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Only if we are -t equals the original, he generic name we licine. US when you need @ n if shopping nearby, out extra charge. A h their prescriptions. 'ours ? ARMACY ; Street East shawa 725-3594 - Motorized Delivery Steffen, B.Sc.Phm. "CLASSES CHURCH ichings ENINGS Auditorium rth |. 16th, 1967 ning more about the olic Church. volics are invited to reat Church 4] IFT WORK " OTHER TIMES WEEKEND TOLL 49 > 40 Fatalities On Highways By THE CANADIAN PRESS Forty-nine persons were killed accidentally across Canada dur- Ing the weekend--40 on the high- ways. Five died in fires, two of carbon monoxide poisoning, one from drowning and one man from being crushed by a falling tree. A Canadian Press survey from 6 p.m. Friday until mid- night Sunday, local times, showed Ontario with the most fatalities--15 on the highway, tive in fires and two persons from carbon monoxide in a parked car. One man was crushed by a tree in New Brunswick and one person drowned in Nova Scotia. Traffic mishaps claimed nine ves in Quebec, four in each of rta and British Columbia, three in Newfoundland, two each In Manitoba and Nova Scotia and one in New Brunswick. Prince Edward Island and Saskatchewan recorded fatality- free weekends. The survey does not include industrial or natural deaths, known suicides nor slayings. The Ontario dead: SUNDAY Sheryl Harris, 12, her sister Carol, 10, of Toronto, Dorothy McLaren, 10 and her sister Deb- bie, 5, of Rockwood, Ont., in a fire in an east-end Toronto home. Joan Thompson, 26, of To- ronto, in a fire in a rooming house in downtown Toronto. Edwin Gerald Burch, 27, of Muncey, Ont., when his car struck a tree stump near Glencoe 30 miles southwest of London, | David Ross Hill, 14, of Wilson- ville, Ont., when struck by a car while walking on a road in dense fog near Brantford. Sulochana Singhanai, 31, of Bombay, India, in a two-car col- lision on the Queen Elizabeth Way near St. Catharines. Ivan Lee Anderson, 22, of Brownsville, Ont., when a car driven by his brother went out of control and crashed near Till- sonburg 20 miles south of Wood- stock. Marcel Carriere, 32, and Al- bert Carriere, 24, both of Chelmsford, Ont., when their car swerved off Highway 11 near Sudbury. Emile Czarnick, 24, of To- ronto, in hospital of injuries suf- fered in a single-car crash in Toronto Saturday. SATURDAY Karim Kahn, 2, of Toronto, when struck by a car in Elm- vale, 15 miles northwest of Bar- rie. Mrs. Betty Raymer, 36, of Hamilton, when the car in which she was a passenger struck a utility pole in Cobourg, 30 miles south of Peterborough. Anna Ouellette, 7, of Fauquier, Ont., when struck by a car backing out of a_ neighbor's driveway about 100 miles north- west of Timmins. Robert Edward William Mc- Auley, 17, and Larry Robert Whatmore, 16, both of London, Ont., when their motorbike' skid- JACK AND J Actress Jill St. John and her husband, singer Jack Jones, pose for pictures on the steps of the home in Beverly Hills where they ILL MARRY were married early Sunday evening. Jill holds her bridal bouquet, and the couple plan a honeymoon in Hawaii. (AP Wirephoto) THE OSHAWA TIMES, Monday, October 16, 1967 3 HEAVY VOTE INDICATED By GRAHAM COX TORONTO (CP)--Campaign- ing for Tuesday's general elec- tion in Ontario virtually wound up during the weekend with provincial party leaders home to stay until the results are known. They'll be doing some hand- shaking and visiting in their home ridings, but as Liberal Leader Robert Nixon replied Saturday when asked if he thought they'd sway many vot- ers in the last 24 hours: "I doubt it." Mr. Nixon's home riding 1s Brant, Progressive Conservative Premier John Robarts is at home in London South and Don- ald MacDonald, leader of the New Democratic Party, is run- ning in the Toronto-area riding) If indications from the ad- vance poll held Thursday, Fri- day and Saturday are borne out, a heavier than normal vote can be expected Tuesday. | was impressively heavier than in 1963, the last provincial elec-| tion, with most returning offi- cers reporting sharp increases and some reporting turnouts of double the 1963 total of voters. ded and threw them ta utility pole in London. Joseph Jeffery Dopierala, 2 John Marion Dopierala, 16, and their step-brother Henry Lewan- dowski, 17, all of Kinburn, in a two-car c oilision near their home 25 miles west of Ottawa. FRIDAY | Ronald Clarence Atfield, 22, of| Brantford, and Ann Patricia Wensveen, 18, of Copeland, Ont., of carbon monoxide poisoning in a car parked in the Atfield's driveway in Brantford. Personal Traits Of Leaders In U.K. Politi By CARL MOLLINS LONDON (CP)--Personal waits of Britain's rival party leaders have sidled into the po- litical limelight on the third an- niversary of the Labor party's electoral takeover from the Conservatives. Edward Heath's capacity as leader of the opposition Conserv- atives is questioned on the ground that his personality is not robust enough. Prime Minister Wilson's camp is determined to scotch '"'various false and malicious rumors .. . concerning his personal charac- ter and integrity," as a High Court judge was told last week in a successful Wilson libel ac- tion. With the Conservative party's annual conference opening Wednesday in Brighton and Par-| i t's aut hl r week away, public debate on) Heath's leadership has reached! a crescendo. NEEDS MORE BOUNCE Gerald Nabarro, a/flamboyant Tory whose criticism provoked cancellation of a party speaking date last week, says Heath should show "much more raci- ness, much more bounce, much more showmanship." | money. earned by the music to! | THIEVES PLAY IT COOL | NEW DELHI (AP)--Police have formed a 100-man patrol| to combat an increase in crime) at the onset of the hot rainy The pre daily average of 29 burglaries and thefts shot up to 41 when the heat came, due, police believe, to people leaving doors and windows open to let in fresh air. ANNOUNCEMENT TED S. MENDYK We have added a new member to our Sales Stoff at Guide Realty Limited. Ted is well known and a long time resident of Oshawa. He will be pleased to serve you and is well quali- fied to render professional and conscientious service as he has passed all courses required by the Oshawa & District Real Estate Board. 723-5281 Guide Realty Limited a| drew some copies containing the cal Limelight! Nabarro also expressed a wish| that Heath, a music-loving bach- elor yachtsman, wouad "'carry a beautiful bride over the thresh- old." Results of an opinion poll published Sunday show Heath supported as party leader by only 38 per cent of Conserva- tives and just 34 per cent of all voters. While 39 per cent of women voters favor Heath over other top Tories, only 28 per cent of the men approve. At the prime minister's resi- dence, a spokesman said Sunday night Wilson's lawyer is dealing with an article about personali- ties at 10 Downing Street. The article appeared in The Interna- tional Herald Tribune, an Amer- ican newspaper published in Paris and distributed in Britain. One British distributor with- article last Thursday, but others, were sold. Some British newspa- pers referred obliquely to the article's contents during the weekend. jconvention, held during the Ss QUEBEC (CP)--An independ-, National. At the party's second annual| | weekend on the campus of Laval; the railways and the St. Law- rence Seaway. The proposed republic would) have a president as well as a| prime minister and cabinet, and| its parliament would be a "na-| tional assembly'? of members) elected for four-year terms. | A Bank of Quebec would be| established to regulate the mon-| etary system. Existing banks| head offices in Quebec and do 75 per cent of their business with Quebec residents. Quebec would negotiate with the rest of Canada for the joint ownership of the seaway and the nationwide carriers. FAVORS UNION Gilles Gregoire, president of le Ralliement who sits in the Com- mons as independent MP for La- pointe, said he is favorably dis- posed, under certain conditions, to the suggestion that le Rallie- ment unite with Quebec's larger separatist party, le Rassemble- ment pour l'independance natio- nale. Mr. the right. SWING EXPECTED The size of the advance poll, Independent Que. Republic ..:.*.°<se.22, Target Of Gregoire Party until after the votes are counted Tuesday night, is leading some observers to look for a swing in affiliation to some degree. It also is being suggested that Gregoire described his/, 1966 redistribution, which ent republic of Quebec is the|party as a party of the centre, |raised the number of ridings in goal of the province's No. 2 se-|flexible enough to absorb the/Qntario to 117 from 108 at disso-| street paratist party, le Ralliement! best ideas from both the left and jytion, has generated an interest | not shown by the general reac In an address to the conven-|tion to speeches by the candi- tion Saturday, he predicted that! gates. at least one Liberal MP will de-| University, about 200 delegates| fect in favor of the Quebec inde-|trojied by the Progressive Con- gave unanimous approval to a| pendence movement. He said| servative party for 24 years, blueprint for independence| that during the next four months|with Mr. Robarts as leader which included such items as a other Quebec MPs will join se-|since 1961, and both the NDP eparate monetary system and|paratist ranks, but he named nO! and Liberal leaders have strong- joint ownership of Air Canada,|names. The government has been con- ly suggested that this is too London Driver Top Trucker TORONTO (CP)--William |of the province under Conserva-| Loeb |tive governments, said in effect: | Hicks, a driver for M. (London) Ltd., of London, Ont., " took top honors Saturday in the could become savings banks on|tandem-axle tractor-trailer divi- the condition that they establish sion, the most difficult section of |posi ial Truck |comp! the National Cent long. Both played steadily on the) theme that the Conservatives) have become complacent and) withdrawn from the needs of the electorate. Mr. Robarts, describ- ing the economic advancement | "You've never had it so good." A crisis in housing in Ontario also has been blamed by the op- tion leaders on government lacency. They charge that the Conservatives have contin- ually failed to act until situa- tions reached crisis proportions. On housing, the premier point- ed to the Home Ownership Made Easy plan implemented last summer whereby medium-in- come families may acquire low- cost housing with a moderate) down payment. Regarding the financial crises that rocked the province and the nation in the last two years, Mr. Robarts pointed to expanded powers granted the Ontario Se- curities Commission to investi- jany participation in the cam- Party Leaders Home | To Await Outcome in the desire that Canada re-| ELECT PILKEY NEW DEMOCRAT main one country. Two of the remarkable as-| pects of the campaign have been! the absence of large rallies by any of the parties and the ab- sence, except for NDP Leader T. C. Douglas in the Sudbury area Saturday and Sunday, of paign by national party leaders. | In Sudbury Saturday, Mr. Douglas said that both the Con- servative and Liberal parties were controlled by the financial and industrial corporations of gate alleged inadequate financ- ing of companies and to demand increased information from both established and developing insti- tutions. Mr. Robarts has attempted of York South. \throughout the campaign to make national unity a key issue but, while admitting the impor- tance of unity nationally, both Mr. Nixon and Mr, MacDonald have denied that it has a place In general, the advance poll in a provincial election. They) say all three parties are united Piloting or \Celestial Navigation | Write to ~ | The University of Tennessee | CORRESPONDENCE | DIVISION OF UNIVERSITY EXTENSION | Knoxville, Tennessee 37916 jc es Canada and as such were unfit! |to govern. | A major point of difference) jbetween the three parties grew out of their attitude toward the balance between labor and man- agement in regard to the use of injunctions during strikes. PLANNING A.:. city GUARANTY TRUST Real Estate Dept. Mortgages Arranged When Buying or Selling Your Home | 32 KING ST. EAST | 728-1653 ¢ BANQUET © CONVENTION © MEETING | First Class Facilities | | For 20 to 400 Guests | Quality Service Experienced Staff RESERVE YOUR FUNCTION NOW! 723-4641 | HOTEL 4 CITY OF OSHAWA REQUIRES A SOCIAL WORKER (Male or Female) A vacancy exists in the Community Mental Health Clinie on @ full-time or part-time basis for a person holding a M.S.W. er B.S.W. degree. Previous experience in psychiatric social work preferred. Salary range $7,549.00 to $10,361.00, with starting figure depending on qualifications and experience Comprehensive welfare benefits are available. Apply in writing only, giving details of qualifications, exper- ience, age, morital status etc., by Friday, November 10th, 1967, to: THE PERSONNEL OFFICER ity Holl, OSHAWA, Ontario {------ . | The Easy Way! Make Wine ' Fresh Grape Juice available in 5 gallon con- tainers for either Red or White Wine. We also have European Wine Concentrates . Wine Yeost ... Jugs... ing necessities available. LANE 302 STEVENSON RD. N. and other Wine mak- ORDER. EARLY ! PHARMACY I LIMITED i 723-1131 Rodeo. Hicks won out over competi- tors from British Columbia, Al- berta and the Maritimes after| earning the right to represent) Ontario. Fred Dedels of Calgary, Another Londoner, Patrick Hennessy of Inter-City Truck Lines, took the trophy in the sin- gle-axle tractor-trailer division. driver for Grancy Holdings Ltd., won the straight truck division. DOWNTOWN DELIGHTFUL AIR CONDITIONES DINING ROOM REASONABLE PRICES Special Noon Luncheons Hotel Lancaster 27 KING ST. WEST RE-ELECT CONSERVATIVE PAINT In the High Court last Wednes- day, lawyers representing The Move pop group apologized for, libelling Wilson on a postcard designed to publicize a new rec- | ord. They agreed to pay the} The Best Fuel Oil For Less WESTERN OSHAWA OIL LTD. 725-1212 charities designated by Wilson. | Buy Direct Save up to 50% TONECRAFT King Park 723-4922 Plaza 1% PRICE SAVINGS J on 100s of luxury broadloom remnants time. members, f Any group with a commoi Credit unions are mutual-help organiza- tions whose members save together sys- tematically and lend to each other at cost. Credit unions stress thrift. They urge their members to leave savings un- disturbed when they borrow -- to repay loans and increase savings at the same Credit unions are run by their member. Each member has only one vote, regard- less of the number of shares he has in the credit union. All earnings over ex- penses and reserves are returned to the union. There people in the People helping people... sociation such as employment, or church or club membership, can form a credit should be 100 or more group. There are over 1,500 credit unions in Ontario, Chances are good that you are eligible for membership in one of them ---or that you are a member of a group in bond of as- which could form a new credit union, To learn how you may join or form a credit union, write to: Ontario Credit Union League Credit Union Drive TORONTO 16 International Credit Union Day is October 19 at the |NU-WAY |WAREHOUSE SALE Friday, Oct. 20th at 10 a.m. RUG CO. | SALES - BATT: | REPAIRS TO ALL MA OF AIDS HOME APPOINTMEN BUDGET TERMS Canadian HEARI Consultants ERIES - CORDS lL NG AID 10 BOND ST. E. 725-2771 OSHAWA & DISTRICT BRANCH QUEEN'S ALUMINI Association ANNUAL DINNER THURSDAY, OCTOBER 19th 6:30 p.m. at the OSHAWA GOLF CLUB Guest Speaker: Dr. W. J. S. 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