'8 THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE, ¥ridey, May 20, 195 gan and two daughters, Miss BIRTHS Mor Efleen Dorothy and Margaret Ann, COCRERTON « Mr. and Mrs, at home Also surviving is a sister, Mrs, . Agekerion (nee Isobel " sanounce the arrival of a baby son, on Thomas Coull (May) of Oshawa; a brother, 5 iam "Badey 'to donna , , i the Osh | FONLO as well B65 several others rues of oo Ee Aromor for | and sisters and other relatives in md , Mother and | the British Isles, The remains will be at the Luke- Jislntosh frit Home until ill be held. in he tingial yr | Army Citadel at 3 p.m, The casket will be o there from 2 pm. until the Une of the service, The services will be by Major John Patterson of Osh awa, assisted by Brigadier Alfred Dixon of Belleville, a former Sal vation Army officer = here, fora a ment will be in Mount Lawn Ceme- Prionds are asked not to call at the funeral home until Sunday afternoon, FUNERAL OF FRANK G., CHESTER The memorial service for Frank Gorman Chester, who died at the family residence, 20 Arlington avenue, on Tuesday, May 17, was held at the Armstrong Funeral Home 2 pm. on Thursday, May A 'John K, Moffat, minister of Simcoe Street United Church, conducted the services, Interment was in Mount Lawn Cemetery, The pallbearers were James Arnott, Thomas Tristram, Wittiam Fitches, George Blight, Greene and Clarence A, a Mr, Chester leaves to mourn his passing his wife, the former Jessie B, Arnott and a daughter Mrs, Thomas Tristram (Mary) of Toronto, MRS, JOHN HOPKIN The death occurred at White. wood, Saskatchewan, on Monday, May 16, of Lillian May Bryant, beloved wife of John Hopkin, Many residents of the Oshawa district will remember Mrs. Hop: kin, who left Oshawa about 40 years ago as a bride and netrled in western Canada, Mr, and Mrs, Hopkin retired to Whitewood three years ago, Mrs opkin is survived by a daughter, Mrs, Thomas Duke (Myrtle) of Wapella, Sask, and three sons, George of Wapella, Sask, John of Langbank, Sask, ] Dionnes Ready To Mark Their Zick Anniversary The four surviving sisters of Dinas mesange, the wots, x: in 1044 made him Dionne quintuplets. will ie motgnes, Their wealth a at the called In at Leon's he birth, bi him the news before the newspaper. Dr, Dafoe frankly' he did not believe the mites would last the day out, We gave the story an Soluma banner on page one, re about our coverage. In "the oto. arta or ropattony ny. raphers a newsreel people trom many parts of Canada and the United States, we became aware Albert Aobert and Evelyn Ousl- for Dennis and SPICHER~Mz, and Mrs, Don Spicher announee the arrival of nda Anne, on Mon. 1, at the Oshawa SWEENEY ~~ Mr, and Mrs, Edward Sneaney (nee Pidduck) are happy to the birth th ot hu Fini Diane Kathleen, § on Monday, Sey 16, Mob a4 the 1vie Hospital, Patafoorough, Mother and baby fine, ZAROBIAK ~~ Mr, and Bil Za obiak (nee Kutasienski) wish 10 an: nounce the arrival of their son Thom: as Wiliam weighing 8 pounds, ounges on W ay, May 18, 1995, A Baby brother for Danny, fin DEATHS » EY ~- Suddenly in the Oshawa val Hospital on Friday, May 20, 1085, James Badley, beloved husband of 'Margaret Ann Morgan and dear of Eileen Dorothy and Margaret Brother of Mrs, Thomas Coull ) of Oshawa, and William of To morning. ork a bit early ing, but that was only | of Metisse it odors [] publishing este: we thee Tin . roel Jug ha that morning to rd it a yo dass Mrs, ASSIGNMENT From that day 21 years id Hor to the present time, oy hay newspaper has been the ink between the Dionne fam- the rest tof the world, For as {at os. the wewsbaper cerned; something ln time did | fly 3 much fo from a ftri- shout 10 Ww Jian before 1 became of the paper in 1940 the weekly paper to a daily. our circulation A coverage was my regular he population Saighment And during, the last ! 4 years 1 have rema a repor- That somith "" was the birth | ter as far as the Dionne coverage of five baby gl to Elzire and | was concerned, I have lok Eliva Dionne in a farmhouse mid- | had entry to the Dionne home yar hat hitwaen the tiny villages of | whenever I requested it, but 1 have Callander , about 14| also heen Invited there many miles ri A North ) Bay Mon- es, day, Ms: 8 984, ore | For some reason or othér Oliva Datory had Hive babies | Dionne and I hit it off from the t the same time, and] start, He has always trusted me and down through the years has akan me into his confidence many times, To the best of my oo a wa , and up North. B Bay by ERE g *E2 romto, ReWting at the Luke-Mcintosh Fu: farsl Home, 152 Wing Bt, East, for servies In the Salvation Army Citadel on Tuesday, May 34, at 3 p.m, The casket will remain open in the citadel from 2 o'clock until time of servige, Friends are reque not to oall until Sunday , Interment Mount Lawn Come. ORTHY «Al Middle Ciresn " Rest Home, Thursday, May 19, a , Elizabeth Jane Stirtevant, wife Inte William Clathworthy,, in 0th year, SeSSRENNg at the W, C. Town Funers! Chapel, Whithy for service Saturday, May 21 at 2.30 o'clock, Interment Union Cemetery, Oshawa, KOVACS = At Memorial Hospital, Bow manville, on Thursday,' May 19, 1866, Oubriel Kovacs, aged 5 years, RR No. 1, Tyrone, beloved husband of Sophie Kovacs, Rasting at the Morrie Funeral Chapel, Bowmanville, Services in the chapel on yodatupday at 8 o'clock, Interment Beth. reeds ee , MAGALUSHEN ~ Entered into rest In the Oshawa General Hospital on Tuesday, May 17, 1988, Nastia (Nel if i MR. AND MRS, WILLIAM LAWSON AND THEIR FAMILY LIBERAL CANDIDATE Fishing Law |¢ William Lawson Member In Manitoba [* Pioneer Pickering Family [Is Changed By JOE GIBSON PARINER IN 1A Pdi Hal, . jth Hon. problem and By THE CANADIAN PRES oth a student at Ong general lowering val| WINNIPEG (CP)--Onl and Ellsworth at home, Wn enable wt wile . Mr, Lawson wis ele to the | ues by removisg sind wd and aval vill il get | free fishing alr the year Ms Also surviving are five sisters, | the Liberal banner in oy legal firm of Taylor and Joy, He | from Lake On Mrs, Ed, Conlin (Florence) -of |ing during the comin provincial maintained this ovociation after wr Lawson Rapla been an active Mash the first time In history ana Prospect, ont. Mrs. Lou Conlin | election, fi a man whose family gradugtion, Jd in MOL bleame ¢ | au pd oo Wig of bo the Manitoba is charging resid resident of io abel) y yy awl J free his its roots deep yin Piekering own as Tayler, Joy, Baker and | Ajax-Pickering Hospital ) bard for lors vio oS cast 8 line ins ; i t =) 2 EE 2f ge. a : ] E LY | & 3 i £ H i 2: ot have ph Th me if Rp Pod had le | known she suffered from epileptic seizures, The answer is no, I was r alaware Emilie was not well, but 1 id know the nature of her affliction, It as a secret the fam- 3 shared only with the doctors th m Emilie consulted, Oliva Dionne is an enigma to most people, and man; the have been written about him, some convinced # was no 0 Joke of them not very com tary. anouncing the ev He Is prof Dably the misunder- t x stood man In the public eye today; ay in rather matter of fac R the publi oy! ih a 50-word 3 28 = 5% 3 g £ £ ¥ B i : 1 i | if Hy J 2 s¥ess i i {i g » ; him Conlin (Vera) of North Oshawa, would like him, § = =z i «3 ! the person of R, Keast Webber: {74 years ago in East i of his death. . Brooklin United Church. A lover of * music, he had given freely of his : aepvices in choirs in Kedron Meth. 8 : Alfnost fifty years ! rection and the life," he that be- + NHeveth in me, i dead, yet shall be live," §t. John } ' words of the master o the sorrow: choirs, ' $ + anc active choir member, | deep sense of loss and speak May 2, Puieral from. {he Abmitre i i ¥ ne choir loft hr filled with ! debarted colleague, i them ' He) Moros, widow of the Iste Matwy no Mike) Magslushen, in her Tad ear. Rud atiin a rmstrong nera FI with sarvies In Mt Yama: Orthodox Church, Saturdey, May 21, at 9.30 am. Imarment Oshawa Un. jon Cemetery, Rev. M. Fyk will conduct prayers at the Funeral Home Friday at pm. ( AD Te 18 the Mrs, Oshawa and Mrs, Ellsworth B White woo d, Thursday, May interment in Whitewood Cemetery, Lloyd Yelland (Delia) of Walter Fulton Allie) of Toronto and a brotherr, Iyeat of Oshawa, service was held at Saskatchewan, on 19, followed by The funers . WARCHOL Oshawa Geners! , 1008, Frank hand of Mary Garason, oi 7 Wier | i in Funeral Webber wishes to thank for their acts of beautiful floral tributes + and passing o i iw ih BIRTHDAYS Congratulations are extend. ed to the following readers of A Times-Gazette who are | geloraing thei birthdays to- a se. 1 [8 J, Yellowlees, M 1 He RW rs. J. A. Copping, 19 Yor pping, 19 King Douglas Bannon, 180 Pri a rince Shirley Milks. Mrs, G. street east, FR 3 3 1 ROBERT KEAST WEBBER | Oo Monday, } May | 16, 100, neigh: hows and frien vooklin and surrounding ns met to pay their last respects to a valued and highly respected friend in r was born hitby Town- ship, the. son of the late John and Hite Webber, He was prede- by three brothers, John Jr, wal ce (Wally) and Leo, Sure pig | are a brother and sister rnest W. Webber of Colum- bus and Miss Jessie with whom he made his home. In 1007 the family moved to a farm near Rrooklin where they lived until 1020 when gh moved to a farm on No ighway, south of the village ul the time | The late Mr. Web t! Mr, Webber was a member of t Church and in Brooklin for is pastor, the Rev. 8. J. Hillier, used as his text "T am the resur though he were in ", chosen appro propriately from the comforting reassuring sisters of Lasaru members of past and present mute evidence of the re- spect and affection accorded their he organist played softly a number of favourite pm, among "The Lord Is Shepherd, af "I Need Thee Every 4h 'Soft. nd Tenderly Tr - Calling" C Actin, Gazette, membe! some official checking on the pres- ent stat f oe us of the time-worn Post gh the H paper. of the House of revealed that the RL as been reported as surplus to the were received Readiine for fers Ss was set at April 20. his Madi brought close to 200 3 ing two fire bri topie. nol women and oni blazes Thursday night on the Williams Badin barn be No Bids For Post Office Nobody wants Oshawa's old post offic Al "last, that's the way It jouks. on behalf of The Time Michael Starr, federal r for Ontario riding, did ce and customs building, The angwers Mr, Starr received s placed on the order own Assets Durndl Bg enders were called for t sale of the building, but 0 bids Six Fires Hit Single Village CLANDEBOYE, Ont, (CP) -- Six fires, all burning simultaneoysly in esex county village ades and scores of dren jo battle the A crew of six men from the Lucan fire brigade arrived when |! It appeared the whole village might swept by flames. They were too late to save the barn on the farm of Rupert Williams, the fire orf inated, ald of a citizens' fouy managed to confine damage where but with the 'bucket brigade a granary and culinary house property, an im. onging to Ward fodging and the homes of Thomas ollis and Louis Raycraft, "Near My God to Thee." 8 Webber was also a falthful member of Beethoven Lodge No. 188 100F in which he was also | Neighbours and friends ttl at OSHAWA AND DISTRICT + ly of Mr, Weber's cheerful "spirit | ! and kindly helpfulness, . vation JAMES BADLEY A prominent member of the fal Army, James Badley, | Bridey morning as AL | lntrate is attending ATTENDING CONVENTION Oshawa police court did not sit Magistrate S. Ebbs was absent. The mag: the annual World Tos a Township, Community spirit has been » trademark of Mr. Lawson's s family since the day In 1840 w Ms great - grandfather, a settler, land ed by boat at the mouth of Duffin's Creek. BORN IN TORONTO The Lieral candidate's father, however, was a Brinting 1 sglesman whose business took to To ronto, And it was there, in 1924, that William Lawson was born. He attended Whitney Public School, and received his secondary school education at UTS in Torento, Then, in the "ui! Lawton stages of al ant, First wae Se to an artillery survey unit, he was aver | F transferred to the infantry after completing a course at the Officer Training School in Brockville, Be. fore the war ended, Mr. Lawson was aitached to the Canadian Army Pacific Force in Virginia, Later, Mr. Lawson enrolled at the University of Toronto, and while there he met and married the former Bridget Elizabeth Grey. son, a native of Dorset, Englan who came to Canada at & war guest in 1940, Their marriage took [lage in Deer Park Church In Mr, Lawson graduated from U, of T. with a bachelor of arts re in 1047, and entered Os- goode Hall to study law. In 1880 ho was called to the bar and 4. Lawson, Mr. and Mrs. Lawson, who now are the parents of an active five. oar ctd son, Hugh, and a charm- Ay ghter, Hilary, three moved 'oronto to Pickering. Their frm s rambling Ihymield structure was bulit Green, one of days, leading citizens in its ear) I a of Greenwood, near The which it is located, was named after him, Also resident In Pickering twon- Ship an are * ME Law Lavions A moth i and active in wy organiza uire the CX. ip's shah, "and Fo . x a a Hho Liberst codiiete' sfirst hr step came with his elec to Pickering Township coun- cil in 1982. He has been re-elected | yi each year since then, The last election, when be led the poll, gave some idea of Mr. Lawson's Ll y, 'or some time the forceful Mr, Lawson advocated zoning of the township. His personal campaign bore fruit recently, when a plan- ning board was set up and the Job begun. Among his chief inter: ests hay been the sontinued de- velopment of the southern portion of the township, He is now spear. heading a drive to protect resi dents of the Squire's Breach area against 'the Invasion of a large- grave which has caused mitted to practice as a Wl oo an the past two years. Fond of getting | (i ! things done, he was also one of ihe Jray Jravines's; 27.000 squan o's the, rime movers in the formation But Tn Butler supervisor of eo Pickering Towmbip Branch 4 rt fishing and fish culture, says t won't ha ter to the province's o the Canadian. Red C DEVOTED CHURCH WORKER ts of anglers. He says be just ay many out ag Wiy or Non family are mem. St. George's Anglican | ev: "ie says there is a great inter est in the new licenc: much so Chen in Pickering. Mrs, We son, besides the role of that several individusls have Sone to his office an [1 no compl fayng wife and mother, devotes much of Jot ite to fe churehy Wain. en's Auxiliary and Women's Mis. stonary Society. She Is 2 a In rh by says, A Is Appioved. [romiuent meinbet of the Picker | ,opyiations w Hop croathd. the fhe Liberal standard foo also provides foba Wal dent oud? oy * China cond annual Fish-a-Car Deby May 15, with its major prize new-model automobile for the fiéh: erman who lands the largest Dick. Sele or finch, The pickerel fecord a o four ounces; F funds. 8, two ounces, s have e od off entries at 275 and reported a long waiting list tor any possible cancel obs. The fishermen, who paid a oe which covers RB dur- Osh thvouthous the. Tomt of" the roughou rest 0 prove ince are 'better thin they have been at any time In the past 13) 4 oars." "I believe," he says, "That basically there is a great deal of discontent with fhe Rresont u ministration, The Jochle Jie ginning to distrus e Pro 4 sive Conservative government." And on the local level, Mr, Law- son adds that ""T don't think the yers of the municipalities en getting the fairest treat. INS eo contributions they have recelved have ot kopt pace ig # ovinglal ov enues.' "This ' he pagh, "Should will cast in Shoal lake, about miles outheast of Winsipes, ing, the one-day der ny. ere probably isn't a more have i 114 a represent. Ushuy-controlled fishing competi- ation, and 1 feel that the Liberals san In Cana hn n oo So and 4 Jt fan provide it. who competed last year say it's Teach New Dogs Old Tricks To Fool Ducks In Yarmouth GERALD FREEMAN Pra n Press Stall Writer YARMOUTH, N.8, (CP)--Hunt- ors In Yarmouth county are teach. a new dogs old tricks, oe canines are Little River dogs, or tollers, They Aa: ar Bred for a single purpose--to [oo UCKS, Owners expect sham to be certl- fied as a breed apert b the Amer: ican Kennel Club within a year, Their tricks are as old as Greec: ee Sirens of classic legend lured sal ors to their death on the rocks by singing and dancing on craggy headlands, Ducks are taken in the same w The 8 don't sing, but they ance an ohber pong rushy lake ores so joyfully at curious ducks Ravel io find out what it's all about, y paddle in within find ou 0) o hunters' guns and they n oul fogs an are light brown bun. as of endly spirit, They are haired it white-tl tails, wil streaked faces and white Boy were crossbred from three breeda: £.!!x"for playfulness, collie | or for color and golden retriever for fetching ability, Strangely Rouen: for the tollers {slained Just what they were in. ed to retain from each ances: tor, They were first bred 78 years ago at the Yarmouth county vila a e of Little River Harbor. utomoblle dealer Fred Arm: ed TE Says you have to know Su to Loge the lake SPEND DAY SPEND DAYS INLA Black ducks and Nails spend thelr nights foeding on salt water 0 - flats along the Yarmouth | 7 to get the most Anniversary Rev. H. C. Linstead of Niagara | Falls, former minister of Cour tice Charge was the guest speak er at the Sunday School Anniver: sary Services on Sunday, May 15. The church was beautifully de corated with spring flowers. As a lude to the afternoon service, Mr. Frank Walter organ. ist, accompanied by Mrs, Rubyrt n Marked At a Church the direction of the oF anigt and choir leader Frank W. At the evening ry Nr. Lins 'What have you to ask that we make our lives an open declara- tion and that we try as Christians not to be silent about our convic. tions, The Church choir under the cap: able leadership of Mr, Fran two beautiful an ueks and ou have the fairest event they have ever| participated In, SPIN FISHING CHEAP Fishermen report that since 1952] go the output and variety of reels and| th rods have skyrock: but costs have plunged. Today, a good spin. ning outfit, which wil olcast the Joni bafledsting Js. can be bought or as low as Origin of wb fishing is not cer- tal 'According to legend, a French allant sab toying with a spool of hread and thus the art of spin fishing was born aT, MAL pert sedi] modern spin-fishing technique to Holden Illingworth, glish: man, who got the brain wave While watching the action of spindles in his cotton mill, Just set 1 of thread on end 4 thread unwinds Smoot ly off we Sua, Stop pu LH, he ie Bt prvi a SPGoling reel operates. Many 'tishermen prefer The oO tem as it does away with bears of the bait casting fe big. with his evolving ane spool, eel--the backlashes and the bird's tangles of line. county shore and fly miand b thousands to fresh water clean up. "Ducks come In about the same place every day," Mr, Armstron| says. "They wife: around a roc int or led, oe and crawl on thelr stomachs to a blind on the lake. Moore and the hunter brings Stow leces of wood for the dog to te ch, The dog knows his part and retrieves the wood silently with ex. orated leaps and bounds. The dusky swim jn to soe what's going on, Mr. Arms s you HY toll ducks up fo 800 00° Yards away, HUGE NUMBER "In one toll last fall I tolled 1,800 ducks-int a black streak of them Co stands up to flush the ducks and fires ad they take wing. They don't leave the lake and can be tolled again in a few hours. De, A bd Javie, & a yatasly. arian, lave 8 are hardy an steangely immune to r 'they're lovely pet. " i ly Srewn they weigh from 28 to|D. poun: Tollers don't have to bring the ducks in as close as foxes did but they love the water and are better rotrievers, A FILES BIG SUIT p NEW YORK (AP)--A Wash , group filed a $1,000,000 aie wit federal court Thurs. against the National Basket. ball nn and its dont, Maurice Podoloff, charging viola: tion of the Sherman anti-trust law. ---- ALWAYS LOOK TO IMPERIAL FOR THE BEST TEA, BURNERS Esso FORCED AIR UNITS hi IN to The Canadian a a eine BeOkg Ye AMA! the Dionne quintuplets, = While he was tapping out his an for rec iprocal ar. shin, 4 Juche a | by sther such pleture va taken, It one of the mos! famous news otures in the Rig Fifteen minutes after Leon'q The tather of the adisutiets hay made mistakes, to be sure, all things considered, -- who was an obscure farmer in nt, has handled himself very trary to the opinion of some he was not a pauper at oe time the quints were born was never on relief; he owned his own car and his own farm and that Sas somthing for a farmer in is uring the difficult d INCREASED WEALTH Oliva Dionne has devel and a vocab tht "woul be a 0 ak of the ul since an act or he Ontario = 2 iE i a ; i i i : § ig H : : o% i ! d LL fl gs £ g Eze i a ef 1 HHH g fs i Py THE CANADIAN PRESS A My oid spring has dela; fod} se almost ever, ada r- t in New Fhe 8 Can tario a A However, » Anadian Press sur- vo this week showed that, despite backs from the weather, grows xpect to plant about the same acre a age year as last--and hope og a toads in Saskatche- wan oF Hite to digcourage farmers i £0 and wha under witer tures wes a Agri 2 wee iL a 4 \! SASKATCHEWAN SEEDING ay it was estimated ha i feu cot of Sas ol hea reage. and || 2 i per cant of of the oats and barley It was axpacted had Theat in planted wor uld Ho 80 Ber 00 cent of last year's 5,040, 054 Sas katchewan viento cro| ah anallent a 11 years was ar w 000,000 ig in 1 I an government estimated 1,480,000 acres flooded in 37 areas this spring with 3,284, 180 acres of crop-producing land ted i soe NAY by the flood. . Provincial officials estimated t will cost 8, 643,270 to drain the land still under water and they sake the federal government to a" cei of the cost, ly, on the prairies the ple: tv Alberta | a Agriculture depart. ment had no seeded up to Mas 8 15 but IF aT age gh | two youl s late but e are ood other | conditions, Seeding Delayed By Cold Spring lng Vo + par A was ahead ot dia last year. Alberta f | apected to plan more than "6.000. acres of wheat th per cent more than in 1064, In Manitoba, Where excessive moisture has dela ¥ 58.000 'heres 2 growers plan to sow 3 018, of wheat this pring. about 20,000{ © less than last year, to increase thelr acreage of oats, Se and Seedin in British Columbia is prospects given favorable weather Total Srain acreage in the province is about 250,000, apart re| from land in hay and © rop| Spring' wheat acreage was creased this spring to 85,800 from last year's Bl, Grains came through the winter "extreme! poly a small amout of inter kill. and a good yield Is axpected. s-, this year from from LIS, bed burley t m 4, are about two' weeks ahead of schedule a yields are expected Af ed fields held in aterlogged fields hel a seeding y oot t of Quebec. owas ly well" in Ontario with A { heat acreage dro) Ww nter whe age replete nl 1s flue-cured Soncco i 0.000 a two | tember, crop. Farmers in Newfoundland have >So 10F Several weeks. and snow not s The to do so a ns in Frult blossoms | jin on the case last year. Prospects are|.. ood as last year because all rains prevented fall . Total ain .ae acreage sown was 000. APERAGE POTATO CROP Little information is available from New Brunswick but main crop of potatoes is expected to be about the same as las Ing is a little ahead schedule. 8 not as heav, Plowing. ince Edward Island fenced a cold spring and mals family." Spinster-Farmer Communist Ch the Droviuce of Manchuria, Jraducss Of in Please Note! Deliveries As Usual on Monday, May 23rd Oshawa Dairy Ltd. "The Dairy That Satisfies" Walter sg thems, * eart of Prayer" hy Leland B. Satiren and 'Brea Forth inte Joy" by Caleb Simper, ue solo parts were taken by: LB 0. Robertson, Mrs, J. Mac: Gregor and Miss 'ehert. At the close of the service, Mr. Linstead showed slides on the beautiful Joldens and scenery at Barber, violinist and Mrs Cow ay pianist played several beau: titul hymns, Mr. Linstead speak: ing to the children used the theme. "Happy Sounds", which he illus. trated with familiar stories of Jesus, The Sunday School accompan: fed by their planist "Miss Louise «| Wehnert, sang several numbers, | Niagara | "Come, Children Join to Sing",| Both services were well attend. "News for Little Children" and | ed. | istrate's convention. The meet. ¢ Roxborough avenue, died Hi ne | Ma % Is being held in Niagara Falls ly at the Oshawa General Hospital this: morning in his 59th your. | ta Year, - A son of He late George : Bad) and rc CRE Window Cleaner Tie a 5 pangles 50 Feet resident of Oshawa for 30 n years, Mr. Badley had lived pre. | WINNIPEG (CP) * viously in Teronto after coming to 1 Canatla The deceased was a welder ; General Motors Charles Roden was working on sal at oked Member o She local | a fifth-floor hotel window when the : secretary \ rend of the cite: | Tosh Broke away (rom the wall. .| shine Mountain." del bullding fund. He had served | sill, hitting "Nis ead kamal the! The Benediction sung by the jo 2 MIONW, . OF CITY Urs 10% DOWN a YEARS TO PAY! PAYMENTS AS LOW AS 5.92 PER MONTH ON OIL BURNERS GEO. THOMSON ...... 125 CONANT Free Estimates Day or Night Also Servicing the Neighboring Districts of ® Whitby = @ Ajax @ Pickering @ Claremont | above a downtown street Thursday | when one of the hooks holding his safety belt hroke, ing Along the Way". The| = ---- ] Beglmers i mary Classes | n r © ® WAYS Sang an | Oshawa Memorial Service action song "Climb Climb up Sun. ® Monumants ® Markers at formerly as bahdmaster and song: | wall, He hung there for. several Children closed the afternoon ser. | ster leader minutes by a single hook before he | Vice He loaves to mowrn hia passing | managed to cligh back to the wip, The the formar Marsaret w ledge. roy an In Lah music for bg both afternoon was upder | } '