Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 7 Aug 1963, p. 3

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ng nape eh a a trmrna ye The Canadian government should review its foreign aid program instead of pouring mon- ey into countries which fail to live up to commitments, a doc. tor said Tuesday, Dr, Claude H. Vipond, one of five Canadian doctors and a nurse sent to Malaya two years ago under the Colombo plan said in an interview: "I thought there was a real need in that country and help would be wel- comed--but I was wrong." "The Sultan of Pahang is building a $2,500,000 palace while trucks repairing the roads in his state have been donated by the government of Canada." Dr. Vipond was accompanied by Dr, J, D, Hermann, Ottawa; Dr, D. G. Sloan, *St, Thomas; STEPHEN STEPINAC FIVE STUDENTS AT Dr. Doctor Would Revise Foreign Aid Program to Malaya to explain medical and surgical techniques to doc- tors there. "We. were promised beds for patients, an operating room and the necessary equipment," said Dr. Vipond, "but none of these was ever provided." AIM NOT FULFILLED "We were able to do some useful work, but failed in our ob- jective to improve the over-all standards of medical care in Malaya," There are 9,000,000 people in Malaya, living in its 11 states. The country, previously gov- erned by Britain, gained its in- dependence in 1957 and now has a government similar to the British system, Dr, Vipend, who has returned cial needs such as food produc: ing, education and medicine, in- cluding birth control, Recipient countries must show a will to improve their own conditions, devoting reason. able proportions of their own re- sources to the areas designated as needy, Canada must have adminis- trative authority -- more than just an advisory capacity, All aid must be clearly des- ignated as to origin, enabling recipients and Canadians to judge its effectiveness, --External aid officials should have experience in the field, --Canadian aid personnel should be distinctively Cana. dian. \Canadian aid should be more concentrated in fewer THE OSHAWA TIMES, s Wednesday, Augut 7, 1963 3 HONOR STUDENTS AT ROBERT. E, BABE F. J, Donevan Collegiate In- stitute secured first calss hon- ors in their Grade 13 examina- tions, Monica Connolly is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Leo Connolly, 300 Athol street east, Monica led all Donevan students with an average of Dr, Donald McLean, Winnipeg, and Dr, Guy Screech and Mrs, Margaret McSweyne, both of to practice here, suggested a seven-point program for future|areas. Canada could apply its aid in several fields in one or Vancouver, The team was sent Canadian foreign aid programs: --Direct aid only to basic so-|two countries, Gracious Liv OSHAWA CENTRAL Col- legiate Institute boasts three students who obtained first class honors in their Grade ing Still | 18 examinaions, Tied for | tirst place at the school were | Robert E, Babe, son of Mrs, Marjorie Babe, 41 Drew street, and Theodore A, Bednarek, son of Mrs, Pauline Bednarek, 480 Simcoe street south, Both achieved an average of 80.6 per cent in their eight best papers, Second highest stand- ing at OCCI was obtained by occ! THEODORE A, BEDNAREK Mr, and Mrs, Ji 789 Gifford street, ave eraged 77.3 per cent in her eight best papers, All three students were successful ip passing Grade 13 examine tions, ' & DEVON BIDDLE COURTICE ROSE REPORT FROM PARLIAMENT House Session 91 per cent with 12 first class honors. Elizabeth Simmons is the daughter of Mr, and Mrs Albert Simmons, 95 Patric! avenue. She obtained first class honors in eight sub- jects. Stephen Stepinac is the | Stephen | Stepinac, 885 Colborne street | He obtained first class | son of Mr, and Mrs east honors in nine subjects, Devon Biddle is the son of Mr, and Mrs. Gordon Biddle, ' 196 Windsor street. He obtained five first class honors. Cour- tice Rose is the son of Mr and Mrs. Edward Rose, 115 Riverside drive south, He ob- tained first class honors four subjects Ends, Found Disappointing By MICHAEL STARR, MP jarea of Canada is difficult to| Parliament has now recess-/understand ed for what is left of the sum-| The announcement that the/ mer, to reconvene on Septem-/Municipal Winter Works pro-| ber 30. It has been sitting cos-|gram will be continued for the tinuously since May 16, and/coming wister was greeted with although a great deal had been relief, expected as to what would bejthe Government is carrying on) accomplished from May 16 to/a program, initiated during the) the present, it has been in period wren I was Minister of many ways a very disappoint-|Labor, which was designed to ing and unfruitful Session so/alleviate unemployment. far _ |. However, upon learning that jthe program had been curtail-/ In spite of all ~~ Seng ed by six weeks, it was dis- ef quick and decisive action to deal with the economic prob lems of this country, very little im fact has been proposed in this direction, cil has been set up but very An amendment to the Atlan-|little can be expected from that tic Development Board Act was|body for the next two or three] introduced and passed, and now| years. They will have to do ai becomes law; but this amend-|creat deal of research work be-| ment had only one effect and/fore any recommendations cin} that was to increase the mem-/be made by them that would be | the employment. appointing in that it will curtail/or possibility of maximum/would have been trial machinery, This has a dampening effect on the econ-/j omy and instead of providing incentives to these two indus tries, who employ many hun- dreds of thousands of Cana- since we now know that/@ians, it has had the opposite) effect of reducing employment in these areas The Minister of Labor pre- dicts greater unemployment during the coming months and especially during the winter months One would think that in view this situation, legislation introduced that would have dealt directly ' The National Economic Coun-|with this serious problem, On/®0re anything secondary, the contrary, many of the poli cies that have been put forward are policies that will worsen this situation in | Far Off For Socialist "The architects must all have dropped dead in the middle of the 19th century," said an Amer- lican scientific psychologist on} his first Moscow visit. "There isn't a single new buiding of promise or originality." | Later he admitted that some {buildings in Leningrad were '"'di- land of the socialist millennium, |¥estible," granted the historical The flaws are often tiny, but Correrars Other binget thy ad: Pe alah baad tthe aad: rp iy| mitted a fondness for tne new cig Pe Fagg Seu coe ~alace of Congresses, :nside the no deodorants, aking "Kk re jders, no cake mixes, no ball- Kremlin jpoint pens, no sticky tape, no jpencil - sharpeners, no pop-up jtoasters, Toothpaste is gritty; |Food lacks finesse One. Rusian defended the sys- Some convinced Communists)iem, saying: "I don't think jadinit the West is ahead in the/ihose who serve should neces- -- oe poset to sarily cringe before the cus- iviels re gaining ANY-\ ror ie atte: ee ) lway, as one party supporter put biel it 3 a matter of persona lit: "You don't know where ,, " jyou're going, You have no gal, purpose in life. We have an} n, a faith, a principle--work- A Canadian Press reporter travelling in the Soviet Un- ion finds the country lagging | behind the West in stand. ards of material comfort. Some of the difficulties are related in this story, By ALAN HARVEY MOSCOW (CP)--Gracious liv- ling is still a distant vista in the Service in the state . owned stores seems civil but perhaps jlacking in super-salesmanhip Clerk know their jobs are safe PRESENTED TO QUEEN P, F. Connell, of Saint John, N.B,, national president of the ROAF Association, was pre- sented to Queen Elizabeth at a garden party in Bucking- ham Palace last week, Mr. Connell exchanged greetings with the Queen on behalf of the Association, of which she is patron, It was the first time an association president had the opportunity of meet- ing the Queen at the palace. CITY AND DISTRICT There is little or no night life in the Soviet Union. There are a " places to.go for a quiet drink he collective g ,? * g for the collective good jSome restaurants have dance} Nevertheless, Western. pati-'fioors but the bands are usually} ence may wear thin at elemeN-jiog joud and the lights too giar- tary Soviet-style packaging, Alling for intimacy | ithe lack gloss & sheen, at a c . | = ia pt rll yay "| Food is substantial but will! thy ; ugh eage . mS scarcely challenge the haute} Plumbing is usually an affair|cuisine of France. Standard fa-| jof broken tiles, protruding pipes vor Strovonoff and primitive fittings. A flush!chicken in the Kiev style and a toilet, when it works, produces!peefsteak with an egg on top. 1) . SUBJECTS OMITTED sound and fury lenjoyed cold kvass soup, made! 2" the report of the Grade 13 This illustrates a Soviet char-jof fermented black breaa, sour/eXaminations at O'Neill Colleg. acteristic. They have a strongjcream, onions and chop eq/iate and Vocational Institute, sense of priorities, Smail things| meat. | bore them. They stake all their!' 4 friend located a cosy side-Quu chips on the big hand and ig-iwalk ~ style cafe in Moscow jwhere we sampled a national! idish, | | iwhich M :. Eng. Lit, Eng. Comp., , Trig., Bot, Zoo, Chem., Trig., Bo., Zoo., Chem., , and Lat, Comp. HIGHWAY CRASH PETERBOROUGH A colli. PANTIES ARE JOKE : When the first Soviet woman] "Beat. lAlg soared into space, an eXasper-) Elegance is not a character. Lat. J ated Canadian in Moscow ex-/iStic of the Soviet people. For all) claimed their strong points, they seem to! ] "To have a heaviness, a crudeness,! heck with the cosmo./_"). a lack of grace except on the several of the subjects in which A. Rose was successful ;were omitted. The subjects in s Rose was successful nauts! Let them only learn to jmake matches!" } It must be said without pa- jtronizing that this country, start jing from way back, is picking up momentum, It is trying for} jbetter quality, The people are! hirsting for "nice things." Just bership of the Board. How thislof benefit to the economy and will help the economy in that!provide jobs. Negro Section ay Seen aaatnned saa #141 Cordoned Off jwill be used in conjunction with} the Municipal Winter Works! . . There's Big Money i a program, These loans could be By P ] of benefit to municipalities in 0 ice HALLANDALE, Fila. (AP) --jlet a shipment of lace under- In Pro. Golf Now | that they will be able to pro-/ |The Negro section of Hallandale|wear arrive from Czechoslova- ante om hay yipeenng cure these loans at lower rates ule Jr. collected $5, im Wit-/of interest and also avail them- tn > ie <or-ikizg . nage , ning last weekend's St. Paullselves of the 25 ar out oo jWas seale a off today by a cor- dl Hungary and whoosh _ open golf tournament, but Ar- /viveness in respect to projec a of police searching for a they re sold out faster than it nold Palmer's status as the toplundertaken from the - money|2?!** : takes to form a queue : pro golf money earner was not!nrovided by this loan: but here) Mayor John D. Steele said the) Russia's thick cotton women's i little jrapist, a Negro, is "a sick ani-|! Palmer, with $96,995 for 17)bility that a great many addi-/™% tournaments this year, is still|tiosal jobs could be provided on) Steele well ahead of Jack Nicklaus, the/a longterm basis. If there is gency No, 2 winner at $79,590 any increase in employment asj © The 'weekly Professional Golf-ja result of this program it wil i ers Association repc releasedonly be on a short-term basis jot white women te Thursday, shows Julius a My beg tear' hand,.the Bud-| The mayor said the action', ders may sell as hich a third with $69,996, followed by/get has brought into effect the|was not taken against the Ne-eo a pound Ac onanee eee te, Tony Lema, $62,513, and Gary) cation of sales tax On/eroes as a race. "There are just : a pound An orange can cost Player, $48,755 iding materials asd indus-las x cents. A. slab of chocolate, | Y larger than an ord reget a's disturbed too there is very littl poss joke about such unalluring atems can ed with the annual in- ase in population. Some prices freeze the blood Vegetables and fruits undergo seasonal variations./ invoked special emer a neet what he/"* pe that) S of rapes j . th mm Mei clio & bar, ballet stage. For ali their es. sential kindliness, th-y some tuumes seem unsure of them- Selves in public place. A So- viet railway station can be a somewhat depressing sight, with a slightly peasant air about it as familie their bundles and iheir string bags : Is the indictment of Soviet material standards too severe? Are we in the We dsessed with superficial thir Time may show the superiority of the new Soviet man, but heré and now," On a strictly materia! level, he comparison is be. lized man and a cal. tween a civi low boy Walkout Felt i S wait pahently. with! sion on Highway 28 near the Jack and Jill Restaurant Satur- day afternoon cost Terence Douglas Kuch, 1 Nassau street, $40 to his vehicle, Driver of the other car.was Alexander Pres- ton 381 Mary street, Oshawa, It received extensive front end damage. Const. Rossmore Hen- dricks of the Peterborough de- t In Flogging tachment investigated. DETROIT (CP)--Two subur- | Teachers Face School Board j j ban Southgate teachers accused of flogging the son of ane of ithem have been told to appear 'Provocation' | } before the suburb's school jboard Monday for a "reap-four praisal" of their contracts. CAPSULE NEWS MP Will Power Off At Pickering Power was off in Pickering Village and a small area to| ARNPRIOR, Ont, (CP)--J. J, the south for two hours early|Greene, Liberal MP for Ren ithis morning. The Oshawa Pub-|frew. South, said Tuesday he \lie Utilities Commission report-/Will donate his salary increase) ed fuses blown at the Picker-|to service clubs and charitable ing hydro substation and "'iso- institutions for welfare work un-| lated .service breaks" in the) til the old age pension is in| district, creased by the promised $10 a Most of the damage from/month, In a_ statement Mr,| Saturday's severe storm has Greene said the recent pay in. inow been repaired, The Bell/creases for MPs had been neces- Telephone Co, said a few wires/sary, he did not feel he should were down due to falling trees,|/vote himself a salary boost, District Hydro crews report:| & --_ ed several lightning (blown) Fo rer4 yo Fa tee ng tuses) calls, The Uxbridge de-i4. United States have agreed | } Janetville and Scugog Island,|the allocation of frequency mod- said "isolated complaints were|Uation broadcasting stations on received." oy -- Ps Pecte ms ae 1» jn Tuesday, Use of FM broadcast. eee ee reat eeaunaay ine channels by Canada and the lwith poles down following "a United States within 250 miles jof the internaticnal border is little bit of a twister. igoverned by a 1947 agreement, Prince Albert farmer Les Bea- APPOINTED TO BBG cock said his grain was blown down but not ruined, Hail was} OTTAWA (CP)--Ottawa law- Coyne, 44, a jlarly Scugog Island | Rhodes scholar, | pointed to the Board of Broad-| " feast. Governors, it was an- Quinte Club nounced Tuesday by the office |Fowler royal commission on Ousts Petes |broadcasting in 1956 and 1957, INDUSTRIALIST DIES Belleville Kenmors shutout), BANFF, Alta. (CP)--Robert t ffive senior Lakeshore|!2s here Monday, He was a for. ~onat ots Poe semifinals in|™er president of General Petro- three straight games, Kenmors|!eums Corporation in the U.S. now meet the Ajax-Oshawa win-|He retired in 1961 as senior vice- Asseltine pitched four-hit ball ect : - ifor Belleville, fanning 10 as he beg hd roy a Institute jwalked four and had fine sup- gy in , | | OFFER MISSILES Doug Stabler and Wayne) NEW DELHI, India (Reuters) jwhiffing three and issuing six for defence against possible Chi. jwalks nese attacks, diplomatic sources | Kenmors strack for four runs/ said Tuesday, The offer was re- in the fourth inning on four) ported to have been made to the! ter and Mavety, They added a/recently visited Moscow, pair in the fifth om two more] pa ai i WILL RAISE SHIP | ) t i wenemaen oars Walks and hits by Mavety and! Qumagc (CP)--Owners of the copay 22,683-ton ore carrier Tritonica, | in several innings but were unab) |33 lives, said Tuesday the ship jwill be raised. The Tritonica Brian Thrower led the losers) Went down in 64 feet of water lat bat with two for four, Shrubb/2fter colliding with the 6,000-ton jand Rowe each getting one in British freighter Roonagh Head. |No one aboard the British ship sick animals white ne } cost me the equivalent of FORT ERIE ENTRIES as the Negro jrace," THURSDAY, AUG. & 190 FIRST RACE -- $2500 maiden claiming.,Gramp's Pride, Olttfach 112 Purse $2500 tor Dyoar-olds, } 1-16 miles. Winsmanshin. No Boy 11? Mary Elizabeth, Harrison 107 }Moktana Flight, No Boy 112 Viprazon, No Soy 12 Wings of Flight, Turcotte (A)X13 Praiamore, Fitzsimmons 107 Mecalla S.. No Boy 18 Tiny. Gailey Na Girfields, Simpson 2X100 In a council, S: around the perimeter to keep the whites out of the northwes! section and the biacks out of the white section." is tasty and reas- By ADAM KELLETT-LONG reported in the area, particu-/yer John M, has been ap- fof State Secretary Pickersgill. jMr, Coyne was counsel to the Presta Heer Lee Minckler, 63, a California erage Boge ds industrialist, died while holiday- Iner for the league title. president of Mobi! Oil Company and was elected chairman of the port. Rowe split mound duties for)Russia has offered India Petes, giving up nine hits,/ ground - to - ground air missiles walks, and hits by Elliott, Hun-jIndian defence mission which | Petes threatened . jwhich sank in the St, Lawrence preci gp © © PUS) River July 20 with the loss of iTWO IN FOUR , ' | Hunter and Mavety each as hurt Mrs. Catherine Trebing, 33,\tanged out two safe blows in ANNOUNCE TRANSFER , though two Pepdeietct ; me _|_ PEKING (Reuters) -- Com-\whose I-yearold son, Jamesitour tries for the winners. in seaming pecks, nearly $1 SHOES EXPENSIVE Ladies' shoes cause anguish. ) Provocation" the unprec.| jedented dipismatic incident here! munist China was considered David, was the victim, and certain today to interpret as a/Mrs, Edith Bates, 37, both have ecady signed contracts for o4 Tuesday when the Russian, East ' : Howard European and Mongolian aMm-|th Allen, president et! Lichee Nut, No Boy 112 A--R. Ginn enc T. E. Hays entry A really chic pair--the best are He said the officers woul - 1d cers would re ifrom Italy and Britain--cost be. FIFTH RACE -- Central Railway Club MAin e from dusk until > Aliewances. Purse $250) for 2yearcits. dawn 1 the ranist cap <n = Ay, rubles, in the ike Ga heen On tured. The policemen, many of S°"™ 30 to $65 or about ae meen hee Geamiien cliteuas jhalf the average monthiy indus-| Free Quest, Dalfor 10? armed and patrolled the egnt-/ira wage. Cheap Russian shoes/ by 10-block section under orders| 2° allure and don't stand up | to hard wear SECOND RACE -- $3500 ciniming, foal wicxory Helfer, No Boy 119 8 im Canada, Purse $1900 for year-olds. agics Ecscn, Harrison 167 ' to let pass only those who could Nylon coats would h had to atten 1 hnrous Lae ae a to reg brought "any price" a few Meraris, McComb 112 ha women have been /SC2°S ago but synthetic models Angela's Niece Turcotte {A)X17? A--Wingfirids Farm entry QUINELLA BETTING ne OW Avaiable are much 'The tntest has. cheaper. the old shopping np scramble is losing seme of i ay morning. There mca . = were two other attempted rapes. CeSPeTation now that more During the last severa}/S00ds ate becoming available there have been at least}, But the housewife's round is ht other rapes reported anq/'!!! tedious. In most stores you! numerous attempts _UP to determine the price Hallandale is a city of about of the article; line up to obtain 10,000 15 miles from Miami your ticket from the cash.er: isebahiacemcaimc --------jand then go back te the first line g pick up what you wante Bronze, Fimpson XW? is Srew Bright, Ledioanc 119 Wanless, No Boy 11 Miss Speedy G., Harrison 11) Moor Park, Uyryama 118 Fippin Floyd, Turcotte X18 Tiny Frott. Harrison 1) dure's Choice, Burton 15 Jonityn, No Boy (A)IT Cxl Jewel, 5. Parsons XKKWS O-Seven Deol, Fitzsimmons | Cherlie's Pak, Ditttach (A) 18 Roysl Heavy Man, Potts 1) Guiding Wave, Rodinson Abe Elig) = ss SIXTH RACE -- Welland County Day sa Allowance. Purse $2000 for S-yearoids ang TAPCd in up, Bdout 7? furlongs (turf course) Loch Ness, No Boy {A}1T! Crafty Lece, No Boy 12 Absent? Son, No Boy 16 Red Sali, Dittach (A) European Flight, Male 116 Roceci Roque No Boy 16 Mystere, Lanoway 136 Ramsay Qed, McCom> 6 ono, Simmpsor XI it t it King enc A. and & THIRD RACE -- $500 Ciaiming Purse S200 for Ryearolds. Se Fors. F Jive Girl, Turcotte x14 Neobie Score, No Boy 11 Cat Fever, Wallace (A) SEVENTH RACE -- Dr. Henry Kenwel HOSPITAL REPORT Claiming $90.000. Purse $2590 for dear he Soviets may Oe Tiger Dance, Balley Guy the Tramp. Hale |} Beosting. No Boy (8) Rovers Pride, J. Parsons (A) 17 Starator, Turcotte KIT a is arsons 1% Fat Way, Tor Lanoway "2; Em: r surgery and thro . Se The 'ast a&--J. 4. Bell, BD. M. Davis Jr. and 1, Gusher entry 3 @--J. W. Smallwood end L. Ehriick entry POURTH RACE S4500 Purse S20 tor F-yeeroics » o ca 3 ® cat- therapy, COVER m. few exciiing The structures | 3 rated and the boa: pear claiming. 5 ond wp. g of ever eve i during)/one's head, regardiess of how it ooks. radio, Friday ights Punencen. Worcee tAIKUA nig tee TR iAugust and September. </at the Hiroshima q Mongolian counsellor stayed aked aj* bassadors walkel out on a mass! political rally The Russian ambassador and his supporters walked out when eking's vice-mayer, Wan Li, accused Russia of "selling out the interests of world peace" by Signing the partial nuclear test-| ban treaty with the United States and Britain It was the third such Russian protest in six days--one being anti - bomb conference this week and the other in Peking Aug. 1 when two Russian newspaper men wacked out of the same hall that the ambassadors left Tues-| ay The Soviet, East German, Pol-) jish, Czech, Hungarian, Roman- ian and Bulgarian ambassadors walked out, leaving no represen- tative behind.) The Mongolian ambassador also left but the Bhs the hall The Chinese press today com metely ignored the walkout a? al rally in honor' af rime Minister Abdi Ra.'* shia Ali Shermarke of the So- j li Republic GOOD FOOD . Lunch, Dinner ? A.M. te 2 P.M, 5:30 P.M. to 8 P.M. Hotel Lancaster e Southgate community schoo! district board said Tues- day the move had been sug- gepfed at a meeting night following the "' le publicity" in the case Earlier Monday the women pleaded not guilty on a felon us assault charge. Police whipped with a leather belt and a braided plastic whip by both! women afier he ran away from home. Welts were raised on his head, face, neck, legs arms and sides STARTED INDUSTRY Canada's first tire factory was built in Toronto in 1899. EYE EXAMINATIONS PHONE 723-4191 by appointment F. R. BLACK, O.D. 136 SIMCOE ST. NORTH rN a: KINDNESS BEYOND PRICE, YET WITHIN 3b; Gilroy, said the boy was} OTTAWA (CP)--Group Capt. Richard L. Denison, 45, af Strat. ford and Winnipeg has been transferred to Metz, France, as isenior air staff officer at the } Petes: Driscoll, 2b; Thrower, j3b; Whitehill, cf; Foley, cf; |Gatfield, I); Shrubb, ss; Rowe,/ M, p; Taylor, rf; O'Donnell, c; jStabler, p; Ayotte, 1. Donate Raise To Charity FIRE BURNS BLOCK ASBURY PARK, NJ. (AP)= Fire roared along a full block of boardwalk Tuesday destroy- ing beach-front establishments and damaging this resort city's huge convention hall, No injur ies were reported, Officials esti- mated damage at $840,000, SUIT DISMISSED SANTA MONICA, Calif. (AP) A judge dismissed a Philippine dancer's paternity suit against Marlon Brando Tuesday on the basis of blood tests, The tests showed Brando could not have fathered the five - month . old daughter of the dancer, Marie Cui, 25, her lawyer, Bernard Co hen, said. TOURISTS LEAVE MONTREAL (CP) -- Thirty- five British tourists stranded in Canada left Montreal Tuesday on a chartered Caledonian Air. lines flight, The group was stranded when the Piccadilly Club of Toronto, which chart. ered the flight, went bankrupt and was unable to pay the tour ists' fares. A similar stranded in Britain is a | to arrive in Canada later aboard Trans-Canada Air Lines flights, SEE CLEOPATRA LONDON (AP) Prince Charles and Princess Anne, ac companied by a detective, saw the movie Cleopatra Tuesday night. A detective always ac companies the royal children in public, but his presence in the theatre served a double pur. pose, Cleopatra has an A--for adult -- certificate in Britai meaning that children under } can be admitted only when ac- companied by an adult, Charles is 14. Anne is 12, NOINING HUSBAND LISBON (AP)--Mrs, Georges Bidault passed through Lisbon Tuesday on her way to join her husband, the exiled former French premier, She said she was going to Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, in response to a wire from Bidault, one of President de Gaulle's bitterest critics. But she said she didn't know where her husband would meet her. COSMOS SENDING DATA MOSCOW (AP) -- The Soviet Union's 19th unmanned Cosmos Satellite is sending scientific data to earth, Moscow radio re- ports. The satellite, launched Tuesday, was reported orbiting the earth at a maximum height of 382 miles and a minimum -- of 167 miles, The Soviet mon sent up its first Cosmos March 16, 1962, STARTED IN INDIA Chess is believed to have om iginated in India at least 13 cen- turies ago. |RCAF's Air Division headquar- | BELLEVILLE -- Locke, cf; ters. RCAF headquarters, in| |Folwell, rf; Eltiott, ss; Hunter. making the announcement Tues-/ 3b; Weston, Ib; day, said that Group Capt. Den-/ Brailey, If; Assel- ison left his previous position as rke, 2b. commanding officer of the| 000 000 900 @ 4.2 RCAF Station a; North Bay last! 000 420 Ox 6 9 1 | Month, | i | PETES | 1 Bellev'l 1 j | SHORGAS HEATING & APPLIANCES | heed aad ACCUSED REMANDED BOWMANVILLE (Staff -- Magistrate R Baxter remanded Neal Kerr, RR 1, Nestleton, to Aug. 20, Tuesday On charges of rape and in- decent assault. CALL OR SEE DIXON'S FOR OIL FURNACES SERVING OSHAWA OVER 3@ YEARS 24-HOUR SERVICE 313 . LBERT ST. | MWY. BOUT: Oar arT=nere SPECIALISTS : SUMAN epee Wil BE CLOSED FOR VACATION FROM Reel pees Use AUG. 5 to AUG. 10 728-6206 323 King St. W. Reopening Aug. 12 J CLEAN YOUR FURNACE TODAY FREE TO CUSTOMERS cau PERRY 723-3443 DAY OR NIGHT Commercial The established, reliable Gee Decler in ,our eree. 31 CELINA ST. {Corner of Athol) 728-9441 ee ere OSHAWA'S ORIGINAL CARPET CENTRE ot Nu-Woy, compet end broad. toom hes been o specialty for 18 years . _ . with thousand: of yerds on displey to select trom, PHONE 728-4681 NU-WAY RUG CO. LTD. 174 MARY ST.

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