to THE OSHAWA TIMES, Pridey, November 6, 1964 29--Automobiles For Sale CLASSIFIED - ADVERTISING (DID (Continued from Page 19) YOU Ze KNOW? THAT WITH REASONABLE 'CREDIT YOU CAN NOW *|OWN A CAR OF YOUR CHOICE. THREE ROOM apartment, unfurnished, Cree leery Bees eee heat included, Nowly remodelled and decorated, 725-9270, MODERN two bedroom basement apert- Brin, oh Te ee acs waar et evelieble. December' 'at, adults pet Apply apartment 2. cers Sac teitio SmiteY: One bedroom .|@ NO DOWN PAYMENT @ TOP TRADE IN ALLOWANCE FOR YOUR PRESENT CAR @ TERMS TO SUIT. YOUR} BUDGET Sa" Rerrtgeretor, stove loom. Available December 1. TWO-BEDROOM basement apartment, ate bathroom, working couple theoterred: Telephone. 725-4548, whitey -- Cnebesronn 'apartment, In yo Porgy range and lie raga ne Hg aed monthly. Avail Seer 1, Telephone Whitby -- 5 aineageal ROOMS and bath, fe entrance. Working couple Nga oo i *sacksorn Avenue or 725-0210. 1UR-ROOM apartment, available No- 7, bgt antag Close fo north GM. Parking. Phon CONSOLIDATE ALL YOUR BILLS WITH LESS MONTHLY PAYMENTS stove EYE IT! "aie hate TRY IT! BUY IT! efouple preferred. reed ong -- N10 | monthly. . Telephone 723- pIVISION STREET, 15: s at tai room apartment. Refrigerator and : ange. 'Aaults og jo ly. imme- oneeeonson carta newly deco- Bates. Couple preferred. Heat and utill- ties supplied. Immediate possession. Tele- phone 728-9632 before 3 p.m. GLIDDON AVENUE Central. Three rooms, $85. monthly, unfurnished. Tele i@ 728-6094. SHREE-ROOM apartment, clean and Wright. Middle aged couple preferred, $75 imonthly, Telephone 725-3947 or apply 180 Mi IEATED four-room apartment, ali "Menlences, newly decorated. Call 725-6741 'br 668-8197 after 6 p.m. Pt teed FOUR-ROOM apartment fe pedroom, in apartment bu! ps ee we Apartment 9 or .tele- phone 7: anTeY = lew one-bedroom apartment In poo hygecre Moulding. Range, pa toeaid for washing bay 8 iar Adults poly. hag i Whitby, 668-: $'WO-BEDROOM apartment i 'apart- and Pampered ay fo South GM. Avail- November 15. For more Information. Fall 778-4866. fey. snrnh suitable for respectable unfurnished, ¢ contrat ly located. After 6.20, telephone 728- PORT PERRY -- Se Available heated apartment. $ Telephone 725-2682 between 9 a. p.m. LANSDOWNE DRIVE, two bedrooms, @hird floor of tri-piex. Avaliable Decem- ber 1. Balcony, parking. Aduits pre oe $115. Write box 52, Oshawa imes SIMCOE '64 PONTIAC, SUPER SPORTS CONVERTIBLE Demonstrator. V-8 automa- tic, power steering, power brakes, very low mileage. Still under warranty. F ° e '64 PONTIAC, PARISIENNE, 4-DOOR HARDTOP V-8 power steering, power brakes. Only 6,000 miles. Still under warranty. '63 PONTIAC, LAURENTIAN 4-DOOR V-8 automatic, power steer- Ing, power brakes. In show- room condition. '62 CHEVROLET, 4-DOOR 6 cylinder, er steering, Grey with real beauty! '60 CHEVROLET, BEL AIR 2-DOOR 6 cylinder, automatic, ideal family ear! acniaiy| immediate- .m. and STREET SOUTH, 281 one-bed- ment 1, Marina 25--Rooms for Rent ATTRACTIVELY FURNISHED ROOMS Available in private home. Call between 5 and 7 p.m. 82 PARK RD. N. 728-8671 FURNISHED room. Private bath end pri- vate outside entrance. By the week or toy 668-2037. automatic pow- power brakes. red interior, A TWO furnished rooms, for 2 gentlemen only, lerge bedroom, twin beds. Separete, kitchen, Parking space. Telephone 725-1904. an ne ag Eng gentlemen, mbm oC SD CHEVROLET, THREE furnished bedrooms, single, pri- vate entrance, eos -- end, $7. weekly, 'Telephone 723- SINGLE AND Daune ve rooms; -- " desired. Apply 25 Division thal FURNISHED front room, floor, twin beds, sult gentieman, or hag ong wilting to share. Apply 25 Brock East, 723-2819, FURNISHED room for rent, Close to Osh- awa Shopping Centre. Lady preferred. Telephone 728-3690. An Standard i ia with matching interior. '59 OLDSMOBILE, 4-DOOR with all power. beauty on four wheels. A BLOOR East, 122, three rooms for rent Telephone 728-6167 before 8 p.m. FURNISHED ". em sult GM 'em-| ployee. Apply Ritson Road South or} telephone. 7: TWO or three rooms, unfurnished, _pri- vate washroom, apply 322 Albert Street. Telephone 725-8365. FURNISHED room, 1 Seatiemen, ~Ginem|57 IMPERIAL ployees, Telephone 723- | CHRYSLER, FURNISHED room In q sai home, gentie- Loaded with every possible man preferred. 574 Crerar Avenue. } 6 extra, Black with matching 2 Room and Board interior. This car must be ONE- OR TWO-BEDROOM furnished| seen and driven to be appre- apartment urgently needed in Whitby or! cioted Highway No. 2. Telephone 668-3667. from 8 to 5. ROOM and board for two gentlemen. Close to downtown and north GM; 29 El- gin E. Telephone 728-3643, PRIVATE. Room and board in beautiful @ for retired. $100 monthly, Telephone! Stouttvitie 640-111 0. ANTED: Room and board for two pr pre- eschool children. Telephone 725-1665. WHITBY -- Central location; large dov- ble room; single beds; good food; lunches packed; parking; TV. Telephone 668-4928. {WINDSOR STREET, 206 -- Room anc and) {board for two, five-day week. ironed work-! rs preferred. Telephone 725-6409. | | | | '60 CHEVROLET, 4-DOOR V-8 hardtop. A reol catcher! '60 KARMANN GHIA, | SPORTS CAR CONVERTIBLE Radio, etc, A real beauty! 59 PONTIAC, LAURENTIAN 4: DOOR Automatic, 6 cylinder. Ready for the road '56 VOLKSWAGEN, si Tak 55 CHEVROLET, eye 'BOM AND BOARD for Tania: will- ing to share, close to bus stop. Simcoe! South. Telephone 725-8450. iTWO SINGLE rooms and board. Lunches| packed. Close to south General Motors. jrelephone 723-1878 after 6. ROOM. and board for gentiemen, double} frooms, single beds, lunches packed. Apply | 5) Brock Street East. Telephone) 728-3405 | '27--Wanted to Rent iWO-BEDROOM house, Oshawa 9723-7307 "URGENTLY needed to rent -- 3 bedroom 'house, unfurnished, in Oshawa for family with 2 school-age children, $110-$120 per) 'month, 728-4092 after 6 p.m. THREE OR Four "bedroom house. Abie to pay $80 to $90 monthly. Close to Cath-| ' otic School. Telephone 728-6688. z marge BEL AIR, 4-DOOR. 29--Automobiles For Sale | * 96 Bown <= 68 Weekly y riv A KELLY DISNEY iia ies USEDCARLTD. 56 FORD, 200 DUNDAS ST. EAST V-8 4-door. Turquoise with WHITBY -- 668-5891 grey: interior. $5 Down $5 Weekly. Drive it away. Cars bought and sold Liens paid off | ~ or small| Telephone} ~~ apartment or vicinity. Trade up or down Always t top quality TILDEN CAR AND TRUCK RENTALS teed at SALES LTD. All Makes and Models) | 3 Locations to Choose From 146 Brock St. North | 512 Brock St. North Whitby 668-3331 CALL 725-6553 14 Albert St. 1963" VOLKSWAGEN 1500 series, under 17,000 actual miles. One owner since new. Call Whitby 668-3368. | 1959 VOLKSWAGEN, excellent running! condition; 4 good tires, radio, Needs little body work. Quick salel $450 cash. Phone between 9 - 5 p.m. Géoff. Hussey, Edi- torial Dept. Oshewe Times, 723-3474, Pa 29--Automoblies For Sale 31--Automobile Repair SABYAN MOTOR SALES LTD. VOLKSWAGEN Sales and Service New ond Used Cars. 334 Ritson Rd, S$. 723-3461 Open Evenings. VOLVO SALES AND SERVICE JAKE and BILL'S TRANSMISSION specialists, sions are our cy a pees North. Phone 728-7339. BARGAINS All. Chev., Installed 4-way Flasher kit .. Ignitian Wire Kit :... DOC'S AUTO 1600 King E, -- 728-7781 (All other acc. 10% off with this coupon) $2. Pontiac mufflers $7.77 Oshawa & District Cerebal. Palsy Parent Council BAZAAR For Crippled $2.95 ; transmis- 038 Simcoe GARAGE General Repair and Auto-Electric Service 449 Ritson Road South 35--Swap and Barter BATHTUBS, cabinets, pressure systems, jaundry furnace, fittings, piping, H. Chinn, 208 Hillside Avenue. Children Sat., Nov. 14th, 2 P.M. $20; toliets, basins, sinks, Oshawa 728-0921 SPOT CASH PAID FOR Good clean cars. Trade up or down, Liens paid off. DODD MOTOR SALES 314 PARK RD. SOUTH 723-9421 e er CAMPIN MOTORS Temporary Location Meade's Sunoco Service Power Store Entrance 588 King St. East 1942 BUICK two-door hardtop, chocolate | brown, radio, power steering, power \brakes, In good condition. Telephone} | Whitby 668-8410. Seer: 2 | |1964 PONTIAC Laurentian, igreen, power steering, rat |tights. plus extras, $2,750. 725-0142, | eylinder| »_ back-up) Telephone | oe § METEOR, automatic sedan; 1957) Meteor, A-1 condition, new paint; | | Packard sedan; 1955 Chevrolet sedan:) 1954 Chevrolet Bel Air. offers refused. Trades accepted. Meteor, 1950 Pontiac. Good transpor-| ee $75 each. Apply 509 Bloor | after No reasonable) 1953} 1960 .ry 'custom coach, 6 "eylinder | with radio, overhauied with new recon- ditioned motor. immaculate, like new. One owner. Call Whitby 668-3368. | 1962 RAMBLER 6 custom sedan, private. | Spotiess throughout. Excellent condition. | Extras. Call 723-7719. 1962 PLYMOUTH Savoy, four-door 6 "cyl inder standard, one owner, low mileage. Best offer. Dunbarton 839-2896. 1963 FORD Galaxie, V-8 sedan, auto- matic, radio, power steering, brakes, white walls, 11,500 miles, Fully equipped. Under warranty. Telephone 728- 8612. 1964 PONTIAC Laurentian (7569), low mileage, extra equipment,. price $2650. Call. 725-6287 1963. CHEVROLET sedan, 6 ~eylinder, automatic, radio. Immaculate, One 9 64. | since new. Low mileage. Call Whitby 668- | 3368 11960 BEDFORD '-ton van, oversize tires. | | Must sell, Best offer. Telephone 725-8628.) 1964 8 cylinder Bel Air Chev. A-1 condi-| | |tion. Fully equipped. 7,500 original miles. Financing available. Telephone 723-7564, USED CAR PARTS, spindles to make| trailers, also used tires. 509 Bloor Street| East after 4, 723-2281. 1953 PONTIAC sedan. Cheap. Apply 319) Annapolis Avenue. Telephone 725-8602. | 1964 OLDSMOBILE F85, black, 4-door, V8, automatic transmission, radio, Other --_ 36--Legal oe Estate 1, ARTHUR N. BRODOFSKE, 290 Albert Street, Oshawa, will not be responsible for any debts contracted in my name, SIMCOE ST. UNITED CHURCH MEMORIAL HALL, OSHAWA Home Baking, Aprons, Knick- Knacks, Knitting Apparel, Christmas Booth, COME OUT AND SUPPORT | A WORTHY CAUSE BINGO ORANGE TEMPLE | SATURDAY, NOV. 7 7:30 P.M. 20 Games -- $8 Share the Wealth | 4--$40 Jackpots to go | 1--$150 Jackpot to go | Children Under 16 Not Admitted NOTICE TO" CREDITORS AND OTHERS IN THE ESTATE OF ANDREW HENRY GLECOFF, deceased All persons having -- claims agoinst the estate of the said Andrew Henry Glecoff, late of the City of Oshawa, in the County of Ontario, Merchant, deceased, who died on or about the 28rd day of May, 1964, are required to file proof of the same with the undersigned solicitors for the Executrix of the estate of the said deceased on or before the 13th day of November, acne v COMING EVENTS |Promotion Of. Frame Housing Reaches Dynamic Phase By CAROL KENNEDY LONDON (CP)--The Anglo- Canadian drive to promote tim- ber-frame housing in Britain, now entering its most dynamic phase, has already produced dividends for Canadian lumber exporters. Softwood exports to Britain in the first seven months of 1964 jumped to $43,033,000 from $28,- 010,000 in the comparable pe- riod of 1963--an increase of 51 per cent. Spruce in particular-- widely used as a "'carcassing" material in timber-frame hous- ing -- showed a dramatic in- crease, more than double the 1963 figure. Britain still buys the bulk of her lumber from Scandinavia and the Baltic countries, with Canada commanding about a quarter of the market. But with the growing interest here in Ca- nadian building methods and materials, Canadian go vern- ment officials see exciting pos- sibilities of expansion. "l am confident that we will jcontinue to increase our share of the market,"' said B. C. But- ler, Canadian commercial min- ister in London. "We really hit the jackpot two years ago," :said Butler, ex- plaining how two fortuitous cir- cumstances helped jolt Britons --and- the British government-- into an awareness of Canadian- 1964, after which date the said Executrix will proceed to distribute the said estate, having regard only to the claims of which she shall then have notice DATED at Oshawa this 21st day of October, 1964. CREIGHTON, DRYNAN, MURDOCH & VICTOR, 5 Simcoe Street North, Oshawa, Ontario. Solicitors for Zenia E. Gle- coff, Executrix of the said SUNNYSIDE PARK MONSTER BINGO TO-NIGHT CLUB CAMELOT | King St. E.--one block east of | city limits. opposite "Bad Boys" $1200 in Prizes Early Bird games at 7:45 Jackpot Nos, 58 ond 51 | Admission 1.00 FALL DANCE- FOR SALE BY TENDERS Two acres with three bedroom frame house, Maple Grove Rd, North, Darlington Town- ship. Apply V:L.A. Box 1270, |3aturday, November 7 Federal Bldg., Bowmanville, Ont. by November 10th, | DNIPRO HALL 1964. i 681 Edith Street Orchestra, Buffet, Bar and | Surprises _ | on or after this date, November 4, 1964,|~ . pac tag = wrisad | |by anyone, without my written consant'| --Arthur Brodofske. ST. JOHN'S PARISH BINGO | extras, 5,700 miles. Ti 728-1408. 1932 CHEVROLET coupe, partially re re stored, new battery, licence, $550. and drive away. Apply Howard Motors, Kent! COMING EVENTS Corner Bloor E. & Simcoe | [Every Fri. at 7:45 P.M. Street North, Whitby. | USED CAR PARTS, spindies to make! trailers, also used tires. 509 Bloor Street East after 4, 723-2281. | 1960 CHEVROLET, , cylinder, r, automatic. Black with silver and-biue interior, radio, windshield washers. In excellent condi- tion, Call 723-7916. 19%3 PONTIAC Laurentian, four - door sedan, V8 automatic, power equipped, radio. Telephone 703-5426. |1962 ENVOY custom, new fires, low mile-| age, one owner. $995 or. best offer. 723- 4613 } evenings Whitby 668-8245. 1960 CHEVROLET 2-door Biscayne 6/ Hyon Standard transmission, 2-tone. in good condition. Telephone 723-7914. 1959 VAUXHALL Victor, excellent body and engine; good tires, radio.. Only $425. 1128' Cloverdale 728-6134. 1955 PONTIAC, automatic, excellent me- chanically, radio, no rust, good tires.| Dial Bowmanville 623-3177. 1956 FORD hardtop, 6 cylinder. Excellent | condition, $275. After 6 p.m. Ajax 942- 1313. 1954 GMC %4-ton pick up truck, good | motor and tires. Reasonable, Telephone! 723- 3924, a Ae 1964 CHEVROLET convertible, red wit black interior, 4-speed transmission. 90 Burke Street. 1959 CHEVROLET station | wagon | A-1 con- dition, 1960 18% foot cabin cruiser. Cash or trade. Both reasonable. Telephone 668-4142 1959 PONTIAC, radio, good mechanical condition. $650. Telephone 728-3142. 1961 FORD, new paint, radio, four new white walls, 8 cylinder, standard. $1,900 or best offer. 623-5263. 1960 CHEVROLET convertible, one owner, automatic 6 cylinder, radio, good tires $1295 after 6 evenings. Call 723- 9833. 1964 VAUXHALL Vive deluxe, white with red upholstery. Used. four months. $1350 terms. Telephone 723-2027. 1957 PONTIAC two-tone, tinted giass,| jglass, radio, standard transmission, A-1| | condition, $575, Telephone 725-2879 1958 FORD, cylinder, custom radio, |white wall tires. Body and motor in A-1 | condition, $595. Dial 942-6697. 1961 CHEVROLET Biscayne, 2-door auto- matic, good condition. Private. After 5 |p.m., telephone 725-5720. |1938 BUICK Speciai sedan. Good running order, licensed. Best cash offer or will accept trade of anything useful. Phone | 725-7129. |1958 CHEVROLET, 6 cylinder, standard, | radio, perfect condition; also pair of fen. der skirts and clips for 1964 Chevelle. | {Phone . 725-5572 or apply 97 Durham Streef '30--Auitomobiles 'Wanted CARS WANTED Buying a New Car? Sell your used car to Talk "Cash" to .the Car Dealer ond 'SAVE' TED CAMPIN MOTOR 723-4494 Res "Ted New c 2 725-5574 $ ALL. CASH $ For clean cars, or trucks we deal up or down. Liens paid NICOLS MOTORS LTD. 146 BROCK ST. NORTH Across from Royal Hotel WHITBY 668-3331 OSHAWA AUTO PARTS and Auto witece ers, 1175 Nelson Street, want cars for wrecking. Telephone 725-2162 or 723- as LAKESHORE Auto Wreckers want cars jfor wrecking. Highest prices paid. 200 |Wentworth East, 725-11 lSHAW Auto Wrecking Co. cars bought, jparts for sale. Iron and metals bought, {89 Bloor Street East. 125-2301., | | | CASH, TRADE OR TERMS !|31--Automobile Repair NICOLS MUFFLERe General Repairs makes BRAKES to all 10 Bays to serve you |/KENT'S WESTERN |. TIRE SERVICE 145 KING W. 728-1607 OSHAWA tune-up Centre offers expert carburetor and auto electric service. 222 King Street West, 728-0817. XPERT brake service and Call 723-4233, Children Under 16 Not Admitted | R Ch £ fron! end|KEDRON UNITED CHURCH WOMEN, suspension alignment, 226 Celina Street.|Fall Bazaar and Tea, Saturday, Novem- | ber 7, 2.30 p.m. | mile north Five Points. 20 Games $10 and $15 Jackpot 58 Nos. $180. : Jackpots and Share the Wealth BAZAAR St. Peter's Anglican CHURCH (Corner Cedar & Thomas Sts.) Christmas, Harvest Bazaar. Sat., Nov. 7th 2:30. 'to 4:30 P.M, MONSTER BINCU Over $500 in Prizes Sat. Nov. 7th AT 8 P.M. style timber construction meth- ods. MISSION TO CANADA One was the problem of find- ing speedier methods of pro- jduction and construction to j|cope with the government's an- jnual housing target of 400,000 new homes--a target to which |Britain's new Labor adminis- |tration also is pledged. The sec- jond was the harsh winter of 1962-63, when shivering Britons began to ask how Canadians survived even. tougher condi- tions year after year. The answer to both problems was found by a British mission to Canada in June, 1963. A 16- member team of local govern- ment officials and timber-trade jand building experts, headed by [Sir Donald Gibson, a leading British architect and research director at the ministry of pub- lic works, toyred building sites across Cana@a. They returned {to Britain feeling Canada was 30 years ahead in the building business. Their report, which became a |government white paper, ex- |tolled the virtues of Canadian timber - frame construction, stressing its speed, labor-saving |qualities and warm, dry living conditions. The report also out- lined a three-phase program for getting the message across to British builders and home-buy- ers, based on a graduated in- troduction of demonstra- tion homes. DRY FROM START Privately, Gibson was re- ported to have said that if tim- ber-frame building did nothing else here it could help combat British rheumatism. In Brit- ain's masonry-built homes, con- densation from mortar and plaster has always been a prob- lem, producing chill, damp con- ditions in a new house. Long-suffering Britons buying newly built homes are resigned to waiting months for a house to "dry out." Canadian builders say the owner can move in the day the builder moves out. Insulation in timber - frame homes is three times better than in brick - and - mortar houses, cutting heating bills by a third. British laborers working on the demonstration sites are im- pressed by the ease of install- ing heating apparatus, plumb- ing and electrical wiring in the well-spaced timber side joists. They also are amazed to find how fast a timber framework goes yp. When the roof is on, the men work in the dry. Saving in labor is a partic- ularly strong : selling-point . for Too Much Blazing Away By Hunters TORONTO (CP) -- Careless deer hunters were blamed for causing most of the 29 forest fires burning Thursday in On-' tario. "There were 29 fires burning |- Wednesday and we extinguished 18 during the last 24 hours," said John Goodman of the lands and forests department's forest protection services. "That means 18 new fires started Thursday." Mr. Goodman said the fire hazard in the Pembroke area, where seven fires. were burn- ing, was high. He said six fires were burn- ing in the Parry Sound district, four near Lindsay and two near Kemptville where the hazard was rated as low. Careless hunters have caused most of the fires he said. GREENWOOD ENTRIES SATURDAY, FIRST RACE --- Purse $2000. ($2500). | Claiming. Three-year-olds and up. One and one-sixteehth Miles. | Niagara Drift, Stadnyk 113 West Four, Walsh 113 |By Command, Sutcliffe XXX106 | Auntie Nora, Harrison 110 | Viking Star, Harris X111 Hop Hop, Robinson 113 Secret Star, Dittfach 113 Tarpon Run, Parsons X108 Dark Gem, Parsons X105 ~ | Jessie B. Good, Armstrong 110 TRAIL RIDING YEAR-ROUND HAY & SLEIGH RIDES print obi lorses Boarde | LITTLE BUCKAROO RANCH | 725-2737 | BINGO FERNHILL PARK CLUB HOUSE WED., NOV. 4th an BIRD -- 7:30 P.M. games $6 each 1 ich fo" $15 - $20 - $30 Share the Wealth Free Admission--Door Prizes ST. GREGORY'S AUDITORIUM SIMCOE ST, NORTH ADMISSION 50 CENTS All Prizes Doubled on Admission Ticket HOLY CROSS BINGO FREE ADMISSION Friday, Nov. 6th 20 REGULAR. GAMES Seek To grate | Legalize 1 Game at $50.00 | 'SPECIAL JACKPOT s ,soinssne. | Abortions F ation | PLUS $10.00 each horizontal TORONTO (CP) --A resolu- line, |tion asking that abortions be jmade legal was passed almost SHARE-the-WEALTH |unanimously Thursday at a con- egular Jackpot $200 in 51 Nos. |yention of the Central Ontario $20.00 Consolation Area Women's Institutes. GOOD PARKING Addressed to the federal min- 7:45 P.M F : pet inka No CHILDREN rest health and justice, it "That the Criminal Code of OSHAWA Canada be amended to legalize LIONS CLUB abortion on grounds which would include criminal assaults WED. NIGHT and the health, both physical and mental, of the mother, and when carried out by a recog- $1,200 in cash prizes Jackpot Nos, 55 and 53 JUBILEE credited place." The nearly 400 delegates passed the resolution without M ITY Alexander Munro of the Toronto OTOR CIT |suburb of Scarborough. She told the delegates more than 75 per jada every year. She said abortion is danger- jous mostly because it has been |performed, only makes the op- jeration dangerous, makes crim-, jinals out of the innocent and 'BATON TWIRLING | CONTEST ot the O'Neill Collegiate SAT. NOV. 7th 9 A.M, to 5 P.M Under the direction of Irenie |committee, duly constituted and Idren Under 16 Not Admitted | know this has to come,' and that more than 1,000,000 are Horvey land futile because it does not when carried out in a duly ac- It. was introduced by Mrs. performed in the U.S. and Can- Come for an hour or 2 ond |prevent abortions from being see the majorettes perform AULTS 50c - CHILDREN 25c Glad Roman, No Boy 113 | Magic Shan, Inda 113 Also Eligible: Currytown, XXX113;_ Rubal Khali, Maxwell, Friend Willie, Robinson, 113. SECOND RACE -- Purse $2000 ($2500). | Claiming. Three-year-olds. One Mile. Royal Doctor, Dittfach 117 Guest Speaker, No Boy 112 | Popey, Leblanc 117 Future Time, Gubbins 116 Dean, 116; ~|Shere Khan, Armstrong 112 Jive Girl, Harrison 109 Dandier, No Boy 114 | Woodcote Park, Parsons X109 My First Duchess, Maxwell 114 Water Duck, No Boy 114 THIRD RACE -- Purse $1900. ($2500). Claiming. Three-year-olds and up. 7 Fur. longs. Bourbon King, manent WW | Rock Age, No Boy 1 | Basswood, No Boy ie Grey Beau, Gordon 122 Jacquilo, Harris X108 Cluny Miss, No Boy 110 Good Vibration, Remillard 116 Faithful Tom, Gordon 113 | Village Squire, Inda 114 FOURTH RACE -- Purse $1900 ($2500) Claiming. 7 Furlongs (Divn. of Third). | Three-year-olds and up. | Mystere, Walsh 116 Soe 's Method, Inda 122 Perky Lass, No Boy 113 Nagnac, Harris X114 | Glenspeed, Turcotte X108 | Well Now, Harris X11] Vogel's Victor, Dittfach 122 | Queens Courier, Leblanc 116 Real Black, No Boy | v2 i ¢ CAREER Mrs. William Woodman, $0, of Edmonton has been in business for 19 years. When she was 62, she entered the nized medical practitioner un- jder the authority of a medical discussion except for a com- FREE ADMISSION ment from the floor that "we cent of criminal abortions are performed on married women forced underground. | "The existing law is archaic provides a lucrative sideline for the guilty." chick hatchery business and now is a full-time working November 7 FIFTH RACE -- Purse $2100 ($3500). Claiming. Three-year-olds and up. and three-sixteenths Miles. | Mondigo, Inda 113 | Hereforall, No Boy 115 | Dark Red, Turcotte X105 | Raven Wing, Gomez 123 | King. City, No Boy 108 No Discard, Harris X112 (QUINELLA WAGERING) SIXTH RACE -- Purse $2600. 'Durban' | Allowances, Two-year-olds. 7 Furlongs. Saag Em-Please, aig 4 ea Bee Sea, No Boy 110 Sriple Alliance, Botnet 3 Echo Boy, Leblanc 119 od Psoatd Walsh 111 erscotch, Fitzsimmons 108 Celean Colonel, No Boy 114 | Victorian Era, Gordon 114 SEVENTH RACE -- Purse $10,000 Ai ed "Sandown Stakes". Thieevenrcoids and up. re me Sunny, No Boy 1 Runadir, Ditttech fe 14 |Canebora, Gomez 116 | Warriors Day, Fitzsimmons 114 | Brockton Boy, Robinson 109 | Golden Turkey, Harrison 107 Galindo, No Boy B-119 Gran Califa, No Boy B-119 Dr. Giddings, No Boy A-121 Doolin Point, Inda 119 Prince Dale, No Boy 119 One Ramuntcho, No Boy Belfort, Hale 113 Whiteborough, Armstrong 119 A--Willow Downs Farm Entry |B--North Star Ranch Entry B-117 EIGHTH RACE -- Purse $2700. "Car- | mel" pronenee: Three- and four-year-/ jolds. One Mile. Aged Dust, Smith 10 Gertrude Q., Fitzsimmons 112 Mr. T.F., Harris X110 |Milator, Dittfach 115 | Queen's Right, Harrison 105 Arctic Swirl, cotter tl We | Xerxes, Armstrong 118 | King of ek eae Leblanc 118 X--S5 Ibs. XX--7_ Ibs. mae. | XXX--10 Ibs. post TIME 1.0 P. M. WOMAN partner in the $75,000 enter- prise. Mrs, Woodman works eight hours a day, six days a -ichants of Bristol, the building trade in a country where six jobs chase every skilled bricklayer. The program outlined in the government white paper now is well under way. Three pairs of semi - detached demonstration homes opened to the public in late October and early Novem- ber--spaced across the country in Hertfordshire, Lanca- shire and Scotland. CANADIANS IN CHARGE The houses were built with Canadian materials under Ca- nadian government auspices with contributions from Cana- dian building-trade associations. Canadians also supervised the British labor force. One house of each pair was left unfinished to show its con- struction. Each pair will be donated to the local govern- ment authority. Other demonstration homes have been put up in Sussex by Canadian companies. The climax of the three-phase program--a 200-house project to demonstrate mass-output meth- ods,.with its own small on-site factory--still is in the works. Several sites have been sug- gested by the British govern- ment, It is possible that a new town will be chosen. The Wilson administration plans one in Wales, where a Canadian con- struction company already op- erates in Swansea. Some deep - rooted British | Prejudices about timber were | investigated by the 1963 mis- sion. Fire risk and wood-boring insects, attracted by damp wood, rated low in Canadian ex- perience -- and as a testing - ground for damp climatic con- ditions, areas of British Colum- |bia are similar to Britain. British insurance companies, however, do tend to charge higher rates for fire coverage in timber-framed houses than do their Canadian counterparts, This even applies to British branches of f Canadian firms. DEATHS By THE CANADIAN PRESS Toronto -- David Alexander Ross, 64, president and general manager of Canada Bread Company Limited, director of a number of other firms, past president of the Bakery Coun- cil of Canada and commander - of the Calgary Highlanders from 1943 to 1945 with the rank of lieutenant-colonel. Kelowna, B.C.--Owen Lewis Jones, 76, CCF member of Par- liament for Yale and Okanagan boundary ridings.from 1948 to 1957 and mayor of Kelowna from 1936 to 1939. Moscow -- Economist. Vasily Sergevevich Nemchinov, 70, a crusader for basic reforms in Soviet economic planning. Copenhagen--Prince Jacques of Bourbon-Parma, 42, brother- in-law of ex-king Michael of Romania and a member of the board of the Danish Motor Sports Association; in a high- way accident. Milan, Italy--Piero Malves- titi, 65, former member of the Italian cabinet who last year retired as head of the European Coal and Steel Community's high authority. Fredericton -- Dr. H. §&. Wright, 74, New Brunswick pro- vincial director of emergency health services and mayor of Fredericton from 1949 to 1957. North Bay--H. R. D. (Rolly) Graham, 56, manager of On- tario Hydro's northeastern re- gion. Toronto--David Korman, 84, Russian-born movie theatre op- erator in Northern Ontario until his retirement in 1957 and first Jewish mayor of Englehart, Ont. Red Bank, N..J -- Sterling Dutch Stryker, 68, who pitched big-league ball briefly for Bos- ton Braves and Brooklyn Dodg- ers and for most of his career in the minors with Montreal, Rochester and Newark in the International League. Grenville, Me.--Louis Oakes, 93, brother of the late Sir Harry Oakes. Four Letters By ED WALTERS ST, JOHN'S Nfld. (CP)--Ro- bert Thorne and Hugh Elyot, two obviously fearless sailor- fishermen - traders of Bristol, England, may have discovered Newfoundland three years' be- fore John Cabot's voyage of 1497. Thorne's son, also named Ro- bert, in a letter to Edward Lee, English Ambassador to Spain, written in 1527, said his father jand Elyot "were the discover- jers of the Newfound Landes. | Although the letter no longer exists, four copies of it, differ- jent in certain aspects including ithe spelling of names, survive. A doctor named John Dee had Thorne's letter transcribed and used it as a basis for a state- |ment of Elizabeth I's title to North America, The statement says in part: "Circa an, 1494. Mr. Robert 'Thorn his father, and Mr. El- yot of Bristow, discovered New- found Land." | The same statement mentions ie Cabot voyage of 1497, al- though it mistakenly names John Cabot's son Sebastian as |commander of the Mathew. Surviving records as pub- lished by the Hakluyt Society of England, a historical group concerned with early explora- tion, indicate that John Cabot knew of earlier discoveries of land almost directly west of {England but then thought to be ja northeast corner of Asia. |CALLED BRASIL Europeans of the time were not aware the American con- jtinent existed and the island discovered by Christopher Col- jumbus in 1492 was believed to be part of the Orient. Eight years ago, a letter writ- ten in 1497 by John Day, an Englishman, was discovered in the archives at Simancas, Spain. It appeared to have been sent to Columbus. Describing the land Cabot had explored, the letter says "it is considered certain that the cape of the said land was found and discovered in the past by the men from Bristol who found Brasil, as your lord- ship knows." The Isle of Brasil was the name given to a land which 15th - century adventurers be- lieved lay to the west. When Cabot first went to Bristol in 1495 the men there were firmly convinced of Brasil's existence. And some researchers read the evidence of early voyages to mean that mariners found a land in the west as early as 1480, Fishing ships from England, including Bristol, had for many}: years been making annual voy- ages to Iceland where their masters possibly heard tales of Lief Eriksen's voyage to Labra- dor and Newfoundland in the 11th century. In 1452 the Portuguese, who | traded regularly to Bristol, re- ported that a ship from the Azores tried to find land be- lieved to lie in the .northwest Atlantic but that it was beaten back by the winds. Starting about 1480, the mer- engaged largely in the Iceland fishing trade, willingly spent large sums of money fitting out ships to look for land to the west. It's unlikely they would have put up the money unless they were fairly certain the land existed. week and is 'usually the last out of the office." | --(CP. Photo) A merchant named John Jay was a part-owner of a ship that Of Discovery Of Newfoundland Remain for land to the west. She was commanded by John Lloyd, described as the, most expert mariner of England. However, after nine weeks of bad weather she was driven back to Ireland. On July 6, 1481, the ships George and Trinity left Bristol "to serch and fynde a certain isle called the Isle of Brasile." There is no record whether they found anything, but the Trinity is known to have re- »|turned since she shows in cus- toms records two years later. It's believed significant that the vessels each took 40 bushels of salt, too much for the crew to eat. As they were apparently not going fishing in Iceland, they may have expected to find fish elsewhere. FISHED ON BANKS Pedry de Ayala, @ Spanish representative in London, re- porting in 1498 on John Cabot's voyage, wrote to his king that Bristol had been sending two or three ships a year since 1491 in search of a land to the west. Some historians believe these voyages were actually fishing trips to the great banks off, Newfoundland but that the mer- chants simply didn't bother to spread word of the discovery. There is also some indication that Cabot may have taken with him in the Mathew mar- iners who had earlier made the voyage and that he was seeking to explore where they had merely fished. One such indication {s 'that Cabot noticed, but was appar- ently unconcerned by, a west- ward variation in the compass of 22 % degrees in mid-Atlan- tic, according to John Day's letter. The variation in Europe at the time was to the east &nd 'therefore a change to the west would ordinarily puzzle a Euro- hean_navigator. This appears to support the contention that he was not the first to venture into that part of the North Atlantic during | the | 15th _century. NEWS IN BRIEF PRESENTS BOOKS LAGOS, Nigeria (AP)--Cana- dian High Commissioner J. H. Cleveland presented $10,- 000 worth of books to Nigeria's new national library Thursday. Cleveland read a message of Prime Minister Pearson in a brief ceremony in the fibrany's reading roonr. 2 DIE IN CRASH CHERAW, S.C. (AP) -- Two military helicopters crashed in South Carolina Thursday, kill- ing two anmy captains and seri- qusly injuring six other service- ment, The helicopters were part of a force taking part in ma- noeuvres over a wide area of the Caro 'nas. SENDS GREETINGS KARACHI, Pakistan (Reut- ers) President Johnson's camel driver friend wired. him congratulations Thursday on his election. Bashir Ahmed vis an the United States as the gue of then Vice-President ee 7 after the two met on a road here while Johnson was visiting Pakistan in 1961, CLEO PAYING OFF HOLLYWOOD (AP) -- Twen- tieth Century-Fox says Cleo- patra, its $44,000,000 gamble is avproaching the break-even poim, "urthermore, says a stu-' dio spokesman, "it wil) definite- left Bristol July 15, 1480, to look ly make money,'