Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 8 Dec 1964, p. 17

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By BRENDA LARGE OTTAWA (CP) -- Canadian consumers don't know enough about how to manage~their in- comes, says one of Canada's leading home economists. Laura C. Pepper, who has 'lbeen chief of the agriculture '|department's consumer section '|for the last 25 years, says: "Today's consumers have a '\better knowledge of food prod- 'lucts and other consumer goods than they did 25 years ago. But I do not think young mar- Jlried couples are really prop- erly equipped to manage their '|incomes, "The tremendous growth of "|consumer credit, which I think is a very unhealthy trend, has made consumer buying a com- plicated business. I feel young people should be prepared for it through courses in high school." Miss Pepper, who retired in June, said in an _ interview there is a great deal more to be done in the field of con- sumer education, That's why she agreed to be an active member of the education .com- mittee of the Consumers' As- sociation of Canada, The com- mittee is exploring ways in which consumer education Consumers Lack Clues | On Income Says Economist might be combined with sec- ondary school subjects. NO LONGER PERSONAL A sprightly, blue-eyed woman with a lively enthusiasm for her life's work, Laura Pepper has spent 33 years helping ed:- cate consumers about Canada's agricultural products. She remembers her travels in 1931 as a young home eco- nomics demonstrator for the dairy branch of the agriculture department. In those days the branch handled all promotion' and research on dairy prod- ucts, "In those days I used to do a lot of personal lecturing at country fairs and at individual farm houses across the coun- try. We had a very personal re- lationship with housewives then and they were always eager to receive new recipes and ad- vice." This close relationship be- tween government and _con- sumer now has almost disap- peared, says Miss Pepper. "With the development of the mass media, most of our con- tact with the consumer is through television and radio, newspapers and magazines." Miss Pepper says she thinks producers today spend too much time and money on fancy packaging and gimmicks to Sell food "(Consumers want food that is safe, good to eat, good for them and at moderate prices." NAMED IN 1939 A native of Ottawa and grad- uate in home economics from Macdonald Institute in Guelph, Ont., in 1926, Miss. Pepper was put in charge of the new con- sumer section of the agricul- ture department in 1939. She began the job of building up a national advisory service on buying and using Canadian agricultural products which has continued to expand ever since. "When the section began in 1939 there were only three of us in the office. Today there is a network of home economists across the country and at peak times of the year our food in- spectors number as many as 30. During the Second World War, Miss Pepper's advice to consumers on how to make best use of tightly rationed foods earned her membership in t¥é Order of the British Empire, a decoration she received in 1946. In 1960 Mount Allison Univer- sity, Sackville, N.B., recog- nized her work in the field of home economics by conferring on her an honorary degree of Doctor of Laws. Today's TorontoS TORONTO 11 A.M. STOCKS By -The Canadian Press .. Toronto Stock Exchange--Dec. 8 (Quotations in cents unless marked $. z--Odd lot, xd--Ex-dividend, xr--Ex- rights, xw--Ex-warrants. Net change Is from previous board-iot closing sale.) INDUSTRIALS uo soNet Sales High Low a.m. Ch'ge 2060 $134 13 13 --% 995 $36 3% 199 (10 10 10 170. $84 8% B4--% Algoma 25 $67% 67% 677/0-- Ve Alumini 470 S$V%0' 31%0 31% + a Alum 4% pr 100 Alum 1 pr 215 $233 23 23 Anthes C pr 15$104 104 104 Arg C P pr 100 $13% 13% 13% Arg 250 pr 100 Arg 260 pr 75 Atlan 6 pr 200 Atl Sugar WO $18% 18% 18% + Ve Bank Mont 237 $68 67% 67% Bartaco 237 $5 5 5 = Bell Knit 200 450 450 450 +15 Bell Phone 1306 Bramalea 235 Brama w 350 Brazil 297 415 415 415 BA Oil 110 $34%4 34% M% BC Forest 2270 $262 28Ve 28¥8-- Ve BC Pow 50 4 «a 48 BC Sugar pr 222 $19% 19% 19% Burns 295 $162 162 16¥2 Cabol 500 39 39 Cal Pow 2800 $20 20° «620 Can Cem 75 $49 49 49 Can Cem pr 3] $29% 29% 29% Can Foils A 25 $312 31'2 31'4a--l¥a Can Perm 220 $72 72 CSL 125 $33 KX) 33 CAE 275 $10 9% 10 Brew 690 $102 10% 10% Brew A pr 50 $50% 50% S50' Brew H pr 50 $54 «54 B AL Aw 650 260 250 B Al Bw 210 250 250 Chem w 450-905 900 $25 25 $68% 68% $11% 11% $23% 23 $53% 53% Stock Abitibi Alta Gas Alta Gas w Alg Cen + $532 532 532+ Ve $26 25% 26 sio0 1 1 335 325. 325 --10 +" 260 250 905 720 $422 422 42a-- a) $52% 52% 52% -- Va) $61% 61% 61¥e-- Vo) 0 | --25 | " Stock Sales High Low a.m. Ch'ge Inland Gas 12100 $9 9% 9% BM 21844) 44) 44) IMc 25 4a Int Nickel 1120 Util 200 $: +% $8 hed $10%4 10% 10% 385 380 380 | 455 450 455 | 500 110 110 110 --5 $122 12% 12% 500 $12%4 124 124-- % 380 $7% Th + % $16 %6 | 813% 12% --1% | $12% lk--% | $20 19% -- % $8% 8% -- | 8% 9% + % | Molson A Montex Mentex pr Montex w Moore Morse A NO Ngas Nor Phone N Phone rt Nor Tar Ch Nor Tar pr Ogilvie Ont Stores Pac Pete Pembina Pow . Corp Price Bros 2330 65 «61 190 395 230 $224 22% 22% 315 $14 "4 "4 200 240 240 240 115 $11% 11% 11+ 1270 $11% 11 1 300 $15%e Sve 80 $40 40 318 $11%4 11% 11% ve 15. $1572 157¥e 157Va +1 220 $14 4 "4 415 415 415 --5 185 185 185 --5 $782 78% 7844 -- Va W% 11% 390 390 390 $20% 20% 20% + Ve $28% 28%4 28% + Yo 780 775 780 +5 15a -- Ve 40 R-Nodwell Romfield Royal Bank Salada Sayvette Shell Can Shell | pr Shell | w --5 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Tuesday, December 8, 1964 177 Stock Petrol Prairie Ol) peed Gas Un Reef P 1000 25 Wsburne W Decaita 4450 279 Argosy ris A Arcad NW" WA 20; Belletere 16000 56 Bethim 7 Bevcon Bibis Bralorne % 35 $1% l\% 700 127 Cheskirk 1000 Chimo 2900 11 Chrom 500 1 Cons Brewis 500 Con Gillies 1000 Cc Mogul 4050 C Morrison 25100 Con Negus 3000 C Rambler 3400 82 BY 16% 164 16+ 9 9 9 490 490 «490 45 2 u Seles High Low a.m. Ch'ge Permo rts 31630 1% 2500 73 anger 200 147 147 147 +2 Scurry Rain S00 $18% 184 18%4-- Ve Teck Corp 350 565 565 565 Triad Oil 1000 206 206 2 1000 126 126 70 60 760 760) + 124 12% 1244-- Ve ss uu Bw +t 470 465 «465 $42 14% 144-- Ve 23. 2 12% 12%4 12%8-- Ve 299 299 299 1 $19% 19% 19% + Ve 140 138 (138 2 27 2 1% 11% 1""+% 7 13: NS Stocx Lencourt Liberian Lorado Lougict Macdon Madsen 4: 1 2 me} +% +1 <5 +1 +4 40 134--1V4 3H 5a -- Va 355 + Va 11%-- Ve 7 120 21 9 445 108 15 --5 +1 ivmaq -- | Sil Miller 180 Siscoe 82-- a} Starratt Va) Steep R ot Sunburst Texmont Tex-Sol Tormont 45 122 --V Sales Latin AM =. 2000 300 25 6800 5000 1100 Magnet 1 Manoka MS 1550 Marcon 5000 S¥eSvesdSbas SeBes338 $ 1900 175 175 w $13% 13% Shop Save $16% 16% 16%4-- Ve $164 16% 16%-- % tock Market Listings " High Low a.m. Ch'ga "ou % he "H+ 13°«3 75 18% a-- Ve 4 2% 215 218 +1 ™" 7 7 =! 1% 6% 2-1 13412 13 --1% 12% 12% 2-2 $20¥a 20% 2 -1 a) 65 128 1 ww 7 "a a Mah B16 Wb --2 +1 -I ~ +3 + +4 3 uw i = 18¥a \8Ve 184 ie | 165 9 =k 2% 28 8 88 of 3 13° «100 «113 700 685 +5 9% We Wal 13% 13% 34+ 665 655 655 +5 44 vew + "4 4 + -1 Ye ~~? --* --" 6. 23423 8 +% 16%a 162 16a-- Va 9 256 «259 3 5'e Sve 5S 590 13% 13% 13% "» % 78 oO. Oo ml 3 35" 354-- % 299 Thibag Un_ Butfad UCL Mine De 0 3% Un Keno 875. 875 875 +3... Utd Pore 3600 19 +18 #19 +1 Urban Q "uM uM ml Vespar Die Ds Dat Va W Beaver 4 4 uM +h --10 West Mines W Surf 1 23 4+% % Wm Ve Wiltsey Winch 0 0 22% 32% 324--% ut ba us 3 Windfall Y YK Bear ve 4+ 42 20 300 297 Shop City rr Shully's Simpsons 10Va 102 10V2 22 2% 2 +14 $16% 16% 164---Ve 520 520 520 --5 305 305 305 $35% 35% 35% + 9%, 9% % $3 48 4 + | Aa | SN 145 «(145 S1S¥%e 15% 2 2 330 330 330 «+10 380 «(380 «6380 % 27% W-- Ve Slater Steel 18% 18¥%a-- Ve Southam 150 3% 2 + Steel Can 12080 25% 26 + Ve Texaco 2 562 56Va-- Va Tex Pac 200 9% -- Tor-Dom Bk 215 70Va 70' Tor Star pr 65 T Fin A 625. 1604 1000 125 615 25 485 $16% $28 $38 $16% $642 $7% $10% $42 $4) $12% $9% $21 $5% $26 $12" 40 $112 $33% $24 $12% $22% $i) $23% $20% 16% 28 38% 16% 649 % 10% 42 4) 12% 9% Chemcell Chrysler Clairtone 360 Discovery Dom: no Russian Symbol Of Ordeal Found In Quiet Contentment By JOHN BEST LENINGRAD (CP) -- Cradle of the Russian revolution and symbol of its ordeal under fire, Leningrad today wears a look of quiet: contentment. It used to be called Russia's window to Europe but the shade was drawn 47 years ago. Nevertheless, Western influ- ence is still buoyantly alive in this northern metropolis of 3,000,000 which looks toward Sweden across the Gulf of Fin- land and the Baltic Sea. | You can detect it in the neon signs that spangle the edges of bustling Prospect Nevsky. It shows in the stylish hats worn by Leningrad women--"In Mos- cow you hardly ever see women e Donalda Geco Mines Genex 3 Gnt. Masct 100 Giant YK 200 Glacier 1000 Goldray 1000 Granduc 600 Gulch 2500 Guif & 500 Gunnar Hastings Hollinger Hud Bay Hydra Ex 2500 176 Con Paper -1 Con. Gas Copp Clark Corby vt Coronation Corontn pr Crush Int Delta B pr Dist Seag D Bridge Dom Elect Dofasco xd D Magnes Dom Stores Dom Tar Dom_ Text Du Pont Falcon Fleet Mfg Ford Cda Freiman Fruehauf G Dynam GMC GP Drill A 23 -- % "se Ma 56 145 13% 13%8-- b'%+ 000 39% 9a -- 12° +1 250 200 7000 2500 1000 Sales to 11 a.m.: 1,063,000. FOREIGN TRADING 100 $13%2 132 1344--1%-- 400 400 400 +4. 5M 2% 12% 112¥2 33% 2% 12% 2% n 23% 23 20% ee | 54 84% Trans PPL Turnbull Tw C Gas Un Carbide Un Gas U Gas B pr U Corp B Versatile Vic G Tr Vulcan Walk: GW Wat Equip Well Fin te WCoast Tr Weston B West A wts Zellers +20 -1 48 645 Yukeno 9 Zenmac Zulapa mouth of the Neva River and named St. Petersburg. (The name was changed to Petro- grad in 1914 and to Leningrad in 1924.) IGNORE EARLY REVOLT "The Great October Revolu- tion" of 1917--it occurred Oct. 25 under the old Julian calendar then in use in Russia but Nov. 7 under the Gregorian calendar since adopted--gets most of the historical spotlight. | That was the uprising that swept the provisional govern- ment of Alexander Kerensky out of power and installed Len- in's Bolsheviks in its place. Only the occasional grudging reference is made to the Febru- ary revolution of the same year which toppled the Russian mon- archy. Yet far more Russian patriots paid with their lives in the first than in the second, which was really a Bolshevik coup d'etat and virtually blood- less. Nor is anything ever. said about Leon Trotsky, Lenin's close collaborator, who was killed by Stalinist agents in Mexico early in the Second World War. Landmarks associated with more of a brooding and inscrut- able flavor of the East. Yet Leningrad--or Petrograd as the city was then called--al- most had to be the focal point since it was the capital and hence 'seat of power. As both an industrial centre and an important transporta- tion hub, Leningrad plays a vital part in the Soviet econ- omy. "We take our economic prob- lems very. seriously," says {Boris Feld, assistant secretary lof the newspaper Leningrad Pravda. "We can't solve them by jokes." But Leningrad citizens are not above making the occa- vomen | sional wry joke at the expense wearing hats," said a visiting|of the System. Such as this one American Leap ae |now making the rounds: It is also suggested by the; An American, a Frenchman fact that Westerners feel more] ang a Rudilan leader were hid at home here than in most So- un by bandits a sseidad : lat hough they can't p by Son seclude viet cities, thoug: road. The American gave in to explain precisely why. threats and handed over $1,000,- To the foreign visitor it may 000. Th Minister the| aha ; e Frenchman gave up mister '*/ seem absurd that the 1917 revo-!1 999 990 francs. The Russian is with its anti- Western 4 ; pes should nets, = shane a yp a Phe "i seg tehed in the most Western- : ied of Russian cities instead re er Wiberg sey they fed. Moscow which has|4sked what he had written, the of, say, } ver Russian replied: "This is the path to communism." Mischievous you-ng Lenin- graders accost. English-speak- ing tourists on the street (they seem able to spot a foreigner a block away) to tell them such stories. But there's no reason to believe the yarns reflect disloy- alty; they're just jokes. Ye " " 5 485 7s $35% $692 69% 692+ 3 23 2 310 298 «310 +12 4h 14a a+ ee 3% 25 25 + 10000 24 2344 2%+ 2 100 785 785 785 +15 504 205 205 205 --# 100 $12Ve 12Ve 12'e-- Ve 1000 642 8% 8%-- 1050 930 925 --35 1800 4 +1 630 200 635 354 2032 1900 500 5500 5500 'so Jacobus Jaye Exp Jelex Jonsmith Kerr Add K Anacon L Dufauit Lake Ling La Luz Langis FOR SWIMMERS something like a small hula hoop. is hardly noticeable when not in use. '"The swim- mer is wearing protection at all times but doesn't have to use the tube unless he gets tired or into trouble. (CP Photo) The rubber, inflatable tube built into this bathing suit can save lives. Two Montreal in- ventors created the "spare tire' without sacrificing swimming. style. Joe P Al- morini, one of the inventors, claims the tube, which looks +5 5 +9» 152 15¥a-- ul $8 18 18 920 920 920 0 $1414 OILS 3500 100 1000 50 1500 740 800 475 7100 | 3000 | 700 i 1000 2160 650 1000 5 Sleeping Children Die In Farm Blaze SCHOMBERG, Ont. (CP) --jhe slept downstairs with his ' |Five children died in a blazing|wife and three of the children. ee het oreeniihul. | farmhouse near here today and| They fled the burning build- Winter Palace occupation of |? sixth, an 18-year-old boy, may | ings, unable to penetrate to the : , Pei in.{also have died in the build-|upstairs bedrooms where five-- which capped the Bolshevik in-);) jor six -- of the children were aoe ah ee ani pineal eh Police Chief Leslie Pengelly| sleeping. fa , nce a aatiosl for girls of King Township police depart-| The Sparks home is 41% nitles was 0) 4 \ment said firemen have been|southwest of here, two miles noble birth but used by the} stat : A F : junable to enter the building. west of Highway 27. rooney Pi se ee The children of Mr. and Mrs.| Mr. Sparks is unemployed i " Lenih satarned from| Wallace Sparks were trapped|and drawing workmen's com- 19 8 16 55 180 ng 4 8 Pus 270 920 4 2 $13% 13% 1 $232 23a $6% 670 $18% 18% $19% 19% 62 62 42 465 465. 465 12% 124 12% 2» 2 +4 +% --4 Hard Carp Hawker-S Home A Home B Home rts Horne Pf Husky Husky B pr Imp Life Imp Oil Ind Accep Ind Min rt Ind Wire Inglis 5 5 5 $19% 19% 19% 297 WS 295 810 805 810 +5 8 = 88 +1 BIRTHS | DEATHS | GMITROWICZ -- Eugene and Maureen) ROTHWELL, George H. (nee Martin) are happy to announce the/ at the Oshawa General Hospital on Tues- birth of their daughter, Susan Anne, 8/ Gay, December 8, 1964, George Herbert tbs,, 10 ozs., born on Friday, December | Rothwell (of 907 Henry Street, Whitby, 4, 1964, at the Oshawa General Hospltal.|sormeriy of Toronto), beloved husband of A little sister. for Kevin |the late Mabel Munroe, dear father of Mrs. J. Wallis (Marion) of Whitby; John MeCARROLL -- Norman and Marjorie} and Donald; loving grandfather of Shery! (nee Feller) ere happy to announce the| and Lynda; in his 75th year, Resting at arrival of a son, Andrew James, 7 |bs.jthe W. C. Town Funeral Chapel, Whitby, , on Monday, December 7, 1964, at) for service in the chapel on Thursday,/| General Hospital. Many thanks/December 10 at 2 p.m. Interment Pine} Doherty and staff of 4th floor. | Hills Cemetery, Toronto, |Reverend J. Smith. $53%4 534 53% 30$235 234 235 +6 449 $5534 55% 55% 600° $254 25%4 254+ Ve 460. 4 3 3 1 100 165 100 375 47 47 47 24% 24% 242-- Va oo 2: Ff 5 5 5 120 12% 124+ % 7 2 Ak +1 165 165 375 375 --S J Osh . te Dr. VANSTONE -- Ross and Shirley wish te announce the birth of @ son on Wednes-| TRENOUTH, day, December 2, 1964 at the Oshawa) At Memorial Hospital, Bowmanville, on Genera! Hospital. A_brother for Paula,|Monday, December 7, 1964, Ida L. Nancy and Murray. Thanks to Dr. Jaciw| Trenouth, 7 Duke Street, Bowmanville, | and Dr. Hobbs. aged 93 years, beloved wife of the late| William J. Trenouth (formerly of} (nee| Napanee). Resting at the Morris Funeral | Gibson) are happy _to announce the ar-|Chapel, Bowmanville. Service in the rival of thelr son, Rodney John baat, 4] sreeel on, Thursday. at 2 p.m. Interment) Interference Cry Kindness beyond Price, yet . : ™ |4n Australia Too 1964 at the Oshawa General Hospital, A) wee baby brother for Randy, Bonnie and Win: reach-of of GERROW SYDNEY, Australia (CP) -- Australian Postmaster - Gen- Ricky. Special thanks to Dr. J. 0. Ander-| FUNERAL CHAPEL} er = eral Hulme has denied "once a . L, Gilchrist and erin Belt an feat, Klas spacial | 390 KING STREET WEST # P d for all'? that there is any) | LEPHONE 728-6226 |r.) 4 th th.|SOME SNOBBISHNESS | TE le) 8-6226 | political interference with the eee ae |by flames that almost destroyed|pensation for a back injury. i 0: Hospital thanks, to AM and tothe Civic Ambulance | : . ; si |Australian Broadcasting Com-|' Leningrad. citizens--those the take} ey rt | | missi |foreigher is likely to meet on|charge of the Bolshevik drive 4 a cee | : Hil; PI | ertilizer Plant | | To Be Constructed for their kind and efficient service. "the A | 1 fficial level--sh pecul-| for po' | The ABC is Australia's only|an official level--show a pecul-|for power. A ; | IN MEMORIAM |non-commercial radio and TV\iar reluctance to admit that The parents and several other] | TORONTO (CP) -- Canadian ida L. | WILSON Harvey and Joyce r i YOUR NEW DEATHS BANKS, Norman A | installed FREE in 115 MINUTES | at Oshawa's newest and finest ' MUFFLER INSTALLATION CENTRE | hae MUFFLER KING | L 206 KING ST. WEST [| BOEM, Dorothy At the Oshawa General Hospital on Mon- TEL. 728-6268 ee Open Mon. thru Sat. 8 A.M. to 6 P.M. Friday nights till 9 P.M. , ied RELIC OF PAST |childrén escaped. and Picker-| BOURNE -- In loving memory of cur{network. It is controlled by a/people here are better dressed The dead children are: Dale, Ene ial Alax and Picker-| ser son end brother, Ernest W. Bourne, | government - appointed control/than those in most other Rus-| There are also landmarks of|93 Ricky, 13, Patrick, 11, Mich. Conber 9, > 1964, _ Norman Alexander RCAF, who passed away suddenlY/ hoard. It's Radio Australia/sian. cities, and that generally|the city's pre - revolutionary|3¢)°@ and Donny, 4. ' White, | Dec r 8, 1940 . .|Leniner 'i se ag 3 jael, 6, y, 4. 7 re A orks Eid baseen Sores see Gone from us, but, leaving memories broadcasts are -heard through-| eningrad looks more attract-|past, such as the Astoria Hotel.|" Five other children «who es-|Industries Ltd. officials said broter of Laura (Mrs, Adalt), Nina] Death can never. take away, out the world. ve and prosperous. Once the haunt of Czarist army|caned the blaze are Kerry, 17,|Monday night the firm will (Mrs. 'Sage Path) bot eee AAy,| While upon this corih-we lay: Hulme. said: "In a troubled] They give the impression they|officers, its rooms still glitter|wendy, 9, Maureen, 16, Karen|build ammonia and fertilizer Mabel, Moutlsing at McEachnie Fonerai|--Always remembered by his loving) world, fair, objective and un-jdon't want the word to get|with the opulence of a bygone!19 and Danny. nae plants worth a total of $50,000,- Home, 28 Kingston Road West, Picker-|mother and sisters. biased comment on both inter-|around, perhaps for fear that/era. : 000 about 20 miles south of Sar- ing. Funeral service in the chapel on) NORRIS -- In loving memory of . my| nd international affairs is| Moscow will get wind of it and} The room keys, big and) FIREMEN HELPLESS ia. Thursday, December 10 at 2 p.m. Inter-| gear wife Annie Llewellyn Bouckley: who| Nal a db something te being 'Lookaiipavy n 'ear £ | nia. ment Erskine Cemetery. passed away two years ago today on| vital.' s . senin- vy, are inscribed--for some) o, + iqe 6 | A CIL spok i b F i in Watt ne fireman said There pokesman said about December 8th, 1962. He said people in other coun-|grad into line. reason in English 'Hotel | A ; s 1,000 constructi i God knows how. much | miss her 4 : f say ; de 4 was just nothing anybody could|!,900 construction workers will Never shall her memory fade \tries often tended to believe) They do, however, allow|Astoria St. Petersburg" and| qo : |be employed to build the "two Loving thoughts shall ever wander anything broadcast on a na-|themselves the luxury of occa-jare engraved with an eagle) « |plants, the bi i dey, Deceiver 7) 1964, Dorothy Boe, ini To the spot where she is laid tional : twork reflected an of-|sional snobbishness, The Lenin-|symbol of Czarist Russia We got the call about/Plants, the bigger of which will her 27th year, dearly loved wife of John|--Ever remembered by husband Henry tional ne - 4 | +4 ¥, mye pe 6:15 a.m. and when the truck be used to produce anhydrous Boem, dear mother of Michael and Debo-| J. Norris. ficial government attitude.|grader, says Feld, is a "cul-j During the Second World War| ot to the scene around 6:30|ammonia, Full-time staff will be aan aed See nan: Mier 293) NORRIS -- in loving memory of my|"This, of course, is a mistaken|tural man, with a love of his/Leningrad gained: fame as althe roof was gone and the|about 300, the spokesman said. ter of Barbara and daughter-in-law of| dear sister, Mire. Aanis, boris: two vears| belief," he added. motherland, a man of quality." |beacon of rescistance to German| whole house was ablaze." Location of the plant is near Mr. and Mrs. Gus Boemn, Resting a} thee today : --_-- -- "The cultural level is higher|armies, For 900 days it was be-| Cause of the fire has not yet|the $110,000,000 Ontario Hydro stent tivante tnear Raehampton) after| "Her memory Is a daily thought. here than in Moscow," said my|sieged. The Russians say 632,-\,66n determined fireman|Lambton enerating station and 7 pm on Eriday.: at|----Sedly missed and: aver remembered. by} |English-speaking guide. West-|000 people starved yereleaid. os € PM P sister Alice, Albert and the boys | angus . s people starved Or were! <aid another CIL spokes d 5 ik ssed Sacrament \ orn antinte find Lemiicrad® audi:| cated said. ; SIL spokesman said]. Church' (Yonge Sheritan), fOr REID -- In loving memory of a. dear| Bho raid iid a Se es Ng | Ma : | Chief Pengelly said the fire|this would put it in the largest requiem mass Interment ¢ather and grandfather Louls (Sparky)! Today, there is no sign of the j at a.m. Mount Hope Cemetery. MANN, Mary-Jane Emily In Dewson Hospital, Toronto, on Monday Reid, who passed away December 7, 1963. --Ever remembered by daughter-in-law Jeanette, children, David, Danny, sand Gary and Lori, Gregory son Milford,| WILBERT A. BRANT A former Oshawa resident, 9rand-) Wilbert A: Brant, died in Buf- falo Nov. 30 after a seven-week jences more sophisticated than |Moscow audiences, she added. |Leningraders also think the city's ballet is better than Mos- wartime destruction. Whole| streets and avenues have been laid out with new apartment first was noticed by Mr. Sparks, |who was awakened by smoke as southwestern Ontario. fertilizer marke for CIL, in blocks. Ten miles from the city's centre, in a southwesterly di- rection, stands a simple obelisk. It marks the high-water point of the invaders' advance on Leningrad. fs uv Fy December 7, 1964, Mary Jane Emily) 'picuarns -- in loving memory of aliliness in St. Joseph's Hospital. , rere egg mysarhge Honeychurch Delovee ar sister "of Mrs, (dear father and husband William Jobn|Mr, Brant worked in Oshawa) _ bee ically, the city is not so Agnes Mann and aunt of Kenneth and} Richards who passed away December 8thiror the Oshawa Railway from | SOP! isticated. Clarke Moffat. Glen Gilbert, Mr Rey 1919 to 1945 Official literature lays great Law (Hazel), all of Tor 918 , : f : Seay ; Pda Goer Mrs. Mann is resting at the Mc He was employed by the | emphasis on the revolutionary Intosh-Anderson Funeral Home, 152 King) "75 0°81 ouch to all of us. |Niagara Frontier Buslines in|past of Leningrad, founded by t ervice in the chapel on rt ry Thursday, December: 10 at 2 p.m Prater. -~Sadly missed by wife Flo and family. |Buffalo for 18 years until his| Peter the Great in 1703 at the ment Union | Cemetery, Oshawa. BL: WODNISKY -- In loving memory of our| death 4 by | relatives will receive a ne uneral daar mother and grandmother, Sophie N r r nt was redecease y home Wednesday evening.) Wodnisky, who passed away Dec. 8 1959. |p Mr. se Beatrice and his We. have only your memory, dear fath ieee ' Bret oe Deb mother ather, Fran r - To remember our whole lite through. laronto, He is survived by: his At Memorial Hospital, Bowmanyiile But the sweetness will linger forever.| ~ . 5 § : Monday, December 7, 1964, Florence| As we treasure the image of you mother, Mrs. Mary Brant of Ritchie, in her 76th year, 6 Liberty Street|--Lovingly remembered by son George, Deseronto; two sons, Garnet a South, 'Bowmanville, wite of the late|daughter-in-iaw Barbara cand grandchilé-| 04 Ciavton- a daughter, Mrs. David McKnight, and dear mother of\ ren é ~|J. C. Luft (Verna); a brother, GET THIS BOOKLET OF eae ea) BASIC FACTS ABOUT MEMORIALS (Srangcelle There -- one IDB BUSINESS LOANS Elford Cobbledick), both of Newcastle; and Murray, Bowmanville. Resting at Morris Funeral Chapel, Bowmanville. | Service in the chapel on Thursday, at 152 SIMCOE ST. S. OSHAWEveNINGS | FUNERAL OF 728-6627 | JOSEF LISCZONEK -------------| The funeral service for Josef Lisezonek who died at his 3.15 om. Interment Hampton Cemetery. Nothing on eosth will mem- jhome, 472 Byron court, Decem- Private funeral oriolize longer or better then a bronze memorial de- -/ber 4, was held in Ritson Road signed by Matthews ond sup- Ipantist Church, Dec. 7 at 2 plied hd Mount Lawn Mem- "11m Rev. J. J; Shakotko con- owe Sher ee rer ducted the service and inter- tion, 723-2633 oe in Oshawa Union Pallbearers were William Boduskey, William Romanuk, M. Konik, A. Phrasewicz, A. Mariciewicz and A. Zluklic. ONCE CHILD PRODIGY Actor Gert «Frobe, title-role star of the movie '"'Goldfinger," }was a child prodigy and gave an all-Beethoven Violin recital jin Germany at 17. What would I give to clasp-his hand, His happy face to see To hear his voice and see his smile McKNIGHT, Florence on THIS SPACE RESERVED FOR IMPERIAL OFFICE NETLEY, 723-1002 the -Hospita! Sick Children, To ronto, on Monday, December 7, 1964, Joanne Netley, aged ofe month, beloved daughter of Don and Mary Netley of 554/ Fernhill Bivd. A private service .will be conducted. By Rev. A. Woolcock at" the) Gerrow Funeral Chapel on Wednesday, December 9 at 10 a.m. Interment will be In Mount Lawn Cemetery. (in lieu of flowers please donate to the Canadian Cystic Fibrosis Foundation, 263 McCaul Street, Toronto.) LOCKE'S FLORISTS CARD OF THANKS Funeral arrangements ond Joanne In for If you are planning to start, expand or modernize a business and you require- a term loan to carry out your plans, write for this descriptive booklet or visit an IDB office. : for Impressively Light! Impressively Right! IM PERIAL ANADIAN WHISKY by HIRAM WALKER id b gin DEVELOPMENT BANK 25 BRANCH OFFICES ACROSS CANADA TORONTO, ONT.: 250 University Avenue -- Telephone: 368-1145 BUNKER -- in the midst of our sorrow floral. requirements for all we wish to express. our gratitude to rela- jtives, friends and neighbors fdr their occasions, |many deeds of kindness and expressions of sympathy during our recent bereav: OSHAWA SHOPPING [2% ,tymoainy, during our, recat bereave CENTRE Clara, and fo Rev. L. W. _ Herbert,: Or. ae gt Bag GT ten 24 HOUR PHONE SERVICE | fal nurses. and' stat and to. the M 728-6555 pital nurses and staff and to the Mo Intosh-Anderson Funeral Home. --The Bunker fey.

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