Street lined with elms coated with ice in this west- ern suburb of Chicago is blocked by bent and broken boughs after worst ice storm since 1948 hit the area. Thousands of homes were without heat and light as power lines snapped under fallin g boughs or sheer weight of ice on wires. (AP Wirephoto) 27 New Cardinals Are Named By Pope VATICAN CITY (CP)--Pope Paul named 27 new Roman Catholic cardinals today includ- ing Archbishop Maurice Roy of Quebec, raising membership in the Sacred College to 103, the greatest number in history. The new cardinals were the first named by Pope Paul in his 19-month-old reign. The new princes of the Ro- man Catholic church will be formally elevated to the purple at a secret consistory Feb. 22. Archbishop Roy's elevation to the purple gives Canada three cardinals. The others are Paul- Emile Cardinal Leger of Mont- real and James Cardinal Mc- land, and Prime of Ukrainian Catholics; Thomas B. Cooray, Archbishop of Colombo, Ceylon; Leon-Eti- enne Duval, Archbishop of Al- giers; Archbishop Giovanni Co- lombo: of Milan, Italy; Arch- bishop Ermenegildo Florit . of Florence, Italy; BISHOP ELEVATED Paul Zougrana, Archbishop of Ouagadougou, Upper. Volta; Enrico Dante, Archbishop Pre- fect of Ceremonies on the Vat- ican Curia; Cesare Zerba, Arch- bishop Secretary of the Congre- gation of Sacraments of the Vat- out portfolio in the federal cab- inet and member for St. Johns, resigned from the cabinet Fri- day pending, he said, RCMP in- vestigation concerning a pro- posed race track in his riding. The compeny referred to by La Presse is headed by Roch Deslauriers, a St. Johns chiro- practer. No permit to operate the proposed track has been granted by the Quebec govern- ment. MONTREAL (CP)--La Pre: says at least $87,596.48 is in- volved in a company formed to establish a race track at St. Luc' near St. Johns, Que., and now the object of a bankruptcy pe- tition. The paper says the petition was filed by Raoul Gobeille of Brossard, Que., who claims the} sum of $25,000 guaranteed credit. Yvon Dupuis, minister with-' bert Aris, a Yves Papineau, an optometrist, asked the Quebec in 1961 'for a permit to run a pari - mutuel race track sim- ilar to Blue Bonnets and Rich- elieu."" merchant, government The latter two tracks are near Montreal. Mr. Deslauriers is quoted by La Presse as saying he and his inches of snow in the Ottawa area Sunday. The storm struck late Friday night and reached a peak Sat- urday evening. During that time Hamilton received 16 inches of snow and 55-mile-an- hour winds that piled drifts six feet high. WORST SINCE 1944 Street Commissioner William Muirhead called it the worst storm to hit Hamilton since 1944, when 48 inches of snow fell. The snowfall varied from nine inches in Toronto and one inch in Windsor to six inches in Chatham. Most southern On- tario centres reported about six inches. Police closed several sections of Highways 4, 73 and 8 in the} London - Stratford area. and| motorists were advised not to! use the. Queen Elizabeth Way By THE CANADIAN PRESS Snow followed by freezing rain snarled. weekend traffic across southern Ontario, and early today many city side streets and country roads were still coated with ice in hazard- ous driving conditions. At least seven deaths were attributed to the storm, which dumped up to a foot of snow on most of the region Saturday and then crusted it with heavy rain Sunday. A storm front from the mid- western United States reached the Lake Superior area Sunday night, bringing cloudy skies and some light snow to Northern Ontario. The weather office said it could extend into south- lern Ontario later today as tem- peratures moderate to near the freezing level. Meanwhile, the weekend dis- turbance moved east out of On- tario after dropping about five 7 Deaths Attributed To Weekend Snowstorm between Toronfo and Hamilton Saturday night. Toronto International Airport remained open during the weekend, although service was sharply cut by bad weather in other areas. Airports at Wind- sor and London closed for three consecutive days. Two Kitchener men died Sat- urday when their car slid inte a CNR passenger train in down- town Kitchener. An eight-year- old boy was struck and killed by a car Saturday. A woman was crushed against a parked car in Hamilton Friday night and a month-old infant died of head injuries after a_ traffic accident outside Hamilton.. The other victim, a 23-year-old man, was killed in a four-car pileup on the outskirts of Windsor Sunday. An Elliott Lake, Ont., man was killed Saturday in an auto collision in downtown Toronto. founder of the Catholic Youth }movement in Belgium; Rt. Rev. Charles Journet, a leading Roman Catholic sociol- ogist, of Lausanne, Switzerland; Rt. Rev. Giulio Belivacqua, an \Italian of the Vatican Curia and |Pope Paul's confessor and Rt. |Rey. Federico ca Lori di Vig- nale, an Italian member of the papal household. The last consistory for the creation of cardinals was held on March 19, 1962, when Pope John elevated 10 men to the Sa- ered College and brought its membership to 87, the -largest | ican Curia; Angel Herrera Y Oria, Bishop of Malaga, Spain; | Guigan of Toronto. Another is Archbishop John) Heenan of Westminster, Eng-| land. | One American, Archbisho' Lawrence J. Shehan of Balti- more, was created a cardinal. NAMES SOUTH AFRICAN Other new cardinals are: Owen McCann, Archbishop of Cape Town, South Africa; Lo- renz Jaeger, Archbishop of Pa-|the International Union of Mine,|for more than 14,000 Inco em-| Rt. Rev. Joseph Cardijn, in history. Since then 11 cardinals have died. Mine, Mill Men Want SUDBURY (CP)--Leaders of 'Bargainers Ousted Mine-Mill as bargaining agent derborn, Germany; Joseph Ma-|Mill and Smelter Workersjployees in October, 1962. rie Martin. Archbishop of Rouen, France; Branjo Seper, Arch- bishop of Zagreb, Yugoslavia; Jean Villot, Lyon, France; William Conway, Archbishop of Armagh, Ireland; 'Agnelo Rossi Archbishop of Sao Paulo, Brazil; Maximos IV Saigh, Melchite Patriarch of Antioch; Paul Pierre Meouchi, Maronite Patriarch of Antioch; Stephanos I Sidarouss, Coptic Patriarch of Alexandria; Josef (Ind.) called Sunday for a drive to oust the United Steelwork- ers of America (CLC) as bar- | the giant International Nickel Company of Canada Limited jplatt here. Canada and the United States arrived in Sudbury Saturday for what the union described as a national organization conferenc Slipyi, Archbishop of Lvov, Po-' The Steelworkers replaced pssocane Mine-Mill leaders from across Nels Thibeault, president of Sudbury Local 598 of Mine-Mill, said the prime purpose of. the Archbishop of) gaining agent for employees at|convention was to declare ofi- cially.a campaign to organize \Inco workers for Mine-Mill. Union President Al Skinner of Denver, Colo., pledged the support and approval of Mine- ;Mill members in the United States. | Canadian President Ken Smith of Toronto said he hopes to see the union approach the labor relations board in May -|with an application for bargain- ing rights. Trucker Dies On The Job BRANTFORD (CP)--A truck driver who apparently died of a heart attack while rearranging his load lay unnoticed in the trailer as the truck was driven A \from Kitchener to Brantford. CHURCHILL'S RESTING PLACE Arthur Newman, 77, part- time gardener at the Blen- heim Palace at Bladeon, Ox- fordshire, England, stands near the plot --fo: where Sir Winston Churchill will be buried in St. Mar- tin's churchyard. Interment will follow funeral services Saturday in St. Paul's Cathe- dral in London. Tall stone cross marks the grave of Sir Winston's father, Lord Randolph Churchill. Grave of Sir Winston's mother is partly visible at right. Sir Winston, 90-year-old. British statesman, died this morning | in London 10 days after suf- fering a stroke. --(Wirephoto via cable from Gordon Maddock, 43, of Brantford, had driven the truck to Kitchener Friday afternoon to pick up a load of casting from a foundry. The foundry called Noakes Transport Limited in Brantford to report the truck had not been tank which blew up, causing) bombs on the T-28S fighters to detonate. The explosions followed close lon the heels of a pro-Commu- nist Pathet Lao warning that further air attacks on Pathet Lao-held areas of Laos would be more "severely punished." Military sources said as many as nine T-28s, almost half the lseries of explosions Sunday de- \stroyed Vientiane military air- |port, dealing a serious blow to the Laotian air force's power to \strike at Communist targets. Discussing the possibilities of sabotage or accident, an_air- port source said: "It is still too early to know,. but so far it 'appears to be an accident." One version was that a 50- Half Laotian Air Force Lost In Airport Blast VIENTIANE (Reuters) -- Ajand went off, hitting a fueljblasts and the fire which fol- popular confidence and build lowed. The T-28s. have been flying daily missions against the 'Ho Chi Minh Trail," used by the Communists to send men and supplies from North Viet Nam munist Viet Cong guerrillas in South Viet Nam. $87,596 Involved In Race Track Company The paper quotes Mr. Des-jcolleagues had the support of lauriers as saying that he, Al-|"the municipal council, the and|Chambre de Commerce anid] three parliamentarians, Dupuis, the county of St. Johns - Iber- ville - Napierville, and provin- cial assembly members Phili- dor Ouimet and Laurent Hamel." ruptcies clerk at the St. John's courthouse lists five guaran- teed creditors, with a total of $55,600, as connected with the Deslauriers company, other "privileged" with an unknown amount owed creditors owed a total of $31,- 996.48, THE OSHAWA TIMES, Mondey, Januory 25,1965 3 Snow Cushions Fall Of Freight Crewmen TIMMINS (CP) -- All crew, members escaped serious in- jury when two Ontario North- land Railway freight trains crashed head-on Saturday at we 22 miles east of ere. Train No. 414 was travelling|® to Englehart from Timmins with a load ot plywood when it|°° co an empty freight train, No, 345, bound lor Tim- mins. Prd roe of both trains were able te jump into deep snowdrifts beside the single track before impact. One engine rode up onto the other, but no freight cars were derailed. A crew with an auxil- jiary engine from Cochrane had the line cleared and in oper- ation Sunday. Crew members of the Engle- hart - bound freight -- R. S. Smith, ana C. L. Knight, both firemen, engineer E. M. Smith, NOTICE TO ALL EX-SERVICE WOMEN and DEPENDENTS All ex-service personnel and their dependents are invited to take advantage of a FREE LEGION SERVICE W. R. BUCK Assistant Secretary, Service Bureau, Toronto LEGION HALL, BRANCH NO, 43 Wednesday, Jan. 27th FROM 2:00 TO 5:00 P.M. Yvon federal member for man on No. scathed. Sree: a 345, were re) The paper says the bank- UMATISM Pain four RoR as ray 'women as creditors them, and 22 non-guaranteed One of the non - guaranteed| creditors, the paper says, is Gerard Veilleux, a race-horse owner of Drummondville, Que., owed $13,000. The paper quotes Mr. Ouimet as saying that $1,000 listed as owed to him by the company was actually owed. to a firm known as Carriere Bernier Limitee, of which his sons are president and secretary. Another To | Quit Grits? | QUEBEC (CP)--Auguste Cho-| quette, Liberal member of Par-| liament for Lotbiniere, said Sat-| urday night scandals in Ottawa are "a calamity and a shame! for French Canada." | He blamed the whole situ- ation on "the old guard in| Montreal" and said party re- newal is vital if the Liberals are to regain respect in Quebec. He spoke at the Reform Club here to the Young Liberal Asso- ciation of St. Sauveur. _ Mr. Choquette, 32, said in an interview he believes Premier BeStee from druveist, Weel hotter Saske Also from 7:00 p.m. to completion of business ... to give skilled advice an Veteran's Benefits, Any- one with questions on war disability pension, War through Central Laos to Com-| calibre machine - gun which fires electrically short circuited Royal Laotian Air Force, may have been destroyed SOME SUFFER NO SYMPTOMS TORONTO (CP)--The annual \meeting of the Royal College of 'Physicians and Surgeons of Canada closed Saturday with reports on high blood pressure, abnormalities in childbirth and the announcement that a young Vancouver doctor had won the college's primary award in medicine. Dr, J. D. Morrow, clinical teacher at the University of Toronto, told a symposium on curable hypertension that pa- tients who register a high blood pressure reading on one occa- sion but do not show any other symptoms should be observed by their physicians over a pe- riod of months to ensure noth- jing is wrong. He said an increasing num-| ber of patients who are found iduring routine medical examin- lations to "have marked high |blood pressure suffer no symp- |toms and are unaware of their | condition. The most common cause of curable hypertension is narrow- ling or obstruction of One or |more kidney arteries, Dr. Ed- |mund Yendt, assistant profes- |sor of medicine at the Univer- ity of Toronto, told delegates. Dr. D. J. Conway of the pedi- | | Ss: | | jatrics department at the Uni- 'versity of Ottawa described |how computers may be used to Law Menaced High Blood Pressure Warning By Physician predict hazards facing expect- ant women and their babies. AIM AT SYSTEM Research at the university into abnormalities in childbirth aims at building up a coding system to feed a computer with information about the mother, the type of delivery and any ab- normalities in the baby, he said. This would build up a pat- tern of cause and effect. In future, it might be possi- ble to feed relevant informa- tion about an expectant mother into a computer and get a re- ply that would warn her doc- tor in advance what disorders to expect, Dr. Conway said. Dr. .David Osoba, physician- teacher and researcher at Van- couver General Hospital and the University of British Co- lumbia, took the award in: med- icine for adding important facts to knowleage of how the body defends itself -- or fails to -- against disease Dr. Osoba established the first conclusive evidence that the mysterious inymus gland, a twin - lobed gland behind the breast bone, excretes a_hor- mone essential to the creation of bodily sentries against infec- tion. in the Robarts Discounts | Story By PC Man LONDON, Ont. (CP) -- Pre- mier Robarts has discounted | Veteran's Allowance (Burnt Out Pension)... Treatment or Hospital Care is urged to call or write to MR. C. A. BRISEBOIS, Business Manager of Royal Canadian Legion, Branch 43, 90 Centre Street, Oshawa, who will arrange an appointment. Jean Lesage should go to Ot- tawa. Mr. 'sesage could restore "a true Canadian party." He said another departure from the Pearson cabinet is imminent. A Quebec member would be leaving, he said. | 1 | | | = TAMBLYN SPECIALS FOR THIS WEEK as "'purely one man's opini a warning by George Hogan, secretany of the Ontario Pro- gressive Conservative organiza- tion, that the party might not survive another 30 days. Mr. Hogan, writing in the Toronto Telegram, said that if there is not an overwhelming show of loyalty, "it is entirely possible the party will not sur- WW. 6 sé The Progressive Conserva- tive premier made his state- ment to reporters during the weekend following a meeting of the London Progressive Con- servative Association. TASTE the go!den goodness JORDAN BRANVIN Sherry CHILL IF DESIRED free home delivery phone Jordan Wines TROUD' | CREAM DEODORANT ARRID VASELINE ARRID BUFFERIN DU-BARRY FLATTER-GL BAND-AID VOs HAIR SPRAY WITH SUBDUE NOXZEMA 8-oz. 79¢ VALUE ) ROLL-ON DEODORANT REG. 1.19 MAKE- UP 25 13 58 19 2 t 1 100s 1.49 Value 10-oz. 1.45 Value and the driver could not be} By Rabid Fox found. Company officials drove) BRANTFORD (CP)--Another| to Kitchener and returned with rabies warning was issued to the truck. larea farmers here during the! | backed inte the loading dock| sy 54 SIMCOE NORTH Tues. and Wed. Specials ! MAX FACTOR Natural Matte Finish Finish Maddock was found behind a pile of tires about midnight Fri- day when a search was made of the truck in Brantford. MACHINED COTTON More than one-quarter of the Uzbek Soviet Republic's cotton yield of 3,500,000 tons of raw cot- ton in 1964 was harvested by machine. weekend after a fox was shot' on the rura! farm of Campbell | Reilly. Mr. Reilly discovered the fox jin his cattle barn and phoned iprovincial police. Const. Roy |Anderson shot the animal as it threatened to chase him. It was the second rabies warning issued by health au- |thorities here in two weeks. to supervise Kitchen Staff. Apply in writing only, giving date available, references. Pe Ci 2nd COOK REQUIRED HILLSDALE MANOR HOME FOR THE AGED Must be experienced in baking, meat cutting, cooking, ability full details of experience, age, rsonnel Officer ity Hall, Oshawa, Ontario | | FRESH PORK RIBLETS 19: SKINLESS WIENE 29 RINDLESS ACON LEAN MINCED BEEF LEAN, TENDER WITH PURSE PETITE DE VILBISS VAPORIZER MAGNOLAX ==. 53: HAIR DRYER 8.97 FOR FREE DELIVERY -- CALL YOUR NEAREST TAMBLYN DRUG STORE DOWNTOWN OSHAWA -- 6 KING ST. EAST -- 723-3143 OSHAWA SHOPPING CENTRE -- 728-5101 1.50 1.75 rs H.95 8-ounce 85c Value 5.95 Value