Easy Credit Rapped As Recessional EDMONTON (CP) Con- tinued lowering of standards for granting credit ould help bring about a recession, says Profes- sor Lorne C. Leitch of the Uni- versity of Alberta, Edmonton. associate professor of - commerce says loan institu- tions have been 'reaching a little' to meet competition and loans have been easier to ob- tain, particularly in the last two years. "The public debt load is ex- cessive... very often excesses like this breed deflation. These excesses are bound to react at some juncture . . . and could lell contribute to deflation." Relaxed standards by finance companies, banks and trust and life insurance companies have not been entirely to blame, he says. Material desires of the borrower also had contributed. "The satisfaction derived from the ownership of things-- cars, refrigerators, TV sets -- more than offsets the cost of borrowing and any dissatisfac- tion that may arise from being in debt." An undesirable effect of this, which is becoming more pre- valent, is the use of second mortgages on homes to pur- chase consumer goods, Prof.| Leitch says. Long-term investments should not be used for short-term as- wep MOTHEn VICTORIA (CP) -- Mother Cecilia Mary is taking her animal shelter and the religi- ous order she founded to an- other battleground. The 75-year-old Roman Ca- tholic nun, battling about six months with the church over her work with animals, says her Good Shepherd animal shelter is up for sale. Queried whether the sale meant she had lost her fight, mother Cecilia replied: 'Defeated? Not on your life." She said in an interview Monday night that the deci- sion to sell was made after an emissary from the shelter returned from Rome with the news that the nuns would be forced to become lay persons unless they gave up their work. "But now our vows are safe," she said. 'The Old Ro- man Catholic church has of- fered to take us under their protection." AQRATTTR WNT wary VELILIN, UEILAN!, WILL ATTEMPT NEW TACK She said that church broke from Rome in the 17th cen- tury because it refused to acknowledge the infallibility of the pope. Mother Cecilia said the Old Roman Catholic church had valid orders and was ack- nowledged by the Catholic church as being part of it. British-born Mother Cecilia, who brought her order of the Sisters of the Love of Jesus into the Catholic church from the Anglican faith, said she is considering a move "'fur- ther away, some place be- tween here and Duncan." Duncan is 60 miles north of Victoria, Msgr. Michael O'Connell, chancellor of Victoria dio- cese, when asked to 'com- ment on Mother Cecilia's de- cision, said: "I know nothing of the teachings of the (Old Catho- lic) church," Year Of Nun! With 3 Films By BOB THOMAS | HOLLYWOOD (AP) -- It's a) good year for movie nuns. | The No. 1 moneymaker is The! n Hollywood, About Them nity but for a year the commu she will not be making records or publishing her songs. "As for the future, she may Road § Replace Signs SASKATOON (CP) -- Re vised traffic signs using sym- bols to replace words has been adopted by the Uniform Traffic Control Council of the Canadian Good Roads Association. The revised signs were de- scribed by the council Sunday as a major breakthrough. The .|for the association, told the an- THE OSHAWA TIMES, Wednesdey, September 29. 19658 7 will be adopted across Canada. Gordon Campbell of Ottawa, director of technical services nual meeting a manual of the new signs will be published in January. Among examples of the re- placement of words with sym: bols, "bump" would be desig- nated by a black hump on a yellow diamond. council said it hoped the signs new signs will be in full use within three years. © The association said the sym- bols are more easily seen and identified than lettered ones. They also would reduce the "clutter" of signs that clog and confuse many city intersec- tions. The symbols also should solve the problems of French-speak- Mr. Campbell predicted. the ni Canadians travelling out- side French-speaking areas. | CITY OF OSHAWA NOTICE TO ALL DOG OWNERS Dogs Are Prohibited From Running At Large At All Time. Notice is hereby given that Dog Control By-law No, 3418 of The Corporation of the City Oshawa, as amended, was further amended by By-law No, 139-65 passed on the 20th day of September, 1965; so that By-law No. 3418 now reads, in part, es follows: 1. No person shall keep or maintain any dog in the City of Oshawa unless such dog hee been licensed and registered under this by-law and, subject to the provisions of Section 4 (4) of the Dog Tax and The Cattle, Sheep and Poultry Protection Act, has on @ collar to which is affixed a dog tag issued for the current year for the said dog. : No dog shall run at large and no person shall permit « dog owned by him te.run ef large in the City of Oshawa at any time. . For the purpose of this section a dog shall be deemed to be at large when it Is off the property of the owner and is not under the control of a competent person either by means of a leash not more than 10 feet in length or by virtue of being found not more ents of sets, he adds, But consumers were finding it easy to obtain second mortgages -at interest rates not much higher than the first mortgage. Prof. Leitch says his studies indicate the average Canadian} family owes about $1,200. OWE TOO MUCH North American economists feel no family should owe more|_ "!0"* bs than 20 per cent of its dispos-| able income. Thus many fami-| lies now were under an '"'exces-| , Slve debt load," Prof. Leitch! ne Soapers And Word Games wa ws. ec Make Debuts On NBC, ABC income had increased only 38 per cent in the same period. : Barring a recession, the bor-- NEW YORK (AP)---NBC and| Subsequently it was revealed|taken to Paradise Bay, a Cali- rowing level is sustainable, he|ABC launched a quartet of new|that five weeks before on the|fornia ocean community, and says. But an increase could help|soap operas and a pair of word|eve of her marriage, her fi-jintroduced to the owners of its bring about a recession, which|games Monday. lance was killed in an autojradio station, his wife and their would then be aggravated by| The dramas started at mid-jcrash and she blames herself.|two teen-age children. A young the borrowers' situation. |morning coffee break time with|An uncle and his wife want her|friend of the children has just "Should there be a recession|NBC's new Morning Star. Our/|to leave home for a change of|beén found dead on a nearby ... the hourly-pay people will/heroine, a silver blonde with|scenery and job in New York|beach under mysterious cir- be hurt as the first to be laid|matching nail polish who wears|before she has a nervous break-|cumstances. And the radio off. They're the ones . . . in|mink eyelashes and full makeup|down. But there is her younger|man's wife seems to be gettngi| general who 'owe a fair amount|to bed, was found writhing and|sister, Jan, to worry about. Janjinvolved with the owner of the|IS JUST FICTION and this will aggravate any re-|moaning in the grip of a night-|is described as "a neurotic par-|local newspaper, an old flame. | He mo age that the story cession." mare, asite."" was strictly fiction and not to | NURSES RETURN \be sed with the cast, anther sver blonde.) 'The Nurses, pooped up oniSiter Adele. raghlactedy # ' ABC in soap opera form in the Sister Adele. fire that took the lives of the| +4| Father Lunders had just re- girls' parents. She is deter-|car afternoon, and you'd : : turned from a conference in '- ~.,. {hardly recognize the old night- ' i mined that older sister Katy/time CBS show, Head nurse Liz Pelgium 'and' anid ne had "ig will not escape to the big city. |rhorpe.no*longer is played by/°! me real singing nun: "She is A short time later, we were/Shirl Conway but by Mary Fic- finishing her studies in music, FAITH MAKES "i!" bt sainser. * avis. at the University of Lau IT WORTH IT |vain. She sings her songs for| Student nurse Gail Lucas - PHOENIX, Ariz. (AP)--A statue of St. Francis of As- lis played by another actress, |but the old hospital atmosphere | jis about the same. ; : After schoo] hours came} _ i Rb pool ani- |ABC's Never Too Young, a soap "eam sot pang fon se opera aimed at the young audi- front of a Phoenix art stu. ence. It was dedicated to rock dio. music and the proposition that In place of the 12-4nch |nervous parents are squares plaster statue was this note |While the important things in scrawled on a paper bag: |life are the beach and going "My pupy is sick. I bore |Steady with the grooviest guy Sait Frans." Robert Shaw, owner of the studio, said he wouldn't who hangs out there. report the incident to au- thorities. "Must let the kid have St. Francis, it's all right. If a kid's got that much faith, I'm for it." Sound of Music, in which Julie|be assigned to South America| than 10 feet from the person supervising the dog. lor Africa; there is a chance| Andrews leaves a convent forjot Africa; I the world outside. Rosalind Rus-/she may work on the daily| sell is starring as a nun in The |Mewspaper in Elizabethville in} Trouble with Angels. And now|The Congo. there is The Singing Nun with| The Singing Nun is notable for) Debbie Reynolds, \the return to MGM of Greer Production is under way at|Garson, star of such movies as MGM on a film based on the|Mrs. Miniver, Madame Curie) |musical success--but not the|and Mrs. Parkington. jlife--of Sister Adele, the Bel-| Whas brought her back to jgian nun whose record of Dom-/films? jinique was a best seller. Over-| wel], 1 thought it was al seeing the movie for the Ro-| charming story, and I've always| man Catholic Church is a quiet-naq good luck with biog- spoken Belgian priest, Father! paphies," she explained, Leo Lunders. He is general secretary of the THE FISH HAS | LAST CHUCKLE church's film office in Belgium and also served as technical ad- viser on The Nun's Story, star- SHEFFIELD, England (AP)--This is a real fish story. George Holland, ring Audrey Hepburn. dropped his bait can into "I have tried to make sure the script stresses spiritual val- d the Derwent River, then dropped his car keys trying ues and not just comedy," sai Father Lunders in his office in the MGM executive building. "Of course The Singing Nun has to be entertainment, but it can} to recover the can. Worse followed. He fell into the river trying to re- cover the keys. He had to force a side window to get bring uplift, too." into his car and, without keys, had to short the igni- tion to start the -engine. But he couldn't turn the wheel since the anti-theft device on it was locked. "The whole. affair," George said, 'was a tri- | "=| BUFFERIN ~ ~~ 79- RE OEE RARE Oi MER TN : | RESDAN «= » Lis What do you need | : to make your home | BAN ROLL ON DEOQDORAN 89c ny completely | GET SET HAIR SETTING LOTION '5; 99c crrouemney | Warm & comfortable| pEDSODENT TOOTH PASTEsz.'79c 14% King St. East | this winter ? WITH FREE BRUSH 87° SILVIKRIN SHAMPOO GILLETTE HEADS UP 6I° BRECK HAIR SPRAY 79° NOXZEMA SKIN CREAM 1.69 @ PHOTOGRAPHIC e@ "BINOCULARS -:::..19.95 2 rx 99° KODAK REG. 1.45 VP 127 FILM" isions of the by-law shall be City Dog Pound and held d at the expiration of 48 . Every dog found running at large y to the p taken up by the Dog Control Officer and impounded in the for o period of not less than 48 hours and, if not red hours, may be sold or destroyed. | POPE'S ALTAR AT YANKEE STADIUM pigeotenle Aion sane Bo altar. (AP) . The owner of an impounded dog shall be entitled, on proof of ownership, to regein possession of the dog on application to the Dog Pound and payment of the following pound fees: first day or part of dey -- $5.00 each edditiolal day or part of day -- $2.00 All licensed dogs are recorded and indexed and every effort is made to notify the owners immediately after dogs are picked up by the Dog Control Department. The above regulations are effective immediately, erected at Yankee Stadium for the mass to be offered by Pope Paul VI on his visit to New York. Genovese, an Anthony Genovese, of | Ridgewood, N.J., points out |. the salient features on model of altar which will be L. R. BARRAND, City' Clerk. . | Pharmacies OSHAWA - WHITBY - BOWMANVILLE REG. 1.25 REG. 1.25 UPER SIZE REG. 1.09 = | REG. 1.09 HAIR CREAM FOR MEN -- REG. 79 A NEW FURNACE? Let Lander-Stark install a new, economical Lennox or Anthes oil furnace in your home 6-02. REG. 996 for your everlasting comfort. 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