-RNS STYLE DAMS radiate he- lar -- most frame your Slim, 2-pe. travel. 4663: Half 16%, 18%, iy takes 3% > Ne.) in coins e) for each esidents add rint plainly DDRESS, INE ADAMS, awa Times, Front St., To- ions are a ZES! See 115 lat patterns es in new Pattern Cata- for free pat- end 50c. APPEAR a (AP)--Po- ting the ap bia of thous saring a por- nist China's e-tung. Some as hand-outs mbassy here orted coming ssion to the air opening zes advertise ins is illegal ~* Jo-Ann Ames, 58 King's Crescent, Ajax, is framed by bouquet of roses that were a part of the Rose AJAX BEAUTY VISITS ROSE SH Show in the banquet room at the Civic Auditorium Sat- urday. The sh was spon- sored by the Oshawa Horti- OW OTTAWA (CP)--Text of the Queen's speech Saturday to members of the Senate and House of Commons on Parlia- ment Hill: Mr. Speaker of the Senate, Mr. Speaker of the House of Commons. I thank you both most sin- cerely for the loyal ad- dresses which you have read on behalf of Parliament and for your welcome to my hus- band and myself. One hundred years of Con- federation; what a simple statement, but what a remark- able chapter in Canada's his- tory. It is altogether right and fitting that Sovereign and peo- ple should meet together here at the heart and centre of Ca- nadian existence to give thanks on this great occasion. Canada is a country that has been blessed beyond most other countries in this world. Although there have been all the possibilities for human anguish and conflict, the pages of Canada's history dur- ing the last 100 years have hardly been stained by serious misfortunes. The problems which faced the statesmen of 1867 and the national problems which have had to be met in the inter- vening years have been solved, with rare and minor exceptions, through discussion and through an effort of toler- ance, g00d will and under- standing. When I visited the scenes of those historic discussions at Charlottetown and Quebec, three years ago, it came to me how quietly this nation had been created by men sit- ting around a table. Not the least important service. ren- dered by Sir John Macdonald, Sir Georges Etienne Cartier and the other Fathers of the Confederation, was this tradi- tion of calm _ consultation which they established. Let no one underestimate the imagination and daring shown by those men 100 years ago. They created one nation of this great country which reaches from sea to sea, a land rich in the things that man needs for a good life, enough to provide for a varied and growing population and to help meet the world's needs as well. They also created a nation of individual men and women to work out their own salva- tions have never been long de- nied. These are profound rea- sons for our thanksgiving. On this day of celebration it is right that we should remem- ber with gratitude the men and women who have held re- sponsibility and authority--at the time of Confederation and down through the 'years in the national capital as in the prov- inces--for their contribution to the birth and growth of Can- ada. PRAISES VANIER I can think of no more valiant and fitting representa- tive of the people I have. in mind than the late General Vanier, soldier, patriot and servant of Canada. I have spoken of the great men, the men whose names have an honored place in Can- ada's history, but we must' not forget that. we owe as much to the unsung work and stead- fast lives of great numbers of more humble people. The men and their families who made the clearings and worked the land, and who built the roads, railways and canals. The greatness and stability of this country also rests on these firm foundations. I am thinking of the eager immigrants who came with such high hopes and had to face the dread of cholera; of the early settlers on the Prair ies struggling through the harsh winters; of the fisher- men determined to wring a livelihood in the storm and danger of unfamiliar waters; of the many thousands who | went back in two 'world wars because they believed so strongly in their own freedom, It is these, the ordinary peo- ple of Canada, who have given flesh and sinew to the plans of the Fathers of the Confedera- | tion. It is 100 years of nationhood that we celebrate today. But let us not forget the earlier centuries of arduous labor that came before Confederation. I am not likely to overlook the contributions made by those of British «stock who came here from elsewhere in North America or who were settlers from the old world in the new. Even more extended in time, and as deep in impact, | have been the contributions made by Canadians of French descent. Ever since. Champlain feunded his habitation at Que- bec--and planted_rose bushes around it--this air has been sweetened with the French tongue and French culture and sharpened with French intelli- gence and French resource. It is one of the nfarvels of history that a society planted so precariously in the wilder- ness should not only have stir- vived but should have flour- ished so triumphantly, still loyal to its past and open to everything that is new. EXPECTS EVEN MORE From all I hear, from every- thing I know, I am sure that the contributions of French Canada to the life on the coun- try as a whole will prove even ampler in the future than they have been in the years gone by. Tomorrow I sail down the St. Lawrence to pay a visit to Expo 67, I have no doubt that I will find there a great mir- ror held up to the future. It will be possible to catch glimpses of what may be ex- pected in the further explora- tion of space, in new methods of travel and communica- tions, in the growth of new technologies. Such a future clearly holds as large oppor- tunities for imagination and daring as any that have ex- isted up to now. And the qual- ities that have made this country what it is will also en- able. Canadians to share in such a future to the full. On the basis of the natural and human resources that are available here, the broad in- dustrial development, the many centres of learning and fag and the skills found ere, there should be few lim- its To what Canada is capable of. Above all, the energy and resourcefulness of Canadians may be relied on to carry them forward successfully whatever the swiftness of the changes that we will witness. MUST HAVE COURAGE Sustaining a human perspec- tive will be possible, I am in- clined to think, only if we have the courage to probe within ourselves as well as into space. And in thinking about the future we must not | be too much distracted from | the problems that we can see about us in our society today. fortunate most others. But not all of its peo- or This country is and prosperous above ple are free from want hardship. al the CADILLAC HOTEL that has grown and prospered in an atmosphere of freedom, where differences are re- cultural Society and it at- tracted over 200 entries from Oshawq and the sur- rounding area. --Oshawa Times Photo Canada Week-end Marred By 81 Accidental Deaths By THE CANADIAN PRESS + ial kend ada Highway 80 miles east of Regina. | M Canada's c has been marred so far by 81 accidental deaths, 52 of them on the highways. A holiday survey by The Ca- nadian Press from 6 p.m. Fri- day, local times, until early to- day also shows 19 persons have drowned, six have died in fires and four have been killed in other accidents. | The Canadian Highway Safety | Council predicted between 65 and 70 persons would die over the 78-hour weekend and the Na- tional Safety League predicted 50 drownings. Last year during the Domin- ion Day weekend, 138 persons died accidentally, 71 in traffic accidents. PLANE CRASHES In Ontario, at least 28 per- sons have died, 20 on the high- way, seven drowned and one man, Helmut Krauss, 36, of Fairfax, Va., was killed when high light aircraft crashed be- side a highway near Holland Landing north of Toronto, Two triple fatalities were re-| ported in Ontario. Three Bramp- ton, Ont., teachers were killed in a two-car crash east of Nipi- gon and a Sudbury couple and one of two small children were killed when their car collided with a train 40 miles south of | known suicides or slayings. | Kingston when his car smashed} itoba also reported six fires. One man died in a plane crash. Nova Scotia recorded two traffic fatalities and two drown- ings while Prince Edward had one traffic death. Newfoundland so far remains fatality-free. The survey does not include industrial or natural deaths, SUNDAY Mrs. Johanna Herzberg, 62, of Germany, in a single-car carsh| north of Underwood. -John Love, 22, of Toronto,| when 'his motorcycle collided with a car and burst into flames} in Toronto. | Philip Quackenbush, of! 24, into rocks in a ditch 50 miles} north of Kingston. Stewart Sarazin, 3, of Wahna- titae, of head injuries received when struck by a car Saturday. Lloyd Pyke, 29, of London, when his car went out of con- trol.on Highway 2 just east of Kingston. Erwin Willard Smith, 55, of Toronto, drowned when his boat was swept over a dam at Healey Falls on the Trent River near Campbellford. Germain Lavalle, 29, his wife Yvette, 25, and their daughter Joanne, when their car collided their home. Quebec has reported 15 deaths, 10 in highway mishaps. | Three persons drowned and two} others were killed when a wall} collapsed. | Seven persons died in New Brunswick, four in car crashes, two in fires and one drowned. Alberta had five killed on the highway and two drownings while in British Columbia three persons died in motor accidents and four drowned. CRASH KILLS 6 Five of Saskatchewan's six highway deaths occurred in a single crash on the Trans-Can- jald-Cartier Freeway at London. with a train at Still River. SATURDAY | Cecil Edwin Howard, 45, of Toronto when : his transport truck crashed on the MacDon- Klaus Janijikowski, 33, of Tor- onto in a two-car crash near Beaverton. Fernand Pharand, 26, of New- market, drowned in McClarney Lake 30 miles east of Burk's Falls. Irene Elaine Judson, 22, Dar- lene Amber, 25, and Margaret Anne Christinson, 27, all of Brampton, in a car crash 20 miles east of Nipigon. Ukrainian CONCERT DANCE " Mickey and Bunny 1967 CENTENNIAL SHOW SPECTACULAR AND DANCE¢ TOMMY BUICK POLKA KING ON THE VIOLIN } THE BUNNIES DNIPRO HALL ; MON., JULY 10 8:30 P.M. V-BAR-S STOCK RANCH HORSEBACK RIDING || STABLES | @ 160 Acres of Lend @ Indoor Arena @ 70 Horses of all Types Western and English Style Riding Trail Rides Horse Rentols --- to groups, clubs, etc. --- Daily, Weekly or Monthly Besis -- Special Rates. HANCOCK RD. N., COURTICE 1 mi. North of Hwy. Ne. 2 728-7768 George Alfred Traves, 25, of Saskatoon, drowned in Angus Lake, 12 miles south of Tema- dead, one in traffic and four in|gami ami. James Edward Lee, 23, of Souris, Man., in a car accident four miles south of Trenton. Andrea Percy, 22 months, of Toronto, -drowned in a pool in a gravel pit near her home. George James Copegog, 22, of Christian Island, drowned when he fell from a ferry into Georg- ian Bay. Luxton Ferguson, 28, of Sud- bury, drowned in the Vermil-| lion River 14 miles north of Sudbury. Maurice Sequin, 30, of Corn- wall, in a two - car, head - on crash west of Cornwall. Matthew Williams, 58, o! hi @ spected, and where the rights Montreal, drowned in the St.) |Lawrence River after he ap- |parently suffered a heart attack' jnear Lancaster. | Jean McCabe and William |Buist, 67, both of Toronto, in ja head-on collision nine miles jwest of Kingston, | Helmut Krauss, 36, of Fair- \fax, Va., in a crash of a light | sieweets beside Highway 11 near Holland Landing. FRIDAY mond Hill, when thrown from a car which went out of control and hit a hydro pole in Toronto. | | Arthur John Gaudet, 19, of Tronto, when he lost control Toronto, when he lost control on a curb in Toronto. | William Albert Sewell, 18, of| Cooksville, when his car crashed on the Macdonald-Car- Helen Marie Ogle, 34, of Rich- | OSHAWA DRIVE-IN THEATRE ~* & ... 723-4972 FIRST OSHAWA SHOWINGS OPEN AT 8:00 > od fi T fn PANAVISION' And METROCOLER ADDED HIT Children Under 12 Free Always A Color Cartoon Vebdbddbbedb badder iii ii iitt Join The \ tier Freeway near Guelph. | | | Jimmy Qua Recordin Canada's Top Western Entertainment Nightly--Soturday Matinee Allen riet g Stars DUNDAS ST, WHITBY starring FP fi E) f fay ty COLOR by DE LUKE scent sn UNITED ARTISTS To ie HELD OVER! . SATURDAY AFTER Theatre 39 KING ST. -- 725-5833 HAdults 2.25 i Children 1.00 ¥ fe Modern Country Music RON McLEOD Channel 11 -- Saturday Night Jamboree -- Arc Recording Stor NOON MATINEE ENTERTAINMENT NIGHTLY & SAT. AFTERNOON THE GENOSHA HOTEL THE COUNTRY. JAYES © EXCITING COUNTRY and WESTERN SOUND Enioy Our French & Canadian Cuisine NOW UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT THE GOLD RUSH LOUN RAY BELMONTE Laffs Aplenty Top Musical Revue a) KING ST OSHAWA TEXT OF QUEEN'S SPEECH There are still wrongs to bg righted and suffering to be relieved, There is still a con- stant.effort of accommodation to be made so that all the peoples in this great country | may live together in friend- ship and harmony. THE OSHAWA TIMES, Monday, July 3, 1967 19 IZZA Phone 723-0241 or 728-0192 FINAL WEEK TEXAS. STARS AT THE ESTABLISHED HOME Of Country & Western MUSIC IN OSHAWA You are cordially invited to enjoy NOW PLAYING! JOSEPH L. MANKIEWICZ" LATE AS ----! | bi i ag '| SEE BOTH et 8:00 P.M. Bcf GHARLES K. FELOMAN REX HARRISON SUSAN HAYWARD GLIFF ROBERTSON CAPUCINE EDIE ADAMS MAGGIE SMITH FEATURE TIMES 1:50 - 4:20 - 6:50-9:25 a 8:00 P.M. AND 4a BoTH OF US ON THE SAME PROGRAM? ..THATS REAL Wwo-GemHERNeESs/ THE AT LAST... THE KITTY LANIER SPRUCE VILLA HOTEL RESERVATIONS 668-3386 REVUE FEATURING ..., EDDY WOOD DUO AFTER SUCCESSFUL ENGAGEMENT AT BROWN DERBY IN TORONTO. or Spur of the Moment Walk In. HELD OVER The BLACK PANTHER Exotic Frolics Back by Popular Demand ~ Entertainment and Dancing Nightly _ Saturday Matinee 4 to 6 pm, ' French Buffet Daily 12-12:30 end 5- . Sunday Dinners 5-8:30 p.m. DINERS CARDS HONORED Now Licensed under L.C.B.0, for Sunday Dinners Bonquets ~~ Weddings -- Parties NE vaeeee® Since laughtep» Now PLAYING Continuous from 1:30 P.M,