6 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Mendey, November 10, 1958 pe Joint Services Honor War Dead BOWMANVILLE -- Members|year union; A, Lobb, for the of the Bowmanville branch of the| Goodyear management; Gordon Canadian Legion paraded to ser-| Rundle, for thé public school vices at the cenotaphs in Bow-|board; Charles mm, for the manville and Orono Sunday, pre (high school board; and for the ceded hy the Bowmanville pipe families that lost kin in the con- and drum band, to honor fallen)flicts Mrs, T, Carter, Mrs, comrades, Kennedy, Jack McNulty, J, King, Joost ® Lagioaives xom Bow. W. Parker and D. Wright. manville, Orono, a ewcastle took part in the services held in| ORONO SERVICE Bowmanville in the morning and| The service at Orono consisted at Orono during the afternoon. In the morning ceremony citi- zens crowded the street around the cénotaph to hear prayers of- fered by Rev, A. G. Beott, Rev. H. A. Turner, Rev. G. Leno, Rev, of an Armistice Day church ser. vice at St. Xavier's Anglican Church and a special sermon by the rector, Rev, G. R, Dewdney, Following the church service Le- glonaires, members of the Le- gion Auxillary, and Girl Guides parades to the Orono war memor- al, 'here three wreaths were der, all members of the Bow-|laid. manville: Ministerial Association,| Ed Rundle, vice-president of the Bowmanville Reeve Willred Canadian Legion branch, placed Carruthers read the names of | the Legion wreath, Ernest Dent, the 104 Bowmanville men wholof Orono, placed the provinelal J. Schaafsma, Pastor A, E, Bell, Rev. A. C. Herbert, padre of the branch, and Rev. .W K. Houslan- Representative R. CZIRANKA BOWMANVILLE AND DISTRICT NEWS Phone MA 3.7224 BOWMANVILLE -- In a speech delivered tu 240 members of Bow: manville branch of the Canadian Legion Saturday night Lt.-Col. Angus Duffy, commanding officer of the Hastings and Prince ward Regiment, of Port Hope, attacked the complacency of the country's policy toward immi- gration, civil defence, and a dis- tinetive Canadian flag. The occa- sion was the branch annual Re- membrance Day dinner, The colonel, who jumped from the rank of regimental sergeant. major to CO of the Hasty P's, told the Armistice Day diners {gave their lives for democracy. | wreath, and Mrs. Ann Piper, pre- The Bowmanville service con sident of the Bowmanville ladies cluded with the laying of wreaths auxiliary, placed the Auxiliary by the province, the town, and | wreath. service organizations. Placing] Climax to the Armistice Day that the matter of eivil defence was a responsibility that rested with the individual, The army, he |said, could not look after all the Ot , ring ay's crisis with the tus Y T western peoples who needs of civil defence. It is essen- tial that every man, woman, and child have a designated role in the overall plan otherwise civil tion before World War wo Col. Duffy assaulted the "sat on their behinds in the 30's and did nothing to deter Hitler from war. ring, The West's complacency urged Hitler to make war," he USSR 18 THREAT The same situation prevails to- day, he continued, the only dif- ference is that the USSR plays the role of the potential threat {o ace, If we are prepared and ie Soviet knows we are prepared to survive, he will not attack, sald Col, Duffy, Legion Speaker Scores 'Western Complacency siles which he said were still in the future, Stressing the need of survival, he noted that if half the popula- tion were killed by a nuclear at- tack the country would be in no condition to fight back, On the matter of immigrants and the fear that they will over. run the country, Col. Duffy de. clared that it is not the proper Canadian attitude to build fences around the nation and keep foreigners out, WELCOME IMMIGRANTS Instead they should be welcom- ed. and encouraged to come fo Canada. And when they do come help them become good Cana dians and make them feel that they are part of the community, he urged his listeners. When it came to the matter of ceeded to the community cen. tre. --Photo by John Mills No Crisis In Schools | wreaths at the memorial for var- events came with the unvelling, lous organizations were: Mrs. of a plague at St. John's Angli- | John Knight, for the province; ean Church, Bowmanville, honor. | |Reeve Carruthers, for the town ing fallen members of St. John's |couneil: Ab Mavin for the Le: congregation. | gion; Mrs, Ann Piper, for the Le-| Rev, Canon C. H. Boulden, |gion Auxiliary; Rex Walters, for MBE, of Port Hope, unveiled and| {the Rotary club; Ralph Mecln- dedicated the plaque. Rev. Boul: {tyre, for the Lions Club; Dr.[den served as a padre with the {Charles Cattran, for the Kinsmen Canadian Forces overseas In both| Canadian Legion and other or- | ies attended services and the | AJAX REMEMBERED HER | parade shown above as it pro- 3 fallen dead Sunday when the | ganizations, with town dignitar- Urges Remembrance Best | deciding on a distinctive national flag, the colonel felt that the Red Ensign with the Canadian coat-of. Present radar lines provide enough warning of an impending attack by air so that in eight d hours all the cities in North|arms should be chosen rather America can be ev ted, be- than developing a new emblem. fore an enemy bomber is even His reason was that the ensign close, he said. He dismissed the symbolized the history of the na- eventuality of an attack by mis-| tion from every aspect, Way Cleared For Ajax Water Plant Tribute To War Heroes Says Teacher AJAX (Staff) -- The town oflor event. 'We can say of Re-|God help us to value these things.! WINNIPEG (CP)--Prof. R. A Ajax remembered its fallen of membrance Day, with the words To love our Canada which is a wardle is one teacher who does three wars who died to preservelof Scripture, 'This day shall be symbol of peace. The gift from|,.; think there is a crisis In edu. freedom in a solemn service of|unto you for a memorial', she|loved ones who paid the supreme ation remembrance in the Community said. sacrifice." "The older generation is al Centre Sunday afternoon. "Today is a day of memories--| 'Memorial Day should be a ways deploring the younger gen- It was a simple dignified serv- it must of necessity be such. The/day when we look into the future eration, They're no.worse than | Space Travellers Face Radiation Club; Don Kemp, for the Good-|world wars. | | | AJAX (Staff) -- The way Is now cleared for the town of Ajax to go ahead with the construction of its new water purification plant, A Municipal Board order issued Oct, 24 approving the plant and the issuance of debentures was rescinded Nov, 8. BOWMANVILLE -- The final "'Drys" Waging Big Campaign An advance poll will be eon. public meeting of the Bowman-|ducted Saturday, Nov, 15, in an Friday, Nov. 7, the council re- ville Citizens Committee before|attempt to gain some indication ice, the congregation stood quiet-older folk can remember dark making sure that the sacrifice of we were," he said in an inter celved a telegram reversing the ly as wreaths were placed at the| days of anxiety, can recall scenes|those who fell in far off lands view, By ALTON BLAKESLEE will touch upon proposals for| foot of the Cross of Sacrifice. The of battle and devastation. [for our freedom was not in vain."| "Teen . agers generally are a pqcooiated Press Science Writer rescuing astronauts from ma stirring notes of the Last Post| uj ing at ourselves today--| The memorial service was pre-|fine lot," says the stout, happy SAN ANTONIO, Tex. (AP)=|rooned or disabled space ships. were sounded, a brief silence andy "we anoreciated the sacrifice|ceded by a parade of veterans, professor who retired last Aug: gpace travellers rescinding order and the order of Oct, 24 stands. A story in the Times Saturday he Nov, 19 liquor vote will be|of the way the town's 4000 voters eld in Bt, Pauls United Church will cast their ballots on the big with Royal F. Moulton, executive day, Forty per cent plus one vote t h then Reveille. face double trou-| Dr. Singer said there are ap|.... nave left the impression |secretary of the Ontario Temper-|is ail that is needed to defeat any of others? There are those in our|Canadian Legion members and|ust from the zoology department midst who are here because they|Ladies' Auxiliary headed by the of the University of Manitoba, | 1 {know from personal loss the price Whitby brass band under Band-| Nor does Professor Wardle be- was read by Rev. T. Rex Norman of liberty and peace. Others have master Eric Clark. Parade mar-|lieve that more emphasis must| and the address oat Een by to the battlefield and know|shal was Staff-Sergeant Art Ward. be placed on science by upivers-| Liculasant Peay Donnelly of the|gom experience the cost, some| After the service the salute ities. od Lieutenant Donnelly in her(S2TTY perpetual reminders was taken by Lt.-Colonel Morley I'd like to see more a More. A ) through wounds or disability. +" Finley. ED ding offi- People studying the arts and hu opening remarks made reference Y C. Finley, ED, commanding Ces. There's nothing like ait- "Are we guarding our heritage cer of the Ontario Regiment, Manities, p I] to the many days set apart as a f " memorial to some great person of freedom?" she asked. "May|Oshawa ting and listening to an old boy AJAX AND DISTRICT NEWS . John Mills, Representative -- Phone Ajax 426 Students Drive | WORLD NEWS BRIEFS Rev. R. E. Armstrong led in prayers, a passage of scripture dle Ages. "It's ideas a university should be producing, not techniques,' he said, Sciences could be learned in technical school.s { There should be more univers- |a certain size it becomes a fac-| tory." Prof. Wardle came to the Uni- versity of Manitoba 30 years ago ble from dangerous radiation, a|parently two bands or haloes of scientist said today. They must radiation around the earth, Both survive two different bands of are a hazard to humans aboard rudiation, not just the one re- earth satellites or coekts to the cently discovered by U.S. ex-'moon or mars. plorer satellites. One is a band of intense or But a spaceship designed like hard radiation discovered by the a club sandwich could take them Explorer satellites and also de- safely through, said Dr. 8. Fred tected by Russia's sputniks. This Singer of the University of Mary: band seems to be formed from talk about the history of the Mid-|jand. Its outer skin would be interactions of cosmic rays from| built up in layers, like a clublouter space with atoms of the sandwich, of various materials earth's air, Dr, Singer sald. to block out the radiation, | The other band is less intense, Dr. Singer spoke at the open: or soft radiation, streaming from ing of the second international the sun. symposium on the physics and| Both bands are trapped in the |ities and smaller ones, he sald. | medicine of the atmosphere and earth's magnetic field and con-| |*"When a university gets beyond space. The three-day conference stitute a human hazard, The ra. th is sponsored by the Air Force|diation could be lethal over long Schooi of Aviation Medicine here. periods of exposure. It could Looking ahead to man's explor- damage germ cells or the genes ation of space, the conference determining heredity. L} For UNICEF MOM IS CHIEF letters are thought to stand for PICKERING (Staff) -- Students| CHATEAUGUAY, Que. (CP)--|'British Ordnance." of Pickering District High School| Raymond Chasles has joined the| reached a new high in collections |teaching staff of St. Willlbrod GREAT TEACHER from the University of M ter. Of retirement, he said he will "do as little as possible." China Communes that the town still lacked ap- |proval for the plant, |" In rescinding the Oct, 24 order |the OMB gave as its reasons that on evidence the town council of Ajax was not prepared to follow a suggestion of the board that it negofiate with Pickering Town- ship | for either a share in the control of the water plant or con- sider the sale of water to the township, With the order to go ahead clar- ified, the council can now com- {plete the debenture issue, The | contractor started on the job last wee The town of Ajax had taken e stand that it had planned the plant over a number of years. It | had spent $15,000 in producing en- | gineering design and working |drawings for a plant based on |the future needs of the town with {no provision to supply water to any other area. In preliminary planning, the township of Picker- The meeting is the third in the| temperance organizations cam- paign to defeat the five-point bal. lot which will ask town electors if they are in favor of: a liquor store, a ladies beverage room, a beverage room for men only, a dining lounge, and a cocktail bar, So far the citizens committee has stressed the point that liquor or beer outlets would only dis. turb the peaceful atmosphere that has prevalled in the town, Besides public meetings the groups campaign has included extensive advertising. Earlier meetings laid the groundwork for a door « to - door canvass for votes, ance Federation, as guest speak- one point on the ballot, Approxi- er mately two - thirds of the vote must favor a point (0 permit an outlet to be established, With the exception of the local brewer's retail store on King street east nearly 50 years have elapsed since the town went "dry" in a 1909 plebiscite, Prior to that time the records show that Bowmanville had eight hotels and four liquor stores. Now there is one hotel and a motor hotel on Highway 401, It is sald that in the last cen- tury Bowmanville professed to have two distilleries renowned for producing "the finest whisky ever distilled." Its fame lies in the legend that it never left a "hang. over." British Are Patient for UNICEF of Hallowe'en. Over (high school, where the principal OTTAWA (CP) -- "Un Grand ing had not approached the town 100 students canvassed in Picker- is his mother, Mrs. J. E. Chasles. pq, cateur" is the title of a 136- to share in the plant, or obtain Stenographer Heads Firm VICTORIA (CP) -- Fair-haired | Hilda M. Harding started out as| ing Village, Fairport, Rouge, Claremont, Brougham and Green- bank, to collect $350. Behind the canvas is the PDHS United Nations Club of 15 mem- bers. The club debates foreign af- fairs. Two of its members, Beth OBC page biography by Rev. Gaston BARNEOSE on A '--Tare| Carriere, Just published, Jepicting . h the life of the late Rev. Rene in Stanstead county, a bobcat : Lamoureux, founder of the Uni- wa Pi oy Summ Bucciane, versity of Ottawa Normal School animal weighed 20 pounds. and its director for 33 years. Are Developing By IAN MKCCRONE HONG KONG (Reuters) -- Peo: ple's communes, the ultimate in ) They contain 8,000 to 10,000 house: holds, or roughly 30,000 to 40,000 |people. The aim is to have ine |a stenographer and then took up|communal life under commun. commune for each "hsiang,"" or a supply of water, ; Ajax states it was not unt Sept. 3 at a hearing of the OMB in Ajax that Pickering Reeve W. G. Lawson made a request that the board make it a condi tion of the board's order that Ajax supply the surrounding By HAL COOPER you have to throw it pretty hard Instead of chuckin it back a In Cheque Dealings LONDON (AP)~You can make|draft, he can a cheque bounce in England, but|on it. The "If he ac cept a Jornal over gh terest Soing interest is one point over the Bank of Ei nterest rate--at the moment, 4% t you, your bank manager would Per cent." Chisholm and Allan Jones at- tended a United Nations seminar at Queen's University last June. Allan said the students get a Students was unable to render NQ, VERDICT MONTREAL (CP)--A jury of pl great thrill out of the canvas and|Verdict at a mock trial of Louis go about their task with a great! Riel, | following ; School principal J. A. Richard-|Indians in Western Canada, The ceptor unit. son said "When you consider that|debaters were members of Mc. gator ever to deal of enthusiasm. hanged in 1885 for treason the uprising by Metis over 100 took part, that means Gill University debating union. that one in five of our students gave up the usual Hallowe'en fes- tivities to do something for some, one else. We are very proud of partment officials after investiga | Fifteen teen-agers here will long tion report a stone slab marked remember the that here." HISTORIC SLAB MONTREAL (CP) -- Parks de- TAKES COMMAND (nursing, but wound up as the ism, over | basic rural administrative area. OTTAWA (CP)--The RCAF set president of a leading sand and China, The commune's job is to speed a precedent at Uplands station gravel company here. The movement began 'quitely up the development of industry, here in appointing Sqdn. Ldr. Eight years ago she went into|lust April. But according to de-/im prove husbandry, construct E. W. Garrett, 41, to command her father's office to assist with tailed reports reaching Hong more irrigation works and organ- 410 squadron, a CF-100 jet inter-|the bookkeeping. Graduallv it be.| Kong, whole provinces have been |ize better communications. He is the first navi. came a full-time job when her| completely "commune-ized." MEMBERS ARMED are developing all areas with water. The chairman of the board said at that time that it had no power to impose such a condition in its order. Controversy over the issue ac- cording to town officials has lost the project at least six weeks of command a jet!father's health failed and she took| The attempt to turn about on more responsibility and when) 750,000 peasants' co - operatives The commune, the regulations he died she became president. into 25,000 self - contained com-|state, will arm all its members. "I started out to be a stenog- munes is seen as the biggest and| Boys, young men and demobilized | rapher," she said, 'but somehow most -ambitious rural project the or retired servicemen will be or-| it didn't last very long. Pelping regime has undertaken so 8anized into militiamen and be "On a visit to England 1 be-|far, given regular training. squadron WORKING PENALTY STONEY CREEK, Ont. (CP)-- 1958 Hallowe'en. A major move in the "big leap good construction weather, Com. pletion of the plant was schedul. ed for the end of 1950, with the water intake finished by midsum- mer. ities under para-military disci Moore, a retired London branch|live on their overdrafts, £8 or £10 in the red. Does it r! "How much of an overdraft much rather persuade you to ac- would you grant to this hypo- cept a formal overdraft. On this 5 he can earn the bank money. |thetical chap? "We will take the hypothetical/ 'I would say perhaps £25, said case of a chap who puts about Moore, "For a monthly deposit of £100 ($280) a month in the bank," [£1,000 I might go to £250. It is an Interviewe sald to Charles sald that many people in Enithd H [richer they are, the more likely {this is to be true." | "You were with the National [Provincial how long?" "Just over 43 years." icochet?" "And how much did you lose in "Oh, dear, mo," sald Moore, [Unpaid overdrafts" manager for the National Provin- cial, "Every once in a whilesthis chap commits a cheque which puts him came interested in nursing and trained for two years at London ------ with the letters "B" and "0"|They paid the county roads de- {found in Lafontaine Park prob. partment $20 for cost of clearing| university College Hospital and| ably was erected there by the debris left on the street and then), gimpson Memorial Hospital in British Army 150 years ago. Thelformed teams to finish the job. Edinburgh." Miss Harding returned to Can. |ada in 1945 and joined the staff of Royal Jubilee Hospital here. | She remained for three years, the| last year as night supervisor. ATLANTA (AP)--'1 always had a suppressed desire to drive a trolley and all of a sudden I found myself with the nerve to do it." That's how Janes 'Camp, a 22-year-old roofing sub - con- tractor, explained Sunday's theft of a 10-ton, 35-foot track- less trolley. "I'm sorry I did it now, of course," he told police, "for it's no fun .» be locked behind | these bars, but it was great fun | | | STILL TICKING {women for productive work, Peas- Hong Kong Standard last month BIG EFFECT forward" drive, the commune It strikes a blow at the Chi: system is openly aimed at the nese regard for private worldly abilition of what little isleft of possessions. It eventually could|private property-holding in China. have a tremendous significance| In Hong Kong, some commen- for other nations. tators are skeptical about the out- In the commune, even house- | come of the big experiment. An work has been socialized to free| editorial in the English-language ants hand in their pots and pans said: 'People all over the world to the central authority and eat|should be informed what these in canteens, Women put their communes really mean to the' babies in nurseries and go to|people on the mainland -- their work in the factories. | complete loss of personal freedom pline." ""The first several times I would "I went up the spout only once, The South China Morning Post thusiasm for the communes ex- periment is more apparent than real. The Chinese people, it said, are no more inclined to give up all rights to an individual life and the proper rewards of hard work than are the people of any other land, The newspaper asked: Will the Chinese Communist leaders be able to Impose successfully a sys- The units are much bigger than|and of family life, and their ergi- the agricultural co « operatives.' mentation into orwellian commun tem which has been a failure else- where--including Russia? Gibraltar Is Sti Gate To Mediterranean By HAROLD WALL |weapons has made some of the GIBRALTAR (Reuters) -- Al 0ld equipment at Gibraltar obso- dashing down the street." lescent, as shown by a recent of- 11 hourly trips by ferryboat to Al geciras, the Spanish port opposite expressed the opinion that the en- | ing. If the pattern persisted, I would be inclined to pore over his account a bit, but I would still honor his cheques. "It would probably develop that he had gone a bit overboard on wine, women, or horses. In this country you always settle with your publican, your mistress and your bookkeeper, even if you have to fly a kite or two with your bank. "If the client continued to live on the bank's money for any| length of time, I would write him a polite note. The note would sug-/ gest that he apply for an over: | draft." [ "Apply for an overdraft?" sald| the interviewer, "It ds as| assume that he was guilty of noth- ing more than careless bookkeep- for £70." "You were a good judge of |elients" | "I believe so. But this client [was an unusually poor judge of COLLECT FUND | OTTAWA (CP) « Alderman | Dick Barber won Saturday night's |fund raising swimming race [against three other city council. | lors, including Mrs. May Nickson. |Some $100 was collected for dis- aster-stricken Springhill, N.S, The swim lasted for one length of the pool and Mr, Barber came in a good two seconds ahead of the pack. The challenger, Alder- man Charles St. Germain was second, Mrs. Nickson third and Jules Morin lash houh he already had an over- raft." OVERDRAFT GIVEN "But the overdraft he has is an | informal overdraft," said Moore. SCOTTISH RIVER The Forth River in Scotland flows 107 miles from Ben Lomond to 'the Firth of Forth, Gibraltar, where there is a daily ficial announcement asking for|train to and from Madrid, and tenders for the purchase, dis-| other intermediary Spanish eities. | Police said Camp, who had never driven a trolley before, Sunday when their rented float. Pilot Richard Miller, 22, and business. nearby. fee p ee Dregk: "I'm afraid I don't know much | the officers' caught him any- - police force shot a fox at the Officers figured Camp's put in storage after the new city made no attempt to run away versation piece. Jost its » [tance as the gateway to the| ESCAPE INJURY BRIDGENORTH, Ont. (CP)-- equipped plane flipped over dur | . . ing a takeoff on Chemong Lake| near this Peterborougn area 00 ng or er It was about this time that she passenger Robert MacDougall 26,| Steals ! Tro l l e clambered onto the floats of the Y | , | Today Miss Harding has 23 o > y , 3 | Vgriimad cralt to await req uel took the vehicle while driver employes, including 19. Work men, two in the office and two FOX SHOT IN Two patrolmen spotted the | 41,ut the engineering end of the| wayward trolley and halted it. business, although I am learning RJAX STREET The driver jumped out and ran |g Jittle every day. My forte is AJAX (Staff) -- Constable how Camp was jailed on a seldom- - used charge -- larceny of a LETHBRIDGE, Alta. (CP) -- A rear of the Shopping Centre in the early hours of Saturday i morning. "suppressed desire" trip cov- hall was opened in 1948, now | ered about a mile. ticks away steadily in the city though the Spanish government The trolley's number was clerk's office, where it not onlyliong has been trying to convince before he shot it. | Mediterranean has not diminished | in any practical way. | It remains a naval base for the| Two Toronto men escaped injury town. started to help her father in his by Ray Wyatt, who was in a boat G. S. Bethel was having a cof- managers. so fast he lost his shoes but |.,c and budgeting." Fred Gallivan of the Ajax trackless trolley. seven-foot-high grandfather clock | The officer said the animal | 1313. tells the time but provides a ow world that Gibraltar now has that the Rock's impor | North Atlantic Treaty forces. |cious docks are kept in a state of readiness for any emergency, and the development scheme for {which a grant of £300,000 ($840, 000) was made two years ago by/| Britain's colonial d e v e | opment welfare fund now is being pushed | ahead. ISOLATION TRIED The Spanish government bas tried for years to isolate Gibral-| tar from the Spanish mainland. | It refuses to allow Spanish na- irategic vatue, the fact| mantling and removal of 130 guns| The barbary apes, which now and gun barrels, TOURIST HOPES Gibraltar hopes to link its fu-| |ture strongly with international and caves, the moorish castle and tourism. It can be reached by direct Britain sees to it that the spa-|flight from London in just over| There are several night clubs four hours for a return fare of about £40 ($112). The fact that it is in the sterling area also has many advantages for tourists from Britain, While in Gibraltar, tourists can; travel without restrictions by! daily ferry to Tangier or by air | four times dally in just 20 min. | utes. In both cases, the return fares are low. Cars can be carried on the ferryboat. There also are| tionals to cross the border for touristic purposes as they had done for more than two centuries, though about 12,000 workers from |the adjoining towns of La Linea |and Algeciras are allowed to earn ia living in Gibraltar, | These, however, on their return) to Spanish territory are obliged to change their sterling wages at| a rate fixed by the frontier fi-| nance administration. This regu-| {lation brings the Spanish govern- ment a handsome income each| | year. Some 85,000 people depend on these wages to live as well as upon the groceries and other com modities that the workers take back into Spain each day from Gibraltar The RAISED FUNDS FOR UNICEF Jones, president, William Par- ish, head of the History Depart- ment of PDHS, It was he who left Rosemary Salgo, Dale Walthier, Faith Shepherd, Sady Walthier, Beth Chisholm. Back row: Victor Norman and Allan UNICEF area This is the executive of Pick- collections in this » ering District High School Unit- ed Nation Club which sparked the UNICEF drive. From the -Photo by John Mills introduction of atomic FOR MISSED PAPERS IN AJAX it you have not received your Times by 7 p.m. cell AJAX TAXI PHONE AJAX 333 All ells must be placed before 30 p.m. total about 40, continue to be a| "must' on sightseeing excursions, which always include the galleries | the many tunnels that Doyo] the massive, 1,400-foot-high Rock, | with floor shows featuring inter- national artists, Gibraltar has many spacious beaches, and there is abundant bathing, deep-sea fishing, yacht. ing, tennis and various other out: door sports. SUBSCRIBERS THE TIMES BOWMANVILLE FOR MISSED PAPERS AND BOWMANVILLE'S FINEST TAXI SERVICE PHONE STEVEN'S TAXI MA 3.5822 If you have not received your Times phone your carrier boy first. If you are unable te con. tact him by 7:00 p.m. TELEPHONE STEVEN'S TAXI Cally Accepted Between 7 «7:30 p.m. Only SPECIAL Top Quality Aluminum be Ric LES EVENISS SALES LIMITED 15 PRINCE STREET OSHAWA RA 5.4630 sparked the first Hallowe'en | A