SUCCESSFULLY COMPLETE GRADE 13 NANCY KERTON DEREK WATCHORN TED DUNCAN BOB SMYTH Biographies Are Published f Top Ajax HS Students . AJAX -- Following are biog-|Carleton College. He is the son Western Ontario in Commerce of Texas called on Mrs. William raphies of students of the Ajax|of oO High School who have success- fully completed their Grade 13 examinations: | Richard Kirby, son of Mr. and Mrs. P. T. Kirby of 18 Birch street, Ajax, led his classmates at the Ajax High School at the| Ontario Departmental Examina- tions. Richard has an enviable| 81 per cent average which willl earn for him the designation "Ontario Scholar". Seven of his nine papers were "Firsts" and two "Seconds". He will attend the University of Toronto in Commerce and Finance. Derek: Watchorn, son of Mrs. W. S. Watchorn of Ontario street, Ajax, stood second with a First Class Honor Average of 80 per cent, which earns for him the title 'Ontario Scholar", awarded by the Department of Education of Ontario. He will at- tend the University of Toronto. Winnifred Willmot, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. G. Willmot of 31 Wishbone crescent, Ajax, had a First Class Honor Aver- age of 79 per cent on nine papers, seven of them "Firsts" and two "Seconds'"; Winnifred may be named an 'Ontario Scholar" on the basis of an 80 pecent on eight best papers Winnifred will attend the Uni- versity of Toronto. Bruce Hall, son of Mr. and Mrs. C. R. Hall of 59 Ridout street, Ajax, had an average of 74 per cent. He will attend the University of Toronto. David Rapsey, son of Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Rapsey, had an aver- age of 74 per cent. He will at- tend York University. James Shearer, son of Mrs. J. Shearer, 7 York street, Ajax, has completed the entrance re- quirements for the Faculty of Dentistry at the University of Toronto with an average of 70 per cent Manfred Pape, son of Mr. and Mrs. E. Pape, 74 Burcher street, successfully wrote 11 papers. He| was the only member of the class to attempt so difficult a task. He obtained Second Class Honors average of 68 per cent, He will attend University of To- ronto in Engineering. Marie Huxter, daughter of Mr.| - and Mrs. S. E. Huxter, § Ed-| ward street, has established Second Class Honor standing of 68 per cent. She has registered with the Oshawa General Hospi- tal for training as a nurse. Robert Smyth, son of Mr. and| Mrs. E. S. Smyth, 64 Forest road, has completed the en- trance requirements for Queen's| Unive: *iy with Second Class § Hon¢ _UMwr cent. i 22, son of Mrs J. Koppens, 28 Elgin street, Ajax, has completed the en trance requirements to the En- gineering School of the Univer- sity of Waterloo with a 64 per cent average. Brian Thompson, son of Mr. and Mrs. R. Thompson of 151 Admiral road, has completed the requirements for the Univer- 'y of Toronto, Forestry School th a 60 per cent average. | Gillard will attend| { |troubled Kivu province for the canadian ranks EXAMINATIONS AT AJAX HS. MARIE HUXTER JIM SHEARER India Gets Dirty Book Offensive NEW DELHI (Reuters)--New Delhi's many curbside sellers of pornographic books are watch- ing nervously the progress of what seems like a mass cleanup drive against obscenity. They have good reason for doing so. Volunteers are trying to stage a big offensive against posters, immoral books, suggestive movie advertisements and even the display of women's lingerie in New Delhi store windows. One storekeeper, irate at the THE OSHAWA TIMES, Thursday, August 17, 1961 2) | lanti - lingerie campaign, de- |scribed the whole campaign as |a "piece of madness." The most determined of the vie untecis are disciples of Ach- arya Vinoba Bhave, a Hindu evangelist noted as the foremost living disciple of the late Mo- handas Gandhi. Last November, this 65-year- old mystic and social reformer announced that one of the prin- cipal causes of the alleged de- cline in morals in India was the spread of indecent movie post- ers. That was a signal for his band of Sarvodaya (welfare) workers to start a campaign against ob- scenity. Five of them, the vanguard of |a promised bigger group, ar- jrived in New Delhi recently and set to work on calendars al- leged to contain offensive pic- tures. They announced they would visit homes, ask for the gift of the calendars and later make a public bonfire of them. They wrote to the owner of a movie theatre seeking the re- moval of a large poster showing the heroine and the hero in a provocative pose. The poster war was brought to the capital following the display of a Holly- wood advertisement showing a woman's bare back. PHYSICIAN DIES LONDON (AP) -- Sir Henry Bashford, 81, honorary physi~ cian to the late King George VI, died at his country home Tues- day. RICHARD GILLARD hh f JIM BARRY BRUCE HALL ." BRIAN HOGAN DAVID RAPSEY be DAVID FLETCHER MANFRED PAPE TWA Members Mark 75th Year Hold Meet | Gigantic Growth By MRS. LORNE JONES {| BALSAM and MT. ZION -- i |The monthly Woman's Associa: CHICAGO (AP)--Sears, Roe-|skirt and bathing suit dimen- i {tion met on Wednesday after- buck and Company, which|sions, perhaps, to the state of | [noon at the home of Mrs. Wil-|started out with a package of the proprieties. : | liam Harbron with 16 members| watches, has ticked off 75 years| Prices also serve as eco- | |present. Mrs. L. Richardson of gigantic growth -- without|nomic barometers. In the old was guest speaker. She spoke penefit of such big sellers as|days, for example, men's suits on the joining of the Women's automobiles and groceries. sold for $9.95, a brass lamp for Missionary Society and the But it's doing well enough $2.30. A "Stradivarius model |Woman's Association "and an- with 140,000 other items ranging| violin" for $6.10. swered questions. in size from diamonds to sail-| Catalogues once were burned | Roll call was answered with boats, to ring up sales of more|in public squares in some small maiden name. than $4,000,000,000 a year. towns. That was i the garly illi | Sears, which operates in Latin| days, when !scal merchants pr Vem Hasbron and, leas as well as the United stirred up storms of hostility the worship period taken on|States, extended its interests| against carpetbagging mail or- Lydia as their subject. |into Canada in 1952 by forming|der houses. All enjoyed a buffet lunch. (2 Partnership with a Canadian| pyc \ype puproNAIRES Mr. and Mrs. E. Buchner of|: part, ris Ps a J Simp.|. Sears, who died in 1914, and Brownsview and Dr. B. Buchner|® 8% <1 prise named SIMP-|p cenwald, who died in 1932, "The combined resources were| "ere multimillionaires. Wood used to build on Simpsons' mail| etired In 1054 fron 00% Tape order, agency and order office) cy aries H. Kellstadt--and is en- usiness, opening new retail| 18" ¢S 2. J outlets in communities across hg) heslth and wealth at the Mrs. J. Mowat of Toronto ajcanmee. : | Roebuck sold his interest in Mrs.| If history wrote corporate gears for $25,000 in 1897, went WINNIFRED WILLMOT ELIZABETH O'BRIEN | | Mr. and Mrs. F. Gillard, 78 and Finance. xeter street. Mary Wheeler has complete Brian Hogan is registered in|the diploma requirements an the University of Toronto Facul-| will train as a nurse. She is the ty of Architecture. He is the son| daughter of Mr. and Mrs. W. C. of Mr. and Mrs. T. W. Hogan of| Wheeler, 3 Forest ose. i 40 Birch Crescent. izabe rien has com-| "TL i : James Barry of pleted her admission require- Hsing Wilh Jer meses, Mrs, names, this one would be known|sear®, fF $25,000 in 1807, went street, son of Mrs. the School of Nursing. Lewis' Jones "|as Sears, Rosenwald, Wood and| niovee in 1933 and died in 1948 has enrolled at the University of! formerly na ind M Grey of Downsview Company. These men were the | Fe Yeo ln A hed in 1s. Toronto. ; I vi ited with Mrs. Winton White. |big builders of the company that By: in 1938. when he was 74. he David Fletcher of 104 Em. moved to Toronto. glen S, is calls. itself the world's largest hcerved: ? peror street, son of Mr. and| John MacKay, son of Mr. J. Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Jones) JL butor Oo ot eae ol served: a . |Mrs. H. J. Fletcher, has en-'MacKay, 42 Windsor avenue, is spent a few days at a Hunt {218 Sears made millions. He's listed with RCAF Officer Train-|at the University of Western On- Camp near Parry Sound. ise. : dead. Rosenwald made $100,- |ing School at Centralia. tario completing his language, Miss Barbara McAvoy of Lay- Founder Richard W. Sears 000,000. He's dead. Now look at Gary Hill, son of Mr and requirements for entrance to the|ton is holidaying with her aunt was a born salesman but he me. Haven't been sick in 27 Mrs. C. S. Hill, 46 Windsor ave-| University of Western Ontario in and uncle, Mr. and Mrs. Frank was 23 before he peddled alyears." nue, has completed the diploma Commerce and Finance. McAvoy. bundle of watches and thus be- requirements and will -attend PRINCE ALBERT Nancy Kerton has completed the University of Toronto. PRINCE ALBERT Those who attended church on Sunday a Harbron. d| Mr. and Mrs. Burnett Jamie- son and Mary Jean spent the holiday weekend at Roy Jamie- son's cottage at Lake Kushog. E: 18 Mary| E. Barry, ments to Her family, Cedar street, Redwood, Minn., went to Min-| re- an- | Dainty| Mr. and Mrs. Walter Smith|neapolis and then to Chicago, -- and Gary of Lindsay visited where he teamed with a young were glad to see our pastor ° Tuesday with Mr. and Mrs. watchmaker from Hammond, |Rev. E. § Linstead, back from Congo Canadians Miss Mary Jean Jamieson Miss 1 hi " a duet by Mrs. B. Jeffs Mrs. and her aunt, Mrs. Gertrude| ADDED NEW BLOOD |C. Neunham was I uy , aw y Stabilizer Julius Rosenwald . Briggs of Oshawa, left by bus| °* Buin The last few Sundays the for Washington, D.C., for a holi-|i0ined the firm in 1896. The go- junior 'classes ~were Ina 1 dov. getting Sears was going and get-|} Mes aa e manage Ee ting business at the top, paying|>y Mrs. S. Glass, Mrs. T. LEOPOLDVILLE (CP) -- A)afterward or escaped and none on to Bukavu with men to op- : hill | >} ; y year after the first Canadians Of the Canadians was seriously! erate it. p the andes» Fler Sows below The Fiz meeting uf tie Won. c ved i "ongo to set up|injured. , nanu- | STV) 0 The Bort hid RE Miations for the UN to SEVEN DETACHMENTS facturer, introduced the indis-| "ome i Ms, 8. Harter, the United Nations, plans are months before agreement was| A post in Kivu province Pensable element, efficiency. | Mr: 8 oyenng Was Shaized by going ahead for a new station|reached May 11 to send 100 un- Would bring to seven the num-| Gen. Robert E. Wood, an Mrs. a Tai grove who wel operated |avid reader of the census Bojcomen e visitors prior to Officers at headquarters of movement control group to ex- by Canadians outside Leopold- reaus reports, took a Sears post °! Ns the 275-member ion sig: | pedite UN supplies from Matadi ville in 1924. He established retail[ Was read by SD Darya. nal unit, which began opera-|to forces throughout The Congo. | Three of them are in Katanga Stores and branched out into| °° of Aug is s : rs.. C. tions here Aug. 11, 1960, are! Canadian signallers waited province -- at the capital of | Latin America. Foley i ps y the Soere working on preliminary organ- with bags and equipment Elisabethville, at the former Sears' first wares were Y hot Hom 4) rg 300 an ization for a detachment at|packed for several weeks, plan- Belgian air base of Kamina, watches. They were of the or-|YOU note from Mrs. Wm. Heayn. Kivu province in the eastern| But the move was scotched|for the Indian UN contingent on|type that were much in demand Ported on finances, stating $60 Congo. both here and in Ottawa when the shores of Lake Tanganyika as symbols of status and so-|clear on strawberry festival. Situated on the edge of Lake the Congolese government in-|in northeastern Katanga. phistication. Accomplishments made Kivu at the border of the Bel- sisted that the Canadians must| The Canadians also operate, To and from the rural areas|garding fair exhibit was gian protectorate of Ruanda-/|eave their personal weapons Signals equipment in three other flowed mail orders for watches nounced by the convener. Urundi, Bukavu now is head- hehind. News of the Congolese Provincial capitals -- Stanley- --varying upward from 98 cents| A committee of Mrs. Wilson, ial Force which patrols much of yoked sharp reaction among all @bourg in central Kasai, and number to $41.45 for one in a(Brown to order necessities and |Coquilhatville in Equator prov-|solid gold case with engraved |arrange for lunch booth at Port N. : ince in the western Congo. flowers--and for clothing, guns, |Perry Fair, Sept. 4. The city has experienced TOOK FIRM STAND _ There are no immediate plans saddles and other goods. It was moved. we cater for periods of sharp disturbance, In the barage of cables that for moves from these posts. At| Business was good. Too good, Oyler Holstein sale. Sept. 12. particularly when pro-Lumum- flowed between Leopoldville and one time it was thought that|in fact. Orders were 30 to 60|Mrs. I. Beacock, Mrs. B. Smith Oriental province seized control|New York, the Canadian govern-|but the base now is a key po- had sent in for a $5.95 baby |details for same. early this year and kidnapped | ment insisted that past experi- sition in central Katanga and is|buggy for an infant son, wrote a| A half hour of favorite hymn the provincial government. Bu-{ence at Matadi was too bitter|expected to remain in oper subsequent complaint! |singing was enjoyed ) kavu and the rest of Kivu be-|to allow the Canadians to re- ation. "Better change the order to a|lunch of cake and ice cream came aligned with Antoine Gi- turn there unarmed. Similarly, Congolese political |single-barrel shotgun. The kid is|closed the pleasant evening zenga's Communist regime at It stuck to that attitude, in-|Manoeuvering is not expected|growing up." : Miss M. Davey, nurse-in-train-| ince. Diplomatic sources in Lea- {UN officials here insisted that Ment in Canadian positions. The) MOVED TO CITIES oe poldville say that regime now|it wasn't for Ottawa to decide, Signals detachments are sta-| Gen. Wood watched the hot futiey Biter a monk of has officially ceased to exist. [that the Canadians were in The|fioned to provide large con- growth of hard roads, the in- oe > Smith a rh Equipment for a station at Congo under United Nations centrations of UN troops with|crease in automobiles and they >. ™ ° ? Ie Bukavu would come from an- control and should. go where COMmunications to UN Congo flow of people from farms to other Congo trouble spot, Ma- ordered without referring to headquarters in Leopoldville di. i Finally a civilian communica- likely to stand fast despite] Broadening of the sales base BACKED BY OTTAWA tions team was sent instead Poliical shuffling within The has made a sharp change in the Canadian officers, with the when the Nigerians enered | Congo, such as the recent dis- nature of the trade. Today about active support of the external Matadi June 17. It remained solution of Gizenga's separate!2 per cent of the sales are affairs department in Ottawa, for the Canadian unit to fight | regime in Stanleyville. from catalogues and 77 per cent have abandoned plans for re- through red tape and the usual = in stores. River port from which United |Canadian signals equipment re-| VIENN -- i and 952 catalogue sales offices Nations forces were ejected. turned to them. | IENNA an) president in the United States, and 52 In a fierce fight there March| When that move is completed, |reached Sofia Thursday for a|stores and nine sales offices in 4-5, the Canadian detachment present plans call for the equip-! short visit, the Bu'garian radio! Latin America was bombarded by Congolesa ment to be repaired -- it sus-|said. He had deen in Romania The catalogues for years have troops and then captured. All tained some damage in last|and goes from Sofia to Comm Les Harbron and Lloyd. Ind., named Alvah C. Roebuck. his vacation. A pleasing vocal on Plan New Statio n little heed to the disorder among| Hodgins and Mrs, M, Pugh. for Canadian army signallers. armed Nigerian police and a ber of detachments exercises. Scripture Bukavu, picuresque capital of ning a return to Matadi. and at Albertville, headquarters |nate, eye-catching, hunting case| Treasurer Mrs. N. Wilson re- quarters for the Malayan Spec-istand is reported to have pro- ville in Oriental province, Lulu-|for a plain, stem-winding nickel Mrs. Newnham and Mrs. A. bist troops from neighboring | Ottawa and UN headquarters in| Kamina would be abandoned, (days late. One customer, who and Mrs. E. Martyn to plan all Stanleyville in Oriental prov-|formed sources say, even when|t0 mean changes for the mo- ing, Niagara, has returned to ta their own government. roop concentrations are stores in 1925. turning to Maadi, a key Congo torpor of The Congo to get the TOURS EAST Sears now has 740 retail stores nine men were released shortly March's barrage--and then sent nist China. {and living standards -- and by cities. He began to open retail N u- held a glass to fashions fads tives. Recent company with Mr. and Irs. R. Butson were: Mr. and Mrs. Jack Weldon, Ruth and {Jacqueline Weldon, Toronto. | Visitors with Mr. and Mrs. B. Smith were Mr. and Mrs. Ralph |Lyle, Toronto; Mr. and Mrs. Don Leslie and children, Sea- grave, | Mr. and Mrs. L {and Mrs. L. Devitt, Oshawa, in| Lindsay Saturday attending {*"The Derry Day" parade Mr. and Mrs. E. Martyn, Mar- {lon and Bruce, have returned from a week at a cottage on Scugog Island. Beacock, Mr. Sale Feature! Three fast-selling models! "Domestic' Sewing Machines Zig-Zag Sewing Machine For hours of sewing pleasure, choose this "Domestic" portable; it makes buttonholes automatically, overcasts seams, appliques, monograms, sews on buttons, darns, mends, and has an automatic bobbin winder. Precision heavy- duty mechanism sews straight stitching both forward and backward. In char- coal with silver-tone grey. EATON Semi-Annual Sale, each Round Bobbin Sewing Machines Designed for the budget-minded, this reliable sewing machine has many important features: it sews forward and backward, darns and mends, and has an automatic bobbin winder. The stitch regulator sets the number of stitches per inch. In gleaming grey with black and grey vinyl-plastic- covered case. EATON Semi-Annual Sale, each Walnut-finish console. Sale, each 79.95 Fully Automatic Sewing Machine Comes complete with 20 pattern discs to create many decorative designs. Blind hems, makes buttonholes, appliques, monograms, sews on buttons-- besides doing regular straight stitching, both forward and reverse. Heavy-duty precision mechanism, with automatic bobbin winder. EATON Semi-Annual Sale, complete Walnut finish console. Sale, each 144.95 design. Many Shop early for in the group Clearance of Demonstrators Please, No Telephone or Mail Orders The sewing machine group includes electric portables, console and desk models in straight stitch, zig-zag, or automatic zig-zag are one-of-a-kind, all reduced for quick clearance the best selection! EATON Semi-Annual Sale, Prices, 34.95" 199.95 EATON'S LOWER LEVEL, DEPT. 570 seen ..91.95 124.95 PHONE 725.7373