THE OSHAWA TIMES, Tuesdey, Mey 1, 1962 3 | Oshawa Man Is Lured By Potato BELFAST, Ireland -- The potato has not, as far as I know, been featured as one of Ulster's tourist attractions, but for Alexander H. Dean, of Osh- awa, Ontario, the ubiquitous tuber has more than compen- sated for our inhospitable wea- ther. "Until I came to Ulster I had not tasted a good potato since leaving Oshawa. Else- where they don't seem to rea- lise you must cook them with their jackets on." With his 76th birthday safely under his belt, Mr. Dean Allie to his friends -- has come to Europe. He is spending a week in Ireland after visiting England and Denmark. IN OSHAWA NORTH OSHAWA PEE WEES FINALISTS IN CRA HOCKEY LEAGUE Janetos, Pat Greeley and IN Robert Cook and Jim Ham- Members of North Oshawa Hockey Team pose for the camera prior to a banquet held in their honor at the North Oshawa Arena recent- ly. The North Oshawa team was defeated in the final game by the Valleyview Park boys and failed to capture the coveted trophy. The North | Oshawa Neighborhood Park | Association held this testimon- | ial banquet for the boys to prove that "its not who won or lost but how you played the game". Show seated-from left are: Mike McCullough, John Laughlin, Remus Hawkshaw, Richard Mooney, Bob Lock, | mond. Standing from left: Bernard Greeley, manager; Dave Mosier, Doug Heard, Gregory Bryant, Gary Gulli- ver, Eugene Balfour, John} Murdie MacMillan, coach; Absent when picture was taken were: Tom Griffin, Tom Wil- ton and Jim Nesbitt. --Oshawa Times Photo During his stay he has had two important calls to make. One was with farmer Jim Mc- Crum, of Tullyquilly, Rathfri- land, who worked alongside Mr. Dean for many years in the General Motors plant in Osh- awa. After clearing the backlog of DISTRICT |personal reminiscences which |have accumulated in the 32 lyears since Mr. McCrum came a jback to Ireland, they settled NINE AMBULANCE CALLS newborn discharges -- male 28, down to Mr. Dean's favorite For the first time in over ajfemale 25; major surgery 59; | topic -- a serious discussion on! month no fires were reported/minor surgery 123; eye, ear,|the cultivation of the potato. p.|Monday by the Oshawa Firejnose and throat 69; treatments! He has also renewed his Department. Civic ambulances|and examinations 135; casts 20; \friendship with the members of answered a total of nine calls/physiotherapy treatments, 464. |the Ulster Girl's Choir, whom during the day. ie jhe met during their Canadian <i \iclimees sir Gay i ee |tour last summer. Mr. Dean} No accidents or other inci-|was fined 1 f wes Stee ene bean sud: ) : $50 and costs or on€jence at the choir's weekl dents were reported in the city| month in jail here Monday when| practice. In fact, it was the Monday by the Oshawa Police/he pleaded guilty to a charge of|choir's visit to Oshawa that fi- Department. |being intoxicated in a public|nally made him decide to visit! FAILED TO APPEAR |place. It was his fourth offence. | this country. A personal service order was | CARRIAGES May 1 Brings Memories Of Singapore Insurgents This one was a little different|thousands of blooms quite o to the normal function of this |livious to the mounting tension Gone were the among their human neighbors. Hour after hour they waited CHILDREN FIND SIAMESE FROG These three children with | 1438 Simcoe street north, and | Steven, seven; Heather, 10; their heads together aren't ng Marra a Bac go frog" | and Holly, four. They are Siamese triplets, but they do | in eir back yard swimming have something in common. | pool. The twin frogs are joined keeping the frog as a pet ia They are all the children of | together by their front legs. | the pool. Mr. and Mrs. Donald White, | The children are, left to right, --Oshawa Times Phote FORT ERIE ENTRIES WEDNESDAY, MAY 2, 1962 By ROBBIE BROWN ' In the inky blackness of the) early hours of May 1, ee poterend) gt 2 die t to move into|dress uniforms 0} e 0 S Dectasint contin throughout|and government officials and for the expected -- the island of Singapore. |the cool tropic dresses and hats Shirts were stained a dar Quietly and efficiently ma-| of their ladies. green with sweat and stuck to chine guns were mounted in| In their place in the beautiful- | their backs. Flies were an ever sandbag emplacements around|ly tailored gardens ablaze with/constant irritation and the rays banks, government offices and|the blooms of the brilliant of Old Saul beating down from other important buildings. acacia and jacaranda trees,|the cloudless blue sky did little Armored cars with dimmed) were 1,000 infantrymen dressed/|to alleviate their discomfort. L. Maloney entry . (B) Double M. Stables and Willow Downs Farms entry SIXTH RACE "The Fredonia', Canadian foal- ed, three-year-olds. Allowance, Purse $2700, 644 furlongs. | ALSO ELIGIBLE: Foxy Re- ward, Dittfach 108; Running FIRST RACE CHARGE WITHDRAWN Three-year-old fillies, maidens. lights rolled slowly into the city/in drab jungle green uniforms EXPLOSIONS ges : its sc trucks loaded/keeping acareful watch on all; The boom of an occasiona oun oun oe , explosion echoed through the ordered to be issued against! Murray Cranston, of Cooksville, by Magistrate F. S. Ebbs here Iti A charge of breach of proba- on against Carl Thompson, 199 Mr. Dean worked with Gen-} eral Motors in Oshawa for 51| years. In 1903 he joined the} Purse $2100. Six furlongs. 1. Select Star, Wolski X107 2. Venturing, Bohenko 119 Trance, Adams 115; Wild Fruit, Wick 115; St. Clair, Brown 115; Moon Romance, Rogers 115; 1. Sun Dan, Rem'lard 123 2. Brace Up, NB 120 3. Copere, NB 114 |Harmony road south, was with- drawn at the request of the {crown in Magistrate's Court here Monday. Suzaluna, Bolin (A)115 (A) C. B. McNeill and Mrs. M. E. Seba entry FOURTH RACE Four-year-olds and up. Pursé) $2000. Claiming all $4500. Six| 1 ; furlongs. | 11. Femme De Fury, N'cutt 112) "1" Great Manassa, B'monte 114 1 12. Pep Bang, Kallai 119 | 2. Handiest, Potts 114 ALSO ELIGIBLE: Pattycap./ 3° pauipolly, Despirito 117 Bolin 119; Modest Reward, NB Queen's Tour, Bohenko 104 112; Chopora, NB 112; Who Have Gun, NB 122 Goes, Rogers 119; Rhonda Nite, Wings of Flight, Rob'son 109 NB 119. QUINELLA BETTING SECOND RACE FIFTH RACE Canadian foaled four-year-olds)three.yearolds and up. Allow- and up. Purse $1900. Claiming}. noe. Purse $2400, 644 furlongs. all $2500. One mile and one six-)'y "pijjan Mapu, G'bins (A)118 teenth. -- ; 2. Illume, NB 118 1, Seawin, Dittfach 114 . New Member, NB 110 2. Demarcki, NB 119 . Queen's Park, Rogers 113 . Mile Master, NB 114 Painted Town, NB 105 . Pancho's First, H'son X117 | 7° Happy Chat, Dalton 108 3. 4 . . . Epic Fields, NB 114 " Country Guy, H'son 96 a: 8. original McLaughlin Carriage) Company which was still mak- ing horse carriages. It had been founded by Robert McLaughlin in a small shack in the Ontario township of Tyrone, moved to Enniskillen (also in Ontario)) and then to Oshawa, where it} has expanded into a multi-mil- lion dollar plant. | Mr, Dean has not enjoyed the| weather, but that, as he explain- ed, could not be heleped. "I would have liked to have) |come in summer, but I could! |not afford the time. I'm retir- ed, but, you see, I've got a gar- den." . Worked Up, Griffiths X114 . Norma Pat, Dalton 112 . Windlette, Fitz'ons 112 . Roc's Champ, Robinson 112) i y sen alert-| approaches to the residence. ome Cee ee es a ta ae city and one or two fires could/Monday. Cranston failed to ap- 3 4 5 6 7. Musical Hit, Dittfach 112 8. 9 0. 1 2 trai y is| WHIPPED TO FRENZY oth po aga pistes Down on the --s pe -§ -- in bred ee pear on a charge of fraud. GENERAL STRIKE along the waterfront, the strike/ly inese waterfront section " Day that year was the|organizers were whipping their|during the day but still it was eo eae es signal for the beginning of a thousands of followers into a|quiet around Government House Pag Thain net ea tania one-day general strike intended frenzy. Stevedores truck driv As the sun began to dip into ata. coniniitne atleast ¥, Dis. Magistrate F. S. Ebbs order-| to paralyse the island's econ-jers making up the majority | the horizon and the _ cooling trict 707, Rotary International ed a bench warrant issued' for| omy and ultimately overthrow/of the mob breezes could be felt from the ja belie 'sla ta. Oshawa tomor.|the arrest of an Oshawa res- the British controlled govern-| It looked as though violence Malacca Straights, word came Bes eprcoscntatives of the 45\taurant operator Monday when ment. was about to erupt at any | that the great uprising had ite in the district 'will attend {he failed to appear in court. Intelligence believed one ofjmoment. The howls an di fizzled out and 1,000 tired and '|Ross Merrifield of the Western the main targets for the com-|screams of the excited mob| weary soldiers piled into trucks DRAW WINNER |Bar-B-Q restaurant, was munists inspired mobs that day/drifted upwards to the ears of and headed back to their bar-' 'The holder of ticket 1025 won| charged on two counts of failure would be the massive white/the silently waiting soldiers. (racks. 4 the social draw held by the|to pay wages to employees. residence of the governor sit-/ The men checked their wea- Two weeks later the Com-|Native Sons of Canada at the uated on a tree covered hilljpons carefully and waited in munist Party was forced to go Aw Hall last week. ADMITS CHARGES near the middle of the city. (the humid tropic heat while inunderground and the 10-year | Cecil Temperton, 53, 129 When the blazing tropic sun|the trees around them the busy|struggle for power was on. -- HOSPITAL REPORT Grenfell street, was remanded rose just after six o'clock that/hum of bees could be heard as| This however will remain in| Following is the report of the|one week for a pre-sentence re- day the governor's garden party|they went about their business|our memory as the longest May Oshawa General Hospital for|port when he pleaded guilty to was in full swing. of collecting pollen from the!Day of our life. {the week ending April 28: ad-|two charges of seduction Mon- day before Magistrate Frank | missions 297; births -- male 31, \female 33; discharges 272;|Ebbs. OBITUARIES 'Bad Cheque CYRIL WILLIAM HEARD {herent of the United Church. s Besides his wife, Mr. Mori-| mitt CAPSULE NEWS A life-long resident of Whitby, son is survived by a son, Stir-| | A Toronto man, who admitted 4. Prize Crew, Potts 120 5. Arthur H., D'fach 114 QUINELLA BETTING SEVENTH RACE Three-year-olds. Purse $2200, claiming all $7500, 6 furlongs. 1. Silver Nail, Rem'lard 116 2. Regent Street, Potts 111 3. Uneducated, Adams 112 4. Deb Time, Biamonte 111 5. 6 ee, Saree . Choppy Gale, Cosentino 112 . Q. Girl, Remillard 112 . Rickshaw Girl, Wick 112 . Gilpy, Parnell 116 . Winsmanship, Northeutt 116 7. Small Type, Ha'son X104 EIGHTH RACE Four-year-olds and up. Purse $2000. Claiming all $3500. One mile and one-sixteenth., 1. Von Rich, Fitz'ons 109 2. Dove Call, Biamonte 109 3. Bold Hunter, Wolski X10 4. Happy Harry, Harrison X104 5 6 7 4, 5. 6. --(Belfast Telegraph) Tory Deficits . Crystal Trail, Potts 119 . Stan Gray, NB 114 . Estanceria, Northcutt 109 8. Prince Tour, NB 109 Post Time 2 p.m. Cloudy, fast, AAC -- X - 5 lbs.; XX - 7 lbs.; XXX - 10 lbs. Create Havoc Says Liberal Diameter, Robinson 122 i Sit Huge NU. Sealant bron it Bill Yates, Bakos 114 g 2 . . Cut Steel, Bohenko (A)113 THIRD RACE . Laburnum, Bakos (B)103 Val bl Two-year-old fillies, maidens. (A) Valley Farm Stable and pa galego gee Peg ling G. A. Morison of Oshawa. Workers Unable nut street, died at his home| from a sudden heart attack) Also surviving are a sister, Monday, April 30, He was in his|Mrs. Ed. McIntyre (Alva), of|Passing one bad cheque and try- Ar-|ing to pass a second here Sat- He was born in Whitby in 1907,{thur Tunnie of Whitby and Gor-|urday, was remanded to May 7 and was the son of the late|don, of London, Ont., and three/for sentence by Magistrate F. S. In| grandchildren. 55th year. Harold and Mabel Heard. 1934 he married the former Nina Evelyn Ross in Whitby. | Vancouver; two brothers, The funeral service will be Mr. Heard was a parts sales-/Funeral Home at 2 p.m. Thurs- man for Seaway Motors Limited|day, May 3. Rev. Dr. G He was a member of the Whit-|Telford will by United Church. eorge ser- in the be conduct vices. Interment will Surviving relatives, beside his|Mount Lawn Cemetery. wife, are two sons, Donald and Phillip, both of Whitby, and a sister, Mrs. R. Carter (Mar- jorie), of Whitby The remains are at the W. Town Funeral Chapel. A service will be held Thursday, May 3,| at 2 p.m. Interment will be in the Groveside Cemetery, Brook- lin. The service will be conduct- ed by Rev. J. Smith, minister of the Whitby United Church. MRS. ELIZABETH COX | Mrs. Elizabeth Cox died sud-; denly at the Cobourg District|She lived in Canada for the}g General Hospital, Friday, April 27. She was in her 59th year. The daughter of the late Wil- liam and Esther Bancroft, she was born at Newington in 1904 and married Gordon Cox at Cornwall in 1923. A resident of Oshawa since 1921 she moved to Cobourg about one year ago. She was a} member of the Baptist Church and a graduate of Whitby Hos- pital School of Nursing. | Besides her husband, she is} survived by two daughters, Mrs. A. L.. Bilton (Dorothy), of Brampton, and Mrs. M. Bonk (Patricia) of Oshawa; two sons, William of Rexdale and David of Cobourg and four grandchil- dren. The funeral was held from the Gerrow Funeral Chapel, Monday, April 30, at 2.30 p.m.| with Rey. N. F. Swackhammer,| pastor of the First Baptist Church conducting the service. Pallbearers for the interment} | Siblock MRS. MARY LUCYK Following a sudden illness at |her home in Columbus, Mrs.|pay cheque worth c.|Mary Lucyk died at the Osh- name of a no awa General Hospital, Monday: April 30. She was in her 72nd year. Mrs. Lucyk, the former': Mary Smook, a daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs. John Smook, was born in the Ukraine. Jan 21, 1891. She was a resident of Columbus for the past nine years coming from Vita., Man.} past 65 years, and was a mem- ber of St. Mary's Ukrainian Or- thodox Church in Oshawa. Her husband, the late John Lucyk, predeceased her Mar. 31, 1959. Surviving are six daughters, Mrs. William Cesmystruk (An- nie), of Vita, Man.; Miss Lena Lucyk, Mrs. Harry Pataryn of Argyle, (Olga), of Oshawa; | Mrs. Ray Cook (Sonya). of Col-} umbus; Mrs. Ray Penny (Helen), of Port Perry and six sons, William of West Hill, Mi- chael of Bowmanville, Peter of British Columbia, Morris of Col- umbus, Walter and Metro of Columbus. Two sisters, ciw, of Sandylands, Man. and) Miss Katty Smook, of New York, also survive along with a brother Metro Smook of Win- nipeg, and 24 grandchildren. The remains are resting at Ebbs here Monday. William Sydney Humes, 45, of attempting to obtain goods by false pretences. Evidence was heard that the accused, accompanied by a woman, obtained a woman's coat at the downtown branch of Zellers Limited by offering a $100 in the m - existent car | dealer. The accused received $73 in| cash together with the coat. Shortly afterwards a_ shoe store clerk became suspicious when the accused asked him to cash another $100 cheque to pay for a pair of shoes. Police were called and the) ccused admitted his guilt. | Humes told the court he had} been drinking with a man and his wife in Toronto. The man told him he owned a car dealer- ship in Oshawa but had been| sheriff. The man suggested he should) | court, Oshawa Jaycees | Hold Nomination The nominating committee of | | the names of candidates for ex- ecutive positions in the 1962-63 term. They were Fred Ball for presi- dent; Len Gardner and Kent Fee for first vice-president; Vic at Mount Lawn Cemetery were:|the Armstrong Funeral Home|Brookes for second vice-presi- Arthur Cox, Frank Cox, Clar-|until Wednesday when they will dent; Laverne Morton and Don ton Obote, 38-year-old leader of ence Cox, Fred Smith, Cliff|be transferred to St. Mary's Uk- Netley for secretary and Dave the Uganda Peuple's Congress Knowles and George Knowles. | rainian Orthodox Church Iprayers Wednesday, May 2, at/treasurer. GEORGE PERCY MORISON 7.30 p.m. Mass will be sung Members were urged to nom- To Get Bodies BOGOTA (AP) -- Authorities said Monday rescue workers jheld at the MclIntosh-Anderson pleaded guilty to two charges) 'ave not been able yet to bring out the bodies of 40 persons, in- cluding two United States Peace Corpsmen, killed in an airline crash in the Colombian jungles April 22. VOTE AGAINST ECM BOURNEMOUTH (Reuters)-- British farm workers Monday voted against Britain joining the European Common Market without adequate safeguards for agricultural interests at home and in the Commonwealth. The vote was 70 to 51 at the annual conference of the National Un- ion of Agricultural Workers, representing 135,000 farm hands. | THINKS JAIL IMPROVED | MONTREAL (CP) -- Lt.-Col. Leon Lambert, 73-year-old act- ing governor of Bordeaux Jail, ended his term Monday night "as happy as any inmate just |having trouble with the county|released from here." No suc- cessor has been named. Colonel Lambert, appointed by the pro- of British Columbia;|cash the cheques for him and/Vincial government to attempt) (Katty),|they would split the money af- 3 thorough house-cleaning of the} Man.: Mrs. Peter|terwards, the accused told the|'foubled and controversial jail, said he was satisfied that the situation had improved consid- erably since his term began. OPERA OPENS SEASON ATLANTA (AP)--The Metro- politan Opera .opened its 1962 season with Elektra Monday night, playing before an inte- Mrs. Ann Pro- the Oshawa Jaycees announced|grated audience in Atlanta for the first time. In the past, Ne- groes have attended the opera in special sections reserved for them. HEADS. UGANDA KAMPALA (Reuters) -- Mil- for Perkin and John Longman for| Party, Munday became prime minister of this British East African protectorate. In polling A member of the purchasingjat the church Thursday, Mayjinate other candidates for the Wednesday his party won 37 department at General Motors|3, at 9.30 am. Rev. Peter Za-lelection to be held May 14. of Canada Limited for 35 years until his retirement about a) year ago George Percy Mori-| son, formerly of 49 Division street, died suddenly Monday,! April 30, at New Orleans, Loui- siana. Born in Carleton Place Mar. 5, 1901, the deceased was| a son of the late Arthur I. and} Lillian Morison. He was mar- ried to the former Bertha Mc- Coy in Toronto in 1925. paryniuk, of St. Mary's Church, will sing the mass. Interment will be in St. Mary's Cemetery,! Oshawa. FUNERAL OF MRS. HARRY R. GREEN Funeral service for Mrs Harry R. Green who died at Oshawa General Hospital Fri- Ig, About a dozen Oshawa Jay- cees will take part in the Jay- cee District 7 Spring Conference to be held in Scarborough May it was announced. A number of members will also take part| in the All Ontario Provincial} Conventicn of the Junior Cham- bers to be held May 18, 19 and day, April 27, was held at the|20 Armstrong Funeral Chapel Members of the Traffic Safe- |Monday, April 30, at 2 p.m.|ty Committee were commended) A resident. of Oshawa for 35) with Rev. Canon C. Cross offi-|by the membership for the ex- A | years, Mr. Morison was an em- ployee of the purchasing de- partment at General Motors for 35 years. During the Second World War he was on loan to the Department Supplies, He was an ad- ciating. cellent work that was done in seats compared to 22 for the Democratic Party. READY TO EXPAND SHEFFIELD, England (Reut- ers)--British Treasurer Selwyn Lloyd said Monday night the British government has_ de- feated a "sustained attack" on sterling and that the country is n a firm position for economic expansion. FLIES TO U.S. PARIS (Reuters)--U.S. Am- bassador James Gavin flew to Bearers for the interment in|/conjunction with the Safety Lane) Washington Monday amid re- Hill ,Cemetery, Toronto Bill Bowler. Cecil Bowl Bill MacFarland, Pine were er, Howard Farndale. starting today A new member was inducted ports of strong Franco-Ameri- can disagreement over a pro- Arthur at the meeting, Don Ellis, who|posed NATO nuclear arms pool of Munitions|Schwass, Hubert Chatten a'®]|was presented with the Jayceejand U.S. refysal to share its ~Ipin by his sponsor, Ed Jones.jatomic secrets with France. BERLIN MAIN TOPIC OTTAWA (CP) -- The seem- ingly eternal problem of Berlin will likely be the main subject for discussion at the NATO Council meeting at Athens this week, informed sources said Monday. External Affairs Min- ister Green and Defence Min- ister Harkness will leave here late today for the meeting by RCAF Comet jetliner. MAN COMMITTED SAULT STE. MARIE, Ont. (CP)--Jesse C. Kendrick. 52, of adjoining Tarentorus Township Monday was committed for trial in the fall on a charge of capi- tal murder in the fatal shooting April 5 of Annie Mathieu, with whom he had been living. FENCER DIES HOLLYWOOD (AP) -- Fred Cavens, 79, who taught fencing tricks to some famed movie swashbucklers, died Monday. Cavens numbered amiong his pupils Douglas Fairbanks, Dou- glas Fairbanks Jr., John Barry- more Tyrone Power, Basil Rathbone and Errol Flynn. | Trading Stamp Plan Dropped By Store Chain TORONTC (CP) Power Supermarkets Ltd., Ontario food store chain, announced today it will discontinue its trading stamp plan as of June 2. Leon E. Weinstein, president, said tne company will introduce a "new food merchandising plan"' in place of the stamp pro- gram. He wolild not elaborate on the new pian. "However," he added, "stamps will be redeemable at Power stores for three months after the expiry date." | Mr. Weinstein said his com- |pany decided to discontinue the stamp plan after a company survey showed that more than 75 per cent of the persons inter- viewed preferred cash saving and speedier service to stamps. 'Added to the nuisance value are current government regula- tions which prohibit the inter- changing of stamps between books from various branch stores," he said. "Currently stamps received at one store may be redeemed only at that. store. Premium stores, one of the basic features of the American stamp plans, are illegal in Canada thereby resulting in Canadian programs SOLINA (Staff) -- The com- bined deficits of the Diefenbaker government during the last five years would purchase a string of cars stretching from Halifax to Vancouver. with many cars in the sea at both ends", Durham Liberal candidate Russell H. Honey of Port Hope told the Darlington Liberal Association last night at Solina. Stating that he based his cal- talling three billion dollars, he sad the sum would buy one mil- lion cars at $3,000 each. Our national purpose requires foresight and planning by gov- ernment, he said. "A Liberal government will return Canada to its position of respect, prestige, high employ- ment and balanced budgets" added Mr. Honey. The Liberal candidate said "it is almost unbelievable that any one government could span of five years." Mr. Honey maintained that "one of the first blunders com- mitted by the Conservative gov- ernment was over the tragic conversion loan. "That loan did not give the government more money but it gave taxpayers more interest to pay on our national debt. It also left bond-holders or, unfortun- ately, in many cases, his wi- dow, with bonds greatly depre- ciated in value. "From this disgraceful be- ginning, the Conservatives stumbled from crisis to crisis and from deficit to deficit." The Coyne affair of 1961 erased whatever trace of pres- tige Canada then had remain- ing, said Mr. Honey. "The human tragedy of un- employment, the recriminations over trade policy and the basic fact that in our economic growth we have fallen far. be- hind other countries are all good reasons for rejecting the Tory government", he main- tained. Other speakers at the annual meeting were E. R. Lovekin of Newcastle, president of the Durham Riding Liberal Associ- ation and Roger Kirkpatrick of Port Hope. Darlington Liberal Associa- tion officers for 1962 are: presi- dent (north)--Bruce Tink; pres- ident (south) -- William Bragg; vice-pres. (north)--Ralph Hills; vice-pres. (south) W. 4H. Brown; secretary--Mrs. Harold Ashton and treasurer -- Everett Fice. CRASH KILLS 4 CUSHING, Neb. (AP) -- A businessman and his three chil-| dren died Sunday when a light plane crashed about six miles northeast of Cushing. being less effective." 1 cause} such havoc in a nation in the/| culations on budget deficits to-/ 12. FAMILY INCOME Purse $1800. Claiming all $5000. 4% furlongs. 1. Black Raven, H'son XX101 . Little Ripple, NB 108 COMING EVENTS 2 3. Wise Selector, NB 108 4. Refreshed, NB 115 5. Fair Medal, Bolin (A)115 6. Right Bower, Potts 115 7. Deal Me Aces, Bohenko 108 8. Snow Lane, Simpson XXX98 9. Roma Locuta, Wolski X110 10. Bobs Diane, Watters X103 11. Scamper Boots, Uyeyamal08 Teachuck, Griffiths X110 THE PETS you want are offered ts the Oshawa Times Classified section. CheeB classification. 3 right now. BAZAAR at Centre Street United Church, East Unit on May 3, 3 e'clock. Afternoon tea 35 cents. RUMMAGE sale, Harmony corner of King. and Harmony North, Wednesday, May 2, 10 to 13 a.m, FERNHILL Bingo tonight at the Avay lon 7.30 p.m., 20 games $6 and $10, Seven $40 jackpots. Door prizes. KINSMEN BINGO TUESDAY, MAY Ist. FREE ADMISSION EXTRA BUSES Jackpot Nos. 55 and 56 TEAM 3 JUBILEE PAVILION IS INCREASING Family income rose 70 per cent over the past 10 years, $3,319 to $5,620, the average of all. Even with inflation, fami- lies are 45 per cent better off now. Their standard of living is that much higher --and will go still higher. our income will rise too, when you use Oshawa Times Classified ads to bring in budget - boosting cash by selling the good ONTARIO RIDING LIBERALS The Official CONVENTION to nominate a candidate for the forthcoming federal elec- tion for Ontorio Riding, will be held at the BROOKLIN TOWN HALL TONIGHT MAY 1 AT 8 P.M. All Ontario etacds Liberals are invited, KINDERGARTEN REGISTRATION FOR BROOKLIN P.S.A.:NQ. 4 WILL BE FRIDAY, MAY 4 from 1:15 to 3:30 p.m. at Meadowcrest School It is necessary to show proof of age of the child. The child must be 5 years of age by Dec, 31, 1962 7 | things you no longer use. To sell items fast, dial 723-3492 now. FOR RENT| modern typewriters and adding |} machines of all makes: Under- |! wood Smith Corona, Royal, || both standard and portable models, Special student rates. Walmsley & Magill Office Equipment Ltd. 9 KING ST. EAST 725-3506 'LAURENTIAN WONDERLAND on the shores of Lovely Lac Quimet Gay, informal, charming. PI $e tenes: ride, swim, Satasnl as pees: canoeing, romance or relax, Quebec cuisi: Rates: lower ine. Cars meet trains, in early season, Write, GRAY ROCKS INN Sc. Jovite, Que. Canada BUEHLERS: 12 KING E. -- 723-3633 Meat Specials! Wed. Only! See What 1.00 Will Buy! 2 lb. SLICED SIDE PORK 2 |b. Shoulder Pork Chops 4 lb. BOLOGNA ""™""" Sliced Beef Liver lb. 39° Tender Rib Steaks Ib. 69° Any of the Above Only ..