Oshawa Times (1958-), 5 Jul 1962, p. 22

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ai okes a oe on ~ * one ---- . ee Eee oh ee : er dong -- SP pips my & oye es ee enemy 2 -_ inept Bee ay es i a Ny he 32--Articles for Sale 1960 CORVAIR motor, in good condi- tion, 16-foot cédar strip boat, Tele- phone 723-7297. Princess Anne -- Visits France LONDON (CP) -- Princess Lawn Watering Bylaw Defiance NORTH BAY (CP) -- Widdi- field Township officials have threatened severe action against residents who defy a by-law against lawn watering) . during the suburb's water shortage. While work neared comple- tion on a $500,000 water main to alleviate the shortage, Reeve John Bolton said Wednesday the situation has reached the point "where it is Hable to en- danger life should a major fire occur." The water main is expected to be in service within a week. Police said they had received complaints of township resi- dents watering their lawns, de- priving the outlying. areas of their share of the North Bay water supply. CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING (Continuea from Page 21) 31--Automobile Repairs Parts pes Service 12-FOOT plywood boat, trailer and motor. T 1% -7774. 15 HP OUTBOARD motor, "Gale," new last year, Reasonable. Apply 144, Nassau Street, AQUA lung, double tanks with pro Rose pth gauge, ¢ompass, etc. In excellent condition. $125. 725-0741. BICYCLE, girl's, 26-inch wheels, very good condition, $10. Telephone 728-2336. NEW portable chord organ, $85: post. able Gpewtiter, ve Apply 127 Park ir. T AUSTIN Statham Motor Soles " DEALER FOR RENAULT 59 King West | 723-7712 32--Articles for Sale yon BBE ade Ade eat reece » Grolier, 20 volumes, " yp bleh een s vlcut saw, 7 uly 2,119 volumes of Lands and People, 10)3-5264, ipe-|volumes of Popular Science books-|/ROaT i4foot, molded ply with bookcases, never been used. $200/,indshield, canopy, 728-2176. den 8 728- 20-FOOT cruiser, flying bridge, 7-foot beam, d, with or wit out motor. Telephone after 5 p.m. 728- 1329, FREEZER, 17 cubic foot "General", like new. Best offer. Also kitchen chrome set. After 6 call 728-2502. TELEVISION, Viking, 17 inch table model; suitable for cottage or recrea- tion room. Good working condition, $40 728-0558, 5 KITCHEN cupboard with glass top, arm chairs, garden tools including he --_ 7 pounds ozs., 1962, at Oshawa General L Paceship, 'eial thanks to Dr. Halam i steering, very 'a BLESSED EVENT -- The birth of child news that your easy to tell) otc, etc, an Oshawa | ajax, WH 2-3491. 1.50. |ELECTROHOME TRAILER accessories, gas refrigera- mirrors, Tudor Street, H G only the princess has been g E mink, two bur- ---- asus who passed away ' --Ever ' family. » ing my stay pital. Special ' has accused Jordanians of fir- or rent at Parkway coe Street North, Oshaw: for sale Television, 918 Sim- iM set, white eaus, two night tables, full size, book- ALLMAN, Harold Meiville miral 19" Portable coe t N HOME, RCA Victor and Ad- rial 9 TV's, Prices start at $188. Parkway Television, 918 Sim- Stree orth. case bed, springs and mattress, $90. Call MO 8-8740. Reeve Bolton said the bylaw will be enforced 24 hours a day BICYCLES, boy's and girl's, recently painted, 24, 26 and 28 inch sizes, good $15 each. Telephone New- etc. CEDAR lawn furniture, tables, chairs, Kitchen cupboards and furniture made to order. CO 3-2573, Hampton, -- OFFICE equip., biggest Suddenly, at Whitby, on duly 4, 1962, Harold Melville Allman, "peloved son of the late John and | Elizabeth Allman, Dear brother of Ed- ' w Chapel, 'vice in the Chapel on Friday, J 'at 3 p.m. Interment Groveside Ceme- tery, Brooklin. Minister the Rev. + Smith. » BELL, Martha Eleanor ; Suddenly at the Oshawa General Hos- pital on Wednesday, July 4, 1962, Mar- tha Eleanor Bell (of 316 Colborne Street North, Whitby) beloved daughter Service with stock around, prices. Try 's, 137 Brock South. MO 8-8442. used furniture. Pretty's highest prices in the city for bal a Br re Used Furniture Store, 723-3271. 444 Simcoe South. castle 4136, FILTER Queen Sales and Service, lib- eral trade-in allowance. Free demon- stration. Telephone 726-4683. CHIP truck for sale, fully equipped, ready to operate. Best offer. 225 \~ awa Boulevard South. After 5 call 725-0454, BOATS: P models, fiber terms, -| CASH registers used, new, low prices, guaranteed. Hamilton Office Equip. 137 Brock South. MO 8-842, glass and moulded plywood; car tops and canoes; Otace trailers. Used boat trailer, $80. For special prices apply '|OLD guns wanted, rifles, shotguns, re- volvers and pistols; also old cartridges. Liberty North, Bowmanville. MA 3-3074. Nurseries, Liberty Street Telephone 725-8183, Oshawa. WE buy, sell and exchange used fur- niture or anything you have, The City Trading Post Stores, 446 Simcoe Street South and 31 Bond Street East, 723-1671. of the late Thomas and Mary Jane Bell, dear sister of Mrs, F. Mathison (Eva) of Whitby. Resting at the W. C. Town Funeral Chapel, Whitby, for private service on Friday, July 6, In- terment Riverside Cemetery, Lindsay. r Mev, Marshall. Visitors 4} 2 p.m. T STANLEY Home Products! Call their dealer, Marie Montgomery, RR 1, Osh- TENTS, hardware, outboard motors, bicycles, Best prices. Tire, 48 Bond Street West. BABY CARRIAGE, blue and white, ex- cellent condition. $25. Telephone 725- 5118, camping supplies, marine gems and if residents to not heed the 9 a.m. to 9 p.m, ban. The township is the second Northern Ontario community reported suffering from a seri- ous water shortage. A lawn- watering bylaw is also in effect in the Hill district of Sault Ste. torus Township where the short- age is blamed on the area's driest summer since 1921. A $400,000 water development pro- gram ihere will not be ready until next year. Try awa, 725-9794 or 725-8849. IFOOT boat, trailer, new, 28 horse FURNACES, forced air, 10-year guar- antee, $2.25 per week, no down pay- ment, package deal, $130, Telephone 725-4729, DAHMER, Frederick Martin | At St. Mary's Hospital, Kitchener, On- AWNINGS, canvas. free estimates. Chair, table Prompt service, rentals. North. power Evinrude, 5-gallon gas tank. Ap- ply 541 Grierson Street. B .F. GOODRICH Stores --Tires, bat- teries, Kelvinator refrigerators, televi- sion, Thrifty Budget Plan. 725-4543, NEW four seater chesterfield with one Cleve Fox, 412 Simcoe tario, Tuesday, July 3, 1962, F Martin Dahmer formerly of Oshawa, husband of Mary Mcintyre and father of Frank of Toronto, grandfather of Mrs. Douglas McDougall (nee Gloria Cook) of Oshawa and great-gr VAOUUM cleaner repairs, all makes, parts, attachments, brushes, guaran- teed rebuilt machines. Estimates free. Rentals. Vacuum Cleaner Repair Ser- vice, 728-0591 anytime of Bobbie McDougall, Funeral services were held today, Thursday at Schreiter- Sandrock Funeral Home, Kitchener, with interment in Memory Garden, Breslau. TURTON, Sydney Entered into rest in the Oshawa Gen- eral Hospital on Thursday, July 5, 1962, Sydney Turton, beloved husband of the late Adah Lowe, and father of George Alfred Turton of Oshawa, bro- ther of Mrs. William Darbyshire (Edith), of Elmhurst, Illinois; = BEFORE buying or selling televisions, furniture, refrigerators, stoves, wash- ers, call Elmer Wilbur, CO 3-2294. 8 p.m. Apply 52 Scott Street. chair, Telephone -MA 3-3781. new tires and tubes, $17. Apply Apart- ment 4, 496 Simcoe North, 725-3922, GREEN Harding rug with pad, 9 x 12'. Good condition. Red chrome table and four chairs. Call 725-1353. | patra B MOTORCYCLE NSU, excellent condi- | fibreglass sealed. Excellent condition. tion. Telephone 728-6600 between 6 and/ $5. Call MO 8-3218. Owner transferred. Sacrifice. \N'S bicycle, good condition, brand OAT FOR SALE. Car top, plywood, rifice for quick sale. Call between 3 and 5 or after 9 p.m. 728-9575. KEYSTONE K38, 8 mm turret movie camera, 3 lenses, 4 speeds, exposure meter. Cost $238, Sacrifice. Telephone 728-6606. TWO % single beds, almost new. Sac: |35--Legal I WILL NOT be responsible for any debts contracted in my name by any- one on or after this date, July 4, 1962, without Prybick, 321 Guelph Street, my written consent. Paul ick Traynor (Leah) of a = rhe le Turton, Resting Osh-|like model. awa, Chapel on Saturday, July 7th, at 10 a.m. Interment Pine Hills Cemetery. Toronto. LOCKE'S FLORIST Funeral arrangement and floral requirements for all occasions. OSHAWA SHOPPING CENTRE 24 HOUR PHONE SERVICE 728-6555 GERROW FUNERAL CHAPEL No discs needed. hems, sews on buttons, makes button- holes. $81.42 balance. Dealer. Apply Box NO money down, $8.00 per month fi|t will not be responsible Bo any debts ig-Zag desk | Contac' in my name by anyone on Rance, beautiful Singer Zig-Zag Blind |or after this date, July 4, 1962, without my written consent. Signed -- MacNeil, 376 Humewood Avenue. Ernest 819 Oshawa Times. WEBER upright piano, $75; chesterfield suite, French provincial, like new, $100. Singer treadle sewing machine; kitch- en table, chairs. 723-9116. PONY saddle, silver mounted, like new, | $50, See at 1700. Charles Street, Whitby. | MO 8-8293. WINDOWS, double size, 56 inch width, with storms, $20. Quantity storm win- dows, various sizes. Call Bowmanville, MA 3-2583, FURNACES, forced air, oil burning, used, excellent condition, delivered to your basement, or completely installed: Jack Perry, 285 Bloor Street West, Osh- awa. Kindness beyond price yet within reach of all. 728-6226 390 KING STREET WEST IN MEMORIAM MUST be sold this week! Cottage fur- SEALED TENDERS Requested for removal or demolition of Burketon's one- roomed school. Site to be cleaned and levelled. Tenders to be received on or before July 16, by Mrs. Jean Grace, Sec:-Treas: S.S. No. 7 Burke- ton P.O., Ontario, Canadian Men Cause Trouble BONN (Reuters) -- Police in Bielefeld, a British garrison town in north Germany, today reported troop trouble involving Canadian soldiers. A German police spokesman said: "Eight or 10 Canadian sol- diers attacked two German workers outside a Bielefeld bar. They knocked them to the ground and kicked them. "The Germans suffered facial injuries and had to be treated by a doctor." The spokesman said the inci- dent took place Wednesday. The soldiers were from a Canadian unit training at Senne-Lager Camp, near Bielefeld. "They were leaving the bar when they ran into Germans who were passing by," he said. After the. attack the Canadians, some in uniform and some wearing civilian clothes, jumped into cars and drove away, he added. British military police are in- vestigating, the spokesman said and the Canadian commander has promised to send a Cana- dian military police patrol into Mrs. Jean Grace Bielefeld tonight "to prevent further trouble." niture: single beds complete, floor cov- erings, lamps, water softener, gas heat- er, gas hot water tank, aluminum storms, large tobacco cabinet, show- case, steel safe and other small 'ar- ticles, 728-5836. BEAUTY salon equipment, reason- able, long dresserette, basin and chair. Three dryer unit, Call Newcastle 3686. BOAT new 12-foot flat plywood. Car top skiff. Apply 180 Osh- awa Boulevard North. 725-8266. bottom painte FERGUSON --In loving of a dear husband, father and grand- | father, Norman Ferguson, who passed BOAT, 14-foot and extras, Johnston 25 horsepower motor and tee nee trailer, $595. Apply 312 Banff Avenue. har . | Just rebuilt in excellent condition, $300. t. PIANO upright 52 inches mahogany with Hoh: 9 Telephone 725-7001 six to eight. KENMORE wringer washing macaine, pump, timer, filter. Three years old, $50. Telephone 725-3391 after 6 p.m. the heart --Sadly missed by wife and family. HUGGINS -- in loving memory of Viola Huggins (nee Thom) who THISTLE baby carriage, bronze, ex- cellent condition, $30. GE dryer in ex- sees condition, $100. Telephone 725- away May 31, 1945, also Roy July 5, 1953. the. ed by JOHNSON -- In loving memory of a dear mother and grandmother, Anne Johnson, who passed away July 5, 1961. We mourned her in silence, No eyes can see us weep, But many a silent tear is shed While others are asleep. --Sadly missed by son, ter-in-law Joan Gail, Craig and Leanne. \ SLEDZIEWSKI -- In loving memory ; of a dear wife and mother, Mary, who ; Passed away July 5, 1959, Past her suffering, past her pain, Cease to weep for tears are vain, She who suffered is 'at rest, Gone to Heaven with the blest. --Lovingly remem and family. WILSON -- In loving memory of a dear mother, Lucy Wilson, who passed away July 5, 1951. O happy hours we once enjoyed, How sweet their memory still, But death has left a loneliness The world can never fill. --Loving Evelyn. Bud, daugh- and = = grandchildren bered by husband 1 ly remembered by daughter, { NORTHERN Muskrat back coat size! 18, full length, excellent condition. Telephone 728-4288. PETERBOROUGH 16-ft. runabout boat 25 hp motor and trailer. Telephone 725-1251. GURNEY gas stove four burner 30" in good condition, $50, Lawn mower. Best offer. MO 8-5277. DE-HUMIDIFIER FOR RENT This amazing machine keeps basement or recreation room dry. Option given for rental money to apply on purchase, MEAGHER'S APPLIANCE 5 King St. W. 723-3425 COTTAGE SPECIAL Used refrigerators, ranges washers, dryers, etc. Located on Highway No. 7 4 miles west of Brooklin Dial 655-3440 CARD OF THANKS PERKIN -- I would like to thank all ind relatives for the lovely flowers I received dur- in Oshawa General Hos- my 8 cards, gifts and thanks to nurses and staff on JE, also Dr. Rowsell and Rev. Mellow for their kind tion. WILBUR -- We wish to express our + sincere thanks to.our relatives, friends and \ kind neighbors, especially thank- ing the Mclintosh-Anderson Funeral Home, Rev. Mr. Page, the pallbearers, the General Motors for the cars sup- plied, for the acts of kindness, messages of sympathy and beautiful flowers dur- ing our recent bereavement of a be- loved husband and father. --Mrs. Carl Wilbur and family. Jordanians Said Killing Israelis JERUSALEM (AP) -- Israel | ing from Jerusalem old "ty positions across the armistice line, killing two Israeli soldiers and wounding three civilians Wednesday night. One of the civilian victims was reported to be a 14-year. old girl. An Israeli . military spokes- man said the Israelis returned the fire. ; » An Israel communique s aid Ysrael authorities have com- iness and atten- ~--J. W. Perkin BOATS Larson, Traveler, Weymouth, Grew Cruisers, Evinrude Mo- tors, OMC 17 Volvo Penta Engines. MARINE Storage and Supply Ltd. CAPSULE NEWS Vast Flooding © In South China FLOODS HIT CHINA HONG KONG (AP) -- The worst floods in a century have hit 'south China's Kwantung province, Canton radio reported today. One million flood fight- ers have left Canton for the stricken areas, the brief radio report said. ASK REPORTERS' HELP BERLIN (AP) --West Ger- '|many's Press Council called on reporters Wednesday to with- hold al! details of escapes from communist east Germany, even after the escapes have been completed. The council repeated an appeal it made Jan, 30 It said such details endanger fut- ure escapes. WINS BY 45 VOTES ST. JOHN'S, Nfld. (CP)-- Richard Cashin, 25-year-old Lib- eral making his debut in federal polities, defeated Solicitor Gen- eral W. J. Browne by 45 votes in St. John's West, the returning check disclosed Browne said officer's final Wednesday. Mr. he expects to request a re- count. He has four days in which to make application for it. PLENTY OF SALT HALFIAX (CP)--The largest cargo of table salt ever shipped from Canada to British Hon- duras leit aboard the freighter Karl Leonhardt. The shipment, 103,000 pounds, was produced at Amherst, N.S. equipment is making its Cana- dian debut here and in a post office at Quebec City. OFFICIAL DIES LAS VEGAS, Nev. (AP)-- Lieutenant - Governor Rex Bell died Wednesday night of a heart attack a few hours aiter at- tending a republican party Fourth of July rally. BILL NEAR PASSAGE LONDON (AP)--The bill to grant independence.to Trinidad and Tobago was given an un- opposed second reading in Par- liament Wednesday night. It re- Marie and neighboring Taren-|? By JIM PEACOCK SEATTLE (CP) --The sleek blue and red trains of the Al- weg monorail whisk thousands of passengers daily between downtown Seattle and the World's Fair, a 1.2 - mile trip that takes 96 seconds. Fair - goers, thrill - seekers and just plain curious are play- ing a merry tune of profits at the system's ticket windows, the operators say, making a $4,500,000 experiment highly} successful financially. There is success, too, in 14 lieving traffic congestion near ths a. grounds -- as parking- ot operators, their lots half empty much of the time, will testify. Interest in the monorail sys- tem is high and almost daily someone is studying it with the critical eye of a man respon- sible for rapid public transit. Whether monorail is the solu- tion to rapid - transit problems of North America's metropoli- tan areas remains to be seen. That it will be tried in at least a few regions seems almost certain. SOON PAID FOR Alweg Rapid Transit Systems of Washington State, running the system here, says mono- rails the best and most eco- nomical means of providing rapid public transit today. Some transit authorities from North American cities agree, some say perhaps this is so, and others say it definitely is not. In any case, it may be stated positively that the gamble here is paying off handsomely -- to the World's Fair because the cost will be paid in full by the time the fair ends in October and the fair will take posses- sion of the Seattle system; and to the operators, because it gives them a working model to demonstrate for transit authori- ties showing interest. The experimental nature of the system here gives it the as- quires a. third reading before becoming law. pects of a hand-made project. Alweg spokesman Bill Tanler INTERPRETING THE NEWS By JOSEPH MacSWEEN Canadian Press Staff Writer Acting Secretary - General U Thant of the United Nations is expected to hold earnest talks on the new Congo crisis during his 16-day European tour. Congolese Foreign Minister Justin Bomboko held a lengthy conference with Thant at UN headquarters in New York Tues- day, reporting on the continued secession of Katanga province. Final Session Brooklin -- 655-3641 | Open Till 8 Evenings, Weekends} , jae Of Paris Talk PARIS (Reuters) -- President Gaulle and West German 1.9. SPRG model $59.95 plained to the UN Israel-Jordan Armisticer Commission. 306 King West IALS Admiral, 14-inch portable 69.9 Marconi, 17-inch table |75-minute session Wednesday Marconi, 21-inch Console New picture tube Marconi, 24-inch Console New picture tube 1958 Admiral, Slim Line 21-inch, blonde, consolette New picture tube Fowler Television 725-1685 {Chancellor Adenauer conferred for three hours today in the third and final session of Ade- nauer's week-long official visit. The two leaders, who had a jwith only interpreters present, ear for an hour longer than had |been expected . They. talked pri- |vately again for half an hour, \then were joined by their for- jeign ministers, Maurice Couve de Murville and Gerhard | Schroeder, There was no immediate word on the substance of today's talks. Discussions Wednesday jfocussed on Britain's applica- jtion to. join the European Com- |mon Market and proposals for further political integration of the six Market countries. Thant, who flew to Europe Wednesday, is scheduled to see Prime Minister Macmillan and President. de Gaulle. It appears certain there will be comment on repeated African charges that the "colonialist" powers have directly or indirectly en- couraged copper-rich Katanga's defiance of the central Congo- lese government in Leopoldville. HOLDS REVENUES | Last week's collapse of three-| month-old talks between Congo- lese Premier Cyrille Adoula and Katangan President Moise Tshombe means that Katanga will continue to reserve mineral revenues for itself. This leaves the central gov- ernment in a hand-to-mouth fi- nancial condition -- and the UN in near - bankruptcy, since The Congo is the world body's heav- fest peace - keeping operation. Thant reacted to the break- down of the Adoula - Tshombe conference by placing the UN Congo force -- now standing at 12,000 men -- on the alert for mnew troubles and Tshombe coun- Thant To Probe Crisis In Congo tered by promising he would be ready for renewed talks. never - ending deadlock in The Congo, some advances toward unity have been made in the last six months, Adoula has apparently squelched the secessionist threats of former vice-premier Antoine Gizenga of Oriente prov- ince by exiling him to an island in the Congo River, Albert Kalonji, who threat- ened to take South Kasai ost of The Congo, now is serving a five-year jail term for his part in a massacre. But the Katanga situation ap- pears nearly as far from prac- tical solution as ever although, and the first time when not bee: says many of its details would not apply or be comparable to those in a working, full - scale rapid - transit system. Wegematic Corporation of New York, parent firm of Al- weg of Washington State and North American patent - rights holder, wanted a _ working model to provide the first prac- tical test vf monorail potential in the United States. COST $4,500,000 Century 21 Incorporated, or- ganizing the World's' Fair, wanted means to lessen traffic problems. Alweg agreed to construct the two - train system at cost of $4,500,000. The fair agreed to set aside 25 cents from each $2 fair admission toward recover- ing the cost, the balance to be paid from fares -- 75 cents round trip, 50 cents one way. When it is paid off, Century 21 takes possession. The trains carried 179,000 passengers before anyone could get off inside the fair grounds. In the first month of the fair, 1,000,000 one - way fares were carried. Quick cost recovery here re- MONORAIL AT SEATTLE WORLD'S FAIR New Interest Shown In Monorail Travel sults in large part because of the special nature of the Seat- tle project. A metropolitan area installing monorail could not expect it to pay for itself within six months. "But we believe it is the least expensive rapid-transit system now available," said Mr. Tan- ler. Engineers: estimate, he said, that on a full-scale monorail system serving the public in a metropolitan area, the cost would average between $2,500,- 000 and $3,000,000 a mile, in- cluding construction of the overhead beamway and acquisi- tion of all running stock. SUBWAYS COST MORE This estimate does not include cost of obtaining right-of-way, but Alweg says little expense should be involved in this as- pect since the monorail can use existing street systems without interfering to any degree with motor vehicle traffic. Some estimates of comparable subway costs run to $25,000,000 a mile. Toronto's 4% - mile Yonge Street subway cost $58,- 500,000, includuing running stock when it was built in 1954. In Los Angeles, estimated cost of a 12.2-mile subway is a minimum of $200,000,000, not in- cluding running equipment. Los Angeles is one of the many cities studying the Seattle monorail. The California city, Chicago and Tel Aviv have re- quested firm proposals from Al- weg and Boston is giving the system serious consideration. Mr. Tanler said men from Toronto, Montreal, Winnipeg, Edmonton and Vancouver also have been inquiring about the monorail operation. "Most reaction has been fav- orable. Some have been luke- warm about it and some have been hostile. But we believe it is the best available answer to rapid transit. It is the most economical and the fastest to build. It takes longer to put the trains together than to build member of her family. In 1954, she and her brother, Prince Charles, sailed on royal yacht Britannia to Gibral- tar and Malta where they met the Queen and Prince Philip on their return from a six-month Commonwealth tour. 2 Die, 13 Hurt In Train Crash F FLORENCE, S.C. (AP)--An | Atlantic Coast Line passenger train carrying holiday passen- gers from Florida to New York tumbled off the track near here Wednesday. Two crew members died and at least 13 passengers were hurt. Both diesel engines and seven of the eight coaches of the rail- road's Havana Special toppled from the tracks, four of the units winding up in a deep gully between the tracks and a high- way parallel to the dual tracks of ACL's main north-south line. Dead were Rindy Keels, 58, the engineer, and Thomas H. Jones, 43, the fireman, both of Florence. The train was en route from St. Petersburg, Fla., to New York. ACL officials said some con- struction work on the roadbed had been under way in the area of the wreck. the right-of-way." WON AWARD The Seattle system was com- pleted in 10 months, using three- foot-wide and five-foot-high pre- stressed and precast concrete beamways set atop T-shaped pylons of reinforced concrete four feet square at the base. Street traffic moves freely be- neath the pylons and beams, i5 and 18 feet, respectively, above ground. The two two-section cars in each train are 10 feet wide and 122 feet long, with seating ca- pacity of 124 and maximum ca- pacity of 450 each. Running at 40 to 45 miles an hour--the trains can go 70--the system can carry 10,000 passengers an hour. The trains runs on pneumatic rubber tires and are powered by electric motors so noise is kept to a minimum--so much so that a merchant above whose store the trains run was un- aware of more than 50 trips made the first day the trains began test operations here. Some complaints of unsight- liness. have been heard, but Mr. Tanler replies to these with a letter from the Central As- sociation of Seattle, which gave Alweg its April monthly award for its contributions to improve- ment of the appearance of downtown Seattle. NOT THE NEWSPAPER'S day. six months ago, a paper agree- ment was reached at Kitona for ending the Katanga secession. There is still a separate army in the province, which has fin- ished the second printing of its own money, | Tshombe. made sure he would not be in Leopoldville for the July 1 observance of Congolese independence -- he left the city just after the breakdown of his talks with Adoula. He hurried to Elisabethville to prepare for July 12 ceremonies to mark the second. year of Ka- tangan "independence." But Adoula and other Congo- lese officials have said it would never be possible to reach agreement with the wily Tshombe, who would merely talk on and on, meanwhile main-|}. taining his independence. HE'S ON YOUR PAYROLL... YOUR CARRIER is an enterprising young man in "business to serve you and the many other customers-- on his newspaper route, quickly and dependably each HE BUYS his papers from us at the wholesale rate and sells them to you at retail. The difference in price pays him for serving you. AND BECAUSE he works for you in this way, he looks to you for payment each collection day. Thus, he is on your "payroll", not ours, and appreci- ates being paid promptly--so that he can pay his own paper bill and en- joy the full profit he has earned ! THE OSHAWA TIMES Despite the appearance of iticatCRRT

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