Oshawa Times (1958-), 17 Jun 1963, p. 16

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

14 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Mondey, June 17, 1963 ULASSIFIED ADVERTISING (Continued from Page 14) 32--Articles for Sale AWNINGS, canvas, Prompt service, free estimates. Chair, table rentals. Cleve Fox, 412 Simcoe North. B F. GOODRICH Stores -- Tires, Bat- teries, Kelvinator refrigerators, tele- vision, Thrifty Budget Plan, 725-4543. RANGES, good used ranges from $29. Used refrigerator $39. Other new and used appliances. Wayne's Appliances. 78 Simcoe Street North, telephone 723-1411. When the princes of the Roman Catholic Church go into secluded conclave Wed- nesday to select a new pope they will be following a ritual that has changed little over the centuries, but which still enhances the dramatic election of a new supreme pontiff. Here is a look at the ancient pro- WESTINGHOUSE automatic washing hii 9% cuble ft. Frigidaire re- DENAULT, Baby Jacqueline Entered into rest in the family dence, 529 Crerar Street, Oshawa, on) room 'wood.' led frigerator, Dining ebony finish, six chairs, large a cabinet, bassin- attres extension table, ette with rubber m: ss. Excellent condition. Telephone 725-5697. to be re - enacted next week in choosing a successor to the late Pope John XXII. By BENNET M. BOLTON Saturday, June 15, 1963, Denault, infant daughter of Mrs. Gervain Denault and sister of Albert, Patricia and Mary Ellen, aged five months, Funeral Home, Oshawa, with memo- rial service in the chapel Tuesday, June 18; at 11 a.m. Interment Oshawa Union Cemetery. FITCHES, Lucy Jane In Oshawa General Hospital, on Sun- day, June 16, 1963, Lacy Jane Stallard in her 88th year. Widow of Thomas Wil- liam Fitches and dear mother of 5 ¢ Resting at the Armstrong} 34--Lost And Found LOST: girl's glasses in green case, vicinity of Henry Street High School and 316 Palace Street, Whitby. 668-3201. WALLET, women's, beige, containing sum of money, vicinity of Adelaide East. Reward. Between 9:30 a.m. and 3:30 p.m. Dial 728-1030, LOST: Dog, Border Collie, black and whie, answers to "Trixie", vicinity Monday, townline and Bloor Street, Mrs, |June 10. Telephone 725- Richard Donald , William. George and Reginald all of Oshawa. Resting at MclIntosh-Anderson Funeral 36--Legal VATICAN CITY (AP)--The Roman Catholic Church | seals its cardinals inside the Sistine Chapel Wednesday in the big- gest conclave of all time. They will stay locked up un- til they have elected the suc- cessor to Pope John XXIII. No one expects them to spend three years at the job, as once happened. Nor is it likely they will equal the cne-day record lave of 1939, when Pope Home, 152 King Street East. Service in Koly Trinity Anglican Church, Court street on Tuesday, June 18 at 2 o'clock. Interment Mount Lawn Cemetery. (The Daughters of England will hold a ser- vice in the Funeral Home en Monday evening at 7 o'clock). SOROCHAN, William Entered into rest in Oshawa General Hospital, Monday, June 17, 1963, Wil- liam Sorochan, husband of Alice Goodsman and father of Mrs, J. Zambonelli, (Anne), John W. and George of Oshawa, in his 72nd year. Resting at the Armstrong Funeral Home, Oshawa, with memorial serv- ice in the chapel Wednesday, June 19. Interment Mount Lawn Cemetery. Oshawa. FAMILIES who have pre- arranged their family estates together in Mount Lawn Memorial Park testify this to be the answer to a delicate future prob- lem, Call for courteous information 723-2633, LOCKE'S FLORISTS Funeral arrangement and floral requirements for all occasions, OSHAWA SHOPPING CENTRE 24 HOUR PHONE SERVICE 728-6555 MEMORIALS MARBLE and GRANITE Designing, Carving, Lettering Installation, Repairs Open Evenings Until 9 'Oshawa Monument Co. 1435 King Street East 728- 3111 RIMAR MEMORIALS MONUMENTS ON DISPLAY IN OUR SHOWROOM Complete Monument and Inscription Service 152 SIMCOE SOUTH Phone 723-1002 CARD OF THANKS BOURGERIE -- My family and I, at this time, wish to thank our relatives, friends and neighbors for the lovely of the Royal Canadian Le- --Mrs. Victor Bourgerie. POWELL -- Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Powell, RR 1, Oshawa wish to ex- press their sincere appreciation and McKenzie, Columbus, Ont., also for the many beautiful cards, gifts and flow. ers recel LEGISLATIVE ASSEMBLY Select Committee On Consumer Credit The Select Committee ap- pointed by the Legislative Assembly of the Province of Ontario ". . . to examine into, study and report on all matters relating to the actual cost of credit to con- sumers such as_ instalment purchasers, borrowers ond mortgagors in the Province of Ontario, and without lim- iting the generality of the foregoing the Committee's attention is particularly dir- ected to investigation of means by which total charges for borrowing money may be revealed in regard to land mortgages, chattel mort- gages, conditional sales agreements, credit retail purchases ond similar trans- actions" . . . will hold public meetings in Toronto for the purpose of hearing submis- sions. In anticipation of the forth- coming hearings, submissions ore invited from chartered bonks, insurance companies, acceptance corporations, fin- ance companies, department- al stores and other retail and financial establishments, credit unions, mortgage brok- ers, solicitors, and others ex- tending credit to consumers. Submissions to be presented should be filed with the Secretary and it is requested that 25 copies be provided. In addition, the Committee will accept submissions from individual consumers and groups, in writing, for pre- sentation by arrangement with the undersigned. Notice of intention to file should be sent to the Se- cretary by June 28, 1963. Notice of time allocated for appearance will be given as soon as possible. H. J. Price, M.P.P. Chairmon Mrs. S. Dell, Secretary Box 51, Parlioment Buildings Telephone 365-2143 Pius XII was chosen. The cardinals almost cer- tainly will need several ballots and several days to find Roman Catholicism 's 262nd supreme pontiff. Filling the chair after the beloved Pope John will be difficult. : Almost 82 cardinals will swear aloud, each time they cast a ballot, that they are vot- ing for the man they think "according to God ought to be elected." ITALIAN FAVORED The cardinals can choose any male Catholic, even a layman. Benedict IX was 12 years old when elected in 1032, But almost certainly Pope John's successor will be a prelate and he will be a cardinal. He also will be Italian in all likelihood. Twenty-nine of the princes of the church come from Italy. The other 53 are from 30 coun- tries. Many names are mentioned as "'papabile'--likely to be elec- ted pope--but no one would be surprised if the next pope were someone who went unmentioned in the pre-conclave speculation. Perhaps too "palpable" is Giovanni Battista Cardinal Mon- tini, 65-year-old head of Italy's biggest and richest see in Milan. Other cardinals discussed re- peatedly are Giovanni Urbani, 63, who succeeded Pope John five years ago as patriarch of Venice; Carlo Confaloniere, 69, a curia member who lives a modest and almost ascetic life; Giacomo Lercearo, 71, Arch- bishop of Bologna, and Fran- cesco Roberti, 73-year-old mem- ber of the curia. LEADS NON-ITALIANS Mentioned more and more among non-Italian papabile is Franziskus Cardinal Koenig, 57- year-old Archbisohp of Vienna. 'Another is Gregory Peter Card- inal Agagianian, 67, who shared Pope John's enthusiasm for seeking Christian unity. The Armenian-bom prelate is head of the Vatican missionary-di- recting agency and an expert on Russian affairs. Cardinals Koenig, Montini and Urbani are considered progres- sives. Cardinals Agaglatian and Confalonieri have been des- cribed as moderates, Cardinal Lercaro as a moderate-progres- sive and Cardinal. Roberti as a neutral. One or two cardinals probably will be too sick to attend the conclave or be otherwise pre- vented from coming. But the 82 NEWS IN BRIEF HAVE LONG TAILS Comets derived their name from the wispy, hairy appear- ance of their long tails. In Latin ee word cometa means "'long air." DRAINS VAST AREA The River Amazon is the world's mightiest flow of fresh water draining, with its tribu- taries, a total of 2,000,000 square miles. HAS MUCH ICE Mount Ranier, Washington, a dormant volcano, has 26 gla- ciers--more than any other sin- gle mountain in the United States, TAKE GOOD PIKE The average weight of pike taken in southern Ontario is two to four pounds but some weighing 15 to 20 pounds are caught every year. Two Italians Die In Crash ROME (AP)--A small private plane crashed in busy Via Ca- vour near Rome's central rail- way terminal Sunday, burst into flames and killed its two Italian . occupants. The single - engined Italian FL-3 swung low over the heart of Rome. Suddenly it lost alti- tude and clipped the ledge of a * commercial building. One wing snapped off on the roof. The plane slid down the face of the building, smashing windows along the way and plummetting through the roof of a car parked at the curb. Aviation fuel showered over the hot engine and burst into flames that consumed the wreckage. ' Police said it was almost mi- raculous that no one else was killed. Via Cavour is a com- mercial street but there are many apartments on the upper By JACK LEFLER NEW YORK (AP) The United States escaped a general railroad strike last week but the question was for how long. Labor negotiations in the steel industry appeared headed for a climax. At the request of Labor Secre- tary W, Willard Wirtz, the rail- roads and unions representing 200,000. employees extended their negotiations for five days. The deadline is 12:01 a.m. no agreement is reached in the dispute over changes the rail- roads want to put into effect, the lines could make _ the changes and the unions would be free to strike. At issue are 40,000 diesel loco. motive firemen's jobs which rail managements consider cost an unnecessary $600,000,000 yearly. A presidential board and the courts have held that the rail- roads have the right to make the changes. Federal negotiators were prodding for an agreement. If there is none, only congress could head off a work stoppage by ordering compulsory arbitra- tion or seizure of the railroads. Management already has. said it will accept binding arbitra- tion but the unions are opposed to it. CALL POLICY MEETING The United Steelworkers Un- ion has called a meeting of its wage policy committee for next Tuesday. This group has the fi- nal word on contract matters. Prolonged talks have been held by the joint management- union human relations commit- tee in an effort to reach agree. ment on issues without re-open- ing the two-year contract as the union has been free to do since May 1. The union would be free to strike 90 days after a re-open- floors of the ing. Steel buying as a hedge next Tuesday. At that time, if) Steel Bargaining Heads For Crisis against a possible strike has fal- len off sharply and is expected to remain lower no matter what the outcome of negotiations. Steel production suffered its sharpest drop of the year last week, bringing it to the lowest level in nearly two months. Mills turned out 2,513,000 tons, off 3.6 per cent from the 2,608,- 000 tons poured the previous week. Automobile production kept on booming with output this week estimated at 171,000 cars, com. pared with 169,273 last week and 148,047 a year ago. Auto sales ran 715,308 in May, STRENGTH DIFFUSED |. The Morgan Guaranty Trust Company of New York found the economy showing broadly diffused strength. "The apparent flattening of the retail sales curve since the end of the first quarter has been a disappointment but it has not persisted long enough to con- | stitute a sure sign of hesitancy jin that area," the bank said. | "Meanwhile, a faster tempo elsewhere is sustaining the economy's upward direction. Home building is working out of its earlier doldrums and last winter's sputtering in the capi- tal goods secton appears to have turned to moderate expan. sion." 11 Gold Miners Crushed To Death JOHANNESBURG (AP) Eleven South African gold. min- ers were crushed to death Sun- day and '10 more are presumed dead in a rockfall in the Groot- viei/Mine The disaster struck 4,000 feet underground in the mine near Springs, 30 miles east.of here on Witwaterstrand, current cardinals make up the largest single body of papal electors since the conclave sys- tem began in the 13th century. In early centuries there were no conclaves. Before 1059 it was up to the people and clergy of Rome 'to pick the pope. Pope St. Leo the Great wrote in the fifth century that a papal elec- tion required: "The vote of the citizens, the witness of the masses, the will of the patric- ians, the election of the clergy." Pope Gregory X, elected in 1271 after a conclave lasting two years, mine months and 10 days, tried to forestall stretched- out papal elections. He said cardinals at future conclaves would be locked up, would be fed through a hole in the door and would sleep in crude dormi- tories with as little comfort as possible, HARSHNESS EASED Gregory said the cardinals should get but one plate for dinner and one for supper af- ter the first three days in con- clave. After five days the ratio should be bread and water, La- ter popes including Pius XII and John XXIII, wrote constitutions and bulls to modernize the rules Secrecy and seclusion have been kept, but much of the physical harshness has been eased. For more than a week now, 200 Vatican workmen have been preparing the conclave area. Wooden walls, some of double thickness, have been hammered into place across. corridors, courtyards and stairways around the Sistine Chapel and the Borgia apartments of the Apostolic Palace. Windows have been white- washed to block the view in- side, Cords have been stretched across doors and windows, the knots sealed with red wax em- bossed "conclave."' Pope John's throne is gone from the rear wall of the Sis- tine Chapel before Michaelan- gelo's 60-foot-high fresco of the last judgment. In its place is en altar with a big chalice. Along both walls of the rec- tangular chapel are individual upholstered chairs and small tables, one for each cardinal. The chairs are called thrones. DOORS GUARDED In the Borgia apartments nearby are the "cells" or tiny, sparsely-furnished living quart- ers of the cardinals. The card- inals and their secretaries--only one priest to a cardinal instead of two because the number of cardinals is so great--will get their food through special blind openings in the double-guarded outside doors. Late Wednesday afternoon a bell will sound three times and the cardinals will file across the courtyard below the Sistine Chapel in violet robes, the color worn when there is no pope. Only when the new pope is elected will they wear their usual purple. A confessor, two doctors, a surgeon and a pharmacist are closed in the area with them. VOTE THURSDAY Once inside the cardinals re- peat the oath they took upon arriving in Rome after Pope John died. They swear them- selves to absolute secrecy in matters about the conclave and its voting, pledging to accept no interference from any civil au- thority and no suggestion about candidates from any other card- inal. They attend mass. The conclave area is then bolted from within and locked from without. The cardinals are henceforth cut off from the outside world until they elect a pope. The next morning, Thursday, voting begins--twice each morn- ing and twice each afternoon ballots are cast. The cardinals are alone in the chapel and each cardinal writes his choice and tries to disguise his hand- writing to add to the secrecy of the election. Each walks to the altar, where six candles glow, and says as he drops his paper inio the chalice there: "IT call to witness Christ the Lord,. who will be my judge, Race Violence Helps Soviet Propaganda By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Racial violence in the United States gives the world's Com- munists a golden harvest of propaganda. They are making the most of it. Newspapers and radio in Communist-ruled countries from China to Cuba have seized en- thusiastically upon the recent events in the southemn states. The Communists tell the peo- ple of their own countries and the world that what is happen- ing in the United States proves that claims of American free- dom and democracy are fraud- ulent, that U.S. leaders are hyp- ocrites, that U.S. "ruling cir- cles" secretly plot brutal sup- pression of minorities. The messages are pounded out day after day in broadcasts to Africa and other areas popu- lated by non-whites. Communist newspapers and radio make the most of dis- patches and news pictures of violence in the southern states. Again and again the idea is stressed that violence and ha- tred show the true face of American democracy, that the race troubles are a datural out- growth of the system, a '"'dis- ease of capitalism." B Cardinals Enter Chapel To Choose New Pontiff that I am electing the one whom, according to God, I think ought to be elected." CHOOSE SCRUTINEERS Three cardinals are chosen by lot each time to be "scruta- tores"--those who have scrutiny over the entire voting proce- dure, Three more are chosen to be "revisores'--thoes who do the counting and reading of resulis. Tie chalice is shaken up and the ballots are counted to en- sure that there is one paper for each cardinal present, One by ome the ballots are put into another vessel, Then a "revis- ore' reads the names, The seated cardinals, mean- while, have been given a listing of all 82 in the Sacred College. They check off the votes on their own tally sheets as the reading goes on. If no one gets a clear two-thirds majority, bal- lots are brought to a cylindrical cast-iron stove, much like the old-fashioned stoves im country avcres. The paper is set afire, along with pitch or tar to blacken the smoke, It rises through 100 feet of flue and out a peak- capped chimney to billow within view of thousands watching in St. Peter's Square. FALSE ALARM POSSIBLE If the voting is successful, damp straw is added to the ballots and the smoke comes out white. That's the theory at least, but it has sometimes caused false alarms, On the second day of the last conclave, the smoke that drifted itvin the chimney looked white. Word spread rapidly that a pope had been chosen. Even Vatican radio reported a successful elec- tion. When the pope is chosen, silk canopies are lowered by ropes over every throne but that of the pope-elect. Eugene Cardinal Tisserant, French-born dean of the college, approaches the new pontiff to ask: "Do you accept your election by law to the supreme pontifi- cate?" With the affirmative answer, the other cardinals advance to genuflect before Catholicism's newest successor to the chair of St. Peter. Armed Airplane Nabbed In Florida MIAMI, Fla. (AP)--A small private plane allegedly equipped for a bombing raid on Cuba was seized at an abandoned airport in the Everglades, customs agents said Sunday. Five men about to leave on the plane were taken into custody, the agents said. They were released after questioning. Agents said they impounded two 250-pound bombs, 55 gallons of napalm, 300 sticks of dyna- mite and some small arms in- cluding grenades. More Charges T oda Seen Against U.K. Osteopath LONDON (Reuters)--A police inspector told a London court 'today that further charges would be preferred against os- teopath Stephen Ward, who is being held on a charge of living|4; off the earnings of prosittution. Ward is one of the key figures) aig, in the scandal surrounding for- mer war minister John Profumo who resigned over his affair with model Christine Keeler. Ward the model. The police again opposed bail 3 when the 50-year-old osteopath td appeared at Marlborough Street Court. Chief Inspector Samuel Her- bert said the police were afraid Ward might leave the country.|8CP He said other charges would be laid and there was the chance of interference with wit- nesses. When the defence asked the nature of the further charges, a representative of the director of|car public prosecutions said they would be someth'ng of the or- der of the present charge. The court ordered Ward held in custody for another week, Cross - examined about wit- nesses he thought might be ap- proached, Herbert said: 'Prior to this inquiry one witness, Miss Keeler, was approached several times." "I have been present in her company when this man tele- phoned her," he added. He said the model would be appearing as a witness. introduced Profumo to rok B. Bodies Found In Isolated Lake Cabin RENFREW, Ont. (CP)--Ho- mer Truax, 60, of Bladensburg, Md., and his 11-year-old grand- son, Gene Lansdow, also of Bladensburg, were found dead Sunday in an isolated cabin on the shore of White Lake, about 20 miles southeast of this Ot- tawa Valley community. A leaking gas refrigerator is believed to have caused the death of the two Americans whose bodies were discovered by district farmer Merville James. Mr. James, a friend of Mr. Truax since the American first began coming to Canada for his vacations several years ago, dropped by the cabin Sunday after noticing that the boat used by the vis tors was beached outside the cabin all day. He found the two bodies sprawled on the floor. Mr, James said the Ameri- cans arrived Thursday and in- tended to spend a month in the area fishing. Whitby School Track Results 50 yard dash: John Reed, Alan McNutt, George Miller. 10 yard sack race: Fred Reed, Steven McCormick, Steven Welling. ; Soccer ball kick: Dennis Towannicki, John Reed, Charles Gauthier. Baseball throw: Dennis Towannicki, John Reed, Charles Gauthier. ' Baton relay Dennis Towannicki, David Myles, John: Reed and Charles Gauth- ier; 2nd, Mark Howe, Brian McClure, George Miller, Jack Young; 3rd, Stephen McCor- mick, Danny McCoy, Allan McNutt, Fred Reed. Running broad jump: Allan McNutt, John Reed, Charles Gauthier, 10-YEAR-OLD GIRLS Standing broad jump: Mary Hoag, Susan Baker, Randi Smith. High jump: Cheryl Bettis, Janis Smith, Susan Baker. 10 yard sack race: Kathy Mif lin, Jane Bryant, Margaret Cox, 40 yard dash: Cheryl Bettis, Kathy Stewart, Marta Edari. 20 yard skipping race: Cheryl Bettis, Robin Minto, Marta Edari. Baseball throw: Sally Roblin, '|Marta Edari, Kathy Stewart. Running broad jump: Cheryl Bettis, Penny Brown, Debbie McCoy. Baton relay: Cheryl Bettis, Susan Baker, Sally Roblin, and Janet Sheahan, 11-YEAR-OLD BOYS Running broad jump: Danny Maundrell, David Hamer, An- drew Roblin. Standing broad jump: Danny Maundrell, Andrew Roblin, David Hamer. High jump: Andrew Roblin, Chris Wells, Danny Maundrell. 60 yard dash: Andrew Roblin, Danny Maundrell, David Hamer, 15 yard sack race: Fairbairn, Andrew David Hamer. Soccer ball kick: Danny Maundrell, Bill MeCaffney, Joe McLauchlan, Baseball throw:. Frank Mitch- ell, Danny Maundrell, Bill Mc- Caffney. Baton relay: Andrew Roblin, Paul Thomas, Dwight Prenie, and Danny. Maunder; 2nd, David Hamer, Chris Wells, Joe McLaughlan and Bill McCaff- ney; 3rd, Joe Creech, Geoffrey Fairbairn, Peter Bayes, and Tom Cinndon. 11-YEAR-OLD GIRLS Standing broad jump: Linda Geoffrey Roblin, Green, Rebecca Ryland, Jane Fuller. Running broad jump: Linda Green, Shirley Grylls, Patsy Towannicki, High jump: Rebecca Ryland, Patsy Towannicki, Shirley Grylls. 60 yard dash: Pats y Towan- nicki, Linda Green, Shirley Grylls. : 15 yard sack race: Marjorie Liddle, Rebecca Ryland, Linda Green. 20 yard skipping race: Patsy Towannicki, Linda Green, Debra Walton. Baseball throw: Cheryl Mc- Coy, Debbie Boenner, Jane Fuller. Baton relay: Shirley Grylls, Marjorie Liddle, Patsy Towan. nicki and Rebecca Ryland. 12-13-YEAR-OLD BOYS Hop, step and jump : Terry Rowland, Terry Godfrey, Ricky McNutt. Running broad jump: John Graham, Terry Rowland, Barry Luke. i Standing broad jump: John Graham, Doug McCoy, Barry Luke. High jump: John Goemans, Doug McCoy, John Graham. 60 yard dash: Terry Rowland, John Graham, David Campkin. Soccerball kick: Peter Staple Bill Alexander, Michael Mutch- ins. Baseball throw: Terry Row- land, Bill Alexander, Peter Staples. Baton relay: 1st, Barry Luke, David Campkin, Ted Nonuick and David Thomas; 2nd, Terry Rowland, John Goemans, Doug McCoy and John Graham; 3rd, Gene Fentide, Tom Gordon, David Payne and David Me- Cormick. 12-13-YEAR-OLD GIRLS Running broad jump: Pat Firth, Shelley Liddle, Kathy Kenny. Standing broad jump: Pat Firth, Kathy Kenny, Pamela Rowland. High jump: Pat Firth, Corne- lius Hortensius, Ann Christie. Baseball throw: Janet Brad- ley, Carol Avent, Lana Kauko- nen. : 20 yard skipping race: Peggy Thomas, Pamela Rowland, Elizabeth Gauthier. 60 yard dash: Sylvia Prince, Pat Firth, Shelly Liddle, Hop, step and jump: Shelley Liddle, Peggy Thomas, Janet Bradley. Baton relay: Pam Rowland. Kathy Kenney, Pat Firth and Sylvia Prince. rights, xw--Ex-warrants. Net change is from previous board-lot cl sale. i le Stock Sales High Low a.m. Ch'ge INDUSTRIALS Abitibi 235 $31 38% 31 25 $109% 109% 109% 115 900 900 900 240 $58 «(57% 5B 793 $29% 27% 2B 225$17% 17% 17% 210 $12%4 12% 12% 610 $9% 9% + 720 $52% $24 52% Build Prod Burns Cabol Cal Pow Can Cem CD Sug Cl Fndry C Pack BX Can Perm 175 $28 = 27% 28 166 $949% 9% 730 60 60 60 295 $23% 23% Whe+ 300 $38%e 38% 38% 50 $27 27) (7 100 $23% 23% 23% +% Y% 1%2% 60% 60% 150 979% 79% 79 1425 870 $11% 11 400 $10% 10% 10% -- % 50410 410 410 --5 $8 8 8 25 110 $17% 17% 17% + % 566% 66% 66% -- % 175 500 a7. 64 275 430 430 430 845 $30% 30% 30% 3 $16 16 16 100 $9 69 69 +% 100 $7% 7% 7%--Y% OBITUARIES MRS, JANE BENNETT PETERBOROUGH The death of Mrs. Jane Bennett, 77, of 86 Park street south, occur- red in a city hospital last Wed- nesday following a short illness. Born and educated in Camber- well, England, the former Jane Hayward, she has lived in Peter- borough for the past 45 years. C Brew C Chem Cc Chem w C Collieries C Hydro C Imp Bk C CIL rt 1 C Mare CPR Chat-Gai Chrysler Cliartone She was a charter member of} poyerisoi the Salvation Army. Widow of Joseph Bennett, she leaves a son, Frank John Ben- nett of Oshawa and two grand- children. Funeral service was held Sat- 8 urday from Comstock funeral home for service at the Salva- tion Army Temple at 11 a.m. with Major F. J. Watson offic- iating. Burial was in Little Lake Cemetery. MRS, LUCY JANE FITCHES The death of Mrs. Lucy Jane Fitches, 214 Albert street, oc- curred Sunday, June 16, after being in failing health for nine months. A daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs. Charles Stallard, she was born in Swindon, Wiltshire, England, May 17, 1876. She received her education in England and married Thomas Williams Fitches, March 29, 1902 in Lower Sydenham, Kent,|¢ England who predeceased her Feb. 26, 1937, Mrs. Fitches has been a resi- dent of Oshawa since 1906. She was one of the original mem- om bers of Holy Trinity Anglican Church and was a past presi- dent of the Women's Auxiliary|\' of that church. She also was a past-president and a past dis- trict deputy of the Daughters|% of England which she belonged to for 38 years. The deceased is the last in line of her family. Ei 135 $45% 45% 45% -- % 200 88 86 88 Fi M4 $11% 11% 11% +% ll La 11 Net +10 +% +1%| Fndtn Loeb M MB PR 17 M Leaf Mill MIf£M pr Mass F Mass F pr Mid West Molson B Mon Food Moore Noranda NO NGas NS LP Ogilvie Ont Loan Page Hers Pac Pete PC Jwl A Pow Corp Premium Price Br QN Gas QN Gas pr QN Gas w Reichhold Revelstoke 100 210 210 12 $31% 31% 3 250 $8 8 690 $55% 36 79 38% 7% % 50 $107% 107% 1074 -- % 000 72 «70 «670 100 $13% 13% I19%--% 220 500 500 500 210 $11% 11% 11%, Rob 2 pr 200 $16% Rothman Royal Bnk Salada Sayvette Shaw I rts 225 36% 8% 8% 3102 $184 18% 14+ % 728 665 665 665 135 $35 _ 35 $33 3 33 475$21%4 21% 2144+ % 150 $17% 17% 109 $64 =A 900 $13% 13 220 $29% 1045 $14% 14% 14% 225$13 13 13 550 $22% 22% 22% 25 56% 56! 100 100 100 100 50 400 235 $59% 59% 59% -- z1 $13% 13% 13% 1% 64 3%+% --%* Suptest ord Tor Dom TFinA.. Tr Can PL Trans Mt Turnbull Un Gas U Gas B pr Vanadium Vendomat Walk GW Weoast vt Weston A Wstn 6 pr West A wts J we $944; 9% IH -- Wdwd Aw 200 475 475 475 --15 270 6 30 410 400 440 745 $12 225 $11% $: 284 Alminex 225 225 1% 1%--% % 11 jl 284 Union Oil U Canso vt Un Oils W Decalta 7800 165 165 165 +8 2100 $11% 11% 11% 500 135 155 155 --7 1000 135 135 135 --3 200 122 122 12 --1 4 -- %) Opemiska Ye --Y| Trin Chib 1 ys Stock Market " Acad Uran Akaitcho "1900 ¥ Ssencgeshdssera Sse ogstt~ > H & z 3 = if Base Mets ~7000 beech He att - z L oes it oS re i g8e8ees s58gzctiesdyties 283 + Lad 3 z Focecy Hert tt! ee H L - = Batgetiecg Sagung,sbdecen. Sse, wot = BgssstBe il; SgBSttHoog Sarcngeshbssezebtes e.cce- Wu" 11 150 $12% 200470 470 10 "4 4 * 3 "= # TRH pL "? HE 5 s ue LF = 3g $s"z%° 33*2°* 1 +4+ e Giant YK Grandroy randuc Gulch Gunnar , Hard Rock Har Min Hollinger Howey Iron Bay J Waite Jacobus Joutel Keeley F Kerr Add Kirk Town Kopan I, Dufault Osu L Shore Langis Lorado Lyndhst Macassa Macdon Madsen Marchant Maritime Matatch Mattgmi Maybrun Mcintyre McMar MeWat # = ss ss = c "s = 332853 woSag gbubeg woSags bit 325 $20% 2% --% 500 410 410 410 45 800 95 «95 8H 3000 15 15 15 --t ' lew Rouyn 2500 N Senator 111700 pede) 3000 Norpax N Coldstrm Northgate ee! Orchan Orenada 1000 atino gs 2 1300 69 Rio Algom 3450 $14% 14% jalem 1000 32 Satellite 11000 15 Sherritt 1675 290 Sit Miller 29000 Sil Stand Siscoe Starratt Seep R {Sunburst Bg8Feskas EESSE gy Bubs eS Faskarresstoewsaks = & +++ ASS E¥VRSS gH SESE Ges es Hitriititrere tty Be. 858 3058s z + + Sales to 11 a.m.: 2,110,000, She is predeceased by a son, Charles, who died in 1909 and a daughter, Alice, who died COMING EVENTS in 1951. Surviving are three sons, Wil- liam, George and Reginald and a daughter, Mrs. Richard Don- ald (Florence), all of Oshawa as well as eight grandchildren. Mrs, Fitches is at the McIn- tosh-Anderson Funeral Home. The funeral service will be held in Holy Trinity Anglican Church, Tuesday, June 18, at 2 p.m. conducted by Rev. Leon- ard Ware. Interment will be in BINGO, Eastview Park, Tuesday, two o'clock, Euchre, Wednesday, 8.15. High monthiy score $5. Prizes, refreshments, Admission 50c, |RUMMAGE sale of adults and ldren's clothing, Centre Church West Unit No. P.m, June 18, chil- Street United 2 Tuesday 2 . GROUP 2, W.A. KNOX PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH STRAWBERRY SUPPER WEDNESDAY, JUNE 19, 4-7 P.M. Adults $1.00 Children up to 12 50c Mount Lawn Cemetery. The Daughters of England will hold a service in the fu- neral home at 7 p.m. today. WILLIAM SOROCHAN ' The death of William Soro- chan, 305 Mitchell street, oc- curred early today at Oshawa General Hospital after a short illness, He was born in Rarancha, Bukav'na, Ukraine, Jan. 1, 1892. Mr. Sorochan was a resi- dent of Oshawa for the past 50 years. He was a member of St. Mary's Ukrainian Orthodox Church. He is survived by his wife, the former Alice Goodsman and a daughter, Mrs. J. Zambonelli (Anne), and two sons, John W. and George, all of Oshawa, as well as five grandchildren. Also surviving is a sister, Mrs. Mary Keronda of Windsor. Mr. Sorochan is at Armstrong Funeral Home. The memorial ST, JOSEPH'S PARISH Bingo, Fri., 7:45 (Bloor and Simeoe) 20 GAMES $6 and $12 5 Jackpots at $40 Share The Wealth . NO Children Under 16 WOODVIEW COMMUNITY CENTRE BINGO Nos. 50 and 55 TONIGHT -- 8 P.M. RED BARN EXTRA BUSES KINSMEN BINGO TUESDAY, 8 O'CLOCK FREE ADMISSION Y B KINSMEN COMMUNITY CENTRE 109 COLBORNE ST. W. BINGO St. Gertrude's Auditorium TO - NIGHT AT 8 P.M. 690 KING ST. E. AT FAREWELL RUMMAGE SALE Wednesday, June 19 Opening 1:30 p.m. LEGION HALL 90 CENTRE STREET Auspices Ladies Auxiliary Canadian Legion FREE ADMISSION Snowball Jackpot $160.-56 Nos. $20 Consolation Reg. Jackpot 52 Nos. $100 $20 Consolation Good Prizes service will be held in the chapel, Wednesday, June 19, conducted by Rev. P. Zapary- niak, Interment will be in Mount Lawn Cemetery. SPORTS BRIEFS PLAN STADIUM MONTREAL (CP)--The Mon- trea] Alouettes football club an- nounced Friday plans for a 40,- 000 seat fotball stadium in the Montreal area, The stadium, to be ready for the 1963 football season, will have an expansion potential of 60,000 seats. . PREDICTS SELLOUT LONDON (AP)--The heavy- weight fight Tuesday night be- tween fast-talking Cassius Clay of Louisville, Kentucky, and British champion Henry Cooper will fill" all of Wembley Sta- dium's 55,000 seats, promoter Jack Solomons said Thursday. Undefeated Clay, who has said he'll knock out the 28-year-old Cooper in five rounds, is a 5-to-1 LYCEUM CLUB and WOMEN'S ART ASSOC. GARDEN TEA AT PARKWOOD Home of COL. R. S. MCLAUGHLIN Wednesday, June 19th 2:30-5:30 o'clock If rain will postpone to the following afternoon, favorite. Free Admission Free BINGO AT DNIPRO HALL 681 Edith Street (off Bloor E.) TONIGHT -- 7:30 P.M, 20 Reg. games $8-$10 Reg. Jackpot 51 Nos. $160, $20 CON. PRIZE SHARE-THE-WEALTH (No Children Under 16 Years) ' PLAN NCW TO ATEND THE MEET PREMIER ROBARTS DINNER THURSDAY, JUNE 20 GENOSHA HOTEL Reception 6:15 p.m. Dinner 7 p.m, TICKETS $2.00 PHONE 728-7550, 725-9592, 728-1763 ADMISSION 75¢ EVERYBODY WELCOME a

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy