Oshawa Times (1958-), 20 Jul 1964, p. 3

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WEEKEND WEDDIN Dr. Samuel Sheppard gets a pat on the cheek as he holds marriage license shortly be- fore his weekend wedding in Chicago to blonde German 4 a divorcee. Pair was scheduled to fly to New York today while awaiting action of a U.S. court of appeals sched- uled to consider request to HARLEM RIOT HURTS 100 |dium Motor Lodge, which Lam- (Continued from Page 1) Poeple began getting knocked to the ground. Robert E. Daly, 35, a news cameraman for the Columbia Broadcasting System, said 35 bert owns with Clete Boyer, New York Yankees' third base- |man. THROW AT CAR When the mob started hurl- FOR DR. SHEPPARD withdraw freedom on_ bond. serving a slaying a previous wife. ilization has great wilderness Europe--Lapland. women which cover their hair and ears during' the bitter arctic winter. |GIRLS GO MODERN carded woollen stockings reindeer-skin boots, upturned toes, for nylons and Lapland Is Invaded By Civilization invaded the last! of Western) An estimated 30,000 Lapps, once nomads with their reindeer herds, now are showing a pref- erence for nylons, baths houses. cosmetics, and centrally -heated Although many still live the hard, nomadic life which sends them in search of good grazing) grounds in mountains near the) Norwegian-Swedish border, increasing number are settting| down to regular jobs. | an Most of the 1,200 Lapps in Kiruna, for instance, work in| iron-ore mines, on railways, or| as fishing and tourist guides. | But they still wear their pic-| turesque national dress, which| World? sets them apart from their Swe-| . dish neighbors. Men and women|Women? Is it against nature? wear padded coats of bright blue, red} and yellow, caught round waist by broad leather belts. colorful knee length the Dressed much the same, the sport frilled bonnets But girls long since have dis- and with their |Swedish-made rubber boots. and attend the movies. M \favor "westerns" with plenty of | Dr. Sheppard's | He was | life sentence for (AP Wireph = DISTRICT CITY AND CANADIAN ROSE CHOSEN A. W. Rundle, a director and\anq the Negroes attacked him and threejing missiles at the car, Lam-|treasurer of the Ontario Nursery Trades Association has just re- turned from the Canadian Nur- camera crew members while they were taking pictures. Daly, taken to hospital, said he was beaten with clubs and fists. The crew members fled. PUNCHED IN EYE Times photographer, as bert said, he told Miss Fawcett to lie on the floor while he tried to put up his convertible top. Miss Fawcett, who came here sery Trades Association Con-| from England 2% years ago,|Vvention in Winnipeg, Manitoba.| suffered head gashes. Lambert|The highlight of the convention John Orris, @ New York suffered a dislocated shoulder. |was the choosing of a Canadian) c~paR CREEK -- Ronnie|a shower at the home of her|qeaths, including 10 highway fa-|don. Harlem has been in recentioriginated rose which will be Willerton is attending summer daughter, punched: in the eye by one of a|\turmoil over tenement condi-/named 'Miss Canada", for Cam- <.hool at Guelph, He is taking| Brooklin. group of Negroes. One bottle|tions, Negro charges of police|ada's Centennial. This rose will struck by a Negro police ser- geant. New York's 26,000-man police force is on 12-hour shifts until further notice because of the explosive situation. brutality and schools. During Saturday night's| battle, police ran out of ammu- nition and boxloads. of shells | had to be rushed in from the! inadequate not be available until the spring of 1967. CHRISTIAN SCIENCE "T shall not die, but live, and2"d family visited relatives at) x ' \Bobcaygeon. SUBJECT Some girls use lipstick now Many action. But, they seldom go dancing. The Lapps, with no music of their own, seem to have no ear for modern jazz. More and more, Lapps are living in. pleasant, centrally- oto) |heated homes. Often, however, | Prince Albert they find the summer too warm in brick-built houses, and leave them for the garden and the cooler reindeer-skin tent known as a "'kaata." Although many have only .a few possessions of their own, they like to boast of their few modern conveniences--the bath portable television set. Youth 'Attends Summer School the Physical Education Course. He is staying with his aunt, Mrs: J. E, Zellar and Mr. Zellar and family. : Mr. and Mrs. John den Boer { SHREWSBURY, Mass. (AP) The Pill is small--sometimes pink, sometimes orange, some- times red white and blue. most talked about. It worries a lot of people, /angers' some, brings hope to Yet some Roman Catholic! strength and sped up by hor- and has. caused some, women do take the pill -° as|mones in another strength. others, n reconsideration of social atti- des woman took the oral contra-| |ceptive pill in December of controversy. Will it destroy social morals jand create a promiscuou Will it cause cancer in | Despite the questions and ar-| guments the pill has become a! daily habit for 6,00,000 women) over the world--half of them) 'Americans. | And in just over six years on the U.S. prescription market, it! has become a major weapon in the arsenal of birth control de- vices. Its true usage is hard to measure. The highest per capita use is) in Australia. The Egyptian gov-| ernment and others pass out) pills to mothers who want to limit the size of their families. Even now, the pill and other) There was a recent report} safe. Personals At PRINCE ALBERT -- Mr. and Mrs. Clayton Love, Lexie and John were guests at the Brock- Poirier church wedding in Alex- andra in Cornwall area. Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Roy Hope,|haps and drownings accounting Dennis Vezina, 17, Field,.Ont.,| Misses Jean and Lois Hope, and| brother John Hope, Mr. and Mrs. R. Stusman, Mr, and Mrs.| H. Long and Miss V. Chilvers| were guests at the Hope-Brown wedding in Newcastle on Satur- day. Mrs. Norman Wilson attended) Mrs. N. Jackson, The party was in honor of Miss Joan Miller, a) bride-elect of Columbus. | under Oral Contraceptive Pill Is Controversial methods of birth control are|that laboratory animals which the highest|were fed a common US. birth study at levels of the Vatican. However, a change in the) In a world facing a gain of|traditional Roman Catholic) Dr. Gregory Pincus of the Wor- 128000 a day, 48,000,000 a year, view toward birth control is cester Foundation for Experi- a population of 6,500,000,000 by|considered unlikely--Pope Pius mental Biology at Shrewsbury, the year 2000, it is man's most/IIX called the use of the pill; Mass., said that it long has ingenious means of birth con-|"'illicit sterilization." Pope Paul) been known that many animal trol--the most effective and the|in recent weeks indicated there cancers are dependent on hor- was little reason to change the; mones--can be slowed by hor- | Roman Catholic position. church leaders admit. They in-| ; | sist, however, that any attemp'|of women show, however, that From the day the first|to offer statistics on the num-|use of the pills may actually ber is foolhardy. | Despite all its publicity, not, 1954, it has been a subject of everyone knows how the pill/tract. In Haiti and other test works, ! Essentially it mimics the} sistate of pregnancy -- when in regular medical checkups of |there can be no further con-| pill users, ception. The pill prevents ovu-) lation--the release of eggs from) the ovaries. The woman takes a pill each day for 20 days. The pregnancy, the hormone progesterone--and perhaps to some extent the sex hormone estrogen -- inhibit ovulation. With the pill, synthetics of the natural hormones do the same thing. GET SAME EFFECT Today, a woman can receive a month's supply of pills for about $2. Newer pills on the market use diminishing amounts of the hormones, but get the same effect. | which--when taken by the male control pill showed accelerated growth of existing tumors. But mone preparations of one Studies of volunteer groups inhibit the normal rate of can- cers of the female reproductive areas, doctors have found fewer signs of suspicious cells There are 30 trade names available on the world market --representing about 10 sepa- rate drugs. Even while the pill is the most talked about contracep- tive method, scientists are also looking for still other means, while improving existing ones. There have been recent at- tempts to develop chemicals --would prevent the maturing of sperm. But they have con- siderable side effects. Dr. Pincus thinks it unlikely! that any drug will be developed for use by men which will be [Accidents Kill 78 During Weekend By TH ECANADIAN PRESS | | At least 78 persons died in onto suburb of Scarborough, laccidents across Canada during|drowned in Sparrow Lake, 15) the weekend, with traffic mis- for all but nine of the total. A survey by The Canadian} Press from 6 p.m. Friday to midnight Sunday local times in- cluded 37 traffic deaths, 32 drownings, one death b y fire! ous accidents. Ontario had 4 accidental) |talities, six drownings, six per-| jsons who died in two separate plane crashes, a girl who was| |struck by lightning and a man} Mr. and Mrs. H. Hodgins are|apparently run over by a train|when his truck was struck by a Brian Arnott, 19, of the Tor- THE OSHAWA TIMES, Monday, July 20, 1964 3 BATHING SUITS When they don their bath- ing suits, Mr. and Mrs. Don Spicer of Oshawa, reveal the art in which they are pro- ARE REVEALING" ficient. Both are tattooist. They are seen here getting a tan during the weekend heat wave. --Oshawa Times Photo miles north of Orillia. | drowned while swimming at| Pike Lake, 22 miles west of North Bay. SATURDAY Gordon Dodd, 26, ang James Craig, 25, both of Auburn, and jand eight deaths in miscellane-|Wigniefred Griffiths, 20, Wing- ham, in a two-car collision near Clinton, 50 miles north of Lon- George MacPherson, 25 Ajax, and John. Kane, 26, Whitby, in a two-car collision near Guelph. Natale Rea, 28, Windsor, visiting relatives for two weeks} Quebec reported 23 fatalities--|train at a level crossing. at Porcupine. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Bond, Toronto have been visiting var- |deaths, Newfoundlang and Prince Ed- 15 drownings and eight road) Russell Elm, Oneida reserve, near London, when he was ap- parently run over by a train at jism |means. . , NEW YORK (AP) -- Former president Dwight D. Eisenhower has declared that Senator Barry Goldwater's remarks on extrem- i "would seem to say that the end always justifies the But, Eisenhower added, "the whole American system refutes that idea and that concept." Eisenhowr, appearing on an American Broadcasting Com- presidential candidates and that he regarded convention demon- strations as infantile. Eisnehower was interviewed by James C, Hagerty, his for- mer White House press secre- tary and now ABC-Paramount Pictures vice-president for -cor- porate relations, and William H; Lawrence, ABC news political editor. - Eisenhower said Goldwater's speech "by and lange" was very outstanding. In Phoenix Satursday, Deni- son Kitche!, Goldwater's elec- tion ign ager, quoted Eisenhower as saying he would be glad to help Goldwater in the pany television program shown Sunday, discussed Goldwater's speech at the Republican con- vention in San Francisco last week in which the Arizona sen- ator accepted the party's- presi- dential nomination for the Nov. 3 U.S. election. However, ABC explained the interview was taped before Eis- enhower met with Goldwater in ign against President Johnson. Kitchel also said the former president felt Goldwater should clarify for the voters his de- fence of extremism in the cause of liberty.) RE-ENACTS HISTORY The landing at Alberton by Jacques Cartier in 1534 is to be re-enacted in the Prince Ed- San Francisco Friday, a session ° at which the extreme passage ee Island centennial this of the acceptance h was Just a Minute... | discussed. OPPOSES DEBATES |Let's exemine the facts, DONALD The former president also|/ TRAVEL provides you with the one said he probably would repeat laereing: thet costs you nothing. his pre-convention role as &/Why not call them when plenning neutral another time, that helyour business er pleasure. trip. was opposed to debates between'668-3304. works of the) Mr. and Mrs, In Johnson City, Tex., Sun-|Bronx.:The truck carrying the|declare the this verse from|tey and family and Mis< Mari-|sisters and brothers. ' 4 " : ; ; then iis. day, presidential press secre-| ammunition was protected by a) Lord" Norris Doher-|ious times this week with his|ward Island each had one traf [Niagara Falls said|pair of men armed with a shot-| Psalms was part of the Golden fie gran sows npregl | A or gl a a Sorte, llyn Farrow, who has been liv-| Donald and Grant Beacock|ported three deaths on the high-|drowne wa Ta ing with the Dohertey family for| enjoyed the weeken d with) ways, craig og | ag | one oo 60 miles east of 8. ak-| frien tage in Halibur-|dea y fire. In New Bruns-| Ottawa. ee ee oS i |wick four persons were killed in| Candice Ashbury, 13, Albion, i ith Mr. sf gg lpg bi traffic accidents and three were|N.Y.. when struck by lightning a hot, hot day with a cooling Holiday Reserve yourself the shadiest tree, the most com- fortable lounge chair. Now a cooling Holiday Beer. FIRST RACE -- Purse $1,900 ($5000);Royal Doctor, Shuk 110 Claiming Maiden Two-vear-olds Foaled In| Puff N'Smoke, Fitzsimmons 117 Canada § Furs Playampa, Harrison 105 Ermine Sox, No Boy 115 Callaround, Dittfach 110 Spin @ Tale, McComb 118 Small Eckie, Fitzsimmons A-118 Fast Kitten, Harris X110 Arabian Market, Harris X107 Day's Best, No Boy 118 Barleycorn, Harrison A-115 Nordstern, Rogers 118 London Liz, Walsh 105 Lucky Draw, Walsh . 118 AR, C. Best and T. E. King entry Fabulous Star, Burton 115 ; Tricky Trudy, Dittfach 115 Aenean: SETANS) Dayliner, Harris X113 jw lens E. Reedy, ; nson has made it} gun and a machine-gun. Text that introduced the Bible maintaining order. |blamed the riots on "rowdies."|hegan a series on names which 2"¢ Mrs. John Farrow. Marilyn) Mrs, Lloyd Hunter. spent ----. while standing on a dock at an ex-convict with a record ofjas Harlem rioters in 1935 and day. travelling in the western Prov-|one 'traffic death amd one|30 miles north of Toronto, when ing hurling bricks, set off by reports that poice| Worcester, Mass.--Rev, Leo-|Highland Creek on. Sunday. and Mrs. G. Miller, at their|incjuding five by drowning and Walter Zimmerman, Howard quired hospital treatment. They|when a Negro soldier was religious duties in Russia. Bermuda, where he will spend a|Nola were Sunday guests of Mr.|known suicides, slayings, indus-/ygich | when their plane crashed publisher 'of Farm Equipment|and Robert Greenwood accom-|Hunter who reached the age of} Joseph F. Clairmont, 41, Mar-|in a two-car collision at Bow- surance education who was em-|and the banks cut back and the; Mr. and Mrs. Clinton Cham-\viiie and Elwood Demille, 47,| SWAP CONTRACTS E. Hull, 70, a hotel magnate and family, New Jersey, U.S.A.,| Gerald William MacDonnell,/have completed a swap of Luxury Item, Leblanc 118 Claiming Three-year-olds and up. 6 Furs.| French, 79, a retired Regina ob-|West Germany, and the need) Glad to learn Mrs. Stella). Richarq Johnson, &, Wick-|Jean - Marie Morissette, Bob O' KEEFE clear that federal assistance) Deputy Police Commissioner|;esson he: at Christi will be forthcoming any time|Walter Arm, public relations| science i on ote The Negro killed Saturdav/ He said they had the same pur-| remained there and her sister,/few days with her friend Miss) : ; : night was identified through pose--looting--and the same ex- avons to Ged. EJaine returned with the Do-|stelia Ross, London. Pacnay yad an phe lady org oo © 10 arrests, police said. They)1933. DEATHS Charles Parm visited his brO-|inces for a few weeks. : : | " : ; | ; ; . drowning while Alberta reported/his car collided with another said he had been standing on| In 1935, one person was killed) ther, Jim, and Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Wilson spent a few daysifive deaths, all in traffic Brit-Inear his home. Showgirl Carolyn Fawcett,|had beaten a 16-year-od youth.|pold L. S. Braun, 62, at one'TO NASSAU in the Barrie area 23, was injured. She and her|In 1933, five were killed and|time the only Roman Catholic) Wayne Willerton left Malton cottage in the : two on the roads. Kuntz, Wendell Whitney and were on their way to the Sta-'wounded by a policeman. Chicago--Elmer J. Baker Jr.,|three - week vacation. His mo- and Mrs. Kyrytow and son Karl, |trial or natural deaths. near Wawa, 105 miles north of 75, farm machinery industry|ther, Mrs. Ernie Willerton, and/all of Etobicoke. | The Ontario dead: |Sault Ste. Marie. FORT ERIE ENTRIES News magazine. , panied him to the airport. |86. Also greetings _ his ae mora, when: struck by a car|manville, eight miles east of Philadelphia--Dr, Solomon §.| The Cedar Creek road is be-|daughter, Melodie Heayn, wh0| |.' peterborough. Oshawa. | eritus professor of insurance at/hill cut down from the Oshawa | bers and family are holidaying Picton, when their light plane} QUEBEC (CP)--Quebec Aces the University of Pennsylvania./road to the old Cedar Creek|/two weeks at Kaladar. crashed into the Bay of Quinte! of the American Hockey League ; That's refreshing. This is Ontario's light-tasti }and builder of the El Rancho NEED: HOMES are staying this week with her)23, Enfield, N.S., when his car|player contracts with the Mont- beer, a pind Sinden wad light, ng Vegas Hotel in Las Vegas, Nev.| There is a shortage of ap-\parents, Mr. and Mrs. E. Mc-|went out of cotnrol and left the|real Canadiens of the National yet Neve teete kin" Seve Ky Potts 116 | stetrician and gynaecologist, fol-|for another 100,000 construction| Heayn is home from the hospi-|cliffe, Ohio, drowned in Lake| Barlow and Bob Courcy and ob- hook Ind, Harris X113 tal. Erie at Erieau, 18 miles south-|tained in return the contracts He lid, . BREWED FOR SUMMER THIRST local authorities need help in|man for the department, | the subject was "Life" and fingerprints as Jay Jenkins, 31,|cuse--alleged police brutality-- herteys for a few weeks holi- Mr. and Mrs. Earl Martyn are|i, the water. Saskatchewan haq| Richard Webb, 16, Bradford, i rs iot| . BY THE CANADIAN PRESS ¥ I at]. | the roof of a four-storey build-|and 100 injured in a Harlem riot Norman Farrwell and Larry with his aunt and uncle, Mr.|ish Columbia had seven deaths, FRIDAY escort, Jack Lambert, 29, re-|500 injured in riots touched off| priest permitted gp carry out his|Airport on Monday for Nassau,| Mr. and Mrs.L. Hunter and) The survey does not include|preq 'Dutton, all of Jackson,| historian and former editor andjbrother Larry and Leonard) Congratulations to Mr. Alvin SUNDAY | Sarah Newman, 77, Oshawa, TUESDAY, JULY 1 \Os Hubner, '82, a pioneer in life in-|ing widened and 'straightened. turned three. Berton Fitzgibben, 60, Belle-| sean ie Beverly Hills, Calif--Thomas School. Mr. and Mrs. Miller (Viola) near Belleville. lannounced Wednesday they hiotiey fe al bees ail the way down. E | isa SIXTH RACE _ Purse $2,800 (si0.000)|,. FOFonto--Dr. Edwin' Thomas|proximatly 1,700,000 homes in| Crea. road near Sudbury. League. Aces sold contracts of wid oo he s Also Eligible: Lib, No Boy 115; Hot oy Buttermilk Pike, Cuthbertson XXX 108 jeast of Chatham. lof John Hanna and Bill Suther- Honey, Walsh 115; Pick a Star, No Boy! swoon Star, Walsh 120 Ah bytes "tege boggles 118; Sul Out of Pocket, No Boy 116 Peter Risi, 17, Brantford,|land. Aces also acquired con- scuier No bay Tit. . bo Meee gga a na i |drowned at Pine Hurst Lake, 12\tracts of Wayne Hicks, Terry }miles northwest of Brantford. (Gray and Don Blackburn, giv- Ante Vucic, 22, Hamilton,/ing up contracts of Bill Dineen, SECOND RACE -- Purse $1,900 ($2500) Wamatier, Harris X113 drowned in a farm pond at|Noel Picard and an unnamed nearby Waterdown. | player. Claiming Four-year-olds and up .6'2|New Member, Fitzsimmons 120 | ===-=== Ballet In England LONDON (CP)--Many a bal-|Royal Ballet," said petite, dark-|probably stop learning when let-struck teen-ager would envy haired Dawn Macdonald, you leave. school," says Dawn the life of six young Canadian|spokesman for the group. "We The students get the occa- girls now studying at London's/have to work for the moment'siona! free pass to a ballet per- famed Royal Ballet School. and get as much out of each fonmance featuring the _ top They come from widely sep-|\day as we can." stars, or better still, a chance arated parts of Canada. Three) Dawn, who returns to. Can-|to work on stage with them as --w@udy Donaldson, 18, Dawn/ada in August, is not distracted/extras. But they are encour- Macdonald, 17, and Sheronby daydreams of Covent Gar-/aged by the school to develop Koshley, 19--are from Vancou-\den. She would like to join|their own. style rather than |ver, the city that produced Brit-'a Canadian company, possibly|model themselves after the big) ain's newest ballet star, Lynnithe Royal Winnipeg Ballet. names, |Seymour, Judy Margoiik, 17, is) English training is extremely! Oytside school hours the Ca- from Montreal; Irene Drudge,|valuable, she says. nadian girls lead a full live. 17, from Winnipeg, and Susan! "People can tell the English|They mostly live in pairs either Davies, 18, from Edmonton. jstyle, just as they can the jn apartments or with families Recently they all appeared in/Russian. English-trained danc-|j, unfashionable, redbrick Vic- jthe Royal Ballet School's an-jers aré noted particularly for/torian suburbs of Loadon such nual public matinee. Thisneat footwork and precision, as Golders Green and Parsons Espirt Gal, Gordon 115 Police Beaten } years's production, The Sleeping just as the Russians have that! Green, Beauty, gained favorable notice great jump in the air that is They find living expensive-- Resting, Fitzsimmons 120 Stopping Brawl d fi at jum in the authoritative columns of their specialty." some are on. grants. .othets Wave Age, Harris A-X115 Horation C., No Boy 120 TORONTO (CP)--Two police-/The Times and The Daily Tele- The girls work hard, averag- fi . ; ; A ; financed their parents--but AG. Groves and K. Miskovich entry men were beaten by 10 persons graph noe ing four 90-minute classes a . by P FOURTH RACE -- Purse $2,200 ($500) when they intervened in a fight) Susan Davies now is. in the|day at the dingy brick building Claiming Twe-yeercids.: # vfs between two women in front of |top class and hoping to be of-\that houses the senior Royal ; k : War Putt, Turcotte a |a downtown hotel early Sunday./fered a place with the Royal|Ballet School in Hammersmith,| Being a ballet student im- Tinasco, No Boy A-117 | Constable Roy Ward suffered Ballet Company, but she al-la district of- west London. | poses certain discipline on lei- Hen ight, No 'Boy 122 le broken | hen hi ready has a contract lined up| Along with classical ballet ex-|Sure activities. Sports such as Doll' 'ell, Harrison 119 a broken nose when he was). a : swimming or tennis are struck by one of the women and|With a German company, so ercises, there are classes -for|' ming or ' 18, No Boy 119 Belle Ange, McComb 111 Parkside Drive, Potts 119 Gramp's Pride, Gordon A-112 Bonnie Flere, McComb 111 Tiny Fruit, Walsh 109 Shall Succeed, Dalton 117 Cluny Miss, No Boy 11! Shasta Road, Dalton 119 Secret Star, Walsh 112 Vee Gee Cee, No Boy 112 Matlucina, Harrison A-107 Also Eligible: Come of Age, Potts 115; falone, McComb 110; Spiked Punch, Har-| EIGITH RACE ris X107; Penepopi, No Boy 112; Flippin Claiming Three-year-olds and ur Floyd, No Boy 119; Hash Boy, Harrison|/and one 16th Miles 116. \Friend, Willie, No Boy 114 A--L. W. Millard and L. Prussky and Bonnie Bird, No Boy 109 .M. Reid entry Mister Mutt, No Boy 117 Who Goes, Burton 112 THIRD RACE + Purse $2,200 Maiden Auntie Nora, No Boy 199 Three-year-olds 64 Furs. jJust Don't Shove, Harris X115 Dear Susie, No Boy 110 | Plucky Crest, No Boy 114 ony ety Me gh Robdix, No Boy 117 luckinsrun, jane | Dream City, No Boy 115 bee a by Wanless Park, Harris A-X110 XXX-10 Ibs. AAC Currette, Sutcliffe XXX100 Post Time 2 p.m. Autumn Souvenir, McComb 115 re | | 'SEVENTH RACE -- Purse $3,000 Allow- ances. Three-year-old Fillies, One mile (Turf Course) | Capiricious Miss, No Boy 119 Brief Wind, Gomez 110 |Forest Rover, Walsh 115 Famous Road, No Boy 110 Ciboulette, Fitzsimmons 110 |French Wind, No Boy 112 Speedy Lament, No Boy 112 Belarctic, Parsons X107 Yearning for a Yacht? Get an HFC Big Purchase Loan Purse $2,000 ($2500) ane For any important purchase, you're better off buying with cash. You can shop anywhere for the best bargains, take advantage of cash savings. Get that cash from HFC, Bor- row confidently-- repay conveniently. Call us now. Tues. and Wed. Specials [ Cis Suau. 49 BEEF 3»$1 BACON 39 WIENERS 29 MONTHLY PAYMENT PLANS 36 so | 20 12 Imonths| months | months | months 0/$..../$ Admission Girls, No Boy 110 Also Eligible: Mr. Possum, Walsh 115; Pertect Pitch, No Boy 110; Line Me Up, Gordon 110; Forest Bird, Harris 115; Sun Gleam, Turcotte XX103; Come Back Bay, No Boy 120 Cc Ib . are entranced by London's ya- riety of cheap entertainment. ASK ABOUT CREDIT LIFE INSURANCE AT LOW GROUP RATES | | Cc 2 OSHAWA OFFICES Ib SKINLESS » Parsons X112; Turcottee B-X104. AA, J. Fitzpatire singer entry. B-J MP. Fleming entry Cock! Cate, Walsh 119 a ie City & ser, Turcotte B-X109 lboth he and Constable George her future is assured for at)mime and character work, es- frowned upon because they de- ee ie ak | Simpson received numerous mi-|Jeast a year: sential to an art that has to|velop the wrong muscles. But ne, ie b 5 - a % j "I < 71 p.| O'Ken, alee NY : [nok tadarten when attacked by She and Sheren Koshley, whojinterpret a story through danc-)!t is by no means as single-| Sen Bee Sea, No Boy 117 ithe others has also been offered a chance|ing. minded a life as some people ey trmeiniens 114 : : een 1 \with the Royal Ballet, have! : suppose. | Suite 208, 0. : Aine, Bnible: Journey Home, Ne Bey Jay Ricardo Jackson, 22, WaSieen in Britain six-years; the|\SCHOOL IN ARTS "Contrary to what many peo-| Svite 208, Oshawa Shopping Ctr.--Ph. 725-1138 ris > Ennisciore,| Charged <a obstructing and as-| thor. only two years, an aver-) Students are_also encouraged ple think we don't live, eat and| (northwest corner, over Fairweather's) . saulti ice. Bry ; , isi ; | cat ry . re 9 ter : yey roy Blair, 25, and Grace ss ie Sstiaat tm aeneeciade) eget te et ore yen| 64 King Street East--Telephone 725-6526 c \ y #95 » a, * ) 3 a Meyers, 21, were charged with RETURNING FO CANADA art in its widest sense lit when we can--watching, ten-| (next to the Genosha Hotel) wiety RA - gee -ereating a disturbance. Mevers "We are. told we must not "There's more. emphasis onnis at Wimbledon. going danc- AJAX: 66 Horwood Avenue South. ......5..56 ey ee Telephone 942-6320 Claiming Theve-yearolds." See and sep| also, was charged with assault- think too much about the pras-jeducation asa continuous thing|ing or to parties. Otherwise one| (over The Advertiser) ling and obstructing police, 'pect of a contract with theithan in Canada, where youimight get tired of it." 4 th miles

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