PROCLAIMED BY POPE Martyrs Canonized, First Black Saints VATICAN CITY (AP)--Pope Paul proclaimed Sunday the canonization of 22 Uganda mar- tyrs as the first black saints of modern times in an unprece- dented cermeony in St. Peter's Basilica. Native tom toms drummed the news of the canonization from village to village across the vastness of equatorial Af- rica where the 22 sainted Bantu tribesmen lived and died for their faith in the late 19th cen- tury. The ceremony here had strong overtones of emphasis on racial equality, The canonization rites accom- panied by the native-beat music of a new African oratorio in the presence of colorfully robed African delegations in St. Pe- ter's Basilica makes it possible for African Negro Roman Cath- olics to have their children bap- tized in the names of people of their own blood and traditions. The saints include a court jes- ter, a herdsman, four musi- cians, a cloth maker, a dugout canoe builder and a potter. ~ The Uganda martyrs are the first saints canonized under Pope Paul. They had been beat- ified -- declared blessed -- by Pope Benedict XV in 1920. That meant they could be venerated locally in their native land. With canonization, the Ro- man Catholic Church declares that they ascended to heaven upon death, and prescribes that they not only can receive pub- lic honor, but must receive it. One by one the pope named the 22 martyrs who were burned alive, behealed, cut to pieces, speared or clubbed to death at the orders of pagan tribal King Mwanga of Uganda between 1885 and 1887. || VOICE OF WOMEN SPOKESMAN: | Dairies Won't Pay For Atomic Decontamination Weekend Toll: 40 Die Violently By THE CANADIAN PRESS At least 40 persons died in accidents across Canada during the weékend, 37 of them in traf- fic mishaps. A survey by The Canadian Press from 6 p.m. local times| Friday to midnight local times Sunday included one hunting death, one death by fire and one man killed by a fall down stairs. Quebec reported the heaviest toll with 13 traffic fatalities. Ontario had nine traffic deaths. Nova Scotia had two highway deaths and New Brunswick a hunting fatality. Six persons died on the highways in Saskat- chewan, four in Manitoba and three in British Columbia. Man- itoba also reported one person dead in a fire. The survey does not include industrial deaths, known sui- cides or slayings. The Ontario dead: FRIDAY Peter Karsten, 21, Jarvis, Ont., in a two-car collision on Highway 59, 20 miles southwest of Brantford. SATURDAY Jack Olney, 50, Kingston, shortly after he was thrown from his truck in a collision with a car at a Kingston inter- section. Domingo Concalues, 33, Tor- onto, when the car in which he was riding collided with a car on the Queen Elizabeth Way near the Toronto area commu- nity of Port Credit. SUNDAY Clifford Bidal, St. Thomas, when he fell down a flight of stairs in his home. Newmarket, in a two-car colli- sion on Highway 11 about 30 miles _northof Toronto, Walter Chodarcewicz, 34, Ni- agara - on the - ke, ter, Lucy, 24, and Miss Jane Tkaczyk, about 22, both of St. Catharines, when the car in which they were riding left the road near Tillsonburg, 25 miles east of London. Miss Dora Schack, 78, both of collision on Highway 17, % miles north of Sault Ste. Marie, HALL HONORED MONTREAL (CP) -- Frank H. Hall, leader of Canada's non- sented with the annual '"De- fender of Human Rights" award of the Jewish Labor Committee Saturday night. The 71-year-old labor leader is head of the Canadian Labor Congress committee on human rights, Cornelius. Brouwer, 64 RR 2) # Reed City, Mich., in a two-car <Y operating rail workers, was pre- Tih THE OSHAWA TIMES, Monday, October 19, 1964 iba Art Thief's Haul: $45,000 MONTREAL (CP) -- The Montreal Museum of Fine Arts has estimated the value of a stolen Rembrandt drawing at $45,000 in a formal Montreal police complaint. Museum officials had first declined to estimate the value of The Death of Jacob, an Old Testament scene produced ii" Amsterdam about 1640, partly on the grounds that such wo! are priceless, The, drawing, 14% inches 10 inches, was unscrewed. Wed-: -- Prey i--s 'wall' and taken ow Police are looking for a tally 30 who is ré> ne floor room whe masters are on Mrs. Mabel Hannan, 80, and| S& "THE BEST IN THE HOUSE" by HIRAM WALKER THE ighteil WHISKY IN THE WORLD ) bd 4 TORONTO (CP)--Equipment | Contamination from the atom - \to remove strontium 90 and ces-|bomb exploded last week by| FOR REBOUND IN OLYMPICS GAME ium 137 from milk could be in-|on the height at which the \stalled by dairies at a cost to| bomb was detonated, its magni- ketball. game in Tokyo Sunday. |the consumer of less than a}tude and composition, the Tor- --(CP Wirephoto) | chairman of the Voice of Wom-|onto physicist said. CANADIAN FIGHTS Rollit Goldring (11) of Can- Olejniczak (8) fight for a re- ada and Poland's Stanislaw bound in their Olympic bas- FIVE IN A ROW WINS FREE PLAYING CARD SPORTS CAR OWNER ANALYSIS cent a quart, Ursula Franklin, en's research committee, said Sunday. Meanwhile, contamination as ja result of nuclear tests con- | ducted in 1961 and 1962 contin- BIG CASH! But nothing short of a gov-jues to pollute the atmosphere, ernment recommendation will) she said. encourage dairies to install the} 'How much pressure must equipment, she said in an inter-|we put on the government to CLIP THIS CARD view. Not "Bond" Vivant Approaches were made to the| |do something?' she asked. "It is like living in a rainy But Well Educated Ever wonder what kind of person does a sports car appeal to? Is he the James Bond type, if not quite one of the Double-O Section licensed to kill, at least a bon vivant and raconteur? Is he just Joe Doakes with dreams of speed and excite- ment - - and mysterious women in black leather coats? Or is he a practical, down-to- earth combination of both? Not too surprisingly, there has been a considerable amount of research done on the sports ear owner by The British Motor Corporation of Canada Limited, the. world's largest manu- facturer of sports cars. In a survey of MGB and Austin Healey sports car owners in Canada, BM came up. with these answers: He, more often a he than a she by 85 per cent to. 15 per cent, may be married or he may be single it's 49 per cent one way and 51 per cent the other. He is 34 years old, but more than 12 per cent of his sports car fraternity are over 55. He has had some advanced education; 42.5 per cent of the owners have earned a college degree. He has a Klein Considered Chief Magistrate TORONTO (CP) -- Appoint- ment of Arthur 0. Klein, dep- uty Crown attorney here, as chief magistrate of Ontario is under consideration by the pro- vincial government, Attorney- | median income General Arthur Wishart said! Mr. Klein, a 55-year-old law- yer, was a member of the at- tormey - general's department who the Boyd gang in 1952. The new post would make him director of the prov- ince's 97 other magistrates. The chief magistrate's office was ieft vacant last month by the death of Frederick Bart- rem. Mr. Wishart said in an inter- above the national average for new car buyers. Roughly one quarter of MGB owners have an annual income below that national average but another quarter have incomes consider- ably above. Almost 45 per cent are professional men or hold an executive type position. He commutes to suburbia every night along with 54 per cent of all MGB owners; 35 per cent are city dwellers engaged in the constant struggle for a plot of ground - - to plant their MGB on for the night. He has about three-quarters of a child less than the average family but give him a chance to ¢atch up. He usually has another car although 46 per cent have only the MGB in their family. He tends to be more. sophisti-| cated in his magazine realing| and claims to be more sophisti- cated in his television viewing. | He likes sports and tends to be a 'do-er' more than a| watcher, Golf and skiing figure| high on his activities list - - and milk and bandages on his shopping list. All-in-all, he is a happy man) distinguished only by a slightly} ruddier complexion from driving| with the top down and a ten-| dency towards more rakish) headgear. | But BM does feel that Doakes, MGB _ owner, have a bit more of James Bond, | Don Juan and Lawrence of) Arabia in him' than does his| station wagon-owning next-door} neighbor. | Joe) By BRENDA LARGE OTTAWA (CP) -- There's a big difference between the rumbling activity of an aircraft |maintenance hangar and the} serenity of a library, but. Mar-| garet Parkin can work in both! settings and like it. An engineering administrator) for the RCAF during the Second) World War, Miss Parkin now |spends her time cataloguing and indexing some 1,500 books and documents in the library of the Canadian Nurses' Asso- ciation headquarters here. Once she studied the causes of stress on aircraft parts, Now she decides which international periodicals dealing with nurs- ing should be included in the newly established library. "T stayed in the RCAF for a time after the war ended," she says, "but soon decided that I'd like to change fields. "Besides, it was so hard to explain to people what my job as an engineering administrator was all about." Former Aircraft Technician Tums To Cataloguing Books lic Library, the Northern Elec- hee tric Company's, research li- bg and the library of Carle- | ton University. A 1942 graduate of the Uni- versity of Toronto in arts, she graduated from the library sci- lence school of the University of | Ottawa in 1960, receiving the university medal for the high- est standing in the course. PROBLEMS. SIMILAR As the Canadian Nurses' As- sociation's first full - time li- brarian, she is organizing a technical library to provide re- search material for the associa- tion's research projects on the educational and_ sociological status of its members. The new library will also al- low the national staff of the -76,- 000 - member organization and its affiliated provincial groups to keep in touch with changes its affiliated provincial groups to keep in touch with changes in the nursing profession around the world through ex- change of nursing journals. does} towne dairy industry by parents in the|climate and refusing to put a United States and Canada dur-| roof on the house in hopes that ing the last nuclear tests, she|it won't rain." said. They asked the dairies to) She said B. B. Migikovski, a install the equipment, which is|federal agriculture department similar to water-softening ap-|scientist, had developed a me- paratus. She said the govern-|thod of removing strontium 90 ment always discouraged these| and cesium 137 from liquid mil WOODBINE ENTRIES TUESDAY, OCT. 20 Clear and Fast SIXTH RACE -- Purse $2,200 ($4500) | FIRST RACE -- Purse $1,900 ($5000) | Claiming Three-year-olds. 6 Furiongs ee tg Two-year-old Maidens. 6 Fur Gay Van, Inda 108 mshi Dogbane, Maxwell 122 Fun-Fun-Fun, Cuthbertson X10) Fails Way, No Boy A-116 Puwpty, ie . 117 Full Honors, Leblanc All7 Kirn Maiden, No Boy 112 Smart Flyer, Fitzsimmons 11 fant Gre om Aes uno" boy i? The Strangier, McC 15 Love Quest, No Boy 113 ¥ Fashion, No Boy 112 » No Boy 117 Merlis, No Boy lis Native Twin, No Boy Sophiere, No 2 Danish Blue, No Boy 115 Also Gligible: -- Bigger Bill, 5; Mandrill, Harris X15; Rebel, No Boy 112; Sporting Blood, Gomez 120; Lady Mahan, Cuthbertson X107; Darbykin, Gubbins 112. SECOND RACE -- Purse $1,900 ($2500) Claiming. 'Three end Four-year-olds, 6 Furlongs Miss Mar-Jo, Inda 109 Bridget L., Harris 104 Queen's Courier, No Boy 114 4. Menette, No Boy 106 5. Q ¥ No General John, Harris X106 A-€. Enderby entry SEVENTH RACE -- Purse $3,000 "Race King' Allowances. Three-year-clds. Foal- ed In Canada. 1 and 16th Miles Pierlou, Davidson 126 Master Matt h. Harrison Ve Canadiitis, Gomez 126 Fairmar, Inda 116 Plain John, Harris X114 ne uy No Boy Canadien Fast Answer, Dittfach and D. Seven Deal, No Boy 6 Sun Hash, Hale 120 Malucina, Parsons X107 Fleet Gypsy, MoCaviey X115 Deal Me Ni wi Successo, Cuthbertson X104 Harlech, Armstrong 119 Bordeau Bar, Davidson 10? Jestso, No Boy 119 Miss Armedam, No Boy 106 Also Eligible: Jive Girl, Harrison hdl | Alirutiah, No Boy 106; Bright Hope, Par- |sons X104; Pantoismine, No Boy 107;|Breconing, Harris X115 |Drifting Heether, Cuthbertson X101; | Lavahot, No Boy 120 Bonn Anie, Staanyk 112 Crystal Fire, Fitzsimmons WS X-5 Ibs. "AAC XX-7 Ibs. AAC XXX-+10 Ibs AAC Post Time 2 p.m. Nagnac, No Boy 120 | Quiet Nancy, Harris X12 THIRD RACE -- Purse $1,900 ($5000) Claiming. Two-year-old Maidens (Divn. of Ist) 6 Furlongs EIGHTH RACE -- Purse $2,000 ($2500) Claiming. Three-year-olds end up. One| Ye Miles on Marshall Turf Course! YOU CAN WIN 100.-*500. 0 R 1000. . MATCH NUMBERS ON CARD WITH NUMBERS PRINTED ON REVERSE OF DOMINION REGISTER TAPES fest atl Hi if re ae Facsimile of this Card Acceptable OMINION All Cards Displayed at Dominion Fleet Musketter, Gomez 120 | Hot to Trot, No Soy 112 | | tenadee, ean ete comers) STOP |. And Think Of Miss Cyprus, Harris X107 Bega Bega, Davidson 120 | |Win Dixie, pace 9 sie |To the Victor, No Boy | h 1 Petene, Harris X12 ae Petene, Harr XiN2, | The Money You Crying J: 1 No Boy Also Eligibie: Other Days, Maxwell 115; Royal Autumn, No Boy 112; Music | Note, No Boy 117; Jammy Doll, Walsh | 112; Royal Pleasure, Gordon 115; Roman Harold, Cuthbertson X110, FOURTH RACE -- Purse $2,100 ($3500) | Claiming Three-year-olds, One end Ve miles Hereforall, Harrison 110 King City, Dittfach 117 Popey, No Boy 110 Woody's Fish, Harris X10? Elm Wood, No Boy 110 Mr. Flirt, | Barleycorn, FIFTH RACE -- Purse $2,600 "Lord Nelson" Allowances Two-year-olds Fillies 7 Furk | Missing By Not Times ACTION ve Been Using WANT ADS There's no sense crylng over spilt milk... you don't have to miss out on the extra cash anymore if you use Times ACTION WANT ADS regularly now 'uriongs | " 1 +'. Glittering Maid, Dittfagh 111 Miss Parkin, an Ottawaleoo*Foo, Shuk 107 ' j;woman, says she finds studying) Breezy Maple, Harrison 109 experience with the nursing] the international periodicals the Tn igg rane Bal bh profession, came to her new|most interesting: part of her wid" LS Raniterd r Wild Lady, Remillard 109 job by way of the Ottawa Pub-! work. (QUINELLA WAGERING) view Mr. Klein is among those under consideration and. his name has been put forward by Miss Parkin, who has no past If you have worthwhile articles around your home you no longer use or enjoy. . . let the magic of Times ACTION WANT ADS turn them into cash. It's easy and inexpensive to put Times ACTION WANT ADS to work for you. All it takes is a phone call. Dial 723-3492 and let the experienced Ad Writer who answers help you write an ad that quickly puts you in touch with buyers for your don't needs . . , and on the special 6 time rate a 24 word ad is just 72c per day. 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