Oshawa Times (1958-), 9 Nov 1964, p. 16

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be oe Pee TE ROT PEAY 16 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Monday, November 9, 1964 29---Automobiles Fer Sele (36--Automobiles Wanted DID -$ ALL CASH $ YOU Pasar KNOW? NICOLS MOTORS LTD, 146 BROCK ST. NORTH THAT WITH REASONABLE CREDIT YOU CAN NOW Across from Royal Hotel WHITBY 668-3331 OWN A CAR OF YOUR CHOICE, CARS WANTED @ NO DOWN PAYMENT Buying « New Car? your used cor to "Ted Talk "Cash" to Aaa t@ TOP TRADE IN + ALLOWANCE FOR + YOUR PRESENT CAR . Cor Deoler and "SAV! TED CAMPIkI MOTORS @ 'TERMS TO SUIT YOUR BUDGET DpmaLioate ALL YOUR TBILLS WITH LESS 723-4494 Res, 725-5574 } MONTHLY PAYMENTS * OSHAWA AUTO PARTS end Auto Wreck- ors, . - sEYE IT! . . TRY IT! ;BUY IT! COMING EVENTS KINSMEN BINGO TUESDAY 8 O/CLOCK FREE ADMISSION EXTRA BUSES Jackpot Nos, 52 ond 52 EARLY BIRD GAMES KINSMEN COMMUNITY CENTRE 109 COLBORNE ST, W. CBC To Present Special Show On Armistice Day mander of the 4th Armored Division, regarded him as the father of armored warfare. | Another old soldier with a story, and who died after re- cording it for the seties, was Col. George Little of London, Ont. A captain in the Princess Patricia's Canadian Light In- fantry, he returned from leave in September, 1918, to find him- the boy's parents and, as the news came up the line, to tell them that their German mas- rs of yesterday had sued for cease-fire that was to start at 1 o'clock. The incident--and myriads of others from that bygone war-- By JOHN LeBLANC TORONTO (CP)--Soon after the dawn of Nov. 11, 1918, as young Georges Licope of Mons went walking to see the effects of an Allied shelling of the day| before, Canadian soldiers began emerging from the mists beside a ditch, are relived through the voices They' were chasing the re-jof the dwindling survivors in a treating Germans in those lastiradio series the CBC starts on P pre-armistice hours of the First| Armistice Day, 1964. Eight hun-|Self in command of the unit be- World War, But three youngidred hours of tape recordings| Cause all his seniors had been lieutenants stopped long enough|from 600 old sweats have been|shot down. He led the Patricias to share their white bread with|boiled down into 17 one-hour| through the remainder of Can- bnitsorsnvi === | Dragrams to continue on consec-|&da's Hundred Days to the end utive Sundays after Nov. 11, | the war. The project, biggest tape re- An old Patricia who had leap- cording and editing job ever|{togged to temporary command undertaken by the CBC, has|% the battalion at an even more been under way four years,|junior rank was located in Glas- Some 42 miles of tape has piled|g°W, Scotland. He was W. H. up, with stacks of transcripts|Niven, a Briton like many of and index books. Interviewing|the PPCLIs and a retired col- crews have travelled many onel. The Patricias were shat- thousands of milse in Canada,|'ered at the battle of Frezen- France, Britain and Belgium, -|>U"e Ridge in 1915, with all the senior officers killed or SOME HAVE DIED wounded, and it was young It has been, in a way, a race|Lieut. Niven. who brought out against the man _ with the|the 50 men they could muster. scythe, "The oldest andj Princess Patricia herself, '|staunchest soldiers do not live|daughter of Governor-General forever, and the time to record|the Duke of Connaught and their. stories was now," saysjnow Lady Patricia Ramsey, A. E. (Bert) Powley, in charge|has made a contribution to the of CBC historical broadcasts. series. She tells of the raising Some of those heard on the pro-jof the unit and her sewing of grams will be voices from the/its colors. grave, -- Mr. Powley followed through | on a suggestion in the fall of} 1960 from Dan McArthur, then} director of special program| projects for the CBC, who felt! the time was narrowing for get-| ting a living record from the men who emerged from the 1914-18 war. A long and involved search for representatives of all facets of Canada's participation| followed, In the result, the contributors) represent all of the 48 infantry) battalions of the Canadian Corps and their supporting arms, from generals to mud- sloggers. The interviews cover Fa \the period from the first enlist- #jments in 1914 to the entry of the Canadians into Mons. Bits of history tyrfi in FIGHTING HALTS SAN'A, Yemen (AP) A cease-fire halted fighting in Ye- men's two-year civil war at 1 p.m, Sunday, President Ab- dullah Al-Sallal announced, A national unity conference be- tween Al - Sallal's republicans and dissid royalists is ex- pected to be held Nov, 23. LAKESHORE Auto Wreckers went. cars for wrecking, Highest prices paid. 200 Wentworth East, 725-1181, SH, Auto Wrecking Co,, cars bought, beri and bought for sale, iron metals Bloor Street East, 725-2311, 31--Automobile Repair BARGAINS Anti-freeze All Chev., Installed 4-way Flosher kit .. Ignition Wire Kit .... DOC'S AUTO 1600 King E, --~ 728-7781) (All other occ, 10% off with _this coupon) MUFFLER . . . BRAKES | General Repairs to all | makes. 10 Bays to serve you, KENT'S WESTERN TIRE SERVICE 145 KING W. 728-1607 OSHAWA tuneup Centre offers expert || carburetor and auto electric service, 222 King Street West, 728-0817, EXPERT brake service suspension alignment, 226 Call 723-4233, Cancer Clinic Formed In B.C. | TRAIL, B.C. (CP) -- Walter Taylor was shocked when aj friend died, of cancer without showing any signs of the dis- ease and not knowing he was| suffering from it. That's when he got the idea| of forming the Well Men's| Clinic here, .a disease detection| unit that costs a man $10 al year. | The fee entitles members to a complete medical examina- tion with the alm of detecting '64 PONTIAC, SUPER SPORTS CONVERTIBLE Demonstrator, V-8 automa- tic, power steering, power brokes, very low mileage. Still under warranty, f HOME ON THE RANGE urday nighf. Tomi got the ers. She took time off from only standing ovation on a a Las Vegas appearance: to program that featured Johnny make the trip. Cash, Flatt and Scruggs and --(AP Wirephoto) front end and Celina Street. Tomi Fujiyama, 22, of Tok- yo sings happily at a record- ing session in Nashville, where she. brought the house down at the Grand Ole Opry Sat- Tropical Fish Gal Also Writes Plays TRANSMISSION specialists, transmis- sions are our only business, 1038 Simcoe North. Phone 728-7339. 35--Swap and Barter BATHTUBS, $20; follets, basins, sinks, | cabinets, pressure systems, jaundry tubs, |furnace, fittings, piping. H. Chinn, 268 | Hillside Avenue. 36--Legal NOTICE TO CREDITORS IN THE ESTATE OF ALFRED HERBERT ROBINSON All persons having claims against the Estate of Alfred the City of Oshowa, in the County of Ontario, Mechonic Herbert Robinson, late of ond Merchant, deceased, who died on or about the first day 6f April, 1962, ore here- by notified to send in to the undersigned on or before the 15th day of Jonuary, 1965 full particulors of their claims ofter which date the estote will be distributed having re- gard only to the claims of which the undersigned shoil then hove notice, DATED ot Oshowa, Ontorio this Sth dey of November, A.D, 1964. HUMPHREYS, BOYCHYN & HILLMAN, 36% King Street East, Oshowa, Ontorio. Solicitors: for the Executor, Cyril Roser COMING EVENTS other big name country sing- Set SSS Fe See 2 Oe © eee '64 PONTIAC, PARISIENNE, 4-DOOR HARDTOP | \ | an unsuccessful business in lit- By MARGARET NESS sustaining so that she can go urgical art called Bede House, LONDON (CP)--'She simply|back, part time at least, to her |won't get at it and have her|feal career of writing. she found herself in Toronto. | babies," said Clare Slater, peer-| Clare Slater has already fin-) She had always thought of ing in at the mother. "There|ished a novel and a TV play,|writing as a possible career |she is, the one with her nose|written during a stay in Sicily|and began by doing some docu- V-8 power steering, power brakes. Only 6,000 miles. Still under warranty. '63 PONTIAC, LAURENTIAN 4-DOOR V-8 automatic, power steer- ing, power brakes. In show- room condition. 162 CHEVROLET, : 4-DOOR 6 eylinder, automatic pow- er steering, power brakes. Grey with red interior, A real beauty! '60 CHEVROLET, BEL AIR 2-DOOR 6 eylinder, automatic. ideal family eer! *'59 CHEVROLET, 4-DOOR Stendard . shift, metching Interior. '59 OLDSMOBILE, 4-DOOR with all power. A beauty on four wheels, Nat Bailey, a 62-year-old restaurateur, who owns 13 drive-in restaurants in Van- | couver and Victoria, started | his career on the streets sell- | ing popcorn and peanuts, Now Ot ere © + 0 ee eee ee eres 'Plan Program Sacred Music The program for the evening is as follows: OFFICERS FOUND The lieutenants proved to be C, H. Mitchell, a retired drug-| gist at St. Catharines, Ont., who} was first located by Mr. Powley in the St. Catharines phone book' and who steered him onto Joe O'Neill, now a retired busi- ness man of Bowmanville, Ont., and Harold Stuart, who had left his pre-war home of Sault Ste. Massed bands, "Coronation| Marie, Ont., and now was chief March", Meyerbeer, |forest ranger at Swastika, Ont. Cornet Trio, "Cheer Up" (Cat-| Also through a tip from Capt. linet). Three Cornetists from|Hundevad, the project. redis- leach band, [peveree Aimy oe a March, "Pressing Onward'/"C:, 2 ong-fongotten 'military (alsden), Oshawa Band. genius of the Canadian Expedi | tionary Force. A_ millionaire of performance which has set Vocal Solo, Bandsman Bram Ritchie French army reservist caught P . in Canada at the outbreak of them on a pinnacle of excel-| mannii. Mevemble. he ou | "Atlwar, he joined the C j Dawn of Day", » "He Jol anadian Trombonists| ar, i ; |The bands participating In rom both band then - revolutionary. Automobile Saturday's program are | March, 'The Endeavour" |Machine-Gun Brigade, the pre- justly renowned for their play-| (Cresswell), Belleville Band. [cursor of 'modern 'motorized ing and the program, embracing) Male Chorus, 'Soldier Rouse warfare. as it does, many varied types Of| Thee' (Coles). |. Gen. Brutinel was music, will display the many-| Suite, "Songs of the Morning" |his chateau in the sided facets of these bands. Ad-| (ric Rall), Oshawa Band. France and taped thousands of tary dent of the lieutenants and|Such og as cancer - and POPCORN AT START young Georges Licope. Capt,| tuberculosis. editor of The Legionary at Ot-/ Was established here five years| in addition to his White Spots, tawa, tipped the researchers off|#8°- own an_ industrial. catering elder? : 4 ly M. Licope provided the firm, a chicken farm and the names of his soldier friends,| Photo | --CP Photo | dresses, | To Represent Miss Slater moved on to an-|Stint as assistant to J. Hutch-|well as radio and TV plays. other of some 100 tanks in the|'80n Scott, the English stage/ It was Canadian comedienne igner well known to audi-| Araby Lockart, now also a Lon- Mothers |what looked like swimming pin-|ences at Ontario's Stratford/don resident, who~ launched lheads. Shakespearean Festival. "T"ve got to get these babies| Miss Slater originally had no| Araby decided to do a revue at Many Canadian veterans will] into another tank before their|intention of going either into the|Toronto's Hart House Theatre. feel a spe inge stal-;mother eats them." f a a | eyed ao er Wel.| Breeding tropical fish com-|In fact she was 24 before: she|and Miss Slater became _busi- nesday. : mercially in the centre of Lon- Ke her first professional play.|Ness manager. and Publicity This coming Saturday night in the Salvation Army Citadel, the Belleville Citadel Band cojointly | with the Oshawa Citadel Band,| will present a program of) jsacred music, both in massed) and individual numbers. For many years the bands of| The Salvation Army throughout) the world have set a standard! roundabout ways,dike the inci-|¢@tly, and in curable stages, John Hundevad, veteran and) 4 similar clinic for women| Mr. Bailey and five partners | 1) this story. At Mons, the now- i Ma 70-room Villa Motor Hotel. but with some outdated ad.| Windsor " a down and her posterior up." _|last year, and has finished a|mentary films for television as lroom and started dipping out/ desi |Miss Slater's theatre career. By THE CANADIAN PRESS | |theatre or tropical fish business.| This was the first Clap Hands ; Changes in militia organiza-\don is a far cry from Miss} Born and up in Oak-|agent: tion announ last sd. Slater's more immediate writ-|ville, Ont., she was always| She worked two summers in Defence Minister Paul Heliyer ing and theatre background,/being urged to do things ath-\the same capacity with the Red will mean that units with which|both in Canada and England. |letic. And she showed no inter-|Barn Theatre at Jackson's some veterans fought will soon| However, it does tie in, atest in theatre as she worked Point on Lake Simcoe, then pro- exist only as names on the|least indirectly, with her studies|toward her BSc at McGill,/duced a play herself, The Tun- army's inactive list. lin the sciences at McGill Uni-|served with the Canadian Wom-|nel of Love. Altogether, 58 major reserve|versity. And she has been in-jen's Army Corps during the| The lure of London' was still army units and 15 minor ones|terested in tropical fish since war and served as assistant edi-/Strong and in 1960 she returned. | Laurence Olivier was Just open- will be relocated, merged or/high school days. tor of the Community Planning| made inactive by the economy| Every time she has settled|Association of Canada maga-|ing the theatre at Chichester, | | i {patterned after Ontario's Strat- moves, down for any length of time she/zine in Ottawa. ; |pa Remembrance Day -- anni-|has bought a few tanks and| After several stays in London,/ford Theatre, and Miss Slater versary of the Armistice which|some fish. And although she|during one of which she set up| became assistant to the general ended the fighting of the First/never expected to commercial-) ---------------- ------------r | manager, |World War on Nov. 11, 1918--lize this hobby, last spring she| | tt was after she bought her will see memorial ceremonies|found she had a sudden need PRIMATE ON TOUR little house 'that she got back across the country for C: 's! sh. | JERUSALEM (Reuters) --/to tropical fish. Hae sk eee ee ee [Most Rev. Howard Clark, Pri-| She gets her breeding stock RENTED SPACE mate of the Anglican Church of/from Florida and plans to con- An | | | blue with eet tee located at) south "57 IMPERIAL CHRYSLER, Loaded with every possible extra. Black with matching interior, This car must be seen and driver' to be appre- Peet Yee e ditional to the playing of the! Selection, "Rejoice and Sing',| words at several sittings includ- jcomplete ensembles, will be the! Belleville Band. ing fascinating and historically -- displayed by the sid (ai . priceless accounts of his deal- | The singing of the bands must | CHECK PILLS ee onus jnot be overlooked. Salvation LONDON (Reuters) -- A g0v-/Kitchener, who didn't. think |Army bands have carried thisjernment committee has started | much of mobile firepower art to its zenith, in that not/an investigation into the safety : only do the bands play as ajof all birth control pills on sale DIED IN SEPTEMBER |whole, but they also sing as alin Britain, a Sunday newspaper| His story was taken down just whole, Indeed it is difficult tojreports. The People says the|in time, for he died last Sep. 21, BINGO St. Gertrude's Auditorium TO-NIGHT AT 8 P.M. 690 KING ST. E. AT FAREWELL | Banks, schools and govern-| |ment buildings will be closed.| |Many private businesses will) jalso close. | |WILL PLACE WREATH | Mrs. Homer Rivait of Wind- sor, Ont., who lost three sons in the Second World War, will jplace a wreath on the national cenotaph in Ottawa on behalf of| all Canadian mothers in the na- She turned to the 20 tanks|Canada, arrived here Sunday) centrate on special..types of of tropical fish she had set up/affernoon from Beirut, Lebanon, |fish, introducing new, stronger in her London home. She rented/accompanied by Mrs. Clark, He] strains. : space in a pet shop, moved the/will visit Jordan for six days,| "Actually, {t's slave labor in tanks in, added more, andjsee the holy places and meet) the fish business. They come by started to breed her own fish\/some heads of other Christian| ar freight and sometimes the At present Miss Slater is sell-|faiths. He also hopes to ac-/airport will phone me at 4 a.m. ing only the surplus but by|quaint himself with the situa-/to say a shipment has arrived. Christmas she hopes the busi-|tion of Anglican Church mem:|No one will insure their live ness will be on its. feet.and self-'bers in Jordan. delivery." FREE ADMISSION Snowball Jackpot $190 - 56 Nos $20 Consolotion Reg. Jackpot 60 Nos. $100 $20 Consolation. Good Prizes PARKING IN SCHOOL YARD DURING ROAD CONSTRUCTION state which is their premier ac-|committee on safety of drugs/his obituary bringing him to jcomplishment has asked manufacturers' to\the notice of millions of Cana- | Acting as chairman will be submit reports of tests carried|dians for the first time. Maj.-| |Commissioner Edgar Grinsted, out in their laboratories before/Gen. F. F. Worthington, a Bru-| jhimself a musician of no mean|and since the pills were put on|tinel disciple in the motor unit| | ability, the market four years ago, land Second World War com- cieted, tional ceremony there at 11 a.m, The House of Commons will not sit Remembrance Day un- der new rules approved this fall and the civil service will close down. | In big cities and small towns| across 'the country, the most} typieal Remembrance Day event will be the community ceremony with a parade by members of the Royal Cana- dian Legion, civic and religious leaders taking part in a non- denominational service to place wreaths at cenotaphs. And most of these ceremonies {will observe the traditional two minutes of silence at 11 a.m.-- the time the Armistice was Signed, Many groups, communities and schools are holding remem- brance services before Wednes- day. Church parades by many|¥ militia units were held Sunday. '60 CHEVROLET, 4-DOOR V-8 hardtop. A. reol catcher! '60 KARMANN GHIA, | SPORTS CAR CONVERTIBLE | Radio, etc. A real beauty! '59 PONTIAC, LAURENTIAN 4-DOOR Automatic, 6 cylinder. Ready for the road '56 VOLKSWAGEN, $5 Down -- $5 Weekly Drive it ewey! #55 CHEVROLET, . BEL AIR, 4-DOOR. $5 Down -- $5 Weekly Drive It Away '56 FORD, V-8 4-door. Turquoise with grey interior, $5 Down $5 Weekly. Drive it oway. the heegwenserereeerstet Eastview Park EUCHRE BOYS' CLUB (Main Floor) | Eulolie Ave. | MON., NOV. 2nd 8 P.M. 50c Refreshments and Prizes eve WOODVIEW COMMUNITY CENTRE BINGO Nos, 5] ond 55 TONIGHT -- 8 P.M. RED BARN EXTRA BUSES See eee ePeregaarane | Student Boozers ® Get A Waming | TORONTO (CP) -- Student | organizers of a beer-drinking contest to raise money for a community welfare fund drive | have received a disciplinary warning from their school and / a pat on the back' from a '| charity-minded club. The students staged a "drinkathon"' in a nearby tav- ern jast month as part of Ry- erson Polytechnical Institute's fund program. Participants, required to contribute a nickel for every draft beer downed, consumed 1,020 beers and col- lected $51.40 The organizers have been put on a year's probation to | behave themselves.. But the ry Dianne, flew to New York | school's Kiwanis Club branch and notified authorities of the presented them with a "'lov- violation. Mr. and Mrs. Jack | ing cup" to celebrate the best Spiezer of Englewood Cliffs, | single effort at raising funds, N.J,, are in background. They | In all, the school raised $1,- read Frenkel's plight and post- | 520.30 for the Toronto United ed bond for him. Appeal. ° HI HO COME TO THE FAIR Court Charlene L 1750 €.0.F. ANNUAL FALL BAZAAR Orange Temple -- Bruce 5t. WED., NOV. 11th, 8 P.M, In Aid of Cerebral Palsy Mrs. Ralph Campbell will open | | | | [CASH, TRADE OR TERMS et #NICOLS MOTOR SALES LTD.| = BAZAAR \HOLY CROSS CHURCH | Simcoe St, South NOV. 10th, 2:30-9 P.M. Home boking, foney work, condy, tea room, ete they were married. Frenkel came to the U.S. on a tourist visa, switched to a student visa and then violated that visa by taking a job. His mother, Mrs. Anne Frenkel, who opposed his plans to-mar- 2 Locations to Choose From -146 Brock St. North 512 Brock St. North | Whitby 668-3331 | CANADIAN WINS INTERNATIONAL JUMP TROPHY -- Day, of the captain of #e Cana- break a streak of seven inter+ member of the Canadian dian at New York's Madison national victories by the Unit+ Equestrian team, receives Square Garden last night. Day ed States in the National the Royal Winter Fair trophy rede Mr. Donahee to a -fault- Horse Show. {from Mrs. James Elder, wife less journey over 11 fences to --(AP Wirephoto) Hym Menasha Frenkel of Israel and his British-born | fiancee, Dianne Bradon em- brace after he was released on bond by U.S. Immigration and Naturaliaztion authorities in New York Sunday, Last night James 18-year-old sale, Nor United esday, Novembet 10 at 1,15 Unit Ne 1 U.C.W, ry a Church, Tu p.m, Auspices |

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