ir, Vocal Poke 20 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Tuesday, October 5, 1963 ROUND THE GLOBE IN A GLANCE At '7 Days By Pearson | . OTTAWA (CP)--"This hour has Seven Days got what ap- peared to be a rebuff from Prime Minister Pearson Mon- day. : The CBC public affairs tele-| vision program Sunday night|was 41 degrees, seven below|35,655-ton liner was completed) the "low maximum" set below| in 1939 it has been an important the turn of the century in 1899.|dollar - earner invited party leaders involved in the Nov. 8 election campaign to appear on the show for ques- tioning. Mr. Pearson was asked about it after he left a cabinet meet- ing. bury 36 (44 in 1935); North Bay) 34 (45 in 1961); Wiarton 37 (52) § in 1961); 1961); Windsor 45 (56 in 1950); London 42 (43 in 1935); tralia 42 (50 in 1950); Hamilton} 44 (52 in 1901); Ottawa 42 (52) in 1957). First he feigned lack of knowledge about the program, then said, "is that the program that had the sketch of his Holi- ness?" Assured that was the case, he said "that's enough comment." The program had a skit about an American television execu- tive chatting with the Pope on United Nations in New York Monday. The executive sug- gested the Pope might umpire part of a baseball game. Later a Pearson aide said his leader's remarks should not be construed as a rejection of the} show's offer made over the air. He said no decision has been made on whether Mr. Pearson would appear, and will not be until an invitation is received through more regular channels. Then it will be given the "at- tention that it merits." NDP Leader T. C. Douglasy telephoned the program while it was on the air to accept the invitation. Ontario centres ha daytime weather for an Oct 4|/England from a Mediterranean in recorded history Monday. with previous low maximums) route. bracketed included: the telephone about evenallin. babncaey eon during the Pope's visit to the|Brazii Monday after 15 months of self-imposed exile following a request seeking his preventive arrest by military investigators} looking into allegations of cor- ruption and maladministration during his 1956-61 term. the heavy-engineering concern, has) offered to co-operate with Rus-| sia in manufacturing goods to sell in third countries, a Krupps spokesman said the Soviet authorities hav Monday Cold Sets Record In Dozen Ontario dozen|liner Mauretania will be sold TORONTO « (CP) coolest|for scrap when she returns to jeruise Nov. 10, the Cunard Line The day's high at Toronto;announced Monday. Since the for Britain, Temperatures at other points|)mainly on the North Atlantic 16 KILLED SEOUL (AP) -- Sixteen per- ons were killed and scores in- jured today as an estimated 100,000 people swarmed around a new stadium for opening cer- of Korea's national Timmins 32 (35 in 1935); Sud- Muskoka 38 (50 in) Cen- : n-| emonies miles south of Seoul. |recently completed stadium has a capacity of 30,000. SEVEN ESCAPE EXILE RETURNS RIO DE JANEIRO (Reuters) Jusce-| returned to armed and uniformed soldiers-- fled to West Germany during the weekend, West German po- lice here and in Goettingen Said Monday. STUDENTS TO VOTE VANCOUVER. (CP)--Univer- jsity of British Columbia stu- |dents will be allowed time off SEEK ALLIANCE ESSEN (Reuters) -- Krupps, mammoth West German " big to go home to vote in the Nov. 8 federal election, Dr. John |MacDonald, university presi- }dent announced Monday. The He| Move would solve the voting e| Problem for about 2,000 to 2,500 out-of-town UBC students who otherwise would be barred from voting because of a residence clause in the Canada Elections said Monday. ot replied to the proposal. SCRAPPING LINER LIVERPOOL (Reuters)--The Act. They were not in residence. at the university when the elec-| tion writs were issued. | Newfoundland airmail commemorating the transatlan-| citizenship to avowed atheists. tic flight of Italian Ge. |Balbo, fetched 54500 ($16,500) | the Bergsma couple's citizen- jat a. London auction of a stamp) ship application was upheld by collection owned by an uniden-|the Ontario Supreme Court but tified Greek millionaire. Har-|reyersed by the Ontario Court mer Rooke, | said Monday it was the highest pein eo ~ glen. $4.50 sons for citizenship." lin eg one os ie naa| Tk oneal. coutt "then Or-/ could be ended or extended to |dered the citizenship court to|other companies as a 'result of | apply to the citizenship and im-|talks scheduled for Friday, a union spokesman. said Monday. J. R. Duncan, lof wham were born in The) rector of the Oil, Chemical and |Atomic Workers Union (CLC), printed by mistake on a 10-cent sports games in Kwangju, 140! yellow instead of a 75 cent bis- The | tre. | |wage areas, mainly Japan and BERLIN (Reuters) -- Seven|Communist | Netherlands. East Germans -- including two) ues to be the most serious prob- lem for the shoe industry, Jean- Guy Maheu, president of the Shoe Manufac- turers Association, and general manager of the footwear and leather show, said Monday in Montreal. companied a Shoe Information Bureau of Canada which showed Canadian production in the first half of} 1965 totalled 24,206,196 pairs, a decrease of 374,859 from corresponding period last year. 000 worth' of farm equipment this year compared with $370,- 000,000 in 1964, J. G. ladies" Cem te ES. ree" their son, Peter, 19, received Canadian citizenship here Mon- day which had been denied thein last year because they. do not Centres believe in God. The Bergsmas made an af- \firmation of allegiance rather Ge \than._the usual oath _ before STAMP COSTLY Judge W. W. Leach of Haldi- LONDON (CP)--A 1933 black) man County court, who last stamp,| year said he would not grant Italo) Judge Leach's rejection of Appeal which ruled the the gegen |Bergsmas "'fit and proper per- | | migration minister on behalf of) BLAMES LOW WAGES the Bergsma family, all but one Imports of footwear from low | Mr. Bergsma, a -steelworker| jin Hamilton 20 mijes north of| here, said Monday he and his) countries, contin- executive vice- Ferguson Ltd., predicted His comments ac- survey shoe}to $3,500,000,000. BUYS PUBLICATION the PREDICTS SALES Canadians wiii buy $415,000,- Staiger,!price was not disclosed. i to strike BA plants | American Oil Company, -affect- g its plants across Canada, |about what they want to dis- vice - president of Massey-/cuss," he said in a telephone waaect sae " ~ interview from Port Credit, Ont.| ashington Monday. He said) «pit it jg as inst that the recent wheat sales to B geno "t chairs a AFeTRAE oe Russia could raise Canadian) nad at. each . other farmers' cash income this year| .an't sit down and talk." national di- } a NEW YORK (AP)--The two nuns clapped their black gloved hands like schoolgirls as the pilgrim of peace walked smil- ing down the aisle of St. Pat- rick's Cathedral. "Oh," blushed the younger nun, "'we're being so undigni- fied." In North America, ap- plause inside a Roman Catho- lic church is all but unheard of. "But this is a special day!" exclaimed her companion. It was truly a special day-- "a day the Lord has made," as Pope Paul himself said in his sermon during the mass at Yankee Stadium, "so let us re- joice. and be glad today." His pilgrimmage Monday was) to the United Nations, but it said BA has requested the meet- senator ing in Toronto. "We have had no indication)many people are ignoring poli- } that weltical activity than has been the] } He said, however, the union|I would apply especially to Ca- expects BA to be prepared to|nadian businessmen." Canadian Pulp and Paper In- seriously discuss the issues, in-| dustry, a monthly business pub-| volving wages and job security, | Diefenbaker as leader of the} lication, has been bought by| which prompted. OCAW mem-|Progressive Conservative party) Maclean-Hunter Publishing Co.| bers in a Ltd. from Mitchell Press Ltd.| Clarkson, Ont., Saskatoon, Kam-|charge laid by Liberal agricul- of Vancouver, it was announced | loops and in the Vancouver area |ture Minister Harry Hays that in Toronto Monday. Purchase! successively starting last Sept./he is leading a revolt against 14 atiand there was no truth in a) 'Heed Politics' Senator Says SAINT JOHN, 'N.B. (CP) -- Wallace McCutcheon) of Toronto said Monday oa { was at St. Patrick's and the stadium and along the' streets of the city where he passed that the rejoicing and gladness was most obvious and unrestrained. The crowds were enormous-- the sort of density that usually keeps police on edge. But such was the atmosphere of warmth and joy that even the police, instructed to face the crowd with their backs to the Pope, tiirned and looked with the rest. When the motorcade pulled outside! Right outside!" -- the ping was feverish, almost hys- terical. They stood first on tip- toes, then on the kneelers, then on the pews. _ Applaud in: church? They en- joyed it. The mass at the stadium like- wise was heavy with emotion: 90,000 voices lifte in hymns, re- the end, "long live the Pope!" After Year In The Courts |Applause, Tears And Joy Atheists Given Citizenship As Pope Captures A-City CAYUGA, Ont. (CP) -- Mr.\family are glad the ordeal is) and Mrs. Ernest Bergsma and| over. Three other Bergsma_ chil- dren, who were at school Mon- day, will apply for citizenship in the next few weeks. Friday Could Decide. Fate Of Oil Strike VANCOUVER (CP) -- An oil |workers strike against British visible from. the grandstands, did not roar by as usual; they crept past, with faces pressed to the windows. The great tu- mult that went up when the pontiff mounted the altar steps, turned, and raised his hands in greeting, became an over. whelming hush when he knelt to pray. From far back in the grand- stand the Pope seemed exceed- ingly thin. He could have been a decade younger than his 68 up to the steps of the cathedral years. From above, his high --and the word spread, '"'He's\forehead made his head ap- e ar large and hi emotions of the 7,000 were ob-lall the yt Hcy . pm jvious. They cried. The clap-|given to symbolism, his appear- ance seemed to symbolize the frailty of mankind in its search for peace, He said in his sermon that "whoever loves peace loves m "must be built up every day by works of peace." Those who saw him and heard him could sponding to the prayers and, at\have no doubt of his sincerity, thunering in unison,{or that the occasion on which he said it was truly a specia' The elevated subway trains, iday. ' : ankind," and that peace tical activity in Canada. | former}! trade minister in the Diefenba-| ker government, said in an in- terview the "citizen should as-| sign a higher priority to poli-| Senator McCutcheon, | case in recent years and this} He said he 'supports John) NOVEMBER Reporting to Payroll Supervisor with payrolls. tration. Applications close 5:00 p.m., October Mr. Diefenbaker. PAYROLL CLERK (Male) CITY OF OSHAWA TREASURY DEPARTMENT Salary Range -- Approximately $79.00 to $90.00 per week (3614 hr. wee Salary Range -- Approximately $84.00 to $95.00 per week (3614 hr, week) Must be able to type ond learn bookkeeping machine operation. in the administration,' preparation and control %of all departmen To be knowledgeable in government regulations and union agreements, and able to answer queries concerning payroll adminis- 1, 1965 the responsibility for cenisting ta! 8th, 1965 PERSONNEL OFFICER, City Holl, Oshawa, Ontorio. -EATON'S..Canada's Shopping Centre Ys OFF! TAILORED-TO-MEASURE DRAPES Prints... Plains... Damasks ... an outstanding choice in this huge special Selling ! 9 PATTERNS ... OVER 40 SELECTIONS ee ee Montcalm YOUR REQUIRED MEASUREMENTS AND ALLOW 4 WEEKS FOR DELIVERY HOW TO MEASURE See diagrgm for how to Damascus +-- width ot measure your windows. wal $0 WON soc ee "C" GROUP .. . Windsor, Montcalm 48" ...1W 7%... 1AW 96" Reg. Sale Reg. Sale Reg. 23.50 15.85 35.25 23.80 47.00 21.00 14.00 31.50 21.00 42.00 33.50: 22,35 50.25 -33.50... 67.00 27.00 18.00 40.50 27.00 54.00 38.00 26.35 57.00 38.00 26-00 30.50 20.35 45.75 30.50 61.00 120"°...2¥.W 144" ,..3W 192" ...4W Reg. Sale Reg. Sale Reg. Sale: 58.75. 39.15 70.50 47.00 94.00 62.70 52.50 35.00 63.00 42.00 84.00 56.00 83.75 55.85 100/50 67.00: 134.00 89.35 67.50 45.00 81.00 54.00 11850 79.00 95.00 73.25 114.00 76.00 152.00 101.35 76.25 50.85 91.50 61.00 122.00 81.35 "B" GROUP... Mayfair, Andrea, Paradise 48" ...1W 72" 20 AW 96°... iawW Reg. Sale Reg. Sale Reg. Sale 19.50 ° 13.00. 29.25, 19.50 '39.00°--26.00 16:50 11.00 ° 24.75 1650 ° 33.00 22:00 27.00 - 18.00 40.50 27.00 ° 54.00 36.00 20.50 13.70 30:75 20.50 41.00 27,35 31.00 2008 46.50 . 31.00. 62:00. 41,35 23,00 15.35 34.50. 23.00. 46.00. . 30.70 120°... 2YaW 14a"... ow 82" 7. AW Reg. Sale Reg. Sale Reg. Sale 48,75 32.50 5850 .39.00 78.00 52.00 41.25 27.50 49.50 33.00 66.00 44.00 67.50 45.00 81.00 54.00 108.00 72.00 $1.25 34.20 61.50 41.00 82.00 54.70 77.50 51.70 93.00 62.00 124,00 82,70 57.50 38.35 . 69.00 46.00 92.00 61.35 "A" GROUP ... Fairly, Aragon, Damascus, Parthia LENGTHS 48" ...1W 72" ...1"~AW 96 4 aw Reg. Sale Reg. Sale Reg. Sale Up to 54" Lined 16.95. 71.30 25.40 16.95. 33:90 22:60 Unlined 12.50 6.35 18.75: 1250. 25.00 16:65 55" to 84" Lined 2300 Veee Soo 2350: A700 31.35 Unlined 17.50 11.65 26.25 17.50 35.00 ' 23.35 85" to 99" Lined 26.95 18.00 40.40 26.95 53.90 35.95 Unlined 19.50 13.00 29.25 19.50 39.00 26.00 LENGTHS 120" ...-. 2¥aW 144",..3W 192 6 a. Reg. Sale Reg. Sale Reg. Sale 42.40 28.30 5085 33.90 67.80 45.20 31.25 20.85 -37:50 25.00 50.00 33.35 58.75 39.15 70:50 47.00 9400 62.70 A379: Qeae 52,50. 25.00 70.00 46.70 67.40 44.95 80.85 53.90 107.80 71.90 48.75 32.50 5850 39.00 78.00 52,00 He): Sale 31.35 28.00 44.65 36.00. 50.70 - 40.70 LENGTHS . Up to 54" Lined Unlined 55" to 84" Lined Unlined 85" to 99" Lined Unlined LENGTHS Up to 54" Lined Unlined 55" to 84" Lined Unlined 85" to 99" Lined Unlined LENGTHS Up to 54" Lined Unlined 55" to 84" Lined Unlined 85" to 99" Lined Unlined LENGTHS Up to 54" Lined Unlined 55" to 84" Lined Unlined 85" to 99" Lined Unlined Up to 54" Lined Unlined 55" to 84" Lined Unlined 85" to 99"' Lined Unlined EATON'S UPPER LEVEL, DEPT. 267 EATON'S UPPER LEVEL, DEPT. 267 STORE HOURS: 9.30 a.m. to 6 p.m. Monday Through Saturday, Open Thursday and Friday Nights Until 9 A e NA '4 : ' »