SPECIALISTS IN @ Convertible Tops @ Rear Window: Curtain Light @ Zippers Sewn in @ Seat Covers OSHAWA AUTO TRIM 62 BOND W. AT CHURCH Telephone 725-8042 j28--Ceming Events. ERino WOODVIEW COMMUNITY CENTRE BINGO MON. FEB. 21st Admission hi Gives You Free Chance On Door Prize, $250. Jackpot Nos. a Se aie oF $50. Consolation Jackpot Pays Double in 52 ALLDREAD, At Memorial Hospital, Bowmanville, on Friday, February 18, 1966, nH, Alle dread, in his 74th year, Deloved | husband of Lillian Reid, 71 High Street, Bowman- ville, dear father of Kathleen and Clar- ence, Oshawa; and Ross, Bowmanville; brother of Sara (Mrs. Henry Scott), King- ston. Resting at the Morris Funeral Kenia el, Bowmanville. Service in the on Monday at 3.30 p.m, Interment Osh: awa Union Cemetery. Jenn He aawsl Hospital on February 8, 1966, Hugh Ldehiygtd \Greag of Claremont, Ontario, beloved of the tate HILLCREST TRANSMISSION CENTRE Automatic Transmission Specialist! 1 mile east of Townline on No, 2 Highwoy. General Repairs 723-8651 (Formerly Walton's Supertest) FRED STONE BROOKLIN Phone 655-3653 @ Motor Rebuilding @ Cylinder Reboring @ Pinfitting @ Resleeving @ Automatic Transmission @ Crankshoft & Valve Service TRANSMISSION specialists. Transmi¢- sions are our. only business, 1038 Simcoe North, Phone 728-7339. 35--Lost and Found LOST -- Male hound purebred, black and tan, since Monday morning, February 14. Vicinity Buena Vista area. Reward! "Answers to Nick". Telephone 728-3879. LOST -- Siamese chocolate point male nurtured cat, vicinity Anderson Street, Whitby, en Saturday, February 12, Re- ward. Telephone 668-6700. LOST -- Part Persian female cat, age S years, black tan and white. Child's pet. On January 24,. vicinity Brock Av- enue. Maple area, Whitby. Reward. Tele- phone 668-6956. LOST -- Female Labrador, all black, with tattoo In ear, on Sunday, February 6. Vicinity Grandview South. Call 723- 1961, LOST -- Hound, black and tan, with col- lar and chain, Call 668-4939 Whitby. Re ward. 36--Legal NOTICE TO CREDITORS AND OTHERS EMMA JOHNS, In the Estate of AUGUSTA JANE Spinster, deceased. All persons having claims against the estate of Emma Augusta Jane. Johns, late of the Town of Bowmanville, in the County of Durham, Spin- ster, deceased, who died on or about the 19th day of July, 1965, are hereby noti- fied to send in to the under- signed Personal Representative of the said deceased on or before the 22nd day of Feb- ruary, 1966, full particulors of their claims, Immediately ofter the said dote the Per- sonal Representative will dis- Wilma Burgess ha "dear brother of Gor- of Pickering (and New Liskeard), igabel of Claremont and Jean of Toronto. Mr, Gregg will rest at McEachnie Fu- neral Home, 28 Kingston Road West, Pickering, after 2 p.m. Sunday. Funeral service in the chapel on Monday, Febru- ary 21 at 2 p.m. Interment Mareraaet Union Cemetery. Nos, or less $50. . Consolation, $150 Jackpot $20 a line $50. full cord 20 Games at $20. 5 Special Games at $30. Regular gomes pay double in 17 Nos. or less. $100.00 Door Prize Early Bird Gome ot 7:45 Admission $1.00 Extra Buses RED BARN NORTH OSHAWA Children under 16 not admitted McGRATH, Thomas Desmond (Des) Entered into rest in the Oshawa Gen- eral Hospital on Saturday, February 19, 1966, Thomas Desmond McGrath beloved husband of Jessie Hurlbert, father of Mrs. T. 'Rout (Eleanor), and Michael, Oshawa; Flight Lt. Paul McGrath RCAF Chicoutimi, Que.; and brother of Mrs. Mary Callery, Shannonville; Mrs. An- ela Burnes, Peterborough; Mrs. Patrick 'orte (Elizabeth), white, Plains, New York; Mrs. Thos. Casey (Margaret) North Bay, Ont.; Everett (Ed) of Oshawa; Mi- chael, Sudbury; and James, Ottawa; in his 62nd year. Resting at the Armstrong .Funeral Home, Oshawa, with Requiem High Mass in St. Gregory's Church Tues- day, February 22 et 10 a.m. Interment Resurrection Cemetery. (Prayers will be held at the funeral home Monday 8.30 p.m.) MONDAY 8:00 P.M. BINGO ST. GERTRUDE'S AUDITORIUM 690 King St. Eost ot Farewell --FREE- ADMISSION -- FREE - 20 Reg. Games--Total $300 SNOWBALL--$150. in 56 Nos. | Riana bayer Pee: Plus $10 each horizontal! line. within reach of all, Regular Jackpot $100 GERROW in 56 Now. $20. Com. | FUNERAL CHAPEL SHARE THE WEALTH 390 KING STREET WEST Good Parking Telephone 728-6226 Extra Bus Service No Children Please. WERRY, Winnifred Suddenly at Bowmanville on Friday, Feb- ruary 18, 1966, Winnifred Rickard Werry, RR 2, Newcastle, aged 53 years, wife of the late Kenneth Werry, dear mother of David, Ruth, Peter and: Margaret. Rest- ing at the Morris Funeral Chapel, Bow: manville. Service in the chapel on Mon day at 2 o'clock. Interment Bethesda Cemetery. (in lieu of flowers donations to St. Paul's United Church Building Fund, Bowmanville, would be appre ciated.) LOCKE'S FLORIST Funeral arrangements and floral arrangements for all occasions. OSHAWA SHOPPING CENTRE 24 HOUR PHONE SERVICE 728-6555 yet Blanche Meechin, On- tario's first woman barten- der, shakes up a drink in ANNUAL ST. DAVID'S_ | DANCE U. "alge HALL IN MEMORIAM BUJOLD- --In loving memory of my| Husband James Bulold, who passed away | Feb. 19, 1965. my heart still aches with sadness And secret tears still flow What it meant to lose you Jim No one will ever know When the days are sad and lonely And every thing goes wrong 1 seem to hear you whisper "Cheer up and carry on'. Says Ad For EDMONTON P) -- "No the bar of a west Toronto hotel, She had been a host- ess at the hotel and when 'No Weakling Need Apply' Alta. School | |ried teachers with families, she BEAUTY AND THE BAR government policy changed to allow women bartenders she decided to switch jobs. --CP Photo |integrated and the teachers mix} |with everyone. Mr. Peters found | \Fort Chipewyan on the shores} pye 200, lof Lake Athabasca, 375 miles jnorth of Edmonton, to be such. In others, such as Grouard, | teachers, clergy, ment officials and store owners| --all white--mix rarely with the| |Morrice Ruff 227, police, govern-| r) THE OSHAWA TIMES, Seturdey, Fobresry 19, 1966 OF5 By CAROL KENNEDY LONDON (CP)--Cancer is a word that strikes less fear into many Britons since they learned the courageous story of Richard Dimbleby. Dimbleby, the BBC's interna- tionally - famous broadcaster celebrated for his coverage of state occasions, died last De- cember at 52 after suffering from abdominal cancer for five years. In those five years, although Dimbleby underwent surgery and weeks of intensive radio- therapy treatment, nobody out- side his family and doctors sus- pected there was anything wrong with the 259 - pound television personality whose calm, reas- suring presence on the weekly newsmagazine program Pano- rama pvas almost guaranteed to take the edge off world crises. Those were five of Dimbleby's busiest years. Apart from weekly television appearances and frequent reporting trips abroad, he ran two industrial film companies and the family newspaper business in Suburban Richmond. He covered royal tours and weddings, Moscow's welcome to spaceman Yuri Gagarin, the fu- nerals of President Kennedy and Sir Winston Churchill and the 1964 U.S. presidential election. He conducted special editions of Panorama from Canada, Ger- many, Paris and Luxembourg. His last big reporting job was the visit of Pope Paul to the United Nations in October, 1965. Shortly afterwards he was ad- mitted to St. Thomas's Hospital in London. By now,'the outlook was grave. Dimbleby had become con- Dimblehy's Busiest Years': Came After Cancer Struck vinced that a major hurdle to combatting the disease was the feeling that concern was some- how an unmentionable word, a tahon_tanic for 4 He told his son David, 27 and also a television reporter: 'Tell them I have cancer." RECEIVE LETTERS David's announcement to the British press set off an avalance of mail from cancer sufferers and hospital staff, relieved that the subject now was being aired without embarrassment. More People went into clinics for check-ups. Cancer sufferers who had abandoned hope of leading normal, fruitful lives wrote Dav- id Dimbleby to say they would follow his father's example and carry on working. Dimbleby had wanted to de- vote an entire program of Pan- orama to cancer, to arouse the}: public to the fact that more than half Britain's cancer sufferers could be cured if they would consult a doctor early enough. Panorama duly screened its cancer program, two months after Dimbleby's death. Intro- ducing it, David Dimbleby said he hoped it would help dispel the "conpiracy of silence" that still shrouded the subject. The program stressed the re- markably higher percentage of cures achieved if the disease is caught in its early stages: 90 per cent for skin cancer, 75 per cent for throat and breast can- cer, 70 per cent for cancer of the womb. Cancer is still Britain's second most fatal affliction after heart disease, killing 100,000 persons a year. Dimbleby's death has awak- ened wide concern that in Brit- SUNDAY NIGHT LEAGUE Bowling over 600 were -- Steve Roz- nick 694 (226, 285); Barbara Smith 655 (214, 293); Muriel Roznick 651 (300); Leo Gorman 640 (297, 222, 211); Bill Smith 637 (218, 236); Gorry Perry 632 (297, 244); Jim Hutchison 630 (233, 215); Loule Kelemen 627 (218, 202); George Haines 602 (268); Mac McDonald 609 (205, 232) 5 and Ted Smith 600 (247), | Bowling over 200 were -- Joyce Taylor | 273, Nelson Wilson 253, Gerald Pye 237, | Al Pritchard 231, Gord Johnson 227, 206, | Robert Trevor Page} | 220, Mel McKinnon 220, Doreen Kelemen 1218, Doreen Rines 216, Bruce Simpson |215, Hazel Austin 212, Nina Wilson 207, Roy Pacey 206, June Hill 204, Don Wil- son 203, Betty McDonald 201 and Ken Lemon League -- Henry Oulette 99, Peter Rines 98, Dian Noden 96, 81, Bob) Hill 91 .and Suzanne Smith 82. GUY'S AND DOLL'S MIXED MAJOR Guy's High Triples -- Ron Jay 840 (303, 269, 268); Dave Bishop 813 (296, 261, 256); John Trott 800 (363, 276); Reg Hickey OSHAWA BOWLING NEWS son 741; D. Tilk 734; S$. Stovin 728; B. Nelson 723; A, Stovin 721; R. Godfrey 713; B.- Arnold 711; J. Vandyke 710; J. Cook 704 (317); J. Dermo 699; T. Krout 691; R. Coleshaw 691; C. McCabe 690; S. Hill 690; F. Eccles 686; N. Galka 684 (313); R, Murry 682; K, Mitton 665; K, Johnson 664; T. Eccles 663; C. Heath 662; J. Logeman 647; A, Hruska 646 (318); E. Hyderman 644; R. eae: 641; D. Brown 640; G. McKnight 629; M. Farrugia 629; A. Blinski 628; A. And son 627; J. Holt 627; |. Estabrook 26, R. Buller 626; F. Kay 6267 H. Veenhof |624; B, Locke 622; M. eee 621; H. Kellock 619; E, Dumas 619; T. Goch 617; A. Nell 6067 F. Makin 602; F. Barnes 600 and B. Bracey 600. Points Group 1 -- Bo-Peep 4, Harry's Novelties 0; Clints 4, G and B 0; Goches 4, Active Realty 0 and Durnos 3, Tum- meys 1. Group 2 -- Esso Service 3, Houdaille 1) Routs 2, Smith Bev. 2; Honest Cals 2 | Dineg Drive-Inn 2 and Home Appliance 3, Tony's 1, Group 3 -- Boscos 3, Gillards 1; Russ 2, Good Boys 8 and Bergs 3, Body Shop 1. Standings -- Group 1 Goches 17, Dur- nos 14, Bo-Peep 12; Harry's Novelties 11, ain only £4,000,000 ($12,000,000) <= is Spent on cancer research = ge fond set-up by the Dimbleby femily ha amo. £75,000 in less ti than two months. | INVESTORS Sremrente LIMITED & M. A. MAIDLOW Mr. C. K. Gareau, Manager of Investors Peterborough Region, is pleased to announce that Mr, Maidlow's annual 'sales of over $2,000,000 during 1965 has placed him among the sales lead-- ers of the Company in Canada. This is the sixth time that Mr, Maidlow's annual sales have exe ceeded one million dollars. Investors Syndicate and Investors Trust. Company are subsidiaries of The Investors Group, the largest company of its kind in Canada. Three affiliated mutual funds are Investors Mutual of Canada Ltd., Investors Growth Fund of Canada Ltd., and In- vestors International Mutual Fund Ltd. fach time | see your photo You seem to smile and say "Don't Cry" I'm only sleeping We'll meet again some day native population. 1799 (252, 311, 236); Frank Hill 767 (239, | | 326, 202); Wilf Villa 757 (312, 269); Har- | TURN TO BRITAIN lold Ballem 746 (214, 245, 287); Ed Wil- tribute the assets of the said deceased having regard only to claims of which it shall Tumeys 8, Active Realty 8, Clints 7 and G and ' Group 2 -- Esso Service 18, Houdalile said. FEW SPEAK ENGLISH weaklings need apply." This is what an advertisement in British 732 (209, 259, 264); Palm Knight 713 then have notice. Dated ot Oshawa this 19th doy of January, 1966. GUARANTY TRUST OF CANADA, Executor, by its solicitors, McGIBBON & BASTEDO, Borristers & Solicitors, Simcoe Street South, Oshawa, Ontario. 38--Coming Events ROWE TOURS Florida Special escorted 20 days $199. March 12-31. No night travel EASTER CRUISE Bermuda April 8-15. Travel motorcoach to New York then via Queen of Bermuda. No night travel. EASTER TOUR New York April 7-10. Hotel ond tour arranged For information to above tours phone or write: ROWE TRAVEL AGENCY 885-2527 Port Hope SAT., FEB. 26th 9 P.M,-- 12 AM. BERNARD TIERNEY AND ORCHESTRA @ BAR PRIVILEGES @ @ PRIZES @ ADM. $2 per person Tickets Obtainable ot door also at 378 Highland Ave. or call 728-1444. PANCAKE SUPPER Christ Memorial Church Comer Mary and Hillcroft TUES., FEB. 22nd 4:30 P.M. to 6:30 P.M Adults $1 00 -- Children 50¢ _ SOCIAL | BINGO. i 4 George' e's Hall. cor- ner of Albert and Jackson. Monday Feb- ruary 21st. 8 o'clock. Lunch and essen _| WANT ADs reach thousanes of intorabter U.A.W.A. HALL SATURDAY, FEB. 19 7:30 P.M. 20 GAMES $10 A GAME 4 GAMES OF $20., $30., $40., $50. JACKPOTS ONE GAME $150. SHARE THE WEALTH [enc piece your ad betore tem now. R T COUVIER--Ron and Betty (nee Kemp) are happy to announce the birth of their daughter, Denise Dariene, 7 Ibs., 1% ozs., on Monday, January 24, 1966, at the Osh- awa General Hospital. A_wee sister for Shelley. Many thanks to Dr. W. H. Stan- ley and 4th floor staff. MOLDEN -- John and Patricia (nee rival of &@ daughter, BINGO KINSMEN CENTRE TUESDAY 7:45 Early Bird Gome FREE ADMISSION Jackpots 57 and 56 Children under 16 not allowed | Special 7:30 bus from 4 Corners Daughters of Isabella Bridge and Euchre Thurs., Feb. 24 ot 8 p.m. St. Gregory's Auditorium Ukrainian Hall Dnipro 681 Edith Street block E. from Bloor Ritson $ DANCE Seturdey, Feb. 19th, 8 p.m. Good orchestra, refreshments. 1 & Social Bingo ot the Oronge Temple Bruce Street Mondey -- Feb. 21, 8 P.M, Prizes and Refreshments Served $1,00 Everyone Welcome } g 9 Ibs. 6 ozs., at Grace Hospital, | Toronto, on Friday, February 11, 1966 A little sister for Ruth. MeMILLAN -- ry) are happy to announce the birth of their son, Meredith Dean (8 Ibs. § o73.) on Thursday, February 17, 1946, at the Oshawa General Hospital. A brother for Larry, Jackie, and Janette. Many thanks jto Or, Blair and staff on 4th floor, Jack and Gwen (nee CARD OF THANKS, Prospects every day. Take advantage of) the vast audience by telephoning 723-3492 | Parker) are pleased to announce the ar-| Mary Margaret, | |--Always remembered by rt Thelma GARNER -- In loving: memory of 8 dear father and grandfather, Alfred G. B. (Fred) Garner, who passed away Febru- ary 19, 1964 Loves greatest gift, remembrance. |--Ever remembered by daughter Mar- guerite, son-in-law 'Fred, son Morris,| |daughter-in-law Gertrude and grand- children Scott and Karen, | | | | JOHNSTONE -- In memory of @ friend | Milton Johnstone (Mickle) who passed jaway February 19, 1965. --Remembered by Bob and Vi Hurlburt! and children Anne Marie, Darryl and) Dwayne LYSON -- In loving memory of a dear |mother and grandmother Odakea Lyson, who passed away February 20, 1965. |- When days are dark, friends few, Grandma, dear, we thing of you Friends are friends if they are true, We lost our best when we lost you. --Son Adam, daughter-in-law Noella and grandchildren. | RIDGELY -- In loving memory of our |dear brother Wm. Ridgely who sudden- ly passed away Feb. 19, 1965. We often think of bygone days When we were all together, The family chain is broken now, But memories will live forever, To us he has not gone away, Nor has he travelled far, Just entered God's eternal home And left the gate ajar. 't broke our hearts fo lose you, But you did not go alone For part of us went with you The day God called you home. --Always remembered by Dora, jMary, John Bll | Alice, RIDGELY -- In fovin: dear son Wm. Ridgely wi ed away Feb. 19, 1965. One sad and lonely year has passed Since that great sorrow fell, The ghock that | received that day No one can ever tell God gave me courage fo meet it, And God gave me courage to bear the blow, memory of my suddenly pass- But what it meant to lose you son No one will ever know It's lonely here without you 1 miss you more each day For life is not the same to me Since you were called away. You bade no one a last farewell Nor even said goodbye, You were gone before | realized And only God knows why. --Sadly missed by mother. SLOY -- In loving memory of a dear father and husband, Kost. Sioy, -who pass- ed away February 20, 1963. When evening shades are falling, And we sit in quiet alone, To our hearts comes a longing, If he only could come home Friends may think we have forgotten,| When at times they see us smile But they little know the heartache Our smiles hide-all the while. -Always remembered by wife Dora, $o Peter and daughter-in-law Frances. SPRATT -- In loving memory of a dear |mother and grandmother, Mrs Lillian! | BROOKS -- We wish to express sin- | cere thanks and appreciation to our many | friends during the recent loss of a dear jhusband and father Ernest G. Brooks. | Special thanks fo The Royal Canadian | Legion members, Rev. Woolcott, Fr. Mun: jgham, Fr. Berriault and members of the |C.F.M. Group, also Armstrong Funeral) |Home. The Alger Press for use of cars,| land. the many friends who sent. flowers _|and cards of sympathy Mrs. F. Brooks and family CUBBAGE -- We wish to expfess our | | appreciation and gratitude to all our | relatives, friends and neighbors for their | many acts of kindness and heip in the) recent loss of a beloved husband, father jang grandfather, Len Cubbage. Special; jthanks to Branch 43, Roya! Canadian Le. |gi jon, Canadian Corps of Commission- jaires, gtatf of Ontario Hospital, Whitby. | Rev. DOr. Mellow, Dr. Orton, Dr. Rowsell, | Dr. Kaczanowski and Mcintosh - Ander- son Funeral Home. --Mrs. Len Cubbage | WOTTEN -- We wish to thank our rela tives, friends and neighbors for their ex [pressions of sympathy in the loss of a dear husband and father; also Rev. W Herbert and the Armstrong Funeral Home for their heip. Mrs, Wotten end Fem. apeath who passed away February 20,| The years are quickly passing, Tho we can't forget, | For in our hearts that loved her Her memory lingers yet. |~-Lovingly remembered by son Harold daughter-in-law Helen and grandchildren Everlasting Memoriolization j is almost possible with the | MATTHEWS BRONZE MARKER | that we supply and insfall; Please call MOUNT. LAWN MEMORIAL PARK _723- 2633 LAWS BAN TESTS SASKATOON (CP) --Cana- |dian laws prevent beekeepers itesting European experiments of feeding vitamins to bees to increase the food value honey, Prof. G, F. Townsend of lthe Ontario Agricultural Col-| lege, Guelph, said bere, of _|Thomas for teachers said newspapers last year. Enough were intrigued by the implied adventure that 46 were hired to teach in northern Alberta schools. They bb °c Frank Peters, Ireland. "But not as bad as. we thought," added Anne Haselton, 27, of London. Seven of the teachers were interviewed in Edmonton while jattending a convention of north- ern Alberta teachers and the Al- berta Indian Education Associ- ation. Some had flown from their {solated communities which are inaccessible by road. | All agreed it was the possi- bility of adventure that ap- pealed, along with the induce- ment of higher salaries Miss Haselton, who taught. at a mixed grammar school in London, was sent to Fort Mc- Murray, a remote boom town of about 2,500 people 230 miles north of Edmonton. It is popu- lated by oil and construction workers, Indians and Metis at tracted by the smell of oil and bt byes fe et af there are no paved ie ans few services. Miss Haselton said it was quite an adjustment to live in sich a small community where people make their own enter- tainment. Most of her single contemporaries enjoy it and don' t find It as difficult as mar- agreed with the ad rugged,"" commented 24, of Galway, Language can be a problem| because few 6f the Indian chil- dren starting school in the re- mote settlements speak English, said Joyce Sandford of Shef- field. Sometimes it's frustrating. 'I knew when the children were speaking Cree they were talking = me," laughed Miss Hasel- on, A sense of accomplishment in the work they are doing plays a big part for both Miss Hasel- ton and Raymond Picton, 26, who taught at a technical gram- mar school in Doncaster, York- shire. They both felt education is a prime weapon in the battle jagainst poverty which has af- flicted many Indian and Metis settlements Mr. Picton now teaches at a school at Grouard, 4 vocational 180 miles northwest of Edmon- ton, which services. much of northern Alberta. Many of the students live in dormitories. "Often when we first get the students we'd give them a good wash,"' said Mr. Picton. He found that those living in fared better than day students, who returned to overcrowded shacks, many without plumbing or electricity. "But the Indians have much to teach us too," said Miss "ve never been on a trap line, never seen a lynx and can't skin animals. I also want to learn their beadwork." Some of the communities are Haselton maseston. THOMAS D. McGRATH | The death of Thomas Desmond |(Des) McGrath, 219 Adelaide ave w., occurred today at Oshawa General Hospital. Mr. McGrath had been in failing health for) the last several years. Son of the late Mr. and Mrs. James |McGrath, he was born at De- lora, Ont., April 9, 1904. He married the former Jessie Hurl- bert here Aug. 6, 1934. Mr. Mc- Grath was a resident here for 33 years, during which time he |worked for General Motors of |Canada Limited, retiring as su- jpervisor of purchasing in 1961. |He was a member of The Church of St. Gregory the Great land the Holy Name _ Society. '\Surviving are his wife; one |daughter, Mrs. T. Rout (Elean- jor) Oshawa; two sons, Fit. Lt, |\Paul_ McGrath, RCAF, Chicou- jtimi, Que., and Michael Mc- |Grath, Oshawa; four sisters, |Mrs. Mary Callery, |ville, Ont., Mrs. Angela Byrnes, | Peterborough, Mrs Patrick |Forte, White Plains, N.Y., Mrs. Casey, Margaret, North Bay; three brothers, Ev- ferett (Ed), city, Michael, Sud- bury and James, city; 10 grand- \children The body is resting at Arm- strong Funeral Home, Funeral service will be at The Church of St. Gregory the Great Tuesday, Feb. 22, with a requiem high mass at 10 a.m. Service will be leonducted by Msgr. P. Dwyer, Shannon- | OBITUARIES Interment will be at Résurrec- tion Cemetery. Prayers will be held at the funeral home Mon- day at 8.30 p.m. Friends are jasked not to visit the funeral lchapel until Sunday. WINNIFRED WERRY The death of Mrs. Winnifred Rickard Werry, RR 2 New- castle, wife of the late Kenneth Werry, occurred Friday at Bow- manville. Surviving are two sons, David and Peter, and two doughters, Ruth and Margaret. The body is resting at the Morris Funeral Chapel, Bow- manville, from where service will be conducted Monday at 2 Interment will be in Bethesda Cemetery. In lieu of flowSes, donations to S. Paul's United Church buiding fund, Bowmanville,;- would' be appre- ciated. FUNERAL OF MISS HAZEL -M. WARING The funeral took place yester- day of -Miss Hazel M. Waring who died at Hillsdale Manor 'on February 16. Funeral was from the MacIntosh-Anderson Funeral \Home with service conducted by the Rev. J. K. Moffat, of Simcoe Street United Church. Burial ~-as at Groveside Ceme- W. A. Adams, assistant super- schoo] division, said the division advertises in Britain because it can't obtain the kind of teach- ers needed in Alberta. The division seeks teachers with at least three years' train- ing and about five years' ex- perience. And most well-quali- fied teachers in Alberta want to stay in the cities. intendent of the Northland)" fat 201) and Red Hardie 704 (261, "Boll 's High Triples -- Bea Ross 810 (345, 296, Drive-inn 8, y and Honest Cals 3. Group 3 -- Russ's 280); Janet Peel 763 (239, 320, 204); Marg Vice 755 (326, 211, 218); Mavis Taylor 77 (294, 237) and Alice Westley 716 (203, | ky Standing -- Bali Hi's 20, Sabres| 16, Trotters 14, Hickleberries 13, Shots 12, Jay Birds 7, Perry's Pets 7 an Alley Kats 7. Team triple was taken by Perry's Pets, with 3691, also team single, with 1330. U.A.W. BOWLING ae Tripies -- B, Call 810; W. Kelly D, Stovin 745) M. Love 7457 D. Hodg- | Shop 4. HUMORESQUE BLIND LEAGUE High bowler for this week was Scott McColeman (171, 151) 322; followed by Ada McDonough (126-114) 240; Freda bis (73 » 85) 158; Jean Johnson (96 ) 184; Harold Bateman (83-41) 124 and Clara Suddard (36-72) 108. With handicap -- Vera Siblock (53-51) 104; Beatrice Chute (50-51) 101 and ive Forrest (50-50) 100. tery, Brooklin Pallbearers were Brise-| bois, Harry Thorne, "ole | \ Manuel, and William Hollo- way. Four Canadians are among the 30 principal sing- ers at London's Covent Gar- den Opera House. All de- scribe it as a turning point in their artistic lives. Clock- wise from bottom are: Joseph Rouleau, Andre CANADIANS BLOSSOM AT COVENT GARDEN Turp, Jean Bonhomme and Victor Godfrey. Only God- frey began a musical career from scratch. CP Phote 13, Routs 13, Home Appliance 10, Dines Smith Beverage 7, Tony* 13, Good Boys 12, Bergs 10, Boscos 10, Gillards 7 and Body 's i } N I Rent your room or house quickly with a Times: Classified Action Ad. One day's rent will more then pay for your ad... and from then on it's money in your pocket. Don't miss the extra that's waiting for income you. Rent your property fast... as these people did. TWO furnished rooms, sultable for one or couple, Heat and hydro supplied. Apply -- Ritson Road North. Dial "Rented as soon as the * poper wos out." ROOM AND BOARD, double room share; also single room, Lunches roca ed. Central; also garage available | | Telephone -- "| could have rented.10 rooms.'" TWO ROOMS, comfortably furnished, bed-sitter, furnished kitchen, with sink, stove, haat per be newly decora' new beds, Suit two ladien. McLaughlin Boulevard. "More calls thon | could handle." PHONE. 723-3492 to Place Your TIMES achioys,