Oshawa Times (1958-), 9 Aug 1966, p. 2

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2 'HE OSHAWA TIMES, Tuesday, August 9, 1966 A GLANCE AROUND THE GLOBE Sir Sidney Oa Killed In Race NASSAU, Baliamas (AP) -- Sir Sydney Oakes, son of mur- dered Canadian millionaire Sir Harry Oakes, was killed Mon- day in a sports racing car that failed to make a highway curve, Police said Sir--Sydney, 39, alone in his Sunbeam Alpine, apparently was heading from the exclusive Lyford Cay Club toward Nassau Airport when he lost control and snapped off a utilities pole, Sir Harry was bludgeoned to death at his Nassau home in 1943. His son-in-law, Count De- marigny, was tried for the mur- der and acquitted, The Oakes title now passes to Christopher Oakes, 17, Sir Syd- ney's eldest son by his first wife, Greta, a native of Copen- hagen. | Two Boys Drown PORT GLASGOW, Ont. (CP) Edward Willard McGill, 14, and his brother David, 10, drowned} Monday while swimming off a/ private beach on Lake Erie. | They were the sons of Mr.| and Mrs, Willard McGill of West Lorne, Ont. | The family had been camping} at the beach, about 35 miles west of St. Thomas. SIR SIDNEY OAKES The victims were apparently ers from the United States are| caught in an undertow created |expected to arrive in the to-| by heavy waves. Store Sales Up OTTAWA (CP) -- Department store sales in the week ended July 23 were 3.2 per cent higher than in the same week last year, the Dominion Bureau of Statis- ties reported today bacco district this week--in ad. and harvest labor from Europe for the first time Severe Measures $ | Premier Daniel Johnson Sales were eight-tenths of one Monday the provincial gov per lower in Manitoba and| ment would take "extremel down 3.6 per cent in Saskatche-! yere measures" wan, but made high a er cent in British Montreal world's fair are not Columbia ns were 7.1/ taken advantage of by the prov- per cent in the Atlantic prov-/ince's merchants. inces, five per cent in Quebec,! Mr. Johnson, speaking while one per cent in Ontario and 2.4| on a visit to the site of the prov- per cent in Alberta. ince of Quebec pavilion and the exposition's administrative of- CPR Net Up fices, said a ceiling on prices { food and lodging might be MONTREAL (CP)--The CPR {created by the government to today reported net income of! prevent over-charging, $1.47 a share for the six months : Pros Lacking ended June 30, compared with! $1.14 in the corresponding pe- riod last year LETHBRIDGE, Alta. (CP)-- Railway revenues climbed 11|Del O'Brien of Pembroke, Ont., per cent to $282,509,298 while|national leader of the Canadian expenses rose chose to nine per| Young Progressive Conserva- y se- cent to $255,827,351. This re-|tives, said Monday Canada| rn-| | sulted in net railway earnings |lacks professionals in gove of $26,681,947 compared with| ment. $19,258,408 a year earlier. "Many Canadians have more Retained income at June 30|confidence in Bell Telephone totalled $716,556,975 compared|than in senior government," he with $689,841,332 at the same/said in an interview. "We are time last year. governed by laymen in Ot- tawa, Price Index Up Mr, O'Brien assailed political OTTAWA (CP)--The Domin-|no political research. fon Bureau of Statistics general) Half of the political platforms wholesale price index rose one-|selected for elections are de- tenth of a point to 259.7 in July| vised only a few weeks before from 259.6 in June. jelections while at least one ma- The index, based on 1935-39|jor Canadian electronics con-| wholesale price equalling 100,|cern devotes at least 22 per cent} was 252.1 in July last year. The|of its total budget to research. | index measures prices of a wide} | variety of goods at various} Keep The Law | stages of production and at mar-| x | kets other than the consumer] MONTREAL (CP)--A_ Winni-| market, }peg judge urged a group of| | United States jurists Monday| |night to keep the law "respon- Funeral Today Pe to the needs of a changing TORONTO (CP) -- A funeraljsociety and not to lean too heav- will beheld today for Percy|ily on precedent." Greenwood Rigby, 77, a former| '"'Law tends to pay homage to official of the American Can|the past, to look back on prece-| Co., who died Sunday at his|dent," Mr. Justice Samuel home in suburban Islington. | Freedman of the Supreme Court Mr. Rigby travelled exten-|Of Manitoba toid delegates~-to sively in Canada for American|the American Bar Association's Can and had served the = cr ge here, pany for 32 years at the time fe said the law calls upon of his retirement. | precedent in its quest for cer- He was well known in musical/tainty but this "can sometimes circles in Hamilton as a bari-|be pushed too far, sometimes tone soloist. and in Niagara|to the detriment of justice." | Falls with the Masonic choir.| Mr. Justice Freedman said| He organized and served as the | some judges like nothing more} a president of the Lions Club} than to em in a law books n Simcoe. }cases similar to the one they} are studying. Then they often Harvest General believe their job is done. BRANTFORD (CP) -- Har- Murder Charge vesting of the 1966 crop of to-| _ | bacco in southern Ontario will! BOULDER, Colo. (AP) -- A] be general by the end of this|murder charge was lodged Mon- week, a survey of the area/day against a 37-year-old jani- showed today. Most farmers are|tor at the University of Colo- optimistic over their crop out-|rado in the slaying of a univer- look. {sity co-ed a month ago. ' Harvesting has been started! District Attorney Rex M. on a few farms and both labor|Scott filed the information und tobacco officials are opti-|against Joseph D. Morse, who mistic over the prospects of/lives at the nearby city of Long- thaving adequate help when the|mont work is in full swing. | Morse was charged with the) More than 2,000 tobacco work-'slaying of Elaura Jaquette, 20, HERE and THERE, |dition to many already there| Slav writer who got into trouble from Ontario and Quebec points|@ year ago for criticizing the/ recruited | Soviet MONTREAL (CP) -- Quebec|the magazine would be a s said|/board for an opposition party ern-'in Yugoslavia. | if necessary to gains ranging aS/ ensure that visitors to the 1967/ parties for engaging in little or| German high court for the life} kes, 39, Car of Grand Junction, Colo., who was found partly clad and sav- agely beaten in a tower room of Macky Auditorium on the campus July 9. Meet Today MONTREAL (CP) -- Senior railway union leaders were scheduled to meet here early to- day to discuss possible joint ac- tion in the event of a nation- wide strike against Canadian railway companies, Frank Hall, of the Brother- hood of Railway Steamship Clerks and Freight Handlers, one of those to attend the meet- ing at a downtown Montreal ho- tel said that a joint statement would probably be issued after the meeting. He declined to comment on the agenda other than to say that joint action has been sought for some time. The 98,000-member non-oper- | ating unions are expected to call) a nation-wide strike early in September. Their last contract with the railways expired last year and all broke off negoti- ations early last spring. | Writer Held BELGRADE, Yugoslavia .| (AP)---Mihajlo Mihajlov, Yugo- | A year ago today Gary Wayne Lay was trapped on the second level of a nine - storey underground missile launch silo that was aflame. He and another Union, was arrested | Monday as he prepared to! launch a magazine in opposition | to President Tito. | Mihajlov had said he hoped| pring-| The district court at the Adri- | atic port of Zadar, Mihajlov's| home, said he was placed un- der arrest there for three days | of investigation. A court official | said the arrest concerned a law! forbidding "spreading false ru-! | mors,"' Friends said the 34-year-old author had been called in for|) MONTREAL (CP) Diver-| investigatory talks with offi-|sion of Canadian water to the} |cials several times recently|United States is 'not. now ne-| |since he announced a meeting|g0tiable, and I am not certain jof sympathizers for Wednesday] that it will ever be," Northern to launch an opposition maga-| Affairs Minister Laing said to- zine, |day He told the annual meeting of ; jthe American Bar Association Life Term | that recent proposals by some BERLIN (Reuters)--The East|¢ngineers to divert Canada's German prosecution called to-|SUrplus water to arid sections day for life imprisonment for|°f the U.S. are not acceptable what it called a confessed|t0 Canada and have not been | American secret agent who said|¢ndorsed by the U.S. govern- he tried to lure an East Ger-)™ent. A YEAR AGO man got out alive. But 53 others died in the dark horror of fire and suffoca- tion in the nation's worst space systems disaster. Lay, 19, reads newspapers "We have our own arid areas;ment policy but merely making too," he said. Mr. Laing said the problem of natural resources and their ownership "will open great fields of controversy in the bal-} ance of this century." He predicted that in most cases, direct controls would not be necessary on ownership of resources. A continuing scale of taxes and royalties would sati fy the public interest. Discove- ries would have to continue to return benefits to the explorer. "I am enunciating no govern- Big Water Diversion 'Not Negotiable Now' Russ Score U.S. Stand GENEVA (Reuters) -- Russia accused the United States today | of summarily rejecting attempts by neutral nations to find a compromise solution for ban- ning underground nuclear tests. Aiexei A, Roshchin, chief So- viet negotiator, told the 17-na- tion Geneva disarmament con- ference the U.S, is not inte- rested in such a ban because it would be an obstacle to de- veloping further nuclear weap- ons. Roshchin said his U.S. coun- terpart, Adrian 8. Fisher, last Thursday turned down a pro- posai 'a a trial -- g a ground blasts coupled with a i a f ; "verification by invitation" sys-| And' he found anew career, tem to guard against cheating.| 4. 4 director. The proposal, originating from) «11's an old wives' tale that a Swedish idea, was advanced |qancers are short-lived profes- at a recent international dis- sionally," he said. "Most of our armament symposium in Tor-|famous film dancers are still onto and raised by Britain in| agile today, and so am I. The the arms talks last week. real reason I danced sporadic- Negotiations on an under-|aljy after I recovered is sim- ground test ban have been/pie: There just aren't enough stalled for years by Soviet-U.8.| musicals to keep dancers busy differences over international in-| (hese days. You have to learn By HOWARD C. HEYN HOLLYWOOD (AP) -- When Gene Nelson was gravely in- jured in an equestrian accident nearly 10 years ago, a certain segment of his audience said-- and not without sympathy-- "well, there goes another good dancer." Gene himself wasn't sure he'd 'ever take a step again. His pel- vis, among other things, was fractured, and he feared one leg would be shorter than the other. Always an. enthusiastic rider, Nelson was on location in Ten- nessee when a horse threw him, pe fell on him. That was in } 1957, spection on the site of suspic-|tg do something else. fous underground upheavals. "Shut up in a hospital, I The Story Of Gene Nelson? It's An Old Wives' Tale Now learned to write scripts. The first few didn't get used, but they got me contacts in televi- sion. One of these asked me if I wanted to try my hand at di- recting. I jumped ai the chance." Among a long list of shows Nelson directed was the first live TV presentation of Matinee Theatre. He also appeared in many, sometimes as a dancer. "You have to learn fast be- cause the.s the way they do everything in television," he said. 'A director must know script technique. "Dancing, too, was. a natural advantage, When I was--sssen- tially a dancer I usually did my own choreography. That puts you into intimate relation to the camera and the director. A dan- cer's sense of timing also is a boon in directing." Nelson began dancing at 12. At 15 he became professional, in a Fanchon and Marco juve- nile revue. Now 46, he is back at Warner Bros., where he did 10 films as a performer between 1948 and 1953, Most were mu- | sicals, and so is the one he now is directing, "the cool ones." Probe Set . | By Pan - Africa | SANBORN, N.Y. (AP)--Bell Aerosystems Co, officials sought} PRETORIA, South Africa |today the reason for a malfunc-| (Reuters)--Zeph Mothopeng, a /tion in an experimental vertical) former executive member of the |take-off and landing airplane| banned Pan-Africanist Congress |that caused an emergency land-|said in the Supreme Court to- ling, in which the craft's tail sec-| day he was given electric-shock Ition was sheared off. jtreatment and assaulted by po- | Veteran test pilots Stanley Ka-|lice in October, 1963. jkol and Paul Miller Jr. set the | Oothopeng is suing the justice | plane down in a field 3% miles | minister, John Vorster for 5,000 from the Niagara Falls interna-jand ($7,000) for alleged mal- tional airport Monday because/treatment by police during his of "an indicated malfunction," |detention under the now-sus- a Bell spokesman said. pended 90-day detention law. Neither of the men aboard) Vorster denies the allegations. was injured, Bell said, and there) Outlining Mothopeng's case, jwas no fire. However, the im-|7 ayer G. Lowen said Motho- jpact broke away the tall s€c-| jane was arrested in April, 1963, that told of that day in the silo near Searcy, Ark. He is at home near Clinton, Ark., and attends the University of Arkansas. | (AP Wirephoto) Hon. : ae the|{0r an alleged offence under the The aircraft, known as the) cu pression of Communism Act, Bell X-22A, was one of two He had already served two years' imprisonment for a polit- ical offence in 1960. "When he was brought to trial on Aug. 7, 1963, the charges |were withdrawn," Lowen said. i D EA THS \"'On walking out of the court, a prediction that in the genera-/BY| THE CANADIAN PRESS ee tions ahead there will be a altax---Dr, nie fe ae : heavy qualification of the his-|80, former president of the CAMP AT EXPO toric appreciation in value of|Canadian Historical Association) MONTREAL (CP) -- Log- resources simply through the oo archivist of Nova oxno, the accommodation de- assage of time and without ef-| Scotia. | re > work any improvement,| Toronto--George Graham, Ge, | Partnent of the 1967 eres "This prediction does not de-|one of Canada's best soccer | International Exposition, is ask- stroy my conviction that the|/players during the 1930s andjing the Quebec government to sphere of natural resources| 40s. : | double its number of camp sites presently in the private sector| London -- Bernard Rickatson) within a 100-mile radius of the will substantially remain there,"| Hatt, 68, former Reuter's chief|city to accommodate the 120,- Text of his speech was re-|correspondent and for many/000 campers expected to visit built by the company in a $25,- 000,000 research program for the army, navy and air force. | Malfunction = Minister Of Justice Sued Congress Man under the 90 - day detainee clause." Lowen said that at the Pre- toria police barracks Mothopeng was hit in the face and body and also was kicked. A bag was then put over his head, A stick was wedged between his elbows and knees while he was in a squot- ting position so that he could not move. "Mothopeng felt wires being attached to his small fingers and index fingers, He again refused to speak. Mothopeng felt very severe electric shocks, It made him vibrate and feel consider- able pain. "Eventually Mothopeng cried out and asked for mercy. and finally felt he was prepared to given information." Later he was then taken to a Pretoria hospital. CALL OR SEE DIXON'S FOR OIL FURNACES SERVING OSHAWA OVER 50 YEARS 24-HOUR SERVICE 313 ALBERT ST. 723-4663 leased to the press in advance/years that news agency's cor-|during the fair. of delivery. respondent in Washington and man into flying a Russian jet|~ fighter containing secret equip-| ment to the West. | Deputy State Prosecution Guen- 8 e jter Wendland asked the East sentence on Guenter Laudahn, | 36, who said he was recruited into the U.S. Central Intelli-| gence Agency soon after fleeing from East Berlin to the West in 1962, Wendland called for a 10-year|(AP)--A U.S. movie company | sentence for Hans - Juergen! finished its final scene today at| Hanke and six years for Werner|this picture postcard village on| Baecker, who allegedly ad-|which it did a_ controversial mitted trying to arrange for|facelift for filming. East Germans to escape to the 'It's been a lot of fun," said West. ldirector Richard Fleischer, By EDDY GILMORE | Sch Indian Band Protests ool Inspector Ousted | "and we haven't harmed proved it." When 20th Century-Fox moved| in here in May with 1,500 an- said: "Don't spoil our village."' Four years ago Castle Combe was voted England's prettiest village in a countryside poll condueted by the British Travel Association. In the wake of worldwide pub- nearby woods and pipe outlets! Force planes destroyed or dam- |\licity, visitors by the thousands Underground to the homes of all|/aged 28 oil storage sites |poured into Castle Combe. Soft) 7V set owners. drink signs and other posters WIKWEMIKONG,. Ont, -(CP)|ress_in The council of the Manitoulinjother subjects. But in other| learning English and sprung up. While Castle Combe remained |tip a fund of $10,000 to maintain Island Indian band at Wikwemi-|cases the schools they go to are|a beautiful village, it did not/it. It has greatly improved the kong Monday continued to agi-jnot as good as the schools they/top the poll again. tate for an inquiry following the dismissal of Gerald McCaffrey, supervising principal of Mani- toulin Island schools. had before. | "In other cases the children Thursday announcing that an/their heads. heard by E. A. Cote, northern|school where no religion is| affairs deputy minister, had|taught and.all Indians who have| been denied, la strong tradition of religion| In a letter dated Saturday and|know that it is the most awful| addressed to the chiefs and|thing that can happen to a child! councillors of Indian bands of|if it grows up without any re-| "He is responsible for the closing of many Indian schools across Canada, and for the sending of Indian children to schools away from their home" their people." | WEATHER FORE butted the charges saying: CAST Meanwhile, in Hollywood, pro- jlose out on some things that are|to film Hugh Lofting's Dr. Do- more important than just get-|little, a story about a man who McCaffrey received a letter|ting a lot of facts crammed into| talks to animals. He picked the jvillage as the ideal spot on a jappeal against his dismissal,| "Often they are sent to a tour of Britain. NOT ALL HAPPY jin the royal fine arts commis-} |sion, which publicly expressed | Canada, members of Parlia-|ligious training. Nothing caniregret that a film company ment, and to newspapers, the|make up for that loss, ishould have made : tions to| council blamed R. F. Davey, di-| 'And the Indian reserve suf-|a village that dat k to pre- rector of Indian education serv-jfers by not having its own|Roman days. jice, for the trouble. |school and the children with| Then Mrs, K R. Harris re- the letter said. NOT AS GOOD 'He claims to do all this so that the children will get a bet- ter education. In some cases the children do go to schools where they seem to make faster prog- Cooler Temperatures Due Variable Cloudiness _, SHOWN eye age he act gn ee Re aaaaraewaressc ma cera sary TORONTO (CP) -- Fore-)Turning cooler late in the day. "Ontario Today", a color film|during the week ending Aug. cast issued at 5:30 a.m. Light winds. depicting in the province 6. Two hundred and ninety-one Lovers Meet Death Synopsis: Unsettled rain con- ' Forecast Temperatures was shown at the Monday|patients were admitted and 278 jditions will prevail in the north! Windsor ........... 58 75 meeting of the Rotary Club of|discharged.: Sixty major, 117 B Rail S ; id Wednesday with variable skies) St, Thomas ........ 58 75 nga The film ig gag minor and 67 eye, ear, nose Y uiciae and cooler temperatures in the/London ..... re | 15 for showing abroad, by the de-|and throat operations were 7. . |lower lakes area. Kitchener soe 58 75 partment of economics and de-|performed. Three hundred and crags. -- al Lake St. Clair, Lake Erie,|Mount Forest ...... 55 70 velopment }sixteen treatments and exam- because ee girl's sathur gb Niagara Lake Ontario, Lake| Wingham ..... weas: 00 70 PARKWOOD TOUR mations were given, and 30liected to their marriage plans,|{U10, Haliburton, Killaloe,|Hamilton .......... 60 = 78 de alah _jcasts applied. The physiother- committed suicide Sunday by Windsor, .L.ondon, Hamilton,|St. Catharines +» 60 78 _ Members of the Oshawa} apy department gave 508 treat- lying down on ' vation: y waeke Toronto: Variable cloudiness|Toronto .......... . 60 76 Chamber of Commerce will|ments and made 396 visits. The in the path of th Paris cil 'and cooler with light winds. Peterborough ...... 58 78 tour the beautiful gardens of|occupational therapy depart- axorene P eC raris Ne) Georgian Bay, Timagami, Al-|Kingston .......... 60 78 Parkwood hom of Col. R. S./ment handled 129 cases. | ey : |goma, Sault Ste. Marie, North|Trenton .......+0.. 60 78 McLaughlin, this Thursday.| a; Be They were killed instantly, |Bay, Sudbury: Mainly cloudy|Killaloe ..... 58 78 Some 500 members and their) UILDING PERMITS Letters found in their car|and cool with a few showers and| Muskoka .. 55 72 wives have been invited to Fifty ~two building permits} parked nearby explained why! light winds. Norih Bay . 55 68 view the gardens. The tour ek igs an estimatedithey made their decision--the| White River, Cochrane, West-|Sudbury ... 58 68 | will start at 7 p.m. and close hei! of $628,400, were issued|father of Beatrice Desutter. 22./ern James Bay: Cloudy with oc-|Fariton ......... 68 at 9° p.m ~ grip Phebe apd during|thought the age difference of|casional rain or drizzle and con-| Sault Ste. Marie 65 HOSPITAL REPORT Pe esitts ig tag wnnibed _ too great for her to} tinuing cool. Winds northeast 15.| Kapuskasing Sevens Oe 62 Fifty-one babies wer born atiat $26,343,400. : : : Seat Gatane ee Ot ich Cloudy with sunny | White River «...... 55 65 | , seger. {periods and a few showers.|Moosonee ........, 50 62 ' Film Director Denies English Village Harmed the| CASTLE COMBE, England| village at all. I think we've im-/ful to 20th Century-Fox. It's re-| jimals, Rex Harrison and 200/rials sprung up." }other humans, a few residents | | |ducer Arthur P. Jacobs decided | | | stroy a dam which the film|bridges, anti - aircraft sites, company built to make the vil-|ferry landings and nine missile jlage look like a fishing port.|/or radar sites. | |They were charged with "con- Then the disapprovals came.|spiring to create a public mis-/1,592 sorties in South Viet Nam, | Keresbord Wors wick, who | chief" and released on £50) 44 more than flown the previous | moved here from London, called | ($150) bail. New York. | Rio de Janeiro -- Fernando |Lobo, 69, Brazil's first embas-| sador to the Organization of American States and OAS pres- identfrom 1958 to 1960. Baltimore--Dr. Paul M. A. Linebarger, 53, internationally known expert on far eastern affairs and psychological ext "Ww 5 ater rate. | fare. fh tee Nassau, Bahamas--Sir Syd-| made the village. It now looks | ney Oakes, 39, a sports car en- like it did years ago--before all|thusiast who was the son of the signs and thé television ae-| Canadian gold millionaire Sir} Harry Oakes; in an automobile | accident. | Mrs, Thomas, a former owner | of the entire village, now owns | six houses here and the nearby mianoe' house, Yanks Destroy a tent cad nay eet 2a Onl Sites | 74 Celina Street FOR THE FINEST Custom and Ready Made DRAPES In the latest Shades ond Pobrits -.) 5 4: S00 osc s Mé&C DRY GOODS & DRAPERIES DRAPERY TRACKS EXPERTLY INSTALLED 723-7827 restcett the signs and the TV aerials. | They erected a huge antenna in| SAIGON (AP) -- U.S. Air in| | North Viet Nam in missions last} »|week, the U.S. command re-| {| Ported today. Pilots also hit 34) lother storage areas. : | Pilots said they set off pers ; 1 " 90 explosions and started 125} manners Cais. Connie. | fires with their bombs and rock-| Sir Ranulph Twistleton-Wyke-| ets in flying 356 missions. ham-Fiennes, a 22 - year - old| Strike pilots also claimed as baronet, and three friends, were| destroyed or damaged numer- | charged with attempting to de-|ous barges, buildings, trucks, | "It cost us about $80,000," said Fleischer, "and we've se | } The air force flew a record| 'week which was the record. Continental French Buffet Hicwy RECOMMENDED Che Rib Room Will Be Closed Sundoys For The Summer Served Daily 11:30 - 2 p.m, -- 5 to 8 p.m. GENOSHA HOTEL BUT 25-CENT HAIRCUTS BACK DON'T LOOK NOW, MISTER! WEST LORNE, Ont. (CP) much off the regular $1.25 | The day of the 25-cent haircut rice is purely business, he has returned--to Roy Haus- says. CONFIDENCE ! er's barber shop in this town The only other full-time bar- about 30 miles southwest of per in West Lorne is James London Lawrence. The cut-rate cul rate ap- "T want to close all day COMFORT ! plies only on Wednesdays at wednesday," said. Mr. Hau- Mr. Hauser"s shop, but even on Mondays and Tuesdays the price is only 50 cents, ser, 'but he (Mr, Lawrence) doesn't want to. Something's got to give." "It's been quite a while wa I cut ar for 25 cents," "At 25 cents he has to work 1. CONFIDENCE --k said Mr. Hauser, who has real hard to make $1.25 an receiving the best been in the business for 39 hour and I have enough to do paid more often. years, Wednesday mornings,' Mr. The reason he has cut so Lawrence said. 2. CONVENIENCE -- } pany, 4. SAVE WITH... Now Is The Time To Order Your Winter Fuel On Premium Quality ave FUEL OIL PHONE 668-3341 DX FUEL OIL | Serving Oshawa - Whitby.- Ajax and District Central <n The 4 C's of Saving CONVENIENCE ! CENTRAL ONTARIO TRUST daily and all day Saturday, 3. COMFORT -- dealing with friendly people -- with a community Trust Com- & Savings Corporation 19 Simcoe Oshewa, 723 23 aes St. W. Bowmanville, 623-2527 nowing that you are rate of interest -- longer saving hours Ontario Trust St N. $221

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