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IMPROVED WITH REST _ feremonies for a 75-minute pro- MAYOR JEAN Drapeau of Montreal, considered Mr. Expo because of his work toward getting the world's fair off the ground, waves duiing closing ceremonies at Place des Nations Sun- day. At left is Premier Johnson of Quebec (CP Wirephoto) Pontiff Passes Restless Night By GERALD MILLER jschedule for the Pope including|'wo the bishops' synod, the first|/from Trois-Rivieres, Que., of Catholic lay-|/holding signs saying Merci Jean men in 10 years and a three-day| Drapeau. meeting with Orthodox Pa- VATICAN CITY (AP)--Sur- gery to correct Pope Paul's prostate ailment may be de- layed by a sudden relapse that world congress has sent him back to bed for|triarch Athenagoras. more rest and anti-biotic treat-! Athenagoras left Saturday. ment. |When the synod ended Sunday, Exhausted by one of the most strenuous months of his 52- month reign, the 70-year-old pontiff "passed a restless night with a rising temperature" Sat- urday night the Vatican said. "The new episode of fever does not cause concern," it said later, but the Pope cancelled plans to appear Sunday at the canonization of a saint and cere-| monies concluding the meeting of his world synod of 8! bishops. } The relapse put in question|9f the Pope's relapse caused) how soon he will be strong be enough to undergo the operation| 'that had been expected next} week. Rt. Rev. Giovanni Benelli cead the Pope's farewell speech to the bishons who had gathered to advise him on affairs of the Church, | Four prelates acted for the Pope at the canonization of Brother Benilde of France, 2 19th-century teacher in the Christian Brothers order. Expo 67 computer spunt out a Stream of facts and figures Sunday as it tallied the count of everything from hamburg- 000. ers eaten to ticket stubs torn over the six-month Expo pe- tors, the United States 000,000, France 8,500,000, Czechoslovakia 8,000,000 and Great Britain 5,000,000. The lines at the Czechoslo- vakian and British pavilions J 'Gun- Salute Ends Expo 1967 Show (CP)--"'Oh * whispered one woman as the sound of a 67-gun| "T feel as though someone has Liliane Azar, @¢jal closing-day | said Margaret Richer of subur- A small crowd gathered near the pavilion of Ethiopia where school girls By THE CANDIAN PRESS Seventy-seven persons died in| accidents across Canada during! (CP) -- An might have seemed the long- est but it was the Soviet Un- ion's exhibit that attracted the most visitors -- about 13,000,- By KARIN MOSER | "Everyone who passes us fs # putting his signature on the pla- MY\card," explained Luce Desaul-| ~ niers, 14. With her 15-year-old " jfriend, Joan Poliquin, she was Salute boomed out Sunday at going to turn the signs over to Expo, signalling the closedown of the 1967 world's fair. all visitors sked to leave pavilions, restaurants and the} Express as it pulled into! |Place d'Accueil, the main|everywhere, talking hostesses handed out 77 Killed In Accidents 66 Of Them On Highways The proclaiming of a saint is|the weekend, 66 on highways. | first}one of the most joyous occa-| ' : : ons in the Roman Catholic|/from 6 p.m. Friday until mid- hurch, but the announcement)night Sunday, local times, also} five accidental loom among the 200 bishopsjings, two deaths by fire, d thousands of spectators in) drownings St Peter's Basilica. The announcement was repeat- It was the Pope's second re-\¢d to a silent crowd of 20,000\deaths and one drowning while lapse since he fell ill with an|Persons who had gathered in St./Ontario had 16 killed on high- acute inflammation of the uri-|Peter's Square below the Pope's|ways, two accidental shootings' nary system Sept. 4. Doctors|@Partment for his usual Sunday|and a seven-year-old boy suffo- jeated after falling into a corn ent Beauvais, 22, both of Moose said the ailment was caused by|"00n blessing. an enlarged prostate. The inflammation was WARNED OCT, 21 His doctors had feared the re-|,; lapse. They let it be known Oct. . brought under control with rest|21 they were worried over the » and anti-biotics in September. (tiring pace the pontiff had set), Then came a heavy October | for himself. Boy Organizes Patriotic Rally WAKEFIELD, Mass. (AP)--A who organized a patriotic rally! that drew a police estimated 25,000 persons to the town com- mon says he hopes it will touch off other public demonstrations in support of U.S. servicemen in Vietnam. Paul P. Christopher The bishops clashed over the extent to which modern theolog-| accidental deaths. ical tends were endangering tra- ditional Church teaching. They also called for drastic liberaliza- tion of the rules on mixed mar- Jr. served Sunday as master of|riages. Their viewpoint coincid- gram of prayers and speeches. Christopher said he decided to ed with that of Protestants who contend that a papal concession on the subject last year did not) organize the demonstration|go far enough. after becoming "burned up" at} an anti-Vietnam protest in downtown Boston Oct. 16 when about 200 youths either burned what they claimed were *their draft cards or turned the docu- ments over to clergymen. Ib/ CAN SAVI BONDS An investment that won't let you down. Some Vatican observers be- lieve the Pope was deeply trou- bled by his role of mediator be- tween the progressives and the conservatives and did not ex- pect the outspoken frankness of the meetings. b Go-ahead people buy their. bonds at TORONTO-DOMINION * The Bank where people make the difference, two miscella-! res | John Nabenionquit, 70, of the ine T inig-\Naughton Indian Reserve near Sudbury, when struck by a car} shoot-| While walking along Highway 17) two | about 12 miles west of Sudbury. Reine Chmilowski, 20, and Lu- cette Rickard, 19, both of Kap- Seat . ,/ uSkasing, recorded 22 traffic/jided with a truck near Kapus- FRIDAY | Allan Atchison, 55, and Mrs. lVerna Nightingale, 47, both of kasing. Creek and Mrs, Jeanine Des- 93, and her son Steve Douglas, In Alberta nine persons: were| Jardins, 40, of Carlsbad Springs,|21 months, in a two-car crash|/ lled on the road, two persons| in a two-car crash near Vars, 15! on the outskirts of London. in hunting mishaps and one in| miles southeast of Ottawa. an explosion. In British Colum-} ia, nine died on the highway,|Chelmsford and his cousin Ben- one in a fire and one person|jamin The laymen's congress advo-|drowned. cated that Catholic couples be allowed to choose among the methods of birth control, plac- ing strong new pressure on the/and Newfoundland and three i pontiff. For months he had de-|Saskatchewan. layed his decision on whetherjaiso reported one fire death|ley Bay area near Sudbury. 19-year-old high school studentjartificial contraception shall be|while Newfoundland had one permissible for Catholics. Canada had 11,000,000 visi- 9,- Expo Express, the fair's free 'transit system, travelled 374,600 train miles and the Expo marina held more than 7,000 boats. There were 25,463 young- sters who. turned up at the de- partment for misplaced youngsters and the depart- happily reported that 25,463 were found. The chore of cleaning up the 1,000-site went to 165 men who removed 200 tons a day of rubbish. Each fairgoer left an average 1.28 ounces of rubbish behind. Canadians visited more than citizens of any the fair Principal Results Listed | azn. THE OSHAWA TIMES, Monday, October 30, 1967 3 HUMANS REPLACED RUSS EXPO SHOW ATTRACTS 13,000,000 |e" jtory here report Panama mon- other nation. Fifty-three per tre ticket stubs, valid for one |keyS may be replacing human cent of all visitors were Cana- night's visiting on site after volunteers in experiments with dians while the U.S. supplied each performance were used. the most deadly form of ma- 45 per cent of the population. Seven-day passports were Jaria. Drs. James Porter and A little less than $6 a person used 5.5 times each Michael Young say they have each visit was spent at the A total of 5,931.578 ham- succeeded in growing malignant fair. burgers were gobbled up by |tertian malaria in the monkeys Season passports were used fair-goers and more than 33,- jand their research indicates the 22 times each on the average 500,000 ice cream cones were [animals can, be used to study and about 480,000 Expo thea- consumed during the fair. the disease and test antimalaria drugs. RENDEZVOUS DOWNTOWN? THEN GO TO THE Montreal's mayor later. One man group and wiped his eyes with a handkerchief. There was a peculiar silence like} small ing that closed Saturday: er than juridical aspects. Canon Law--The » bishops recommended that canon law, the central body of law gov- erning Catholic religious life, be fundamentally rewritten rather than merely retouched, with emphasis on moral rath- Earlier in the day during offi-) © ceremonies, each pavilion Several youngsters passed her cathered their national flags as carrying blue banners bearing they were lowered in Place dvs the Expo symbol and the words Nations Au Revoir--till we meet again Other fair-goers carried whis- tles and streamers to them as they left the pavi- ~ lions. But no one whistled and Following the ceremonies ti) e| & crowds milled around, many of them making their way to the parked limousines where offi-/ cial dignitaries soon appeared. About 4 p.m. Everyone just walked away/men, women and children lined |quietly from the 1,000-acre site. the banks of the St. Lawrence, | of and crowded onto lights SATURDAY Douglas Evershed, 18, of Hines, of Toronto, | |when their car plunged into the! Traffic mishaps claimed four| Vermilion River about 35 miles! lives in Manitoba, one in each| west of Sudbury, of Nova Scotia, New Brunswick; Jerry Chemij, 46, of Toronto, struck in the head by a shotgun Saskatchewan shell while hunting in the Hart- Joseph Murphy, 48, of Kapus-| kasing, in a two-car crash 15 Prince Edward Island had no| miles west of Kapuskasing. Carrol McCutcheon, Not included in the survey are! Port Arthur, in a car-train colli- of | | | | REGISTRAR "C'est triste,'--it's so sad--|jammed into Place des Nations} Roger Nantel, 36, of the Place! Montreal, has been appoint- d'Accueil platforms to watch a ed Registrar of the Order hour-long fireworks display. When the fireworks stopped,| @SSistant secretary to the only the twinkling were could be seen. The 1967 world's fair lay in) April 17, jdarkness. of Canada and also deputy Governor - General. The | Order of Canada was estab- lished by the government y (CP Wirephoto) | Arthur. Howard Carmichael, 37, on the Ottawa River. southwest of London. col-; | DX -- DX -- DX -- DX -- PF RK LK BE WISE: . . . ECONOMIZE ! SAVESS FUEL OIL s Phone 668-3341 FRA RHR KH SK bishops secration of Seminaries--The approved a_ suggestion that stronger voice in deci was requested for the episcopal conferences around the world. Doctrine--The bishops over- whelmingly urged Pope Paul to issue a "positive pastoral' declaration on the "crisis of faith in the church." They voted that an interna- tional theologians commis- sion, selected by local episco- pal conferences and approved the Pope, be set up solve doctrinal problems with- | in the church A synod document on doc- trine acknowledged that '"'un- warranted innovations, false opinions and even errors" been made in Catholic doc- trine. Progressives defeated | conservatives in blocking a proposal to establish a "cata- logue of errors." Liturgy -- A_ progressive- leaning commission, headed by Giacomo Cardinal Lercaro of Bologna, submitted a port, later approved by which essentially urged a simplication of mass. Priests should have a choice of three new canons--central industrial and natural deaths,|sion at a level crossing in Port) prayers surrounding the con- }known suicides or slayings. The Ontario dead: episcopal conference to decide the best adopted form of mass James Fennell, 7, of New-| for the area. They said Mass bury, suffocated in a corn stor- age bin on his family's farm needs of modern man. near Newbury, about 30 miles should be adopted to had the bread and of; wine, the commission said. |Pembroke, in an Ottawa hospi-| The prelates favored "variety tal after being shot in the head| within unity" leaving each earlier in the day while rowing bishops seminary instructors take a od's role to enable it to make decisions binding on the year of special instruction and that priests be prepared with more up-to-date methods. They said Catholic education- ists would welcome a general director of cathechism, which would give guidelines to local episcopates on ways of teach- ing religion. Mixed Marriages--Most bishops voted to ease the church roles requiring oral promises from the non-Catho- lic partner that the children be reared as Catholics. They said "moral certainty" should be sufficient for church au- thorities, They approved giving power to local Catholic pastors to make exceptions to the gen eral rule that a Catholic' priest must perform the rite for the marriage to be valid in the eyes of the church. Peace--The 200 bishops ap pealed to major world powers to spread justice and love so that peace may flourish , church done to the heart. "From RC Bishops Synod | yn VATICAN CITY (AP)--The main results reported by the Roman Catholic bishops synod during the month-long meet- Hote! Lancaster 27 KING ST. WEST DON'T NEGLECT A SORE THROAT Even @ minor sore throot can be extremely dan- gerous to a child if neglected. It might be one of the early symptoms of rheumatic fever and this disease causes more deaths than polio did before Dr. Salk. The cause of rheumatic fever is the strepto coccus germ which can be easily identified by your physician. The: diagnosis must be as soon as possible Beginning symptoms ore the innocent looking minor sore throat, @ feeling of fatigue and mild joint pains. Don't wait for the severe stages when the sore throat develops with a high fever, sore neck glands, red and swollen joints, By this time irreparable damage may hove been YOUR DOCTOR CAN PHONE US when you need a medicine. Pick up your prescription if shopping nearby, or we will deliver promptly without extra charge. A great many people entrust us with their prescriptions. among men. May we compound and dispense yours ? Outlook for the Synod: To be continued on an_ experi- mental basis to advise the | Pope. Bishops have submitted private opinions to the Pope recommending further meet- ings. Some would like a synod meeting every two years The first meeting ended with the synod still empow- ered only to advise and not legislate. How the Pope reacts to the suggestions should indi- cate how disposed he may be eventually to widen the syn- | Stratford, in a two-car collision Maurice Besner, 18, and Laur-' at a town intersection. Mrs. Douglas Dorothy Dailey, 37 King East © MURDOCH i" © McMURTRY @ TURNEY Insurance Limited ALL LINES OF INSURANCE 728-5137 Oshewe BALANCE YOUR BUDGET AND PAY ALL YOUR BILLS WITH A SUPERIOR LOAN «ee and reduce your monthly payments by as much as half $50 to $5000 SUPERIOR FINANCE the fastest growing all-Canadian loan company 3% Simcoe St. South, 725-6541 Don Rees, Manager Daily to 5:30 p.m.; Friday to 8.00 p.ms Other evenings by appointment. 31 SUPERIOR offices to serve you | 67 LTD -- 4 DR. HARDTOP Finished in Frost turquoise. A beoutiful car. Lic. K}7146 67 LTD -- 4 DR, SEDAN | 390 67 GALAXIE -- 4 DR. HARDTOP V-8, automatic, power steering, power brakes, radio, ? tone. Lic. K11364 MacDONALD FORD SALES (Oshawa) LTD. MacDONALD FORD SALES "Where friendly people meet . AN D SAVE" CLEARANCE OF 67 DEMONSTRATORS 67 GALAXIE -- 4 DR. HARDTOP 390 -- 4 barrel, power steering, power : dics brakes, comfort stream ventilation, V-8, automatic, power steering, power automatic, radio, rear seot speakers, brakes, Finished in Burgundy with black trim, Lie. 67 GALAXIE -- 4 DR. SEDAN - 2 barrel, automatic, power V.8, automatic, power steering, radia, steering, power brakes, radio, reor seat finished Wate (waue Lie speaker. Finished in white with red oAee interior. Comfort stream ventilation. K17077 Lic. K17274 67 CUSTOM S00 -- 4 DR, SEDAN V-8, automatic brakes, radio. Lice, K16984 power steering, power "With two locations to serve you better' 520 KING ST. W., OSHAWA (Opposite Oshowe Shopping Centre) 219 King St. E., Bowmanville IMMEDIATE DELIVERY ON 1968 FORDS NOW IN STOCK! EASTVIEW PHARMACY 573 King Street East Oshawa PHONE 725-3594 Fast --- Free -- Motorized Delivery P. B. Francis, Phm.B -- J. R. Steffen, B.Se.Phm. <1] tU Ce Ue K15030 DX -- DX -- DX -- DX -- DX -- DX | Pd The public is cordially invited to COMMENCEMENT EXERCISES Saturday, November 4, -8 p.m. GUEST SPEAKER DR. G. E. WILLEY President of Durham College of Applied Arts & Technology The R. S. McLAUGHLIN Collegiate and Vocational Institute REFRESHMENTS AND DANCE WILL FOLLOW | Jalousies 'ALUMINUM OSHAWA FREE PARKING Awnings Storms -- Screens Doors - Windows Prime Windows CMHC Accepted Aluminum Siding Sliding Glass Patio Doors Aluminum for Frame and Walls For Bodies of Trailers. and Pickup Trucks Aluminum Aluminum Combination STORM-SCREEN eine DOORS "To Save Cash -- Buy Nash" Many Models to Choose from To add beauty ond comfort to your home. SEE them in our show- Pw eRe es toom NOW! Re-glazing and Peterman | SHOWROOM AND FACTORY uminum oor cad Windew 95 ATHOL STREET E. -- OSHAWA Inserts PHONE 728-1633 following times and place: DATE OF SITTINGS PLACE OF SITTINGS REVISING OFFICER His Honour Judge A. C. Hall inclusive. of the Provincial Electoral District' of (Oshawa of Wilson Road from the list. or voters so omitted, L. R. BARRAND, Returning Officer, City Hall, 50 Centre Street, Oshawa. Dated this 30th day of October, 1967. THE VOTERS' LIST ACT Notice of Sittings of Revising Officer TAKE NOTICE that sittings of the Revising Officer for the purpose of hearing complaints or appeals with regard to voters' lists to be used at the voting on December 4th, 1967, under The Liquor Licence Act in the municipality of the CITY OF OSHAWA, will be held at the TIME OF SITTINGS 2:00 . to 4:00 n. Wednesday, Bis /~ p.m. to, p.n a 50 Centre Stree 7 5m. to 9:00 p.m. November 15th, 1967 Oshawa are Standard Tine) CLERK OF REVISING OFFICER L. R. Barrand, AND TAKE NOTICE that the lists to he so revised ore the official lists for each polling subdivision (Nos. 10 to 21 inclusive, 33 to 41 inclusive, 64A to 69 inclusive, and 94 to 135 as prepored and certified by the Provincial Revising Officers for the soid polls including the additions and revisions. These polling subdivisions are in the areas annexed by the City in 1922 and 195! and apply to those Parts of the City south of Bloor Street, west of Park Road, north of Rossland Road and east AND FURTHER TAKE NOTICE that any voter who desires to complain that his name or the mames of any person or persons entitled to be entered on the said list have been omitted from the same, or that the names of any person or persons who are not entitled to be voters have been entered thereon, may.on or before the 15th day of November, 1967 apply, complain or appeal to have his name or the names of any other person or persons entered on, or removed AND FURTHER TAKE NOTICE that such appeals must be by notice in writing in the prescribed form, signed by the complainant in duplicate and given to the Clerk of the Revising Officer or left for him at his office at City Hall, 50 Centre Street, Oshawa AND FURTHER TAKE NOTICE that any time prior to the sittings of the Revising Officer, any voter whose name. is omitted from the list as prepared by the enumerotors, or any.person who has knowledge of the fact that the name or names of any voter or voters have been so omitted, may so inform the Returning Officer in writing, stating the names and addresses of the voter HIS HONOUR JUDGE A. C. HALL, Chairman of the Election Board for the County of Ontario County Court House, Whitby. paleee,