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FARNHAN 677â€"4080 10:00 A.M. â€" 4: 30 P.M. VICKERS DIVISION 50 VISIT 58. â€" Services 45. _ Help Wtd. Male & Female ~* Any work or repairs around your home, apt. or property. 247â€"1286 â€" 241â€"8163 REPAIRS â€" ALTERATions Metro Lic. PH 57 Norman C. Chapman 363 Blackthorn Ave. PLUMBING oDD JOB MAN 653â€"7758 58. â€" Services 51. For Saleâ€"Cars & Trucks New ceilings and repairs, shaling basement walls refinished in cement. Carpentry repairs, floor tiles Eavestroughsâ€"Cleaned, Repaired. Easy monthly payments. No interest. HAL STADE 767â€"4842 PAINTING and decorating, inside or outside work. Paper _ hanging, free estimates. CH1â€"1407. Toronto "Key. Man" is now residing‘ in your area, and can give 24 hrs. repairs, _ key d uy p l ic a t ion, . mailbokx installations. Painting & Decorating LIMITED TIME OFFER â€"ommunity Locksmith Attention‘ â€"Ceilings â€"Repairs, Large or Small â€"Fast, Clean, Reasonable Interior painting and paperhanging, exterior painting our speciality POST HOUSE TRAVEL BUREAU Why Not Join One Of Our Canadian Escorted T ours? No Service Charge HU 3â€"2945 MacDonald & Sons LE 6â€"5128 PLASTERING Heating & Plumbing 2402 Bloor St, West 767â€"5401 DUNE BUGGY KIT ... ... ... . $2785. (Reg. $349.) GT. AVENGER KIT . . . . . e s . $595. (Reg. $795.) s SAVE 10% TO 50% ON ALL VW & BUGGY ACCESSORIES R. B. IRWIN EQUIPMENT LTD. 1649 Weston Road 248â€"6217 Knox Latimer Plastering THE WESTON TIMES 51. _ For Saleâ€"Cars Ceramic Tile. Reasonable. 769â€"8280. PLASTERING, Stucco and 1 pound shrimp, shelled, cleaned and cooked 1 orange, peeled and sliced 1 cup fresh tangerine secâ€" tions 1 quart torn chicory Orange Chili Sauce 61. _ Notices CAT, Siamese _ male, jewelled collar, Islington â€" 7933. Toss. together shrimp, orange slices, tangerine sections and chicory. Serve with Orange Chili Sauce. Makes 4 servings. Orange Chili Sauce: & cup chili sauce Va teaspoon grated orange rind. Combine chili sauce and orange rind. Rexdale Typewriter Rentals special rates for students _ by week or month Sales & Service Free delivery 742â€"2404 [ 1 encloss Mail Subscription of $7.00 per year in Canada. ) Other countries $9.00 per year. ) Please deliver by carrier. FRESH TANGERINE SHRIMP COCKTALIL YES.... X» TY I Would {" ~)é% like To *# l e Subscribe ;/( }‘l ï¬â€˜!; WESTON TIMES 241â€"52 1 1 n area, reward. 247â€" Services & Trucks 2189_Wesion Rd. â€" Clip Here â€" An official receipt will be mailed to you. "I tell you, Al, it‘s just a foolish thing to do. You come up for reâ€"election next year. If word of this ever leaks out, you won‘t poll enough votes to carry your own nei&hbor- hood. Go through with this and you‘ll be very dead poliâ€" tically, very dead." _ ____ _ _ Al Barton frowned sli%lhfly and rocked back in his chair, hearing the familiar squeak. "Before I leave office, I aim to oil this chair at least one time. Probably on my last day." He rose, wearily, pulled a cigar from his breast pocket andg lit it carefully. Then he turned to face the man across the desk. "I know how right you are, Bill. You‘ve always been right. I can‘t remember a piece of bad advice from you. Not one. In twenty years, you havé never steered me wrong. You are probably dead right this time, too. But, I can‘t help myself." Of late years this Yule event has beentied in with an appeal in behalf of sick and disabled youngsters. The response has become very generous. A staff of very many people handle all the details of the "Carols By Candlelight" program. "Do you think it would be the same if the shoe were on the other foot? You know it wouldn‘t be, just as you know my name is Bill Blair." On Christmas Eve in Melbourne, Australia, a vast crowd assembles to sing the season‘s favorite carols. In recent years over 300,000 have been on hand. This "Carols By Candle light" festival is the world‘s largest Christmas carol "sing".. It is a delightful spectacle, for every singer carries a lighted candle. Picture those tiny liihts glowing in the darkness while that vast chorus rises to the stars. It is one of Yule‘s most thrilling presentations. is % s Everybody comes, regardless of race, religion, or social position; every â€"singer has a candle to show against the darkness. For such a large gathering, there have to be Business like preparations. Candles and candleholders are orderedfls\early as March, to make sure the supply will not give out the Ttast minute. Bill Blair headed for the door. He paused, the door half opened. "I‘ll write the headline for you: Mayor holds secret rendezvous with fugitive mobster. It doesn‘t sound very pretty." . Al sat down in the chair again. "I‘m going to take my chances, Bill. And, I think things will be all right." Alone now, Mayor Al Barton picked up an envelope from the desk. He removed a frayed piece of paper, yellow with age. He read it slowly, aloud: TWENTYâ€"FIVE WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 24, 1969 YEARS FROM THIS DATE, December 24, 1945, the belowâ€" signed members of Company B shall meet at Casey‘s Bar (or, if Casey‘s shall no longer exist) at the nearest refreshâ€" ment stand to the west gate limits of Camp Springham, for the sole purpose og hoisting one egg nog in memory of the hardy times we have had toâ€" gether and to mark the anâ€" niversary of our last night toâ€" gether as comradesâ€"inâ€"arms." Most of the signatures were illegible. But he could make out his own and that of Harold Lancer, now familiarly known to the press, the public and the underworld as "Lucky." Beneath the signatures, in fresh, erratic penmanship was an added message: "Casey still exists. I‘ll be there, if only long enough to shake the hand of an old friends" Al looked at his watch. Four hours until plane time. He turned his attention to the papers on his desk. Al took the note. It was adâ€" dressed to the FBI and the handwriting was familiar. It said:"Hear you‘re looking for me. I‘ll give myself up to my old Army sergeant. A man I respect for being all the things I haven‘t been able to be." It was signed Lucky Lancer. 4 Casey‘s Bar was alive with activity. Al sat alone, looking out across the crowd. No sign of Hal, or any of the others. Or, were they here and changed so much in twentyâ€"five years that he did not recognize them? No, he would know them. The sound of a chair scraping across the floor brought his attention to his own table. A stranger, middleâ€"aged, wellâ€"dressed. "Are you Al Barton?" "Yes, do I know you?" "No. Name‘s Jackson. FBI. Read this." Al returned the note. Jakeson put it in his pocket. "We had a telerhone contact since this note. It warned that LuckJ' wouldn‘t show unless you did, and insisted that your name be kept out of any news reports. We think he‘ll show, and we intend to live up to the bargain." id Al smiled, "I‘m sure he‘ll show." And he rose to his feet to 5reet the bl%; smiling man striding through the crowded tables with a glass of nog in each hand. "Merry Christmas, Hal," he said, knowing that it would be so after all. L