bo ga Sli 2 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Mondey, November 16, 1959 CHURCHILL LEAVES HIS OLD SCHOOL Sir Winston Churchill leans on his cane as he leaves his old school, Harrow, to the sing- ing and cheering of its stu- dents. Occasion for the visit was the school's annual sons' night -- an event the former British Prime Minister never the anti - misses. Churchill studied at the school in Harrow, England, in the 1890's. ~AP Wirephoto | Apples From Whitby Tops TORONTO (CP) -- McIntosh) GRAIN, SEED JUDGING epples from the Red Wing Or-| Results in the grain, seed and] GUELPH (CP)--A federal civil hip hand, Nels Thi- chard, Whitby, were judged best hay judgings for individuallservant rally here Sunday called ll leadership pa, Neis in the class for a box of any variety at the Royal Winter Fair, The reserve went to Smart Brothers of Collingwood, who also took the Tyrrell Trophy for the best 45-tray lot of any va- riety. James Richardson of Walker-| serve chamoinnshins in turnips. PERCHERON WINNER In Percheron judging Saturday. Justamere Stylish Stella, owned] by Victor E. Cookson of Bow- manville was acclaimed grand champion mare. classes included: Six-rowed barley; Grand cham- pion, Stoskopf Brothers, Mitchell, York; Reserve, J. E. French, Mitchell, York. Pea: Grand champion, George h Hespeler' Ch Nor N. | serve, Harry N. 'Gorseline, De- Wiovestile, black wax pencil Soybean: Grand champion, W.| R. Battie, Stalles, Hora-ay; re-| serve, Jack McKillop, Dutton. | Sweet corn: Grand champion, | Other horse judging results in- Sylverster H. Brant, Picton, cluded: Single pilot, Mr. and Mrs. Smith, Brampton; 2. The Pilot,|grass, {golden cross bantam, harness pony: 1. Co-| Hay: Grand champion, Thomas MPs, Alfred Hales from Welling- Norman §, Bowman, Stroud, legume and ton South and William Anderson Resolutions By Civil Servants BATTLE OF WORDS By ARCH MacKENZIE Canadian Press Staff Writer SUDBURY (CP) -- A bitter la- bor family squabble to be settled by ballot here Tuesdav has im- plications far beyond the in- volved membership of Local 598 of the International Union of Mine, Mill and Smelter Workers (Ind.) . Whoever forms a new execu- tive will decide the future action of the 26,000 - member national Mine - Mill union, bounced from organized labor affiliation 10 years ago on grounds the leader- ship was Communist-dominated. Results will show whether Lo- cal 588, with 16,000 members claimed, will continue to follow Communist reform normally were filled by acclama- tion drew perhaps 3,000 voters. Both sides express confidence, al- though Gillis people conceded that it looked bad r, STRIKE UNDER SOLSKI It was under Solski's leader- ship that Mine-Mill called its three-month strike against the International Nickel Company in September last year. Practically everyone except Mine-Mill lead. ers regarded the strike as having been ill-timed. Its repercussions are attributed with helping Gillis oust Solski. Because of the strike, last No- vember's elections were held over until March. In contrast to nearly all previ- ous elections in 598's 15 - year history, the current campaign has been a battle of words that willingness of the Canadian La-|ihas spread well beyond the con- bor Congress to take back at fines of the several union halls least part of Mine-Mill, one of|in the district. the largest Canadian unions barred from affiliation. RESULTS WEDNESDAY Results of the vote are ex- pected to be known Wednesday. It has been a no-holds-barred campaign with campaign pitches geared on both sides to the mul- tiple ethnic entities in the huge International Nickel Company workings in the Sudbury area. One key figure is miner Don Gillis, 45, a Cape Bretoner who ousted the old guard in a sur- prise election result last March and who seeks re-election with a slate of 16 other anti-Communist supporters. Gillis rode to victory over Mike Solski on dissension springing from a prolonged and y strike last year against Inco, but even his closest sup- porters agree that other issues now prevail. |for an act of Parliament to give {them the right with their employer--the govern- hault, a personable, persuasive former local president who re- do battle with he Gillis forces. 'ment, | Gillis followers estimate he has a departments from Hamilton, | Kitchener, Waterloo, Galt and this area unanimously adopted a| resolution calling upo the na-| tional joint action committee of the Civil ServiceAssociation tol recommend and obtain the ne-| cessary act. { It would Include the right of collective bargaining, conciliation| and arbitration. | The meeting, attended by two, Dr W. C. Bovaird, Brampton:| Small seeded legume: Grand protest to Finance Minister Clipper's First, Dickson's Pony champion, Lt.-Col. G. C. Reeves, Fleming asking that the Civil Farm, Woodstock. Pair of harness ponies: of D bar D, Dickson's Pony | Farm; 2. Indiana's Commander A, McMillan, Dalkeith, timothy. Duke and Cedargrove's Slight Grass classes: Reserve, Myles Advance, Mr. and Mrs. J. L Innes, Stratford. Pair harness ponies: 1. Christ. mas Eve and Pilot Model, Mrs. Elgin Armstrong, Brampton; 2. King's Madonna and King's Bandolier, Mr, and Mrs. Matthew MacDougall, Erin. Palomino stallion: 3. Belve- dere's Baron, Earl H. Forrest, Listowel, Tandem, harnese ponies: 1. Dickson's Pony Farm. Lightweight working hunters: 3. Cladeboy, E. H.* Cudney, Wi- nona. Middleweight working hunters: | 3. Khoranette, Dr. R. L.. Tre leaven, Woodstock. Corinthian working hunter: 3, Khoranette' Dr. R. L. Treleaven. Single trotter: 1. Lady Lee, W. H. Lindsay, Campbellcroft; 2. Jenny Lee Harvester, Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Wright, Listowel; 3. Vanity Todd J., L. L. Thibeau- | | | of newspaper says he has received |cight letters of protest against a front-page hrance Day which referred to the University Article Protested TORONTO (CP) -- The editor the University of Toronto article on Remem- ting first murder and then suicide." Sam Ejzenstat, who wrote the article in The Varsity, said one letter from a wmiversity profes- sor demanded the students' ad- ministrative council take action. war dead as "poor bewildered beasts deluded into rood The article refers to the words, "Take these men as your ex- amples," carved in a memorial Gen. Graham £37 Appointed deau, Markdale. Bath, Viking birdsfoot trefoil; re. Service Commission report on| L serve, L. Dixon, Mono Road, al-|civil service salaries be made Clipper'e First and Cardinal Lee|falfa, public. unanimously passed a resolution| that Guelph and district civil servants would not go on strike, would not march on Ottawa, would not have a slowdown movement and would not refuse to buy Canada savings bonds as means of backing wage increase demards. Another resolution said the province of Ontario should sup-| port wage demands of civil serv-| ants. E. T. Harshman, executive- secretary of the Hamilton joint action committee, said "the prob- servants are granted the same] rights as other Canadian citizens who are protected from un- {lateral action of their employ- ers." The Civil Service Commission shouldn't be pushed to a level which might bring the return to political patronage, he said. Mr. Anderson said government employees must be loyal to the government. "It's disturbing to be in Ot- tawa and to hear the talk by the civil service about the Conserva- tive party," he said, United States Army training pamphlet which describes ways of killing with bare hands. The Varsity article is entitled To New Job A Manual for Death. which they passed and for which TORONTO (CP) -- Lt. - Gen they were trained has disquali- fied them as examples," the ar- | Howard Graham, former chief of| staff of the Canadian Army, has| ticle says. It goes on to quote from a been appointed president and | general manager of the newly- Canada The industrial association has| been esablished to encourage| economic development through Canadian Press Staff Writer low-cost transportation on the St.| Lawrence Seaway and the Great tion department has launched a akes Another objective is a eam- Canada next year of British im- paign agains' tolls on shipping migrants with skills and profes-|job and keep their capital intact using the Welland Canal. sions. | Directors appointed by the as-| An immigration department of- sociation include A. A. Schmon|ficial says every effort is being and J. B. Jones, the Ontariolexerted by immigration officers Paver Company Limited, Thor i the United Kingdom to attract as many spitable British immi- TOUR ORGANIZER grants as possible in 1960. Gen. Graham has served as 8 The drive is being made, he regular soldier in the army andigaiq, in the light of an antici- the militia. He was organizer of pated buoyant economy next the six - week Canadian Royal year. This was expected to result Tour lasi summer. in a demand by many employers The 61-year-old general, who for most types of workers, ex- took over as army chiefs from cept those in unskilled categor- Lt.-Gen. Guy Simonds in Septem. joo ber, 1955, and retired three years There already is evidence, he later, enlisted in the army as an/gaid, of some shortages of skilled infantry private in 1916. workers However, this was not He left the army in 1919 as a/the case with respect to unskilled staff sergeant and became a workers and no attemnt would be lawyer. In 1933, a He age of 35,| vod to speed the flow of this he was appointed a king's coun-| sel and the next year was elected] 9 smmigtast sexi year. mayor of Trenton. NO UNSKILLED At the outbreak of the Second| The department feels there will World War, he was a major inibe no shortage of unskilled work- the militia, later commanded thelers in 1950. The official sald that Hastings and Prince Edward|to encourage arrivals of immmi- Regiment and in 1943 took overigrants In this category would be command of the 1st Canadian In- vnfair to the Immigrants and to fartry Brigade from Gen. Sim-|the Canadian labor market. formed Great Lakes Watermeys| S 111 ] W Development Association, it was ki k announced Sunday. | e or ers By JOHN E, BIRD | With skills who want to migrate ns |to Canada are being told that OTTAWA (CP)--The immigra-|all of them will find it possible Seeks | vice-president on the Gillis --about the same as themselves --and that perhaps 12,000 of Lo- cal 5968's huge membership or 75 per cent will vote Tuesday. Don McNabb, running again as slate as opposed to the unitv slate sponsored by Thibault, says pre- vious elections in which positions His opnonent is an old mine- In previous years there usually was announcement of an election day and afterwards announce- ment of the result, with a mini- mum of fanfare. More often than {not, Thibault or Solski were re- turned by acclamation. Ever since the Gillis slate took office and called in Alistair Stew- art of Winnipeg to audit the lo- cal's books, union business has to a large extent been public business. Stewart, in reporting on his au- dit, which he said disclosed sev- |cral irregularities in money |handiing sharply criticized the |Solski regime. National president | Thibault set up a fact - finding |committee to examine the Stew- |art audit. EXCHANGE INSULTS The committee complained of {lack of co-operation from the Gil- |lis - led local officers and also from Stewart, who would have nothing to do with the committee, of negotiating|signed as national president to|noyartheless, it came up with a [printed report which tore the Stewart audit to shreds. The re- Representatives of all federal hard core of 400 loyal supporters) "\ muinauitss fact « finders made little impression on the| Gillis executive, but over the months it did bring many ex- changes of insults between Gillis and Thibault and sometimes Sol- ski, a picture unprecedented in Mine - Mill annals here, where |intra-union battles generally re- Canada's Jumping Team eres ie on Tries For 3rd Victory TORONTO (CP) Working show to investigate Canada's pro- Sudbury Election Stirs Mine Workers mained within union ranks and a "brothers - in - arms" ap- proach. invariably presented to the public. Mill affairs entered the picture a few months ago in the person of Alexandre Boudreau, a pro- fessor at the University of Sud- bury, who rarely misses a chance to denounce communism, in or out of union ranks. . The old Mine-Mill leaders be- came prime targets, since they already had a Communist-tinted background. The union was ex- pelled from the oid Canadian Congress of Labor 10 years ago for alleged Communist leanings, among other things, and Thibault ie barred from entering the United States. West coast Mine- Mill officer Harvey Murphy is an avowed Communist. LEADERS NON-COMMITAL Thibault, Solski and other lo- cal leaders never deny or admit Communist leanings, but invari- ably fall back on such state- ments as "the racé, creed, color or religion of a worker is never questioned in our union, which cperates in a democratic man- ner." A factor unexpected in Mine-| in September Editor Of Moscow Paper Fired MOSCOW (AP) -- The editor of the newspaper Evening Mos- cow has been fired for major journalistic oversight -- he did not get around to printing the news of the launching of the Soviet rocket that hit the moon "This serious political mis- take was not accidental," sald the monthly magazine Soviet Press in reporting the incident. "The editorial board of the newspaper has not displayed the necessary operativeness and sharpness in reflecting events of domestic and interna. tional life." The dismissed editor is A. A. Fomichev. The complaint about not carrying the launch. ing news was made at a meet. ing of the citv committee of the Communist Party. A study of the files shows the newspaper has been listing K. A. Tolstov as editor since Oct. 29. He formerly was a deouty editor. Evening Moscow is a paper everyone in town reads for di vorce news, television and the- peratively lively coverage of events not covered by the ser- fous - minded government and Communist Party papers, Iz- vestia and Pravda. atre programs and for com- |basis. Quebec Session: QUEBEC (CP) -- The Quebec legis! opens Wednesday and during the session the provincial government proposes to correct long-standing difficulties in the fields of education, labor and municipal administration, The new session promises to be one of the busiest and most significant in years. But it will lack the color pro- and school officials, levy cla taxes with a numbe¥ of hs At regent private bil} ations Just rival 'to, lature each time Be make a move in: 3. Legislation giving municipal 2 Ss new salaries of their d deal time want to these fields. 4, establishing vided by Premier Maurice Du- plessis, whose oratory and politi- cal strategy brought sparkle and fire to legislature sessions for more than 20 years. Mr. Du- plessis did Sept. 7. Hon. Paul Sauve, Quebec's new , is expected » vel a staggering program a-| ig It is Pg be the fourth and probably last session of the 25th legislature elected in 1956. FOUR SEASONS PROMISE HOT DEBATE The 17-member Liberal opposi- tion is sald to be planning some lively debates. Expected highlights: 1. Legislation to wipe out the chronic financial difficulties of the province's universities and place provincial gov ernment ED WILSON SEZ: FREE . , . S-piece Kitchen or are ot ny iy Tay, Si {WILSON FURNITURE CO. 20 CHURCH STREET grants to them on a statutory 2. Legislation meeting most de- mands of the Quebec Federation of Labor (CLC) and the Cana- diag | and Catholic Confederation of Remember for 59ers, the doughty band of Michigan pi- oneers who set out to home stead in Alaska last spring? They're facing their first win- ter in the far north. Here's a report on how they're getting along--and some hard facts ior other would - be home- steaders. By WILLIAM TOBIN TALKEETNA, Alaska '(AP)-- Generous supplies of home - can- ned food, including porcupine, | caribou and moose meat, line the | shelves. | There are 65 stacks of home- grown potatoes on hand and plenty of green vegetables. Snow will soon blanket three other homes -- converted Quon- set huts and worn house trailers with canvas lean-to extensions. is homestead country, wuere the Michigan 59ers--what remains of them -- are buttoning up for their first Alaskan winter of 35-below-zero temperatures. "If I'm real good," says pretty steadily into top condition for thi: gress in the research, production Bertha Donald son, wistfully, tional jumping team goes out for its third straight victory in to- night's individual puissance event| at the Royal Winter Fair. Saturday Canada's Tom Gay- second in an 1l-jump, take-your- own-line event. Scoring on total seconds for each knockdown: Canada now leads the five {teams with 13 points. The United * States is second with four, Ar- gentina and Mexico tied with two events on the schedule. GAYFORD FAULTLESS All Canadian riders followed the same route over the compli- cated course, Gayford, riding with complete confidence, had a clear round for a 43.8 - second total. night's fastest time, 37.3 seconds, but was penalized for one knock- down. Argentina's Dr. Hugo Ar- and Brazil trails with a single'; lem will be solved if the civil | point. There are 11 international? poultry industry, Other visitors included 140 dele- gates to the 28th national 4-H Club Week here. The members, representing the 10 provinces, ford on Blue Beau and Jim Elder|were chosen for their excentional| riding Isgilde placed first and service in leadership and com- NO REGRETS munity "service, | 's i -'and rketing b f the "I'm going to get a new wash- The 200 - strong rally also 1200 Olympics, Canada's interna- and marketing branches ol e going tub and an axe for Christmas." Ten adults and three children are left from the original group lof 42 persons who arrived last {March from Michigan to carve new lives in Alaska. | The modern day pioneers at- {time, riders were penalized eight | mmmemmsmm : a ' >; bd --o- Elder went round in the . * % bor rambide, riding Final, was third. He took 47 seconds for his clear round. Gayford's victory won him the § GOLDEN Sash as leading rider in ig this yeat's international jumping in North America. The previous § holder was the U.S. team can-| tain, William C. Steinkraus, who faulted three times for a 67. second total. Coached by Major Anatole Pieregorodski, the Canadian team is aiming at an Olymnpic| gold medal. The Canadian Olym-| pic equestrian committee al-| ready has raised $75,000 to pay, for travel' training and new horses. | RUSSIAN. WATCH Watching the horse show Sat- ot immediately to obtain thelr type drive to encourage the flow to of work. They are being advised|than 5,000 entries in the poultry g8 that they should accept another until they can find work In a job. for which they have been trained. The British immigrant, the of- ficial said, will find that the key to success in Canada is willing- ness to accept any type of work. Canada will face two forms of competition next year in efforts to attract British immigrants and suitable newcomers from other countries. DETERS EMIGRATION The main obstacle will be the improved economic position of Britain and west European coun- tries. This increased prosperity, plus adverse publicity about Can- ada in some sectors of the Brit- ish press, is having a deterrent effect on emigration to Canada. The second problem is an in- creased effort by Australia to at- tract immigrants, especially from the UX. The Australian immigra. tion target next year is 125,000, an increase of 10,000 from this year. urday were four high - ranking Russian agricultural experts, headed by M. Badanov, the So- viet Union's chief poultry officer. The visitors toured the more Two Canadians In Death Pact JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (CP)-- Two Canadians, a man and a woman, were found dead in each other's arms near here Saturday, apparently killed in a suicide Y \¢ 5 Alaskan Homesteaders Face Tough Operations tracted nation - wide attention on their trouble-plagued motor cara- van to the 49th state. Now, after [six months, how do they feel? "No regrets -- not yet," says |Mrs. Marino Sik, whose husband is head of the remaining group. After initial troubles in settling on a location, 59ers took homestead land 10 miles west of here, across the ice-choked Sus- litna River 80 miles north of An- |chorage. About 20 other settlers also live in the area. No bridge spans the wide river. There is no electric power--the |onlv light in midwinter darkness |will come from lanterns and can- dles. No telephones serve the homesteaders. Dynamite blasts are the only newly - built cabins of hand-cut|means of signalling for -aid in birch logs and a handful of/case of emergency. The explo- |sions, heard in Talkeetna, alert |bush pilot Don Sheldon, who has itlown several missions for the 59ers -- proof that the system | works. FUEL COSTLY | Mrs. Donaldson's husband, Ger- ald, 46, a carpenter, is working on a 28- by 24-foot cabin, Mean- {while they live in a house trailer |sparingly heated with an oil (stove. Fuel costs $16.50 a barrel |plus $7.50 air freight. A wood stove is used for cooking. But life is easier since Donald- son dug a well. "It's good to have water," says his wife. "We melted snow for so long at first." A few of the original 5%rs did [return to Michigan after initial |discouragements over finding suitable land to start new farm. ing careers. Others settled in the more pop- ulous homer area, on the Kanai peninsula so uth of Anchorage. Others became residents of An- | chorage, taking up routine city | SISTER ANTONIA 'NO SPECIAL DESIRE' pact. The bodies of William Clare Joyce, 30, of Napanee and Bev- erly Arlene Blakeley, 29, of Pic- ton were found in a car parked in a wooded area, with a rubber exhaust hose through a window and all the windows closed. According to sources in the TORONTO (CP) -- A nun who Picton-Napanee area, both had|gi died architecture b it the ( Sister Makes Mosaic Wall The nuns were in Vienna when, a heen missing from their homes yo. on the curriculum. not be- s entered Hun-| gary, and they could not return) for about two weeks, | Both were married and had two children each, all grade schoool age, Joyce had worked as a ca: | in G last summer, Before that he ran! boys of | |cause of any special desire for it, now is making a mosaic wall for a Roman Catholic church she |also designed. Sister Antonia, of the Sisters of 1 since our Lad order in Toronto, de- signed St. Michael's Church in Immigration to Canada thisan automobile azency in Napa- Windsor, Ont., and now is work- year is expected to total about 105,00 , as against 124,851 in 1958, nee where he still lived. onds. As a brigadier, he won the Dis- sought by the department are British immigrants being which was average for the post- in Picton where her husband war period. No target has been Robert worked in a hardware] ing on mosaics for the inside and Mrs. Blakeley was a housewife outside walls of the church en- trance. Pastor of the church she de- to their native land. "My brother. was already in | Canada," said Sister Antonia, "so| we came here eight years ago and stayed with the Sister of the Holy Name until we learned to| speak English." | The church itself was com- pleted in 1054. Made of yellow brick, it is 120 feet long, and seais 500. Sister Antonia consid- | tinguished Service Order twice, those able to adapt themselves first in Sicily and later at the to the Canadian environment, es- Mora River battle in Italy. He pecially this country's work meth- came home in 1944 because of ods. illness. Potential British immigrants| set for next year but an immi- eration department official said the door is wide open for suita- unskilled categories. store. signed is Rev. Colomon Moullion, |ers her best work is an interior Florida police sald Joyce had Sister Antonia's brother. She and|seven-foot-high mosaic represent. was no baggage in the car. - y $179 In his pockets when her sister, a nun of the same or-/ing St. Michael. {ble immigrants, except those inthe bodies were found. There der. studied art in Vienna and Budapest. | symbols. The ceiling has 100 souares with ecclesiastical] | occupations. |LOTS OF LAND |" Millions of acres are still avail- |able in Alaska under the home- |steading act, which permits a man to take over a 160-acre tract {for the cost of administrative 4 |fees. During a period of years-- the time limit varies -- he can earn title to the land if he turns it into a successful farm. However, staggering obstacles {| block the road to success in the venture. State officials reluc- [tantly predict a ma jority of would-be homesteaders will wind |up discouraged, jobless and pos- sibly on' relief. James W. Wilson, acting direc- tor of the state's division of ag- riculture at Palmer, in the heart E of Alaska's lushest farmland, puts it bluntlv: | "People with no better than av- erage ability and. with limited fi- nancial backing can expect to {find homesteading a very dis- couraging enterprise." He adds: | "Farming anywhere is a busi- ness requiring a sizable invest- ment. The 'free' land on the {homestead "costs about $200 an acre to clear. Unless a person knows where his investment cap- ta is coming from, he's in trou- ble." | EXPENSIVE VENTURE The federal bureau of land management gives this estimate: | "By the time the land is cleared, a home and barn built, machinery, animals and equip- GOOD FOOD Reasonable Prices LUNCH 12 70 2 P.M. DINNER ... 5:30 TO 8 P.M. HOTEL LANCASTER may have $65,000 and 10 years of hard labor invested in his under- sized tract." Even then, success isn't as- sured. Once the h der i The Best Buy In Town Wall to il floor coverings. 10,000 yori of meny - lovely gai oi al , colon, clearing ot WILSON FURNITURE CO. 20 CHURCH STREET in production, he faces the prob- lem of limited markets. The bulk of foodstuffs con. sumed by Alaska's 215,000 res- idents is shipping in from other areas. Improving the local dis- tribution is one of the big jobs facing established farmers and new homesteaders. Young Liberals Claim Campuses HAMILTON (CP)~Young Libs erals have taken over the lead- GET THE BEST For Less At MODERN UPHOLSTERING 926Y4 SIMCOE ST. N. OSHAWA RA 8-6451 or RA 3-4131 ing position at most universities in the province, a conference of Ontario University Liberal Clabs was told Saturday night. James Scott of Toronto, execu- tive director of the Ontario Lib- eral 'Association, told a meeting at McMaster University that the Young Progressive Conservative movement was slipping rapidly on the campuses. "Before Mr. Diefenbaker took over the government of Canada the Liberals were low man on the totem pole on most cam- puses," Mr, Scott said. "Today the opposite is true. The Conserv- atives have slipped and we have F. R. BLACK. 0.0. 136 SIMCOE ST. N. (AT COLBORNE) The exomination" of 'eyes and glosses. Firting of. contact lenses; Children's visual training RA" 34191 aporment bettered our position." LEAN TENDER THIN SLICED PORK LIVER LEAN BUTT PORK CHOPS LEAN Minced BEEF CLUB STEAKS Ih. TROUD! Csshcor vow Tuesday and Wednesday Only! Sensational Meat Features! 19: 5.39: ws. $1 Ib. ment acquired, a h Joyeux Noel! Frochliche Welhnachten! Vrolyk 1 Weeal Kerstf Merry Christmas! : h Swiamt! Buona Natale! No matter what longuage you speak, it's hard to be if merry ot Chri yeu fove is in the Sanatorium. Help us muke Christmas bright for cur patients in sonctorie by buying we . % CHRISTMAS SEALS - Christmas seals are being mailed out to most homes in Ontario County this wesk, Your purchase of these of health fa di 4 seals will help TB pati 4 1 and our y prog social service and rehabilitation, If you should not receive your seals, please télephane Ontario County Tuberculosis Health Association . RAndainh 3.3157 A and we will be happy to send them on to you, .