2 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Tuesdey, August 14, 1962 Nordair Seawa To Close As Planned HAMILTON (CP) -- The sea-jfurther service, the municipal-| way route flying service ofjities would have to show they Nordair Limited will be sus-|could support such a service by pended Wednesday as sched-|providing enough people to use uled, a meeting of four city)it. i civic representatives was told) To resume. the service, he Monday. added: "It is obvious some The group from Hamilton,| government aid would also be Sarnia, Kingston and Windsor|necessary, such as airport im- decided to set up a_steering| provements and reduced depart- committee to prepare informa-|ment of t ransport airport tion for later representations to| charges. the federal government. The group decided to set up| Nordair recently announced|a steering committee to decide} discontinuance of the service, what type of survey of the sea- declaring losses in 19 months, way route is needed. ion li il 'oach| : $1,000,000. ssovsiaminones jport back and representations i . |will be made to Ottawa. Monday, Hamilton Controller} 'Ald. Fred Whitehouse of Ham- Vic Copps asked the company). ; i ; lilton attacked Nordair for not ine oh were pec F geoeiy hoe revealing the airline's problems ; ; ; ;,| sooner. ti -- board' Reaping in "Every time we asked _ : things were doing, they Rowland Lafrancois, Nordair pone tine, fine' the vice-president, replied: Mesibabcei ta 3 "The, loss is so severe that we cannot afford to carry on with this service one day longer." MUST SUPPORT Mr. Lafrancois said before entertaining any thoughts of Paratroopers Drop Into BERLIN (AP)--The Western powers expected strong Soviet protests and new threats today following West Berliners' at- tacks on the Berlin wall and Russian vehicles during the first anniversary of the barricade. Rioting crowds hurled paving blocks and curses Monday night . W. New Guinea at the barricade which was be- a S ieee Se -- gun a year ago and now divides dred I 4 eh as oH -/Berlin with stone, steel, barbed pei drieae on ichgdnin: wire and military fortifications istered West New Guibea before| ah dawn foday, a Dutch military |lice repeatedly drove communique announced. screaming demonstrators It said two Indonesian planes|from the wall. flew over the Merauke area,| The crowds demonstrated scene of previous airborne in-|continously, from noon until Reinforced West German po- the wildly back vasions, while others flew near|heavy rain sent them home at Sorong, Teminaboean and Kai-/1:30 a.m. West Berlin police es- mana. vette tats veer apse eich . Merauke yy the southeast- . ern part of the territory, close} B d B k to the Papuan border, Sorong| e oulns ac is in the Vogelkop (Bird's Head) | . Peninsula, about 200 miles} With Herds northwest of Raina. (In Melbourne, the Australian | Broadcasting Commission said) On Sahara the drop involved from 400 to : 500 troops, according to Dutch} SETIF, Algeria (Reuters)-- officials in Hollandia, making it|/Thousands of Bedouin nomads the biggest invasion to date. are returning from the Sahara (In Jakarta, Indonesia Presi-|Desert to graze their herds on dent Sukarno said he hoped to/|the big pleateu area near Setif be able to announce by Friday|for the first summer since the that West New Guinea, which| start of the Algerian war nearly the Indonesians call West Irian,| eight years ago 2 was being transferred to Indo-| The plateau--the Petite Kaby- nesia "in accordance with our lie--is a coastal area of flat up- desires." {lands and almost impentrable (In The Hague, Dutch official) mountains in eastern Algeria sources declined to comment on|that the French Army never the landing. Asked about re-|could subdue during the Mos- ports that an agreement on the|lem insurrection that ended last transfer of the territory to In.|March. donesia would be signed Wed-| The area was put under a ban nesday, an official spokesman|during the war and the inhabi- said: "That is possible." tants, including entire villages, The communique issued by were evacuated by the French.| the dutch military command in|The villages were then de- Hollandia said 'the Indonesian|stroyed to prevent their being} planes were picked up by Dutch) used by the insurgent army. radar as they approached from! Roads were closed and French the Indonesian islands of Ceram aircraft fired on anyone» seen and Kei. below. CHARLESTON 0, CLEAR WEATHER EXPEC WEATHER FORECAST armer Trend ate Wednesday Forecasts issued by the Tor-,Sunny with cloudy periods Wed- onto weather office at 5 a.m.:/nesday, cool. Winds northwest- Synopsis: Fine weather northierly 15 to 25, becoming light and west of Lake Superior will) tonight. push eastward tonight and Wed-| Northern Georgian Bay, Ti- nesday into the lower Great)magami region, North Bay, Lakes. The warming trend wil!/Sudbury: Cloudy with sunny pe- edge slowly eastward to coveririods, clearing this evening, most of 'the province by late/sunny Wednesday. Cool, with Wednesday. warming trend Wednesday Lake St. Clair, Lake Erie,|Winds northerly 15 to 25, be- western Lake Ontario, Niagara|coming light tonight regions, Windsor, Hamilton,| Algoma, Sault Ste. Marie, Toronto: Cloudy with sunny pe-|Cochrane regions: Sunny with riods today. Clear tonight and|cloudy periods today and Wed- Wednesday. Cool with warming|nesday, warmer Wednesday trend Wednesday. Winds north-|Winds light today, becoming westerly 15 to 25 today, light to-|southerly 15 Wednesday night and Wednesday. White River region: Sunny to Lake Huron, southern Geor-jday. Cloudy with a few scat- gian Bay regions, London:|tered showers Wednesday, Mainly cloudy with intermittent|warmer Wednesday. Winds drizzle today, clearing tonight.|light becoming southerly 15 to- Sunny Wednesday. Cool with|day and shifting to west 15 Wed- warming trend Wednesday.'nesday. Winds 'northwesterly 15 to 25, Forecast Temperatures becoming light tonight. Low tonight, High Wednesday Eastern Lake Ontario, Hali-| Windsor 5 78. burton regions: Mainly cloudy St. 78 with a few showers today.iLondon . 75 This committee will then re-| alder-' service. West Expecting Berlin Protests y Route man said, ". . . The time to) hold this meeting and go to Ottawa was when they found out the route was failing." J. B, Adamac, Windsor city clerk, said he was here to sup- port the plan but the service was not as important to Wind- sor because the city was also} serviced by TCA. He added, however, that the convenience for business men) flying between the cities on the| seaway route was essential and} Windsor would do everything it} could to help. : | Ald, H. T. Ross of Sarnia said) | that industries there developed a policy. whereby they told their personnel to use Nordair, even) | |though some firms had t heir own aircraft. : He said because Nordair was) | vital, Sarnia industry had done} this in an effort to support the! ; timated that at the peak 10,000 people gathered before the wail, screaming, spitting and. throw-| ing paving blocks' at the barrier.| tan er ' none , : < |vessels for weeks and led to al : | eWe vevl cannot allow them| # ; ; . : jretaliatory boycott against SIU-|2'¢ status of organized labor' too near the wall,'"' said one po-; lice captain. 'They shoot over} there, and there are enough} dead already." One crowd, frustrated in its} | attempts to reach the wall, sur-| SPACE COMMUNICATION } rounded three Russian Army vehicles near Checkpoint} Soviet technician V. Niku- Charlie in the U.S. sector. The| lenkova receives flight infor- Russian soldiers were returning} mation from cosmonaut An- from guard duty at the Soviet| drian Nikolayev as she oper- | war memorial in West Berlin. | ates controls in a Moscow ra- The angry demonstrators| dio station, according to cap- hurled stones and beer bottles,)~~ ' ean ames em ae Wer tbat is Un ton Coan 1 5 S t a tio n S R e fus e To Join CBC Network shouting "Pigs" and "Dirty If space ships Vostok III and Vostok IV, which are orbiting the earth simultaneously. tion information received with this picture from Russian | news agency Tass. The station is one of the Russian monitor- ing points maintaining two- way communications with | --(AP Wirephoto radio from Moscow) via bums." West German police fi- nally freed the Soviet vehicles. At least one demonstrator was arrested. Solid Food Given | To Red Astronauts 07) sired radio stations injaction concerning the stations|Canada's English-speaking pop- MOSCOW (AP) -- The Soviet|Canada so far have refused to| which still have not affiliated or ulation, the BBG was told. Union's two orbiting astronauts|join 43 others in tying them-|require them to affiliate and) To raise this coverage per- are eating solid food heartily-- selves voluntarily into a pro-jhope for an agreement on terms centage, the CBC in its Statu- cutlets, roast veal, chicken, pie| posed new CBC radio network, later, jtory job of providing a na- and sandwiches, Tass news ag.|the Board of Broadcast Gover- DUE TO BE SCRAPPED jtional broadcasting service" has ency said Monday. nors has been told. Bs cesechie , , to rely on private stations as Inlik i . Thus the BBG was confronted} At present there are 30 pri-/network outlets. It chose the 58 Unlike their predecessors In) biti '+ wowivate stations on the CBC's!cfations -- mainly on technical space, Lt.-Col. Pavel Popovich with the possibility that it may T Darna ebrk 44 s y ! and Maj. Andrian Nikolayev|have to use its statutory power) spit "att ne tae en My grounds--to boost its coverage don't have to eat paste-like pre.|to force the 15 stations to join Both. th iggy beta gga to 90 per cent. : pared food squeezed from tubes,|the new system unless they eee systems ah ue to, Forty-eight of these stations the Soviet news agency added,|come to terms with the CBC be- be dismantled Sept. 30 as the already belong to one or the Medical scientist Georgi Aru-| ie h kc ti tyunov told Tass the previous : ° yo ne ge agp. flights of Lt.-Col. Yuri Gagarin) Dr. Andrew Stewart, | and Maj. Gherman Titov had chairman, told a public hearing) shown man could chew and|Monday that the 8 ft : sticha in Canad swallow while in a state of Would be "very happy" if the 15 tions and its 81 low-power radio| stations in Canada. weightlessness, affiliation deals could be com-/relay transmitters -- unmanned! The 58 earmarked for the net- pleted before the deadline. 'units serving small communi-| work would be required--under he said, the ties. These alone are capable of By DON HANRIGHT | they aren't, OTTAWA (CP)--Fifteen pri-| BBG will either have to. defer|reaching about 55 per cent of| costs, better programs and hook-ups. ) ' The remaining 10 board slightly improved coverage. jhave never been affiliated with The revamped network would|the corporation. In all, theie Tass said the personal tastes|! ~ } |\VESSELS STALLED }rence |Canal. lfore the scheduled Oct, 1 start|CBC strives for lower network/other of the existing CBC radio) -- governors also include 24 CBC radio sta-|are 207 privately-owned radio: ! Lakes Labor Struggle Inquiry Opens Today | By ROBERT RICE Nov, 24--Officers of CLC hold May 24--CLO President TORONTO (CP)--A fedcral,court on the charges, seeking! Claude Jodoin appeals to federal inquiry opens here today into|peace on the waterfront. government for full investiga- a tangled web of international! 1959 tion of SIU, saying a "reign of intrigue, waterfront violence. Feb. 9--The Marine Engineers terror' has. resulted from CMU- and shipping disruptions woven) Association again complains to! SIU struggle for lake suprem- around the militant struggle of/CLQ about SIU raids. acy. two rival trade unions for the, Feb. 27--Charges are heard) April-May-June -- Incidents loyalty of Great Lakes seamen.|by CLC executive council, 'of goon tactics, basebali bat Headed by Mr. Justice T. G.}| April 29--CLC council orders attacks, ship shootings and Norris of Vancouver, the indus-|SIU to withdraw from engineers intimidation reported from trial inquiry is expected tojfield, warning that it will be various lake points as ships throw new light into the semi-|suspended from CI if the edict|manned by .CMU crews face darkness shrouding the tough,|is disobeyed. 'harassment and delays. turbulent world of lake shipping) May 28 -- International SIU July 3--Informants say Can- and the unions that represent|Chief Paul Hall promises his ada has formally asked the the men who sail lake ships,|Canadian wing will conform to United States government to man lake docks and run the'CLC constitution and cease investigate reported incidents seaway locks. raids, of violence at U.S. ports involv- At the heart of the matter is) June 18--CIA° decries Hal] ing Canadian seamen and ships. the mortal feud between the|assurances as not genuine, July 5--Seaway workers re- Seafarers International Union of orders SIU suspension. fuse to handle: SIU - anned Canada, headed by American-| . 1960 ships in retaliation against born Hal C. Banks, and the) May 28--SIU fails to turn up| harassment of CMU vessels. Canadian Maritime Union, led|at CLC convention to answer, July 6--With Welland Canal by ex-SIU_ organizer Michael | edict and is expelled from con-\blocked at both ends, federal Sheehan and backed openly by/gress. government promises industrial the Canadian Labor Congress. 1961 linguiry commission, seeks This fight, brewing for! Aug. 30--Canada Labor Rela-|iMjunctions to end seaway boy- months, boiled over in April,|tions Board rules that SIU com. °°: leading to violence, threats and| mitted acts of fraud in rigging| , July 8--U.S. Labor Secretary intimidation against ships and/ballots to show Marine Engi-/Atthur J. Goldberg announces seamen who broke away from!neers Association had voted to|i@quiry into lake strife, while the SIU to join the CMU, amalgamate with SIU in 1958,/S!U promises truce in feud. Sept.' 6--Top CLC officers de., July 18--Labor Minister Starr cide to back new Canadian|@"nounces appointment of Mr. Maritime Union in effort to win] ustice Norris as one-man in- vp in) seamen from SIU, dustrial inquiry commission to > ee a ee Pcie Sept. 28--Canada Labor Rela-/iVestigate shipping disruptions . » a (tions Board is urged to investi-/4%4 labor unrest. ¢ ot Aug. as inquiry board manned ships i on Great Lakes after: union|recommends joint U.S.-Can Seaway v4 "y Wellanal/a¥ver Maurice Wright warns|dian talks to solve union juris- that "intensely dangerous" situ-|dictional dispute between CMU The seaway boycott resulted) #ton is developing. : jand SIU. in federal government action to| Oct. 13 -- Canadian Maritime Aug. 7--Norris inquiry holds launch the Norris inquiry. poy cg formally _established| organizational meeting, with The roots of the dispute go on alae Mike Sheehian| Upper Lakes Shipping, St. Law- back more than.a decade--to| : : rence Seaway Authority, Cana- 1949 when Hal Banks and the dian Labor Congress, SIU and SIU were invited to Canada tolc CMU plus five other unions scuttle the Communist-dom-| invited to participate. inated Canadian Seamen's Un-| Aug. 14 -- Inquiry formally ion in one of the bloodiest union| launched in Toronto, with plans There was harassment against CMU-manned ships and| 1962 Jan. 9---CLC formally accepts MU into affiliation. April 5--CMU gains contract| with Upper Lakes Shipping Lim- chronological 1958 Oct. 27--National Association of Marine Engineers complains to CLC that SIU is raiding Great Lakes membership. considered in preparing the Mystery Caller Sought In Rape menu, which also includes fruit, water, coffee and) fruit juices. TORONTO (CP)--Pretty, 16-)A .32-calibre bullet, fired from year-old Julian Wolanski is to|short range had passed through be buried today as police press|her heart and .lodged in her the search for a mysterious tele- spine. i6h OGRE COTES TEMP AAT het 1etont --/| vestigation The buildup should' be made|in 1951 when he was appointed The two men are expected to) " play an important role in shap- Ontario Hydro Employees Asso- ing the direction of federal in-|Ciation in its court struggle to into marine trou-|Prevent the International Broth- \bles by Mr. Justice T, G, Nor-|Thood of Electrical Workers ris, 68, Vancouver, a member|ffom wresting control. of the British Columbia Court| 1m 1958, he was counsel for a lof Appeal. the Maggy od pehaggl 2 into Mr. Dubin was hai icly| allegations at the Interna- balled publicly tional Brotherhood of Teamsters one of Canada's youngest King's| 4S attempting to gain bargain- Counsel at the age of 29. The|ing rights through intimidation. # --_...| Mr, Dubin represented the Ontario government in 1960 in a case in which the legality of phone caller who summoned her, She had been missing from factors. away from her home before shejher home since Tuesday after- : was raped and shot through the noon, when she left to keep a heart. rendezvous with a male caller N P Many of the blonde girl's|who said he was one of her ewsmen ay Grade 10 classmates are eXx-| teachers from Givens Street pected to attend the requiem'Senior Public School. The man H d T | mass at the Polish-language S!.'said he wanted to talk to he ee 0 8) re Mary's Roman Catholic Church. about a school examination. Julian's bruised and nearly; Soir : nude body was found Sunday in COULD BE ANYBODY a ditch in suburban Etobicoke.. "He may have been MOSCOW (Reuters) -- West- ern reporters here are taking a new attitude toward Soviet ~|teacher, but he could have been|"'jokes" after 'having been any man," Inspector William|caught off guard over Russia's McNeely of the Toronto homi-|launching of its fourth space- cide squad said Monday, ship, Vostok VI, Sunday. Police Monday drew a blank) The reporters were told of the in questioning some of Julian's|forthcoming launching by Soviet . . . Civil Service | Plan Revealed teachers, friends and relatives.|surces, who made a joke of it.| Continued searching of the area) As a_ result the reporters OTTAWA (CP) -- The 70,000- in which her body was found wrote off the tip as just some member Civil Service Federa- also were fruitless, Soviet banter until they learned! tion of Canada Monday made) Besides trying to run down that the spaceship was actually public its proposals for over- the mystery caller, police are! whirling round the globe, | hauling the Civil Service Act. seeking missing items of the) The confirmation came from They call for negotiation, con- girl's clothing. The body was|the Soviet news agency Tass ciliation and arbitration proce- Clad only in silk stockings and and Moscow Radio -- Russia's dures on all matters pertaining 4 garter belt. Missing are ajonly official news media, to public' service salaries and white sweater, white sleeveless working conditions. blouse, green pleated skirt and|papers, agencies and broadcast- A negotiating agency would brown flat shoes, ing companies are represented lbe established by the federal] Police believe Julian was\by correspondents in Moscow. government with full authority] Slain somewhere else, then|None of these correspondents to conclude agreements with dumped from a car on the su- was invited to see the launching! recognized associations of fed-/PUTban road near the Humberjof either Vostok III or IV and leral employees. Staff associa- River, about 14 miles northwest| officials of the foreign ministry] tions would be recognized by|° downtown Toronto. and organizations closely con-| Liaw: ' Inspector McNeely said they|nected with the Vostok project! Fred Whitehouse, federation| "ere not certain when she wasigive no information, | president, said copies of the killed nor when she was thrown! Even the launching site is se-| plan will be sent to all members| into the ditch, although they es-|cret--although it is suspected to} lof Parliament. A copy went iast imated the body had been in|be in Baikonor, in the arid des-| week to Prime Minister Diefen-|the ditch about three days. iert of Kazakhstan. | baker--along with a_ request} that he meet with civil service] AUTO INSURANCE representatives to discuss the! For Under 25 Age Group government's salary freeze. NOW... required coverage HEATING & APPLIANCES AND... With easy monthly payments spread over. 9 months. Industrial and SCHOFIELD-AKER Commercial LIMITED The established, reliable Gas 360 KING ST. WEST PHONE 723-2265 Dealer in your area. © Don Ellison @ Gerry Osborne @ Ralph Schoficld @ Reg Aker 31 CELINA ST. AMPLE FREE PARKING AMPLE FREE PARKING TED or | Kitchener Wingham .. Kitchener . Wingham .. Hamilton .. St. Catharines Toronto .... Peterborough Trenton .., Killaloe .. Muskoka .. North Bay Sudbury . Earlton .. Kapuskasing ... White River.. Moosonee .... Mount Forest ee Sault Ste. Marie... Timmins x eee ee esos Souunun TPIT 2-93 SN Observed temperatures: Low overnight High Monday Dawson. ose ss 6° 12 Victoria... 67 Edmonton . . Regina Winnipeg .*. . « « .63 Lakehead... White River... . Sault Ste. Marie Kapuskasing .... .36 North Bay . Sudbury . Muskoka Windsor London Toronto Killaloe Ottawa i Montreal We can provide at special low rates (Corner of Athol) 728-9441 More than 50 Western news-|S#4 le of 0 ited to represent some 450. sea-|for furth i i t battl 'be t 4 rther hearings in Mont- tees waaadion tabor Hls-imen on 25 ships, while SIU|real, Trois-Rivieres, St. Cathar- y charges company "locked out"|ines, Fort William and probably mainstream 'of organized labor in Canada, a rough, tough but| generally accepted member of i the CLC, the op A epee oung aw V ers central federation of trade un- ions in this country. e the SIU stepped from its tradi- Counsel Norris Holo jurisdiction over un- icensed seamen into the field i of marine engineers--a move Orawh heen Winslpeny gankie an bee ne one ot lakefront lawyers--one from Toronto, the lawyers generally teke 15 years , ederal investi-| other from Montreal--have been|to attain, STEP BY STEP for the Norris industrial inquiry | WIFE IS LAWYER Hite da the commission into Great Lakes| His wife, Anne, a successful pias shipping disruptions and labor|!awyer in her own right, was vlaaddaad |strife, sources said Monday. | @Ppointed # QC this year, Announcement of their ap-| By 1954, Mr. Dubin was pointments is expect shortly,|Credited with saving at least a its Charles Dubin, 40, a Toronto|and since then he has success- ____ |lawyer with wide-ranging inter-|fully handled many more capi- jests and a reputation as an out-|'l charges. : |standing. labor specialist, and| He spent much of his early ennett SKS Marc Lalonde, 33, a Montreal|¢areer handling labor and trade lawyer who was once executive|¥ion cases and built up such a . For Canadian \Fulton, and now is in private|Pointed counsel for the Ontario ctice |Labor Relations Board. In 1954, S tleokot dant elicea bo tae ld R he successfully represented the CBC--to carry a minimum of Go eserve 26 hours and seven minutes a jporation network,. Some are|Premier W. A, C. Bennett of likely to carry more programs| British Columbia says Canada | voluntarily. eve gage ws its gold reserves ey ; through a federal subsidy and This minimum requirement--:-- eh 4 y }making up what is called '"'re- establish its own Fort Knox. served time'"'--is the strickler in : prolonged negotiations: with tie its ack yee Prag tps 15 holdout stations. The CBC) ounce, $15 higher than the ine said Monday the reluctance to} cet by the United States he taial join the system is due to varying! in a speech Monday at this B.C.| C Mi ht interior gold rush capital. ampers 1g |trading stamp schemes was ae move would enable Can: | Hi ada to sabilize its world trade, H L h d is assistant counsel, Mare bolster its economy and pay off ave nc e Lalonde, has an academic and 3 pa} international deficits when peel . Sy eee ground. He is pressure on the Canadian dol- Y h " P ] |was graduated in law from the lar, said the Social Credit pre- out 5: 0 1¢ce University of Montreal, then mier, ki t f th 4 studied economics at Oxford ier, making a tour of the B.C.| : ry) . 5 rs interior. : CHATHAM (CP) - Angry) and gained his master's degree He said the gold should be campers aint NeNe ee kept at the mint in Ottawa, just fur Bake yg pag ho nerd He taught commercial and as the U.S. stores its gold re-|¢ police had not arrived at the/2dministrative law at the Uni- serves at Fort Knox. fracas, provincial police Con-| vera qs oad oe et ; q le says. , ia pen USE AS RESERVE == staple John Relitying Monday|'® Justice Minister Fulton 'until _ isn't a question of using ft ths, one charged) 1960, also serving on the Uni- gold for international payments, | against four youths, one charged) 7 he said in an interview later, It with assaulting 14-year-old Rob-|VersilY ne cee : 4 malt k, Mr. Lalonde has returned serve to strengthen world con. four charged with creating a) Work, | i i pierce in Pine hy | disturbance. ito private practice and is coun- Gis: Menkatt sald tow perects| Jot Sutherland, 19, of Lon-|sel for the St, Lawrence River gold in Canada's economy. jail on the assault and disturb- Raising the price in Canada| ance charges. : would not affect its internal) Joseph. Blackwell, 19,0f St. used in internal exchange, he|of St. Catharines, each received : i 15-day terms for their part in "Canada is in the most for-|the disturbance. the world, having such a large|George Mudge, 18, of Stratford supply of gold in its hills and|was dismissed for lack of evi- streams," he said. dence. opening of a park comprising |had marched through Rondeau buildings restored to mark the|Park during the weekend, using | centennial of Bakerville's hey-| insulting language and overturn- B.C, gold rush. covered with food and stoves. -- COURSES: 1--Clerk-typist For years, the SIU was in the its SIU crews. | Ottawa. Then in the summer of 1958, j8ation. jchosen to act as legal counsel The commission counsel are|49zen people from the gallows assistant. to Justice Minister|tePutation he was often ap- |week of programs from the cor-/ BAKERVILLE, B.C. (CP) \tested. would simply be used as a re.ert Gostlin of Guelph, and all Since leaving government understand the importance of|don, was sentenced to 30 days' | Pilots' Association. economy because gold is not) Thomas and Carlysle Roy, 18, tunate position of any nation in| A similar charge against The premier officiated at the, Const. Doyle said the youths day as the centre of the 1862 ing and breaking picnic tables 3--Secretary braemor | qa rdens LEARN. oo. living in Braemor means, living convenient to § schools, (2 public. } senior public, 1 High and | Separate School), LIVE. . 2--Stenographer 4--Accountant's Assistant living In Braemor means, living amongst the _ friendliest people, in individually designed homes at sensible prices. PRAY ... in Braemor gardens, you are close to churches of: virtually all denominations PLAY In Braemar, (a com- munity designed with your children in mind) there is no through traf- fic, lots of sun and fun, Other children to play with and Braemor is within a stone throw from parks and playgrounds. 5--_B Ad pe Se SUBJECTS: Take any of our 29 business or secretarial subject separately. FALL CLASSES STARTING SEPT. 4th, 1962 Please write or phone for free catalogue about our night classes or day school. THE CANADIAN SCHOOL OF BUSINESS 52% SIMCOE ST. NORTH PHONE 728.7081 Exclusive Realtor HARRY MILLEN -REAL ESTATE 11 ONTARIO ST. 728-1679 <. 13 {4 ia 3 z