2 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Thursday, November 15, 1962 AS ANTHEMS PLAYED band plays the national coming ceremonies on ques alamaty . White House lawn for the anthems of their: two coun- German visitor. tries Wednesday during wel- President Kennedy West German Chancellor Kon- rad Adenauer stand together --(AP Wirephoto) the OTTAWA (CP) Liberal Leader Pearson fired the open- ing salvo in the Commons Wed. nesday of what promises to be a major opposition attack on Agriculture Minister Hamilton and his controversial grain marketing proposals. Describing the minister's sug- gestions as "ridiculous," Mr. Pearson said that in making them in a Friday speech to the Saskatchewan Wheat Pool Mr. Hamilton was guilty either. of violating the rule of cabinet solidarity or of perpetrating a hoax on his Regina listeners. Mr. Hamilton defended his jaction in broaching the propos- als, which were that: 1, Farmers consider setting aside a 'protion of their final wheat payment to build up a fund which would be used to help the federal government meet any losses caused by pay- ment default on export credit sales of grain- 2. The Prairie wheat pools} and the United Grain Growers consider forming a grain sales organization to enter, aggres- sively, first the domestic mar- ket and later the export mar- ket as a real selling agent of the Canadian wheat board. WILL CONTINUE Wednesday's abbreviated Commons sitting allowed time only for Mr. Hamilton and Mr. Pearson to speak, and the Op- position leader will continue his speech at a later sitting. Use Of Sabin Vaccine Gets Confidence Vote tA (CP) -- The Sabin] ie aie vaccine, sus-/000 Canadians administered the|all age groups. penced for use in Canada two}vaccine had developed severe months ago, now has received] paralysis. a vote of confidence from the} A national committee of ex-| federal government. perts thereupon began an inien- Health Minister Monteith ta-|sive investigation of all polio bled in the Commons Wednes-icases and other acute diseases day a report of the Dominion|of the nervous system occurring Council of Health. recommend-|jn Canada this year. It w ing that "the use of Sabin vac-/the basis of this study that the cine be deferred no longer." | Council of Health recommended "T have accepted this advice| reinstatement of the Sabin: vac- and it has been made available| cine. to all of the provincial health) "The Dominion Council departments for their gui-|Health: believes that liv dance," he said. lyirus Sabin vaccine offers a| The oral vaccine was with-|great potential for the control) drawn from general use Sept.| of paralytic poliomyelitis in 13, little more than six months| after it was licensed for use in| said. i Canada. | The committee recommended|sabin vaccine was reviewed. The action was taken afterithat Salk dead-virus vaccine re-| 'Thre were no deaths discovery that four persons, main "for the present" the} Win Encourages Federal Liberals OTTAWA (CP)--Federal Lib-|tion in hopes of Union Na- erals read encouragement for|tionale help at the next federal their hopes at the next federaljelection in return for not split- election into the victory of Pre-jting the conservative vote. mier 'Lesage's Liberal govern-|They maintained this support fying close appraisal, 10 were ment in the Quebec election. won't now be forthcoming. considered to have no associa- Progrssive Conservatives,, The New Democratic Party/tion with Sabin vaccine and the revamping their Quebec organ-|also entered no candidates in|others were believed to have a ization since the June 18 federal|Quebec but National Leader T.| moderate or slight probability election, remained unperturbed/C. Douglas saw the result as|of association." on grounds their party wasn'tlan indication that Quebec 1s| Experience with Sabin in directly involved and the voting|moving toward the sort of pol-'other countries had had a showed no trend which could bejicy advocated by his party--|"spectacular effect" in reduc: translated to the federal scene.|greater development of the pub-|ing paralytic polio, said the Observers here foresaw atilic sector of the economy committee. least two effects in federal poli-| He called the election result} The committee recommended tics--the Liberal opposition will]a "real tribute' to Quebec Re-|that Sabin types 1 and 2 be be in an even tougher fighting} sources Minister Rene Le-| used freely for all age groups. mood in Parliament 'and they|vesque, often tagged as a So-) "jt called for active surveil- will be counting heavily on help|cialist by opponents, who intro-|\jance and prompt reporting of from Mr- Lesage's organization|duced the issue of nationaliza-| 51) cases of nervous system dis- when another federal election|tion of power companies and) pase occurring within 60 days is called "pressed it through with ten-|of yaccine feedings, Opposition Leader Pearsonjacity." Use of Sabin would not be in gave an indication of this in| Conservative sources consider|dicated in-cases of acute feb: his comments on the election.|the party's federal organization| rile illness, debilitating disease He described the Liberal Vvic-imust be greatly improved in/or where the patient has re- tory as merited by their cond/Quebec because less heip can|ceived another live-virus vac- duct in office and stressed that/he expected from UN followers|cine--smallpox or yellow fever federal Liberals worked hardjin those areas where be placed on the Salk vaccina of age. : ; Trivalent oral vaccine--incor. as on|immunicatior low an initial vaccine and thereby polio viruses," These are essentially general use in the first place. Detailed information concern Sabin vaccine.". jcurred earlier, -- "The predominant He was asked whether hellast federal election. thinks Premier Lesage ~ will; _-------- Th work harder in the Liberal) cause at the next federal elec-| WEATHER FORECAST '= Cooler Weather Moves Eastward be given. Prime Minister Diefenbaker| followed his usual custom of not commenting on provincial elections. However, Senator Jacques Flynn said he thought no def- inite conclusion could be reached about the effect on the next federal election. Senator Flynn, former federal mines minister, was defeated June 18 and has been a key figure in the Progressive Conservative reorganization in Quebec since then. "The same trends did not ap- pear in this election as in the federal election," he said. Both Liberals and Conserva- tives suffered at the hands of Social Credit in the last federal election. The 26 federal seats won by Social Credit covered areas of the province in which Wednesday gave Liberals a 19- to-12 edge over Union Nationale members. Six UN: gains from Liberals were in "Social Credit" territory. SEE NO EFFECT Both Social Credit Leader Robert Thompson and Deputy Leader Real Caouette said their, men took a hands-off attitude to the Quebec election and saw no great effect on the federal scne of the Lesage victory. However, Liberals here. ar-| Windsor ....... us gued that Social Credit kept its|St. Thomas....... men out of the provincial elec-London cecsssseeee cause because they thought it the right thing to do '"'and I'm! sure he will do what he thinks) is right." | 35 40 40 45 45 "FOLLOWS USUAL CUSTOM 45 Forecast by the TorontojKitchener ........ |weather office at 5 a.m.: |Wingham .. Synopsis: Cooler weather is|Hamilton ... spreading. eastward from the|St. Catharines.... Prairies into northwestern On-|Toronto tario and will cover the rest of| Peterborough the province by Friday morn-|Trenton ....+++0++ ing. Killaloe Lake St. Clair, Lake Erie, Lake Huron, Windsor, London, Hamilton, Toronto: Partly cloudy and warmer today Mainly cloudy tonight and Fri- day, rain likely Friday evening, cooler Friday. Winds southerly 20, becoming light tonight and) northeast 15 Friday. | Lake Ontario, Haliburton, Georgian Bay regions: Clouding| over this morning, with a 'ew showers developing towards evening. Mainly cloudy with much the same temperature Friday. Winds light, except southerly 15 this afternoon. [Winnipeg .... Algoma, Sault Ste. Marie,|Lakehead . White River, Timagami, Coch-|White River.. rane regions, North Bay, Sud-|S. S. Marie....... bury: Mainly cloudy, a few|Kapuskasing showers or snowflurries. today.|North Bay. Variable cloudiness and cooler) Sudbury oes Friday. Winds southerly 15, be-/Muskoka ..70...++ coming north 15 tonight and/Windsor ... Friday. Forecast Temperatures Low tonight, High Friday 40 38 38 Earlton se eeeeenes Moosonee .. Mount Forest..... Sault Ste, Marie.. Timmins «.+e..00+ Observed Temperatures soocee 2h Dawson .... 28 Victoria Edmonton Regina eeeeeeee teens 48 45 45 Montreal |Quebec .. IHalifax secsoseeces and possibly more, of the 4,000,-|basic vaccine for protection 0! "Particular emphasis should tion of children under one year porating the three Sabin types --should be included in routine unication programs to fol- course of Salk "further diminish the circulation of wild the cof same conditions under which e polio-\cabin was recommended for : ling all known polio-like illnesses Canada," the council statement} re ada this year that might n any way be associated with in these cases," said the health council's statement. 'In the ap- proximately 4,000,000 persons fed Sabin vaccine in May, June é and July, there were four cases of paralytic disease with a high probability of association. with Another such case nad oc- virus in these cases was Sabin vaccine Type 3," said the council. "Of ithe remaining 26 cases consid- fered by the committee as justi- B : they|inoculations, for instance -- 21 for their provincial conferences,| hacked the Conservatives in the|days or less before Sabin is to Low overnight, high Wednesday Still to come are Social Credit Leader Thompson, who opposes current multi- million'- dollar credit 'sales of wheat to Red China, and New Democratic Party Leader T. C. Douglas who already has described the minister's proposals as a devi- Ous means of undermining the scope and function of the wheat board. Over Liberal protests, the| government refused Wednesday to change the schedule of busi- ness to allow the agricultural debate to continue today. In- stead, the Commons will re- sume study of government bills implementing proposals in last April's budget. Mr. Hamilton, introducing his department's 1962-63 spending estimates, said he made his Re- gina suggestions "for consider- ation and discussion by western Canadian farmers during the next few months." | "I was doing what I have al-| ways done and what I promised! the farmers I would do,| namely, to discuss with them first all matters affecting them Personally before bringing such matters forward for govern- ment consideration." HAS PAID OFF This technique of stimulating iscussion among farmers had paid dividends in the past. It was a democratic process. The thesis of his Regina re- marks was 'simply that there was a great opportunity to sell more Canadian wheat now if everybody pulls together. The minister described as| "false in every respect" Mr, Douglas' contention that he was attempting to undermine. the Canadian wheat board: Mr. Pearson said Mr. Hamil- f | Women Warned Against Drugs 'It Pregnant ANN ARBOR, Mich (AP)--If you're pregnant, your medicine |cabinet may be one more dan- |ger in an already. dangerous | world for your unborn child and |his delicate timetable of life. | Many drugs--from hormones to pain killers--may increase the risk of birth defects in the rapidly-developing embryo, Dr. F. Clarke Fraser of Montreal's |McGill University said Wednes- day. To be safe, no pregnant woman should be given a drug for a nebulous reason, he said. Drugs should only be used if they are necessary to her health, There have been cases in which synthetic hor m-ones, given to pregnant women in an attempt to prevent spontaneous abortion, have produced defects in the sexual features of the baby, he told a science writers' seminar of the National Foun- (Pearson Assails Grain Proposals ton's Regina text did not bear out the contention of Prime Minister Diefenbaker and the agriculture minister that he had spoken in a personal capacity and not on behalf of the gov- ernment, It was "a complete denial of cabinet responsibility, cabinet solidarity, cabinet collectivity, and indeed responsible parlia- mentary government, to say that (Mr. Hamilton) can make an official visit to the Saskatch- ewan Wheat Pool and put for- ward proposals in his personal. individual capcity about which presumably the cabinet knew nothing at all." If it were true, "then he was certainly perpetrating a hoax on his listeners." 'NO RIGHT TO SPEAK' "Kither he spoke as minister) of agriculture . or he had no right to speak at all in the way in which he spoke." In the last election campaign and up to last Friday, Mr. Hamilton had emphasized farm- ers had nothing to worry about on the current credit sales, bulk of which are to Red China. He had said the government: was assuming the risk for them. If payments were defaulted, it) |would cost the farmers nothing. "Tf that is the situation," Mr. | Pearson asked, "then why did| the minister make the kind of| speech he did last Friday?" | "If everything was so rosy until last June in the Canadian agricultural world, as we were told it was, why is it not so rosy now? What is worrying the minister about default on these future credit sales?" There was only one con- clusion to draw: "The minister must be slipping, as indeed the government is slipping." U.S. Labor Ruling Fought By Canada WASHINGTON (CP)--Canada has called on the U.S, Supreme Court to reject the contention of the U.S. National Labor Re- lations Board that it has juris- diction over seamen of foreign- flag vessels doing most of their the board's position is upheld, this '"'could lead to a collision between the U.S. and Canada in the regulation of labor reja- tions on Canadian - registered vessels and to wide unceriainty 'as to the applicable law " business in U.S. ports. and Panama in opposing the board's argument, the Canadian Joining with Britain, Liberia| The board, supported by the National Maritime Union of America (AFL-CIO), faces op- position not only from abroad 4 VICTORY KISS Premier Jean Lesage kisses his wife after he learned that he was re-elected for a second time at the head of the Prov- | ince of Quebec. --(CP Wirephoto) TV Debate Sought By Socreds, NDP OTTAWA (CP) -- The lead- ers of the Social Credit and New Democrstic parties want to get in on any television de- bates held between the leaders of the older parties in the next federal elction campaign. Social Credit Leader Robert Thompson and New Democratic Party Leader T. C Douglas en- dorsed the general idea of TV INTERPRETING THE NEWS Talk To UNITED NATIONS (CP) -- The United States and the So- viet Union announced Wednes- day night the 17-nation disam- ament committee will resume sessions in Geneva Nov. 26. U.S. Ambassador A thur Dean and Russia's Valerian Zorin, committee co-chairmen, set the date at a meeting. Lt.-Gen. E. L. M. Burns, Ca- nadian disarmament delegate, hailed their agreement as "an encouraging factor' and ex- pressed the belief 'we will get down to serious negotiations." Canada has been urging an early resumption of negotia- tions at practically every oppor- tunity, in statements by diplo- mats here and by External Af-| fairs Minister Howard Green at| Ottawa, The Geneva talks, recessed before the UN General Assem- bly opened sessions in New 17-Nation Arms Resume of reaching international agree- ment on a test ban--the oppos- election debates but took strong exception to a letter written to CBC President J. Alphonse Ouimet by Senator John J, Con- nolly,. president of the National Liberal Federation. In his letter, made _ public Wednesday, Senator Connolly urged the publicly owned CBC to provide for a debate be- tween Liberal Leader Pearson and Prime Minister Diefen- baker in its television and radio planning for the next election. A senior Conservative party official said negotiations have been under way for two years on such a proposal, and that the Conservatives would agree if an acceptable formula for such a Mr. Thompson and Mr. Doug- for leaving them out cold. debate could be found. Chances of this are considered unlikely. las criticized the older parties in the government, maintained that if Shot To Death After Planning| To Kill Others "ARGUES U.S. INTEREST SUDBURY (CP)--Max Koel-. The controversial case cen- bel, 39, was killed with a .410/tres on the U.S. union argument shotgun in the presence of his|that some big ship operators wife, son and stepdaughter, but/deliberately switched © zargoes no one could say how the gGn|and operations to ships under went off, a coroner's jury was/foreign flags for the purpose of told Wednesday. |paying lower wages and reduc- Koelbel had planned to killling operating costs, In the pres- his wife and 18-year-old step-\ent case, the U.S. United Fruit | daughter, and possibly his 12-/Company operates a big fleet year-old son, Thomas, on thejunder a Honduras subsidiary. night he was shot in the family, The board contends that since cottage on a lonely bush' road) these ships do most of their |near Burwash, his wife Helen) business in U.S. ports and that | testified. Pe tas |in fact the subsidiary is owned |_ The jury, inquiring into the|hy American stockholders, the |Sept. 23 fatality, returned a) board has power to order anion |verdict of accidental death. representation elections aboard | Mrs. Koelbel said the day be-|ihe vessels involved. fore the shooting Koeibel| Robert MacCrate of New |started drinking about 4 p.m.) : 4 | Mrs. Koelbel said her hus-|¥°rk, Canada's lawyer, said |band woke her during the night! this emphasis by the board on and ordered her to waken her|the existence of American stock daughter. | ownership in the foreign operas There had been constant/tion is of particular concern to quarrels between her daughter|Canada because of heavy Amer- and husband, Mrs. Koelbel said.J/jican investment in Canadian BEGS ON KNEES enterprises. "He pulled her by the hair| and knocked her head against a post. Then he said 'This is the night, tonight is the night. You and your daughter are go- ing to get it.' Thomas got out of bed and fell on his knees and begged him to leave ~ her alone." Koelbel threatened to kill the boy if he interferred, and sent him for the gun, Mrs. Koelbel said. The stepdaughter, Renada Herpich, said her stepfather told her: "I promised to shoot you and tonight is the night." but also from within the U.S. government, Both the state and defence departments have re- quested the justice department to file opposition to the board's position, which' has been re- jected by a lower appeal court. The Supreme Court will fix a Sales Tax Earning In First 6 Months TORONTO (CP) -- Ontario's retail sales tax earned $78,746,- 682 in its first six months of operation, the provincial treas- urer's office announced Wed- nesday. Provincial treasurer James N. Allan said his department had predicted a $50,000,000 rev- \eonducted by the U.S. ad Rus- ing positions of East and West were said to be closer now than for many years. | The British Labor party intro- duced a motion of censure and British newspapers also. at- tacked the idea, calling it a "miserably clumsy gesture" and "a piece of military folly." Macmillan's defenders say SHOWS NARROW VIEW gun and as he handed it to hi terview: "The very fact that|striking the man in the hea psed. he did indicates his narrow poli-|la He said Wednesday he wa tical perspective. which I de-| plore." a four-way discussion, I think|ger, had discharged. She said Thomas brought the Mr. Thompson said in an in-\father it went off, the load senator Connolly would write as|and killing him. The boy col- | unable to explain how the gun, "I'd be happy to go along on| With a 614-pound pressure trig-| enue in the first six months of the three per cent tax, intro- duced in September, 1961. | He said the forecast had been inaccurate partly because an jexpected rush of last-minute | buying before the tax went into jeffect had failed to materialize. | s Ss jAlso, his department had no that the explosion will be a mere firecracker--a_ triggering device -- compared with tests eh ae jd be ely hae e people have a rig' oO a oronto Meat | . Inspection sia which, however, were com- ing to the end of their current series. But UN diplomats say Brit- ain and the West generally will be bitterly criticirzed if the Bit- ish test occurs oin the eve of resumption of the Geneva ne- gotiations. Thy say the criti- cism would likely be even more intense if the blast came after) Wednesday that Toronto could York in mid-September, were the talks open. supposed to esume Nov. 12 but the 110-member body was deep in disarmament debate at that time, and still is. Communist Yugoslavia's Miso Pavicevic said Wednesday the Cuban crisis showed that dis- armament is not only a "burn- ing problem" of the age but that some of its aspects--the nu- clear arms race--"in them- selves constitute a direct threat to the peace." In the eyes of some dele- gates, however, at least one good thing cam out of vhe. Ou- FREE PARKING FOR 7 YEARS PHILADELPHIA (AP) -- Sebastian Barone, sentenced here Tuesday to 744 years in prison for ignoring 270 park- ing. tickets in two years, has been freed on bail of $6,618 pending an appeal. Barone, 39, said Wednesday that all he did was follow the instructions on the back of the way. There are, perhaps, many pitfalls for some leaders, >. that is the test of what leader- ship is made of." Mr. Douglas told a reporter that he takes strong exception to Senator Connolly's letter. Even though the New Demo- cratic Party was fourth in $190'| tacit deine a ee now: it wa a notional ONS board of health meeting her deserving of equal recognition. become: & Senator Connolly said in his|for diseased t jletter to the CBC that discus-| He said, "if the province isn' jsions on the form and distri- bution of free - time political|meat inspection, | broadcasts during the next elec- tion campaign should proceed/Toronto and made it work." now, "especially in the present) At He said the debate between Premier Lesage of Quebec and Union Nationale Leader Daniel Johnson last Sunday "arouscd great interest." | Mr. Diefenbaker's view is that the only place for such de- bates on national. political is- sues is the House of Commons. in existing meat-inspection reg ulations. Alfred Cowling Park) told the meeting tha able to' judge leaders in this] toral strength in the Commons uncertain political situation." Toronto may be introduced a "dumping ground' prepared to go whole hog on I : then I think it's time we had a bylaw in the meeting were city members of the Ontario legis- lature who had been called to the conference in an attempt to persuade them to plug loopholes (PC -- High legislation to provide inspection of all meat and poultry sold in ban crisis. President Kennedy, Premier Khrushchev and Prime Minister Macmillan exchanged tickets. The instructions say: "If you desire a hearing, you may wait for receipt of a the coming session of the leg |precedent on which to base the forecast. Mr. Allan said a first-year estimate of revenue from tie was I tax originally. set. ° 000,000 but was Nevised tn Ben: tember to $160,000,000, : Blonde Indicted ° In Bedroom Death BOSTON (AP) -- Blonde Su- zanne Clift, 21, member of a socially prominent Boston fam- ily, was indicted by a grand jury Wednesday for first-degree murder in the bedroom slaying of her lover. Miss Clift is accused of shoot- ing to death Piero Brentani, 27- year-old member of an old Ital- ian family now residing in Zurich, Switzerland. His nude body covered only by a sheet was found Oct. 3 in Miss Clift's bedroom in the home of her grandmother, The jury also indicted Miss Clift--a niece of movie actor Montgomery Clift--for carrying ja gun without a permit. n 0 e t t t messages pledging their best efforts to reach agreement on an end of all nuclear tests. summons by mail." But Barone lives in Mer- chantville, N.J., and Chief Magisirate Joseph Hersch COMING EVENTS STEP FORWARD Building on this, the assem- bly overwhelmingly approved a resolution 'urging that all tests cease forthwith, but in any case by Jan. 1, This was regarded as a step forward even if the big nuclear powers did merely abstain, refusing to take a yes or no stand on the issue. Macmillan, therefore, caused| said the instructions do not apply to out-of-state motor- ists. Hersch sentenced Barone to consecutive terms of 10 days in jail for each ticket after Barone indicated he would not pay fines totalling $3,309. PARKDALE Your Guide to | SALE of used clothing, West Unit No. 2, Centre Street United Church, Friday, November. 16 at 12 noon. EUCHRE, Scout Hall, Gibbon at Buena Vista, Friday, 8 p.m. 6 prizes. Refresh- ments. Admission 50c, TOP TOPICS at the YWCA, 199 Centre street, John of Creative Styling will de-| monstrate hair styles, Thursday, asl 15 at 8 sharp in the loung OSHAWA JAYCEES BINGO TO-NIGHT FINE WINE 8 P.M. ~ NOVEL BINGO considerable dismay at the UN --and elsewhere--when he an- nounced this week Britain would conduct a nuclear test, albeit small and underground, at the! Nevada site. EYE EXAMINATIONS PHONE 723-4191 by appointment THURSDAY EVENINGS 7:45 at ST, GEORGE'S HALL, (Albert and Jackson Sts.) Game $6, $12, $20 May be doubled or tripled $180 IN JACKPOTS | dation at the University of | Michigan Pregnant _ women, infected} | Moscow newspapers said the) move threatens the possibility! F. R. BLACK, O.D. Door Prize $15 136 SIMCOE ST. NORTH "BAZAAR & TEA with German measles during the first four weeks of preg-| nancy, have a 50 per cent chance of bearing a deformed) baby. | Narcotics addicts have given| birth to babies addicted to the! same drug by getting it from! the mother's blood. These ba- bies suffer withdrawal symp- toms after birth. Cortisone may produce a cleft| palate, Radiation can produce} genetic damage directly to the! egg cell or to the developing) embryo. Vitamin deficiencies also produce defects. Special Weekly Message To Members Of CHAMBERS FOOD CL oie I 08 38S ve SO 3 ic . 109 g85 ... » 132 912 52 4 32 48 72 88 OFFICIAL CHRISTINE HOUSING An invitation is extended One or two units of thi opening ceremony. The project is located ea and access is by way of Ki OSHAWA CITY OF OSHAWA to attend the Official Opening of the Christine Crescent Housing Project on Saturday, November 17th, 1962 at 2:30 p.m. will be open for your inspection following the UKRANIAN PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH LADIES' AID. 488 SIMCOE S. Sat., Nov. .17 2:30 p.m. _ EVERYBODY WELCOME CREAM SHERRY the perfect choice OPENING f 20 games at $20, 5 games ot $30. 1 -- $150 Jackpot 2 -- $250 Jackpots. NUMBERS 50, 55 RED BARN UNITARIAN FELLOWSHIP CRA Building, 100 Gibb St. Sunday Service 7 p.m. Guest Speaker: Rabbi LOUIS J. CASHDAN of Temple Emanu-EL, Toronto. CRESCENT PROJECT to the citizens of Oshawa iain CHATEAU CARTIER Yin | THE STILL WINE | AT PREMIUMS AS LOW AS S forty-two unit project FOR ALL OCCASIONS with adequate insurance. | eat noy st of Ritson Road South,* }} aep, Kine sr. WEST tchener Avenue. ® NOW! $300,000.00 Auto Liability Insurance A Court Judgment can ruin your life financially «+ be sate SCHOFIELD-AKER @ Gerry Osborne PER YEAR 723-2265 @ Ree Aker (Limited) @ Ralph Schofield 'THE PARKDALE WINES LTD. | | HOUSING AUTHORITY 220 hy ereerene