Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 22 Jan 1963, p. 2

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2 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Tuesday, Januery 22, 1963 GOOD EVENING By JACK GEARIN. AIRPORT COST CITY $17,703 IN 1962 The 11th. Annual Members' Banquet and Wings Presen- tation of the Oshawa Flying Club Saturday night was an impressive affair, by all accounts. Not 'only did this select social event mark the club's 17. year of progress' (as an advance publicity release so aptly put it), it also served as a blunt reminder of another important fact: The City's share of the up- keep of the Oshawa Airport (of which the Oshawa Flying Club is such an_ integral part) has reached a sizeable figure. Tt cost the taxpayers of Oshawa $17,703.45 in 1962-- estimated expenses over rev- enue, The annual bill for the City's share fluctuates be- tween $11,000 and $12,000. This cost is of importance because many taxpayers have been super-critical for years about the City's ad- ministration of the Oshawa Airport, which is leased to the municipality by the De- partment of Transport on a yearly basis. The questions that disturb the electorate on such occa- sions go something like this: Is the Oshawa Airport effi- ciently administered by the City so that the maximum rev- enue is obtained from it ? Does the City's existing business arrangement with the -Oshawa Flying Club represent sound business procedure from the municipality's viewpoint? Is the City over-subsidiz- ing the Flying Club under the present set-up, whereby the club rents several buildings from the City payment of taxes for which is accepted as payment of rent? ~ FLYING CLUB SHOULD PAY RENT? : Under the existing arrangement, the Oshawa Flying Club manages the airport. The Airport manager also serves as secretary-manager of the Flying Club. The City pays $4,800 annually towards his salary (as management fees). The balance is paid by the Club; request for an increase in management fees was refused by the City recently. This ar- rangement has been in force several years. The Airport _manager discusses budget and takes direction on operation «matters at the Airport from the City Property Committee (Alderman Albert V. Walker is chairman). Why does the City not charge the Oshawa Flying Club, a private business enterprise, a yearly rental as it does with other Airport lesees such as Air-Direct Ltd. (the president - of which is W. B. Bennett, the City builder and road contrac- tor) which rents the large No. 2 hangar? Air-Direct, for "a yearly rental of $4,500, uses part of the building for its own business; it also sub-lets and carries on a plane storage business. The City spent $5,200 recently to put a new roof on this hangar. The City pays insurance coverage of $592.45 annually on it. The large No. 1 hangar (most valuable and essential * asset of the Oshawa airport) was purchased by the Oshawa Flying Club in 1955 from the Department of Transport for $25,000. They operate club activities, rent plane storage " space to others and give flying lessons. The Club pays taxes on property. They also lease three other properties at Mathe Airport; the Recreation Hall; Club Lounge (sub-let to "No; 'Wing of the RCAFA), a small dwelling used by their engineer as living quarters.) CLUB PAID $3,630 IN 1962 TAXES Some City officials say that the municipality is fortunate > to have such tenants, who conform with the wishes of the _ {Department of Transport in that their work generally sub- = scribes to Airport usage; and that these buildings would likely be vacant if the present tenants did not occupy them. If Air-Direct and the. Oshawa Flying Club can get tenants > why would it not be possible for the City to get them direct * and thus increase the City's revenue which, in turn, would » cut down the annual Airport deficit ? There is no legal reason why the City can't charge the " Oshawa Flying Club rent for these buildings instead of ac- 4 cepting their taxes as rent. The Club paid the City a total 2 of $3,630.40 in taxes in 1962, $2,567.76 of which went for No. 1 * hangar, which it owns. One City alderman summarized the situation this way: " "The entire question of the Oshawa airport poses quite « a problem. Should the City continue to operate an Airport ? « Is the Airport of value to a growing community from an in- " dustrial development point of view? Some local industries « use the Airport to bring in supplies. There are some who « say that the City is subsidizing a private club at the Airport by maintaining the operation with taxpayers' money. Dis- cussions have been held on Airport problems -- some of the buildings are privately-owned; others are leased to the Osh- awa Flying Club, and others to the City; in some cases buildings which are privately-owned and also leased to the City. Some of the buildings leased to the City are in poor shape of early Second World War construction. WHEN AIRLINE SERVICE FOLDED "The advent of a regular airline service to the Airport ™ last year appeared to solve some of the financial problems with considerable added landing fees, but this did not be- come a permanent reality. Present landing fees are well up * to the Department of Transport standards. The rent on No, 2 hangar could not be increased to any appreciable degree " and still retain a tenant -- for several months that hangar was empty prior to the present tenant. Under the City's » lease with the Department, the City agrees to maintain ™ Janding strips, lighting facilities, sewers, roads and other -. facilities on the land, in a serviceable condition for operation » of a public airport. The City also agrees to keep land, build- ' ings and other installations in a good state of repair. ne "The problem: Where could any significant increase in revenue be derived? Is the Airport of sufficient value to the City to continue to spend tax dollars to keep it in opera- "tion? To date the majority feel that it is a decided asset." Following are some of the 1962 expenditures at the Osh- ", awa airport: GHOW TOMOVAL ciccceccssctvccvesccecctcses Maintenance of ditches, drains, parking lots Sundry maintenance Runway and aircraft parking apron lights . Tractor, Mower - fuel, etc. ..... Provision for new mower ...... eevee Insurance--Airport liability ($1,000,000) .. No, 2 Hangar (fire and wind) Weed control Pest. control Repairs, resurfacing runways ............ +$2,500,00 Airport incomes in 1962 totalled $5,800 as follows: No. 2 » hangar rent -- $4,500; landing fees, local operations -- $1,200; visiting aircraft'-- $500; aircraft parking -- $300; airline parking ---- $500. Walter Lane, when he was an alderman, accused City Council of lacking in "moral fibre' when it constantly re- fused to "revise" its Airport policy so that the full potential of revenue would be realized. Mr. Lane has departed for other fields but his words of caution are still remembered. A drastic revision is needed of the City's Airport set-up, When the above alderman says that "'to date the major- _ ity feel that it is a decided asset" to whom he is referrnig the members of the Oshawa Flying Club ? OSHAWA AIRPORT ++ -- $5,500 roads, $2,000 $600 $600 $300 $600 -- $510.00 -- $592.45 -- $600.00 -- $175.00 |RCAF officer with only five PM Sees In Foreign Policy OTTAWA (CP)--Prime Minis- ter Diefenbaker has indicated that there will be at least two major stages in determining Canada's future international policy. One arises from the British- American proposal, now . being discussed by the NATO council in Paris, for a multilateral nu- clear force. The second relates to North American defence and the pos- sibility of Canada's role chang- ing and the United States' role being modified. In anticipation that changes may be necessary in Canada's NATO and NORAD roles, plans are being discussed in govern- ment circles for Canada to un- dertake a largely warning role in continental defence and pos- sibly a nuclear role in NATO. Reporting to the Commons Auditor Says Hampered By Government OTTAWA (CP) Auditor- General Maxwell Henderson has indicated he has been hamp- lered by the administration in |keeping track of the public's | money. | He said Monday in his ettmrual report for the year ended March, 31, 1962, that govern- ment recruiting procedures have prevented him from get- ting the staff he needs and this has reduced 'his audits to the point of 'serious concern." And he noted in one insiance that the revenue department re- fused to open tax-collection files for him despite the fact that the law entitles him to "free access at all convenient times to all files, documents and other records... ." Despite these handicaps the 53-year-old auditor - general, a former distillery executive and CBC comptroller, reported these among other irregularities dur- ing the 1961-62 fiscal year: At one shipyard a government barge was being built on a cost - plus basis for $624,000, while at another yard a similar vessel was being constructed for $357,000 after calling tend- ers TAKES A LOSS The post office still is selling rural mail boxes for $4 each although they cost the depart- ment about $7.50. The result- ing loss was $64,000 in the year under review No legal action was taken against a veteran who claimed and got the so-called "burnt- out pension" despite the fact he was getting $6,540 a year as a federal civil servant when he swore he had no job and only $50 to his name. When the treasury board--a cabinet committee--refused to approve publication of 3,000 copies of a translation reference book for an estimated $8,000, the Queen's Printer went ahead anyway and printed 300 copies at a cost expected to be $4,000 but which reached $7,000. | The "widow" of a deceased years' service was paid $8,428 in death bemefits, because the |United States was divorce she- obtained in the not recog- Changes: Monday on the Nassau pact, in which President Kennedy and Prime Minister Macmillan pro- posed the multilateral nuclear force, Mr. Diefnbaker said: "IT believe that the whole fu- ture direction and shape of the military forces in NATO are now in process of review. The enormous costs of modern weapons systems and the speed with which they become obso- lescent dictate the utmost care in reaching final decisions. NUCLEAR FORCE KEY "It would be premature at this stage to say anything further about Western defence policy until there is a clear indication as to whether or not some form of NATO multilateral nuclear force can be worked out." Meanwhile, behind the scenes the government was being urged to adopt a special role for Canada in international affairs. This included a_ suggestion that the continental defence ar- rangement, NORAD, be renego- tiated so that the United States would bear the rsponsibility for continental defence and Canada the responsibility for warning systems. In NATO, the proposal would) mean acceptance of whatever role the NATO alliance agrees) upon when current discussions| on the multilateral nuclear force are concluded. This point may not be reached until the April meeting of NATO here. A suggested broader interna- tional policy also would include continuing pressure through the} United Nations for disarma- ment commitment of an oper- ational, air-transported Cana-| dian brigade to a UN police} orce; a larger economic aid' program for developing Com- monwealth countries, .and strengthtning of the Common-| wealth. Meet Planned On Canadian Broadcasting OTTAWA (CP)--A high-level private conference ranging over Canada's broadcasting pro b- lems will be held later this month, it was announced Mon- day. For the first time representa- tives of the Board of Broad- cast Governors, the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation and the Canadian Association of Broadcasters are to get to- gether in an informal session to discuss mutual problems. A brief statement announcing | the forthcoming session was signed jointly by BBG Chair- man Dr, Andrew Stewart, CBC President J. Alphonse Ouimet and C.A.B. President Don Jamieson, representing private broadcasters The meeting will last for two days and is described as being of an exploratory nature, Later sessions will be held if it seems useful. No formal agenda has been arranged and the statement merely says '"'matters of mutual interest and concern related to the development of broadcast. | nied as: legal in Canada. She had subsequently remarried. ing in Canada' will be dis-| cussed, WEATHER FORECAST | Forecasts issued by the Tor- onto weather office at 4:30 a.m. |EST: | Synopsis: Although tempera- tures will moderate to the teens and low 20s in the southern re-) |gions today, clearing skies and la return to colder weather are |scheduled for tonight. Mainly |sunny and very cold weather is |due for the entire province Wed- nesday. Local snow is again likely in the lee of the Great | Lakes. | Lake St. Clair, Lake Erie, 'southern Lake Huron, western | Niagara, Lake Ontario, Halibur- ton, Windsor, London, Hamilton, Toronto: Clearing this evening Sunny and colder Wednesday. Winds southwest 15 today, northerly 20 tonight and Wed- jnesday. | Northern Lake Huron, south- ern Georgian Bay, eastern Ni- agara, Algoma regions, Sault |Ste. Marie: Variable cloudiness and colder with snowflurries and'local squalls tonight and |Wednesday. Winds southerly 15 jtoday, northerly 20 to 30 to- jnight and Wednesday. | Northern Georgian Bay, Ti- jmagami, Cochrane, White |River regions, North Bay, Sud- bury. Mainly clear and very cold tonight and Wednesday. Forecast Temperatures Low tonight, high Wednesday | Windsor °... 0 10 |St. Thomas. {London "KINDNESS BEYOND PRICE, YET WITHIN, REACH OF ALL" GERROW FUNERAL Sunny, Colder Weather Seen |Kitchener ..+++0+. Wingham ....sesee Hamilton ....++008 St. Catharines. | Toronto Peterborough :... Trenton .... Killaloe ..sseeeees Muskoka . ee counssuan | | Sudbury .. |Earlton .. Kapuskasing White River. Moosonee .... {Mount Forest | Sault Ste, Marie... -t Timmins -40 -25 | Observed Temperatures |Low overnight, high Monday {Dawson .. « 919 2 |Victoria .. |Edmonton . |Regina . | Winnipeg ... | Lakehead Sault Ste. Marie White River....... |Kapuskasing . |North Bay Sudbury .. Muskoka . Windsor .. |London .. |Toronto .. |Ottawa . 41 12 2 -18 4 9 3 er "4 we SHORGAS HEATING & APPLIANCES Industrial and Commercial The established, reliable Gas Dealer in your area. 31 CELINA ST. (Corner of Athol) ") CHAPEL 390 King W. 728-6226 | WRITES ESKIMO FICTION . Leah Illauq, a 23-year-old Eskimo from Pond Inlet, on Baffin Island, is seen here showing her newly-published book to Northern Affairs Min- ister Dinsdale in Ottawa Mon- day. Miss Illauq's book "Imir- qutailaku!uk Nanuaalullu," is the first piece of Eskimo fic- tion written by an Eskimo for Eskimo children. It tells of a polar bear that incubates the egg of an arctic tern. When the egg hatches, a small polar bear with wings is born. --(CP Wirephoto) Economy Board Talks By JACK BEST OTTAWA (CP) -- The Com-| mons after a 30-day Christmas re-| cess and plunged right into aj months. national economic development board, last discussed Nov. 29) and then set aside. | The bill is up for second read-| ing, approval in principle, with debate due to continue today. Monday this measure and} three other government boards} were lumped together under the heading of '"'cocktail planning" by David Lewis, deputy leader of the New Democratic Party. Mr. Lewis, member for York South, said the government has set up or pfoposes to set up at least four planning agencies, NDP Cox Glad He Took Trip To Visit Cuba VANCOUVER (CP) -- Cedric Cox said Monday he has no re- grets concerning his expenses- paid trip to Cuba and he would go to Communist China too "'if Mao Tse-tung wants to pay my way" "I want to see conditions for myself," the New Democratic Party member of the British Columbia legislature for Burn- aby told a convention of the| independent Mine, Mill and Smelter Workers, Mr. Cox returned Saturday from a two-week trip to Cuba,| made as a member of the Fair| Play for Cuba Committee and at the expense of Premier Castro Im an interview following his speech, Mr. Cox criticied the provincial NDP leader, Robert Strachan for his disapproval of the Cuba trip. Mr. Cox said B.C. workers! and farmers are sick of "right- wing leadership' in the NDP. "The true grass-roots social- ist members, of which I am one, are having to buck the right-wing element which is against the worker." He emphasized in his speech that his appearance at the con- vention should not be linked di- rectly to his recent trip. "T want to make it clear that I am not a Communist, and this is not a Communist union," he told the meeting. "I was in- vited to speak at this conven- tion, long before I had any plans or invitation to visit Cuba. This is a progressive unicn and I am a progressive man." "I found that Cuba can be a paradise in 10 years if we can get the Americans off their backs "' | Mr. Cox said he found 75 per} cent of the Cuban people back-| ing Castro, 20 per cent "on the; fence' and five per cent bit-} terly opposed. ORGANIST 9 TO 12 NIGHTLY JOHNNY McMANN HOTEL LANCASTER NOW IS THE TIME To have that carpet or chest- erfield cleaned professionally in Oshawo's Original Carpet Cleaning Centre . . where fully guaranteed satisfaction' is assured. Phone 728-4681 NU-WAY RUG CO. LTD. 728-9441 | 174 MARY ST. full-time chairman, That board. Renewed This Session jonly one of which will have a|meal, they are to try to plan one|the economy of Canada. This reassembled Mondayjwas the national development! cannot be done" Two cabinet ministers -- re- | We are to assign to these|Sources Minister Dinsdale and | debate suspended for nearly two| sroups of men, giving their|ASSociate Defence Minister Se- ; : spare time to the work, the task|Vigny--contended that the de- Under consideration was the/of planning our economy, the|Velopment board proposal has government's bill.to establish a)realiocation of indutry, the pro-| Tea! merit. ductivity of our eccnomy and all the ther tasks that have to be performed "I call that cocktail planning. A lot of busy industrial execu- tives and leaders of labor and agriculture are to be brougitt together from time to time and, over cocktails and a leisurely RCMP Questioning Denied By Fleming OTTAWA (CP)--Justice Min- ister Fleming said Monday the RCMP is not engaged in inter- viewing students or teachers at Canadian universities about the political views of other students and teachers. He made the statement in a written reply to questions from Tom Berger (NDP--Vancouver- Burrard), On Jan. 4, the Canadian As- sociation of University Teach- ers asked the government to deny allegations that ROMP personnel were conducting such investigations, | | Mr. Sevigny expressed confi- dence that the proposed board will bring about a "meeting of minds' between management and labor in a climate of mu- tual respect. This was vital if Canadian products were succes- sfully to compete in world mar- ets. The government's proposal also found a champion in Dep- uty Social Credit Leader Real Caouette, who termed the de- velopment board "necessary and urgent."' More capital was needed to develop Canada's "practically unlimited" re- sources, John R, Matheson (L--Leeds) said Canada's trade and gen- eral economy have been in rel- last few population ative decline in the years despite fast growth. Shortly after the House re- convened Monday, Prime Min- ister Diefenbaker announced that legislation will be intro- duced implementing recommen- dations of the Gill committee on unemployment - insurance, the MacPherson royal commission on transportation and the royal commission on publications. Ruling Reserved | In Cooke Action TORONTO (CP) --Mr. Jus- tice S, N. Schatz of Ontario Su- preme Court reserved judgment Monday on a_ $500,000 suit launched by Jack Kent Cooke, a former Toronto publisher and mination came when the station learned that Mr. Cooke was about to sell his Toronto radio station, CKEY, move to the United States and take out U.S. citi h radio station owner, against ra- dio station CKOY, Ottawa, for |wrongful dismissal and breach of contract. Argument in the non-jury ac- tion was completed in one court sitting. Mr. Cooke testified he signed a contract in June 1949, as a program consultant with the station after the Canadian Bank of Commerce, to which the sta- tion owed $250,000, suggested he be brought in: to help cut losses which in 1948 amounted to $31,000. Under the contract he was to receive 40 per cent of the sta- tion's gross profits. The con- tract was terminated by the sta- tion in March, 1961, he said, on six months' notice. Joseph Sedgwick, counsel for CKOY, told the court the ter- Mr. Sedgwick said CKOY had been told by the: Board. of Broadcast Governors that un- less it ended its contract with Mr. Cooke, its licence would be jeopardized. The board renewed the station's licence for one year, instead of the customary five, and CKOY's programming had come in for much criti- cism, Mr. Sedgwick said. Mr, Justice Schatz questioned whether the one-year renewal was related solely to Mr. Cooke's employment, adding: "CKOY could have pointed out it was bound by its contract with Mr. Cooke. It should have gua acorns cponrnareeneraraTseaieomenta at Mine Union Strife Actions Examined SUDBURY (CP)--An Ontario Supreme Court justice began consideration Monday of four legal actions arising from past internal strife in, the Interna- tional Union of Mine, Mill and Smelter Workers (Ind.). , All four actions began before Mine-Mill was replaced by the United Steelworkers of America (CLC) as bargaining agent for Sudbury employees of the International Nickel Com- pany following a bitterly fought jurisdictional campaign. Mr. Justice E. G. Thompson refused a motion to "discon- tinue" two actions brought against Kenneth Smith, na- tional president of M'ne-Mill, and District Secretary William Kennedy. The actions by Don Gillis, former president of Sudbury's Local 598 of the union, stopped Mr Smith from acting under the Mine-Mill constitution and sought $250,000 for damages al- legedly inflicted on the union hall here when it was tempor- arily taken over by a faction led by Mr. Kennedy. Counsel for Mr Smith ob- |jected to having the cases dis- |continued since "there would be a prejudice left" against the de- | fendants. | ASKS DISMISSAL The counsel, Malcolm Robb, likely that three of them will be- dismissed by government of counsel. : The fourth action involves a request by Mr. Smith for a dec- latory judgment that the Mine-Mill constitution was valid and binding on Local 598, i my. of . ee eb le Miss Riot : Charges Said Dismissed OXFORD, Miss. (AP) + Charges were dismissed Mon. day against former Maj.-Gen. Edwin A, Walker and six other persons arrested in connection with desegregation riots at the hy a of Mississippi last all. ; U.S. Attorney H. M. Ray of Oxford asked for the dismissals several hours after a federal grand jury adjourned without indicting the seven. ~~ U.S. District Judge Claude F. Clayton of Tupelo, Miss., granted the dismissal "without prejudice"--meaning that the charges could be reinstated at any time before the statute of limitations expires in five years. jasked that the suits be dis- | missed, | Claims for large assessments) lof damages in all four suits | have becn abandoned and _ all] four cases were adjourned to! next Monday. It was considered' Walker was charged with in- surrection, seditious conspiracy, conspiracy to impede and in jure officers of the United States and assaulting, resisting and impeding officers. ' Walker denied the charges. Growth Hormone Research EDMONTON (CP) Two Montreal doctors who dis- covered that an adult dwarf grew slightly after treatment wih a hormone from_ sheep have. sparked new inerest in research into what makes hu- mans grow. Dr, J. C. Beck and Dr. E. E. McGarry, his assistant re- ported on their discovery at the, recent meeting here on the Canadian Society for Cl'nical| Research. Jump Foreseen In Population Ot World ROME (AP) --. The. world's {skyrocketing population is ex- pected to double by the end of |this century. | If there is to be even moder-| jate improvement in the pres- ently inadequate state of nutri- \tion for half the people on earth, the world's food production must be doubled by '1980 and trebled by the year 2000. These were conclusions pre- sented Monday by the Food and Agriculture Organization of. the United Nations. A statistical publication, "six billions to feed," did not pre- dict whether or how it could be ldone, It only said this tremen- dous increase in food production is imperative. * | It took tens of thousands of years from the dawn of man- kind for the world to reach Urged Later, they told in an inter- view how they first got a hunch 18 months ago that the hormone -- called prolactin which controls the production of milk in»sheep might be used to induce growth in humans. After lengthy laboratory work, the in- itial test was made recently and succeeded, : Dr Beck and Dr McGarry have been studying the human pituitary gland for more than five years at McGill University clinic in Montreal's Royal Vic- toria Hospital. When Dr. Beck began his work five years ago he read an article by an American doctor in a medical journal that pro- lactin appeared to stimulate growth activity in breast can- cer patients. Later Dr. Beck came across anoher tiny re- port, this one from an. Aus- tralian bio-chemist working with sheep who reported @ bi cal similarity between prolac- tin and the human growth hor- mone. nae After more than a year of laboratory work the McGill team sought a dwarf who had not grown because of the des- truction of his pituitary gland. For two months he was given a highly purified amount of prolactin each day. When the supply ran out it was found the 31-year-old dwarf had grown one-quarter of an inch. ; The findings were reported by the Montreal team in a British medical journal and the report, said Dr. Beck, "has started a sudden demand for prolactin." The pituitary, pea-size gland at the base of the skull, controls growth and appears to have some part in keeping adults 'in 1,000,000,000 population in 1830, FAO noted. But it took only 100) lyears, until * 1930, to reach| |2,000,000, population and only) 3 years until 1960 to reach) | 3,000,000,000. | | In the next 40 years, by the) end of this century, the popula-; tion is expected to reach 6,000,- 000,000. And from then on it| {will go up in huge multiples|: every year. | | Today there are only 12.5) jacres of land on earth for| jevery man, woman and child inow living. Of this, only 1.1) lacres is: cultivated today, and, good health. 260 People Hurt In Train Collision PHILADELPHIA (AP)--More than 260 persons were injured Monday when' a special Read- ing Railroad train jammed with morning commuters because of a transit strike. smashed into the back of a regular local as it discharged passengers at a city station. determined specifically what)FAO estimates that at maxi-| No one was hurt seriously. the board wanted." Mr. Cooke testified that he put the station in the black by the end of 1949. In the 10 years ending in 1960, the station had made $1,600,000 in profits. GLECOFF SUPERMARKET Specials for Mon. - Tues. - Wed. JAN. 21 - 22 - 23 CHICKEN BACKS 3»: 29° FRESH SHOULDER PORK CHOPS HOSTESS TEA BAGS DEMPSTER'S BREAD CHEESE SLICES DOG FOOD DELMAR MARGARINE » 1,00 n'sas 7 OF 2 ist 39° 32° 29° un 95* 24-0Z. OAVES Ya-LB, PKG. 15-0Z, TINS 3 Shop and Save at Glecoff's Supermarket OPEN EVERY NIGHT 'TIL 10:00 P.M. jmum only about three acres icould possibly be cultivated. |The rest is too arid, too moun- tainous or too cold. Most of the injured were cut by shattered glass or bruised when flung about the coaches. Some had fractured bones. COMING EVENTS |SOCIAL Bingo, 8 p.m. Wednesday, January 23rd, St. George's Hall, corner) |Albert and Jackson Streets. Refresh- {ments served. |RUMMAGE sale and bake sale to be |held at Rundle Park Clubhouse on Wed- nesday, January 23, at 2 o'clock. ATTENTION -- | | FREDERICK GEOGHEGAN | | CONCERT ORGANIST | Wednesday, January 23rd | 1963 |R. S. MCLAUGHLIN 30 P | DOG TRAINING CLASSES | CHILDREN 10-14 YEARS United Steel' Workers Hall 115 Albert Street WED., JAN. 23rd 6 P.M. Dial 725-4858 LIONS COLLEGIATE M. | bella. FERNHILL Bingo tonight, Avalon, 7.30, 20 games, $6 and $10; seven $40 jack- pots, Door prizes. EUCHRE and Bridge Party at St. Gregory's Auditorium, January 24, 8 p.m .Sponsored by Daughters of Isa- EUCHRE PARTY WOODVIEW COMMUNITY CENTRE ' CADILLAC AVE. NORTH Wednesday, Jan. 23 AT 8 P.M. LUNCH -- PRIZES ADMISSION 50c EACH BINGO oe WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 23, 1963 8:00 P.M. JUBILEE PAVILION 20 -- $20.00 GAMES -- 20 5 -- $30.00 GAMES -- 5 3 JACKPOTS 1 -- $150.00 -- 2 -- $250.00 EXTRA BUSES -- FREE ADMISSION EVERYONE WELCOME

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