RTE 2 SONY EN aie ps mga" papas ae Q THE COMAWA TIMES, Tusedey, Apel 9, 1963 i ha et Pte hed ESS es m GOOD EVENING By JACK GEARIN ONE-WAY TRAFFIC TO BE STUDIED . A four-man committee of the Oshawa Businessmen's As- eéciation has a big date tonight. ~ It will meet with City Council in committee to discuss a'problem that has had wide repercussions of late -- this. is the proposed one-way traffic plan for downtown King street as suggested in the recently-completed Smith, Damos Re- port, which is stoutly opposed by the OBA. - The merchants will support their case tonight with a bslef. Two representatives of the Smith, Damos firm will be on hand to answer questions. Details of the brief have met been published, but the merchants will likely point to some other Ontario municipalities where the one-way traffic deal has not worked out to the advantage of downtown firms, especially in St. Catharines, Ont., where it reportedly caused @ % per cent decrease in business for a period. *. The Oshawa Downtown Businessmen's Association is to be commended for taking this step which could lead to a happy solution of their traffic problems. This is a many- aided problem, one that can only be solved after all parties involved have been heard. RECALL 1894 TRACKS CEREMONY " Our April 4th column -- in which a search was instituted tér persons who witnessed the historic King street track-laying ceremony in 1894 -- appears to be making headway. Douglas W. Jolins, superintendent of Hillsdale Manor, re- ports that at least two of the H-M residents attended -- Walter Hockin, an Oshawa blacksmith for more than 50 years; and Bill Johnston, a teamster. « In addition to this, the following letter also arrived from Hillsdale resident: ~~ Dear Mr. Gearin: ¥ Further to your April 4th column. "« My wife, the former Evangeline Louvenia Burr, recalls be- ing at the track-laying ceremony with three sisters with whom she was living at the time at the southwest corner of Athol street west and Centre street (site of the present City Hall). * The sisters were Marianne, Harriet and Maggie Billings, afl deceased. Would anyone remember a "Dr. Cobourn," who Hdd an office on Simcoe street south? x IT came to Oshawa in 1893. It may be of interest to you to know that I was at the fire that destroyed the McLaughlin Car- age Works prior to Christmas, 1899. I worked on the new building put up in 1900, help lift the cornerstone in place. The late John Stacey had the contract for the brick work. as Gale the wood-work and Hawkins and Bailes the roof- ipg. I believe I'm the only one still living who worked on that building. I feel it is quite an honor to say I worked on the first building of the big GMC and that it is still standing. ™ We were married January 1, 1906 and have lived here con- tinuously since December, 1922 -- we lived in Alberta 1907 to the above date. : , We have been married more than 57 years. My wife is 84, I am 85. Our birthdays are June 18 for Mrs. Hogarth and July 20 for myself. For 32 days yearly, we are the same age. Sincerely, A Henry W. Hogarth, Room 105, Hillsdale Manor, City. eS WILLSDALE MANOR RESIDENTS CAST BALLOT . | Terence V. Kelly, the athletic-minded young lawyer and SS epeaker, was one of four stars last Saturday for Oshawa Vikings when the local entry played a scoreless @e with the Toronto Camicks at Lakeview Park in a Rugger e ***tion game. Dave Nicholishen, Don Pringle and Russ \ Hiams also starred for Oshawa. . . . Some citizens may fault with the Canada Elections Act, but it allows for -ridden patients in civic-run institutions like Hillsdale Manor to cast a ballot even though they are unable to leave their bed. These people cast a ballot yesterday at the con- Glusion of the regular-vote period when the DRO and two @ssistants brought the ballot box to their room. There were 19 eligible voters in the Manor. UTTLE NOTES FROM HERE AND THERE « Edgar F. Bastedo, QC, former City alderman and chair- than of Finance, returned Tecently from a 17-day cruise p aabegie Bastedo to Spain and Tangiers . . . Hayden Mac- returned last week from Florida where he had been vacation for three weeks. . . . Morley G. Finley and Dave H. Lander returned from a Bermuda holiday recently. » +. Alderman Cecil Bint has had a tough bout with pneu- @onia, but is showing good improvement and hopes to be back at this office in a few days, He's been confined to his fiome for one month. . . . The next open meeting of City Council will be on Tuesday, April 17. * SOTES FROM THE HUSTINGS OF ONTARIO RIDING: Remember back to May 26, 1952, when "Mike" Starr -- making his debut in Federal politics as a PC candidate in io riding -- tallied 12,310 votes (which was light) com- d with 9,088 for John L. Lay, Liberal, and 8,470 for .. Roy Scott, CCF? = Scott, a newcomer to Federal politics as were his two ents, made a remarkably strong showing in Oshawa only losing out to Mr. Starr by 6,473 to 6,403 -- 70 votes ? » The NDP committee room on Simcoe street north was @ beehive of activity as early as 7 a.m. yesterday with Qerty-workers gathered in overflowing numbers and the 'eaffic problem acute outside... . Alderman Finley Dafoe Pas in super-irate mood again Monday as he stood outside the PC committee rooms on King street east before noon and @omplained bitterly that election campaign posters had been ed to PUC poles during the night, "and not by the 8". Tis this the same Finley Dafoe who wa GCF candidate ? oe AUTOMOTIVE MUSEUM TAKES FORM « The Oshawa Automotive Museum has ~ it first started to take form on the % seven or eight months ago, = There was a reminder of this recently when the special _--.. of the Oshawa C of C in charge of the project ve an attractive brochure on the subject. = The committee has already lined up 31 classic autos } ¢ display purposed at the Simcoe street south museum and seeking a steam and electric car -- the $1 cars range from € 1903 Cadillac to a 1929 Pontiac. * Because of his long association with General Motors of where he was chief engineer for several years, Mr. F. "Ed." Armstrong is an ideal choice as chairman of Museum committee. « Few men have such a comprehensive knowledge of the industry as has Mr. Armstrong and already this beginning to show to good advantage in the progress made in the planning of this complex program. Museum will represent a visual history of Canada's industry, past, present and future in Oshawa and come a long way draft board no less ott ll Mr. Armstrong: 'e want the Museum to make people aware, particular- wa and district people, that the Canadian automotive was born and developed right here in Oshawa. we want to preserve, under ideal conditions, valu- automotive exhibits, such as early cars and trucks -- they are lost to posterity. Third, the automotive in- has played and will continue to play an important in the economic development of our country. We want an education service to schools and colleges. we feel that a well-run Automobile Museum in wa will attracts hundreds of tourists from other coun- and all over Canada." fe i neee i In the following story a United States reporter who covered the campaign for The Associated Press as- sesses the result from the American point of view. By MAX HARRELSON TORONTO (AP)--Despite the confusion surrounding the out- come of Monday's election, it seems likely that Prime Minis- ter John Diefenbaker can at best only delay the formation of a Liberal government. In order to maintain his Con- servative government in power, Diefenbaker would have to have the support of both the right-wing Social Credit party and the left-wing New Demo- crats, This does not appear probable. If and when Liberal Leader Lester .B. Pearson gets the bid to form a government, he is prepared to launch a blitz at- tack.on a half - dozen urgent problems, including the sagging U.S.Canadian relations. His prospective cabinet mem- bers have been working for months on economic, financial. defence and foreign policy prob- lems, Pearson has indicated he aims to follow the pattern of the famous 100 days of the New Deal in Washington. 'LEAVE EAGLE ALONE' The 65-year-old Nobel Prize winner has stressed over and over that he wants to pursue a good-neighbor policy. He says he deplores anti - Americanism and what he calls "plucking the eagle's feathers." Anti - Americanism was in- jected into the campaign, pri- marily by the Conservatives, but Diefenbaker insisted it was pro-Canadianism, The vote did not give any clear sign that the issue had influenced the deci- sion. Mandate or no mandate, Pearson is expected to put a Priority tag on the task of patching up the tradition of friendship with the United States. It would be a mistake, how- ever, to conclude that the days of friction between Ottawa and Washington will end with the formation of a Liberal govern- ment. Both defence and eco- nomic differences are too wide for immediate solution. And Canadian officials, in- cluding Pearson, are deter- U.S. Reporter Views Federal Vote Result up if the interests of Canada are involved. The, question of accepting nu- clear warheads raises immedi- ate difficulties. Although Pear- son declared during the cam- paign that he favored accepting the warheads to the extent nec- essary to carry out Canada's commitments, he has never been enthusiastic about having nuclear weapons on Canadian soil, Up until last January he was publicly opposing such a step. NEEDS SUPPORT As head of a ely gov- ernment he would be depend- ent upon one of the other par- ties to support any major de- fence policy. It is doubtful that he can win such support. arming its NATO forces in Eu-' rope with nuclear weapons js especially urgent since the NATO council meets in Ottawa May 22. Some economic policy state- What Canada will do sbout| ments made by Mitchell Sharp, a Liberal government, and Wal- ter Gordon, prospective finance minister, have run counter to policies being pushed in Wash- ington on tariffs. Sharp has criticized. Diefen- baker for not adopting a tough take in future tariff bargaining under the U.S. Trade Expan- sion Act. The Liberals say they will work out industry-by-industry plans for producing more goods in Canada and buying less from the United States. Gordon has indicated that a Liberal govern- ment would turn first to the au- tomobile industry. Canadian as- sembly plants, mostly owned by companies, now import more than $300,000,000 worth of auto parts a year. Pearson, once Canada's am- bassador in Washington, will have the problem of trying to cut down Canadian imports, in- crease exports to the United Quiet Trading On Monday Stock Market TORONTO (CP) -- Buyers moved in, prices advanced firmly, and three of the four index sections hit new 1963 highs during relatively quiet trading on the stock market Monday, Ford of Canada posted one of the largest gains of the day as it rose four points to 180. Ford jumped 2% to a new 1963 high of 55% and General Motors gained % to a new year's top of 74%, All major banks moved ahead in a fractional range. Some notable utilities in- cluded Bell Telephone ahead % to 56% after hitting a new top of 57, B.C. Telephone up %, Great Lakes Power % and Cal- gary Power %. On index, industrials were up 3.14 to a new 1963 high of 614.56, base metals, after hitting a high of 207.37, were up .79 to 207.27 and western oils reached a new high of 120.26, up 2.18. Golds slipped .84 *o 88.86. Final vol- ume was 2,956,000 compared with 3,539,000 Friday. mined to avoid anything that appears like kowtowing to Washington. As Pearson put it recently, Canada must do. its best to maintain good relations with the United States, but at the proper time it must speak $5,000 Bail Set For Bush Workers TORONTO (CP)--Chief Jus- tice J, C. McRuer of the On- tario High Court Monday set bail at $5,000 each for 20 men com- mitted to stand trial on non- $36,000 In Gems Loot In Robbery LONDON (CP)--Thieves stole jewellery worth £12,000 (about $36,000) from the suburban home of stockbroker David Met. calfe and his Canadia-born wife during the weekend. Mrs. Metcalfe, 33, is the for- mer Alexandra Boycun of Fort William, Ont. She was previ- ously married to film magnate Sir ---- Korda who died in 1956. States and at the same time avoid aggravating U.S, - Cana- dian relations. In foreign and defence poli- cies, he may even have to lean over backwards at times to keep the sensitive Canadians from accusing him of being subservient to Washington slated to be trade minister in) enough stand for Canada to} § Mitchell Sharp, former Lib- eral deputy trade minister, whoops it up at party hedd- quarters in Toronto Eglinton every time he goes along with Washington. following his victory in the WHOOPS IT UP federal election Monday night. Justice Minister Fleming, Conservative member for the riding in the 25th Parliament, did not seek re-election. --(CP Wirephoto) By THE CANADIAN PRESS How prominent candidates fared in Monday's election: Three of Ontario's five fed- eral cabinet ministers swept aside by the avalanche of Lib- eral votes which hit the major cities--Frank McGee, minister without portfolio, in York-Scar- borough; Postmaster - General Ellen Fairclough in Hamilton West, and Immigration Minis- ter Richard A. Bell in Carleton. Judy La Marsh, 38-year-old woman lawyer who headed the Liberals' controversial truth squad, re-elected in Niagara Falls. Health Minister Waldo Mon- teith, in the cabinet since 1957, a fifth-time winner in Perth. Labor Minister Michael Starr re-elected for his sixth straight victory in Ontario riding. Lionel Chevrier, former Lib- eral transport minister, re- elected in Montreal Laurier for; his ninth term in the House of Commons, defeating Gilles Ca- ouette, son of Social Credit Deputy Leader Real Caouette. Real Caouette re-elected in the northwestern Quebec riding of Villeneuve. Walter Gordon, 57, chairman of the Liberal national cam- paign committee, returned in capital murder charges arising from the Feb. 11 shooting deaths of three Kapuskasing lumber workers. The'20 men -- all independent lumber workers--face trial be- fore a Supreme Court judge and jury in October. They have been in custody near Kapuskasing since Magistrate W. S. Gardner committed them for trial last Wednesday. The $5,000 cash or property bail is the same amount set for the men after their arrest fol- .|lowing the deaths of the three strikers and pending their pre- liminary hearing. INTERPRETING THE NEWS Seems P By ALAN HARVEY Canadian Press Staff Writer | Don't let this leak out to the John Birch Society, but it's be- ginning to look as though the United States government is get- WEATHER FORECAST Partly C Forecasts issued by the Tor- onto weather office at 4:30 a.m.: Synopsis: Skies are mostly cloudy in Northern Ontario, ported, while partly cloudy skies prevail in southern re- ther pattern will be slow to change. Lake St. Clair, Lake Erie, Lake Huron, Lake Ontario, Ni- agara regions, Windsor, Lon- don, Hamilton, Toronto: Partly cloudy with little change in temperature today and Wednes- day. Winds northeast 10 to 15. Georgian Bay, Haliburton, Timagami, Algoma, White River regions, North Bay, Sud- bury, Sault Ste. Marie: Cloudy with sunny intervals and little change in temperature today and Wednesday. A few scat- 'tered snowflurries. Winds nortb- east 15. Cochrane region: Mostly cloudy with periods of very light snow today and Wednes- day, little change in tempera- ture. Winds northeast 15 to 20. Forecast Temperatures Low tonight, High Wednesday Windsor .. . St. Thomas London Mount Forest Wingham ...sse00. Hamilton ..... eee cores eseee NEED AN... OIL FURNACE? CALL PERRY DAY OR NIGHT 723-3443 where some light snow Its re-| loudy | Weather Seen St. Catharines .... Toronto ... Peterborough .... |Trenton .ccccccece |Killaloe oe dear god ose | gions of the province. This wea-| E Kapuskasing White River Moosonee .. Sault Ste. Marie .. Timmins ......... Low overnight, High DAWSON coscccccces 37 Halifax ....sseee0- "KINDNESS BEYOND PRICE, YET WITHIN REACH OF ALL" GERROW FUNERAL CHAPEL 390 King W. 728-6226 Socialist Europe. alctable ting. ready to swallow the once unpalatable idea of a socialist Europe without so much as a grimace. Once upon a time, any right- thinking administration in Washington would have recoiled in horror at the thought of a pale-pink color scheme on the old Continent. But now -- well, things have changed. The first augury of the new trend is the U.S. visit of pipe- smoking Harold Wilson, the La- bor party leader many regard as likely to become British prime minister within the next year or sv. All reports of the visit suggest that Wilson, rapidly sloughing off the trappings of a wily poli- tician and accustoming himself to the cosy garments of a re- sponsible statesman, made a considerable impression in Washington and went a long way toward convincing Presi- dent Kennedy that a Labor gov- ernment in Britain would be something less than a tragedy. SIMILARITY OF VIEWS Wilson's big impact on the White House is perhaps less due to the bewitching magic of his own rather enigmatic personal. ity -- though he and Kennedy probably have much in common as pragmatic, ice - cold poli- ticians -- than to the similarity of some of their views on the defence of Europe. Washington's prime worry is about the proliferation of inde- pendent nuclear deterrents in the name of old - fashioned na- tionalism; Wilson for his part says the independent . deterrent idea is just so much Victorian nostalgia and that is just what the president wants to hear. HEAT WITH OIL DIXON'S | OTL SERVING OSHAWA OVER 24-HOUR SERVICE 313 ALBERT ST. 723-4663 Toronto Davenport which he first won last year. Paul Martin, health minister in the former Liberal govern- meni, an easy victor in Essex East for a ninth straight term. Paul Hellyer, associate de- era., were defeated in 1957, successful again in Toronto Trinity. Mitchell Sharp, 51, former deputy trade minister, elected in Toronto Eglinton. Cote. Gordon Churchill, defence minister in the Diefenbaker cabinet, elected in Winnipeg South Centre one hour and 57 minutes after polls closed. Agriculture Minister Alvin pelle, Douglas Harkness held Calgary North for the Conservatives. Douglas Fisher of the New Democrats, who played the giant-killing role by toppling the late C. D. Howe in the 1957 ee re-elected in Port Ar- thur. Raymond O'Hurley, defence production minister, defeated by Liberal candidate Auguste Choquette in Lotbiniere. Egan Chambers, president of the National Progressive Con- servative Association, defeated in Montreal St. Lawrence-St. George by Liberal John Turner. Transport Minister Leon Bal- cer, re-elected in Trois-Riv- jeres. Walter Dinsdale, resources Minister in the Diefenbaker government, re-elected in Bran- don-Souris 46 minutes after close of polls, Stanley Knowles, New Dem- ocratic Party spokesman in the last Parliament, elected one hour and 16 minutes after polls closed. ' Rudy Usick, prominent Van- itoba Liberal farm spokesman, defeated in Selkirk, Theogene Ricard, mimster without portfolio, re-elected in St, Hyacinthe-Bagot for fourth consecutive term. Howard Green, a member of' the Commons since 1935 and ex- ternal affairs minister, defeated in Vancouver Quadra constitu- ency by Liberal challenger Grant Deachman. Deachman, 49, is former B.C, Liberal or- ganizer, A Series: No. 2 Shake, Rattle and Roll Stirring paint Is @ drag. To save you a lot of fuss and muss, we've installed TWO mechanical all shook up before it leaves our store, Take your choice of C-I-L or FLO- GLAZE finishes: in every case, colour mixing and mechanical mixing is FREE at PATTE'S Paint and Wallpaper 93 Yeors ot 85 Simcoe North Free Parking at Rear of Store PHONE 725-3529 fence minister when the Lib- Pierre Sevigny, former asso- ciate minister of national de- fence in the Diefenbaker cab- inet, unseated in Longueuil by Liberal candidate Jean-Pierré| Hamilton returned in Qu'Ap- Former defence minister shakers and now every can of paint is| How Prominent Vote Candidates Made Out MinesMinister Paul Martin- eau re-elected in Pontiac-Tem- ae peng Maurice Lamontagne, eco- nomic adviser to Liberal As cn DOTA a ercenteeinatenins By BOB THOMAS SANTA MONICA, Calif. (AP) Gregory Peck, the peaceanak- the , ruthless Coretta Swen ENG ae For Peck, 47, it was the cli- max of a 2-year career in films. He-had been five times for Hollywood's high- CHOICE IS POPULAR The choice of Peck was obvi- ously a popular one and the au- dience of 2,500 at Santa Mon- ica's Civic Auditorium erupted in waves of applause. Peck support, Miss Bancroft, 31, is appear- ing in Mother Courage on the rei York stage. Joan Craw- '0 upset soned observers, bi had tabbed either Bette Davis (What Ever Happened to Baby Jane?) or Geraldine Page Veteran Begley, noted as an actor's actor, cantbih another' surprise in the supporting actor (Sweet Bird of Youth) to win,|hour greed irsni ene EOL Peck, Bancroft Award Winners race, Omar Sharif of Lawrence was considered the favorite. "T've come a long w from said. Miss Duke's victory marked. the first time a juvenile has oot honor, Dut et for 38 yones, ete The French Sundays and Cy- od Rains iy Mal ee for- language " song was Days of Wine and Roses his close friends for the moral] 'rec' ner, Ben. » which col- lected '11. nid The Oscar cast ' minutes past the estimated two- mark, and moved along with businesslike precision while producing no great mo- Leader Pearson, elected in Montreal Outremont-St. Jean. Gilles Gregoire, prominent Social Credit spokesman, re- elected in Lapointe. Charles M. Drury, former deputy minister of national de- didate in Montreal St. Antoine-' Westmount, Gerard Picard, Quebec leader of the New Democratic Party, defeated in Montreal Mercier in his first bid for a House of Commons seat. Leslie Morris, Communist party leader, defeated by a wide margin in Toronto Trinity. Red Kelly, hockey centre with Toronto Maple Leafs, a repeat winner in York West for the Liberals. David Lewis, deputy leader of the New Democratic Party in the House of Commons, de- feated by a Liberal in York South. Mrs. Margaret Macdonald, Progressive Conservative, only woman member of the last Par- liament from the Atlantic prov- inces, defeated by Liberal John Mullally in Kings, P.E.I. Allan J. MacEachen, former Special adviser to Liberal Leader Pearson, re-elected in Inverness-Richmond. Forestry Minister Martial As- selin defeated in Charlevoix by Social Credit candidate Antoine Belanger. Hazen Argue, former CCF House leader, defeated as Lib- eral candidate in Assiniboia, a Saskatchewan constituency he had represented since 1945. Conservative Lawrence Watson won the seat. Marcel Lambert, veterans af- fairs minister and Speaker in the last Parliament, re-elected in Edmonton West. | H.W. Herridge, former New Democratic Party House leader re-elected with a' comfortable majority in Kootenay West. Harold Winch, a founding member of the former CCF party, returned in Vancouver East for the 11th straight time NOW To have that carpet or chest- erfield cleaned professionally in Oshawa's Original Carpet Cleaning Centre . . . where fully guaranteed satisfaction is assured. Phone 728-4681 NU-WAY RUGCO. LTD. 174 MARY ST. Want Your Home WE REQUIRE YOUR HOME Sold ?| \) Women Lose Members In Commons By THE CANADIAN PRESS The number of women in the Commons dropped by one and the balance swung from Pro- gressive Conservative to Lib. eral in Monday's general elec- tion, : The four women in the new House will consist of three Lib. erals and one Conservative. In the last Parliament, there were five women: Three Conserva- tives and two Liberals, Outstanding casualty of her sex was Py Be jen Fairclough, Canada's ti $ federal minister, who lost to a Liberal in Hamilton West, which She had represented since 1950. Mrs. Jean Casselman of On- tario's Grenville-Dundas consti. tuency was the only Progressive Conservative survivor as Mrs. Fairclough was joined on the defeated list by Mrs, Margaret Macdonald, who lost her Kings seat in Prince Edward Island to a Liberal. JOIN MISS LA MARSH Mrs. Isabel Hardie, a Liberal, lost her Northwest Territories Seat to a Progressive, But two new Liberal women joined Miss Judy La Marsh, head of the party's "truth squad" during the election campaign, who re- tained Niagara Falls. The new women MPs are Mrs. Margaret Konantz, who unseated Gordon Chown, deputy Speaker of the last Commons, in Winnipeg South, and Miss Pauline Jewett, who won back Northumberland (Ont.) from the Conservatives for the first time since 1953. In all, 43 women were in the field--14 Progressive Conserva- tives, 14 New Democrats, six Liberals, six Social Crediters, two independents and one Com- ments of excitement. Bob Hope's wit was missed, but Frank Sinatra kept things mov- ing and provided occasional laughs. ; Fairclough Defeated In Hamilton HAMILTON (CP) -- Mrs, El- len Fairclough, Canada's first woman cabinet minister, was defeated in Hamilton West rid- ing Monday, Her successful cp- ponent said "she put up one hell of a fight." Liberal Joe Macaluso, on his fede) io bie, onl win over Mrs. Fairclough. Mrs. Fairclough, wo con-~ ceded to Macaluso one hour,. three minutes and 30 seconds after the polls closed, tossed her head and remarked: "Thanks for the memory." She started her political car- eer in 1946 as a member of Hamilton city council and was elected to the House of Com- mons in 1950. She was a mem. ber of the Canadian delegation to the United Nations and in 1955 was a member of the Ca- nadian delegation to the Nor'h Atlantic Treaty Organization in Paris. Mrs. Fairclough made history in 1957 when she became secre- tary of state and the first woman cabinet minister in Ca-. nadian politics. In 1958 she was appointed minister of citizenship and im- migration. Mrs. Fairclough told reporters - she has no plans for the future. As a five-piece Italian band helped, turn Hamilton's King Street into an outdoor dance hall, Macaluso said he hopes he doesn't have to face Mrs. Fair- clough again. "You can't underestimate her,"' he said. "I know I've been in an election battle. We didn't expect to win this big." COMING EVENTS RUMM. Pm, at CRA Gibb by St. Luke's Ladies' Guild, ANNUAL Banquet, Oshawa Diabetic Association, St. Paul's Presbyterian Church, Wilson Road North, Wednes- day, April 10, 6 p.m. 'AGE SALE, Wed:, April 10, 1.30 street. FERNHILL Bingo tonight, Avaion, 7.30. 20 games $6 and $10, Seven $40 jack- pots. Door prizes. KINSMEN BINGO TUESDAY, 8 0'CLOCK FREE ADMISSION EXTRA BUSES Jackpot Nos. 51-57 EARLY BIRD GAMES KINSMEN COMMUNITY CENTRE 109 COLBORNE ST. W, LIONS BINGO WEDNESDAY, APRIL 10th, 8:00 P.M. JUBILEE PAVILION 20 -- $20 GAMES -- 20 5 -- $30 GAMES -- 5 1 -- $150 JACKPOT -- 1 2 -- $250 JACKPOTS -- 2 JACKPOT EXTRA BUSES -- Nos. 53-52 FREE ADMISSION EARLY BIRD GAMES $1200 IN CASH PR Children Under 1 IZES AVAILABLE 6 Not Admitted PROPERTIES ARE MOVING FAST! We Sold Over $165,000 of Homes IN THE PAST 10 DAYS! Call To-de y For Action! SCHOFIELD-AKER 360 KING WEST OPEN 9 TO 9 BILL MeFEETERS -- 725-1726 LES HALL -- 726-5513 (Limited) 723-2265 -- SAT. 9 TOS REG, AKER -- 725-0201 STEVE MACKO -- 728-5868 HENRY STINSON -- 725-0243 FREE PARKING AT REAR OF OFFICE ed ASSESSMENT OFFICER REQUIRED The Oshawa Separete Sc time Assessment Officer. Applicants epply in writing, stating age, marital status, quoli- d, to:-- Oshawa Separate School Board and salary 47 Simcoe St. South, Oshawa Frank E. Shine hool Board require o full ess Admin tor