Daily Times-Gazette (Oshawa Edition), 26 Jan 1957, p. 5

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3199 SEE IT WHITBY SPORTS "py nlops Held To 2 All Tie SPOTLIGHT By Improved Kingston Team By WREN A. BLAIR z By CLIFF GORDON { Charlie Burns celebrated his re-|in schedule play . . . They nip- The Kingston CKLC's and the turn to Aetion wis 2 Boa at the|ped tne Dutities bs 3 their ast : Whitby Dunlops battled to a ter- 11:27 mark as he drilled one by start here and wo ce tn make The Cornwall "Chevvies", victors over the Dunlops last time jg, ho Pe last night in Brooks with Tom O'Connor and|it two in a row. The Chevvies| . here, make their final visit of the regular schedule here at the ginocton It was one of the best Gagnon getting credit for the are running the Dunnies a close| © Whitby Arena tonight. These two clubs exchanged 6-5 games oD games of hocke seen in that assists. The Dunnies held a slight second, but were trailing in last, i opposition ice recently and they will likely battle each other to the arena this season. The big factor edge in this period and outshot! night's game against Belleville, wire, to decide the ultimate winner of first place this season. The in the Dunnies tie was the tre-'the home side 7-7, iby a single goal at the end of Dunlops have the most favourable position at the t, holdi d goal ding of John The teams opened 3 at ajtwo periods of play. So if they| a lead in points as well as games in hand. However the "'Chevvies" Henderson. {breathtaking pace in the final lost that one, the Dunnies would| ; |" The Kingston team outshot the frame as they both had their pick up another point over their| have nearly all home games left in the race. plos the fact tha) Whitby team by a total of 38-22. sights set on the big one. The closest rivals . . . McBeth was| two, of these are at home with Whitby. Long John. Henderson WI Of this total, 17 shots were fired Dunnies hit the score sheet at/back in cction but was used| make his second start in the local nets tonight ,and if he comes, woo "he first period as the the 11:15 mark as Samolenko sparringly . . . Burns made his, | up with a performance equal to Wednesday's, the "'Chevvies" gi,ocion team played a vastly im- scored one on his old team mates first start in over three weeks) will have to work for their tallies. It's been some time since any proved game. The best the Dun-to give the Dunnies the lead for and came up with a goal. He player so completely captured the imagination of the hockey fans nies could do was five shots at the first time in the game. The appears somewhat out of condit-| of this district, as has Long John. The fans cheered his every Bert Brooks in the Kingston cage. Kingston team kept pressing and ion but he will soon gain that| i i i ding roar, as the Brooks also came up with a stand.|again they took advantage of a back , . . Kingston still trying to move Wednesday, climaxing it With 3 rescuing in og P 2 | penalty to the Dunnies to score./get a top contender have signed i i in hi here. out game. final buzzer went, recording a shut-out in his first appearance ere: | 3 game, were a big thing in With Redmond serving a minor another player, Roy Partridge, Henderson made some scintillating saves, but more than ||act night's game as the Kings- sentence, the Kingston team put who played for Barrie and Vic- that, it was the manner in which he handled himself, that im- [ton team scored both their goals on a power play. Buchannan ull- toria . . . Kingston are fighting pressed the fans. Once a team gets a shot on him, they have | While the Dunnies had a man ined the string on the equalizer gamely for the last playoff spot in to make it good, because he seldom gives a rebound for any [the cooler. {with Bellringer and Moore divid-|the league and now trail Pem-| d ch He is ificent with his stick, clearing | Charlie Burns, back for his first/ ing the assists. broke by only a single point for | yi The teams failed in a game that coveted fourth spot. The pucks switly ine the corer sally away from blo donrsies, | SST ie the isc Whthy ou flrs ta break the Geadiock" Th wil be. going al ut. aid hen ONE HORSE POWER his height, when the puck struck the end of the rink, bounced ee Geo Samolenko Soule te Be te tired Whitby oe this iin > it as the The old gray mare was called | ist, caught in a squeezd by the land, when he ran out of fuel ea | Perth, in Sostiend. high into the air, and looked as though it would drop in front | ~~ ° cq for the home side./to come out with a tie. Gagnon earmarkings of a dandy. in to help out this British motor- ' rationing of gasoline in Eng- | a lonely country road near of the net, where a Belleville player stood poised to whip it |The Cornwall Chevvies will make drew a penalty early in the over-| | home. With the puck somewhere about 9 feet in the stratos- |their final appearance of the sea- time stanza and the Kingston SUMMARY LJ phere, Henderson calmly reached into the yawning space, [son here tonight, fans were really chanting for a 1st Period | fi dA Muh TRE EE ne emt meni oe. | B1g Challenge Confronts Burns | {over the front i Dunnies, | hel e fort and came out w zzini, 22, is 'still looking for that puck to drop. A great deal of credit over the fron Nihning Dun ios, he Shots tH DOE Penalties: Howarth, McBeth p , wh ked steadily to help.the [the Kingston team, p Sues ue Beuierson's Se matea his. debut, i a Pde A 13199 howling fans, were keyed up| ICE CHIPS . . If the fans 2; Bellringer, Sindeen, | i a - ® ® ® ° Loi |for this game. They also wanted thought that Henderson was sen 2nd Period rink, t t the puck, | ; : : i n e; si A ng Ju nk, of his nitiation rd [to give Long John a t:ue Kingston Saliva gh id Hem id 2. Whitby Burns, Tom' O'Con- | a a Pp fool |welcome. The teams battled it should have seen him last night.| ™ "Ga nsn 11.27 i i 1 | 1 | | 1 i i | J i the legue. The arena was filled, for the attraction, and we feel |,+ at a torrid pace with the The big fellow came up with} Penalties: Redmond | e X there is little dougt that a record crowd will be on hand tonight. |homesters having a decided edge some tremendous saves . . . | 3rd Period 3.ia . i Those who saw Wednesday's game will certainly be back, and [on the shooting. They finally man- Kingston team played the best 3. Whitby er) G { By JACK BRAYLEY giving an analysis of the Middle ask Canada for the fine adminis-| "This is where the Canadians we know of dozens who were on night shift, and they are anx- |aged to hit pay dirt as, withgame they have shown against J hut x amolenko, agnen, ool Canadian Press Staff Writer [East situation. The next thing the trative troops we've got now." [stepped in and we started to build fous to see the former Boston netminder tonight. |Sinden in the cooler, Chiarellijthe Whitby team this season. | t. Ki ors oy Buch 2 Bell. EL BALLAH, Egypt (CP)--Run- general knew, Pearson was say- He says that doesn't mean Ca- with a purpose and get organized The week of Feb. 4th to 11th, has been declared Minor Rocke Itook a pass from Toppazzzini and They should provide a bang up| % \ ngs on uchannan, Be 15:25 ning the United Nations Emerg: ing: "You're the man for the job." nadians are all at headquarters properly." Week in Canada. In Whit: b tiv i Y|partridge to fire the first goal affair here on Tuesday night as Li ope 4 '@ ency Forces demands a studied] Gen. Burns chuckles at this ver- wielding pens and counting sup- CHIEF WAS ADAMANT eek In Canada, 'n by, Where 3:-Inost active minor league by Henderson since he joined the|they will take up where they left Penalties: mond. neutrality and an international sion, plies. Canadian sappers are in the] The general's quiet but com- Is in operation, it will begin the night of Saturday Feb. 2nd. The \hijthy team. The Dunnies fought off last night . . . Tonight the Overtime outlook. But Maj.-Gen. E. L. M.| "All I'll say," he says, "is that van of most take-over operations manding voice was behind every Dunlops will be out of town that night, ahd the Bantams, Midgets pack gamely but could not get a Cornwall Chevvies will invade the| Scoring--None. Burns says he feels very much aI had spent an awful lot of time behind the Israeli withdrawal. |stage of the build-up. When the and Juveniles will take over at the Arena in a big night, as part scoring rally organized. | Whitby arena for the last time! Penalties: Gagnon, Canadian, : |arguing the need for the closest Yugoslavs pulled up at Ismailia of, "Minor Hockey Week." This coming Tuesday night, the Kings- ------ --ee "After all, being a Canadian issupport of UN and its work, and DELICATE POSITION ' | for the night, their transports boil- no disadvantage on this job," says I could hardly refuse the post prs man to enter El 'Arish be- ing from a fast trip from the dis- ton CKLC's visit here in a tilt against the Dunlops, and as a start Mr. James stated that this was| . , / . . T og. oT ; [the patient Montreal sapper. "It's|when it was offered." nd the Jewish forces was Maj. embarkati i Por i towards this big week, the Senior club will have as their gueests all Rotary Members old a "peculiar" session compared to well documented that Canada has| When the Suez crisis flared, he Don Morgan of Maitland, Ont., a an askation boi st Por t Sad, the boys playing Minor Hockey in this town. Also that night, the the others in that the delegates| ~~ direct or selfish interest in this|was chosen--as the ex Royal C di D | ! 8 3 selfis : s|was chosen-- pert on the Royal Canadian Dragoon who|them to cross the canal to tak Dunlops will guest all the boys and girls who work as Safety Patrol Bre jockeying for political advan-io..." "other than seeing that a situation -- as commander of made arrangements for the Egyp- advantage of Srey. to take ge. eaceful settlement is reached. |UNEF--the world's first such po- tians to take over the civil ad-| "We'll move first thing in the workers, and who do such a fine Job, in seeing that their younger " 0 { th in top in thi Pp schoolmates get safely back and forth across busy streets. The ne of the main topics in this|® «Ang hoth the Egyptians and Is- lice force ministration of the town. The take- morning," said the tired Yugoslav Whitby Brass Band, who took first prize at the Canadian National ommons eSS1011 gessions, said Mr, James. wes the raglis know this. a o Since, he went to Jerusalem over Slsy demonftrales the dell commander. . Exhibition last fall, will also be feted, as well as the High School ; wv --ridi aved the day and volun- . Me hidtact. | e talked mildly, under the nearly four years ago, en. Burns td n. Burns and| "You'll have to go right mow," Wrack and Ficld team, and the Public School Soccer Charapions. Vio MANVILLE mente 1 Fane Fadi Rind Say in Tb jail oat his he Highest since glare of a single droplight that lithas not been able to take his an- Ms force in their relations with said the general, and they did, It's officially being tabbed as "Honour Night" in Town, and all Toronto Rotary Club, who was to| Mr. James told the club of the [LIC follaps © | Ee Oe I ters ois haa saan et 1s 10. Saye at | Egyptian propaganda preceding] oye ou bocked ground that was these swell organizaztions will be honoured not only for their have been guest speaker at the fifth session of parliament. dl. One of the big questions in the Be NER heodquanels hie 22s hanage Is 10 days at a the tukeover said there prex ong Hos forasable and suspected accomplishments, in their respective fields, but also for the part they Neely lticheon Heeling of ie He said that {HIE session owe budgt, declared Mr. James, iS/ndian and Canadian guards were| Now he has no time for recrea- heavy fighting between the Is- "The willingness and co-opera- play in our daily lives, in this community. Bowman] Lary on or pro A ay id the request for mu increase in old on duty outside. tion. His only relaxing has been raeli rearguard and the advancing|tion I've had from all contingents THE TOWN AND COUNTRY . . . The Dunlops were tn Kingston James, Liberal member of the for June. Everyone. he said, felt tov, Bf aly age pensions. are in. Posy WORK SCBEDULE vis 00s ays Siudiving 1a the gE os a: Tuerd ave romarkable. Bonny of ' S, b tom. i s e evenin, ntervie as Red Sea. He tr some spear Was . urpose and friendly inter-unit re- last night but results of that game were not known as this was House of Commons for Durham that there will be an election. creased other pensions, such as|p ea from his 12-hours - a - day, fishing but says "I guess no fish At no time were the Yugoslav lations are wonderful. You'd think written . . . Ted O'Connor missed the game and may also miss to- -- |family allowances. would also seven - days - a - w . 1 1 fired i " troops even in firing distance and|they" i night's. He has a severe groin injury, which he received in the . . |have to be increased. ye ye ii et or Wo limb Middie East, anyway we've had A roid Shdliheyd all been hand - icked for second period against Belleville Wednesday. Charlie Burns will likely Councillor S 1cences Another major topic in the bud- signed papers and rephrased tele- nobody has taken a shot at him.|this at all," says Maj. Morgan. |rific" but lie anticieates 3 Lt soe action tonight, after a long absence . . . Junlor "C" action takes get is the allowance for national grams. Once his car was stoned by youths| Gen. Burns deals with Egypt's down when his advancing cole place at the Arena on Monday night coming, when Bowmanville move . . . jGefance, which totals 1.7 billion ™ Gey," Burns is scrupulously vigi- In Jerusalem. He receives crank ), asser on : Jormay basis. ;|umns reach frontier, positions ir into Town. The Hillcrest Dairy club is battling towards top spot in F B | I P k . lant about the objective status of letters from various countries S Is not to say he is not/the desert and the 'monotony on the league race . . . The Eoprid Juveniles jr on top in id pon or 1ICYC es In ricxerin | rhe Yospital budget pize wil himself and his 10-nation force but criticizing him and offering weird songenial, he, says. "In fact, he|waiting for a settlement has to be ot 0 r p 1 t A p shore League schedule, and they will soon move into play-off action| pjckering Township Council met paid in Toronto was 25 cents per 2 EDN IOE doesrt worry shout the demiient golutions, but be also gets many| Big To oO nd of voltation Teave 4 . . . Windsor Bulldogs eked out a 1-0 win over Sudbury Wolves in an in special session this week when bicycle, The members agreed to In order to get the plan through and military staffs. TOUGH PROBLEM always 'personally friendly." | rest and recreation centres at Inter-locking game in Sudbury Thursday night . . . Mercantile Hockey Councillor Glenn Julian suggested check with Chief Constable Arnot at least six provinces and the His chief finance officer is Char-| Burns has a keen appreciation Both sides seem to have come at spots like Cairo and Beirut--the action takes place on Sunday with a doubleheader in Whitby Sunday ja 2 move should be made to [aking concerning the matter. | LC. population of hese PIOV-lag Poudriere of Victoria. His t-|that the problem is deeper than|last to a point where they agree Indonesians likely will go to afternoon, and two games in Bowmanville that evening. The Oshawa licence all bicycles in the munic? 8 » [|inces which represents the maior: formation officer is King Gordon|invasion, border skirmishes, a test|t0 disagree in a most friendly at-|Mecca--is under consideration, Juveniles meet Oshawa Tony's in the first game in Whitby, while the |ipality. |FIRE BRIGADE iy Zane Sation must Bo O05 of Winnipeg. His secretary is Mar-jof arms and sovereignty. All nosphets, though each follows his 'We meet problems as we come Orphans meet Merchants at 2:30. In the evening Macko's A's, meet] The councillor pointed out that! Ross Knox and Frank Cant wl e le 8 ion Warren of Hamilton, Ont., and round his headquarters, 40 miles/0Wn policy strongly and is cer-|to them," says Gen. Burns with Gouldings, and league leading Larry's BA's face Durno's We the plan should ngt be instigated I ting the Br irg the, le a 8 Ear Iiost of tle other girls from the south of Poi Sad Is evidence ofl Nor SCOURAGED TT BE a Dleuty y aii either Ontario or Quebec to a o a INOT DISCOURAGED dent: 3 to mention his earlier UN New York are Ca: ht and sub-standard( VT can aay 109 tn ve been few and - this week, when the Whitby Dunlops/as a means of collecting revenu Brigade, appeared before Council) ies" ve plan and co-operate in nah " 1 condi Bm YS Conte Ti SE yh ag 8 iy, Soh, HSE Fag CR er aioe SF Wie may ce, ah wa ey id EE eg hgh el inni 3 cillor's idea was linked with the jasis. 4 mes | ed, saying po 4 *|--not at us, an full Ll v i Wi ning gos]. Tupimy STaihed he Buk = Supe in Vii) search now being carried on by he De Tt 22 |ihat Premier Frost indicated yay Sate, BENGE Er re-| It's been like that since Burns| 5 Couaeotons and oiler = g! , , y the Metropolitan Police Force fol- Call. 56. {Ontario might very well go along yr ansport, supply, repairs and air|lieved by Jewelry across their|arrived on the first plane into quickly to Bobby Attersley, who in turn whipped it to a waiting Geo. |lowing the murder in Torootn of 8 | with the plan | A |Cairo after the ai " " " l | | . 5» . | ort Was Samolenko, parked in front of the net. "Sammy" quickly sunk the|Carl Voyce. It was pointed out that the!" ify reference to the Carol|T4SPOTL. oo is colle, came WO alee ey bombed by the Mig French| rubber, but it was Tommy's fabulous rush that made it all possible.| Council believed that the fee brigade Jiss 13 ep on gall The Voyce murder. Mr. James stated nie pare of Camp Borden, Ont.. jugs and washed thelr feet in the force. With a small nucleus of his| FOR MISSED EE TE sig ley ip at he that a report on sex deviates 1s ;,4 ic" chief air officer is Wing same water. |truce observer team and some ? ing new hats, coats, A at (anxiously being awaited. Cmdr, Art Byford of Brandon, Trajtie arolmd the hole included |civilians he began organizing his PAPERS #1 cost of $500.00. The brigade also! an. {smelly camels, donkeys and water) l0fce. 5 t Y fal .| Observers sa the general planned to open classes to train Club Members The stocky 59-year-old general buffaloes that turn the ancient ir hii ri ts hE era IN AJAX | re fire looked around at UNEF confer- rigation wheels. ) prospective firemen. ences and decided things were Except for this and other oases,| mulation of apparently insur-| { INDUSTRIAL COMMITTEE . confusing. much of the area is desert where mountable problems. He has a| If you have not received your {| Reeve Wf. Lawson, Deputy- D er Guests DESIGNED OWN UNIFORM wandering tribes, unchanged in quiet but effective way of getting] Times-Gozette by 7 P.M., Call i Reeve Sherman Scott and Coun-! nn | "Combatants, occupying troops life and progress since Biblical things done. {lelllor Glenn Julian will represent! and even the referee were - all times, find a bare existence, A base camp was set up, an AJAX TAXI council on the township's Indus-|Two students of the Bowmanville| turned out in virtually the same/ A modern school amid the date airstrip cleared and soon his force| trial Committee during 1957. The High School will be special guests/cut and color of uniform," he palms, bare of facilities, Is a start Was growing to almost divisional other members will be, E, Ner: at the Ontario Soil and Crop Im- gays "I decided to do something by Egypt to educate some of its strength. Phone 4|lich, Wm. Newman, W. H. J.|provement Association's annual ahout my own uniform." people. | "We had problems," says the | Thompson, D. Donaldson, K. H. banquet to be held on Thursday, Now he wears a blue-grey, Am-| Nearby are the battered living general. 'Transport and supplies AJAX 333 {Clarke and P. Piggott. Jan. 3h aE ie Eine ward erican-style air force uniform as!quarters of Burns's staff. A for- Jad to catch up vith He Hoops IW. H. Westne n Hugh Hotel in To YO _ StU-ithe basis and has a big UN hat in- mer British Suez security post --|in the field. Some had arrive AR oolls must be placed before {Michell ee to ee dents are Burt Werry and Garth gionia His shoulder straps carry the canal is only a few hundred| Without tents and with few rations, 7:30 TH RHDP McGill, both of Enniskillen. |a broad gold band, his lapels have yards away -- the Nissen-hut-type so keen were their governments |" Councillor Edgar James report! The two students, 0 Are light blue tabs studded with a row buildings were holed by the ad- to support the program. members of the 4-H Club, were|,f ciars and his buttons carry the|vancing Anglo-French force and {ed that a dog pound had been|yinners in the 4-H potato growing|jaiters UN. His trousers have a scarred by demolition by the de- GET AHEAD WITH A erected in Pickering Village and competition held in Guelph 12st wide black stripe down the side. parting Egyptians. Living is hard. | was now in operation. fall His only concession to his rec- CHILLY AT NIGHT | | Council agreed that a motion The 4-H grain competition win-lord 'as a Commonwealth fighting] While it is almost summery by should be prepared to have the ners from Peterborough will also...) in two world wars--including day, a chill creeps in from the - township represented on the'be guests at the bankuet repre-|. mand of a Canadian corps in| desert at night. Metro Planning Board. senting this area. [Italy--is six rows of decorations| The general has a plain, single] ill | set out in Canadian order. {room that hasn't even a porch; » Pay Jatover sssional ills "3 After the Second World War he entrance. He messes with the| and redice hig] yon AD W est (Germans M ake Bid became deputy minister of veter-| troops of all ranks. English is the| fuente wits a prompt oon | ans affairs at Ottawa and says he dominant language, with anything | oo fo a Phone Tor your 4 was content "'doing a job that pre-| from a Finnish to an Indoneslan Joan in one visit, or come in. i GC Mi E M k sented a rea) challente, coping accent. a that the ins} ol : with the problems of rehabilitating] Gen. Burns says tha e insist- Loans up to $2500--up to 30 months to repay on loans over $500 To rab id- ast ar et the servicemen." He also got ence on English as a basic lan-| P P i : "tangled up" with one of his great guage is one main reason why| 11% SIMCOE ST., N., 2nd FL. (Over Bank of Nova Scotia), SHAWA : West Germany is preparing to mill and ather projects in Egypt personal interests -- the United Canada was asked to substitute Phone: RA 3-4687 « Ask for the YES MANager make a powerful bid for the tinued to build bridges, a steel, Nations Association--and soon be- administrative forces for the OPEN EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT -- PHONE FOR EVENING HOURS Middle Fast mavkel virtually Ion even during the most eriticat{fEme iis, nationgl President Jo Be vou) Rirtes wed to fave) NEW NAME! Suez crisis. days of the November invasion haq free for gardening and do-it- the Queen's Own," he said. "They| Personal Finance Co. Is now called BENEFICIAL FINANCE ttn West Germany is the only West- have helped much to promote this| yourself projects, |were in a position to be self-con-| : 2 ern country whose trade. with this 80odwill. EVENTUAL DINNER [tained with all their own services €O. Only the name has been hanged! i j Wi # bu i ol area shows an upward trend. It] But much of the current Ger-| The story goes that he went to and gear. u id 5 evidently is the only European man popularity is from the war. dinner one night with External] "This wasn't the case with the Te T I] |country which has the economic Veteran observers say probably|Affairs Minister Pearson who had other contributors, who could give| BENEFICIAL Fi NANCE C Y BENEFICIAL WILLING HANDS REACH FOR LIFE capacity to fill any 'vacuum' in the most popular German name just come from a UN meeting injus only infantry. To avoid confu-| Sy f INS the Middle East. among the Arabs .is that of the New York where it was decided sion it was necessary to conduct or canada {LOA} Careful, wiling hands reach | Mandurah, near Perth, Aus- | of digging by volunteers. Doc- A concerted move to boost busi- late Field Marshal Erwin Rom-/to find a Canadian to supervise operations in English so we had tol : WME out for Graham Davies, two- | tralia. The youngster was jam- | tors found his condition good ness with the Arab countries is mel. Because his Afrika Korps al- the uneasy truce in the Holy --" and-one-half vear old tot as he | med upright for more than 22 | considering his ordeal. Graham due in March with a large Ger- most drove the British back to|/Land. | was rescued from a sand and | hours in a 14-inch hole. He was | was playing with his brother man industrial exhibition in Cairo. Cairo, Rommel is a military idol] Pearson got the general talking limestone excavation hole _at rescued in a night and day epic | when he slipped into the hole. German technicians who con-to anti-British Egyptians. labout UN and inveigled him into/ i . : San Se 7 % % 1 Hillcrest Juniors Are REV. V. W. WIGHTON In Fourth Spot In League | NOTICE BO 8 Al or Soe The standings: Rem. |take on Bowmanville Jrs. on Mon- [ : - Aut AND EVANGELIST Pts.Gms. day night. Assured of a playoff i Aurora x 22 6 |position, the local club is fighting V/A | § HOOPER MALE QUARTET Newmarket 4 hard to rise in the standings to % in d f Brooklin 9 9 4 obtain home ice in the first and - pissin : 4 will conduct a series o 9 4 LRA Evangelistic Services 4 Whitby deciding games in the comng Bowmanville Lindsay 3 3 playoff series. SHOE STORE j J at the With only four games remain- FOR MISSED | 31 Simcoe St. N. : fo AJAX ing in the regular schedule, the Whitby Hillcrest Dairy Juniors PAPERS : : . \ BAPTIST CHURCH EUCHRE || 'NBOWMANVILLE || or RITER will be closed from Monday, January 28 to MEN co aroun Ph . ci | Sat., Jan. 26 [| 4» 3.556] prom Friday, January 31 inclusive 1 OS, N C S I RV CES o* the oily Bi Walmsley TO FACILITATE THE REMODERNIZATION OF OUR STORE | your Times - Gazette by & Magill | SUNDAY --" 11:00 A.M. & 7:00 P.M. 1.0.0.F. HALL [|7 pm. call ; v Pickering Beach Rood || KING TAXI ons Store Will Re-open at 9 A.M. Friday, February 1 | vou ARE CORDIALLY INVITED TO THESE SERVICES Avtpisent All colls must be placed RA 5-3506 White Dove Rebekoh Lodge before 7:30 oh OSHAWA Sf

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