HIRE VY Wee wyy PWYSew # 1Vew and Mrs. Frank R. Hills of 9 | Craig street, Port Hope, seen old Port Hope veteran, W. H holding - a bunch of poppies, ' an ostrich feather from Africa Potts, are admired 13-year- | ready for Poppy Day Mr He plans part in the old Bari Hills, daughter of Mr. | Potts is wearing his Boer War | Legion Poppy Sale November Veteran Of Three Wars To Help Sell Poppies MEDALS OF THREE WARS, worn on the chest of 75-year- shire Regiment compicte with to take By MAURICE HACKMAN PORT HOPE One of eldest members of the Canac Legion aga in this Port Day gn is remaining veter W. H. Potts v the South African veldt, the fields of Flanders, and again volunteer ed and was accepted for service overseas in World War VO His life of adventure arted when he was 16, and volunteere HE the strange; lost feeling that came to fight in South Africa. He alsol ver me when I found myself served aboa a full-rigged sail alone with another lad the two ing ship which brought him to eo just kids really setting Canada over 50 years ago out on a 90-mile trip across the ! He still viy dly remnbmin vs his veldt to carry some signal equip three wars. Nights on the lonely| mont to the troops veldt, a 16-year-old boy-soldier sharing the frightening "sound the night animals ith one 17 year-old companion. His 64 days at in a full-rigged sailing s ship. the mud of Flande n 1914 Mountain to guide us to our des L] Ld : os i t a8 A We O a' and the bombing of Britain in tination. It was a weird feeling, 1941 recalls "We lived on bully beef and his MAY HOLD RECORD cuits until the war ended in 1903, Mr. Potts may he some added a living re lia 8 lvag pecord beli¢ JOINS SHIP may be the only veterar y ) \ Vi th d r ada to have taken an When ended, M in three Polts signed on as a crew mem ber on hoard a full-rigged sailing The Spry, : listed: at the age bound for Port' Midway . y h Scotia. Without previou South Staffordshire > England. "giving his - age rautical training he found himself and shipped out to South climbing the rigging to take in| in 1901 sails in a hurrican'off the Bar bados. After 64 days at sea on a IN SUPPLY COLUMN diet of fat pork and sea biscuits After he was glad to see the coast of regiment Canada taken from Krong After at a prison « n town, he volunteered fo with the Mounted Infantry "They called for volunteers whoa job as a moulder with the Port could ride horses and 100 of us Hope Sanitary Co ere formed into a unit to carry; m v y ; AT VIMY where the on the In 1914 he signed up 21st Battaiion and served over seas for five years seeing ac tion in such famous battles as the Somme, Pachendale, Vimy Ridge, Mons, Ypres and others He was a compan) ergeant major when discharged Shortly after the Second World War broke out Mr. Potts up with the Royal Canadian Ord nance Corps with the rank of staff sergeant and went overseas in 1941. He was stationed at While Hill in England for two and half years, where he established and operated a foundry aluminum and iron for fittings on tanks other equipment RETIRED IN PORT HOPE After the war he Port Hope and for Foundry, In 1951 he enjoy life with his wife, Rilly McAvoy Port Hope who he married some 50 years ago. He has one married daug living in Port Hope Lo Mrs. W. Phiilips "1 feel very fit-.and miles a day hang around the house Asked what he thought about wars, he replied: "When we get down to one language around the world, so we can understand one then wars may end," he surmised Mr. Putts is curious to find out if there are any other veterans alive who actively teok part in three wars overseas, and would like to hear from them Truck Firms Submit New Pronosals MONTREAL I's mitted rations to biockhouses who will was fighting with the aid first skirmish with the n|Boers we lost three men: Two of them mi have lived if we'd had the medical services we have to- day," he added LONELY TRIP One thing I'll never forget was vear campai Hope he 'In our t Ans zht signed ago for brass vork uses , artillery and round eyes of baboons at us in the dark, the aiming of monkeys apd hyenas and just the shape of a sea worked in he the Oshawa retired to 1 of kind of he he ves he n in Cah heli) ive part hostilities wars over 1 walk two I never " he said Vi ran en 16 in the Infantry a Afric kative ¢ of ta or three n Nova 16 a another several months with the prisoner « Syr guarding s B © some time in the Mani s- times went to Buffalo, and duty eventually worked his way to Port Hope in 1907, where he found United Counties Rabies Control Body Organized COBOURG A United Coun ties Rabies Control Comm has been formed. and has held its first meeting, Garnet Rickard deputy-reeve of Darlington tow: ship, was named chairman The purpose committee is to act as a central agency in the counties for disseminating aulhorit: formation on the var of rabies control, and mine positive tha limit the the The committee sent the Board of ties Council, Departme culture, Depa Forests, Provin the Northumberland Health Unit Rabies Durham be Nort possibility ing it for some years and 1 mp he of committee | the opinion that term control mea be needed at municipa ty oP trucking industry proposals t : to forestall a st walkout of the 6.000 wally stall e route Mant sith driv rik ttee lon ures will ha and coun a. \ levels ) One mea and cat ts vaccin to all dog their ire open ers Any vould virt vd to have ! ited and to own prem under owner int vit} n Mon of the keep them on thei es unl do athe and and control in a dog means f¢ animale that eate a problem where 0 mpanied, Mun i king by-law A resentin ive in lities by pas of Tuesda plan 18 aspects vould have the } ' aid \ area volved rt t to deter- deal with str bound to « ay are \ way migh spread © disease. there is a he incidence uf \ ke rabi t of the It was s memb: H bein of the 1 h, Coun nt of Agri rtment of Lands and |su Police and | rabie Durham repre mn Were al we who, Wi I membre an animg herhe died e pr ther glo 0 ave stu al seantion develope s to we I rd f mime we committee will attempt nd voted te of [through its men hip to sup is found in all parts represen and at i rs toll t Count d ¢ f of « hat and crest of the Stafford- at home in Port Hope! : [cational Institute, : er at the conference, spoke in the 7 and 8. Bari's father is Frank R. Hill, Zone Commander of "F' District, Zone 2 of the Ca- nadian Legion BESL Photo by Udvarhelyi Studio Strong Start By Combines COBOURG Cobourg - Port Hope Combines launched their Iseason in the Eastern Ontario In- termediate 'A Hockey League on successful note Monday night and they did it with ridicu lous ease. The Combines coasted to an 8-5 triumph over Kingston in the Limestone City before a slim crowd of 130 fans in the huge Kingston palace Combines rarely exerted them selves and didn't have to against the Kingston crew After the locals had raced away to a 6-0 lead they toyed with the sasterners the rest of the way. It was a dull, slow tilt and very uninteresting to watch i The other curtain raiser at Na- panee saw the Comets get away fast as they clobber ed Trenton 11-4, Pat Gilmor, Jack White, Tar Brady and George Jacklin paced the winners with t goals he Ontario champion Comets are here Fri day night for what it is anticipat ed will be a ding-dong battle Only game scheduled tonight has Bowmanville-Orono playing * at I'renton Bud McDougall, expected by ome to score 35 goals this year, got off to a great start by scoring four Nine penalties were assessed, 6 to the vietors KINGSTON Mellow, ( T. Pettit fee powerless lo ¢ start wo each times K. Stevenson M. Osborne, W. Mec Laren, H. Ball, T. Meeker, I.. Mc Neill, B. Vallier, S. Martin COMBINES -- .C., Sommervilie, B, Thompson, J. Dawe, A. Me Keen, J. Fisher, K. Medhurst J. Chase, R. Campbell, P. Doris, B. McDougall, 8. Dowle, Mc- Keen, B. Weiss M Howson, Johnson, J Young Painters Receive Prizes PORT HOPE painters of Port vashed the orange gn fr st wi now novies The tore The young Hope, having and black de windows tickets to the ym the receive H: vinners of the llowe'en vindn aintin ere. announced today by of Mr if the Rotary of the lerdan Port Hope Jordan i ipervising principal publie school chairman Club committee 'in charge lub-sponsor I ) slore in town had htened Friday a ters from Grade d in the sty wil Nearly every ts windows bri wl 8 to ols tr the dows with witches Rotary ng the izes schools to color th in pictures of pumpkins nd other desi Club arranged art dnd givin k tine ne for t vork 0 children to out from ol 1 € ! ndows Mon oct eeond prize (Johann Sweerink. as U.S. Senator. | ers, '| 0.5. Election Blow To Ike, Europe Thinks LONDON (AP) European 'No Excuse Seen For Idle Pupil PETERBOROUGH -- What ob-|versity graduates immediately ligation has a high school to a following their jofmal training. | senior student who has ability, He felt that it might be better to 4 but who is indifferent to his! withhold judgment for a few inte ud Undet Wig Som pane Mads studies? None, according to A, R. ears, to see what the student | ons Ike." C. Duncan, Professor of Philoso-| looked like after he had had time| "yon Europe's major con PAY, at Queen's University, Ring: 10 broaden himself with a little! on appeared to be how all this While teen-agers at Cobourg,| That this is a democratic state yould: affect President . Eisen- Port Hope, and Bowmanville high deludes too many people into feel |p a q.5i4e is blow to Tke," said schools enjoyed a day off, their ing that all education should be y..™y onion Evening Standard teachers were busv attending a equal, saitl the professor. Certain-| ¢ day-long conference of number 22,1 all avenues of education shoul |his ma |Kawartha district, Federation of be open, but these should be re-|y,.y +» {Secondary School Teachers, in stricted to those with the ability | "It's a landsiide against Ike," Peterborough Collegiate and Vo- Tn a vood Ta done to. pot id the London Eveving News, 4 |"Democrats sweep victory' individual i soctety by wasting said the London Star, attributing nd Siete [the election outcome "largely to afternoon on "Philosophy of Edu- p '| anti-Eisenhower feeling. . cation'. Answering the question DISCUSSION GROUPS The Stockholm trade union pa- posed by one of the teachers Discussion groups were held per Aftonbladet said editorially abont the indifferent student, the during the morning, and Cobourg that "without doubt President professor elaborated on his Collegiate vice-principal Charles Eisenhower's regime lost face to "none" answer, Hagen' reported on one of these, 2 high degree during the last In the lower grades there is an on Grade 13 examinations. excuse for a student's indiffer-| "There were no direct criti- Democratic party's sweeping election victory in the United n Rockefeller wins in New Professor Duncan, guest lectur- in the eyes of the Americans." newspapers today reported the 'Springhill Mourns | | By DAL WARRINGTON Canadian Press Staff Writer sun shone brightly on Springhill Tuesday. From the top of the hill you could watch clouds make shadow | Ipatterns on fieids and woods be- 'yond the town. Children trudged down the hill carrying school books. The air was still. Voices car- the chimneys. Peace seemed everywhere. But there was no peace. It was the 12th day. Springhill still bur- fed her dead. On the green lawns of the ceme- tary halfway down the hill, grave- diggers worked in relays. Fresh mounds of earth scarred the far slope. A police car ied a funeral cor- tage down the hill. There were two hearses. The Embree i { years, not only abroad but also|brothers, they said. Eleven fun- erals Monday, seven Tuesday. ence, for he may not have learn- cisms of the exams," he said, | ed self discipline for a long term |"the group felt that whether or| cause. The senior student may not it was the best possible not have any idea what his method, it was the best one found career will be, but he should be yet." mature enough to realize that his. Other. groups discussed dis. educatipn will help him in it, civline, promotion standards, and whatever it may be. education for the nuclear age. ¢ Special groups were held for new, BETTER ALTERNATIVE |teachers, and subject groups for In his speech, Professor Dun. gpecialists, can suggested that too many peo- Over 400 teachers from across ple felt that an education should the district heard 3rd vice-presi- tion include everything necessary to dent of the provincial executive|Bress equip a person to face life, A bet-| of the federation, Reg Cozens, out- ter alternative, he felt, would be line the principles of the federa. to equip the student with a basic tion at a lunch in the school gym. liberal education and skill or pro- He stressed that its objective was fession, and let him fill his ownipot just confined to raising the personal .education gaps. |average salary, but also to de: [in five of the six states in which One fault common inthis so- velop the standards of the profes-|the issue was on Tuesday's bal: clety, he continued was the prac- sion. Members of all school|lot. tice of judging high school or uni-'boards attended the lunch. Union strategists said the com- Rockefeller Wins | N.Y. Governorship seeks--such as a higher mini- mum wage, extra unemployment benefits and recession curatives --will get more favorable consid- eration than they have in recent years, One thing organized labor wil: fight for in Congress next year, NEW YORK (AP) -- Nelson X.| Keating 2,847,758; Hogan 2,711, Rockefeller's election as governor 975, by more than 500,000 votes sky-| Rockefeller has insisted--and rocketed him today as a possi- repeated today--that he is not in- bility for the 1960 Republican terested in 1960 possibilities and | presidential nomination, [that he has "no other intention" The multi-millionaire's over-| than to serve his four-year term whelming victory over wealthy 8s governor. Democratic Governor Averel 1| Harriman stood out particularly | because of its contrast with Re- publican defeats in other states. It also appeared to knock out whatever chance Harriman may have had for the Democratic| presidential nomination two years hence. Harriman had sought the Election WASHINGTON (AP)--Eight la. bor unions today acclaimed elec- returns as ensuring a Con- that can wreck all existing swoop and enact new social leg- islation, They gained confidence from defeat of right-to-work referenda that section of the Taft-Hartley states to enact right-to-work laws. to hold their jobs. talking of him as a possibility joining 18 other states that al. [that he might win the state elec books. tion But to lead the Republican party in|lost by a narrow margin New York state and he expects Idaho. union sources said, is repeal of Law known as 14B which permits These ban the union shop--a la- bor contract provision that re- quires workers to join a union a Kansas voters approved a ban ut his supporters have béen on the union shop on Tuesday, since it first became apparent ready had such laws on the Rockefeller told an early-morn- down handily in Ohio, California, | ing press conference he intends Washington and Colorado, a i 8 Unions Favor Results | Labor unions turned out their members in droves in the six |states, but said they fought hard- (est in Ohio. state right-to-work laws at one] They wanted to avoid at all costs any spread of the right-to- {work principle in the industrial (middiewest, Indiana is the only [state in that area now having such a law. The other right-to-work states |are Alabama, Arizona, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Iowa, Missis- | sippi, Nebraska, Nevada, North and South Dakota, North and South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, Utah and Virginia. COULD REPEAL 14B Union officials calculated to- day they will have a good chance {In the next Congréss to repeal the Taft-Hartley Law's section 14B, but they conceded that even with bigger Democratic majorities in Senate it will be close. interstate commerce. [to-work laws and make them practically meaningless. nod in 1952 and 1956. {REPUBLICAN SENATOR The campaign spearheaded by Rockefeller also led to election] of Republican Re pr e s entative Kenneth B., Keating of Rochester the next Republican national con: | vention. Rockefeller, 50, genial, liberal minded member of the famed oil fortune family, scored heavily 'in traditionally Republican upstate New York and cut sharply Into {the normal Democratic majority |to head the state delegation to Republican Keating, regarded as an under: dog throughout the campaign, de- in New York city. feated Manhattan, District-Attor- LIBERAL PROPOSALS ney Frank S. Mogan for the office| Rockefeller and his backers| Republican Senator Irving M.|went on the theory from the outs | Ives is vacating for reasons for set that New York voters never health. would elect a so-called conserva: | ens from 11,510 of 11,625 tive. | a gave: | Some of the proposals he advo- third-term victory as governor. Rockefeller 3,115,186; Harriman cated were: ] | 2,559,821. Continuation of group life insur. ¢ Returns 11,507 districts ance benefits for a workman gave after he retires. MINNEAPOLIS (AP)<Repub- lican Senator Ed Thye, a Minne. sota political power for 15 years, McCarthy in Tuesday's elections. Minnesota also gave Democrat from 065 for -Thye. Knutson, whose family Winning teams and location of, winners, two tickets, and thi rd! their work were: Grade 6, first, Ballett's, right window, Jeanetit STUDY UNEMPLOYMENT Returns from 2,240 of 3,764 pre- incts gave McCarthy, a Roman | Catholic In a predominantly Prot- made a futile plea for his wife to give up politics and come Republicans clinched wo of the | "Ome. four House of Representative seats they carried into the elec- tion and were leading in the other two. They also threatened to take estant state, 372,108 votes to 330,- Senator Toppled After 15 Years troubles became a ign is. | sue, was only 1,000 votes in front |of 'Republican Odin Langen with was toppled by Democrat Eugene (60 per cent of the vote in HUSBAND TO SUE Mrs. Knutson's husband said rville Freeman a smashing early today he will sue her execu: Itive secretary for causing aliena- tion of affections and for slander. Andy Knutson SPRINGHILL, N.S. (CP)--The| the House of Representatives and Congress has the power under the Constitution as intérpreted by the Supreme Court to regulate ali labor relations which affect Bo if Congress changes 14B to permit the union shop and other forms of compulsory union mem- bership, state right-to-work laws could apply only to purely intra. right-to-work was voted state labor-management relation- ships. This would narrow drasti- cally the effect of existing right- last summer But Life Goes On On the other side of the hill, out of sight of the cemetery, traffic moved as usual, but people stood: in little groups on the corners, talking. A man walked up to Miners' Memorial and read the names-- 125 who died in 1891 in a coal mine explosion; 39 kilied in an explosion in 1956, A man with greying hair and a flushed face asked anether man: "Why does God let such things added in smaller type, "but ried. Smoke rose straight up from happen?" Downtown, flags flew at half- staff. Beyond the post office empty cellars yawned -- burned out in a conflagration last De- cember. The smoke rose straight from the chimneys -- smoke of coal brought here from Sydney. Springhill, a town that lived on coal, had none of her own. Rir Search May Disclose 2 Men's Fate GRIMSBY (CP)--An air search of Lake Ontario today was ex- pected to confirm fears that two young men who vanished in a rowboat had drowned. Police said they held little hope {for the safety of Joseph Walkem |and Jerry Smith, both 25, who {were caught in four-foot waves Tuesday shortly after they started on a duck-hunting trip in a leaky 14-foot craft. Mrs. Walkem, 20 - year - old {mother of four, said she saw the I men---in difficulty about a mile from shore. The boat disappeared beneath the waves as she (watched helplessly. | Veteran boatmen said they {doubted whether anyone could hang onto an overturned boat for more than a couple of hours in such wild water, A search of the area turned up only a jacket, rub- ber boot and glove which Mrs. Walkem identified as belonging to the men. Provincial police said they had asked the RCAF search and res- cue unit at Trenton to make an aerial sweep of the lake at dawn today. Mr, and Mrs. Walkem lived in lakeshore cottage about two miles north of here. Smith had been staying with them since he was laid off at a Hamilton fac. tory last week. | SUBSCRIBERS THE TIMES BOWMANVILLE FOR MISSED PAPERS AND BOWMANVILLE'S FINEST TAXI SERVICE PHONE STEVEN'S TAXI MA 3.5822 if you have not received your Times phone your currier boy Hirst. If you are unable to con tact him by 7:00 p.m. TELEPHONE STEVEN'S TAXI Cally Accepted Between 7 «7:30 p.m. Only DAILY CROSSWORD ACROSS 1, Encounter 6. Tatters 9. Argentine dance 10. Choice A 2. Riddles 3. 8elf (poss.) 4. Male up oat 12. 8peech form B. Adorn 13. Chairman's again mallet 6. Wing 14. Wooden pins 7, Béstowed 15. Music note 8. Cuble 16, Bitter vetch meter 17. Boy's 9. Highest nickname quality 18. Beetle 11, Otherwise 19. Born 18, Game of 20. Elaborate cards speeches 23. Former Turkish title 24, Small parts , Bending forth 80. God of pleasure 88, Ordinal number suffix 84, Bxtinet bird $5. Building 38, Existing 40, Gloom 41, Malay * {sland 42. Languished 48. Stitches 44. Among ROLE CER] GA ee through [MISES SEE circles |RIEMENMAIS (BILE 21. Definite 40 article [§ 22. Distress signal 25. Kettles drums 26. Bhunned 27. Settled, asan audience 29. Neuter ronoun 30. Thrash 81, Island (N. Y. Harbor) 40. 18. Lines [BIAISINAIUISPL CIE] un [HIA /] RIEIAIDBRAIDIDIS] Yesterday's Answer 82. Sticky mud 37. Leveling slip of wood 39. Solemn romise esort Pozer, Ann Cameron, Harriel, KIRKLAND LAKE (CP)--Teck Wakely and Patricia McCurdy: | Pownship council Tuesday night sceqnd Li iwgles'. Danny Wlady- decided to study its employment a, Ronald Knsey, Tom Hodgson|gipjation and inform authorities and Keith Jay; third, Aru's Bak- at Springhill, N. whether any Ray Aru, Michael Windop,|;, iy : ti tHe bwin David Manley and John Madigan Jobs are available in district gold First, Randall's, Rick. | ---- ey Lambert, Gordon Gilbert, Indy Wall and Wendy Francis; second, Durham Hardware, right window, Patsy Hughey, Penny Sweel, Diane Huffman and Chris fine McMahon: third, Nixon's, Victor Bray, Brian Henley and Wayne Godwin Grade 8 Familiar Names Appear . one of the five Democratic seats, In U S Election Stor that held by Mrs, Coya Knutson. che FORMER PROFESSOR | The banner victory, however, WASHINGTON (CP) -- Names represents the hopes of many belonged to McCarthy, former familiar to many Canadians fig: Republicans for a new popular economics professor who had fred in the United States mid-|figure to replace President Elsen- served 10 years in the House. [term elections with the promin: hower, whose political career The 42-year-old St. Paul con- ent family name of Rockefeller | ends by law with the expiration gressman had been favored by | throwing some light on a gener- of his second term the polls, and he won about the ally gloomy Republican picture. | Canadians also were familiar | wav he had been expectéd to--by Nelson Rockefeller himself was with the name of defeated Re- piling up hefty margins in his little known to Canadians before| publican Senator Charles Potter hometown of St. Paul and in the the current campaign, but as the of Michigan, who often spoke in Duluth and Iron Range areas, new governor of New York state|favor of the St. Lawrence Sea-| The religious issue, if there was and successor to Averell Harri: way. one, rarely came up explicitly in man he will undoubtedly have! Senator William Jenner, In. the campaign. But political eom- much to do with his neighboring diana Republican who figured Mmentators sugested that a Me. authorities in Ontario, particu: prominently in the news two | Carthy victory would boost the larly in the joint St Lawrence | years ago as head of the Senate's presidential prospects of Demo. #34 Nain pve projects. , internal security subcommittee in Cn aor John Kennedy of Another state governor just jts Communist-naming investiga. foils. across the border from Ontario| tions, figured indirectly in Tues. FORMER GOVERNOR will 'be Michigan's G. Mennen|day's election. Te, 62, a jose Minnesota Williams, re-elected for a record, myo olose friend of the Jate| 50 rhor an wo-term senator, sixth straight term. . © got hig anticipated support in the ATR h senator Joseph McCarthy of Wis: vps] areas but couldn't over EYES ON 1960 VOTE consin voluntarily declared him:| orth bi i N come the McCarthy big-city vote, Williams' less - than - expected self out of this year's Indiana gpa Thye-McCatthy campaign victory margin, however, may senate race. Hie successor candi: oan ived on farm and foreign pole dim his chances of national date, outgoing Governor Harold jo. and charges of lack of lead: prominence in the 1960 presiden- Handley, lost out to a Democrat. | gpehip that each made against tial Democratic 'nomination race. proXMIRE WINS TEST |the other. Thye ran as an oppo. Rockefeller, on the other hand, 4 , {ent of Agriculture Secretary B 7 MeCatthy's successor, Demo. \ 8 ary Kzra crat William Proxmire, who was Bénson's policies and so did Me: named by the Democratic state Cath". administration in Wisconsin to| Mrs. fill out the Republican's Vi expired term after McCarthv's KILLED IN STORM death last year won out in his] HONOLULU (AP)=One eréw first vote test. By contrast with/member was killed and seven MeCarthy, Proxmire had been were injured when the Liberian singled out in he Riu iean tanker World Glory encountered campaign as a "radical."" |heavy seas en route to the Per sian Gulf from Long Beach, {Calif., the U.S. Navy said Mon: day night. The World Glory, 700 [miles northwest of Midway, gained navy permission to enter Midway Harbor to obtain treat: ment for the injured. | ery Grade 7 FOR MISSED PAPERS IN AJAX if you have not received your Times by 7 pm. call AJAX TAXI PHONE AJAX 333 All cells must Be placed betord 0 p.m. They said it Couldn't be done! Well I'll Show Them. WATCH Thursday's Paper NOV. 6 Lakeshore Print: right window, Michael Wil ton, Paul Plousos, Donald Burg er, and Kenneth Smith; second, Lyall Carr's, Robert Keyes, David Black, Bill Darrell and vezg Ruston; third, Thompson's Sore Kathryn Dolley Mary Glad Joan Abbott and Shoe in N | 1 684 GLENCAIRN ST. Warehouse for Rent Apply Mr. R. Bradley PHONE RA $9489