4 KENNEDY ADDRESSES LABO troit Kor John F, Kennedy ad Holiday Week Death Toll Heavy | Fifty-five persons were killed Canada's roads during the Labor Day weekend, It highest holiday highway tolls on record A Canadian Press survey from 6 p.m. Friday to midaight Mon day local time howed .at least 79 persons died In car accidents drow from other accl dental during the holiday 959 Labor Day fa 74 death toll equalled 56 and far ex 43, It also day forecast of Highway on three-da one { tt of the in and CAUSES The i of ceeded last vear's | pre-ho Canadian toppec 50 Safety Ne pros cidental end. Mar province ity Twenty! by the Council undland ich { only no Ac was the recorded deaths during the week te the only other without a highway fatal ve persons died on On tario and 19 on Quebec roads 1 inging from Alaska to De- | crowd Cadillac Square as idential came in he pushed his pres bury, when a car in which they were passengers overturned near Barrie Sunday, Karlis Vitols, 51, Saturday night in a two-car collision in Niagara Falls Eldon Russell Burtch, 20, Satl- urday night when a car struck a tree near Elgin, 35 miles north. east of Kingsic Grant Lang, 28, Spanish, Fri. day night when his canoe cap sized on Timber Lake about 60 miles southwest of Sudbury am Bellinger, 18, Ottawa Irene Scott Renfrew McLellan Arnprior and Ronald Witne 2, Owen Sound, In a two-car urday night on High 17 near Antrim, 30 miles east of Ottawa Joanne Patenaude, 3, and her sister, Francine, 6, daughters. of Mr, and Mi Arthur Patenaude of Vars, crushed . beneath th wheels of a trailer being towe by a farm tractor. ih Mrs Doris ( d b ! that Eisenhower ad- | policies charged ministration economic Hurt Our Ind TORONTO (CP)~Imports from low-wage countries do propor tionately more harm to Canadian industry than imports from the United States, T. R. McLagan, president of the Canadian Manu facturers' Association, sald to day, Addressing the luncheon of the Exhibition, to critics Canadian too | much imports quite some 70 imports State directory Canadian Na Mr. McLagan who sugge manufacturers stress on low tional replied that place wag ut! "that fotal sald our the the world true," he cent of come from United which has highest wage rates in the Thus, in 1959, Imports from the U.S. had a value of $3,836,000,000 whereas those from Britain, West Germany and Japan had A com BE DECENT, CHAPS per L ports DAY CROWD IN DETROIT lost income the last years ily six over dresses a large Labor Day | paign into Michigan today, He | had cost every American fam-~ | --Bee AP wire story) end | Low-Wage Imports ustry bined value of "However, a high propor imports from the US, Is up of industrial equipment, ma terials and components which of ten complement and are tial to our own production portation of such item which it will not be sound to produce |} have Oni on o Im (many economical until population) jer larger and susie employment Conversely ports from most tries are kind alread is these the low bulk of im nad nada coun consumer of made ( mpo. LH nD production seriou W di ha made ad nt limited Canadian market expense of hg Mr. MeLa contained Ir able to delivery U.S, BEST PROSPECT fr 0 ne Industrie imn's comments wi 1 in 1 4 pre mad the advance Mr $626, 100,000 made essen ol Iy we sup manufacturing fl It tue ( the at the re of Biggest CNE | Labor Parade TORONTO (CP) labor movement marked Labor Day with the biggest turnout yet for Ws annual parade to the Canadian Mational Fxhibition More than 8000 men and women, among the many mi grant workers, marched to the musie of 16 bands Monday as thousands of spectators lined a three-mile route, At the CNE director's lunch- eon, an official of the American Federation of Labor described the spectacle as "the best Labor Day parade in North America" Frank Raftery, gencral repre. sentative of the Brotherhood of Painters, Decorators and Paper hangers of America, said it was a "tremendous demonstration in honor of workers and their unions," Union workers constructed 50 floats and weather conditions were f(deal--warm and sunny The exhibition grounds were packed and a crowd of 250,000 Cattle Awar This city's: flocked in, This was 17,500 more than last year's Monday holiday old British historian has » and boosted this year's total CNE gested that the battle of El Ala. Writer Calls El Alamein "Unnecessary LONDON (Reuters)--A 33-year- attendance io 2.000 more than al mein in 1942, where Britain suf te corresponding time Another traditional Labor Day at the C} baby show, won by Steven Lee Sherwood, a 13-month-old from Toronto, ein 1959 fered 13,500 casualties, was un ightight of necessary, , was the| FATHER LOST IN 'W Young Steven won a prize that Monday by William Kimber, The military reputations Field Marshals Viscount gomery and Earl Alexander are iehallenged in The Desert Gener: | | "nations about reports of a serious SPI one of the most sensitive Listen of North Korea," says Mont | ean Foreign Minister Chung Yil 'No Sign' Seen " Of Russ-China Rift SEOUL (AP) --~ Government with us and against the Chi are generally sceptical officials of a number of Asian nese" he sald. British officials in Hong Kong, beiween Russia and China over ing points in the, Far Kast, tend the question of future relations to downgrade the seriousness of with the non-Communist world, a dispute between the- Russians "There isn't any »i th Kor- Hyung. "Does anybody really believe Khrushchev wants peace- fat als by Correlli Barnett, published ful i A highly - placed Indonesian his father tried to win in 1930] Montgomery, a weekend guest official noted that Moscow had That year Willidm Sherwood got at Sir Winston Churchill's coun- remained neutral in Indonesia's), =~ to the semifinals, 1 was his/try home near London, declined clash with China, brought about idea to enter Steven in this year's to comment on the charges. | competition, Steven, a bouncing Barnett says Britain had crush | 26-pounder, got the nod over 849 ing superiority over the Germans other contestants, and Italians under Field Marshal | Today, the highlight Is to beg. ivan Rommel and it was) the Hereford show, marking the 100th anniversary of the estab- lishment of the breed Agriculture in Canada Minister Harkness is to open the show as breeders surprising "not that we won the! battle but that we almost lost He says the battle was un vie for more than $20,000 in necessary beécause Rommel prize money, ds Made At CNE TORONTO (CP)--Alex T. ¥d- champion bull, Pinpur Echo Ad- tory." Arva the grand steer award with his Aberdeen angus entry in Canadian National ¥.xhibition [Judging of market cattle, | Top awards in judging red polls went to W, Coulson and George FE head, both of Milton In Holstein judging, D, 8 ton and of Brampton the grand champion female award, wards of won champion Sunday of Read Dun sONS Mar short cham Merry to Charles ¥. Champion reserve Ww. H award went of Norval steer and was won by fin horn plon of Millon In beef Coulson's Mr 15th cattle Pinpur judging Advancer while serve junior champion bull Vdvancer 45th was re for champion Vr. Readhead won erve grand champion female ard with Reedlyne Brend: Sue, which also was named jun champion female Roy Coulter of Campbell had the reserve gran jun the re nw or A ville Insecurity won Ruby, his vancer, which also Mr, Dunton won entry with Glenvue was Saturday senior champion bull, his Babe Mid night, The reserve grand cham pion female was Re Kitchener, In the junior class, Kenevelyn female was owned Paris The Peel by R of county club the Newmarket Jersey Club third The 1 went to H. Butcher Bagg and Son two men placed the premier exhibito Leads Sig In Congo | LEOPOLDVILLE dian signalmen hav Jersey banner, eho Texal Leonard Karen, owned by Ebydale Farm, premier breeder award Sons, was grand champion bull and Princeton with the runner-up Alf Woodbridge. The) 04d the and same r award Cobourg Man nals (CP)~Cana-|the Genocide in Tibet, as- tung ¢ been named Holstein champion Achilles Brown Breeders' for would have had to retreat any-| way 17 days later when the Allies! {made their landing in French | North Africa, | "If the battle had followed the Anglo-American landings victory {would have been partly ascribed to them (the Americans)," the historian says. 'The ultimate {Judgment of history may well be to record it as a political vie Barnett's book covers fighting in the North African desert he- tween 1940 and 1043 and was written during three years of re- search and interviews with Brit. ish generals, The book is highly eritical throughout of Montgomery's handling of the desert war, his treatment of predecessor Gen, (now Field Marshal) Sir Claude | Crowd Pickets Chinese Opera | TORONTO demonstrators packed their picket signs at curtain time Monday night and left an audi nee, about one-third Chinese, to enjoy the Peking Opera. The demonstrators made up of about 50 European New Cana- dians and members of the city's {Chinese community, picketed | quietly as a crowd of about 1,400 | entered the Royal Alexandra | Theatre, They carried signs that read {This Show is a Camouflage for Mao Tse. People's | | @ | | the Killer and restrictions on Chinese mer- nts in Java and Sumatr, "But we do not (ake th Burketon Boar Wins At CNE TORONTO (CP) A boar owned by Arthur Morrow of Cookstown has been named grand Yorkshire champion in swine judging at the Canadian National Exhibition, Reserve champion boar was owned by Gordon Schweitzer of Petersburg, Ont, James C. Hart and son of Gadshill and Donald O, Smith of Glanford Station won top awards ti of it In and Chinese, And another observer, sta. oned close to the Communist satellites in Asia, suggesied that Moscow and Peking may be working a doubleplay to hood- wink the non-Communist world, ' the Chinese do," referred to Chinese |the border of a sign that the Russians are | Sailer events 'Khrushchev doesn't want {0 held responsible for what he said, He actions on the and India and in Nepal bet, "They hardly come under the heading of peaceful coexistence, So it's possible that the news. paper articles on thé interpreta- tion of Communist doctrine were published deliberately to {mote the illusion of a spl Ti DRIVE TO peau Valley TONIGHT in judging of tamworths swine, The Harts owned the grand Did You Know Lo champion boar, the reserve jun- for champion boar and the re. serve grand champion sow. Mr, Smith had the grand champion in the moin Dining Room of he GENOSHA HOTEL you con have o Full-course Dinner for sow, the junior champion sow JONLY 95¢. h 0 and the reserve junior sow, Newton Taylor and Sons, _ Burketon won awards for the serve grand champion boar, Glen Gould of Florence won eight top awards in the Berk- shire class, His entries were the grand champion, senior champion, jun- for champion and reserve junior champion boar, and the grand sow, Allan Lockie of Zephyr won awards for reserve grand cham. pion and senior reserve cham- pion boar, and reserve senior and junior champion sow, Worst Winter For Jobless Auchinleck, his publicity-seeking junior champion boar and the re-| Heserve grand champion steer Club of Brampton won the #nd his post-war memoirs, defeating . York County Jersey Club of The Oxford County of Woodstock was (CP)==A hundred: champion, reserve grand cham-| UP pion, senior and junior champion | GET THE BEST For Less At MODERN UPHOLSTERING 926'2 SIMCOE ST. N, RA 8-645) or RA 3-4131 OSHAWA ONLY 10% DOWN UP TO 2 YEARS TO PAY FOUR SEASONS TRAVEL CONFIRMS YOU ON McLagan pri Canada Steamship Line real, sald that despite talk "about crashing more heavily into Fu ropean markets, and that of Brit ain in particular," Canada's best | export prospects are in the United itates market, He added: "The problem, of course, that the door to this rich prize has long been locked against us |at least so far as manufactured goods arg concerned. However there are hopeful indications of change," Mr, McLagan agreed that Can ada must buy from other coun tries but, he asked, "does It fol ident of Mont 15 of the deaths caused In four accidents in the two prov- inces, British Columbia recorded three h ay fatalities, Alberta Saskatchewan and Nova Scotia two each and Prince Edward Is land and New Brunswick one| each | The with Mrs, Tony Graving, Battle Creek, Mich., of head injuries suf fered in a three-car collision Sun-| day at the Intersection of high ways 4 and 7, 10 miles north of London | Sandra Ann Winship, 5, daugh ter of Mr, and Mrs, Thomas Win-| ship of Newbury, drowned in al gravel pit Sunday at Clachan, 25| miles northeast of Chatham, Mus, Doreen Calkins, 25, Strath. | roy, Sunday when a car in which] she was a passenger collided) with another near Burgoyne, 20 miles west of Owen Sound, | George Schuler, 47, Musselman| Lake, Saturday while swimming] - | signed to communications duties Commune Hell on Earth, P d ct d {at the big Kamina base evacu-| Among the demonstrators was Ie 1 e BRUSSELS (Reuters) A ated by Belgian paratroopers last| Capt, C, C, Liu of the Formosan) HAMILTON / (CP)~Donald L. Reuters correspondent in Leo. Week In breakaway Katanga ship Prosperity who with 20| MacDonald, secretary - treasurer poldville sent this message to Province. | members of his crew dined in|of the Canadian Labor Congress, | Brussels on the radio Telex! Four signalmen left by air Sat.| Chinatown before joining the told a Labor Day rally here tha service Monday night: usday for Kamina to join Capt. picketers, {unemployment hangs over Can: "Armed guards have just been! J. P. O'Reilly of Montreal, who| Theatre officials sald the crowd ada like ther sword of Damocles, | posted at the door of the Telex Will be liaison officer, They are fell short of the theatre's 1,625 "This winter will be the wors!| office to prevent journalists from! L. Cpl, Bill Hutchins, Corner| capacity [that we have known since the| entering." Brook, Nfld, and Sigmn, Lew| The Peking Opera will be here/terrible '30s,"" he sald, | Asked from Brussels: 'Are Allan, Kingston, Ont., Richard a week, About 2,000 attended the rally you in danger?" the correspond. McNulty, Saint John, N.B., and| An advertisement in Mongay, to hear civic and labor leaders ent replied: 'Think so, but Clff Goddard, Montreal, |Globe and Mail signed by offi-|speak. A parade through down. John Hall, Co.|clals of Chinese communities 1 ent," burg, Ont, of the signal corps/12 Canadian cities said the ex- standing 1 shine for pres:| Earlier Capt {town Hamilton sponsored by the| ancing by machine lor pres 130,000-member Hamilton and Dis. Later, the correspondent, flew to Kamina to examine the ploitation of the Peking Opera for|trict Trades and Labor Congress, and he has already propaganda purposes is "a vivid was the largest Labor Day par. AT GIRLIE SHOWS LONDON (Reuters)--Brits ish tie manufacturers proudly claimed another vies tory for conservatism Mon- day--London nightelub oper- ators now insist that custo. mers viewing striptease shows must wear ties, The Tie Manufacturers' As- soclation confidently forecast another victory in the offing at London airport, where a move Is underway to per. suade porters to wear white collars and black ties But It qonceded that little THE spoT In The Congo ALSO ALL OTHER TRAVEL ARRANGEMENTS RA 8-6201 was also with seven and Quebec Nova Sco. drowning toll Ls highest in Ontarlo British Columbia each recorded three, tia and Manitoba one ! Three persons died of carbon) ® {monoxide poisoning in vehicles, twp In Quebec and one In On- tarlo, In Quebec a man died in an accidental shooting and af vVvww NU-WAY pedestrian was struck by a train,! Two children in Ontario were erushed by a trailer being towed by a farm tractor, There was another tractor death on a Mani. toba sideroad. An Ontario mad) died of a bee sting, | Ontario dead | lan McKenzie, 47, and his two sons, Lawrence, 18, and Jamle, 8, within sight of their Cayuga home, 25 miles southwest of Ham-| ilton, when their pickup truck was struck by a freight train Fri- day night Mr. and Mrs, Trenton, thelr son, daughter Emily, 6, and nephew Stephen McCoy, 17, of Bloom: | field. when the car in which they Robert Webb James, 12 were riding got out of control and | tated when two cars were In ajof Ottawa took the lives of four overturned on a curve on High way 2 near Trenton Friday night Doreen O'Neil, 17, Killaloe, Friday night when a car in which § Was a passenger slauck a #e 15 miles north of Renfrew Harold Gehringer, 48, Cleve fand, Ohio, Saturday when a car in which he was a passenger col lided with another | Bernard Robinson, 28, Oshawa, Friday night when his car col 0! at a hunting camp near Dorset Dale Erie Wagorn, 2, youngest of six children of Mr. and Mrs Raymond Wagorn of Ottawa, drowned Monday In Norway Lake, 70 miles southwest of Ot. tawa, Ron Pedler, 17, of Windsor, In Lake 8t, Clair Monday when he attempted to retrieve a drifting outhoard motorboat, Claude Perron, one of six chil dren asleep In the rear of a can- vas-covered pickup truck, by carbon monoxide fumes Satur. day at Clarence Creek, 25 miles east of Ottawa, Lucien Lamontagne, rker Beardmore, 4 39, bush we at decapi sideswiping collision 32 miles west of Hearst Fernand Couture, lumber mill employee at Nassau Lake drowned Sunday in a boating accident at Nassau Lake Allan Shepherd, 36, Langstaff Saturday in Lake Nipissing while fishing near Monetville, Bernice Imber, 18, thrown from her car, Detroit, which bounded out of control on High-| headway had been made at the headquarters of the Brit. ish Labor party, which has flatly declared itself "against controls in dress, Four Killed | In Accident | Near Ottawa ANTRIM (CP)--A spectacular] head - on collision between two cars on Highway 17 near this small community 30 miles east persons Saturday. | Police identified William Bellinger, 18, Ottawa;| Mrs, Irene Scott, 28, Renfrew; | | Doris McLellan, 18, Arnprior, and Ronald W. Whitney, 22, Owen Sound. Thomas tawa, and Colin the dead as O'Brien, 21, Niblett, 19, of | production | stated, the point where we let our facilities own | the |low that we should carry this to James Wolfe, sent a message to situation "Not sure started radio communications to|example of Communist perfidy, decline and what side the Congolese troops United Nations headquarters at|~ - equipment | Brussels office: create widespread unemployment Who are occupying the Telex of-| Leopoldville through f among our own people?" Manufacturing, Mr McLagan whether the guard ice are on Is for Lu with the growth of the Canadian!it inadvisable to ask him." labor force, and he described this, in present un-| as a major factor employment, In the last 10 years the percentage of the labor force a employed in of Of |} { Arnprior, are in hospital in Ot: |} Their condition Is serious. | Scott of Renfrew, Mr. | tawa Walter lided with a truck at a Sudbury way 2 near Melbourne Monday, and Mrs, Thomas McDowell, of intersection Mrs, Helen Robinson, 52, Fri. day night when struck by a car after being stung by a bee at Es. co as she pushed! a lawnmower down the main street of Pontypool, 15 miles northeast of Oshawa | Arthur Lysehryka, 24, and his brother Nelson, 21, both of Sud- INTERPRETING TH and struck by an oncoming car Howard George, 40, Monday sex, 20 miles southeast of Wind sor, James O'Sullivan, 18, in an automobile collision on a down town Kingston street Monday. ENEWS U.S. School Days Unhappy Days Back « to « school time in the United States is annually a period of tension, spreading out of the south into life in almost all parts of the country But this year there appears to be distinctly new factors In the annual troubles A new altitude is apparent in three key groups: the federal ju. diclary, national politicians and the Negroes themselves NEW FIRMNESS Developments last week indi. cate a new firmness on the part of federal courts in enforcing de- segregation, On Thursday the U.S. Supreme Court backed the decision of a lower court in New Orleans call ing for integration of that deep south eity's schools to start on a grade-a-year basis Nov, 14, At the same time it called for inte gration to beghh next week in Houston, Tex, and demanded a speedup in Delaware integration, *robably the most significant development came in the New Orleans case. The technique of closing public schools and reopen ing them on a private basis--at tempted in both Arkansas and was declared uncon The decision is being Louisiana stitutional appealed The new attitude on the part of national politicians 1s brought Into focus by the current presi dential election campalgn It seems evident that no presiden. tial ticket---now or in the future can hope for broad national sup- port unless it takes a distinctly liberal attitude towards integra- tion, PASSIVITY GONE Southern Negroes themselves in the last year have shown clearly that they will no longer wait passively for integration The isolated resistance of pre vious years was consolidated into a widespread, cohesive front this year as the Negroes walked firmly into white restaurants and churches, The results have been distinet and impressive But If should not be forgotten that sit years after the famous supreme court desegregation de cree, less than two. per cent of some 2,500,000 Negro students in the 11 southwestern states will go to school this fall with white chil dren, | for the entertainment of friends, Renfrew, and James Noonan, of Pakenham, also are In serious ndition in hospital at Arnprior. Police said Mr, and Mrs, Scott Mr. and Mrs, McDowell driving west Renfrew Ottawa where they had | watched Saturday's Big Fow football game, The second car | was travelling east from | prior, | The two cars crashed on a | straight stretch of highway, Po-| lice said marks on the pavement | indicated that one car was on the wrong side of the highway's painted centre line, Both cars were demolished, The dead were so mangled iden. tification was not completed un: | til Sunday afternoor | Rifle Aimed At Bridegroom | TORONTO (CP) man shielded a wedding party outside a church in suburban] Scarborough Saturday as the! bride's brother pointed a 22. calibre rifle at the groom | Rev. W, V, Egan called police iwhile 20-year-old Baxter Burton remained outside the Roman Catholic church and reasoned with the brother, The wedding between Thelma Webber, 20, and Daniel Sinnott, 19, of nearhy Malton, was de layed 20 minutes. Detectives sald the girl's parents were Seventh Day Adventists and opposed her marriage to Mr, Sinnott, a Ro man Catholic, Melvin Douglas Webber, 28 was charged with possession of an offensive weapon and with pointing a firearm, and were from to The best Movie actor Pat O'Brien keevs a juke box in his rec eation room Arn | | MOLOTOV ARRIVES FOR NEW POST sia's permanent representative | Molotov has been Soviet am Vyacheslav M, Molotov, cen- ter, former Soviet foreign min. Ister, and his wife, Paulina, ar rive in Vienna today where he will assume new duties as Ruse manufacturing had broiled or {declined from 24.8 from 26.6, SAVORY LOBSTER crawfish and be boiled, or | lobster thermdior or Newburg, ar ee large can | with the International Atomie Energy Agency, At left is So. | viet Ambassador I, A, Avilov, The Bermuda lobster resembles base, The UN estimates 15,000 Congo-| served as|lese were dependent on Kamina United Arab Republic troops is. no longer keeping pace mumba or for Kasavubu, I feel have been assigned to Kamina | | where the UN started a study to employment civilians at the hig {find alternate Congolese base work for their | bassador to since 1957. (AP Wirephoto | from Frankfurt) Outer Impossible to judge left behind by the Belgians, livelihood, -- » ade in the city's history, ALEXANDRIA, La, (AP)--For- mer governor Earl Kemp Long, last leader of a vanishing Louis jana political dynasty, died Mone day. | The 65-year-old former gov | ornor 'just turned over in his | bed and died," said his physician, | 4 (Dr, R. U, Parrott, Long was admitted to hospital] 10 days ago, the day he was| [elected to the U.S, House of Representatives, | Dr, Parrott sald Long had| spent a reasonably good night but [*just turned over in his bed and died" Monday morning, | Mrs, Blanche Long, his os: | tranged wife, said Long, in good | spirits but "he went out just like| Last Of His Kind Governor Long Dies to another mental hospital at Mandeville, La, again cracking the whip over the state, Long bounced back Into the political picture in the August 'ongressional election after he alled In an attempt for another erm as governor, State law prohibits a governor om succeeding himself, but f t fr Long once indicated he would re-| sign shortly before his term ended last spring and then run for re-election, He didn't, but tried for the Lieutenant Gover. nor's office and lost, | But again, a few political mani. pulations and he was out and| | RUG & CARPET SALES Broadloom wall to wall, Rugs, Carpets, Stair Runners. Installation by our own mechanics 174 Mary Street RA 8-4681 gn a light after he drank a cup of coffee," NUEY'S DEATH RECALLED Earl's death came five days] before the 25th anniversary of the death of his brother, self styled "Kingfish" of Loulslana and its governor and U.S. sena- tor, Huey Long was shot Sept, 8, | 1935, in the corridor of the sky. | scraper capitol he built, He died two days later, A dynamic force In state polit: fes for more than 30 years, Long reached the pinnacle of his ca- reer last year, His antics, includ. {ing bouncing in and out of two | | mental hospitals, drew headlines | everywhere, After a legislative committee meeting -- where he called one) legislator a "Dago" and used | profane language with Roman] Catholic nuns and school children | | «| in the gallery--he was flown to a Mongolia via radio psychiatic clinic in Galveston, | Tex,, on orders from his wife| and nephew, U.S. Senator Rus- sell Long (Dem, La.) i | A court hearing got him out of the Texas hospital on his prom- {ise that he would enter a New Orleans hospital, This promise he | fulfilled--for a few hours--but he| | slipped out and sped toward his| | governor's chair in Baton Rouge. ! | His wife had acted quicker and | he was arrested en route, | Cursing and screaming and] begging for help, he was hustled | WONDERING? How to Meet your High Monthly Payments? SOLUTION:- A Low-Cost Home-Owners C lida F. RICHARD The Examination of eyes And Glasses EVENINGS BY 136 SIMCOE N. AT COLBORNE Fitting of Contact Lenses Children's Visual Training For Appointment Please Call RA 3-4191 BLACK, O.D. APPOINTMENT ORGAN MUSIC NIGHTLY AT THE GENOSHA HOTEL Completely Air-Conditioned Loan S1KINGE. BORROW $1,600 REPAY ONLY $30 MO. ALLIED INVESTMENT CO. Member of Ontario Mortgage Brokers Assob. RA 3.3993 )