Oshawa Times (1958-), 12 May 1962, p. 2

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'Prurient Sex' On TV Charged' WASHINGTON (AP)--Senate investigators quoted from sub- poenaed files Friday in accus- ing CBS television network ex- ecutives of attempting to inject "prurient sex" into its Route 66 program. But James T. Aubrey Jr., president of the CBS TV net- work division, denied request- ing any salacious sex or ex- treme violence in the show "2 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Saturdey, Mey 12, 1962 GOOD EVENING By JACK, GEARIN NDP's NOMINATION MEET TUESDAY Some big names will be coming this way to participate in the Federal election campaign. This is good news. The campaign has been dragging in Ontario riding, as elsewhere. . C, "Tommy" Douglas, national leader of the New Democratic Party, will visit the riding (and Oshawa) some- time this month to display his silvery oratory. Mrs. John Diefenbaker, wife of the Prime Minister, is scheduled to play the 3 Leaders Woo West, Pearson Stays East By THE CANADIAN PRESS Robert Thompson campaigned|fodder bank. Under this pro. Prime Minister. Diefenbaker|in Winnipeg. 'gram the government will en- attacked the former Liberal, Prime Minister Diefenbaker|courage farmers to store live- government's monetary andjwas to return to Ottawa early|stock fodder. wheat sale policies in speeches|today. He planned to spend) Mr. Pearson spoke for almost n Western Canada Friday,|Saturday and Sunday in thejan hour at Sherbrooke--chiefly while Liberal Leader Pearson'capital before moving into Que-|in French flavored with an On- one ogg his party's bid for bec Monday. tario pees age an audi- uebec votes. Mr. Pearson was to continuejence of about 600 persons ge re. oe cur Mr: Diefenbaker told a Con-jhis Quebec tour with meetings|crowded in the St. Francois 'i Cas sia ps . : sant rally in ae Hat . pire Marieville, + ear School auditorium. e testified before the Senate/his government has cut thejham, Iberville and St. Johns. host role June 14 in Ajax subcommittee on juvenile delin-|spiral of inflation it inherited|/He will spend Sunday in Ot- EXPLAINS FORMULA 2 : j : : ee : ' quency as it resumed hearings|from the Liberals. In Sher-|tawa. The Liberal leader said the at a reception-tea sponsored =| ~ wa : : 3 } on the impact on American|brooke, Que., Mr. Pearson out- Sie A DANGER new flexible formula in federal- | z 4 an provincial tax relations would by the PC ladies' auxiliaries youth of crime, violence andjlined a new "flexibility form- in the riding. sex on TV programs. ula" in federal provincial tax} Mr. Douglas was to be in Re- permit provinces to choose e : Aubery was asked by Chair-|relations aimed at helping thejgina today and will spend Sun-/how they want federal assist- The PC's also hope to have man Thomas J. Dodd (Dem.|Pprovinces "achieve their fullday in Calgary. Mr. Thompson} ance in such joint fields as tax- Mr. Diefenbaker stop off in Conn.) about a Jan. 5, 1961/Stature in their own way. jwas to attend a party seminar] ation, scholarships and univer- Oshawa about that time New Democratic Party,at Hamilton and then speak at Leader T. C. Douglas spent Fri-|a public meeting tonight. sity grants. They could take memorandum that quoted the either a fixed amount or col- CBS official as laying down a and the Liberals are trying to lure Big Chief 'Mike' Pearson this way. | All parties in the riding | were working feverishly be- hind-the-scenes this week to complete their organization work, mend their fences; all, except the Socreds had Firemen play water on char- tanker truck which spun into red hulk of a gasoline-laden | Edmonton. Driver Peter Tro- chymchuk, 27, of Edmonton, who suffered burns to 95 per the ditch and burst into flames after colliding with a car near cent of his body, died Friday in hospital. The 5,500-gallon FATAL TANK TRUCK FIRE load of fuel sprayed across the highway. Driver of the car involved, Eugene Chanasyk of | Aubrey replied that he didn't}0f Saskatchewan's' annual con- Dawson Creek, B.C. was not seriously hurt. Philip Flies dictum for 'broads, bosoms,|day in Saskatoon where he re- In a_ speech at Lethbridge, jand fun' in the Route 66 se- lries. ceived an honorary doctor of|Alta., Mr. Diefenbaker said |laws degree at the University|there was a danger of Con- |servatives becoming too com- lect a similar amount through provincial taxation, with fed- eral taxes lowered accord- ingly." believe he ever used the words|Vocation. Social Credit Leader in connection with a CBS net- ~ : roe a Huot --~| work program. He said that it is "quite easy| Work Towards for people in the business' to interpret' a request for whole- |placent. | "You always have to get out and work," he said. '"Confid- ence yes; but no compla- cency."" Revenue Minister Nowlan, P "Any such province could then use such monies for the purpose of the joint program ov for any other purpose it may refer." Meanwhile, Labor Minister Love Confounded > By Parole Board | |speaking at Stellarton, N.S.,/starr said in Toronto there is some, pretty girls as a request} bse eda ond Pin gay jsaid_complacency and over-ing secret report on unemploy- for broads and to translate at- tractive into bosoms. opened committee rooms in Oshawa, within a_ stone's throw of each other. poe The New Democratic Par- i. B. JOLLIFFE ty will get its Ontario riding campaign into high gear next Tuesday night at a nomination meeting in the Hotel Genosha. The guest speaker will be E. B. "'Ted" Jolliffe, QC, who certainly needs no introduc- tion to the political world in Ontario. He is regarded as one of Canada's top Labor lawyers. He became the leader of the Ontario CCF Party at 33, when the post was created in 1942, He is a graduate of the Uni- versity of Toronto and a Rhodes Scholar. He entered the Ontario legislature as a CCF member for South York in 1943, was defeated in 1945, returned in 1948 and defeated again in 1951. Cliff Pilkey cut short his attendance at the big UAW International convention in Atlantic City by four days to return here and start work on the NDP's campaign -- the best guess at this time seems to be that Miss Aileen Hall, the OCVI teacher, will get the Party's nomination but any- thing can happen at a political convention, as the record clearly shows, Arthur Maloney (MP, Parkdale, Toronto) will be the guest speaker here next Wednesday in the Hotel Genosha at a meeting of the Oshawa PC Association -- Labor Minister Michael Starr will be out of town, but will be the guest speaker at the annual Civic Night of the Oshawa Builders' Association May 23, also in the Genosha. MAGISTRATE DNIEPER IS TRANSFERRED So Magistrate Robert Dnieper has been transferred to the Toronto area? It seems like yesterday -- actually it was May 1l, 1961 -- that the rugged, outspoken 33-year-old Osgoode Hall Law School grad (he was called to the Bar in 1956) made his debut as a magistrate in Ontario county. The Attorney-General's Department said this week that the transfer was made to relieve the pressure of work in Metropolitan Toronto courts. There have been few public figures locally, at least in modern times, who have attracted such widespread publicity beyond the County's borders in such a short time. His stiff sentences, maximum terms frequently sent chills down the spines of those who were about to come be- fore him, including first-offenders and teen-agers. His stern rebukes did not always exclude the Crown. They were mostly reserved, however, for witnesses, the ac- cused and defence counsel, many of whom frequently com- plained that. he was unnecessarily severe (as one of this group put it, 'His Worship sometimes displays a sad lack of judicial temperament"'.) He publicly referred to a client of Russell Humphreys, QC, as "a nut'. He had little patience with trucking firms convicted of over-loading on .public highways and sometimes irritated their influential owner operators, Some owners resented the maximum fines; what concerned them far more ,however, was too many convictions for overloading (a serious offence that caused heavy damage to roads) as this would be a black at aE: RST WEATHER CONTINUES ACROSS ONTARIO AND QUEBEC SUNNY Hamilton. ..... 45 65 St. Catharines . . . .45 65 Toronto. ...++-+ 45 65 Peterborough... . 40 67 Trenton... «+e 42 65 Killaloe . » «+++» 38 67 Muskoka ...--. 40 67 North Bay .... .40 65 Sudbury ....... 40 65 Earlton ....+++ 38 65 Kapuskasing... . 38 65 White River..... 40 60 tatives of the 10 provinces have|vatives June 18. |; Mr. Pearson was quoted as lround Friday in the case ofjmerly of Fort St. John, B.C., by another CBS executive|ca!l and vocational high schools, | Diefenbaker said that between sored committee and predicted [state parole board turned down| Miss McKearney said the! Philip will arrive in Canada by|written. He said he indicated/day. jthe Liberals were in, power--| "No government department |diate release to allow him to|ing news "'but it won't change/his first visit in nearly two/terpretation placed on his in-jing here of the National Advi-\Canadian dollar dropped 38\ctarr said. "It is a figment of The recommendation that) The board's report stated that" The prince will go on to Ot-, "those people be straightened/Vocational Training endedja year. tion." ; ' , RIG Ee MRO Wr AN from Walpole State Prison now|tion for freedom was concerned|iving at Uplands Airport at| Dodd said that Route 66 was|members had recommended SLASH DOLLAR SPIRAL' [Governor John A. Volpe by/|in prison during which he dem-| ong in the capital before return-|exceptionally large audience of the provinces and federal gov-joffice in 1957, the dollar was) Wharf Destroyed of the parole. board. The vote|never before shown in his life.'se¢ond Commonwealth Study mated average of about 6,000-)0ut standard courses for alljthe 1945 dollar, he said. | ) : ai antner it ais ; Th il was C. R.ling spi z ce On March 23 he pleaded his) io) the basis of the necessity In his capacity as conference Watching it each week. e federal was told *) C. R.|ing spiral from more than three) LIVERPOOL, N.S (CP) advisory board of pardons, |(°" equal and consistent judg: | ver the keynote address at the|tion of the subpoenaed files," tional training, that curriculum|cent." ltween $350,000 and $500,000 in a 33-year-old Fran McKearney oners there was nothing ex- jproblem" in view of the great|the Liberals didn't go out after|loading wharf at a mill here had' completely rehabilitated; Wuce Would justify his release| University of Montreal. aoe oon eee Route construction across Canada. | Disposal of the wheat surplus| The fire was controlled about 4 4 A 66 in order to bolster its rat- is essential that)--mainly through sales to Com-jan hour' after Flaherty will be eligible for,he will be met by Governor- | . fi Do 4 7 ao i _|on training programs to be used|age space now was available| mediately known, There were nothing in Flaherty's petition) June, 1964 at the earliest and|100-man RCAF guard of honor. sideration." ae 4 art Z ; 8 yer y h d Sh ary consideratl Flaherty is serving terms ag- House, where he will be a week Watc e Ow, testified at the hearing, planned|variety of convictions including}eral and Mme. Vanier. |possible following his release.|possessing burglary tools, safe-|ada during the summer of 1960, | : : ; CHATHAM (CP)--Five teen-| | newspaper stories and even-|breaking, putting in fear and tawa and Toronto making plans|agers, after watching a televi-| | . Although Flaherty had a bad| Conference. lcountry cemetery and opened a | Asks Protection [prison record when he was firs allied in e Poard sald) them from outside Canada, will! A 17-year-old Chatham girl, jtional violations since March! weekend for the conference. police a statement saying the TROIS-RIVIERES, ue. (CP) ar ti oat kee ss onan England, in 1956. |and could think of nothing to do affected by a labor dispute said)... ; i : PORSICB i ee a aie statement was read into the threatening his employees and|°"s were held hostage at gun-|cross-country affair, winding up their wives and asked for as-|--_ penne way ieee | L. R. Davidson, president of| mutilating a tomb. tors Limited, said in a telegram) the statement pleaded guilty a Roget aig ie ine "WW hd , D {her also was convicted. Both authority is being flouted" in a t e) t were remanded out of custody labor dispute. a Cc g u |for sentence June 1. jeted by members of the Sea-| TORONTO (CP)--A ratepayer) Mr. Bell said an elected of-/Burke, 18, Leonard Lozon, 19, jof ships operated by Upper|action to unseat an elected offi-|--giving up his right to the of] The cement cover of the cof: The shipping company Thurs-|cjal has done wrong, a senior|after he discovers that he is in-|had not been lifted. | province. ' 'al : p J. W. Bell of the department's BECAME LAW APRIL 18 ;Act and said the girls did the Mass Of ( 'loud pe "aaatg with the shipping company) branch said in an interview that | The most recent amendment the car. circles, especially by the men on the beat. Many police ee bargaining rights for UPPeT| dure by transferring the initia-|agreed to before that date but| from the hoodlum element. It gave them the respect that |cies. If court action is taken in re- In Produce Sheds onto weather office at 5 a.m.:/much change in temperature to- than|Great Lakes an extensive areajover by evening. Winds south-| Low overnight, High Friday .. jconfidence are the only things ; ' OTTAWA (CP) -- Represen- that could defeat the Conser-\mo"' ** Catan SY Es Fone 2nd C { r INDICATES DISPLEASED <% on e ence Aubrey said the memoran- roe to bh toward ye Speaking to 3,500 persons in| saying such a report was pre- BOSTON (AP)--Love lost ajtually they corresponded, For- dum was brought to his atten-|ardized curriculums in techni-|the Medicine Hat Arena, Mr. ; ; : By ALEXANDER FARRELL |{ ion pared by a government - spon Joseph A. Flaherty when the/she now lives in Somerville. MONTREAL (CP) -- Prince) some 30 days or so after it was|the labor department said Fri-/1945 and 1957--a period when|pioh unemployment in 1964. jthe convict's request for imme-|board's decision was disappoint-|air at 1:45 p.m. EDT today for|his "displeasure" with the in-| Reporting on a two-day meet-|the purchasing value of the has made such a report," Mr. }marry a Canadian girl. anything. I'll wait for him." years |structions and. directed that/sory Council on Technical and|cents, or more than three cents his (Mr. Pearson's) imagina- Flaherty, 40, not be released|the essence of Flaherty's peti- awa almost immediately, ar-| ut. Thursday, the department said Sa ine lwas given to Massachusetts|With his last four or five years!5.45 m., and spend the week-|"'a program that attracted an|that curriculum experts from) When the Conservatives took |Cornelius J. Twomey, chairman|onstrated traits of character|ing to Montreal to open his|young people," with an esti-|ernment meet next fall to work|worth only' 62 cents in terms of| . : i parts of the country "We have slashed the gallop- By Fire In NS. |was unanimous. NO JUSTIFICATION |Conference Monday. 000 children and teen agers : 7 : oi eee : 2 : "eqn ikki rela.|Ford, fede i f yoca-| s y d | 4 case at a hearing before the \president, Prince Philip will de-| The most shocking revela-| or ederal director of voca-|cents a year to less than one|Damage was estimated at be. [pointing out that his love for|ment in the cases of other pris- first plenary session Monday|Dodd fay = in cleat at. development is an "urgent| The prime minister also said|fire that destroyed a coal un- cae guened his sie Ue 1; |traordinary in his petition| Session Monday afternoon at the| tempt by the highest officers o Inumber of trade schools under|wheat sales. Friday , ; 4 jec i s i t r | hi at this time." On arrival in Ottawa today, inject prurient sex into Route He said it it broke out, im. a inge.t? provinces place more emphasis|munist China--meant that stor-|Cause of the fire was not im- The board said "there waS/parole in routine fashion in|General Vanier and review a)" ssa [ ( in the new schools. 'for increasing the government's no injuries. that called for any extraordin- November 1964 at the latest. |Then he will go to Government Ser eects : Miss McKearney, who also gregating 31 to 41 years for a.end guest of the Governor-Gen- to marry Flaherty as soon as|burglary, attempted burglary,| The prince was last in Can- Opened Grave | She first learned of him through|breaking and attempting safe-| when he spent some time in Ot-| - --ifive counts of rape. for the Commonwealth Study/sion horror show, drove to a prison record when he was first) gome 399 delegates, 230 of|grave, court was told Friday. For His Workers there have, been no institu-| gather in Montreal during the involved in the incident, gave oe The first was held in Oxford,|five had an.urge for excitement The operator of a grain elevator Friday "strongarm thugs" are\riot during which prison offic- The conférence will be ajsfer watching the show. The lnoint. i Vaheotver dine 6. ag by Crown counsel Blake surances of adequate protection.) a > ey ' The five were charged with) the Three-Rivers Grain Eleva-| Ratepayers Keep The girl who gave the police to federal, provincial and mu- and another girl accused with nicipal governments that The elevator had been pick- Still to be tried are Barry jfarers' International Unioniin Ontario has been tradition-|ficial can generally avoid court}and Robert Dunlop, 18, all of \(Ind.), protesting the servicing! ally responsible for initiating/action by filing a "disclaimer"|Dover Centre. ame Shipping Limited. lcial when he believes the offi-|fice -- within certain periods|fin, weighing about 700 pounds, WEATHER FORECAST day won an injunction prohibit-| solicitor in the municipal af-leligible or after action is taken | mark against their record with the Highway Transport Board {ing further picketing in Quebec|fairs department said Friday. _|by a ratepayer. |day under the Canada Evidence of Ontario (which has life and death powers in the granting The SIU 'has been feuding f t ct ; d general municipal counse idigging while they remained in Citizens who were disrespectful to the police also infur- {since the recently formed Cana-| ai 'a ; | z ae *, "so far the department hasn't|to the act became law April 18.) _ | fated him, so that he was well liked in law enforcement (dian Maritime Union (CLC) seen fit to change" the proce-|It is believed that contracts} ges astwar officers felt that his general attitude toward them made leer sailors away from tive to either the department or|not completed until afterwards $1 Million Blaze ae their work easier. It helped them to demand more-respect |' the loca] law enforcement agen-/would not be affected. Forecasts issued by the Tor-)Sunny with light winds and not M4 . oosonee.....- their work deserved but did not always get from the public. Two More U S | He explained that for munici-| gard to dealings after April 18) BOSTON (AP) --M, Synopsis: Just west of the/day. Sunday sunny clouding] Observed temperatures i i i {pal affairs officials t Ss ici icials| b AP)--More His Worship also had a flair for disturbing some powerful eWJ. (pal affairs officials to assume|but before municipal officials) of cloudy weather and scatteredleast at 15. TT LS editorial pens in such places at Metropolitan Toronto, espe- 'cially when he held an impromptu night court in the rear of a police cruiser on. Highway 401 at 3 a.m. to hear a speeding case -- this also happened when he abruptly order- ed an accused home to discard his work clothes for more formal attire. Drunk drivers and wayward teen-agers were his special targets for several months -- there is little doubt but that his stiff sentences served as a strong deterrent to them. A MAN OF DIRECT ACTION He was a man of direct action, didn't believe too much in the subtle approach as a solution to complex problems-- when Whitby Town Police complained this year that there was too much drinking at Teen-Town dances held in the Whitby arena (under sponsorship of a private group for more than four years), he immediately ordered the closure of the Teen-Town dances. He sentenced an Oshawa youth, 21, found guilty of having liquor there to three months. He said in Whitby last November 8 that his camgaign to stamp out drunk driving in Ontario County had been "quite successful". There was not one case of drunk driving up that day -- three weeks before there had been 12 in a day. He had handed out 30-day sentences for this offence in the immediate weeks prior to that date (the maximum), even to first-offenders. : He did not follow this maximum sentence policy rigidly once he was convinced that the offence was decreasing in the area, but cut the jail sentences to 21 days and 15 days. He did a good clean-up job of teen-age drinking in Pick- ering Township--this started last June 6 when he sentenced 11 minors to jail for two days each and fined them $100 each and costs, or an additional seven days. He later varied his tactics there when the situation im- proved for teen-age drinkers -- he then fined nine youths $100 and costs each with the proviso that the fines be paid immediately or the accused serve five days in jail. Six of the youths paid. When he learned last September that teen-age drinking had ':dwindled"' in Pickering Township, he let eight teen- agers go scot-free and levied light fines on seven others. Magistrate Dnieper has departed, but he won't soon be forgotten. He did rub some people pretty hard the wrong way, but he was not withe staunch supporters -- included in the latter ranks were some of those same waywatd teen- agers and drunk drivers who, not so long ago, felt the full severity of his justice in the form of mayimum sentences and terms. responsibility could be regarded N l h as an infringement of munici- | uc @ar ots jpal autonomy, "an interference | by Queen's Park." | WASHINGTON (AP) -- Two, On the other hand, a local po- more United States nuclear test|liceman instituting action to un- ishots, including an underwater|seat a municipal councillor |explosion, were fired Friday in would be in the "unhealthy" the Pacific. position of taking action against It was the first announced|his employers. underwater detonation of the! The question arose as a re current U.S. testing operation,|sult of recent discussion about |which began April 25. an amendment to the Munici- | Friday's first blast, No. 8 in)pal Act which makes a muni- |the series, was an air drop of|cipal councillor eligible for dis intermediate yield -- meaning|qualification if he is an officer that it had an explosive forcejor has a controlling interest in somewhere between 20,000 tons\a firm which does business with and 1,000,000 tons of TNT. the municipality. Test No. 9 presumably had to _ ' do with the testing of anti-sub-| NOT AUTOMATIC marine weapons and the Atomic} The disqualification {s not Energy Commission said it was|automatic, but must come as detonated in the eastern Pacific'a result of a complaint filed by |several hundred miles from the|a ratepayer with a judge of the |closest land area, Supreme, county or district The announcement described|courts. To guard against frivo- the underwater shot as having|lous or vindictive complaints, a low yield, meaning an explo-|the ratepayer must post a $200 sive force equivalent to some-|bond. thing less than 20,000 tons of| The judge who hears the case |TNT. The Pentagon said no|may assess court-costs against jradiation hazard to fish is ex-\either the ratepayer or the |pected. 'municipal official. PREMIUM GAS OIL SERVICE STATION HIGHWAY NO. 2 (BETWEEN OSHAWA"& WHITBY) QUALITY Prompt Courteous Service OPEN DAILY INCLUDING SUNDAY had become aware of the new | $2,000,000 worth of property lay provision, Mr. Bell said he be-|i" Tuins today after a five-al- lieves a "judge could not help|@%m fire raced through a half- but have regard" for the lapse|Mile of produce sheds in of time in coming to his decis-| the Charlestown district Friday, lion. |destroying or damaging 11 tene- _,. |ments and about 100 loaded _ City clerks or other officials| refrigerator cars. Ten families in almost every Ontario munic-|jost their homes. showers and thunderstorms is| Cochrane, White River re-| edging slowly eastward. This|gions: Sunny with light winds weather appears likely to affect}and not much change in tem- western portions of Ontario both|perature today. Sunday mainly north and south tonight and/cloudy. Winds southerly 10 to Sunday. |20 Lake St. Clair region, Wind-| sor: Partly cloudy with light Lake Ontario: Variable east- erly winds 10 to 15 knots in-) Dawson . . « « « » +84 58 Victoria. . 25.2. 45 Edmonton..... .40 Regina... ++. 44 Winnipeg ..... .47 Fort William... . 40 White River. .... 37 Kapuskasing 39 ipality receive copies of public bills brought before the legisla- ,/ture and notice of changes and Millions of pounds of pota- jtoes, much of the United States winds and not much change in temperature today. Mostly cloudy tonight and Sunday with to 18 tonight, Fair. Lake Huron, Georgian Bay creasing to east to southeast 12) readings given the bills. A mu-|¢2*t coasts Supply spr te. rex! jnicipal affairs official said the| month, ee ee jdepartment regards it as the} & Pees responsibility of municipal civil] scattered showers or thunder-|and Lake Erie: Variable @ast- showers: Winds southeast 15. erly winds 12 to 18 knots in- Lake Erie, Lake Huron, Al-|creasing to east to southeast 18 : i FLIES TO MOSCOW jgoma, Sault Ste. Marie regions,|to 23 knots, Thundershowers |servants to advise elected offi-| os i ..,,. |London: Sunny with light winds} west sections Huron and Erie cials of legislation affecting), MOSCOW (AP)--Pierre Salin-/and not much change in tem-| tonight. them or their municipal admin-/8¢", White House press Secre-|nerature today. Sunday cloudy| Forecast temperatures: istration. jtary, flew to Moscow Friday | with sunny intervals, Chance of|Low tonight, high Sunday Ade farther step. the. dee elo the object, among other!a shower or thundershower late|Windsor...... . 50 step, ine Cepart-|things, of sampling Siberian)sunday. Winds southeast 15 St. Thomas... <« 50 68 ment sends a report annually/meat dumplings and vodka|" Lake Ontario, Niagara Hali-\London.....+ +» .45 67 fo each municipality, summar-|with Premier Khrushchev's|purton Georgian Bay, Timag-|Kitcheter . OE @ izing legislation passed at the/ son-in-law, Alexei Adzhubei, ed- ami regions, Hamilton Tor. Mount Forest... 40 65 { last session which affects mu-jitor-in-chief of the government onto, North Bay, Sudbury:! Wingham 65 nicipal government. The sum-| newspaper Izvestia, Salinger| -- a Bib secre mary for the session which|said his visit has no connec-| | ended April 18 is expected to|tion with any possible visit to! be in the mail within a few|the Soviet Union by President days. Kennedy. | | | pd YOU wsir OPEN THIS SUNDAY | ; | 12:00 A.M. to 6:00 P.M. | Harmony Village Model homes open ever. dey. See the fara J CORY & LOWELL LIMITED "Canadiana". Credit Valley Stone natural fire- 8 KING ST. EAST 723-2245 place. Hollywood type kitchen, Have your choice of McCORDICK DRUGS Armstrong Corlon on floors. All prepaid services, 360 WILSON RD. S. 725-8711 LAW PHARMACY Yes, we will take your older home on trade. CALL EXCLUSIVE AGENTS FOR S#LE TODAY! SOLD TOMORROW! LIST TO SELL! DON'T ASK -WHO- CALL JOHN A. J. BOLAHOOD LIMITED -- REALTOR GUIDE REALTY LIMITED 16 SIMCOE ST. S. PHONE 723-1121 See for yourself and be sure you'll get the bestn the "village" II 1204. WECKER DR, 725-3525 | \ \ 725-6544 7 A.M. ¢-- MIDNIGHT {

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