ee 2 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Wednesday, November 14, 1962 GOOD EVENING By JACK GEARIN LYMAN RE-ENTERS CITY MAYORALTY RACE The current municipal election campaign got the kind of shot-in-the-arm it so badly needed today with that important announcement out of Sydenham Harbor (now Oshawa Harbor): a Lyman Géfford will seek to return to the municipal arena, (fcom which his vibrant personality has been missing since 1960),, and will contest the mayoralty December 3. This was good news for many thousands inside and out of the Gifford camp, which has never, incidentally, been known to suffer from paucity of numbers, even in defeat. Regardless of the readers' personal views of Mr. Gifford or Mrs. Thomas as mayoralty candidates, the it meant two things, both important: : 1 -- That there would be no acclamation in the mayor- 2 -- That all civic campaign races -- Council, Board of Education and PUC -- would benefit as the result of greater public interest which, spelled out, usually means a far greater vote turnout than is the case when there is no competition for the Chief Magistrate's seat. © Mr. Gifford comes from a pioneer farm family of the district that dates back to the United Empire Loyalists -- his ancestors moved from Vermont to the Eastern Townships and his grandfather settled north of Oshawa in 1831. The Gif- fords later moved to a homestead in East Whitby Town- ship where the 1962 mayoralty candidate was born, one of five sons of the late Hiram E. Gifford, a former warden of Ontario County (in 1914) and long active in municipal af- fairs. Lyman Gifford attended the old Cedardale Public School and completed his education in Oshawa. He bought the 125- acre Sydenham Farm from the late Gordon D. Conant, form- er Premier of Liberal Ontario, in 1932 and still resides on it with his wife, the former Louise Boddy (who is, incidentally, one of the better public speakers in Ontario riding, although she appears unfrequently in such roles). Mr. Gifford was named warden of Ontario County in 1939 after serving as a councilman and reeve in East Whit- by Township. He joined the Ontario Regiment in 1929 and was called to active service in 1939. He did not serve over- seas, but attained the rank of captain before his discharge in 1943. Mr, Gifford, immediately following his 1960 defeat by Mayor Thomas, told a reporter that he was disappointed with the result and that he would sit at home and '"'listen to the grass grow" (a quotation used previously by the late Mitchell Hepburn, former premier of Ontario, when he re- tired from the Provincial arena to his onion farm near St. Thomas). Mr. Gifford dropped out of public life altogether follow- ing that defeat -- previous to that, he twice tallied more votes than Mrs. Thomas in aldermanic races. He polled 6467 to her 6301 in 1955 and 5,884 to her 5,611 the following year. Mrs. Thomas headed the aldermanic race in 1957 with 6.637 when Mr. Gifford won the mayoralty in a three-way race by piling up 5,807 votes to 3,586 for Alderman Lane and 2,214 for Alderman Attersley. . As an interesting aside to Mr. Gifford's 1957 mayoralty election -- in this same campaign, Mrs. Thomas headed the alidermanic race with 6,637 followed by Walter Branch with 6,310 and Norman Down with 6,283 to give the three top al- dermanic candidates more votes than. were obtained by Mr. Gifford, To peruse this statistical study further, both Alderman Attersley (with 8,520) and Alderman Branch (with $,462) obtained more votes than Mrs. Thomas in 1960 during her successful mayoralty bid. MR. ATTE™°' "Y AGAIN ENTERS ALDERMANIC RACE The m.yoralty race was clarified further today with @ statement from Aldermen Gordon Attersley, who has kept quite a few people guessing as to what his. political plans were. He will definitely seek an aldermanic seat--this should put to rest. the widespread Tumors that he would be a mayoralty candidate against Meyor Christine Thomas December 3, The 50-year-old Oshawa- born GM office employee 'who headed the aldermanic race in 1960 with a thump- ing 8,520 votes, said today: '"T have tried to represent the people at all times, esp- eclally delegations with re- 'zoning problems. such as 'Rosslyn Plaza area and the lawn mower dispute on Cen- tral Park south." Mr. Attersley (Bobby At- tersley of Whitby Dunlops fame is his nephew) is or ane, ---- ALDERMAN ATTERSLEY rent housing, the key project of which is the new Christine Crescent Public Housing project off Dean avenue near Highway 401. ' Mr. Attersley said he was "'solidly behind" the appoint- ment of a Director of Operations (as recommended in the Woods, Gordon Report), but priority should be given to the appointment of a Commissioner of Parks (also recommend- ed) because the latter move will necessitate the liquidation, er reduction, of several boards and commissions -- appoint- ments to these bodies are made early in the new year. Mr. Attersley is slow to anger, but he can get as hot as. a hornet's nest if anyone suggests that municipal election candidates in the upper alphabetic brackets have a distinct advantage on the ballot slip (as was suggested herein last Saturday). Mr, Attersley suspects that the source of this theory eould be traced right back to City Council. "Such a pointless line of reasoning could only be con- ceived in the mind of someone who constantly seeks to 49 the polls but never succeeds -- it doesn't take much C to guess who would drum up such a story." . = Attersley was unimpressed by what appeared to be oeCONDlisputable facts herein (ie. in 1958 eight out of Purse sis00.ames alpabetically on the aldermanic slip were Sine jew, NP7, the same ratio existed; in 1956, six out of ae Cashy Were successful, and so on). y"Was it any handicap for Dr, Claude Vipond in recent races to have his name so low in the alphabetic stand- "t he set an all-time high mark up to that time for votes ? And how about Dr. A. E. O'Neill, the revered and former OCVI principal? Unless my memory is he gave the field quite a shelldcking in the 1960. Board yet his name alphabetically is far down on the list, Mayor Christine Thomas, when an alderman ? ie head the poll? Didn't John Naylor head the iH! 73? Ff LE er or not Mr, Attersiey is right, he has succeeded up a rumpus about a subject which is far from ded. : - i a good thing, too, because this municipal cam- sagging badly in the doldrums -- what it needs now are some red-hot issues. Too bad more of our candidates don't the spirit so moves them. 33 = gripe out loud - § By ROBERT RICE OTTAWA (CP)--Mr. Justice T. G. Norris warned the Sea- farers' International Union of Canada Tuesday that he will crack-down on any new at- 'tempt to delay or frustrate his one-man investigation of terror and violence in the turbulent maritime labor field. The 69 - year - old Vancouver jurist served a blunt notice that he plans to submit his report to the federal government in time to be used for the 1963 shipping season. threatenéd to set a cut-off dead- line on further SIU evidence on| the strife-torn feuds of unions ada's 7,000 Lake sailors, quiry--an. attempt to turn its) proceedings into a farce." | REVIEWS HEARINGS | The judge made his statement! after reviewing the last 10! 'Norris To Put Clamp On Any Probe Delays sought to refute allegations against itself by detailed docu- mentation--a' method of adduc- ing evidence that the judge found often irrelevant, unneces- sary repetitive and time-con- suming. "T will not tolerate further the tactics of the last iwo weeks --tactics. which are reprehen- sible and quite foretign to Cana- dian procedurts," he said. His sharply-worded statement was given as his inquiry re- sumed public sessions in Ot- surprise shift i : from Montreal where the SIU Speaking crisply, the judge)jaunched its case two weeks tawa,. after a ago. It came as the SIU filed, with- out comment, a document that seeking supremacy among Can-|seems bound to explode into a/speculation that the SIU was jnew dispute at some future considering court. action, "IT have come to the very|session of the federal inquiry:|through an injunction in Que- definite conclusion that what} The document was the min-|bec, to delay, if not block, fur- has been done is part of a de-|utes of an Oct. 3 SIU meeting|ther investigations liberate attempt to delay and|at which SIU President Hal C.|unrest on the Lakes. frustrate the course of this in-/Banks is reported to have ac-! Justice Norris of|most four months ago to make cused Mr. bias, and to have slammed the judge for "abusing" SIU coun- sel, SUMMARIZE REPORT hearings at which the SIU has| The minutes, summarizing, Philatelic Socred Leaders Hit Liberals, PCs OTTAWA (CP)--The two-man leadership of the Social Credit party called down a plague on both Liberals and Progressive Conservatives Tuesday but maintained it still believes a winter election would be wrong. National Leader Robert) Thompson and Deputy Leader party's position, claiming it MPs, They spoke at a press) conference in the wake of a jrash of apparently conflicting)! reports of the party's future| voting line in Parliament, | Mr, Thompson said that there is no split between him and his| deputy on party policy. He sug- gested that reporters have been misinterpreting the statements and actions of himself and Mr.| Caouette. Mr, Caouette backed| him solidly in that view. WINTER VOTE 'WRONG' | Then Mr. Thompson repeated! his often-stated belief that a} winter election would be wrong! By JOHN E. BIRD OTTAWA (CP) -- Toronto lawyer Walter Williston said Tuesday that vncorroborated Crown evidence was used to convict Detroit Negro Arthur Lucas of capital murder follow- ing a double slaying in Toronto @ year ago. He also told the Supreme Court of Canada that Ontario Chief Justice J. C. McRuer's charge to the jury which con- victed the 54 - year - oid Negro represented a "compounding of errors." Mr. Williston said Crown Counsel Henry Bull drew "ter- rible inferences" from the un- corroborated evidence in ad- dressing the jury. He asked the court to quash the murder conviction on grounds of a miscarriage of justice and to acquit Lucas of capital murder, or to order a new trial. i Lucas was -convicted of the murder of Therland Crater, 44, Crater and Carolyn Newman, 21, both Negroes, were killed last Nov. 17 in a struggle in a Toronto apartment during |which their throats were cut. | Crater also was shot four times. | During the trial before Chief | Justice McRuer, the defence ar- gued that Lucas was the victim of a frame-up. His counsel con- tended that after Lucas had left Crater and Miss Newman, a professional killer entered the Mr. Banks' report on why he was not maintaining a day-to- day. watch on the proceedings, said: ". , . Brother Banks thought it expedient that he absent him- self from the daily sessions be- fore his indignation boiled over and his resentment of the un- fair treatment accorded to SIU counsel] . . . resulted in a pub- lic blow-up before we had a chance to present our side of this dispute." Mr. Justice Norris announced that he will continue his in- quiry in Ottawa because "'it is conducive: to the proper per- formance of my duties and in the public interest." He made no mention of recent into labor The jurist was appointed al- ja searching investigation of | shipping disruptions and vio- jlence on the Lakes. | | | Uncorroborated Evidence Said Used Against Lucas Mr. Williston said an im- portant part of the Crown's case was that blood of the types B and AB was found on a num- ber of articles in a Detroit apartment frequented by Lucas and in a car in which he had ridden, The blood types of the two persons murdered, he said, was B. But the defence was unable to submit evidence as to the type of blood of Lucas and to show that the blood on the ar- ticles must "have come from a person other than the arcused."' Mr. Williston said that the Crown referred to underwear found in the Detroit apartment as belonging to Lucas. The Crown, he said, told. the jury that "his underwear which was found in the basement had been washed but was still blood stained." Statements. of this type by the. Crown, Mr. Williston said, were "most damaging" to Lu- cas. The Crown submitted no evidence to prove that the un- derwear belonged to the ac- cused, | Mr. Williston also protested against the Crown being per- mitted to introduce evidence as to other criminal acts alleged to have been committed by Lu- cas. Evidence was given that Lu- cas trafficked in drugs, that drugs were found in the apart- ment, that he was a pimp and) Fantasy apartment and committed the | | murders. that his wife was a harlot. | The case is continuing. | Fizzles INTERPRETING THE NEWS lomie of the country's econ-| omic condition and because an} WASHINGTON (AP) -- The another two or three months of/dreams of riches of a few [another campaign would add/U.S. post office shattered the instability and confusion to the|stamp collectors Tuesday national picture. But he charged Prime Minis- ter Diefenbaker with failure 'o |give leadership in Parliament| Real Caouette sketched their'on measures to correct econ-|print will be able to get one 'sjomic problems and accused the!for four cents. upheld by all 30 Social Credit| Liberals of being obsessed with| the idea of bringing on an elec- tion to the exclusion of any ef- fort toward sound government. _His assessment was that an election may be necessary if the government continues to fail in leadership and the Lib- erals continue to press for one. But if one comes, Social Credit will not be the party which forces it. Mr. Caouette said the electors expect Social Credit to use its power and influence toward "positive" legislation in a Par- liament where. none of the four political parties commands a majority of seats. WEATHER FORECAST Forecasts by the Toronto jweather office at 5 a.m: Under partly cloudy skies aft- ernoon temperatures are ex-| pected to reach the upper 40s today in southwestern Ontario} counties but will be mainly in the 30s over the remainder of| the province. Continued pleas-| ant fall weather is expected) Thursday. | Lake St Clair, Lake Erie,| Lake Huron regions, Windsor, | London; Sunny with cloudy in- tervals today. Clear and cool to- night with local fog. Increasing) cloudiness with much the same temperature Thursday, winds light, Niagara, Georgian Bay, Lake} Ontario, Haliburton regions,| Hamilton, Toronto: Partly cloudy today, clear tonight.! Mainly sunny and a _- little) warmer Thursday, winds light.| St. Catharines and Hamilton 48 and 32; Muskoka and Killaloe) 38 and 30; Trenton 42 and 25;/ Peterborough 40 and 25. Algoma, Timagami, Coch- rane, White River regions, Sault Ste. Marie, Norts Bay and Sudbury: Mainly cloudy with a few snowflurries and not much change in temperature today and Thursday, winds light. Forecast Temperatures Low tonight, High Tursday WiNdkor vesseiise Oe 50 Kitchener Wingham .. Hamilton see NONG Inquiry 'To Send Man | | Out West TORONTO (CP)--An Ontario| Securities Commission investi-| gator will be sent to British) Columbia to check evidence turned up there in the inquiry into the Northern Ontario Na- tural Gas Company, commis- sion Chairman Oswald E. Lex- nox confirmed Tuesday. The inquiry was reopened two months ago by former attorney-general Kelso Roberts jon the basis of evidence pro- |vided by the RCMP. The new evidence was turned up by the British Columbial Securities Commission after the| government had extended the NONG investigation. | Commission investigators wil] also be sent to Port Arthur: to check stock distribution of Twin City Gas Company, a NONG subsidiary. |Montreal Sunny, Warmer For Thursday Killaloe ...eeseeee Muskoka ... . North Bay.. Sudbury .. Earlton .... Kapuskasing . White River.. Moosonee Timmins ... Mount Forest.... Sault Ste. Marie... Observed Temperatures Dawson .... 25 Victoria Edmonto Regina Winnipeg ..; Lakehead . es Sault Ste. Marie. White River... Kapuskasing North Bay Sudbury .... Muskoka . Windsor London .. Toronto .. Ottawa ..... TM neeeenns Quebec vesehasines Halifax .... }same--though deflated--prize. |be any by jannouncing that it will flood the market with their misprinted |Dag Hammarskjold stamps. Anyone who wants a mis-| Causing By DOUG MARSHALL Canadian Press Staff Writer Reports reaching London indi- cate'an ugly situation is brew- ing in the British crown colony of Aden, The British government pro- poses to go ahead with its plan to link the colony, a vital mili- tary base, to the Federation of | Southern Arabia by next March. The federation is a series of British protected sultanate states in the colony's hinter- land. An unmarked, unguarded border separates them from the revolution-torn Yemen. In the colony a strong left- wing Arab Nationalist group, with its nucleus 'in the Aden Trades Union Congress, is op- | posing federation because it sees The post office announcement |the expanded territory as an ex- hit Sherman hard. "There won't| tension of British -cwer and in- more people collecting |fluence in the area, stamps," he said, "It would be) pe be LINKED WITH CAIRO jPointless to try, |_ The Aden TUC has links with | The post office said the de-| President Nasser's Arab Nation- |cision to produce misprints was|alists in Cairo and strong sym- jin line with Postmaster-General| nathy for the revolutionary re- \J. Edward Day's "'policy of publican government in the Ye- avoiding production of rare or| men. jover-valued philatelic items." | The colony's government has jbeen using tough new laws ei- HISTORIC SYMBOL ther to imprison or deport anti- ' |\federation agitators since the THETFORD, England (CP)--| draft agreement on union. was |This Norfolk town's mayoral) signed last August. jtruncheon, lost 100 years ago,| Riots broke out in September jhas been found under floor-|when the. Aden legislative-coun- boards in an old hotel, Tradi-|Cil finally approved federation |tionally the truncheon is used by - Rel ps pig oad -- the mayor to keep order in the| forces was called last month. ;community. The re i That means the handful of collectors who figured on get- ting several thousand dollars each for their misprints will have to figure anew. Now, ac- cording to H. R. 'Jorgenson,} president of the San Antonio Stamp Club, "they eventually should be worth eight or 10 cents each." Postal officials expected and| received angry complaints} from some of the people who! bought the original misprints. One' collector, Leonard Sher- man of Irvington, N.J., had a complete sheet of 50 misprinted stamps. He had estimated the eventual value at $500,000. Now $2 will get any collector the REALTOR 728-9474 52% SIMCOE ST. Aden Situation t Yemen revolution| Alarm Tunnel TORONTO (CP) -- By 1967 Welland motorists may be able to drive under the ship canal which divides their city instead of waiting until ocean vessels pass through opened bridges, the Ontario government an- nounced Tuesday. Following a year of provin- cial-municipal study of traffic problems, the government ap- proved in principle the building of a $10,000,000 tunnel under the Welland Canal. A joint announcement by Premier Robarts and Highways Minister Charles N. MacNaugh- ton said negotiations would be- gin immediately with the City of Welland and the federal trans- port department to determine financing of the project. Construction would probabl begin in late 1964 or early 1965, Mr. MacNaughton said and the tunnel could be ready for use by 1967. The two-lane tunnel -- to be built on dry land, floated into position and sunk in a dredged channel--is aimed at relieving serious traffic congestion on routes which cross the 27-mile- long waterway by bridges which now must be opened to allow ship passages, the highways minister said. WON'T CHARGE TOLLS No tolls would be charged for use of the route, he said. "We doubt that the federal govern- ment would be sympathetic (to sharing construction costs) if we tolled it." Highways department engi- |neers said the total length of the tunnel, including ap- proaches, would be about 3,000 feet. The section under - water would be about 600 feet long. Construction phases which might otherwise interfere with .jvessel passages through the WellandCanal Plans gested, the highways minister said, but had been ruled out as too costly and impractical, since it would have risen "over top of" the city's main business section at the canal side. 'FOR POLITICAL REASONS' In Welland Mayor Michael Perenack said he was certain the announcement was made "for political reasons." eal "We have been trying for 16 years to get some results . . . and there is no doubt in my mind that this points to an early provincial election," he said. -. Mr. MacNaughton said the tunnel project was only one out- come of a year - long traffic study of the Niagara Peninsula area carried out by the province and local municipalities. He also announced Tuesday that tenders would be called later this year for construction of the first phase of a 15-mile controlled - access highway, planned to eventually join Port Colborne and Welland with the Queen Elizabeth Way at St Catharines. Although some Welland busi. nessmen have objected that the new highway, numbered 406, will attract business away from their city to St. Catharines, Mr. MacNaughton said, he felt the freeway "would be of benefit to the entire area." PLAN PET LAW WINDSOR, Ont. (CP)--Sub- urban Sandwich East Township council next week will consider a bylaw placing a limit on the number of pets allowed in a household. Preparation of the bylaw was ordered after the Metropolitan Windsor health unit reported that one woman had nearly 100 cats around her ,home last summer. canal would be done in winter further excited left - wing feel- ing in Aden and has convinced some members of the colony's government that _ federation should be postponed. At least three ministers, led by Education Minister M. S.| Husseiny, have declared they will resign if the British government proceeds with its when the route is closed to shipping. An average of more than 30 ships a day pass through the St. Lawrence Sea- way section which links Lakes Ontario and Erie. A high-level bridge to carry an uninterrupted flow traffic over the canal had been sug- AID TO INDIA BRUSSELS (AP) -- Belgium will take part in an interna- tional consortium for aid to In- dia. Government officials say Belgium has agreed to finance up to $10,000,000 worth of indus- trial equipment for India. present plans. the same time reports reaching London tell of violent threats made against pro-feder- ation ministers. These are be- lieved to come from the Aden TUC. |ELECTIONS WANTED The moderate opposition in Aden 'favors federation in prin- ciple but is opposed to union being forced through by March without elections in the colony. The British government §ar- gues that elections would be hopeless in the present atmos- phere of tension. It also tears that the left - 'wing extremist strengthened if federation is de- layed. Aden correspondents say reac- tion in the colony to the British government's proposal is un- element in the colony will be|---- COMING EVENTS BINGO, Bathe Park, Eulalie Avenue, Eira to retire? Sell business fast wil hi jassified ad. Dial Thursday, 2 p.m, Euchre p.m, ith a fi 723-3492 today. Refreshments. High score prize, $5. NOVEL BINGO THURSDAY EVENINGS 7:45 ot ST. GEORGE'S HALL, (Albert and Jackson Sts.) Game $6, $12, $20 May be doubled or tripled $180 IN. JACKPOTS Door Prize $15 BINGO Union Hall, Bond Street Wednesday, Oct. 31st 7:30 P.M. likely to be as violent as was supposed a few weeks ago. 20 Games -- $8 and $10 Shore-The-Wealth 6--$40 Jackpots SHES MORTGAGES Ample Funds for Ist MORTGAGES 2nd MORTGAGES We Also Purchase Ist and 2nd Mortgages || | N.H.A. LOANS ARRANGED You Will Find OUR SERVICE IS FASTER OUR COST IS LOWER SCHOFIELD-AKER Limited 723-2265 -- 728-3376 After Hours 728-3376 Euchre Party WOODVIEW * COMMUNITY CENTRE WEDNESDAY, NOV. 14 8:00 P.M LUNCH " PRIZES EUCHRE EAST WHITBY CORONATION SCHOOL November 16, 8 p.m. ADMISSION 50c Lunch and Prizes. RADIO Park Euchre, Grenfell Avenue, BAZAAR & TEA \8 p.m. every Wednesday. Adinission 50c monthly UKRANIAN PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH 488 SIMCOE S. Sat., Nov. 17 2:30 p.m. EVERYBODY WELCOME KINETTE CLUB OF OSHAWA HOME BAKE SALE Friday, Nov, 16 : at 2 p.m. in the POWER STORE ROSSLYN PLAZA U.N.F. Women's Auxiliary. BINGO SOCIAL TO-NITE-8 P.M. 68 Bloor St, East PRIZES AND REFRESHMENTS | LADIES' AID. | | / | | EVERYBODY WELCOME OSHAWA JAYCEES $B | Mnoster BINGO - Thursday, Nov. 15 | POT ROAST | 394 SIMCOE ST. NORTH e HIGHEST QUALITY MEATS e 49: PEAMEALED Cottage ROLLS c FRESH PORK-END 69: | tom iy LEAN, MEATY BLADE SHORT CUT (Ist 4) PRIME RIB ECONOMY--6 & 7 LEAN, MEATY SHORT RIB BONELESS SHOULDER FRESH PORK Ib 69: Ib 69: Ib 69: Ib FRESH CHICKEN DEVON RINDLESS BACON SHOULDER Legs, Breast MAPLE LEAF -- SLICED BOLOGNA MAXWELL INSTANT 69 49 39: 69 33 CHRISTIES' 24-02. OVEN R EXTRA FEATURE NO, 1 WHITE Mushrooms COFFE BREAD FIRST GRADE BUTTER --- EXTRA FEATURE -- FRESH KILLED Chickens 2% -3LB. AY, 20 GAMES AT $20--5 GAMES AT $30 1--$150 JACKPOT $20.00 PER LINE PLUS $50.00 PER FULL CARE 2--$250.00 JACKPOTS JACKPOT NOS. 50, 55 $10 PER LINE PLUS $200.00 PER FULL CARD IN 50, 55 NUMBERS THIS WEEK PLUS $25.00 CONSOLATION PRIZE $150 TOTAL PRIZES GUARANTEED IN THESE TWO GAMES EXTRA BUSES RED BARN, Oshawa ADMISSION DOOR PRIZES $1.00 REMEMBRANCE ASSOCIATION of the OSHAWA SILVER CROSS CHAPTER Annual BAZAAR at the LEGION HALL C HOUSE -- Ib REG. 1.14 4 ' BROOKSIDE 237° 55: RADY 39: " WHITBY BRASS BAND BINGO Thursday, November 15, 2 p.m. Mrs, Edwards, RCAF Chapter Toronto Will Open The Bazaar CLUB BAYVIEW, BYRON SOUTH, WHITBY WEDNESDAY, NOV. 14th EARLY BIRD GAME -- SHARE-THE-WEALTH Bus Leaves Oshawa Terminal -- 25c Return $200.00 SPECIAL $20 EACH HORIZONTAL LINE--$100 FULL CARD $150 ADDED IF WON IN 53 NOS. OR LESS 5 GAMES AT $30 -- 20 GAMES AT $20 TWO $250 JACKPOT GAMES Church Bus Leaves 4 Corners at 7:20 p.m. $1.00 ADMISSION INCLUDES ONE CARD Ist -- No, '58; 2nd -- No. 56 -- $30 Consolation Door Prizes Children Under 16 Not Admitted