@ THE OSHAWA TIMES, Fridoy, Jonuory 4, 1963 GOOD EVENING By JACK GEARIN Bank Rate Cut SECRET CAUCUS SET FOR SATURDAY One. of the most sacred of municipal rituals will be ob- served behind closed doors at City Hall Saturday. This is the traditional ceremony of selecting Council per- sonnel for the four standing committees (Finance, Board of Works, Property and Traffic). : The Councillors themselves will cast the votes for fellow- councillors, no easy task when it is considered that the four ehairmanships represent the most important jobs within the entire municipal framework, outside the mayor's chair. The secret ballot system (which allows one alderman to vote against another without the former's identity being divulged) will likely be in force again, as it has for the past several years. These secret caucus sessions are sometimes tense and stormy meetings, during which tempers blow hot and cold and frank talk is freely exchanged, Sometimes the heated discussions get out of hand and councillors get up and go home before anything definite is decided, If there is too much debate and disagreement Saturday and no decisions are reached, the councillors have another alternative -- they can stop the meeting and put the matter over to Monday evening in open Council; if that was done, they would be asked to vote openly (without secret ballot) in the time-honored manner frequently used by their counter- parts in the Ontario County Council, It takes courage for a councillor to stand and vote openly against a colleague, but there is much merit in this system in that it dispenses with the secret ballot, the favorite weapon of the pressure cliques. LITTLE NOTES FROM HERE AND THERE Seen skiing at Kirby Sunday in sub-zero weather with scores of other Oshawa adherents of the sport -- Lawyer John Greer, who can now put the title "QC" after his name; Subdivider Herman Kassinger-and his three-year-old son, Stephen . . . Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Attersley (he's the alder- man who headed the polls this year) celebrated thelr 32nd wedding anniversary last Sunday, . . . John Cameron, who played such an active role with the Oshawa Liberal Associa- tion when he practised law here, was a visitor here New Year's Day -- he is now associated with the Toronto office of the Unemployment Insurance Commission, ... BELIEVE-IT-OR-NOT DEPT, (OSHAWA DIVISION): Two Oshawa brothers -- Norman E. and Allan W. Lam- bert -- spent 45 minutes in the chilling waters of Lake On- tario off Lakeview Park New Year's Day afternoon bedecked in their diving suits. Norman said he had a few tense moments when his regulator equipment clogged when he was about 10 feet under, but that otherwise the trip was without incident, Allan said he was not the least bit cold: "Once or twice gome water leaked in, but I didn't notice it much because it is warm in those diving suits.' Asked what prompted him to take the January 1 pl Aids Economy LONDON (CP) -- Treasury Chief Reginald Maudling, in his third surprise move ia less than two months to put more zip into the British economy, has cut the bank rate to four from 4g per cent. And speculation was that the chancellor of the exchequer would follow up with yet an- other plum--an increase in old- age pensions and unemploy- ment benefits, Thursday's bank rate ar: nouncement was greeted w ith cheers on the floor of the stock exchange, It was believed that one of the major immediate ef- fects would be a reduction in home lodn interest rates. The Building Societies Asso- ciation, meeting a week from today, was expected to recom: mend a rate of six per cent in- stead of the present 6% per cent. Since succeeding Selwyn Lloyd -- the sacked chancellor whose name was linked with the unpopular pay freeze, in- creased sales taxes and other austerity measures -- Maud- long has brought forth one measure after another to cush- ion the effects of such difficul- ties as growing unemployment and the housing shortage. POUND STRENGTHENS Financial observers took to- day's announcement as an indi- cation of the growing strength of the pound and Maudling's determination to stimulate the nation's economy, At the time the announce- ment was being made, Prime Minister Macmillan was in ses- sion with several cabinet min- isters and it was reported that the meeting dealt mainly with home-front issues. This new sense of urgency on domestic affairs lends weight to the view of most observers that the government, painfully aware of its waning popularity, is embarking on a campaign to pacify the voters before the next general election sometime within the next 22 months, Maudling gave a shot in the Norman replied: "Well, I'm 32 years old and I had never yet been diving fn Lake Ontario on New Year's Day -- I thought it was about time I did something about it and I'm glad I did." "WORKS" CHAIRMAN HAS TOUGH JOB The toughest job of all on City Council -- outside of the Chief Magistrate's chair -- is unquestionably that of the ehairman of the Board of Works committee which has to do with the direct operation of the City Engineer's Department and the Board of Works Yard. This job is extremely tough because the aforementioned civic departments are the two largest in the municipal frame- work (exclusive of the Board of Education) insofar as yearly Operational costs and personne] total are concerned. The chairman of the Board is automatically a target for disgruntled types from people whose driveways get clogged with snow to people who claim that their garbage service lags, The recent Woods, Gordon Report (which appeared to have more harsh words for these two departments than any others) was quick to point this fact out; i.e., that it was easier to criticize them because of their size and because of the fact they were in closer contact with the public. The chairman's job, because of the enormity of his do- main, demands far more time and responsibility than does that of the chairman of Finance, or Property or Traffic. All of this preamble is by way of saying that Council should deliberate long before filling this post -- the chairman- ship of the Board of Works. Not only is this the toughest chairmanship on Council to fill satisfactorily, it is the one that can effect the greatest saving in valuable tax dollars, Assuming that the incumbent chairman, Walter Branch, will not let his name stand for re-election (and this would seem like the greater part of wisdom for Mr. Branch since he has already held the post for five years and his valuable services could be efféctively utilized elsewhere, such as the chairman of Finance or Property), it would seem like the wise thing to elect a senior alderman to the pest who also has the proper time to devote to it. To assume that Mr, Branch, despite his qualifications, is the only rightful candidate for this post (as some aldermen do) is to encourage a negative type of thinking that is highly dangerous, to say the least. If one councillor is indispen- sible to the effective operation of Council, there is only one conelusion to arrive at -- either this is a woefully weak Coun- cil or several of Mr. Branch's colleagues are deliberately try- ing to shirk civic responsibility by accepting a post that is not all sunshine and roses, Skiers Tell Tale Shotgun Death 'Justifiable' Jury Rules ELMVALE, Ont. (CPz) --A coroner's jury Thursday found that Lucius Brezziel, 80, of Flos Township, was justified in kill- ing Cornelius van Gaal, 19, of Barrie, with a shotgun. Van Gaal died Dec. 14 soon after he was shot in the lower chest while he and three other youths were trying to break into Brezziel's farm four miles south of here to steal $75,000 they be- lieved he had cached in the! house, the jury was told, | Ronald Howell of Thornton,) Ont,, and Dennis Greeley of} Barrie, arm to Britain's valuable mo- tor industry in November when he cut the purchase tax. He fol- lowed up earlier this week with a cut to 25 from 45 per cent in the tax on television and radio sets, gramophones and records, perfume and cosmetics, Briton Claims JFK Dangerous To U.K. Future LONDON (Reuters) -- Air Chief Marshal Sir Philip Jou- bert, wartime boss of Britain's Coastal Command, said no one is more dangerous to the future of Britain than President Ken- nedy. He accused the United States president Thursday night of seeking to ensure Britain's po- litical and economic collapse by pushing the country into the European Common Market as soon as possible, Joubert spoke at a meeting organized by the National Fel- lowship, a patriotic group founded lasi year and claiming 100,000 supporters. He said that in the Second World War Britain defeated two dictators, Now, he said, the country is faced with many more dictators, and he added, there is no one "more danger: ous to our future than the pr. ident of the United Sate 7 Joubert said that as far bs he could see the only thing that could stand in the way fo com- plete domination of Britain by the U.S. is continued existence of a really independent nuclear deterrent in british hands . For that reason it was vi- tally necessary to conserve Britain's Bomber Command as the basis of such a deterrent, Joubert, 74, is retired from the RAF. OPP Man Backs Reports He Wants To Quit TORONTO (CP)--Provincial Police Commissioner W. H. Clark Thursday confirmed re- ports that he wants to retire from active police work. "I want to confirm a state- ment Thursday by Attorney- General Fred M, Cass that I told him I would like to resign," said Commissioner Clark, The attorney-general's state- ment that the commissioner wished to resign because of his wife's health, was denied ear- lier by the OPP head but the later statement cleared the air. "We (Mr. Cass and Commis- sioner Clark) discussed my res- ignation and agreed that I should take no action until the report of Mr. Justice Roach has been received by the govern- me both 16, are awaiting|ment. I want further to confirm sentence after conviction ofjeverything Mr. Cass has said breaking and entering with in-|today in connection with my de- tent to steal, A juvenile is sery-|sire to retire from active police ing a term in Guelph Reforma-|work." : ae tory on the same charge. | vbeoovsyirs, 4 vans penteoting Howell testified he had|reports about Commissioner warned before the incident that|Cl@tk's prospective Se ghgpuions someone would be killed, but) Premier Robarts called a press . * ~ 7 «iconference to say Commis- ntti py had replied: Ih ioner Clark had expressed a 4 : .|wish sis ks ago to resign, Brezziel, who lives alone, said i " Sent ta ceekens thes his home had been set on fire) what is goin, un with the com- by hooligans on two occasions.| missioner has nothing to do Elmvale is 16 miles northwest! with the Roach report," said of Barrie. |Mr. Robarts. WEATHER FORECAST Possible Light Snow Or Drizzle Forecasts issued by the Tor-|Kitchener ........ onto weather office at 4:30 a.m. Wingham ... Synopsis: Cloudy skies and|/Hamilton ....... light sprinkles of snow asso-/St. Catharines... ciated with a weakening/Toronto ..... weather disturbance . still lin-| Peterborough sete gered over southern, central/Trenton ..... and northeastern sections of|Killaloe .. Ontario early this morning.| Muskoka .. Mainly cloudy weather is fore-|North Bay, seco Four of the 18 survivors of a mountain avalanche return- ed to Field, B.C,, by truck Wednesday night. They are SURVIVING SKIERS RETURN from left Alistair Macdonald of the University of B.C, ski- Denton Hewgill and Dr, and Mrs, Ted Wells, The avalanche took the life of one member ing group. --(CP Wirephoto) OTTAWA (CP)--Gen. Lauris \Norstad has stoked the fires of the nuclear issue by saying that Canada won't fulfil its commit- ments to NATO unless it ac: cepts nuclear weapons for its forces in Europe. The 55-year-old American general, who retired Tuesday as NATO's military commander in Europe, said at a press con- ference here Thursday that Canada in, 1959 agreed to pro- vide a nuclear strike capability for the RCAF air division in Europe. NATO was depending on Can- ada to meet this commitment, particularly because of the high quality of the air division, Gen. Norstad said. Canada can't provide this nuclear capa- bility until it signs a bilateral agreement with the U.S, Even after such an agreement was signed, it would take three to six months to train the crews in the handling of nuclear wea- pons, The RCAF air division formed its first of eight CF-104 low- level jet bomber squadrons in West Germany Dec. 17, All jsquadrons, totalling 200 planes, jare expected to be formed by early summer. GREEN DIFFERS Gen, Norstad's remarks ap- peared to contradict a state. ment made by External Affairs Minister Green in the Commons Dec, 17 on his return from the NATO council meeting in Paris. Mr. Green said; 'We were very pleased to have it pointed out, not by our- selves but by the (NATO) mil itary authorities and the United States, that Canada had lived up to her commitments. . . There was not a word of crit- icism of Canada's military ef- forts in NATO." Gen. Norstad said he was ad- vocating that Canada and the U.S. sign a bilateral nuclear agreement now. The air divi- sion and the Canadian Army brigade group in Germany "must have atomic capability "' These forces "could have" conventional capability but Can- ada "should not downgrade their deterrent value by making them conventional." "We are more interested in preventing war than winning the damn thing if it starts," he said. The government's position, as expressed by Prime Minister Diefenbaker, is that Canadian forces should be equipped with nuclear weapons on the out- break of nuclear war. NOT POSSIBLE Gen. Norstad implied that this would not 'be possible' with- out a Canada-US, nuclear agreement. Nuclear training re- quired three to six months--- "too long." Gen. Norstad said '"'essen- tially all' NATO countries, in- INTERPRETING THE NEWS Katanga Gamble May Be By DOUG MARSHALL Canadian Press Staff Writer The United Nations is gam- bling its reputation on the success of the military venture in The Congo's Katanga prov- ince, If UN Secretary-General U Thant achieves reunification of the secessionist province with the central government the operation will go down as a precedent that can be usefully followed in future orises. If he fails the UN likely will| be raked over the coals for) indulging in a dangerous and costly: blunder, thus reducing its effectiveness ag an interna- tional mediator. TIME SHORT Unfortunately for Thant, time is running out and Katanga President Moise Tshombe is proving just as recalcitrant as | ever. Latest reports suggest Tshombe fully intends to carry out his threat of "total destruc- Costly frustrated UN officials have become with the various pres- sures at work in the copper- rich province. The UN first move into The Congo to prevent it becoming a cold-war jousting ground and to restore order during a périod of administrative R The further aime 'help the Congolese put the country on a permanent economic and politi- cal footing, was blocked by Katanga's secession. FORCED TO ACT Faced with a tottering cen- tral government and mounting irritation in some contributing nations, the UN had to do some- thing fast. The alternative to the military gamble would have been total failure in: The Congo and a permanent blot on the UN escutcheon. Now that the UN forces seem o have won military control, UN civil authorities must en- sure the support of the Belgian- owned copper mining company Norstad Stokes Fires Qf Canadian A-Issue cluding West Germany, have bilateral nuclear agreements with the U.S, NATO had a nu- clear ~stockpile in Europe and would supply Canadian forces from it in the same way as it supplied other NATO units OTTAWA (CP) --- Liberals consider Prime Minister Diefen-| baker muffed an opportunity to bail himself out of an impending parliamentary crisis. As a re- sult, they predict a March or April election, The crisis involves money and the.chanee to avert it cen- tred on the length of the Christ- mas-New Year's recess of Par- liament which began Dec. 20 and ends Jan. 21. Senior Liberals contend that it now is virtually ssible for ed ago er to get empora ng authority beyond Feb. "98 or to get par- liamentary approval for ail of the hundreds of individual spending eee in the interim. This ne ave been possible if Mr. Diefenbaker had pro- posed a shorter holiday recess, having Parliament resume the session Jan. 7. By the time the MPs get back to work the government will be faced with the need to obtain more money within a period of a week or two to meet current expenses. Before recessing, Par- liament granted the government interim spending authority to the end of January. PAST FIVE-8IXTHS This interim authority brought the total such temporary spend- ing up to five-sixths of the planned expenditures for the 1962-63 fiscal year which ends March 31, A further grant of one month's interim supply would bring the total to eleven- twelfths. Such interim grants of money are made by Parliament on the basis of the government giving a constitutional guarantee that the temporary grant does not interfere with Parliament's right to debate each separate spead- Liberals Predict Spring Election Therein, say the Liberals, lies Mtr eede ie aa it would mpossible to the Commons the constituional guarantee on more than eleverm twelfths of the spending pro gram. To attempt to do so would amount, in pir ng "approve all our shan and you can debate it er." i The 1962-63 spe program was never approved by Parlia- ment before the June 18 elec- tion last year, In the period since Parliament _reassem) Sept. 27, only one of the requ six two-day supply debates has been held. MUST HOLD DEBATES sis ut the Commons r "the. ind of the around to taking up vidual spending items five departments entered for consideration. The estimates of the other departments can't be considered until further two-day supply debates ere held. Thus to meet a Feb. 98 dead line the Commons would hava to spend 10 sittings days debaty ing the remaining two-day sup ply motions and 10 sitting days on individual spending items. On the basis of past perfor mance, it wouldn't be an im- possible task for Parliament te clean up the government's money problems for the fiscal year, But with the present temper of the house, the chances are slim. Liberals are pressing for a% election and are able to insist on extensive debate on each item of the spending ram. In addition, they have hopes that New Democrats and Social Credit will join them in voting non-confidence in the abt ad : ment during one of the two-day ing item later. supply debates. subject to a bilateral agree- ment, He talked with Associate De- fence Minister Sevigny, who gave a luncheon in his honor, but not to Mr. Diefenbaker. Both the prime minister and Gen, Norstad called on Gover- nor-General Vanier Thursday afternoon, but at different times, The general left for Washington after his five-hour visit, Gen, Norstad is on a round of farewell visits to the capitals of NATO countries, Gen. Norstad' was apparently aware that his comments on nu- clear weapons might have polit- ieal repercussions in Canada. He repeatedly asked that re- porters change the subject. When they didn't, he finally de- clined to deal with the matter further, 'IS DEPLORABLE' Liberal Leader Pearson is- sued a statement saying "it is a deplorable situation that hav- ing accepted these (NATO) commitments we are appat- ently not able either to follow through or to change them," He said Gen. Norstad nad merely confirmed that the Ca- nadian government had ac- cepted a role in Europe which required use of nuclear war- heads but had not put Canadian forces in a position to discharge such a role. "One can understand the frus- tration of NATO authorities at this time," he said, T. C, Douglas, national leader of the New Democratic Party, sald Gen, Norstad's statement obliges the federal government to "clear the air" over Cana- dian acceptance of nuclear wea- pons, Gen, Norstad said "what many of us suspected and sur- mised," said Mr, Douglas, BIG HYDRO PLAN LA PAZ, Bolivia (Reuters) ~ In an ambitious plan in 1963, Bolivia will join all it's water. ways to use them as means of communication and as a source of hydro-electric power, | | Of Fleeing Death FIELD, B.C. (CP)--Thirteen skiers have told of a race to save each other from death un- der the crushing snow of a mountain avalanche, They lost in a bid to save Jean Sharp 21, of Vancouver. The exhausted survivors made their way here Wednesday, Their experience occurred Sun- day on nearby Mount Whale- back, but they had to wait in 2 lodge -- ree days for guides and ski equipment to re. Place their own, still buried in snow Unprecedented 100 inches of snow, followed by rain, had fallen within a week on this under the snow if it hadn't been for (party leader) Bryon Ol- son," one student said in an in- terview, 'He got to the surface first and kept shouting for us to call out so we could be found," The slides had laid a burden of snow 300 yards wide, almost @ mile long and from seven to nine feet deep, One skier said: "We could see ski poles and skis sticking up out of the snow, being waved by students who coudn'* get to the surface, We scrambled across the slide to them and dug down with our hands, "We could hear some of them southern British Columbia area/faintly shouting under the sur- when the University of British Columbia students began their climb. They said one thundering slide knocked them down, They freed themselves but were hit by a second avalanche, It took 30 minutes of frantic digging and probing with ski poles to find everyone, face, One fellow had his arm out and had made a hole through which he could breathe." As the party traversed the slide, a third avalanche came down the mountain. It missed them by yards, RCMP Const. Linden McLean, After|who helped bring the students east for today and Saturday. Lake St. Clair, Lake Erie, |Lake Huron, Niagara, Georgian Bay, western Lake Ontario re- gions, Windsor, London, Hamil. ton and Toronto: Cloudy with light winds and not much change in temperature today and Saturday, A few periods of very light snow or freezing drizzle, mostly ending this morning. Eastern Lake Ontario, Hall- burton regions: Cloudy with light winds and not much change in temperature today and Saturday. Occasional snow, mostly ending this morning. Chance of snow again late Sat- urday, North Bay, Sudbury: Cloudy to- day with occasional mostly ending this morning. Partly cloudy and colder to. night. Saturday, cloudy with intermittent snow, Winds light. Algoma, White River regions, Sault Ste, Marie: Partly cloudy and a little colder today, Satur. day, cloudy with occasional about 25 minutes, everyone was/off the mountain, said the third snow. Winds light. free but Arthur Heine and Miss almost unconscious. It was too jslide could have killed Sharp. Heine was tugged clear'group in its exhausted condi-|Low tonight, high Saturday 2 the tion. He said only alertness late when they found the girl. |saved the skiers from perish- "More of us would have died|ing in the first two. | Forecast Temperatures 35 35 32 Windsor St. Thomas....... 27 \London scccocecees 29 Timagami, Cochrane regions, |) Sudbury Earlton «+++. |Kapuskasing +++. |White Rivery+.oe. |Moosonee ... [Timmins .... Sault Ste. Marie... 20 Mount Forest.,.., 22 Observed Temperatures Low overnight, high Thursday Dawson . Victoria .. Edmonton Regina .., Winnipeg . Lakehead ....+.0. Sault Ste, Marie... White River,,.... |Kapuskasing ..... \North Bay,..evee |Sudbury .. snow), |Montreal . ; Quebec ,,, |Halifax .,.., TALLY-HO ROOM A GOC® PLACE TO MEET AND RELAX HOTEL LANCASTER tion" in the face of the UN Advance, -- |reunification plans. Diplomatic observers say, There will be tough bargain-| Thant is "disinclined" to dea!jing over some subjects and] with Tshombe and thinks he can/much will depend on how soon reunify The Congo without/the UN can start channelling its bothering to bring the provin-| military expenditure into tech- cial president to heel. nical aid, Tshombe's main hope 's that} With a little luck there now is the war can be protracted longa. chance the muddy Congo) enough to force Thant's hand.|situation will be cleared and The Congo operation is costing) settled once and for all. an estimated $10,000,000 a) month and there is a strong: possibility that the UN Indian| troops involved will be with) drawn at short notice, Thant's determination to go OSHAWA'S for broke in the third round of} The Congo fiasco illustrates how) | CARPET CENTRE and move ahead with Thant's | | | at Nu-Way, carpet and broad- fi) loom has been a specialty for LIST | To i 18 years . , . with thousands H of yards on display to select §) if from. } | PHONE 728-4681 NU-WAY RUG CO. LTD. 174 MARY ST. WITH OSHAWA'S 0 TOP REALTOR || JOHN A, J. BOLAHOOD Ltd. REAL ESTATE -- INSURANCE 725-6544 | © Budget Terms A OWEN SOUND (CP)--Wesley Lindsay, superintendent of the Grey County Home for the Aged, has been cleared of charges of beating an elderly resident of the home, Judg Calin E, Bennett, con- ducting a* hearing into the op- erations of the home, said Wed. nesday night he will report his findings on the general opera- tion of the institution to the next meeting of Grey County Coun- cil. The home is at Markdale, 25 miles south of Owen Sound. "T exonerate Mr, Lindsay, un- conditionally, of the allega- tions," said the judge in con- cluding the public sessions. Judge Bennett was referring to testimony given by Ray Clarke, a service station oper- ator, who said he saw Mr. Lindsay beating Allan McMann, a home resident. Mr. McMann died August 25, 1959, in Eugenia Nursing Home, er days after the alleged beat- ng. COUNCIL ASKS The inquiry was requested by county council following com- plaints that home residents were mistreated and inade- quately cared for. Judge Bennett said because of the seriousness of the beat- ing allegations against Mr, Lindsay he decided to give his decision immediately and de. liver the second part of his find- ing, concerning allegations of lack of heat and food in the home, to county council, Judge Bennett said; "I am entirely satisfied that the story told by Ray Clarke is untrue." He said he found many in- consistencies in Clarke's story a "prejudiced witness". ment with Mrs, Lindsay, testi- Home For Aged Case Dismissed male resident while the man -- was on the floor. Mr. Lindsay denied hitt the man and said he often to help residents from the floor. ADMITS EXAGGERATES Miss McCannell had earlier written Judge Bennett saying she had seen a resident beaten severely. Asked by Judge Ben- nett Wednseday if this was an exaggeration, she replied, "Yes". Judge Bennett said Mr, Lind- say's character had been wrongfully maligned and he hoped. that newspapers would give as much publicity to the decision as to the earlier state-. ments, Also testifying Wednesday was George Coutts, former Owen Sound undertaker, now serving a term in Lg Pen itentiary for bank robbery, Coutts, brought from Kingston . to testify, said if he had fqund evidence. of a beating on Mr, McMann's body when it was: embalmed he would have told the doctor in charge, Mrs, Gordon Goldsmith, whe operates the Eugenia Nursing Home with her husband, where Mr, McMann died, said he was bathed when admitted but ao marks were seen on his body. She said Mr. McMann said nothing about ill treatment at the Grey County Home. Judge Bennett said he planned to visit the home avpl. talk with residents and would welcome any new evidence op its general operations, Mrs, Robert Walker, a staff member of an Owen' Sound weekly newspaper, The Herald, and described a 17-year-old girl) Wednesday produced the names brought forward by Clarke as|of two witnesses, Mrs, Donald Bell and Mrs. Charles Connolly, The girl, Mary McCannell, an|after Judge Bennett threatened assistant cook at the home last|/her with contempt of court if summer who quit after an argu.|she didn't. The women had complained fied Wednesday that she saw|to Mrs. Walker about treatment Mr. Lindsay strike an elderly!of home residents. COMING EVENTS TEEN-AGE DANCE EUCHRE. Fernhill Park every Friday, 8 Clubhouse, P.m, sharp, Freeze out, BSc. Tea, coffee and cookies, ULA.W, HALL 1 P.M, SATURDAY BINGO JANUARY 5th NO SLACKS OR JEANS ADMISSION 25c ORANGE TEMPLE . AUTO LIABILITY INSURANCE PREMIUMS AS LOW AS 25.00 PER YEAR tah SATURDAY, JAN. Sth 7:30 P.M. 20 Games --- $8 Share the Wealth 4-- $40 Jackpots te go 1 -- $150 Jackpot to go Children Under 16 Not Admitted, Want-Ads Don't tin for you and your fomily. | Cost-They Pay WOODVIEW PARK MEMBERS Attend the ELECTION OF OFFICERS for Woodview Park Neighbourhood Association FOR 1963 SEASON to be held on SUNDAY AFTERNOON, JANUARY 6, 1963 AT 2 P.M, in the COMMUNITY CENTRE BUILDING, CADIL- LAC AVE.» NORTH Assist us in arranging recrea- @ Easy Monthly Payments Schofield-Aker Limited 360 KING WEST PHONE 723-2265 @ Don Ellison @ Gerry Osborne @ Ralph Schofield @ Reg Aker | | | @ AMPLE FREE PARKING e MONSTER BINGO Over $500 in Prizes SATURDAY, JAN. 5th AT 8:00 P.M. ST. GREGORY'S AUDITORIUM SIMCOE STREET NORTH ADMISSION 50 CENTS CHILDREN UNDER 16 NOT ADMITTED