Oshawa Times (1958-), 29 Jan 1963, p. 2

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"| THE OSHAWA TIMES, Tuosdey, Jenvery 29, 1963 GOOD EVENING By JACK GEARIN IN ASKS FOR TRACKS' REMOVAL SIGNS-OF-MUNICIPAL-PROGRESS DEPT. ( ~ Oshawa division): ; Canadian National Railways made formal application ast January 25 to the Dominion Board of Transport Commis- toners, Ottawa, for permission to remove Oshawa's King "treet CNR tracks, ~~ . This is a mere legal for- mality, but it clearly indi- cates that the machinery |s being oiled for the big transi- tion finally, despite the years of frustration and des- pair. President Gordon W. Riehl of the Oshawa C of C an- nounced today that the Chamber had tentatively de- cided on Saturday, May 4, as a suitable date' for a tracks' removal Celebration Day for its organization and that it was making plans for a special program, "The only thing that could change this celebration date," added Mr. Riehl would be the weather or some unforeseen delay in ' implementing the agree- ment decided on by all parties concerned -- mean- while, our committees are proceeding with plans." GORDON W. RIEHL OLD 6167 KEEPS ROLLING ALONG The CNR's old 6167 -- a nostalgic relic of the steam- engine age well and favorably known in this district -- set another record Sunday when she carried 685 passengers on her 10-hour whistle-stop tour of Lake Simcoe area spots like Washago, Atherly, Orillia and Barrie (under auspices of the Upper Canada Railway Society). The news will be welcomed by railway steam-engine ad- dicts and historians who have been disturbed of late by ru- mors that old 6167 would be headed for the scrapper's torch. - The old girl was never more popular (as was evidenced " last Summer at the CNR station here when more than 500 sight-seers greeted her) and the feeling persists that anti- " quated railway steam-engines have a strong lure for the ' public; several Oshawa and district people were aboard, i NT oy SES : i No Interpretation Needed, PM Says By DAVE McINTOSH think it requires any interpre- OTTAWA (CP)--Prime Minis-| tation." : ter Diefenbaker said Monday he|, Opposition Leader a doesn't think his Friday Com-|"If the prime pegged he ge mons. speech on defence 're-|Was as clear as he said it was quires any interpretation." why did the minister of national He made the comment a few defence have to interpret it for hours after Defence Ministex| him? Harkness issued a statement} Speaker Marcel Lambert in- saying certain paragraphs initervened at this point, saying Mr. Diefenbaker's defence pol-|the Commons was in an argu- icy speech "'state a definite poi-| mentative mood. icy for the acquisition of nu-| Mr, Douglas asked that Mr, clear arms" in certain terms.|/Harkness» who didn't speak in In the Commons, Paul Mar-|last week's defence and foreign tin (L -- Essex East) asked|policy debate, be given a whether Mr. Harkness' "extra-|chance in the Commons soon to ordinary steps" would "pre-|clarify his press statement. clude him from taking the nec-| David Lewis (NDP -- York essary and normal step of re-jSouth) asked whether Mr, from the government in|Diefenbaker had seen and ap- view of his differences with the|proved Mr. Harkness' state- prime minister." ment, Mr. Harkness said he took no NOT SEEN extraordinary steps. He had gare eel or statements made been asked questions by report- by ministers following requests ers "and in order not to have by the press are naturally not to deal with a dozen or 20 peo- seen by the prime minister," ple individually I made a state- Mr, Diefenbaker replied. ment." ; ; y . Hark- "I think that statement stands ioe pol -- ea as it is," he added gotiating with the United States for the last two to three months "in order that nuclear war- heads will be made available for our two squadrons of Bo marcs and for the F-101 inter- centor squadrons." He added:: 'These negotia- tions will be continued in order to reach a satisfactory agree- ment, I believe such an agree- ment can be arrived at in the near future," This appeared to some ob- servers to go beyond what Mr. Diefenbaker had said Friday: 'We will negotiate with the U.S. so that . . . in case of need nuclear warheads will be made readily available." Mr. Diefenbaker had added: "In other words, we will be in a position to determine finally, in the interests of Canada and our allies, thé course to be fol- lowea in the light of changing circumstances in the disarma- BEGINS DEBATE T. C. Douglas, New Demo- cratic Party leader, began the Commons exchange by saying Mr. Harkness' statement pur- ported to be an interpretation of Mr. Diefenbaker's Friday speech "'as setting forth a def- inite policy for the acquisition of nuclear arms." He asked whether Mr. Diefen- baker accepted the defence minister's statement as a pro- per interpretation of what the prime minister had said. Mr. Diefenbaker: "My speech Negro Enrols In Carolina including W. H. J. Thompson, the Ajax lawyer, and this ", turnout was achieved with a minimum of advance publicity. The Upper Canada Railway Society (president of which is Edward M. Jordan) would not be adverse to participating in Oshawa's proposed CNR King street track-removal celebra- tions next May; if proper arrangements can be made, Mr. " Jordan said, the UCRS may even sponsor a special excursion . trip from Toronto to Oshawa that day so that members can witness this historic moment in Oshawa's railroading history. City Solicitor Edward McNeely said today that the wea- ther is about the only impediment in the way of the removal of the tracks -- his best estimate was that removal work would start early in May, weather permitting. YOUNG PC'S HOLD PORT PERRY MEETING This Provincial election fever is starting to catch on. The Young PC's (the Young Progressive - Conservative Association of Ontario riding) got into the act last Sunday hight with a meeting in Port Perry. , The weather was miserable, but the turnout was still * @mall -- approximately 50 -- to hear such a distinguished array of Party big-wigs. Labor Minister Michael Starr was present, also Dr. Mat- thew Dymond and Thomas Rundle and Albert V. Walker (who is still the best bet to get the party nomination in Oshawa riding at the big meeting in Whitby Thursday, February 7, in the Legion Hall. LOOK MA, IT'S COLD OUTSIDE.! In the wonderful world of Oshawa's skin-diving fraternity sub-cold weather is no deterrent to outdoor fun and games. Twenty members of this rugged cult -- who are in no way responsible for the sad plight of Canada's Physical. Fit- ness Program -- journeyed to Maple Beach (in Lake Simcoe ~ area nearby Pefferlaw) for a chilling ritual last Sunday. Each submerged for more than five minutes through ice 22 inches thick, in 18 feet of water (temperature of which was 31 degrees, with air temperature of 15 - and 40 mph winds). This feat naturally attracted scores of natives to see the Oshawa divers, all members of one of three local clubs -- Oshawa Underwater Search and Recovery Group, Oshawa Diving Club and Oshawa Metro. Brent Snowdon of 55 Farewell avenue headed the Oshawa Diving Group; Don Cranfield the OUSRG. THESE FISHERS MAY GET TOGETHER YET Douglas A. Fisher, general manager of the Oshawa C of C, has long had a desire to meet a famous namesake of his (who is no relation) -- Douglas M. Fisher, the MP from Port Arthur who gets into the headlines so often. Mr. Douglas M. will be in Oshawa next Saturday, Douglas A. Fisher recalled today that Canadian daily newspapers frequently (and erroneously) used his picture instead of Douglas M. Fisher's in 1957;, this was when Doug- las A, was national president of the Junior Chamber of Com- merce and Douglas M. was "raking some national leaders over the coals with his well-known skill." "I have lived in the shadow of the famous Port Arthur member for several years," said the Chamber's Mr. Fisher today, "It would be a pleasure to meet him first-hand." Stock Market |" DEATHS Has Late Surg e By THE CANADIAN PRESS | Hollywood--John Farrow, 56, |movie director and producer TORONTO (CP)--The stock market drifted for most of the College CLEMSON, S.C. (AP) -+ The last state with unbroken public school segregation lowered its barriers under court orders to a smiling, reserved Negro who emphasize' "my main purpose is to get an education." | ment field, which have become encouraging recently. ..." Mr. Diefenbaker's only speci- fic reference to the F-101 inter- ceptor was that he had an- nounced in June, 1961, that this plane would be armed with con- ventional weapons. MAY CONCERN DELIVERY Mama Gnu _ nuzziles -her baby, born Sunday at New New York's Bronx Zoo. The baby, sex presently undeter- NEW GNU AT BRONX Z00 mined, is the first white-tailed gnu born at the zoo in 14 years and stands about two feet tall. Gnus are African Commons Time Spent Arguing OTTAWA (CP) -- The Com- mons passed nothing Monday but time. It spent a lot of time --as usual--arguing. After the high-interest ques- tion period, in which opposition MPs tried to drive a wedge be- tween Prime Minister Diefen- baker and Defence Minister|probl Harkness: debating didr.'t have any of its usual fireworks until shortly before Monday night's adjournment. During the day, not a single substantive motion on govern-|D ment or private members' bus- iness was a At the night's end, the oppo- sition asked House Leader Gor- don Churchill again for a de- fence policy statement from Mr. Harkness, who did not par- ticipate in last week's external affairs and defence debate. But the opposition went unsatisfied. SPARKS. DEBATE J. W. Pickersgill (I--Bona- vpsta - Twillingate; sparked the later fireworks on the govern- ment's bill to establish a na- tional economic develop- ment board. He called it "an- other Diefenbaker gimmick to fool the people," and Finance Minister Nowlan replied that the Liberals were speaking nothing but political clap-trap. At the night's adjournment, ||House Leader Churchill an- nounced the business for today's sitting would be just the same as called for action Monday: The eco nomic development ) board bill, followed by an ex- antelopes with an ox-like jtension to the government's head, short mane, al Freight Rates Reduction Act. curved horns and a long tail. Mr. Nowlan asked the House --AP Wirephoto |t9 ena its rambling, general de- TORONTO must step up its long-term rate) of growth and must grapple ef- fectively with the chronic defi- cit in its balance of payments, Senator M. Wallace McCutch- econ, federal minister without Growth Rate Step-Up Urged By McCutcheo eventual elimination. "We must,"' he stated, "make every effort within our power to promote stronger and more efficient industries in Canada and to tackle, cn' as many bate on the economic develop- ment bill and get down to spe- cific clauses setting up the board. The Liberals, however, put up two more speakers to extend the debate to the ad- journment hour. IDEA HIS OWN Mr. Nowlan said there was no grey eminence behind the board and that the idea was his own (CP) -- Canadaycit in the near . term and its|may have to look to exportjas a measure to meet Canada's markets as well as to the do-|jong-term balance of payments mestic market and must, there- difficulty. He said partisan criti- fore, grow up amid the full rig-icism of the measure was going ors of international competi-|to make it difficult for the gov- tion."' REFERS TO SURCHARGES Harvey Gantt, 20-year-old ar- chitectural student, said he was surprised by his friendly recep- tion on the Clemson College campus where he enrolled Mon- day as a transfer student from Iowa State University. Civilian-clad state police and Meanwhile, reliable sources said the nuclear negotiations concern establishment of a fast delivery warheads from U.S. bases near the border to Canadian Bomarc and F-101 bases. system , for nuclear Such an arrangement would portfolio ,says. |fronts as possible, those things} He told the annual dinner of|that impede the most effective the Metropolitan Toronto Board! use of our manpower and capi-| of Trade a faster rate of growth| tal resources. | is needed to achieve and main-| "We must also develop new tain reasonably full employ-) industries, especially in the area ment while the balance-of-pay-|of secondary manufacturing-- ments objective should be ajindustries which, in order to substantial reduction im the defi-! benefit from economies of sale, uniformed highway patrolmen were on hand to keep order. Gant's formal acceptance marked the first time a Negro has enrolled in a publicly-sup- Ported South Carolina white school at any level. The only hint of disorder came when State Law Enforce- ment Division agents ordered two men off the campus, saying "they had no business here." A division spokesman said the two had been overheard making threatening remarks and had "been under surveillance all night." But the terror of such students as were on campus Monday--a/| day set aside for enrolment of transfer and new students--was evidently friendly. About 200 gathered to see Gantt enter to| register. Most of them laughed! and joked. | From Governor Donald Rus-| sell and Clemson President Dr. Robert Edwards down to stu- dent leaders, there has been a unanimous call for peaceful ac- ceptance of Gantt. Clergy and business organizations have is- sued similar appeals. But Russell has made clear the state's policy is -to fight Gantt's case and all other in- tegration attempts to the -high- est court level. The fourth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals de- clined to postpone its order directing admission of Gantt to Clemson while the case is ap- Pealed to the U.S. Supreme|"fast reaching a stage' when Court. there can be exchange of was very clear, very direct and|notes." very comprehensive. I do not This was never reached. WEATHER FORECAST Cloudy Weather Seen Wednesday Synopsis: Cloudiness and a/colder again Wednesday. Winds few flurries of snow will move| Westerly 15 Wednesday. across central and northeastern) Forecast Temperatures Mean peacetime exclusion of nuclear warheads from Cana- dian soil. It was reported to be re- garded favorably by the exter- nal affairs department but not by the military, which consider that the warheads must be at the Canadian bases in time to be used in any emergency. Distance of Canadian inter- ceptor bases from the U.S. bor- der (not from the nearest U.S. base) are: Chatham, N.B., 160 miles; La Macaza, Que.,150; Ottawa, 70; North Bay, Ont., 240; Bagotville, Que. 240; and Comox, B.C., 75. The negotiations have in- volved the defence departments of Canada and the U.S. the ex- ternal affairs department and the U.S. state department. DECIDES TO SCRAP The negotiations mean that Canada has finally decided to scrap the former agreement drawn up by the two defence departments which would have placed nuclear warheads in Canada under the "two-key" system. This system would have meant the warheads in Canada could have been fired only on authorization of the U.S. presi- dent but that Canada would have had veto power over any firing of them by the U.S. Former defence minister Pearkes announced July 3, 1059, that the then negotiations were tenes who was married to actress Maureen O'Sullivan; of a heart session Monday, until a selling) attack. surge in the last hour dropped prices to their lows. Atlas Stee] continued to dom- inate trading in the main list, showing a volume of more than 130,000 shares. Eight special- size transactions accounted for 800 Atlas shares valued at 392,410. The stock closed at , down %. zTrans-Canada Pipe Lines fell a point. Banks provided a firm under- tone, with NQOVA Scotia up point, Montreal %, Toronto-Do- minion % and Royal and Ca- nad an Imperial Bank of Com- merce % each. On index, industrial fell 1.63 to 599.35, golds .20 to 90.20 and western oils 1.36 to 116.32. Base metals rose .10 to 199.39. Vol- ume'was 4,123,000 shares com- pared with 3,866,000 Friday. Am base metals, Interna- tional Nickel dropped 5%, while Falconbridge and Noranda both gained 14: In western oils, Dome fell %. Sse x VOC OWES Pee eee eee eee se ee ee eee Owe ; Ottawa--Mrs, Rose Loeb, 72: Ontario today. Scattered flur-| widow of the founder of M. Loeb and Company, a food dis- tributing firm;.of injuries when struck by a car. - New York -- Walter Kernan, 54, associate owner and mana- ger of three circuses; appar- ently of a heart attack. Minneapolis, Miss.--Dr. Jean Felix Piccard, 79, famed for his stratospheric balloon flights and cosmic ray research. | Havana -- Miguel! Reyes Castro, 34, secretary - general of the Tobacco Workers' Union and one of Cuba's major labor) leaders; 'of suicide. Toronto--Walter John (Nig) Brenneman, former hockey player with St. Louis of the American Hockey League and near the Great Lakes. Lake St. Clair, southern Lake| onto: night and Wednesday. | Lake Erie, Niagara, eastern} Lake Ontario regions, Hamil- ton: Considerable cloudiness with a few snowflurries Wed-| nesday. Winds light tonight and! Wednesday. Haliburton region: Variable cloudiness with a few snowflur. | ries Wednesday. Winds light to-| night and Wednesday. Northern Lake Huron, Geor- ries are expected to continue| windsor St. Huron, western Lake Ontario|Kitchener regions, Windsor, London Tor-|Wiagham Considerably cloudiness|Hamilton ... tonight and Wednesday with a/St. Catharines few snowflurries. Winds light to-|Toronto Timmins Low tonight, high Wednesday Thomas London Peterborough .... Trenton Killaloe Muskoka North Bay.. Sudbury .... Earlton .. Kapuskasing . White River Moosonee 10 10 10 10 5 10 12 12 10 12 5 . RAMNSASN INTERPRETING THE NEWS Seen As By HAROLD MORRISON Canadian Press Staff Writer President Kennedy and Prime Minister Macmillan may have been caught in a diplomatic blunder in sacrificing national sensitivity for poltical speed and expediency in_ hurriedly hammering out the Polaris mis- sile agreement at Nassau last menth., It s this action, above all others, to which French Presi- dent de Gaulle keeps referring in his campaign to block Brit- ain from the European Common Market. Seen from de Gaulle's viewpoint, the arrangement was an attempt at a fait accompli-- an unbreakable Anglo-Amer - can alliance that would crush European integrity, character and independence. It was al- most inevitable that the Lion of Lorraine would resist it. De Gaulle has been depicted before the U.S. public as a nar- row-minded relic of the past, so anti-American he would be will- ing to. destroy the Western al-| liance rather than bow to deci- sions from the White House. | Yet historians certify it was on de Gaulle's back that France rose from the ashes of the Sec- ond World War and on_ his} |shoulders that the French eco- nomy was restored and the jcrumbling French political) | structure rebuilt. | WANTS FRANCE STRONG How could a man with his} | Vast experience in hardship and} Struggle, bloodshed and death) agree that the security of} |France could be safely left to} janother country? De Gaulle | wants European _ nuclear) strength rooted {mn France as| }much as Kennedy wants _ it {rooted in the U.S. How could France be sure the! day would not come when the U.S. and Russia would reach some secret deal highly satis- factory to themselves but unsat- isfactory to the smaller pow- ers? Knowing this, why were Mac- millan and Kennedy in such a hurry to end the Skybolt con- troversy and complete the Po- laris. deal, present'ng France and other North Atlantic part- LIST gian Bay, Timagami, Cochrane, North Bay, Sudbury: Wednes. day partly cloudy. Winds light tonight, west 10 to 15 Wednes- with a number of senior teams in Ontario. | Toronto--Steven Dimitro, 42: said to be the king of Canada's 200 gypsies, of,a heart .attack.| day. Boston--Robert Frost, 88, un-| While River, Algoma Regions, crowned poet laureate of the|Sault Ste. Marie: Clearing this United States. evening. Partly cloudy andjf FUEL OIL...| CALL PERRY DAY OR NIGHT 723-3443 "| | | JOHN A. J. BOLAHOOD Ltd. _ REAL ESTATE -- INSURANCE 725-6544 Pact In Nassau Blunder ners with the one choice of ac- cepting membership in the pro- posed Polaris missile force? U.S, officials say Macmillan's political problems at home were most pressing. Britain had an- chored its strategic nuclear fu- ture on the skyborne Skybolt missile which the U.S. suddenly decided to scrap. Left tempor- arily without an altemative, Macmillan might have been highly vulnerable at home. Macmillan therefore swiftly accepted the Polaris and the foundation of the multilateral force--which de Gaulle rejected --was launched somewhat shak- ily. BOLSTERED ARGUMENT What Macmillan had accom- plished was to give de Gaulle a stronger argument that there is a special relationship» be-| tween Britain and the U.S. and opening the question whether Britain has the best interests of continental Europe at heart. Some American officials say that if de Gaulle had not seized on the Nassau agreement he would have used something else, since he had his mind made up to block Britain. These same officials agree that in retrospect the Nassau pact contained a diplomatic er- ror--the error of stepping need- lessly on de Gaulle's toes. dition to increased employment, The necessary basic improve- ment in current account, Sena- tor McCutcheon continued, can- not be achieved by restrict ve measures. Such measures as import surcharges "may have to be retained a little longer, but they cannot form part of any program for the lasting improvement of our current ac- count position." Neither, he stated, do the ob- jectives mean that we shall/A cease to make foreign capital welcome or to maintain a hos- pitable climate for foreign in- vestors. "We will continue to. need net imports of capital for some time to come--we may always need it at times of rapid re- source development. Moreover, we are talking of a reduction in our net imports of capital, and the flow of investment cap- ital, like the flow of goods in international trade, is a two-way matter."" Of the measures taken, Sena- tor McCutcheon said "the most essential and important seems to me to be the reduction end Stabilization of the external value of our dollar at an ap- propriate level, "All the evidence if that we have yet to experience the full effect of that action, The effect should be an increasing one for several years to come." His comments were contained in a text made available to the press in advance of delivery. Senator McCutcheon cited as the kind of arrangement he has in mind the one by which au- tomotive manufacturers receive credit for duty on the import of automatic transmissions and en- crease their export of parts. "Under the best of circum- stances this might result, in ad- to some $35,000,000 to $40,000,000| on the favorable side of our in- the appraisal fee charged to applicants by the Crown lend- The announcement Monday by $100 worth of loan. will be de- $10 down plus a deduction of 50 cents for each $100 worth of wi than the total deductions, to refund fees if no appraisal is made. Loan instalment post- ments can be arranged for bor- rowers developing a new enter- prise from which little return is expected for the first year or gines to the extent that they in-|5® Farm Credit Amendments Announced OTTAWA (CP)--Two amend- ments have been announced in regulations of the Farm' Credit ct. One provides for reductions in ing agency. The other permits postponement of loan repay- ment instalments under special circumstances. Appraisal fees of $50 and $100 --depending on the type ofloan --had been charged previously. Aoriculture Minister Hamilton said the change will mean lower appraisal fees for smailer loans. Henceforth, farmers applying under one section of the act will pay $10 down on the apprai- sal cost and 40 cents for each ducted when the loan is made. Under a second part of the act, the far mapplicant will pay loan on approval--or $100 if that orks out as a smaller amount The corporation will continue ernment tc get the best Lo available to serve on the 5 During the day, i MPs argued that while they suppo! the measure in principle, thought the government sufficient experts in the pub service to advise it on economic lems. The lack of action on the gov- ernment measure carried over into the private members' hour.' No decision was taken on a resolution introduced by J. P. eschatelets (L--Montreal Mai- sonneuve-Rosemont) to requife the government and industry to employ a percentage of work- ers who are handicapped with epilepsy. Mrs. Jean Casselman, parlia- mentary secretary to Health Minister Monteith, said t hat such compulsory measures in the United Kingdom had not worked well in practice, Fire Escape Refused; 3 Die In Fire HAMILTON (CP)--A previous owner's request to build a fire escape in a _ building where three people died Saturday was turned down in 1961 by the city building department, it was learned Monday. The Hamilton fire department had ordered the former owner to build a fire escape, but the building department rejected his request for a permit be- cause the house was zoned for Single - family occupancy and was being used for more than one family. year-old son, John Jr., and his daughter, Susan, meeting fire regulations. previous owner, who had using all three floors of house, stopped occupancy on third floor when his request a fire escape permit was fused. NDPs Oppose RC Secondary Schools. TORONTO (CP) -- The Om tario New Democratic Party opposes separate secondary schools and teachers' colleges, Leader Donald C. MacDonald says. However, the NDP supports the "historical right" of eepar- ate schools at elementary level- Mr. MacDonald said Monday in a letter to Anglican Archbishop W. L. Wright of Algoma, met- ropolitan. of the ecclesiastical province of Ontario. Mr. MacDonald said a divided system of education would destroy the possibility of providing all children, whether Roman Catholic or non-Catho- skills needed in the 20th cen- tury. He said the establishment of separate teachers' colleges would represent an unn expenditure of public funds. Ontario Roman Catholic bish- Ops, in a brief to the legislature last year, urged increased pro- vincial aid for elementary sep- arate schools ext;ension of pro- vincial grants to secondary sep- arate schools and establishment of separate teachers' colleges. Mr, Hamilton said one such example would be a switch to beef production from dairying-- part of a current campaign to increase Canadian meat sup- Plies and trim dairy surpluses. ternational current account. We have only to take a limited number of such steps to go a long way towards meeting our) goal." GLECOFF SUPERMARKET Specials for Mon. - Tues. - Wed. JAN. 28-29-30. SHORGAS HEATING & APPLIANCES Industrial and Commercial The established, reliable Gas ler in your area, 31 CELINA ST. (Corner of Athol) 728-9441 | Now To have that carpet or chest- erfield cleaned professionally in Oshawa's Original Carpet Cleaning Centre . . . where fully guaranteed satisfaction is assured. Phone 728-4681 NU-WAY RUG CO. LTD. 174 MARY ST. | | | | | , DEMPSTER'S SLICED BREAD 2 caves 39° AYLMER -- YOUR CHOICE ASSTD. SOUPS 6 '™: 89° CIGARETTES «cw. 3.09 2 LBS. $s] FIRST GRADE BUTTER nant LOF MAPLELEAF CHEESE 28° BURN'S Shop and Save at Glecoff's Supermarket PURE LARD OPEN EVERY NIGHT 'TIL 10:00 P.M. 24-07. LOAVES 10-0Z, TINS (with 3.00 or more Meat Order) Ya-LB, PKG. COMING EVENTS SOCIAL bingo, Wednesday, taprg | wo, 8 p.m. St. John's Hall, corner of Bloor and Simcoe. Refreshments served. FERNHILL Bingo tonight, Avalon, 7. 20 games, $6 and $10; seven $40 jack- pots Door prizes. RUMMAGE SALE JANUARY 30th 1.30 P.M, Margaret Hamilton Group __C. R. A. Gibb Street. LIONS BINGO WEDNESDAY, JAN. 30, 8:00 P.M. JUBILEE PAVILION 20 -- $20.00 GAMES -- 20 5 -- $30.00 GAMES -- 5 1 -- $150.00 JACKPOT -- | $20.00 A LINE -- $50.00 FULL CARD 2 -- $250.00 JACKPOTS -- 2 NOS. 52 EARLY BIRD GAMES EXTRA BUSES -- FREE ADMISSION DON'T worry, hurry and rent that vacant room through far-reaching Clas- sified ads. For extra income dial 723-3492 today.

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