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The Oshawa Times, 26 Apr 1960, p. 15

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

» BUT, FELLAS! AH DIDN'T KNOW WHUT=#-AH MEANS -WHO AH WAG tee! ATIN'f! = AH DIDN'T MEAN TO BE NO CANNIBAL & * TEE Cd THE ANIMALS WILL YO' KIN GIT LOST TRUST HER 4 NOW SHELL (4 WAL=AH BIN NEVER 4 AGAIN. HOOMANTY REMARRY ME, Jf o ian JULIET JONES aE fa Ca 2 RG TL IE WEE AT THE OSHAWA TIMES, Tuesdey, April 26, 1960 15 MUGGS AND SKEETER Tke, DeGaulle Wind Up Policy Talks WASHINGTON (AP) -- Presi- dent Eisenhower and President de Gaulle wind up their summit strategy talks today. They are re. ported agreed on a stand-pat Berlin policy but hoping for a disarmament deal with Soviet Premier Khrushchev. The two leaders scheduled a White House session with their foreign ministers for mid-morn- ling and planned to issue in the |afternoon a communique on the {results of their discussions. Immediately following the White House meeting de Gaulle arranged to address a joint ses- sion of Congress. He was ex- pected to stress his view--shared by Eisenhower -- that the best prospect for accomplishment at the Paris summit meeting next month lies in the field of disarm. ament. De Gaulle sees no hope at the summit for settlement of the So- iB ' |viet-Western dispute over the fu. ture of the divided city of Berlin. Eisen! and he are agreed MY HAIR, AND T KNOW IT MUST LOOK A FRIGHT! IT'S FUNNY HOW A THAT LITTLE WORD BOO CAN FRIGHTEN BIG, STRONG MEN THE LONE RANGER SECRET AGENT X 9 MAC'S THE DOUBLE TRY TO SWINDLE CROSSER! ME, wie you! YOU MADE ME THINK THE RANGER! ) You KILLED that the Western powers must stand firm on all their rights there in face of Khrushchev's de- mand that they withdraw their troops. PREFERS SIDETRACK Since de Gaulle sees no way out of the deadlock he is be. lieved to have made clear to Eisenhower that he would prefer to sidetrack Berlin negotiations at the summit. But Eisenhower feels that the West is committed to negotiate the problem with Khrushchev at the sessions open- ing May 16 in Paris What decisions they reached were not disclosed, but the two men announced through spokes- men Sunday that "we are ia MARKS PLACE 16 THE RENDEZVOUS FOINT ALL RIGHT ! THAT SUB MAY EVEN BE THERE RIGHT NOW / . as to how we agr eg shall proceed at the summit § | meeting." "We will continue these talks tomorrow," they added, "when we meet with our foreign min. isters to inform them of our pri- vate conversations and to decide on the way of presenting our common ideas at the meeting." Judge's Body Face-Down i MORLEY HUGHES FRANK WONNACOTT TAKE YOUR PICK . .. TOPICK A GOODWILL USED CAR FOR YOU MIKE JACULA "GEORGE 'DOC' KORY HARRY DICK JACK McKEEVER RAY MARTEL BADE CRANFIELD RAY McLAUGHLIN AL ATKINSON FRANK WHITE DAVE PEARSE TED MIDDLEMASS DON GAVAS EARL SCHAEFER Over 200 Goodwill Used Cars To Choose From At . . . THE CLIFF MILLS MOTORS LTD. In U.S. Lake te oe of i Padus ot Lynn Parkinson has climaxed one of Chicago's most famous missing persons cases. Still a mystery is exactly how the 57. year-old jurist met his death A passerby spotted the judge's B77 SPUNNY, BUT SHG DIOWT LEAVE | RY. IDR EVEN hex FoR A REFUND ON HER RENT, ROY ROGERS l/ a - : £1 WAS | OUTLAWS HORSE hm RIDING |S HEADED FoR - rv wr y "o ' > 1 vy & v JUST OUTSIDE OF Ti ROGERS/T OT AWAY FROM CRUNCHER! IF WE HURRY, «..FOR TH' TIMES, NOW AN' THEN, WHEN I MUST HAND | HERA BILL / [4 7ew seconos came CS IMANDER IN TE CAR, LITTLE ANNIE ROONEY MAYBE ITS PIRATES « OR TOUGH GANGSTERS =~ OH, GEE «NOW T AM COME IN HERE, ne JUST WHOEVER CAME ON BOARD 1S WALKIN' AWFUL QUIET AN' SNEAKY, ZERO = MAYBE IT'S NOT THE ~ POLICE LOOKIN' FOR US AFTERALL = TO AVOID THIS MAD SCHEME = «== decomposed body Sunday float- ing face-down in Lake Michigan near the north edge of the Loop. This was but several blocks from the Drake Hotel, where the fed- eral judge vanished Oct. 26, ap- parently sick and dazed. The body, identified by a cousin, fingerprints and identifi cation cards, bore no apparent marks of violence. An autopsy re- port said everything was consist- ent with drowning, a theory held by many policemen since the judge's spectacles and umbrella were found along a route leading to 'a beach last fall. An extensive search by skin- divers then failed to turn up clues, giving rise to speculation the judge had met with foul play. a theory still not ruled out. FAMILY VIEWS His widow, Elsie Ruth, main. tained until Sunday night that her husband was an amnesia victim. Judge Parkinson's son, William L. Parkinson Jr., said Sunday night that his father was either "put in the lake or had an aec- cident and fell in." He ruled out suicide, saying, "Dad wasn't the type who would take his own life." Coroner Walter McCarron said his office would investigate the possibility the judge was robbed. He said no money or jewelry was " : found on the body. PIERRE =YOU SHAME ME WITH YOUR TIMIDITY ~AT TACH OUR TOWLINE TO THE BARGE =~ THAT IS AN ORDER = gut The judge, reported by his fam. ily to have suffered from low blood pressure, left his office about 4:30 p.m. Oct. 26 to walk to his home a few blocks away. £|He never made it. Jewish War Dead Z| Recalled In Meet TORONTO (CP)--The 6,000,000 "|| Jewish dead of the Second World ) Me QA lene Walt Dis War were remembered Sunday night as the Shaarei Shomayim Synogogue. commemorated the Warsaw uprising of April, 1043, At the synagogue was one of the few survivors -- Dr. Henry Fernigstein of Toronto, among 50,000 Warsaw ghetto Jews whe resisted German forces with knives, home-made grenades and a few rifles. He came to Canada in 1048 after living through four concen. tration camps. SALLY'S SALLIES

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