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The Oshawa Times, 20 Sep 1960, p. 2

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§ THE OSHAWA TIMES, Tuesday, September 30, TOU GOOD EVENING By JACK GEARIN DON'T LET THE LANDLORD "FREEZE" YOU OUT. | If you live in an apartment, or a duplex, and you think your landlord is trying to freeze you out, you can do something about it, The city has a bylaw to protect people on such matters -- No. 3339, passed Feb, 11, 1957, on a proposal from Alderman Gordon Attersley. Originally, it called for suitable heat for the period Oct al 15 to May 15, sti- pulating that the minimum air temperature must be above 70 degrees fahrenheit during that period. Viola tion of the bylaw could bring 8 maximum fine of $50, bylaw amended Sept. 6 by Council to extend period of enforcement so that it now runs from Sept. 15 to June 15 Commenting this week on the bylaw, Mr. Attersley said: "There have been no prosecutions locally, so we have reason to believe has been effective locally in protecting tenants, The extension was made to give them more protection." his was + it NOW IS THE TIME TO PLAN FOR POOL ing the he swimitr easor t that the city's $54,000 Rotary it down for repairs recently, opened boring beer for r had te this year, anyhow, property come use thank ayed-planni of the mittee 1 Littl y, bli tractors, hampered unnecessarily dule the project started if a be ha by e me could a tight work sche- Let' h forget about the hundreds of irate parents and disappointed this year, Let's pool shape pool is little enough for a city of little plan for 1961 one ret re and t the sucr ge in this siz There's health department app unless all other remember fair warning that it will the Rotary pool in 1961 are rigidly adhered to. one po to erv the city not 3" oper regulat 0 LAUD N'AGARA SWIMMING POOL It tollo y tor arrived slightly to meet ¢ swimming pools during vacatior s been cut space Dear requirements Sir 3 I; column, we feel you hold City. We lived here the City expand a great I ger v 10 years, ? readers our ine inter have 8 or d en | 1 the matter of even one swimming pool ne of controversy that is the given out by the Falls, Ont at the gates, 9,000 visitors However, the City hak been ¢ ason we re enclo 'yanamid of Canada Niage The e huge, at a folder ng pool had over day fr we swimm y to employ six life guards ras spelling relief pool and picnic to the da ven days a week, Niagara Falls for two years, pool for granted. be interested and perhaps There is a fenced- i station equipped 1 the wading pool. The » pool is large er 11 ¢ all times w i are open public from 1 p.m. to 9 p.n When we ide were guilty of We hope you migh make some use of the in wading pool with loud speaker, plus canopied bleach Cyanamid employs or Yours re at we taking the 4 nformation ection, a fir change } es a wash rooms, ers nea 2,200 v sincer i Sheila Pigeon ide Street, Ont nawa (EDITOR'S NOTE: The by Cyanamid of Canada Ltd., since 1936, The m has ng that time, accord- on maintenance and opera urir operation budget owned and operated open to the public approximately $500,000 i beer Il spent ing to Annual is about $30,000. More than 300,000 admissions to the pool and picnic area are recorded annually.) mpany e FURTHER NOTES ON DOWNTOWN PARKING Alderman Albert V. Walker, chairman of the traffic committee, up hope of receiving any official reply from hawa Dowr 3usiness Men's Associatior prop made last June for a City p but committee has not been idle on subject of parkir ty at 64 no r roper it Bor reet east was purchased f Mary -- and it available before recently t 18 Xt Dec n the e 25th, t The 20 new perk meanwhile, lot Ct negotiating for space for ch and Bond streets "I WAS ALWAYS A LIBERAL, UNTIL" Press Quote of The Week: -- "I was alwavs a Liberal, but Mr. F Dymond have s0 nice I think I'll be Conservative now, After all I let Mr. Diefenbaker share my birthday today (Sunday). He's 65" Mrs, Celia "Granny" Baker of Uxbridge on her 107th birthday, Sept. 18, t i NV beer SEND BEST WISHES FROM JAPAN The Soroptimist Club of Oshawa and District recently sent best wishes to the Soroptimist Club of Tokyo, Japan, when the latter group was admitted into the International Association Soroptimist Clubs. Here a letter in reply sent to Miss Grace Winnell, corres= ponding secretary of the local group, from Tokyo: Dear Madam: We appreciate your friendly letter . We held the inauguration our service to are sure that of + meeting June 21st., vowing international peace and friendship, We ill be able to do somethng good by entering into the association and doing the best in our power. You operation with you Finally it is nee makes a visit to Japan will hearts at any time we Ww are requ in eve Soroptir ted to give us assistance and co- ssible way to enable us to work st of all the world. less to say that any member who be welcomed with all our Very truly yours, Sue Takeuchi, president, OSHAWA FANS CHEER ARGOS ALONG When you®mix with Argo foctball gan one thought 5Se8 fans are always out they're not all Double Sunday afternoon, we coun the intermission crowds at. the CNE Grandstand Oshawa and district at these games, even if supporte On a recent d no less than 40 Oshawa id sections including such assistant Crown Attorney, Bosco, Theatre Manager L. E "Pop" vo T home € at the impre residents in nearby gr: Iruce Affleck, ti Joseph wople as Realtor ) ie m ther icketls can be abtained here at 8 Simcoe North. Mr. Johnston al of an 450 ducats with interest ine appear to be evenly with Ar®s having more lor the lone, treasing fivided ) slight attached to the con- has ended, so there's little point t Is th a w {P u | 8 |W te Sy {the late morning Ito I |T | ha |w | be T |in |haye evening, be B became | af time, although she had beén com-| formed ir pl sore 47 {shortly he "Don't 80 Su Sc Ww of B br of sk de th. in cr st af pl tu Ww la of fo hi bu m bu thi th ev bu ac a of outeries and loud {of | before her death June tario Supreme Court at the first Prosecuto day of the four children rectly banged Jaekel said she heard Sullivan Sudbury Murde Trial Opens Bibby to have received the head |: S- Marriott of the Ontario Su parts of the evidence the accused couldn't understand beer in a Sudbury hotel wound. He said his brother drank about the same. Gunfig In Montreal in the stomach, thigh, chest and ity of their condition, rather than left broken left arm and head injur-|indiscriminately, les. and Adolphe Leclerc, when wounding Dumais for a sign of the gunman another |in hospit cigar store owner fell badly wounded at the feet of | ment A KILLS striking an oncoming vehicle Four persons are known to have died in the accident, and TRACTOR TRAILER A tractor-trailer rests atop a | ear in Carbondale, Penna after racing down a hill and Oshawa Crown Attorney Prosecutes Murder Case OTTAWA (CP) Neighbors | shout, "Get up estified Monday that they heard ber that." bumping com- Similar testimony was ng from the Ottawa apartment by Mrs, Carmen Goyer Mrs. Ethel Lahaye the night cupied the apartment 1 to the Lahayes The evidence was given in On In opening address, Crown Alex Hall Os uld introduce evidence show Mrs. Lahaye died of a ain hemorrhage "brought on external Mr. Hall )k the case after Ottawa Crown Attorney Raoul Mercier cite Jitls and just remem given who oc- next door of 1awa the murder trial Jo- said he eph Francis Sullivan ad oecupied the apartme 46-year-old woman an violence." The woman's sister, Mrs, Ger Id Bennett, was ov me in the itness box when vn police 8 vontinuing hotographs of the battered feat res of Mrs. Lahaye. She had to t down and drink a glass of No-B ater before she could continue 0 ras pstimony Mrs. Bennett testified a et Mr. and illivan came to their home ir came 1 (i a f June 1 anc un id them Mrs mscious and I ¢ he Bennetts went aye apartment oman dy covered by a © ave 1't wake her to the L th found ti 1 ): | | ww. Applauded | TORONTO (CP)--Girls of Les ts Africains danced bare th tage the It Mon opening of their nerican tour, ig ws which - out theatre There no immediate re: under three action from police morality. offi consumed. | cors who had lier they van would adopt a atti Lahaye {ude a and 1 somed on ¢ Alexandra the dead on a of ya n 1 I North Ar Ont catre ELLS OF WINE Bennett testified the apartment w and Sullivan when just ittles of wine were ennett said he left after Su irritated. Mrs was all righ 0 had been Mr La the previous ) law th de or semi-nude 18 no said ear wait-and-see pparently which recently per don with full sanc bared breasts, goes fter a week's run a tion to New here An 1 of a headache and Jaekel, who above the Lahaye Lorn Avenue, said before midnight May aining face st 1 ed dl flat at that Hor ope Wht audience of ecatrp's capacity of the native dancers an Mrs, Lahaye cryin at the end of the 2%-hour don't," and also performance which fe atures unds of something being , lorful and sometimes frenzied or moved about. Mrs.| African dances and story-telling son : Last year the girl pany filmy I their Toronto er in that tour |bare-bosomed | States cities but 1 J) gave heard of the com in ap Ear. they had danced several United were ordered to cover up in New York n SUDBURY (CP upreme Court trial of Karlo opta, 26, of Toronto, charged ith manslaughter in the death off « duty policeman Charles ibby in a March 15 street awl, opened here Monday Dr. J. D. McInnes id Bibby nearby Copper Clif, died of a ull fracture Dr. Mclnnes fence counsel ~The Ontario TORONTO (CP)--An order un to Seating Chris Tonks as reeve of uburban York township was is- ney, for Monday by Senior. Master reply Ma sald, in Arthur ued at it was not unr t asonable preme Court Mr. Marriott said in his Judg- that. the aim of the Muni- t was to help prevent a of interest between a of council and the muni. jury from a fall rete Bibby is alleged to have heen ruck on the head by a plank Sopta, who went into hiding ter the policeman's death, eaded his innocence with gut- and he declared the pur- ral vehemence. An interpreter |', of township land by Mr as in the dock with him, trans.|}0"Ks is prohibited by the sta ting into a Croatian tongue tute against con ment cipal conflict member cipality chas The motion for the unseating was brought by Nicholas Man- Ivan (John) Bibby, 22, fredo, a merchant in the town- Charles Bibby, said ur or five glasses of brother sl | he had Nr Mar | draught Marriott said Mr, Tonks s day CAN appeal the decision the day PI : h | | 'New Plan For | Hospital Care TORONTO (CP)--A four-zone plan of hospital patient care |styled after program at the anchester. Community Hospi- A wild tal, Manchester, Conn., is to be! s brother received his fatal | ht | MONTREAL (CP) Monday night sent three!s at Queensway General Hos- urhs Patients will be se illet wounds Fernand Major, 31, is in seri gregated ac- ous condition with bullet wounds|cording to the nature and sever- | LONDON York Town Reeve Fired BOUGHT LAND ILLEGALLY Canadians Will Get 4-Day Week SAINT JOHN, NB. (CP four-day work week will be alent in Canadian industry and commerce before long, Claude Jodoin predicted in an interview Monday, The Canadian Congress president is here to at tend the annual meeting of the National Union of Public Em The prev- ployees. - Mr. Jodoin said the shorter iweek not only will be requested {by more unions but "may he come a necessity because of auto mation and unemployment," In an address later, he said unemployment is Canada's main problem, | "All sections of our economy {will have to make efforts, but if {is matural to look to the federal government for leadership," he said. | He repeated a CLC demand for |a conference of government | management and labor re | sentatives to seek ways of creat. ling more jobs Mr. Jodoin offered these * { gestions" for study at such a {ference: A more 'energetic amination of the effects of auto mation; a training program for FOUR displaced workers; more low rental housing and slum-clear | police are searching for more lance projects; a Jower interest | vietims, rate on governmen nisin AP Wirephoto (loans, end measures to rais --|farmers' purchas po The labor aid members recognized the {had a responsibility t unemployment, They this by "discouraging work and moonlighting son holding down two Provincial and thorities could help up public works in exempting building from sales taxes, i] co Red Blasts Puzzle Green UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (CP) External Af airs Minister Green of Canada said Monday he puzzled by Soviet attacks on UN Secretary-General Dag Ham- marskjold for his Congo policies leader union y combat d er co ov me (one job c | | | mur by wind pal au steppin er and is materials Labor 150 the do | 'INTERPRETING THE NEWS Mollet Bears Algeria Blame | By ED SIMON {d'etat in France itself, Mollet's todh ps ii Canadian Press Staff Writer [support for de Gaulle was cru- =" tudy L. aadian maga Two years ago, the news that cial in forestalling any efforts by "/0¢5 and periodicals Wi make eialist leader Guy Mollet was the left to resist the general's SuJe an tont>nbion" to numbered g the opp ption of near - dictatorial fe development of a "virile of President de Gaulle might powers to deal with the situation an adianiem and assist in the have plunged France into eivill Now Mollet has become virtu Inuation a "strong na- war ally the last significant politica press. Today, Mollet's break with his figure of the defunct Fourth Re-| Prime Minister Diefenbaker old resistance leader is only the public to abandon de Gaulle announced Baturday formation of latest sign of the growing pol- after helping him to the presi- the commission, headed by M, tical isolation that has befallen dency {Grattan O'Leary, 71, president of the man who was voled into of- ~ i ithe Ottawa Journal, to assess the fice as the last hope of unifying LOST POWER i. 'uture of Canadian magazines the French people, But Mollet's acquiescence In and periodicals, and to recom- But there is bitter irony in the Gaullist constitution automa. eng aeeiciance. if needed, in Mollet citing the president's fail. tically deprived him of his ol their battle to survive foreign ire to bring peace to Algeria as Power to make or break governs: competition ments, The president now is . one of the regsons for their 8 rmly In the saddle that virtu. Mr, Hamilton told the Central rangement. As much as any . Ont: sin > Sales i 01 ing gle French politician, the so- ally nothing short of de ath or ao Ce al Svartising alist leader bears responsibil. yolumasy renunciation eould re $5 "have 2 Sper if lor the long, Bloody Salome) For the left, Mollel's reaction Cause American magazines have ' {may have the long-term efect a tremendous circulation in Can. ENDED EFFORTS lof reunifying a once - powerful ada and, in recent years, various Mollet, the last French premier party of which Mollet still heads American publications as well as who seriously sought a negotiated the largest faction but which has some from other countries have tlement. with the Algerian reb- sufered increasingly from defec- decided to seek not only Cana- abandoned his eforts abrup-/tions by small groups of adhe- dian circulation but Canadian ad- four years ago when he vis. rents disillusioned with the ap. veriising revenue as well," ted Algeirs and w elted with parent absence of any recogniz- No og : ad Alge J Hy i as pe X| ¥ith pare sociale pohey nu Canada 1s fo develop "a f But there is little immediate catis : al identity, is pub. Mollet's sudden switch In pol- evidence of resurgence, let alone '|©4H0Ns must play a vital part had the effect of bolstering unity, among the scattered ranks? "Strong and healthy periodical confidence of the right-wing of de Gaulle's opponents, who Press ty contributes substan alition of settlers and army of- range from the virtually silent "2 10 he general development ¢ in Algeria, demoralizing Communists off the far left to the of a nation liberal elements and emphasizing embittered ight-wingers whose the impotence of the tottering support of de Gaulle was based... always be maintained In ssion of governments that on the assumption that he would late . 4 Now # huffled in and out of power in pursue their aims. Violate, no nation. ean allow the P The lonely man in the Elysee financial and commercial aspeets Palace remains the only effec. of publishing to ex tive politician in France, tend a Ws own Magazine Commission Praised BARRIE (CP) Postrnaster General William Hamilton sald i ght that the federal government - appointed commis- | | fonda 8 of riodics al pe io et els " 5¢ fey ot "While the freedom of the press eee When the growing power of the h dissidents in Algeria threatened to achieve a coup operations point where and business Fret to Describing the work of H marskjold and the UN comm as "marvellous," Green press conference: "The make just as many mis- takes as we (In the West) do, and this looks like a bad one." Green sald Canada aims for an independent approach on world issues and does not automatie.| ally tag along after any other country am and told a Commu. OLD GARGOYLES IRK NEIGHBORS TORONTO (CP are trying to dissuade : urban York township re from puttin ) cement gargoyles house "I's up ttin neighbors,' qd Charles Goodfellow "but I don't supp we can do nists Officia 3 sub dent around his e g all the oun Mo e 1 { 1y, Initiation | 'Orientation' Ont, (CP)~The Uni versity of Western Ontario cam. pus swarmed with blue and white beanies Monday as more than 1,000 freshmen and freshettes ambled into the most sedate initiation period the univer sity's history So sedate it, that fsn't| even called initiation any more. | Upperclassmen "Orienta- tion." Huron College nglican ponsoring | | raner Strathe proper decora with gar from condemn out 19th Two guard the another re lawn, {10 § ret d or burned cer ] n Garner "ver Is int It several to buy antique dealer them." say | the university's Church affiliate nyw ere the most daring 1spects Orientation W eek Wormettes, as Huron female S ome first-year students are called, ap peared in odd socks and large I H K " In Hong Ko identity placards Other freshettes wore ultra. HONG KONG hort skirts. A few were wearing curl up to slec slacks. Freshmen wore business or park bench | lca or Europe polic suits. All wore beanies, ~|ably will shake vi BIG VISITOR | But in thi MARATHON, Ont, (CP) semi-tropleal B est deepsea ship to visit this|Sands of people point on the northern shore of | each night, in alleyy Lake Superior since the St. Lawr. walks and on rooftop ence Seaway opened was the| They n peace 7.000-ton Swedish freighter Sea|fear of policemen Friend. Special cranes were An organization headed by s¢ needed to load pulpwood because prominent of Hor of the ship's height above the provides pr tion for th docks The iti wm "Street is f (AP a ir a Larg leen in th eep in the , on sleep no citize eral Kong street sleepers |is called the {Shelter Society." When the [the strec society roof over |shower, and |and a blanket The society provide an average of 50,000 The results from the persons each year, a York township land inquiry con- said ducted earlier this year The organization does not ap- | peal for public funds and mo {of its support comes from the Judge Joseph. Sweet of Hamil-| Jockey Club and the Church ton, who conducted the inquiry, | World Service. The group now found that Mr, Tonks had bought has three apartment buildings land illegally. Mr. Tonks had for sleepers, Another will be built a house on the land in ques- ready. next month tion | The society is ly con The senior master is a judicial| cerned with destitutes born and oficer of the Ontario Supreme|raised in the Hong Kong area ship : eather turn coo! It tries their to heads Ins give them a a warm le of t tea fo titute man shelter d actions spoke primari Court who may be called upon to| though it does aid some refugees! make certain judgments pre. coming into the colony from Com scribed by civil law. The post, munis China that of a junior judge : Hospital Not 'Public Place' Mr. Marriott ruled that Mr. Tonks' personal interest in de-| CHATHAM (CP) ate ruled Monday th a ho A magi at fending another action aimed at| invalidating the sale of the prop- | erty brought him into conflict with the township and disquali-| str fied him from office | pital is not a public place and Mr. Tonks claims he is entitled dismissed a charge of intoxica to $31,600 in compensation from|tion against Charles F. Falconer the township, plus interest at five 60, of no fixed address per cent, if the courts rule that] Magistratt F. K. Jasperson had he must turn back his land to the been told Falconer was arrested township. iby police after they removed An appliance dealer, Mr. Tonks him from the admitting room at shooting spree In east-end Mont. adopted for the first time in Can-| aS been a member of York town- St. Joseph's Hospital real men to hospital for treatment of pital in Toronto's western -sub- P€Cn reeve for the last four years drunk in a public place ship council since 1951 "There is no evidence he was t th and has served four terms as magistrate said. "He was drunk deputy reeve. {in a hospital." He has| ng | are eliminated by competition from other Could Check | Body Found =. Unemployment = {tions unfair LONDON, Ont CP)~Unem- In Trench be coun- yyment Canada could ecked appointing a three-| TORONTO (CP)--The body of pretty brunette, bound with in by Did You Know... In the main Dining Room of the GENOSHA MOTEL you con have a Full-course Dinner for ONLY 95e. irty commission. with sufficient a Stanley Knowles, Wire and wrapped in a. grey of the Canadian blanket and newspapers, was mgress, sald Monday found Monday by workmen re Mr. Knowles, former deputy Opening a construction trench CCF leader, said in an interview! Insp. William McNeeley, chief here that unless that federal gov-|0f the Metropolitan Toronto po- nment takes such action unem.llice homicide squad, sald the loyment will soar in Canada this body had been taken to the pro- ' "|vincial crime laboratory. The commission Only apparent sign of injury was a trace of blood in one ear Insp. McNeeley said that judg ing from dates of Toronto news. papers found wrapped around the body it could not have been buried before Sept, 156 { Detectives described the |woman as five feet, one Inch tall | Falls Under Train Boy Unhurt oo A KITCHENER (CP)--Two-year.| brown eyes {old Lester Martin, who wan.| All her dered onto the railway track|they said, fy his father's farm, fell as found crambled to safety ahead of! Workman Raymond Slemko, 22, speeding train Monday discovered the body while cutting The engine and two freight a hole through the concrete wall passed over him, |of a three-foot-wide pipe well, was pulled out by train| The trench was filled in two members and found to be weeks ago but reopened to instal only minor cuts and!pipes forgotten in the original work, The trench was eight feet ad apparently fallen flat deep and the body was found be. | ween the rails neath three feet of sandy soil, | Solid Future For Nigeria By ALAN HARVEY Canadian Press Staff Writer |struggles. | LONDON (CP)--Confidence in| The high commissioner sald in-| future of Nigeria was ex-|dependence is not coming as the ed Monday by leaders of Af-|result of any sudden outburst by| rica's most populous territory. |a selected few, It had been care-! "The chaos in the Congo has/fully prepared over a long period no chance of repeating itself in!in close co-operation with Brit. A 1 said Dr, Nnamdi Azi- ain, sustained by tolerance and kiwe, governor « general - desig- goodwill, | the federation. Dr. Azikiwe, widely known as| Arikive was educated in the Zik Kidressed a pre-independ.| United States where he excelled ence luncheon, Nigeria is to be-|35 @ middle - distance runner. come independent Oct. 1 and is|SPeaking to a reporter, he re-| looking forward to taking her | called visits to Toronto and Mont- place as a full and equal member| "al, and cited Canada as an ex. the Commonwealth ample of a nation of two official His confidence in Nigeria's fu-| languages that could be com: shared by Alhaji Abdul. Pared in some way with Nigeria. MANY THANKS For Your Generous Support Of House - To - House Canvass Last Night On Behalf Of ver to act, vice-president La ( DRIVE TO BeauValley TONIGHT nvisaged a { government, on the lines of a created in Sweden vith unemployment, nt ndust g labor| ry body | GOOD FOOD Business Men's Lunch 12 - 2 Daily Air Conditioned DINING ROOM HOTEL LANCASTER were Intact, shoes were clothes d but no m a | | He Crew ring RUG & CARPET SALES Broadloom wall to wall, Rugs, Carpets, Stair Runners. to have sympathy with Nigeria's! Installation by our own mechanics 174 Mary Street of RA 8-4681 FV VN ture was the federation's high com: | missioner in London, who sald! independence 'will mark a turning point in the political his- ory of Africa. A | | | malik | CHALLENGE | I'he disturbing events in Af- rica constitute a challenge not| {only to Africans but also to the| entire civilized world. They are| hallenge to Africa's claim to| maturity to manage its own af- fairs Ii | eria is a country of 372,647 miles, somewhat larger| than British Columbia, and its population of between 35,000,000 and 40,000,000 makes it a nation] of key importance in the emerg-| ing Africa | Addressing some 50 newspaper | men, Azikiwe and Abdulmaliki tressed that Nigeria intends to have independence without tears. | [hey appealed to outsiders to "treat us like human beings' and quare MENTAL ILLNESS arm. He also suffered a/being dispersed throughout wards C. Norman Appleton, chairman Also wounded were Lionel Du-|of the hospital's board of direc ais, 28, shot in the left arm, said Monday conversion 53, with a/plans are under way but no illet wound in the thigh tarting date for the new ap Police said the shooting started proach has been set. a man fired a bullet] There are four zones: Intensive rough the door of a tavern at/care for patients seriously ill, e corner of St. Lawrence Boul-| intermediate care for those less Catherine street, seriously ill, self-service for those able to move about, and a fourth As police searched the crowds|zone for patients expected to be 1an 30 days began from because of chronfe illness or one and Leclerc, ajcomplicated by additional acute was struck by illness tors ard and St 1 mger th rst of shooting ross the street stray Major, bullet the third victim, In the self-service zone, the then emphasis is on home environ- with conventional beds, ar kitchens for those cook their own clothes rather constable. |lounge e later recovered a sawed | Who 22-calibre rifle at the want to scene|meals and eet The C.R.A. is prepared to conduct classes in the fo MILLINERY ART -- Adult POTTERY COPPER TOOLING ALUMINUM ETCHING WOODWORKING LEATHERCRAFT BOX-LOOM WEAVING SQUARE DAN SQUARE DAN ART -- Child BALLET --. C DRAMA -- C JUDO -- Adu JUDO -- Chil CRA. -- RA 5-1 the shooting. than night attire, C.R.A. FALL PROGRAMME sufficient registration. Groups will commence in early October. WEIGHTLIFTING For information and registration call I lowing should there be If for any reason you were CING -- Adult CING -- Children ren's hildren's hildren's Ir dren missed last night your con- tributions may be sent to P.O. BOX 335, OSHAWA The Canadian Mental Health Association 4H 1 Oshawa and Ontario County Branch

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