OBITUARIES ROBERT JAMES CORDICK The death occurred at the Oshawa General Hospital today of Robert James Cordick. He was in his 69th year. Surviving are his wife, he| former Gladys Paul, and two daughters, Mrs. L. K. Williams Phyllis) of Toronto, and Mrs. Ag Highfield (Helen) of Sar- / The remains are resting at the Armstrong Funeral Home. JAMES MURPHY After being in poor health for the past three years, the death occurred at the Toronto Gener- al Hospital, Friday, July 28, of James Murphy. He was in his year. Surviving are his wife, the former Annie Hunter Taylor, and a sister, Mrs. Edward Harrison of Oshawa. The deceased formerly work- ed for W. B. Bennett Paving! Ld, and GM. The remains are resing at the Armstrong Funeral Home for High Requiem Mass in Holy Cross Church, Monday, July U.S. Plots Aggression Cuba Claims | HAVANA (AP)--Cuba accused the United States today of plot- ting "imminent military aggres- sion." The charge was made in a note to the United Nations. The foreign ministry said in its note that the "imperialist government of the United States" plans to justify military aggression because of Cuba failure to surrender a hijacked Eastern Air Line plane. The airliner was forced to} land in Havana by a Cuban who held a pistol on the pilot of the| Miami-to-Tampa flight. | The Cuban note said the -air-| liner now is under a court em- bargo requested by '"'an inter ested party." It noted that in| the last 10 months 10 Cuban| planes have been seized in the| United States and sold at auc-| 31, at 9 a.m. Monsignor P. Cof- fey will sing the mass. Inter- ment will follow in St. Greg- ory's Cemetery. FUNERAL OF MRS. VIOLET DOUGLAS The funeral of Mrs. Violet Douglas, who died at the Osh- awa General Hospital on Wed- nesday, July 26, in her T7ist year, was held from the Arm- strong Funeral Home, Friday, July 28, a 3.15 p.m. Services| were taken by Major M. Rankin |g of the Salvation Army. Inter- ment followed in Oshawa Union Cemetery. Pallbearers were: Douglas Mclndless, Maurice McIndless, (k Harold McIndless, Donald Mec-|§ Indless, Kenneth Clement and : Harold Rrowr FUNERAL OF MRS. DOUGLAS SHACKLETON The funeral of Mrs. Douglas J. Shackelton, who died at the Oshawa General Hospital July 26, in her 36th year, was held from the Armstrong Funeral Home Friday, July 28 at 2 p.m. Srvices were taken by the Rev. W. G. Dickson of Centre Street United Church. Interment fol- lowed in Mount Lawn Ceme- tery. Pallbearers were: A. Prout, H. Keenan, M. Kain, S. Rus- sell, W. Hall and I. Welsh. | Search Cellars | Grocers Urged EAST BERLIN (Reuters)--| East German grocers were asked to search their cellars for| extra food today. Neues Deutschland, East Ger- many's main Communist news- paper, said searches of grocery- store cellars would lead to dis- {covery of many things "that are|p not found on any inventory" and| "many gaps in the supply of | goods could be way." The appeal came amid con-| tinuing reports of East German| food shortages, a rising flow of| refugees to West Berlin and demonstrations of discontent similar to those which preceded the country's 1953 anti-Commu-| nist uprising. | | | COMING EVENTS | BINGO UAW.A. HALL SATURDAY, JULY 29 | g 7:30 P.M. 20 GAMES $10 A GAME 4 GAMES OF $20, $30 $40, $50 JACKPOTS ONE GAME $150 SHARE THE WEALTH OSHAWA TIMES WANT ADS obkd MOST ANYTHING| KINSMEN BINGO 20-$20 GAMES $150 Jackpot $20 each line plus $50 Ful 5.__$30 Games; 2 JACKPOT NUMBERS 54 and 50 TEAM 2 JUBILEE PAVILION FREE ADMISSION--TUESDAY, AUG. Ist Children under 16 not admitted | Card --$250 Jackpots BINGO EVERY MONDAY, 8 P.M. | ST. GERTRUDE'S AUDITORIUM 690 KING ST. E 55 NUMBERS $100.00 JACKPOT CONSOLATION $20 20 GAMES -- 16 PRIZES OF $10 1 EACH OF $20, SHARE THE WEALTH JACKPOT $140. CONSOLATION $20, $10 EACH HORIZONTAL LINE. ADMISSION CARDS 50 CENTS GOOD PARKING -- EXTRA BUS SERVICE SNOWBALL CHILDREN: UNDER . AT FAREWELL | $30, $40, $50 IN 56 NUMBERS, 16 NOT ADMITTED WHITBY BRASS CLUB BAYVIEW, BYRON SOUTH, WHITBY Wednesday, Aug Bus Leaves Oshawe Te SPECIAL GAME OF $200 (Must Go) $20 each horizontal line--$100 a full card $25 ADDED EACH WEE IF WON IN 5 Church Bus leaves 4 5 GAMES AT $30 -- TWO $250 JACKPOT GAMES 1st--No. 52; 2nd--No. 54; $30 Consolation $1.00 ADMISSION INCLUDES ONE CARD Door Prizes--Proceeds go to Building Fund BAND, BINGO ust 2nd, 8 p.m. rminal -- 25¢ Return K, NOW WORTH $125 1 NUMBERS corners 7:30 p.m. 20 GAMES AT $20 WOODVIEW COMMUNITY CENTRE SUPER ONDAY $100.00 DOOR PRIZES Jackpot Nos, 56-59 2--$500 JACKPOTS IF WON IN 52 NOS. OR LESS (IF NOT THEN GAME IS REGULAR $250 JACKPOT) (NOS. 56-59)-- (Consolation $25) 1--$300 JACKPOT IF WON IN 52 NOS. OR LES! 20 GAMES AT $40 IF WON IN 17 NOS. OR 5 GAMES AT $30 "THE RED BARN EXTRA BUSES -- ADMISSION $1.00 ADMISSION TICKET GIVES YQU PREE CHANCE ON DOOR PRIZES BINCO , JULY 31 S ($150 Consolation, Must Go) LESS ($20 Consolation) NEW" gusty in thunderstorms. patches tonight. Mainly cloudy. Showers and thunderstorms be- ginning this afternoon. Winds variable 10 to 15 knots, {tigate the city's methods of han- PARTLY CLOUDY, WARM AND HUMID WEATHER FORECAST Hot And Cloudy Again Sunday Official forecast issued in Tor- onto at 5 a.m. EDT: Synopsis: Little change | temperature is expected for southern Ontario for Sunday, but a large mass of cooler air which now covers the prairie provinces and extreme North- western Ontario will bring cooler weather to the northern and central regions by Sunday morning. | Lake Erie, Lake Huron, Nia- ara, Lake Ontario, Georgian] ay, Haliburton regions, Wind-| or, London, Hamilton, Toronto, Partly | S North Bay, Sudbury: tered showers and thundershow- ers during the afternoon and evening of both days. Continu- ing warm. Winds light, except gusty in thundershowers. Algoma, southern White River, | Sault Ste. Marie, Timagami re-| Sunday. Occasional showers and | thundershowers beginning this |afternoon except gusty in thun-| temperatures: dershowers, becoming northerly 15 to 20 Sunday. | Northern White River, Coch-| rane regions: Partly cloudy to-| day and Sunday. Scattered Regina showers and thundershowers| ing cooler tonight. Winds west- erly 15, gusty in thundershow-| ers, shifting tonight to northerly 15 to 20. Marine forcasts: Lake Huron, Georgian Bay: Winds variable 10 to 15 knots, Fog Lake Erie, Lake Ontario: {| Electric and chancellor of the Machine Is Unique Modern-day Benjamin Frank- lins ai Ontario Hydro are do- ing something new with light- gusty in thunderstorms. Fog patches tonight. Mainly cloudy thunderstorms. Forecast temperatures Low tonight and high Sunday Windsor ...eees.. 68 85 St. Thomas «eceae 85 London ... 85 Kitchener ....... 85 Wingham ..... Hamilton St. Catharines ... Toronto Peterborough .... Trenton .eceeees closed in this|qo,4y today and Sunday. Scat-|Killaloe .... Muskoka . North Bay .. Sudbury ...cceeee Earlton . Kapuskasing White River ..... Moosonee ... |gions: Partly cloudy today and/S.S. Marie ...... 60 TORONTO (CP) -- Observed Min. Dawson Victoria Edmonton . Winnipeg ending tonight. Warm, becom-|Fort William ..... White River . S.S. Marie . Kapuskasing .eeeee North Bay sccecece Sudbury ..ececcees Muskoka .eseseees Windsor seceecesse London ....eeeeeee 6 TOronto .eeecesccss 7 Ottawa . Montreal Quebec ...s0 Halifax .e.ecesnces CAPSULE NEWS Machine Takes Life Of Child FORT WILLIAM (CP)--Ron-, ald Boyd, 3, was drowned Fri-| day when he fell into a wash-| ing machine in his home. | JUMP PARALYZES TORONTO (CP) -- Sheila 0O'Boyle, 14, jumped into about] four feet of water in a swim-| ming pool Friday, hit bottom with her heels and was para- lyzed from the waist down. Doc- tors said she suffered no frac- tures. ORDERS PROBE BARRIE (CP) -- Mayor Wil- lard Kinzie Friday ordered City Manager Walter Giggs to inves- dling tenders on its contracts. He said the investigation was prompted by complaints from| suppliers who lost city tenders. AIRMAN COMMENDED OTTAWA (CP)--L. Cpl. Ken- neth Barrett, 22; of Toronto and London, Ont., has been awarded the Queen's commendation for saving the life of a fellow para- trooper, the defence department | announced Friday. A member of | the Royal Canadian Regiment, L. Cpl. Barrett grabbed the un- opened parachute of Sgt. Joseph Lanzrath, of London, Ont., and carried him to the ground on his own parachute, April 19 at Crumlin airfield near London. Both had jumped during a para- chute training exercise. PREDICTS RECORD TORONTO (CP) -- Assistant Registrar F. C. Passy of the University of Toronto Friday predicted a record enrolment of 16,000 students at the University, Canada's largest, this Septem- ber. He said 5,285 applications have been received so far. FIRES DEVIATES WASHINGTON (AP) -- Re- presentative Francis E. Walter (Dem. Pa.) said Friday the United States National Security Agency has fired 26 sex devi- ates as security risks since two of its code clerks defected to Russia last summer. CAN ATTEND MONTREAL (CP) --Children under 16 Friday were allowed to attend movies in Quebec with- out adult company for the first time since 1928. A new provin-| cial law permits anyone 10 or older to see films approved for WILL BUY CATTLE LETHBRIDGE (CP) -- Be: tween $50,000 and $150,000 worth of southern Alberta cattle will be purchased by the five -man Romanian delegation which has been visiting this area, a spokesman said Friday. Carl Anderson, manager of the east- ern irrigation district at Brooks, said the group led by Alexandru Mogghioros will purchase like amounts of cattle in southern Alberta for each of the next five years. NUNS ARE DROWNED DANVILLE, Vt. (AP) -- Two Roman Catholic nuns drowned Friday when a small boat in which they were riding with four other persons capsized and sank in Joe's Pond. Dead are Sister St. Joseph, 69, of Mont- real, and Sister St. Pauline, 57, a teacher at Mount St. Joseph's School, St, Johnsbury, Vt. The others were rescued. JESUITS CELEBRATE QUEBEC (CP) Celebra tions commemorating the arri- val of the first Jesuit mission- ary in Canada 350 years ago are to be held this weekend at La Vieille Maison des Jesuites (The Jesuits' Old House) in suburban Sillery. Father Ennemond Masse landed at Port Royal, one of the first French seitle- ments in North America, May 22, 1611. NO FIG LEAVES? JAKARTA (Reuters) A new religious sect -- whose female followers pray together naked -- was reported in In- donesia Friday. Military author- ities said the sect started in northern Sumatra. GET SIX MONTHS PORT ELIZABETH (AP)--A South African businessman and a Negro girl have been sen- tenced to six months in jail un- der South Africa's Immorality Act. The businessman, Cornel- ius Roelofse, 39, and Corneilia Gueda, 22, were found guilty tions in a hotel room. GAGARIN INVITED GENOA (AP)--Soviet space- man Yuri Gagarin has been in- vited to celebrations here honor- ling Christopher Columbus. A feature of this year's October fete will be awards for pioneers children by the provincial cen- sorship board. in communications and Gagarin is te win ene. Friday of having sexual rela-|P |ning bolts -- counting them. | And like Franklin with his |kite, there's method behind in| with occasional showers and 'their apparent madness. Researchers at Hydro ex- plain that lightning counts pro- |v.ue information for new and better designs of protective equipment for the province's power grid. It's one of the many roads Hydro's research takes in its quest to advance service to customers. y Their work isn't exactly new. With the aid of electronics they |have been counting lightning | strokes since 1952 -- and their |progress has roused wide in- terest in this exclusive field. | Last fall, Hydro scientists de- | veloped something new: an inex- pensive, portable model of |the photo-sensitive stroke coun-| [ter they have used for the last eight years. It's operated by | = 4 |transistors and batteries. | The new counter is capable of counting strokes to earth _ |within a 10-mile radius and of | monitoring atmospheric dis-| charges that occur within 100 miles. Hydro's experience indi- cates that, on average, about five strokes to ground occur in the Toronto area per square mile per year. The machine caught the at- tention of Professor S. A. Pren- tice, Head of the Department of Electrical Engineering at the University of Queensland, Bris- bane, Australia, when he visit- ed Hydro a few years ago. Hydro sent its electronic-age counter to Brisbane, one of the few lightning observatories in |the world, for tests last winter. | {Hans Linck of Hydro's Re-| | search Division has received re- ports that "its performance locks nretty good". The Univer- sity of Queensland will keep the machine until next spring, when it will be returned to Canada for a dose of Ontario lightning. NEW LIFT FOR LAZY SWIMMERS A new gadget -- Mermaid Lift -- helps lazy swimmers hoist themselves out of the B.C. Mourns Death Of Dal Grauer VANCOUVER (CP) -- A. E. side cemetery overlooking the city where he spent the best years of his life. Mr .Grauer, chairman of B.C. University of British Columbia, died Friday of leukemia. Premier W. A. C. Bennett and leaders of academic and busi- ness life have paid tribute to the 55-year-old scholar, lawyer and businessman. "This is a terribly sad day for British Columbia," Mr, Ben- nett said. "In Dal Grauer all +-- qualities which combine to produce true greatness were spent and he used all of them unsparingly in the service of his fellow citizens." Mr. Grauer, born of immi- grant German parents on a farm in the Vancouver suburb of Eburne, graduated in arts from UB.C. and in jurisprud- ence, as a Rhodes Scholar, from Oxford. He won a doctorate of philosophy in economics at the University of British Columbia. He was a member of Canada's crosse team at the 1931 olym- pics. After several years as a pro- fessor at the University of Tor- onto, he returned here in 1939 to be secretary of B.C. Electric. He later became president of the huge utility, a post he held until last with the post of chairman. Blood Clinic Is Planned Plans for the August Red Cross Blood Donor Clinic were announced today by Mr. Rob- December together| § ert H. Stroud, a vice-president of the Oshawa Branch of the So-| ciety and chairman of its blood donor clinic service. | The clinic will be held on Thursday, Aug. 3, at St. Greg- ory's Auditorium on Simcoe street north between the hours of 1.30 - 4.00 and from 6.00 - 9.00 p.m. Mr. Stroud revealed. According to Mr. Fred Roberts president of the Oshawa Branch of the Canadian Red Cross So- ciety there is a serious shortage of blood at the central blood | ank aggravated by the sum- mer holidays taking many do- nors out of the city and the] steadily mounting toll of acci-| dents. Volunteer workers for the Clinic are stepping up their ef-| forts in an all-out drive over| the next few days to recruit sufficient donors for the Thurs- day Clinic. With the coming Civie Holiday week-end expect- ed to force demands for blood even higher in area hospitals the need for hundreds of vol- unteer donors is great if Osh- awa is to reach its minimum goal of 400 pints of blood on Thursday. According to Red Cross offi cials anyone between the ages of 18 and 65 who is in good health and has not suffered re- cently from jaundice or malaria can feel free to give blood safe- ly. The number to call for an| appointment that will save a donor a lot of time and delay at the Clinic is 723-2933. pooi. By simply stepping on the lift, they are pulled up to poolside. The lift then submerges automatically, ready for the next 'paddler. And you'll be in the swim, too, when you do what so many other progressive businessmen are doing. Use a daily Oshawa Times Clas- sifieu Ad to reach your best prospects. It's the smart, modern way to increase your profit. Dial 723-3492 to- day for an experienced Ac- count Representative who will explain the low com- mercial rates. Ask To Cut Foreign Car Competition TORONTO (CP) -- Mayors and civic officials of six key On- tario car manufacturing centres agreed Friday to urge the gov- ernment to adopt measures to reduce foreign automobile com- petition. Representatives of Windsor, Hamilton, St. Catharines, Osh- awa, Oakville and Trafalgar meeting here recommended im- mediate implementation of two proposals of the Bladen Royal Commission on the automobile industry. The group felt a sales tax on imported cars, based on the price paid to the retailer as sug- CITY AND DISTRICT SEVEN-DAY TERM Ross M. Keeler, of Allan street, Port Perry, was sent to jail for seven days and had his licence suspended for six months, after being found guilty of drunk driving in Magis- trate's Court Friday. Keeler pleaded guilty to the charge. NO ACCIDENTS The Oshawa Police Depart: ment reported today that in the period from noon Friday until 8 a.m. today, no accidents or break-ins were repored to the department. QUIET PERIOD No fires, or alarms 'were re- ported in fire-prone Oshawa dur- ing the past 24 hours. In the period from 9 a.m. Friday until 9 a.m. today, the Oshawa Fire Department ambulance went out on three routine calls. "Bill" Smith Passes Course Manager Bill Smith of the Oshawa Children's Arena, re- ceived word today that he had passed a five year university course in Arena Management, held at the Ontario Agricultural College, Guelph. The course was set up to qual- ify arena managers for a ipl in arena management gested in the com report, would bring taxes more in line with those on domestic cars. Also endorsed was Prof. Blad- en's recommendation that the customs regulation "Common- wealth content" clause be dropped to discourage UK. manufacturers from assembling cars in Canada with British arts. "The auto industry is in a life- and-death struggle," said Wind- sor alderman William Riggs, "We have to keep pushing Ot- tawa or else the Royal Com- mission report will be shelved." The government recently im- plemented -a Bladen recom- mendation removing the 7%3 per cent ise tax on domestic ©al five years ago; this year 14 managers qualified to write the final examinations. Some 85 arena managers are taking the course. Mr. Smith was one of the 14 who qualified to write the final examinations in Ontario. The Arena Management Course has been held over the past five years and subjects in- cluded Accounting, Business Ad- ministraion, Promotion, Public Relations, Refrigeration, and various Acts of Legislation covering arena operation such as the Hospital Tax Act, Depart- ment of Labor Acts, Commun- ity Centres Act, and the various Acts covering Recreation and Connie Maxwell, 7, of Ux- bridge displays what appears to be two tomatoes, but is ac- tually only one. She is the daughter of Bert Maxwell, the professional wrestling referee, who grew the tomato in his WHAT A TOMATO! Seturdey, July 29, 1961 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Production Cut' By Changeover 'TORONTO (CP). -- Canadian motor - vehicle production this - week is esitmated at 2,444 com- pared with 3,405 last week, says the Canadian Automobile Cham. - ber of Commerce. The low production figures the last few weeks are attrib- uted to the model changeover period. With the exception of American Motors, International Harvester and Ford, none of the companies were producing this week. Production this week consisted of 2,197 cars compared with 12,714 last week and 247 trucks compared with 691. Production this year to date compared with ,240 in the corresponding period last year --made up of 202,265 cars com- pared with 227,902 and 41,854 compared with 50,338. Car output by companies this week and this year to date, with figures for last week and the . corresponding period last year in brackets, was: American Motors 147 (180), 4,168 (nil); Chrysler nil (nil), 27,701 (31,471); Ford 2,050 (2,- 534), 62,288 (66,795); General Motors nil (nil); 104,815 (125,- 790); Studebaker-Packard (nil), 3,293 (3,666). DIVIDENDS By THE CANADIAN PRESS Canadian Fairbanks - Morse Company, Ltd, Class A 17% cents, Class B 15 cents, Sept. 1, record Aug. 11. Standard Brands Incorporated common 45 cents, Sept. 15, rec- ord. RING EXPERIENCE Comedian Bob Hope was in- terested in boxing as a youth and fought a few bouts under the name of Packy East. garden. It weighs 2 pounds, 3 ounces and is 1814 inches in circumference. It is 6 inches wide. On the same stem were two tomatoes weighing ap- proximately one - half poun each, --Oshawa Times Photo FIGHT HIGH COSTS! Jha Joost views 4nd deveiopancs nts Pp d an planning. Be prepared. Write for free lon to . By CARL HARTMAN BERLIN (AP)--Thousands of people flee from Communist East Germany every week, but a couple of hundred also leave the West in the hope of finding gre'ner pastures under Red rule, The number who deliberately choose communism is small and apparently declining. Mostly they are people with little inter- est in politics. A peak -- about 50,000 -- was reach in 1959, when life seemed to be improving under Com- munist rule. That was the year the flow to the West from the Communist East hit a 10-year low of 143,000. The immensely larger number who leave the Communist area takes on more meaning when you remember that there are ionly a third as many people in the Communist zone as in the West German Federal Republic. Leaving Communist rule with- out official permission is a {punishable offence called "flight| from the republic." Those who! 'Not Many Move To E. Germany 80, go secretly for fear of being caught and at least turned back. They do not risk taking much baggage. What they leave be- hind is confiscated. CAN TAKE ANYTHING Anyone quitting West Ger- many can take what he likes with him, send what he likes. He can sell what he doesn't want and convert the proceeds into Communist East German cur- rency at a favorable rate. Communist camp officials say they get many deserters from the West German Army and young men who want to avoid conscription, Military service is not compulsory under the Ger- man Communists. People in West Germany at- tach little importance to the small movement to the East. "When a jackass is enjoying life too much, he goes dancing on the ice," says a German proverb. West German author- ities say a large proportion of those who go to the East change their minds and come back. Some ne'er - do - wells have crossed several times. 3-Day Trip Is Enjoyed UXBRIDGE -- The Ontario County Farm Safety Council sponsored a three-day trip -- July 19 to 21 -- to Ottawa, and the St. Lawrence River area, for the four winners to the Farm Safety Poster Contest, which was held in the County. The winners were: Barbara Rose RR 2, Oshawa; Barbara McQuarrie, RR 3, Oshawa; Charles Yake, Goodwaad; Da- vid Gould, RR 2, Uxbridge. The party travelled by car to Ottawa. The first evening a tour of the city was made, in- cluding the parliament build- ings, the peace tower, and the grounds of the Governor Gen- eral's home. The following morning, along with thousands of sight-seers on parliament hill, a changing of the guard was viewed, followed by a tour of the public archives, and the war museum. A very cordial RCMP officer conduct: ed the party through the horse barns at the RCMP barracks to view the 70 mounts, includ- ing the musical ride horses, in their spick and polish surround- ings. The afternoon program in- cluded a visit to the Royal Mint, where coppers and fifty-cent pieces were being made at the time of our visit. The remainder of the trip was to Morrisburg on the St. Lawrence, to Upper Canada Pioneer village, and the control dam and locks at Iroquois. It was interesting to see, and hear of the transformation which took place along the river when the seaway came through. At Kingston Old Fort Henry occupied most of a morning, touring the various furnished quarters and museums, and watching the changing of the guard and the firing of the can- non. The high limestone walls of Kingston and Collins Bay igrants received under the Acts. penitentiaries stood out. forlorn against the morning sky, as the party journeyed west from Kingston, past the Trenton Air Force base to the general foods plant at Cobourg, where a tour of the plant revealed how me- chanization mixes and pack- ages our instant puddings and drinks. A package of samples from the general foods plant put the finishing touches to a very in teresting and educational three day tour. Abbeyvale BOX 131 Oshawa Times IF YOU DON'T DRINK + « » pay less for your auto insurance! Insure with ABSTAINERS INSURANCE COMPANY, the one insurance company in Canada that issues policies enly to mon-drinkers. | We will be glad te give yeu full information, without ob- | ligation, | JOHN RIEGER INSURANCE AGENCY TOOLEY'S RD. NORTH R.R. 3, BOWMANVILLE PHONE 728-3341 Representing the Abstainers' Insurance COMPANY 24 Poel St, Box 444, Simcoe, Ontarle "immediate services of established tnd 4 t ble to Canada or the US.A. a SHOP & SAVE ON BUEHLER'S 12 KING STREET EAST THESE SPECIALS at PHONE 723-3633 On Sale Mon. & Tues. Only! BOLOGNA BY. LEAN, BONELESS STEWING BEEF . 59° MEATY CHICKEN WINGS 7 $1 D CUTS 4 --- $1 -THE-PIECE UY FREE!" MEAT FOR $1.00 GET 5 LBS. FREE! S-LB. SAUSAGE ¢