2 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Tusedey, Apr 2, 1960 GOOD EVENING By JACK GEARIN MISS HALL FOLLOWS BRISK SCHEDULE Miss Aileen Hall, NDP candidate in Ontario riding, push- ed 'her campaign into an old and familar hunting ground this week, one she has not visited since the 1962 campaign. This is the South Plant GM Gates. The hard-working, Scot- tish-born, Edinburgh Uni- versity grad (MA in Eng- lish and Maths) has been too busy elsewhere thus far to get down to the south depot, where the voters pour out by the thousands each day. She turned up there at 6 a.m. Monday and Tuesday and got right down to seri- ous business with the same drive and lady-like deter- mination that has marked her public appearances to date -- she made speeches, answered questions about the campaign and distri- buted Party literature with a AILEEN HALL cheerfulness that is not always the trademark of pol- itical candidates at such an early hour. The 31-year-old Oshawa High School teacher as yet shows no signs of the least fatigue, despite the rigorous grind of coffee parties, public meetings, door-to-door can- vassing and hand-shaking campaigns (all of which is in addition to her regular teaching duties), Miss Hall spoke to two overflow crowds of Party work- \ers last Sunday, the first in the UAW Hall, the second in x NDP committee rooms -- meanwhile, her NDP co- ge rs this week intensified their door-to-door campaign in Oshawa and district. Miss Hall is scheduled this week for a busy round of speaking engagements at places like Bay Ridges, Pickering Beach, West Rouge and Port Perry. She will speak Wed- nesday to UAW pensioners in this area at a special meeting in the UAW Hall on Bond street. One of the highlights of her current campaign. was her appearance in Maple Leaf Gardens, Toronto, last Friday night on the platform with "Tommy" Douglas at the biggest political gathering ever held in Canada. The district NDP campaign will more than likely reach its crescendo next Saturday in a mammoth motor car caval- cade, details of which will be announced later. NOTES FROM THE HUSTINGS OF ONTARIO RIDING: The New Democratic Party is circulating 35,000 copies of the Oshawa Observer, the special political organ published by the NDP for this campaign -- 30,000 will be hand-delivered, the balance mailed throughout the riding. Aileen Hall, NDP riding candidate, is given great promin- ence in this edition, including two front-page stories '"'Our Sad Headless Country" and 'The Scandal of Schools." Miss Hall is also photographed with "Tommy" Douglas ("architect of Medicare and cheaper car insurance"), with a group of local women Party workers, including former Mayor Christine Thomas, and with three-year-old Paul Munroe of Oshawa. Another article on the 32-year-old, Oshawa High Schoo) cher "How to Succeed By Really Trying" recalls that she 827 votes last June in her first fling at politics -- more ny CCF candidate ever received in Ontario riding. LITTLE NOTES FROM HERE AND THERE Rt. Rev. F. H. Wilkinson, Lord Bishop of Toronto Diocese, will be the guest of the Anglican Men's Club of St. Matthew's Church, Wilson road south, at an "appreciation dinner' May 8 to raise funds for the Bishop's use during the forthcoming Anglican Congress in Toronto. Rv. R. A. Sharp is the rec- tor... Unit 42 of the Canadian Corps Association will pre- sent Her Majesty's colors to the cadet corps of the Ontario Regiment at a ceremony Sunday afternoon . . . Mr. and Mrs. John Brady are in Peterborough to celebrate the 50th. wed- ding anniversary of her parents. th VERNE SINGER REPLACES SENATOR CROLL Verne Singer, a member of the Ontario Legislature for York Centre, will be the guest speaker Wednesday night in St. Gregory's Auditorium at a meeting of the Oshawa and District Liberal Association. Mr. Singer, who was a candidate for the leadership of the Provincial Liberal Party in 1958, will replace Senator David Croll who will be unable to attend Wednesday. Mr. Singer was Reeve of the North York Township and a mem- ber of the Metropolitan Toronto Council in 1957-58. He was elected to the Legislature in 1959, "MIKE" STARR THURSDAY SPEAKER HERE Labor Minister Michael Starr will make one of his more important speeches of the week next Thursday at the month- ly dinner-meeting of the City of Oshawa Progressive Con- servative Association in the Hotel Genosha --. Albert V. Wal- ker, PC candidate in the upcoming Provincial election in Oshawa riding, will also be a head-table guest with Mr. Starr. Mr. Starr has been spend- ing much of his time of late out and around the hustings of Ontario riding, where he has garnered such vote- strength in recent years, especially in the farm areas. The PCs, also, are plan- ning to hold their motor cavalcade next Saturday, which will be the closing day of the campaign actual- ly for public demonstrations of this kind, although organ- izers of all parties will be busy on Sunday with last- minute planning for the big vote on Monday. Mr. Starr has spent. more time in Ontario riding this campaign than in any previ- ous campaign, except for the " vg 1952-53. days when "MIKE" i¢ was a comparative poli- es tical unknown; in recent years he has rendered a unique service to the Party as a platform speaker and vote-catcher across the Dominion and has been regarded as '"'one of the better PC salesmen." In such a short campaign, he found it advisable to spend more time in his own riding this year. KAPUSKASING, Ont. (CP)-- A police constable estimated 75 shots were fired in a two-min- ute period of post - midnight darkness last Feb. 11 when hun- dreds of striking bushworkers raided an independent logging camp. The testimony of Const. F. Raymond Ware of the Iroquois Falls provincial police detach- ment was a highlight of 4% hours of a preliminary hearing which began Monday into a charge of non-capital urder against Paul Emile Coulombe, 34, one of 20 independent log- cutting settlers charged in the death of three striking union loggers. Close questioning by both Crown end defence attorneys slowed the pace of testimony, Witness Says 75 Shots Fired In Logging Camp strike Jan, 14, said he knew of 13 cases in which strikers al- legedly molested or threatened phaotndent settlers or non- striking company emplcyses. Answering a question from defence lawyer M. J. Haffey of Toronto, Sgt. Murray said po- lice had witnessed some of the incidents. No charges were laid --_ of lack of evidence, he said. Lawyers involved in the case could recall no precedent in Ca- nadian legal history for the mass murder hearing. The closest was said to be the case arising from the massacre near London, Ont., Feb. 4, 1880, of five members of the James Donnelley family, known as the Black Donnelleys because of their local terrorism. Twelve men were charged with murder in that case but the charges were dropped when one of them, James Carroll, was ac- quitted in his second trial. Besides Coulombe, the men charged--residents of the near-|}™ by communities of Hearst, Val Rita, Mattice, Lac Ste. Therese and Fauquier -- are Florient Boucher, 43, Noel Brochu, 18, Leopold D'Allaire, 47, Mare D'Allaire, 47, Ubald Germaine, 51, Camille Gratton, 49, Joseph remcn 31, Jean Larouche, ancois Larouche, Gilles Mur- ray, 28, Herbert Murray, 25, Lue Nolet, 35, Herve Plamon- don, 59, and his' sons Victorin, 30, and Paul, 19, Amadee Tan- guay, 53, Leon Tremblay, 28, Victor Tremblay, 57, and Ro- land Lacrois, 57. the bulk of which was presented by Det. Sgt. William Murray of Ed provincial police and Const, are, CHARGE IN DEATH Coulombe, the father of six children, is charged. specifically with the death of 26-year-old Fernand Drouin of Opasatika. Drouin and brothers Irenee and Joseph Fortier died when sev- eral hundred strikers stoned a camp at Reesor Siding, 32 miles west of this Northern On- tario lumbering community. Their deaths came while in- dependent settlers were stack- ing wood. despite a boycott by striking loggers against ship- ments to the strikebound Spruce Falls Power and Paper Company here, The strike was Settled Feb. 16, Const. Ware said provincial police had been stationed at Reesor Siding since Feb. after the settlers asked for po- lice protection. He said senior officers had warned that there could be a clash and "trouble was definitely expected." When Const. Ware saw union members massing at a union hall, then moving out in a fleet of some 100 cars, he radioed for help and drove to the siding. There, a doezn armed police, some with billies in their hands, tried to talk the swarms of yell- ing, screaming strikers into turning back. But, the constable testified, "we would have needed an equal number of men unless we used weapons to stop them." "Eventually we couldn't talk, there was so much yelling. All of a sudden there was a loud yell and they surged forward, brushing. us aside." HEARS GUNFIRE When Const. Ware picked himself up from the ground, he heard gunfire but thought at first it was the noise of fire- crackers, The shooting con- tinued for about two minutes and he estimated about 75 shots were fired. Police found a total of 14 weapons at the scene, once the strikers had been pushed away and the names of the settlers taken. They included a pistol, two shotguns, six rifles and five .22-calibre rifles. He said police had no trouble arresting the settlers--17 on the spot, two shortly after and a 20th Feb. 19. Det. Sgt. Murray, explaining a gradual build-up of tension in Kapuskasing and its surround- By HAROLD MORRISON -- WASHINGTON (CP)--Haroid Wilson, leader of Britain's La- bor party, has called for a sum- mit conference of Western pow- ers to expand credit facilities and thus prevent another eco- nomic crisis. At the same time he rejected any suggestion of increasing the official price of gold, now pegged at $35 an ounce. Such an increase, he told the Wa- tional Press Club, "would sim- ply provide an uncovenanted benefit to two countries, South Africa and the Soviet Union, whose benefit should be low in our scale of priorities." If he became prime minister of Britain, a Labor government would be ready to reopen mem- bership talks with the Zuropean Common Market, he said. But he condemned the trade Sloc's restrictive food import policies. The Common Market's agri- cultural policies, he said, in- volve "a degree of interference with established market chan- nels, a degree of rigging of prices and production, if in- ternal self - sufficiency, far transcending the wiidest dreams of any British or Amer- ican secretary of agriculture." Ending talks with President Kennedy, Wilson said also that a Labor government would na- tionalize the steel industry in Britain, "integrate" the trans- portation industry and perhaps "buy ' into the drug industry to discourage huge profiteering. OPPOSE NEUTRALISM Opposed to neutralism, his party would continue to support the North Atlantic Treaty Or- ganization but would want to turn over to the United States the entire responsibility for pro- viding the Western nuclear de- terrent. Britain, he said, should concentrate on increasing NATO's conventional strength. A Labor government would Oppose a separate nuclear de- terrent force for Europe or any nuclear force in which West Germany could play a_ vital part, for this might be highly ings following the start of the provocative to Russia and could WEATHER FORECAST Forecasts issued by the Tor- onto weather office at 4:30 a.m. Synopsis: Unsettled weather with cool temperatures and a mixture of ra#. and snow will continue across Northern On- tario regions today and Wed- nesday, Temperatures in the 60s and 70s persist over south- ern regions. Lake St. Clair, Lake Erie, Lake Huron regions, Windsor, London: Sunny with cloudy in- tervals end continuing very warm today and Wednesday. Winds southerly 20 Wednesday. Lake Ontario, Niagara south- ern Georgian Bay regions, Tor- onto, Hamilton: Considerable fog tonight, partly cloudy and warmer Wednesday. Winds be- coming southerly 20 Wednes- day. Haliburton, Algoma, northem Georgian Bay, Timagami, southern White River regions, North Bay, Sudbury, Sault Ste. Marie: Cloudy with occasional rain and cooler today and Wed- nesday, local fog. Winds east- erly 15. Northern White River, Coch- rane: Overcast with snow or rain Wednesday and moderat- ing temperatures. Winds east- erly 25 to 35 Wednesday. Forecast Temperatures Low tonight, ind ies 78 % 75 vb 70 % HEAT WITH OIL BUILD UNIVERSITY new in United States-Mex-| changed ' ican trendy relations is taking : a but was cut off on the U.S. DIXON'S CITY (Reuters)--A/side when the Rio Grande OIL shape with the annc ment that a continental university will be built on the Chamizal, a controversial portion of land on the American side of the Rio Grande at the border city of El Paso, Tex, El Chamizal originally belonged to Mexico FUEL OIL... PERRY DAY OR NIGHT 723-3443 SERVING OSHAWA OVER 50 YEARS 24-HOUR SERVICE 313 ALBERT ST. 723-4663 Cloudy, Warmer For Wednesday St. Catharines .... 55 Toronto . Peterborough «+... Trenton Killaloe .... oe Muskoka .sevescees North Bay woveoes. Sudbury ..scccccee BHearlton ..ccscecece Kapuskasing «oe... White River ...... MOosonee ..ssevess Mount Forest ..... Sault Ste. Marie .. 4 Timmins .... Observed Temperatures Low overnight, High Monday Dawson wsesescees -20 Victoria sso. Edmonton ... Regina .ccccccece Winnipeg .. Lakehead .. White River ...... Montreal Quebec ... . Halifax ....... OSHAWA"S ORIGINAL. CARPET CENTRE at Nu-Woy, carpet end broad- loom has been a specialty for 18 years . , . with thousands of yards on display to select from, | PHONE 728-4681 NU-WAY RUG CO. LTD. 174 MARY ST. UK. Labor Chief Asks Summit Talk prevent East-West disarma- ment agreements, Wilson said the West Berlin issue should be settled through some 'flexibility' in recogniz- ing the East German Commu- nist regime but any settlement should guarantee political free- dom for West Berliners and free access to the West. A Labor government would seek East-West nuclear free zones in areas of high tensions, perhaps beginning with Africa, then the Middle East, Latin America and Central Europe, he said. But a Labor government would not want to give up over- Seas bases east of Suez. "I believe it to be a mistake to evacuate key bases where we nave the chance to remain. It is 100 times easier for Britain to remain there, even with a token force, than for us, still less the U.S., to seek to enter if trouble breaks out." Wilson would become Brit- ain's prime minister if his party should win the next gen- eral election, due next year at the latest. Service Vote Begins Monday OTTAWA (CP) -- Canadian service men at posts around the world began voting Monday. They will be marking their ballots far from home--at the Kibbutz of Rosh Pina in Israel to sand-drifted Sharm-el-Sheikh on the Gulf of Aqaba to the jungles of The Congo. Members of the armed forces cast their ballots during the week preceding election day, using a variety of polling sta- tions, some stationary, others mobile. To cover Canadian service men in The Congo, a United Nations DC-3 aircraft will be set up as a polling booth and will fly into base camps where the Canadians are stationed. Lt. R. H. L. MacHale of West Vancouver, a deputy returning officer, will cover some 2,700 miles in 60 hours, flying into six detachments in the 115- degree heat and humidity of The Congo interior. In the middle east, polling stations--some of them mobile --are being set up in Palestine, Egypt, Lebanon, Jordan and Israel, Capt. Reid Goulding of Kings- ton, another deputy returning Officer, will travel to Port Said, then to Cairo and tnto Sharm- el-Sheikh overlooking the Red Sea at the southern tip of the Sinai Peninsula, all to collect the votes of Canadians far from their homeland. Servicemen at Canada's NATO bases in Europe will also be voting during the week. GUATAMALA RULER Col. Enrique Peralta Azur- dia, is seen here at his first press conference Sunday shortly after he led a coup d'etat ousting president Mig- uel Ydigoras Fuentes, Peralta said the army ousted Ydigoras. to prevent communist infiltra-, Following is fourth in a series of five articles which look at areas of Canada and how they may react in the federal election April 8, The opinions on individual candi- dates, ridings and areas are the result of an informal poll among politicians, jour- nalists and other informed people in Ottawa, taken three weeks before election day. The "trend ridings" may, on election night as the results come in, help to give some indica- tion of any shifts in Cana- dian political thinking. OTTAWA (Special) -- The three prairie provinces are the|try: private range of the Conserva- tive party and will almost cer- tainly remain so on April 8, Of the 48 seats in Manitoba, Sas- katchewan and Alberta, the Conservatives won 42 of them last June and may do almost as well this time. The appeal of prime minister Diefenbaker, himself a wester- her, plus the boom in wheat sales engineered by the Wheat Board and agriculture minister Alvin Hamilton, are two strong talking points, Almost as tell- ing is that none of the other parties can muster much of a political organization except in 0 leas areas in each prov- ince, sh The popular vote in the three provinces last June gave the Conservatives 589,864 to 318,389 for the Liberals, 212,216 for the tion, Peralta, who had been minister of defense, appears here wearing civilian clothes. He took over all executive and legislative powers in Guate- mala, --AP Wirephoto INTERPRETING THE NEWS New Democrats and 192,909 for Social Credit. MANITOBA -- The Liberals Cuba-Hungary Parallel By HAROLD MORRISON Canadian Press Staff Writer In cracking down on Cuban coastal raids by U.S.-+based ex- iles, President Kennedy argues such raids do more harm than good--that they lead to a tight- ening of the police state inside Cuba and. reprisals against those who oppose Premier Cas- tro. This argument was a familiar ring. Something similar was raised during the 1956 Hunga- rian revolution when the West- ern powers withheld help from the Freedom Fighters, saying Western interference would merely increase Communist re- prisals against the revolution- aries. The Hungarian revolution fol- lowed ringing U.S. declarations that the Communist "captive" states must be set free. That cry somehow has become muf. fled over the years. Hungary and the others are still behind the Iron Curtain. Following the abortive Bay of Pigs Cuban invasion two years ago, Kennedy declared that the rebels should not give up hope; that Cuba one day would be free. That encouraged the hit- and - run raids and increased Havana's uneasiness about the possibility of further invasions. Suddenly last fall, Kennedy found himself confronted by a powerful array of Soviet nu- clear missiles in Cuba. In the negotiations that followed, So- viet Premier Khrushchev with- drew the missiles and bomber: public utterances since '*" viet weapons were withdrawn appear to substantiate Khrush- chev's statements. Kennedy re- Cuba when ' suspicions. made their best showing in this province, winning mna enat nnd being only 40,000 behind the Con- servatives in the popuia, + The Conservatives won 11 seats and the New Democrats 2, Lib: erals are hopeful in Selkirk where Rudy Usick, a farm union leader, is the candidate, and in Winnipeg South and Winnipeg South Centre, The NDP is sure of returning Stanley Knowles and probably David Orlikow, who had a 4,000 edge over his Liberal opponent. Defence min- ister Churchill, whose margin dropped to 2,200 in June, is in the political fight of his life. Seen But in fact all of Kennedy's an fused to bow to Republican de- mands for reimposition of a Caribbean 'quarantine against it was disclosed that Russia still had thousands of troops on that island. Ken- nedy said a blockade would be grounds for war. He now has restricted the exile raiders fol- lowing Soviet complainis that a seats, Only survivor, SASKATCHEWAN -- This is solid Diefenbaker country and the Tories won 16 of the 17 Liberal Prairies Always Tory Territory ble and could lose to Conserva- tive Lawrence Watson who lost in June by only 353 votes. Agri- culture minister Hamilton would dearly like to see Liberal farm critic Argue defeated and has planned to spend more time pe-+ sonally in Assiniboia to help bring this about. Saskatoon re- presents the other big struggle with popular, well-re: mayor Sid Buckwold trying to overcome a 15,499 majority tacked up by Conservative Harry Jones, Indications are - that the task may be just a bit too much for Mr, Buckwold. ALBERTA -- Another Harry Hayes of Calgary, to eee to the Liberals and is rated a better than even chance of winni: ary South since the three-time Conservative win- ner Arthur Smith has retired, he|Alberta returned 15 Conser- vatives and two Social Credit and was the second province without Liberal representation in the last parliament, P.E,I. being the other, Prerena! s--s. larity of Social Credit leader Robert Thompson may hep 10 add two or three seats for his party, but statements by Real Caouette, the deputy leader, are hurting the party through- out the west. : TREND RIDINGS Provencher in Manitoba has been held since 1957 by Warner Jorgenson, an agricultural par- liamentary secretary in the last house. His 3,000 edge of 1958 was reduced to 924 in June by Liberal Stan C, Roberts who is trying again. The Battlefords in Saskatche- wan find Conservative Albert Horner facing a tougher Liber- {al opponent in former mayor Jim Maher. But the better than 6,000 Horner majority of 1962 should stand up. Edmonton East has Conserva- tive William Skorekyo in & tough fight with Social Credit and Liberal opponents. His mar- gin in June was 1,600 over So- cial Credit and 2,500 over the Liberal candidates, CONSENSUS A group of political observers here see this possible result in the 48 prairie seats on April 8, with 1962 figures in brackets: Conservative $7 (42), Liberal § (2), New Democrats 2 (2), So- cial Credit 4 (2). Hazen Argue, is in serious trou- Tomorrow -- Spotlight on BC. Russian ship was crippled in a Cuban harbor. At the time of the Cuban crisis last fall, Khrushchev pro- posed that the U.S. withdraw Jupiter missiles from Turkey and Italy. Kennedy rejected this demand. But in a recent move that aroused suspicion among his critics at home and abroad, Kennedy ordered dis- mantling of the Jupiters, say- ing they are obsolete and the area would be better served by Polaris submarines patrolling the Mediterranean. In French military quarters, the view is held that Kennedy and Khrushchev reached some secret understanding on nu- clear disengagement in sensi- tive European and Caribbean areas, The speed with which Ken: nedy is removing the European Jupiters and the crackds | against the Cuban exiles could perhaps add weight to these Program halt it. suit. saying Kennedy had agreed not|f to invade Cuba in the future. Kennedy said he had never made such a promise because Castro had refused to allow on- site inspection to make sure all the offensive weapons were re- moved. @ Commercicl. and Industrial Sites @ Leaseback @ Development Paul Ristow REALTOR 52% Simeoe N. 728-9474 Illinois. His Superior Court suit said public policy defined by the ~~ islature is to uphid and is based upon the preservation and the strengthening of the family unit. The suit stated that commis- sion designations to make birth control devices available to "women with spouses" and to "women with children" are eu- phemisms for married and un- married women, TO CUT AID COSTS The controversial public aid WE LES ONLY TO ye 3 SELL Or SPOT CASH (' OR TERMS "JOHN A. J. BOLAHOO REAL ESTATE -- MORTGAGES 725-6544 program was undertaken to cut Modernize and Improve your Home Now... with a new oil furnace LANDER-STARK HOME HEATING ; SERVICE Our residential fuel oll customers now receive - all in the price of oil -- a Furnace Cleanout and Tune-up once each year. In addition, we will con- tinue, as we have done for many years, to pro- vide Emergency Service at no additional cost. Our own Service Dept. is on call 24 hours every day and is Radio Control- led for fast, efficient service, Oo. 43 KING STREET WEST, OSHAWA .............. PHONE 725-3581 Yes, now that Spring is very good time to modernize your home .. . keep its value up to date, If you have an old or obsolete heating unit, let us install a new modern Oil Furnace in your home. We have a number of choice and a very convenient 5-Year Purchase Plan. Call 725-3581 and let us give you a Free heating survey and a quotation . . » now. Ve the costs of aid to dependent children, The Illinois public aid com- mission began mailing informa- CHICAGO (AP) -- Illinois public aid officials started a birth control assistance pro- gram Monday and the Repub- lican candidate for mayor in today's Chicago election sued to A few hours after relief of- ficials began accepting applica- ions from mothers for birth con- tro] aid, Benjamin Adamowski, opponent of Mayor Richard J. Daley, Democrat, brought his Adamowski alleged that the Mlinois public aid commission, the relief agency, through its aid to unmarried women, was using public funds to subvert the public policy of the state of Birth Control Aid Started reliefers, Arnold H. Maremont, IPAC © chairman, said he hopes that 12,000 among the 56,000 womsn relief recipients would take ad- vantage of the commission's new family planning help setup. The commission's policy on birth control provided for infor- mation and drugs or supplies for any recipient requesting help who has a spouse or child, This includes unmarried as well as married mothers. Relief Officials say a large percentage of children for whom direct re- lief funds are provided are il- legitimate. Roman Catholic opponents of the IPAC birth control policy say that it amounts to a state subsidy for adultery and prosti- tution. Bills are pending in the Iill- nois legislature which would re- strict welfare birth control age sistance to women living with their husbands, a step which, Maremont says, would kill ef- fectiveness of the program. FEATURE CANALS STOKE BRUERNE, England (CP)--A museum featuring the history of British canals is to be set up in this Northampton- shire village. Exhibits will in- clude, the Northwich, believed the oldest canal barge in exist- tion and materials packets to! ence, COMING EVENTS FERNHILL Bingo tonight, Avaion, 7.30. 20 games $6 and $10, Seven $40 jack- pots. Door prizes. RUMMAGE Sale Wednesday, April 3, 1.30 p.m, Simcoe Hail. Articles of excel- lent quality, Clean and reasonable. KINSMEN_ BINGO TUESDAY, 8 O'CLOCK FREE ADMISSION EXTRA BUSES Jackpot Nos. 50-56 EARLY BIRD GAMES KINSMEN COMMUNITY CENTRE 109 COLBORNE ST. W. EUCHRE PARTY WOODVIEW COMMUNITY CENTRE Cadilloc Avenue North here -- it's a models for your THE OPPORTUNITY for a business of your own is in the section to day, Check it U.A. W. RETIREES IMPORTANT REPORTS WED., APRIL 3 at 2.P.M, UNION HALL BOND STREET EAST Picnic arrangements. Must be finalized - with good attendance, LIONS EXTRA BUSES -- WEDNESDAY, APRIL 3 JUBILEE PAVILI 20 -- $20 GAMES -- 20 5 -- $30 GAMES -- 5 1 -- $150 JACKPOT -- 1 2 -- $250 JACKPOTS -- 2 JACKPOT NOS. 51-52 BINGO rd, 8:00 P.M. ON FREE ADMISSION EARLY BIRD GAMES $1200 IN CASH PRIZES AVAILABLE Children Under 16 Not Admitted some. 5,000 physicians who treat ...