ile ni lt PM aM eS A smiling President Johnson shakes hands with some of the hundreds who lined a fence at JOHNSON GREETED the airport in Palm Springs, Calif., Thursday to greet him upon his arrival for a two-day PENSION PLAN HASSLE AT PALM BEACH ¥ Cass Pledges To Hike Consumer Protection {By Commons TORONTO (CP) -- Attorney-|no action on a union request for|forts in maintaining immuniza-'MP's bill promoting birth con- General Fred Cass said Thurs-ja Royal Commission -into ajtion," said Mr, Dymond. _ |trol was introduced in the Com- day there is no question in his|strike in which three bushwork-) However, Stephen Lewis) mons Thursday, In the bill, Rob- mind that the Ontario govern-jers were shot dead near Kap-\(NDP -- Scarborough West)lert Prittie (ND P-- Burnaby- ment must provide a means ofjuskasing, Ont., last year, until/told the health minister that the/Richmond) seeks to have de- d with c com-|criminal court appeals in the/area_ of human health in On- leted that portion of the Crim- icase have ended. tario is "an administrative /inal Code which makes it an Mr, Cass said the government) Local 2995 of the Lumber and|shambles. ete offence to sell or advertise any is indtiring into a consumer|Sawmill Workers Union (CLC),| Mr. Lewis criticized the 80V- y-1h control information or de- protection law in England that|of which the three workers werejernment for failing to act on vice, gives buyers four days to with-/members, asked for the inves-|the 'staggering deficit" in hos) yy. ia in bh slatement out: draw from purchase contracts,|tigation Wednesdy. jpital beds, the shortage Of) ide the Commons that the per- He said he had not yet de-/ Mr, Robarts said he under-/nurses, and the fuzzy relation-| ont section of the code is an cided wheher such a plan--sug-jstand appeals by the attorney-|ship between the Ontario HOS: Warranted interference in the gested to the government by/generai's department of fines of pital Services Commission and} rivate and 'phiedsel alteles oF Fred Young (NDP -- York-!$100 each imposed on three bush | individual hospital boards. lindividuals view) a few weeks ago--would|workers for possessing offen- James Trotter (L--Parkdale) | : be timely for Ontario. sive weapons will be disposed|also rapped the government for "IT am personally interested injof next month, The government|doing nothing' to keep nurses this approach," said Mr. Cass.|will decide then what action to/from leaving Ontario for the "We're waiting hopefully to see take. United States. One of the main if it does work." - Health Minister Dymond told) reasons for this is that they are In outlining the English plan /the Legislature Thursday no underpaid, he said. | Birth Control Bill Studied By. Commons ling rs' plaints. The question of a Common- wealth prime ministers' confer- ence this year was discussed informally with Sir Alec Doug- las-Home on his recent visit, Prime Minister Pearson said in to the house, Mr. Young said/deaths from polio have been re- A serious crisis within the|the Commons Thursday. But the many consumers are given|ported in Ontario for three|nursing profession was pre-jinformal discussions came to no high-pressure sales pitches and/years, No cases of paralytic|dicted by Mr. Lewis. Their re-|decision and this would be a isign the dotted line only toe re-| polio have been reported in the} quests were being ignored by|matter for the 17-odd prime gret it later. |province for the same period,/the Hospital Services Commis-! ministers of the Commonwealth, ago ; ie he said. sion and the Registered Nurses|Mr, Pearson said. CAN THINK IT OVER ' ' "Thies record justifies the| Association of Ontario, the lat- With four days to think it ppeatest commendation to the|ter having refused to consider jover, many victims of shyster health department for their ef-'night differential payments. door-to-door salesmen could de-| - as mt - ;mand to be. let out = por Rend . tracts, he said, Th C ada Treads Softly In Feud With Haiti ceived suppor frem mny parts of Canada. Las: session's bill would be forced to return any OTTAWA (CP) -- The Cana-jpresent at least, the govern-\did not get beyond the first A bill that would permit serv- jice clubs and religious organiz- ---- |ations to raise funds for chari- table purposes by raffles and bingos was introduced in the Commons Thursday by Herb Gray (PC .--Essex West). Mr Gray said in a statement that after introducing the measure las session tha he had re- mecting with President Adolfo lapez Mateos of Mexico. ae: Wirephoto deposit. The Attorney-General said he jexpects to introduce legislation | | during the current session of the 'legislature to provide for in- iereased consumer protection. He said the legislation could PEARSON TELLS COMMONS OTTAWA (CP) -- Prime Min- ister Pearson said in the Com- mons Thursday night that emo- tional "loose talk' and misun- derstanding about the meaning of bilingualism and_ bicultural- ism are complicating the prob- lem of national unity, He appealed to all parties to present the case against preju- dice, dissension and extremism at every opportunity, not only in Parliament but in speeches across the country, initions of biculturalism and bil- ingualism attempted so far by the Liberal government, going far beyond the vague terms of reference of the royal commis- sion named last July to inquire into the whole field, "What biculturalism in our country does and should mean is that there are two strains-- French and for want of a bet- ter term, English--which were he foundation of our national | society, | "There must be no pressure lon one to absorb the other; each, I hope, influencing and improving the other and each influenced and enriched by the cultural contribution of other ra- cial grovps and strains which are to be encouraged." WON'T SUPPORT SPLIT Biculturalism did not that cultural segregation or sep- aratism would be encouraged mean a | He gave the most detailed def- Loose Talk Hurts Bicultural Study that the government would force Canadians to learn a sec- ond language; it did not mean that French would be used in areas where the French-speak- ling population is practically inon-existent, it did not mean that unilingual civil servants would be penalized, The government hoped that bilingualism would be a factor in future civil ce -promo- tions, ciency in "dual-language regions a communities" would be able to become fluent in both lang- uages, ; Canada was privileged to jhave two of the world's great- e'* languages; bilingualism was an asset, not a burden, Union Fined For Strike Against Hydro COOKSVILLE, Ont. (CP)--A union was fined $500 and five of its members $25 each Thurs- day for taking part in an ille- gal strike at Ontario Hydro's thermal-electric plant at nearby Lakeview. Involved were the United As- | ; she : Aa Sal ! sociation of Plumbers and P: lbe in the form of amendments|dian government is restraining ment would study the situation.|reading stage because of other by the government; t did not fitters (CLC) and ore one ee lto the Unconscionable 'Trans-|{ull expression of its displeas-/A main factor was that most/legislation on the order paper.|mean an attempt at cultural ab-|of its Local 46. " r Robarts Queries OTTAWA (CP) -- Ontario's chief criticism of the Canada Pension Plan proposal centres on the 10-year transition period,|criticism of Premier Robarts of say that but no apparent reason exists for making it any longer, Prime!such danger for the existing that no such plan would be pos- Minister Pearson told the Com-! mons Thursday. | There would admittedly be fewer problems if the transi- tion period---tefore the contribu- tory plan takes full effect-- were longer, Mr. Pearson said in launching his first major speech of the new session of! Parliament. But it was also important that fore mittee for study as quickly as asi b he federal "io the House permits. vasion by the federal govern existing private plans, Mr.) Pearson said. He added flatly, in answering foresaw \Ontario, that he no plans. PLANS CAN ADJUST The prime minister said he believed could adjust readily to the re- vised Canada Pension Plan which he proposed to bring be ; special Commons com-|, Mr. Pearson was applauded || only about 30 per cent of Cana-jjoudiy when he said the plan dian workers now are covered); ybably is the most important/SOME ARE ESSENTIAL by pension benefits and "ourlitem of those outlined in Tues- concern is the other 70 per/qay's throne speech cent,"' he said. it--a reference had crii- y May Amend Tax To Aid Periodicals jment also was in the world where the compe-|provision of more scholarships tition for advertising from the|and bursaries -- this is the 10,- 000 of $1,000 each that has been The matter of community an- mentioned frequently -- and the|reason Hal C ious government -- were out-|tennas in television had already|Canadian Universities Founda-jexecutive have not been ouste lined Thursday in the Commons'been referred to the Board of|tion had been invited to exam-/from the SIU is because of the ine OTTAWA (CP) -- Measures| to strengthen the position of Ca-) nadian periodicals -- based lar- gely on proposals of the prev- by: Prime Minister Pearson, The Income Tax Act would be- amended so that no tax- payer after Dec. 31 this year could claim a deduction from taxable income for advertising|signs'" that metropolitan news-| acce placed in foreign periodicals But Time and Reader's Digest would be exempt from this pro- vision, The Customs Act also would be revised to ban foreign pe- riodicals if more than five per cent of their advertising space was specially aimed at the Ca- nadian domestic market r, Pearson said there was no wish to interfere with the Canadian public's reading tastes and 'the five-per-cent provision was inserted to strike a balance while guarding the future Periodicals would be defined as these appearing from once a week to four times a year. AQTION NEEDED Government action was needed to prevent the disap- pearance of the periodical press in Canada. Mr. Pearson said he didn't know of any other place Compulsory Service Gains Quebec Backing OTTAWA (CP) -- Gerard La- training ist o give young Cana-) His resolution on the Com- nie], the 39-year-old RCAF vet- dians a greater sense of respon-|mons order paper calls on the eran from Valleyfield, Que., who is sponsoring a motion fav- oring compulsory. national serv- ice for young Canadians, says his proposal is winning surpris- ing support in the province of bec. 4 bs 3 Laniel, Liberal MP for Beauvharnois - Salaberry, ex- pects his motion to be debated in«the Commons within a few weeks. an interview Thursday, he several of his Quebec back- bench colleagues may support it. But he doesn't expect imme- diate adoption of the plan by the government. "Many of the people I have talked to approve a form of M@-jast war at the age of 17, my part of Canada and another, training and are ready for solo tional service. I, thought there family refused consent, and 1 Mr. Laniel said. National serv- sition to it,' had to wait until I was 18. That ice would fill the bill. be more in Quebec. But whether or not they'll get up $0, seen." Mr. Laniel said the purpose keep hinf at home That was*an- adapt it right off the bat of conscripting youttg men into armed \" U.S. raised such problems. Broadcast Governors. U.S. TV stations near the Ca- nadian border solicited Cana- dian advertising There were now also "some papers in Canada or newspaper |chains might in future "'be in some danger. of coming under foreign control." The government was giving this matter very careful consid- eration, The action proposed by. Mr Pearson, forecast in the throne speech and a hold-over from the last session, is another in a se ries of federal attempts in the last eight years to deal with the magazine problem. Liberal legislation of 1956 was repealed in 1958 by the Conserv- atives who named a royal com- mission that recommended a ban on foreign magazines con-| taining Canadian. advertising. The commission also recom- mended disallowance of tax-de- duction rights on advertising in foreign periodicals aimed at the Canadian market. sibility and discipline, "The plan wouldn't prevent people from continuing their school studies. University stud-| ents could take summer train- ing, and even earn some money." Mr. Laniel first proposed na- tional service in a speech in| the Commons on defence policy last October. The idea was dis- cussed in a public opinion radio program in Valleyfield at that jtime and 80 per cent of the par- ticipants favored it, he says. He sees' the change of atti- tude resulting from the rise of ja hew generation "When I tried to enlist in the was one generation. My father was called up in the First remains to be World War and his father spent| government or the all kinds of money ving to jother generation. I'm convinced forces for a year's'the old attitudes have changed."'| { the existing plans}, " jthe pension plan, he reje sted| e e jamee, 51, of Montreal. 'ithe attitude of premier Lesage| D f H t { : | Father Laramee, who man- "lof Quebec that a proposed stud- 1e€ in ) laged a religious radio station aid in some Cases essential as- He said the Conservatives are sistance to It would not be reasonable to opposed to lengthen the transition period|the fact that Opposition Leader sion of provincial rights than unless this was the only way to|Diefenbaker earlier stop a "crippling" impact onjcized the system of pension|ioans, home improvement loans Censda REEL or others : to They were no more an inva- jconsultation with the provinces |before the detail jout. leith} "TLC Mr. Diefenbaker's point again| . . ould ne to avoid any sus-|Within the CLC, sitaw whie LC seretdipe tiga dood arte: My secure the membership of these/Thursday was that a CLC un n arlo ] essary beyond the present ones "Church's actions Act, whose validity was/Ure with Haiti over the expul-|of the Canadians still in Haiti recently upheld by the Supreme Sion cf 18 Canadian missionar-| are missionaries. Court of Canada. ies because of concera for the' Mr, Martin had In other legislature business, welfare of some 500 Canadians Canada's "great dissatisfac- INDP leader Donald MacDonald|Sti in the country, informed tion' Feb. 13 when he called the lintroduced a bill to reduce the/Sources said Tuesday. Haitian charge d'affaires to his voting age in the province to che external affairs depart- office. : i plan registration numbers for 18 from 21. ment was withholding React The seorhare a Ping it most Canadians, cai tario shoul ke diate comment on a aitianwas '"'un ortunately"' unable to Mr. segs interjected # Pe sah Soa valley 'ehies embassy statement here Wed-/2¢cept agg oR tg ta his party pioneerec xr provinces, Saskatchewan/nesday rejecting an earlier pro-\Cause 0 he rancy Mr. Pearson replied|end. Alberta have already re-|test by Eronn Affairs Minis-| Serious nature" of what it called rd he steps down early in Recapitalization of the debt- agit burdened CNR is one measure expressed that will be added to the par- liamentary schedule if sufficient progress is made with priority legislation, Pearson said Thursday. Presi- dent Donald Gordon of the pub- the plan. | sorption by social or political jpressure; it did not mean a sup- leriority of the English nd French cultures over the other cultures. Prime Minister| Bilingualism meant that the Magistrate H. T. G. Andrews ruled that Stanley Newmarsh, business agent for Local 46, in- structed the five men to stop work last July until a jurisdic tional dispute was settled. federal government had an ob-|wihdrew from the job for 16 ligation to ensure that the con- days. licly-owned railway has said he|Stitutional guarantees about the 'T! would like to achieve this be-|French language would be pre-| While unions have a recognized lserved and exercised. Bilingualism did not sib! saainin i jduced the age and Quebec ister Martin. the "plot contrived by the rey-)---- Stile, Geen. cp opty feel | to do so, he said Sources said there still was a i agrees gt Premier Robarts announced possibility of further action on registration. r mbers. j : , i F 7 Just as Mr. Pearson rejected |that the government will take'the diplomatic front but for the erend Jesuit fathers." The rejection of the official |protest was based on allega- itions against one of the 18 Jes- juit missionaries, Rev, Paul Lar- 'PAPER TIGER' Mr. Robarts' reservations about; ~nt-loati system was another in- lrun by the order, ws arrested @ jon his arrival at Port-au-Prince H ld S I I J R d {International Airport Jan. 31 Oo S dal jand kept in jail along with an- other member of the order for, OTTAWA (CP) -- Opposition, question in the new session of 13 days prior to deportation. Leader Diefenbaker implied! Parliament. strongly Thursday that a Cana- ment into ion. provincial jurisdic- PARIS (Reuters) -- Commu jnist Chinese leader a 's Such loans were of assistance se -- oe oe stintants. he eat, Last session, Parliament) ontaining offensive Lakes seameniover the controversial the Seafarers'|main target of a stinging fed- priest's luggage. Union (ind.) of eral inquiry report, and four other marine unions. "Know ... that after some) One of these, the Canadian 'of these people were visited by Maritime Union of the CLC, has the questioners they were im-|Since launched a recruiting was workeg| mediately approached by repre- | drive among the SIU member-| He was confident this | Sntatives of one of the unions) § ip. endeavoring to using a Great survey to raid ' : : Mao's offer were Farm Credit Corporation International came in a. provided under fed- eral direction, Phere w av be clos | There would have to be close thn when ie tote here' Babies Given American arms, bin j " ion seems to be seeking to sign : their union," Mr. The newspaper Paris-Presse ne ry : ern. people in Mr. Pearson said his govern said in launching|UP the same people that are be- committed to|Diefenbaker : : the eight-day throne speech de-|ing questioned by a bate in the Commons, organization which intends to) with deformities a sis mabaeted the| Poll 1,000 Great Lakes seamen|mothers took the 4 Sonks pis/2bout their economic status mide during pregnancy d generally. benefitted from a provincial as. This is the Religion n Council, an inter-faith group ter Dymond said Thursday, promoting social and economic; The program provided finan- justice in industrial life. Mr.)cial help for medical treatment, TORONTO (CP) -- Twenty of drug thalido-;conversation was devoted have matters involving the U.S. When some of that and France owes much to the U.S. |Mao replied: this whole question. "courtship between certain The foundation would recom-;members of, the NDP and the meri what measures were nec-/Liberal party." Mr, Diefenbaker Wednesday) federal marine trustees are re-'splints and plasters or surgery that would be made the Great Lakes seamen's sponsible, to help i plable constitutionally issue the subject of his first) He asked again for the nature ties. 2 E - : . . of the questionnaire and said of jthe trustees: between the ages of one and o | "They have been abroad find-|two years. urc €evl1lves jing out what they could do. We Dr.Dymond told the legisla- jin Canada know what they ture they are received physio- TORONTO (CP)--The United board of evangelism has brought back its padre who visits the pubs. The board Thursday unani- mously approved a $5,000 expen- diture to establish a tavern min- and also those | correct, limb deformi-| friends." tiger."" NEW YORK (AP) -- The Co- Banks." ported Thursday night that a deputy in the French Parlia- ment was told by Chairman Mao Tse-tung of Communist China that the Red Chinese of artificial limbs. she mw man -- ye oe WEATHER FORECAST tional $5,000 to pay for his a Mostly Sunny Little Milder ary and living. accommodation. Ferecasts issued by the Tor- Establishment of a drug clinic} that would distribute narcotics | onto weather office at 5:30 a.m. Synopsis: Persistent northerly at cost to registered addicts who winds continue to pump cold air Reform Bill Couid Affect London so 75 Senators . .. will co-operate to kick the habit ister with his head office in wa. ai by Dr. C. W. Top- downtown Toronto. ping of the University of Brit- Rey. Arthur Packman started ish Columbia's sociology and a similar project a year and a criminology department. half ago, visiting the city's night) ; Mount Forest. | clubs and beer parlors, but it is ig age ee Wingham : sl Eaceeees one ~ ag bi out pg Pag Bey lege the oo ie * aman. southward from the Arctic to Hamilton retire senators at age 75 applies| ore ecrelary 0 ie vOE . + ig "i, . " \ ¥ ari ~ | :. . : ton, supported the motion, but eo ed a p anys _ a NN gall auld jto present senators it would re- said a drug addict is only rarely Peratures, for the next few days 'Toronto move 36 members from the sen- will be five degrees or more be- Peterborough .... ate this. year--30 of them Lib- low their seasonal normals, Ac- Trenton lerals, tive siorm centres capable of Killaloe . PaOS ES heavy snow falls are suppressed Muskoka . Pisco gh -gadlng th Beco pl well to the south. Weather will North Bay | speech from the throne read at be dry except in those commu- S lthe opening of the a sariia- nities immediately adjacent to | mentary Haale dor diag jsay whether present senators }was to set a retirement age for a voluntary|the 25 children in Ontario born|Which reported the conversation|----° __ : because their Said one-third of the 14-hour should do, and that is remove|therapy and training in the use jumbia Broadcasting System re-} It did not specify an age or|® |would be affected. But since one|}. jof the Liberal election pledges! > China Predicts K.s Downfall -|ideological split -|\was complete. Paris, } ' the Soviet-Chi- French parliamentarians in Pe-|nese friendship and assistance| patty should suffer just because 20 Thalidomide king recently and was reported treaty of 1950 has been nulli./two unions have a dispute over iby the six-man French delega-|fied, \jurisdiction?" Magistrate An- The network report said Mao|\@ewe The Chinese leader also pre-|blamed the ideologic: dicted there would be a revolu-|,, ghinienggcorvirniiacye tion in South Viet Nam _ with The magistrate said that place in the economy, "there mean is so much petty politics across {the bargaining table . . . the court shudders to think what is behind the cases that are never heard in court. REFUSED TO WORK The case arose from the re- fusal of pipefitters to work. on fittings that had been installed eorlier by members of the rod- men's union. The plumbers' an- ion maintained the fittings should have been installed by with Russia their members. During the court case, the un- The embassy said documents|!ung has offered his friendship) The nétwork said one of its\ion offered ty plead gulity to a material|{0 the United States if the reporters in dian Labor Congress union is\placed a federal trusteeship had been found "in a purely Americans get 'out of Formosa, Peli, received the report from|strike if Hydro withdrew the SIU,\accidental manner' in the it was reported here Thursday. Deputy Marie Francois - Be- Charges against the men, Hydro of friendship nard. Francois - Benard said!refused. conversation with|Mao told him Anthony Charge of calling an unlawful "Is it reasonable that a third asked. "There are so many petty disputes, cheap rationalizations, repeated Soviet violations' of)and demagogueries in manage- the treaty which Benard said| ment, in labor and between the were "ideological and other-|two that, on occasion, the pub- '| wise," lic must despair." aati the French) x -Labor|sistance program, health minis-/delegation protested that! . "I quite under-| . Diefenbaker asked whether the'drugs, x-rays, the application of Stand. Let the Americans quit |Formosa and we will become . : , Mao also predicted the eowe-| The deformed babies now are|ray of Soviet Premier Khrush-| chevy, whom he called a "paper | | future senators, it is expected to exclude the 99 currenly serv- ing in the upper chamber. | | Of the 99--there are three va-| cancies among the 102 Senate| seats--more than half are 70 or! over. There are 15 senators between cured Earlier, the board called for jlegal sale and advertising of birth control methods and ma- terials. The church's report on mora! issues, askin for an amend- : oe. ment to oc. Criminal Code the open waters of the Great Sault Ste. Marie... 5 states: Lakes. Kapuskasing ...... | "Legalizing of the advertis-| Lake St. Clair, Southenn Lake White River.. ing, sale and instructions in the Huren, Lake Erie, Niagara, Moosonce .. use of contraceptives would|Lake Ontario, Southern Geor- Timmins .. ; tend to reduce the number of gian Bay, Windsor, London, ae government to consider the ad-\yn wanted pregnancies and Hamilton: Sunny with a few Observed Temperatures visability of adopting compul- would tend to diminish the num- cloudy intervals -and not quite Lows overnight, highs 'Thursday sory service "for all men 18 to per of illegal abortions." so cold Saturday. Northerly Dawson .....6.06, 5 9 21 years of age, the service dur-- 'The church is already on rec-\winds becoming light tonight. Vancouver . ation to be approximately 12 orq favoring planned parent-| Northern Lake Huron, Hali- Victoria see months," hood burton: Variable cloudiness Sat- Edmonton seseees Mr. Laniel said that when' The Criminal Code which|urday, Not quite so cold Satur- Pa a spee | young men are conscripted|makes it illegal to advertise and day. haa atoon . | , "they'll be unhappy for a month'sell birth control material has. Toronto: Mostly sunny and Within |70 and 74, another six have their or two--but then they will real- never been rigidly enforced, the/not so cold Saturday. Winds ii '* 75th birthdays this year, 15. are ize it isn't so bad and they'll|report says. northerly becoming light to- Lake ead i jbetween 76 and 79 and there learn a lot about the country : - night ' er ae a. . <" gees 1 alga mae and about other young Cana- TLY °C) 7 Northern Georgian Bay, Al- > ote. Marie... 2 | e sen ar dians." aon goma, Timagami, southern Soares or over this year break down) . A Liberal caucus committee | 4 stronauts Maj . Garden White River, Sudbury, North avg (s 40 Liberals and 11 Conserv-| on biculturalism discussed ways'Cooper and air force Capt. Ed Bay: Variable cloudiness with rs re ) atives. : ES of promotin exchanges of|ws F 4 sad pt. Ed-'. few snowflurries and milder Sud vury « Oldest is Senator Aristide | W promoting exchs 8 ' {}ward H. White say they have Saturday. Southwest winds near| Windsor , |Blais of Edmonton who will be | young Canadians between one completed 11 hours of helicopter 15 Saturday. London 89 in October. Four others mark} Northern White River, Coch- Toronto 5% |their 88th birthdays this year.) rane: Variable cloudiness with oe * a few snow flurries tonight and awa Saturday. Winds becoming west Montreal A. E. JOHNSON 0.D. to southwest near 15 tonight i "* OPTOMETRIST Alitax licage @ EYES EXAMINED @ PRESCRIPTIONS FILLED 14% King St. E. 723-2721 flight. Cooper cid White told a press conference Wednesday "But we have to be realistic|that the helicopter training is about this. I don't think the designed to prepare them for defence de- landings on the moon. They said and.the helicopter is more altied in vattern and approach to a moon But this debate may build up landin vehicle than public opinion in favor of it."available instrument artment will jump a' thi Forecast Temperatures laws tonight, highs Saturday: New any other, Windsor ,..... - 10 * 30 |Miami ANGUISHED MOTHER An anguishe¢ mother, Mrs. Thomas Thacker, Indiana- polis, kneels beside her son Michael, 8, after he was struck by a car when he ran into a street on his way to school, The boy was listed in fair condition in an Indiana- polis hospital. --AP Wirephoto SHORGAS HEATING & APPLIANCES | Industrial and Commercial The established, relichle Gas Desler in your ares. 31 CELINA ST. 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