w ’ "sewer lines will serve. the property boundary. ‘It had ~~ or five days ‘for failing to—stop ton, CS.A. Ritchie, Canadian ambassador to the United States, cuts a ribbon to form- . ally open the -first Canadian . Government Travel - Bureau Installing Of Sewer Line ‘Discussed At Georgetow With Mayor Howard S. Mac- Lean presiding and Councillors: J.W. Lavers, Mrs. Joan Currie, James G. McConnell and Joseph E. Johnson in” attendance the Georgetown Town Council met in regular session’ on Monday night. For some time the Council has been considering the instal- ling of a number of sewer lines in the Town and have obtained plans and supecifications from Laurie A. Coles and Associates, consulting engineers, relative to the laying of six parcels of sewer lints. The proposed lines ~-would serve West Street; Vic- ‘toria Street; Water Street; Kent Street; Richmond Street and ‘also serve a proposed Trailer Park, | hoped to be constructed and situated on East Street, between the extensions of Richniond and Grafton Streets. : The proposed. sewer lines would be hooked up with the now installed industrial sewer lines. The new lines would also ificlude lateral lines to the pro- perty lines of, the various resi- dences on the streets that the _It would be the responsibility of the home owner to run a line from his basement to the end . of the latéral line where it met -been hoped to obtain a long term loan for this purpose from Municipal Development and Loan Fund but the Province’s quota under this fund has been ‘epent. The council also -proposed—to pave Richmond Street from Vic- toria Street to East Srteet and a section .of West Street and George Street to meet existing _pavement and also to do some other necessary street work. Following a discussion it was) moved that the Town of George- town . request for Provincial LOCAL BRIEFS FINED $10. Joseph Omer Doucette, city, received a fine of $10 and costs x : | at a red traffic light when he CANADA OPENS WASHINGTON TRAVEL BUREAU | office in Washington. From LEFT: Special Constable A. Lamothe; Dan Wallace, direc- tor of the travel bureau in Ot- Sybil tawa: Ritchie; Miss Island News Page Eastern and Central Districts | The Guardian, Charlottetown, Thur, March 17, 1966. 5. a Ae ea |placed in an awkward position iby the request of the Canadian | Gerda Information Request Awkward For United States By DAVE McINTOSH OTTAWA (‘CP)-—The United rnment~’‘has been the woman wasn't a security | risk, it would tend to support Mr. Fulton. SEE PRECEDENT The precedent for refusal to | c = | | | Power-Kent, manager of the -. new bureau office, and Spe | cial Constable W.B. Hunt. | (AP Wirephoto) | } T hired from those taking -- course, which will conclude. with written. examinations. raining Course Is Scheduled A specialized training course | ¢ for all members of the Charlot- | nenned in espionage work for |tetown Recreation Playground. staff will be held| Davie during the Easter Holiday per- | ¢tvative iod, it was announced yesterday |is_ recollection of the by Jim Fox, director of the City | | department. ; The 1966 summer staff =n > jeurity case here, entry to the U.S. in 1953 and y curity risk while Government for a long term | at large in the town and molest- loan amounting to one hundred/ing residents; although the thousand dollars to be guaran- | clerk has not received any for- teed .by the town’s per capita; mal written complaints. The grant. The Council,is of the opin-| council recently passed a by- ion that the sewer lines are of | law relating to the dog nuisance .|to be | contract for and also some fur- prime importance if people are | attracted to build in! Georgetown. : It is: understood, from, press reports that the Province is now receiving a considerable sum of--money from. the-_Diminion Government on loan from the Canada Pension Fund contribut- | ions and it is felt that a guar- anteed loan could be made to the town at the same interest rate as the province pays for the per capita grant, fer 1966, until the Legislature has dealt with the matter, it was necessary to leave the matter of drawing up a town budget over to a future A letter from the A General on the. question of hav- ing the Royal Canadian Mount- ed Police engaged under con- tract ‘to police the town was read. The letter stated that Ot- tawa had estimated the town’s requirements to be four RCMP miembers. The council are in no financial position to | consider engaging four police officers and the clerk was instructed to write the Attorney General for more clarification as to the i number of RCMP | members the Town could hope to | ther information as to hours of duty that. would be performed per week under a contract. _ A considerable number of appeared before Magistrate A. J. Haslam. QC, in city police court yesterday morning. DOUGAY FUNERAL The name of a pallbearer for the funeral of Mrs. Jerome Dou-| gay was: incorrectly reported in. Wednesday's edition of — The | Guardian. The correct name is Alastair MacLeod. Bennett Daw-, gon, another. pallbearer, was ef- roneously omitted. CARD PARTY The following are the winners of the card party staged at the Basilica Recreation Centre last night: ladies first, Mrs. John M. Mulligan, ladies second, Mrs. , John Cummiskey: gent’s first Matt White; second, »A Ellis; door prize, Edison Mac-| Donald; special prize,.Harry Hughes and the freeouf-Mrs. F. | -Puncher and Levie Young. complaints have been heard as |to the number of dogs running and in this regard the clerk was instructed to write the Char- lottetown dog catcher for infor- mation as to obtaining his ser- the terms of the by-law. authorities stated that the pro- | posed plan, submitted by the | Town for ‘a Trailer Park has, ning. In this matter the Coun- cil has made application for . | To date over 60 applications have been received for summer | employment and at the close of ‘application period, March 21, Mr. Fox will release further tails of the training course. Absolutely_no_ applications will ibe ‘considered after the advertis- ed closing date. The City of Charlottetown op- erates five playgrounds during - : B | the vices at an early date to enforce | mately 46,000 youngsters took ; ‘part in the 1965 playground pro- A letter from Towa Planning ; gram. summer months. A) WEATHER been approved by Town Plan-| TORONTO (CP) — Tempera- tures: Low overnight, High Wednesday government for information on Gerda Hessler Munsinger. Should the U.S. supply: such information, knowing that it could be used for political ends? A precedent exists for any re- fusal to pass security informa- |tion between Ottawa and Wash- ington. It was set by Prime Minister Pearson when he was affairs minister in . central fig- alleged sex-and-se- was barred in an came to Canada lived in 1955. She ears. . . Justice Minister Cardin says the German woman had been unists- Fulton, former Con- justice minister, says 1961 RCMP Mumnsinger file is that she was not considered a se- in Canada. noted. that the Lib- in 1955 If that singer was a genuine security risk in 1953, it would tend to support Mr. Car- \plain why she was admitted to N this country. Wf the U.S. has" information Fish Officers Hold Meeting Fisheries officers for Kin, a County and members of the '|Kings County Fish and Game Associations met yesterday for the annual distribution of fish | — Cardigan Fish Culture Sta- | ion.. In 1965 approximately 170,000 | speckled trout, rainbow trout, including yearlings which have been marked,. were~Teleased in .|the streams and ponds of Kings. ‘|For 1966 it is expected a similar -}amount will be released. Representing ier, Carl Peters, John G. Mac-| Lean, T-A. Harris. For Monta- | gue: J. Cudmore, J. MacNeil,’ as | in Canada nearly six ‘ pass along security information lies in the case of Norman. | on was Canadian am-_ assador to Egypt in April, 1957, | when he jumped to his- death.| from the top of a seven-storey Cairo building after the U.S. Senate internal security sub- committee revived charges against him that he was or had | been a Communist. It turned out that at least part of the subcommittee’s in- formation on Norman had come from a 1940 RCMP report Passed to the U.S. Federal Bu- ‘reau of Investigation in 1950. | The RCMP discredited its own original report—and told the FBI so—three months later in| 1950 after Norman had been E. Herbert. . called home from Washington | ~ for special security check: the first RCMP report and dis- regarded the second, if it ever received it, has never been es- tablished. Neither has it been determined who leaked the orig- inal RCMP report to the FBI | to the ittee. | In any event, Mr. Pearson— his parliamentary - secretary at the time was Mr. Cardin—fired off a stiff note to the U.S. y, orman’s suicide. SOUGHT ASSURANCE It. sought assurances from the Actress Ann Margaret |s the obvious center of attention of U.S. Marines at the Da Nang clines on the stage before them. The shapely actress is VIET NAM HEAT WAVE» base on Monday as she re- — WN me on an entertainment tour of the Viet Nam battle areas. : (AP Wirephoto by cable from ; Tokyo) : personnel, and medical fac- ies. In Sweden where ‘a plan j‘has been in operation for 10 years, the average patient here ed ilit City Director Returns Home Jim Fox, City Recreation Di- |din’s contention—though not ex- April 10, 1957, days after rector, recently returned to ‘the city from Dartmouth, NS., jwhere he-attended the executive meeting “of -the-Society—of -Muni- group |which the U.S. executive branch the Souris |Munsinger case, said by Mr. | branch were: Edward Gauth- | Cardin to have involved ‘two | US. that, unless specific con- ‘cipal. Parks and Recreation Di- | sent was given by Canada, no'rectors of the Atlantic security data about Canadian |vinces: Citizens be passed to any con-| Mr. Fox; who is executive Se- @ressional or other over.|cretary-Treasurer of the Society, jas well as provincial representa- itive, listed some of the services Pro- of government had no control. |The-Cafiadian note to. the U.S.,--to he offered by__the Municipal signed by Mr. Pearson, said Parks and Recreation Directors that unless such an assurance Society of the Atlantic Pro- can be given .- . the Canadian | yinces. government must reserve the, A number of requests for as- pel in se ar to supply < sistance will be dealt with di- forma’ concern’ -Treasur- Canadian citizens to any U.S. aw oe oT government agency:” a N | Many reguests for. assistahce toot St Shee ie on the other | esuse of their. nature ne : referred to a special committee set up a-royal commission, over of the Society which wil: be com- which it has no control once of top men from the Muni- established inquire cipal. Recreation field in the At- ; ed ~~ \lantic Provinces. “J feel that a very beneficial and important service is being offered to communities large and small by our Society and I or more’ Conservative cabinet | inisters. If the Canadian government finds his situation worsened rath- er than improved. It is more dif- ficult for him to get a doctor. He must wait longer to-get into |@ hospital, and he is foreed to pores ~ hospital before he is | ically ready for..discharge. The shortage of nurses is acute. | Over burdened doctors must turn |away thousands of patients an- | nualy. we ae a in.Sweden’s welfare state. “Tn Belgium, the medical pro- fessi have withdrawn spo plan. Further action by our govern- ment should be delayed until the provincial premiers meet with the prime minister at 4 top level conference scheduled to be held in June of this year. “We are hopeful afso' that re- consideration will be given at this meeting by the féderai gov- ernment to’ include mental and | TB hospitals: under the hospital | insurance act which will mean a saving of some $700,000 and which -would go_a long way to- ward making a medical plan fin- “Medicare is being referred | to here as one of the dark spots ‘ GIANT MOVES LIGHTLY An elephant weighing 10 tons. can pick a flower off the ground “ aw its trunk without crushing / aay FRONT-END & WHEEL A taal fe pletely from the government | Front Wheel - - Balance Including weights. This price - |officers: Cla well as Cst. Percy James, |feceives information from the RCMP game warden. Fisheries U‘S._ on Frau Munsinger, can ude Richards, Sou- |!t pass it on to the royal com- | ris: Frank MacMillan, Morell; | sion : without breaching _ its {Peter Sinclair, E.F. McDonald; |W" Position of 1957? sincerely hope that any com-| munities needing assistance will | not hesitate in making use of our | services,’ concluded Mr. Fox. * ‘The following is a list of the | executives of the society: Don- ancially feasible to this pro- vince.’’ : Montague and Thaddeus Shep-|U‘S. RECALLS CASE herd, from the Cardigan Culture | The U.S: state department has Station. given every indication it-recails money. aoe eee BER certain financial . assistance in|Dawson .:......... 3 21 The financial report was pre-| the development of this park, as | Vancouver ........ 37 St sented ‘by Councillor Lavers,/ a possible means of partly solv- |Victoria .......:..- 3990Ct«CD and was adopted. A considerable | ing the housing problem. \Edmonton ........ 8 32 refund is due the town on money | . ; ing |Calgary .:.......). 8 8 expended under the Winter The question of transf Yellowkn '" 46 ” Works programme Councillor | 22 area of land on Kent Square | 5° If ..++.+- a Currie reported no applications | measuring 165 feet by 672 feet, Swiratn = 2 ae for relief and no applications for | Where a senior citizens home is — Mill SEA agi ee additional street lights. Coun-| Bow under construction and if oiiNe tert" 39 $7 cillor McConnell. for | other homes could be built in a : AY, seorcece = Public Property and bhis report | the future was discussed and is | Qit 0 77-7777" co showed that the wofk at the|Deiné held over for final de | \¢ ore j-*:7" Sig Ss rink -of installing the new fur-| cision at an early meeting. The Qe --" wee nace. and other necessary car- | Senior Citizens Housing Ce aAsvicton er ae ae pentry work has been complet-|Poration are requesting the jee rong 2 38 ed. Councillor Johnson's Police | ‘t@nsfer of lend. * Moncton ne she a 32 Report was delivered by-Town' A considerable amount of other | patitax : ete ae Policeman Allison Grover, who | business was discussed, and will | cp, -iottetown .... 12 2B gave a detailed day-by-day re-| be finalized at a meeting to be |cviney ........ 1 31 port of his duties for the month, | beld on Monday, March 21st. OMe /Yarmouth ........ se: The report’ showed a total of| matter up for discussion was icy John's. ........ 2 a $105. collected in fines during |the question of maintaining the Boston | .........- 3 48 the month of February. |town dump. Quotations on fenc- |New York .....--- 2 45 As no information had. been | i2é have been obtained and it 1S tampa ..........- 5273 received as to the amount of the Ped to proceed with {the Miami .....--+++ 599075 erection of a—chain link fence ; aie as under the winter works pro-| HALIFAX ‘CP). — The wea- gramme. Gates have already ther office says skies were clear been purchased for use at the over the Maritimes late Wed- dump. oe as a Lene eae If citizens continue to disre-/ area approac ‘om west. gard the regulations as to dump- |~The--high-pressure Area. wis ing as has been done by indivi- | moving slowly and will provi duals in the past the Town will | mostly sunny skies over the be forced to post an attendant | Maritimes for the next two days. at the site. |‘Temperatures will rise to the Council members were provid- high 30s or low 40s in ee ed with a sample by-law felating |Tegions today. In Prince Ed- to the formation of a Fire Bri- | ward Island and Eastern Nova gade. This will be studied and Scotia they should reach the upon low to mid 3s. prohrer gay a oy Regional forecasts: : 2 Nova Scotia, Prince Edward ; = Island, New Brunswick: Sunny; Island Native Passes Away temperatures similar to Wed- ,nesday; light winds increasing News of the death in Mon- | Kentville 15 and 40, New Glas- treal of Sister St. John Gual- | gow, Goshen and Sydney 15 and bert (Mary C. White), eldést) 35, Charlottetown 12~ and —-32; daughter of the late. Mr. and /| Moncton 18 and. 37, Fredericton | Mrs. John T. White of Emerald, | and Saint John 15 and -40, Ed- | and diminishing in the afternoon | to light; low-high at Halifax 14 land 40, Yarmouth 22 and 40, ‘Oldest Mason In U:S. Dies. BLOOMINGTON, Minn. (AP) —Thomas Yould, a. native of ,|Windsor, N.S., and the oldest Mason in the United States, died Wednesday -at the Minnesota |Masonic Home. He would have 'beén 109 April 13. || Yould was . principal figure |Tuesday in a ceremony in which | he presented a gold trowel to be jused in cornerstone laying for a 130-bed Masonic care centre in- \firmary to be completed next |year. He became a Mason 87 years ago and entered the Masonic |Home in 1950. Younl cgme to Minneapolis in was received by her Island re- | mundston 10 and 40, Campbell- ‘Jatives recently. } ton 15 and 40; outlook for Fri- Sister St. John entered the day, sunny with a few cloudy iM gregation of Notre Dame in | Periods; a little milder. ontreal in August 1927. She) : ‘ Charlotte- las a graduate of Notre Dame ive 835 6 tk: at a0 rae At 03. p.m. Summer- -Academy, Charlottetown; and | pistico at 2 received her Bachelor of Science | sida tide eighteen minutes later |in the morning to northwest 15, The fr¥ distribution program | the Norman case and is aware has been in existance i: aie | of the delicate political nature al years and is considered to be |% the Munsinger affair. - |one of the major reasons for the ,, !t has declined to say pub- lrecord of catches in the area. |licly when Frau Munsinger was | |_It_was_also—noted—that-.4,000 barred entry to the U.S. — marked yearling trout had been| , TH Conservatives when in released in the Hillsboro River Power backed: Mr. Pearson's aes area) and a similar num- 29% stand. 13 into the Morell River. ; : |Sportsmen are to be advised to pein ee, ee eee | report-the-- catching, of — any of ioe “secretary ~to~the- eset sese these to the fisheries officers Of | and now deputy finance minis- the Fish and Game Association |¢a- in one of its reports: as soon after as possible: : The late Sidney Smith, Con- It was also pointed out by Pe- servative external affairs min- ter Sinclair, fisheries officer | ister, said the U.S. government that the Montague pond accord-|had given an undertaking that ing to statistics has the best re-'|names of Canadian citizens ap- jcord for the raising of trout in| pearing in evidence before con- jthe province and perhaps any- |gressional. investigating com- where; 44 lbs. per acre has been | mittees would be sent to Cana- the Island is 25 16s. and for the | for investigation, if -necessary, world 10 Ibs. per acre. |in_ Canada. Years distribution amounts | Mr. Smith said Canadian trust per stream for 1966 range from | in this undertaking had been | 1000 to 7000 to over 55 streams | “misplaced.” - and ponds: They will be released) Whether this ‘misplaced in July through September, con- | trust’’ has resulted in Canada sisted of trout ranging In age | Withholding security information from two weeks to 20 weeks. | in its possession from the FBI The fisheries officers present has—never been“ disclosed: were able to describe the streams and ponds and the ap-| “CALGARY HIT BY FLU |proximate condition of each and| CALGARY (CP) — _ Spokes- pointed out that several streams, men for Calgary public could be improved. separate school boards The. matter of polution was | Tuesday the absentee rate in mentioned with particular refer-|city Schools due to influenza is lence being made to streams|about. 20 per _ cent. |where gravel is washed. It was | spokesmen estimated that 220 of the opinion of all that the silt |the city’s 2,700- teachers re- 1958, the US. | recorded while the average for|dian authorities in confidence | | that have | darsiy hs and | said | School | ald Lynch, -president, Dart- mouth, N.S.; Arthur Buck, vice- | president, Moncton, N.B.; Jim” Fox, secretary-treasurer, Char- jj - lottetown. The following are the | representatives: Ronald , Wheel- er, N.B.: Jim Fox, P.E.I. and | Gordon Price, N.S. ‘ ‘FLUORIDATION (Continued from page one) comprehensive medical service | coverage-universally__available. 4 The provinces feel that compul- | sion is constitutionaly wrong and | that the desired comprehensive | medical care coverage can best | be achieved through a voluntary program in which government and free enterprise cooperate. “The provinces’ share of the | total costs will have to be raised | \by taxes and or premiums and TET rE ¥ Me MH ¥ {many provinces feel there are | greater priorities for tax money than providing medical coverage |for a large segment of the pop- | ulation, which after all, is quite | capabe of providing for it’s own needs through existing pans. The plans in other | countries been promoted can called unquaified guc- cesses in the ight of décument- ed°accounts of rising costs, abuse of — services, dissatisfaction among. those who provide the services and shortage of quaifi- Maritime Stationers Limited @ Stationery, everyday and sea- sonal cards ‘ St. Patrick's Day DANCE Come Along and Listen to Your Favorite. Irish Music with The Smoothies ; THE HORSE AND SULKY’S |_«. GRANADA STEAK ROOM | Members and ‘Guests Welcome _ in Ediutation Degree from Pro- | vidence. College, .Rhode. Island. During her years in religious | ‘life, she taught in Notre Dame | | Academy, Charlottetown, New | York, Connecticut, Rhode Is- | ‘land and Vermont: te | | She leaves to mourn two bro- thers, Matthew of Charlotte- town and David of Toronto, also 0 sisters, Mrs. Agnes Reeves Toronto, and Mrs., Henry rnadette) Adler of Dorches- r, Mass. She was predeceas- ed by her than Charlottetown. Sun rises ea at 6.23a.m. and sets at 6.21, p.m. and sand from such an opera- | tion: drove the fish from these} |streams. It was also pointed out “ARREST STUDENTS CALCUTTA, India (AP) — A jmoisy mob of young Arabs dem- ‘onstrated outside the Grand Hotel Monday against President Zalman Shazar of Israel, as he arrived for an overnight stay ‘en route to Katmandu and an official visit to Nepal. Police ar- rested 11 of the students who parents, two brothers, ‘blamed the Israeli governrhent John Peter and Joseph and by a for ‘‘driving out Arabs from | jthat new, regu | lution | of streams. and ‘rivers |most likely would take this and other polution matters under | serious consideration for Island | waters. "" DEAF « w! w! t \ported ill Friday. There were | lations on the po-gno -reports of persons being | ported sick Monday and _ that | many teachers had also re- | meeneh evra , Out of town newspapers Magazines and novels Children’s books severely ill: C9 ‘ onfederation Centre t Ss Poccevccccocsccssecee ss ° its where the HEs meet the SHEs \1884 and was employed by the EASTERN ‘FUNERALS MacKINNON FUNERAL The funeral for Mrs. Dougald | MacKinnon was -held Wednes- man. Later ‘he moved to St. | Paul where he became fore- ‘patch and .Pioneer Press and later for the old St. Paul Daily News. He retired when The Minneapolis Tribune as a press- | |man_ for the St. Paul \. Dis- | | Sister Martina Cash. . Hootenanny their Palestine homeland.” No wires! @ No cords! No ‘batteries: Nothing behind your ear! Nothing in your glasses! = Ws here! What you have always wanted, an invisible hearing aid. Weer this instrument and no ene will ever know. Hear at once - INSTANT HEARING | of OPENING REGIONAL FESTIVAL Dominion Drama Festival ' Under the Distinguished Patronage of , * gsidence, day, March 16, from her late re- Mt. Buchanan. Rev. Donald Nicholson conducted the | service at the home, church and | ‘News. suspendedpublicationin., Survivors include a daughter. two grandsons and six great grandchildren. Main. Brace . | with clarity, free from disturbing ff ~His- Honour--Lieut enant-Governor. Lt. Col: W. J. MacDonald OCC eres ee008 the TONIGHT : grave. Organist was Mrs. M.W. MacDonald. Hymns sung were , IMPORT VACCINE The Lord's My Shepherd and|’ CANBERRA (Reuters)—Aus- Abide With Me. Pallbearers were tralia will buy 600,000 doses of John W. MacWilliams, Donald Salk) polio vaccine in Canada MecKenzie, Robert MacKenzie, and ‘Britain to overcome 1a tem- ‘John -C. MacKinnon, Angus |porary. shortage of Australian- Nicholson and John Nic- |made ‘vaccine, the health min- holson. Flowerbearers were jister, Dr. A. J. Forbes, Sumner MacKinnon, Arthur Can- |Wednesday. The emergency pur- telo, Albert Larsen, Albert Mor- |chase follows’ the failure of a rison, Frank MacRae, L1o-yd 500,000-dose: batch of Australian- Buchanan. and William Saun-made vaccine to pass tests. The | ders. Interment: took,--place in British and Canadian vaccine is ~ Polly Cemetery, Mt, Buchanan. \to arrive in April ¥ i said | Come along and other Featuring The KAN:KAN~GIRLS ‘\" Members.and Guests Commodore Room Tonight - 9 to12 | join the fun new acts way to better hearing, # new hear- ing life for the hard of hearing, a new deal, for the deaf. People naturally proud of their appear ff HM ance now can happily join in life il with eveyone else and forget deaf- i mess. Prove this claim in your own home FREE by sending the thin 10 days to:— Maritime Hearing Service, Bayers Rd. Shopping Centre, — Starlite Bldg.,. Halifax, N.S. Name : Address His Worship Wa TONIGHT 8 P..M. , east of 17 «fhis group took Best Actor last year’s Festival. _ RESERVED x gunn Iter J. Cox, Mayor of Charlottetown, and Mrs. Cox ~ TICKETS AT THE BOX OFFICE aes OPEN AT NOON . / ADULTS $1.50 - $1.00 \ nelses. i . and Mrs. MacDonald _ Here is a new technique, a new Honourable Walter ‘ an yi ncn of Prince Edward Intend a mye eee) ae A AVALON : HICKMAN “ammo (GENE “ELECTRA” St. Dunstan’s “Players Outstanding Costunies and Best Director Awards in we CHILDREN .75 0 cg ORMAN *secwwALAN RAFKIN seme ROBERT KAUFMAN. MMM Be pe OM ® eovers all cars. a] ISLAND CHEV ‘OLDS LTD. ~ At’our new location, Corner of Euston and Weymouth. Opp. Ch’town Curling Club. ¥ * MMM EVERYONE IS... INVITED — MAD! MAD! PARTY TODAY -'SAT.. SHOWS 3:30 - 7-9 Pica LESLEY GORE, ; JAMES BROWN % \ ANDTHE FAMOUS May LAMES sing their - newest HITS seeeeereee 909090200000000000n220000 MeV TIS (a) aU RR AL meme lt SHOWS 3:30-7-9 Also — Comiedy - Cartoon *% A =