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Oshawa Times (1958-), 3 May 1962, p. 2

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2 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Thursdey, Mey 3, 1962 FALLOUT Mother Scared Of 'Dirty Rain By ALTON BLAKESLEE Associated Press Science Writer OAK RIDGE, Tenn. (AP) -- Outside, rain spattered down. And a frightened mother kept her children home from school. Rain, she believed, would bring down deadly amounts of radio- active fallout. Other parents at times of nu-| clear tests, and even long after- ward, won't allow their children to drink milk for fear it is con- taminated with radioactive io- dine that would give them thy- roid cancer. Scientists are generally dis- mayed over such extreme reac- tions to real or potential haz- ards in fallout. They know wheat happens to animals given pretty good wal- lops of radiation, or big doses of Strontium-90 or radioactive jodine. They know, for exam-| ple, that strontium goes to bones, and can produce bone cancer in animals. But it takes 1,000 to 10,000 times the amount of strontium represented so far in fallout to produce the bone cancers in animals. Still, for caution about what the far more tiny doses from fallout might do to humans over the) years. But the scientist's phrase 'might sometimes is taken to mean that gives them cause | be hazardous"| for nuclear testing, the moral right to test and the fear that testing enhances prospects of ultimate war. CONTRIBUTE RESEARCH New research experiments) somatic or bodily effects of low - level, may be. One project being started} here by a team of specialists! will involve a colony of 100,000) mice, quite apart from the mice! used in genetic studies. Hundreds to thousands . of mice will be exposed to variou dosages of gamma rays from radioactive cesium over _pe- riods of days to months. Then they will be observed) spans -- normally about two years or so--to see if they live less long or get more cancers, leukemias and other ailments than mice not so exposed, 'ex- plains Dr. A. C. Upton, a path-! ologist and physiologist. Life shortening from radia- tion has been observed so far @ n mice, Dr. Upton adds. But little information is available about animals larger than micc and about humans. are aimed at learning what the|§} chronic radiation' § and examined during their life-| ¥ PM Says Trade 'Essential Link' OTTAWA (CP) -- Prime Min- ister Diefenbaker said Wednes- day night that the United 4/States, among other countries, B takes "strong objections" to the i|system of Commonwealth trade! preferences. He also reiterated that Brit- 'lain's entry into the European Common Market might place a "strain" on the Commonwealth. Mr. Diefenbaker, currently campaigning in Newfoundland, made the statements in a tele- vision address filmed here ear-) lier Wednesday. Mr, Diefenbaker said trade is) "one of the essential links in the bonds of Commonwealth," every member of which had benefitted from the existinglon the Common Market issue. ;|system of preferences. _ | The Canadian leader sa'd' "T believe it is imperative,Wednesday night Britain has i|that these trading advantages|the right to decide for herself! shall not be done away with.|whether to join the Common -- Sept ts ee "However, if she does join,| questions arise which must be) PCACE oser answered. Would she no thereby place a strain on the! MONTREAL (CP)--A_ three- Commonwealth as she commits week-old walkout of Montreal her primary allegiance to Eur-)truck drivers which has tied up jope and undertakes to acceptjan estimated 85 per cent of | decisions of European institu--truck traffic between Quebec tions of the future?" There are some countries, in- cluding the United States, which have taken strong objec- tions to these preferences in trade." Preferential tariffs would end unless the six member nations of the Common Market "agree otherwise as a condition of Britain joining." Mr. Diefenbaker's address, an election campaign talk, is scheduled to be rebroadcast} over seven other private tele-| vision stations across Canada| tonight. CONCLUDES TALKS Tuesday Mr. Diefenbaker| concluded two days of talks here with British Prime Minis- ter Harold Macmillan, mainly Truck Driver Another Cpl. Faces Charges Of Smuggling OTTAWA (CP)--A second Ca- jnadian Army corporal faces a gptieicges a pcan at a acactipg suman henge ies f | in agree a eserva-|"", : court martial here today on Hen ok tha Cami animate Following a meeting Wednes- i ny harges of breaking military|comes first and that she will le |discipline and order by becom- not join "the Six" on terms that} Brotherhood of Teamsters (Ind.) and the eight strike- and Ontario and resulted in two} day between the International] WINDY AND COOL ACROSS ONTARIO AND QUEBEC WEATHER FORECAST Pleasanter Day Seen On Friday Synopsis: windy day appears likely sunny, warm weather will move linto Southern Ontario Friday. ' ts : 2 : Forecasts issued by the Tor-!burton Canada had "taken a stand|major outbreaks of mob Vi0- onig weather office at 5 a.m.:|windy today. Sunny and warm A rather cloudy,|Friday. Southwest winds near jn|25 today, westerly winds near lower Jakes regions today put |! regions: Cloudy and?! 5 Friday. Northern Lake Huron, Geor- , gian Bay, Algoma, Sault Ste. : Marie, Timagami, White River, Britain's PM Looks Weary | jing involved in smuggling by|would "permanently or detri- Canadian personnel in Indo- mentally" affect Common- | china. wealth trade relations. Cpl. Hector Joseph Noel of the; The communique Saskatchewan signals troop will|lowing Mr. Diefenba Lake St. Clair region, Wind-) bound companies involved, Cyp-| 1 1 rien Miron, chief Quebec labor|sor: Cloudy, clearing this morn- ing department negotiator, said he|ing. Sunny. and warm Friday, issued fol-| hopes the dispute will be settled| gusty westerly winds near 25 to- ker's talks day, diminishing to 15 Friday.| Cochrane regions, North Bay, Sudbury: Northerly winds 15 to ' 25 today, light Friday. Marine forecasts any amount wil! be hazardous.) U.S. government: radiation experts have established what they believe are sound safety limits regarding special-threat fallout atoms. These are the maximum amounts of radioac- tive stontium, iodine, or cesium which they believe a person could take in or be exposed to daily and still not be harmed Fallout in the air, in milk or food, rarely has exceeded these! limits, and then only for brief periods. But they cannot offer abso- jute proof of no bodily harm| from test fallout. Full know- ledge about such radiation is lacking. This uncertainty creates an issue in discussions of the need F leming Sees | 'Revenge' Bid | TORONTO (CP) -- Finance} Minister Fleming Wednesday) accused his Liberal opponent) in the June 18 election on en-| tering the campaign to. seek! 'personal revenge." Without referring to him by name, Mr. Fleming described) Mitchell Sharp, former deputy) trade minister and Liberal candidate in Toronto Eglinton, as "a member of the bureau-| cratic brains trust' with " personal axe to grind." He said a speech his oppon- ent delivered in Ottawa March) 19 had bristled with 'scurrilous and defamatory assertions', suggesting that members of the Diefenbaker government might be prepared to set aside Chris-| tian ethics in the struggle for political power, The minister said: "I do not recall any previous) campaign in Eglinton into which any candidate has entered with! a@ personal axe to grind, or seeking to make himself an is- sue or seeking personal re- venge. "That appears to be the main- spring of the present Liberal! campaign." | 30 DAYS' DETENTION Cpl. Albert West looks de- jected as he is led from Ottawa courtroom where he | was sentenced Wednesday to | 30 @ys detention and re- | THOUGHTS IN SPACE Maj. Gherman §. Titov, the | men at the Russian embassy Washington. Titov is in On His Return | m Soviet cosmonaut who orbited | in W I ashington to report on his ' ! 3 W LONDON (Reuters) -- Prime the earth 17 times in a flight f A Th PIRAEUS ; 3 | é e military trials arising Minister Macmillan arrived flight before an international r r s s stand charged with "conduct to|with Mr. Macmillan "answers the prejudice of good order andjonce and for all the unjust, discipline." even untrue, propaganda that ain, or have been acting in a way that was unfair to- Brit- ain."" Factory Shift Called Callous Macmillan will brief the ca- binet and answer questions in the House of Commons on. his meetings with President Ken- nedy and Prime Minister Die- fenbaker. Macmillan, whose four was Conservative and Liberal par- tral counties, good progress has been made in spring seeding but in eastern counties only limited field work has been WINDSOR: Ont. (CP) -- The\, truck driver operating out of|n ties are unwilling and unable to'-- Douglas Charges | Economy Control It is time Canada had & g0V-|Killaloe ... are "as futile as baying at the} moon."' The other parties were) _ The report said, however, that! by. the end of the week. | 'Both sides were reported to | jbased on a federal con rejected by the Teamsters, "Considerable . progress been made in one area," junion lawyer Phil Cutler follow- ling the meeting. 130-cent an hour wage has ne \be working out an agreement ron regions, The Teamsters are asking a onto: Lake Erie, southern Lake Hu- London: Mostly cloudy today A few showers we have been opposed to Brit-|hoard majority report originally,morning, sunny intervals this) afternoon Sunny and warm Fri- day. Winds westerly near 25 to- said\day, diminishing to 15 Friday. Niagara, western Lake On- tario regions, Hamilton, ° Mostly cloudy and windy ltoday. Chance of a few show- after rejecting the conciliation|ers this morning, but sunny in- board recommendation for a 16-\tervals cent boost. Montreal is $1.55 an hour. | SELKIRK, Man. (CP)--T. C. Douglas put forward again Wed- Inesday the New Democratic /Party theme in the election lcampaign--that Canada is in ithe election campaign -- that Canada is in the grip of an eco- jnomic dictatorship and that an |NDP government would turn it into an economic democracy. Job Situation Cited By Starr GUELPH (CP)--Labor Minis- iter Michael Starr said Wednes- lday night that Liberal Leader Lester Pearson predicted last 'summer there would be an in- crease in unemployment. But since Mr. Pearson's pre- diction unemployment had de- creased 20 per cent and the gov- ernment had created 654,000 new jobs. Mr. Starr was speaking at a Progressive Conservative con- vention here for Wellington |South at which Alfred D. Hales, 43-year-old Guelph merchant, was nominated to contest the June 18 federal election. Mr. Hale has held the seat since 1957. Mr, Starr said the only issue in the forthcoming election is whether the Progressive Con- servatives will be allowed to continue progress or whether' Canada will be turned back to bureaucrats or planners. HIT BY QUAKE TOKYO (AP) An_ earth. quake rocked northern Japan today. In Sendai, about 150 miles north of Tokyo, the quake sent crowds in movie houses outside. A 55-year-old woman |was crushed to death by a fall- ling fence and two children were jinjured seriously in their home iby shifting furniture. | | EXECUTI done. It's true describe the interior of this i Special Weekly Message To Members Of CHAMBERS FOOD CLUB tive comfort to the home. The 'second floor -- with si large fomily living -- The extras are many -- dishwa large lot ond many others duced to rank of private by a court martial. West. was convicted on service charges arising from the smuggling of gold and aye in Indochina. (CP Wirephoto) ast / t, d S- | space sy ; ' smugg back here by air today looking ee ee eee trom swaugeling of gol abe lcommission are expected to the trial of an officer, identified| E r rt Stand Brig. N. H. Ross of Fredericton mainly aimed at discussing bert West, 33, of the Black into the Common Market, said) CALGARY (CP) -- The gov- flight through Kelowna and|qowy to a private and sent to prevent such "callous" shifts of Common Market has been "'pe-|Calgary. iCpl. West--at Maj. Platt's re-|Oakville, NDP Leader Donald Yo i |Vienti Saig i rk and Toronto he tried to} Weyburn, Sask.,. tonight, an/| Vientiane to Saigon, though he| night. a certain picture of what we| Under Progressive Conserva- even jlater picked up a trunk from)Ford's parts and accessories di- particularly the deep interest we tion. OE member. OF aaa in the trunk. sions, Mr. MacDonald told a iv 5 'ana-| All 17. Alberta : DOESN'T REPEAT to divert 15 per cent of Cana with a "hard core of chronic Macmillan, who was met at United States, had been re-|the 1958 election and 16 of Sas-'~ ; . jSense of protests against such . Common|cePted. dys, did not mention his off-the-/Market, the government | | brook action by the old - line parties mon Market capitals. tude was out of step | millan said that if the Common| cid. treaty with the U.S. TORONTO (CP)--A Montreal believed industry had the right thy auditorium, summarising the/e¢xamples of government mis- night young criminals to be re-)cause such industries were their be lost if Britain joins the six- victory a week ago in Prince\@ither to export of electricity) Rev. Noel Mailloux, professor or | told 250 penologists: jurists, law-| make, is not of course to ne- "lefits, he said. But each case|John Howard Society meeting makes it very much easier to} Report Battle "It takes a minimum of two/tering the seeding season with | Had Pay Boost . vd attitude," he said. nesday. |two top leaders of the Interna-| Wednesday. special advisor on correctional/Dureau's first 1962 telegraphic of the union's 3l-member ex- 'act. tinguished service. jday night. labout 160 pounds, and IUE Sec-|Pear before the Ontario Labor voiseyey: whose folk dancing Wate to germinate seeded ey ee 'a increase was rescinded because} | jnesday's board meeting, Carey ty" and intellectually dead, In|Deem done yet apart from some nose: Neither man. could be|Pued to 18. guards, turnkey| Saturday, Moisyev called f0r' winter wheat is reported to at least one of them being : today when Mrs. Mary Calla-| Mrs, Evelyn McGarr of Mont- ing and, if he had been injured,|found in the human body hasjthe results were maintained| The Carey-Hartnett feud has stitute researcher re ported continued, "the report stated tary-treasurer of the AFL-CIO| American Physicians. lowed subsequent courses: of The IUE conflict flared up|!one--has been found effective press with a column by Hart-|!ymphoma patients at the insti-) jper finally was published with-|a breakdown product of male} James Toughill, was fired by|Sloan - Kettering Institute and lei ; tion as he meets with news- --AP Wirephoto jopium by men attached to the te the Gaited mater ant ro. - : interaational truce supervisory} F . an- P Att k reach their climax later with earson ackKs [oar ony a Ma AW. Plt Wednesday, a court headed by deliberated for two hours fore sentencing Cpl. Gerald Al- British negotiations for entry By ARCH MacKENZIE and continued by charter plane| watch Regiment, to be cut the trip was "rather crowded|¢™mment's response to British] Cranbrook shed pe ag or an army jail for 30 days. industry as Ford Motor Com- hae taleead and, I think, use-|overtures to the European) -20 elnbridge ana' The army had charged that|pany's moves from Windsor to : ee ; | i ion,'| He is to make his first ma- Pal ' He said in speeches in Nee ee Tee pares cal jor speech on agriculture at\avest--carried a parcel from|C. MacDonald said Wednesday give Americans and Canadians| Wednesday. - of some. significance,|PCi2ved it contained gold, and} Citing the recent shift of are doing in Britain, how weltive rule, trade policy hinged|The constituency is Assinibola,| toms for Cpl. Noel, while|visi finds 4 ' araot -a..where Hazen A 17 years ajcUstoms for Cpl. Noel, while|vision out of Windsor and ear- are facing our problems, and/0n diversion and then disloca azen "Argue, ©! years a) suspicious that there was opium'lier moves of other Ford divi- have in the Commonwealth and| A British free - trade offer, and now Liberal candidate: | , a ou ' $s ug ; set sals|seeks re-election. The army prosecutor, Maj.;nominating convention such r American friends. jmade in response to proposals seats. were James Fay, said the corporal's|transfers leaves communitie ' : tai |Progressive Conservative after suspicions proved correct. dian trade to Britain from the " --|imemployment and a forboding London airport by Common-|jected. Th 7 itain|katchewan's 17--Mr. A c- b d. Then, when Britain| f---MT. ATZUC eX i " wealth secretary Duncan San-lturned toward. the | Youn Convicts jaction by the whole area. in-|. A small crowd of 100 at Cran- g He said protests against such cuff remark two days ago which'quiged in childish behavior be- in the East Kootenays raised eyebrows in many Com-'fore it recognized that its attj./neard him pledge a new. Lib-| Hard To Chan e [ with Ca-\eral government to re-examin- g In his Toronto speech Mac-|nadian opinion, Mr. Pearson|tion of the Columbia River junwilling to act because they Market nations "want us they) 4 . i The Columbia Riv priest, who is also a professor |t k i : 1 Y| He spoke to an audience of Phe a River treaty i /t0.make such decisions, and will have to make it easy for| about 400 filling a high school| Situation is one of the "prize|of psychology, said Wednesday| were unable to prevent it be- Canadians have been con-.aj.-4; : i |management,"' he said. habilitated need training apart) main campaign contributors. cerned that their Common- ey oeeethaa dace A Liberal government woula{tom that given in penal insti-) -------- Se ee wealth trade advantages willliaunching his bid for a June 18|\29t be opposed in principle | 'tions. ae nation group. | iaeard' island to the sale of Columbia|at the University of Montreal, Prairie Farm Fp sage ger ae) Boge, He displayed weariness at the|River power owed Canada by| a oth fficials. at . of these visits, which I like to slg ph Victoria(the U.S. for water-storage ben-|yers and other. officials at al M end of a day begun in Victoria ge Den-| o1s Te iW gotiate." must be judged on its merits, |that it is hard for a young con- "It is to have the kind of, | vict to change his deeply-rooted) OTTAWA (CP)--Wide areas personal discussion which} idea that he is bad. of Prairie farm lands are en- carry out one's ordinary work| . | Guards Almost years, more or less, of intensive| 'Critically low levels' of sub- between the different govern- Disrupts IUE work by excellent and well|S0il moisture reserves, the bur- | trained personnel to change this|/€@u of statistics reported Wed- Board Meeting ss, es age Oar ee Ing Ir SARNIA (CP) -- Guards at) Later in the meeting of the Some large increases in vambton County jail had a $300/ Ontario body, Maj.Gen. R. B. grasshopper infestation on the WASHINGTON (AP) -- The annual increase for 14 minutes Gibson, who retired this year as Prairies also are forecast in the |tional Union of Electrical work-| County council approved the planning to the minister of jus-)"eport on crop conditions, based ers were reported to have had motion of a committee to giveltice, was presented with the so-|0n reports from field corres- la fight Wednesday in full view|the increase in a two-year con-!cjety's nickel medallion for dis- pondents received up to Tues- lecutive board. nt a council was told the} ----__---- --~ | The two are IUE: President|National. Union of Public Ser- oy LIKE TWIST with some exceptions surface iJames B. Carey, 50, weighing|Vice Employees (CLC) will ap- Meee BP panalle ae Igor moisture in the West is ade- | ers Relations Board May 16 to ap- ; * F i ; bagel ---- oly for certification of fhe troupe has held North American | "reps vila gid porn eg |32, weighing abou - |. \suards. The motion for a wage|audiences spellbound, says the! me general in moss areas this | After verbal clashes at Wed- a 8' ltwist and rock 'n' roll are "gir-| Week: Little or no seeding has 2 : of "uncertainty of the county's | istricts >» ert te a Lae esilen an interview published in tne SOwery dicts of Alberta an taliated and bloodied Carey's| The increase would have ap-|government newspaper Izvestia) }, Southern Ontario, most seachel dar Coamaat and the matron. Present wages | creation of new Russian dances|paye suffered about 25- to 30- eacilive board 'embers are between $3,120 and $3,700/expressing "'comradely spirit/ner.cent loss from winter kill- are said to have piled in, with annually. jand kindness." knocked off his feet. The meeting at IUE head- quarters was then recessed to han of Philadelphia complained | it was more than she and the other female board member, ancer ype real, could take. i Carey held a press conference. ATLANTIC CITY, N.J, (AP)|seven in the lymphoma group, after Wednesday's board meet-|A natural hormone _product|within two or three weeks, and| didn't show it. been able to reverse the growth|while the treatment continued, ee ann ae of one type of cancer in some!|the report noted. AFL-CIO CONCERNED patients, a Sloan-Kettering In-| When the treatment was dis-| concerned AFL - CIO leaders,|Wednesday. prompt recurrence of the dis- sg jr ye unsuccessfully; pr Leon Hellman presented|ease was seen in all cases, but 0 mediate it. Carey is secre-\the report to the Association of|Prompt improvement again fol-) industrial union department and etiocholanolone. formerly was No. 2 man in the| The report said the natural) -- old ClO. hormone product -- etiocholano-| again a few weeks ago. Carey|in the treatment of lymphomas | refused to let the union's news-|--tumors made up. of lymph) paper, the IUE News, go to/Sland tissues. Four of seven nett cautioning union members tute have been aided by the to be on guard against would-be new treatment. union dictators. The union pa-| Etiocholanolone, a steroid, is jout the challenged column. hormone formed in the testes As a result of that situation,|and in the adrenal glands. the paper's managing editor,! In studies carried out in the} |Carey, who declined to tell re-|Montefiore Hospital, there was | sodpiie Wednesday his reasons}a marked regression of mul- for ordering the discharge. 'tiple tumor sites in four of the AJAX 9 --- a picture is worth a thousand words, now let us large rooms throughout, the main floor has a private music room adjoining the vestibule ond the oak trimmed living room, Fireplaces in both the living and the dining room odd distine- oll the spacious rooms have closets. LIST PRICE $30,000--TERMS WILSON & NORRIS REALTORS OSHAWA SHOPPING CENTRE 725-6588 VE'S_ FAMILY immaculate family home. With x bedrooms lends itself well to sher, storms, screens, verandoh, 42-3364 jshow Canadian jsomething similar to the joint, this afternoon. Sunny land warm Friday. Winds south- The present average wage of}west near 25 today, westerly ear 15 Friday. Eastern Lake Ontario, Hali- ernment "to represent those who produce the wealth," the NDP leader told a rally of about 500 persons in this town 23 miles north of Winnipeg. He said a few large companies control a major part of the Canadian economy. Much of the income of the steel rolling mill. It also is a \farm and Lake Winnipeg fish- eries centre and the border point between the federal consti- tuencies of Springfield and Sel- kirk. Both ridings were won by the Progressive Conservatives in the 1958 general election. Jake Shulz, who once before held Spring- field for the CCF, is running again in Springfield and Valdi Arnason, from the Icelandic centre of Gimli on the west shore of Lake Winnipeg, is the NDP nominee in Selkirk. | Time For Debate Offered By CBC OTTAWA (CP) -- ublicly-owned corporation has ffered time on its national TV networks for debates between the four party leaders in the June 18 election campaign. The form of debate would be up to the politicians. This was the first indication that the CBC stands ready to) TV_ viewers) p 0 TV appearances of John Ken-' nedy and Richard Nixon in the! 1960 U.S. presidential cam- paign. Tor-|® Lake Huron: Northerly winds 20 to 30 knots becoming west- erly near 20 tonight. Showers. Georgian Bay: Southerly winds near 15 knots becoming westerly 20 to 30 this afternoon and diminishing overnight to 20. Rain tapering off to show- rs. Lake Erie: Westerly winds 20 to 30 knots diminishing to 15 to 20 tonight. Lake Ontario: Southwest winds 20 to 30 knots becoming west 20 tonight. Forecast Temperatures Low tonight, High Friday Windsor .-: 5 vb} St. Thomas .++++. London Kitchener . Wingham ....+.++. Hamilton .+erseoes St. Catharines Toronto Peterborough Trenton North. Bay Sudbury .. town of 8,500 comes from a|Low overnight, High W: a farm leader|s Earlton Kapuskasing White River . Moosonee Observed Temperatures edmesday 18 40 54 48 Dawson Victoria ... Edmonton ...-+0+ Regina Winnipeg .....s++ Fort William ..... White River.....+. Kapuskasing ...:: North Bay S. S. Marie.. oaeeeeneeee Muskoka .. Windsor ...+++eeee London ...+++ Toronto . Ottawa .... Montreal Quebec .... o ~ {Halifax ....00- 56 DETECTIVE LOSES BADGE NEW YORK (AP)--A woman detective lost her badge, re- volver and $10 to a burglar who A CBClihvaded her apartment while spokesman said Wednesday theshe was asleep Sunday. The burglar entered the ground- floor Brooklyn apartment of Detective Edith Williams, 32, through an open bathroom win- dow. She awakened and screamed. The man fled. EYE EXAMINATIONS by appointment PHON E 723-4191 F. R. BLACK, O.D. 136 SIMCOE ST. NORTH ings. In southwestern and cen-|and department stores fleeing) dog tags. ON DEMAND. DOGS TOWNSHIP OF EAST WHITBY BY-LAW NO, 1545 . No person shall allow a dog to run at large on parcels of land of 5 acres or under, within the limits of the Township of East Whitby, during the months of May, June or July. . No person shall allow a dog to run at large any- where in the Township of East Whitby from Sunset to Sunrise at any time of the year. No dog shall be allowed by its owner to become a nuisance or cause annoyance or damage to any person or property at any time of the year. Any dog found running at large may be dis- posed of by the Police or any person appointed for this purpose by the Municipal Council. DOG TAXES DOG TAXES IN 1962 will be paid to the Town- ship Assessor, who will issue the licences and 2. All owners of dogs must be prepared to pay the DOG TAX to the TOWNSHIP ASSESSOR George Farncomb, Clerk, Township of East Whitby, Columbus, Ontario.

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