Seen aoe ane a i 26 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Wednesday, Februery 20, 1963 TORONTO 11 A.M. 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'3 J ga > wt = siisiees crac = Un Keno 220 Upp Can a Ps 8% + % Violam rr] 2 Mm 13% 83 b 42% + %4) Yk Bear -- %| Young HG -- %|Zenmac 2 Zelapa 10 10 +% tion. Previ promotion was| standing desire for more non- Net |Democratic Party candidate tributing some of the'r enumer- left the party in his riding about|for each polling division Then|Centre to about $8,000. lice will not necessarily have tojsideration in promotions above cent to 9,220 in 1962, directors --1 | Val Scott, NDP candidate for|eral with one NDP. stamp was the famous "penny| Tuesday. 'om all 17 police districts . , i s .. . for if affeds your welfare, 100 $16 16% 16% | Weston Majtrans ™% ™-- ; ardeon constan! nave success-)Vancea course at the omicer for the nding has had said when 'he two par- OPP Promotion 168 who a issioned officers ina the based on. 15 years' experience| commi Sales High Low a.m, On'ge |says a request that half the fee| election in each riding have [0] ation fee of $32 plus 19 cents the enumerators are supposed wait 15 years to become corpor-| the rank of corporal, the spokes- +1 |100 enumerators short fur duties) Me das oe y' aid, municipal ltbrary here in tt York Centre, said the returning] Returning Officer Dean Rich-' black" issued in Britain in 1840.| A spokesman said first-class re Be the first five-week ad-|reported. i) r] 8 | your well-being, your prosperity! say Bk C 221 sete 63% 63% --| West A wis 10% 10% + %| Marcon 580 $138% 13% 1%--% f thei or their to recruit enumerators aligned|ties did not-supply him with fully completed an advanced|which ended last week. ies| his job to select th inder. ® cial Police College here will be| noicy is in line with a long. Of Enumerators |to tu ou tte nos quota. Hut Scott said. despite. with cker priowe 's Stoc arke Bo res cance avec oe a in all exceptional cases. |2,000-man force. moo $1% 1% 1% paid NDP enumerators be|supply the returning officeria name tisted have swelled] TORONTO (CP)--First - class) affected by the change. Merit 10000 12 before the April 8 federal elec-|t© be teamed in pairs--in the als in future, the attorney-gen-|man s: es|cTeased by more than 50 per ie The world's ao i odeaueiiaiin LENSE ie AMR NATE ET EME EAT EE TAS W Pacific 1100 817% AN INTERPRETATION BY LOCAL 9% Woodwd A 16% 16% Maritime ® e ® € Objectives -- Community Relations -- Developments '6 3 | 'Coming | babble HaltEs DUBLIN TAXIS NUMEROUS Tourists Met By Horse-Drawn Carts By CAROL KENNEDY ble. You can still see bullet|titled Rebel Cork's Fighting UB! CP) -- Dublin is|}Pockmarks at the foot of rebel/Story and With the IRA in the atau te Ps po ey in|Daniel O'Connell's statue, near|Fight For Freedom -- the Red Europe where a horse-drawn|the Post Office where the|Path to Glory. s J ? Riding Short with the Progressive Conserva-| sufficient enumerators, it was training course at the Provin-/ The spokesman said the new eligible for immediate promo- TORONTO (CP) -- A New| ...0.04 the polls in the previous| #0", the 330-odd persons con- In Future ase. Senior positions no y - INCREASE MEMBERS turned back to the party has|With a list of enumera'ors--one|NDP campaign funds in York| constables in the provincial po-jhas always beea the main con- 73° Ition. case of York Centre, one Lib- first postage|¢ral's department anaounced oom 40 first-class Me % 8% -- % 500 280 300 12 -1 200 ete i a + ¥%| Westeel a it n M aS 500 485, +25 |Zenith 455 Mattgmi 885 CPR ih 26% | 4 Cdn 100 sin 1% lU"*+ %| I Tire A xd 550 $25 5 --%| y Fy Gon Bid 100 $9% a st _ [tte tan care . mn ss we wa Con Bidg pr 100 Ang Min- % % 9 Con 500 17117 $23% 23% 2%--% 400 ¥ 20% 20% 500 5S Coronation 400 Told In Complete Detail In 'wexener e 3 cab meets you at the air ter-| rebellion started. minal. It's partly a tourist gimmick: The big hotels maintain their own reconditioned hansoms gleaming in chocolate and gold. But Dublin still has a few free- lance coachmen or "'jarveys," and the unsuspecting visitor ac- cepting the offer "cab sir?" is likely to find himself assisted up a rickety step into a dark interior quilted in leather and BLEND WITH PAST But all the buildings have been meticulously restored; the Customs House lifts its green copper dome against the sky like a spring bud; and by some alchemy of time the stones and columns look as weathered as if they had stood there for cen- turies. ; The people must know the se- The picture is by no means all rose-tinted. Outside Naples, Europe today has few worse slums than those of the Irish capital. The Neapolitan slums can look picturesque from a distance with their lines of col- ored laundry strung across the lanes, but Dublin's slimy, rot- ting 18th - century tenements make the onlooker feel physic- ally unclean. Men in real rags, tiny grimed Mr. Biisinessman... . Be Sure To Tell Your Story in the 1963 Business and Industrial Review! and a Competent Advertising Representative will call" to assist you in the preparation for your advertising message! ' |cret of it. Famed the world over) children humping piles of even- smelling of hay and horses. \for their social poise and epi-|ing papers mye as themselves, Jolting over the paving-stones,| grammatic talk, gregarious yet|the teeming 12-to-a-room war- one gets the first taste of a city|oddly self-contained, Dubliners|rens of The Coombe -- these where time has not exactly are intensely in touch with mod-|things tear at the heart of a stood still, but where different/ern life -- avid readers and| visitor an hour's jet flight from levels of it seem to coexist and moviegoers--yet fit easily into|London» where such sights be- PHONE 723-3474 flow together, and where cer- the framework of their fathers' tain aspects of life remain se- renely unchanged from generations back. This unchangeable quality) never fails to astound the visitor) from Britain or North America, | where the landscape of cities| visibly alters from month to month. After 10 years away,| one 2xpects to see a new Dublin --faster, more neon-lit, glassy| with cubist office blocks. NOTHING CHANGES But the place remains un- touched, except for ribbons of few suburban villas. The same liminous, color - washed skies light up the crumbling wharfs that Yeats and Shaw knew; the same adenoidal yelling of the paper-boys turns "Herald"' into "Heggle;" the same names in Victorian gilt lettering loom over pubs, saddiers and "count-)* ing-houses" that were in busi- mess when a British viceroy lived in Dublin Castle. The network of 18th-century terraces round fashionable Mer- rion Square where Oscar Wilde lived stili glow rosy in the splendid sunsets, while over on the north bank of the murky Liffey, beyond the coffee-bars and souvenir shops of O'Con- Mell Street, the leprous tene- ments that once also were noble Georgian houses fester in a per- petual smoky twilight. Nothing changes: for better or worse. This timeless quality is par- ticularly strange in view of Dub- lin's violent past. In the Easter Riging of 1916 and the bitter civil war that raged on into the 1920s, the city's finest public three) world. Out in the country a feudal pattern of life persists, with the ord in his stone- -flagged castle jand maids carrying up steam- ing cans of water for the hip-| jbaths. And the capital keeps something of a rural feel and| | Pace of life. The green doubledecker buses! sweep round corners on the un- wary pedestrian, but in back streets by the river life still moves to the rhythm of the horse, There are chromium cocktail bars in the old hotels, but the atmosphere retains the air of a well-run country house, with chambermaids inquiring in the flat Dublin brogue if "ye'd be wantin' a jar in y'r bed"-- meaning a hot - water bottle. (The other local meaning of 'jar," one quickly appreciates, is a drink--preferably a draught of the rich Guinness stout brewec down by the river.) HIDEOUS SLUMS Perhaps this native ability to mingle old and new explains how Dublin has managed to ef- face her revolutionary past so gracefully, and how she emerges to the stranger as a bing along amicably in the soft rainwashed air. The contradictions are every- where, from Nelson on his pil- lar a few yards from the steps where Patrick Pearse read the proclamation of nationalist in- dependence on Easter Monday, 1916, to a religious' bookshop blandly displaying missals buildings were reduced to rub- long in the pages of Charles | Dickens. | One leaves puzzling over the jenigma of a place where the Philosophy of things - as - they - have-always-been seems to be jaccepted as much in the reek-| jing slums as in the classical | mansions of Merrion Square. | | Tomorrow: The battle of | Fitzwilliam Street. Whisky Export Ban| Considered By U.K. LONDON (Reuters) -- Britain is considering a ban on the ex- port of immature scotch whisky, the House of Commons was told Tuesday. Minister of State Alan Green| of the Board of Trade said the} board is considering represen-| tations asking for such a ban in order to preserve the repu- tation of scotch abroad, Conservative MP J. A. Stodart had complained in the Commons that selling immature scotch-- whisky aged less than the three years it must be to be sold in Britain--"could easily damage \the value of a great export." | bundle of contradictions all rub-| Sodar said about 1,000,000 gallons a year of the underage product were being exported. FIGHT MALARIA MEXICO CITY (AP) -- The United Nations International Children's Fund will contribute $2,400,000 to the Mexican gov- ernment's campaign to eradi- cate malaria and t uberculosis among Mexican children, alongside lurid paperbacks en- UNICEF officials said. 1. ON THE COUPONS BELOW, FILL IN THE NAMES AND ADDRESSES OF PERSONS TO WHOM YOU WISH TO SEND COPIES. i Ct es ee MAIL AWAY TO FRIENDS EVERYWHERE 2. BRING OR MAIL TO THE OSHAWA TIMES WITH 15c FOR EACH ONE TO BE MAILED OR $1.00 IF YOU WISH TO SEND EIGHT COPIES. 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