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Oshawa Times (1958-), 9 May 1963, p. 2

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NE EG Yay ee Q THE OSHAWA TIMES, Thursdey, Mey 9, 1963 GOOD EVENING -- -- By JACK GEARIN "LOCAL 222 MY BABY, I LOVE IT' -- MALCOLM SMITH Few men have such deep roots in the turbulent political world of Local 222, UAW-CLC, as Malcolm Smith. He will seek re-election as president next week for his third consecutive twe-year term. The 58-year-old Scottish-born ex-coal-miner played a key role in the founding of the Local,-largest Canadian UAW outlet with a membership today of more than 13,500 (ap- 1,500 are from GM). ov He was mid-wife and poli- tical advisor, liaison man with Detroit and always the forceful, outspoken cham- pion of the policies of the International, es pe cia lly when the going got rough. The birth of the Local actually goes back to the Fall of 1936 when Smith was a member of a "secret" organization committee, prime purpose of which was to obtain a 'UAW Interna- tional charter on behalf of local workers. The charter: was obtained, bears his name. Smith took part in a GM strike in 1928 and was a member of a union formed at that time. It folded six months later. The unhap- piest period of his life, he eee STES says, was that nine-year stretch from June, 1927 (when he joined the company) until 1936 without a GMC umion. Smith can boast of a unique record of continuous politi- cal activity and achievement in the world of Local 222 since that time in almost every available office, such as chief steward, vice-president, chairman of the GM Bargaining com- mittee and president. He was on the executive of the old Canadian Congress of Labor for three years. He has been on the Canadian UAW Council for more than 20 years. He was president and vice- president of the Council several times. He is a delegate to the Oshawa and District Labor Council. He was a delegate to Europe in 1950 -- he toured auto, aircraft and farm im- plement plants tc compare productions methods overseas with those of North America. The membership of Local 222 has displayed its apprecia- tion. of his trade union organization achievements by electing him as a deleagte to every UAW convention since 1941. He has also served on various convention committees. Canadian UAW Director George Burt once offered Smith a position on the staff of the International Union. Smith de- cided to stay with Local 222, because, as he says, "I feel. that Local 222 is my baby, and as long as I can be of assist- ance to our membership in Oshawa and see them prospering, I am happy. Any ability which I may have developed in my years of experience in the Trade Union movement will al- ways be. available to the members of Local 222." Asked this week what he liked best about being presi- dent of Local 222, he replied: "I feel that in this position I can do a lot of people a lot of good." Smith got his first taste of Trade Union life in 1918 when he left school at 13 to take a job in the Scottish coal mines. He took part in a six-month strike which saw the miners defeated. He also took part in the 1926 strike. It started with famous Ge ' Strike and lasted 10 days after which the miners were leit to fight alone -- they did this for eight months and were. again defeated. Smith has remained firm and unyielding throughout the years in his staunch allegi to the policies of Walter Reuther and the International UAW. Not only does he hope to retain the presidency, a full- time, paying job, he also hopes to get 'enough of his party members elected so that he can control the Executive, Dis- trict Council delegates and Standing Committees (Political Action, Education and Recreation); without these necessary majorities, a president's hands would be tied. Smith says that there are no serious issues in Local 222 at présent, that the membership has prospered under the administration of the Unity Right-Wing' Group in recent years. The membership will have an opportunity to endorse or reject these claims in next week's elections starting Tuesday. CROWN ATTORNEYS PLAN €ORNWALL POW-WOW The life of a Crown Attornéy sometimes. requires a robust constitution. It's mostly a never-ending round of court ap- pearances, lengthy research sessions in the Law Library and interviews, not to mention Coroner's inquests and public after-dinner speaking engagements. Crown Attorney Bruce Affleck is taking time out from this brisk schedule this week to attend the Ontario Crown Attorneys' conyention in Corn- wall, Thursday through Saturday. He will speak on "The Ad- ministration of Justice' -- 85 CA's and their deputies will attend. NEW RATEPAYERS GROUP PLANNED Residents of that area west of Stevenson's road have been invited to attend a meeting Sunday night in the Mall Restaurant at the Oshawa Shopping Centre. Purpose of the meet is to discuss erganization of a new ratepayers group. The meeting will start at 8:30 p.m. and John DeHart, presi- dent of the Lake Vista Ratepayers Association will be the guest speaker. . . . CNR officials said today four different types of auto transport cars will be on view here Saturday; the automobile transporter, the tri-level car, the Evans auto- loader and a gondola car. MORE ENTRIES ARRIVE FOR BIG PARADE The Oshawa C of C will have two entries in next Satur- day's Tracks Removal Celebration Parade, a°1908 McLaugh- lin Buick and an ancient surrey. . . . Citizens who would like to assist the worthy fund drive for a campsite for the On- tario Camp of the Deaf near Parry Sound should contact Mr. W. D. Bell, 106 Lauder road, Oshawa, who is the local chairman. The Evangelical Church of the Deaf, Toronto, is sponsoring the campaign DON BRANCH TRANSFERRED TO TORONTO Members of the Oshawa Lions Club are going to lose their energetic president, Donald A. Branch, who has done so Much to advance their cause in the past year. Don, the gon of Mr. and Mrs. Walter Branch (chairman of the City Finance committee) has been transferred to Toronto by the Bell Telephone Co. of Canada. He will move there with his family later; meanwhile he is commuting. . . . The Oshawa Kinsmen Club is bringing in the Kinsmen Band of Lindsay for Saturday's big parade here. COW TRS Se ee Taxation By STEWART MacLEOD TORONTO (CP)--A_ special tax report on corporation prof- its, which Finance Minister Walter Gordon says was kept secret by the Diefenbaker gov- ernment, was made public Wed- nesday by the royal commission on taxation, The report, prepared by four tax experts in March, 1961, was sent to the commission by Mr. Gordon after the Canadian In- Wide Response To Anglican Finally Released Report stitute of Chartered Accountants had written to the finance min- ister seeking access to the study. In his reply to institute Presi- dent J. W. Abbott of Toronto, Mr. Gordon said the 'report was kept secret and apparently nothing was done about problems." He decided to sub- mit it to the taxation commis- sion '"'so that it can be obtained by anyone who is interested." The report produced a series of recommendations concerning the undistributed profits of cor- porations--a problem that ranks high in the current investiga- tion. Members of the four-man committee who, Mr. Gordon 1963 Congress TORONTO (CP)--World An- glicanism has made an out- standing response to the 1963 Anglican Congress, it was re- ported Wednesday to the na- tional congress committee meet- ing at the Anglican Church of Canada headquarters here. Rt. Rev. G. B. Snell, coad- jutor bishop of Toronto and chairman of the congress sécre- tariat, said that registrations of official delegates from the 18 churches comprising the Angli- can communion now total 910. With three months to go, it is possible nearly 950 delegates may attend. The congress will be held |Aug. 13-23 at the Royal York Hotel here. Most Rev. Howard H. Clark, primate of the Anglican Church of Canada and honorary chair- man of the congress, com- mented on the advisability. of in- viting official observers from other communions. He said that because of the size of the con- gress and the wide scope of its program several people had ap- proached him on the matter. "We must not lose sight of the fact that the function of the con- gress is markedly different from that of the Vatican council and even that of the. Worid Council of Churches," he said. The Anglican Congress is not a legislative body nor will its de- cisions be anything but advisory in nature for the churches of the Anglican communion. 'In addition services and plenary sessions of the congress will be open to the public." The primate said that after consultation with Anglican lead-| ers in the United Kingdom and} the United States it had been| deemed advisable not to take) formal action inthe matter. | RC Missionaries Remain In Haiti OTTAWA (CP)--Some 375 Ca-| nadian Roman Catholic mission- aries are remaining in Haiti for the present, despite an appeal by the government that all Ca- nadians leave the war-threat- jened country, church officials said Wednesday. The external affairs depart-| ment said Tuesday that Cana- dians in Haiti were being evacu- ated because of the threat of war with the Dominican Repub- lic. The government can only advise Canadians, other t han those employed by the govern- ment, to leave. A spokesman for the Cana- dian Catholic Conference here said that the missionaries would remain unless the situation |grew worse. The decision would be made by clergy in Port-au- Prince, the Haitian capital. said in'his letter, were appointed by the government, included A. Emile Beauvais, a Quebec City chartered accountant, who is a member of the six - member royal commission. He is past president of the Canadian Insti- tute of Chartered Accountants. LISTS OTHERS Other members were R. Bre- din Stapells, a Toronto tax law- real tax lawyér, and Harold P. Herington, a Toronto chartered accountant. The basic recommendation in| the report was to impose a "shareholders tax" of a flat 15 per cent on the dividends paid to shareholders from the accu- mulated earnings of corpora- tions. Under existing laws, divi- dends paid to shareholders are taxed under the graduated per- sonal income rates, but there are several legal loopholes through which dividends can be taken from the corporate sur- plus without tax-paying. This is yer, George T. Tamaki, a Mont-|, Heavily. - laden climbers move across Khumbu Glacier at an altitude of about 18,500 feet in one of the first pic- tures to reach the United EVEREST EXPEDITION States from the American ex- pedition which conquered Mt. Everest a week ago. This pic- ture was released in Washing- ton Wednesday by the Na- tional Geographic Society. It was sent by runner from Everest to Katmandu, Nepal. (Copyright 1963 National Geo- 'LONDON (CP) -- Canada joined Wednesday in a family- type two-day study that is part of perhaps the biggest exami- nation and assault on tariffs yet attempted in the free world. What started here was a 17- country Commonwealth confer- ence among" experts and it is linked either formally or inevit- ably with other conferences leading to next. week's Geneva meeting of the 44. Gen- eral Agreement on Tariffs and Trade. Questions rather than answers set the tone of the day: Nationalism or international- Possible Action Against School For Salesmen TORONTO (CP) -- Attorney- General Frederick Cass said in a statement Wednesday an in- vestigation of a provincially- supported school for salesmen has revealed information which, graphic Society Photo via AP if substantiated, might result in Wirephoto) action by his department. Agency In Feed Grain known as "dividend stripping."'| Chief Justice | Will Preside | At Opening OTTAWA (CP)--Chief Justice Robert Taschereau will become Administrator of the govern- ment of Canada for six hours May 16 to preside at the open- ing of the new Parliament, it was announced Wednesday. This will give the chief jus- tice, acting in the place of Governor - General Vanier, all the special honors normally ac- corded the Queen's representa- tive, including two 21-gun sa- lutes on arrival at and depar- ture from Parliament Hill. Government House said Gen. Vanier is making good progress in his recovery from his mild heart attack of April 8 but that his doctors have advised him not to undergo the strain of the ceremonial opening of Parlia- ment. Therefore, it was announced, the Governor-General had asked Chief Justice Taschereau to open Parliament as Adminis- trator, from noon to 6 p.m. on May 16.. The ceremony starts around 3 p.m. EDT. The Chief Juste or a Su- preme Court justice, acts as a deputy for the Governor-Gen- eral several times a year and is given a number of courtesies --such as being called "the honorable deputy: to his excel- lency,"' and riding in a Govern- ment House limousine. But by going one step farther and making Chief Justice Tas- chereau Administrator for the occasion, he will be entitled to the full honors paid the Queen's representative. WEATHER FORECAST Forecasts issued by the Tor- onto weather office at 5 a.th:: Synopsis: Much cooler wea- ther covers Northern Ontario where snow was reported in some localities. Showers and thunder storms will be less nu- merous today. Another weather disturbance moving from the southwestern United States is |however expected to renew the shower activity over southern Ontario on Friday. Lake St, Clair, Lake Erie re- gions, Wind8or; Mostly cloudy Friday with scattered showers lor thunderstorms, not quite so jwarm. Winds becoming south- jeast 15 to 20 Friday. | Lake Huron, western Lake |Ontario, Niagara regions, Lon- don, Hamilton, Toronto: Mostly cloudy Friday with scattered showers or thunderstorms de- veloping by afternoon, little change in temperature. Winds becoming easterly. 15 Friday, Eastern Lake Ontario, Geor- gian Bay, Haliburton regions: Partly cloudy Friday, becoming cloudy with showers toward evening, little change in tem- perature. Winds light. Algoma, Timagami regions, Mostly Cloudy Weather Seen Marie: Mostly cloudy Friday with scattered showers or thun- dershowers developing by after- noon, little change in tempera- ture, Winds becoming easterly 15 to 20 Friday. White River region: Partly cloudy and cool today and Fri- day, winds northeast 15. Cochrane region: Sunny with cloudy periods and continuing cold Friday. Winds light. | Forecast Temperatures Low tonight, High Friday WiNGSOL ss sicccies 00 80 St. Thomas ....... LODO seks abancis Kitchener .....0.. WINGHOM si cssivas fl Hamilton .......0. 5 St. Catharines .... 55 TOPOMO 6occsccinrs Peterborough ..... TENOR ss ..00s eee Killaloe .... Muskoka .. North Bay ... Sudbury Earlton'....... Kapuskasing . White River. Urged By Federation By ARCH MacKENZIE OTTAWA (CP) -- A federal agency serving feed grain con- sumers was recommended Wed- nesday by the Canadian Feder- ation of Agriculture in its first appearance before the new Lib- eral government. The federation's executive met Agriculture Ministef Harry Hays and Rene Tremblay, mi- ister without portfolio who-is-te become a second agriculture minister specifically in charge of Eastern Canadian farm af- airs. The feed grain crown agency was the only new item in the list of proposals discussed in a general way. They include an early start on a national school milk pro. gram and establishment of a Canadian dairy advisory coun- cil--the latter already begun under the former Conservative government. There were these other sug gestions: A planned policy of railway abandonment on the Prairies to avoid "'piecemeal" withdrawa! of service. WANT WHEAT SOLD Continued aggressive efforts to sell wheat, tied in with credit facilities. Federal legislation to rein- sure provinces against heavy losses from crop disasters. Extension of farm credit fa- cilities to cover emergencies and rural housing. The feed-grain formula was another manifestation of inter. est in providing adequate sup- plies for Eastern consumers at stable: prices--a condition ham. pered now by existing storage and purchase patterns and higher costs after water trans- .|portation freezes up on the Great Lakes-seaway system. The agency would have an ad- |visory committee formed from |representatives of or ganized farmers. Montreal Men Face Charges On Income Tax OTTAWA (CP)--Seven Mont- real men face a total of 72 charges under the Income Tax Act of supplying fake church donation receipts to individual income tax payers. A justice department source said Wednesday that the re- ceipts used all were from the jsame Roman Catholic parish in |Montreal, St. Elisabeth du Por- jtugal. The parish has since |been reorganized under a differ- jent name. | The charges have been filed in court at Montreal and the seven men have received war- rants to appear for arraignment May 16. All of the 72 charges are simi- lar, alleging that the accused man participated in making a false declaration in the income tax return of an' individual by providing him with a false re- ceipt for a charitable donation to the parish, The justice department source said the seven men did not act jointly with each other. No charges have been laid against the individual taxpayers Agency functions would cover these points: Administration of the system of federal assistance on feed transportation costs. WOULD HAVE AUTHORITY Adequate authority to force action, when 'required, in mak- ing Eastern Canada public sential carry-over stocks, Administration of a recum- mended storage subsidy pro- gram for feed grains. Advice to the government on its policy of permits for im- ported feed grains. Finally, to provide a generai study and advisory body on feed grain supplies and market developments "which may have created undesirable and short- run distortions and fluctuations in price." However, it would not grain storage available for €s-| Mr, Cass did not specify the nature of the possible action. He was referring to an inves- tigation by the criminal inves- tigation branch of the provincial police into operation of the Ca- nNadian Sales Motivation Insti- tute with schools in Windsor, Hamilton, Sudbury, London, Ot- tawa, North Bay and Cornwall. The institute, a private profit- making agency ,offers a course in salesmanship under a section of the Canadian Vocational Training program whereby the province pays 25 per cent and the federal government 75 per cent of costs. D, C, O'Brien, co-ordinator of the program for the Windsor interfere with the Canadian wheat board, crown sales agency for Prairie wheat, oats and barley. : The former Conservat:ve gov- ernment had been working on legislation to set up a federal feed agency serving Eastern Canada. Canada J oins Tariff Probe ism? Are the new economie blocs seeking rivalry in trade or real co-operation? Can the less- developed countries look for- ward to real meaning in the phrase trade-not-aid? Will the highly - industrialized countries recognize the particular prob- lems of, say, a primary-pro- ducer like Canada? The immediate job of the ex- perts meeting in London was to prepare the ground for govern- ment ministers--including Can- ada's Trade Minister Mitchell -- Sharp'-- who will attend the Commonwealth Consultative Economic Council meeting next Monday and Tuesday, Other almost-concurrent con- © ferences also are involved but . the one that may really count is scheduled for next year. This is the United Nations world-wide trade conference with special © application to developing coun- - tries, for which a preparatory meeting will be held just after the forthcoming Geneva get-to- gether. Failure of the GATT talks could well mean an explosive political situation at the UN meeting, where Soviet Premier Khrushchev could be expected to take advantage of failures of the advanced countries to make concessions to the less-devel- oped areas. The big impetus in the whole. complex of talks was President Kennedy's success Oct. 11, 1962, in getting the U.S, Congress to give him authority to negotiate across - the - board tariff reduc- tions up to 50 per cent. The principle of tariff reduc- tions has been approved by Prime Minister Pearson but he explained at a press conference in London last week that the 50-per cent "linear" idea might present problems because Can- ada is a producer of primary items and semi - manufactured goods. board of education, said he ac- cepted fees for professional ser- vices to the school when its op- NOTES BUTTER SUPPORT The brief noted the new gov- erment's decision continue the 12-cent-a-pound butter sub- sidy although on a more lim. ited source of supply. "We think on the whole that the policy meets the needs of the present situation and we ex- pect in 1963-64 the demand and supply situation for butter will come very much closer into bal- ance." te sor, spread to other centres. Mr. Cass _ said jaction, eration, which began in Wind- in his state- ment that since March 21 some 200 persons have been inter- viewed, bank accounts checked and documents reviewed. He said information has been re- vealed, which, if substantiated, might result in departmental Forced Blood Test Move Opposed HALIFAX (CP)--An Edmon- ton lawyer charged here Wed- nesday that any change in the Criminal Code, which now pro- The butter surplus of more than 200,000,000 pounds has Two Plead Guilty been rising annually since 1958. INTERPRETING THE NEWS In $200 Robbery Defence By HAROLD MORRISON Canadian Press Staff Writer _The U.S. defence department is undergoing internal convul- sions involving the careers and morale of the top military eche- lons as the result of a single military contract equivalent in value to the entire Canadian budget for a full year. When Gen. Dwight D. Eisen- hower stepped down from the presidency two years ago, he warned against the possibility of a huge military-industriai com- plex acquiring undue govern- ment influence.' Because of tre- mendous government defence expenditures, 'the potential for the disastrous rise of misplaced power exists and will persist,' he said. But Eisenhower also warned against what he described as an equal and opposite danger-- that public policy itself could be seized by the scientific-techno. logical elite. In reaching a conclusion as to what company would be given the contract to construct a con- troversial new fighter plane, with a hinged, tapered wing, de- fence secretary Robert McNa- mara probably realized his de- cision would become highly po- litical and debatable CONTRACT FIGHT Various districts in need of jobs were hungry for that con- tract which eventually would mean federal outfays of $6,500,- 000,000 or more. The biggest competition was between Boe. ing Aircraft Company of Cali- fornia and General Dynamics Corporation of New York and Texas. General Dynamics got: the contract under circumstances which initiated a heated con- gressional investigation amid charges that McNamara _ig- nored recommendations of his generals and displayed dictato- rial tendencies in his final deci- sion. The former ' whiz kid' of the Contract Sparks ston men pleaded guilty Wed- nesday to beating and robbing a suburban North York druggist of $200 Tuesday, Archie Cameron, 29, who were arrested after a wild, 30-mile Police chase, also admitted rob- Strife Detroit auto industry resented the criticism. A tough and hard- working Irishman, he pursued a determination to cut Pentagon costs, knock military heads to- gether to eliminate inter-service rivalry and push for an auto- mated form of defence ased mainly on missiles despite the cry of some of his military men for a new family of long-range jet bombers. But wove through his tough- ness there appears to be intol. erance of criticism and a rage for revenge ageinst those who oppose him. The top man in the Navy, Admiral George Aader- son, is being dropped. His one- year term ending next August will not be extended. LOWERE DMORALE The two-year term of Gen Curtis LeMay, chief of the air stores earlier this year. They were remanded to May 15 for sentence. Top Teamsters Probe Books In Kingston KINGSTON (CP)--Two top executives of the International Brotherhood of Teamsters (Ind.) arrived here Wednesday to investigate the financial af- fairs of Kingston-based Local 91. The investigation was ordered by James Hoffa, international Teamsters president, after an audit of the local's finances un- covered discrepancies. we TORONTO (CP)--Two King- James Berkinshaw, 40, and bing two other Toronto drug force, is being extended for only one year instead of the expected two. These and other changes ar reported to have reduced moral among the top military career men i a low pint. Congressional investiga tors says there were errors in Mc- Namara's jugment in handling the fighter contract, They sug- gest there may have been more politics than military savvy dis- played. Now McNamara is heing crit. icized, and defended, in edito. rial columns. Where before he was considered the golden boy of the Kennedy administration who could do no wrong, he now is described in one column as a would-be superman who ignores the public in his decision-mak- ing. _ Politics being what it is, the fighter cont-act :s unlilely to be upset but it could split some of the democratic groups in congress and possibly reflect in the presidential vote next year. I M. (Casey) Dodds, Cana- dian. director of the interna- tional union, said one estimate of $15,000 as the amount miss- ing from Local 91 funds was "way short." He said in an in- terview the amount might be nearer $25,000, Arriving with Mr. Dodds to conduct the investigation was Raymond Bennett, a Teamster executive from Detroit dele- gated by Mr. Hoffa to head the investigation, The special inquiry was or- hibits evid that a person re- fused a scientific test to estab- lish blood alcohol content, would be contrary to the Canadian Bill of Rights. A resolution calling for the section of the Criminal Code to be repealed by the federal gov- ernment was passed by the Ca- . nadian Highway Safety Council at the annual meeting. However, the resolution met stiff opposition from Charles H. Grant of Edmonton, a member of the Alberta Safety Council and a practising, lawyer. Mr. Grant claimed that the use of such a refusal as evi dence to convict a driver of im- paired driving was also con- trary to a Criminal Code sec- tion which stated '"'a man shall not be compelled to convict him- self out of his own mouth." Dr, Wallace Troup of Ottawa, a member of the council's med- ical advisory committee, said in an interview that as a doctor he wanted to see something don€ about impaired drivers. "All statistics prove that the drinking driver is the cause of most fatal accidents," he said. The tests were the only way to stop the menace of impaired drivers. dered Monday after all seven members of the Local 91 execu-| tive had filed charges with the, ' international headquarters al-| leging financial distrepancies in the local's finances. Mr. Dodds said Wednesday that "The heavy majority of the |executive board of Local 91 are |completely clear of any respon. sibility for the local's being in debt." OSHAWA'S ORIGINAL A terrific combination for a tall, cool drink Mt. Forest .. involved. COMING EVENTS Now On Classified Page In order to facilitate easier reading for all the vital statistics, The Coming Events will be moved over to the same page as the births, deaths, in memoriams, and obituaries. As a general rule, they will be print- ed on the third classified page. MOTORIZE SOCCER _|motorball and it's played by two NOT Bay, Sudbury, Sault Ste. MONTREAL (CP)--A varia-\helmeted teams on a soccer| tion of soccer played by men ONlse14 with an inflated ball sim HEAT WITH OIL motorcycles has been intro- DIXON'S duced in Russia and "is quickly|!ar to a beachball. Few details itching on,"" says Soviet Union|of the rules were given but pic- a monthly - magazinejtures showed that the players by the Soviet embassy|apparently kick the ball while! in-Ottawa. The game is called/astride their motorcycles. OIL SERVING OSHAWA OVER 50 YEARS 24-HOUR SERVICE 313 ALBERT ST. 723-4663 CARPET CENTRE at Nu-Way, carpet and 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. Special Weekly Message To Members Of CHAMBERS . FOOD CLUB Try TINI with Coke or ginger ale too for bracing refreshment TINI is available throughout Ontario listed under "Flavoured Wines." ? StRWICE CLEANERS and LAUNDERERS OSHAWA - PORT HOPE WHITBY - COBOURG ROWMANVILLE - SCARBORO Curtains, Drapes, Blankets, Rugs OSHAWA'S ONLY UNIONIZED SHOP 723-4631 SO MILL EYE EXAMINATIONS PHONE 723-4191 by appointment F. R. BLACK, O.D. || 136 SIMCOE ST. NORTH @ Commercial and Industrial Sites @ Leaseback e Development Paul Ristow REALTOR 52% Simcoe N. fIbEtht 728-9474 . : 'THE PARKDALE WINES LTD.

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