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Oshawa Times (1958-), 21 Aug 1963, p. 2

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2 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Wednesday, August 21, 1903 'Meetings Opened Robarts Appoints GOOD EVENING By JACK GEARIN SAYS TAXES TOO HIGH FOR WIDOWS, VETS City Council was given another grim reminder this week that some ratepayers are beginning to buckle under the strain of heavy taxes, also that some relief must be afforded these people. The reminder came in the form of a petition signed by 23 people, which read; "Mr, Mayor and Members of City Council: "We the undersigned rate- payers residing on Verdun road (both sides) south of Olive avenue to the CPR humbly request City Council not to proceed with the gran- ular base road, curb and gut- ter which was approved by the Ontario Municipal Board Friday, July 26, 1963. The road has been graded and oiled in the last month and is in better shape now than it has been in the last three years, "We are satisfied with the road as it is at the present time but would suggest that a layer of black top be placed on the west sidewalk TORONTO (CP) -- Ontario's first non-political liquor board commissioner since 1938 was appointed Tuesday by Premier |Robarts to replace Chief Com- missioner Allan Grossman, G. Harry Sheppard, 58, a Tor- onto businessman who says he has few political ambitions and no aspirations for a cabinet post, will take over the position Sept, 1. | The chairmanship has been j vacant since Mr, Grossman, 52, | who held the post for two years, was appointed minister of re- }form institutions last- week. Mr, Sheppard, chairman of | New Liquor Chief After the war he returned to IBM and was elected president in 1946, He became board chair- man in 1962, : Mr. Grossmans' two years in the post were marked with con- troversy. He was criticized by the "wets" for too many re- strictions and attacked by the "drys" for making liquor too easy to obtain. Earlier this year, he came under criticism after it was dis- closed his wife held shares in Seaway Hotels Limited, which owns liquor outlets. Mr. Gross- man said the shares had been acquired long before he was ap- |board of International Business| |Machines, will be the first pri-| vate businessman to act on the | board since 1938 when then Pre- jmier Mitchell Hepburn ap-| jpointed a government member,| |Eddie Odette, to succeed pri-| vate businessmen who had held! {the post since 1927. Mr, Sheppard said he will take a salary cut but "terms | have been worked out on a basis il think is quite satisfactory." |Mr, Grossman received a cab- jinet minister's salary of about $21,000 a year. WILL QUIT IBM pointed liquor commissioner, Mrs, Grossman said last week she had sold the shares. MP Pay Raise Reaction Said Very Slight OTTAWA (CP) -- Social Cre- dit Leader Robert Thompson said Tuesday he has received little reaction from across the On Biculturalism By RONALD LEBEL OTTAWA (CP) -- The royal commis sion on biculturalism and bilingualism likely will take a good look before leaping into an intensive round of public hearings on the turbulent topic of relations between English and French language groups. Commission co - chairmen An- dre Laurendeau and Davidson Dunton held their first business meeting in private Tuesday and announced afterward that the full 10-member commission will meet here Sept. 4 to chart its course, Mr. Laurendeau, editor of the French . language Montreal daily Le Devoir, said next month's meeting will be organ- izational and administrative, . He did not expect public hear. ings for several months, prob- ably not before January, so that provincial governments and vol- untary organizations would have more time to prepare briefs. Both he and Mr, Dunton, pres- ident of Ottawa's Carleton Uni- versity, said they already are receiving "piles of. mail" from interested groups and individ. uals across Canada, a full-scale study of bilingual- ism in the federal civil service, WILL INVITE VIEWS The commission will issue special invitations to the prov- inces and certain influential or- ganizations and individuals to present their views in briefs. Any interested individual or group will be welcome to write to the commission or submit briefs at the hearings. The co - chairmen said the commission likely wil] travel to all 10 provincial capitals, but they declined to hazard a guess at the duration of the inquiry. The findings likely will be in- corporated in a single report. Appointmnt of the commis- sion's two bilingual secretaries also was announced, As was re- ported unofficially previously, they are Neil Morrison, 49, a dean at York University, Tor- onto, and former CBC official, and Paul Lacoste, 40-year-old lawyer and professor of law and philosophy at the University of Montreal, ' The commission is expected to appoint research officers and Other staff assistants at the Sep- MEET ON BICU LTURALISM from Mitchell avenue south WESTERNERS WORRIED jtember meeting. They. will also sign his IBM position, but will remain on the boards of sev- eral other companies. i 'I think the liquor contro}/ board is a large, important and| complex business and this ap- pointment was offered to me be- cause I am a businessman," he said. | His appointment was de-| scribed as a "good thing" by] Donald C. MacDonald, leader of| the Ontario New Democratic! to the CPR tracks, as was done on the same side of the from Olive avenue south to Mitchell avenue some years ago, which proved satisfactory ALDERMAN BINT street 'We would recommend further to the black topping of the sidewalk that a shallow ditch be cut on the west side of Verdun road south from Mitchell to the CPR tracks." Charles Cherry 360 Verdun road, speaking before Council Monday on behalf of the above petition, warned that of Mr. Sheppard said he will re-|¢ ountry to the hefty pay in- jcrease that members of Parlia- jment voted themselves three weeks ago. Mr. Thompson, who returned to the capital Monday after a two-week holiday break at his Red Deer, Alta., home, said his own constituents hardly men- tioned the matter and his office here has received only 30 com- plaining letters, almost all of them from old age pensioners. language daily "Le Devoir". The pair. announced the full 10-member commission -- will meet in Ottawa Sept. 4. --(CP Wirephoto) their first business meeting in Ottawa Tuesday. Mr, Dunton is president of Ottawa's Carle- ton University and Mr.. Lau- rendeau editor of the French- Co-chairmen of the Royal Commission on biculturalism and bilingualism, Davidson Dunton, (right) and Andre Laurendeau discussed future plans for the commission at PM Urges Home Riding some of the ratepayers in his district simply can't pay any higher taxes, especially widows and war veterans. with "limited incomes". He said that an earlier petition favoring the work was worded so that ratepayers didn't actually know what they were. signing City Council thus found itself in a dilemma. Alderman Finley Dafoe wanted to concur with the petitioners' request that the job be abandoned, but it wasn't that easy; not only had the Municipal Board approved the work, but the con- tract had already been let and work was about to commence. Council referred the matter to the Board of Works com- mittee. Chairman Cecil Bint promised an early' meeting to see what could be done NOTES FROM THE POLITICAL HUSTINGS: RON SPROULE POSSIBLE CANDIDATE The name most bandied about these days as Oshawa riding Liberals continue their desperate, last-minute search for a candidate in the Provincial election September 25 is that of Ron Sproule, 42-year-old Bay Ridges resident who iS also manager of a Toronto construction firm. Mr, Sproule's credentials as a hard-working Party mem- ber and organizer are impressive, especially in view of his record in last May's Federal election in Ontario riding when he did yeoman service on behalf of candidate Norman Cafik (who «gave "Mike" Starr quite a run for the first-prize money) This much having been admitted, there is no reason to believe that Mr. Sproule is the big-name candidate the Liber- als need if the party is to dethrone T. D. "'Tommy'" Thomas after all of these years. At best he must be regarded as a political unknown, a decided handicap in a short, swift race of this nature. Mr. S; e, meanwhile, is thinking the matter over before the party convention {o pick a candidate is held any day now. s President Godfrey Schilling of the Ontario Riding (Pro- vincial) Liberal Association today made a long-awaited an- houncement: The party's nomination meeting for Ontario Riding will be held in the Port Perry Public Schoo! building next Tues- day, Augut 27, at 8:30 p.m Among those whose names will likely be offered to the convention as possible candidates are: S. P. Hollingsworth of RR 1, Ashburn; Dr. K. C. Hobbs, MD, Whitby; Bruce Mac- key, Oshawa lawyer who lives in Port Perry; William David- son, Whitby town councillor; and Dr. J. H. Davis of Uxbridge. Mr. Hollingsworth, head of the Department of History, is the only member of the above group of potential candi- dates who has definitely indicated that he will allow his name to stand if nominated. He said this week that he would be ready to resign his teaching post if elected to the Legislature. Ontario Riding (Provincial) is held by Dr. Matthew B. Dymond, Minister of Health in the most recent Provincial cabinet. LITTLE NOTES FROM HERE AND THERE Alderman Walter Branch and his wife, Evalyn, returned recently from a vacation at Moosonee in the James Bay area Alderman Clifford Pilkey and his wife were the guests ef Wally Forbes who happens to be a town councillor in Arkona, Ont. They also took a cruise aboard the motorship Mildred around the Muskoka Lake district out of Bracebridge, Ont... . . The taxpayers of Oshawa will spend $2,512 to pay for a re-reroofing job on the Jubilee Pavilion in Lakeview Park w has been renied annually (without tender) for more than 30 years by the present operator, Mr. Owen Mc Crohan, from the Mr. McCrohan is currently paying 3,000 annually to the City as rental on the pavilion but this amount also gives him exclusive catering rights to Lakeview Park. Mr. McCrohan once estimated that he had spent be- tween $50,000-$60,000 renovating and rebuilding the pavilion, bpt this was over a long-term period. City Council agreed to the re-roofing job Monday -- only Alderman Pilkey asked any questions. He wanted to know if the City was making ny money on the building, "or is it taken up with mainten- Pnce costs?" Property Committee Chairman Albert V. Wal- ker said Mr. McCrohan's present lease runs until 1967. He said the roof was leaking badly and that the City had to pro- tect its property. City Party. The incréase, announced jnew program to promote bilin-\91q age pensions are two e | "Liquor policies are go Shortly before Parliament. be- fraught with overtones that,84" its two-month summer re. |more than normal pressure js| CSS Aug. 2, raised MPs' annual [brought to bear on commission.|P8¥ to $18,000 from $10,000. The ers who are active in politics,' $10,000 included a $2,900 tax-free} ihe . said _|expense allowance. The new) Mr. Sheppard started with|rate includes $6,000 tax-free. IBM as a student salesman: in| Mr. Thompson gets an addi- Toronto in 1929. He later served|tional $4,000--putting him at as branch manager in Hamil-|$22,000--as a By JAMES NELSON ESPANOLA, Ont. (CP) -- A |sidewalk meeting with Liberal |party workers, a few ~ hand- Attia \shakes with holidaying Cana- minority party|qian and American tourists, an salaries and jgagements, from a barbecue in| INTERPRETING THE NEWS In town after town he has thrown open his meetings with |local authorities, after he has isaid a few formal words, to questions from the townspeo- ple. It is an event which seems riod he had after major elec- tion campaign speeches last spring REQUESTS FEW But the requests have been few. At Blind River Monday night they asked for a new home for the aged, and he said that At Massey, they asked for in- formation about a $4,000,000 mu- nicipal loan fund and a secre- tary quickly produced a copy of the new act of Parliament passed last session Coupled with a political ap- proach to the problems of his home constituency, Mr. Pearson has spoken during the last three days about Canadian-American affairs, particularly in the eco- was a provincial matter. | -|panola district, the North Chan- To Present Demands nomic field. Here, where ar American-owned paper mill pro- vides the main industrial em- ployment, he said Tuesday night} that Canadian-American econo-| mic problems «volved about the } for Canadians He told a public rally that\ernments were free to throw the| starting next spring he will per- |sonally pay the expenses of four high schoo] students from the riding to go to Ottawa each year |to study at first hand for a few days how the government ma- |chinery works. Mr, Pearson spoke in the high {school playground, The prime purpose of govern- |ment, he said, is to bring about 'a state of affairs in our coun- ry in which men will have jobs lt jto do--in other words, that they|that the cultural identity of all severely will have work." WILL TAKE STUDENTS | He announced that his _per- jsonal scholarship plan. will take high school students. to Ottawa \from Manitoulin Island, the Es- inel shore extending from Elliot Lake to Thessalon, and the Chaplea area At Killarney, Mr. Pearson jpromised the Killarney Fisher- added Mr. Dunton. Mr, Laurendeau 'said most of his mail comes from worried westerners who want to know whether the commission will force them to learn French, or asking questions about just what the commission intends to do. | He was not concerned about the tone of the letters. "It shows there is a real interest in the commission,"" he told a press conference, "This is a great chance for the people and for us, too, to learn about these problems," draft a schedule of hearings and decide on the location of of- fices, The commission was named July 22, but holidays prevented the co-chairmen from getting together earlier They met Tuesday with Privy Council President Lamontagne and the two secretaries. The terms of reference were made public in June after the provin- cial premiers were notified in letters from Prime Minister Pearson. Most premiers have promised co-operation with the The two co - chairmen used " both languages at the confer-| Mr. Laurendeau stressed that| the royal commission's role will be to dig up facts and offer sug. to flow from the question pe-|question of providing more jobs gestions to the federal and pro- vincial governments. The gov- recommendations out the win- dow if they wished. WON'T TOUCH RIGHTS Mr. Dunton indicated that the commission will follow the gov- ernment's terms of reference to the letter, with the rights of the provinces or of individuals, Both echoed Prime Minister Pearson's remarks in a week end speech at Murray Bay, Que |Canadians would be jexposed to American domina tion if Confederation broke up Reporters questioned the co- chairmen about criticism of the of refer- commission's terms ence by Premier Manning of Al- berta, Mr. public hearings. without tampering} Manning said the terms are too vague and could jlead to explosive and emotional French-English clashes at the 'inquiry, COULDN'T TAKE IT ATIKOKAN, Ont. (CP)--A po- lice searck began when the ciapper disappeared from the bell on an old logging locomo- tive displayed in this northwest- ern Ontario town. It was found at a home nearby--removed by a night worker who couldn't sleep during the day because of children ringing the bell. Your Original CARPET CENTRE Over 50 Rolls of Cerpet on Display Select from the largest "@& display east of Toronto, f . N-1-R-C LICENSED CARPET CLEANING 728-468 | Mr. Thompson will spend the next 11 days in Ottawa, with short trips to Toronto and Mont- real, working on party business. Then he heads west on a busy schedule which will take him to Australia and New Zealand Inspector Claims | Highway Cheating. OWEN SOUND (CP) -- A for- K Meets Seeking By CARMAN CUMMING Canadian Press Staff Writer Nikita Khrushchew is back in Belgrade again, in an atmos- phere distinctly different from that of the historic "B and K trip to Yugoslavia in 1955. as Russian party chief, and Pre- mier Nikolai Bulganin were openly hopeful of leading Presi- dent Tito and his wandering Yugoslavs back into the party fold. Khrushchev is a much stronger man now--with Bul- ganin one of the victims of his climb to the top---but. he has gone to Belgrade this time with somewhat more diffidence, Tito has proved, in the 15 years since he split with Stalin, that independent socialism can be profitable. He has risen to a leading position in the "'non- aligned" world, gained huge quantities of U.S. aid and kept himself in a strong bargaining position with the Soviet bloc. He, ton, Winnipeg and Montreal and/ leader. \Indian tribal dance, a picnic in then as eastern district sales} "I had some people complain a park, and the dedication of a manager. back home but I asked them public school will mark Prime In 1942 he was granted leave|how much they pay their high Minister Pearson's day in his j of --o to ee prods nl besa teachers, their city ad-|home riding of Algoma East. general of organization and per-|ministrators and their doctors.| i 0 ys he sonnel in the wartime depart-|Surely their representative Wilace Vad' a vielew of aintine en- ment of munitions and supply./Parliament ought to be worth y re "las much," the Social Credit! Eliot Lake to stamping his RUE . leader said in an interview. | footprints in some concrete at Civil Service He said the amount of the in-|Chapleau. And through it all, crease may have been a little|the theme of his return to his | sis s too high, "perhaps it could have home riding has been that al- | ingualism been done in two stages."" But|though he now is prime minis- he said it is not fair to criticize/ter, he is still just the local MP. B hl Pl d the principle of the increase on| He has surprised veteran po- eing anne ere that the sagery $10/jitical correspondents from Ot- jmonthly increase for old age ; é : OTTAWA (CP) -- Privyjpensioners should have been 2 an ing ge Rpg epee ) . A , 7 Council President Lamontagne] acted first, ness in telling local town coun- said Tuesday the government's| «Parliamentary cil men they should not hesitate pd : a } N-\io bring forward their demands |gualism in the civil service is|tirely 'separate matters and|for local improvements |being ironed out by a cabinet/they can't be compared," he|---- cee weees cnc {committee which he heads and|caiq The money needed to pay a subcommittee of several dep-|the extra to MPs--about $1,500.- uty ministers. 000--would only give pensioners , The program, to be unveiled/an extra $1 a year, he added. in Parliament, is expected to m provide for a bilingual institute) \for civil servants, salary bon-| uses for bilingual personnel in key positions and revised staff recruiting procedures to attract more French - Canadians, who} now comprise about 13 per cent! of the upper civil service and 31 per cent of the population.| Mr. Lamontagne made the| comments at a press confer-| ence held jointly ith Andre} Laurendeau and Davidson Dun- ton, co-chairmen of the royal) commis sion on biculturalism|mer soils inspector for the high- and bilingualism ways department said Tuesday Meanwhile, the presidents of|there has been widespread the two largest civil service| Cheating on contracts in the Staff organizations said they;Owen Sound district. will watch the bilingual pro-| Gordon Molock of Owen |gram carefully to make Sure|Sound, who was dismissed from that it does not. affect thejhis job in April, made the alle- jchances for promotion of civil|/gation in an interview. His spe- Servants who speak English'cific and general accusations jonly were later denied in Toronto by MAY BEGIN ANOTHER |Highways Minister Charles "Our concern, is that the gov-|/MacNaughton. and senior de- ernment, in remedying one ob-|partment officials, vious imbalance, doesn't create} Mr. Molock produced copies another," commented Cal Best, |of laboratory reports showing president of the 32,000 - mem-'/that earth used for highway fill ber Civil Service Association. jon one contract was unsuitable "Ours must be a watch-dogiIn several instances, he said, role for the moment," saidithe highways department has Claude Edwards, president o'|had to spend thousands of dol- the 72,000-member Civil Service lars correcting faults. in re- Federation. He predicted that'cently completed highways jobs, On that occasion Khrushchev, | men's Co - operative that he jwould investigate the _possibil- Tit ' jity of financial aid. in some Li ] form to the economically de- pressed community, hit by a de- Cline in the Lake Huron fishing lindustry, , | Today, Mr. and Mrs. Pear- peste real concern over China's|son and their 'party of 18 drive attempt to make their ideologi-|tg Manitoulin Island for brief jeal. quarrel into a race fight--|visits to Little Current, Mani- with Russia in the role of the|towaning,. a luncheon at the white bully teaming up with the| Manitoulin Indian community of U.S, to suppress the non-white} Wikwemikong, a picnic on the |peoples | shores of Lake Mindemoya, and Khrushchev may want the Yu-ja civic reception and hool goslav chief to use his influence|dedication ceremony at Gore in Africa and Asia to counteract|Bay, before flying to Toronto that kind of propaganda. Tito/for the night also is expected to visit Latin) America in the fall A word from him might help to sway Latin:Communists wavering be- jtween Moscow and Peking. More broadly, Khrushchev] Delay UN Probe jmay want to co-ordinate poli- jcies with Tito with regard to KUCHING, Sarawak (Reut-| the non -aligned and neutral|¢ts) -- Indonesia has threat-| lcountries. At times they appear|ned to delay a United Nations) ito act at cross-purposes in that investigation into whether the) area. {peoples of the British Borneo | territories of Sarawak and |DISTRUST MUTUAL {North Bomeo are sympathetic} | The same is true for East Eu-jto joining the projected Feder- jrope, the most tender spot inlation of Malaysia, Moscow-Belgrade relations. Informed sources here said | Moscow has always looked|Tuesday the UN mission has/ with deep distrust on any Yu-|turned over the problem--an In-| Indonesians May "Personally," Mr. Lauren- dau commented, "I feel we should investigate the facts in depth and get away from vague talk. We have plenty of opinions in Canada on this problem but few facts." Mr. Dunton said one of the commission's chief tasks will be NU-WAY RUG. CO. LTD. Expert Upholstering 174 Mary Street SAY 909 Simcoe St. N. -- 728-7041 MEAT SPECIALS! Thur. - Fri. - Sat. a | BLADE or SHORT EQ. 39 RIB ROASTS FRESH, LEAN GROUND CHUCK bilingualism will be a key topic at the federation's convention opening here today but the contractors responsible!j.nt likely to give it up now. have still received other high-| preserves. Tito, on the other way jobs |FEAR RACE QUARREL hand, resents Moscow's contro! goslav poaching in the satellite WEATHER FORECAST Khrushchev nevertheless has} of the area. His anger over Mos- 'much to gain if he can per-icow's intervention in the 1956 suade Tito to co-operate a little)Hungarian revolution was the more with the Kremlin }main factor in re-freezing rela- +Summer For A Few Days Forecasts issued by the Tor- onto weather office at 5 a.m Synopsis: Summer. returned to Ontario Tuesday with the temperature at Hamilton and ~) Windsor rising to 80. The warm | The visit inevitably ties injtions after the 1955 thaw jwith Russia's sharpened quar-| Most observers at the current rel with Communist China./Belgrade talks expect Khrush- |Khrushchev won't have to sellichev will not seriously attempt his peaceful coexistence line to/to interest Tito in membership Tito, of course, but the Yugos-|in the Warsaw pact, the Com- lav leader could help in other munist counterpart of NATO. | ways. But there are indications that The Russians lately have Tito may be ready to reassess - soot on Comecon, the a East European economic union. | LaMarsh Studies | Pension Program Back Forecast Temperatures Low tonight, High Thursday WIRGNOr issccscess 58 |St. Thomas. London . Kitchener Yugoslavia has found herself increasingly isolated among the jrestrictive trade groupings |growing up around her. Mem- donesian demand for more ob. jservers accompanying the UN mission -- to UN Secretary-} General U Thent for a decision. | Meanwhile, another 424 tough Gurkha troops were flown into! neighboring North Borneo by the British army Tuesday to strengthen forces in action against guerrillas believed to! |have slipped across the border from Indonesian Borneo. READINESS TEST BERLIN (Reuters) -- About 12,000 troops of the three West- ern garrisons in Berlin were} called out Tuesday for an opera- | tional readiness test, an Allied spokesman said, The test, which | involved all men of the United {| FRESH LEAN BUTTS OF PO SLICED RINDLESS--DEVON B Breakfast BAC 4S ox 69 Maple Leot -- Sliced or Piece BOLOGNA 265: Garden-Fre sh Produce! GOOD FIRM HEADS CABBAGE 2 tor §9- CUCUMBERS '3 sr 19- PERFECTION BAKERY PRODUCTS Are Now Available at... SHEPHARD'S BOTH STORES 46 Simcoe St, N. and 909 Simcoe St. N. ner Downtown Sale Both States, British and French gar- risons, was designed to evaluate the mobility of Allied units and their ability to react to various situations. |when the tower was topped by,dry spell should last several Mount Forest. the already famous .Guildford|days 'as a high pressure ridge) Wingham angel becomes established from the yamilton The Guildford project-- Great Lakes eastward. St.. Catharines. started in 1936, interrupted bYy| Lake St. Clair, Lake -Erie,/ Toronto the Second World War andi; aie. Huron, Niagara, Lake On-| Peterborough Pressed for funds when costs|tario, Georgian Bay, Haliburton, Trenton ....... as tripled after the war -- gave Killaloe .. Cathedral Windsor, London, Hamilton, Muskoka tens of thousands of tourists ai>p to: § , , ° -- Delegates %: ni .|Toronto: Sunny and warm to- TORONTO (CP) egates|chance to take a direct part in!asy and Thursday. Winds south.|North ag Sudbury to the Anglican Congress here}; ae oe 1 from Guildford, England, are gg sg ee west 19 to 15 being pestered by people who cents), you could purchase a. Timagami, Cochrane, north Earlton stop them in the street, pecr at prick. write your name on it Bay: Sufny with a few cloudy|Sault Ste. Marie their name badges and an-|ang put it back on the stack|periods today and Thursday,|Kapuskasing ..... ounce proudly: "I bought a/for the builders. Bishop Rein.|Widely scattered showers in the|/ White River.. brick for your cathedral." dorp says that'in recent years|afternoon, not miuch change in|Moosonee .... But Bishop George E. Rein- this operation alone produced|temperature. Winds southwest Timmins ... Gorp, Archdeacon K. D. Evans about 5,000 annually 10 to 20 ee and Commander and Mrs arby are young maple trees l GAS BOOMS Carver say they er at ed in two world wars by Maric In 1945 there were 23,000 gaso- ef pestering about new Canadian soldiers, stationed onjand Thursday line outlets in Canada compared cathedral, completed thie spring'the surrounding Surrey Downs.|10 to 15 bership in Comecon, or at least) associate membership, would! offer definite advantages. However, Tito would have to weigh these advantages against possible loss of backing by the U.S., where right-wing senators) | : : have complained loudly about/| a in The Nether-| nis jockeying between the world| Following her study she is toe blocs leave for Paris on the last leg jof her European tour and will] jfly from there to Montreal Fri-| day. : | AMSTERDAM, The -- Nether- jands (Reuters)--Health . Minis- | ter Judy LaMarsh of Canada ar- rived here by air from Copen- jhagen Tuesday for a one-day | working visit, during which she |will study contributory pansion 'Many Bought Bricks For | CALL OR SEE DIXON'S FOR OIL FURNACES SERVING OSHAWA OVER 50 YEARS 24-HOUR SERVICE 313 ALBERT ST. @ 723-4663 : it {about 35 from the post office, (just North of the P.U.C. We hove larger, more efficient quarters there, 80 we con serve you } HARRY MILLEN Real Estate 728-1679 % NEED AN OIL FURNACE. . cau PERRY DAY OR NIGHT 723-3443 Perfection Bakery have moved from their fo location. and their products will now be SHEPHARD'S STORES. : Sudbury, Sault Ste and warm today Winds cemouies yma sunny to 36,000 outlets in 1962. I ite

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