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

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2 (THE OSHAWA TIMES, Wednesdey, October 9, 1963 Lute _GOOD EVENING By JACK GEARIN CITY SHOULD RESTORE DISRUPTED BOULEVARDS Mayor Lyman Gifford and Alderman Finley Dafoe rarely combine their talents to fight for a common cause, but 'ast Monday night was an exception. Each waxed eloquent to point out that something should be done by City Board of Works yard crews to tidy up resi- dential boulevards after granular base, storm sewers, etc., have been installed. This has been a sore spot with residents for many years who cry long and loud when their boulevard handi- | works are left desecrated. Mr, Gifford (who said he was as guilty as anyone for not advocating a policy change in bygone years) suggested an extra levy on the general rate be ~ made when estimating the cost of such projects. Mr. Dafoe said such boulevards could be tidied up by the City "within minutes' and sug- gested that such items as loam be provided to quickly help restore such boulevards to their original state. Mr. Dafoe has been advocating such a change for years now, but somehow his words never seem to get through to his associates on this and ALDERMAN DAFOE many other subjects. Chairman R. Cecil Bint of the Board of Works committee promised that these proposals '"'will be taken under con- sideration." b LITTLE NOTES FROM HERE AND THERE The 80-odd members of the Oshawa Postal Recreation Association deserve a special bouquet -- they presenied a cheque for $175 this week to the Oshawa and District Asso- ciation for Retarded Children to help the work of traiming children of pre-school age who currently attend classes at Simcoe Hall. The OPRA is composed of postal clerks and letter carriers who raised this amount by means of dances and other social affairs. . . . Larry Conde, Industrial Com- missioner of the town of Whitby, attended a dinner meeting Tuesday of the Commercial Affairs committee of the Oshawa Chamber of Commerce in the 'Hotel Genosha. COUNCIL COMMITTEE TO STUDY WARD SYSTEM Alderman Clifford. Pilkey 'sounded perfectly reasonable Monday night in open Council when he got around to asking some questions about the proposed restoration of the Ward system of electoral representation at the municipal level in Oshawa; yet the feeling persisted in some minds at least that Mr. Pilkey (and some of his Council colleagues) regarded the system with more than a little suspicion, like some strange political phenomena from far outer space designed STRIKING STEVEDORS FORCE LAUNCH OFF DOCKS Jeering Quebec City steve- Canada to back off. The men but the demonstration by the Empress to cancel plans to dores caused this launch from on the launch were to handle striking stevedores caused the tie up. (CP Wirephoto) Caouette Happ y With 8% Million | Frigate Scheme | ; | | | OTTAWA (CP) -- Cancella- Separate Seat Block 22 %si jssip frigate construction pro- | gram announced by oly oe | OTTAWA (CP) -- Real Caou-|what privileges are to be givenjitiste caucus meeting which is-| Conservative government in Ap- |ette's Creditiste MPs lost their| the Creditistes. : jsued a statement saying the|ril, 1962, is expected to be an- |fight Tuesday in the Commons; 4 further provision recom-| committe decided something |nounced in ntsygi gemine in- |privileges committee for prefer-| mefids that the 17-member New| beyond its terms of reference|formed sources said Tuesday. jence in the House of CommonS/Democratic Party be seated asjand a decision was "'still) Only $6,400,000 was allotted over Robert Thompson's Social/the second - ranking opposition| awaited" on recognition of the|for the program in the current Credit group. |group, beside the Progressive Creditiste parliamentary group. fiscal year, mainly for drawings They immediately served no-|Conservatives. This spot now is| The Creditiste's post - soandad ge Pr inane a |tice they consider the commit-|shared by the Creditises a cage aoe nuithir canon lost ee wall ssiuetitna' a3. hg pig eget ong dy ped b> ame siesta vice | study of-last weck's state-jother shipbuilding project, not : | 'Ry {men by Speaker Macnaughton.jnecessarily military, to keep By a vole of 14 t0.8 the Com: org PRIVILEGES Mr. 'Macnaughton had asked|the shipyards working. |mittee adopted a proposal by) Apart from seating, the priy-|Commons guidance on the seat-| Defence Minister Hellyer, who |Gerard Girouard, a Thompson)ijeges sought by the Creditistesjing problem and matters aris-|has had the frigate program |supporter, to give preferred/inciude a $4,000 annual party|ing from it. The Commons sentjunder review since he assumed Commons seats to Mr. Thomp-|jeader's allowance for Mr. Ca-|the statement to the committee./his portfolio April 22, told the son's 1l-member group instead/oyette, added to his $18,000 pay, | \Commons defence committee of to the 13 Caouette men wh0l|an executive assistant and two| TORONTO (CP) -- Real Ca-|Tuesday a decision will be broke with Mr. Thompson in Au-) secretaries for hm at public ex-|ouete said Tuesday his Rallie-|reached "very soon." gust. |pense, choice of parliamentary|ment des Creditistes in Parlia-| | The motion goes as a recom-|office space and power to name|ment would be satisfied with of-- DRAWS IRE -- |mendation .to the Commons|Creditiste MPs to official, all-|ficial recognition of the break-| He.drew the ire of some op- later this week with another rec-|party delegations travellingjaway 13-member group as ajposition committee members }ommendation that Speaker Alan|abroad at public expense. party separate from Robert|when he said this decision will |Macnaughton be' given a legal; The committee's decision, af-/Thompson's 11-member Social) reached without benefit of jopinion by Dr. Maurice Olliv-|ter a welter of defeated amend-|Credit party. jay recommendation from the lier, Commons law clerk, on| ments, was followed by a Cred-| The Creditiste leader said at/committee, $$ ja press conference here he did| "We might as well adjourn jnot care about parliamentary|now," said Heber Smith (PC-- ba - |precedence involved in the in-|Simcoe North). ower Tl l n S |ternal Social Credit dispute so} Te main witness before the |long as his. following was|committee, Vice-Admiral Her- }awarded a separate block of|bert Rayner, chief of aval |seats in the House of Commons.|staf, said the navy urgently But he warned that if Parlia-jneeds new ships--submarines e qior. TORONTO (CP) -- Ill health has forced one of Ontario's most vibrant political personal- ities out of the provincial cab- Robert William Macaulay, only 42 years old last May, gave up his dual portfolio of energy resources and of economics and development Tuesday on_ his doctor's advice. The resignation came less 'than two weeks after an over- whelming election victory by the Progressive Conservatives which he had been instrumental in fashion ng. "It is a very said moment," said Premier Robarts, announc- ing the resignation at a press conference, "'We were. very close personal friends." Mr. Robarts named John Sim- onett, 52, minister without port- folio and an automobile dealer from Frontcnac-Addington, as new minister of energy re- | sources and temporarily gave charge of the economics and development ministry to Provin- cial Treasurer James N. Allan, 66-year-old dairyman and cab- inet veteran from Haldimand- Norfolk. There was immediate specu- a _ lation that a more far-reaching cabinet shuffle was not far off. Among possible successors to the economics and development portfolio was Stanley J. Ran- dall, 55, who left the presi- dency of General Steel Wares Limited to become first head of the Ontario Economic Council, then quit that post to run suc- cessfully in Don Mills riding in the Sept. 25 general election. Mr, Macaulay will continue to sit as member for Toronto Riv- erdale, an industrial constitu- ency he has represented for 12 years. His eyes misted and his voice catching, the retiring minister said at first that he did not know whether he would return to a more active life in govern- ment if his health improves. He quickly recovered compo- sure and said he hoped that would be the case, '"'but one can't write blank cheques." After cleaning out his desk and resting for a few weeks, Mr. Macaulay will resume his law practice. Farquhar Oliver, Liberal House leader, and New Demo- cratic Leader Donald MacDon- INTERPRETING THE NEWS | By ROD CURRIE Canadian Press Staff Writer The Kenya independence talks have bogged down in ... London because Prime Minister Jomo Kenyatta has belatedly balked at accepting a govern- mental system similar to that in Canada. ie The provisional constitution, drawn up after months of hard bargaining, had in fact in- cluded the idea of a federal government along with seven district or provincial govern- ments, each with a legislature and president or premier. At the time all parties concerned agreed in principle. a Now the strongly nationalistic Kenyatta, his hand strength- ened in last May's general elections, is seeking to change the constitution in favor of a Kenyatta Balks At Canada Setup Mau Mau secret society that terrorized Whites and many African natives in the 1950s. Kenyatta's Kenya African Na- tional Union draws its support from the numerically strong and politically experienced Ki- kuyu and Luo tribes of the central, eastern and Nyanza regions. In the May election the prime minister, once jailed for seven years for his Mau Mau activi- ties, swept 82 of the 117 House of Representative seats and won control of the Senate. He interpreted this as a mandate to change the constitu- jtion -- and then the trouble | started. The smaller tribes, concen- trated in the coastal, western and Rift Valley. areas and supporting KADU, fear a strong As Macauley Quits ald both expressed sorrow at the manner of Mr. Macaulay's leaving, Mr. Oliver describing him as a "very bright chap with an excellent future" and the NDI chief calling him a "political animal in-the finest sense." . Mr. Macaulay invited super- latives. Son of Leopold (Leo the Lion) Macaulay, a long-time Conserv- ative cabinet minister in On- tario before 1934, the younger Macaulay entered the legisla- ture in 1951, the same year the voters of London North sent John Robarts to Queen's Park for the first tinie, He was named a minister without portfolio five years ago by former premier Leslie Frost and second vice-chairman of Ontario Hydro, Steeping him- self in hydro affairs, he ene gaged a University of Toronto professor to teach him about atomic energy and then pro- duced a layman's guide to the subject which has become al- most a classic. ° CONTESTED LEADERSHIP He became minister of energy resources in 1959 and developed a strong following among young Ccnservatives. In 1961, when Mr. Frost retired, he was one of seven contenders for the party leadership. He survived four ballots at the party con- vention, then publicly swung his support to Mr. Robarts to assure his friend of election over then attorney - general Kelso Roberts, _Mr. Robarts's first cabinet shuffle gave the commerce and development portfolio to Mr. Macaulay, and also transferred the economics department to his jurisdiction from the treas- urer's office, His departments produced a steady stream of legislation-- the economic council with its host of sub-committees, a hous- 'ling branch to get slum clear- ance and urban redevelopnient moving, a start on long - range economic planning expan- sion of Ontario's representation abroad, and most recently the government's trade crusade. Mr. Macaulay suffered a mild heart attack last spring. and his doctors told him to slow down. After a brief pause, he: plunged again into his burgeoning cru- sade to increase Ontario's ex- ports and reduce foreign im- ports. He worked tirelessly on the election. Thomson Sinks by a few to trick the many. , ' jment did not accord his group|and surface ships--to geplace central government could lead g to dictatorship by the influen- tial Kikuyus. They insist that the constitu- jtion give wide powers to the regions as protection against usurpation of their rights and status. British-style government, with power concentrated in the fed- eral authority and district as- semblies reduced virually to county councils, The Opposition Kenya African Democratic Union, champion of the smaller, more backward e Praised By Sharp |recognition as a separate party| ones now "rapidly" wearing Further, it would be "benefi-|"we will fight." He did not spe-|out. Admiral Rayner said in reply Matheson (L--Leeds) Whether or not such ap- praisal is fair, the question of the Ward system reared its head when a -letter was read from the Lake Vista Ratepayers submitting a peti- | OTTAWA (CP) -- Electrical, -- |power exports and a nationaljcial to Canada and to the U.S.,|cify how. power grid tied in with thejand not prejudicial to the na-| Mr. Caouette was interviewed|to John |United States were listed Tues-/ tional interest, to encourage in-| before appearing on a CBC tele-|that new naval ships shou'd day by Trade Minister Sharp as/terconnection agreements and| vision program and a few hours|have been laid down some jfeatures of national power pol-|inter-ties between utilities in the|after the Commons privileges|months ago. Canada was "fall- tion of 408 names of Oshawa taxpayers for City Council to adopt the Ward system. ; Mr. Pilkey asked that Council meet in committee =. for a full discussion of the & question with City Solicitor Edward G. McNeeley. He especially wants to know how many Ontario municipalities currently use the system and what the legal problems to be confronted are ("I think this should be a full-scale discussion with all parties directly concerned present," he said). For the sake of the re- rd -- 71 Ontario municipalities currently use the Ward system for electing Councils, including 14 cities, such as Sault Ste. Marie, Sudbury, Welland, Kingston, St. Catharines, London, Barrie, Brantford, Brockville, Toronto, Hamilton, Ottawa, Cornwall and Belleville. Mr. Pilkey is on the right track in instituting high-level discussions on the subject, but this will, of course, do nothing to relieve Council of its responsibility of allowing the elector- aie to decide for itself whether or not it prefers a restoratiun af this system. As long as Oshawa has widespread, thickly- populated areas without representation on Council, there will be a persistent and loud clamor for it, especially from areas like the northwest (where there are many of the more expen- sive homes) to the south of the CPR railway tracks, where thousands are without direct representation on Council. A City the size of Oshawa -- 22 square miles or 14,000 acres -- needs a more democratic representation system. The Lake Vista group had requested a plebiscite this Fall. Council decided that this was undesirable as it would require preparation of a special voters' list at a cost of $5,000-$6,000; coming on top of the current Liquor plebiscite, (which will Cost $9,000-$10,000) this was considered to be too expensive by Council. ALDERMAN PILKEY OSHAWA REALTORS AT 'PEG CONVENTION * Lloyd Corson writes from Winnipeg where he is attending the 20th Annual Convention of the Canadian Real Estate As- sociation together with other Oshawa realtors, including Sol Hyman, president of the Oshawa and District Real Estate Board. . . . A Canadian Press news item out of Peterbor- ough, Ont., last week said Bertha "Mom" Whyte is still operating an orphanage training centre and ambulance service at Aiyetoro in Nigeria's Kabba province. Her village is far from any large centre, without telephones, cars, electricity or running water. A small hospits with a doctor and two nurses is 14 miles from the village. .«er orphanage, Whyte- haven Missions, houses 22 babies. It's a community project founded and supported by an advisory board of Kabba prov- itce chiefs and a working committee from the village. The committee forms work bands, provides supplies and lectures to villagers on their duties. It cares for orphans and trains 'them as leaders and supervisors to help establish agricultur- al and child care projects in other. villages. Drinking Minors Lectured By Cadi OTTAWA (CP) -- Magistrate Glenn Strike delivered a stern lecture Monday to nine minors who pleaded guilty to drinking at a high school football game Friday night at Lansdowne Park here. parma masiszas lined up he rinally dropped onto. the con advised them it was their prob-|crete at the foot of the grand- stand. Each youth was fined $50. Police said each had a 12- ounce bottle of liquor when ar- rested. Morality officers des- cribed the conditions at the game as "disgraceful." Police said one boy, now in hospital recovering from head injuries, was passed bodily over the heads of the students from fe jone row to another until he was |4 licy. |respective countries in cases|Committee in Ottawa decided tojing astern" of its naval com- | His lengthy statement to the|\where the interconnection|Sive the Thompson group pre-|mitments to NATO. mmons seating {House of Commons contained no| agreements suitably protect the| ference in ati departures from. the policy of|/Canadian interest." jover the Caoette group. The T MP S the former Conservative govern-| 'Phe government. would. con-|°o™mittee passed the issue of ment and Opposition Leader| sider favorably, on recommen.|""2t Privilegds the Caouette 'Hypocrisy' OTTAWA (CP) -- Conserva- Diefenbaker immediatel> said|qation of the National Energy sone. gga gah ree eo eee Board, the export of large Speaker The government wants to en-|amounts of constantly SUP-| The Creditiste leader said' he courage power - transmission|plied or "firm" power to en-|\giq not care whether his group links and agreements across the|courage the development of was ranked fourth in the oppo- country between private and/power resources that might|sition--after the Conservatives public utilitie to form a grid/otherwise remain undeveloped, the New Democratic Party and Mr. Sharp said, although "'it re-/Mr. Sharp said. tive MP Jack Horner called Tuesday for an end to "this hypocrisy" of a legal ban on lotteries and sweepstakes that! was generally ignored by public and law enforcement officers ----| alike. He said in the Commons that 1 3 the Thompson Social Credit alizes that the complete inter-) The Conservative government| party. 2 connection may not be econom!-|took this same stand a year ago,| "I don't care about seating. cally feasible for some years to reversing the long-held prohibi- ja legalized national hospital sweepstakes would improve-- |not harm--the moral fibre of | fe All I want is recognition as a jcome. tion against exports of large Closed On Oct. 14 10! harm : separate group and me as To this end, studies were con-/amounts of electricity for long MONTREAL (CP)--The Mont-| J. J. Greene (L. -- Renfrew 0 leader." tinuing. Soe | Periods. - could be made tojreal. and Canadian Stock Ex-|South) replied that it is "'a dan- a Mr. Diefenbaker commented R i] U a |Tuesday that "three years ago jchanges will be closed Monday,|gerous philosophy" for Cana- Both the power grid concept|Oct. 14, Thanksgiving Day. |dians to think they can get | we took the stand that the rules Backs Bill To and the exports policy had been| Banks, trust companies, prod-|Something fo: nothing. |which had heretofore been . . . Rid Employees 1 p y |set out by the Conservatives, he|uce and livestock markets will) The debate developed as the denying export should be re- moved and that export of power surplus . . the U.S." OTTAWA (CP) -- The na-|Said. also be closed Commons, for the second time tional legislative committee of| To ~--|in five days, was asked to sup- the International Railway |Port a private member's bill to Brotherhoods swung its support |Ppermit government, - sponsored Tuesday behind a private Com- lotteries and sweepstakes. mons 'bill proposing various Last Thursday Louis-Joseph types of compensation for up- Pigeon (PC -- Joliette > PA- rooted railway employees. fat crea Regul pared bill was introduced in tne cial sweepstakes be chan early this session by i ae sponsored by Douglas Fisher (NDP -- Port Alberta, proj i -- in Arthur) and its subject matter swoevetakes. Like Mr Pace was referred to the House rail- bill, it was talked out during |way committee, _ the day's "private members' | The measure did not receive| hour" and is unlikely to be de- second reading -- approval in| bated again. cine ame tee 'Wht anak is Three similar bills by other not before the railway commit- |members are awaiting debate. Mr. Horner said some critics claim gambling weakens moral \fibre. _"The moral fibre of the na- tion, to me, is receiving more harm by this continuous disre- gard of the law by attorneys- general and law enforcement Officers." Mr. Greene said that if Mr. Horner's arguments about the moral effects were accepted, "the people of toughest moral fibre are the residents of Las Vegas." Stock Exchanges WEATHER FORECAST : Sunny, Warmer: Winds Southwest | Official forecasts issued by,with a few cloudy intervals and the Toronto weather office at| warm, Winds light this morn- 5 a.m.: : |g becoming southwest 15 this Synopsis: A weak high pres-\afternoon and Thursday, sure area covers southern On-) i tario while a westerly circula- tion is once again bringing warmer air from Westem Can- ada into Northern Ontario. Skies are mainly clear and fog patches have formed in some localities. Today should be a sunny day with temperatures higher than on Tuesday parti- cularly in the north country. Lake St. Clair, Lake Erie, Ni- agara, Lake Ontario, Lake Kuron, Georgian Bay, Halibur-)Trenton ton, Windsor, Hamilton, Lon-!Killaloe .. don, Toronto: Sunny with a few|Muskoka ... cloudy intervals today and|North Bay ...... Forecat - temperatures: Low overnight, high Thursday Windsor ..... 75 St. Thomas 70 London Kitchener ....... Mount Forest ..... Wingham .. Hamiiton St. Catharines ... TOLONT ss icivsies Peterborough .. tee. Under the bill, railway »m- ployees who lose their jobs as a result of changes beneficial to a railway would be compensated for training for new jobs, mov- ing, or early retirement or other compensation determined by the board of transport commission- ers, The 'legislative committee, representing employees of Ca- nadian railways, said railway unions have been attempting to obtain this type of legisla*ion jtribes, is violently opposed. | The British government, --~|which has played a major part| lin all these negotiations, is seeking a compromise although it has aways supported. the original contitution. WANTS SAFEGUARDS It insists on. effective safe- guards to establish a balance between the two concepts but is willing to discuss reasonable arguments consistent with this position. The basic difficulty is the wide variance in regional and tribal attitudes among the na- tive population of the African country, land of the dreaded | |SLOW PROGRESS So far the London conference has made slow progress--ac- cording to Commonwealth Sec- retary Duncan Sandys "we are plodding along." Continued failure to agree could force postponement of independence, now set for Dec. 12, and upset an_ elaborate timetable involving Kenya and neighboring Uganda and Tanga- nyika. The three hope to form a political Federation of East Africa and apply for United Nations membership before the UN session ends about the third week of December. Bewdley BEWDLEY, Ont. (CP) -- The owner of a hotel and restaurant here stood by helplessly on crutches Tuesday as fire flared through his property. He esti- mated damage at $50,000, The buildings had been closed for the season and no one was injured. Harold Rahn of Hanover, Ont. owner of the Bewdley Hotel and restaurant in this resort village 17 miles south of Peterborough, was unable to fight flames that destroyed his. two building frame hotel, the restaurart, six cabins and a boathouse contain- ing 19 small craft. He is recov- ering from a torn ligament. Mr. Rahn, helped by two men, was pulling up a floating dock on the front of Rice Lake when a small explosion was heard in the hotel dining room. The flames spread rapidly and within minutes 19 small boats in a storage building be- side the hotel were Jestroyed. Maurice Myers, one of the men helping Mr. Rahn, said: "Before we could do anything about the fire it was too bad to By $50,000 Blaze Hotel Hit Firemen from three volunteer fire brigades brought the blaze under control after about two hours. They were hampered by a 20-mile-an-hour wind that threatened to sweep the flames up a dry-grassed hill behind the hotel: Four homes on the hill were evacuated as firemen watered down other cabins, cottages and permanent homes. At one stage two firemen, sur- rounded by flames, turned. off the supply of a steel-encased, 50- gallon gas tank, used to supply fuel to boats at the waterside. BUILT FOR SKIDS NORTHOLT, England (CP)-- Britain's first municipally built "skidpan" has been opened in this London. suburb. On it mo- torists will be able to learn how to avoid and control skids. $3 Million In Dublin Plant DUBLIN (Reuters) -- Roy Thomson, the Canadian news-« paper millionaire, plans to set up a £1,000,000--($3,000,000) printing plant here with a revo- lutionary new film printing pro- cess, It was disclosed Tuesday that the Dublin city government was negotiating with a Thomson sub- sidiary, Graphic Films Limited; for the leasing of an 11-acre site at Coolock in Dublin's northern suburbs. , The city will get an ininal payment of £27,000 ($81,000) and an annual. rent of £450 ($1,350) for a 130-year lease. Revolutionary new type-set- ing equipment costing more han £100,000 ($300,000) was bought by Thomson at the In- ternational Printing Exhibition in London in July for the Dublin plant. t t NEED AN OIL FURNACE .. car PERRY OAY OR NIGHT 723-3443 get anywhere near the build- ing." since 1958, A 1958 ruling of the Supreme Court of Canada led that compensation of this type could not be paid under the Railway Act. The committee said Mr. Fish- jer's bill to amend the Railway |Act to provide that railways pay jsuch compensation is essential as a result of automation and jtechnological changes in the} jrailroading business. Thursday. Warmer. Winds light/Sudbury ... today southwest 15 Thursday.' |Eariton Timagami, Algoma, White|Sault Ste. Marie .. River, Cohrane, North Bay, Kapuskasing ..... Sudbury: Fog patche: clearing] White River . this morning becoming sunny|Moosonee .. ewe warmer. Thursday sunny|Timmins ... SHORGAS HEATING & APPLIANCES Industrial and Commercial The established, reliable Gas Dealer in your area. 31 CELINA ST. (Corner of Athol) 728-9441 DID YOU 'KNOW? That Our Services OSHAWA'S BIGGEST REAL ESTATE MOVE! Carpet Sales and Service Rugs and Furniture Cleaning Carpet Laying Fringing - Binding - Serging and Dying Mothproofing - Sizing Wal to Wall Carpet Cleaning in your Home or Office Re-Upholstering INFORMATION FOR FURTHER 728-468 1-2-3 NU-WAY RUG OSHAWA LTD. 174 MARY Sf. -- OSHAWA $ / "KINDNESS BEYOND PRICE, YET WITHIN REACH OF ALL" GERROW | FUNERAL |, CHAPEL 390 King W. 728-6226 Joba A. J. Bolahood Ltd. |} and Lloyd Realty, (Oshawa) Ltd. NOW Bolahood Brothers Limited WN. | 101 Simcoe 728-5123 | McLaughlin Public Library THURSDAY, OCT. 10 - 8 P.M. Are interested in expanding the out-lets for the consumption of liquor in Oshawa ? If your answer is "NO" then come to the Library Thursday, Oct. 10 at 8 p.m. We'd like to call to your attention A truly happy modern invention. 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