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Oshawa Times (1958-), 10 Apr 1964, p. 2

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2 THE OSHAWA TIMES Fridey, April 10, 1964 GOOD EVENING -- By JACK GEARIN. -- Eskimos Treated Like Serfs, Opposition Says = MUNICIPAL, ELECTION TALK IN THE AIR ALREADY <_ It's only April, but there was municipal election talk in the air at City Council Monday, Council passed a bylaw designating boundaries of polling subdivisions within the wards. A bylaw was passed sev- eral months ago designating boundaries of wards -- Al- derman Gordon Attersley Monday let it be known this could be upset, which opin- jon did not seem to be shared by many, least openly, Passage Monday of the by- law was intended primarily as an aid to City Clerk Roy Barrand, faced with the mon- umentail task of getting the municipal election machinery ROY BARRAND oiled for next December-- he must prepare a_ voters list of approximately 35,000 names, geographically describe 135 polls. He is understandably anxious to get on with the job. Mr. Barrand let his wishes be known to Council Monday. at of COUNCIL STALLS AGAIN ON 'WARD' PLEBISCITE expe Whatever happened to Baby Jane? Whatever happened to Oshawa's proposed Ward system plebiscite, (gathering dust on Council's agenda these many months)? Know a The way was pretty well cleared for passage by Council last Monday of a bylaw to implement the Ward system pleb- iscite (some councillors believed this, department heads too). So what happened? Nothing, absolutely nothing. There were a few vague, abbreviated speeches, circumlocution dis- plays, but it wasn't passed. (As one alderman said later: "That thing was ali set for passage, I'm sure, But something funny must have happened on the way to the Forum Mon- day, I mean City Hall.") In fairness to Alderman Walier Branch, he talked like an alderman who wanted the bylaw passedf promptly, regard- less of personal feelings, but. his words were greeted with something less than enthusiasm. He didn't get any outward support then Acting Mayor Hayward Murdoch, in the chair suggested Council meet in committee next Thursday, April 16 to discuss the matter, This met with general appro- val. Alderman Gordon Attersley suggested vaguely that ward boundaries, changed Jast year, could be changed again. Alderman Cliff Pilkey wanted to hear more about the legal | ramifications. Alderman Cephas Gay didn't say anything. So Council's majority is still fussing and procrastinating with the W-S plebiscite, some seven months after receipt of a 400-name petition requesting such a vote. Council has constantly acted in a manner that would clearly indicate strong opposition to the system, yet some aldermen are realistic enough to admit such a plebiscite is inevitable in the face of\a growing public clamor. What. useful purpose will. next Thursday "commitee" meeting serve, unless it represents a last-minute, desperate thrust by some to throttle the proposal altogether? Not only did announcement of the meeting irk some councillors, it further aroused suspicions of many taxpayers that further and more emphatic representations must be made to Council. Does Acting-Mayor Murdoch think Qouncil will put the issue. in a plebiscite next December? "It is my opinion that it will,' he said, "but, of course, I can only speak for myself." 'WEATHER FORECAST Sunny, Cool On Saturday Forecasts issued by the Tor-) Winnipeg onto weather office at 5:30 a.m,|lakehead . Synopsis; Central Ontario's ea Ai sed Wi s secret? DEATHS By THE Hempstead, lery, 49, and 1 2 1} 3 lilliard Tz HEAT WITH OIL DIXON'S OIL 313 ALBERT ST. 24-HOUR SERVICE 723-4663 SERVING OSHAWA OVER 50 YEARS pr govern- S¢ ' is your drink Wood's Old Navy ity period of up to 20 years in- government is stead of 10 The premier aid the govern- ment had considered and _ re- jected a proposal to give per- Trustees Master Plan | majo: raid ' 0 tary hopes for a quick clean-up! seal year that ended March 3.\Laing noted the Conservatives' a plan to separate deck officers|and the CBRT and become the) "Ho said the trustees feel a loursday, a day after smash-| a T The gov- provinces. them in two different unions-- hands, oilers, cooks, stewards,|labor democracy to the SIU and! 1 ot About 300 guerrillas ambushed| For weeks the proposed trans. "serfs and political pawns." gnere be with the Eskimos be- the plan in a report to the Com-|Service Guild, ich represents} "This is particularly so since Cay, about 10 miles south of|from the federal government Dinsdale charged the proposed .. po; : re Riles about the turbulent waterfront the. SIU, the N.A.M.E. and the | oes i he he ee ak ta an Eskimo representative is on 0 6 a] : - 4 . property of the) ,arently still raging, no cas-|mons--mostly in question form. "underhanded, devious and un- Sommons . ganizati sentir all lic-} \ n Outside the Com Ss, r. ganization representing ladded \ + | paitmedital eillindies eho cpl Justice Minister Favreau 6 Nielsen (PC --. Yukon) three The ambush forced the mili-) , ? J " ye times, ihe OE ERE, ; "ritions '. Mr. Laing said the govern- 2 > =| Cree alia Naini ' ti g g ? president of the Seafarers' In-|Groat Lakes began when the| ore a COINMOnS vorenitiee |atroops assigned to track down were ready criticizing the a America, gives a "'solid expeC-|tion of Marine Engineers, thus era ; ) if : joverwhelmed the self-defence) rong was stil] on the Eskimo ment's transfer to the provinces| Whatever means we can obtain ide hia 3 2 ' 5 tnetabaace ata ; ' : ane sentation would be considered, the Great Lakes. Congress kicked the SIU out of|When the trustees took office|troopers were sped to the oe day of plodding throughjfor' Indian mere minister after consultation with) "aq, 4, see have indicated been alleged, was maintained The trustees have indicated The scene of the Viet Cong of the constitution. "You cannot tal realignment of trade unions) s), e117? cai 2 ps | But Mr. MacKache: os n a Se the SIU," said Mr. Ma chen. acEachen said a the country's two most critical W ll i | "These poor people on the | It would leave only two un- ,... ESO OS " - ' soa a ace as Ing l. gration of engineers with other|tempting to locate members stered by troop reinforcements others, not to them." ternational Union of Canada ; 5 e : the > Ds stan ESSE FAVOR INTEGRATION he practice doesn't occur NOT IMPRESSED ' - ' the Canadian Merchant Service : ; Not long afterwards, Opposition Leade Yiefen- were race rokten: the trustees do not intend Jlengater ader Diefen- were unimpressed. In the strike} By CARMAN CUMMING A number reasc M to his. feet and announced that Marine section of the Canadian| marine workers. Indications are|ane coamoe i sing oe ' ' arhhond of : are seamen stil being denied and on the main road from the|wajjace was known chiefly as consin success. Some anctimonious hypocrisy." port and General Workers. dums of the various groups of); <+ 2 i : , The guerrillas killed 28 South|way of the University of Ala- tive states' rights feeling, local hen on, and questions more fre- sult of the trustees' plan would/nounced that the trustees are) ...ate, 'x ntolerable situa- created' an intolerable situa- jities machine-guns, shotguns) Now, in the wake of the Wis-|vote in the Democratic primary, statement on whether any Mr. Diefenbaker sad that if" te : arm a company. Thirty-seven|tion, Wallace casts a much two governments, apart from a Hubert Humphrey "all the evils of Banks' regi ' iia - ENS Oe en eee wered. Sone may have _ been litical scene. wars Py oo hes said he could categorically deny ; ; ee aoe, : i traitors. ya p and a fizzie N { Lik Q ] c's said the new president of the Reynolds said it only showed isted, and later Mr. Favreau Mr. McLaughlin, SIU vice-pres-|helped by agents inside' the When he came out of the deep the north as well } uth Phets th restetig vavag tr ae ee the south. The justice: minister sug- a ark. ait Pe as at is + | 'shake e eyetee of both Robarts said Thursday that ifjinvestment fund which could tential successor to deposed/ defenders as they slept just be statement saying the vote was|5 misunderstood, es cae ae a popularity poll, necessarily follow the pattern'might be used for is loans to . | up 6 civil rights program jurisdiction over the Eskimos 0 arts tl n ou t more than half as many Gover- In a 90-minute interview in low interest rates. : jnor John H. Reynolds drew in pear to be some loosened eye| government, and, onlv the ad- Bee OY Sng ee eson ito. the set into competition with Que-| undoubtedly wondering where The federal government now vince, Such a fund would be . . at peoece. risk capital for developing in- PHOBIA FOR TRENDS kimos in the north. What was Pearson said Thursday/of the investment fund built up , hee tan The. premier, however, made ; fa CANADIAN PRESS "The House may di red \ é ld include sur for what are known as ground- he House may be assure sension plan would include sut- entjy hasn't made up his mind) Mr. Pearson said the govern- i id RS ' he: Jednes- : : s licity director of the yriq» eek nadian Club luncheon Wednes Se De ie Ontario pension plan or par- its proposal, motion ta teaiane and ataesli t ¢ IC held." he said. 5 : Winnipeg--Mrs Plan. inthe: ta Replying in the Commons to Is given second reading and f j yarations for its own contribu- 3 : i pai tes : ton. kind of support he got from Wis-jof cancer. ; the larger question of changing said he has studied a partial) Opposition Leader Diefen- consin, it is hard to see how it) Montreal--R. Edgar Gilbert at change its: plan enough to win 2 AEE Bl : | was not pressing to. get out of|question and he sees nothing in appointtd officials to work ON|on the civil rights issue. Ris 27 years as a paddling ex- tario does set up its own public é : . e. aber sts . ieee --_---------- |Plan had not yet started. lintention to proceed' with the islation has gone through Par-!on the civil rights bill and when prolific writer of biogray between the federal governmént|Ontario premier would conclude rying out their duties--duties Francisco in July and the Dem- Dickens, Shaw, Disraeli, Canan cise their constitutional powers the federal plan. said. eutiee C ist ommun Ss Ss it can to convince Mr. Robarts'ciple that no appointments RATE NOT DECIDED jacted tough new measures tario pension plan, Mr. Robarts on (SC--Medicine Hat) that he also necessary to take some from positions of influence they been decided. But there would) nier Robarts indicating that/plan. He thought the issue rep-| : 7 federal plan Sitting as the supreme com- '® fiat . . ee this ASKS ABOUT SHARE gave sweeping powers to an in- prepared to of-/| Vis : 71 (5 Viet Cong OTTAWA (CP) -- Labor Min-) 1. The SIU would absorb thejCommons industrial relations) TAN AN (AP) -- Communist é I as er : _| The lively northern affairs de-| willingness in 1960 to turn over and engineers from seamen on/bargaining agent for all unlic-)meetng right now would "pre-|'"% defence post on Saigon's| last year's final spending es | South Viet'. Nam's strongman- of northern Quebec Thursday /ernment, he said, is treating the The stickiest point of the day if they agree. wheelsmen and others. |promote union stability in the rithoias in ceapenee A Sy Saabs ial Sable woul a South Vietnamese battalion|fer of administration over Que- Later former Conservative:fore any change is made. mons TRUSdRy Mh TeSpONss 0/OMly MaAsiens at nd a! |much of the information in their teal ; tion ttpanatar ie. baie handied i |has been in and out of the Com- transfer is being handled in an the proposed federal-provincial MacEachen said the pact made ensed personnel on lake ships i tah al te e said he supported the trus- ' : iefenbaker was * -- \tary regime to divert some par- Diefenbaker' wa The result was that at the end doing some hing similar to the Mem will ensure 'the views of tation as of now" that there will] expanding ' its jurisdiction and Was no evidence of a cont .u- post at Go Den, 30 miles north | The proposed move, Mr, Dief- the threeanan board of marine |. shey saa « inte.|by the SIU leaders acklis : J INTERPRETING THE NEWS | that they do not favor the inte-|3 eaders to blacklist' -werrilla strikes is in an area shores of the Arctic are being lions in a feld shared now by) < 7 Pies Sincsnate -] : - | hips' officers if the engineers|formerly on such a list and from the north. Lloyd : lations inti Francis (L--Carleton) Guild, the National' Association tO bak 'ad : ; : ' aker said that in Montreal/at G > y ¢ rget! impose union integration ee eau ntreal at Go Den they chose a target) Canadian Press Staff Writer becn put forward to ex; ces became. louder from While no specific unions were workers to weigh their feelings OP ef ;: er Ngee This simply means 'a contin-\Vietnamese, wounded 36 andjbama to keep the school aillissues, or a protest by the Re- quent. Leonard McLaugnin succeeds ; 3 other defenders are missing. larger and more ominous obnsin's iiberal Dame { memorandum tabled in the S) s 'Tal emocratic i eee tr close! U.S. sources said ttack-ing to wave it away, with only d union would be under close; sources said the a what 'we've known all along-- said that negotiations had not kage . SPREE (OM Se parties if he won as many as Ontario decides to establish its amount to $3,000,000,000 in 10 ise le Kactiesk {9} the guerrillas "struck. a not in the slightest a repudia-| There will be no breach of the his office he said Ontario did Wow COMPETE defeating him. And the politicos, teeth in Wisconsin and Washing- ministration would be trans I Y iTE ' About Ontario Plan -- PM 5 e rect control of the sess Mae of es outside the dines : dustry," he declared eter American politicians have rong with having the provin- no more clearer or positive cwalle of prasasootn trend NY Jim that the fundamental and basic vivor and disability benefits in yet whether to go ahead with ment has already put forward ! r grass-roots trends. ay on whether Ontario would ' eertannl ns : i meade ssh ve Hockey League: after : 4 isting private pension plans to ticipate in the Canada Pension studied by a Commons commit: ianq, campaigning against inte- < . ° edie I : civil wrongs bill. lor, who achieved fame g But he did say his Mr, Robarts emphasized that Stanley Knowles (NDP--Winni- after consideration of the rongs bill a : : | tory plan in the belief that the : 4 LN dkaia Taber RIAA Ae fo ae aie ft federal-provincia] \relations. text of Premier Robarts' state- baker said it is "most IMPFO-| could fail to affect the waverers 63, retary of the Canadian Ontario's approval. : i eunagihid ; a lis 2 existing shared-cost programs,|it which would warrant the fed- aspects tof the Canada Pension The results may show up both|erutive: B i] E t He said there had to be a re-|Canada Pension Plan. liament. party planks are formed at the whose works included, f and the provinces, but added: |it is in the best interests of On- which have not become appli-|' cratic conclave in Atlantic City Doyle, Gilbert and Sullivan, Os- to the weakening of the central) He said the federal govern- Privy Council President Mc- RIO DE JANEIRO (AP) -- of that. should be made without the leg- Referring to the possible On- Thursday night to purge Com- said the rate of employer and has not received any communi- preparatory steps for such com-| acquired under overthrown b¢ @ closer ratio. of contribU-| Ontario plans to set up a separ: resented a "pretty fine. line." Psi ' In practice, he added and of the revolution that : ' ny ' Mr. Olson asked whether the terim president still to be ee oa | N is OTTAWA (CP) ---Parliamen-|the final appropriations for the| Northern Aftairs Minister ister MacEachen has unveiled seamen members of the CMU|committee "at this time." guerrillas struck in force again { ae : - bate was started by Opposition'Indian welfare services to the Great Lakes ships by placing/ensed seamen such as deck-|judice their efforts" to restore|@orstep in a bold challenge to/timates got frozen in the snows)feader Dicfenbaker Premier Nguyen Khanh. night 500 Eskimos involved like was , qi y ! was how much consultation wil Mr. MacEaclhen spelled out) 2. The Canadian Merchant) shipping industry. , I 4 s } moving along a road near Mo bec Eskimos to the provincial northern affairs minister Walter' wiy the é a series of Opposition questions absorb marine engineers from Beast | the government see that |possession is felt by the | x obEDiAy BRT a bi 5. sl Tan An, With the fighting ap- situation. iC , thus' becoming the or- 4 sl ig Gy ob rime 7 unions they represent," he ualty figures were available, |When the northern affairs de-'certain' manner. udy commission? Asked Erik ; insisti by the trustees and Paul Hall,! The present troubles on the : , Thursday, Opposition snowballs plied that Mr sisting On an answer. tees in declining to appear be-| government for ternational Union of North)sju raided the National Associa- alia wi aay we Mr, MacEachen said there guerrillas who early Wednesday | o¢ the -day's sitting, the Com-\formér Conservative govern- the Eskimos are known by ace this s a : : j ' shin?? lict t "Trt | sti i as i Z strati sducation (hem,"' and that Eski - be labor peace this summer on], power. 'The Canadian Labor ing 'do-not-ship" list in the SIU?" na, an. Instead the pare-(Cre facing at least an-of administration of education Eskimo repre ' M The plan--as outlined by the) jj. panks j | - thi ve,|last year.. Such a list, it had!ca. apes its ranks in 1960 for this move. ; Cay area. enbaker 'chayged. Wae a bradach trustees--calls for a fundamen-| ...44; yop ads in| member: a aa 'ahi do this. You dare not do this. gration of licensed personnel in s from geting jobs. 'Khanh has described as one of] lin the shipping industry, pn Sage ai >» inte-| trustees ae i i ia eke They would favor the inte-|trusteeship staff member is at areas. The area: has been bol- told the constitution belongs to five unions--the Seafarers' In- and other officers so desire. |steps will be taken to see that O e The Canadian Maritime Union, ' ; | minous a OW ACCU DIEF , again. , : chta' dni wentio The minister made it Clear But the guerrillas. apparently have, jumped of Marine Engineers, and the on yy nosdaey , meee tal ese ' sue i--or , Wednesday, he was told there only 15 miles south of Saigon Until last Tuesday, George C.\explain away -- W: Mr Diefenbaker's speech was Brotherhood of Railway, Trans- the trustees may hold referen-| york pecause ¢ TT black nf y, 3 y > se of the SIU black-)capits ; ACK | capital. the man who stood in the vate-have attributed it to conserva-\. ¥ mentioned, the apparent end re-|. Mr. MacEachen also an- pono, ' ee tis , juance of a major wrong that : A = ; ¢ majo ong at made off with all the post's! white, publicans who. cros over to Mr, Nielsen wanted a flat be: not willing to appear before the ¢j9), + Mr. Diefenbaker said. / Agere é , : : : seein ot BE ao NE hk S and pistols, enough weapons to consin presidential primary elec- SUCCESS DENIED eement existed be!ween the e e rt np | to the presidency of the SIU O1 1tar1o Per 1LSIOI l gaeeet ey. © '|Presumably they were cap- shadow across the American po- os ; Wall x ommons March 4. Mr. Laing S' é F, Says Valliace Ss will aontinue.'"" Mr. MacEachen ~ pe aha ( Civil rights supporters are try- that any such. agreements ex- : is tii é ama ders auanigg 3 Demag Sy >y : limited success. supervision by the trustees." ers were believed to have been there are prejudiced pec in gone beyond the memorandum. + hen i : : : ; i i south Wallace said that he would TORONTO (CP) Premier|pension scheme with a reserve ident, has been named 'as po-/post, who killed many of the The White House issued a gested the entire matter was ___. 25,000 votes in the Wisconsin own pension plan it would not/years, one thing the money nn es eae tion of the U ninistration's constitution, he said, Ultimate P came vith § 261, A on the Quebec scheme municipalities to float bonds at Be that as it may, there ap- would remain with the federal not intend to compete with Que-"" ir, certainly not going to unimpressed on the surface, are ton, ferred to the province, re industry. into. the he got those votes, and* why. 1as age cj sand. to, Aare. NOUS. bec if Quebec puts money into . eaten a 4 ' has agents looking after the Es- OTTAWA (CP) -- Prime Min-)fer the provinces a higher share ; provincia] government a é F lead rain 4 cial. government as an agent? The premier said any Ontario «,,¢ premier Robarts appar- under the pension plan. scination bordering on phobia statement than he had at a Ca- : secretary - treasurer|piohts of Eskimos will be up- addition to pension beefits, It ° which 'would. be Wallace now moves on to pri-|at : P ont out of the Canada Pension i 10 a » pensi ' $ a persor quity or Plan. tee once the pension legislation - ation and what he calls the ! i as 2 » ahez t re- 7 If he continues raw .» sculptor in Canada and Britai : ee Sk Ea ee the pensions istue was part of|Peg North Centre) Mr. Pearson|views of the provinces." f he continues to draw the opine vias: federal government would not ; - al esi cc le ' al oe He also pode gg Ontario|ment Wednesday on the pension per" t the government has| ang fence-sitters of both parties €an ciation for many of Mr. Robarts said that if On- ' ic: Late R fe sl gy noting that the Canada Pension/eral government changing its Plan before the approving Jeg-lin the Senate's current debate! 'London--Hesketh Pearson, 77, adjustment of responsibilities) Mr. Pearson said he hoped the These officials now were car-|Republican convention in San mus, Darwin, Shakespeare, Crackdown On "The provinces cannot exer-|tario residents to participate in cable under Parliament, he the' following month. car, Wilde and Sir Walter Scott. government." ment would be happy to do all(Ilraith said it was true in prin- Brazil's military ministers en- Mr. Pearson told H. A, Ol- islation being passed; 'it was munists' and. fellow travellers employee contributions had not cation in recent days from Pre- plicated matters as a pension) President Joao Goulart. tions and benefits than in the ate provincial pension plan. = I I lousted Goulart, the ministers would probably mean a matur- 7AsTE-TEMPING 4 DEUCIOUS elected by Congress. Military | chiefs received power to sus- pend political rights for 10 year BUYER -- J LL SELLER cooler weather should reach Kapuskasing oe southern Ontario later today Earlton along with some cloudiness but! North Bay. only slight cooling. A minor dis- Sudbury .. turbance approaching the Great Muskoka Lakes from the west on Satur-| Windsor . day is expected to have little London and to revoke mandates of fed- eral, state and municipal legis- lators without any recourse to the courts. The measures were contained in a so-called Institutional Act signed by the ministers and by- passing congressional approval sons the right to opt out of a provincial public plan in favor of a private one, While it. was actuarily possible to equate a public plan with private and other government plans "I'm not the least bit interested in pleasing the insurance compan- es 728-9474 PAUL RISTOW REALTOR 187 KING ST. E. Come in soon for @ delicious Italien Style Meal or Pizza VESUVIO PIZZA RESTAURANT @ IN THE PLAZA' o 374 WILSON S$. 725.0438 is your Rum This is a rum that's dark and mellow. This is a hearty robust rum that's every bit a man's rum. This is Wood's Old Navy, a blend of the world's finest (many as old as 9 years). A long-standing effect on southern Ontario's Toronto . weather. Trenton . Lake St. Clair, Lake Erie, Ni- Ottawa agara, Lake Ontario, Windsor, Montreal Hamilton, Toronto: Sunny. with, Quebec a-few cloudy periods Saturday. Halifax Little change in temperatures. | Chicago : Winds light, lll bale Lake Huron, Georgian Bay, to. Angeles Haliburton: Sunny with cloudy," __ periods Saturday. Little change in temperatures. 'Timagami, North Bay, Sud- bury: Saturday sunny with a few cloudy periods. Winds light. Southern White River, Satur- day mostly cloudy. Winds light. Northern White River, Coch- rane: Increasing cloudiness and not quite as cold Saturday. Winds southerly 15 to 20 Satur-. day. | "It remains very clear that the revolution does- not seek to legitimize self through Con- gress,' the act states. The act specified that the in- terim president to serve out the' unexpired term of Goulart is to be elected by Congress within the next two days A "BAHAMAS ROOM" INSTALLATION by Nash Aluminum -- Oshawa favourite in England, we think you'll agree that no other rum can match Wood's Old Navy for full- bodied flavour. Try it next time. PLAN TO ATTEND... Van Belle Gardens SPRING GARDEN FESTIVAL THURS. - FRI. - SAT. - APRIL 9- 10-11 Featuring the Radio and TV Gardener... JOHN BRADSHAW April 11 -- Bring Your Gardenina Problems to an Expert SEE US FOR LANDSCAPING DESIGN SPECIAL _ Forecast Temperatures Low tonight, high Saturday Windsor 35 St.. Thomas. 30 London 30 Kitchener .. 30 Mount Forest. 25 Wingham ... 25 Hamilton 30 St. Catharines 32 Peterborough 20 Trenton 25 Killaloe 15 Muskoka 20 North Bay. 5 Sudbury 15 Barlton 5 Sault Ste. Marie... 20 Kapuskasing 15 White River... 20 Moosonee .. 5 Timmins SHRUB 5.45 Now .. 2 @ 1 LOVELY HYDRANGEA @ 1 COLORFUL POTENTILLA @ 1 SPIREA VAN HOUTTI TREE SPECIAL Reg. 8.45 Now 6.99 @ 1 WEEPING WILLOW @ 1 MOUNTAIN ASH Special FERTILIZER Reg. SPREADER SAVE 1.70 Reg. 8.65 Now . §.95 ROSE SPECIAL » Reg. 3.75 Now 2.99 e@ 1 BLAZE RED CLIMBER @ 1 FASHION PINK @ 1, F.K. DRUSKI WHITE Special SHEEP MANURE Reg. 3.28 ..., Qa 1.49 25 Ibs. Reg. 1.95. EVERGREEN SPECIAL @ 1 GOLDEN PFITZER @ 1 MEYER JUNIPER e@ 1 SAVIN JUNIPER 9.95 Al Vertical Mullions Al Door Al Horizontal Mullions Concrete Embossed Operating Well of Aluminum Glass Panels Gloss Petie Ponels With Screen Panels Protection Reg. 12.05 NOW Van BELLE GARDENS "YOUR FRIENDLY GARDEN CENTRE" 3 MILES EAST OF OSHAWA ON HWY NO. 2 : i) For more details come in or phone ond our representative will call on you, ALUMINUM OSHAWA FREE PARKING PHONE 728-16334 15 Observed Temperatures Low overnight, high Thursday Dawson .«.- ps} 45 Victoria 5 55 Edm 56 ee 2S } : } 7 PHONE 623-5757 teoeneeees 95 ATHO ST. EAST

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