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Oshawa Times (1958-), 18 Jul 1964, p. 2

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2 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Seturdey, July 18, 1964 GOOD EVENING -- By JACK GEARIN -- PM Enthusiastic About Conference OTTAWA (CP)--Prime Minis-|fectiveness, if it acts in respect "GOOD SAMARITANS" RETURN LOST GIRL, 4 _Letters-to-the editor frequently pack an emotional wallop. "That recent one from Mr. and Mrs. Deane Wellman, Omemee, Ont., is an example. _ hey dropped their daughter, 4, off July 11 outside the home of a friend while they went off to a wedding. ' The child, about to enter the house where she was await- ed, noticed that the garage was empty. She wrongly assumed the house was empty, panic-stricken, she started alone for home several miles distant, An unidentified Oshawa couple found her. running and crying alone along the busy highway nearby the friend's home (located near Emily Provincial Park outside Omemee.) They got directions from the child and drove her to the home of an aunt and uncle, who forgot to ask their names Here's the punchline.of the story: the Welimans want to locate these people to thank them personally for assisting their daughter. "We shudder to think of the 'accident that might have happened', or the type of person who might have 'picked up' our child," writes Mrs. Wellman. "These most-kind peo- ple drove a small white, or light-colored car that had no back seat. If any of your readers can identify these Good Samaritans, we would be most grateful." WUTTLE NOTES FROM HERE AND. THERE OVERHEARD ON A SIMCOE ST. BUS: "Why ali of this excitement just because City Hall is replacing its coal-heating with gas? It won't mean much of a change--isn't that about all what we've been getting for years, anyhow, from City Hall -- gas?" . . . The Sudbury Star editorially has re- buked Sudbury City Council for selecting a new police station as the City's Centennial project for 1967, Wailed The Star: "Sudbury needs a new police station, granted, but it also feeds something to which its citizens can point with pride as their contribution to a great moment in the history of this nation. . . . The brief submitted by council's committee was singularly unimaginative; a mere recount of what police chiefs of past years have made clear in their reports'. TORIES SILENT ON THAT "LIBERAL" STEER DEAL Whatever became of that plan to purchase a 1,000-pound « steer from a prominent Liberal shorthorn breeder for that big Tory picnic August 15 at the farm of Heber Down? Did the Tories' anti-subversive propaganda committee squelch the deal? Even Richard Donald and Donald Dodds, those indefatigable party drum-beaters in this riding, refuse to dis- Guss the matter... . The PUC's new 40-foot Diesel bus, second to be delivered this year, has arrived from London, Ont., and is to be seen on regular duty... . The City is await- ing written approval from the Ontario Municipal Board be- fore levying for an extra $50,000 in 1965 to help pay for the Hillsdale Manor 100-bed annex. Costs went up about $75,000 above estimates -- the City will pay one-half the total, but found itself short. LET'S. NOT SELL THE KIDDIES SHORT ON POOLS It is strange, or isn't it? "The only formal protest to date to recent remarks herein on children's swimming pools came from a familiar source. That is correct -- the author of that sizzling letter-to-the- editor Friday, in which a columnist was roundly scorched, was Robert E. Wilson. The signed letter didn't say, so, but its author is the same Robert E. Wilson who is a member of the 12-man Civic Auditorium committee. Is anyone in our reader-audience unfamiliar with the committee's stand on swimming pools, especially the type that could be built Margely with a $200,000 Centennial grant windfall? What Mr. Wilson says, in effect, is this: 'Scattered swimming pools for children would be nice, but this is pri- marily the responsibility of Council; furthermore, we have done as much as any community for the children, now let's do something for ,the adults." This is representative of the committee's philosophy. It is selfish, misleading be- cause it does little to put the case of the children (in re- gards to pools) in proper perspective, The City has 27 parks for children, as Mr. Wilson states, but it has only three children's pools (two are operative only two months yearly) in a community of 67,000. Mr. Wilson didn't mention it, but the total number of peols has been increased by exactly one since 1937 when Ritson was opened. He mentions Camp Samac, outside the City's boundaries, which has made a fine contribution to child welfare, but it is taxed to capacity; furthermore, it is a re- stricted pool for Scouts, Guides, Brownies, Cubs, etc. Few. people did more than "Bob" Wilson (former chair- man of the Children's Arena commission) in the old days to tight for children's swimming pools; so why the de-emphasis bn them now when they are more urgently needed? If the need was grave in the 1940's, how much greater it must be today. In one breath "Bob" admits Council's gross neglect to the children, in the next he plumps hard for the $300,000 Auditorium pool (construction of which would represent 4 continuation of this municipal neglect.) 'Bob' must know that 90° percent of the children who desperately need more civic swimming outlets would never get a chance to dip their toes in the Auditorium pool. His letter ignores children of tender years unable to travel great distance; not only are their parents too busy to accompany them, they haven't got the bus fare on a regular basis, Don't abandon these kiddies, "Bob", in their hour of need, in this great tug-of-war for the $200,000 Centennial Fund spoils. This represents a golden opportunity to repay our young- sters, in some way, for constant neglect throughout the years in regard to swimming pools, Let's not make the Auditorium site the sporting, cultural and administrative centre of the community . overnight ("Watch those fellows," warned a wag recently '"'or they'll move City Hall out thére, or perhaps the playing fields of Eton.") ROBERT E WILSON ter Pearson returned to' the|of domestic matters?" Commons Friday with an en-| It might have been more ef- thusiastic report form the Com-| fective, he said, if the colony's monwealth prime ministers' prime minister, Ian Smith, had conference. The reaction of op-| been invited to the conference, position leaders was that the) Mr. Pearson told F..§ Com- prime minister's trip to London|mons that he had added some was well worth while, qualifying phrases to sugges- "In recent years fears have|'ons that Communist China be Whey senceieae. ~ that the|2dmitted to the United Nations. : While he agreed that "condi- shat og ig a gy Sng tions should be erg ye Bas simply an amiable club with no rac agg Begs oot Ne real objective," Mr, Pearson rh ache hey qt . be forgotten said. ". . , The recent confer-| 0", ory 6 eg 80 ence has shown that those fears| 'Pat Communis i " se are unfounded." an Ggerespor ih ores. an Mr. Pearson returned to nis| there grid ae" Racal at aa 4 S\cluding Canada, that could no sone gy Poe ares, accent the extension of Commu- sides of the House, His g0-| uit Tule to Formose. minute report was followed by 90 minutes of opposition replies that were gilded with good will. Rd Sg ply A VIER PS eee cee) « . ae By JOSEPH MacSWEEN Canadian Press Staff Writer Barry Goldwater may not win the American presidency but some folk figure he may win the British general election ~--for Sir Alec Douglas - Home, that is. Douglas - Home, the British prime minister, hasn't claimed so far that his chances of vic- tory are enhanced by fears aroused in British hearts by the ascendancy of Goldwater in the US And Harold Wilson, his Labor party challenger, certainly isn't saying that Sir Alec's chances are zooming just because the Republican party chose Senator Wilson, in fact, said as late as. Thursday night it would be foolish for the Conservatives to try to make long-range capital from the American struggle be- cause that/ would be a_ two- edged weapon, "We shouldn't get in their hair and they should stay out of ours," was the gist of his message. HOPE JOHNSON WINS : Both Wilson and Douglas- Home, it seems sure, honestly hope for re-election of Dem- ocratic President Lyndon B. Johnson in view of his stalwart support of the Atlantic Alliance and his moderate stance on for-| eign affairs generally, i Yet Douglas-Home can point) Nomination Of Goldwater May Help Britain's Tories to Goldwater's policies--so0 ec- centric in British ears -- as showing how wise the Conser- vative government was to re- clear deterrent against all pres: sures. ys Wilson, who claims the Brit- ish nuclear force is neither in- dependent nor a deterrent, has a sharp question on that one. It goes. like this: If Goldwater cannot be trusted to defend Britain against nuclear attack, how can he be trusted to supply the Polaris missiles without which Britain's "independent'"' force is no deterrent? AGAINST DATE Wilson, going, over to the attack, accuses Sir Alec of ister my thafiks and the thanks ing Canada as he did," said | Opposition Leader Diefenbaker. |DOUGLAS PROUD | "I should like to tell prime minister that all of wus, jas Canadians, are proud of the jserious diplomacy and modera- tion of voice which he brought to this important conference," |said New Democratic Party |Leader Douglas. Mr. Pearson said the confer- ence was a fascinating and | stimulating experience. If the conference had ignored the ex- plosive issue of race relations "I express to the prime min- of the opposition for represent- the) Employees Get Walking Papers PERTH, Ont. (CP)--Fourteen jemployees of the Public Utili- ties Commission who walked out Thursday were given back pay, vacation pay and unem-} ployment insurance books Fri- day. The Canadian Union of Public} Employees, bargaining agent} for the employees, branded the} action "an act of intimidation."'| Mayor Scott Burchell, a mem-} ber of the commission, said the commission regards the action of the men as termination of} {have been keeping the commu-| in Southern Rhodesia, the Com-|nity supplied with water and| monwealth might not have sur-! electricity. g Goldwater as standard - bearer. WASHINGTON (AP) -- The, firing by a Soviet naval vessel| of three shots across the bow of a U.S. grain ship in the; Black Sea has been termed) |excessive" and "clearly out-| |side the norms of -acceptable) |behavior" by the U:S. state de- partment. | | At the same time, the de- {partment concedes that the ac- \tion "may have been within} strictly legal rights." ; The department said a Sovie State Department Terms Soviet Action Excessive -- N.Y., reported the ship was) stopped when it was 16.3 miles from' land--outside Soviet terri- torial waters. Anora! protest was delivered here to Georgi M. Kornienko, Soviet minister) counsellor, by Acting Assistant} State Secretary Richard Davis.) EXPLAIN INCIDENT The department 'said the in- cident resulted from different} means of paying Soviet steve-| 1U.S., q Port, it said, the ship had the vessel last Wednesday pt choice to pay either $3 an hour| vived, Mr. Pearson said. It was a question that could not be ignored. The 13 employees signed un- \the SS Sister Katingo, boarde per man for unloading its cargo ion cards June 2 and asked rec- ognition of their union as bar- Mr. Diefenbaker said the situ-| gaining agent June 3. Two days ation in Southern Rhodesia was|later the commission passed a| not the same as in South Africa| bylaw removing the employees when 'that country decided to|from jurisdiction of the Labor leave the Commonwealth dur-! Relations Act. ing the 1961 prime ministers' mission is willing to hold talks Wayne Scott fax, N.S, and Ricky Norman, Mayor Burchell said the com- Bridgewater, N.S., are mak- LIKE HELICOPTER (on top) Hali- 'Hindu clinoline'"', spinning trick: They are here a rope at Valley Forge attending the sixth national Boy Scout Jam- \it and forced the captain to pay la fine, The U.S, ship had left of 32,336 tons of grain, or 50 cents per ton. cargo Fertig the port of Novorossisk without) permission following a wage dispute. | No injuri reported chose the $3-an-hour rate. | This apparently displeased) Sein nae ae Soviet authorities and the dis- a es were es OF damnag fad was referred to the Soviet ministry of merchant marine in Officials here said Friday that the ship's captain, Arthur | Niagara tialifies of what has taken Place| ployees but would not discuss ministers' conference tend to | WITH FOG VIEW | N years ago stood 29,002 feet Not Charged | ® al e the Empire State Building |dict a 32-year-old truck driver The view was coo foggy," her alleged. assailant. May 29, 1953. ling of George Deutsch, 26, of} in each direction, said companions. were riding in a| weekend visit from New from a wedding reception. They| Falls Sunday. Coffey told police he peers |rse lone." TORONTO (CP)--Ontario to- jand his companions approached|to the three main cigarette calibre revolver, warned the Giving this news Thursday, also fired two shots into their|prospects look good. ' They said Deutsch continued|tario farm products exhibit at conference "T realize the frightful poten-|with a committee of the 13 em- in Southern Rhodesia but I won-|anything with the union. der . will not the prime} weaken itself, to destroy its ef-| NOT IMPRESSED U S Tru k | _ TORONTO (CP)--Sherpa a Cc er Tenzing Norgay, who 11 on top of the worid, a few | days ago stood on top of | ROCHESTER, N.Y. (AP)--A| in New York--and was not grand jury refused Friday to in-| impressed. [who responded to a woman's| Said the man who con- ery for help and shot and killed) @uered Everest with Sir Ed- | Roy Coffey of Rochester was The view from Everest \not charged in the July 12 shoot-| was much better, 200 miles \Rochester. Tenzing Friday after arriv- Police said Deutsch and three|' ing in Toronto for a flying jconvertible and spoted Mrs.| York, -- ish Shirley Compson walking home| _ He will visit stopped and Deutsch nid |proached Mrs. Compson. 110 Tons Tobacco iMrs, Compson Scream: "Leave * 'Sold To 3 Firms Police said Coffey told his |wife to telephone police and jthen ran from his -home into|bacco growers have been as- \the street. They said Deutseh|sured sales of at least 110 tons Coff»y, one carrying a baseball| Manufacturing companies in Is- |bat. Coffey, who had a_ .32-|rael. lyourg men to halt, and fired|D. E. Williams of the Ontaro ja warning shot into the air. He|food council said future sales automobile and all but Deutsch; Mr. Williams recently re- stopped, police said turned from supervising the On- \toward Coffey, who said later,|an internat.onal trade fair in |"the gun went off." 'Tel Aviv. | WEATHER FORECAST Not So Warm Mainly Sunny Official forecasts issued by|Sunny with cloudy periods Sun- Toronto weather office at 5:30/day. Cooler tonight and Sunday. a.m.: Winds southwest 10 to 20, shift- Synopsis: Another hot humid/ing to northwest 10. to 20 this day is forecast for southem On-| afternoon or evening, tario, However, cooler air is jpushing southwards across the Forecast Temperatures extreme northern sections of, Low tonight, High Sunday the province and is expected' Windsor ++ 68 85 to reach. the Georgian Bay area|St. Thomas this evening and most southern| London sections by Sunday morning. | Kitchener Variable amounts of cloud and|Mount Forest ... a few isolated showers or thun-| Wingham |ders'.owers are expected today,| Hamilton - mainly during the afternoon and|St. Catharines .... evening, Cloudy skies and show-/Toronto jers will accompany the arrival Peterborough ...--. of the cooler air in the north|Trenton today and in eastern Ontario|Killaloe .. Sunday. Muskoka Lake St. Clair, Lake Erie,/North Bay . jsouthern Lake Huron, Lake On-| Sudbury jtario, Niagara regions, Windsor, | farlton London, Hamilton, Toronto: |sault Ste. Marie . Sunny with cloudy periods to-| Kapuskasing |day and Sunday. A few scat-/|Moosonee tered thundershowers this after-| White River noon and tonight. Hot and hu- |pimmins imid today, not quite so warm . 65 62 lof variety this week | volume ran as high as 10,000,000 ing like a helicopter with a Speculating Focused | On Mining Company By GORDON GRANT were picking their stocks with; Gas distributors gave the util- Canadian Press Staff Writer), pin, giving them a run andiity section a tg appearance. Wild fluctuations in specula-ithen moving onto something| Union Gas made a good gain, tive mining issues and a solid) ejce, Pegg bed pepe gy erinreye Ye hee Meanwhile, industrial stocks} jatter company is gearing for a dian stock markets with: plenty|/continued to make new highs|m ar ket expansion. Lakeland steele "spurred by a thriving economy| was ahead more than a point. .,/and a buoyant New York 'mar- "es : & On the Toronto market daily et, ptione beth povorded 1964 peaks Banks led industrials ahead / shares as speculators scram-|as' the five listed chartered seus case' Gar Comet ae Be OT a one tice Im the| banks showed gains, Nova Sco- and Dofasco made headway as | boree, (CP Wirephoto) |H, Fertig, 33, of Wading River, | Moscow. It ruled that the dis. pute be arbitrated and that the Katingo be permitted to leave after discharging its cargo. The local authorities refused, |wantonly plunging Britain into jan election campaign at the same time as the one in the leaving the West. weak- ened against possible Commu- nist initiatives. The U.S., he says, has a set constitutional election date but Douglas - Home deliberately chose autumn. for political rea- sons although he could have called the poll at any time this Some observers feel, how- ever, that uncertainty in for- eign and defence matters causes voters -- rightly or wrongly -- to turn toward the Tories, as if they were blessed with some sort of mystique in these affairs, springing from | dores. According to Fertig's re-| ages of diplomacy, The U.S. developments have underlined that perhaps there really isn't so much difference between the Tory policy and that of France's President de Gaulle. Both recognize that some day there may be a U.S. leader. who wouldn't defend Europe. As Sir Alec put it when he was foreign secretary: "It is assumed that the Uni- ted States will always in all circumstances cover Britain with her strategic nuclear de- terrent. I profoundly hope that is true." however, to clear the ship, and} it left Wednesday without per- mission. According to the captain's re- port the ship was pursued by a Soviet patrol boat flying inter- national signals with orders to return. When it "failed to heed the order, a Soviet naval craft fired three rounds across the bow of the ship," the state de- partment said: After' a search the Soviets forced the captain to pay a 50- ruble (about $55) fine and per- Malaysia Premier Will Visit Canada LONDON (CP)--The top man in tormented Malaysia visits Canada late this month to 'buy planes for fighting communism Peppery Prime Minister Tunku (Prince) Abdul Rahman spends three days in Canada starting July 27, One day will be spent at the Canadair Lim- > i him to continue to Istan- jul, The ship, owned by: Nautilus Petroleum Carriers Corporation of New York City, carried a cargo loaded in Canada but! stocks with properties in the! tig which recently increased its| T mmins, Ont., area. dividend was ahead more than| "° industry boomed. owned by Cargill, Incorporated, of Minneapolis. Focal point in speculative ac-|two ponts while Montreal, .Tor--GM AHEAD tivity was Windfall Mines andjonto-Dominion and Royal were| Motor stocks were paced by Oils which gyrated widely, trad-|ahead. one point or more. Im-|General Motors which ga ned| almore than 3 in rising to a new jing in a $2.70-$4.75 range. |perial Commerce climbed All of the act vity arose from | fraction. rumors that Windfall had pulled) la good drill hole on its Prosser| Township property near the} Texas Gulf Sulphur Co.'s huge base metals discovery. Monday the company--in res] ply to a Toronto Stock Ex-| |change demand--issued a state-| ment saying the core from the} | jeconomy strode ahead this drill hole had not been as- sayed, The stock took a tempo: | week, showing little 'sign of slackness that would | y setback » ead jrary setback, then roared ahead). mer > Se ae week at interrupt the rhythm of its 41- month advance. | ASSAYS SOON Business and finance leaders | The company announced as- paid little overt mind to front- |says would be available in the|page political events capped by near future and would be made/Senator Barry Goldwater's Re- public mmediately. } Tuesday, in less than one tion, {hour Glenn Uranium, a com-| Rosy readings poured in from | pany searching for base metals}many gauges of economic be- in Wark Township near Tim-jhavior relating. to industrial mins, churned through more/productivity, factory earnings, than 2,000,000 shares, climbed/employment, personal income from 27 cents to 85 cents, then|and the like. settled around 45 cents : An earlier trickle of reports Wednesday P. C. A. Giat-lof record second-quafted and dine, Glenn's president, said/first - half corporation profits that drills had not intersected|proadened into a wide stream. {sulphides or mineralized beds | With a fe w exceptions, things of any interest. The stock then|were fairly quiet on the labor |drifted to its closing level of 38) front. cents. The U.S. Federal Reserve's : ae ee Sees yee index of induStrial production, a urn run. Hees doubled n price to 64 cents and | ninth moved back to where it started.| wimp Bunker Hill was popular in the initial April speculative spree,,;CHEV SAGS >consecutive month of but has been only moderately; Retail sales of General Mo-| active since its driiling proved|tors' Chevrolet sagged a bit, | fruitless apparently because of a strike Tormont also had a big day, of moving from 20 cents to 43/new autos on the East Coast. cents and settling at 32 cents!) Chrysler deliveries were |for a gain on the week of 10\down, seemingly for the same | cents. reason. But Ford and Pontiac |SWITCH LOYALTIES sales in-the fiest 19 Gays of July Retail Car Sales Sag Due To Drivers Strike NEW YORK ( AP)--The U.S.|topped 'year-earlier levels and|gregation for her action. publicari presidential nomina-|was expected to fall somewhat y «easure, tagged June as alrun well ahead of 1963's. | truck drivers who deliver! | Woman Apologizes, | Closing Cemetery | | WINDSOR, Ont, (CP) -- A |woman caretaker, who with her |three helpers Thursday closed \the gates of Shaar Hashomayim Cemetery in protest against ;poor working equipment, has japologized to the Jewish con- 'high of $102. there was no fear of a weak-| Mrs, R. E. Jones made a re-| ening trend generally. traccion of her statements Fri-) The East Coast strike, in its|/4@Y and said the issue was aj lthird week, stopped deliveries} ™isunderstanding." ited factory: in Montreal, where the prime minister will take a close look at the CL-31 recon- | he» would... buy, the Tunku, who leaves for Waskngton Tuesday, replied: |"Qaite a lot," In Ottawa July 28, he will see Prime Minister Pearson and In- dustry Minister Drury, meet other members of the Canadian cabinet and lunch with External Affairs Minister Martin, as well as take in the usua] social round accorded visiting ministers. HEAT WITH OIL DIXON'S . OIL 313 ALBERT ST. "TI was not informed that the equipment I had asked for would soon be available," she \said. She said she had been as- sured by cemetery officials that| jof 120,000 cars ticketed for deal- ers fr om Massachusetts to Maryland--nearly two thirds of them Chevrolets, Auto industry output in July| 24-HOUR SERVICE 723-4663 SERVING OSHAWA OVER 50 YEARS the equipment would be forth-| under 600,000 units, or about coming. . 200,000 under June's level, as one producer after another {fol- lowed. Cadillac's lead in tempo- rarily shutting down. Wage contract negotiations with the United Auto Workers simmered along, still in prelim- inary stages. The UAW asked Ford and GM - financed stock purchase plans for union mem- bers. | A National Industrial Confer- ence Board survey of 207 manu- facturing concerns showed most companies expect 1964 profits to Lovely 3-storey home centrally churches, schools and bus lines, ces, medical clinic, nurses res rooming house, Ample property This house is now available and Phone HARRY DO HOUSE FOR SALE located in Oshawa, Close to Ideal for conversion to Offi- idence, rest home or large for apartment development. can be seen by appointment. NALD 668-3304 BUYER --) ©) SELLER | 728-9474 PAUL RISTOW SERVICE STATIONS OPEN THIS SUNDAY REALTOR 187 KING ST. E. 7:00 a.m. to 9:00 p.m. | One market observer said it jappeared as though speculators | NEED ANEW... DRUG STORES OPEN THIS SUNDAY OIL FURNACE? Call CROWELL'S SH SARGANT'S TEXACO STATION 278 PARK ROAD SOUTH PERRY |] Day or night 723-3443 12:00 A.M. to 6:00 P.M. 22 BOND ST. EAST MEADE'S SUNOCO STATION 74 SIMCOE ST. SOUTH half an hour due to the over-|Sunday. Winds southwesterly 10 time consideration of agricul-|to 20 with gusts in thundershow- | ture estimates. Because of the/€Ts becoming light overnight. Genocide Bill Ly 7 Still On Top shortened period, the bill was|. Northern Lake Huron, Georg: | : left on'top of the list until this|ian Bay, Haliburton, Timagami, | OTTAWA (CP)--A bill that|Friday--when post office de-|Cochtane regions, North Bay, | would designate genocide and|partment estimates again cut|Sudbury, Killaloe: besten , Sroup defamation as crimes in|the normal hour in half. cloudiness with a few scatered | Canada was left on top of the| At the start of Friday's de-|thundershowers today, becom- Commons order paper 'Friday|bate, Mr, Walker said the sub-|ing cooler and less humid by after the half-hour allotted for| ject matter of the bill would bejevening. Cloudy with a. few {ts discussion had expired. ireferred to the Commons com-|showers Sunday.' Winds south-| The bill, sponsored by Milton| mittee on external affairs for|westerly 10 to 20 except gusty Klein (L-- Montreal Cartier)|further. study. But Gordon|in thundershowers, becoming | and James E. Walker (L--York| Churchill (PC--Winnipeg South west to northwest 15 overnight. ate We have. an older couple who own a six room 1 storey brick home with large lot and garage, clear, valued at $10,900, in College Hill area. Very anxious. to exchange for smaller home on one floor. Call Lloyd Corson at 723-1121 GUIDE REALTY LTD. 16 Simcoe St. S. 723-1121 KARNS DRUGS LIMITED 28 KING ST. EAST PHONE 723-4621 RITSON DRUGS 264 KING ST, EAST PHONE 725-5370 JURY & LOVELL LIMITED 1271 SIMCOE COR, KING ST. E. A RUSS BOSWELL SE CORNER WILSON OHAWA TUNE BRAMLEY MOTOR SALES STATHAM B.A. STATION Centre), originally came up for|Centre) said the bill was too im- debate last Friday when private| portant to be referred to a com- '@ hour was alse cut toimittee without full discussion. i White River, Algoma regions: | REALTORS 530 SIMCOE ST. SOUTH PHONE 725-3546 Variable cloudiness with a few| showers today and tonight. * 222 KING STREET WEST ELL STATION ST.. NORTH ND RITSON ROAD RVICE STATION RD. AT OLIVE -UP CENTER

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