Durham Region Newspapers banner

Oshawa Times (1958-), 26 Jun 1967, p. 7

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

THE OSHAWA TIMES, dey, June 26, 1967 RIDGE B. JAY BECKER cord-Holder in Masters' ual Championship Play) 'AMOUS HANDS dealer. fe South vulnerable. NORTH #293 Feeg Pass g lead--jack of spades, s no such thing as play- ectly all the time. You o make occasional er- judgment, and all you is to try to hold their fo a minimum and hope ones you do make ove expensive. it this hand played in n the match between i the United States in en Siniscalco and For- | the North-South cards , the bidding went as f their bids are incom- le by normal stans- they were playing. the in system and the slam iched was reasonable Considering the. few is they held, the Ameri- did quite a lot of bid- t they were simply n the vulnerability con- ed a spade. Forquet the ace, entered dum- a diamond, led the hearts, and finessed. to the king, but that uch ended the hand. later drew another jiscarded three clubs nmy on his diamonds, ed 1,430 points. for the an American pair held "South cards, they also the slam, but on this 1@ 2h # Bass Pass 4 Pass Pass 5 ® Pass Pass 69 lian West (Chiaradia e six of clubs. This in- ad cost declarer the won in dummy with ind finessed the queen' , but Chiaradia took' and cashed a club to » contract one trick. . * us gained 1,530 points eal, but it does seem. if West's opening lead st table is regarded. as », the punishment was oportion to the crime. JHOUSE RESTORED RICTON (CP) -- A choolhouse more than old has been moved fen, N.B., to the cam: ie University of New ; where it is being re- a centennial project. - room school was th the aid of a $4,000 n the New Brunswick committee. :E ABOUT MAO (AP)--The Chinese ts have released two ss about their party following the success 'se - tung's thoughts. } are: Chairman Mao, Sun in the Hearts .of ple throughout -the id The Radiance of tung's Thought Illu- he Whole World. 'S SALLIES nows what he wants, aw it advertised somewhere." eded to show whether accurate guess. M. D. B.: I cannot witching the type of sould have had the. | on your youngster's I would follow the mentioned: There is think that something: perhaps faulty diet, mme chronic 'illness, th. Have a pediatri- wer. t Disneys w White| sven Dwarfs ICOLOR® _Sweatues - «+. TODAY!. US PLAYERS TucATas -- een SS Pk HG Ae a BS As SWB ek a OY eam a ee a i TODAY'S STOCKS | INDUSTRIALS Clairton 200 $94 94 %A+ Columbia 200 $5 5 5 Coiumbi Pp 72100 $16%4 16% 16% | Cominco 3513 830% 30 3 -- | Computr 750 $8% 84 Bly Con Bidg * 600 110 105 110 --§ CQON Paper 265 $37% 37%, 37% -- Con Pap w 225 655 655 655 Con Paprp 150 $26 2% 2% Cons Gas 860 S1B% 18% 18% Coronatn 725 185 155 155 Couvret P 7220 490 490 490 Cygnus B 160 S7% 75m 75 -- % Dist! Seag 900 $395 3912 3952+ Dome Pete 100 $58 SB sa --} | D Bridge 629 $18 ~=---17%q_s«*iB Dofasco 180 $235 235% 23% -- % Dofasco p 210 i] " 91 Dom SI 206 $1758 175% 17% -- Ve Domtar 900 $15% 15% 15% D Textile 470 $20 19% 197% + | Exquisite 100 $54 5% Su--% Exquite w 100 72 72 12 --6 Fe'con 112 $852 8514 8514 Fleet Mfg 2730 145 145 (145 | Ford Cnda $2$164 1632164 +1% FPE Pion 1100 $23% 23' 23'4 FRE Pn pr 220 $9334 93% 93% Fraser 200 $2) 2% 21 +% GL Paper 200 $2614 26% 264 + L Power 150 $22%e 22% 22% Guar Trst 100 $10 10 10 Hard Crp A 1300 $13% 134 13% --v%e Hawker $ 205 365 365 365 --5 Hays Dna 100 $1) 11 1h --% H Smith pr 21 $352 354 35'% H Bay Co 780 $19%e 19% 191% HB Ol} Gas 667 $39 = 38% 38% -- % Husky Oil 925 S174 174 17% Husky Dw 124 760 760 760 +10 Imbrex 200 $6 6 6 imp Oj! 238 $627 62% 62% -- 've Imp Tob 200 $14%_ 14¥%e 14% ind Accept 1230 $2258 21% 21% ind Minerl 250 $13% 13% 13% Ind Wire 200 $6% 6% 6% Inglis 140 $12% 12% 12%-- inland Gas 200 $1). 1) 11 -- | Inland G p 100 $17 7 7 +% Inspiratin 100 18S 185 185 Inter-City 200 $l4ih 14lq 144 -- Vel Intr City pr 7250 $18% 1834 1894 Int Nickel 280 $106 105% 105% int Util 725 $32% 32% 32% -- Ve Int Util pr 105 $32% 32% 32% -- Ve Intpr Pipe 460 $24 2424 Int Pipe w 450 $11%4 11% 11% Intpr Steel 600 445 440 440 Inv Grp A 950 $10 «1010 TL Ind 200 $34% 34 34 --% Jefferson 855 $38 38 BOO Jeffersn w 630 $29 28% 2 +% Jockey C 1670 325 320 3: Kelsey 240 $16% 16% 16% + % Keivinatr 225 $8 8 LOnt Cem 300 460 460 460 +10 Laura Sec 130 $12%4 12% 12% Levy 325 $2014 20% 20% Lob Co A 500 $734 7% 7% Radical R cal reform of Greece's anti- quated fiscal system is being studied by the army - hacked government which took over the country's administration after a coup April 21. The present system, says Ad- amandios. Androutsopoulos, 55- year-old finance minister, is be- set by three main troubles: the great inequality in the distribu- tion of the taxation burden; visible and invisible tax evasion carried out on a_ large-scale; and the lack of adequate and modern fiscal machinery. "Taxation legislation will be simplified and made flexible enough to respond to modern economic and social needs," said Androutsopoulos, adding that there was no category of taxpayer in Greece who has not enjoyed tax exemptions or priv- ileges, Bank of Greece figures show state revenue from, direct tax- ation in 1965 amounted to 4,500,- 000,000 drachmas (about $163,- eform Proposed Of Greek Fiscal System ATHENS (Reuters) -- Radi-|296,000) York Lam B 150 195 195 95 +25 | Sa'es to 11 a.m.: 633,000. | against 20,500,000,000 drachmas (about $746,928,000) from indirect taxation. Experts are unable to esti- mate the extent of tax-evasion in Greece. However, they agree it has reached such proportions as to deprive the state of rev- enue of many billions of drach- mas. FEW PAID TAX One expert says available fig- ures indicate only one in nine Greek families registered in the 1961 census and only 257,562 heads of families notified the fiscal services of their annual income for taxation purposes. Against a national income amounting to 130,000,000,- 000 drachmas ($4,838,400,000) in 1965, family i for the port hurdles, Canada gave com- parable concessions in Canadian tariffs on imports, he told the Canadian Gas Association. TARIFF SLASHING "The reduction in tariffs will be substantial, and they are well worth the long and labor- ious years of negotiations,' said Mr. Sharp. The text of his speech was re- leased in advance of delivery. Mr. Sharp said Canada ob- tained tariff reductions by the United States for "virtually the whole range of duitable Cana- dian exports,' and important concessions in the tariffs levied by Japan and members of the European Economic Com- munity. "For Canada's part, of course, we have promised important re- ductions in tariff protection, and we have taken the occasion to improve and rationalize our tar- iff structure. Many firms which will find their tariff protection reduced will also find the cost of raw materials and compo- Tariff Cuts Seen Helpful operate on a larger and more nents are being reduced at the same time. "I know there will be objec- fions from those who depend ex- clusively on the domestic mar- ket, and who would therefore prefer to live in a more shel- tered world. | "But I also expect that when the tariff bargains are revealed at the end of June, Canadians in every part of the country-- oth producers and consumers --will recognize at once that for Canada and Kennedy round has been one of the greatest and} tions of our history.' IMPROVE ECONOMY Mr. Sharp said the lower tar- iffs on Canadian exports and lower cost of imported raw ma- terials and components will en- able Canada to build a more specialized and productive in- dian firms should be able to efficient scale. | Lob CoB 600 $7% 7% T+ | Lob Inc 1000 8% 6 6.+%!] Loeb M 100 $13 1313 | MB Ltd 155 $282 28% 28% -- ta M Lf Gard 25 $30¥2 30% 3ie-- % | Mass-Fer 800 $212 21% 22+ Milt Brick 150 390 390 390 Molson B 7100 $244 24 24% | Mont Test 400 S61 tet ts ont Trsi $6 16 1% + im yall mts le 8 gig Rey apa hae Nabrs Dig 725 450 450 450 nance Minister Sharp saic ay af Eaten ~ Bs ai": ats substantial tariff reductions to Neon 100 $6% 6% 6h be announced Friday will en- Nia Wire B 225 $18' 18% 18le able Canadian industry to get oranda 606 $51% 51% 51% --~ i Nor CH G 945 $1194 1184 1134 into -- and broader -- Ogilvie 410 $13% 13% 124--% markets ut may raise objec- at ere = f. ot " 4 tions from producers wanting to ' . Pac Pete 649 $15% 15ve 15% + | aepend exclusively on the do- pernbine ra $13 1 12% -- v,| mest market. orp 0% 1 0% + MM 'oun . Price Com 1405 $11% 11% 11% -- te ao meseen? 4 "c es QN Gas 216 $10% 10Ye 10% cutting negotiations in Geneva, Seok Ore 55 in a gat whe said, 'has been one of the Ma "a Ve Reverse 20 99% Oo greatest and most successful Romfield 2000 2% 26 2% trade negotiations of our his- aoe ae Nas ied wet tory, and certainly one from Sayvette 500 330 315 325 --s |Which our country must not fail Shell [38g sm lt, 1 11 -- w/ to profit. an i, se Shop Save 100 $12% 12% 1244 %|_ Results of the nearly four Siiverwd A 2 $15' 15¥2 15¥4 years of bargaining are to be impsons 220 $2B% 281% 28% i SKD Mig 190 6% 64 614 4+ nerd age at Meg Pare EDT Siater SH 19 $914 9% 9% Tiday, when the Tgaining Sopemine 125 a0 4 14% conclusions are signed by the am Zz V4 M2 42M ici j i i ST Redlo 25 $35 35 36 4y,| Participating countries in Ge- Steel Can nn 3B neva. In general, they mean ini 210 $19%e 19% 19% i \ Lpun st to tae eee tariff cuts for one quarter of Texaco 100 $29. 29 Canada's exports to the U.S., atom a 200 $29% 29% 2% + % and broad reductions in trade kk Os el me y,| barriers with other countries. Transair $5% 54 5% | In return for these lower ex- Can PL 1380 $313" 31 3% Tr Can PI 50 S4BY%4 4814 44 -- Va | Tr Can Pw 350 860 860 860 +10 | Trans Mt 225 $19% 1924 19% | Trans PPL 225 $7% 734 7% UNAS Inv 730 $122 1244 12% Un Carbid 465 $202 202 202+ % Un Gas 2620 $14 13% Ve + % Union Oil 50 $39 399 39 + uw / Versatile 280 $40'% 40 Vie G Tr 735 $14% 14% Walk GW 320 $33% 33 Weste'st 130 $25 25 25 +4 West ind 100 225 225 205 19 W Pacific 600 $64 6» be-- ve Weston A 100 $19% 191% 19% White Pas 500 $15% 155% 15% + Ve By BORIS MISKEW Woodwd A 170 $30% 30% 30%41%,) MONTREAL (CP)--The pre- miers of two European Commu- nist countries are expected to- day to make tours of the world's fair Tuesday. Premier Todor Zhivkov of Bulgaria is expected in Mont- real after visiting Niagara Falls, Ont., en route from New York where he attended a session of the United Nations General As- sembly. He is expected to make an in- formal visit to the, Expo site Tuesday, the same day that Premier Jozef Lenart of Czecho- slovakia will be paying an un- official visit to the world's fair. Today is Man the Provider the Agricultural Institute Canada who will be treated to a parade of prize dairy and breed- ing cattle. One of the highlights will be the presentation of honor certifi- cates of the 174 sponsors of Man the Provider pavilion by Agri- culture Minister J. J. Greene. Sunday, Expo received its 15,- 000,000th visitor since its official opening 'last April 27. TECHNICAL TROUBLE A_ history-making round-the- world live television broadcast was made Sunday but technical difficulties in Montreal pre- vented viewers in 26 countries from getting an aerial view of Expo. Day at the fair and Expo will be invaded by 1,000 members of Fourteen countries, including Canada, participated in carry- 'Two Communist Premiers :&-. Due For Expo Tour Today ofjing the telecasts by four com- munications satellites to the far corners of the world and a po- tential viewing audience esti- U.S. Approval Of Pipe-Line| Eases Fear Of Gas Shortage Canadian Press Business Editor Approval of Trans - Canada Pipe Lines Ltd.'s application to build a new west-east natural To Many Firms In Canada i.e cen |shortage of the fuel this winter in Ontario. Distributing companies were |naturally loathe to talk about the potential shortage because of the effect on future custom- ers, although some indications of the real situation did come jout at hearings in Ottawa. With United States approval to build the new pipeline, however, Northern and Central Gas Ltd. said it now will be in a position to increase sales this winter by 10 per cent. | Before most successful trade negotia-| granted, most distributing com- panies had carefully said they expected to be able to supply existing customers this winter-- without mentioning any poten- tial vise on expansion plans. It is still possible the work on the new line, which will deliver an additional 677,000,000 cubic a feet of natural gas daily dustrial structure. More Cana-|Ontario, could be delayed. Opponents of Trans-Canada's application to the U.S. for per- {mission to build the line can |apply for an injunction to halt/at $11.25 bid and $12 asked. | Trans-Canada's bid for an im-| |mediate start pending an ap-|ported to be identified with a | peal against the Federal Power! group of possible western buy- |Commission's favorable ruling. Trans-Canada officials, ever, are reported to feel that such a step is not likely since historically appeals against similar rulings by the FPC have} Pt e not generally been successful, |With James Coyne, Meanwhile, Canadian energy| officials were pleased with the introduction of the concept of By KEN SMITH 000,000 cubie feet of gas daily to the U.S, markets. The exports are expected to be worth $550,000,000 over the next 25 years. Energy officials say that with this concept now firmly set, it should be a short step to win- ning approval for increased ex- ports of crude oil. NEGOTIATE SALE To help finance the new line, Trans-Canada recently negoti- ated the private sale in Canada and the U.S. of $120,000,000 worth of 65%-per-cent, 20-year debentures. Last week it also had a peti- tion filed with Parliament to increase its common share cap- italization to 25,000,000 from 10,- 000,000 and its preferred shares to 5,000,000 from 1,000,000. _Elsewhere on the business scene, the long-confused situa- tion surrounding the fledgling Bank of Western Bank became even more confused. York Lambton Corp. Ltd., whose 433,000 shares of the new bank represent a majority hold- ing, announced it plans to sell them to western investors. to| SETS PRICE FOR SHARES It put a price of $15 a share on the stock--the original sub- scription price--although shares were selling Friday in Toronto line south of the Great $212,000,000 the approval was One of the first persons re- lers was Sinclair M. Stevens, Toronto lawyer and financier who was a founder and former chairman of the new bank. He resigned as chairman after a public dispute over bank policy president how- and also a founder. Last March, Mr. Stevens sold his holdings in British Interna- tional Finance Corp., the par- mated by a CBC official at more /national security as one reason lent of York: Tambien, to Mant. than 500,000,000. Habitat 67, a revolutionary mass-housing concept on display at the fair, was shown by the CBC as part of a sequence on overpopulation and man's at- tempts to overcome this prob- for the FPC's approval. The FPC said in effect that it is nice to be assured of an alternate source of supply in the event of an emergency. Its approval the right to export up to 170,- real financier Mare Bienvenu. Immediate reaction to York Lambton's announcement was that the offer could save the new bank from being wound up before it even opened its doors for business. grants Trans-Canada lem. But' an aerial view of Habitat in the foreground and of the pavilions at the world's fair in the background failed to be re- layed during the two-hour pro- gram. LACKED PREPARATION Charles Kirkman, an official of the International Broadcast- Jordan King To Attend UN AMMAN (CP)--King Hussein of Jordan left today for New Some eastern observers quickly wondered, however, what will be in store if a group with which Mr. Stevens is as- sociated buys in, considering the public fight between the Toronto financier and Mr. Coyne that started the confu- THE OSHAWA TIMES, Monday, June 26, 1967 7 Foreign Aid Outlay MONTREAL (CP) -- Canada should double its foreign aid out- lay: and make at least half of the over-all total conditional on birth-control programs in recipi- ent countries, a food expert said today. Dr. C. F. Bentley, dean of ag- riculture at the University of Al- berta, told the Agricultural In- stitute of Canada it is a myth that science can expand food production to provide satisfac- tory diets for the world popula- ti the expanding population. Population control to bring the birth rate down to the death rate is the only solution to man's food problems, he said. PLEAS UNANSWERED He said Canada has not re- sponded to pleas from many India and Pakistan, for help with their countries, notably population problems. Dr. Bentley suggested Canada and other countries follow the example of Sweden, which de- votes the bulk of its foreign aid ion. The population is increasing too quickly, he said. It is going up at the rate of two per cent annually. In the next 33 years, food production must double merely to maintain the present inadequate level of supply for to population control work. Sweden also donates one per cent of its Gross National Prod- uct--total value of all goods and services--to foreign aid. The Ca- nadian total is half of one per cent. Dr. Bentley said the food aid given to India this year will prove harmful in the long run increase the | because it will number of people surviving on the lowest of subsistence levels. Tying food aid to India with ade. 'Canada Asked To Double a birth control program would permit India to reach its goal of reducing the birth rate from 40 to 1,000 to 25 in the next dec- loan comm made Peking Hails Kaunda Visit PEKING (Reuters) -- Presi- dent Kenneth Kaunda's visit te China has ushered in a new stage of development in the re lations of friendship and co- operation between China. and Zambia, a communique on the visit said today. The _ visit contributions to the strengthen- ing of Afro-Asian solidarity, the said. It a that Chinese Premier Chou En- lai has accepted an invitation to visit Zambia but mentioned no date. President Kaunda, who made a short provincial tour after his talks with Chou in Peking, ar- rived in Karachi early today on his way home, The communique mentioned no tanglible results of the visit but President Kaunda told a weekend banquet that China has agreed to provide Zambia with a $17,000,000 interest-free "under terms which of mutual benefit to both of us." LEWIS OPTICAL Established for over 30 yeors 10% ™ Street West 725-0444 ey COAL & SUPPLIES NOW IS THE TIME TO CALL Take advantage of it! 24 hour ser- vice; and radio dispatched trucks always ready to serve you. Fuel Oil Budget Plan Available OVER 40 YEARS EXPERIENCE! . McLAUGHLIN 723-3481 sion early this year. = Outlook For Rest Of Year 2: orzram wes By JACK LEFLER NEW YORK (AP)--The at- cent U.S. business investment tax credit gave hopes of in- creased spending for new plant tention of many b ists and government of- year declared to tax collectors totalled only 21,963,000,000 drachmas ($801,360,000). After relevant deductions and franchises provided by the law, only 10 per cent of the net na- ficials centred this week on the economic outlook for the second half of 1967. Opinion was divided, but the majority seemed to feel there will be an upturn in the next tional income. was taxed. 400-Year Tradition Broken To Speed British Debates LONDON (Reuters) -- Brit- ain's two-chamber Parliament has broken a 400-year-old tra- dition in efforts to modernize procedure and speed up de- bates. It has passed a law under which Black Rod, a royal house- hold official, will no longer in- terrupt proceedings in the House of Commons to summon members to the House of Lords for the ceremony converting bills into laws. This tradition goes back to the time of Henry VIII, when the monarch and his nobles gathered in the Lords' Cham- ber. Members of the Commons, then a mere parliamentary ad- junct, were summoned to the upper house to hear the sov- ereign give the royal assent to new laws. This now is done by a royal commission of three or four peers dressed in ermine, and wearing three - cornered hats. | In future the fact that a bill) has become law will be an- nounced by the Speaker in the Commons. The visits by Black Rod, a dignified figure in black court dress, silk stockings and silver- buckled shoes, with a sword in one hand and a three-cornered hat tucked under the arm, have come to be resented by the Commons. His arrival often meant inter- rupting a tense debate. Some angry members have been known to tell him in unparlia- mentary language that he should go somewhere else. Though no longer able to in- terrupt debates, Black Rod will continue his ceremonial visits to the House of Commons at the end of parliamentary sessions. | Black Rod gets his name from an ebony rod with which he knocks three times on the door of the Commons to ask for admission to the chamber. Computer Programmer Has Never Seen Computer SAULT STE. MARIE, Ont. (CP)--Douglas Leavens, one of five computer programmers at Algoma Steel Corp., has never seen a computer because he is blind. : : "We are very happy with his work," says Jack Books, head of the steel mill's community relations department. Mr. Leavens got his job about a year ago after John Chatwell, employment officer for the Ca- nadian National Institute for the Blind, persuaded the company to accept a blind man as a pro- grammer. He receives the problem to be solved through a tape recorder, then types the appropriate pro- PLAN MONSTER SEARCH LONDON (CP)--A_ two-year investigation into the existence! of the Loch Ness monster is; planned by the Phenomena In- vestigation Bureau of London, following a $21,000 gift by an American. gram on thick paper with a Braille typewriter. A final draft of the finished program is later prepared on an ordinary type- writer. Mr. Leavens said in a recent interview that given the neces- sary talents and proper train- ing, 'I can see no reason why a handicapped person should feel sorry for himself." He himself was prepared for his job by learning to be a skilled typist and an expert in Braille. They fitted with his tal- ent for technical things and mathematics, 2 "T feel sorrier for thosés who do not use their abilities to make some contribution to so- ciety," he said. Need An Oii Furnace? PERRY 723-3443 DAY OR NIGHT six months. Many factors were involved in the various projections: Inven- tory adjustment, capital invest- ment, consumer spending, taxes, government spending, Vietnam and the Middle East. Among the sources making forecasts were Morgan Guar- anty Trust Co. of New York and Standard and Poor's Corp., an investment advisory firm. Morgan Guaranty said: "The customary business indi- cators continue to show that high-level sluggishness remains the dominant characteristic of the evolving business situation. But performance is nevertheless consistent with the widely-held view that conditions favorable to business acceleration in the second half are developing." Standard and Poor's com- mented: "A modified version of the late 1965 experience--a rapidly rising economy, a fast increase in profits, an expanding money supply and rising interest rates --may well be in the making for late 1967." Indications were that the downward adjustment of heavy inventories was continu- ing. Some said it had been completed. HOPE OF INCREASE Restoration of the seven-per-| and t, Railways placed orders for new cars. Consumers were expected to step up their spending to par- allel the sustained rise in dis- posable income. Among the ben- eficiaries would be producers of consumer durable goods, par- ticularly automobiles. Whether the rate of govern- ment spending ingreases will continue depends ainly on whether the Vietnam war will escalate and on what transpires in the Middle East. Automobile production this week was estimated at 177,000 passenger cars, up 3.6 per cent from 170,849 the previous week but down 5.6 per cent from 187,- 000 a- year ago. Steel output last week slipped to the lowest level of the year. Mills turned out 2,210,000 tons of steel, down 3.1 per cent from 2,281,000 tons the previous week. ing Centre at Expo, blamed the trouble on bad weather and on 'Business Should Improve'. ii is. technical difficulties involving the CBC and broadcasters from other countries gathered to- gether at the International Broadcasting Centre, a CBC- sponsored communications com- plex. The Soviet Union and a num- ber of other countries were scheduled originally to take part in the program but later with- drew their participation. The program was co-ordinated by the BBC in London. It was Quebec's day Satur- day at Expo and Premier Dan- iel Johnson told a crowd of 2,000 at a ceremony during which his province's blue-and-white flag was raised that Expo was "the launching pad of modern Que- bec and of the French-Canadian nation." Equality with the English- speaking provinces of Canada is not possible for the French-Ca- nadian cultural community "if York to attend the United Na- tions emergency General As- sembly session on the Middle ast. Informed sources here said that the king was expected to stop over in Paris for a meet- ing with French President de- Gaulle. Hussein announced in a radio broadcast that he was going to the UN to present "Jordan's 'case against the Israeli aggres- sion." A here appointing Crown Prince Hassan as regent during the king's absence. Hussein will address the As- sembly Monday or Tuesday. His government has accused Israel of expelling thousands of Arabs from occupied parts of Jordan. Lebanese newspapers re- ported Friday that the socialist Arab block a proposed Arab summit. They speculated that Egypt, Sy- ria, Iraq, Algeria and Yemen believe they might be outnum- bered by more moderate Arab leaders. E N i eo ; royal decree was issued nations probably will sREWOR, DISPLAY AT THE GIGANTIC OSHAWA SHOPPING CENTRE You and Your Family are Invited to Enjoy Our CENTENNIAL YEAR 110 King St. W. FIREWORKS DISPLAY Thursday, June 29th, 10:00 P.M. Quebec cannot negotiate freely the agreements necessary for the preservation of its particular | heritage," Mr. Johnson said. Infinite heet switches, spill- proof cocking surface for easy cleaning, appliance out- let, | eutomatic high-speed oven variable broil control, KkKkkk MOFFAT RANGES preheat, removeable oven door, porcelain enamel: fin- ish, LOCAL IMPROVEMENT NOTICE TAKE NOTICE THAT: 1, The Council of The Corporation of the City of Oshawa intends to construct cement concrete sidewalks, as a local improvement, and intends to specially assess o part of the cost upon the land abutting directly-on the work as follows: : ESTIMATED COST Owner's Owner's Cost Annuol City's Per Ft. Rate Per Name of Street From To Side Width Total Share Ftge. Fe. Fege. Ritson Rd. North 183.0' South of §. Adelaide Ave. East West 4' $1,075.00 $ 562.50 $2.50 $0.352 Limit of Adelaide Ave. East Ritson Rd. North Adelaide Ave. East North Limit Lot C-32, Sheet 4, Plan 335 East 4' 3,978.50 1,989.25 2.56 0.352 2. The estimated cost of the work is $5,053.50, The special assessment is te be paid in ten equal annual instalments. . Application will be made by the Corporation to The Ontario Municipal Board for its approval of the undertaking of the said work and any owner may, within twenty-one days after the first publication of this notice, file with the City Clerk his objection to the soid work being undertaken. objection to the said work will be considered, DATED at Oshawa this 26th day of June, 1967. . The said Board may approve of the said work being undertaken, but before doing so, it may appoint a time and place when any L. R. BARRAND, Clerk, City of Oshawa. MODEL 24M20 GARY NESBITT | Representative | SUN LIFE | Assurance Company of Canada Oshawa Shopping 129 WITH TRADE. MODEL 24M25 White '135. WITH TRADE STARR 497 RITSON RD. S. | rien 74s | Pada de dead MODEL 24M25 Copper with window 149 WITH TRADE FURNITURE and APPLIANCES -- 723-3343 LOCAL IMPROVEMENT NOTICE TAKE NOTICE THAT: 1, The Counci! of The Corporation of the City of Oshawa intends to construct esphalt pavement with concrete curb and gutter, os @ local improvement, and intends to specially assess a part of the cost upon the land abutting directly on the work as follows: ESTIMATED COST Name of Street From Te Width -- Total Lansdowne Dr. 9.0' East of E. Limit Sussex St. 28' $51,100.00 of Wilson Rd. North Oxford St. Stone St. Phillip Murray Ave. 32' 63,020.00 Oxford St. Phillip Murray Ave. Emerald Ave. 32" 8,315.00 Seugog Ave. Phillip Murray Ave. Wecker Dr. 28' 15,445.00 Sussex St, Lansdowne Dr, Lansdowne Dr, 28' 32,660.00 Oxford St. Emerald Ave. 566.91' North of N. 22° 18,320.00 Limit of Emerald Ave. Phillip Murray Ave. Cedar St. 50.54 East of W. Limit Lot 89, Pian 648. 32' 28,845.00 wr City's Shore $41,950.84 52,466.96 7,369.28 11,942.56 27,704.34 11,475.56 23,190.74 Owner's Cost Per Ft. Ftge. $4.41 4,4) 4.4) 4.41 4.41 4.4] 441 . The estimated cost of the work is $217,705.00, The special assessment is to be paid in ten equal annuol instalments, : . Application will be made by the Corporation to The Ontario Municipal Board for its approval of the undertaking of the said work Owner's Annuel Rate Per Fr. Fege. $0.60 0.60 0.60 0.60 0.60 0.60 0.60 ond any owner may, within twenty-one days after the first publication of this notice, file with the City Clerk his objection to the said work being undertaken objection to the said work -will be considered. . The said Board may approve of the said work being undertaken, but before doing so, it may appoint a time and place when ony DATED at Oshawa this 26th day of June, 1967. L. R. BARRAND, Clerk, City of Oshawa, important are

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy