Ontario Community Newspapers

Daily Times-Gazette, 16 Jul 1953, p. 4

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J. H. ORMISTON Editor and Manager PHONE 703 ." WHITBY AND DISTRICT NEWS /'4 THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE, Thursday, July 16, 1953 THE LEVIS SINKS IN WHITBY HARBO Partly dismantled, the Levis rests on the bottom of Whitby harbor. The boat, a former ferry on the St. Lawrence River, has been in Whitby harbor for some months, being brought here by the new owner, the McNamara Construction Company, of Toron- to, which plans on using the boat for a barge. Lakeside residents report that the Levis sank with- out warning on Monday after- noon. Shown in the above photo, taken from another boat in the harbor, is the bow of the Levis sticking in the air. The stern, as can be seen, is beneath the sur- face and lakemen say that part of the stern is resting on the bot- tom but the remainder is hanging over a <ghelf in the harbor bot- tom. It is understood that plans are now underway for bringing it back to the surface. --Photo by Scott Studio, Whitby. Sundin Top Hitter For Whitby Stokers The Stoker batting averages to date for players who have played in at least four games are: AB R H Pct. RBI .: Sundin 48 921 437 9 . Procunier 34 813 15 . McEwen 2910 9 . Knibb 3 710 . Loreno 47 13 14 . Jordan 42 512 . Orr 14 3 4 . Jordan 4 913 . Welch 46 6 12 . Lyons 15 2 3 200 Doubles: J. Loreno 4, A. Knibb | 3, B. Procunier 2, J. Jordan 2, M. Jordan 1. Triples: J. Jardan 2, B. Procun- fer 1 ' Home runs: B. Procunier 2, A. Knibb 1. PITCHING L. Decloux R. Moore 11 4 3 D. Wilson 15 2 3 Strike outs: R. Moore 25, L. cloux 23, D. Wilson 20. .400 257 15 5 6 De Writes Books On The Socreds. J. H. BLACKMORE Social Credit By THE CANADIAN PRESS John H. Blackmore, 63, former leader of the Social Credit party in the House of Commons, left the teaching profession in Alberta in 1935 to win a federal election in Lethbridge constituency, and re- tained the seat in all three gen- eral elections since then. A strong supporter of his party's theories om monetary and eco- nomic reform, he has published a book on the subject. Born fin 1890 at Sublett, Idaho, Mr. Blackmore was two years old when his family moved to a south- western Alberta homestead near Cardston. As a youth, despite a crippled leg, he made his mark in athletics and won boxing and wrestling championships at the University of Alberta. In 1925 he married Emily Wool- ley of Raymond, Alta. They had 12 children, three of whom died. One son with the RCAF wag killed in action in the Second World War and another died in army service three years ago. Howe Hit In Leaflets Outside Liberal Rally By HAROLD MORRISON Canadian Press Staff Writer PORT ARTHUR (CP) -- Prime Minister St. Laurent suggested last night that George Drew, Progres- sive Conservative leader, shouldn't come to the Lakehead and '"at- tempt to teach grandmother how to suck eggs." "Grandmother" was Trade Min ister Howe, Liberal member of the House for Port Arthur. Mr. Drew, in the course of his recent western campaign tour, promised he would build a steel mill at the Lakehead. Mr. St. Laur- ent wondered if the Opposition Leader planned to operate .it as a "socialistic enterprise." "For iff Mr. Drew meant that] the industry would be operated by | | private enterprise I feel certain} that Mr. Howe is as well suited as any man to advise business if and when a steel mill is economic- ally feasible." The prime minister, on the last leg of his western tour, spoke: at a Liberal rally attended by 1,500 persons who filled the Port Arthur- Fort William Exhibition hall.and spilled out on the » surrounding grounds. Loudspeakers were strung up outside. Before the rally got under way representatives of the Labor-Pro- gressive Party stood outside the hall distributing pamphlets calling Mr. Howe a "pompous bureau- crat" and the "chief spokesman for United States monopolities in Can- ada." The pamphlets irked 80-year-old Rev. Don Meclvor, Liberal repre- sentative for Fort William, who ac- cused one of the women distribut- ors of being a Communist. "When you are accusing Mr. Howe, you are not helping the Lakehead," he said. "What have you Communists done for the Lake- head?" Liberal Meeting To Be Held Here Friday Evening The first public meeting in town connection with the federal election is called for Friday eve- ning of this week, at eight o'clock, on the lawn just east of 121 Dundas Street East. John Lay, the Liberal candidate in the riding of Ontario, will de- liver an address and will be fol- lowed by "other speakers. The meeting is being held outside where it will be more comfortable than a public hall, Liberal headquarters have been established in the MicGillivray house on Dundas Street East. PHONE RECORD MONTREAL (CP)--The number of telephones in service in Ontario and Quebec has passed the 2,000,- 000-mark for the first time in his- tory. Thomas W. Eadie, president of the Bell Telephone Company, said Wednesday in his r to shareholders that the number of telephones in service in Ontario and Quebec increased by more than 75,000 in the first half of this year. The French seaport of Le Havre is second in importance only to Marseille. Whitby Classified NOTICE: sg: a Ci adver ts for this column must be in the Whitby office by 5 p.m. the day preced- ing publication. ROCKWOOL ' INSULATION, FIR E- proof. Cool in summer; warm in winter. Free estimates. Walter Ward, Insulation Contractor, 204 Chestnut West, phone 2563. (Aug.21) DON'T SIMMER THIS SUMMER. IN- sulate now with PAL-O-PAK. Do it yourself or have us do it. Phone 2374. PAL-O-PAK MFG. CO., Ltd. (Aug.2) WELLS DUG AND DEEPENED. SEP- tic tanks installed and cleaned. Phone 2961. Don Ferris, 639 Brock St. North, Whitby. (Augl2) FOR SALE--LARGE LOT NEAR NEW school, sewer, water. Write Box 541, Times-Gazette. (July27) SWIMMING POOL MANAGER--APPLY by letter stating qualifications, age, etc., to Crain, Swimming Pool Commit- tee, Box 912, Whitby. (163¢c) LOT FOR SALE--60' x 42', NEAR NEW school, in Whitby, water and sewer. Phone 2577 after 5 p.m. (163¢) LOST--CHILD'S TOY YELLOW FUR cat, June 27, on Brock South, Trent or Centre South. Keepsake. Reward. Phone 2394. (165a) FOR SALE -- 3-PC. CHESTERFIELD, BROC This Theatre is NOW PLAYING The d COMEDY (/ EVENING SHOWS 7 - 9 P.M. SATURDAY MATINEE 1:30 WIDMARK - TAYLO th CASEY ADAMS - MURVYN VYE - DARRYL HICKMAN - o LITTLE RASCALS" "MR. MAGOO" Ozzie Nelson and Orchestra WHITBY PHONE 613 Alir-Conditioned TTUSTARRING TIN MILNER CARTOON Duncan Phyfe table, like new. Phone Pi 59. (163¢c) LOOK! POCKET NOVEL READERS. We trade 2 for 1, sell for 8c each (used). We deliver. Phone Mobile Book Ex- change, 2868. (165¢) FOR RENT--ONE LARGE BED-SIT- ting room, unfurnished. Might suit lady or retired gentleman. 911 Centre Street North. 4 (163¢) i § FOR SALE--CHERRIES AND RASP- berries at their best. Phone 2502 or call at 900 King Street. (164c) FOR SALE --HEAVY DUTY ELECTRIC stove, good condition. 127 Admiral Road, Ajax. Phone 461J, Ajax. (164c) ROOMS FOR RENT AND LIGHT housekeeping. 220 Brock North, Whitby. (164c) WANTED TO RENT -- 4-ROOMED apartment or small house by couple with school-aged girl, in Whitby or Osh- awa. Write Box 228 Times-Gazette, Whitby. (165¢) FOR SALE -- CCM CLUB RACER. EX- cellent condition. Apply 500 Green Be (165¢) FOR SALE--LITTLE PIGS. WALTER Langmaid. Phone 5-6072, Oshawa. (185b) FURNACES -- PIPES, CHIMNEYS VA- cuum cleaned. Phone 2270 Whitby, 419 Ajax. (Augi16) WANTED--HOUSE OR APARTMENT IN Whitby or vicinity. Careful tenants with steady employment. Dial 3-7837, Oshawa. (165tf) FOR SALE -- 40 CHEV., NEW TRANS- mission, springs and shocks. Seat covers and paint. 42 Dodge Station Wagon, metal body, seats 9 $400 each. Will take refrigerator, stove, washing machine, garden tractor or older car as part pay- ment. Phone Whitby 440. (165¢) AUCTION SALE, FRIDAY EVENING, July 24, of hqusehold furniture, the prop- erty of R. EY Sheridan, 1010 Centre St. South, Whitby. A lot of nice things at | this sale, Everything in good condition. No junk sell phone us up. Sale at 6:30.) Mrs. E. Oke, clerk, Wm. Maw, auctioneer. If you have a few things 20 | oli EDITORIAL Encouraging Local Industry While the quest in Whitby is rightly for new indus- tries that will give lucrative and increase our industrial assessment, it should always be good news when an established industry in the town finds its business expanding t | addition is necessary. Yesterday the Times-Gazette was happy to carry an announcement that the plant of the William J. Anderson employment to our citizens o the point that a large plant WHITBY DAY BY DAY Accounts of social events and news items of local interest and names of visitors are ap- preciated. PHONE 703 The July meeting of the Wom- en's Institute will be held in the Town Park, Friday afternoon, July 17, at 2.30. The meeting will take the form of a picnic. Recent visitors at the home of Company on Euclid Street is to be expanded with the [mr and Mrs. Frank Roberts were: erection of a substantial ad and the addition of new machinery to take care of new | lines to be manufactured by The company has added it was re-organized in 1949, and with travellers calling on the trade from coast to coast, its products are not only widely known but greatly in demand. It is always en- couraging each year at the annual company banquet to hear reports of progress by by the travellers who usually attend such a function. The veteran founder of the son, who was president for of the Board, always had a business established on a very small scale, but with con- fidence and faith, and how from year to year the busi- ness had expanded. His son, George others associated with him, dition to existing buildings, | the company. to its plant three times since members of the Board and business, William J. Ander- years and is now chairman glowing story to tell of a Mr. and Mrs. Norman Shelton of Woodstock and Mr. and Mrs. Cliff Rush and family of Straffordville, Ontario. Miss Marianne McEachren, of Toronto, is spending a week with her uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. Herbert L. Pringle, Brock Street outh. $9,000,000 In Properties Are Registered A. Anderson, and are inspired with the same Property valued at close to nine million dollars exchanged hands in Ontario County during the first six months of this year. According to figures issued by the County Reg- istrar, J. M. Roblin, this was an confidence and faith. They are witnessing an expansion | increase of more than three million of their business and are taking steps to take care of it We feel that every citizen of tinued success. Whitby will wish them con- The Times-Gazette has always advocated that every | ancouragement should be given to industries already es- | tablished here. Outside of g ranting bonuses, there may | dollars over last year's figures for the same period. Mr. Roblin stated that properties valued at $8,975,427 had changed hands in Ontario County during the six months ending June 30 this year. In the corresponding period last year, he reports, the value of land registered totalled $6,534,765. be something that the Council or the Chamber of Com-|WORK ON ADDITION This major increase in registra- : | merce can do along this line, and there should be notions at the County Registry Office hesitation in doing it. We want new industries, but we |¢omes in the year when a new addi- also want those already here to grow and expand. Approve $100,000 For County Paving Ontario County Council has re-, ceived permission from the Provin- | cjal Department of Highways to | issue debentures up to $100,000 for | the construction of new pavement in the county. A special meetigg | of the Council is being held today | oh Jecide where the paving will be aid. If the 25 miles are completed, the county's paved road mileage | will be increased by 50 per cent, | County Road Superintendent, R. E. | Sims said yesterday. Further, it! will represent the largest road | construction undertaken in the county since it was organized. The decision of the Department of Highways, which cut the coun- ty's road budget for this year sub- | stantially, thus ruling out any pos- sibility of any new paving, is big news, and will no doubt, be well received by the county legislators. The Council has long felt that to do so much paving each year is in the long run the most economical, but the lack of funds has been a stumbling block. The traffic .on county roads today is greater than it ever was, and roads will have jo be constructed to take care of | it. Apartheid. Extends Color Bar CAPETOWN (Reuters) -- Oppo- sition Leader Jacobus Strauss told Parliament Wednesday that Prime Minister Daniel F. Malan's efforts to amend South Africa's 44-year- old constitution may deprive Jews as well as persons of mixed blood jrom voting with the white popula- on. : Strauss made the statement 'be- fore a joint session of the Upper and Lower Houses after Malan urged approval of his South Afri- can Act amendment bill. The bill prescribes a separate electoral bill for some 50,000 Cape Province colored (mixed blood) voters who hitherto have balloted with the white electorate. Section 35 of the South Africa Act says no | voter may be removed from the roll for reasons of 'race or color" unless the section is amended by a two-thirds: vote of both houses in joint session. Strauss, leader of the United To Jews party, said that if section 35 is altered "it will be possible to de- prive members of the Jewish com- munity of their voting rights on the grounds of race only." Several leaders of Malan's na- tionalist party have been widely accused by their political foes of anti-semitic views. Strauss sought to shelve the Na- tionalist bill by proposing a crip- pling amendment during the second reading. The amendment asks that the bill be held up until a joint committee of both Houses studies the issue in detail. Malan offered a lengthy defence of his bill. He denied it discrim- inated against any race but merely provided that whites and colored voters each have their own elected representatives "in parliament. "If the bill is not passed," he said, "the color question will be an issue at every election and by- election." : Roving Hecklers Liven Meetings By WILF CHISLETT Canadian Press Staff Writer LACOMBE, Alta. (CP)--Finance Minister Abbott debated vigorously with hecklers and appeased one by pouring him a glass of water at a lively public meeting Wednesday night in this town, 80 miles south of Edmonton. Two of the hecklers were identi- fied as the same pair who were ejected durin an Edmonton speech by Prime ent Monday night. But nobody was thrown out hére, and everyone ap- peared to enjoy the fun, including Mr. Abbott, who called it 'one of the finest meetings I have ever seen." On the platform with the finance minister were Jean Paul St. Laur- ent. son of the prime minister, Alberta Liberal leader J. Harper Prowse and Clinton Reed, Liberal candidate for Wetaskiwain constit- uency. The audience of some 80 persons first began to stir as Mr. Reed began to outline the government's record. "What record?' one of the heck- lers interjected. The next speaker, Mr. St. Laur- ent, said it was the first time he had been on a platform with a| cabinet minister outside Eastern | Canada. A member of the audience invited him to go back to the East. After, another spirited exchange during which a heckler and some- one in the back row threatened each y other with fisticuffs, Mr. FINED AND JAILED ST. CATHARINES (CP --Hegi- mus Malawski, 43, Wednesday was fined $200 and -costs for practising | dentistry without a licence. Malaw- was also sentenced to six months for indecent assault on a| (165a) | nine-year-old girl. ftinister St. Laur- | {and district resort. C. C. Downey Abbott waved his spectacles in ad- monition and asked the heckler why he didn't listen to those on the platform. "That's a good idea, thank you, sir," the brawny youth replied. Later, after peppering the speak- ers with pointed questions, the Same man, apparently a Social Credit supporter, asked Mr. Ab- bott if he could have a drink of water. "Certainly," filling a glass. earned one." An elderly man walked up to the platform, doffed his cap, saluted Mr. Abbott solemnly and asked him for a comparison of the Lib- eral and Progressive Conservative platforms. The finance minister told him the Cofiservatives stand for people 'who are alréady pleased with how they are." The Liberals fis- cal and economic policy was framed for the good of the majority of the people. MR Abbott said, "I think you've FIREWORKS CASE CRYSTAL BEACH (CP)--Decis- ion was reserved Wednesday in the case ofsthree business men charged with selling fireworks in this Well- of Toronto, who represented the three businessmen, said the act under. which his clients are charged is unconstitutional and beyond the power of a village to enforce. tion is being constructed. At pres- ent, the staff at the office, which before the construction program began, felt crowded quarters, now finds space very short indeed for one office of the present office has been torn down to make way for the addition. To add to their diffi- culties of lack of space, registra- 4ions and other work at the office has shown an exceptionally heal- thy increase this year with 1,145 more registrations being made this year in the first six months than in the corresponding period of 1952. Canning Plant In Operation 205 On Pay Roll A larger crop of exceptional quality is being harvested this year and the plant of the Stokely Van Camp Company in Whitby is run- ning full blast. Yesterday there were 168 men and 37 women on the pay roll, or a total of 205. The canning operations will be carried over into August, it was learned yesterday. Manager Bill Forbes said that peas were of ex- ceptional, quality owing to the cool nights and an exceptional amount year. Part of this year's harvest, some 20 acres in fact, is on the Dunlop property and grown for the Ro- tary Club. Crystal Gazing Member WINNIPEG (CP)--The Progres- sive Conservative party will win 52 seats in Ontario in the federal Slectifn Aug. 10, Donald Fleming, Progfessive Conservative member of Parliament for Toronto Eglinton predicted Wednesday. Ontario has 83 seats in all. Speaking at a meeting in support of Gordon Churchill, PC candidate for Winnipeg South Centre, Mr. Fleming said the election. will be 4 toss-up between Liberals and Conservatives with other parties negligible factors. He predicted the CCF will elect not more than one candidate east of Manitoba and said the Social Credit party is not a factor. He said Liberal arrogance is highlighted by the party's failure to set a platform before the people. TRAWLER FOR CANADA LONDON (CP) -- The trawler- sealer Theta, being constructed in Britain for a Montreal firm, was recently launched from a River Clyde shipyard. The vessel will be powered by a British-built 800 horsepower motor. . TRAINING RECRUITS CAPETOWN (CP)--About 9,000 men will be posted next January to army, air force, navy and marine active citizen force units throughout the Union of South Africa to begin a new training plan. Recruits will spend an initial continuous training period of three months in camp. READY CASH CAPETOWN (CP)--As a result of relaxation of exchange-control regulations, travellers from South Africa going overseas wil! be al- lowed to obtain up to £400 worth of foreign exchange every year in- stead of a similar amount every three years FUND TO CLOSE WINDSOR (CP)--The Sandwich East District Tornado Fund which was organized to assist victims | of the May 21 tornado in Sarnia will end July 25, it was announced | Wednesday. Officials said the fund now stands at $1,769. REG BRYANT ELECTRIC Wiring & Repairs 213 BYRON ST. SOUTH TELEPHONE 628 of moisture for this time of the, A heavy agenda was disposed of by the Whitby Public Utility Commission at its regular month- ly meeting last evening. * A letter was received from Gore and Storrie, consulting engineers, enclosing a signed contract with the Cornish Construction Company of Oshawa for the construction of the intake extension at the lake. This work will be done within the next few weeks. The Commission will ask the Council for $1,500 for sewer opera- tion. So far this department is with- in its budget, the secretary-treas- urer said. WATERWORKS DEFICIT In the waterworks department,' it is a different story. A state ment of revenue and expenditures for the first six months of this year shows expenditures of $32, 300 and revenue of $30,639.90. The Commission, with so much more construction going on, will be for- tunate if it breaks even at the end 'of the year. The department never was a money maker. WILL AID ARENA The Commission passed a reso- lution assuring the Whitby Com- munity Arena Board that it will lend every assistance within its power to the erection of the new" rink, and will furnish water, sewer and light connections. The Com- mission will wait to see what work is required when the new building is started. CONSTRUCTION APPROVED The Provincial Department of Health has approved of the water and sewer construction which the Commission has undertaken this year. This approval is required be- | fore work can be started. The de-' R. L. ROBERTSON News Editor PHONE 703 Public Utility Commission To Work With the New Arena Board artment, however, in a letter, rowns on the use of one-inch mains. The Commission is asked for many of these and as a gen- eral rule does not care about lay- ing them. They are no longer rec- ommended by Superintendent H. L. Pringle. CAN USE WINDOW The Rousseau Upholstery was granted the use for three weeks of the Commission's show window for the display of materials and products of this wing business and miniature industry. Mr. Rous- seau, must, however, consult F. J. McIntyre who is chairman of a merchants' committee which has in hand the window displays. It was pointed out that originally the intent ofthe Commission was to let the window be used for the dis- play of goods involving the use of electricity, such as ranges and refrigerators. WANT ADDITIONAL TRUCK The Commission will study a request for an additional truck for the water and sewer departments requested by James Wilde. The contention is that one truck now In use cannot handle all the demands made upon it and Mr. Wilde says that he is using his own car for the transportation of men from one Job to another. Superintendent . L. Pringle claims that the truck is not needed. The Commis- sion will hold a special meeting next Tuesday evening to deal with the request which would involve an expenditure for which no provision has been made and for which no money is available. The Commis- sioners will make an investigation in the interval. Ex-School M. J. Coldwell, a former Regina school principal who played an im. portant role in the rise of the CCF party from its roots in the West's farm and labor movements, is for the third time the party's national leader in a federal election. The 64-year-old native of Eng- land has for more than a quarter- century combined his teaching skill and political convictions to tell Canadians what socialism has to offer. Mr. Coldwell came to Canada at the age of 22 and taught in Alberta and Saskatchewan schools before he became a principal in Regina. It was there he turned to public life, and was city alderman for a working class district for nine years. ! Setbacks marked his early at- tempts in the provincial and fed- eral political fields. He was de- feated as a Progressive candidate in the 1952 federal general election and met the same fate when he first ran as a CCF candidate in the 1934 Saskatchewan election. In 1935, however he gained a seat in the Commons in the Sask- atchewan riding of Rosetown-Big- gar and held it in successive gen- eral elections in 1940, 1945 and 1949. He became CCF House leader in Teacher Leads The CCF 1940, succeeding J. S. Woodsworth, and became the party's national president two years later following Mr. Woodsworth's death. SCHOLAR, STUDENT An author, student of world af- fairs and educationist, Mr. Cold- well has become one of Ottawa's best-known political figures. He is an unobtrusive man of medium height, who wears glasses, and is one of the Commons' outstanding speakers, He is author of the book "Left Turn, Canada," and international affairs have a large place in his wide interests. He took part in the San Francisco conference where the United Nations was born, and is an honorary vice-president of the United Nations Society of Can- ada. He was a delegate to three Empire parliamentary conferences in London, England. His home is in Ottawa, where his wife died June 26 after paraly- sis had confined her to a wheel- chair for 21 years. Mrs. Coldwell, keen and alert despite for ailment, had been a familiar figure in her wheelchair on political platforms with her husband all across the country. His son served overseas with the RCAF and her daughter is a nurse. : By EPO KOENIG BONN (Reuters)--West Germany has started to rebuild a passenger shipping fleet; with the main emphasis on dual-purpose cargo ships. The first ship, a combined freight and passenger vessel of 9,000 tons, is under construction at a north German dockyard. She will ac- commodate 80 passengers and haye a speed of 17.5. knots. Five similar ships are to be built by the end of 1954, to be operatetl by the Roland and Hamburg-Amerika lines. Although these ships will be the nucleus of a German passenger fleet, it will be many years before Germany can hope to rival the United States and Britain or even compete with Italy, which has just put into operation its 12th post- war passenger liner, or Japan, whose growing fleet German ship- ping officials are watching with envy. Hans Christoph Seebohm, West German transport minister, said | recently: "all that was left of our 4,000,000-ton merchant fleet at the | end of the war was 120,000 tons. | Allied restrictions on new con- struction were lifted only slowly. Only at the end of 1949 were we permitted gain to build ships up to 7,200 and 12 knots. Larger and | faster ships could be built only | since April, 1951." | Italy's merchant navy was not subjected to post-war restrictions and she received considerable aid under the Marshall Plan and also government assistance to recon- Six Ships To Be Laid For New German Fleet struct her passenger fleet. In Japan the Allied restrictions were lifted much -earlier than in Germany." Before the war German pas- senger shipping extended to the United States, the West Indies, the east and west coasts of South America, Africa and the Far East. Today travellers using German ships can reach most of these ter- ritories only in 139 freighters which among them can accommo- date a total of only 1,225 passeng- ers. Fifty-six of these ships can take up to six passengers each, 73 between seven and 12 passeng- ers, -and 10 between 24 and 28. Trained Germans will be avail- able from the pre-war shipping lines for the new combined freighter-passenger ships, but the Roland and Hamburg-Amerika lines plan to train additional younger people as soon as the new ships come into service. COOL OFF IDEA: A better fan or refrigerator is easily found in the Classified advertising section. Or place your own "Wanted" ad 30, Feash folks eager to sell. Call 0) W. C. Town & Sons _ FRIGIDAIRE WHITBY PHONE 410 AUTHORIZED DEALER Friday, J ~ 8:00 ON THE LAWN AND OTHER LIBERAL RALLY uly 17th P.M. NEXT DOOR TO 120 DUNDAS 5T. EAST HEAR | JOHN LAY LIBERAL CANDIDATE IN ONTARIO RIDING SPEAKERS

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