Ontario Community Newspapers

Terrace Bay News, 27 Jun 1973, p. 3

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

JUNE 27, I973 TERRACE BAY NEWS PAGE 3 TERRACE BAY NEWS PUBLISHED EVERY WEDNESDAY at the News Print- ing Plant, Post Office Building, Terrace Bay OFFICE HOURS - 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Mon-Fri. DEADLINE - for all advertisements and news materials is NOON Monday for Publication in that week's issue. SUBSCRIPTION RATE - $4.00 per year (local) $5.00 per year (out-of- town) Second class mail Registration Number 0867 STOKES CONCERNED ABOUT STEEL RIVER Mr. A.T.C. McNab, Deputy Minister, Ministry of Transportation & Communications. Dear Mr. McNab, I am writing to call your attention to a very serious and hazardous condition immediately west of Steel River Bridge on Highway I7, Thunder Bay District. : There have been far toc many fatal accidents at this location and many incidents with severe perscnal injury and property damage due to poor alignment and faulty elevation. Westbound and traffic coming off Steel River Bridge is faced with a railway on the left, a wayside park on the right and a flat curve which must be negotiated when driver distraction is at a maximum. The latest fatal accident occurred about one month ago and this is a repeat of many similar incidents which are becoming far too numerous. I think it is accurate to say that local resi- dents have learned to compensate for these dis- tractions and faulty elevation but tourists who are unfamiliar with road conditions at this point are unable to negotiate the turn without great difficulty. The condition has been brought to my attention by many concerned citizens, including a Coroner and law enforcement officers. I respectfully urge you to have it investigated immediately so that maximum protection can be provided to the travelling public. Your interest and concern in this matter is anxiously awaited. Jack Stokes, MPP. Thunder Bay. SPORTS SLANTS - By Ray Shank * The way those Montreal Expos were knocking off the opposition for a while earlier this month, they definitely looked like National League east division pennant threats. The Expos were so hot, it prompted club general manager Jim Fanning to compare them with the I969 New York Mets. The '69 Miracle Mets, if you remember, won the pennant and went on to take the World Series in five games (or was it six games?) . Matter of fact, Fanning went as far as to say that his I973 version of the Expos were even better than the '69 Mets. The Expos, before dropping a 3-2, I2-inning heartbreaker to Los Angeles Dodgers Sunday, June I7, had won seven consecutive games and had pulled to within 3% games of the front- running Chicago Cubs. Also, they held a firm 3-game lead on third place St. Louis Cardinals and looked like honest-to-goodness world-beat- ers. Expos were doing so well that only four other teams in the 24-team major leagues had better records than they - the Cubs, San Fran- continued page 4 e closer people work together, the faster the work gets done, and the more profit you make. That's why we'd like you to think a moment about the hours lost each day, simply by people trying to communicate: manager to foreman, to worker, and back. Now consider Fanon walkie-talkies. Instant communications. You reach people instantly, wherever they happen to be. Instructions get issued, questions get answered, and the work gets done faster. Fanon walkie-talkies. They can make yours the most profitable business in the business. Six models and prices, one just right for your operations. 25 Bathurst St., Toronto M5V 2P1, Ontario. LNA (416) 363-5011 Telex 02-2126

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