Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 27 Dec 1961, p. 3

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Z. THE OSHAWA TIMES, Wednesday, December 27, 1961 GOOD EVENING By JACK GEARIN WILL COUNCIL BUCK THIS PLAN? Will a City Council majority buck the proposed plan for a survey (by an outside firm of consultants) yt QOshawa's municipal set-up? Perhaps not, but City Council in committee approv- ed such a survey by Woods, Gordon and Co., July 13, 1960, but only on a split vote -- then the Council turn- ed around and tabled the matter on hearing a report on finances from the City treasurer. 'pale at The important point is this.-- the great majority on the present Council sat on the 1960 Council, so the question to be asked is this: Will these elected repre- sentatives deliberately set up roadblocks to such an important survey, as they did in the past, on the thin pretext that the City lacks funds for such a purpose? There is one advantage to the new recommenda- tion by Alderman E. F, Bastedo -- it will be made early in the new year in plenty of time to allow for be the inclusion of such an a- : mount on the 1962 budget; ERNIE MARKS furthermore it should be less costly than the previous survey would have been because the latter included a probe into the need for a purchasing agent (which appointment has been made), Glancing backward on this same subject, it is in- teresting to note that Lyman Gifford, then mayor, made # notice of motion January 18, 1960, to set up a special committee of Council "to investigate and report on: the CM form of government or some alternate type of gov- erhment that might be an improvement on our present administration." _ Ex-Alderman Ernie Marks made a report to the tax- payers November 21, 1960, on his committee's work. He said its function was to study the question of improve- ments in Oshawa's civic administration and bring in a report. Several meetings were held. Many reports on civic administration were studied, They felt that a consultant firm could help, especially by making rec- ommendations as to improvement. The two top consultant firms in Ontario submitted a proposal for a survey, along with an estimated cost. They .were prepared to come here for two months. They would study the. standing committees, examine present channels of communication between Council and departments, review the present system of admin- istration down to and including the first line of super- vision below the departmental heads, with a view of recommending the mos, suitable form of organization required to achieve efficien, administration. _ Mr, 'Marks emphasized that the committee held no preconceived notions about the CM system: "At least éne of the consultant firms also had an open mind on this point, If a survey had been authorized and a con- tract awarded to one of the consultant firms, the final report might or might not have recommended a CM type of Government." The special committee under Mr. Marks recom- mended that one of the firms be retained. There is little doubt that the Marks committee made a long study of the subject, but there is no evidence that the rest of the Council has done likewise. When Council rejected the proposal, Mr. Marks noted that "some lack of co-ordination of follow-up exists on Council." Alder- man Sydney Hopkins, since retired, noted that the City should look for a city manager or co-ordinator as too much time was spent on detail by Council and not nearly enough on policy making. "Council is not free to do what it was elected to do -- set policy" he complained. Mayor Thomas, then an alderman, said that department heads should be consulted more, Mayor Lyman Gifford then made a wise dbservation. "We must sell this product first to our Council, then to the public. Thus far we have not been able to sell the product to the Council. I do believe we need a survey." That was Lyman Gifford's big problem -- to sell the idea for a survey to the Council, Alderman E. F. Bastedo, who sponsored the recent notice of motion, is faced 'with the same problem. Perhaps most of our councillors have mellowed enough by now to have an open mind on the subject and favor a survey. CNR TRACKS' REMOVAL GAINS SUPPORT Dear Sir: A discussion took place at the last meeting of the Oshawa and District Labor Council in regard to the position that you have taken re the railway tracks on King Street and the Oshawa and District Labor Council wish to advise you that they are fully in support of this idea and wish to commend you on the splendid job you are doing through your column in presenting these conditions to the public : of this City. We hope that you will keep up the good work knowing that this large group representing a wide section of this City are fully behind you. Yours very truly, Keith W. Ross, Secretary- treasurer, ' Oshawa and District Labor Council NOTES ON ASSESSMENT APPEALS ! The recently-concluded three-man Court of Revis- ion under Chairman Louis Hyman, QC (that sat recently to hear appeals from the City's recent two-year re- assessment survey) presented some unique cases for the student of municipal politics. ' -' For instance, did you know that a property owner On the City's assessment roll can appeal the assessment of another property owner, if he thinks the latter has been assessed too high, or too low, or wrongly inserted OTTAWA (CP)--Prime Minis- ter Diefenbaker is expected to leave for Quebec City today with as many of his 22 ministers as are available amid reports that changes in the federal cabinet are to be made there Thursday. Although the Quebec trip has not been confirmed officially, sources said two special railway cars were being readied to leave here at 4:30 p.m. EST and are due to return Thursday night. In the event of a cabinet shuf- fle, the trip to Quebec would be necessary to have new minis- ters, or those changing their portfolios, sworn in before Goy- ernor-General Vanier who is at his Quebec City residence for the holidays. Considered most remote, was the possibility that the trip to Quebec might be intended for dissolution of Parliament and the calling of an early election. This theory largely has been re- jected because Parliament has been called into session Jan. 18 and dissolution would not re- quire the presence of all cabinet ministers. Reports that cabinet changes would take place in a ceremony Thursday at Quebec City were the culmination of months of speculation about impending shifts aimed at realigning ca- In South JOHANNESBURG (AP) -- At least 50 persons died violently during the Christmas weekend in South Africa in what many South Africans deplored as the enness and brawling, The Johannesburg Star and the South African Press Associ- ation reported that more than 1,000 white and non - whites were admitted to Johannesburg hospitals between Friday after- noon and Tuesday noon for treatment for injuries resulting from brawls and assaults. Of these, some 220 were Violent Holiday Africa booze and knives and clubs drawn in drunken brawls that caused most injuries. Between Friday afternoon and Sunday night more than 500 Af- Big Shuffle Rumored For Federal Cabinet binet composition before the next federal election, expected in 1962. Among observers, the nature of these changes is a matter for conjecture, Should the shuffle occur, it is certain that a re placement would be named for Hon, Paul Comtois who left the mines min- istry Oct. 6 to become lieuten- ant-governor of Quebec. Speculation has it that the mines post will be filled by a Quebec member of Parliament and that the province also will tive in the cabinet. be given a seventh representa- '\the Jesse James or Dalton '\fonso Jackson Al KB liuckiess train Dead At TARZANA, Calif. (AP) -- Al- Jennings, tram robber, ex-convict, law- yer. lecturer, evangelist, poli- jtician, movie celebrity" and \chicken rancher who hated kill- ing vhickens, is dead at 98. man from the Oklahoma bad- Jands died Tuesday with his boots off in his tree'- shaded white frame house. Despite his death, the contro- veisy he created still lives: Was he really a desperado gang calibre? Or was. tiny Al, only a lick and a spit over five feet tall, just a onetime loser, .a - robber, who Former Bad Man self - styled bantam bad- . Sad ack ae See aI Age 98 i aa Al claimed he ou and Frank James at y 14 in a shooting j Docge City, Mo., that the Dalton boys, nat he new Z Three MPs mentioned for} these posts are Martial Asselin,| MP for Charlevoix; Jacque S| Flynn, MP for Quebec South and deputy Speaker of the Commons; and Paul Martineau, MP for) Pontiac - Temiscamingue and} parliamentary secretary to Mr.! Diefenbaker. | Most speculation concerns Fi- nance Minister Fleming. The theory is that radical changes in budgeting before an election would be easier if there were a new finance minister. Mrs, Arthur Carr comforts | daughter, Lee, 7, whose fath- LUCKY TO BE ALIVE cashed in on a legend he em- broidered for naive movie folks in later years? Author Stuart Lake, western scholar and biographer of Wyat: Earp, says: "There's no record of Alrever killing any- one,' Al said he was a feared out- law and train - robber in the 1890s, terrorizing a score of trans in Oklahoma, Texas, Arkansas and Kansas. Tuesday when car plunged | 'he record shows he was con- through ice. Lee's dad, who worst - ever Yuletide for drunk-| ricans were treated in hospitals jof Joh burg and neighbor-/MAY TRADE JOBS | er tossed her out of sinking | was driving auto, also saved car onto solid ice when five | himself, Mrs, Carr did not go | for ride. victed in 1895 for robbing the Rock Island train in Oklahoma, sentenced to life imprisonment, ing Pretoria for mostly stab wounds, One doctor said "Drink is the cause of most of this. Some of the patients, both white and non- white, were still fighting when they came in for treatment-- fighting anybody within sight." |ANIMOSITY GROWS The most persistent rumors] persons in one family were are that Mr. Fleming will as-| drowned in Lake Champlain ' paroled after five years and --(AP Wirephoto) sume the justice post, perhaps in| a straight exchange of portfo-| lios with Davie Fulton, or that} he will replace Arnold Heeney) as ambassador to the United | States. | Another possibility for Mr Internal Indian Mother, 2 Sons Die In Flames HAMILTON (CP)--A mother }Fulton-is-that-he would become Disapproval Up and her two young sons died white -- believed a record in| this metropolis of 1,000,000, itants are non - white. There are several reasons. There's growing animosity be- About two thirds of the inhab-|tween the non - white majority jand the ruling white minority in The Johannesburg pro - gov-|this country which heightens as ernment Afrikaner afte rnoon/more and more African - contin- newspaper Die Vaderland gavejent countries become black- health minister, thus freeing Waldo Monteith for Mr. Flem- druggist from London, Ont. hides peg NEW DELHI (AP)--Internaljcommon element of Ganhdis' ing's job. Others see Mr. Mon-\gisapproval of India's military|teachings "was that the best singe post being filled by G.|ccizure of Portuguese Goa, Diujends cannot justify the means rnest Halpenny, minister with-|anq Damao grew Tuesday. An|inconsistent with the doctrine of out portfolio and a graduate|eqitor joined one of India's el-/non-violence except in self-de- Tuesday night in a fire in their south-central Hamilton home. : Mrs. Marjorie Stirling, 36, died in an unsuccessful attempt to rescue her two - year - old son Glenn from a flame-filled stor- age bin in the basement of the ,,morning after they had opened a picture of what it called Black Christmas Weekend. 620 ARE TREATED | Vaderland said 620 whites re-| ceived treatment at Johannes-| burg General Hospital. | Traffic accidents claimed 20 lives -- 13 whites and seven-| non - whites. But it was the} Refuses Smoke, | Shot To Death | VICTORIA HARBOUR, Ont.| (CP)--Ten-year-old Emery Lad-| ouceur was killed by a shotgun} blast Christmas Day after he re- fused to smoke a cigarette of- fered him by an 11-year-old chum. A boy of 11 was charged Tuesday night under the Juve-| nile Delinquents Act in the slay- ing and was taken to the juve- nile detention home in Barrie. Police said Emery was told by his ll-year-old friend he would be shot if he didn't light the cigarette by the time he counted to three, Emery collapsed on a chester- field beside the Christmas tree and died in minutes from a 12- gauge blast that hit him in the left shoulder and chest, Police said Emery and two friends went skating Christmas their presents in their homes. At noon they went .to the 11- year-old's home to watch TV. The 11-year-old offered cigar- ettes to Emery and 12-year-old David Bent. The pair refused to 'ruled and yet blacks here are |denied voting rights. This was the last Christmas when white bootleggers were lable to sell liquor to blacks at ak " inflated prices. Next year, bot-|Revenue Minister Nowlan, whojing in the Eastern Ec tle stores will be opened to alljsuffered a series of heart at-/Said that after nearly a half-| non - white adults and they will get liquor at legal prices. The government said this leg- bootlegging trade, easing police chores and probably even teach- ing temperance. CONVENT'S PET HAS HANGOVER MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP)-- Honey Bun--a convent's pet pony -- is recovering nicely from her Christmas binge. Honey Bun is the pet of chilaren. at the Convent of the Good Shepherd. Like many humans, she observed the holi- day by getting potted, stag- gering bleary - eyed about the | vacant grounds. Veterinarian W. L. Austin says it wasn't Honey Bun's fault. Children fed the pony Christ- mas apples and the fruit lodged in the caecum, a pouch- like cavity that lies between the large and small intestines. There it began to ferment and the result of fermentation, of course, is alcohol. "The convent was in a panic," Mother Superior Mary said "We were all terribly frigitened, and we prayed ex- citediy, as fast and hard as we could," light them. peancnco 38 w % AUR INDIRATE BURCT EO WG [haar ana Tunes BON oe CLO with Mr. Fulton's job going to State Secretary Dorion, was well-known in Quebec as a Crown prosecutor. Still another forecast is that jtacks last summer, will assume jlighter duties. However, the 'feeling is that he would remain lislation is aimed at killing the|i" the cabinet, perhaps as min- ister without portfolio. \take-over as_a violation of the |handas K, Ghandi. Eric da Costa, an editor writ- onomist, century of reliance on Gandhi's principles of non - violence the lcurrent question is '"'What faith |do we now profess?" Da Costa declared the basic INTERPRETING THE NEWS '\der statesmen in criticizing the,fence." "What message does India who} moral principles of the late Mo- carry now in a world on the brink of moral collapse?" he asked. | The first significant sign of domestic protest came from Charkravarthi Rajagopala- chari--known in India as C. R. --the only Indian ever to serve |as governor-general of the coun- itry. The 82-year - old statesman, who broke with Prime Minister two years ago to found the right- wing Freedom party, declared Nehru's Congress party | home. Her other son, Cameron, 5, was found dead on the ground floor near the front door, Mrs. Sterling's husband, Hu- bert, a ticket clerk for the CNR, was at work at the time. The three-death fire was Ha milton's second within a week. Last Thursday a father and two children died in a fire on Cam- bridge Street Acting District Fire Chief Ivan Rusiick said it is believed both boys were in the cellar when the fire begun. Police said the bin was used to store clothing son' Doc Holliday, Wyatt D, as well as humorist Rogers, Al also said he met writer 0. Henry ina federal .penitentia and that he, Al, was the. in- spiration for many of the .au- thor's tales, Book Royalty | Fight Goes On prety s h bert, 71-year-old. champion . of underdogs, river-side deligh ts and victims of injustice, is con- tinuing his campaign to win li- brary royalties for authors, A clause in the contract for Sir Alan's latest book of poems; Silver Stream, due out in the spring, says the publishers. will "use their best endeavor to pre- vent the sale of the said work to any library." ' Sir Alan, who has written 70 books, several plays and some musical comedies, has long ar+ gued that authors should re- ceive at least one penny every time their books are: borrowed from a library. . J. Alan White, managing di- rector of Sir Alan's publishers, said it will be difficult to do anything because the libraries do not buy directly from the publishers. "Yes, it is a gesture," said the old campaigner whose past successes include a parliamen- tary reform of antiquated di- vorce laws satirized in his 1994 and might also contained gaso- novel Holy Deadlock. EEC Deadlock jthat as a result of the Goan in: vasion "India has totally lost the moral power to raise her voice line or cleaning fluid. the bin. "It may not do anything yet Firemen confined the blaze to ce we've got to start some- where," By DAVE OANCIA Canadian Press Staff Writer Tie Christmas festivities may Shock Softened a policy for the Common Mar- Soviet Ambassador |ket as.a whole. \niess this is done, the com- against the use of as she used to." Ends Stay In U.S. |have cushioned the severe psy-|munity cannot move into the| \the veadlock in the ministerial |meeting of the six-nation Euro- }pean Economic Community. 't- stake in the discussions which broke up early Saturday morning without a decision is no less than the thrusting rate of progress the community has gaze in its four years of life. fhe breakdown was over agri- culture. Agriculture in the com- muviiy formed by Germany, France, Italy and the Benelux countries generally is heavily subsidized and heavily pro- tecied Tne community now is in the jthtoes of trying to eliminate the national schemes and to develop ie 5 UDY, COLDER AND WEATHER FORECAST Mainly Cloudy, F HATTERAS SOME SNOW Victoria ooo cee « 0368 Edmonton. .... -21 Regia ... soe vee 13 Wirn-peg ... «22. -ll Fort William... .- White River. ... lscacauled on Jan. 1. This would lautomatically mean a halt in the community's internal tariff cut- ting process and in the erection of a common external tariff on goous coming from outside the |six aiember nations. NATIONAL INTERESTS rhe dispute essentially is a re- flection of individual members' determination to protect national inte: ests, France, an exporting agricul- tural country, wants Germany to relax its import controls and start working ior a common pol- icy to give French farmers a charce to break into the rich German food market in a big way. Germany, on the other hand, is reluctant to make the sacri- fices--chiefly in accepting lower internal prices for its farmers-- largeiy it seems because of po- orretic party relies heavily on support from farmers, The ministerial council meets again Dec, 29-30 in an effort to to ciear the decks for a move into the important second stage of 'he community's develop- meit. Ths stage begins when all 'leountries feel they have made erough progress towards eco- nomic integration to move into a more "supra-national" phase, FRANCE ADAMANT France is adamantly refusing to move into the "'majority rule" stage unless an agreement is reached on a common agricul- tural policy. The deadlock can hardly avoid jhaving adverse effects on the lcousse of negotiations on the |British application to join the} European Common Market. | Umiess the community scores r breakthrough, two of the most important topics can hardly be |discussed, These are the position jof british agriculture in an en- larged Common Market and im- ports of foodstuffs from Com- monwealth countries, including Ichalugical shock expected from|secena stage of development as) WASHINGTON (AP) -- The Soviet embassy said Tuesday that Ambassador Mikhail A Menshikov will assignment early in January. named, Officials and diplomatic leagues. Eichmann Refuses Christmas Service Eichmann, condemned man in his death cell. | Informants said Tuesday pri-|. . json authorities had thought \Eichmann might want a Pro- breck the deadlock and to tr¥|testant minister to join him for lspecial Christmas prayers in |his cell at Ramleh prison near Tel Aviv. During his trial Eich- mann said he believed in God but was not bound by any de- nomination. On Christmas day he had a special dinner with turkey pre- jpared for a number of other jnon-Jewish prisoners. His "mail from \abroad_ in- cards: THEBERGE JOINS As military power. She can no longer speak complete his normal tour of duty here and /return home to Moscow for re- His successor has not been The grey-haired Soviet diplo- mat, who was dubbed Smiling Mike shortly after his arrival Feb. 11, 1958, is holding a fare- well reception at the Soviet Em- bassy next Friday for eae col- JERUSALEM (AP) -- Adolf to be hanged for his part in the Nazi slaughter of 6,000,000 Jews, re- litical reasons. Chancellor Kon-|fysed an offer of a special rad Adenauer's Christian Dem-|Christmas service by a clergy- cluded a number of Christmas| ae DENVER, Colo. (AP)--Anthro- '/pologist Margaret Mead urges borab - proof shelters for the world's newlyweds -- to assure continuance of the human race in the event of nuclear war. Dr. Mead, of the American Museum of Natural History, of- fered the suggestion in a talk to the 128th meeting of the Ameri- can Association for the Advance- men: of Science Tuesday. "Let the United States pro- posc,"' she suggested, "that the United Nations be asked to de- bate the feasibility of an inter- nationally-financed shelter sys- tem in which a cross-section of the most productive and highly motivated members 0! every country on every continent could be saved, 'Let us propose a program in which each country is assisted to cuild a blast-proof shelter suff.cient to accommodate all of the people married in that coun- try during a two-week period (and that) . . . during the first six months after marriage (they) spend two weeks in the shelter." Addressing a special sympos- jum on Problems of Survival, Dr, Mead said such a shelter system for newlyweds would en- able the survival of a group that Shelters Urged .- For Newlyweds . lives together and to reproduce themselves."" ENTERING NEW WORLD. .. "They would be,"' she said, "tue stuff of which young immir grauts are made,. and they wou.d indeed be immigrating--if there were to be an all-out nu- clear war--into a world that no man has ever known... . "As long as survival is dis- cussed in terms of one nation, er one group of nations, of one rave, of one kind of culture, we ure closing our eyes to the known risks and are weakening our own internal position and ou. moral position in the wold." : Seymour Melman, an associ- ate professor of industrial and maaagement engineering at Co- lumbia University, told the sym- posium: "Insofar as American indus- try operates by means of a fineiy-integrated division of la- boi, the fire effect alone of a moaest - sized nuclear attack would render this society no longer viable as a_ significant production centre of the world." xe said that if the 65 major industrial centres of the coun- try were each hit by 20-mega- ton hombs, the immediate effect fron. "fire storms" would be to 'would be the most highly mo- tivated to try to continue their vedvce the United States to a third-rate industrial nation. | COMING EVENTS EUCHRE at Harman Park on Wedles.| day, December 27. 8 p.m. 6 prizes, re- freshments. Admission 50c. | WOODS T OC K (AP) -- For-| mer Kitchener-Waterloo hockey star Gerry Theberge has joined Wondstock Athletics of the On- tario Hockey Association senior league. Theberge, a left winger, also plays well on the right side, a weak spot for Woodstock, He| BINGO UNION HALL BOND STREET WED., DEC. 27, 7:30 20 games $6 and $10 Share the wealth 6 $40 jackpots was released by Galt Terriers earlic: this season. Playing with Kitchcner-Waterloo Dutchmen in 1955-6 Theberge had 17 goals and NOVEL BINGO THURSDAY. EVENING, 7:30 ot ST. GEORGE'S HALL, at WHITBY BINGO QLUB BAYVIEW Wednesday, Dec, 27th Special Games $75, extra in 53 Nos. Jacknots 52 and 54 Nos. Bus leaves Oshawa Terminal. Children under 16 not admitted. BATHE PARK BINGO WED., DEC. 27 ih or omitted from the roll. He may within the time limit give notice in writing to the city assessor or clerk? ' Such appeals are permitted under Section 72 of the ssessment Act (sub-section three) -- there was a per- fect example of this when two appeals were launched 4gains the re-assessment totals of the Oshawa Golf €lub by N. M. Goldman, Braemor Gardens and the Sholom Construction Ltd. -- $542 Raised At Brooklin Bazaar By MRS. ARTHUR ELLIOTT BROOKLIN The annual azaar and tea sponsored by the oman's Association of Brook- Kaptiskasing .... North Bay .. S.S Marie..... Colder Weather Pale TORONTO (CP) -- Officialjsunny intervals. Winds light My.snoka. . forecasts issued by the Torontojincreasing to west 15 this after-|Windsor ... . weather office at 4:30 a.m.: |noon. London .. Synopsis: An area of light) Haliburton, Lake Ontario re-|Toronto .. snow south of the Great Lakes/gions: Cloudy with a few snow-|Ottawa ... : is expected to affect extreme/fiurries and turning colder to-|Montreal ... .. southwest regions during the\day. Thursday cloudy with|Quenec .. morning and then move east-\sunny periods, light winds. Hauyay ward south of the lakes. Mainly| Timagami, Ge org ian. Ba cloudy and colder weather with northern Lake H nt A vaalans' Forecast temperatures a few snowflurries is the fore- North Bay, Sudbury: M sik iy Low tonight and high Thursday: cast for the most of Ontario on\ciouay with a tow' envatinnwac Winteor fo... cs OO ursday. : t 2 let, EROMORE . us os Lake Si. Clair, Lake Brie, Nii and Thursday, Cu 018 London ves ccs. agara, southern Lake Huron) ify *|Kitchener regions, Windsor, London, Ha-| White River, Cochrane, Al-|wingham .. goma regions, Sault Ste. Ma-|tamiiton Canada. 21 assists for 38 points. | 'he negotiators hoped that |talks on these critical subjects lcould begin at leagt'by Febru- lary Only the most optimistic of |the dedicated European integra- ticnists now think this will be |possible. Goodbye, Measles! "One of the greatest accom- | plishments in the history of public health"... . that's the Medical Association's opinion of a new vaccine against measles. Read in January Reader's Digest why measles. deserves more respect than it gets (it's (Albert and Jackson Sts.) Games $6, $12, $20 May be doubled or tripled $230 JACKPOT INCLUDED Door Prize $15 | OSHAWA JUNIOR CHAMBER OF COMMERCE Monster BINGO - Thurs., Dec. 28 20 GAMES AT $20.00--5 GAMES AT $30.00 1 -- $150.00. JACKPOT ($20.00 PER LINE PLUS $50.00 PER FULL CARD) 2 -- $250.00 JACKPOTS JACKPOT NOS. 51 -57 7:45 P.M. 20 Regular games, 4 jackpots * Share the Wealth . Bathe Park, Club House Eulalie St. see ee * members working behind the scenes. Each group was responsible for a booth, tea table and home baking, sewing and preparing for months ahead. The money handed to the church treasurer, Mrs. A. I. Mc- Brien, amounted to $542. -20 re bs) 15 - i -20 \ milton: lin United Church was held in the Christian Education Hall re-| cently. : Mrs. Harry McCool convened cert guitarist, is' among star: the. event, assisted by of hig a vener appointed n each s§ groups of WA with numerous|broadcast Jan. 19. GUITAR ARTIST jon The Telephone Hour NBC-TV Cloudy and turning west 15 to 25 Toronto: Cloudy with a fgw snowflurries and turning col@>r today. Thursday cloudy w, re colder today, a few periods of rie: Mainly cloudy with a few)st. Catharines . . light snow during the morning.|S"°Wflurries today and Thurs-'Toronto ... ... .. Andres Segovia, the great con-/Mainly cloudy Thursday. Winds 44y. light winds. TURONTO (CP) -- Obcervec em} cratures: [DOWSOD soo eve ons -39 seen 20 20 Peterborough . . . 20 Tren'on ty 3 SRAOIOO ss 6) dene ee 20 Muskoka .. Aree] Norih Bay . «. os . 10 a world-wide plague with dangerous after-effects) . . . and' how this new vaccine may soon wise it eut. Get your copy of Reader's Digest, today -- 40 articles of interest. ww LEGYD REET Y (Oshawa: Ltd., Realiors | 101 Simcoe N. --- Osho "| POMISSION 1.00 $10.00 PER LINE PLUS $200.00 PER FULL CARD IN 51-57 NUMBERS THIS WEEK PLUS $25.00 CONSOLATION PRIZE. $150 TOTAL PRIZES GUARANTEED IN THESE TWO GAMES. RED BARN, Oshawa EXTRA BUSES" DOOR PRIZES

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