Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 24 Jan 1963, p. 2

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ee ee Q THE OSHAWA TIMES, Thursdey, January 24, 1963 choy, sates ee ep yng ee seg Pe mn a Mite Ra tL Nm wc eth GOOD EVENING By JACK GEARIN WITH MR. PILKEY AT CITY HALL -- CHAPTER I Clifford Pilkey has come up through a rugged school to his present ition as City alderman. ; It's the oneness political world of Local 222, UAW- CLC, where the tempo is highly accelerated, the in-fighting rough with few holds barred (which could well serve as an ideal training ground for more political hopefuls with an eye on municipal life.) When Mr. Pilkey makes what he thinks is-a reason- able request, he doesn't want to be brushed aside like an errant boy with innuendoes, evasive half-measures de- signed to stall, or double- talk; nothing will arouse him to effective spontaneous ac- tion, to bitter protests quick- er than such tactics. There is no desire to put a halo around Mr. Pilkey's head prematurely, before he has had time to get his feet wet in the municipal pond, so to speak, before he has had a chance to truly prove himself. ALDERMAN WALKER SUPER-CRITICAL This having been said, these things were noticeable Monday night: Mr. Pilkey can perform CLIFFORD PILKEY most creditably under pres- sure when the occasion demands, when the odds seem unsur- mountable; he can be explosive when aroused, but his anger was controlled, his arguments reasonable and his manner Parliamentary at all times. It is little wonder then that he finally mustered enough support to barely squeeze through with a 7-6 vote (Mayor Lyman Gifford casting the deciding ballot) on his controver- sial proposal that Council find out for itself what the cost of construction of school classrooms is elsewhere instead of applying direct to the Board of Education for this information. The information is needed so that Council can sit down with the Board at an early date to discuss possible pruning of future debenture issues. Mr. Pilkey drew his strongest censure from Alderman Albert V. Walker who was visibly upset by any suggestion that Council should seek such information on its own ("I fee] that Council has plenty of work of its own without delving into this kind of stuff," said Mr. Walker. "If Mr. Pilkey wants this kind of information why doesn't he dig it out for himself?") Mr. Walker's Property committee colleague, "Fighting John" Dyer, even went so far as to suggest that Mr. Pilkey's proposal would be tantamount to '"'tampering" with the Board's business (which was stoutly denied by Mr. Pilkey.) SCHOOL COSTS DISTURB MR. PILKEY, ALSO Mr. Pilkey can make a major contribution to Council where a strong, independent voice is frequently needed to needle the complacent (who are almost a majority group), to help clear the road for progressive legislation. Mr. Pilky (lik thousands of taxpayers) is deeply con- cerned about the rapid-rising cost of education in Oshawa; hat disturbs him especially is the reported costs of local , Ragsrooms which range from $25,000 to more than $30,000 ' (as was the case with the Hillsdale Public School) as compared with some outside costs which go as low as $17,000 per classroom. Monday's bitter dispute followed a request from the Board that the Council approve a debenture issue of $221,000 to finance the construction of the following school additions: An addition to the Adelaide McLaughlin Public School, consisting of four classrooms -- $95,000. An addition to the Dr, C. F. Cannon Public School, con- sisting of four classrooms and a general purpose room -- $126,000. Mr. Pilkey insisted that he had no desire to "meddle" in the affairs of the Board; but neither did he want to be "a rubber stamp" when debenture proposals such as this were proposed. He wanted pertinent information garnered from non-Board sources so that he could discuss the matter in- telligently. Such arguments did not go down too well with people like Alderman Cecil Bint, a former Board trustee and a dedi- cated disciple of the 'There's-Nothing-Too-Good-For-Educa- tion school of thought.' When Mayor Gifford politely asked Mr. Bint if the City could-not approach the Department of Education, Toronto, for such costs, Mr. Bint was barely polite, ALDERMAN BINT BARELY POLITE 'I hope they tell us it is none of our business because they would be perfectly right if they said that." "Well, that at least let's know where you stand," quip- ped Mr. Gifford. Aldermen Gordon Attersley and Finley Dafoe deserve special marks for their defence of Mr, Pilkey's stand when the going got rough. Mr. Attersley said that the Provincial government, in asking Council to pass on all debentures, expected Council to be inquisitive, to ask intelligent ques- tions ("They certainly don't want us to become rubber stamps; no wonder so many people say we take the easy way out," he said.) Mr. Dafoe recalled that in the old days the electorate turned down a debenture request by the Board after the Council had refused to sanction it. Here's how the vote lined up: For Mr. Pilkey: Gay, Attersley, Rundle, Dafoe, Brady and Gifford; against -- Walker, Murdoch, Dyer, Down, Branch and Bint, DON JACKSON DUE IN NEXT WEEK Don Jackson's parents -- Mr. and Mrs. George Jackson of Oshawa -- are planning to attend each nightly performance of the Ice Follies (of which Don js one of the stars) in Toronto next week. A tight schedule will not enable Don to make any trips to Oshawa during the week, . . . Oshawa's Toast- masters' Club played host this week to a group of Toast- masters from Scarborough when the weekly dinner-meeting was held, TWO AWARDED POLICE SERVICE MEDAL Two long-service members of the Oshawa Police Depart- ment, each of whom retired recently, have been awarded the Police Service Medal. They are Joseph Wright (former constble who served 34 years and seven months before he retired last October) and Duncan Foreman (former sergeant who served for the same period before he retired the end of December. They are the first recipients of the medal locally, It is awarded for 20 years' service, or more, which may be accumulative in more than one force or in the same force, as follows:: For 25 years' service For 30 years' service For 35 years' service Leaves Good conduct is one of the requisites of the award. -- silver bar with one Maple Leaf -- silver bar with two Maple Leaves --- silver bar with three Maple vention of the Canadian Fed- eration of Agriculture held in Windsor this week, Using his daughter, Victoria, (centre) as Agricultural counsellor for the Russian Embassy in Ot- | tawa, I. I. Khoroshilov (right), visited the 27th annual con- apt Oy strana asta, RN Gp ert i] VISITS AGRICULTURE CONVENTION interpreter, Mr. Khoroshilov said he finds Canadians "very friendly". Talking with the Khoroshilovs is L. A. Bagra- | wienghie wer * Sa a i il alae A lal mov, of Ottawa, correspondent for 'Country Life', a Russian daily newspaper. --CP Wirephoto Four Killed Eight Hurt In Blast ,OTEAWA (CP)A ew isu SAULT STE. MARIE, Ont.|Is the government preventing (CP)--Four men _ were killed) the auditor-general from prop- and eight others injured whenlerly doing his job as Parlia- a huge coke oven exploded in/ment's watchdog over spend- a battery at the Algoma Steeljing? Corporation early Wednesday. Opposition MPs jumped Three men_ were believed killed instantly by the blast and a fourth died later in hospital. Dead are: Charles J. Wolfe, through a procedural opening Wednesday to attack the gov- ernment, contending it was keeping Auditor-General Max- Auditing Issue Boils In House to all files of every depart- ment..." Speaker Marcel Lambert re- jected the motion, ruling the subject matter did not meet the requirement of urgency. About an hour later Prime Minister Diefenbaker moved that the 1961-62 public accounts and the auditor-general's report be referred to the public ac- counts committee for detailed 48, a first helper on the oven|weli Henderson short - staffed and the father of two; Charlesjand barred from income tax E. Gooderham, 60, a labor fore-|files. : man and the father of one;| Finance Minister Nowlan said Hnry Crawford, 50, a foreman|the opposition drew incorrect and the father of seven, andjinferences from the auditor- Steve Tarasuk, 36, who died in|geireral's report, released Mon- hospital, a foreman on No. 5/day. Their allegations would be battery and the father of four.|cleared up when government of- Cause of the explosion has not|ficials were called before the been determined but it is known|public accounts committee, he to have occurred between No. 5jsaid. and No. 7 batteries. | Today, the House begins a Algoma officials said when|two-day special debate on de- the oven exploded it scattered|fence policy and international wreckage and burst water pipes/relations. Ammunition will not that flooded the basement of|be lacking for any of the four the battery. parties. TO HEAT COAL |HAVE WIDE RANGE : A battery contains a number| Talking points probably will of ovens which heat coal tojinclude the Nassau conference; about 2,000 degrees to make|Liberal Leader Pearson's re- coke, gas and other by-prod-|cent statements on nuclear ucts, The coke is used with iron|arms, last week's Progressive ore to make steel. Coke ovens|Conservative national conven- average about 40 feet long, 18|tion, which split on the nuclear feet wide and 10 feet high. issue and tossed the ball back As rescue teams dug through to the cabinet; the near-collapse the rubble in the flooded base-|of negotiations between Britain ment they uncovered the bod-|and the Common Market; Ca- ies. |nadian military aid to India; Mr. Crawford's body was Red China; the Cuban crisis, found about five hours after the|and cuts in Canada's 1962-63 explosion, He was buried under|contribution under the Colombo a wall that had collapsed from plan. the force of the blast. | The relationship between the Two of the injured men are|auditor-general and the govern- in hospital in satisfactory condi-|ment was raised by New Dem- tion. They are Joseph Marinich,|Ocratic Party Whip Stanley suffering a broken nose and|Knowles, MP for Winnipeg shock, and Roy Parr, .suffering|North Centre. : : minor burns to his hands and| He moved that ordinary busi- face and the others were|ness be set aside for an imme- treated in hospital for minor in-|diate debate on the auditor- juries and later released. jgeneral's report that in 1961-- Coroner W. E. Sullivan said:|in Mr, Knowles' words--"He "It looked as if a large bomb|Was denied access to certain had struck the place. All thejfiles, despite the provisions of windows in the office building|the Financial Administration 100 yards away were blown/Act that notwithstanding any out." 'act he is entitled to free access WEATHER FORECAST : Cold Wil! Ease Tonight, Friday Forecasts issued by the Tor-, Forecast Temperatures jonto weather office at 4:30 a.m.|Low tonight, high Friday | Synopsis: Gradual modera-| Windsor 2 |tion of bitterly cold weather is|St. Thomas. }expected in southern Ontario to- Kitchener .. night and Friday, but brisk) Wingham | Py ' . |winds and local snow will con-|Hamilton ... tinue serious drifting conditions |St. Catharines. | Lake Huron, Lake Erie, Toruito southern Niagara, eastern Lake Peterborough Ontario, Georgian Bay, Algoma Trenton regions, Sault Ste, Marie, Lon.|Muskoka ... don: Hazardous driving condi.|North Bay.... tions. Mainly cloudy with snow-|Sudbury .. flurries and local squalls as Earlton tees well as heavy drifting today|Kapuskasing . and Friday. Slowly moderating| White River....... temperatures tonight and Fri- Sault Ste, Marie.. day. Winds westerly 20 to 35,|/Timuniias Northern Niagara, Lake St. Observed Temperatures Clair, western Lake Ontario, Low overnight, high Wednesday Haliburton regions, Wind-|Dawson 12 sor, Hamilton, Toronto: Partly) Victoria cloudy with a few snowflurries| Edmonton and very cold today. Mainly| Winnipeg ... cloudy with occasional light|Lakehead . snow or snowflurries and-qnod-|Sault Ste. M ig oS erating. temperatures tonight|White River....... - 23 and Friday. Winds westerly 20|North Bay.. -19 to 30. bre Timagami, White River, Coch. |Muskoka |rane regions, North Bay, Sud-|Windsor ... |bury: Variable cloudiness with|London .. occasional snowflurries, consid. |Hamilton '.. erable drifting today and Fri.|Toronto day, continuing cold. Winds |Ottawa ...... westerly 25 to 40. [RCRRERAL, «+45 090s awe wes aAunnadnosoun study. Such motions generally are passed in a few seconds. INVITES DEBATE But Mr. Pearson speedily pointed out that the motion was debatable. He invited Mr. Knowles) to make the speech he had been unable to deliver ear- lier because of the rules. Mr. Knowles and _ several others immediately criticized the government for denying the auditor-general rights conferred on him by Parliament and for delays in bringing his staff to full strength. Mr. Henderson said in his re- port he needs a minimum of 179 employees to carry out a "basic external audit" of gov- ernment books. The government had authorized this number, but recruiting delays had cut the actual number to 150 last Oc- tober. The auditor-general also said he was refused access to three personal income tax files on in- structions of Finance Minister Nowlan, then minister of na- tional revenue. Mr. Nowlan told reporters Tuesday that under the Income |Tax Act he was required to | keep confidential all personal income tax files. He said the three files in question con- cerned some members of Par- liament and others. |EXPRESS CONCERN | Walter Gordon (L-- Toronto Davenport) and H, A. Olson (SC--Medicine Hat). expressed concern that the auditor-general may not be able to turn up ir- regularities and check all spending unless he gets an ade- quate staff. Mr. Gordon said the Service Commission was adver- tising for accountants, but the Salaries offered were low and unlikely to attract qualified per- sonnel. _ William Benidickson (L-- Kenora-Rainy River) criticized Mr. Nowlan for putting all MPs under a cloud of suspicion, _Mr. Henderson did not men- tion MPs in his report. He said the action of cabinet's treasury board in 1961, in approving "the withholding of amounts |payable to three taxpayers to be applied to reduction of their jindebtedness to the Crown with | respect to income tax for the | years 1954 to 1960 . . . indicated ja failure of normal collection} procedure."' Hence his request) for the relative files for audit |examination, Mr. Nowlan said Wednesday} |'there has been no denial. That} lis why I want this matter to| BO before a committee where evidence can be introduced and} not allegations which have no foundation in fact." The public accounts commit- tee, headed by Liberal Alan Macnaughton, Montreal Mount Royal, is expected to meet Shortly to explore the matter further. MOVE LESS OFTEN Britons move house on aver- age once every: seven years compared with once every four years for Americans, says a Civil) ~Jin 1957, Britain countered with Racing Trainer Asphyxiated, 3 Unconscious PRICEVILLE, Ont. (CP)-- Melville Howard Wilbur, 57, a trainer for the Ontario Racing Commission in Toronto, died of asphyxiation Tuesday night. [Three other persons narrowly lescaped death, Wilbur, who rented a country home here, was found lying on the floor in the house by his wife and her two brothers after he lit a furnace which hadn't been used for eight months. Msr. Wilbur called Dr. J, D. Robinson of Flesherton, who pronounced the man dead. The doctor left to make arrange- ments with an undertaker and when he returned 15 minutes later, the wife and two brothers were also unconscious. They were admitted to hos- pital in Markdale where one brother was released almost immediately. Mrs. Wilbur and the second man were released Wednesday. Mr. Robinson, who is _ also coroner, said Wilbur died of asphyxiation from carbon mon- oxide which originated in the Socred Begins Attack ww ; i Against CNR President OTTAWA (CP) -- Charles- Arthur Gauthier (SC -- Rober- val) resumed Wednesday in the Commons his party's blistering attack on President Donald Gor- don and the top management of the CNR, ; He said the publicly - owned ONR is run by. the "most in- competent and most arrogant' ipersons he has ever seen. He said Mr. Gordon and his kel iates, and prot " have demonstrated they can't pro- vide adequate railway services without . deficits. . The CNR had lost thousands of customers 'becuse of poor service. The deficits were mainly due to lack of good ser- vice. Mr. Gauthier, speaking in French, said the CNR has ex- perience with deficits only and now takes pride in them. To the CNR management, deficit was an economy and incompe- tents were those who couldn't produce deficits. ARE ON HIS TRAIL The 26-member Social Credit group from Quebec has been hot on the track of Mr. Gordon ever since the CNR president told a Commons committee last fall that he couldn't find any qualified French - speaking Canadians on the railway staff Russia Trip Organized By Thomson LONDON (CP)--One hundred and seventy British business- men are to fly to Moscow next month on a weekend visit or- ganized by publisher Roy Thom. son. The trip will be made in a Russian TU-114 jet. Thomson has "done a deal' whereby most of the cost will be borne by the Russians, a spokesman for the publisher said Wednes- day. The party leaves London Feb 8. The trip is timed to coincide with the introduction a year ago of The Sunday Times color sec- tion. The guests include construc- tion magnate Bernard Sunley, textile executive Cyril. Lord, John Bedford of a London department store, Whitney Straight. of Rolls-Royce and George McWatters, head of a coal furnace. sherry firm. to fill any of the 27 top man- agement posts. He also said that figures filed with Commons committee show that French-speaking Canadians exceed 13 per cent in the "up- per-middle and senior manage- ment ranks" of the CNR. Mr. Gauthier spoke during re- sumed Commons debate on a government bill to reimburse the railways $20,000,000 in the year ending March 31, 1963, for freight rate reductions given non - competitive rate ship- pers on orders of the govern- ment. John Turner (L---Montreal St. Lawrence-St. George) said this is the fourth year in a row the government has asked for such "temporary legislation" and the subsidy now amounted to $75,- He said the government had asked "piecemeal renewal' of the legislation until the Mac- Pherson royal commission on trnsportation could report. But the commission now re- ported and recommended aboli- _ tion of this type of subsidy. Mr. Turner, speaking in. French and English, said the~ legislation is almost a year late . because the railways have been | granting the shippers the lower . rates since April, 1962, This was another example of Par-. liament being asked to approve expenditures when it was too hw for it do to anything about them. Presumably the government ° would have to ask for another $20,000,000 in three months. Debate was adjourned with- . out the legislation making any : progress. Government Offer : Claimed MONTREAL (CP)--A state- ment to shareholders of the Shawinigan Water and Power Company Limited says the Que. bec government's expropriation offer of $30 a share for the com. pany's stock is $10 too low. But Premier Jean Lesage re- lied almost immediately Wed- nesday night that "'if they think they can blackmail the govern. ment this way they are making a mistake." He said the government's of- fer was "unalterable, firm and definitive." The offer was $30 for each common share and $30.25 for each Class A share. The statement from the com- pany's board of directors said the government offer "is not a fair one in comparison with the prices the government proposes to offer for the shares of other it plans to take over. The Quebec premier an- nounced the government offer last Dec, 28 to shareholders of Shawinigan and 10 other private power companies to be expro- priated as a result of an elec- tion mandate received by the government in the Nov, 18 gen- eral elections. Expropriation of the power companies was the reason given for calling the election. QUOTATION RISES Last Dec. 28 Shawinigan closed at $ 5.38 on the Montreal Stock Exchange and Wednes. day's closing quotation was $29 companies" Too Low The government offer cluded the right to acquire at $5 each an equal number of shares in a new company to which assets outside the firm's electrical transferred. The Shawinigan statemerg said "the offer as reported is below fair value and we believe that shareholders should defer final judgment until after re- eipt of the official offer" from Crown-owned Quebe¢ Hydro. "Internationally - recognized value of Shawinigan stock at $10 per share more than the pro- posed government offer. Your -- concur in these find. ngs. 'IS UNFAIR' "The government offer is un- air in comparison with those made to the other companies. This is clearly reflected in the act that the government offer for Shawinigan shares is less than 20 per cent above book value, while the offers for the shares of other utilities are con- siderably higher and in some cases more than 100 per cent in excess of book value." In a later speech to party sup. porters Wednesday night, Mr. Lesage said the offer 'will not be changed in any way." "We will final." INTERPRETING THE NEWS DEATHS | COMING EVENTS By DOUG MARSHALL Canadian Press Staff Writer French suspicions of Britain's willingness to abandon tradi- tions and go whole-hertedly into Europe are partly justified by post-war history. Britain's effort to become a full member of the European Economic Community was a revolution in British foreign pol- icy. In previous European nego- tiations since 1945 Britain had tried to dilute concentrated plans for a strong supranational community, Dr. Richard Mayne, a senior spokesman for the European Economic Community commis- sion in Brussels, says that in spite of Winston Churchill's call for a "United States of Europe" just after the Second World War, attempts to construct one had always followed a ritual pattern. Broadly, the pattern was that the Common Market six wanted a tightly-knit community, Brit- ain, jealous of her parliamen- tary and financial sovereignty, worked constantly for a broad, loose association. French Suspicion Partly Justified come this distrust during the talks in Brussels during the last 15 months and apparently has convinced everybody except President Charles de Gaulle. BRITAIN AWOKE Mayne says the reason for the revolution in British policy is that Britain finally realized she could gain the commercial ad- vantages enjoyed by the market only by becoming a full mem- ber of the community. Britain also. was conscious of her decline as a world power, the weakening of her special relationship with the United States and the blunt fact that a U.S.-style giant was growing up on her doorstep. "Britain has always shown herself willing to accept the essential principles of the EEC --the common external tariff and the common agricultural policy," says Mayne, "The French suspicions on that score now are clearly false. France's only real objection seems to be a nationalistic fear of Britain's influence, and noth- ing can be done about that across a bargaining table." JOINED LATE | For these reasons; Britain re-) fused to join the European Coal) and Steel Community in 1950) and was brought into it as an) associate member in 1954 only) through the efforts of coal-steel President Jean Monnet of} France. | At the Messina conference in 1955 when the Common Market plan was drawn up, Britain sent only observers. When the mar- ket seemed close to becoming a reality, Britain came up with its plan for a free trade area. When the free trade idea failed and the Treaty of Rome forming the market was signed | the seven-member European Free Trade Association. All these moves led the con- tinental powers to a general dis- trust of Britain's intentions. British movers association, Britain has managed to over- HEATING & APPLIANCES Industrial and Commercial | JOHN A. OVENS Optometrist HARE OPTICAL J 2 BOND ST. EAST 723-4811 GOOD FOOD Breakfast, Lunch, Dinner BUSINESS MEN'S LUNCH 12-2 P.M. ~ Hotel Lancaster The established, relioble Gos Deal. your area. 31 CELINA ST. (Corner of Athol) 728-9441 SHORGAS | Special Weekly Message To Members Of CHAMBERS FOOD CLUB <e 86 SPANISH FISH FRY "|throughout the world. By THE CANADIAN Dacca, Pakistanh--M Ali, 538, Pakistan's foreign min- ister, Pakistani high commis- sionner in Canada from 1949 to 1952, ambassador to the United States in 1952 and 1953 and prime minister of Pakistan in 1953 and 1954. Sydney, N.S.--Rt. Rev. Ron- ald Cameron Macgillivray, 77, vicar general of the diocese of Antigonish and principal Ro- man Catholic chaplain for Ca- nadian armed services in Eng- land during the Second Worid! ar. PRESS Toronto -- George Breathet Chapman, 72, a director and founder of Acme Paint and Varnish Company Limited. Toronto--Gerald Wright, 47, Ontario's chief inspector of pri- sons since 1956; after undergo- ing abdominal surgery. Aux Oayes, Haiti -- Gerardo Blanco, consul of the Domini- can Republic. Bogeta, Colombia -- Teofilio Rojas, 27, Colombia's most no- torious bandit blamed by police for 592 killings; shot by militaty patrol. Easton, Md.--Lee Lawrie, 85, one of the world's leading sculp- tors who was instrumental in designing the relief of Franklin D. Roosevelt on the U.S, dime. WIDESPREAD MOVEMENT There are some 8,900,000 Boy Scouts in about 145 countries] | LONDON (CP) -- Londoner John Hampshire plans to open a British-style fish and chip shop in Spain, Ex-travel agent Hampshire says he is horrified at British tourists groaning from the effects of spicy Span- ish dishes. FUEL OIL...| CALL PERRY | DAY OR NIGHT 723-3443 | LIST with || OSHAWA'S TOP REALTOR || JOHN A. J. BOLAHOOD Ltd. REAL ESTATE -- INSURANCE 725-6544 EUCHRE, Scout Hall Gibbon at Buena a se NOVEL BINGO THURSDAY EVENINGS 7:45 at ST. GEORGE'S HALL (Albert and Jackson Sts.) Game $6, $12, $20 May be doubled or tripled $190 IN JACKPOTS Door Prize $15 ST. JOHN'S PARISH BINGO 20 gomes at $6. and $12. 5 Jackpots at $40, Time 7:30 No children under 16, Share the wealth. OSHAWA JAYCEES BINGO TO-NIGHT 8 P.M. 20 gomes at $20, 5 games ot $30. 1 -- $150 Jackpot 2 -- $250 Jackpots. NUMBERS 50-55 RED BARN EIGHTH OSHAWA SCOUT MOTHERS' AUXILIARY NIGHT OF CARDS WITH PROGRESSIVE EUCHRE CHRIST MEMORIAL CHURCH HALL Hillcroft and Mary Sts. to Shawinigan shareholders in. . holdings would be , ee valuation experts set the real * not change one. iota. That is definite. That is , Lal " [Corner of Bloor and Simcoe * FRIDAY, JAN. 25, = 8:00 P.M. 75 cents -- Lunch and Prizes <a OSHAWA'S ° ORIGINAL CARPET CENTRE at Nu-Way, carpet and broad- loom has been a specialty for \f 18 years . , . with thousands of yards on display to select from, PHONE 728-4681 NU- WAY | RUG CO. 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