- 2. THE OSHAWA TIMES, Seturdey, June 22, 1963 ~~ 300 GOOD EVENING r By JACK GEARIN MR. ROBARTS KNOWS HOW TO MAKE FRIENDS » The Hotel Genosha looked like Toronto's Royal York a Tory convention. , <= Big-name PCs were all over the place, with one excep- ton: & Robert H. "Bob" Stroud was up in Room 210 at a quiet ner-meeting with the executive of the Liberal Association Ontario County. ' » Albert V. Walker, the pop- ular City alderman who will be one of Mr. Stroud's oppo- nents in Oshawa riding in the next Provincial vote, was up in Room 410 -- he was having a quiet chit-chat (prior to the start of festi- vities) with the great star of the evening, the Hon. John P. Robaris, the highly per- sonable 46-year-old Premier of Ontario (handsome enough to be a matinee idol and al- ready popular enough in Par- ty ranks to be considered for the national leadership role.) More than 20 head4table guests were awaiting Mr. Robarts for a brief reception in the second-floor Corvair Room (Col. R. S. McLaugh- lin, Mr. T. Creighton, QC, William Austin assistant to Mr. E. H, Walker, president of GM). The largest crowd of all awaited the PM downstairs in the big Picadilly Room, 279 dinner guests, including Terence V. Kelly, the intrepid card-carrying Liberal who ordinarily would have been upstairs in Room 210 with "Bob" Stroud (I'll go anywhere, and I mean anywhere, to sell the Civic Auditorium. Doesn't my appearance here tonight prove it?") Mr. Robarts handled himself well at an informal pre- _flinner Press conference with his candid, easy manner and ,minick, articulate grasp of complex problems; but his Picadil- sly Room speech was a dreadful bore, a drab recital of some eairly well-known facts on Automation. In all fairness to the Premier -- he was advised beforehand that the well-organized dinner-meeéting (sponsored by the Progressive Conservative Association of Oshawa under the highly competent direction 'st Mr. George Martin) was to be 'non-political', He strictly observed the rules, Two of the obvious purposes of Mr. Robarts' visit were: ~~ 'To rub shoulders personally with those faithful party work- »-@ts who operate his well-oiled political machine in Oshawa +fiding -- he had not been here since assuming the mantel of PM. To personally and publicly endorse the candidacy of Mr. Walker. e The evening was an unqualified success from both an- " gles. Mr. Robarts may be young in (political) years, but he "1s undoubtedly a past master in at least one important facet .,0f public life -- he knows how to win friends and influence people in a remarkably short period. He stayed on after dinner and mixed with the crowd. They loved it. ('He'll be tough to beat,'"' quipped an observing reporter.) we» Mr. Robarts went out of his way to bestow his blessings on the candidacy of Mr. Albert V. Walker, chairman of the City's Parks, Property and Recreation committee, in the up- "Goming election, especially when he said: "I would love to "have Mr. Walker with me in Toronto after the next election." Did he have any comment on the oft-repeated reports, ,.@specially since his Quebec visit, that he will be drafted soon for the leadership of the Federal Party? ('Remembering that ~.Ontario and Quebec wrote an end to John Diefenbaker's ,.reign, some experts are beginning to prophesy that John Rob- evarts, rather than Manitoba Premier Duff Roblin, will lead the Tories back to power from his Ontario springboard," said "the Toronto Globe and Mail). "T have given these reports no consideration whatsoever. I haven't been elected Prime Minister in Ontario yet and we ~have a big job to do right here in Ontario," he said. "We must be sympathetic to the problems of Quebec," "he said before the dinner-meeting. 'I think many of us have a tendency at times to disregard these problems, to concern --ourselves more with the problems of our own province. We sometimes forget that these neighboring people, who have "eertain undeniable rights under Confederation, are there. We "must seek a solution to our differences because we are depen- * "dent on each other. They need us and we need them." PREMIER ROBARTS "KK OF C PLANS CIVIC NIGHT More than 200 turned up Thursday at the annual Ward- *"~ens Picnic at Atherley. . . . St. Gregory's Council of the K of C will hold its annual Civic Night next Tuesday. Among » the invited guests are City Councillors, members of the Osh- @wa Separate School Board, the chairman and committee heads of the Board of Education, the PUC and municipal de- partment heads. .. . Dr. J. O, Swales will be the guest speak- ~@f at the monthly meeting of the Catholic Luncheon Club eemext Thursday at noon. His topic will be 'Medical Morals «» Problems in Obstetrics and Gynaecology." te sfTAYLOR CONTROLS LOCAL 222 EXECUTIVE So» The Democratic Right-Wing Group scored a big victory Scthis week when Doug Sutton was elected first vice-president of the executive of Local 222, UAW-CLC. Sutton, a GM employee since 1937 and member of the GM Bargaining Committee since 1950 (he was also chairman of the top negotiating committee for six years) defeated in- »-Gumbent Jack Meagher by 2,506 votes to 1,877. This victory assured the Group led by President '"'Abe"' : Taylor of at least 6 of 10 executive seats, with two results ' still to come. Taylor, the 36-year-old Oshawa-born Trade Unionist who scored a big upset recently by defeating Malcolm Smith for : the presidency, now controls the GM Unit of the Canadian UAW Council, 9-3; the Recreation committee, 6-3; the Political Action committee, 3-2 (with 2 independents); and the Educa- Body of man identified as Randolph Jackson, 39, lies in street outside the Hotel Com modore in New York Friday after he was. shot and killed by a policeman. On Jackson OS SP ee CE OTL yg en 6 Boy Scouts Found By OPP Searchers PARRY SOUND, Ont. (CP)-- Six Cooksville, Ont., Boy Scouts, | two days overdue on a 35-mile return canoe trip from a camp on the Magnetawan River, were located by a provincial polic plane Friday. ' Two of the scouts, Brian Smith and William Calde, both 16, were ill and were flown home. : Robert Moore, scoutmaster from Cooksville, was flown in to guide the other four on their return trip to camp, They set out last Sunday with three canoes on what was ex- pected to be a three-day trip. The four heading back to the camp ate Ross McKenzie, 16, Grant MeDonald, 15, Warren | Jones, 16, and James Murray, INTERPRETING THE NEWS Inside, Outside Feud Builds Up folio than to attempt both to weather the storm in Parlia- ment and to restore lost confi. dence among businessmen. Sources close to thé events since the budget was pfesented see two chief factors as respon- sible for Mr. Gordon reaching the stage where it would be im- possible to carry on. One is the Liberals' famous 60 days of decision, These sources say the period of time was too short for a proper as- sessment to be made of the ef. OTTAWA (CP)--Walter Gor- don, finance minister for only two months, appears to be the target of irresistible pressures from inside and outside his own party. Informants Friday were freely forecasting that Mr, Gor. don has presented his first and last budget. They anticipate he will be shifted to another caty- het job some weeks hence after Parliament finishes dealing with his budget. Daily since he presented his budget June 13 he has been un- der steady fire in the Commons. As the parliamentary and business outcry rose higher, for thorough preparation of a budget. Budgets normally take five or six months to prepare. fects of budget proposals and" BANDIT SLAIN were found seven pieces of jewelry worth $34,100, which were stolen Thursday by a thief who used a brick to smash the window of Van Cleef and Arpels gem shop on Fifth Avenue. The knife-wield- Traffic Control System Installed TORONTO (CP)--A computer-| controlled system of traffic con- 'trol which is expected to save the motoring public an esti- {mated §2,000,000 in opera doubts began to be expressed within the Liberal party of the wisdom of Mr, Gordon continu. ing as finance minister much | longer. This pressure came into con-) Under the political necessity of bringing down a budget with. in 60 days, Mr. Gordon went outside the government service for help, | His manner of doing so in- volves the second key factor in Ifliet with the intense loyalty of|)°. Ve Prime Minister Pearson for|>'inging Mr. Gordon near the end of the road as finance min- members of his team, esPe-| itor This factor was lack of cially for Mr. Gordon, his close) hein and experience with the su. friend for almost 30 years. |preme task, for the politician, S. Rhodesia Big Problem For Britain By CARMAN CUMMING Canadian Press Staff Writet Britain is being asked to " Negro population -- which numbers the whites about 30 to ASK FOR TIME With no etsy way out, Britain has tried, to tread a middle course and persuade the white Field government to ease its position and avoid the racial clash that now appears imevit- ible. At the United Nations, Brit- ish have pleaded for expenses annually was unveile at Toronto city hall Frilay. The computer will control the length of stop and go signals to ing Jackson had fled a jewelry | fit traffic density. store in a thwarted holdup at-| The new system is expected tempt with the policeman in |to go into operation in about 100 pursuit and they battled to the |intersections toward the end of "SAY PEARSON AGREES | of satisfying the opposition par- | However, reliable sources say) |}that Mr, Pearson has come to} |agree with those who argued it | would be more in the national) jinterest and safer politically to) | shift Mr. Gordon to a new port- death under the marquee of| August. the hotel. ae --AP Wirephoto | Opposition Rips Into Gordon's Tax Switch OTTAWA (CP) -- Partial text of Commons exchanges Friday involving opposition questioning of Finance Minis- ter Gordon: Stanley Knowles (NDP--Win- nipeg North Centre): Mr. Speaker, may I direct a ques- tion to the minister of finance? Was anyone other than a cab- inet minister or a top official in the department of finance informed of the decision to withdraw paragraph 11 of the Excise Tax Act resolutions after the decision was taken and before it was announced in the House? Finance Minister Gordon: Yes, Mr. Speaker. +--Mr. Knowles: Mr. Speaker, will the minister of finance tell the House who outside of these people were so informed? Mr. Gordon: The deputy minister, the senior assistant deputy minister who was work- ing on this particular tax, Mr. Stanley, Mr. Conway and Mr. O'Connell, Mr. Knowles: May I ask a further supplementary ques- tion? Did any of these gentle- men--I refer in particular to the outside gentlemen, the contractors--assist the minis. ter of finance in the prepara- tion of the statement he made to the House concerning the withdrawal of that resolution? Mr. Gordon: No, Mr. | Speaker. | Douglas Fisher (NDP--Port | Arthur): A supplementary question, Mr. Speaker. It is in the same field but I should like to direct it to the prime minister, When he is consider- ing his investigation would he inquire whether there is any truth in reports I have had from press offices in Toronto that simultaneously with the | announcement by the minister of finance in the House that | he was' withdrawing para. graph 11 of the budget resolu-| tions dealing with excise tax) there were telephone calls coming into his office from floor traders on the exchange! asking if it had been with- drawn? Prime Minister Pearson: I will be glad to look into that, Mr. Speaker. Later | | Opposition Leader Diefen- QUEBEC (CP)--Pope Paul VI és not unfamiliar with some of the problems of the Roman Catholic Church in Canada. Colin Cameron (NDP -- Na- He visited Canada for five Pope In Canada 5 Days In 1951 the Duplessis government and the dominant right-wing clergy as a dangerous figure. Conserv- ative bishops twice during the 1940s carried criticism of him to ties in Parliament, WAS IN BUSINESS Mr. Gordon's background was almost entirely in the business and administrative world until he was first elected to Parlia- ment in June, 1962. A single ses. sion of Parliament, and in oppo. sition at that, was all the time he had to learn the delicate art of getting things through Pariia. ment--especially a Parliament in which the government has no over-all majority of seats, Informants say this gap was particularly clear when Mr. Gordon took the unprecedented step of making a tax change while the stock market was still open for trading. It was a step Parliament was not ready t6 ac. baker: I should like to ask the minister how he justifies such an astounding admission as the one he has just made, that before an announcement is made in the House of Com- mons these three individuais to whom criticism had been directed were brought in and made aware of so important a change? What is behind all this? Some members: Oh, oh. Mr. Pearson: We know what is behind it. Mr. Diefenbaker: Answer. Mr. Speaker, the House has a right to this information. Mr, Gordon: Before I make any announcement in this House, even though it has been drafted by myself and approved by the cabinet, I usually show it to senior offi- cials of the department so that if there is any small change that needs to be made in it they will inform me of it. Mr. Knowles: Was it part of the contract made with these three gentlemen that they were identified as senior officials of the department of finance? In spite of what I hear over there advising the minister not to answer, I think he should answer this question, Mr. Gordon: They were not hired as junior clerks. They were senior individuals who were working with senior per- manent officials and in that capacity, For the time being, they were acting in that way. NDP Leader Douglas: In view of the fact that these three gentlemen had shown their incompetency by not having recognized the admin- istrative difficulties -- Mr. Speaker: Order, please; the Hon. member .. . is giv- ing an opinion, not asking for information. Mr. Douglas: In view of the fact that these three gentle- men had failed to recognize the administrative difficulties, does the minister not think it was inadvisable to consult them any further? Mr. Gordon: I would think that was a question might better be brought up in debate. WEATHER FORECAST tion committee, 4-3. Political control of the 13,500-member Local 222 (more than 11,000 are with GM) thus reverts to the Democratic Right- Wing Group for the next two years. CALLING ALL JUNIOR YACHTSMEN William "'Bill" Hart calls attention to the fact that the Junior section of the Oshawa Yacht Club will start its pro- gram July 2 and continue until the end of August, Monday through Friday. Two competent instructors trained in Royal Canadian Yacht Club junior section will be in charge of the course, Jack Miller -- of 8-1884 -- can furnish information. This section was started last year. divorce came in a debate in the Official forecasts issued by the Toronto public weather of- ifice at 5.00 a.m.: | Synopsis: A high pressure cell/ moving slowly southeastward' from Michigan gives every indi- church's historic opposition to cation of providing a near per- fect weekend for most of the province, Forecast for all Ontario re- gions: Sunny with moderating | temperatures today and Sun- |day, Northwesterly winds 10 to |15 today becoming light tonight and southwest 15 Sunday. Forecast Temperatures j Low tonight, high Sunday | Winlsor 55 | tained in government service that | | the minister in the statement Sunny, Warm Over Weekend Kapuskasing 45 White River...... Moosonee ... Timmins .... Observed TemPeratures Low overnight, high Friday Dawson . + 42 65 Victoria . Edmonton . Regina Winnipeg .. Lakehead .. White River.. S..S. Marie.... Kapuskasing . North Bay. Sudbury . naimo - Cowichan - The Is- lands): May I ask a supple- mentary question? After com- pletion of the budget were these three gentlemen still re- days in 1951 while @ monsignor in the Vatican's state secretar- iat and @ year earlier played a jeading role in finding a solution *o a church-state problem. | or was their contract termi- | Church sources said Friday nuted upon completion of the quietly yh a Porcine og udget? é Mr they |tion of Very Rev. Georges-Henri were, |Levesque brought to the Vati- Mr. Cameron: Are they on por by two Quebec cabinet min- | now? isters. Mr. Knowles: The contract |, Those were the darkest days was for six months. (Later) R. G, L, Fairweather (PC-- Royal): I should like to ask the minister of finance if he ca would assure the House that I he would consult knowledge- able pageboys before making any further statements likely to influence the stock mar., ket? Mr. Knowles: Mr. Speaker, I rise on a question of priv- ilege which relates to the matter just now under dis- cussién. I appreciate the hon- esty of the minister's answer a few moments ago that he did inform these three gentlemen Gordon: - Yes, bec, the sources said, but Msgr. Montini was known as @ sympa- thetic power in the Vatican. in priest, zaval University's social ences department and a ful figure in the fight for social reform in Quebec at the time, NAMES MINISTERS The church sources said the two cabinet ministers were An- tonio Barrette, later premier of Quebec and now Canadian am- bassador to Greece, and Dr. Al- biny Paquette, then health min- ister. Both were in the Union Nationale government of the then was dean of soi for the Liberal clergy in Que-| Father Levesque, a Domini-)miles west of Montreal. _|MET ST. LAURENT Rome. The Montini decision to shelve the denuncitations was a heart- ening one during a bleak period for clerical liberals here, the sources added, Father Levesque, 60, now is superior of Maison Montmor- ency near Quebec City, scene of many labor amd social confer- ences. At the end of July he is }to become president of a new University in Butare, Ruanda, | Msgr. Montini came to Can- jada principally as the Vatican's |emissary to a summer boy scout) | Jamboree at Vaudreuil, Que., 20 cept quietly, It became even clearer when he presented the Commons with two statements on different days about the number of per. sons who knew in advance of always has been jealous of get- ting the full facts from a@ minis- getting them first, three outside budget helpers, the opposition and some within the tax withdrawal, Parliament ter when he is questioned--and When Mr. Gordon on one day listed Prime Minister Pearson and the cabinet as being in the know, then later added to that list senior civil servants and his spokesmen time to let policies of modera- tion work The. African delegations are in n position to great this time, even if they wanted to do so. In the General Assembly's colonialism committee For another, they to be running to keep ahead of the Soviet bloc. his own party lowered the boom. Port Burwell Lighthouse Ends Career PORT BURWELL, Ont. (CP) The Port Burwell lighthouse, But he also had lunch in Ot-) tawa with Louis St. Laurent, then prime. minister, and visited James Cardinal McGuigan in Toronto and the late premier Maurice Duplessis in Quebec City. At the jamboree he celebrated mass for 2,500 scouts who as- sembled from Canada, United States and Europe. } Mr. St. Laurent Friday re-| called the visit. "I rememb I was very one family, has come to the end late premier Maurice Duplessi At the time of the denuncia- tion, the sources said, Father |Levesque was regarded by both of the changes, but my ques- tion of privilege is that this House was misled by the min- ister on June 19, the day the | statement was made. The minister was asked a question by the leader of the opposition and his reply, as repored at Page 1341 of Hans. jard, was this: | "Mr, Speaker, I gave no in- formation to Mr. Kierans, and I did not make any state- ment to anybody else until I came into this House, other than the prime minister and certain members of the. cabi- net."' Some members: Shame, Some members: Resign, Mr. Knowles: We have now had the minister's own words that these three gentlemen who were taken on as special consultants were informed of this decision after it was made and before the House was so advised. They were not in- formed directly by the minis- ter of finance but they were informed with his knowledge, with his consent, and I sub- mit that we were misled by outsiders and were taken in on so - called contract under. a Treasury Board minute of doubtful validity, were in- formed. to the rights of Parliament. Some members: Hear, hear. (Later) Clifford Smallwood (PC -- Battle River . Camrose): I have a question for the prime minisibea yesterday's Mont- real Gazette it was reported that (he) intends to replace the minister of finance. Is this report true? Mr. Pearson: That report, Mr. Speaker, is untrue, Mr, Diefenbaker: I should like to ask the minister of fi- nance whether he consulted with his three outside experts I called them "'tinkers" but experts they were--before the withdrawal of this tax, and when did he advise them, the three of them, of his intention to make the announcement he did on the evening of the 19th? Mr. Gordon: I did not con- sult them, Mr. Speaker, After the cabinet meeting 1 in- he made to the House on Wed- nesday of this week. Mr. Gordon: Mr. Speaker, I daresay that people can I suggest that the; whole story is a sorry affront |iine and Ste. Anne-de-Beaupre|eatly 1800s to guide his fleet of much impressed with his perso- nality, I feel certain his election as Pope was a choice inspired from above." And he spent one August night a. @ summer cottage on the St.| The lightkeeper, John Suther- Lawrence. land, 35, is the great great Msgr. Montini's 1951 visit also] grandson of Alexander Suther- |took him to Trois-Rivieres, St.{land, who built the original pri- Hyacinthe, Cap-de - la-Made.| vately-owned lighthouse in the of its career. For the first summer in 123 years, the government light- house will not be operated this year. in Quebec province, as well as| fishing boats into this Lake Erie Kingston and Niagara Falls in| port 18 miles south of Tillson- Ontario, | burg. -- -- The government lighthouse| | was built in 1840. Now other) | lights at the t h de th No Negroes In | lighthouse sonoehunate Ta ebay vo tier wil fee" te. pouserte: the e e Optimist Club President Says light for its decorative ani tourist value. TORONTO (CP) -- A Negro cannot be a charter member of Test Beaches Simi wea er FOr Typhoid Glub's international president,| NIAGARA - ON - THE- confirmed Friday. |LAKE, Ont. (CP) -- Beaches He said this is the policy ofjhere are being tested for pos- the present 12-man board of di-|sible traces of typhoid after a rectors of the club, based on/12-year-old Buffalo girl was its interpretation of the Optimist| stricken with Lincoln County's In'ernatiional constitution. first case in a year. However, said Mr, Grimiand| Dr. J. M. McGarry sald the nt | operated by five generations of ple twist words. I do not mean that my fr iend did that at all, but I think you can misread these things. It has been my understanding were entitled, and usually did, speak to the senior members of their departments, and I that I am certainly included these peo- in that Mr, Knowles: I rise on an- other question of privilege, Mr. Speaker, Any suggestion category. guilty of twisting words is completely without foundation, Some members: Oh, oh. Mr. Knowles: F have read | the minister's own words of Wednesday, which were to the effect that he told no one but the prime minister and cer- tain members of the cabinet. There was not even any men- tion of officials then, but I that ministers | men advised? formed the deputy minister, the assistant deputy minister and those three gentlemen who had been helping me_ with these matters. Mr. Diefenbaker: The ques- tion is, what time in the afternoon? Donald 8, Macdonald (L-- Toronto Rosedale): When did you become honorable? Mr. Diefenbaker: It is very important, having regard to the transactions which took place on the stock exchange. At what time were these three Mr. Gordon: It was just be- fore I came into the House but I do not know the exact time. (Later) Mr. Smallwood: I should like to ask the minister of 'fi- nance a'supplementary ques- in an interview, once a charter jis granted, club headquarters has no more imfluence on mem- bership and the individual club 'is free to accept Negro mem- bers, "The strength of our organiz- ation is in the southern United States," he said. 'So what can we do as a board of directors but say we won't take Negroes as charter members? And we won't." "We just won't go for that sort of stuff in Canada," said John Duffy, president of the newly formed Breakfast Opti- miist Club of Toronto. A contro- versy arose when the Toronto chapter was told at its founding' meeting of the policy on Ne- groes, "T believe it's against the law in Canada," he said. '"'We're go- ing after this thing 100 per cent." tion. In order to restore Cana- girl had been swimming in Lake Ontario, but it was not certain whether swimming in the lake or the Niagara River had cauSed the fever. | The unidentified girl was staying at a summer cottage. A case of paratyphoid was re- ported in the county last year and there was a case in 1961 and two in 1960. | EXCHANGE MAY SUFFER MONTREAL (CP) -- An ex- change of visits involving more than 800 high school students in Ontario and Quebec is in dan. ger of bogging down this year s Graphic Arts | Group Hits Printing Tax MONTREAL (CP)--The Gra- phic Arts Industries Associa- tion telegraphed a protest to the federal cabinet Friday, calling for cancellation of the budget proposal to remove sales ex- emptions on machinery, equip- ment and materials used in printing. The association, representing 700 printing firms and suppliers across Canada, denounced the budget proposal in such terms as "absolutely unjustifiable," "needlessly inflationary" and "especially vicious." The association also con- tended the move would give United Nations printers "a still greater competitive advantage over us in the small Canalian market" because U.S. printers operated the same equipment "in a much bigger market with- out much duty or tax." Woodstock To Get 2887 Area Acres WOODSTOCK (CP)--The On- tario Municipal Board has granted Woodstock permission to annex about 90 per cent of the 2,887 acres from four sur- rounding townships it applied for, it was announced Friday. The annexed area will in- crease the city's size by about 75 per cent next Jan. 1. About 500 persons now residing in the townships of East Oxford, West Oxford, Blandford and East Zorra will become residents of the city. The city's present population is about 20,800. because of insufficient r from French-speaking Quebec students, With more than 500 Ontario students eager to par- ticipate, and the visits sched. uled to begin July 2, only 350 French - speaking Quebec high school students have applied. Muskoka .. would not have thought that NOW IS THE TIME Anglican Seeks Change In Divorce Stand dian confidence abroad, why wait till spring? Why does he not. resign now? was out of place. Of course, he would tell the deputy minister of finance; at least, I would hope he would. But now we are told that three people who were not officials of the départment, who were | DIXON'S OIL FURNACES Windsor ....++. London .... TOTONO ccvsocss Killaloe Montreal .. Quebec Halifax | SHORGAS | HEATING & APPLIANCES Industrial and House of Lords on a bill to im-| St. Thomas prove reconciliation procedures) LOndon for separated couples. A clause| Kitchener ....... that would have allowed divorce win, Forest..... by mutual consent after a seven-| H aaion vee year separation was defeated. amilton To have that carpet or chest- ertield cleaned professionally in QOshawa's Original Carpet Cleaning Centre . . . where fully guaranteed satisfaction is assured. "Reda e vs Rhet esc eens sees ucens P seeeeeeees eee "KINDNESS BEYOND PRICE, LONDON (AP) -- The Arch-| ' bishop of Canterbury said Fri- * day night he is searching for a * formula that would allow the Church of England to recognize * divorce for marriages that have '~broken down without hope of|also conforming to church doc- reconciliation. trine as well as the conditions This slight break in the'of modern society, : | St. Catharines. The archbishop, Dr. Michael Ramsey, intervened in the de- bate to report he has asked fel- low churchmen to work out some formula recognizing the breakdown of a marriage but Toronto 55 | |Peterborough .... } ]Trenton .vecccroce Killaloe . {Muskoka . North Ba Sudbury ... | Earlton e \Sault Ste. Marie... GOOD FOOD Breakfast, Lunch, Dinner A.M. to 2 P.M. 5:30 P.M. to 8 P.M, Hotel Lencaster 187 King St. E. @ Commercial and Industrial Sites @ Leaseback @ Development Paul Ristow REALTOR 728-9474 YET WITHIN REACH OF ALL" GERROW FUNERAL CHAPEL 390 King W. 728-6226 Commercial The established, reliable Gas Dealer in your ares. 31 CELINA ST. (Corner of Athol) 728-9441 SERVING OSHAWA OVER 50 YEARS 24-HOUR SERVICE 313 ALBERT ST. | 723-4663 | ' Phone 728-4681 NU-WAY RUG CO. LTD. 174 MARY ST.