Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 5 Jul 1963, p. 2

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2 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Pridey, July 3, 1963 - GOOD EVENING By JACK GEARIN IS CITY IN REAL ESTATE BUSINESS? Hindsight is easier to come by than foresight, it's true. Yet the spectre of that 1958 land deal offer -- the one bébbled so badly at high municipal level locally -- must still haunt some of our elected representatives. There was another grim reminder Monday. City Council agreed to rent a building owned by the McLaughlin Fuel Oil Co. at King and McMillan for the City Welfare Depart- ment at a monthly rate of $270 to ease criticial overcrowding . at City Hall. It was back on October 5, 1958, that the City was given a golden opportunity by the Crown Assets Disposal Corp. to get itself off the book insofar as City Hall overcrowding was concerned. The CADA offered to sell the City two valuable Federal properties on Ontario street for a song -- the old Customs building and the former site of the old Post Office at. King and Ontario. The CADC's offer was this -- formal tenders would be called, but the City would be given an opportunity to match the highest bid. CADC wanted the City to have the proper- ties, ideal for municipal use. The City could have bought them for as low as $35,000. The Customs building could have been renovated for $10,000. The deal was kicked around and finally fumbled by the majority on Council. The matter finally got to Council Octo- ber 20 when it was sent to the Property committee. City Treasurer Harold Tripp (since deceased) gave a report on the building and its possible usage for municipal purposes October 27, 1958, but the committee didn't recommend pur- chase, for some reason, or reasons, that are still obscure. Chairman John Brady said something to the effect that the City was not in the real estate business, but this brought a loud, derisive guffaw from Mayor Lyman Gifford ("What are we in, if we're not in the real estate business? he chided, "We're always buying and selling property. We would be foolish to miss this opportunity." The next official word was in December, 1958. Mr. Brady read a memo from Mr. Gifford. It said that Mr, Ken Jackson (who finally purchased the properties with Mr, Sam Jackson, Jr.) 'wanted to know if the City was interested in renting space in the Customs building, The City was not. These two properties today are owned by Cedar Glen Oshawa. Ltd. The old Customs building is known as the Cedar Glen building. It is filled to capacity with nine tenants and MONTREAL (CP) -- A new hearing has reversed 4 previ- ous finding of criminal negli- gence against Michel LeCorre, warden of St. Vincent de Paul Penitentiary and two guards for opening fire May 2 on a cell where two prisoners held a guard hostage. Guard Taymond Telller, 35, a veteran of eight years peniien- tiary service and father of three children, was killed in the fus!i- lade along with one of the pris- oners, Marcel Marcoux, 34. A new coroner's jury Thurs- day night blamed guard Tel- lier's death on Marcel Marcoux and his cousin, Claude Marcoux, 21, who had seized Tellier and attempted to barter his safety for a transfer to another peni- tentiary. Last May 10, the first coro- ner's jury found Warden Le- Corre, guards Alphonse Desor- meaux, 56, and Aurele Martel, 40, criminally negligent in the guard's death along with the two prisoners. The Quebec attorney - gener- al's department authorized a new inquest requested by ted- eral Justice Minister Lionel Chevrier, He had received cep- resentations, including the . Civil protesting the jury finding. REPRESENTED GUARDS The penitentiary guards are represented by the CSA, the institution north of Montreal and was believed to be the first ever held in a Canadian peni- tentiary. Tunnel Network Guard Death J ury Reverses Ruling one from Service Assqciation,| The new. inquest was held at} has an assessed value of $54,980. The old Post Office proper- ty at 32-40 King east has a modern office and store building' on it and is assessed at. $146,185. There have been many times since 1958 that City Hall employees have not been able to conceal their anguish over what many of them term "deplorable overcrowding". Per- haps the most ludicrous situation of all presented itself in 1962 when it was suddenly discovered that there was no accommodation for the incoming Purchasing Agent; for a time he was earmarked to sit in an open hall adjacent to Mayor Christine Thomas' office. If the new Director of Oper- ations arrived next Monday he would be without quarters until the 9-man Welfare Department staff vacated. The City En- gineering Department is the most overcrowded and the City Clerk's office isn't far behind. Overcrowding at City Hall (first opened in January, 1954) has long been critical. Strangely enough the move to oust the Welfare Dept. came from Council which must decide now where it is going to accommodate the new Dir- ector of Operations. One of these days soon the office must be filled, despite many false starts; and nobody realizes it more than Council, which has had such a recommendation before it since last September. il PC FEDERAL TAX BITES. HARD As an indication of the added expense of the recently- anhounced 11 percent Federal tax on building materials -- it will add approximately $88,000 to the total construction cost of the new County courthouse and administration build- ings in Whitby. The City of Oshawa will only be affected on the increased cost of the courthouse -- $53,000. It will pay 45 percent of this total -- $23,850. SOME NOTES ON KING ST. PARKING Should parking be abolished on the north side.of downtown King street? City Council voted "no" Monday, 7-6, but only after a heated debate that threatened to break out into a free-swing- ing affair. Traffic Advisory Council, an affiliate of the City Planning Board, made the recommendation -- it also asked that one hour parking be permitted on the south side of King from Queen to Centre except for "'no parking" within 50 feet of intersections. : Alderman John Brady said that 48 new car park spaces would be provided in a new city lot at Centre and King, but he ran into a storm of protest. Alderman Albert V. Walker wanted to wait until the one- way traffic problem was settled. Alderman John Dyer '"'seri- ously questioned' a suggestion by Mr. Brady and. Alderman Cliff Pilkey that a serious traffic problem had arisen on downtown King. + "Who says we have a traffic problem there?" he snap- ped, "The Damas and Smith report," replied Mr. Brady. "Are we deliberately baking up a situation that really doesn't exist at all?" asked Mr. Dyer. He continued: "I'm not an expert. I think experts mostly are for the birds. "What is an expert? Somebody who comes from 30 miles Found Manned By Reds | SAIGON, South Viet Nam |(AP)--A fantastic labyrinth of jtunnels, still manned by Com- ia unist guerrillas, has been! found by chance only 25 miles} |northwest of this capital. | The communication tunnels, plus supply depots, are in a net- work; stretching at least 15 jmiles. U.S. military officers, |from what they know of it, be- ilieve the guerrillas needed at |least eight years to complete the Warden LeCorre, winner of the Croix de Guerre in the Sec- ond World War while fighting with the Free French forces, ac- cepted full responsibility for the shooting. He had been ordered not to bow to the prisoners' transfer demands and authorized to use "all necessary force" if he dis- covered the hostage guard was being harmed. : he recognized the* prone form of Marcel Marcoux on the floor, knelt down, and fired two more bullets at close range. After that, he fired more shots in an upward direction when he thought the other prisoner was jumping him, fatal shots at guard Tellier. Jewett Says Time Needed For Success OTTAWA (CP)--It takes time for the "progressive spirits" in the Liberal party to succeed with their ideas, the Commons was told Thursday. Pauline Jewett (L--Northum- berland) said it must seem to the public that all such ideas are pushed in Parliament by the small parties--that the old par- ties are full of '"'mossback reac- tionaries."' Not. so, she said. Miss Jewett, former professor of political science at Carleton University, said there are 'a number of progressive spirits' in the Liberal party. But she added that in a large "omnibus party" in power, it is more difficult to get one's idees across than in a small se- lect group. No member of the large party could expect to suc- ceed overnight Miss Jewett said that in such a situation an MP can't "push" ideas effectively, once they first emerge. It took a fair amount of time to "broaden the basis of consent." Miss Jewett spoke as the Commons debated a bill by Stanley Knowles (NDP--Winni- | peg North Centre) to provide Guard Desormeaux testified) § Evidence showed he had fired| Rite returning tv the battle against a 9,000-acre forest fire raging 150 miles north of Sault Ste. Under a pall of smoke, a seaplane refills its tanks with water on Wawa Lake before OTTAWA (CP)--On Aug. 4,;reason the United States had to 1960, Defence Minister Hellyer,;move squadrons out of France. then in opposition, said it would) Air Chief Marshal Miller said be "'sheer folly" to base eight) the RCAF CF-104 is "exclusively RCAF CF-104 nuclear bomber/atomic."' It could play no part squadrons on two West German|in a conyentidnal war and the airfields because of vulnerabil-jair division could make no con- ity to missile attack. |tribution to conventional air de- He now is stuck with thisjfence or support for ground problem, the magnitude of|troops. which was set out Thursday for| Of what value, he was asked, the Commons defence commit-|would the four CF-104 squad- tee by Air Ohief Marshal Frank|rons on the two French bases Miller, chairman of the chiefs of}be even ina tactical nuclear staff committee. |war if they had no nuclear war- The RCAF Air Division in| heads handy? Europe has. four bases: Zwei-| He said the NATO military WATER BOMBER RELOADS Nuciear Jet Probiem For Defence Minister Cross-Border WASHINGTON (CP) -- The United States Chamber of Com- merce says the U.S, and Can- ada should negotiate complete elimination of cross-border tar- Sliffs on whole categories of in- dustrial goods and that the U.S. m|should be empowered to' work out similar deals with other countries, '< It urged also that Canada join Smithe Organization of American a|States "to further western hem- isphere co-operation" and that the Canadian Chamber of Com- merce support such a move. The Chamber announced its Progress Seen In Mediation At Sudbury | TORONTO (CP) -- Ontario |Labor Minister Leslie Rowntree |reported "progress" Thursday | after two days of personal medi- lation between the International |Nickel Company of Canada and spokesmen for about 14,000 em- ployees threatening to strike, Negotiations were to resume jtoday between officials of the big base metals producer and the United Steelworkers of America (CLC), representing workers at Sudbury and Port Colborne, Ont. : "The negotiations have been conducted in a spirit of har- mony and we are making prog- ress,' Mr. Rowntree said at the close of the afternoon session. He gave no further indication of the trend of the talks, and the dispu'ants maintained their agree? silence, Workers at the Sudbury and Marie, Ont. The fire burned to within four miles of the resort centre at Wawa, 200 CF-104s crammed on four-- or, in an emergency, on two-- bases he will reject the RCAF's request for some 65 more CF- 104s at a cost of $140,000,000. The CF-104 program now totals $468,000,000. Outside the Commons, inform- ants said that in case of an alert some of the CI'-104s at Marville and Gros Tenquin would be flown to the two German air- ields. This would mean running the risk of having nearly the entire air division wiped out by two intermediate-range missiles and the remaining planes at the French bases having nowhere to Port Colborne operations have authorized union officers to call a strike if no settlement is reached, but no 'walkout has been ordered yet, Main issues in the long dis- pute are a company proposal for a new pension plan, rejected as inferior by the union, and a un- ion demand for compulsory dues checkoff. Inco and the Steelworkers have never had a contract. The company's last labor agree- Tariffs Elimination Sought policy views Thursday in en dorsing the recommendations of the Canada - U.S, committee . made up of prominent business leaders from both sides of the border and sponsored jointly by the two national chambers. : In its meeting at New Orleans os athe Us cater ae urged the U.S. r ; rt amendment of the Trade xpansion Act so that President | Kennedy could negotiate total . tariff elimination on specified ~ categories of industrial goods . with the specific aim of under. ~ Loe such negotiations with | 'anada, SHOULD GIVE SUPPORT . "In turn," the committee sali, ~ "the Canadian chamber should support Canadian government . encouragement of specialization ' within industrial groups in Can- ~ ada in order to realize full bene- fit of tariff elimination," In supporting a general policy of BS Dblh hs Bye trade through lower tariffs, the Cana- dian and U.S, chambers have joined in urging their govern ments to take "'the most nonre- strictive position possible" at» world tariff bargaining expected © to open next year under the- General Agreement on Tariffs' and Trade, . The two chambers also urged © that a special Canada-U.8, offi. * cial subcommittee be formed - "to study ways and means of overcoming existing non-tariff . trade barriers in the interest of « stimulating the flow of trade be- . tween the two countries." On the question of Canada © joining the Organization of American States, the U.S. chamber said it endorsed the position of the American section of the Canada-U.8. committee which had pleaded for an imme. diate Canadian decision "to as- sume its rightful role in the -- of hemispheric leader- ship." Alternate Plan To Frigates Studied ment, with the International Un- bruecken and Baden-Soellingen| in West Germany and Gros Ten- quin and Marville in France. The air division now is form- command still wants and needs the CF-104s on the two French bases "even with this disabil- ity."" | network. ; Ni | \for two weeks' vacation--in- The U.S. officers are advisers stead i phen at present--for jto the South Vietnamese Army|employees under federal labor jin its fight against the Viet! jurisdiction who have one year's Cong guerrillas | service. | The army now is methodi-| It was obvious mid-way in the cally ptobing and destroying the| one-hour debate allotted under labyrinth from the surface. How|Commons rules that the bill many guerrillas are down there/would not be passed. is unknown. One reason, it became evi- Every so often, a guerrillajdent, is that the government sniper will pop up from an open-|hopes to introduce a new labor ing and open fire, In recent days|Code that would deal with the these snipers have killed nine/Vacations matter as well as government troops and a U.S,|9thers. : adviser and wounded 50 other| _ But on the motion of Solicitor. soldiers. |General J. Watson ,MacNaught Armored personnel carriers the "subject matter" of the bill and tanks combing the tangled a rag sy lige jungle region stumbled on the|Soomtres. for sorter aly. underground complex last week.|.0us the bill itself. was killed jend. A tank sank into the soil! Over a subterranean supply de- |pot | but Mr. Knowles' proposal was kept alive | Arnold Peters (NDP--Timis-| | ' kaming) said minimum federal) | The army is disabling the tun-/jabor standards should be ap-| jnels by pouring in tear gas.| plied without qualification to the jsmoke and other chemicals and! Northwest Territories. He said NATO believed the planes could be used "'in certain cir- cumstances." Nuclear bombs jet air defence fighters. could be. picked up by the CF- West Germany permits the|104s at non-French bases "un- stockpiling of American nuclear/der certain conditions." warheads on its territory.| Mr. Hellyer has indicated that France does not. It was for this|because of the vulnerability of INTERPRETING THE NEWS Hope Glimmers In Moscow Talk By HAROLD MORRISON Canadian Press Staff Writer Soviet P.emier Khrushchev ing eight CF-104 low-level nu- clear jet bomber squadrons, two at each base, to replace Sabre jready to sign a partial, un- \policed agreement on banning jthe more dangerous tests--all appears to be pursuing tactics| except those underground. But of tying up the Western powers|he also wants a simultaneous in all soits of complex and|20n-aggression pact. between the paralyzing negotiations while he|North Atlantic partners and the jthen sealing them off with eX-\application of these standards plosives. But it is a long busi-! now depends on whether a proj- jness. ject under federal contract is de- The smell of guerrilla dead en-|clared to be in the general ad- jtombed in the blown tunnels al-jvantage of Canada, In many ready is drifting over the area.icases this was not done | | Scientists Probe Crust Of Earth | OTTAWA (CP) -- Canadian;earth's and American scientists will set! off more than 60 tons of explo- 'sives in Lake Superior during) the next month in an attempt to core below that Is some 2,000 miles in diameter. : The Lake Superior study is be- ing made by the department of}! mines and technical surveys and! deals with tue more dangerous|Warsaw-pact Communist group. home probum of overcoming! Kennedy has already declared the idco.ogital battle with the/himself in favor of such a dec- Communisi Chinese jlaration--a simple declaration Yet despi« the added compli-|0f non-aggression. cations Kacushchev has imposed} y..,, " " with his ismand for a simul- FEAR SOMETHING MORE taneous non - azsression, pact,| , Dut his advisers fear Khrush- , <4 Hy abe ,/Ghev may have something more some West'rn au horities see aj: ; glimmer oi hope that the three-|'" mind, He may. be hoping to power talks opening at Moscow|1s¢, the Hon-ageression vehicle July 15 will produce some for-|', 'ree the Western powers ward motion leading to a par-|/%to full recognition of the East tial agreement to end testing in| German reune oF to revise the the atmosphere, outer space|Status of the Western powers in and under water. West Berlin Their hope is based on a view that the most important crisis Khrushchey had to overcome was the split within Kremlin jin mind, the Moscow talks are doomed to failure. West Germany is opposed to jincreased. recognition of the |fined $200 each. If this is what Khrushchev-has| ------------ to the west. There's enough hardship coming up on King street, I don't think these meters should go." Mr. Pilkey described what he termed "'the great down- town traffic confusion," especially between 5-6 p.m. and on Saturday afternoons. Mr. Brady said money was not yet available for imple- mentation of the one-way traffic recommendations ("Traffic engineers say it will speed up the flow if these meters are removed.") The "No" vote was -- Gifford, Rundle, Down, Murdoch, Walker, Dyer and Dafoe. The "Yes" -- Gay, Brady, Atter- stey, Pilkey, Bint and Branch. Alderman Dafoe broke the tie. WEATHER FORECAST _-- Mainly Sunny Weather Seen ~ | «Forecasts eather office at 5 a.m. EDT:|Hamilton, London, Toronto: ~Synopsis: Cooler air Hudson Bay and Quebec has|day with near seasonal temper- spread southward and westward atures, Winds light. imto Northern Ontario and will) Eastern Lake Ontario, Hali-; dover eastern sections of the|/burton, Georgian Bay, Tima- province this afternoon. The|zami, Cochrane regions, North leading edge of this cooler air|/Bay, Sudbury by the Toronto)Lake Ontario regions, Windsor,| learn the thickness, shape and! jother features of the earth's jcrust below the lake. | The joint project which starts {July 7 forms part of an inter- jnational study of the mantle of}! the earth below the crust. This study--known as the Interna. tional Upper Mantle Project-- istarted in January, 1962, and jcontinues until the end of 1964.) Scientists are studying the mantie because conditions with- jin the earth's thin crust are con-' itrolled from within the mantle Earthquakes, volcanoes and the ~| forces that push up mountains | originate within this part of the | earth, It's also believed that ores jfound in the earth's crust were | pushed up from the mantle and that the mantle can be a source of minerals once those in the icrust are depleted. The crust of the earth has an average depth of some 22 miles.| {Below it lies the mantle which) is about 2,000 miles thick. The) from|Mainiy sunny today and Satur- s (Kitchener .....00 Mount Forest..... Partly cloudy) Will become almost stationary in) and cooler today and Saturday. 'St. a line from cen'ral Lake Ontario Widely scattered showers or dorthward through Muskoka and}thundershowers both days. west of Timmins by this ---- west to northwest. 10 to PE sications are that this cool Algoma, White River regions, q@utbreak will retreat slowly|Sault Ste. Marie: Mainly sunny Gastward toward the Quebec|today and Saturday. Not much! ' porder on Saturday with little| change in temperature. Winds change for the remainder of the' light x . Forecast Temperatures province. < : "Lake St. Clair, Lake Erie, Lows overnight, highs Saturday Niagara, Lake Huron, western|Windsor 82 : bo & Toronto Trenton .. Killaloe .. Muskoka . North Bay. Sudbury . Eariton .... or Sault Ste Marie... Kapuska#ing .. | White "River.. 'Moosonee ......0+« the universities of Toronto,|tanks and that ne was able to Western Ontario, Alberta and Manitoba. The Carnegie Institu. tion of Washington and five U.S. universities make up the Amer- ican contingent. The crust under Lake Superior will be studied by setting off some 60 underwater explosions in the lake: along a line from Michipicoten Island near Wawa, | Ont., to Duluth, Minn. Each charge exploded over this 360 mile distance will be sect off at a depth of 300 fect to minimize the!tween these two Communist/0t Whether it is an indication) gin Canadian operations in the danger to fish Seismic instruments located on land near Wawa and Duluth | | will measure the time taken for) 80 $5 | shock waves to travel through the earth's crust from the site| of each explosion to the record-| ers. With this and other inform. | ation it will be possible to de-| termine the thickness of the| crust under the lake and get al picture of its contours. i Dr. J. H. Hodgson, chief of| the seismology division of the) Dominion Observatory, said) Lake Superior was chosen for! |the study because it is near the) jcentre of the North American| {continent. The features of the! jcrust below the lake would give | iscientists a standard to which) jthey can compare crust depths) 'elsewhere in North America. "A knowledge of the crust is | fundamental for all geophysica!! studies," Dr. Hodgson said.' "Such information will be im. portant in the future for the! mining industry in its search for new ore bodies." The Canadian seismic team, headed by Dr. Gordon West of the University of Toronto, will operate a total-of 50 seismic sta- tions spread along @ 12-mile line. | reassert his power and leader- jEast German Communist gov- jernment and any revision in ship in the Communist party) west Berlin 'status battle last month lcourse, France will support His philosophy of peaceful co-lwest Germany fully, particu: existence with the West appears! i, ji, in view of the 'friendship to have prevailed over the old.) 03 te a n line Stalinist doctrine of world a Soren Son Sree oe emies Conquest by war Thus the Western powers can- SEE NISCIW SHIFT jnot be sure at this point whether lf this is the case, the out iKhrushchey's latest nuclear pro- come of Khrushchev's talks with|Reuncements are designed to) the Chinese may be assessed in|Paralyze the Western front/ terms of a deepening split be-|While he deals with the Chinese camps and a Moscow shift to./he finally is ready to negotiate! wards more productive negotia-/i8_ g00d faith. | And of} ion of Mine, Mi and Smelter \go for armament. | Workers (Ind.), expired in Jan- juary, 1962. Since then, Steel dis- placed Mine-Mill as bargaining . Logger Dispute := "* """""" Investigation | Bootleg Lod g Lodg Said Planned Complaints PORT ARTHUR (CP)--The/ Ontario department of labor an- P nounced Thursday it will open To. e an investigation this month into a labor dispute that resulted in} TORONTO (CP)--Complaints death last February to three|that bootleg tourist lodges are persons near Kapuskasing, Ont.|/being operated in Ontario by The announcement was made|Americans are being investi- in Toronto but relayed here by|gated by the province's travel telephone to delegates attending/and publicity department. the annual convention of the On-| But spokesmen for tourist or- tario provincial council of the ganizations hold . conflicting United Brotherhood of Carpen-| views as to the extent and-the ters and Joiners of Americaieffect of any violations of the (CI£L). jlaw governing the licensing of A spokesman for the group/holiday accommodations. said the announcement was re-| Travel Minister Cathcart or- layed by the union's legal coun-|dered an investigation after of- sel in Toronto following anjficials of the Northern Ontario emergency resolution adopted|Tourist Outfitters' Association OTTAWA (CP)--The defente \department is studiyng a num- jber of possible alternatives to a |$374,000,000 program to build jeight frigates, it was learned | Thursday. These alternatives include: 1. Construction of nuclear sub- marines in Canada. 2. Purchase of conventional submarines from Britain or their construction in Canada. - 3. Use of anti-submarine hy-' drofoil boats, A $9,100,000 con- tract has been awarded to de Havilland Aircraft of Canada Limited for development of a hydrofoil prototype. Develop- ment is expected to take two years and sea trials another year. : : 4. Production of more long. ~ range anti - submarine planes such as the Argus patrol plane in current RCAF use. Defence Minister Hellyer has indicated he may be forced to scrap the frigate program, inl- tiated by the previous Consérv- ative government, *o give him- self financial room to man-. oeuvre in the choice of new weapons, here "demanding the minister|charged that United States resi- of labor act immediately to im-|dents are evading the licensing) plement a promise made April/requirements by having Paying) 10, 1963." jcustomers pose as friends. Asso.| _ The spokesman said the inves-/ ciation Secretary-Manager Rob-| tigation promised by Premiierjert Giles of French River said John Robarts and Labor Minis | this "must be costing the econ- ter Leslie Rowntree is sched-|omy hundreds of thousands of! uled for July 30-31. idoliars annually," In addition to the fatal shoot-| (The Canadian Press on June ing of three persons, the Kapus-/30 erroneously attributed this| kasing strike also resulted in/estimate to Mr. Cathcart.) | eight persons being wounded,|. Marcel Bellehumeur of Pene-) 187 persons jailed and 138 found|tanguishene, president of the! guilty of unlawful assembly and|Huronia Tourist Association in| ; the Georgian Bay-Lake Simcoe-| --iCouchiching area, said the} jcharge of heavy losses caused! by unlicensed Americans was sabotage of the tourist industry. | He said there might be a jhandful of U.S. citizens renting TORONTO (CP)--Representa-|accommodations without li- tives of the Peugeot Automobile|cences but people in the tourist |Co. of France opened discus-jbusiness had enough to do jsions here Thursday with offi-/"'without starting to brand) i Peugeot May Set Up Plant In Ont. development department on the tax evader. KNIGHTS NO MORE WORCESTER, England (CP) --The romantic imege of tramps as "knights of the road" has been shattered by this city's health inspector. He says that instead of walking 15 or 20° miles a day, the modern tramp -- hitchhikes in trucks. SHES MORTGAGES Ample Funds for 1st MORTGAGES 2nd MORTGAGES We Also Purchase Ist and 2nd Mortgeges N.H.A, LOANS ARRANGED cials of Ontario's economics and|Americans as bootleggers and| S. | CLEAN YOUR FURNACE} TODAY FREE TO CUSTOMERS cau PERRY 723-3443 DAY OR NIGHT possibilities of setting up manu-| facturing operations in Ontario.) Similar discussions have al. ready been held with Quebec government officials. If a suitable arrangement can be made, the company will be- | spring of 1964. You Will Fi se SCHOFIELD-AKER Limited 723-2265 -- 728-3376 After Hours 728-3376 = HES ee tions with the West in areas} The July 15 Moscow talks,| where the alternative may be/CoMing on the heels of Soviet an open clash y talks with the Chinese, may The contest between the U.S./Provide the necessary -- clues and Russia in nuclear testing|Meanwhile, it is apparent there is such an area. President Ken.|4T¢ changes in Moscow winds nedy has warned this may be|a"d the element of change may the year of decision -- either|De beneficial to the West. NEW ADDING agreement on a ban is A or world competition in nuclear) weaponry may spiral endless'y, To hove thot carpet or chest- adding to the possibility of ac- cidental war while contamina- erfield cleaned professionally in Oshawa's Original Carpet tion from nuclear debris in-| Cleaning Centre . . . where fi) creases Khrushchey now appears| tully gueranteed sotisfoction is §) ossured. Phone 728-4681 NU-WAY RUG CO. LTD. 174 MARY ST. CALL OR SEE DIXON'S FOR OIL FURNACES SERVING OSHAWA OVER $0 YEARS 24-HOUR SERVICE 313 ALBERT ST. 723-4663 : i] il w SMITH CORONA -- 10 KEY -- @ 22 Machines In This Group ®@ All have direct subtraction -- All but three have credit belance -- Some with memory rece key and automatic stepover. CAPACITIES TO 13 FIGURES Values To Values To Hand Operation Electric Operation 169.00 3" 399.00 25 (OFFICE SUPPLY DIVISION) 64 CELINA OSHAWA ummer Clearance | MACHINES & 1 YEAR GUARANTEE -- TERMS -- TRADE-INS ACCEPTED GENERAL PRINTERS LIMITED TOTALIA ~~ 114.50 .. 129.50 224.50 .. 264.00 PHONE 723-7733

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