Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 2 May 1966, p. 2

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YB THE OSHAWA TIMES, Mondey, Mey 2, 1966 SILHOUETTE IN STEEL The columns of a distilla- tion plant are silhouetted 'against the setting sun. The IN NORTH VIET NAM SUNDAY U.S. Jets Pummel nti- Missile Sites From Reuters-AP SAIGON (CP)--U.S. Navy jet bombers destroyed a Russian- supplied anti - aircraft missile site in North Viet Nam Sunday after it launched a missile at them and missed, a U.S. mili- tary spokesman said today, The bomber hit the site, lo- cated about 34 miles northwest of the port of Vinh, with radio- guided Bullpup air-to-surface missiles and 500- and 1,000- pound bombs. American planes flew more than 300 sorties against sus- pected Communist targets in South Viet Nam, For the second day in a row B-52s pounded Some Signs Hesitancy Noted - DBS | By JAMES NELSON | OTTAWA (CP)--Some signs of hesitancy have shown up in plant is part of a Shell Can- ada complex in Montreal East. -- Prince Friedrich Dies Body Found In Rhine 'BINGEN, West Germany (Reuters)--Mystery today sur- ded the death of Prince ledrich of Prussia, 54-year- the latest Dominio Bureau of Statistics reports on the backlog of unfilled orders for Canadian manufacturers. The figures on unfilled orders are a principal indicator of what levels of business consider the prospects for the next few months, They indicate both longer term demand and an eagerness ury hotel--where the prince was last seen alive April 19. The head of the House of Viet Cong troop areas near the;Lodge but praising American Cambodian border. assistance to the war effort. U.S. spokesmen reported the) The Catholics repeated a KEATE NAMED CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 the president of the CBC has met our request for a full-scale review of the case... by disinterested third' party." The CBC said there is an "'ur- gent need for clarification of the points of difference between the parties. REJECTED OTHERS In an interview Mr. Keate said he understood management and producers agreed upon him loss of two more planes over North Viet Nam, raising the total shot down there to 227, but the pilots of both were rescued by helicopters. CREDITS AIR EFFORT A U.S. spokesman claimed the lull in the ground war, now in third week, was the result of crippling blows to the Viet Cong supply lines, forcing them to scale down their military effort. About 5,000 Roman Catholics demonstrated in the suburb of Hoc Mon, 10 miles northwdst of Saigon, demanding the ouster of charge that Lodge favors the Buddhists over the Catholics, a charge dating from the over- throw of President Ngo Dinh Diem, a Catholic, in November, 1963, Elsewhere in Saigon, someone hurled a grenade through a win- dow of the home of a pro-West- ern union leader, and injured him and four members of his family. Shooting broke out in Da Nang when a jeepload of gov- ernment troops halted a crowd trying to march on the centre U.S. Ambassador Henry Cabot!of town. Chaos, Despair Seen In South By ANDREW BOROWIEC j|without impact on the rest. A SAIGON (AP)--'There is no|simmering revolt of the Mon- | Viet Nam south of the 17th|tagnard tribesmen openly defies parallel," said the highly placed|the central government. Western diplomat, "There is} The Roman. Catholics, about only chaos, despair and unend-| 45 per cent of South Viet Nam's ing struggle." 15,000,000 people, are ready to "a ig orev Hye appraisal defend their rights. jof the situation in Sou MS ws [Nam clashed with the official| mar ine intlucnce of the Saibon United States line but coincided} .,; A re ' lowe 'ol h military regime extends little pec the views By many other) beyond the capital. Even in Sal- diplomats and observers. gon's Chinese suburb of Cholon, "South Viet Nam today is not) > enades are reported made for| a country," he said. 'It: is 8| terrorism. | group of feuding religious) ' ; | Mortar shells have been § lords, of : ries, At Gariens. ATION, o lobbed into the crowded Tan | | | after either one side or the other had rejected other names on a list, It had been suggested he was acceptable to both be- cause he had worked on the cre- ative side of newspapers before going into administration. Mr. Keate said he thinks the dispute involves a "breakdown of communications" between management and producers. He said he does not expect the review will focus on any single issue such as the Watson- LaPierre said, though this was bound to enter the discussions. _ Last week, before the prime minister intervened, 'producers were insisting on suspension of the decision on Mr. Watson and Mr. LaPierre pending an inquiry before they would suspend the strike deadline. Mr. Ouimet of- fered an internal inquiry into grievances but vetoed a re- opening of the particular case. Public statements by the two parties following Mr. Keate's appointment did not indicate where. this issue now stands. KEPT BUSY FLYING Mr. Keate crossed the con- tinent by air twice during the weekend, and wiil head west Tuesday night for a speaking engagement in San Francisco. He will return to Ottawa Thurs- day. He left Vancouver for Ottawa on only five hours sleep after rising at 9 a.m. EDT--"that's 6 a.m. in Vancouver"--to tele- phone the prime minister Sun- Hohenzollern, Prince Louis Fer- to buy now in anticipation of generals refusing to obey the| Son Nhut air base iust outside old grandson. of Germany's last/dinand, brother cf the dead kaiser, whose body was fished) man and now the last survivor otit of the Rhine Sunday almost/of Kaiser Wilhelm's four grand- two weeks after he disappeared.|sons, declined to comment on 'Police were unable to estab-/Prince Friedrich's death. lish the cause of death and) Lady Guinness and the prince planned to move the body today|were married in 1945 and had te Mainz, where the public pros-|three sons and two daughters. ecutor will decide whether to! Prince Ferdinand spent most erder an autopsy. |of the last 30 years in Britain. (The Associated Press quoted| He was the fourth son of Crown German authorities as saying! Prince Friedrich Wilhelm and a suicide is indicated but the|great-great grandson of Brit- ehief prosecutor in charge of|ain's Queen Victoria. | the investigation, Hans Klein, said: "There is no definite evi- dence. The official cause of the death has yet to be deter- mined."') The prince's body gras spotted| inthe water early Sunday, only two days before a divorce ac- tion by his British wife, Lady Guinness, was du2 to be heard before a court in Frankfurt. The prince left Germany in 1937 to study at Cambridge Uni- versity in England. At the out- higher prices for goods in fu- ture. The yearly trend line of un- filled orders has been rising more sharply in the past two years than in the earlier years, since 1961, in the current busi- ness boom. There was some hesitation last spring when the line turned down at mid-year, but it resumed its strong up- trend later in the year. Now, for January and Febru- ary, the line has become flatter. But ecohomists here don't see this as a particular danger sign for the fiture*of the economy. break of the Second World War he refused to return to Ger- many. During the war he was in- terned by the British, and spent| important factor in discouraging! p the last two years of the con-|n€w orders. flict working on a farm, He married the Guinness heiress in| With industry generally working at capacity, the time is length- ening between the placing of orders and delivery. This is an| PROVOKE HESITATION | orders of Saigon, of entire areas} junder Communist control, of political parties and groupings none of which can exercise a determining influence. "Only the presence of Ameri- cans hold it together. "The United States must re- main here. How and for how long, I don't know. But its de- |parture from here would mean jan immediate disaster." U.S, planners are hopeful that South Viet Nam can be forged Saigon from villages controlled by the Viet Cong. On the outskirts of the capital, from which the U.S. war effort in Viet Nam is directed, guer- rilla roadblocks freely check cars and buses. | Keate Granted Absence Leave _|ready in bed. day morning, There was a message for him from the prime miuaister's office waiting for him when he ar- rived home Saturday night from another speaking engagement in Boston, He called, but was informed Mr. Pearson was al- He expects to hold no public hearings and to call no wit- nesses because his work is in- formal and not an inquiry com- mission. And he hopes to com- |plete his task in about two 30,000 Students Return To Classes QUEBEC (CP)-Thirty thou- sand students returned to classes in government + run schools throughout the province today, ending an unscheduled three-week holiday that began April 12 when their 2,300 teach- ers went on strike. In. announcing settlement of the strike, Education Minister Paul Gerin-Lajoie said Saturday that though most students should be able to make up for lost time, 10-to-20 per cent of them may have abandoned their courses at the teacher-training, vocational and agricul- tural schools as a result of the Mr. Gerin-Lajole had said learlier that the government was idetermined act to yield te the Ceierms Bt o-o teachers on these two points and after negotiations through last Friday night and Saturday. the union members conceded and agreed to return to work, accepting the fact that the prov- ince will continue legal action -- 13 of its leaders. e court proceedings began after the union--an affiliate of the Quebec-based Confederation of National Trade Unions--con- tinued the strike in defiance of an interim injunction April 13 Formal signing of the new contract is scheduled for Tues- dey. ° Though the government and union representatives had agreed to a contract April 27, the strike dragged on until Sat- urday because of teachers' de- mands that the government drop legal proceedings against the leaders of their union, Le Syndicat des Professeurs de Etat du Quebec (the Quebec government teachers' union), and that it pay them for all but seven days they have been on strike. strike. declaring it illegal. Breakaway Talks Slated To Start By COLIN FROST LONDON (AP) -- A small group of Rhodesian officials is expected in London Tuesday to open informal talks on settling the breakaway colony's future, political sources said today. Once first soundings have been made, they added, the talks can be expected to switch to Salisbury, the Rhodesian cap- ital, or perhaps to neutral ground, If they make progress, and commentators can detect little optimism on either side, they logically would lead to a confer- ence to rewrite the Rhodesian constitution and couple inde- pendence with guarantees for Negro advancement, British government officials declined all comment on the im- minent arrival. This was in line with Prime Minister Wilson's declared aim to keep the early contacts as much out of the | progress toward eventual major- ity rule for Rhodesia's 4,000,000 Negroes. --Guarantees against ret ro- gressive amendment of the agreed constitution. --An immediate improvement in the political status of Negroes whose voting rights now are British side almost certainly closely restricted. will include Oliver Wright, for- eign affairs adviser in Wilson's| --Progress toward ending ra- secretariat, and Duncan Watson/cial discrimination socially and of the Commonwealth relations| economically. office, Bria must be satisfied Both men played key roles if|that the basis proposed for in- the hush-hush bargaining which| dependence is acceptable to both last week produced surprise|NXEGROES AND WHITES. agreement to get talks moving--| ~-Guarantees against oppres- the first step toward settlement|sion for the 250,000 whites who since Rhodesia seized independ-|now hold power. ence from British authority last Nov. 11. | TALK ABOUT TALKS Officially the talks are de- signed to discover if a basis can be found for negotiation -- in other words, they are talks| about talks. | And the British, anxious to avert African suspicions that they are knuckling under to the! Rhodesian regime's demands, | insist that they stand by the six| principles for Rhodesian inde-| pendence laid down by Wilson. | | | 1 HEAT WITH OIL DIXON'S OIL 313 ALBERT ST. 24-HOUR SERVICE 723-4663 spotlight as possible. But informed sources said the} SERVING OSHAWA OVER These are: | 50 YEARS --A guarantee of unimpeded! Non - Confidence | Now THAT You've Motions Loom politically in elections promised} WINNIPEG (CP) Stuart this summer. Most other diplo-|Keate has been granted leave mats and observers believe that|of absence as publisher of the elections are not possible in this} Vancouver Sun while he is oc- nation at war--and that a valid|cupied as federal government| p; weeks. OTTAWA (CP)--The. life of Mr. Keate is a member of the the minority Liberal govern- Canada Council and honorary! on the line to- president of The Canadian -- vote could not result. mediator in the CBC Seven The country has. more than 70|Days dispute, it was announced | Olitical parties, none of them) today, large enough to take a deter-| R. S. Malone, general man- ress. Bar Adjourns --. |two-day supply debate. | opportunity to introduce non- }eonfidence motions on any is- . day as the Commons opens a Opposition MPs will have an| mined lead. The Buddhists, often jager of FP Publications Ltd. de-|and executive vice-president of | Wagner Hearing sue they choose. The Liberals are. two seats short of a ma- |DECIDED TO DANCE... LEARN ALL THE NEW STEPS... Brush Up On The Old Favorites T Your . ARTHUR MURRAY FRANCHISED STUDIO MONTREAL (CP)--The coun-| "The World's Finest... by Reputation" W. Marks, Licensee, 11% Simcoe §, Open 1 to 10 p.m. Daily For Information Cell 728-1681 NOW... Is the time te switch . . . It's that time ef the year when interest ig paid en sevings eccounts .. . THE PERFECT TIME TO SWITCH UP... 4%.% on SAVINGS 4% on CHEQUING 6% on 1 to § year G.I.C.'s 7% yield per annum en 10 year ACCUMLATING G.I.C.'s The body was identified by a is | police sergeant who knew the prince and a member of the staff of Rheinhartshausen Castle--a former Hohenzollern residence converted into a lux- scribed as one of the strongest|The Sun, said Mr. Keate political forces, are divided into|temporarily relinquishing hi s|¢l! hee. three main quarrelling factions.|publisher's duties 'in order is ation has adjourned until Se-| Soci cai aoe Aye mae The Hoa Hao and Cao Dail/ensure full freedom of editorial|tember its consideration of a ee ill dis religious sects also demand in-|comment and reporting of the|complaint against Justice Min-| Wednesday essa go fy faa fluence, but they are limited to/current CBC controversy by the|ister Claude Wagner of Quebec. | CUS® the bad age an gg et two small regions of the country' Vancouver Sun." The complaint was filed Fri. | toral map for Manitoba. Objec- n i a ---- |day by Judge Jean-Paul Berube|tions to the electoral maps of |of Riviere du Loup, Que., who eight other provinces were aired |said Mr, Wagner had infringed |i ® three-day debate last week. jon a bylaw of the bar in a| A total of 27 petitions signed | speech last Oct. 10, by 158 MPs were submitted to Mr. Wagner appeared at ajthe Speaker, covering every Randall Requests Women To Buy Canadian Goods | five-hour hearing Friday held|province except Newfoundland. by the committee on the com-| After the debate ends Wed- TORONTO (CP) -- More than|would like to see in household|plaint. The hearing was con-| nesday, the Speaker must refer | con-| #ppliances. He said that too| ducted in private and no state-|the stenographic record to the often manufacturers don't know| ment was issued, /10 non - political commissions | And though official statistics) 1945. They had a farm in Hert: | don't yet show the fact, further -- and an apartment in| hesitation is being inspired by . government fiscal policy. Fi- i gg Ray on tye teat ge nance Minister Sharp's March Gert ip cater ssion 29 budget proposed a five-per- erman subject. cent refundable tax on corpora- tion cash profits, which be- comes effective this week. First payments are due at the end of this month. Shipments of all manufactur- ing industries were valued at | $31,560,057,000 in 1964, and at) NEW DELHI (Reuters)--Can-jSingh over the charge, con-|$°4:079,802,000 last year. tained in a ministry report pub-|_,At the end of 1963, the value eg has rejected a charge by it dalliiod art Nesatod Indian government that it!lished in March. Ree aes dee eee ne CeLALOG 606 women who attended a Michener told Swaran Singh|** SEATS O.ON, taking tate ac- was slow in fulfilling its aid) | commitments to india last| hi k count seasonal variations. Ajference sponsored by the wom-| 14.01 the consumer wanis, Th / year, a Canadian high eR baeelap ls gah 32,725 Peigatl this figure was'en's advisory committee, On-| "Food is our best buy," R. E. tion ly je Uae Ol teeitte oe federal Honan | not the donor country. Singh|*72/79'400,000, and at the end of|tario department of economics|Goodin of the Ontario Food|formation on a judicial report cil of the Montreal Bar Associ-|SFty but are virtually assured | Charges By India Denied On Commitments Delay sion spokesman said here to-| | day. promised to look into the mat: Teaak cit Un ele fig and development, were urged|Council said. 'The average|on grounds that this would be e - an insult to the dignity of the le said C i . ; R | Thurs madian. i i mioer ind M che nes|anig,+ "on? "OMTMEY ae the Sensnay-aioaed | ane J. Rana ccmomicy penis tuto ay We ot ged a verbal protest with Ex-| i ; nd development minister, said|wor hi ire-| . Ww i , et Se Mie Ab Ceadian arts cme nd of Suman an Fetus agement, en orig oe fod, reqle |r. Ware, i peck ~~ | $66,000,900 in food aid for the|to $3,246,200,000 and $3,275,300,- representing 32 per cent of the/three days out of five." er. a a ju- 0 icial case which, he said, Smith Seen ;coming year in the form of| 000. labor force. However, Mr. Goodin urged ieee "ewe Hsin ww ore | ; | wha wheat shipments and the can-| A t ; 'an.| . Designer Sid Bersudsky urged|housewives to give more time ' \ | collation of debt veensineeis. # to actual shipments, Can the women to get in touch with|to their shopping lists, "care-| fessional ethics." c ™ He said the case occurred last WASHINGTON (AP)--Rhode- jada' f s wi i | | India's Plannin g Minister ae SORA auIrees als winter | manufacturers to let them know fully checking prices and buy- sia's Prime Minister Ian Smith has belittled the effect of a Brit- ish blockade of his country and Pa eos exercise a lot stronger than we 'went into it." Smith, in a copyrighted inter- view in U.S. News and World Report, says a number of rea- sons make him confident his government can survive the British campaign. "You see, inherently we have @ very good country here," he said when questioned at Salis- bury, Rhodesia. "It produces lots of things that are in de- mand in the rest of the world and there are people who have built up trading relations with us, who like the quality of the things that we produce; the price is right and so they are| not going to be easily devi- ated o Smith, who contended 'there are a lot more people in the world than appears on the sur- face who are actually sympa- thetic with what we are doing," admitted the British sanctions have affected his country's econ- omy. "But in the long run these shortages and these embarrass- ments are going to strengthen our economy, and hence the country... ." gave "wa will come 5 | North Oshawa Neighbor- hood Association hold their weekly euchres on Tuesday evening at 8.00 p.m. The win- ners for the month of April areas follows: Mr. Norm Gimblett, Mrs. Elsie Gatch- ~ lagen tain | Asoka Mehta, who arrived in | Ottawa Sunday for talks with |\the Canadian government, will jalso receive a promise of a further $40,000,000 development aid to be supplicd by Canada through the Aid India consort- 7 in production that usually ap- pears in the monthly figures. Despite the strong upward trend over the whole of this ex- pansionary period, now in its sixth year, there were slumps in manufacturers' s hip ments during ihe iast two or three ~|months of each year t design improvements they |WEATHER FORECAST jing more in bulk," | Cool And Mainly Sunny | But while this seasonal trend |did appear in December, 1965, it was a shallow dip. Mrs. Wallace Seeks Offi | oo XE von kum 1. Chustist's pa Wallace wins the Demo-| . cratic nomination Tuesday in| C d ti ondition * s Amanda (Ma) Ferguson of Critical jher hssband, Gov. George C. Alabama she'll be on her way| Texas, the only two women MINNEAPOLIS (AP) Nick Wallace, barred by law from pattern set by Nellie Tayloe Ross of Wyoming and Miriam United States. ; j Mrs. Wallace is a stand-in for after 'a sudden equipment fail- 000 feet from his high-altitude balloon, was flown to Minnea jure forced him to parachute 57,-| | | Cloudiness Due Tonight | TORONTO (CP) -- Forecasts|White River: Sunny and cool to-| issued by the weather office at|day clouding over this afternoon 5:30 a.m.: or evening with a period of rain Synopsis: Cool mainly sunny|°r snow. Variable cloudiness jweather is forecast for most|tonight. Tuesday cloudy with oc- |areas today as a high pressure|aSional showers. Celd, Winds |area continues to move slowly|northwest 15 becoming light this| jeastward across the province, | afternoon. A small disturbance west of the \Great Lakes early today is ex-| pected to bring cloudy skies to) most of the forecast regions to-| night and a few. showers or melting snowflurries to central and Northern Ontario, : Mount Forest ..... Lake St. Clair, Lake Erie, | Wingham RR Niagara, Lake Huron, Georgian || Forecast temperatures | Low tonight, high Tuesday Windsor .. 8 55 St. Thomas 52 |LONdON ....cceeeee Kitchener ......66 | | June but he did not say where or in what court and he gave no names. The association could dismiss the complaint or it could repri- mand Mr. Wagner. If the sec- ond course were adopted, the | justice minister could appeal to jthe general council of the bar | of Quebec. MANY SEE PAST More than 8,000,000 people visit Romania's 200 museums annually, { City-Wide Delivery MITCHELL'S DRUGS Simcoe N. 723-3431 4 IGHLY -RECOMMEN Che Rib Room NOW OPEN SUNDAY 4 TO 7.30 P.M. toward following the petticoat | ever elected gove ; i governor in the! piantanida, in critical condition another term, Their husband-| }Hamilton .... P-'Bay, Haliburton, Killaloe, Wind- , DED sec jond term in 1932 and being de-} ; ; |feated for the last time in 1940, |Cuntry's few hypoberic cham-| | olis today for treatment in a and-wife , in- ife team effort is remin hospital oxygen pressure cham- ber. iscent of a 1924 Democratic! campaign in Texas. "Two governors for the price of one' was Ma and Pa Fergus- |. ; 5 ons' campaign slogan then. into his radio transmitter James E. Ferguson had been aboard the balloon gondola. governor and his wife, 49, made|1"e" he was parachuted to no pretence that he wouldn't be |°2' near Worthington, Minn., helping to run things if she got Sunday and was taken uncons- elected. She became governor °19US from the open gondola, Jan. 20, 1925, A He was transferred this morn- The Ferguson team ran again ing from a Worthington hospital and again, Ma winning a ., {to Hennepin County General |Hospital, which has one of the Piantantda, his oxygen cut off, managed to gasp "emergency!" On Jan. 5, 1925--15 days be-|bers. The pressure device fore Ma first took office--Nellie floods the body with oxygen and Tayloe Ross, 45, became gov-| has been successful, among ell, Mrs. Carrie McLean, Mr. | ernor of Wyoming, first siate to other things, in treatment give women the vote. sor, London, Toronto, Hamilton: |St, Catharines |Toronto .... Continental French Buffet of | gangrene and severe frostbite. | Sunny and continuing cool to-| Peterborough ...+< jday. Considerable cloudiness to-|Kingston .....ssee night. Clearing again late morn-|Trenton .......006 ing or afternoon Tuesday. Winds Kijjaloe .......+++ . |Muskoka .sseceeee Timagami, Cochrane, North|North Bay .......+ Served Daily 11:30 - 2 p.m. -- 5 te 8 p.m. GENOSHA HOTEL Bay, Sudbury: Sunny and con-|Sudbury .......... tinuing cool today clouding over|Farlton .........66 \towards evening with a period|Sault Ste. Marie .. of snow or a few snowflurries|Kapuskasing ..... jtonight. Variable cloudiness} White River ...... Tuesday. Winds light. |Moosonee ....+e0 THE ULTIMATE IN Algoma, Sault Ste. Marie,|Timmins | LUXURY LIVING! Adult Building Central Location Prestige Address Distinction Beyond Compare Longer CONVENIENT HOURS @ 9 A.M, te 6 P.M. Mon. te Thurs, @ 9 A.M, te 9 P.M, Fri, @ 9 AM, te B P.M, Set. SWITCH UP... =] Central Ontario Trust & Savings Corporation Heed Office: 19 Simece St. N. OSHAWA, 723-5221 "wun 23 King St. W. BOWMANVILLE 623-2527 YOU ARE NOT OLD WHEN YOU ARE HEALTHY Only @ few generations ago almost everyone was old at 40. People who hed a fiftieth birthday were consid- ered fortunate. Meny of them had insurable pains and aches. Few enjeyed geod health. New, with greater medical knowledge we have medi- cines thet perform seeming miracles. There are few diseases that do not respond favorably to treatment. Drugs cen usually be depended upon te produce @ desired benefit. People con be immunized against form- er killers. We carefully read and study oll information about new drugs and add them to our stock as soon as they ere ilable. Your physician can p ib dici which will keep you young for @ longer time. YOUR DOCTOR CAN PHONE US when you need « medicine. Pick up your p iption if shopping by, or we will deliver promptly without extra charge. A great many entrust us with their prescriptions. May we compound yours? EASTVIEW PHARMACY Up to that moment Mrs. Ross; Doctors were uncertain, how- | |had been only a mother of three |¢V@"». how much the chamber boys, taking no part in politics, | would aid the 33-year-old Brick Then her husband, Gov. wil-|!own, N.J., balloonist. |liam Bradford Ross, died in of-| ee |fice and the Democratic state! |convention nominated her to| §. Burnett, Mr. C. Pascoe, | Mrs, E. Byam, Mrs. FE. Mac- chi, Mrs. FE. Moth, Mrs. L. Wright, Mrs. D. Brock, Mrs, J. Waldinsperer, Mrs. S. Wil- liams, Mr. F. Williams. . Mr. Williams won the monthly Underground and Level Parking 573 King Street East Oshawa PHONE 725-3594 Fast --- Free ----- Motorized Delivery ALCAN Furniture & Appliances 452 Simcoe St. S. 723-0011 By Appointment Only 723-1712 -- 728-2911 Russell C. Honey, MP for | Durham Riding, expects to | prize. The North Oshawa Osh- awa Community Centre is Jo- cated on the Nonquon road, directly across from Wellman idirector ef the U.S. Mint, - jserve the remainder of the term Defeated for re-election, she later became the first woman return to Ottawa May 9, Mr. resting at his home in Port | Hope, Honey underwent surgery al few weeks ago and has been | Oshawa's New Furniture and Appliance Store feot- uring Admiral .T.V., Zenith, Top Service and many top lines of furniture and appliances. G@ORGIAN hy TRansions 124 PARK ROAD NORTH, OSHAWA P. B. Francis, Phm.B, -- J. R. Steffen, B.Sc. Phm.

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