| 'HE TIME ALL f It! 24 hour ser- fispatched trucks serve you. Plan Available $ EXPERIENCE 3 LIN St. W. . King 10 New Official CANADIAN FLAG 26"x72" nena / Sun-Rite UNGLASSES Values from 69c to 8.98 jo OFF! NEW DAWN light'er blonde , 1.99 E'S 1 Rd. North | and 2 sIMCOE AACY St. North 418 | nial plaque, a fireworks display, t by the Grey and Simcoe For- (i RECALLS OLD DAYS 2,000 Quebecers Deprived Of Provincial Franchise QUEBEC toral riding. (CP)--The Labra-|most of the vast northern terri-|is not yet in a provincial elec- i i i dor boundary dispute between|tory of New Quebec, pad ? New Quebec without including Quebec and Newfoundland has|known as Ungava. been depriving about 2,000 Que- becers of a provincial franchise. Y are not yet repre-jvalid the Britich 7 @ Quebec legislature.'decision of 1927, awarding New-'that, contrary to specific re- Several have complained to |foundland the tax appeal board of taxation|miles of Labrador wilderness. without representation while the government works out a solu-jestablished a four-man commis- tion a sensitive situation. UNDERMINE CLAIM An official disclosed that if|jand, Quebec created a new riding in is Henri Dorion, a geographer Privy Council decision is legally Quebec does not _ accept invalid, the 110,000 square;quirements of the British North America Act, Quebec was not Premier Daniel Johnson has|represented in the case. Several alternatives are being sion to examine the "'territorial|/studied. Among them is the pos- integrity' of Quebec, particu-jsibility of extending the areas larly the border'with Newfound-|around Schefferville and Fort Chimo, where the right to vote Chairman of the commission|was extended in 1960. These two outposts, hundreds Labrador the move would tend|from Laval University who ar-|of miles Stitt, has been at- They can vote federally in\to undermine Quebec's claim on * These people, except for res-|the riding of Saguenay Ar aicithe disputed boundary. gued in a 1963 book that the|tached to the provincial riding idents of Schefferville and Fort|though they pay taxes to the Involved are whites, Indians|Chimo, cannot vote in provincial] province the: and Eskimos of voting age injelections because their territory'sented in th ~wiessis, Ccenuted at Sept. Iles on the north shore of the Burden of his contention is|St. Lawrence River. THE OSHAWA TIMES, Wednesday, May 17, 1967 13 the age of 18 and eligible to vote numbered 338 at Fort! Chimo and 1,649 at Scheffer-| Henri Coiteux, a Liberal. UNDER THEIR NOSES LONDON (AP) -- Recantur- ing Anthony Smithers, 20-year-| {to 10 a.m. SUPPERTIME KILLS REGINA (CP) -- Police de % ville. Member for Duplessis jg| Patient figures show that Sate lurday is the most dangerous day of the week to drive. There jwere 820 accidents in Regina on |Saturdays in 1966, compared jwith 725 on Fridays and 509 on old abscondee from a juvenile/Tuesdays. Most accidents oce werner was a snap. Police|curred between 5 and 6 p.m. recognized him at work as alwhile the safest period was 9. In the 1966 election those overilaborer in Scotland Yard. " . CHAIRMAN Steve Nimigon was elect- ed chairman of the Top GM Bargaining Committee at recent elections for Local 222, UAW-CLC. Orillia Now Lively Town Of 20,000 ORILLIA (CP) -- This lively town of 20,000. is getting the centennial jump on other parts of Canada. On: Saturday it bounces into its second century six weeks ahead of Canada's principal cen- tennial celebrations July 1. An imaginative observance, scheduled then, may give the whole country some indication of things to come. Bustling Orillia no longer is the sleepy Mariposa of humor- ist Stephen Leacock's Sunshine Sketches of a Little Town. "The future looks bright," Says Orillia's second woman mayor, Isabel Post, who has presided over part of the town's progress from an agricultural centre to an industrial hub. She has been attending cen- tennial events since last fall in a dress she had made in the style of the 1800s. She will be wearing it again this Saturday when the town starts whooping it up in the big- est community celebration in its history. TO CLOSE MAIN STREET A crowd of 35,000 is expected to join in the May 20 celebra- tions, when the main street will "be closed to auto traffic and a / farmer's market will be set up. A centennial parade is to fea- ture more than 100 floats. There will be a centennial baby con- test, a beard-growing competi- tion, the unveiling of a centen- a showing of period uniforms esters and a centennial costume ball. And 5,000 will get a slice of a giant ice - cream birthday cake donated to the town. One Orillian who in a way signifies the change that has come over the town is William Jarratt, who at the age of 101 can remember Sir John A, Mac- donald, Canada's first prime minister, speaking from a pub- lic platform here. . Mr. Jarratt seems a symbol of the farming era which ex- isted so long. He was born in nearby Jarratt, named after his family, and operated a farm there until he became ill sey- eral years ago. He can recall the hard-drink- ing days of the last century when Orillia was barely out of | frontier life. Roads into what now is the resort. centre of Muskoka had just begun to push into the bush in the 1860s. A lumber boom was on and the newly - inconporated village of 1,000 persons on 400 acres sat next to an Indian reserve. The. principal means of trans- portation to Orillia was by steamboat. It was by boat on July 1, 1867, that William Sword Frost, father of former premier Leslie M. Frost, arrived here. He was later to become mayor. In the first 100 years, Orillia gradually lost its lumbering in- dustry and has become instead a "steel town' with most of its large industries being foundries. A temperance movement chased the taverns out of town in 1908 and kept them out until last month when the town voted to allow cocktail bars and din- ing lounges. When these come in in July they will be the first in 50 years. New International Structure Asked MONTREAL (CP)-- Philippe de Seynes, United Nations un- dersecretary for economic and social affairs Monday called for establishment of new interna- tional structures to help spread wealth and technological know- how more equally among devel- oped and underdeveloped coun- tries. Speaking to 1,500 delegates at- tending the 2Ist International Chamber of Commerce con- gress, Mr. de Seynes warned that action by individual pri- vate enterprises "however en- lightened and generous" is un- likely. to produce "an accept- able international. order." "There is little hope of im- proving the level of the under- developed countries unless we can establish a whole network of consultations, mutual com- mitments and international sur- veillance," he said, Fit, We On Me We OE en Wy OL OS ODS X\ FORA WONDERFUL \ {WORLD'S FAIR. VISIT QUEBEC PAVILION i fora, ful world of fair prices visit -yourAP store What are fair prices? To us, at AGP, fair prices are more than just a few advertised specials each week. After all, what good are the specials, if you have to pay more for other items you buy? What you need is a lower total food bill. And we try to give it to you with the lowest possible prices on scores and scores of items every shopping day. Sounds fair. Doesn't it? y SUPER-RIGHT QUALITY -- READY TO SERVE SMOKED, COOKED HAMS WHOLE HAMS SHANK PORTION | BUTT PORTION '59: FULL CUT HALF HAMS -- NO CENTRE SLICES REMOVED AVAILABLE AT SLIGHTLY HIGHER RETAILS 14 TO 26-488 »Y AC NO ADDITIONAL PROCESSING AT THIS LOW PRICE, PLEASE SX or BURNS 2-LB PKG IENERS OR STEAKS IDEAL FOR BARBECUING CENTRE CUTS id A&P's OWN SUPER-RIGHT BRAND OVEN-READY EVISCERATED J ™ 89: CANADA, GRADE "A" Canada "Grade "A" Eviscerated FRESH KILLED COTTAGE TURKEYS «= (45: ROLLS Sweet Pickled, Vae Pac, Halves 9: 8X Brand Maple Leaf CANNED HAM %-b%1.79 SAUSAGE MEAT $X Brand Shopsy CANNED HAM +»%3.39 POTATO SALAD 12: 33¢ Allgood, Smoked, Sliced, Rindlese Shopsy POTATO SALAD 2:59< SIDE BACON b45« 2b ks 1.39 BARBECUING THIS WEEK-END? AzP HAS SPECIAL PRICES ON SUPER-RIGHT STEAKS FOR BARBECUING ea Frozen Foods [iu- VEGETABLES 24 pks Me Qe AP ORANGE Juice Frcs 220252 6 s1o21n Y Se CREAM PIE "A&P MIXED Reg: Price pkg 550 -- SAVE 60 Farm House Frozen -- Banana, Cheeolate er Cocoanut ~ VAC PAC FROZEN 6 TO 10-LB AVERAGE 35 SATISFACTION GUARANTEED OR DOUBLE YOUR MONEY BACK TURKEYS f A&P BRAND BREADED SEA SEALD OCEAN nee 39¢ PERCH FILLETS Reg. Price pkg 690 -- SAVE 160 HADDOCK PORTIONS «2: »- 59% Reg: Price pkg 480 -- SAVE Se sci 3 Be ie Good Buys on Fine Groceries! een! Salc! A&P Coffee! Seam Paper Towels Reg. Price pkg 55¢ -- SAVE 6e SCOTTOWELS pkg of 2 rolls Qe Libbys Fancy Quality Reg. Price pkg 41¢e -- SAVE 230 TOMATO JUICE 3 42/1021 1.00 Shirriff Instant Reg. Price pkg 59e -- SAVE 4e POTATO FLAKES os 2zpks 5 5c Scott Cut Rite Reg. Price 33e -- SAVE 4e WAX PAPER REFILLS 100-4 el DY ENO FRUIT SALTS 5401.19 CANNED BEVERAGES ease ot 24 10-fl-oz tins 1.69 MARVEL ICE CREAM = {isrce? Sevcet?---gatem Qe ALPHA-GETTI Reg. Hel eave SAVE : & i9410z tins 9D TUNA FIS CARNATION SOLID WHITE MEAT 74loztin 3c SAU-SEA SHRIMP COCKTAIL KLEEN KITTY Ab pko 4 Se 15-fl-oz bil A Qe TWINKLE CAKE MIXES IVORY LIQUID Orr oe giant 24-07 cnr BO STOCK UP FOR THE LONG WEEKEND \ A&P Food Stores will be May 22nd -- VICTORIA DAY Don't forget to buy extra Jane Parker SCOTTIES 3 sie -1100 1.00 YUKON CLUB (5 VARIETIES) FEATURE PRICE GRAHAM WAFERS n.,.2:"7%, . toornky 39e eg. Price tin 470 -- pe 3 « 98. LESTOIL CLEANER =u urrose 2 vouch packs Qe CLOSED ALL DAY MONDAY - BREAD! VISIT WITH US AT... All Prices shown in this ad guaranteed yi Oshawa and 'E'RE SP THE G POULTRY BUILDING -- AGRICULTURAL SECTION Ile 4 fas og FAB wis BORAX FAMILY TISSUE TOILET TISSUE AzP PEACHES TOMATO JUICE AzP PEAS Seca Jone Parker Features foem JANE PARKER CHERRY PIE 2.00 JANE PARKER SLICED BREAD cx woe ver 3 xoxi01s & Se -- So Fresh+-So Low In Price! A&P Produce! Yom J CALIFORNIA, FRESH, CRISP, LARGE HEADS, SIZE 24's, NO. 1 GRADE LETTUCE == FLORIDA, HAND-SELECTED QUALITY, RED, RIPE, NO. 1 GRADE TOMATOES «25, FLORIDA, RED, RIPE, FULL OF FLAVOUR, NO, 1 GRADE, 17-LB, AVERAGE meee =. WATERMELON ~89- NONE PRICED HIGHER AT A&P » "8 SS SS NS A 8 he a 6 a ag Sh A (20¢ OFF DEAL) FEATURE PRICE! GIANT SIZE PKG 7% SCOTT BATHROOM Reg. Price 57¢ -- SAVE 4c PKG OF 4 ROLLS 53 PUREX Reg, Price 33e -- SAVE 4e PKG OF 2 ROLLS 2% CHOICE ' QUALITY 14-FL-OZ TINS ¢ A&P FANCY QUALITY 19-FL-OZ TINS ¢ CHOICE QUALITY Reg. Price each 59c -- SAVE 10¢ cil 9 Reg. Price loaf 24¢ -- SAVE 7e "19. NONE PRICED HIGHER AT A&P NONE PRICEN HIGHER AT A&P EPR Pa vars we ke Be eee ee 2 19-FL-OZ TINS 43. ~ ~ BOKAR COFFEE 279, SAVE 40 29).19 SAVE 240 CUSTOM GROUND EIGHT O'CLOCK SAVE 100 SAVE 8060 1-LB 3-LB 4 AT TIME OF BAG ¢ | BAG 1. PURCHASE J ~\ JANE PARKER LARGE ANGEL CAKE ~ 39 Reg. Price each 59e -- SAVE 200 iN WASHINGTON, NEW SPRING CROP, FIRM, TENDER, NO. 1 GRADE ASPARAGUS '39! NONE PRICED HIGHER AT A&P ee, OO oe ee em oe t '