Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 12 Dec 1967, p. 4

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~-- She Oshawa Gimes 86 King St. E., Published by Canadian Newspapers Company Limited T. L. Wilson, Publisher E. C. Prince, Associate Publisher OSHAWA, ONTARIO, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 12, 1967 Oshawa, Ontario The headlines in The Times, in themselves; told an exiting story for Oshawa last week. One emphas- ized that a bright future was pre- dicted by the business and indus- trial commission. Another announ- ced a successful vear for the city with building projects valued at $30 million-plus. A third pointed out that the proof of growth was found in steel, concrete and timber. The optimism of the headlines was amply substantiated by the interpretive report on construction -- major construction -- under way and planned in the near future in Oshawa. It wag a report repeating many times over figures of more than a million dollars on the value of new projects. There is, for in- estance, a $2 million shopping plaza between King and John - Streets scheduled' for completion next August, a $2 million Simpson-Sears store to open next fal] at the Osh- awa Shopping Centre. Construction is proceeding on the 5 million rail way freight and passenger complex. A huge new shed will be completed on the harbor next year. One 10-storey apartment building is scheduled to open in January, another 13-storey one is planned for later in the year. In the, plans for the ire are equally exciting projects. There is the parking garage and bus terminal to change radically the whole appearance and outlook of downtown Oshawa. Another new shopping plaza is being discussed which is likely The classified advertising section of newspapers such as The Times is already recognized by readers as an important shopping centre, the place to find real bargains. There are also jnstances of the classified pages being an entertainment centre too. » The sequence of classified advertise- ments reprodiiced here today is a hilarious illustration. The hope ey'll give ou a good laugh and take your mind off the worry of what you're going to get Aunt Sara for Christmas. "Thankfully," begins The Rocky Mountain News," we haven't had a string of errors like the one report- ediy made by a small daily in the southern United States "It started with the following ad on a Monday: FOR SALE: R. D. Jones has one 'Ghe Ostyaroa Times 84 King 9 forie; 640 array Dott OTTAWA REPORT serve four people--are passed seurs of what loosely might be described as brandy-soaked brandy for later use. orange with lemon with peel, and one table- wooden hands. Progress In Oshawa Put In Proper Perspective for the east end of the city. Plans and a suitable site are being con- sidered for a $6 million commercial and apartment complex in the down. town area. Then, of course, programs are in progress or being planned for major development in the civic and institu- tional] fields. The $3 million addi- tion to the city hall will be com- pleted in June. Under consideration is the construction of a new art gallery, a police station, a court house and a drop-in centre. Plans have been announced for the build- ing of another $3 million vocational school. Nor do these proposals take into account the enthusiastic predic. tions made previously by the indus- trial commission regarding the steady growth in development of the industria] park and the require- ments seen for land for further industrial growth. Then, too, another important as- pect is the urban renewal . study which is now expected to be comp- leted by April. This is sure to pro- vide impetus for further develop- ment of major proportion. All this surely effectively mutes the wails of the economic crepe- hangers in Oshawa. When put in proper perspective the development taking place in this city, the pro- gress being made, is certainly sub- stantial. It is important to continue to think as big as Oshawa already is, and is going to be! Funny Thing Happened sewing machine for sale. Phone 958 after 7 p.m. and ask for Mrs. Kelly who lives with him cheap. "On Tuesday -- Notice: We regret having erred in R. D, Jones' ad yesterday. It should have read: One sewing ma- chine for sale. Cheap. Phone 958 and ask for Mrs. Kelly who lives with him after 7 p.m. "On Wednesday -- R. D. Jones has informed us that he has received several annoying telephone calls because of the error we made in his classified ad yester- day. His ad. stands corrected as follows: For sale: R. D. Jones has one sewing machine for sale. Cheap, Phone 958 after 7 p.m., and ask for Mrs. Kelly who loves with him. "Finally, on Thursday -- Notice: I, R. D. Jones, have no sewing machine for sale. | smashed it. Don't call 958 as the telephone has been taken out. I have not been carrying on with Mrs, Kelly. Until yesterday she was my housekeeper, but she quit." Other Editors' Views LABOR COURT Canada urgently needs a manage- ment-labor-court system hy means of which impartial, judicial settle- ment of wage-and-work disputes vill eliminate the strike, at least in those areas where the public and national interests may be placed in jeopardy. So far, the public has not been getting the kind of action from its leathargic and timid politicians that it deserves. (Calgary Herald) remony {s the mixing Mix well, in a large bowl, two of the Christmas pudding, a fa- peste Foisgas4 lute it, vorite 4 ¥ : fenilies af ee Carciniatatn ' fine-chopped suet and the bran- here i which father oi pike dy-soaked fruit. Add one cup of over the top. heat chet Sumciee ee nf prod fine-chopped. candy peel, one ireony 6 call pudding' 'fo grated peeled apple, one grated The Day. peel, one grated ¥ ft at ae and welcome between spoon each of nutmeg, cinna- . mon sugar, chopped almonds helping. The most luscious production and mixed spice. Remember to TI have tasted is too good for me mix thoroughly while adding not to pass on to other connois- these ingredients, using a spoon or well-washed steam puddings. that neither steam nor water 'di- the bowl should be cov- ered with wax paper, piece of material securely tied All Steam again for four hours on That will make a tasty Christ- mas pudding for 12 people, all of whom will ask for a second ADD HARD SAUCE But the essential topping and most delicate flavor must not be overlooked, This of course is the QUEEN'S PARK Perspective Required On Pollution By DON O'HEARN TORONTO -- A warning against getting hysterical about air pollution was probably the highlight of the conference on pollution sponsored by the gov- ernment. The warning was given by Dr, Patrick Lawther of London, Eng., in the wind-up speech of the three-day conference, Dr. Lawther said there is a great deal of fantasy and not too much fact in the | supposedly "scientific'"' find- ings on air pollution, and particularly on the effects of sulphur dioxide. Reporting to the conference as a researcher, he said much of the scientific study to date has been largely groping and some of it is definitely wrong. This is a danger of this scien- tific age, Science is on such a pedestal that practically any- thing any scientist says carries an impression of the absolute in the public mind and we tend to give interim findings the bless- ing of finality A notable example here was several years ago when the health department did a study of the fluoridation of water sup- plies The study said it there could be adding fluoride. But it carried the definite warning that any assessment of its use at that time could only be tentative. It would take several years more experience and study before it could really be known just what the results might be, particu- larly harmful effects. This warning barely saw print and got no prominence at all That part of the report deal- ing with potential benefits was seized on by fluoridationists and appeared benefits from the press, and the impression was left in the public mind that fluoridation had received a blanket endorsement. You see this same error. of judgment in many fields today where action is being taken, or pressured for, in areas where scientific study is needed. In many cases you have to ex- amine the actual studies them- selves to find out precisely what they say and often you will see a caution that has been over- looked Of course, scientific study is not the exact process we would make it. For instance, commer: cial interests can get scientific studies supporting pretty well any point of view they want to get across. This isn't to say that air pollu- tion, isn't a threat and Dr. Lawther: didn't say this. But we shouldn't necessarily think the end of the world is around the corner because of every statement we hear about pollution, YEARS AGO 20 YEARS AGO, December 12, 1947 The Dunlop Tire and Rubber Goods Co. Ltd. of Toronto have announced that they will build a $1,500,000 factory on a 55-acre tract of land south of the new highway. A fire of unknown origin com- pletely destroyed the frame of- fice of Bennett Motor Sales, King Street West. 35 Years Ago December 12, 1932 The temperature: in Oshawa today dropped to 6 below zero and a miniature blizzard de- veloped causing 2 to 3 inches of snow. J. C, Anderson, an Oshawa Board of Education member, was re-elected director of the Penny Bank of Ontario, BIBLE "Lord how are they In. creased that trouble me! many are they that rise up against me."' Psalms 3:1 Many of us have more time for eur troubles and enemies than we do for God. "Trust in the Lord with all thine heart." "He will never leave thee nor forsake thee."' By AN LT a eS FOREIGN AFFAIRS CENTENNIAL MEDAL ANALYSIS | So Little Given To So Many By PHILIP DEANE Foreign Affairs Analyst Affluent dieters can buy an amusing gadget this Christmas to help them watch their weight, complete with lights, dials, gauges; the perfect gift for that special someone loom- ing larger in your life than the doctor would deem wise. It only costs $15, which is one dollar more than a top economic plan- ner receives per month in In- donesia. His employees are paid so little that they work at their government jobs for two hours then must go out to earn money as street vendors. They deem themselves lucky in Indonesia this year because the price of rice will have gone up only 100 per cent whereas it climbed 1,- 500 per cent last year. Zambia is cutting her invest- ment in development--she sim- ply does not have enough money. India is abandoning her fourth Five-Year Plan because she cannot finance it. Oh, she will produce another plan, cut- ting her coat to fit her cloth, Lut the one she has scrapped would not have been enough to combat the misery; the new one will be like fighting a tidal wave with a hand broom. In the past 15 years, the gross national product of the Atlantic nations has increased by 150 per cent. During the same period, the share of that gross national product devoted to foreign aid has decreased by 50 per cent and it is decreasing still further this year with cuts in U.S. for- eign aid, And much of the "aid'"" from the rich to the poor is now in loans which are not precisely free, HUGE FOREIGN DEBT West Germany,~- Japan, France and Italy give India just enough aid for her to pay the in- terest on what she owes them. India's foreign debt now stands at $7,000,000,000 which is one third of her gross national in- come or, to bring home what these figures really mean: The average Indian who earns $40 a year must give $13 to his for- eign creditors. Add to this what Indians must pay us, the rich, for the use of the ships in which we send them aid, for the services of our banks, in profits that we make selling them goods and it turns out that we are grinding the faces of the poor. We do not in- tend to do it, of course, but we do do it. eT Patrick Nicholson To make sure and a place more page page. Christmas Pudding For Change Of Pace OTTAWA ~~ Our national cap- fruits. So here, with my recom- Then add one teaspoon of salt hard sauce, or brandy butter. ital is a haven of hom e life, rate mendation, is the recipe, and three cups of brown sugar. To make this, cream two cilps er than a metropolis of cliff- ah he aaa ; a Mix in four tablespoons of but- of butter until light and fluffy. dwellers and night-club ha- START YESTERDAY ter and four tablespoons of light Gradually beat in four cups of bitues. At no time of the year The preparations should start cream. Beat well eight eggs, icing sugar until the sauce is does the fo e enjoy the day before the mixing, when then mix the eggs and the bran- very smooth and light. Then more. togett S at one cup each of raisins, sul- dy into the bow]. beat in brandy to suit taste, Christma and t ere is one spe- tanas, currants and stoneless Some people prefer to use adding a little at a time. You cial Yuletide ceremony which dates should be put to soak in beer, or sherry from the Niag- may find one-third of a cup conveniently fills a w vecend three cups of brandy. ara peninsular, rather than ample. it is too late to watch foot- The next evening, strain the brandy Put this sauce into the refrig- too early to 'take the fruit, and keep the remaining Steam for six hours, as for all erator at least two hours before serving, so that it will harden. This to my taste is the best of Ottawa's Christmas puddings. famous home-made of this of course has no in a political column; it is suited to the home-making of the paper. But mixing this pudding and its sauce is a job father will enjoy, wouldn't and he see it on mother's And anyhow, this pudding will add much more to Christ- d mas conviviality and enjoyment than a description of the record tax collections about to be lev- fed by the present government. All theories about the develop- ment of underdeveloped coun- tries agree that if the "moderni- zation process" stalls because poverty prevents the growth of a domestic mass market, chen revolution is likely to occur. That is why, despite his bad press here in North America, Che Guevara the revolutionary is a saint in many poor coun- tries. One way to fight a Che Guevara is with guns, to kill him, then to burn the school- house where he was killed for fear it might become a shrine-- that's what the Bolivian army has done. If each man, woman and child in the United States and Canada set aside eight cents a day, In- dia's foreign debt would be paid off in one year; that would be another way of fighting poten- tial Indian Che Guevaras, and India would have the necessary fund to build enough fertilizer planta to be self sufficient in ood. 'Dots' Heard Across Ocean Signalled Marconi Success By BOB BOWMAN Some of the world's most im- portant inventions were com- pleted in the face of ridicule cruel criticism. Alexander Gra- ham Bell was called "crazy Bell" by people in Brantford, Ont., where he invented the telephone. Later, fellow-scien- tists warned him that he would lose his reputation if he persist- ed in his belief that men would be able to fly. Gugliemo Marconi, who did more to develop wireless than any other man, received his share of criticism and frustra- tion. Fortunately, the British government had confidence in Marconi and made it possible for him to experiment with ship to shore communication. The supreme test came in .1901 when he proved that wire- less signals could be heard across the Atlantic. Marconi built a transmitter at Poldhu, Cornwall, and a receiving sta- tion near St. John's, Newfound- land. The aerial was a 600-foot wire hoisted into the air by a kite, and it was blown away on the first attempt. MARCONI SUCCEEDED The operator at Poldhu was instructed to send the letter "S"" (three dots) for three hours every day beginning at 3 p.m., G.M.T. On December 12 Marco- ni managed to get a 400-foot ae- rial flying, and at 12:30 p.m, (Newfoundland time) the receiv- er began clicking. C. S.-Kemp, P. W. Paget, and several fisher- men were in the shack and Marconi was so excited that he shouted at them in Italian 'did you hear that?". There was no doubt about it, Marconi had suc- ceeded, Yet, he still had battles to fight. Some scientists claimed that the signals were faked. Others said that he would not be able to broadcast from west to east against the movement of the earth. Then came another crushing blow, Newfoundland told Marconi that he would have to discontinue the experiments because the Submarine Cable Company had exclusive rights to communications from New- foundland for 50 years. Alex Johnson, Sydney, N.S., newspaper publisher, came to Marconi's rescue. He took him to Ottawa and introduced him to Prime Minister Laurier and Fi- nance Minister Fielding. They gave Marconi $80,000 to con- tinue experiments from Glace Bay, N.S., and he successfully transmitted signals from west to east across the Atlantic on December 5, 1902. Other Dec. 12 Events: 1812--Loyal Patriotic Society formed in Upper Canada. 1813--Captain Black, Royal Navy, "captured" Fort Astoria on the Pacific coast. 1837--Dr. Wolfred Nelson, Lower Canada rebel leader, was captured and exiled. 1882--Michigan Central Rail- way agreed to operate Canadian Southern Railway for 21 years. 1894--Prime Minister Thomp- son died during visit to Queen Victoria. 1885--First trainload of wheat from Manitoba left Portage for Montreal. 1916--Noted prairie mission- ary, Father Lacombe, died. 1942--Fire in Knights of Co- lumbus hostel in St. John's, Newfoundland, killed 99 people. 1944--Snowstorms and _ bliz- zard in Southern Ontario caused 24 deaths. 1944--Mrs, Nancy Hodges was appointed Speaker of the B.C. legislature, the first woman in the British Commonwealth to hold the position. 1951--St. Lawrence Seaway authority was established, TODAY IN HISTORY By THE CANADIAN PRESS Dec. 12, 1967... Guglielmo Mare j re- ceived the first transauantic wireless signal at St. John's, Nfld., 66 years ago today-- in 1901, The inventor of wireless telegraphy flew a box kite trailing 400 feet of copper wire to a telephone to pick up faint clicking sounds transmitted from 2,000 miles across the ocean at Poldhu wireless station in Cornwall. Today. the hill on which he stood is called Sig- nal Hill. 1894--Japanese forces in- vaded Korea. 1963--Kenya became inde- pendent. First World War Fifty years ago today--in 1917 -- the destroyer Par- tridge and 10 neutral and British ships in convgy were sunk by a superior force of German destroyers; the Italian chamber voted confi- dence in Premier V. E. Or- lando; British repulsed a strong German attack near Bullecourt. Second World War 'Twenty-five years ago to- day--in 1942--the Liberian governmént severed rela- tions with Vichy; United States heavy bombers at- tacked Rouen, France; 99 died in a fire at an army hut in St. John's, Nfld. THEN AND NOW Pioneer Praised Free, Friendly Land By FORD LINDSAY of The Times. Staff Through the courtesy of Clar- ence A. Sadler I am privileged to reproduce a letter written by J. F. Plowright 17 months after he emigrated to Canada from England in 1877. The letter will be of interest to residents of the district as it gives his impres- sions of the voyage to Canada and his new home. Mr, Plowright was a trained miller who purchased the mill half a mile west of Columbus from John Bickle in 1892, Later he rebuilt the mill as well as building a two-storey house which is in use today. Mr. Plowright sold this property in 1906 to a Mr. Calvert. HIS LETTER is as follows: Sir: "With much pleasure I now write you a short letter respect- ing my voyage across the At- lantic and also what I think of Canada. I left England by one of the Allan Line steamers -- a splendid vessel. It was a very good voyage. We were seven days, six hours and 42 minutes from leaving Liverpool till we landed at Quebec, and I can only say that a voyage across the Atlantic is not so bad as you think. We had y to eat and drink and all"the comfort that one could desire on the passage across to Canada. "The vessel was well man- aged and a better crew of men I never want to be in company with, Sir, I never heard an oath escape their lips while crossing to Canada and I cannot speak too highly about the Allan Line and their seamen. We had on board a good-hearted captain -- a lover of God's word who seemed to dcvend upon God and rc'y upon His 'blessed teachings and his daily walk and conduct was a good example to those by whom he was surrounded; and to my surprise .. voyage across to Canada was a very pleasant change. I would say to anyone wishing to come to Canada, come by the Allan Line, both for comfort and for safety. "RF3PECTING Canada, I like it very much and I would not come back to England on any consideration. Dear broth- er, this country is a place where you are free and where a man can get a good living and I think a little to spare. I have been in Canada 17 months and by what I can judge from ex- perience, a man who comes into this country with an intention of getting on in life and a desire to have something more than from hand to mouth, the Cana- dians are a kind of people that will help and do all that lies in their power for the elevation and support of their fellow coun- trymen, "For my own part I have met with more friends and also bet- ter friends in Canada than I ever had ot met with in En- gland. So to you young men I would say come out to Canada. There is plenty of work and plenty of land in Canada that wants cultivating. So to you young men I would say come out from poverty, starvation and want and put your shoul- ders to the wheel for once in your life, with a good pluck, determined to make progress in this world so that you can do justice to yourselves and your fellow creatures, "Young men you must not think that when you come to Canada you are going to pick money up in the streets. Don't forget that you will have to work and for that work you will get well paid. But if you don't like to work, nor want to work, but to lounge around taverns and spend your life in such a way that it is disgraceful to all mankind, you had better stay where you are, for you are no good anywhere and no one wants your company. "The man who keeps himseif all right gets on like a house on fire. He has plenty of friends, plenty of work, suffi- cient money and, if anything like me, he will be as happy as the day is long. So I am sure whoever takes my advice and comes to Canada with a desire to get on in life will find friends and plenty of them; also plenty of everything which his or her heart may desire. "YOUNG MEN there are plenty of young ladies in Can: ada, respectable young women, just such girls that will suit a man who means progress. They turn out and milk about 10 cows every morning before breakfast and do their best to help a man and comfort him.: "I must speak well of Can- ada for it is coming to Canada that has made me what I am and to the friendly inhabitants I am endebted for all I enjoy. Now, sir I must close with these few lines, hoping they will do more good, knowing that what I have written is the truth te which you, my fellow coun: trymen, are perfectly wel- come," R And R' For U.S. Soldiers New Industry In Far East J. C. Graham, CP corre- spondent in New Zealand, found in a tour of Southeast Asia that rest and recrea- tion for troops from the Vietnam war haye hecome a major new fact of life. In this story, he tells about R. and R. By J .C. GRAHAM Canadian Press Correspondent AUCKLAND, N.S. (CP) -- R and R may not be a famil- far term in some parts of the world, but lately it has be- come the basis of a major new industry in the Far East, R and R means rest and recreation and it is eagerly awaited by troops fighting in South Vietnam--mainly Amer- ican troops, but also for Aus- tralians, New Zealanders and men of other nationalities. After some months service Jn the war zone, varying ac- cording to national arrange- ments, troops become eligible for five days rest and recrea- tion leave in another country. They have a wide choice of countries, extending within the last few months even as far as Australia. Throughout the East, the presence of large numbers of free-spending servicemen with bulging paybooks, almost un- tapped in Vietnam, is a mat- ter of great importance, How- ever, it has also raised prices sharply for the ordinary tout- ist. MUFTI IS THE RULE The troops do not wear uni- forms on R and R leave. Mufti is the rule, yet they are as obvious as if in full regi- mentals. In Hong Kong, RBang- kok, Taipei, Tokyo, Manila, Sydney, Penang and a score of other cities, the young, pale, crewcut, rather sad, rather bitter young Americans are unmistakable. And institutions have sprung up in vast quantity to eater to their needs. They come by air, and rapidiy spread out to hotels in the main cities--regular tourist hotels and new hotels which seem to have come into exist- ence mainly for this trade. Likewise, all the major cit- fes have flocks of brightly-lit new bars and night clubs ca- tering to the visitors, com- plete with coveys of hostesses and varying nationality. Hote! lobbies carrying a range of pamphlets giving the trops information on local at- tractions and particularly on the habits and customs of bar girls--how much it costs to buy them a drink, to talk with them at hourly rates, to take them out on the town. The information usually stops at that point with advice that any additional arrange- ments are a matter of individ- ual negotiation. The evidence suggests that a large number of individual negotiations are made. Some of the new hotels, prominently labelled "Best place for R and R,"' leave lit- tle doubt about their purpose and the range of facilities available. They carry such names as the Perfumed Gar- den or the Seventh Heaven. But the girls who serve as ubiquitous escorts to many of the troops are not visitors only to such new instituttons. They can be seen hand in hand with R and R leave per- sonnel in main hotels in all the big cities at all hours. PROVIDE COMPANIONSHIP They act as sightseeing es- corts, too, leading servicemen patiently on tours of the main sights, instructing them in taxi fares, bartering where necessary, and generally act- ing as guides and companions, The girls vary in appear- ance and sophistication from place to place. Most of them are incredibly fine-boned and decorative, almost universal among young Eastern fe- males. Some adopt elaborate makeup to the point of fan- tasy. Some wear Oriental styles to advantage, others prefer the latest Western fa- shions. But mini-skirts are rare. In- Stinctively, or regretfully, most of them acknowledge that the Oriental leg is woeful- ly unsuited to the fashion--the lower le is sy>t and the thigh skinny, a combination that rules out mini-skirts for most Eastern girls of percep- tion. They have other advan- tages to exploit. The most noteworthy fea- ture of the whole R and R in- dustry, however, is its quiet, sad orderliness. Australian and New Zea- land troops on leave tend to be ebullient, even riotous. But the Americans, by and large, raise remarkably little hell. Large numbers of them do not, in fact, make any contri- bution to the R and R cater- ers in Eastern cities. But even those who do seem to derive little evident pleasure from it. They walk quietly hand in hand with their exotic butter- flies, talking quietly among themselves or to their girls. Ordinary American tourists make 10 times as much noise. The girls chatter away gaily in bars like so many twitter- ing sparrows, but once con- tact has been established and a temporary alliance formed, they also show less animation, "in the day Mayor TENDEE WHITBY (Staff) -- The velopment of the town's in trial area came a step cl last night when council au ized the public utilities com sion to proceed with the ca of tenders for sanitary se and a pumping station on | kins Street and a pumping tion on Blair Street South. proval for the projects has | CASE ADJOURNED Town Se To Gas ! WHITBY (Staff) -- The lon drawn out battle between th Town of Whitby and the Cor sumers' Gas Company will g on -- for at least another week A Supreme Court applicatio for an injunction by the town t stop further extensions of th gas supply was adjourned yes terday for further agreement i Toronto a week tomorrow. Earlier this year a- simila injunction was refused and ai appeal was disallowed. Outlining the case for thi town George Finlayson said tha a 35-year-old franchise allowin; the company to supply gas t Whitby consumers ran out it June of last year. It has no been renewed. There had been no negotia tions between the town and th company but Consumers' Ga: -had- continued adding nev customers -- there had beer some 11 since the franchise rar out. The engineer, Walter Ander son Evans, said he had receiver three applications but none had been granted. POLICE VISIT The court heard about inci. dents on Dec. 9 when Con- sumers' Gas workmen had tried to connect the MacNamara Marine Company Ltd. to the supply. The Brock Street site was first visited by the Police Chief George Rankine and _ his deputy along with the engineer. A trench had been dug for the pipe and work was going ahead. Chief Rankine told the court he had asked the engineer in charge of the operation, a Mr. Wolnik, to stop work, but he twice refused referring the chief to the company solicitors. Later Desmond Board Sched Apartment L WHITBY (Staff) -- Notifica- tion has been received by town council that the Ontario Munici- pal Board will hold a hearing at 10 a.m., Dec. 27, in the council chamber, to hear an appeal by the municipality against a de- cision of the committee of ad- justment which granted an ap- plication by Onurb Construction Limited. The committee granted an ap- plication by the firm for a variance from the provisions of Bylaw 1946 to provide for a re- duction in the total lot area. The. lot is 131 square feet short of: the required area to construct an 11-suite apartment building vat 1455 Byron St. S. Mayor Desmond Newman, Coun, Vernon MacCar! and en- gineer W. A. ~"Bvans_ were authorized to attend a meeting of the; technical co-ordinating committee, Dec. 13, at the Osh- awa city hall which will study transportation problems in the area. Brynbrook Realty Limited has filed an objection to the zoning of its property on Brock Street South. It claims the change would handicap the developer from a rental point of view and| also in obtaining the necessary! financing. Industrial commissioner Wil- liam Morrison was asked to re- port at next Monday's mecting regarding an application by) Highland Van and Storage to| the highway transport board for| a Class H PCV Licence. The| firm said it has been operating| in Whitby for two years. | An application from the Whit- by Minor Hockey Aasociation| for a grant of $1,500 was re- ferred to the 1968 council's bud-| get discussions, Announ Healing Su Shrinks Piles Exclusive healing subst hemorrhoids... and re A renowned research institute has found a unique healing substance with the ability to shrink hemor- thoids painlessly. It relieves itch- ing and discomfort in minutes and speeds up healing of the injured, inflamed tissues. One hemorrhoidal case history after another reported "very strik- ing improvement.' Pain was Promptly and gently relieved . .. actual reduction or retraction (shrinking) took place. Among these case histories were a variety of hemorrhoidal condi- tions. Relief even occurred in cases of long standing, and most im- Portant of all, results were so thorough that this improvement was maintained over a period of

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