Daily Times-Gazette, 6 Oct 1948, p. 9

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WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 6, 1948 FHE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE PAGE NINE J AE CTAN OY Qr 4 A AU NOVI 34 J All Points Report Serious Shortage; Population Rises By The Canadian Press October is not the headache it once was to truckers moving families from one home to another. A Canadian Press survey shows that most Canadians are staying where they are, not necessarily because they like it, but because they can't find any better place to move. ® With thousands of new ho sprouting across the Dominion, the nation is experiencing the paradox of long waiting lists for any sort of shelter--from houses to convert- ed barracks. A housing review publishéll by the Central Mortgage and housing Corporation showed 21,000 houses completed in the first half of the year in towns and cities, 3,000 more than the same period last year. In villages and countryside 30,528 new units were completed in the first half of this year. The tempo will increase, the re- view shows. Twenty-four thous- and houses were started in cities and towns--39,768 started in vil- lages and rural areas--in the first half of this year. Population Increased Basic reason for the shortage is the population increase, set against the background of the long de- pression and wartime period when housing construction was below normal. Canada's population this year is estimated at 12,883,000, against 11,- 267,000 in 1939 and 10,376,000 in 1931. Building materials and labor are both more plentiful, but houses still cost more. Apartments are scarce and high- priced in Halifax, but 241 homes were completed during the first seven months of 1943 and at June 21, 420 were being built. There are about six times as many applicants looking for ac- commodation in Charlottetown, PEI, as there are units. A total of 29 new homes are under con- struction. Rented quarters are in heavy de- mand in Freddericton, N.B., where 200 houses are scheduled to be ready by winter. More than 900 veterans and their families are seeking shellr in St. John. Few moves will be made this month in Quebec City, which is about 2000 dwellings short of its needs, About . 7,400 private homes were completed in Quebec province dur- ing the first eight months of 1948, with about 5,200 of these in Mon- treal, Ontario Hard Pressed Central Housing and Mortgage built 2,500 low-rental homes in Ontario since Jan. 1, and complet- ed another 2,600 under an inte- grated scheme whereby individual builders construct the projects for sale to veterans at a price set by the corporation. "There won't be any moving in Toronto this month because there's no place to move to," commented a city real estate dealer. He said a home was slightly eas- ier to buy than last year but prices had increased. "It will take five years to catch up with the demand for moderate housing, and another 10 years be- fore the supply is normal," stated a Toronto real estate broker. Toronto has spent, $2,356,022 for 2,235 emergency housing units since the program started during war years. "We're beseiged by hundreds in search of homes," say officials of the Emergency Housing Office in Ottawa. They report the situation is still acute despite provision made of emergency housing for 700 fam- ilies, new apartment settlement for 400, soldiers' housing projects for 400 and private building. There is little indication that many will move this October. It's the same story throughout Ontario. In Peterborough the Cen- tral Mortgage and Housing Cor- poration. is building 200 homes while 150 are being built privately. In Kingston some private residenc- es are being conyerted into apart- ments while in Kitchener there are no rental homes available, al- though & wartime project will pro- vide 100 homes for veterans. Of 266 houses under government construction in Guelph, 188 are al- ready occupied. Mayor Gordon Rife said he believed it would be two years before the situation was back to normal. About 80 mew units are umder construction by the Central Mortg- age and Housing Corporation in Woodstock and 50 in Owen Sound. Following a record house-building boom during the summer the short- age is no longer acute in North Bay. Scores of Noimes now under construction should be eompleted by Christmas. Lg Assaulted Crew, Five Seamen Get wo-Year Terms Port Arthur, Oct, 6--(CP)-- Five men facing a charge arising out of the early-morning boarding of the Canada Steamship Lines freighter Martian here June 20 each were sentenced to two years in peniten- tiary by Mr. Justice ER.E. Chevri- er at Fall Assizes Tuesday. The men--John Mack, 23, Mon- treal; Yvon Gauthier, 20, Montreal; Donald McCuish, 24, New Water- ford, N. 8.; Nicholas Sundue, 25, New Toronto, Ont., and Russell Ped- dle, 23, Montreal--pleaded guilty to a joint charge of assault occasion- ing actual bodily harm. The Crown did not press six other charges stemming from the board- ing of the freighter. Five members of the Martians crew were severely beaten up by a masked boarding party wielding baseball bats and rubber hose rein- forced with lead. Four of the crew were in hospital for 10 days. The boarding of the Martian was the first instance of violence at the Yakehead since the start of a juris. dictional dispute between the Cana- dian Seaman's Union and the rival Canadian Lake Seamen's Union. Communion Is Celebrated At Hampton Church M. HORN Correspondent Hampton, Oct. 5--Mr. and Mrs. Ted Johns, Toronto, visited Mr. and Mrs. Austin Barron on Sunday. Sunday Services were fairly well attended. Our pastor was in charge of the evening service when "Com- munion" was observed. We - were pleased to see a full choir again which rendered an appropriate sel- ection. Mrs. James Smales sang a solo, "O, Lord, Correct Me" which was a fitting contribution also and was appreciated. Next Sunday the servide will be held in the morning at 10:30 a.m. in charge of Rev. E. S. Linstead. The Sunday School will be at 2:15 in the afternoon. Quite a number of football fans attended' the entertainment pro- vided by the Johnston family of Blackwater, assisted by Al. Harvey, comedian of Brougham, at Ennis- killen last Wednesday night. The event was made possible by Mr. and Mrs. Ernie Werry and family of Enniskillen. James Gregory and Mrs. Ed. Goodman, Oshawa, and Edgar | Gregory of Kitchener, visited C. W. n Reported Still A arto Cie | Berlin's Ruins Help To Feed City This immense pile of rubble from Berlin buildings shattered by Allied bombs during the war is now serving a useful purpose. raw material for the building of new airstrips. Rubble is collected from scattered locations and brought here as a source of Trucks haul the stuff to Gatow or Tegel airports where it is used as the foundation for landing strips for airlift planes 'hat ate keeping Berliners from starving. $7,677,479 Chest Drive Objective Ottawa, Oct. 6 -- (CP) -- Thirty- six community chest campaigns are being held across Canada this fall, with a combined objective of $7,- 677,479. Fourteen already are under way; most of the others are sched- uled for this month. Figures released. today by the Canadian Welfare Council show 534 agencies will share in the funds raised. Four campaigns--in Chat- ham, Ont.; Moose Jaw, Sask.; Lind- say, Ont., and Sudbury, Ont.--are the first in the history of those communities. The campaign details: ONTARIO Belleville (3 agencies) $16,000 ob- jective, starting Oct. 18; Brantford (8) $75,000, Oct. 25-30; Chatham (9) $45,000 Oct. 18-Nov. 6; Corn- wall (7) $22,500, Sept. 27-Oct. 9; Galt (9) $31,500, October; Kingston (12) $59,000, Oct. 18-23; Lindsay (4) $11,500, Oct. 18-23. Niagara Falls (8) 4-23; Norfolk County (2) $15,000, Oct. 17-30; Oshawa. (15) $91,000, Oct. 20-30; St. Thomas-Elgin Coun- ty (5). $25,000, Oct. 18-30; Sarnia (7) $21,000, Nov. 15-29; Sault Ste. Marie (7) Oct. 4-16; Sudbury (12) $85,000, Oct. 1-31; Toronto (66) $2,300,000, Oct. 18-Nov. 6. $45,000, Oct. Vegetable Import Ban Lifting Asked Toronto, Oct. 6--~(CP)--The Fed- eral Government was asked Tues- day to lift the import ban on fresn fruits and vegetables not available on local markets. The request was made in a resolution passed by the Ontario Food Branch of the Retail Merchants' Association at closing sessions of its two-day annual con- vention. Lifting of the ban was urged "io prevent a repetition of the ouirage- ous prices of last year." Delegates also passed resolutions opposing tax exemption for co-op- eratives, They asked that costs of the inspection of scales in food Souch and the Caverly's on Sun- |stores be paid by the Federal Gov- day. J. Marshall of Oak Hill® Lake, | | er. near Stirling, is visiting his daugh- | ter, Mrs. Ted Chant, Mr, and family. Miss Reta Kerslake, Bowmanville, is visiting her uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. T. Salter. Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Stafford of Markdale, were week-end guests of Mr. and Mrs. Norman Yellowlees. Douglas Caverly has retffrned home from Alberta where he has been employed on a ranch for the past three months. Congratulations to Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Chant on the gift of a daughter. Mrs. W. Cunningham, of Cam- eron, spent the week-end with Mr. and Mrs, Harland Trull. Mr. and Mrs. Percy Allin, and daughter Sheila, Oshawa, were with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Horn. . Mr. and Mrs. Claude Dunlop visited her sister, Mrs. T. Salter, last week. Mr. and Mrs. Ryerson Beare, Greenbank, were also visit- ors at the Salter home last week. Mrs. Ada Tamblyn, Orono, visited relatives here' during the week- end. Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Hogarth and Clare, visited her parents, Rev. and Mrs. W. Rackham at Manilla on Sunday. Chant Tendency To Use 'Britain' Angers St. George Society London, Oct. 6 -- (Reuters) -- The Royal Society of St. George has made a strong protest on be- half of English men and women against an alleged tendency by the British press and radio to sink Eng- land's identity in the word "Brit- ain." It accuses "a. considerable body of writers, journalists and broad- casters" of "a concerted determina- tion" to avoid mentioning England and lhe English ai all costs, even in contexts where it is demon- strably- wrong to use any other term It complains that the "junior " in the United Kingdom-- Scotland, Wales and Northern Ire- land--are allowed to retain their name. Why should the English, who comprise 82 per cent of the total electorate of the United Kingdom not be allowed to do the same? The society asks. Scotland, through the St. Andrew Society, has taken the "strongest exception" to being described as a "junior partner." It asserts that for every occasion where "Britain" is used as an in- clusive term for "England" there are a hundred where "England" is used to 'denote the United King- dom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland. "Britain," it maintains, is a con- venient contraction for the full title, the official contraction of "United Kingd us not being in all cases appropriate. AS rn | ernment rather than by the retail. W. Hussey of Toronto was elected president of the food divis- ion. Other officers: A. Earle Hodge, Falconbridge, past president; A, Hales of Guelph, R. Haynes, of St. Catharines, E. Stedman of Wind- sor and J, Shamess of Kingston, vice-presidents; C. Read, London, treasurer; R. T. Barnes, secretary. Four Injured Get VJ-Day Damages Ottawa, Oct. 6.--(CP)-- The Su- preme Court of Canada Tuesday reversed a judgment of the Ontar- fo Court of Appeal and restored damage awards to four persons from St. Catharines, Ont. The damage suits were institut. ed following an accident in St. Catharines' Montbellor park during jhe, VJ-Day celebrations Aug. _15, A flagpole tower in the park collapsed and killed Grace Ann Mc- Cormack, 18-year-old daughter of Willard J. McCormack. Mrs. Mar- garet Booth and Arnold Bowler were injured. The suits were taken against the city by Mrs. Booth, Stanley Booth, Mr. Bowler and Mr. McCormack. The Supreme Court of Ontario awarded Mrs. Booth, $4,500; Mr. Booth $2,364; Mr. Bowler, $2,500 and Mr. McCormack $1,000. The city appealed the judgment and the Ontario .._ "il Court al- lowed the appeal and dismissed the actions without written judg- ment. The Supreme Court of Canada unanimously reversed 'the appeal court's decision and restored the awards of the Ontario Supreme Court. LORD'S 'DAY CHARGES St. Thomas, Oct. 6 -- (CP) -- A total of about 12 charges have been laid under the Lords Day Act against an undetermined number of Port Stanley concessionaires, as a result of wide-open Sunday opera- tions late in the season, it was iearned here Tuesday night. Simi- lar charges have been laid against summer operators at Grand Bend and opher Ontario resorts. ! x Income Tax Collections Highest Since War End Ottawa, Oct. 6.--(CP)--Here are some of the highlights of the gov- ernment's 1948 "taxation stastics" publication issued recently. Of the $1,317,706,890 tax collec- tions made in 1947-48 the Toronto district shelled out the biggest in- dividual share, $304,428978. By provinces, Ontario led the field with $581,873,929. Quebec came second with $383,967,886. During the last 20 years, Cana- dians have paid out more than $11,- 000,000,000 in tax. Of this about $8,000,000,000 was in the .formP of income tax, about $3,000,000,000 in excess profits tax and $128,352,371 in succession duties. This year's income tax collec- tions of $1,059,848,357 compares with 1947's total of $963,458,245. This year was also the biggest post- war income tax collection year, ranking higher than 1945's $1,072,- 758,068 and licked only by 1944's to- tal of $1,151757,035, a war-year re- cord. Similarly, 1948 proved a bonanza succession-duties collection year. The total of $30,828,040 was the highest on record. Canadian corporations have shelled out $2,588,141,081 in excess profits tax since 1941. Individuals contributed $130,050,827. Corpora- tions got a break in 1948. Excess profits tax totalled $213,886,014 compared with the high of $465,- 558,732 in 1946. Canadian territory with the smallest total tax contribution in 1948 was the Yukon with $807,- 850. Next came Prince Edward Is land with $2,5. Of all the income tax acts, the War Tax Act gave the Government the biggest yield in 1948. It swept into the treasury more than $1,000,000,000. Some 7,000 companies showed a loss during the 1946 taxation per- iod, compared with 23,000 which showed a profit. Mining proved a comparatively poor venture with 343 companies showing profits and 1,016 showing losses. Well Baby Clinic Well Patronized MRS. T. C. BROWN Correspondent Brougham, Oct. 4--Mrs. George Hamilton and son Gordon of Kes- wick, were Brougham visitors one day last week. Mrs. Hamilton is always a welcome caller in her old home district. Mrs. Thomas Sharp called on her aunt, Mrs. Brown, on Wednesday of last week. The well baby clinic was well patronized by mother and young children at the meeting held in Council Chambers on Wednesday afternoon. Mr. Anderson of Toronto, was a Sunday visitor at the H. Malcolm home. W. J. Brown of Toronto, spent Saturday with his mother here. Mrs. Walter Knox of the Sick Children's Hospital and other To- ronto friends, were Saturday visit- ors at the H. Malcolm home. Mrs. Haltby is not improving as fast as her friends desire. Harold Stevenson from the west, visited his sisters, Mrs. Miller, and Mrs. Barclay, last week. It is a number of years since Mr. Steven- son has been back east before. Markham Fair was, as always, an attraction for Brougham people. Mrs. Carl Devitt spent last week with her daughter and family near Orillia, Mrs. John Gillman has returned family of Langford. Mrs. Vickers home from a visit with the Vickers was formerly Norma Harden. Mr. and Mrs. Bert Dunn and child, have returned frem a pleas- ant motor trip through Western Ontario and as far as Michigan, visiting aunts of Mrs. Dunn's. The Wallace Ellicot family of Toronto, were with their people here over the weekend. The regular meeting of the Women's Institute will be held on Tuesday, October 12, in the Town- ship Hall. There will be a demon- stration on Handicrafts and an ad- dress by District President, Mrs. Brady. There will be no Roll Call. Please bring your small homemade Christmas 'gift to the November meeting. Hostesses .were Mrs. J. Gillman, Mrs. R. Harden, Mrs. H. Malcolm, Miss Green and Miss Gillman. Mr. and Mrs. P. Hardy and Billy were with the Knox family for weekend. A large congregation attended World Communion Service on Sun- day last. Baptists Raise Ministers' Pay Montreal, Oct. 6 -- (CP) -- Pas- tors and laymen of the Eastern As- sociation of Baptist Churches Tues- day approved a plan to raise min- isters' salaries to $1,800, with fur- nished parsonage. A session of the 61st annual meeting of the association, delegates voted to support the salary scalé urged by the Baptist Convention of Ontario and Quebec at its meeting in June. Hamilton Firms Face 2-Day Weekly Closing Hamilton, Oct. 6-- (CP)--Next week all Hamilton plants may have to go on a three-day week, or, if they work on Saturdays and Sun- days, a revised five-day week, and all merchants may have to con- serve 50 per cent of the load they are now using under existing power restrictions." This was the warning of A. W. Bradt, General Manager of the Hydro-Electric System ° of Hamilton, today.' "Our load is still on the ragged edges," Mr. Bradt said. "It looks as though all of our plants will have to cease operation for two days of the critical period." (The critical petioy each week is Monday to Fri- y. New Paratroop Techniques Revealed In U.S. Exercises By ELTON C. FAY Eglin Field, Fla. Oct. 6--(AP)-- The United States is making long strides in the art of airborne troop warfare, joint military exercises here reveal. Among. new techniques and equipment disclosed in demanstra- tiohs are two of major signifance: 1. An airborne force now can move twice as many fighting men with the same number of aircraft as in the Second World War. 2, The conventional parachute may be on its way out as a method for dropping assault troopers, to be replaced by a rotary glider. Operational plans and prelimin- ary demonstrations for 'operation combine" dealing with the airborne phase of these exercises, which are being run by the battle-tested 82nd Airborne Division, show that one modern transport-cargo type plane can carry 42 fully equipped para- troopers compared with only 20 for most wartime types. This means that not only fewer planes now are needed to get the same number of men into battle but that also fewer fields are need- ed from which to operate them. Indications are that 55,000 men plus light artillery and vehicles are to be transported in about 1,500 air- planes and three thousand gliders, far better than in wartime cam- paigns, "Operation Combine" demon- strated lightning-swift techniques of launching an airborne strike in this rapidly-modernizing branch of the U. 8S. armed forces. Airborne experts have corrected many weaknesses displayed in war- time operations. Among them are improved systems for locating drop zones into which cargoes and troops are to be parachuted or landed by glider. Among these "pathfinder" gadgets is an infra-red signal which. can be detected visually .by approaching es at three miles or at 30 miles when a special de- vice is used. t Legal Debate On Margarine Is Continuing Ottawa, Oct. 6--(CP)--F. P. Var- coe, Deputy - Minister of Justice, resumes before the Supreme Court of Canada today his defence of the legality of the 62-year-old ban on the manufacture, importation and sale of margarine in Canada. Handling. the Dominion's case in the refsrence to this highest court in the land, he is expected to com- plete his submission, started in Tuesday's 'opening session, before the court hears the argument of The Canadian Federation of Agri- culture, also supporting the pro- hibition. The case stems from the adoption by the senate of a motion calling for a Supreme Colgt reference to determine whether the legislation, approved in 1886, is legal. The government agreed to refer the question to the court. Tuesday, Mr, Varcoe contended that the ban comes within the jurisdiction of the Federal Parlia- ment because it embraces agricul- ture, criminal law and regulation of trade--all of which were granted to the central authority under the British North America Act. Mr. Varcoe cited the section of the B.N.A. act which authorizes the Dominion to legislate for "the peace, order ahd good government of Canada" in all matters not as- signed exclusively to the provincial legislatures. In his formal submission, he read the preamble of the original act which called for the outlawing of margarine on the ground it was "injurious to health" and then cited present-day medical opinion that butter and margarine are "ex- actly equal" as a source of energy. Mr. Justice Thibaudeau Rinfret, heading a full bench of seven jus- tices, questioned the "objective" in citing arguments that margarine no longer is injurious. Mr. Varcoe said he thought the court might feel it was "relevant." Hospital In Path Of Forest Fire Winnipeg, Oct. 6--( 6--(CP)--Patients | and staff of an Indian hospital in | Manitoba's Interlake district peer- | ed anxiously through the smoke- filled air today, fearful lest forest fires burning five miles should bear down on' their prem. ! ises. Stafed by six nurses, the hospi- tal normally accommodates 40 pa- tients, but approximately 60 reported to be there now, includ- ing a number of persons from Dal- | north | las, the village six miles which was evacuated Tuesday. Firefighters said they do not ex- | pect the hospital, under normal cir- cumstances, to fall victim to the flames which have levelled several | farm homes and destroyed thous- ands of acres of timber in norin- central and eastern Manitoba witli. in the last week. Farmers Delayed By Dry Weather Toronto, Oct. 6--(CP)--Contin- ued dry weather hampered farm away | WHERE THERE'S COKE are | | ernment | ($8,000,008) ! | | | | operations all across Ontario last | week, the Provincial Agriculture Department said Tuesday weekly crop report. Scattered showers fell in many parts of the province, put short pastures were generally reported in is and in Eastern Ontario dry ground was delaying fall ploughing. Potato harvesting a silo fill- ing were well ddvanced in every | area. In the Algoma district ot} Northern Ontario some farmers | were harvesting from 200 to 300 bags of potatoes per acre. | Milk production dropped in Hu- ron County and cattle marketings fell off in Frontenac because of the short pasture, SHOWGIRL SUSPENDED London, Oct. 6 -- (Reuters) -- Beryl Lund, pretty 25-year-old amateur showgirl, has been sus- pended from her duties as a Supply Ministry clerk because she has as- sociated with the Communist Party "in such a way as to raise legitimate doubts as to her reliability." Miss Lund joined a growing number of civil servants suspended under the government's program to "purge" security departments of alleged Communists and Fascists. Production Drive Comes Under Fire In Great Britain By H. L. JONES Canadian Press Staff Writer i London (CP).--Production 'is the | cry in Socialist Britain today -- production for export to bridge the ! dollar gap--but within the ranks of | labor there are critics who doubt its wisdom and say so. The openly-critical group is com- paratively small -- not more than 400,000 out of Britain's total labor | force of 19,000,000. But it is vocal with, the argument that the ques- tion of production is irrevocably tied to others such as wages and | prices and long-term effects. These worker-critics, mainly from woodworking, electrical and bakery | trades, recently vented their feel- | ings at the annual convention of | the 8,000,000-member Trades Union | Congress at-Margate. The conven- | tion approved the production drive, | as it always has, but only after | heated debate. | One delegate declared there would not be an increase but a de- | crease in shipbuilding unless work- | ers got wage increase considera- ! tions. Another expressed fear un- |! employment would eventually follow all-out production. Others were howled down when they insisted on | injecting wages, profits and war | into the debts. 'Some said produc- | tion was a 'class question" and | asked "Who gets the most out of | it?" without answering their own | question. These critics, regarded as an ir- | ritation to smooth agreement | among the workers, present another | problem in a government produc- | tion drive that goes far beyond | merely appealing to the rank and | file. | To help modernize some of Bri- tain's out-moded factories the gov- | is spending £2,000,000 | on capital investment this year. Government publications are fis- | sued to thousands of factories sug- | gesting new production methods and novel ideas, Joint managemerit- workers production committees have | been set up and there are frequent union groups. Recently the government an- {nounced a United Nations indls= tridl efficiency team was coming to make suggestions. This caused a ripple of resentment in some labor and management quarters but the : general opinion expressed by the T.U.C. at Margate was "if they can tell us anything we'll accept it." The government frequently ree {ports direct to the workers, as Sig Stafford Cripps, chancellor of the exchequer, did at the Margate con- vention. He told delegates more production was the only road out of the economic jungle, that it | would keep price® down, protect the value of real wages and bring home needed dollars. But he said he would rather see intreduction of new machinery and new methods than longer hours of work. This statement was consid ered significant following the ad=- dress of retiring T.U.C. president | Miss Florence Hancock, who had | declared constant exhortation of the workers to work harder and longer without consideration of other factors caused "irritation" in | the rank and file. Under the unprecedented produc- | tion drive goods are pouring out |as never before. The production index stood at a monthly average of 120 for the first six months of | this year compared with 108 for all of 1947 and 100 for the whole of 1946. HUNTER SHOT, KILLED Hartland, N.B., Oct. 6--(CP)-- The second fatality since New Brunswick's hunting season opened [last Friday occurred Tuesday when | Donald Irving, 36, 'of Hartland, was shot by a cousin, Wesley Stew- art, 16, at nearby Highgate. THERE'S HOSPITALITY Pre-war Price. . . ;.:..25¢ Wartime Taxes & Orders I I¢ | BS batty You Pay 36¢ PLUS DEPOSIT 2¢ PER BOTTLE Ask for it either way . , . both trade-marks mean the same thing, 00) Authorized bottler of Coca-Cola under contract with Coca-Cola Ltd. Hambly's Carbonated Beverages OSHAWA -- TELEPHONE 755 NOW You can collet upto § HERE'S OUR 5 STAR PROGRAM Hospital or Nurses' fees up to $800.00 109020 EACH INDIVIDUAL ACCIDENT OR SICKNESS Miscellaneous Expenses as much as $40.00, up to $10.00 for X-Ray Surgeons' Fees up to $150.00 Doctors' Fees up to $100.00 Maternity Benefits -- regardless of where birth occurs JIM HUNTER CITY OR TOWN... I crrs | sam. eesnpm. | ExcerT sunDavs OCCUPATION MUTUAL BENEFIT HEALTH AND ACCIDENT ASSOCIATION J. W. PATTE 5 Bassett Bldg, 8 Simcoe St. S, Oshaws » gq

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