Daily Times-Gazette, 4 Mar 1952, p. 3

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Jaycees Hear Talk On Foot And Mouth Disease Outb v ad reak Oshawa Druggists Seek By-Law to Regulate Store Closing Hours A petition, backed by a letter | from the Oshawa Retail Druggists' | ociation, presented last night at e statutory meeting of City Coun- cil, will probably be responsible for passage of a by-law to regulate hours of closing of such stores in| Oshawa. Under the provisions of the draft Jby-law submitted and with which, it was stated, all Oshawa druggists were in agreement, stores will be required to close every day be- tween the hours of nine o'clock in the evening and five the next morn- ing. The five o'clock provision was there, said T. K. Creighton, Q.C,, who represented the druggists be- fore Council, because of an old ordinance which stated that if a man wanted to open his store at five in the morning there should be nothing to prevent him. City Solicitor John Hare recalled that a request for passage of such a by-law was brought before City Council last December. At that time, he said, Council acting on his recommendation, declined to pass the by-law unless it was ac- companied by a petition. He agreed with Mr. Creighton that passage of the by-law was mandatory upon Council as it now was presented. In response to a question Mr. Creighton said that all druggists were agreeable to the hours of closing but that a new man might Ontario Spotlight *MISSES CAT, HITS FOOT Sudbury (CP) -- Mrs. Napoleon Thibeault, 59, of Alban, 35 miles southeast or her, tried to shoot a cat and hit her own "dcgs." She was carrying the cat in one hand and a .22-calibre rifle in the other when the gun discharged. A slug went through her foot. Mrs. Thibeault is in hospital; the cat is still- alive. goo ede SHOOT FOXES Toronto (CP) -- An organized fox hunt in suburban North York would have scandalized England's red-coated sportsmen. Members or the Danforth Rod and Gun Club bagged seven foxes--with rifles, CR RECALLS WEDDING Dixie (CP) -- Mrs. Elizabeth Mc- Callum, who celebrated her 84th birthday yesterday, recalled her marriage in 1890. She and her hus- band drove in a Democrat to the railway station and went on their honeymoon by train--to Toronto, 10 miles from here. LE ER 2 oN 3 come into the community, and if the by-law did not exist, throw the | whole agreed upon policy of hours | into chaos. In his remarks during which he | said that it was obvious that the by-law was being passed among | other reasons to shot out com-| petition, Mr. Hare said that he| thought the druggists should bear | the cost of public notices required | and should shoulder the onus of | enforcement. It was pointed out that the present policy whereby a drug store is open on Sundays and holi- days would be continued. The necessary by-law will be presented at the next meeting of City Council. Zoo Hunt Yields Its | TIMES CHANGE St. Thomas (CP) -- Mrs. Walter Owen of Union, first teacher in a ome-rqom school when it was built 50 years ago at Locke, was on hand yester- day at the opening of a new school complete with a combi- nation auditorium and gymnas- iufm. She told parents that at first she had no blackboard and wrote with blue chalk on plasier walls. +* + + NEW (CD DIRECTOR St. Catharines (CP)--Brig R. G. Whitelaw, retired, last night was appointed director and co-ordinator of civil defence for St. Catharines. City Council also appointed G. O. Darte, local underiaker, as deputy director. Brig. Whitelaw succeeds Lt.-Col. Murray Robertson who has resigned. * + + TRAPPER CARVES COFFIN Devonshire (CP) -- A 70-year- old trapper will be buried in a bright red casket which he carv- ed for himself with a jack-knife six years ago. The trapper, whose name was not given by friends whg related the story, Rewards a collector of Gerald Burrell, wild beasts, recently went to the Cameroons with a party in search of specimens for various zoological | societies, relates the BBC London Letter. They wanted to find rarities such as the White Mongoose, the Ang- wantibo Lemur, the Booming Squirrel and the Hairy Frog, but it was not just a question of going into the forest and finding the ani- mals for, contrary to popular be- lief, it.is an achievement to see an animal at all in the great African forests, and to catch one is almost a miracle. | ELUSIVE FROG They sometimes walked for] hours or even days without seeing anything more than a few butter- flies or birds. The hunters they in-| terviewed knew where the animals were to be found, all except the Hairy Frog affd their remarks] about that were frankly disbeliev- | ing. "Did the stranger mean a water rat perhaps?" '"No, he did! not," said Burrell, "he meant a frog with hair on its legs." | The hunters pursued everything | else enthusiastically but ceased to bother about the Hairy Frog for they were convinced that no such oddity existed except in the white men's brains. The cther quarries were relent- | lessly. tracked down and it took | two exhausting days to catch the White Mongoose with the aid of a pack of half-starved village. dogs. After a hair-raising pursuit, during which Burrell sprained his ankle, cut his shin, and ran head first into a wasps' nest and got badly stung, they ran the White Mon- goose to earth in a hollow tree trunk, the first animal of its kind to be brought back alive to Britain, OTHER SPECIMENS As time went on they got nearly all the specimens they wanted, Chimpanzees, Moustached Monk- eys, Baboons, the rare and lovely , Golden Cat and a priceless Ang- wantibos, but no Boomiing Squir- rels or Hairy Frogs. Burrell caught | a myriad of frogs that he had never seen before -- yellow frogs, frogs with pink spots, frogs that looked like leaves and frogs which looked like sticks, but none with a vestige: of hair. He decided at last to go a hun- dred miles up-country to highlands that had less forest and more roll-{ ing mountain grassland with nar- Coming Events LEBANON LODGE DINNER Meeting--86:30 p.m. Tuesday, March 11, Honourable McKinnon Phillips, Minister of Health,' guest speaker. Tickets $1.25 available until Satur- day, March 8th at 6 o'clock at of- fices of The Robert Simpson Co., Jury and Lovell, Houston's Ga- rage, Public Utilities and Jewell's | Men's Wear, (52¢) MISSIONARY ADDRESS, IN CEN- tre St. United Church, Wednesday, March 5th., at 2:30 pm., by Miss Luella Rorke, on furlough from Japan. All welcome. (54a) THORNTON'S CORNERS W.A. Home - Cooking Sale,. Thursday, March 6, two-thirty, Centre Street Church. (54b) 3-ACT COMEDY, "THE HAUNTED School = House", by Blackstock Young People's, Albert St. United Church, Friday, March 7th, 8 p.m. Admission 35 cents; children 20c. « (ba) was found shot to death by his own rifle in an isolated form- house in this community near Timmins, Friends said he fre- quently tried the hardwood box, which he used as a trunk, for size, + + Bb TEACHER SHORTAGE Toronto (CP) -- Education Min- ister Dunlop said last night the shortage fo teachers and classrooms in Ontario is increasing at a rate of 1,000 a year. In an address, he urged parents, church officials and businessmen to take an interest in -education. > + + DON'T. WANT FRILLS Meaford (CF) -- St. Vincent Township ratepayers voted yes- terday not to give up their 92- year-old one-room school. They had been asked to send their children to a new $350,000 pub- lic school here. "Frills mean nothing to us," saif a spokes- man for those who opposed closing the little school. Eastview Park Association Names Directors At the election held in the club- house of Eastview Pak on Mon- day March 3 the following were elected to the Board of Directors for the coming year: S. Aldswofth, A. Barnes, T. Barnes, J. Carey, E. Disney, A. Hennesey, C. Hubbell, W. Kirby, S. Melnichuk, J. Menzies, J. Mot- ley, I. Muir, H. Monaghan, J. Mor- rison, A. Parkin, Despite unfavorable conditions, 70 people braved the cold weather to cast their votes. The board of directors .will meet in the near future to elect its president and other officers for the year. row wooded strips bordering rush- ing streams. He soon found plenty of Boom- ing Squirrels and this left only one elusive specimen to be captured. He asked the natives of this new country if they had ever heard of a Hairy Frog and to his delight and amazement, they had. It was to be found in the fast- flowing valley streams, and night after night for a week they walked up and down icy watercourses look- ing over rocks, peering into holes and shouting above the din of waterfalls to scare it. : He had almost given up hope when he suddenly saw a fat 'choc- |olate-colored frog, large enough to cover a saucer, perched on a rock at the edge of a deep pool and his legs and sides were unmistakably covered with thick hair. Burrell grabbed at his long sought-after quarry, forgetting that this highly remarkable amphibian had a set of long, retractile claws like: a cat's which were used to good effect. The first Hairy Frog 'got away but they caught five more later and all the males had good coats of "hair." It was not really hair at all but, elongated skin filaments which, it is thought, act as a type of additional breathing apparatus, allowing the frog to extract a cer- tain amount of air from water even when he is submerged, THE OSHAWA Combining The Oshawa Times and Whitby Gazerte and Chronicle DAILY TIMES-GAZETT WHITBY VOL. 11--No. 54 OSHAWA-WHITBY, TUESDAY, MARCH 4, 1952 PAGE THREE Five students in the home econo- mics class at Centre Street School get a chance to relax and eat some dessert they have prepared during | PRACTICAL HOME ECONOMICS WORK their cooking class. They are | Donna Collins, Carole Anderson, Marilyn Olliffe, Louise Anderson | and Frances Barr, The girls are all wearing blouses they made during sewing classes ai the school. Photo By Dutton, Times Studio. City Council met last night for its statutory monthly assembly, and to the astonishment of ail | beholders, completed its business | | before ten o'clock. Three delega- | [tions were heard but they were | | dealt with in a manner which] smacked faintly of efficiency. As| the result the city fathers were] able to get through quite a goodly mass of correspondence. The fact | that the meeting began at 7.30 o'clock was also a help. I Dean of the council, Alderman | Clifford Harman, was the receip- | ient of congratulations. He was celebrating his thirty-fifth wedding | anniversary. Walter Fowlie spoke for the | people of the Fernhill Neighbor- hood Association. They wanted the five acres, presently known as Fernhill Park, confirmed as such as turned over to the jurisdiction {of the Board of Parks Manage- | ment. Reasons given were that it was a good location for a perman- ent playground and that the site was easily. maintained. It was pointed out that the land was in- herited from the Westmount School by the Board of Education upon annexation and that it was bought for $1,250. The City Property Ccm- mittee, the Planning Board and the Assessor will be asked to consider and report. President of the Oshawa Horti- cultural Society, Mr. Whitney, ap- | peared to ask Council co-operation lin the beautification of the Hill crofy district. The Board of Works will be asked to contribute loads of topsoil to the district so that it can be mulched with manure to | make flower beds. | | | |] Mr. | An individual® suppliant, | Lowrey, who owns five acres of land just north of the creek on the west side of Simcde Street South, appeared to ask council to prevent the outpouring of a storm sewer on his land. Matter was referred to the Board of Works. A letter was received from Wind- sor City Council in which the Oni- ario government was asked to in- stitute regulations making driving qualifications stiffer and requiring a certificate of physcal fitness be- fore 'granting a license. It was "received and filed." Sault Ste. Marie wanted concur- rence in a resolution asking that in view of high hospital costs in municipalities the government leave at least 90 per cent of all amusement tax collected in the city where it was collected. Con- currence was given. An application for a vendor's li- cence to sell peanuts and popcorn from James Colobakos was refer- red to the General Purpose Com- mittee. A letter from Gordon Wright, 262 Eulalie Avenue, asking that park- ing be limited on Eulalie Avenue west of Glecoff's Grocery store was referred to the Traffic and Transportation Committee. A letter from C. A. Glecoff ask- ing installation of a sewer on Eu- lalie Avenue between Verdun Road and Willingdon Avenue to assist the poor "overburdened taxpayer' was referred to the Board of Works. The City Property Committee will consider a petition for mod- ern lighting on Brock Street be- tween Mary and Division Streets. This petition was addressed to the Mayor and members of City Coun- cil and "body guards" -- whatever they are. City Property Committee will | confer with the Times Publishing | Company regarding the signing | of a new lease for the premises | at 65 Simcoe Street South occupied by the Welfare Board. ! A letter was received from 446 parents in the Taylor Avenue dis- trict asking that plans for a school | in that district be completed at once and enclosing a similar re-| | City Council Briefs | In view of the fact that City Coun- | East at that time. | West from Fernhill to the city's | quest to the Board of Education. | | cil recently held up a debenture by-law which would have provided | money for this and another school | until such times as the Board re-| viewed the school needs of the | people in the northeastern section | of the city, it "received and filled" | the epistle. A Jehovah Witness Assembly | will be held in Oshawa at the end of March. Permission was given last night for the local branch to string a banner across King Street The Board of Works was asked to consider a request for a cement | sidewalk north to Jones Avenue. | Council decided to take space worth $25 in a program being pre- pared by the women of the Ladies Auxiliary UAW-CIO who are pre- paring a musical comedy on March 13 and 14. The proceeds of this | entertainment will be devoted to the work of preventing cancer and | tuberculosis and to the Toronto | Sick Children's Hospital. | The Board of Works will investi- | gate the condition of the sidewalk | between William and Alice Streets on Divisicn. Alderman Naylor thought it pretty bad, Lighting conditions on McGre- gor and Centre Streets in the vicir- ity of Rotary Park were very bad Alderman Attersley said -- so bad that young women were being mo- lested. The PUC will be asked what it can do to rectify the situation --with regard to lighting that is. A request that the PUC consider installation of lights on King Street boundary was approved. { Alderman Hayward Murdoch gave a short report on the new city crest which has been under consideration for months and months. It evolved down to a ques- tion of the wording of the motto. The committee, composed of re- presentatives of representative city groups thought it should be "Labor and Prosper." The matter was tabled for the time being. A contract to paint a 'Danger' sign at the lake front was awarded to Donald George. The sign, 15 feet long and three feet high will cost $22. Alderman Norman Down was give permission to buy a picture of Queen Elizabeth II for the coun- cil chamber, Cost, $16. Colors for the recently establish- ed Silver Cross Association of Oshawa will be purchased by the city and presented to the organiza- tion. The Silver Cross Association is made up of wives and mothers of men lost in World Way II and perpetuates their memory by wel- fare work among needy families of deceased veterans. A request of Fred Kosiw, who wanted to build a 20 by 22 foot house on two acres of land he owned down by the lake on the ex- tension of Park Road South may bring the question of the 'green belt" to the fore again. The "green belt" was established following an- nexation and one rule made was that homes could not be built on less than five acres of land in its area. Discussion of the pros and cons of the subject was brief last ¥ You are invited to the 4TH ANNUAL OPEN MEETING ---- gf ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS PLAZA THEATRE Sunday, March 9th 8:30 p.m. Eg Big N Marketing Board Held Need Campbellford -- George Mc- Laughlin, of Oshawa, was the guest speaker at a recent luncheon meet- ing of the local Rotary Club. Mr. McLaughlin said, 'the farm- 'er is the only man who buys in the retail and sells in the whole- sale markets. He is the last man to get the advantages of rising | prices, and in some cases, also the first. The middleman takes his pro- fit regardless of rising or falling prices." The farmer, said the speaker, is, to a great degree, himself respon- sible for this situation. In making a profit there are three fundamien- tal factors to consider -- price, quantity and cost. The farmer, regardless of long- run conditions, was prone to] jump into the production of a com- | modity because of the high prices! prevailing, If enough farmers do this, high prices were automati- cally lowered and no one but the farmer is to blame. DOES TOO MUCH Often too anxious to spread out, | the farmer tries to do many things | instead of doing a few things well. | Mr. McLaughlin said that there would be better quality commodi- ties produced if the farmer was in- terested im taking one product all the way from the production through to the consumption stage. Planned production, along correct lines and according to the suita- bility of the land itself, and an in- terest in the distribution angle of farm products, would improve both the price and the quality, said Mr. McLaughlin. . He suggested esthat if the farm- ers of Canada do not do more than the half job they are doing at the present time, the masses of Eu- | rope and Asia would sooner or lat- | er try to do it for them. An international marketing board would do away with all problems of surpluses and be a great factor for peace, said the speaker. Education is the soundest social | Insurance which can be employed, and the nation which neglects it is inviting disaster. What we want in the people we must put in the schools. (Georgia Educational Journal) night but Alderman Norman Down gave notice that he wanted to see it threshed out fully at a future meeting. - In a letter to Council the Plan- ning Board states that it did not consider the erection of a foot- bridge across Oshawa Creek at the Robson Leather Company pro- perty feasible. Alderman Hayward Murdoch said that, aside entirely from the legal complications and the cost of construction which would probably be in the neighbor- hood of $5,000, there was the fact that the banks at that point were eroding badly. It was decided to ask the Board to consider a site further north perhaps in the vicin- ity of Cedar Street. City Does Turn About On Poolroom Last Thursday night City Council granted permission to issue a licence to Frank Gerace to operate a poolroom at 44)2 Simcoe Street North. Last night, after Alderman Cephas Gay was accused of "with- holding information at the previous meeting, council decided to hold up issuance, of the licence until such times as Mr. Gerace complies with such building changes as might be ordered by the Fire Chief and the Board of Health. The question which, it was thought, was interred last week af- ter some discussion as to the ad- visibility (on moral grounds) of having another Oshawa poolroom, was exhumed by a letter from S. Frank Cawker who lives on the other half of 442 Simcoe Street North, Mr. Cawker pointed out that the stairway which would be used by poolroom patrons was common al- so to his residence as was one of his walls to the poolroom premises. He feared that rowdyism and noise would make living conditions intolerable. It was brought out that in a letter to the City Clerk, Fire Chief Wesley Elliott agreed that a pool- room licence should be granted but only after some major building al- terations, one of which was a new tiled chimney, were made. '""We should have been Yrmed with this information last week when we made our decision. I am sorry that this information was withheld by Alderman Gay when he was pressing that thfs licence be granted', said Alderman Nor- man Down who is Alderman Gay's Vice-Chairman on the General Pur- pose Committee of City Council. Alderman Frank McCaullum thought council would have refused the application had it known all the facts last week. "What about this business of passing a motion one night and rescinding it the next. We must Dyer. "It seems to me that this is a matter between the two men involved and not within the com- petence of this council." Would Make Local Taxes Deductible Halifax (CP) -- A Liberal mem- ber of the Nova Scotia legislature wants provincial and municipal taxes to be deductible from federal taxes. William H. Pipe, (Lib.--Kings), speaking in the Throne Speech de- bate yesterday, urged the Nova Scotia government to make 'strong representations .to Ottawa that | such deductions be allowed." "It would 'be a legitimate way of extending federal assistance to all municipalities, for it would give un- doubted relief to individual tax- payers, while at the same time en- abling the municipalities to raise their assessments or rates without corresponding increase of burden on cur citizens," he said. Today's Birthdays Congratulations are extended to the following readers of The Times- Gazette, who are celebrating their birthdays today: Mrs, Alice McCabe, 250 St. Julien Street. Mrs. Leo Keeler, 84 Centre Street. CHARGE STOLE CHEQUES New York (AP)--Peggy Ells- worth, 24, 'Miss Michigan" of 1947, was arrested yesterday, ac- cused of cashing stolen govern- ment cheques two years ago to get narcotics. The raven-haired beauty was an admitted dope addict, but she told a Michigan legislative committee last summer that she had cured herself. PLAN TV TOWER Montreal phone Company will begin work this week on a 100-foot microwave tower and an equipment building on Mount Royalit was announced yesterday. It will be the second television tower on the mountain, where the CBC's transmitter now | is under construction. The Public are Cordially Invited ' to Attend the ANNUAL MEETING of the RED CROSS SOCIETY To be held at the ADELAIDE HOUSE, Y.W.C.A. Thursday, March 6th -- 8 p.m. Guest Speaker MR. L. R. (Commissioner Ont. STRINGER Red Cross Society) Refreshments Will Be Served! (CP)--The Bell Tele- on the foot-and-mouth disease The foot - and - mouth disease, said the speaker, who is owner of one of Canada's finest dairy herds, is a filterable virus which has its seat either in the lymph glands or in the bone marrow of cloven hoof cattle. Horses, for example, are immune to the plague. About 60 per cent of cattle usually recover from the foot-and-mouth ailment, said Mr. McLaughlin, and they are then immune to Ethier attacks, but s aS-earriers of the That is whe in stamp- there is a | to further shipments of Canadian cattle, went on the speaker, and would only re-open 60 days after the outbreak had been cleared up. In fact, declared this business-like farmer, there were groups locbby- | ing in Washington to make the embargo a permanent one. That state of affairs, he asserted, would put Canada on the rocks eco- nomically. | To show what effect the disease | was already having in Canada, | Mr. McLaughlin pointed out that | there were 51 animals on the Canadian market yesterday, com- pared with 2,000 the same time last week. The speaker described some of the advantages of Holstein cattle | over other breeds, this breed hav- | ing been introduced to Canada 70 | years ago. The holstein-Freisian | Association last year registered | some 70,000 cows, more than twice |as many as all the other breeds | together, and did a $250,000 busi- | ness. | SHIP TO 23 COUNTRIES Canada has shipped animals of | look pretty foolish to the general nis arge and healthy strain to 23 | public," observed Alderman John| countries abroad, including Pales- | tine, Argentina and Japan. Two | vears ago Peron"s land bought | $100,000 worth of cattle. The | state of Pennsylvania has also been a good market. of the foot-and-mouth disease, Mr. McLaughlin cited the instance of a farmer near Lindsay, who had 500 dairy cows which were shortly due to calve. By now, he would probably have marketed them in the States, but with the border closed he will have to keep them past calving time, and without proper milking facilities and per- sonnel at his disposal, the man will have nearly 500 milk-produc- ers to cope with. Mr. McLaughlin stressed 'that the cattle qlague would not reach serious proportions if it could be kept localized in the region of. its present outbreak. To that end, he said, the various provincial | borders had been closed, even the | one between Ontario and Quebec.' Government action was being tak- en, the speaker concluded, to con- tain the menace and keep it from spreading. The speaker was thanked by President Don Lander for his in- formative and illuminating talk, |and reports on various Jaycee ac- | tivities were heard. | DISCUSS RADIO FORUM | Vice-president Doug Wilson led a short discussion on the Junior {Chamber of Commerce Radio For- 'um, which has already run three | programs, on the "Do It Now" Cam- | paign, the CRA and the YMCA, and has one to go in its trial series, on "Municipal Taxes." It was decided | to leave it to the executive for fur- ther action. The Forum Committee consists of Doug Langmaid, Don Allman, Ralph Jones, Dcn Crossley and Alf Redknapp. Reports on clinics at the Jaycee Welland Conference were given by Alex Ferries, Lloyd Campbell, Chick Hewitt and 2nd vice-president Don Brown, HEAR PROGRESS REPORTS To get back to the seriousness | Tommy Cook was named as] Chairman of the Traffic Safety | Ramifications Of Disease on Farms Of Canada Cited Speaking to the Jaycees at the Genosha Hotel last night and the repercussions for Can- ada if the plague should spread, George McLaughlin of Elm- croft Farms, also gave an illuminating report on the make- up and activities of the Holstein-Freisian Association of Canada, of which he is a director. > DIES SUDDENLY Stanley Edgar Hann, well known local tailor, who passed away sud- denly yesterday morning in his 76th year. The funeral will be held from the Luke-McIntosh Funeral Home dt 2 p.m. tomorrow. Manchester News Budget Manchester -- A number from here attended the telephone euchre at the home of Mr. and Mrs, J. E, Holtby on Saturday evening. Mrs. John Cranley and daughter | Jill of Windsor, are visiting her sister, Mrs. A. Roach and family. Mr. Bruce Hedges of Toronto, was with his parents here on Sun- day. Mr. Grant Innes wna family have moved into - Mr. D. McKenzie's house. We welcome them to Man- chester. Mr. and Mrs. D. W. Crosier, Stouffville, visited Mr. and Mrs. W, F. Crosier on Thursday. Those who saw the moving pice | tures in the hall last Friday even- | ing, enjoyed them very much. Pro- | ceeds were for Church and Sun- | day school. | Mr. and Mrs. A. Roach and daughters, visited friends in To- | ronto on Sunday. UNIQUE PARTNERSHIP | Halifax (CP) -- A partnership | believed unique in Canada was | established here last night. The | Halifax 1ocal of the Musicians Union | presented a $1000 cheque to the Nova Scotia Opera Association, which is putting up an equal {amount on an orchestra-building program for a full symphony orchestra in Halifax. | | Committee, and progress reports |were heard on the forthcoming | Home Builders and Home Furnish- | ings Fair, a Jaycee project, of | which Don Brown is chairman and | Bill Henry is co-chairman. Report |ing were Perc Ploss, Bob Dewland, | Tom Currell, Walt Libby, Tommy Cook and Bill Mavis. Jim Hare entertained at the pi- ano and 'led a sing-song. Brock Brace announced the Little Theatre productich of Noel Coward's "Blithe Spirit" in the OCVI Auditorium for Friday and Saturday of this week. Listen to MIKE ""E"" CKLB Sunday, March 9th 6:05 p.m. : of Our 13V2 Simcoe SERVICE! WE DON'T SELL IT! We Give It To Every Client List your property with us now -- for prompt, courteous service. We have clients waiting to purchase homes, large and small, building property and business property. "Dial 3-3849 LEON B. NASH REAL ESTATE BROKER Office Street North bases rn rr ---- S-- m--

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