Daily Times-Gazette (Oshawa Edition), 20 Mar 1956, p. 6

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-ere TATE -- "we os mmwww a THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE Published by Times-Gazette Publishers Limited, 57 Simcoe St. South, Oshawa, Ont. Page 6 Tuesday, March 20, 1956 New Industries In Ontario; But Where Do They All Go? At a time when the powers that be in Oshawa are expressing concern about the lack of new industries seek- ing locations in Oshawa, it is highly enlightening to read the Ontario in- dustrial Review for 1955. This publi- cation is issued by the Ontario 'epart- ment of planning and development. It deals specifically with new industries and new branch plants established in Ontario communities in 1955. "t also lists industries which have undergone major additions to their plants in that year. According to this factual report, On- tario gained 115 new industries in 1955. This was an increase over the 91 established in 1954. In 1955, also, 43 Ontario manufacturing firms built branch plants in new locations in the province. And in the same year, 350 Ontario manufacturing companies are listed as having built major additions to their existing plants. All of these, with their locations are listed. Sad to relate, the name of Oshawa does not appear once in any of the lists, Whit by is shown as having acquired one new industry in 1955, while Ajax ac quired one new industry, two branch plants of other industries, and two ma- jor-additions to existing plants. Where did all the new industries and branch plants go. Of the new ind--t- ries 43 were established in Metro- politan Toronto. Of the branch induste ries, three were established in Toron- to, but 15 Toronto firms opened branch plants elsewhere in the province. Of the 320 major additions, reported, 101 were in Metropolitan Toronto. And scanning the lists, we see frequent ref- erences to Windsor, Kitchener, Sarnia, Chatham, St. Catharines, Brantford, Peterborough, Stratford, Hamilton, Kingston and Belleville as locations for new industries and new branch plants or additions. But as we have said, not a single mention of Oshawa. That is a situation which should give our new Industrial Commission in this city considerable food for thought. That Excise Tax On Cars Tonight Finance Minister Walter Harris will introduce his budget in the Canadian House of Commons. It is be- ing eagerly awaited by most of the people of Canada, and particularly by those who are in any way associated with the automobile industry. It has long been argued that the automobile has become a necessity, and is no longer a luxury. As such it is argued, it should not be subjected to the heavy excise and sales taxes now levied against it. There is at least one change in the taxes on automobiles that may be an- ticipated. It is likely that the regula- tions will be changed so as to have the present tax collected when the dealer sells the car, rather than at the time when it is delivered to him from the factory. This would obviate the heavy losses which many dealers sustained a year ago when the excise tax was reduced, and they received no rebate on cars on which the tax had already been paid. Perhaps it may be too much to ex- pect a reduction in the taxes on auto- mobiles this year, although some are optimistic enough to believe that they will be cut. This tax has long been the subject of dissatisfaction, and its re- moval would undoubtedly give a stimu- lus to the automobile industry by the reduction it would make possible in prices. But to us, it does not seem as if this will be done this year, desirable though it may be. There is much more likélihood of the tax being removed next year, when there is an election in the offing. It could be quite effective election bait if held over until next year. That, however, does not alter the fact that, with the automobile a neces- sity in business life today, and as a means of transportation for workers, the imposition of a luxury tax on it is grossly unfair, not only to the motor- ing public, but to the automobile in- dustry. TCA Again Makes New Records The annual report of the Trans- Canada Air Lines, shows a continua- tion of the marked success which has attended the operations of this pub- licly-owned transport system in recent years. In 1955, for the fifth successive year, the company has shown a net surplus. The surplus for the year amounted to $190,095, and while it is somewhat less than in 1954, it is nevertheless a very satisfactory result of the year's operations. Of even more interest and import- ance in the report, however, is the number of new records for air trans- port established by the TCA during the last year. The company carried the heaviest passenger, cargo and mail loads in its history. In the course of the year, it carried the 10 millionth passenger since its inception. Last year, it carried 1,682,195 passengers, Editorial Notes Stratford, Ontario proposes that representative citizens" should re- place judges and magistrates on police commissions. That would be a sure way of getting politics into police af- fairs. The Daily Times-Gazette T. L WILSON, Publisher and General Manager. M. MCINTYRE HOOD, Editor The Daily Times-Gazette (Oshawa, Whitby), com- bining The Oshawa Times (established 1871) and the Whitby Gazette and Chronicle (established 1863), is published daily (Sundays and statutory holidays ex- cepted). Members of Canadian Daily Newspapers Publishers Association, The Canadian Press, Audit Bureau of Cir. culation, and. the Ontario Provincial Dailies Association. The Canadian Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news despatches in the paper credit ed to it or to The Associated Press or Reuters, and also the local news published therein. All rights of special despatches are also reserved. Otfices: 44 King Street West, Toronto, Ontario: 229 University Tower Building, Montreal, P.Q. SUBSCRIPTION RATES Derivered by carriers in Oshawa, Whitby, Brooklin, Port Perry, Ajax, and Plekering, not over 30¢ per week, By mail (in province of Ontario), outside carrier de livery areas, $12.00. Elgewhere $15.00 per year. DAILY AVERAGE NET PAID CIRCULATION FOR FEBRUARY 13,041 an increase of 17 per cent over 1954. Freight and express revenues showed a combined increase of 30 per cent. Volume of air mail carried showed an increase of 11 per cent. Much of the continued success of the TCA is due to the management's pol- icy of keeping its equipment up to date. Introduction of the Viscount pro- peller-turbine planes to its fleet in 1955 made possible the provision of a still better transportation service to the public. They provided faster schedules, more travel comfort and a substantial increase in available accommodation. Expansion of services were also made possible, and in the matter of costs, air travel is coming closer to the éost of surface transportation. The TCA is to be commended on an- other highly successful year. With its forward-looking policies, this success should be continued, Bits Of Verse THE COW I USED TO CHASE That pasture should have kept a cow contended, She hadn't a shred of excuse for breaking out, And yet the fence she leaped or circumvented Was no more barrier than a small girl's shout, She had deep clover, daisies in their season, Asters, and vetch, blue cornflowers in the sun, Shade of a maple, and nowhere any reason For fancying some field was a greener one, I could faithfully pump the water for her trough, And feed her dandelions, and stroke her flanks, But turn back toward the barn and my cow was off. Gone free--and this was all I got for thanks: 1 learned to patch barbed wire with wearisome labors, . And she made me acquainted with everyone of the neighbors. --BETTY BRIDGMAN. Bible Thoughts Humanity has been trying to learn God's plan for thousands of years. There is in each of us a still small voice ready and anxious to supply guidance. Teach me thy way, O Jehovah, and lead me in a plain path.--Ps. 27.11. FATHER IS A CREATURE OF HABIT WELL - IT SAYS ) RIGHT HERE ./ 1S THE BEGINNING OF - SPRING // TODAY Indusirialization Makes Air Pollution Worse By BEM PRICE WASHINGTON (AP) -- About 50 years ago you could fling open a window with a reasonable chance oi collecting a chestful of fresh air--a mixture of gases roughly one-fifth oxygen and the rest ni- trogen with traces of carbon diox- ide, argon, neon, Krypton and hel- ium. Try it now. You will get the usual, but it will be diluted with plant-killing sulphur dioxide:, am- monias, oxidized hydrocarbons and assorted other gases and solids, none of which is going to do you ary good. The reason for the change is that with their automobiles, factories, oil burners, coal fires, backyard invinerators and burning trash d' mp:, people are slowly fouling the air they breathe. This matter of air pollution has reached the point where the U.S. g 'vernment through the depart- ment of heaith, education and wel- fare is embarking on a research pregram to determine the effect of dirty air on public health. LIZTLE IS KNOWN Research is one of the great reeds. While information on the effects of air pollution is volum- inous it becomes apparent, after you investigate a bit, that rela- tively little really is known. There i3 some thought that when certain man made chemicals, themselves harmless, are released into the air they combine with otherso r are changed by the reac tion with sunlight into irritants-- or worse, In Los Angeles, doctors have cited .he choking, smarting smog that settles over the city from time to time as a contributing fac- tor in some deaths. Last October a choking smog settled over New Orleans, trigger- ing a wave of asthma attacks which killed two persons and sent more than 350 to hospitals. During the last week of Octo- be., 1948, a stifling foglike pall cloaked the heavy industrial area around Donora and Webster, Pa. In 36 jours 20 persons were dead. LONDON HARD HIT Another smog squatted over the tetinery town of Poza Rica, Mex- ico. in 1953, leaving 22 dead and 320 in need of medical care. The great London smog of 1953 set off a wave of respiratory ill- nesses and hastened an estimated 4000 deaths. A study by W.C.L. Hemeon, di- rector of the industrial Hygiene Foundation of America at Pitls- burgh, indicates the killers in the London and Donora smogs were acidic salts from coal smoke that cried the fluids in the respiratory tracts and caused irritations. Each of these fatal smogs has becn brought about by a peculiar weather condition known as temp- erature inversion. Smogs occur most frequently in ratural bowls and in river and loke valleys. Masses of warm air moving down from the upper at. mosphere settle over the bowls and become compressed. When the mass drops low enough to touch the sides of the bowl, it is con- siderably warmer than the air at ground level. Since cool air has a tendency to settle and the warm air already is pres ing downward, this mass lies like a blanket over the com- munity, holding and concentrating the air pollutants, In most cities there is enough turbulence in the air to carry oif or disperse much of the pollution. Part of the research by the U.S. government will be a study of these temperature inversions. While coal smoke, blamed in the Donora tragedy, long has been a nuisance (England's King Edward 1 tried to curtail the ue of "seae coale" 65 years ago), it can be controlled. So, for that mat. tel, can smoke from other sources though the process is expensive. A prime example of what can be cone is New York city, which burns about 30,000,000 tons of fuel annually--coal and oil --for heat and power plus a billion gallons of gasoline. Dr. Leonard Greensburg, com- missioner of the department of air pollution control, reports that 10 rears ago 162 tons of soot settled on each square mile of New York each month. Now the soot level is down to 62 tons. In no other town has air pollu- ton been studied as extensively as in Los Angeles--and no coal is burned there. The Stanford Research Institute of Stanford University, Calif., has found tha: backyard incinerators, fuctories, stoves and automobiles in and around Los Angeles burn 50,000 tons of organic materials and fuels daily. Salk Tests Bare Strange By RENNIE TAYLOR BERKELEY, Calif. (AP) -- A searching new look at poliomyelitis shows that many illnesses diag- nosed 'as the disease--primarily the non - paralytic type--are not caused by the polio virus, but by organisms which the polio vaccine will not touch. Among these mysterious organ- Isms is a group of microbes face- tiously called '13 viruses in search of a disease." Another is a family known as the Coxsackie viruses. They infect humans but cause no known disease except vague fe- vers, The strange viruses began show- ing up in the Salk test cultures in evaluation work, At first the labor- atorfes were too busy looking for polio antibodies to bother with the new viruses which seemingly had nothing to do with polio. After the outbreak of disease among some who had received the Salk vaccine, however, the test la- boratories went back for a second look. In many instances they found the strange viruses were the only suspicious organisms in some cases diagnosed as poliomyelitis IMMUNE TO VACCINE A committee of the National Viruses Foundation for Infantile Paralysis investigated these viruses and Its findings included these points: The viruses are not inactivated by polio vaccine. They are inactivated by human gamma globulin, the substances which preceded the Salk vaccine as a polio fighter." This indicates to researchers that they will infect humans even if they do not cause a bona fide. disease. They are not related to the vir- uses of mumps, measles, cold sores, influenza or the group called the acute respiratory diseases, or the adenoidal-pharyngeal - conjunc- tival group which affects the throat and eyes. They are easily distinguishable from polio viruses by modern la- boratory techniques. The findings suggest such com- plications as these: People who get polio vaccine and develop good protection against the three conventional types of the vi- rus might become infected with some other virus and wind up with polio-like symptoms that fool the doctors and even cause paralysis. Or a person who has had a bout with the offbeat viruses and con- siders himself immune to poiio may still be susceptible to the dis- vase, MAC'S MEDITATIONS Peeking Into The Political Future or two to select their candidate for the federal election, speculation is in order. And we do not mind in- By M. McINYRE HOOD All the portaiis point to he bos. i al elec- . it i By ee I ont dulging in some guessing as to year -- probably in the latter part Why the next election is likely to ot the year. We do not think the be a humdinger. government will pull another mid- . There will, of course, be at least summer election again, as was three candidates in the field, pos- done the last time it appealed to sibly more. The three major politi- the people. So sometime after the cal parties, the Liberals, Progres- 1957 session is over, it is likely sive Conservatives and the CCF that an election will be called. will all have candidates in the This leaves rather up in the air field. And the forlorn hope ol some very important questions. Canadian politics, 2 aber. pro. Some of these are of a national ETEISIVES. MAY S80 ceeldes character. They include the follow- WHO WILL THEY BE? ing: Will Prime Minister St. Laur- The big question that comes to ent lead his Liberal party in the mind at this stage is just this -- : Who will the candidates of the most likely man to be chosen as i the ridin; Ris successor? Will Solon pou, three major parties in the riding BE? Here we can do some gazing who has suffered a severe setback jnto the crystal ball to see what in health, be leading the social omes up. Credit party in the next election? The only sure candidate, of These are items which will have a course, is the sitting member for direct bearing on the election cam- ontario riding, Michael Starr, Pro- paign in the result. Leadership of gressive Conservative. It is a fore- the Liberal party means a great gone conclusion, after his two vic- deal in Quebec. Leadership of the {ories in federal elections, that he Social Credit party means just as iil again be chosen as the stand- much in the western provinces. ard-bearer of his party. Changing ON THE LOCAL SCENE from a winning horse at such a Ve are much more interested, time, especially when the nation- however, in how things seem to al party is hoping to make consid- be shaping up on the local political erable gains in the next election, scene. As things look now, we are is something that is just not done due to have Jossidly the most in politics. And smce Mr. Starr is keenly-contested federal election still a young and ambitious man, that we have had since the days we do not imagine he will have any when Dr. T. E Kaiser and W H. desire to drop from the political Moore were rynning against each field at this juncture in his car- cther. Of course, anything that eer. So that makes candidate No. might be written about it now is 1. very much a matter of speculation LIBERAL: POSSIBILITY and conjecture. Many things may We can go out on a limb as happen to change the picture be- far as the possible Liberal candi- tween now and a period 18 months date concerned, and predict that from now. But since the Liberals at the forthcoming nominating con- are to be meeting in the next week vention, Dr. Claude Vipond will b= the nominee of the party. An effort was made but without success. to induce him to stand in the provin- cial general election of next year, but ali the signs point tc Dr, Vi- pond being willing to get into plit- ical life with both feet and to ac- cept the federal nomination at the coming convention. Member of the | Oshawa board of education, Dr. Vipond in his municipal elections has polled a splendid vote, which is evidence of his personal strength. So, unless our guessing is all wrong, that makes candidate No. 3. CHOICE OF THE CCF We have to go still farther out on a limb in trying to guess who will be the CCF candidate. Yet the eeneral concensus of opinion in and 'around Oshawa is that Mayor W. John Naylor will be the choice of that party. It is certain that Mayor Naylor can have the nomin- ation if he wants it, and we know that he will be subjected to con- siderable pressure to allow his name to go before the nominating convention, when it is held. Mayor Naylor's record, on the board of education, as an aldermen, and a third-term mayor, is well known in Oshawa. His CCF sup rters are confident that he would make an excellent representative at Ottawa for Ontario riding. So our guess is that 'he will be candidate No. 3-- and in making that guess we can say that we have never even dis- cussed the matter with Mayor Naylor, It is just what came up out of the crystal ball -- that's all. Just think what a contest it would make if these three men were in the field -- Michael Starr, Dr. Claude Vipond and Mayor W. John Naylor. In Oshawa, at least, the fight would be the keenest in many vears, and with a large rural area also concerned in the voting in Ontario riding, it would take more than a magician to predict what the result would be. Of course, many things ay hap- pen before the election, Many new: and important issues may come up before then, and they would have an influence on the result But 'we hope our guesses are correct, for no other reason than that these three candidates would really stir up election interest, and bring out a much bigger vote than has been ~ustomary in such elections. BYGONE FOR BETTER HEALTH DAYS 20 YEARS AGO The Independent Order of Fores ters entertained at a euchre party. Twenty-two tables were arranged By HERMAN N. BUNDESEN, MD and prizes went to Mrs. Pickup. ALTHOUGH nephrosis is one of Mr. Gutsell, Mr. Bryce, Mrs. of childhood, relatively little 1s The net result is the release McClemond, Mr. Nesbitt and Mrs. the most common chronic diseases into the atmosphere of some 3,000 Batch. known about it. tons of slids and ga:es. We don't know the cause, we TRACED TO AUTO The mothers and wives auxiliary have no sure cure, and the out- After a prolonged study a thou- of the Phi Delta Gamma Fratern. ¢ome in any one patient fs com- sand tons was traced to automo- ity. entertained at the Granite Club Pletely unpredictable. There is bile exhausts, including 290 tons in honor of Mrs. N. H. Brown Bot much publicity given the dis- of eye-stinging olefins, a hydro- before he. departure from the city, €ase, either, although about half carbon of the ehlylene series which Present from Oshawa were Mrs, ©f the victims die. can be used in making anaesthet- Brown, Mrs. R. H. Reyvmore, Mrs. STRIKES CHILDREN ics--or mustard gas. E. Bradley and Mrs. C. M. Mun. Nephrosis usually strikes chil Only 220 tons of the pollutants 9aY- dren between the ages of one and came from the vast peroleum ine a half and three and a half years. dustry in and around the city, _ The women's mission circle of Infants and older children, even Stanford said. The rest came from First Baptist Church held its regu. adults, sometimes are victims. the backyard incinerators, the lor meeting in the Sunday School Boys are affected more fre burning of natural gas and evap- With Mrs. Rice, president, presid- quently than girls. The disease oration of gasoline. The petroleum ing. Mrs. E. Hamlyn, Mrs. A. J. 3ftacks all races and occurs in industry was the heaviest finan- Milligan, Mrs. Howard and Mrs. All climates, too. We have no evi- cial contributor to the survey. J. Anderson were in charge of the deuce, that it is hereditary, N. L. Faith, chief engineer for Frogram. ie arious body functions the Air Pollution Foundation in : ie altted, the primary concern Ios Angeles, said, "there is evi- Mayor John Stacey and Alder- Bg he isturhen M fune. dence that automobile exhaust is man A. S. McLeese were appointed for Phin yr B hisvaze Tung the No. 1 culprit in air pollution." to represent the City of Oshawa missi } 5, Joni Sudden res Dr. Greenburg, in hearings on at a conference of the heads of sions and recovery sometimes 3 ; conte 3 caus ob occur. We don't know why air pouution legislation last year municipalities in Ottawa, 3 V| V! x in New York, put the finger on FOLLOWS INFECTIONS ' Sitomebile exhausts, too, saying Ina is, somlelimes. Bees Hey Jaay be 8, Taclor in the re- Northminster Church for the such as diphtheria, tuberculosis, Sent alaf g Increase HE ie unualty pight program, Dneumonia and syphilis. It begins ancer. ; t _Saywell opened the pro- gradually, sometimes with a per- doay Fone : pp. ons c Norminsterwas the main speak- the victim feels listless and is in ectio ctween exhaust fumes or All the numbers were well re- vague ill health, Over one hundred people gather- : ed in in lung fir.t Nephrosis Victims Mostly Very Young The first indication of childhood nephrosis usually is a swelling around the eyes, especially in the morning, Frequently the puffiness disappears by afternoon. At this stage it is difficult to detect the disease. Unless a urine examina- tion is made, a doctor might not even suspect nephrosis, The swelling increases as the illness progresses, becoming evi- dent in the feet and abdomen. Eventually, the .entire body be- comes swollen. UNEVEN COURSE Nephrosis does not run an even course. The swelling may disap- pear only to return again after a lapse of a few days, weeks or even months. Even blood and urine tests may give perfectly normal results dur. ing these periods of remission. But recurrences are frequent. If the are ve for as long as six months, ever; the victim probably is cured. QUESTION AND ANSWER A Reader: Why are presons with ulcers in most cases forbidden to drink and smoke? Answer: Since Stoking and the drinking of alcoholic beverages act as a stimulant for the secre- tions of hydrochloric acid and oth- er digestive juices, they may per- petuate and even increase the symptoms of the ulcer. and air pollution, it is giving con- ceived and a vote of thanks for siderable study to the problem. 4 Eight di'ferent automobile mak- fhe talent bt ad Dr. C. W. ers spent more than $1,000,000, last vear in a joint effort to control 3 a the release of hydrocarbons from _ King Street United Church held exhausts. One of their experiments 2 Special father 'and son service so far unsuccessful but promising, and Rev. R. J. McCormack con- involves the use of an after-burner ducted the program. on tailpipes. Aside from the health problem, The Olive Branch of Mission the economic lo's because of air Band met with Muriel Glass vice- pcllution is enormous. Metals cor- president in the chair. Mrs. Miller rode, synthetic fabrics are dam- aid Gertrude Moore were in charge aged, buildings are steaked with in the program. soot and so, for that matter, is your home, D MAC'S MUSINGS The Kiwanis Clubs of Canada are undertaking To wage a campaign Of a different kind Against books containing Obscenity and sadism, That questionable type 0! reading material which Is all too common tyday And which is flaunted before Children as well as adults. By TOM WHITNEY NE / YORK (AP)--One question raised in Russian minds by Nikita Khrushchev's denunciation of Sta- lin is what the present Communist party chief and his Kremlin col- Gro leagues were doing while Stalin guests at the subscription terrorized th~ Soviet Union. Li De Lodge Boss Chapter The political future of the' pres- eld in the King Edward i Soviet leaders possibly depends Toronto. cn the skill with which they answer this -- and on the ultimate conclu- G. Welton of Oshawa was nam- sicn which the Russian people ed as the third year Jeplessutative 1each. in the Engineering Society of ap- Khrushchev has already made plied science at Queen's Univer- 5 effort to sidestep this JBL sity. by declaring that he and Stalin's other subordinates were in fear of their lives. He says they never knew where the next blow was going to fall, never knew when they went in to see Stalin whether they'd come out. alive. NOT CERTAIN But it's not certain that the Rus- tian people will accept this as a completely satisfactory explana- tion. / key question is whether Soviet citizens may not, as a result of the revelations of Stalin's crimes and blunders, come to a more or less unanimous conclusion that they'd prefer to be ruled by peo- ple less intimately associated with the old dictator. Clearly, it is a shock for many Russians to be told that the sac- ri'ices of Stalin's purges and much of the sacrifice of the war itself were unnecessary, that they were extorted by an evil power - mad tyrant to satisfy his psychoses. Perhaps Russians inside and out- WINDY SPOT side the Communist party will be- Gale winds blov: 300 days of the gin to look to Soviet army leaders year on Kerguelen island, 2,750 for unsullied non - Stalinist guid- miles southeast of the Cape of ance. Good Hope. Never has the Soviet army's star r. Jim Bayne and Hap Gross were dance 10DE Hotel, Alderman A. S. McLeese was appointed as a member of the Welfare Board by the City Council. PAT NICHOLSON [S INDISPOSED Some of our readers have been inquiring why the usual "Ottawa Report' column, by correspondent of The Times Patrick Nicholson, Ottawa Gazette, has not been appear- ing on this page during the last two weeks. It is regretted that Mr. Nicholson has been ill dur- ing that period, and for that reason has been absent from his duties on Parliament Hill. As soon as he has recovered from his illness, he will re- sume his daily reports from Ottawa. This Kiwanis campaign is Different because it is Directed at the parents of Young children who are Being asked to sign a pledge To supervise closely all Literature available to Their children, and to allow No questionable books To come inside their homes. There is sound thinking Behind this campaign, since, If parents took a personal Interest in what is read By their children, the whole Problem could be solved, And our yqung folk trained To recognize the value Of reading the great array Of good books available. We have always believed That the attitude of Parents was at the root Of the distribution of Objectionable literature, And that if they did Their full duty in the Supervising of reading, The sa'e of these books Would become negligible. The In iation of Canada THOMSON, KERNAGHAN & CO. (MEMBER TORONTO STOCK EXCHANGE ) BOND and BROKERAGE OFFICE 16 KING ST. W., OSHAWA Resident Mgr, ERIC R. HENRY Dealers A Now Many Wear FALSE TEETH With More Comfort FASTEETH, a pleasant alkaline (non-acid) powder, holds false teeth more firmly. To eat and talk in more comfort, just sprinkle a little FAS- TEETH on your plates. No gummy, gooey, pasty taste or fes'ing, Checks "plate odor' (denture breath). Get FASTEETH at any drug counter, For Information DIAL RA 5-1104 Here's $64 Question In Stalin Mystery stood so high. Marshal Georgi Zhukov and other Red army lead- ers, as most Ru.sians understand things, did not do Stalin's dirty work, That was the job of such rarty leaders as Khrusnchev, V.M. Molotov, Georgi Malenkov, Nik- ciai Bulganin, Anastas Mikoyan and the rest of Stalin's politburo, DO YOU NEED A $50 for 2 weeks IIRL YC Examples You Cost for | Cost for Receive | 2 Weeks | 1 Month $50 | a7 | $1.00 $100 | .94 | $2.00 Other Examples Monthly Payments $ 7.78 $23.35 $27.00 $44.70 $67.05 ) | $89.40 You Receive $100 $300 $510.68 Larger amounts and many other pians to suit your budget. $560 to $5,000 without endorsers or bankakle security. SUPERIOR EFEINANCE 17 Simcoe St. N. RA 5-6541 Open Saturdays till 1 p.m. Open Wednesdays till 9 p.m.

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