The Oshawa Times, 5 Jan 1960, p. 2

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dress «of «the plan to y A THE OSHAWA TIMES, Tuesday, January 5, 1960 WEATHER FORECAST "GOOD EVENING By JACK GEARIN Cold Continues, - CITY NEEDS A CITY MANAGER Mayor Lyman Gifford to be congratulated. This needs a city manager form is city desperately of government to stream- line Council's work and fhisis. ype he advocated in no uncertair terms inaugural add ; The fact that His Wor- ship plans an early motion to set up a committee to ate t possibility the CM (or some te of government) not mean that the proposal will be "welcomed with open mvest of int he alter form does ar 5 n cou His w . MAYOR GIFFORD ocating time, however, . to be v hoped the majority on council will sup- n this important progr: and it is propsal was neatly ouncement out of V just marked the CM form Colter, Windsor's city mana sphere of skepticism and was s several councillers. r+ Patrick of Windsor Monday: no question that the city's aff are g more smoothly than they ever did and all the members of council, including myself, are gratified that we chose Mr. Colter for the position of city man- ager." timed to synchro dsor, Ont } its y n of govern took irs had saved the city the cost nually) and many times over in been able to effect and in which city hal DEPARTMENT HEADS ty ma is appointed by council ive officer; city le to the counc the city's affairs and of the b functions ROLE OF The ci and asporisi i 1 of supervision ecting of the © the city. ed this out last Aug to the adian Ass m the CM for government. The heads of department appointed by the Council on t he city manager's recommendation, he ex- plained, the department head i > city. mz: or for the efficie oper: partment and for the training .and s personnel in his department, He is re regular reports on the efficiency and at de of employee in his department. He also recommends sal- ary and pay increases. Oshawa's departmental heads are highly efficient and experienced group. They are also respected by the councillors and the public with whom they come into contact. Therefore, there may be some apprehension and fear on their part that a city manager would supersede the min too many ways. The record shows that where the CM form of government operates ef- ficiently there is no need for such apprehension which is, after all, only natural. a all, MUST CONTROL DEPARTMENTS Colter says the strongest advocates ger plan are to be found among depa be seen that it is vital have departmental heads who can cont their departments efficiently. I think that the cause much of this fear the feeling that when t manager is appointed he will immediately deal with of is ' 18 ity the detailed work in all the departments. This is obviously *velectorate. It is the blending of the know AERA REEE REE NE EE ~buttons a impossible and undesirable." 'If local councils undertake to go it alc ir of their decisions they may get lost and wa Members of city councils should rely on adm to get the fact with suggested alternative policies. "Administrators spend their lives at City Hall, but eouncilmen come and go according to the w { the the r and of the councilmen, which makes for . Our way of living is not a matter of push d gadgets, it calls for consistent, hard efforts administrators and citizens who seek ces." nl many around, adr $004 | says that when a municipal organization confuses the voters and wears down and administrators with little, if any, action City business today is big business, he all the services provided require great know- nd experience and extensive training if these jobs are to be done efficiently. COLTER HAS FINE RECORD Many councils control departments through stand- . nittees which supervise each department head, as is done in Oshawa. This means that committee mem- bers must do two jobs at once and may do neither prop- erly. These councillors neglect their real job, that is the one of deciding policy, by dealing with details. In addi , the council as a whole gets only a broken picture of how its decisions are carried out. When all the department heads are required to deal with a single full-time executive officer responsible and re- porting to council, the elected body gets a better pic- ture of what is going on. Mr. Colter is quoted extensively in this column because of his fine record in past years as a city man- ager in Saint John, N.B., and Sarnia and Windsor, where . he is now employed at an annual salary of $17,500. He ; won't be locking for a job for a long time, if ever, Perhaps the best thing the city could do at the : present time 'would be to invite Mr. Colter to Oshawa « to giv a public address on the CM form of government, which he understands so well. Surely such an appearance could do much to remove * the clouds of doubt now permeating the minds of some f 1 0 do much to le our cour rs and civic officials. Certainly it could d support to Mayor Gifford's most ex- cellent proposal which is the result of long and constant ; study of the CM form of government. Would one of the service clubs be willing to extend Colter an' invitation in the interests of public : service' The sooner the better, because the hour is getting TORONTO (CP) Forecasts issued by the weather office at! : Winter continued to io in its grip Monday Snowflurries prevailed in of Ontario today with {heavier squalls expected in the {Lake Huron Georgian Bay snow- belt area. Wednesday will see at least partial clearing in 2'l re-| gions but temperatures will con-| ' Snowflurries Haliburton, Kirkland Lake re gions, North Bay, Sudbury: Partly cloudy with a few li snowflurries today. Partly cloudy Wednesday. Little change in tem- perature. Winds west 20. Timmins-Kapuskasing: Partly| cloudy today and Wednesday. A few snowflurries Wednesday afternoon and evening. Little| change in temperature. Winds] west to northwest 15 and 25 to- | Analyse Cost Of Bypass BROUGHAM -- Pickering Township Council Monday night decided to retain a planning con-| sultant firm for an independent cost analysis of two Canadian National Railways by-| pass routes to run through the municipality. The council does not want to W ¢ figures from the CNR on The committee u what either route will cost the|year to fight off-shore drilling for| accept a g : township in zoning and planning gil snd gas In lakes Huron : Srie. adjustments. The bypass line extends 25 Township To CAPSULE NEWS No Aid Given On Pollution VOTE NO AID 'SURPRISE THE WORLD' CHATHAM (CP)--City .councill VIENNA, Austria (Reuters) -- proposed|decided Monday mot to give fi- Budapest Radio Monday night nancial |American Committee on Water|ing that Russia will launch a new |Pollution as other organizdtionsirocket which will "surprise the ere controlling water pollution. world" before the East - West aid to the Canadian-|quoted Soviet scientists as say- was. set up last'summit con'erence May 16. NEHRU HOPEFUL LONDON (AP)--Prime Minis- {ter Nehru of India said Monday [night there is bound to be con- disarmament in the and! HONORS TO VANIER tinue on. the cold side. Regional forecasts right Wednesday. Lake Erie, Niagara, Lake On- tdrio regions, Windsor, Hamilton, Cloudy with occasional | 1 St. Thomas . '| London* S Wingham . ¥, becoming Toronto southwest 15| Trenton ... {St. Catharines Hamilton ... Muskoka .. Killaloe ... Earlton ... Sudbury .. North Bay . Kapuskasing . White River . {Moosonee .......... CITY AND DISTRICT CASE REMANDED |ists are urged to exercise cau- Earl Cooper, 89 Avenue street, |tion in approaching the intersec-| day, light tonight and Wednes- valid until day, Forecast Temperatures tonight change west 15 light tonight Wednesday Lake Huron, Georgian Bay re. gions, London: Cloudy wih snow- and occasional = snow- . Wednesday partly asional snowflur in tempera- t to northwest 20 lay, west 20 tonight and and H : s g5 |i til they become accustomed pleaded guilty to stealing $165.95, (tion unt A } pleaded gui o g '\to the new installation. miles through Pickering, Mark-l m,poNTO (CP) -- Governor-|siderable iam and Vaughan Townships. Genoral Vanier will receive animext 10 years. Speaking on a here are plans fo build a largely ovary degree of doctor of|taped BBC television program, freight marshalling yard west i,q a4 the University of Toronto|Nehru said he thinks the cold of Richmond Hill. Feb. 8, it was announced Mon- war "will get progressively less The first route, strongly favor. day. ' land less" in the coming decade. od by the CNR, runs through | Dunbarton, The second, an alter-| JOIN LIBRARY BOARD TOWNSHIP APPOINTMENT native requested by the Metro| OTTAWA (CP) -- A specialist) OTTAWA (CP) Gerald Planning Board's technical com-|in Canadian literature, a 1i- Dooley, former assistant in mittee, skirts Dunbarton and brarian and a housewife were ap-|Gloucester Townships treasury uns through parallel to the Sec- pointed Monday to the National | department, has been appointed ond Concession, It involves diver- Library Board by Citizenship acting treasurer. He succeeds T. sion of Duffin's Creek. | Minister . Fairclough. The mew G. Bender who gees to Belleville CNR officials will meet with members are author Dr. Sera-'as city treasurer later this township 'residents at Dunbarton phin Marion o otaws, Voravian month, Friday evening to discuss the pro-|John 8. Russell o nnipeg an y posed alternative. Mrs. Donald Lidstone of Sum-| FATALITY. FREE YEAR Hy ARNIA (CP)--A brief cere The Metro Planning Board has merside, P.E.L br! Iready granted tentative approv- {mony was he here Monday as BP ex atans for tho Dyhass KISS OR FREEZE Sarnia marked a fatality - free al to CNR plans for the BYPASS|- opr\WA (CP) -- Police are year. The last fatality in the city ie nships. investigating complaints of moth- was in September, 1958. ers that a young Romeo haS| guppy yore TONIGHT CITY COUNCIL been accosting girls at a geboo] |skati rink, d 1d isses| S rea OF TINE, Semandi Girls for Local 18-639 of the Oil, Chemi- [tha ' d in/cal and Atomic Workers Interna- jthat don't £omply. gre. dumpe tional Union (CLC) said Monday SARNIA (CP) Negotiators _ NEWS IN BRIEF { Traffic committee' chairman {the snowbank, | sentence a! SIX AMBULANCE CALLS D va Fire Department yorted x routine ambulance since Monday morning. There were no fire alarms. MINOR ACCIDENT a Police Depart- only one minor Two cars were i collision at Bond street and McMillan drive. One car was driven by Altona Mark, | of Union avenue, Port Perry. The| er of the other car was Roy Bo ; RR 1, Pontypool. Tog, meeting of the Rotary HOSPITAL REPORT Following the report of the ospital for the admissions is harges, charges major surgery, 73; eye, ear, 44: examination, 36 50; casts, 26; treatments, 155. e '21, female 20; Jery nose and throat, treatments, physiotherapy FIRM INCORPORATED The current issue of The On tario Gaeztte carries t a nm letters pat peration have been gr Thermo-Temp Indusries of Can ada, Limited, which has its head office in Oshawa. that VISITORS AT ROTARY | Among the visitors at the Mon- SLASHED IN FATAL ATTACK Mrs. Diane Fournier hobbles | the slaying of Stanley Coulson into police headquarters at To- | at her home in Toronto Jan. ronto on crutches. Her leg was | 2. Her husband, Auray s by a seven-inch knife , a postal clerk 'Will Bring Suit UXBRIDGE -- Mrs. Marguer-|which Mrs. Chatterley's husband, Clublite Chatterley said she will seek Graham, is chief constable. Four- | has | immediate court action to obtain a seat on town council after she tal estimated damage was $575, | ¢ Ochawa were Rev. H. A. Mel | ra {low, of Oshawa: Ernest Herzig, of | JUDGMENT RESERVED Toronto and Rotarians C. Stanley Tokarowski, 37, of 165 Thomas, Terry Moore and Rev. Gibb 'street, pleaded innocent of John Van Harmelon, of Whitby; {drunk driving when he appeared gd, Rvzak. of Ajax; Ross N in Oshawa magistrate's court, |son, of Pickering and N. Elliott, I After hearing evidence lof Peterborough. te F. S. Ebbs reserved . until Jan. 11. The GRANT AWARDED charge was laid after an accident| Welfare Minister Louis et south, Nov. 8, in announced 'in Toronto Monday ki was injured. [that a grant of $59,043 has been | forwarded to the City of Oshawa | SEVEN-DAY TERM {toward the construction of the | Wiliam Gooding, 323 Alberf!207-bed Hillsdale Manor Home |street, pleaded guilty to drunk for the Aged. Hon. Cecile said {driving when he appeared be'ore that grants totalling $538,882 had Magistrate F. S. Ebbs, Monday. been made by his department to He was sentenced to seven days|five aged homes in the province. in jail. His licence was suspended . for six months |PLAN INAUGURAL MEETING | [ficlals of the Oshay 0./was denied permission 1 sworn in as a councillor Monday [open for council were filled, a| by Mayor William Hochberg at|Second nomination meeting Was|coynty clerk - treasurer, gave result of a 4 ; Inotice of the intent of the county Egypt and a threat by President Mrs. Chatterley said she is le-| Mrs. Chatterley was again nom-\\,"wundraw from the joint (with Nasser of the United Arab Re-| Oshawa) civil defence program. [public to divert Jordan River | headwaters. at -------- Cecile! to be council's inaugural meeting. gallv entitled to a seat on council because she was properly nomin- Nov. 25 ion accepted by returning officer Delmas Long. REFUSED TO SIGN Mr. Long, on advice from the town solicitor, later refused to sign Mrs. Chatterley's qualifica- tion papers because he had re- ceived her nomination paper "about 30 seconds after closing time for nominations". He also ed knowledge of a paper nom- ing Mrs, Chatterley, e clams he received earlier the STREETS CLOSED | Of i The following streets will be of Education announced lclosed for construction today: |that the board will hold its in Gibbons street from Annapolis to|augural meeting in the OCVI |Fairleigh; Wayne avenue from boardroom at § p.m. Thursday, |Simecoe street north to west end Jan, 14. of street. Whenever possible| later outside the town hall as a these streets will be partially ATTENDS CONVENTION | result of an. investigation by the opened to permit movement of| Jack Judge, president o is-| Uxbridge police de artment : of local traffic. Extreme heavy rain|trict No. 20, Ontario Secondary! 1 -- p P me evening. A crumpled and torn nomina- tion paper bearing the names of Mrs. Chatterley, SECOND NOMINATION Since only five of the six seats {held Dec. 10. inated for what she claims to be the third time. She questioned and her. nomina-|the legality of the meeting and| f said that. she considered hers |already legally elected to council {bv acclamation. Only two of the four persons nominated at the second nomina- tion meeting qualified. In an elec- {tion held Dec. 21, W. H. Gould | defeated Fred Kellan for the sixth {seat on council. | Through her solicitor Thomas Harris, Mrs. Chatterley said Mon- {day she will immediately seek a wheh [hearing on the matter before ei-| ther an Ontario County judge an Ontario Supreme Court juc on the grounds that "Mrs. Chat: terley was duly elected and is a r her mover and|member of council because the ander Christie was held at the seconde 'was found a few days|election proceedings were not ac-|Armstrong Funeral Chapel, Mon- tion that legislation be sought] |cording to law and therefore the election of Mr. Gould is in- ivalid," . may result in the closing of other School Teachers' Federation and streets a member of the staff of the Osh-| awa Central Collegiate Institute,| CAUTION URGED was among the 250 delegates at- The city 1gineer's department tending the three-day annual as- announc this morning that the sembly of the 11,000-member On- new tra lights, at the intersec-|tario Secondary School Teachers' [tion of Mar and Adelaide streets, Federation in Toronto during the would be turned on today. Motor-'last week in December. 'TV-RADIO COLUMN | Attraction Rediscovered On Screen By CYNTHIA LOWRY | By ALAN HARVEY | Canadian Press Staff Writer | PARIS (CP)--A crowded time- table' confronts western states- Q {men in the early months of 1960. Of wports | Conferences, state visits and |preliminary work by! experts (officials dancing the {measures of the diplomatic min- {uet well into midsummer. : | Hand} " : { However, sports events have Wola trade, a changing !certain advantages. In the first *"'/ disarmament, Timetable Keeps Canada Hopping ing of course the conference of Commonwealth prime ministers starting in London May 3. The government is playing a key role in disarmament, and is intimately involved in talks de- signed to fit an Atlantic trade {promise to keep ministers and umbrella aver divided Europe mincing and in continuing Western con-| {sultation on summniitry, | Under External Affairs Minis- ter Green, Canada has shown Common- signs of grasping any suitable! opportunities to act on behalf of smaller countries. She is not | "questing" for a new role as smaller-power spokesman, it is understood here, but y wishes to be alive to occasions anada will be involved in vir- in which her particular role in| world affairs may be utilized. | Here are the provisional diplo- {matic dates for early 1930: | Jan, 13--Ad hoc Paris meeting {of 13 countries, including Canada, [to study ways of tightening trade |ties between Europe and North America. Jan. 14--Paris meeting of 18- nation Organization of European Economic Co-operation. Canada is an associate member, Jan. 18--Washington ' meeting of ambassadors of five Western countries, including Canada, on disarmament, East - West rela-| tions and Germany. Jan. 25--Washington "meetings of Western "working. groups" on same subjects, March 15-First meeting, at Geneva, of 10 « power disarma- no progress was made in talks LEADS OCEAN STUDY {with Union Gas of Canada Lim. A alee a hort raffle! ys" Cameron, 44, leading Cana- meet tonight to set a deadline lights will be in operation al ji. "a inority on oceanography, for strike action to back up wage day, or at the latest, Wednesday. : ' : Y "the federal government's ex- The Bloor - Ritson intersection is panding oceanographic research i. in about 10 days. T : rmer ror | 17QINING YORK UNIVERSITY TROIS-RIVIERES, Que. (CP) . M. Frost acknowledged receipt of|5400 tons of steel arrived Mon- Seminar a city council resolution concern-|day to launch what shipping men gly. He commented that the season for this port 500 miles in- selection of the site is a matter land from the St. Lawrence Gulf. iniversity to decide. Line vessel won the silver tray| LONDON, Ont. (CP) -- Dele- . awarded the first salt-water ar-|gates from 18 Western Ontario GOOD ROADS RALLY w Monday for the district's first po- tion notified council that the 1960 SAYS TENSION ACUTE lice training seminar, [Ho med Ce heid 'at the| MONTREAL (CP) -- Rabble B se ph leader of da's Jewish com officers and men from London, 22,28 and 24. Motion to pay the leader of Cana Brantford, Ingersoll, Kitchener, OTTAWA (CP) -- Dr. Willlam!ited. The union membership will Adelaide and Mary streets Tues- nronq,0 wag" named director of | demands. |expected to be similarly equipped oo oonap Ontario Prime Minister Leslie|._The freighter Eskimo carrying ing the location of York Univer- hope will be a winter navigation F P li r the board of governors of the The 6,500-ton Canada Steamships or 0 ice Ontario Got: Ronda' Associa: rival of the year. police departments met here Ss. York Hotel, Toronto, Feb./Reuben Slonim of Toronto, a) The seminar, attended by 77 Preston, Sarnia, St. Thomas, ly ership fee of $30 was munity, said Monday that the Sealy mend ay ¥ |Middle East is closer to war now [than at any time since the Arab.|Galt, Waterloo, Chatham, Wood: NOTICE OF WITHDRAWAL William G. Manning, SUGGEST APPOINTEES C. Mason, president of the Cen- {tral Council of Neighborhood As- sociations, recommended the ap- |pointment of Robert Andrews land Robert Wilson as Central | Council representatives on the |Oshawa Children's Arena Com-| | issione OBITUARIES _| Israel Sinai conlict of 1956. He|stock, Canadian National and Ontarlo said the increased tension is the| Canadian Pacific railways, the World Bank loan to/army's provost corps, the RCAF and provincial police is spon- |sored by the city police depart. ment. There will be six courses, each of one week's duration. Chief Constable A. E. Knight of the city police, introduced the first lecturér, John P. Gore, managing editor of the London Free Press. we "I have always felt that the press and police have never worked closely enough together and there is much to be done in this respect," the chief said. Mr. Gore weighed the faults of Clear Debt th li d th Ww BELLEVILLE (CP) -- Taxpay-| oer reporter. Belleville Tries To or | ig . Hy ers have. been given two pro- "50 : - FUNERAL OF qe |posals for retiring the city's big! We save 8 SOmimen lag ALEXANDER CHRISTIE [J 00 hated debt. you a p p The funeral of the late Alex-| 'arouse A" McLean Halg sug- and we are the source of the {gested Monday at his inaugura-| Public's information," said Mr. re. | "The policeman today has [day, Jan. 4, at 2 p.m. Rev, 8S. C. : {day, p permitting ratepayers - to pay made great strides in public re- H. Atkinson, of the Albert Street ssessed ~share of the li- | United Chureh, officiated. lability. either in a lump sum or spect and acceptance. He can go | The late Mr, Christie died in by instalments over five vears, | farther. The newspaper man can Toronto, Jan. 1, after a heart "wyat that would mean on hej Ricrpret the policeman fo the attack, His home was at 237m rate is mot certain, said{PUon.C: ; Drew street. Oshawa. [Mayor Haig, since the true de-| "The task is to sell the whole Burial was in the family plot{e cit win pot be known until mid. Police force and He We yaw s i he Mount Lawn Cemetery, 0 i {room on mutual rel hip. ne . (February when auditing is com |This seminar is only the first .-_|pleted. ' The pallbearers were William | The figure, attributed in last |step." Cade Sel iv Sith, ais ais royal commission Joquiry | Rutherford, Alexander LOD; into general misspending by city James Smart and Wilfred Whit- a during the last few years COMING EVENTS ing, land a hidden subsidy to the FERNHILL -- Bingo tonight, Avalon, 8 p.m. 20 games, $6 and $10, Seven $40 jackpots. Door prizes. 3a world amateur champion Belle- POP CONCERT, Band of the Ontario Regiment, Friday, January 8, 8 p.m. 5 MILLION ACRES ac teen 'estmated. at around OCVI Auditcrium. Admission by teadt, OF GRASS TO CUT included Bank overdrafts i arn included in the deficit, the in- ; 4 quiry found. Americans spend over 2 bil Mayor Haig, elected by accla- lion annually for the seed, mation to succeed Gerald Hyde] K|INSMEN BINGO tools, fertilizers, chemicals, etc., to take care of their TUESDAY, JANUARY 5 JUBILEE PAVILION FREE ADMISSION {who did mot seek return to of- fice, said the city's bankers, the | lawns and gardens, Over 5 EXTRA BUSES Jockpot Nos. 52 and 54, Bank of Montreal, will be asked million acres are covered by [to carry the debt as a floating lawn alone. debenture. If you have tools or other "We feel that, regardless of things you no longer need, (how this debt was accumulated, get cash for them with Osh- [the bank must be expected to awa Times Classified Ads. [share some responsibility under Easy and inexpensive to use. [the circumstances." | Dial RA 3:3492 now to place The Ontario government will your ad. |be petitioned for a private bill} [to provide for retirement of the |debt, ment committee. : i | Mayor Haig said the new city March 15 -- Paris meeting of councl will ix financial state- NATO defence ministers, |ments from all departments at April 19 or later--Paris NATO Loqylar intervals throughout the| meeting to conclude summit year. . preparations. May 3--London conference of Commonwealth prime ministers. | May 16--East - West summit meeting in Paris, May 22 (approxim ately)~| CANADIA CLUB NATO meeting in Istanbul, 4 OF ONTARIO COUNTY Did You Know . .. In the main Dining Room of the GENOSHA HOTEL you can have a Full-course Dinner for ONLY 95e¢. Apart from this program, there will be the journeyings of French President de Gaulle, Nikita Khrushchev of Russia and the Commonwealth premiers, and meetings arising out of those listed. | DINNER MEETING--HOTEL GENOSHA Wednesday, January 6th - 7:00 p.m. sub 1 of g nh. 8 NEW Yi ( - - intal my wealth aff 8 - - aE Y onk aD) The Dar. place, intellectuals never rap TV Yieaitn aliairs and East-West re ried Amer S- sports coverage. In the second lations, culminating in a summit het tarae, ever mentioned by those erities|, ° °° : : by Be en now has rediscovered who decry the violence and intensive sessions since wartime A ports events usually get big au- that there is plenty of coverage s . is : 8 - in that area right now. That cer- diences, a situation not common fot on" mics we Stee] Pact ple of weekends, when it was looming large in network plans practically impossible to tune in i SPE on anything except a large nt seems curious to this viewer a or F | mound of young men piled up on that sports events should be ex- | {gemes are more violent than the {make-believe film fights -- the { {victims bleed real blood, for one] MARMORA (CP) -- Due to thing. |the United States steel strike | agreement, a small group of} | een or comedy on family life next fall: |Modern dialogue in a prehistoric miners in Canada | seiting--and all done with car-| The 252 em ee | | é ; 52 ployees of the Beth- All Co-Ops toons. (Any resemblance t0 a\jehem Steel Corporation subsi-! | OTTAWA (CP) Ralph 8./And also in preparation is an-|the U.S, steelworkers when they president of the Co- other series preoccupied with the|ctruck . across the border last chance that the jedleral Eovern. conformal joys and terrors. . . .|workers of America (CLC) they | ment will propose legislati i its on Tal ais' il prop: gislation for Playhouse 80 will make its debut had a labor rate of $2.03% cents| | . | He made the statement to re- Sound of Trumpets will pre-empt|was 41% cents below the U. S.! tion and Prime Mir eT Di en- will be on Feb. 24 and will take! The Marmora local demanded baker, Justice Mir er Fulton over the time usually reserved parity in wage rates with Bethle-| The royal commission on food Sounds like 'a secret weapon to one at thc parent company. [price spreads proposed legisla-/8lve Garry Moore a vacation. | The wage package that ended| a means lving farmers a Startime, NBC, 9:30-10:30 --|gives an increase of nearly 40] larger share of the consumer The Man, with Audie try, painfully upgrading its out- : svonte ara rarely ifjM€Cting: May 16, will plunge put in an effort to simmer down place, sports events are rarely if chancelleries into one of the most fights in the westerns and pri- days It may seem to those who are ©..." oo Tue 11 not dedicated sports - watchers! Y2I&:€Y€e Seties. And 11na13Y,ially all of the meetings, includ: tainly is true during the baseball pri. Ye Soralied norma. {season and during the last cou-|, = WS CH. gre BS a football. empt from the usual carping | comment, Sometimes those C - | Legis] ti dalladians | ABC will try a novel situation yrarmoraton Mines employees| 11 continue as the highest paid ) {current newspaper comic Sip diary at this villa i en ; diary L ge 37 miles will probably be coincidental.) inortheast of Peterborough joined| Union of Canada, sald same theme: Split leve alll july he thinks there is a good about ban living and its. Members of the United Steel jue federal incorporation of co- as a floating CBS special on an hour, including a 17-cent-an-| operatives. Tuesday, Feb. 9 when To the hour cost-of-living allowance. 1t| {porters following a 30 - minute Red Skelton and the Garry rate a i i meeting between a union delega- Moore show. The 'second show Tale 20d Wghest Jor Canadian |and Agriculture Minister Hark- for' The Millionaire, Men into hem employees in the U.S. and ness. Space and I've Got a Secret. sought a pension plan to match tion to allow incorporation of co |the U.S. steel / cperatives on a ne al basis as Recommended tonight: I plied to See] Jistule be 22 | 3 s. It} 2 | h Murphy cents an hour in pay and bene- food dollar, a psychotic killer ifits over 30 months. | iL STAN B OSHAWA REPRESENTATIVE 420 ELIZABETH CHAMBERS 65 UNDERWRITERS. RD. THE FOOD PLAN THAT 'HAS PROVEN ITSELF ~Speaker- MAJOR-GENERAL W. H. S. MACKLIN, c.B.E, cp. -Topic- "Some Popular Military Mythology" MEMBERS -- please note that this will be a Dinner Meeting -- Come and bring a guest. RYNING RA 8.5358 HN Jole]o} CLUB (0) GR EFT)

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