The Oshawa Times, 31 Mar 1960, p. 3

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HS WILLIAM GIBBIE, left, broadcasts bids Wednesday night at the eighth annual | Saves Time, the medical and . char- itable deduction claims. Key to the whole operation is the IBM data - processing ma- chine. In the front is a panel of small orange lights which flick off and on at the speed of a wink each time a card goes through. Inside is a mass of electronic equipment that makes it work. There are at least 1,500 electronic tubes and more than 20 miles of wiring. 6000 AN HOUR The cards are put inside a sep- By RICHARD GWYN OTTAWA (Special) -- Pride and joy of Ottawa's National Revenue Department, Taxation Division, is an office desk-sized IBM machine which can devour taxpayers at the rate of 100 a minute. Actually what is fied to the glis- tening grey and silver machine is not a live taxpayer but a card, with suitably - punched holes, which add up to what the citizen thinks he should be paying in tax. The IBM machine takes less than a second to digest this in- formation and throw out the card again with its coldly accurate calculation of what the tax really should be. Oificials say that about one in |every 10 taxpayers make an error lon their return, | ERRORS TRACKED If the machine says you're {wrong you can bet you're wrong. data-processing centre by. co- axial cables. This machine has 80 wire brushes and 80 electric mag- nets which brush over the card and at a signal from the main machine punch the appropriate holes. The cards come in and go out at the rate of 6,000 an hour. Official name of this marvel is New TaxCalculator arate machine, connected to the] Errors the IBM 607 Electronic Calcula- tor. (It is not, officially a com- puter since it cannot store in- formation). What is the value of this to the taxpayer? In the first place, whether he wants it or not, he'll get his tax form returned more quickly. The average is now about three weeks, | depending what time of year it is| sent in, The worst time will be to-| ward the end of this month as the deadline approaches. Secondly, the department has cu: its staff requirements, reduc- ed errors, and cut costs. Eventually the department {hopes that all T-1 short forms |from across Canada will come to Ottawa for electronic processing |instead of being handled by hand in district offices. The reason is that the numbers of taxpayers are increasing faster than the depart- ment can deal with them in the old ways. | {But to double-check all~ cards| where the taxpayer and data- processing machines disagree are! put through another series of ma- chines and the error tracked |down. The taxpayer is then sent |a form pointing out the source of| {his mistake and the amount pay- |able, or refundable, quoted again. | But the harassed taxpayer struggling with his receipts, try-| a or ssues ing to figure out how many de-| pendents he can claim and how| OTTAWA (CP) -- Settlements I he has given to charities, have been reached in four labor e some solace in the fact gisputes between the United machine has made some|Steelworkers of America (CLC) To be exact: in| Settlement In Four | ti mistakes ed to date. SEE SECOND PAGE | The officials say that ordinary {humans, accountants and clerks, [working over tax returns with pen- cil and paper, would do well to Kiwanis Radio Auction while , clubs participated in the huge fellow - Kiwanian Ian McNab | gyetion. looks on, Both Oshawa Kiwanis | are effected. The companies involved Algom Uranium Mipes Limited six injand mining companies in the El 700,000 tax-return forms process-|liot Lake area, the federal labor department announced Wednes- day. All settlements call for wage had known the second ore body increases. About 3,900 'workers|existed it would have built its Inco Staking THE OSHAWA TIMES, Thursday, March 31, 1960 3 OBITUARIES MRS. STEPHEN CHILDERHOSE Funeral services were held in the Anglican Church, Maynooth, Ont., March 28, for Mrs. Stephen Childerhose, who died at her home at Maple Leaf, Ont., March! 25. She was in her 81st year. The daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs. James Howell, Mrs. Childerhose was born in Hastings Caunt;. In 1897 she married the late Stephen Childerhose, and moved to Wicklow township, where she resided since her mar- riage. She leaves a son, Arthur, and a daughter Lillian (Mrs. D. C. Olmstead) both of Osh Inter ment was at the Emmanuel Ceme- tery, Maynooth. Six grandchildren were pallbearers. MRS. ROSEMARY ARNOLD A Whitby resident for the past five years, Rosemary Arnold died in St. Michael's Hospital, Toronto, on Monday, March 28. ' She was in a car accident three days earlier. Born in London, England, 39 years ago, Mrs. Arnold married Geoffrey Arnold in London in All Saint's Anglican Church in 1945. She is the daughter of Cather- ine Driscoll, and the late Dan- iel Driscoll, of London, England. Mrs, Arnold was a member of All Saints' Anglican Church in Whitby. Surviving besides her husband Huge Ore Find FLIN FLON, Man. {Daily Miner says the Interna- tional Nickel Company of Canada has discovered another huge ore {bcdy in" the Thompson area, where it already is going ahead with a $175,000,000 development on an earlier find. The newspaper quotes a re- liable mining authority as saying that Inco still is staking the new if the company | discovery, but | processing plants there instead of are|at Thompson, 400 miles north of| ,| Winnipeg. (CP)--The| |are two children, Kenneth and {Graham; her mother, a sister Mrs. Helen Lowery and a brother | Daniel, all of London, England; |another sister, Mrs. May Algar, lives in Epsom, Surrey, England. The body is resting at the W. C. Town Chapel, Whitby. On the family's request the casket will {remain closed. Friends will be received Friday evening from 7.30 to 9. tanley Armstrong of All Rev. S Saints' Church will conduct the |chapel service on Saturday, April 12, at 2 p.m. WEATHER FORECAST TORONTO (CP)--Official fore- casts issued at 5 a.m.: Synopsis: A storm now in East- ern Ontario will move off to the Atlantic seaboard today and clearing cold weather will de- velop in the lower lakes regions. With a series of storm centres moving in from the Pacific, rather variable or unsettled weather seems likely during the next few days. But no prolonged departures from seasonal norm- als are anticipated in tempera- tures. Regional forecasts valid until midnight Friday. Lake Erie, Lake Huron, Lake Ontario, Niagara regions, Wind- sor, London, Toronto, Hamilton: Extensive fog early this morn- ing, then cloudy with a few light showers. Clear and colder fo- night. Sunny Friday, clouding over late in the day. Northerly winds increasing to 25 by mid- day but becoming light tonight. Georgian Bay, Haliburton re- gions: Cloudy with a few show- ers or flurries of snow today. Clear and colder tonight. Sunny K fternoon ing over colder. Northeast winds 25 today, east winds 15 Friday. Wind White River . Clear, Colder Sunny Friday . Sunny late in the day. Much Timmins - Kapuskasing: Sunny and cold today. Cloudy Friday with a few snowflurries likely. Easterly winds 15 to 25. Forecast T 'emperatures Low tonight, High Friday sor wS88pRBspke apuskasing . BREE RESSESE80E Friday, clouding over in the 814,200 Claimants For Jobless Pay OTTAWA (CP)--Claimants for unemployment insurance benefits totalled 814,200 on Feb. 29, the bureau of statistics reported Wed- nesday. This was above both the month-earlier total of 782,500 and CANADIAN NATIONAL TRAVEL AGENCY 3 KING W. -- RA 3.4122 Rail--Air Sea--Tours C. E. Cornelius--Mgr. 40 Years Selling Travel the Feb. 27, 1959, total of 796,000. Interment will be' in Union Cemetery, Oshawa. FUNERAL OF Pronto Uranium Mines Limited,| Operations are scheduled to|WILLIAM BILETCH (BILESKI) Northspan Uranium Mines Lim-|giart at Thompson this summer| The funeral of William Biletch ited, and Milliken Lake Uranium|and planned production is 75,000,-| (Bileski) was conducted by Rev. Mines Limited. {000 pounds of refined nickel a|P, Zaparyniuk at the Armstrong The two-year agreements with|year. {Funeral Home, Wednesday, |Algom and Pronto, effective from ~--|March 30, Mr. Biletch died at eration in the ground floor of one|{Jan. 1, provide a six-Cenis-an- . | Toronto Monday, March 28. the wartime 'temporary' hour pay increase for miner's to Newspaper Guild | Interment was in the Oshawa se temporary structures are|bring their Joly fais to 20 {Uon Cemetery. tie standard Ottawa cocktail joke) |In additional, all classifications of| - Pallbearers were: J. Drelick, idings near Parliament Hill in|workers get a four-cent increase May Go On Strike E. Dutka, W. Kashul, J. Lipa, A. ly February effective last Jan. 1 and an addi-| {Druzik, and G. Druzduk. Kiwanis Radio Auction Seen As One Of The Best Ki-|PHONE BUZZES hold mistakes down to two in a hundred. This works out at 14,000 in 700,000 ALL ONTARIO RETURNS The IBM machine went into op-| [(V1=P-G a SP -N=4 4 ug ap- - the e age bid had been equal to wanis Club and the Westmount] The auction telephones siarted proximately 70 per cent of Kiwanis Club, wended their way|to ' buzz" at six-thirty o'clock last|actual value of the articl homeward last night, just like the|night and right up until midnight, voucher or service, ofi¢ red f little boy in the public - school | when the 30 operators who mann- sale. English composition story --|ed the telephones, lifted their| Ap item-by-item checl "tired but happy phones off the hooks, it was a ed that while many a Following the conclusion of the|continuous busy session. vouchers offered for sale, drew eighth annual Kiwanis Radio Auc- Announcers, via the services of most the full retail value from tion, chairman Lorne Nance-|Radio Station CKLB, kept the the successful bidder, in other| kivell and his auction committee public informed as to what was cases, great savings and big bar- announced that it had been an (going on, what was the highest|gains were enjoyed by others outstanding success. Percentage bid on each article. The public| oo. the waek-end, successful of purchase bids this year were|responded in noble fashion bidders will be notified and will| not as high as in former years.| Frank Taylor and his staff of}, required to redeem their pur-| But committee members were | broadcasters kept the public in- chases. Upon transaction happy with the situation. {formed at all times while Murray their cards will be played in the As one commiftee member Sparkes and his committee kept|; yy for the handsome special pointed: out, "Sure, a lot of people [al accurate check on all bids and prize. The Frigidaire Imperial | picked up "some real good bar-{2 file of individual records on the 1) coo will be drawn for, at Tues- gains this year, they bought brand| bidding for each item. y : new merchandise and services as low as half-price, but this only] that our Kiwanis Radi Members of the Oshawa of FRESHLY SLICED LEAN MILD BACON ~w. 59° ® STORE SLICED COOKED MEATS eo nes oom 1G) PICKLE & PIMENTO DUTCH LOAF BRANDED BEEF BLADE BONE REMOVED BLADE ROAST SHORT RIB SHOULDER DEVON RINDLESS -- 1-LB. PKG. al this : 14 fy iv +1. (CP)--The Toronto] It is being used to process all tional five cents effective Jan. 1,| TORONTO the T-1 short forms from Ontasio| 1961. {Star unit of the Toronto News| 2,000,000 in all out of a national|p ATES LINED UP {paper Guild Wednesday bight ap. total of 5,000,000. | e ns and Northspan rates before the nites Waterworks offices across the country). All| However, all workers at both|increase over 24 months, was to| the T-1's were sent into these Northspan and Milliken getiresume negotiations today. | oftices and processed there. seven-cents-an-hour raises under| The meeting rejected a Star of-| t ewcast e Each district office would hire|their new two-year agreement. |fer based on a conciliation board | ies-| part-time staff to help out during|Three cents of this is retroactive|report recommending a nine-per-| day's regular luncheon meeting| ni ' ur t i month pe-| NEWCASTLE (Staff) -- Hear- g|the peak rush on income tax re-|to Jan. 1 and the other four cents|cent increase over a 28 pe 10g of an application 'by the On- is a rf ranians who all and next year, our sales should| Phones, chairman Ray Weeks and|club and from Westmount Kiwanis haudle the T-1 general and corpor- ! benefit." his group conducted a board re-|Club, Oshawa club president Ken ation returns but their part-time(for employees permanently dis-|excius Item, and lication by the iwanis Club president|{P™%: equal to any stock market|Jackson voiced his sincere appre-|requirements have been eut/placed by the closing of the editorial employees covered by|iem, i an appiicalion by Oshawa Kiwanis Club p! blackboard. {ciation of the manner in which the|sharply: Fort William is down|mines brought about by the gov-|the agreement which expired last council to set rates for the col- Ken Jackson, i his remarks at| At the conclusion of last night's public of Oshawa and district had from 18 last year fo eight and|ernment's stretchout program of|Dec. 1. The conciliation board lection of necessary funds, as | uranium purchases announced suggested settlement of this point|provided by the bylaw, will be last November. by the Ontario Labor Relations|continued in Toronto Friday at - {Board. the board's chambers at 145 | The $2.20 miners' rate brings|ceitjoment of their wage and con-| pay of Algom and Pronto miners|.aet demands. A strike deadline were processed at the 11 Revenue Department district offices across kept track of the actual bid Bis ior Pee pe vin Bd lilo? te call § 4 ; i jo saying "G ght" is|this has been concentrated in Ot- jour agreements call for a i Sands shile in eon: 2h, i0 x Is Sve OE continuity ico of $6 a monthjof a new agreement, on settle-| enter into an agreement with the ment of a Star demand for the council of the village of New- + is reciation|Nancekivell and his committee/thanked the Kiwanians of both ee re eC radio estimated that almost all of the|clubs for their contribution to/ RENTED MACHINES I i | proved strike action to achieve a| Peviously the T-1 short forms Ray Weeks and his checkers ways Ju : ie of Oshawa Kiwanis Club. |turns from February to June. Now|begins Jan. 1, 1961. riod. 4 The guild is insisting, as part|tario Water Resources Board to the close of the auction, voiced|proceedings, chairman L or n e|responded to the project and also|Sudbury from around 20 to 10. Queen street west. The hearing started March 14, in line with the Milken Lake|win pho fixed by a 12-man com-| Ontario. (There are 29 district| negotiations began. The guild, seeking a 12-per-cent| manned the tele-/staff of Kiwanians, from his own|tawa. The district offices still tH of service with a $400 maximum : exclusion of more than 12 key|castle to instal a waterworks sys- auction committee especially and 500 or more items up for sale, had|the outstanding success of the 1960 Meanwhile in Ottawa the main| for that matter, by all Kiwanians of the Oshawa and Westmount clubs. COMING EVENTS MONTHLY meeting of Oshawa Liberal * Association, Monday, April 4. YWCA Library 8 p.m. Louis Munro president of the Oshawa Liberals will be present NORTHMINSTER United Church Rum- mage Sale, Simcoe Hall, Friday, April 1, at 1.30 pm LE : ART exhibition, Library auditorium, from Monday April 4 to April 25. In- cludes water colors, sculpture and oils. Artist Julius Damasky. EUCHRE, Scout Hall, Gibbon Buena Vista, Friday, April 1 prizes, refreshments 5 x TANNERY Ladies' Auxiliary, Bingo at the Avalon, Thursday, 8 p.m. Six jack- DO Ame ----p---- RUMMAGE sale, Friday, April 1, 1.30 p.m. Simcoe Uni Church and Six 23rd ANNIVERSARY DANCE 8 PM. TO? APRIL 2nd, 1960 Round and Square dancing to Bill Askew's Orchestra 2.00 per couple--Refreshments Tickets available at the office or at the door. U.AW.A. HALL BOND ST. EAST THRIFT SHOP OPENING (Good Used Clothes) NORTHMINSTER CHURCH West Door Open Every Friday at | p.m HARMAN PARK BINGO, FRIDAY NIGHT ST. JOHN'S HALL Corner Bloor and Simcoe 20 gomes $6 ond $10. Share the Wealth. 5- $40 Jackpots ANNUAL BAZAAR -- Giant Bingo, April 1st and 2nd, to be held ot the Slovak Greek Catholic Parish Hall, 464 Rit son Rd. S. Home bokery, fancy work booths, tasty cakes and cookie Open 2 p.m. Friday Bingo starts 7:30 p.m NOVEL BINGO THURSDAY EVENING, 8 P.M at ST. GEORGE'S HALL (Albert and Jackson Sts.) Gomes $6, $12, $20 May be doubled or tripled $160 JACKPOT INCLUDED Door Prize $15 __iture in a campaign to win bar- |data-processing machine has been | -- [installed and 11 other machines | rented to handle other stages, {from the punch-key machines |which put the initial holes into |the cards to electronic sorters and checkers. Total rental cost of the machines is $10,000 a and they been auctioned off and the aver-iradio auction. CAPSULE NEWS Man Charged After Blast |simpler tasks from opening the {letters | brains" | STRATFORD (CP) will be used for five/rope when the supersonic CF-104|for eight months, Over 400 part-time help| goes into service, informants said brought to his attention by his|.ep. > {have been hired to handle the|Wednesday. jesre af the Jaren 1 Deating Henry|Gilbert, 71, owner and publisher|of the audit group which leafs|West Germany. RCAF Rir Division Telegram Waits Part To Disband |For Minister OTTAWA (CP) -- The govern-| OTTAWA (CP) -- days before it | staff. The one-third which would be| He informed H. J. Robichaud checking their contents.|dismantled comprises the four (L--Gloucester) in the Commons 1,44 sufficient s : H S | > Po | wat orting them into groups. The only|CF-100 jet squadrons serving in/that the telegram arrived at h nl er is available job remaining is that|the air division in France and] office March 8 but wasn't brought s to his notice until March 16. The elegram had to do with Mari- Harriston, was|of the dailies L'Evenement-Jour with usinginal and Le Soleil, was appoinfed e Haug, 27, of charged Wednesday |explosives to cause bodily harm|Wednesday as Union Natio {in connection with the "bobby-'member of the Legislative Coun- itrap" explosion in a Stratford cil--the 24-seat provincial senate {man's car March 18. The explo- He will represent Bedford divi |sion rocked the car of Sheldon sion. vacant since the death in| Wein, a 43-year-old chick hatch-(1948 of another publisher, Hon ery salesman, when he switched|Jacob Nicol of Sherbrooke. on the ignition. Wein suffered AID TO VICTIMS burns to his legs. QUEBEC (CP)--The provincial, Three valuable radio miero- MIXED REACTION government announced Wednes- phones and other technical equip- | TORONTO (CP) -- The Etobi- day it will pay $51,466.96 to 142/ment, to be used at the Kiwanis {coke Drama Guild's presentation citizens of Rimouski, Que., whose Radio Auction, were stolen from |of Terence Rattigan's Separate homes and comme establich- the lobby of the Hotel Genosha {Tables won both acclaim and|ments were destroyed fire early Wednesday evening. {criticism from adjudicator Dr.|which swept the town in 1950. The ly estimates placed the loss {Betty Mitchell of Calgary Wed-| om represents the government's at $1200. However 'Gordon Garri- nesday night. The play, one of chara of interest payr ; a h at |Ontario Drama League Festival, lacke@ punch, the adjudicator | said. The proy- station CKLB, said the actuallq e would be somewhat lower. | people for rebuilding ince had promised to pay up to|valu three per cent interest | Radio station personnel were |moving equipment into the hotel {minutes before the program was Ti LABOR TO LOBBY Thiet Grabs Radio Goods cut of the beverage room prob- records. ment because of it's specific use, he said. t ly 20 minutes late startin | a . ts on/ son, president of Lakeland Broad- 48 delay was not Sand 8 but seven competing in the Centrally, nc contracted by the Rimouskilcasting Co. which operates radio|theft, Mr. Garrison attributed the | wi | phones into service, he said. time Provinces freight rates. CITY AND DISTRICT STREETS CLOSED The following streets will be ed | closed for construction today: a Fernhill Blvd., closed at Ross |and road west; Rossland road north to Gibbons street. When- lever possible these streets will be partially opened to permit move- ment of local . traffic. Extreme avy rains may result in the closing of other streets, NO SUPPORT Trustee M. Brown, at Tues- day night's meeting of the Osh- bly thought the box contain s. The thief will have ard time disposing of the equip- The program was approximate- | elay to line trouble with the Bell elephone Company. Technicians ere able to press spare micro- BLAST KILLS THREE AUBURN, N.Y AP)--An plosion bl 4: service s | | TORONTO (CP)--The Ontario |Federation of Labor is preparing to lobby members of the legisla- ex./to go on the air when the theft oe occurred. Reginald McCausland, assist-| TV-RADIO COLUMN , ant technical director of the sta-| tion, told police he left a box| containing the equipment just in-| side the east door of the hotel] while he carried some other] equipment 'upstairs. When he re- turned five minutes later the box | had disappeared Mr. Garrison told The Oshawa A -- NO RUSH OF ANDREWS Times the equipment was in a ALMONTE. jJcp)--Mrs. REWS box similar to the type contain- | McCallum, oldest resident of this| ToNDON Reuters) -- Parents ing long-playing records. | i Jed-|in the London area have not : . . \ Ottawa Valley town, died Wed don area have not. Jor He said that somebody coming {nesday at the age of 102. She/ried to name baby sons Andrew| 2° 54'€ ° {was 'honorary president of the|in the week since Britain's new : Ppo * " For Magazine [Alexandra Club, Almonte Lawn|pPrince was named, a survey {Bowling Club, the Women's Insti-/shows. Register offices reporte No Oshawa - Police Chief Herbert ye TENNIS PLAYERS 5 ARE INCREASING {tute and the Women's Missionary parents were sticking |Society. Her husband died in|conventional names 11936 {George and Henry | Tennis players will ber 8,000,000 by 1970, about 1,000,000 more than today, GIVES FULL ACCESS BUFFALO (AP) Federal Judge Harold P. Burke Wednes- {day awarded the state power au- ithority full access to about 50 acres of Tuscarora Indian land for use on the Niagara power say sport experts. And they will spend a whopping $20, 000,000 a y on equipment approximately 50 per cent more than in 1959! To get out more and have money to spend th | project. HEADS COTTON GROUP things you n't use. Dial RA 3-3492 right now to place MONTREAL (CP) WwW. H Young, managing director of fast-action Oshawa Times ant Ad gaining rights for employees of burn Wedn 12 {crown agencies. The decision fol-|tbree firemen, the station owner {lows the government's refusal to and another person. The firemen lift the legislative barrier to|P2d been summoned to the serv- lunion erganization for members|ice station after a gasoline odor of the Workmen's Compensation| Was noticed. Firemen said gaso- Board {line was used to wash a grease rack DIES AGED 102 | Peter| {for fa 18l vi |di |Gold", published by the RCMP|of Veteran's Association, num advertising ni the Oshawa an in day regarding sales campaign -- area, {Hamilton Cotton Co. Ltd. was lelected president Wednesday of! the Cotton Institute of Canada.| He succeeded J. E. O'Gra managing director of Stauffer- Dobbie Ltd. of Galt |in no way benefit by this maga-| collected for it in this area. sell C {the official organ of the Cana dian Association of Chiefs PUBLISHER IN COUNCIL | of Police," he said, | QUEBEC. (CP)--Lt.Col. Oscar {Head, who has designed clothe career man. a off today denied any support/Head will serve as "official de- lof a magazine titled "Scarlet and| sign consultant" for the Academy |Sciences when He said representatives of the casts its annual Oscar-awarding magazine contacted him Wednes-| ceremonies on NBC Monday| the theatre." For Oscar-Awarding Show By CYNTHIA LOWRY NEW YORK (AP) Edit! The special 30-minute fashion! how will begin at 10 p.m. EST, | receding the ceremonies. It willl Ye pre-taped in a Hollywood res- taurant, and show some of the] [top stars and their gowns--*long| shols, so you can see the bottom | of the dresses and all the fashion details instead of closeups cutting] them off at the waist," amplifies the designer. Miss Head will be on hand to describe the details | r many a motion picture and i: mous for haying put whit oves on Grace Kelly, has a tele- sion job which would tax the plomacy of a state department For the eighth consecutive sar, the tiny, dark-haired Miss Tonight's programs are the las! elig'ble for this year's TV Emmy awards, The statuettes will be presented on: an NBC special June 20 and sponsors have al- ght. {ready been line Although the annual event is|" ady been lined up for the show Motion Pictures Arts and television broad- partly a fashion show, there are p.. iohts Chief Flintoff emphasized the certain rules of taste which Miss] ao nended tonight; 7:30-8:30! Oshawa Police Department would Head must enforce. . he. Burn og Re i" --Acis from the European Bert-| Some of the rules are com-ram Mills circus with Joe E.| {zine or by advertising revenue mon sense," she explains. "For|Brown as host. |instance, "The only magazine 1 supportaway from dead white -- light |is "The Canadian Police Bulletin'.|hounces off it. Other rules are I tell them to keep| Hour of Great Mysteries, NBC, 9-10--First of a new series, this an adaptation of The Bat, by noseful: No low decolletage-- Mary Roberts Rinehart and cameras are placed high in{Avery Hopwood, starring Helen (Hayes and Jason Robards Jr. Transport ment plans to disband one-third Minister Hees said Wednesday a month (of the RCAF air division in Eu-|telegram to him was in his office was awa Board of Education, moved {but was adjourned to allow coun- sel to prepare arguments. E. R. BACON wus Le. 49G¢ Lovekin represents the village council, and A. A. H. Strike, of Bowmanville represents a group of 76 ratepayers opposing the ap- plications. SNOW WHITE NO. 1 u 49° Water Resources Board engin- GOOD SIZE CRISP LETTUCE -- {supported the council's claim that {there is need for a system, and {from a well in the area. 2 =» 25° FRESH HOT HOUSE RHUBARB 30 AT CLINIC | Thirty drivers attended the {final March Oshawa Traffic ws. 19° |Clinie held in the Oshawa Police | Building Tuesday evening. : Betty Haydl | HER NEW SPRING IN Order Yours Now | Official Design Consultant PRESENTS PATTERNS DRAPERY In Time for EASTER In order to acquaint you with our CUSTOM MADE DRAPES . . . The prices below include material, lining, hooks, weights, making of drapes up to 95" finished length. 3.50 RANGE _ 29.00 43.50 58.00 87.00 101.50 | | RANGE 26.00 30.00 52.00 18.00 2 PANELS 4-ft. Wall 32.00 48.00 3 PANELS 6-ft. Wall 4 PANELS 8-ft. Wall 6 PANELS 12-#t. Wall 7 PANELS 14-ft. Wall RANGE 64.00 96.00 4.98 | RANGE 38.00 51.00 76.00 113.00 133.00 Betty FH a yd, Interior Decorator RA 5-2686 15 KING STREET EAST RA 5-2686

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