Oshawa Times (1958-), 22 Feb 1963, p. 2

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Q THE OSHAWA TIMES, Friday, February 22, 1963 Little Opposition Seen To New Grants System By THE CANADIAN PRESS No general opposition has shown in reaction so far to Pre- mier John Robarts' major out- line of a new system of educa- tional grants. religious courses as optional subjects in secondary and teachers' colleges, supervised by clergy of the faith. He stressed "religious and spiritual con- cial grants this year would be $233,300,000 of a total education budget of $395,532,000. Leslie Dewart, associate pro- fessor of philosophy at St. Michael's College, a Roman the need for) % Church, school and political Catholic affiliate of the Univer- cepts in our educational system in ali levels. . officials met Thursday's 6,500- word speech in the legislature with qualified approval in nearly all cases. The speech set out a new sys- tem of educational grants start- ing in the 1964 calendar year to provide equality of education for public and separate, rural and urban school students. It denied a request from Ro- man Catholic bishops for a sys- tem of separate secondary schools and teachers' colleges, but a Roman Catholic spokes- man said this was not surpris- ing. The new grants system, to be known as the Ontario Founda- tion Tax Plan, will increase provincial grants by about $50,- 000,000, Mr. Robarts said in ajion Bureau of Statistics show./Ont., that the premier's pro-| rough guess. About $32,000,000 of this will come in this fiscal year's spending, providing a more gradual transition. GRANTS BULK LARGE Mr. Robarts, education min- ister for three years until his elevation to the premier's posi- tion last summer, said provin- Cabinet Crisis Starts Talk About 1896 OTTAWA (CP)--This month's cabinet crisis, in which three ministers resigned on a matter of principle, started political ob- servers talking about 1896. _ In that year, seven senior ministers quit the Conservative cabinet of Sir Mackenzie Bowell sity of Toronto, said Mr. Ro- Rev. Ernest E. 'Long, general barts' "speech had some good features to it and it was pre- sented in a reasonable tone." He said it was not surprising that it rejected the separate secondary and teachers' college suggestions. Roland Berialut, chairman of the Ontario bilingual school commission, said at Ottawa the plan to provide equality for all school boards was "a step. in the right direction." He did not secretary of the council of the United Church, said: ". . .. we are grateful that Premier Ro- Yyarts is convinced of the neces- sity for religious and spiritual concepts in our educational sys- tem at all levels." He praised the offer to in- clude religious options carrying credit standing. He said the re- port was an honest effort to deal as fully as can be done at one point in history with a comment on the other aspects. There was no official com- jment from any of the Roman Catholic bishops. Roman Cath-/ 100-year-old problem. ANGLICAN APPROVES Most Rev. W. L. Wright, cent of Ontario's population, the} ecclesiastical latest figures from the Domin- tario, said at Sault Ste. Marie, A United Churck spokesman, |posals sounded extremely: rea- Rev. Harold Vaughan, secre- sonable. It will relieve the situ- tary of the church's board of ation for both school boards |schools and colleges, said the| (public and separate) by giving plan "echoes .the brief of the them additional financial sup- United Church and the inter-/Port to carry on their work at |church committee in recogniz-\the elementary level, he said. jing the impossibility of there) Ontario Liberal leader John |being enough tax dollars to|Wintermeyer, himself a Roman |maintain the two systems." Catholic, said in the legislature : |he generally favored the plan. }COST IS PROHIBITIVE |He said it was not "materially Mr. Robarts said in hisjat variance' with Liberal sug- speech that cost of a system of] gestions. separate high schools and) Kenneth Bryden, New Demo- teachers' colleges was prohibi-| cratic Party member for Tor- tive. orto Woodbine and a Presby- Mr. Vaughan said: "I am in-|terian, called the plan a "'bits- jterested in seeing justice done|and-pieces approach." But he jand I have no objection to sep-|Said "at least the concept of a tary schools receiving that kind|tion finance is accepted by all jof help, but one wonders|sides of the House." |whether this gesture constitutes. Mrs. John Cropper of St. justice for all minorities inter-/Catharines, president of the On- ested dren separately." School Associations, said the | Mr. Robarts said he was pre- plan sounds "'like a step im the arate Roman Catholic elemen-|foundation approach to educa-| in educating their chil-|tario Federation of Home and| é # & olics make up about 30.3 per|metropolitan of the Anglican| province of On-| : \s L | | Mrs. Wallace Couvillion (right} became a mother and a grandmother in the same Dief Taking | Trade Group To London | By JAMES NELSON | OTTAWA (CP)--Prime Minis-| ter Diefenbaker is taking a) jstrong trade delegation with} him to London tonight for. talks) with Prime. Minister Macmil- \lan. | Defence problems are being| rated as of secondary impor-) iance, according to the lineup} of officials who are to be} BECOMES MOTHER, GRANDMOTHER TOO livery dates were supposed to be two days apart. (CP Wirephoto) birth to Lisa. Both women were in the same room of the same hospital, although de- day when she gave birth to Lori, and her daughter-in-law, Mrs, Stanley Couvillion gave Cass Sees Overhaul Of Practices By OSC TORONTO (CP)--The organi-, heared by the full commission, | ciety of Upper Canada, which zation and practices of the On-|including the chairman. said the society was "not una- tario Securities Commis-| Although no injustice may nimous in the belief" that the sion may be overhauled during|have resulted, 'this procedure|Public defender system was the the current legislature session,/has not the appearance of a|best defence for an accused. Attorney-General Cass says. (fair and impartial hearing) Lands and Forests Minister He said during debate Thurs-|which should exist," Mr. Cass|Kelso Roberts told the legisla- day night on his department's| said. ture, in answer to opposition spending estimates that consi-| filmer Sopha (L --.Sudbury)|Charges that the province has deration of appointment of ajsaid the public is afraid to in-| been slow and indecisive in new chairman to succeed the] yest in stocks because of sus-|COmbatting Dutch Elm disease, and later were described by|Pared to discuss a system of!right direction." Bowell as a nest of traitors. " One of Bowell's problems was the Manitoba school question. Manitoba had done away with the province' separate schools and Bowell was under pressure Anti-US. Issue _laboard the Prime Minister's| late OSC Chairman Oswald Len. picion of speculative promotion RCAF air-|9X "'has caused me to review| and demanded more control by craft. the commission's organization| the OSC over stock exchange| Trade Minister Wailace Mc- 24 operation. ; _| operations. Cutcheon and Defence Minister| The study is being undertaken] feonomic development de- Gordon Churchill are accom-|With "'the object of providing| pends largely on the operations Yukon -- transport there was "no reason to believe it will not cover all the species) (elm) in the province." How- ever this did not mean the dis- ease would not eventually be wiped out. from his Quebec ministers tol pass legislation through Parlia- ment re-establishing them. Ex- asperated by Bowell's delays in this, a Quebec minister, A. R Angers, resigned. This left Bowell with wo problems--the Manitoba school question and a ministry with in-ister Diefenbaker uses nuclear|American States, in which the representa-| 4M Ame! . ja federal election issue, adequate tion. LaINISTERS QUIT When neither problem had) been solved, seven ministers, led by Finance Minister George E. Foster, quit the cabinet. In Quebec Credit Leader Robert Thomp-|peoples. Responsibility included Rapped By Socred LONDON, Ont. (CP)--Social|of the world for freedom-loving son predicts that if Prime Min-jjoining the Organization of ms and anti-Americanism a S\U.S, is the leading voice. s t/ SHOULD TAKE LEAD Mr. Thompson said Canada| " not going to go down by jus half; he'll go down even further than that." should take the lead in estab- Mr. Thompson, in a press|lishing a Commonwealth trad- conference which kicked off a ing community. The community] |would be "entirely informal." series of four speeches Thurs- would be centred around day criticized Mr. Diefenbaker's|, «Commonwealth settlements Toronto statement that the Bo-lbank." the functions of which marc missile has lost its effec-/he did not define. a statement in the Commons, they said they were doing so in hopes of forcing Bowell's resignation and the formation of a new government under an- other leader. In a final compromise the seven ministers returned to the fold, Bowell remained prime minister and Sir Charles Tup- per entered the cabinet as sec- retary of state. Tupper was ear- marked as Bowell's successor. The Quebec cabine gap was filled by appointment of Al- phonse Desjardins. Parliament was prorogued, Bowell resigned and Tupper be- came prime minister. Tupper then called an election on the issue of the Manitoba school re- medial bill but was defeated by the Liberals under Sir Wilfrid! Laurier. ' place their defence dependence} « on United States missile bases| tiveness. Trade among Commonwealth Western Canada|countries would be financed without the barriers of gold! areas of | and the U.S., although the Bo-have plagued our trade, espec- mare might be outdated soon, |iajly with Great Britain, in the} is depending on it at present,!ng at." he said. The system could be used to In an address to the Uhiver-| expand Canada'> trade with the sity of Western Ontario's United) United States, elsewhere in the Nations Society, Mr. Thompson, | hemisphere and with areas such|) who says he has yet to open his!as April 8 election campaign for- mally, attacked what he called urope and Japan. He said trade with the Com- € » |muni bloc i "shameful cries of anti-Ameri- weaken the Win. tue Once canism. ; .,, nist strategy of peaceful co-ex- Responsible co-operation withjistence was being helped by neighbors and friends was nec-|'naive pacifists, ban-the-bomb- essary for Canada to providejers and naive' idealists who leadership in the development] work dilligently to weaken the WEATHER FORECAST |military strengt> and political ;cohesion of the West." The circumstances of the elec- Cold To For Saturday Forecasts issued by the Tor- onto weather office at 4:30 a.m. Synopsis: A gradual decrease in wind strength is likely to continue in Ontario. A slight moderation in temperatures is expected today and tonight. " Lake St. Clair, Lake Erie, * Niagara, southern Lake Huron, Lake Ontario regions, Windsor, London, Hamilton, Toronto: Sunny with a few cloudy pe- riods today and Saturday, not quite so cold. Winds westerly 10 to 0. . Northern Lake Huron, Georg- fan Bay regions: Variable . cloudiness today and Saturday, snowflurries, not quite so cold. Winds westerly 10 to 165. Haliburton, Tim aga mi re- ions, North Bay, Sudbury: inny with a few cloudy pe- viods today and Saturday, not quite so cold. Winds westerly 10 to 15. Algoma, Cochrane, White River regions, Sault Ste. Marie:| Variable cloudiness today and tonight, occasional very light snow, not quite so cold. Satur- day mainly clear and cold. Winds becoming northwest 10 to 15 Saturday. Observed Temperatures Low overnight, high Thursday Dawson ....... 2 23 Victoria .. 38 49 Edmonton. .. 12 22 | } | } tion indicated a "fight between isolationism with all its self- delusions, hypocrisies and dis- honesty and internationalism in its Tealistic form of interdepen- Ease and foreign exchange crisis that} panying the prime minister. Also aboard will be Senator Allister M. Grosart, retired na- tional director of the Progres- sive Conservative party, who has been working on Mr. Dief- enbaker's two speeches for Monday in London when the| prime minister will be made a Freeman of the City. The defence minister told a leporter Thursday he planned no formal engagements in Lon- don and any talks he had with British defence authorities London reports said Mr. Mac- millan would be looking to Mr. Diefenbaker for suggestions on the next move Britain and the Commonwealth should take, fol- lowing the rejection. by France of Britain's application to join the European Common Market. Mr. Diefenbaker has pro- Posed, and other governments now are moving towards, a trade conference later this year involving the Common Market countries and Britain, Canada, the United States and | | Japan. So far he has not spoken publicly of any more detailed proposal. _ After the City of London fune- tion Monday, the official party is to atiend a reception given by High Commissioner George Drew aid Mrs. Drew at 6 p.m. Monday. They will return to Ottawa immediately. | | Youth Relates Stabbing Tale dence,' WOULD START BANK Mr. Thompson told a public meeting Thursday night estab \lishment of a "social develop. ment bank," operating through |the Bank of Ganada, would sup- ply money for schools, hospitals and other public projects at low cost, He told the press conference earlier his party would support a minority government as long as its policies were agreeable to Social Credit. | Parliament had collapsed 'be- cause of a crisis of leadership. |The government and the official |opposition had failed to come to grips with public problems. | Mr. Thompson told campaign | workers in another speech that, \if he forms the next govern- ment, he is sure he will have | the full co-operation of the Que- |bec wing of Social Credit. Although not. interested in a jnational health scheme, he told |Supporters he would like to be |the federal government Ppartici- pate in a voluntary health plan | Regina . Winnipeg .. Lakehead .... White River.. S, S. Marie... Kapuskasing . North Bay.. Sudbury . Muskoka Windsor ... London ...... Toronto ..... CHAWE sc cticcsee Montreal .....006 QUONES coccccccese "17 Halifax 12 Forecast Temperatures Low tonight, high Saturday Windsor .... ak St. Thomas London .... Kitchener . Wingham Hamilton . St. Catharines.... Toronto Peterborough .... enton Killaloe Muskoka . North Bay.. -16 -14 42 0 to make needed care available to each person in the form he chooses, To Courtroom TORONTO (CP) --A youth testified Thursday he saw a "|knife being pulled from: his|*¢eP out-of Paris from now on. | friend' | outsid I 8 throat during a fight ast December, The youth, Fergus Robert 0'- Connell, 20, was testifying at the preliminary hearing of Patrick | Garrity, 17, of Toronto. Garrity jis charged with the non-capita] |murder of Garry Graham, 19, | also of Toronto, O'Connell said he and Graham had gone to the school dance. A fight started and O'Connel admitted striking one "fellow". He said Garrity called him and said he was looking for "five guys who beat up his buddy."" The two were then joined by Graham and 0'. Connell said: "I think Garry (Graham) _ struck Garrity. I don't know." O'Connell said he struck Gar- rity "after I saw the knife." He said the dead boy had hit Garrity on the right side of the | head. | He said he wrestled a knife| 'om Garrity. The case continues. ltr Mr. Roberts said spraying with chemical preparations and growth of shade trees might help control spread of infection more efficient and speedier] of the stock exchanges, but the methods of processing matters government "'reneges in its re- coming before the commission,| sponsibility in this area of pub- such as registrations, renewals, | |jc importance," Mr. Sopha ' hearings and _investigations,"! caiq. and cross-breeding to develop Mr. Cass said during the Leg-| farlier, Mr. Cass denied alle-| disease - resistant varieties of islature's first night session this gations by M. Sopha that he has| elm "may be the best answer." year. already received an OSC report! SPRAY A 'WASTE' Mr. Cass said OSC practices|on an investigation into the af- Robert Nixon (-Brants said which "'have given me concern|fairs of Northern Ontario Na- he understood the only effective and which will be the subject|tural Gas Company and was} contro} measure was destruc. of legislation at this session"| 'playing politics and waiting for tion of dying elms to prevent were the role of the chairman,|some opportune moment to spread of infection. He said separation of the commission's| release it." spray control was a "waste of administrative and "'quasi-judi-| sei money." cial" functions, and review an| SEES NO NEED Municipal | Mr. Cass said that although| Affairs Minister amendment were necessary of te " the Ontario Securities Act's pro.| he could "see no need" at pres- visions for investigations. jent for the appointment of a government - paid public de- e a Toronto high school | 5 ; CHILL SETS IN CAN SUSPEND, CANCEL He said present legislation au- thorizes the chairman, acting by himself, to investigate and sus- pend or cancel securities regis- trations. An appeal against a decision by the chairman is fender to represent indigents in criminal cases, 'I do not close the book" on the system. He read a letter from John Weisdorf, assistant provincial director of the Legal: Aid So- ciety, a branch of the Law So- INTERPRETING THE NEWS French, British Hostility By ALAN HARVEY Canadian Press Staff Writer It was a tiny "'filler" story, tucked away between the so- ciety gossip and the classified ads, but it had wider signifi- cance. Flying home from Paris, the little news item said, Londoner Robert Sanderson scrawled on his embarkaticn card: 'Profes- sion -- anti-Gaullist." And the French authorities, unsmiling, told. Sanderson to That's how things are between France and Britain these days. iver since President de Gaulle shut the European door, there Things are getting so tense, they say, that British gourmets are refusing pepper on_ their steaks au poivre, and sipping Spanish burgundy instead of French claret. The Eotente Cordiale, it seems, is becoming the Entente Glaciale. French newspapers have care- fully noted British hostility, A lighthearted poem broadcast on the BBC was published by sev- eral papers, along with a news- paper columnist's comment that de Gaulle is a "bottled-nosed old giraffe." The columnist is a real live lord--the Earl of Arran--which made the description .seem all the more outrageous to the French. All this is on the public level. -- ---- } Sudbury ... Earlton .. JOHN WILSON SIGNS White River.. Moosonee ... Mount Forest. Timmins Sault Ste. Marie.. -15 FUEL OIL... CALL PERRY DAY OR NIGHT 723-3443 EYE ~ EXAMINATIONS PHONE 723-4191 by appointment F, R, BLACK, O.D. 136 SIMCOE ST. NORTH THE BEST FOR LEAST You will be surprised when you Call for an Estimate 728-5071 List | NOW !| inewioige Buyers Financing JOHN A, J, BOLAHOOD REAL ESTATE -- MORTGAGES 44 HEAT WITH OIL DIXON'S OIL Grows Undoubtedly, most of it comes under the heading of good clean fun, and will vanish completely by the time the tourist season rolls around. At the government level, how- ever, a sense of estrangement may persist for some time. The Elysee Palace and Admiralty House are no longer on the same wave-length. British min- isters feel genuinely let down after their failure at Brussels, and there is no sign yet that the French are feeling any re- morse. Spooner said legislation will be introduced amending the As. sessment Act, requiring all rail. way hotels in Ontario to pay business taxes. He told the private bills com- mittee the amendment will end an exemption held by the Royal York Hotel, Toronto, owned by Canadian Pacific Railways, since it was built in 1928. Busi- ness tax on the hotel was esti- mated at $170,000 last year. Only other hotel affected by the legislation will be the Canadian National Railways' Chateau Laurier in Ottawa. The legislature threw out part of a private bill which would have allowed Toronto City Council to levy a one-per-cent tax on winnings at Old Wood- bine racetrack, within the city limits. Illegally Occupied Homes In Hamilton HAMILTON (CP) -- Hamilton probably has "a couple of thou- sand" homes illegally occupied and without proper fire exits, Fred Staunton, fire prevention chief, said Thursday at an in- | ANGRY REACTION London magazine, The |has been a disttict coolness be-| Spectator, wrote angrily after| jtween John Bull and Maid Mari-|! } anne he Brussels breakdown that the} French negotiators must have! been all "liars or lackeys."'| British officials might not go all the way with that, but they probably would claim that they were misled by repeated assur- ances from Foreign M'nister Maurice Couve de Murville that France had no political objec- tions to British entry, The French meanwhile are saying that the negotiations with Britain not only were negative, but were proventing progress in discussions among the Common Market countries on other sub- jects. quest into the death of three! fire victims. Fire Captain Bronte Malek said he felt the absence of a fire escape was a contributing factor in the death Jan, 26 of taxi driver John Lawrence Nicholson, 30, and his children, Susan, 6, and John, 4. The jury ruled all three died of suffoca- tion. Mr. Staunton said the Nichol. son house was illégally occupied because the second and third floors did not contain fire és- capes. The jury recommended improved house inspection and that the 30-day warning period for meeting municipal bylaws Cool On WASHINGTON (AP) -- Once more many members of Con- gress are emotional about Cuba without knowing all the facts. And once mere President Ken- nedy has to stay cool to learn the facts in order to make in. telligent decisions. The American shrimp boat Ala, drifting with engine trou- ble in international waters be- tween Cuba and the United States, was attacked late Wed-' nesday by two Russian-built. MiGs from Cuba. Neither the ship nor the two-man crew was hit. Rockets or machine-guns were used. Kennedy told his press con- ference Wednesday he wants to learn: Whether the MiG pilots were Russians or Cubans; whether they attacked on their own or were ordered to by the govern- ment of Cuba; and whether this was an isolated case or part of a Communist policy. To prevent this whole busi- @ ness from getting out of hand--| jand leading through "'hot pur-| suit" to an incident which could} |mean war--Kennedy has done} two things until we can be sure) of the facts: 1. He ordered American mili. tary planes to shoot-if-necessary against MiGs making any simi- lar future attacks on U.S. ves-| sels, 2. He will try to find out why and by whom the attack was! made on the Ala. In 1961, three American} planes were seized and landed in Cuba. The last of the com- mandeered planes was an air- liner with 81 persons aboard. Castro returned the plane and} the passengers. But, before they knew what he was going to do, senatons Strom Thurmond (Dem.. §.C.) and Barry Goldwater (Rep. Ariz.) wanted Kennedy to order the plane returned within 24 hours or, although Castro had nothing to do with the: seizure, send U.S. forces into Cuba. Ken- nedy stayed calm. There have} been no more plane seizures. Similar demands were made in Congress Thursday before it | | | Indecent Avsaalt JFK Must Remain Attack could be learned whether the MiG pilots knew the unmarked shrimper was an American boat or why the attack was made. Some of the demands were for "hot pursuit." If Kennedy orders "hot pur- suit," American planes which came upon a similar inciden in the future would pursue shoot down the MiGs even ff it meant chasing them into their bases in Cuba to do it. As Defence Secretary McNa- mara demonstrated ly on television --with aerial graphs--the Cubans have been bothering U.S. plané which now are flying over Cuba to take pictures. p But if U.S. fighter planes went in over Cuba to down Cuban planes, they ably would be fited on and so would the non - fighter U.S. planes on photographie mis. sions. Then what? Yet Senator Richard Russell, Georgia Democrat who is one of the most important meén in Congress as chairman of the armed services committee, was one of those advocating "hot pursuit" although he admitted he didn't think the MiG pilots knew they were attaeking an American boat. Husting Tour For Pearson Outlined OTTAWA (CP) -- Détails of Liberal Leader Pearson's first hustings tour of the eléction campaign--a one-week swing starting today through Québec, New Brunswick and Nova Sco- tia--were announced Thursday. Party headquarters said the following week will be spent in Ontario, Saskatchewan and Manitoba, returning again to Ottawa for the March 9-10 weekend. Mr. Pearson will speak today at the Quebec Liberal party's annual convention in Montréal, and next week will make cam- paign appearances at Trois- Rivieres, Rimouski and Mont Joli, all in Québec, and Of His Sister, 13 was sentenced today to 2% years in Kingston penitentiary on a charge of indecently as- saulting his 13-year-old sister, | The charge was laid Dec. 13 after police found the girl, nude jand frostbitten, on a country |} road. She had been thrown from a car and left in sub-zero wea- KITCHENER (CP) --- Brian} Robert Nixon, 20 ,of Waterloo!' Moncton, Fredericton, 'O- |mocto, N.B., Truro, N.S., Mil- |ford, N.S., Halifax and Sydney, lj No details were announced of {his following week's campaign, |but the announcement indicated |there will be only a rapid sortie into Western Canada. Mr. Pearson will spend the first two days of thé wéek in Ontario, be in Saskatchewan March 6, and spend the rest of the week in Manitoba and at the Lakehead. COMING EVENTS EUCHRE, Fernhill Park Clubhouse, every Friday, 8 p.m, sharp. Freeze out | Admission 40c. Tea, coffee and cookies | | YOUR big opportunity may be knocking right now in the "Business Opportun- itiés" columns in the Classified section Be sure you check today. NOVEL BINGO THURSDAY EVENINGS 7:45 ot ST. GEORGE'S HALL (Albert and Jackson Sts.) Game $6, $12, $20 May be doubled or tripled BINGO AT U.A.W.A. HALL SATURDAY, FEB. 23rd 7:30 P.M. 20 GAMES $10 A GAME 4 GAMES OF $20, $40 $40, $50 $160 IN JACKPOTS __ Door Prize $15° TEEN-AGE. DANCE U.A.W. HALL 1 P.M., SATURDAY FEB. 23rd. ADMISSION 25¢ DANCE SAT.,. FEB. 23 KINSMEN HALL Sponsored by the Gerrard Road Firemen's Assoc. $3. PER COUPLE BINGO ORANGE TEMPLE SATURDAY, FEB. 23rd 130 PM, 20 Games -- $8 Shore the Wealth 4--$40 Jackpots to ao 1--$150 Jackpot to go Children Under 16 Not Admitted JACKPOTS ONE GAME $150 SHARE THE WEALTH COMIC OPERA "Women Are Like That MOZART | BY CANADIAN OPERA COMPANY R. S. McLAUGHLIN COLLEGIATE Friday, March Ist 8:30 P.M. Tickets $2.00--Reserved $2.50 HENDERSON'S BOOK STORE SAT., FEB. 23RD SAT., FEB. 23 AT 9 P.M. Sponsored by the resi- dence. 75c, $1.25 per | couple. Dance to Records Refreshménts LIBERAL NO be reduced to seven days. OSHAWA'S | ORIGINAL CARPET CENTRE lf at Nu-Way, carpet and broad- | loom has been a specialty for 18 years . . . with thousands of yards on display to select from. PHONE 728-4681 313 ALBERT ST. 24-HOUR SERVICE 723-4663 SERVING OSHAWA OVER 50 YEARS NU-WAY RUG CO. LTD. 174 MARY ST. MORTGAGES Ample Funds for Ist MORTGAGES 2nd MORTGAGES We Also Purchase Ist and 2nd Mortgages N.H.A. LOANS ARRANGED You Will Find OUR SERVICE IS FASTER OUR COST IS LOWER SCHOFIELD-AKER Limited 723-2265 -- 728-3376 After Hours 728-3376 S us | MINATION MEETING THURSDAY NEXT, 28 FEB. 8 P.M. Henry St. High School, Whitby To nominate a candidate to contest Ontario Riding for the Liberal Party. SPEAKER: MISS J UDY LAMARSH The Dynamic Voice of Women in Parliament |ALL LIBERALS AND THE GENERAL PUBLIC | ARE CORDIALLY INVITED. This time, make certain. This time, work and vote Liberal. ONTARIO RIDING LIBERAL ASSOCIATION s

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