Oshawa Times (1958-), 16 Apr 1963, p. 2

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Q 'THE OSHAWA TIMES, Tuesday, April 16, 1963 GOOD EVENING By JACK GEARIN BUS "POLITICAL ADS" DREW PROTEST Don't be surprised if there are not some furtherf reper- eussions locally from the PUC's eurrent policy of renting space on city-owned buses for political advertising. The question cropped up in the recent Federal election campaign, as was indicated by several hard-swinging letters- te-tlie-editor.pro and con. It will be heard of again at official level when the PUG holds its next monthly meeting Clare McCullough, former president of the Oshawa Builders' Association, said today that he will write the PUC, formally protesting the present policy and asking that it be rescinded 'without delay." Canada's Role In Overseas Education Hit Budget Control Feud Carried To Cabinet TORONTO (CP)--A group of mon Market and. French-Cana-| multi-storey schools in down- school 'rustees will cut them-|dian separatism. town areas will help overcome selves loose from the army of|° Teachers have a role to play|high land costs in the future. teachers and trustees in conven-|in assuring the continued exist-|Playg on the roof and tion here today to go before the| ence of Canada as a nation, he|elevators would be among their Ontario cabinet and defend) i features. : ae bingy scalp endowed budgets. , ara' . i The delegation from the On- ee J, slag tario School Trustees' Council »| president . Michael's ° F ; lege in Toronto, hold out the will visit Queen's Park to op- U i marie i prospect of separate high a nad oe ew a schools and universities in On report of a select committee of ae f the Ontanio legislature -- that tario in the future although the ' ' | Ontanio government recently re- i . McCullough: municipal councils exer- ' " cise control over school board) jected the finst steps in such a "This represents an abuse bad ev | plan when they were pro; of a public transit service pos Soe er open cree by the province's Roman -- when political advertising is M oY While Ea 2 a in| ac biahage, : accepted as it was during oe" Wilinsa G. Devs sai 'isa a. ro Roig rorya he he the recent campaign. Re- Monday he also opposes muni- vat ; t a haad eas a Can Cathie ait gardless of what defence is |cipal control of school budgets, |°f television, radio and film. jh SG athalic secondary made of the PUC's policy, it jhe indicated several cabinet) WOULD PROVIDE INFO school or university to attend," is offensive to many tax- |ministers take 'an opposing) _A central organization to pro-| Father Kelly said. But the Ro- payers; furthermore it can | V¥W. jyide information and research|man Catholic population of Tor-| i prove costly in the long run There have been several de-|on school design was suggesied|onto was expected to reach| o the PUC. " Discuss Nutria Value At Wildlife Session TORONTO (CP) -- Lewis! By STUART LAKE |thought it would be. They are|they will become careless with Perinbam, secretary of the Ca.| OTTAWA (CP)--The destruc-'seeking solutions. to problems| 'he animals and allow them to nadian National Commission for| tiveness of the nutria as a wild/they have run into. escape. UNESCO, said today the time|animal and its value. as a| A member of the rat family Builletins igsued by the Na- has come for "a careful and|fatmed fur-bearer will be the|and not unlike the beaver in ap- tional Better Business Bureau critical appraisal" of Canada's subject of one of the papers to|pearance, the nuiria is not|in the United States have told educational programs in rela-|be read at the federal-provin-jfound in the wild in Canada.|of farmers in Lou'siana--where tion to developing countries, | Cal wildlife conference to be} But thousands of the species|mutnas abound -- being eaten He told the Onfario Education| held here April 18-19. jhave been fmported inio the|night off their land by the Association that the developing) Prepared by Darrell Eagles,|country from the United States|rodent which is noted its countries of Asia, Africa and|head of the Canadian Wildlife)by persons hoping that wider! voracious appetite. Latin America present a new Service's publicity department,|markets will develop here and) Mr. Maia siresses there, are educational frontier to Cana-|the paper is the result of num-|abroad for garments made from|sOme_ successful, responsible dians with opportunities for oit-| TOUS inquiries received by the! their pelts. nutria ranchers in Canada who izen, school, community and|80vernment agency from per-| In 1961 the wildlife confer-jwent into the business with state to conquer together the|S0s who have gone into thejence passed a resolution ex-|the'r eyes wide open. "oitadels of ignorance, misun- business of raising the furry) pressing concern about the pro-| Those who rushed in unaware derstanding and mistrust." rodent for its pelt. motion of the nutria industry in|of the nisks and hazards of Mr. Perinbam said he was not| Jn most cases, the letter|Canada and recommended that|natsing the animals are causing criticizing present programs or, Wiens confess that raising nu-|the justice department inquile| the concern among his offécials, those who administer them, but|'ias isn't quite as easy as,they into advertising methods used READY WITH ADVICE i im| Mo ------------= by some of its promoters. ve 4h ' it was conceivable improve The Wildlife Service sees its ments could be made. SOME MAY ESCAPE role mainly as the Three areas in which he felt Delegates then felt that mis-/Maimtenance of willlife as an there was room for improve- leading adveni'sing was prompt-| impontant natural resource and ment included reception of over- ing inexperienced people. to normally wouldn't become in- seas students in Canada, co-op- | volved. with the nutria until the ; raise nuttia as a "get rich) eration between the federal Story Sources leuick'* gumeae' , animal became established government and voluntary agen- in . | 7 over ud vo PHILADEL PH1A (AP) --| Since then, the number of the the wild. : cies Ba yet field, and the two Philalelphia Bulletin exec-animals entering Canada' has| However, i now feels it has gene: attitude bomannts the| utives, convicted of contempt|greatly increased. Many prov-|been put into the picture by the -- 8 Pagaete in foreign aid.| tor refusing to answer grandiinces don't keep count: of thelletters it has received and by e a, could play its role jury questions about stories\number of nutnia within their/the facts uncovered by Mr.. yA up ¢bipaga ad's into they published, were sentenced boundamies but from those tihat| Eagles' study. |their homes, and letting them Monday to five days in jail and do, it has been ascertained that) By discussing the nutnia lay. fomething of Canadian f9m- | tined $1,000 each. the papolaiion on fur fainms has the Ottawa conference, the sean h The two men, President Rob- reac 1000. jvice hopes to bring i Py Ped ret some Part ert Taylor and city editor Earl) W. W. Mair, head of the wildlife officials up to date A, master the systems of mass communication used in class- rooms. Such a system alneady exists im jana, Promising university gradu- ates would be chosen before they enter teachers' college, Dr. Rainsberry suggested, and work for pay along with other teachers experienced in the use " f ocean Newsmen Refuse To Disclose ser: at on 'CLARE McCULLOUGH j Delegates LITTLE NOTES FROM HERE AND THERE Dr. and Mrs. Albert Bastedo, of Bracebridge, Ont., were instantly killed in Indiana last week while enroute to Califor- nia -- Dr. Bastedo is an uncle of Edgar F. Bastedo, QC, former City alderman and chairman of the Finance commit- tee. . . . Don't forget the Kiwanis Club's mammoth Radio Atiction which is to be held Wednesday night. The auction room will be in the Hotel Genosha. This is the most impor- tant of all business activities for Oshawa's two Kiwanis clubs -- downtown and Westmount -- as they depend on revenue from it to finance their most worthwhile projects. ... "Mike" Starr and T. D. Thomas will be two of the special guests of honor Friday, April 26, at the annual Mili- tary Ball of the Ontario Regiment. His Worship Lyman Gifford has also. promised to attend as has Mayor Stanley Martin of Whitby. Out-of-town guests will also include Brig. H. E. Brown, Commander, Central Ontario Area, the CBnadian Army (Militia); Colonel A. McGinniss, commander 15th. Military District. from municipal councils, that| associate technical advisor to|and "'by that time we may be! firms that spend more than are set by the board of educa-/ Some school boards hire ex-|| But delegates rejected a bid them drop their bus adver- |money requested. boards seeking similar informa-|there aren't enough Catholic litieal advertising was -- comet vim Eins Asati 24's) INTERPRETING THE NEWS ' ' ' " | 7 the middle of a red-hot poli- |counails could paralyze a school \specific tasks, such as ex. Taylor and Selby' were freed |profit will become discouraged | their The, PUC will likely argue that it is only following the |terborough, president of the On- ment of voluntary organizations | ------ |thorities anil, as usual, the |payers Association, told dele- Transit Association in a recent release). oug t Vy abs lof the context of aid. | |ommendation "with a sense of | also will hear than $400 from: such advertising in the recent campaign, plus 4 ' | were cmwded with meotings,|. AS more U.S. Steel companies |not made good his promise to|Canadian educational process the propagation and shooting of Boaleraggl | as individuals and as tion."| i . ' |was no discussion period 0 this year over 1962. Revenue this year to the end of March (10,000 teachers and trustees problem s and as a nation."'|old philosopher who posed as a) was no discussi and n Association and a dozen smaller|1% throughout the economy 0g ee for quick action on his) ---------- |their time praying for a non-|jf I iid, I'm very sorry." Mayor Lyman Gifford quipped at a recent PUC meeting: ] | leiation that criticism of the|, Industrial prices have beenjomy as manufacturers buy up| ae in iiwen oalar wd tes ine cancer ree months, urg is roaching death. April 8, didn't advertise on the buses. He hasn't made an The program does not com- creases in the steel industry| makers and others are likely to) y 1 . n tags | Beserk View will be bliss. Association. William R, Evan- 4 wor in the ballot box with the most number of ballots -- : | aimed at reducing the number|°™Y--® trend-maker in prices--|the face of higher earnings by I é visers recognized the problem berserk atmosphere of re-| future. ax, were arts, commerce or|8° Unnoticed by other industry An assistant professor of phil-/sHoCKS AUDIENCE Western Ontario, he sa'd he/shocked into silence: by his pers Z : Although the mood between v vy s needs of individual pupils, the last year to prevent a general it would have caused and in- alderman and councillors bej|the education department, as a.able to consider other alterna-| able to tiim. school expenses. At)means of avoiding duplication | tives than those we have now $900 annually with the PUC | " for bus advertising. What is ; d of tion in each municipality and|perts to investigate new school|to exclude non-Catholic teach- |}, the municipal council must set|designs, he said, but their find-|ers from separate schools after tising because of this politi- cal policy ? Won't it lure a | | tic lt : | MIGHT PARALYZE on. eachers now and academic 5 .. | Selby, refused to clear them-| Wildlife Service, says his offi-| developments. They thus will be - | available to , ror hid Cane AES F ae. dropped ? leducietieael Amssabeticas axa ta voluntary organioations |selves by giving the grand jury|cials fear that persons taking in a position to give the best oo a i jon $1,000 bond each pending ap-\by the quality of the fur and) The Ottawa meeting is the tical tempest regardless of sy stem through mistaken thnift. I f] ti Cc rl changes of personnel, volunteer) ,eai io Pennsylyania's Supreme|the lim'ted demand for it, 26%h annual Bhan of fed- n in other countries. | policy set down by more than 95 percent of the public He also suggested that odu-| 'C bd ® , os Beare gl -- | gates that trustees had received ancer Victim The PUC can also produce some other strong arguments "Overseas service should be ee " y p | i say regarded, i i i ; pack By HAROLD MORRISON | The big puiitical outery| "84 in my view, as a kind D re) ces Pr e eer a proposed bylaw 'af the fact that every deficit dollar incurred by it must be ara 2 u g be made up by the taxpayers of the City of Oshawa. |discussions, panels and wander-|J0:n the parade towards higher|Move the U.S. economy out of/ 1M al the rewands and bene- | i | mailard ducks. confronting the U.S. | Proposed income tax cuts as one Mose of tke, Paredes ah | aan a dees By ghd nedha 0 i : ' " heat | 6 ernment is h |way of stimulating the economy. r. Perinbam's ad-| victim cancer &) opportunity. totalled $14,046., an impressive figure for the Commissioners |!urned out for the annual meet- ever onete 1s RaW Ne paevene oer . 4 |dress was made available to the|lunrheon audience Monday that) He added: 'I want to make it when they realize that the monthly deficit hit the $2,000 mark | organizations. into export markets where it Proposals. 5 r | / | Education Minister Davis told °@n affect the economies of} A mild dose of inflation pos-| a eternal life. | Pale and quiet-spoken, he had "We should buy bigger buses next time so we can sell more Dr. Peter A. Angeles, con-| told the audience it would be his dvertising." : ; ' : a 4 lprovince's new streaming sys-| fairly steady in the United | more supplies of basic materi-} : ne ; tem for secondary education is|Sates for the last six years) als as a hedge against still high-| his audience lh soggence A in} Dr. Angeles's speech was | service to others, creation | ice-princi » ' official statement as to whether he disapproves of such ad- made to the vice-principlas' sec-| vertising, but he did say: 'Elections are not won with |promise academic content as\™ight not cause any major|increase their profits. And or- some critics have suggested, change. | ganized: labor is unlikely to re- But Dr. Angeles said later in| son, president of the section, fe a telephone interview from his,said the group had no advance that's what really counts election day."'. : ; | By JOSEPH MacSWEEN home at London, Ont., that he warning of the philosopher's in- a of drop-outs from high' school and 't is unlikely thet the suc-| management. LONDON (CP) --. Anti - nu-does not have cancer and| tention and was left with mixed by directing students into fields|©°SS Or failure of the steel in-| strained carnival and gnim con- trades. --and labor as well, -- cg SP ane cous in fusion when they straggled The program represents the|,, President Kennedy used ail) ooo.. ' rect der Se ay eq| Police and the demonstrators used paste Pome create a) opening by Syfptote May amiga d youthful minister said. | Steel industry price boost ani| , increases turned ugly -- dangerously ugly | ; mF 4 a jthe announced $6-a-ton increase | ("nou the wird es ved ' | ASKS EXPANDED ROLE mands recently, including some by F. J. K. Nicol of Toronto,|more than 50 per cent by 1980 "For instance, there are present, school. board budgets and waste. going to happen if some of |the mill rate' to provide the ings are not passed on to other|several trustees protested 'that lot more than it would if ale inck of Wi . Nicol predicted that! standards might suffer. The PUC will find itself in |a°\ntery ew Monday municipal iivactial bade ie ndertake |e information it asked. up nutria farming for a quick/possible advice if asked for what final decision it makes in this dispute. And J. G. McCarney of Pe- schemes and assisting develop-| | 'The danger then aises that|/enal and provincial wildlife au- | tanio Schoo] Trustees and Rate- | transit systems in Canada (as quoted by the Canadian | cational programs be taken out} tory bird regulations will be on |the legislative committee's rec- the agenda. to bolster its case, such as the fact that it took in more Downtown hotels in Toronto) C@"adian Press Staff Writer/against Kennedy is that he has of post-graduate course in the| Gleichen, Alta., and another The PUC expects to triple its bus advertising revenue |ing delegates as an estimated|Ptices on selected products, the|threatened stagnation. He has fits that education brings to us| TORONTO (OP)--A 32-year-\the audience after, but there ling of the Ontario Educational|Teeping inflation from spreal-|But Congress is showing no. en- : : | press before delivery, |people should not fritter away) powerful. I guess 1 overdid (as compared with $3,000 last year). i A RES RON ac rerdi | | . ithe Headmasters Asso-, %her countries, sibly could also stir the econ-| A -N | } ' gy nti uc ear tending he expected to die of|last public appeanance because "Mike" Starr, successful PC candidate in Ontario riding G P ts irresponsible. and a few scaititered pmice in-| er prices in the future, Steel-| roup resen and in suffering and the "end|tion of the Ontario Educational gimmicks, with colorful posters or speeches, but they are ; : Mr. Davis said. Rather it was) But steel is basic to the econ-|strain higher wage demands in " ' Kennedy' , clear legions created a slightly doesn't expect to die in the near feelings about whether it was a where their greatest prospects|{ustry's new price pattern will) os See Sone ho | oh at the University of} Members of the audienc ; through London Monday. osophy 4 . e, first genuine effort to meet the|t#€ Weapons at his command crease had not been rescinded 1 n when he 4 ar to one last month when helious. When the speech was , --at times, the general tenor) | was rescinded, The biggest Ken-|W°Uld have led organized labor \posed as a 70-year-old profes-| over, several men left the room \to adon new jiancy i seemed almost gay to an ob-/ iniead ; ' | ' 5 _Dr. Norman A. M. MacKen-/ nedy advisers maintain it pa é PH Boll -- it en " server, especially biel ening tas ts for) | Dr. "Angeles * zie, who heads the national be difficult to prove collusion in| 25 4 ia bands played and as aeate J last time at a university tive men were awame that each committee organizing Canada's\the current price increases,|M@V¢ Seriously weakened the) io) 0q ecture, tirk of time was precious and centennial celebrations and is since they are selective, grad.|frees working toward the re- un-|, Dr. Angeles a | mast be used wisely. a former president of the Uni-| ual and unilateral. jStoration of our international) .ocned and the unshaved,"|forewamed three officials of his i j quipped one onlooker at Trafai-|{Mtentcons and planned to tell there ts no end to R . .. thel called for an expanded role for|dustry's price increases will|CAN EXPORT INFLATION |gar Square, jammed with eager] pa barge gh aren M "rn ee was 'a ' stick. ----, appears to be) The problem for Canada in| holiday-makers for two hours ai OF aD ,: ++ There ds r : try voi i inflati -the-bom' - n world, teachers trying to avoid a new battile,| facing U.S. inflationary and de-|before the ban-th b march JFK Phones Wife He told the vice-principals three Rs, Dr. MacKenzie said. | political repercussions of his! are n, it is|mile hike from Ald that there is no cosmic purpose , -|D | ot contained. Because it is}Mile hike from ermaston. , They must be able to help pu-| fight last year and perhaps be-! * | ike - i p perhaps the world's most powerful econ-| Spike - heeled glamor girls |beginning or end. tional and international affairs |remain popular as he seeks a'tional tnader. the U.S. is able querade as mamchers--leaving) PALM BEACH, Fla. (AP) --| Dr. Angeles, a native of Ohio, as nuclear weapons, the Com-' second term in 1964. j|to export inflation just as it is tourists goggle - eyed as t hey| President Kennedy telephoned| graduated from Columbia Uni- ; von,.|in skin-tight jeans and black|King Jr. Monday to reassure osophy. Poe et agp ai cae. nt. | sweaters, waving anti - nuclear) here that the justice department} ponts, If prices on key U.8, com- pennants. [is looking out for the safety of | , \during anti-segregation demon- pet feel the burden on their a did their best to keep|strations at Birmingham, Ala. ' DONE AOE. TOOKIAG 2: Re Kennedy phoned Mrs. King) industry of its own but still de-!son column that dominates the|#ter returning from an after- pends on the United States for) square into which the marchers | 2000 yachting cruise and was| part of its steel needs, includ- ' We'd like to call to your attention A truly heppy modern invention, It saves you worry, * Running and hurry: It's Bell's convenient KITCHEN EXTENSION! Save countless steps -- get more things dene - order HARRY CARTER RECALLS SHE TITANIC The recent 5ist. anniversary of the sinking of the Titanic didn't create a ripple of excitement locally, but Harry Carter won't soon forget it. Mr. Carter, a GM assembly line worker for many years before his retirement 10 years ago, lives at 148 Athol street. He was 29 at the time of the sinking, one of the greatest tragedies in marine history. He was also a young hopeful from Britain coming to America for the first time. He was a passenger on the 12,000-ton Victorian of the Allen Line -- it was bound for America, as was the sup- | WEATHER FORECAST Scattered Rain We LIST ONLY TO SELL "ye said he had jn It's the parade of the "The universe is infinite, versity of British Columbia,' In ail likelihood, the steel in-|Co™Petitive position. no supernatural." must s i | i y pass on more than the) perhaps because of the heated/fiationary trends is that they|ers arrived on their annual 60- ,e | Of Negro Leader only eternal existence without pils form opinions on such na-|cause of an earnest desire to\gmy and the greatest interna-| grabbed the opportunity to mas-| able to export unemployment. |Wandered about in the sunshine the wife of Rev. Martin Luther) versity with a doctorate in phil- + : d her husband, arrested Friday modities rise, Canadian impont-) PROTECT COLUMN Canada has a growing steel/high base and lions of the Nel- 'ip posedly unsinkable Titanic which foundered April 15, 1912, on her maiden voyage after collision with an iceberg off the Grand Banks of Newfoundland. More than 1,600 of the 2,349 passengers were lost. Forecasts issued by the Tor-| jonto weather office at 4:30 a.m. Early Tomorrow Forecast Temperatures Low tonight, ing heavy machinery and other poured from Whitehall. Police with hands _ joined tried responding to a call she placed) to the president late Sunday, it} products not made in Canada./tg keep te marchers to one| WS eamed. SPOT CASH OR TERMS \ High Wed. - 55 50 50 50 50 50 50 If prices 'of these commodities |side of the street, | : f lea Mrs, King was concerned be- rise in the United States, it i¢| her side' far' heen ena heavy Easter|cause she had been unable to traffic, and to some extent they|get in touch with her husband, difficult to keep them from ris- ing in Canada. | succeeded. \a leader in the Negro civil | , since | JOHN A. J. BOLAHOOD REAL ESTATE -- MORTGAGES | Synopsis: A low pressure; Windsor ......... system moving eastward will St. Thomas ....... |likely bring an end to the spell!/London ........... of settled weather which has| Wingham ......... prevailed over Ontario. Cooler|Mount Forest ..... air will reach Ontario Wednes-|Hamilton ... 65 Mr. Carter explained: The Victorian followed in the wake of the Titanic, but too far behind to know immediately about the tragedy be- cause of slow communications -- this information was con- firmed two or three days later when the Victorian passed st oC i the homebound Empress of Britain somewhere about mid- ge St. Clair, Lake Erie, A agate a ocean. : |Lake Huron regions, Windsor,|Peterborough ..... 5 "News of the sinking naturally shocked our passengers," | London: Partly cloudy and mild|Trenton .......00.. sald Mr. Carter today, 'but there was not much outward j|with scattered showers and Killaloe ....... display of emotion, although I didn't sleep too well from that thunderstorms tonight. Wednes- Muskoka ... point on until we docked." day sunny with cloudy periods. North Bay Les Eveniss, the Oshawa curler, has provided this de- beg nmr to west Wednes-|Sudbury ... partment with an historic relic of the sinking, a copy of the "Wises. Toke Ontario, Geor- Kapuskasing he Toronto World for April 19, 1912. gian Bay, Hatiburton regions,/White River Isa 's item, cr d full with dramatie first- |Hamilton, Toronto: Increasing Moosonee . person stories under such headings as: "Band Played as | cloudiness this afternoon Partiy S.S. Marie ....... | Ship Sank" -- "Alone on Deck Captain Died" -- 'Two Life- |cloudy and mild tonight with Timmins ......, | boats Sank with Load' -- "Weirdest Sound that Could Be | Scattered showers and thunder- | ** = 'Death Found a Hero At Every Post" and "Titan- | ie's Side Torn Open By Berg". CAFIK WINS 6OLDIERS' VOTE Norm Cafik, the 34-year-old Liberal candidate from | West Rouge who gave "Mike" Starr such a close race in On- tario. riding April 8, will hold a meeting Wednesday night with "'all area chair- men" to "express. thanks for the past and make some plans for the future". Said Mr. Cafik today: "The Liberal Party Ontario riding is at strongest point in many years, thanks to the hard work and concentration of | many people. We intend to | do all within our power to | keep the party in such a | | | \ Any generai increase in U.S.| But when the square specta-|rights fight in the south domestic pnices--reducing U.S.|tors broke loose it Seemed that|his arrest, ee with suppliers |the double-deck buses and oo -- other countries -- may also) give way to increased U.S. de lois. -- OF © Son eee protection against| When the police warned the| | : p |spectators back, the marchers |_ It is not likely that Kennedy | countered with shouted invita-| |would yield easily on such de-| tions to join the parade. Stray | mans: His publicized drive 1S) children howled . and dogs-in-| oon lower transatlantic tar-) arms whined in terror as the| iis and increased trade, But it) commotion increased. | is a question of whether he - a would risk 'antagonizing any| major block of voters at home| if it came to a major test be-| 7 a presidential election in seeeee ee Modernize and Improve your Home Now...with | a new oil furnace SEES BIG EXPANSION The first railway in India was opened in 1853 with 20 miles of | track. Today India has some storms. Showers early Wednes-| Observed Temperatures 35,400 miles of track. day followed by clearing. Winds) Low Overnight, becoming west 15 to 20 Wednes-| Dawson .., day. Victoria . Timagami, Cochrane regions, Edmonton North Bay, Sudbury: Becoming Regina ..... cloudy with a few showers to- Winnipeg ... night. Wednesday partly cloudy Lakehead ., and cooler, Winds becoming|White River . east 15 tonight and northeast 15) Kapuskasing . Wednesday. | North BOY 'cvdccsas Algoma region, Sault Ste.|5.5. Marie . Marie: Mainly cloudy with scat-|Sudbury .... tered showers tonight. Wednes-|Muskoka ... day partly cloudy and a little Windsor cooler. Winds becoming east 10 London . tonight and north 15 to 20 Wed-| Toronto nesday. Ottawa ..... COMING EVENTS Now On Classified Page In order to facilitate easier reading for all the vital statistics, The Coming Events will be moved over to the same page as the births, deaths, in memoriams, and obituaries. As a general rule, they will be print- ed on the third classified page. GET GIFT FOR BLIND | ST. JOHN'S, Nfld, (CP)--The |Newfoundland division of the Canadian National Institute for the Blind has received an anon- ymous bequest of $5,000 for a special fund to "assure the) stabilizing of services." | igh Monday | ¢ ie! | oe ® Tiel tine | @ Leaseback @ Development Paul Ristow | REALTOR 52 Simcoe N. INOW IS THE TIME To have that carpet or chest- erfield cleaned professionally in Oshowa's Original Carpet Cleaning Centre . . . where fj fully guaranteed satisfaction is f) assured, { Phone 728-4681 NU-WAY | LANDER-STARK HOME. HEATING SERVICE Our residential fuel oil customers now receive - all in the price of oil -- o Furnoce Cleanout and Tune-up once each year, In addition, we will con- tinue, as we have done for many years, to pro- vide Emergency Service at no additional cost. Our own Service Dept. is on coll 24 hours every day ond is Radio Control- led for fast, efficient service, Yes, now that Spring is here -- it's a very good time to modernize your home ... keep its value up to date, If you have an old or obsolete heating unit, let us install a new modern Oil Furnace in your home. We have a number of models for your choice and a very convenient 5-Year Purchase Plan. Call 725-3581 and let us give you a Free heating survey and a quotation . . » now, Oe Vi 43 KING STREET WEST, OSHAWA .............. PHONE 725-3581 728-9474 |) NEED AN... oll FURNACE? PERRY DAY OR NIGHT 723-3443 ] in its | HEAT WITH OIL DIXON'S OIL SERVING OSHAWA OVER 50 YEARS healthy shape." Harry W. Jermyn, District Returning Officer, today an- nounced the result of the Soldier's Vote in Ontario | Riding for April 8 as fol- lows: Cafik, Liberal Starr, PC Hall, NDP 24-HOUR SERVICE 313 ALBERT ST. 723-4663 -- 200 -- 105 -- 2 RUG CO. LTD. 174 MARY ST.

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