Oshawa Times (1958-), 28 Jun 1963, p. 2

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é 2. THE OSHAWA TIMES, Fridey, June 28, 1963 GOOD EVENING ; By JACK GEARIN ROSSLAND W. RESIDENTS WIN RE-ZONING TEST = Those Rossland road west residents -- the ones who op- ppse re-zoning from R-1A (top residential) to C-1 to allow an "easterly extension to the Rosslyn Plaza -- never give up. = This same re-zoning battle has been going on since early 1960. The residents won another important round before Plan- ning Board this week when the latter recommended that City buncil make no changes. " Mr. Kelso Creighton, QC, the distinguished counsel for the applicant (J. C. Stephenson of the Plaza), argued that the gentre needs a bigger variety of stores to be economically @ccessful, suggested that the residents were "reacting against @fact of City life." ce * Norman Millman, Oshawa's 'Father of Town Planning," dla not agree with this -- he admitted that "gobd planning @ictates the finishing of the centre, "but he added "you can't ferget the complaints of the residents." Pd City Coouncil will formally discus$ the matter at its next dben meeting and consider the recommendation of the Board, which is only an advisory group without power to act. » The Rosslyn application will be followed with interest by many property owners who are apprehensive lest their own tomes be re-zoned. City Council, 9-3, stood firm behind the residents in their last appearance at City Hall, April 18, 1960-- this seems like the wise course to follow when the matter crops up again at an early date. HILLSDALE COMMITTEE HAS FREEDOM Some may disagree, but the Home for the Aged act seems to be quite specific on this point -- the committee of management of any such Ontario home has the right to refuse admission to anyone, including senior citizens financially able to maintain themselves elsewhere. Mr. Noble Drew, director of the Homes for the Aged branch of the Ontario Department of Welfare, stoutly main- tains this to be so, but Oshawa's five-man committee of management for Hillsdale Manor thinks otherwise. They say that citizens with financial means must be admitted with needy cases, The act (under section 13) specifically defines four groups qualified for admission and maintenance and concludes with these words: "May be admitted to and maintained in a home or joint home by the committee of management or the board of man- agement, as the case may Ms we: The act does not say "shall be admitted", but "may be admitted". This leaves the onus squarely on the committee which has the widest possible leeway in such decisions, despite what some of its local members may say to the contrary The committee can argue rightfully that the act is vague, ambiguous on this point but Mr. Drew says that this is deli- to allow the committee maximum freedom ' berate GRID SEASON IS JUST AROUND THE CORNER Manager Joseph Bosco of the Oshawa Hawkeyes can get excited about football when the mercury is in the " s. He was elated this week about Ted Naperkowski, 21-year- old Hawkeye halfback who has earned a place at the Argo- nauts try-out camp, a big step forward in any rookie's career. Coach Don Hart will open the Hawkeyes training camp July 15; with only 23 returnees from last year, there will be 'several important gaps to fill. The team has an exhibition game August 16 and will open its regular season here August 23 with Balmy Beach. Hawkeyes are in the Eastern Group with Toronto Invictus Redmen, Balmy Beach Marines and Scarboro Rams. in ~ West group is Hamilton Hurricanes, Burlington Braves, Lake- shore Bears and Niagara Falls Tigercats. ------ games will be played within each divsion plus one interlock- ing game with each team in the other division. The Hawks have been superbly trained before the opener in bygone years, a factor which has kept serious injuries on their staff to a minimum. The same could not be said of Qther teams. The league officials would do well to look into this matter Before it is too late. Two near-fatal accidents marred the #962 season for the Toronto Invictus team. Jack Bobie, 2l-year- 'eid defensive end, was crippled for several months in a Sep- tember exhibition tilt with the Oakville Black Knights. Herb Geist, 21-year-old tackle, suffered a concussion in a freak acci- Zent in Oshawa in the opening game. He broke a leg, but Zter went into a coma and was unconscious for more than *hree weeks. He was a patient in Mount Sinai Hospital for sev- @ral weeks and was later transferred to Lyndhurst Lodge Where paralytics are given special treatment. Farmers In Nepal Plant Rice Crop KATMANDU, Nepal (AP) --ing, medicine and seedlings Grums throb and singers chant! acricultural experts cheer on the lines of stooped that the yield of Nepal's farms en striving to get the rice' nouiq be doubled or trebled geediings into the ground before yith modern methods, but the e rains come. ..,| landlord is content with the old «But most tenant farmers will system, and the tenant has no means to change it be lucky to reap enough to feed) ; Hi xt) their families through the ne Fie chit eraavenies Khia Me: hendra has taken steps that ar. =the average farm, is Nepal could eventually break the cen- jturies-old feudal system. yields 14 bushels of polished fice an acre. About 75 per cent} usually goes to the landlord for; The 43-year-old ruler has de- rent and debts incurred at high creed a new land reform law interest rates. to be tried out in three sample « Before planting time rolls districts of the mountain mon- round again, the tenant farmer) archy this fall. The program probably will be back in the| will: landiord's debt for food, cloth-) 1, Fix maximum rents at half z | the previous year's crop level . s . An increase in yield will go Patient Given | automatically to the tiller. % os 'High Award . . . liess farmers on 10-year terms. 'In Scouting 4. Siphon the landlords' capi- 2.. Limit landlords' holdings to between six and 42 acres, depending on the kind of land The rest would be sold to land- ERIE, Pa. (AP)--The Grea\ Lakes Commission is conside:- ing a sweeping plan to enable it to regulate activity on the five lakes through an interstate agency, it has been discloseu, The Great Lakes Water Re- sources Plan was outlined in an interview by Albert J. Meserow, chairman of the seven - state commission. which began its semi - annual conference here Thursday. As it stands now, the commis. jsion can adwise and recom- jmend, but cannot regulate ac- \tivity on Lakes Superior, Michi- gen, Huron, Erie and Ontario. It is a joint agency of the states of Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Minnesota, New York, Pennsyl- vania and Wisconsin, The proposed new resources plan was discussed last year in Indianapolis at a gathering of Canadian and American experts /on water and sanitation. These experts prepared a list of prob- jlems in lakes usage. | Since then, Meserow, a Chi- leago lawyer, has appointed a jcommittee to compile a biblio- | graphy, of all studies concerning 'the lakes. | his bibliography, which Mes- erow said should be completed j within a year, covers all ship- Cabinet Lineup | Review Seen By Pearson OTTAWA (CP)--Once Parlia- }ment disposes of some of the jcurrent business, Prime Minis- iter Pearson is expected to make! a survey of his ministerial | lineup. | A lot of corridor gossip 's be- ing devoted to this these days, especially since the recent) budget crisis involving Finance} Minister Gordon, There appear to be three pos- sible courses, if the 57-year-old) finance minister leaves that} portfolio as is widely predicted in the capital, including govern- jment circles. i One involves a straight switch) lof portfolios between Mr. Gor-| don and Trade Minister Sharp.| | A second might be appoint- ment of Mr. Gordon to the Sen- jate when an Ontario vacancy occurs. This could give him free rein to devote his consider-| able administrative and organi-| | j 'Agency Planned To Govern Lakes | The jneuve, 19, Alain Brouillard, 18,! jand Alain Gabriel, 19, are| ping, pollution, power, recrea- tion and similar studies. Mese- row said the bibliography would be combined with the list of problems and turned over to an independent group, such as uni- versity scientists, which would make a preliminary engineering study which Meserow hopes will be financedeby foundations. The next step would be for commission members tq sell the study to the state legiStatuyes, so that an interstate compact could be agreed on. At the same time, the Cana- dian provinces. of Ontario and Quebec would be offered an agreement with the states, Meserow said the nadian and U.S. governments probably would have to step into the pic- ture next since their regulatory powers would be needed. Three Appear. For Statement On Bombing MONTREAL (CP) -- Three teen-aged students are to ap-| Ipear for voluntary statement |today on charges laid in the |throw'ng of an incendiary bomb! jat the Victoria Rifles Armory! March 8. : three, Raymond Ville- charged with conspiracy and public mischief endangering human life. They were also committed to jvoluntary statement on charges |of conspiracy and attempted ar- son, amended from conspiracy and causing an explosion. Voluntary statement is a stage) in Quebec court procedure at which the defence may present evidence. Their preliminary hearings on| these changes, ending Thurs-| any of 158 charges against 18 suspected members of the ter- rorist Front de Liberation Que-| becois. } Preliminary hearings were scheduled to resume today on| charges of non-capital murder against five of the 18 in the! death of night watchman Wil-} lfred Vincent O'Neill, 65, killedjtive of the iwhen a time-bomb exploded out-/2bout side an army recruiting centre April The five are Villeneuve, Ga- Sask. Medicare Ends First Year CARDINAL McGUIGAN WITH POPE James Charles Cardinal McGuigan of Toronto poses with Pope Paul VI during private audience with the Pontiff at the Vatican yester- day. (QP Wirephoto) Judge Dismisses Jury TORONTO (CP) udge S1X nd a Greek Orthodox priest. Judge McDonagh told the jury a his decision came after much} jdiscussiori about the complexity} of the case and because of news- paper publicity he had spoken to a represen' Toronto Telegram that papér's and was asking chief J Dana Porter of Ontario to 100 into it. k Mr. Denson, former $11,000-a-) publish, as evidence in the cur- Frank McDonagh dismitsSed alyear construction superintend-|rent trial, testimony which Mr. - man county court jurylent, is suing for the loss of his}Donson had given earlier in | Thursday, saying he will finish)wife Martha, assault and spe-|family court. day, were the first completed on|.1,n0 the trial of a $12,000 civil/cial damages. He testified' his 1958 and returned to Greece in Ap! child, but his wife iriage, Which | they | Thursday's eventful jended with Judge McDonagh In Suit Against Priest Judge McDonagh ion the trial Wednesday hearing tion as he deems advisable said The |suit between a Greek immigrant|wife came here from Greece .n/Telegram's late - edition article ap- ril, 1961, taking their chikd.| peared at first reading to be an Je said he had followed her|exact reproduction of questions to Greece and brought back the| and answers read to Mr. Don- remained) son in family court, leaving the about it. He said there. He alleges Father Dimop-|inference these facts were ta./oulos interfered in his mar-| proved at trial. j took place five) He told Telegram representa- coverage, | Years ago in the United Church,| tive Bert Wemp he will forward ustice| DY insisting to the couple that/a transcript of the proceedings were not properly married.|to the chief justice for such ac- REGINA (CP) -- Saskatche- wan's controversial medica} care plan observes its first anni- versary Monday in an atmos- phere charged with continuing mistrust, suspicion and ill-will between most doctors and the provincial government. That the CCF government'r prepaid, tax-supported medical care plan works is evident. Res- idents pay their premiums, visit doctors, are treated and. have their bills paid by the adminis- trative body, the Medical Care Insurance Commission. About 870,000 of Saskatche- wan's 930,000 persons are cov- ered by the plan and pay annual premiums of $12 a single person $24 a family. It is the side issues--sidelined Nto-% ttle the basic dispute be- fween--the government and the Saskatchewan College of Physi- cians and Surgeons last July 23 --that are keeping the medica: care wounds open. When the plan was intro- duced, the basic objective of the socialist government was to provide comprehensive, compul- sory medical care through ad- ministration of a Crown agency. The doctors objected on the |basis that the government's uni- versal medical care would en- tail compulsion for patient and doctor as-well as governmental control over the provision of medical services. WITHDRAW SERVICES Doctors withdrew normal medical services last July and boycotted the governmeat plan for 23 days prior to the signing of a truce, known as the Saska- toon agreement. In the agreement, they were given the option of working di- rectly under or outside the Sas- katchewan Medical Care Insur- ance Act. The areas of conflict, how- ever, remain broad and em- brace aspects ranging from pay ment methods for some diag- nostic services to complaints that hospital medical staffs dis- criminate against doctors work- ing in consumer-sponored com- munity clinic. Doctors change that political medicine is being practised in Saskatchewan, that the medical profession is harassed by the government and that efforts are being made to divide the profes- sion within itself and that they were misled when they signed ibriel Hudon, 20, Jacques Gir- joux, 19, Georges Schoeters, 33, and Yves Labonte, 18. Preliminary hearings on other jzational talents to Liberal party affairs, A third, apparently the most} |remote, possibility would be Mr. | Gordoes esate business and charges against all 18 accused his retirement from Parliament| Were postponed Thursday to va- The jury had been hearing the suit since last Monday. It) was brought by Harry L. Don- son against Very Rev. Georgios nad . ; ; A ~\ s ihad ordered a Telegram repre- Dimopoulos of a - oe sentative brought to court. Then Annunclanon o 9 8 he repeated a warning he made stalking from the courtroom. Before declaring his decision | altogether. |rious dates next week. |OTHER MOVES LIKELY | Informants say a move for Mr. Gordon, first elected to the {Commons in June, 1962, isn't the only ministerial change which might take place. Two are already wel] known }Mr. Pearson has said Defence Production Minister Drury will become industries minister as/ soon as Parliament sets up the new industry department which it now is working. And Hon. Rene Tremblay, inister without portfolio, has! {been tabbed by Mr. Pearson as jagriculture minister for Eastern Car wh: Pe lup the double agriculture min- Make the Commonwealth work istry. The present agriculture! Addressing. the Royal Com minister, Harry Hays, presum-|monwealth Society on the topic ably would become minister for, The Commonwealth as a World Western Canada Force, Lord Home said that in the world along racial lines is ©n Commonwealth, . the Earl of }Home said Thursday The British foreign minister coupled the warning with a plea to newly-independent coun- tries to pitch in.vigorously and A couple of Quebec ministers|the past responsibility for giv-| --one of them Mr. Pearson's/ing a lead and demonstrating chief Quebec lieutenant, Justice understanding rested largely Minister Chevrier -- are men-| with Britain amd its oldsr part- jtioned in' speculation about)ners such as Canada. other 'possible changes "The duty of holding together Mr. Chevrier, 60, is being|the Commonwealth now falls at jmentioned for appointment to least as much on the other part- Home Cites Peril In Race Division (Mary, _..|Wednesday to reporters not to Judge Adjourns uit Against TSE TORONTO (CP)--A suit for $2,100,000 damages launched by | Wilfred Posluns, a former direc- | | | | | LONDON (CP) -- Division of;we can certainly claim that it)tor and employee of investment) built his first car in 1898. was a partnership in ewery|dealers R. A. Daly and Com- the greatest danger facing the|scnse of the word in peace and|pany, against the Toronto Stock) James Southall Wilson, 82, an war, It -had a profound influ-| Exchange and George Gardiner, ence on world events. TSE chairman,-was adjourned "The modern Commonwealth; Thursday by Mr. Justice George is a much more ambitious con-|Gale of the Supreme Court of ception and has therefore much] Ontario. greater opportunities for exer-| The trial will reopen Sept. 23 jcising an influence on world so-|for a two-week summing up by ciety." counsel. Home's major address was| Mr. Posluns accused the TSE lseen as u' pledge for contiqued|@9d Mr. Gardiner of conspiring ico-operation with the emerging|t@ have him removed from his jcountries and at the same time] P0Sition with the investment a plain - speaking request for| firm. jto dismiss the jury, the judge's the Saskatoon agreement. On the other hand, the govern- {ment charges that opponents of By THE CANADIAN PRESS |the plan want to "keep the med. Windsor, Ont, -- Mrs. Minnie {cal care pot boiling" until the Maude Dunnell, 86, mother of|NeXt election, that they want to | Milton Dunnell, sports editor of overhrow the plan before it be- | the Toronto Star. |comes too commonplace and ah ty ithat some doctors' complaints Montreal--Very Rev. Dr, Mal-| sre "finicky." }colm A. Campbell, 87, a former) |moderator of the Presbyterian|sHow RETICENCE | Church in Canada and chairman) probably the most significant of the Montreal Protestant|/change in attitude towards the school board. idispute, which had its begin- Ph rgynchgectanior ag M. Holley,/nings when medical care 'nsur- 86, an automotive pioneer wh0| ance was announced as a major |plank in the CCF 1960 election |platform, is that both sides now idisplay reticence in voicing |complaints. But when comments on the Niagara Falls, Ont, -- Fred Plan are made, doctors still dis- |Campbell McBurney, 91, a prac-|Play the kind of bitterness that \tising lawyer in Niagara Falls\blanketed the province last since 1895. | year. Pm | Montreal--Mrs. Sarah Hazel| Dr. Harry Portnuff, who this) egg ie widow of the late} ev. Fred W. Poland, first rec-| . 2 tor of St. Peter's Anglican| Verdict Of Guilty Church in suburban town of! | DEATHS Charlottesville, - Va, Dr. authority on the works of Edgar Allen Poe and a prominent Vir- ginia educationist. ' understanding 'on their part as jthey: grow in maturity. He spoke} of '"'comprehension from the Inew to the old." Color, race, religion and poli- \tics tend to divide peoples "The| lexcitement of the Common-| Mine In Bancroft 'Mount Royal, ee In Barmaid Death | HAGERSTOWN, Md. (AP)--| William D. Zantzinger was con-) vieted Thursday of manslaugh-; ter in the death of Negro bar- maid Hattie Carroll, 51. year replaced medical care war rior Dr. H. D. Dalgleish as col- lege president, said in an inter- view that patients patronizing community clinics go there be- cause the doctor has the same philosophical and -- ideological outlook. This, he said, is politi- cal medic'ne. "Some of my patients, whose children I have delivered, cared for and counselled into univer sity, have left to go to doctors in community clinics." Community clinics were born out of the crisis last summer when normal doctor services were withdrawn. About 30 doc- tors are working in mine clinics in the province and work di- rectly with the Medical Care In- surance Commission. MUST OPPOSE Sponsored by citizens who pro- vide office space and equipment for their doctors on a rental basis, the clinics are opposed by the bulk of the medical pro- fession. Some of the doctors in the clinics --. most are from the United Kingdom--have had dil- ficulty in obtaining hospital privileges. College officials say this is due to qualifications and not, as charged by the clinics and government, discrimination. Some of the compiaints now are before a one-man royal commission appointed by the provincial government. HAD CONTRACTS During the July crisis, 111 doctors were brought to Saskat- chewan by the Medical Care In- surance Commission on tempo- rary contracts. The price was $511,000 and the college s refers to these doctors and com- munity clinic doctors as "mer- cenaries."" About five of the temporary doctors have joined community clinics and another 19 are in pri- vate practice in Saskatchewan. To qualify for patient reim- burstment, general practitioners can contract with the Saskatch- ewan Hospital Services Plan to declare their offices hospital fa- cilities. Dr. Portnuff charged this is an attempt to divide the profes- sion within itself. Dr. Portnuff said while the number of doctors in the prov- ince is about the same as last year--774 active May 31 com- pared with 781 at the same time a year ago--a doctor-recruiting program will be undertaken in August because the patient load is increasing as a result of the government plan. SPECIALISTS LEAVE Dr. George Peacock, college registrar, will visit Britain te "attempt to get the type of doc- itor we have lost," said Dr. Portnuff. He also said 35 spe- cialists have left Saskatchewar and have not been replaced since the beginning of the gov- ernment plan. Although the dispute contin- ues, it has not impeded the pay- ment of accounts. The MCAC's 200-member staff handles 8,000 claims a day and spent $12,500,- 000 from April 1 to May 31. Based on monthly expendi- tures this year--last year was not considered normal -- Com- mission Chairman Donald Tans- ley estimated the MCIC opera- tions will fall in line with origi- nal estimates of $21,000,000 to $23,000,000 a year. About 70 per cent of the ac- counts are handled through ap- proved health agencies which act as middle-man between doc- tors and the commission. Doctors opposing the plan work under it indirectly by hav- ing approved agencies--for the most part, agencies which pro- vided health insurance before the bench in Quebec Postmaster-General Denis, 56, said to be headed for the is at present is in Quebec WEATHER FORECAST ners as it does on ourselves,"| wealth experiment lies in the| he added opportunity: to heal these great} If we look back on thelqivides, briding them by con- agree Senate where the only vacancy achievement: of the old Com-| ,joys understanding and co-|Urenium monwealth of European origin operation Continued Hot, Humid Weathe Forecasts by the Toronto pub- lic weather office at 5 a.m Synopsis: Hot weather shows no of relinquishng its hold on Ontario over the week- end Widely scattered showers and thunderstorms are forecast for most sections of the province both today and Saturday, © Lake St. Clai Lake Erie, Lake Huron, Ni ra, Lake On- tario regions, Windsor, London, Hamilton, Torento signs enthusiasm with which the new] {partners in the Commonwealth} jset an example then we! | shall be able to say "The em- pire is dead |Commonwealth.' "' | Boy Bitten 60 55 60 RINGS isssa casas Muskoka . North Bay Sudbury Earlton Sault Ste. Marie... Kapuskasing . White River Moosonee .. Timmins 90 18.| ORILLIA (CP) -- An the arm by a Massasauga rat- tlesnake Thursday while play- jing in the back yard of his home} Observed Temperatures lat Hydro Glen, 25 miles north of Low overnight, high Thursday |here Dawson 50 63 | Keliy Ircnside, son of Mr. and Mrs. William Ironside, is recov- Seeks Loan Fund TORONTO (P) -- Faraday Mines Limited will ask the federal government to period until 1969, President A. W. Johnston said Thursday Mr. Johnston estimated pro- duction costs for the period at quire loans to this extent Unless some' guarantee of pro- duction is obtained in the near future, the company's mine will probably have to stop, work around July next year, he said. Faraday is the smallest of the three mines affected by the gov- ernment's announcement Wed- jmonths-old boy was bitten OM) necday that it will continue! stockpiling uranium for one more year. The other firms are Rio Algom Mines Limited and Denison Mines Limited, which operate in the Elliot Lake, Ont., area. signed with the British govern- ment last year. In Ottawa, Joseph Slogan (PC "In the future the part that back private loans to ensure|-- Springfield) said Canadian the Commonwealth will play an continued production at its Ban-|uranium companies have made the world will depend on the/croft, Ont., mine for a five-year! $400,000,000 in profits and asked iwhat they had done to 'help |maintain employment in their |mines. 3 Justice Minister Chevrier re- Long live the)$23,400,000, but said it was un-|plied in the Commons that Mr.|t ; 2 i |likely that the firm would re- Slogan had made a "gratuitous | impatient with service during jstatement" but that he would refer the pont to Trade Minister Sharp, then absent. The exchange came during scussion of the government's ay night announcement di B R ] jwhen its contracts expire wednesd y att er | that it will buy and stockpile until July 1, 1964, uranium from two mines. T. C. Douglas, New Demo- cratic Party leader, complained that the announcement hadn't been made first in the Commons jand asked if it covered Saskat- ;chewan uranium mines at Beav. jerlodge and Uranium City. " Three judges, delivering the|the government take-over--han- verdict in Washington County|die their accounts. The largest circuit court, postponed sent-|agency, Medical Services Incor- j ence, porated, has about 370,000 con- j i 200 | 'They found that. Zantzinger, a|tracts compared with about [24+ year - old white farmer,|000 prior to the government caused Mrs. Carroll's death by|Plan. insulting her and hitting her with a cane while she tended bar at a Feb. 8 charity ball in) OSHAWA'S ost | ORIGINAL | The trial included testimony | the affair, CENTRE | | CARPET jthat Zantzinger was drunk and | CALL OR SEE if ot Nu-Way, carpet and broad- IXON'S 'loom hos been a specialty for FOR 18 years . . . with thousands OIL FURNACES | of yards on display to select from. PHONE 728-4681 SERVING OSHAWA OVER i SO YEARS 24-HOUR SERVICE NU-WAY 174 MARY $T.° | 723-4663 Mr. Chevrier said it covered | jonly the three mines named. | LOCAL IMPROVEMENT NOTICE TAKE NOTICE THAT: 1. Continuing | Vactoria mainly sunny, hot and humid to- Edmonton . day and Saturday. Widely scat-| Regina tered showers or thunderstorms Winnipeg . . both days, winds light Lakehead ..... was « OTTAWA (CP)--A 13-year-old tal into hydroelectric and other boy scout, suffering from mus-|deyelopment projects, This cular dystrophy in a Toronto) would be done by paying them hospital, has been awarded the) for seized land in project bonds seg coi terenye known as|instead of cash, Georgian Bay, Haliburton, AL|White River e° Victoria S of scou "| 5. Make government credit epi B'<) J bay, Ha ibur' on, +1 : . sepeecce . R "1a na, Timagami, Cochrane,|5. 5. Marie.. The award, announced byY/. citable for new seeds, fertil- White River gi one. g Fra Kapuskasing . Governor-General Vanier, went): to Patrol Leader James Cari|izers and tools and for ag Bay, Sudbury, Sault Ste. Ma- North Bay Mee rie: Sunny with cloudy periods Sudbury Shard of Scarborough, Ont,,/ dating small, owner @ho has carried out his scout-/'87™8- widely scattered showers or| Muskoka img duties even while a patient thunderstorms today and Satur.) Windsor at Sunnyview Orthopaedic Hos-|World Scout' Jamboree inday, continuing very warm,|!@ndon .... pital: | Greece. winds light Two other Cornwell badges) Certificates of meri- were awarded posthumously for|torious conduct went to scout Forecast Temperatures outstanding courage. to scout! Warren Fink, 12, Kifchener, and Low tonight, high Saturday Donald Steele, 12, of Edmonton,|the 3rd Cornwall Scout Troop. Windsor 68 #vho died of cancer, and Troop/for their action in two fires; |St. Thomas 65 Leeder Lang Baker, 17, of|and Colin Marshall of Cornwall! London .. 65 Prescott, Ont., who died of aland Patrol Leader Frank Jur- Kitchener ... 65 diver ailment ley, 14, of Vankleek Hill, Ont., Mount Forest..... The Silver Fox, given for ex-|for rescuing persons in danger) Wingham ceptional service to scouting in! of drowning. Hamilton Amory, British high commis-| Certificates of merit went to St. Cathari sioner to Canada, and to De-|Walter Erwin, Fort Frances,'Torev:to -. metrios Alexatos of Athens, Ont.; and Thomas Jones, Rdige- Peterborough . tamp chief of the forthcoming) way, Ont. jTrenton . ering in hospital here after be-/STARTS JULY 1 ing given four doses of anti-| Denison Mines Limited an- venin, jnounced it will start stockpiling Mrs. Ironside ran into the|uranium for the Canadian. gov- jfamily yard after her daughter/ernment July 1 at its Elliot jsaid she heard a buzzing near|Lake, Ont., mine. | |the baby. The. mother found aj} Jt said it is prepared to defer! jsnake lying across the child's|to July 1, 1964, production still legs outstanding under. a_ contract She grabbed Kelly andj -------- oe | Berit ite ee : (SSMS S| shonaas |miles over bad roads to Orillia| HEATING & Poise coal eae 22 inches long| APPLIANCES and bad seven rattles i Industrial and rr yas Commercial The established, relichle Ges Deoler in your area. 31 CELINA ST. (Corner of Athol) 728-9441 es locel Pp ESTIMATED COST PER LINEAL Foor $ 9.22 12.02 7.76 5.33 5.31 ~ The Council of the Corporation of the City of Oshowe intends to sanitery sewers in the following streets between the points mentioned: _jand SIZE TOTAL 8" $§ 1,401.39 s" 3,340.46 NAME OF STREET Dieppe Ave. (Proposed cul-de-soc) Easement Knights Rood Hillcroft Street To West limit of proposed FROM cul-de-soe Hillcrest Drive Minte Street 280 ft. West of West Limit of Ceder Street 8" North Limit of Let 421, Plon 146 \" South Limit of Plon 776 Va end intends to specially assess @ port of the cost upon the fend ebutting directly on the work. The estimated cost of the work is $16,102.47. The special assessment is to be poid in fitteen equol annual instalments and the annuel rete per feot frontege is 30c. Application will be mode by the Coroporation te The Ontario Municipel Boord for its epprovel ef the undertaking of the \scid work, and ony owner mey, wi twenty-one days after the first publicotion of this notice, file with the City Clerk his objection te the said work being undertaken. The scid Bocrd moy approve of the said work being underteken, but before doing so it mey appoint @ time and ploce when any objection to the work will be considered. DATED at Oshowe this 21st day of June, 1963. 2,326.87 7,032.75 1,981.00 Hillsdale Ave. Ceder Street North Limit of Plan 776 |Ottawa o. Montreal . (Quebec .. Halifax Minto Street Nelson Street @ Commerciol ond E Industria! Sites @ Leasebock @ Deveiopment Paul Ristow REALTOR 728-9474 |] CLEAN YOUR FURNACE TODAY FREE TO CUSTOMERS cau PERRY 723-3443 DAY OR NIGHT 4. L. R. BARRAND, Clerk, City of Oshawes. nS ) 187 King St. E.

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