EDWARDS OPENS NDP HEADQUARTERS Thomas Edwards, New Democratic Party candidate 'in Ontario Riding Saturday morning unlocked the front door leading into 125 Brock street north to declare his campaign headquarters offi- cially opened. With him are, left to right, Adrian Goverde, campaign manager, Mrs. George Brooks, ladies ac- tivities chairman and Deputy- reeve George Brooks, presi- dent of Local 494, United Rub- ber Workers of America. --Oshawa Times Photo Campaign By Robarts Picks Up More Steam TORONTO (CP) -- Premier Robarts' relaxed campaigning in Ontario's general election is icking up some steam as the Bent. 25 voting day approaches but is not yet showing any signs of bursting the pressure gauges. His appearance at Ottawa to- day before the federal-provin- cial conference on pensions-- where his submission will in ef- fect be a reply to opponents' c.arges that he is trying to tor- pedo the Canada Pensions Plan --may touch off a phase of more intensified barnstorming. Right after he tells the Ot- tawa group of his willingness to integrate Ontario's already- adopted portable pension plan with a federal scheme--a move calculated to take some of the wind out of Liberal Leader Win- termeyer's sails--he will fly out Travelling Education For Girl, 9 VANCOUVER (CP) -- Diana Heaton-Watson doesn't go school. But find a nine-year-old that has a better education. Her parents are a restless, travel-bent pair who can't be bothered staying home in East . Afriéa to run a 1,000-acre coffee plantation. So, they have travelled, They have, in fact, travelled 125,000 miles by specially designed truck in the last 4% years, Diana has been along, learn- ing to speak French, Spanish and Swahili. "The trip is making her com- pletely international," says Kenneth Heaton - Watson "Everywhere we go she plays with children of a different na- tionality. "My wife and I give her les- sons each day and we teach her! the geography, history, and po- litical background of each c.un- try we pass through," It costs Ken and Ann Heaton- Watson $300 a month to pay the family's bills. They live and sleep in the truck, which they dubbed Dianke to combine tho: three names. They carny 96 gallons of fresh water and enough gasoline for 600 miles. Their travels have taken them from England through Eu- rope to the Near East, Inda Australia, New Zealand and back through Europe. Thay shipped to Canada and now are driving through the United States, Central and South Amer- ica with Argentina the goal, "This will take us another 18 months,"' ms -Heaton - Watson said here, hen we might go back to farming again." His plantation at Tanga, Tan- ganyika is in the care of a man. "7. "But we also have a cra scheme to sell the truck in yr gentina and go by boat to Japan for the next Olympic Games. FP og we wus catch a train @ way mm Pekin Calais, France, '* of the capital for an afternoon appearance in Galt. He has scheduled also a night speech at Kitchener. During the last week he has stumped in northwestern Onta- rio and through parts of central and western Ontario for the most part at low pressure. mostly making sounds in the style of a man sure of election and exhorting local groups to put their Progressive Conserva- tive candidate on "the winning team." FEW HEAVY ATTACKS On only a couple of occasions --in two dozen major and minor speeches -- has he uncorked heayy attacks on Mr. Winter- meyer, mainly accusing him of misrepresenting the gov-ern- ment's stand on pensions. He has virtually ignored the New Democrati¢ Party, refer- aes to it only by indirection in such references as promises not to engage in socialistic "toying" with the economy. NDP Leader MacDonald's name has not been spoken, Mr, Robarts appealed during the week basically on his gov- ernment's record -- 'no slick promises" and "I'm giving you the 'have dones' not the 'will dos' "with occasional sections of his off - et - cuff speeches ment planned to institute an im- mediate $10-a-month increase in the universal old age pension and promptly announced at a breakfast speech that, if this is so, his government will put in corresponding boosts for the types of assistance under its ju- risdiction. These include the provincial share of old age assistance be- tween 65 and 70 years for the indigent, payments to the blind and disabled and Ontario's new assistance plan for widows and unmarried women between 60 and 65. At his next meeting in Mea- ford in the Georgian Bay area --attended by some members of the municipal cougcil--he has- tened to take issue with a pub- lished report that the calling of the election would cause enough delay to wipe out the chance of providing employment this com- ing winter through the federal government's $400,000,000 muni- cipal development loan fund. No so, Mr, Robarts said. The government was getting legisla- tion and administrative proced- ures set up; was Calling a spe- cial legislature session immedi- ately after the election for tie-m legislation and would start pro- cessing municipalities applica- tions for loans as fast as they S. African Trade Boycott Requested OSLO, Norway (Reuters) -- President Julius Nyerere of Tanganyika has called on all na- tions to boycott trade wit uth Africa in protest against ~its apartheid (race-separation) pol- icies. Nyerere told a Norwegian Stu- dents' Association Sunday: "There is no halfway, neutral position. Even a refusal to sup- ply arms is not neutrality. By itself it is illogical. It must be a forerunner of further steps." The president, speaking on the last day of a three-day official visit to Norway, said interna- tional trade is the lifeline of South Africa. "By continuing trade you are inevitably 'supporting apartheid, by refusing you are inevitably acting against it." next year in a federal-provin- GERALDTON, Ont. (CP)-- Premier Robarts' record in the fiedl of industrial safety was assailed here Sunday night by New Democratic Party Leader Donald MacDonald, who de- scribed it as "one of the strong- est indictments" against the Progressive Conservative party. Mr. MacDonald, on the fourth day of an election campaign swing through Northern Onta- rio, said that despite Conserva- tive claims of a pepped-up la- bor department and promises of a safety code for woods work- ers, nothing has, been done. The industry had Posi oso acci- rate in the' province as . The truth of the matter is that the code and its regula- tions have been ready for weeks and'the labor department will not put them into effect. - "The department has become NDP Chief Mac Donald: Raps Premier Robarts local inspectors handle the task, of keeping the job safe. "The local inspectors are often called from the ranks of| municipal employees _specializ- ing in ragweed inspection, snow removal and other tasks. "They are given no power and no support from local coun- cils, and then are expected to fight against multi-million dollar corporations about lack of safety , for construction work- ers." Today Mr. MacDonald was to i. in Fort William and Port Ar- ur, At a meeting Saturday night at Kapuskasing, some 210 miles Man Rescued so éntrenched that it is con- temptuous of recommendations even when they might save lives and years of suffering," Mr. MacDonald said. It had reverted to an time- cane" ractice of ignoring recommen ations in the hope that they will fade away." The NDP seeker ND rally here in support of Joe Shannon, party candidate for Port Arthur riding, that the labor depart- ment "no longer feels bound ta keep its own promises." CITES EXAMPLE He gave as an example the treatment by Labor Minister Leslie Rowntree of a union-re- quested hearing into charges of "skullduggery in the woods" last February at Reesor Siding, 35 miles west of Kapuskasing. "The hearing lasted little more than 60 seconds," Mr. MacDonald said. The labor min- ister, "displaying absolute con- tempt for a situation that had already cost three men their lives, walked out . . . because of personal pique." He also scored the govern- ment for its "refusal to do any- thing that ing irritate the barons of: the North." He said that in northern construction work, the province insists that From Niagara NIAGARA FALLS, N.Y. (AP), A 21-year-old man, who said he THe OSHAWA biniienederreiac!snsveit- Bere 5 ric: east of here, Mr. MacDonald told about 30 listeners at a rally for the NDP candidate in Coch- rane North, Elmo LeFebvre, that "for a time the fresh breezes blew" in Ontario after the 1943 election, when the CCF ained more than 3Q seats in the egislature. ? "This must happen again. We are not going to get lost in the shuffle."" Mr. MacDonald's wife, Sim- one, who is accompanying her husband, spoke in French at the Kapuskasing meeting and said skingum ur otice eed he as 29-year-old Way! rm Hopewell, about 10 miles west Wired of here. Osborn, the victim's Man, 29, Killed In Shooting Fray ZANESVILLE, Ohio (AP)--A Muskingum County man author- ities said serk was ere ee went ber-| OTTAWA (CP)--Prince ael 1 killed late The Mu victim sie of ie, ed Authorities said Mrs, Linda sister-in- law, called the sheriff's office and said Osborn had threatened to kill his family and everyone in the house. Deputies said the Osborn fam- that consumers are often forced into buying things they do not want, "Advertising must inform, not only arouse interest," she said. "The consumer is forced intg buying not what he wants but what the manufacturer wants him to purchase." Mrs. MacDonald is a native of Montreal. emer the border patrol would deny him eniry to Canada, tried to get there Saturday by 'swim- ming the treacherous Niagara at below the Falls. He was fished out in midstream. "I'm awiully glad to see you," his rescuer quoted William Fair. -- of Paterson, N.J., as say- ing. Fairclough left his sweater, shirt and shoes on the ©.S. dock of the Maid of the Mist excur- sion. boat, dived into the river and began swimming for the Ca- madian shore, Niagara Park po- lice said. The current, flowing at 26 miles an hour, began carrying him downstream. Lawrence McGinn, Maid of the Mist manager at, Niagara Falls, Ont., spotted Fairclough in the water and put out in a small launch to get him. Fairclough was charged with disorderly conduct and com- mitted to city jail, pending a SENIOR CITIZENS NOTE The Senior Citizens Club of Whitby will again commence activities next WED. SEPT: 11th 2:00 P.M. All Saints' Anglican Church Hall all previous members ond any new members are invited to attend. For further information PHONE 668-2877 mental examination. PEeaeQees aes ess 2 4 a TOWN OF WHITBY TENDER FOR *% TON PICK-UP TRUCK cial conference in another at- tempt to amend the British North America Act. Federal Justice Minister Chevrier said Friday his government intends to call such a meeting. Otherwise on Saturday, Mr. Robarts campaigned in a lei- surely criss - crossing through the Georgian Bay area constitu- encles of Grey North, Conserva- tive jerritory in the last house, and Liberal-held Bruce, Around the small towns of Thornbury, Wiarton, Meaford and South- ampton, he shook hands on the sidewalks, congratulated a band ed Fay lorettes, went through to| Pe to the da: ar news. in Owen Sound. Saturday, he came He also took occasion to an- rev % ine and bought some observed a morning paper re-|nounce that his government willjhome baked bread at a market port that the federal govern-|be "delighted" to co-operate r coffee-and-dough- One-Stop DECORATING SHOP @ Wallpaper ond Murals @ Custom Draperies @ Broadioom and Rugs @ C.1.L. Paints and Varnishes © Flo-Glaze Colorizer Points DODD & SOUTER 107 Byron St, $., Whitby Phone 668-5862 place, TORONTO (CP)--The weekly newspaper publisher in Canada now is an administrator, and that's the modern touch, But he still has to be very versatile, and in that respect things haven't changed a great deal This appears to be the sum- ming up of himself and about 500 of his fellows by Cliarles Nolan, a weekly newspaper edi- tor and publisher for 26 vears. Mr, Nolan, publisher of- od Stouffville (Ont.) Tribune, elected president of the coum. dian Weekly Newspapers Asso- ciation at their annual conven- tion recently at Murray Bay, Que. Mr. Nolan started in the busi- ness with his father, the late A. V. Nolan, and he went through the backshop training of linotype operator and all-round composing room man; of sell- ing advertising and of writing and editing news. Accordingly, when he took over the business on his father's death in 1950 he could run it himself in the sense of operat- ing every department. But he doubts that his son will be able to take it over in the same inti- mate way. TOO COMPLICATED Nin fact, Mr. Nolan doesn't try to do it all himself any more He has arrived at the point where he says he can leave the paper for considerable periods without it suffering, and that's his idea of a well-run business. At the same time--in an "We would have Dianke Mark II made for us in England and then we would drive home." emergency---he can pinch-hit in the back shop and, if his editor Weekly Publisher Needs Versatility he'll go on his own editor's re- porting staff. Mr. Nolan emphasizes that the problems of weeklies' pub- lishers are varied, He publishes in a town that has doubled its population to around'3,500 in the last 10 years His circulation, because of 4a prosperous surrounding area, 1s about 1,000 more than the pop- ulation of the town, 30 miles northeast of Toronto. Some weeklies serve much smaller communities, he points out, and they may be shops op- erated by two or three men. That sort of operation still calls for the traditional qualities of the weekly editor. In other ways, his problems are different from those of his fellow weekly editors, Being near a large city, Toronto, he has big-city competition but this also opens to him big-city mar- kets for his sidelines, The sidelines, of course, in- clude. commercial printing.. A development of recent years however has been expansion into related retail fields such as stationery, office supplies, typewriters and adding ma- chines. Mr. Nolan recommends such retail ventures. He said they can be handled with little addi- tional overhead by the staff which is on hand anyway, NEWS COMES FIRST Another development in re- cent years, especially in On- tario, is centralized production with several weeklies having their printing done at a larger shop, perhaps in the next town needs someone to cover a story, veamananremnnaees weno roa BROCK WHITBY ben eos Shows At 7 - 8:30 'ALSO -- SECON FEATURE ATTRACTION "MARILYN" iN STARRING---MARILYN MONROE Complete Show at 8:30 or city. He carries his own pro- duction to the mat stage, with the printing done elsewhere. Apart from production prob- lems Mr, Nolan always bears in mind his father's teachings. Basically, in his father's words, it is that: "We are first of all newspaper publishers; only after that- are we commercial printers," His father was always inter- ested in municipal politics, He was reeve of Stouffville when he died. Charles Nolan, as part of nis training as a weekly publisher, reported a municipal councii meeting at least once a month for 25 years, Large or Small, a weekly newspaper must never forget that its strength is its local news, he says. And, in recent years, this has meant local pic- NOTICE OF REVISION NOTICE OF SITTINGS of the Revising Officers Public Notice is hereb given of for the CITY of OSHAW. . the TOW ONTARIO PROVINCE of ONTARIO ELECTION OF LISTS OF VOTERS in Urban Polling Subdivisions in the Electoral District of Oshewe, the revision of the lists ef INS of AJAX and WHITBY end vos TOWNSHIP of PICKERING in the Electoral District of OSHAWA, AND FURTHER TAKE NOTICE thet sittings will be held by the revising officers et the times ond places set forth in the schedule hereinefter set out, Any person qualified te vote at the to the L end whose mame has been omitted from or incorrectly entered in, the "enumeretor's list of yoters is called up to attend of the times and places hereunder mentioned for, the purpose of having his name enrolled upon the list of voters to be used ot the said election. Complaints which heve been properly filed with to names gfully entered upon the enumerotor's lists will be heard at these sittings. Lists of voters for this Electoral District will be open for public in- spection at the office of the Returning bg hay ot 1" SIMCOE Aviad SORT, Na relades between the how 9:00 A.M. and 5:00 P.M. (0.5.T.) ney except SUNDAY UNTIL. THE COURT OF RE- VISION I$ Conctup .. The lists may also be inspected ot +g a. bof ae) con « Municipality between the hours of 9:00 5:00 sos eoch doy except SATURDAY end His 'UNTIL THE Ptbu T 'of REVISION 1S CONCLUDED, SCHEDULE forth istrict No, 1 fi of King ba Registration and Fh abhen oll Polling in the City of Registration ply er Registration and Revising District No. 3 i oll Polling % in the Town of Whitby * south of 401 'eee in the tieteoret District of Oshawa. Registration ond Jevieine District No, 4 i in the Town of Ajax. Registration ond Revising District No, 8 i olf Polli in the Township of Pickering in the Electoral District of Cobuen. will be held for Registration and Revising District Ne. 1 at the office of MR. THOMAS RUNDLE, 361, ING STREET EAST, Om AWA between the hours of 10:00 A.M, and 12:00 NOON (D.S.T.), 2:00 P.M. and 4:00 P.M. (D.S.T.), and 7:00 P.M, ond 9:00 P.M, tat PY of FRIDAY, the 13th DAY of SEPTEMBER ond SATURDAY, 14th DAY of SEPTEMBER, 1963 vss aa and Revising Officer; MR. THOMAS RU! ciae to py Officer: MRS. BESSIE wat eee "KING STREET mee a IOON (| fps 7:00 9:00 P.M. DAY " SEPTEMBER oA SATURDAY, the pare " Y + 'egistration and Revising Officer; MR, BRUCE AFFLEC ene to Revising O MR, L. R. BARRAND, CITY HALL, OSHAWA, Sittings COUNCIL CHAMBERS, MUNICIPAL BUILDING, 405 WEST, WHITBY between the ual ot ule fring (D.S.7.), 2:00 P.M. and 4:00 P.M. S.T.), 7:00 P. id .P (08.1) of FRIDAY, the del Bay st SEPTEMBER and SATURDAY, the 14th DAY of SEPTEMBER, 1963, held for Registration -". none District No, 2 of ard. 06 Joo acon en ert between ped hours of FRIDAY, 'the the rath rrenetny 1 1963, will be held for Registration and Revising District Ni DUNDAS. the Neo JOON Registration and Revising 'tte: MR, H. JERMYN. Clerk to Revising Officer: MR. JOHN FROST, MUNICIPAL BUILDING, Whirey. Sittings will be bee for Registration and Revisin ng, Diets le, 4 et the office of MR, W. H. J, THOMPSON, 152 HARWOOD AVENUE "tobrh, eae on oe ine' Beauly iad ote, oe ae Fel ibys ne Hays E ot aT fos), or FRIDAY. the 13th the of SEPTEMBER ge SATURDAY, the 14th DAY of SEPTEMBER, 1963. Registration and Revising Ofticer: MR, W. H. Clerk to Revising Officer: MRS. MONICA 'noUGH, 152 HARWOOD AVENUE SOUTH, AJAX, District - No, ot Wouo AVENUE touTh, Sittings will be held for fogiewotion and Revs the office of MR. HENRY POLAK, 158 MAX between the peur of 10:00 hm pe) 12:00 NOON (D.%.T,), 2:00 P.M. and 4:00 P.M. (D.5.T.), ond 7:00 P.M, and 9:00 P.M, (D.S.T.) of FRIDAY, the 13th DAY of SEPTEMBER and SATURDAY, the 14th DAY of SEPTEMBER, 1963, Registration and Revising Officer: MR. HENRY POLAK. Clerk to Revising Officer: MRS. MARY SLOAN 158 HARWOOD AVENUE SOUTH, AJAX. THOMPSON, ture coverage as well, (No special tende Sealed Tenders Addressed:--Truck Tenders, c/o J, R. Frost, Clerk Town of Whitby will be eccepted until 5 p.m. Wednesday, Seotombiee 18, 1963 for @ % Ton pick-up truck The fi ing must be inch r forms required) ® price: Heevy Duty Front end Reser ¢ab Menented), blue flasher with 700 x 15 x 6 spot light; tires (Dunlop preferred) Front -- 700 1 ply snow and mud, spore 700 x 15 x 6 ply; heavy duty bumper with centre mounted flock type, tow hook, two sun- pert ef the tender rings end Shocks, sealed beom {top spore amber lens, cob operated 5x6 , Rear-- vietts electric wipers and windshield Bosca val front and rear directional send - Hwy/Yellow - Dept. Truck Ne. 3) Whitby, -W, forest Cg (Town of os sro | deor panels, 1958 Airs Model No, as must be token in trade, Full specifications mel oh The full price of a Ly be stated on tender, soe quoted must accompany tender, nce ond net cost to Town must fi TOWN N ENGINEER: NOTICE OF REVISION OF LISTS Orv (IN URBAN POLLING SUBDIVISIONS) NOTICEOFSITTINGS ~- posed aro Pepe Dogs Bey fi ain olin posses ..Public Notice te hereby given of the revision of the fists of voters for polling subdivisions for the TOWN of bed end the TOWNSHIP of PICKERING in the Electoral District of ONTARIO, AND FURTHER TAKE NOTICE thet sittings will 4 held by the revising officers places set in the schedule hore set out, Any Pedy k go to agg at the in nome has been omitted from or entered mes, list ot tb lag 're upon ea "attend ee times beet Hagen ay 4 ment pu name en 4 of voters to be used atthe. s0l sieetion. Complaints which he heve been properly filed with d enumerator's lists will be seedy ot ey sittings, .. List of voters for this Electoral District will be open for tion et the office of the Return loceted et tween the hours of 8:00 A.M. and 8:00 P.M. (D.S.7.) each SUNDAY, UNTIL THE COURT OF REVISION If CONCLUDED, The Liste moy else be tnepeeted ot the office of Se the hours of 9:00 A.M, end 5:00 except SATURDAY end SUNDAY UNTIL THE 'court REvision 1S CONCLUDED, SCHEDULE Registration and Revising District No, 1 Sateien oh Potien in the TOWN. of Waite North. of HIGHWAY 401, in og | etd of ONTARI egistration and includes all. Poli: oe ry the TOWNSHIP ol of r 'pKERING in in "ene paid District of Sitti: will be held for é cou \CIL_ CHAMBERS, MORicIPAL BUE UnBiNG, age DU i ' tReet ', between the rs i 10: id (D.S.T.), 2:00 P.M..and 4:00 P.M. (D.S.T.), @ 760M nd 08 Pa, eae) on FRIDAY, the 13th DAY ot SLPTEMBER end SATURDAY, the - 14th DAY of SEPTEMBER, 1963. Registration end Revising Officer: MR. H, JERMYN lerk to to Revising Officer: MR. JOHN FROST MUNICIPAL BUILDING, WHITBY. wilt be held end Revising District the ite Bunch. beep gg is" municipal NGS on HAM, Sititanee. between the hours of 10:00 A.M, and Bi gc Ma P.M. and 4:00 P.M, (D.S.T.), ond 7:00 P.M. and 9:00 Po N (0.5.7. Tivos the 13th DAY of SEPTEMBER = SATURDAY. the "Dien" Bas ya SEPTEMBER, 196 » Registration 9 'Revising Officer: MR, JOHN HARE Clerk to Revising Officer: MR. L, T, i ttigé ta: MUNICIPAL BUILDING, BROUGHAM, ONTARIO, HARLEY'S Service Centre FREE PICK-UP _ AND DELIVERY Licensed Mechanic Majo rand Minor Repairs Rambler, Trailer, Seles and Rentals FINA CENTRE MERCHANDISE 668-8211 1101 BROCK $T. S., WHITBY WwW. C. TOWN FUNERAL CHAPEL LTD. Ample Parking Facilities You don't hove te ploy q sport to be @ good sport 110 Dundas St. E., Whitby 668-3410 GOOD SPORTS Support home town sports. HOME TOWN SPORTS SUPPORT THE LOCAL SUPPLIERS OF FUELS and BUILDING SUPPLIES SAWDONS' (Whitby) LIMITED 244 SROCK ST. S. DIAL 6468-3524 WHITBY, ONT. Blair Park Plaza Barbershop WHITBY NOW 2 BARBERS NO WAITING Closed Monday-- Open 8-6 P.M. Tues. to Set. Proprietor M. THERAULT GEORGE'S FINA SERVICE Tune-ups. Licensed Mechanic Free Check-Up Enjoy Carefree Holiday Driving PICK-UP & DELIVERY 668-4232 932 BROCK ST. N. WHITBY =, SPORT CALENDAR -- of -- Weekly Events! This Programme Presented By The Local ° Business Firms of WHITBY and DISTRICT} CLIP AND SAVE FOR WEEKLY REFERENCE! THIS WEEK'S MERCURY AUTO BODY COLLISION-CUSTOM "BODY WORK SPORTS EVENTS HOCKEY Wednesday, September 11, et 8 p.m. Ace Electronics of the Sunday Night Industrial League will practice et Bowmanville Arena, Wednesday, September 11 at 9 p.m, Whitby Hotel of the Sunday Night Industrial League will siatiogn at Bowmanville Arena, Last week, these two teams met in a pre-season exhibition gome during the regular practice schedule and the Ace Elect- ronic boys claimed a 12-2 victory. WRESTLING Tuesday, September 10, at 8:30 p.m. Oshawa Children's Arena Main Event, Gentleman Jim Hody vs Johnny Volentine, This Is a no time limit bout and there wil Ibe a fence around the ting to keep the wrestlers inside and all others out. Semi-final Ilio Di Paolo vs Billy Red Lyons. Preliminary Tony Marino vs The Great Mephisto. Attention Sporting organizations we are still looking for your September and oll future schedules for publication weekly . in the Sports Calendar, Please have them into The Oshawa Times Whitby Office, 111 Dundas street eost by Thursday of this week for publication in next week's sports calendar. HOOKER &- SONS LTD. No. 7 Highway, 3 miles West of Brooklin 1962 MERCURY METEOR DELUXE 4 DR. $9295 Automatic transmission General Motors Dealer For CHEVROLET--OLDSMOBILE CHEVROLET. TRUCKS CORVAIR BROOKLIN 655-4811 MODERN EQUIPMENT SATISFACTION GUARANTEED COURTESY & SERVICE 324 ASH ST, PH. 668-8522 24-HR, ROAD SERVICE WHITE'S B.P. 616 Brock St. WN, itby 668-8241 After Hours 668-8268 GENERAL REPAIRS 24 HOUR TOWING LICENSED MECHANIC FREE PICK-UP & DELIVERY OPEN 7:30 A.M, -- 10 P.M, For Home | Delivery of Ontario County's Only Daily Newspaper » 668-3703 George H. Harding Construction Co, Ltd, EXCAVATING 411 Fairview Drive, Whithy 668-3566 TRENCHING AND COMPLETE SEPTIC TANK SERVICE