Oshawa Times (1958-), 16 Oct 1964, p. 21

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FROM CAMEROON VISITS OSHAWA he is superintendent of pri- mary schools. He was in Osh- awa during the weekend as a guest of Mr. and Mrs. D. K. Stiles, 770 Grierson street, to celebrate Thanksgiving. Mrs. left, and Stiles is pictured, her son, Kent, is on the right. MURKY RIVERS PROBLEM (Continued from Page 1) amount of human and indus- trial wastes to be disposed of. At the same time, we must consider what is physically and. economically possible." The Conservation Council's report paid tribute to the work of the OWRC, but add- ed: "The combined efforts of government and industry to control pollution in Ontario leral Republic of Cam- Miniature Go ture Golf Tuesday, Sept. 29, dawned| Where alll the girls plan to spend of school. the First Oshawa Air|8° to Mr. and Mrs. Hart for} shoot a game of miniature golf. gers! Don't forget to leave Oct.| After splitting up into groups | but remember the Air Cadets! people were around as some of) vou are niaving 2-g0ot same'| N@ar Port Perry and showed their skills by com-| Donald Marshall this morning] swinging pole! Here, their luck) where 'the deer went which did| take them. awa, was driving on County energy rushed into the stand to/in front of his. car. toes. Here we laughed at the} could not avoid hitting the ani- When the last group hadjcar he found the headlights and cars (two of them being sports| searched for the deer but it was the Rover Room is located. |day: 'It must have been a us extremely hungry and we all/to fun off." | who decided that they were put-/ NIAGARA FALLS, Ont. (CP) of food, our little party dis-|hibiting dogs from running loose on forgotten tomework. I'm) Pwo months ago an amendment Coming up in the near future!the year. must be greatly stepped up just to keep pace with the problem in the future, let alone get ahead of it." Dr. Vance again agrees, but yints to "'realities'" that af- fect the rate of a stepped-up effort. There has been a steady increase in the Water Com- mission's budget as it takes on more projects and_in- creases its scientific and tech- nical staff. There has beeen a great growth in co-operation between industry and the Com- mission, with many industries spending spectacular sums to treat their own wastes. But how much money can be spent, and how quickly, with- out imposing crippling bur- dens on taxpayers and indus- tries? One Council member esti- mated that nearly $3 billion would have to be spent over 20 years in Ontario to ensure water supply and lick pollu- tion. In fact, Ontario spend- ing is now fairly close to that rate and will probably exceed it during the next decade. MILLIONS SPENT Municipalities or others wishing to build new water or sewage works or make ex- CANADA'S ORIGINAL MUTUAL FUND 127™ CONSECUTIVE QUARTERLY DIVIDEND 4% CENTS PER SPLIT SHARE PAYABLE NOV. 1, 1964 TO SHAREHOLDERS OF RECORD OCT, 15 SHARES SPLIT 3 FOR 1 APRIL 15, 1964 RECORD 1964 DIVIDENDS TOTAL 14¢ ON NEW SHARES EQUIVALENT TO 42¢ ON OLD SHARES CASH DIVIDENDS EXCEED $63,000,000 SINCE ORGANIZATION Canadian Investment Fund, Ltd. Canada Wins Gold Medal By JACK SULLIVAN Canadian Press Sports Editor TOKYO (CP) -- Canada won| its first medals of the Olympic! Games, a gold for in| rowing and a third-place bronze in track, as world records were equalled in the men's and women's sprints and an eight- cared United States crew de- feated the favored world cham- 'pion Germans for the prized eights gold award. A pair of husky, tall Cana- dians -- George Hungerford of "|Vancouver and Roger Jackson | Z\of Toronto--brought off a tre. mendous triumph by winning the gold medal in: the coxless| pairs rowing event. Harry Jerome of Vancouver sprinted to a third-place finish in the men's 100-metre dash, losing a silver medal by an eyelash to Cuba's Enrique Fig- uerola in a dazzling race high- lighted by the world record- equalling victory of Bob Hayes of the United States. | '| Canada, too, had a chance for another medal in the 800-metre men's race when Bill Crothers of Markham, Ont., won his semi-final qualifying heat and will go into Friday's final against New Zealand's great Peter Snell in a star-studded SS Mr. Nwalipenja is Kent's room mate at Waterloo Uni- feid air , : ield, versity where he i studying. | A world record was broken in --Oshawa Times Photo | rifle shooting, an Olympic mark : ----~| was cracked by Al Oerter of \the United States, who won the |gold medal in the men's discus LAKE VISTA RATEPAYERS INSTALL NEW EXECUTIVE: The executive for the en- suing year was installed at a recent meeting of the Lake Vista Ratepayers' Association. from left, are Mrs, Pat How- ell, treasurer; Mrs, Eve Ey- man, president and Mrs. Syi- via DeHart, secretary. Stand- ing, from left, are Robert Lawrence, director; Ben Young, second vice-president; Stan Ibbot, director; Robert Carswell, first vice-president; ret OTE rte epne amen naitnnd J. Jobin, director and Joha DeHart, past president, Ab- sent when the picture was taken was Terry O'Connor, director. --Photo by Stannett throw, and the United States| added to its. growing bag of) medals by winning the gold medal in women's platform div-| ing. | BLACKFEET SALE Crothers Wins: Silver Medal | won four more gold medals in track and swimming at the Olympic Games today. The Americans were pulling TOKYO (CP)--Bill Crothers,|away from Russia in the bat- |the heady Markham, Ont.,|tle for gold medals, and the pharmacist, won Canada's first|Russians were losing in events; ltwo of the five events on the \track and. field program today, land the Americans added two |more swimming championships to bring their swimming total to nine, Crothers couldn't catch New The U.S. government paid|second-place silver medal in|they were favored to win. The | Zealand's Peter Snell in the $1,500,000 to the: Blackfeet In-| Olympic track competition in 28|U.S. had 19 gold medals, the|/men's 800-metre final despite a dians of Montana for land to|years, sharpshooter Gil Boa of|Russians eight establish Glacier National Park, bigger than the state of Rhode|fourth in the smail-bore rifle|the women's fi 'shooting and the United States!and men's 400-metre hurdles,! fastest. Olympic time ever. Island, St. Catharines; Ont., 100-metre dash determined closing bid, and the placed| The U.S. won gold medals in|defending Olympic - champion crossed the finish line in the tensions to existing snes are required to obtain certificates | of approval from the Commis- sion. Certificates issued in the | seven years up to the end of 1963 covered projects costing $803 million. The Commis- | sion's payroll last. year alone amounted to better than $2.5 million. Nearly $2 million was spent in 1963 in the operation of water and sewage treat- ment plants. Add to these fig- | ures the millions spent by industry on treatment of wastes -- several industries have spent more than a mil- |}, lion dollars apiece on this during the past couple of years -- and the total be- comes impressive. Commission officials become cautious when future spend- ing is discussed. But the | OWRC produces an exhaus- tive annual report. Perusal of these reports reveals the solid expansion of the Commission's work and interests. The obvi- ous conclusion is that expan- sion must continue. The rate of the expansion is controlled by the revenue available. to the municipal and provincial governments. There is just so much money in the tax pot each year to cover all government spend- ing. The size of the pot can grow only in two ways: an increase in taxation, and a broader tax base provided by growth in population and pros- perity, so that there are more taxpayers earning and spend- ing more money. What is done about pollu- tion must be considered in that context. ; HAS DECLARED ITS EATON'S LOWER LEVEL, DEPT. All machines have a 4-cycle Briggs & Stratton + heavy-duty engine for good starting and lugging power, Handle located throttle and clutch con- trols: Features reverse drive and "Easy-Spin" starting. Deluxe tine shield helps protect engine from dirt and dust. 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Many thanks| Rangers decided to break the|loaning us their cottage. usual. routine of homework and| A reminder to all Air Ran- We all met at 7 p.m, outside the|21 open for our big Hallowe'en; North Oshawa Golf Course. |Party. Invite your dates now,,| of four, we started around the|Will also be in attendance. course. Fortunately, not many Auto Hits Deer the girls had been led to be-| | lieve that if you get the ball in| a The majority of girls, though,| were familiar with this game} "Oh dear, oh dear," said pleting each hole .under par.jas -he looked at the $100 dam-| That is, until they reached the|age to the front of his car, But| changed and a few of the less the damage nobody knows. talented girls started to over-| Donald, 8 Wayne street, Osh-| We finally reached the 18th|/ Road 2, near Port Perry, Thurs-| hole and with a last burst of|day night when a deer jumped! warm our numbed fingers and) He slammed on the brakes but numerous jokes pasted on the! mai. surrounding walls. When he climbed out of the triumphantly staggered in, we|front grilismashed. all piled into the three available| Police were called and they cars) and headed for the Lans-|no where to be found. downe Shopping Centre, where| Said a police spokesman to-| HEALTHY APPETITES pretty big deer, to take a bang The cold weather had made|from a car and then be able ordered mountains of fodd, all) -------------- that is except Bonnie and Sally, POUND WOULD FILL ting on weight. City council here has been After demolishing 10 pounds | warned that if a bylaw pro-| banded and started for their/during the winter is enforced, | respective homes to catch up|the dog pound will overflow sure we all had a very en-| was passed requiring dogs to be joyable evening. Right girls! |kept from roaming throughout a) FREE PLAYING CARD CARD No. 9 VALID TO Sat, Oct.24 Choose from a wide r your selection! Shop e YOU CAN WIN 100.-*500. 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