Oshawa Times (1958-), 18 Jan 1967, p. 4

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OTTAWA REPORT Herridge Wit Enlivens House By. PATRICK NICHOLSON OTTAWA--Mr. H. W. Her- ridge, New Democrat MP for Kootenay West, has presumably made a New Year's resolution: to enliven the individual and collective life of MPs with more wit and charm than before. British Columbia's popular 71- year-old import from England made the day for Mrs. Mar- garet Rideout, parliamentary secretary to Health Minister of the new Dominion of Canada, Allan MacEachen. An especially in whose creation he played the gay dress combined with her leading role. bouffant fair hair as plumage He died in office as prime which was scarcely protective minister nearly a quarter of a camouflage among her greyly- century later; he won his last dressed colleagues in the Cham- election on the slogan "The old ber of the House of Commons, man, the old flag, the old' so Bert sent her this pencilled party.' Was it a malicious ges- She Oshawa Zimes 86 King St. E., Oshawa, Ontario Published by Canadian Newspapers Limited T. L. Wilson, Publisher E. C. Prince, Associate Publisher OSHAWA, ONTARIO, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 18, 1967 'Time's Opportune In City For Visits By Celebrities the climb to fame of the celebrities and thrill anew at their accomplish- ments. The real thrill, however, will come for today's youngsters. The boys and girls are finding many of the things the rest of us may consider Building. Hardly surprising that snow-shovellers either hire a snowplow, or else die of a heart attack! OUR FIRST LEADER John Alexander Macdonald was born in Glasgow, Scotland, Jan. 11, 1815--just five months before the Battle of Waterloo was fought. Fifty - two years later, and 3,000 miles away, he became the first prime minister Homecomings of sons and daugh- ters who have achieved national and international prominence are very much a part of celebrations . such as the Centenary. The more of «them who manage to visit their hometown the greater the success of the celebration is likely to be. "old hat" as entirely new, vibrant be eon in ae oe oa * Rag . io In Oshawa's case, were all who and exciting. They're great ones for 414 req. oF las couaarauvals uakeed To the Left now being led! Left or Right we do not care, birthday, the centennial postage stamp was issued, bearing as its chief feature the new flag which would have been ana- thema and heresy to him? Most Conservative MPs here are mad at that undiplomatic timing; all hero worship during the Centennial or any other time. It is important b ' f to them and for Canada and Osh- 5 lone ** we cam sit and awa that they come to know and He signed it appreciate our homegrown success Kure for Kare." stories. : ee cece every ret father consider it unnecessary. The Centennial Year is a time to strivent with a snow shovel and WHAT TO BELIEVE? look back to the early days. It is snow tires, might be surprised Even the professional news i those so' often to learn that a fall of merely media make. their slips. The also a rad % make f t » five inches of snow can halt all CBC widened its credibility gap termed "our citizens of tomorrow flights at Canada's largest in- the other day when it was as- aware that men and women who _ ternational ol gna that serted, on the 6 p.m. national fe was why many holiday-makers news, that during the last elec- baled ul Oshawa as they seed passed an unplanned day at tion John Diefenbaker made "a doing have attained similar or Christmas in Montreal's caver- sentimental journey to his birth- greater heights of success than the -- go Nash ge : crwied in od _-- of -- hie ' logistics of even such a chewan."' Now how could any- personalities they hav © come to comparatively minor blizzard one say that. know so well on television, blanketting an airport are stage John D. of course was born It is to be hoped Don Jackson and gering. The paved runways, at Neustadt, now known as Hugh Smith will be but the first two to return and to be whole- heartedly welcomed by Oshawa this Centennial Year. have gained success in fields of sports, entertainment, business and industry able to arrange their schedules to spend sometime here, each visit would represent: a note- worthy occasion. At present, among « "the first to pay Centennial Year visits seem likely to be Donald Jackson and: Hugh Smith who have won such wide recognition -- and brought Oshawa such great publi- city -- in the world of the flashing blades. The career of Don Jackson, as an example, will always have a strong link with this Motor City. The circumstances of the visits to their hometown of Oshawa celebrities is of little relative im- portance. The excitement lies in their return. Citizens of their gen- eration or one older will remember "Kootenay's aprons and stands at Montreal, Newstead, in Ontario. Surely I learn, total 368 acres. That is one of the best-known--certainly equivalent to a straight high- one of the most oft-repeated-- way 25 feet wide running from sagas of modern Canada is the Chatham or Sarnia to Toronto. tale of the Diefenbaker family's A five-inch snowfall dumps 125,- trek from Toronto to "'the wilds 000 tons of snow on such an of Saskatchewan" when he was area; it amounts to 7,500,000 approaching his eighth birth- cubic feet of snow, which would day. require more than 25,000 dump Rare indeed must be the per- trucks to cart it away. son on Parliament Hill who has That~same fall piles 1,500 not heard that story from his cubic feet of snow on the drive- own lips--the discomfort of the way _and_ front path-of the_aver---colonist_cars_.on_the_-railreads, age Canadian householder. To the lost Diefenbaker dinner, shovel that away, Johnny Ca- young John trampling the nuck would do at least 225,000 grapes in some new-Canadian's foot-pounds of work. That is home winery, and so onward equivalent to carrying his past the piles of buffalo bones mother-in-law up to the top of along the trail of the Red River the 102 - story Empire State carts. Hidden Report Handicap While the 212,000 students from the separate schools in Quebec are glorying in their unscheduled holi- day the majority of Quebec resi- dents are viewing the situation with alarm. The union which represents the 9,000-odd striking teachers in Mont- real turned down a proposal Sunday the cause provided the mediator's report was to be made public. It is actions such as these which cause the collective public's eye- brows to be raised questioningly, even though there may be nothing devious or sinister in the action at all. The mere fact that the striking teachers did not want the dispute made public leads most of the public to view the situation with a biased criticism. A free people is an informed people and the value of the press is never more clearly delineated than in affairs where disputants with diverse viewpoints must expect the public to form an opinion one way or the other. Where, however, in- formation is withheld from the pub- lic it seems to be a human trait (frail though it may be) to auto- matically be suspicious of people who will not divulge information which is presumed to be in the realm of the public interest. While the students are having a Grand Schemes Crumble In Vietnam 'Pacification' By PETER ARNETT SAIGON (AP)--The history of pacification in South Viet- nam is a chronicle of grand schemes crumbling, of the boundless energy of talented advisers evaporating. It is also a tale of the cor- schemes costing more money. They never seem to go any- where. The late president Ngo Dinh Diem put the first foot on the modern pacification treadmill. HAMPERED BY HERITAGE From his takeover in 1954, The Oshawa Times T. L. WILSON, Publisher £. €. PRINCE, General Manager C. J. MeCONECHY, Editor SUBSCRIPTION RATES The Oshawa Times combining The Oshowa Times {established 1871) and the itby Gazette and Chronicle (established 1863) is published daily (Sundays and Statutary holidays excepted), AYES i o' Daily ers Association, The Canadian Press, Audit Bureau Association. The Canadian Press is exclusively entitled to the use of republication of all news despatched in the pai credited to It er to The Associated Press or Reuters, and also the local news published therein. All rights of special des- batches are also reserved, Offices: Thomson Bullding, 425 University Avenue, Toronto, Ontario; 640 Cathcart Street Montreal, P.O. Delivered by carriers tn Oshawa,Whitby, Ajax, Pickering, Bowmanville, Brooklin, Port Perry, Prince Albert, Mople Grove, Hampton, Frenchman's Bay, Liverpool, Taunton, tyrone, Dunbarton, Enniskillen, Orono, Leskard, Soy Burketon, Claremont, Manchester Pontypool, and Newcastle not. over 55c¢ r week. By mail in Province of Ontario outs! carrier delivery area, $15.00 per year. Other provinces and Commonwealth -- Countries, $18.00 per year, U.S.A. ond foreign $27.00 pa yeor. gay old time the teachers and the commission are at loggerheads. However, it is to be hoped that the mediation discussions are made public, if only to determine the justifiability or the unreasonability of each sides point of view. Other Editors' Views AHEM Many teen dances across the country seem to end in rioting. A problem for the police must lie in deciding when the dancing ends and the rioting begins. (Edmonton Journal) ruption of officials at the grass roots destroying what a series of jaternalistic and inept Sai- gon governments were reluc- tantly trying to implement from the top. The battle "for the hearts and minds of the people" in Vietnam has 'often been a tra- vesty of misdirected and in- complete effort, of statistical illusions and false optimism. These harsh judgments have been borne out only too well by recent history. Current Viet- namese leaders have poured scorn on the efforts of their predecessors. American offi- dellj Diem attempted to adjust Viet- nam's ancient feudal structure to the needs of social prog- ress. He was hampered by the constant undermining of his program by murderous Communist cadres in the countryside, and eventually by his own introversion, which trapped him in a theoretical world of his own. Diem tried four major re- construction schemes to re- store order in rural areas torn by war. All failed. Diem set out to abolish the injustices of land tenure and the hopel of the peas- cials are again r ling the whole pacification appara- tus. The pattern of pacification seems to recur as an Oriental treadmill powered by plann- ers who envisage bigger ant's lot with an elaborate land reform program. By the end of 1962 only about one-third of the land supposed to have changed hands actually had done so. nactvnenennnsvntnne nt Moana neering UNIQUE BRITISH INSTITUTIONS Quaint Misnomer "Public School" To Exit By CAROL KENNEDY LONDON (CP) -- A small, cold wind of apprehension is blowing through the chilly cor- ridors of those unique British institutions, the public schools. It may only be a matter of time before they are forced to live upj to their name. As North Americans in_Bri- ain soon discover, the quaint misnomer "public school" means the most exclusive, ex- pensive education you can buy. Headed by. eminent Eton College, cradle of cabinet min- isters, and Winchester, noted for its exceptionally brilliant scholars, the best public schools attract the cream of the country's teaching talent and their selective intake, coupled with high annual fees, tends to ensure pupils are both academically bright and socially privileged. They are widely believed to have easier access to the best Oxford and Cambridge col- leges than the state grammar schools, and to assure a place in tomorrow's governing elite for their pupils through the old-boy-net that still operates in many British institutions. FUTURE IN DOUBT The public schools have been a source of bristling con- troversy since the First World War broke up Britain's stiff layers of social apartheid. With a socialist government in power pledged to reshape British education along egali- tarian "comprehensive" lines and determined to sweep away what one education min- istry spokesman described as "rationing education by the purse," their future seems more precarious than at any time in their 500-year-long history. At the end of 1967, the long- awaited report from the New- som commission is scheduled to appear. Headed by educa- tionist - publisher Sir John Newsom, himself a product of the public school system, the commission was set up by the Wilson government in 1965 to advise on the best way of integrating the public schools with the state system. Education minister Anthony Crossland told the House of Commons: "The government are deter- mined that the public schools should make the maximum contribution to meeting the education needs of the coun- try, and that this should be done in such a way as to re- duce the socially divisive ef- fect which they now exert." LIFT BARRIERS In essence, Crosland ex- Plained, this would probably mean broadening the schools' intake to include pupils of all ranges of academic ability as well as all social backgrounds, along the same lines as the giant secondary "comprehen- sive" schools now being ex- tended across the state net- work. This would spell creeping death to the prestige of the public school, although it has been suggested the govern- ment might want to retain a "top 20". group of schools for exceptionally bright pupils. If Crosland's proposals were endorsed by the Newsom commission, they would pro- voke uproar among upper-in- come parents who feel they should have the right to buy the best education for their children. And there would probably also be an outcry that Labor was "'nationaliz- ing" education. The controversy over public schools, an education minis- try spokesman said, is bas- ically one of political philos- ophy, A. E. Howard, head- master of Wandsworth com- prehensive in London, said the "buying of privilege' was an outmoded concept. Public schools were "tribal so- cieties" geared to produce conformism to certain social attitudes. "We're running out of a rul- ing class," he told reporters on a press visit to the vast, concrete-and-glass school in south London. PLAYED MAJOR ROLE Ironically, when the first public schools were founded in the 15th century, they proved a tool of social progress. They recruited talented but poor scholars and trained them for administration under the Tu- dor monarchs. It was the be- ginning of Britain's celebrated EASIER ACCESS civil service, which helped de- stroy feudalism and lay the foundations of the modern state. During Victoria's reign a second great burst of change and expansion took place. Be- tween 1840 and 1900, 42 new public schools were estab- lished, taking a great influx of children from the middle classes created by the indus- trial revolution and broaden- ing the hitherto aristocratic governing class. But each period of vitality was succeeded by stagnation. In 1918, says an expert writing in The Observer, the public schools missed their crucial opportunity to recruit the working class into the Estab- lishment in the general post- war shakeup of society. There are 110 independent schools in Britain, mainly boarding schools and princi- pally located in the prosper- ous southern counties of Eng- land. Five or six are gener- ally acknowledged the cream of the country: Eton, Win- chester, Marlborough, Char- terhouse, Rugby, Stowe. PUPILS GO FARTHER Some tend to operate a kind of hereditary 'principle. At Eton, two-thirds of the boys are sons of Old Eton- ians. Many _ headmasters, however, deplore this and the trend is dying: Over - all, nearly half the public school population now is first-gener- ation. LOOK SHARP, FEEL SHARP, BE SHARP TUL LL eit vung mm INTERPRETING THE NEWS U.S. Spurs Aid For India By ARCH MacKENZIE WASHINGTON (CP) -- The United States is making another diplomatic move to spur aid for famine - threatened India from seven wealthier Western and Asian-~-countries.-Canada's~ef- forts could be used as an ex- ample. This U.S. mission is prompted by doubt that the U.S. can much longer maintain its pres- ent rate of food aid. There also is the question whether it is willing to in view of a tougher mood about foreign aid evident in the new Congress. One Canadian official says congressional sentiment seems to favor a fair contribution by the U.S.--its share of the es- tablished need--but no more un- less other countries help. Eugene Rostow, state depart- ment undersecretary for politi- cal affairs, now is at New Delhi to discover the success of In- dian requests for aid from members of the Indian ald con- sortium. From there he goes to Japan, Italy, West Germany, France, The Netherlands, Belgium and Britain. HAS SPECIAL STATUS Canada isn't on the list be- TODAY IN HISTORY By THE CANADIAN PRESS Jam. 18, 1967... Francisco Pizarro, con- queror of the Inca civiliza- tion of South America, founded the city of Lima 432 years ago today--in 1535-- as the Spanish colonial cap- ital. He laid the foundation stone for a cathedral the same day and a university was founded 16 years later. Now the capital of the re- public of Peru, the city was destroyed by an earthquake in 1746 and later pillaged by the Chilean army in the 1880s. Only a few years be- fore the war with Chile the city walls had been pulled own. 1951 .-- Mount Lamington, New Guinea, erupted, kill- ing about 40,000 people. 1957 -- Three USAF B-52 aircraft completed a non- stop flight around the world in 45 hours 19 minutes. First World War Fifty years ago today--in 1917 -- British troops at- tempted to advance north of Beaucourt in the Ancre Valley; Russians and Ro- manians attacked the Aus- trians and Germans in Mol- davia. Second World War Twenty-five years ago to- day in 1942 -- Premier U Saw of Burma was arrested for conspiring with the Jap- anese; Japanese bombers hit the oil depot at Singa- pore's naval dockyard; the tanker Allan Jackson was sunk by a submarine off North Carolina. a BIBLE "Now therefore put away, said he, the strange gods which are among you, and incline your heart unto the Lord God of Israel.' --Joshua 24:23. Life is made up of a lot of little earthly gods designed to keep us out of Heaven and away from the Lord. "Thou shalt have no other gods before me." cause future and planned con- tributions appear to have given it a special status here. Rostow discussed his trip with Canadian Ambassador A. Ritchie Saturday. Canada ranks second-behind the U.S. in aid to India and on a per capita basis has done as much or more than the U.S, It is understood from Ameri- can officials the Canadian exam- ple is being used to defend the U.S. program from domestic critics wanting to cut it. Ros- tow also may well use the Ca- nadian program as evidence in seeking to convince countries such as Britain, France and West Germany they should be doing more--by buying grain if they have no surpluses to send. In 1966, Canada donated about 1,000,000 tons of food, mostly wheat, and is sending another 200,000 tons now. The U.S. sold India 8,300,000 tons in 1966. Payment was made in rupees. The 1966 Food for Peace program authorized by Congress would charge India and other countries scarce dol- lars. Canada has been' working steadily for lower interest rates on loans while the rates charged by the U.S. and many other countries have climbed with commercial interest rates. CHARGES NO INTEREST In many cases Canada now charges no interest at all to de- veloping countries. President Johnson, conferring here last month with Trade Minister Winters, is said to have known within five per cent the extent of Canadian aid to In- dia. Australia this year is donating 150,000 tons of wheat. Russia, with a bumper crop, has do- nated 700,000 tons and the U.S. has sold 900,000 tons for rupees and plans another interim 1,- 800,000 tons pending the signing of a long-term aid agreement with India. U.S. determination to have other countries help is under- lined in the formula it has re- vealed for a wheat agreement at the Kennedy round of tariff negotiations, nearing a climax at Geneva. The formula would place re- sponsibility on countries that do not grow wheat as well as wheat exporters for food aid-- indirectly if necessary from fer- tilizer, technological training or other means to stimulate food production in needy countries. Franklin Trek From Bay In1820 WentSouth To Sask. By BOB BOWMAN The tragedy of Sir John Franklin's . expedition to the Arctic in 1847 is so well known that it has almost been forgot- ten that he explored northern Canada from 1819 to 1822 and again from 1825 to 1827. He also placed the cornerstone of one of the locks of the Rideau Canal. Before exploring Canada Franklin served with the Royal Navy, mapped the coast of Aus- tralia, fought in the battle of Trafalgar, and took part in the attack on New Orleans in 1814. Just before he made his last trip into the Arctic Franklin was governor of Tasmania, and that colony contributed money to send out search expeditions when it was known that he was lost. Franklin's explorations of Canada's Arctic coast were preparations for his effort to find the Northwest Passage, al- though that expedition did not begin until 1845. His first trip into the Arctic was in 1818 when he was captain of the Trent in an expedition led by Captain D. Buchan. In 1819 Franklin was placed in command of an expedition YEARS AGO 25 YEARS AGO, JANUARY 18, 1942 William Boddy, Oshawa, was appointed chairman of the Pub- lic Utilities Commission for 1942. Joy Bunker, Teddy Oldfield and Brent Oldfield, members of King St. Junior Church, re- ceived perfect attendance awards. 40 YEARS AGO, he January 18, 1927 e chimney on a house at 1775 Centre St. was not. drawing properly and when repairmen were called, they discovered a swarm of bees had mad? their winter home in the chimney. Madame Lugrin-Fahey noted soprano will sing in Oshawa, under the auspices of the Gen- eral Motors Dramatic Club, that sailed into Hudson Bay and then went overland to the mouth of Coppermine River, as Sam- uel Hearne had done in 1770. He arrived at Cumberland House in northern Saskatchewan, Jan. 18, 1820, and by the time he reached the Arctic coast and returned to Hudson Bay he and the men who survived had cov- ered 5,500 miles, were living off the land. "The expedition from 1825 to 1827 was down the Mackenzie River, and along more of the Arctic coast. Franklin was con- vinced then that strong ships could get through the ice. It was on his way back to Britain in 1827 that Franklin paddled down the Ottawa River and arrived at Bytown just in time to place the cornerstone of the third lock. Crowds gathered from near and far, although there was only one-day's notice for the event. He was knighted when he returned to Britain. OTHER JAN. 18 EVENTS: 1839 -- Rebels convicted in Lower Canada rebellion were hanged at Montreal. 1849 -- Parliament met at Montreal. Session included Re- bellion Losses Bill and adopted French and English as official languages. 1871--It was announced that a census would be taken in April when the population was esti- mated as being 3,496,000. 1888 -- Thomas Greenway formed Liberal government of Manitoba. QUEEN'S PARK It's Essential For Inquiry To Dig Deep DON O'HEARN TORONTO -- The important Rand inquiry into labor rela- tions has concluded its first week of hearings and is off to an impressive start. The inquiry could go in two directions. It could make a most valuable contribution to labor relations, and therefore in- directly to the whole economic and social life of the province. Or it could be superficial and turn out to be one more false-- start in attempting to get to grips with the situation in labor relations, which with wildcat strikes on one hand and refusal of some employers to bargain on the other is approaching a point of crisis. DIG DEEP? The test of the value of the inquiry will be whether it really gets at the roots of labor-man- agement relations, digs out the basic areas of conflict, clarifies --and this is particularly im- portant--just what the "rights" of labor and management are or should be today, and then proposes some new approaches for labor-management harmony. There was reassurance in the first week of hearings that it would be aiming at these goals, and probably would have some success in attaining them. This didn't come from the presentations to the inquiry. Major groups from both sides of labor relations were before the Commission: The Ontario Federation of Labor for the workers and the Central On- tario Industrial Relations Insti- tute speaking for employers. BRIEFS PEDESTRIAN The briefs of both were pedes- train--a repetition of old argu- ments, almost all designed to give more freedom to their in- terests. Notably missing was fresh thought, and any apparent will- ingness to look on labor rela- tions as a whole and to try and work our solutions from the viewpoint of the benefit of the community at large rather than their particular self-interest, The assurance came from the commissioner. The former Supreme Court of Canada justice, Ivan C. Rand, showed he probably will be an outstanding commissioner The 82-year-old Mr. Rand demonstrated by his intensive questioning at the public sex sions that he is determined te try and get at the roots. He was asking blunt ques- questions, such as, of Jabot whether picketing wasn't intimi- dation, and of employers whether they should have the right to hire strike-breakers. He was digging deep, and digging boldly. And from what we know of the fresh mind of this man from the past, if he pets the facts of the problems e will come up with independ ent, logical and probably ig some cases original, solutions. Rerial Mapping Color Studied VICTORIA (CP) -- Use of color aerial photography in map making is being studied in a joint experiment by the federal and British Columbia govern- ments, "We want to determine whether color photography gives more detail than black and white for mapping pur- poses," explained Axel Kinnear, air division chief of the provin- cial lands service. A roll of 40 color exposures was shot over the lower Van- couver Island area from a B.C. lands service aircraft. The film was sent to Ottawa for processing by the federal department of mines and tech- nical surveys. "Color is more expensive than black and white but if we can save somewhere else, it might be more economical to use color," Mr, Kinnear said. The federal government is testing the colored aerial photos to determine their value as an aid in map making. "The color prints are sharper. More detail is visible than in black and white photos. . . ." One advantage of color aerial photograph is its value in the detection of water pollution. Pollutants can be traced more easily because of the ef- fect they have on the color of the water, Mr. Kinnear said. One government agency which had aerial color photos taken by B.C. lands service sur- veyers seemed quite pleased with the results. New Home Recipe Reducing Plan It's simple how quickly one may lose pounds of unsightly fat lose bulky fat and help regain right in your own home. Make this home recipe yourself. It's easy, no trouble at all and costs little. Just go to your drug store and ask for four ounces of Naran Concentrate. Pour this into a pint bottle and add enough a sige juice to fill the bottle. 'ake two tablespoons full a day as needed and follow the Naran Plan. If your first purchase does not ghow you @ simple easy way to more graceful curves; if reducible pounds and inches of excess fat don't disappear from neck, chin, arms, abdomen, hips, calves and ankles just return the empty bottle for your money back. Follow this easy way en- dorsed by many who have tried this plan and help bring back alluring curves and ul slenderness, Note how quickly bloat bay! tips much bet- ter you feel. appearing and More alive, yout active, WHITBY Figur Plans The Whitby Club competitio Jan, 21 at Whi Arena, starting Professional instructions du are: Mrs, Jacki Mrs, Betty Smi Mrs. Jean Barc Afternoon Installation o held for All S Church Afterno term, Elected w Honorary p Stanley Armstr Mrs. Donna Ma Mrs. E. L. Hulb ing secretary, Beckley; tea ti Telephone - cc Edith Watts, Barnes, Mrs, | Mrs. Victor Ms Nellie McLean. Ratepaye The purpose Vista Ratepaye meeting was tc for the 1967 ter In office a Harry Houston; dent, Leonard vice - president Carlson; recor Alec Pollock; secretary, Mrs. | treasurer, Mrs. sport chairman, press corres Two Chil The Sacramen tism was observ: United Church morning when . of Dr. and Mr: and Donna L daughter of Mr. ert Hanoski, v by their parents The anthem \ "Go Not Far F1 WH Mr. and Mrs Ewen, 916 Byro presidents of Travel Trailer tained executive their home last | a short business party was held : served a buffet night. Attending were Garnet Johnstone Rae Rundle, | Frank Ball, M Richard Thorne, Jelle Bakker, ! Ronald Thompso! Jack Perry, Mr. liam (Bill) Kent, Kenneth Ostler Mrs. Gerald Shi Oshawa. Dr. and Mrs. Windsor, visited his father H. P. Phin, Craydon R Mr. and Mrs. Ottawa, spent visiting at the parents, Mr. al Parise, 205 Kent were Sunday dir his parents Mr. | Treffers, 801 Gre Gardenview Un Women executive at the home of Speck, 949 Dono to make arrange Jan, 23 general 1 home of. Mrs. Cedar Springs R

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