Oshawa Times (1958-), 27 Jan 1967, p. 4

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She Oshawa Cimes 86 King St. E., Published by Canadian Newspapers Limited Oshawa, Ontario T. L. Wilson, Publisher E. C. Prince, Associate Publisher OSHAWA, ONTARIO, TUESDAY, JANUARY 24, 1967 Confusion Clouds Issue Over U.S. Subsidiaries The federal government has be- -come involved again in another "apples-plus-oranges-equal - lemons" controversy over the influences on subsidiaries of U.S. companies con- ducting business in Canada. The fact that such firms have refused to provide medical supplies for the Quakers to ship to North Vietnam cannot be seriously considered as an argument for stricter Canadian ¢urbs on such subsidiaries. By logic, somewhere along the line the question must be asked to what extent we want government to control the action of any busi- ness -- a U.S. subsidiary or a whol- ly Canadian-owned plant. What government pressure should be ex- ercised if a Canadian firm decided against selling such supplies? What government pressure would be con- tenanced in insisting Canadian newspapers take a pro-North Viet- nam, or a pro-South Vietnam line editorially? Surely there's a par- allel. Wherever the initiative originates to sell or not to sell, to support or not support, do we want the fed- eral government -- in time of peace -- regulating these actions? There is also the other side of the coin. In recent days both the pres- ent trade minister, the Hon. Robert Winters, and a former trade minis- ter, the Hon. George Hees, have underlined the necessity of obtaining U.S. capital to spur Canadian devel- opment. However this northward flow of U.S. funds cannot be con- strued as an aid program to a back- ward country. The money U.S. firms spend in Canada represents sound investment in an expanding market. If it were otherwise, the acumen of U.S. businessmen would be the deciding factor against con- tinued investment. U.S. subsidiaries should operate in Canada on a strict business basis devoid of special privilege of any kind. It must be clear-cut that. they abide by the regulations applicable to business and industry, whatever the ownership -- in Canada. But, by the same token,\these U.S. sub- sidiaries merely because they are U.S. subsidiaries should not be har- assed by pro-Gordon influences on every pretext. Caution And Concern While there is no call to push a panic button, cautfon and awareness with respect to rabies in Ontario County are required. The point was made at the meeting of the county council last week with the decision to have the federal govern- ment establish a rabies clinic in the area. At the same time it was reported that nine persons--five of them youngsters -- were receiving anti- rabies treatment after being attack- ed by rabid animals, a dog and a cat, both strays. A dread fear is attached to rabies The Osharwn Zimes T. L. WILSON, Publisher € C. PRINCE, General Manager C, J. MeCONECHY, Editor SUBSCRIPTION RATES The Oshawa Times combining The Oshawa Times " {established 1871) and the Whitby Gazette and Chronicle (established 1863) is published daily (Sundays and Statutary holidays excepted). Members of Canadian Daily Newspaper Publish- 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 paper credited to it or to The Associated Press cr Reuters, and also the loca: mews published therein, All rights of special des- patches ore also reserved, Offimas: Thomson Bullding, 425 University Avenue, Toronto, Ontario; 640 Cathcort Street Montreal, P.Q. Delivered by carriers in Oshawa, Whitby, Ajox, Pickering, Bowmanville, Brooklin, Port Perry, Prince Albert, Maple Grove, Hampton, Frenchman's Bay, Liverpoo!, Taunton, Tyrone, Dunbarton Enniskillen, Orono, Leskord, Brougham, Burketon, Claremont, Manchester Pontypoc!l, and Newcastle not over. 5c per week. By mail in Province of Ontario Bing carrier delivery area, $15.00 per year. Other provinces and Commonwealth -- Countries, $18.00 per year. U.S.A. and foreign $27.00 pe yeor, monte GOOD EVENING sgt outbreaks which cannot be justified by statistics. In the last 25 years only five deaths have been recorded in Canada. In Ontario County some 200 cases in animals have been con- firmed in the last decade. The sit- uation has become what biologists term as "endemic" in this region, there's always likely to be a certain amount of rabies present. The chief concern stems from pets and domestic animals coming in con- tact with rabid wildlife. Sugges- tions are made by veterinarians and medical doctors to avoid difficulty in such circumstances. Children, they say, should be warned to give widest possible berth to normally wild animals which show no fear of them. It's best to beware also if norm- ally affectionate pets become ag- gressive. Suspicion should be a- roused if a dog's bark changes or the animal tends to stare at you. If cats or dogs carry things const- antly in their mouths, this could also be an indication of rabies. If you believe a pet has rabies handle it with thick leather gloves and trans- port it in the trunk of your car to the veterinarian. If you should be bitten or clawed, both a veterinarian and a doctor should be called im- mediately. A preventive measure, strongly advocated by the Humane Society is to have your pet inoculated an- nually against rabies. OTTAWA REPORT Backbench Life 'Not A Happy One' By PATRICK NICHOLSON OTTAWA--The life of a back- bencher on Parliament Hill is very like the barrack regime in the armed forces. It is almost entirely amasculine community with little privacy, limited scope for initiative and no home com- forts. mf That is the view of Don Tol- mie, the 43-year-old lawyer from what he describes as the vibrant and unique city of Welland, who compares his rookie year as an MP with his wartime service in the RCAF and his not dissimi- lar barrack years at university. While he sits long hours on the rearmost of government back-benches among his 24 fel- low Liberal newcomers, he has little opportunity to achieve na- tionwide headlines. Yet he has been favorably noticed for three major speeches, phrased with maturity and delivered with ele- gance. In committee work he has more openings--as a_ vet- eran himself on the veterans committee, and especially as a lawyer on the justice and peni- tentiaries committees. Like many MPs with young families, he is essentially a week-day bachelor, while his wife remains at home raising their three children. Daily he walks three blocks from_ his small hotel room to a little restaurant where he can break- fast alone, reading the paper and, as he expresses it, fretting awhile. By 9.30 each morning he is on Parliament Hill and there, in office or committee room, in Commons chamber or coffee shop, he passes the next 13 hours. Don Tolmie won his way through a hard-fought nominat- ing convention to be adopted as the Liberal candidate for Wel- land, which has loyally re- mained Liberal for three dec- ades. He had already made his mark in his adopted hometown as an eight-year alderman and an active -participant-in--com- munity projects. He triumphed in his first parliamentary elec- tion--by a majority so large that it was only once exceeded even by his popular and re- spected predecessor, Dr. W. H. MeMillan. Now, with his freshman year behind him, Don can take stock of the parliamentary process. On the political side, he is still assessing the opposing pulls of the dual role of an MP; as a national legislator and as the representative of his electors. His political philosophy fits him into the left half--not the left wing -- of the Liberal party, 'Identifying. closely with Health Minister Allan MacEachen ("he made the best speech--on the guaranteed annual income -- I have heard yet in the Com- mons'), Manpower Minister Jean Marchand, and acting Reg- istrar-General John Turner. Yet he questions the wisdom of the leftward practice becom- ing traditional in 'our politics: of seeking power by bribing the electors with their own tax- money. The welfare state has been achieved. Now Parliament should enact reforms in other fields which would not cost mil- lions of dollars. As a start it should update its own proced- ure, and the administration of justice, and our 19th century divorce laws. Don Tolmie's greatest current interest might be to ensure that. rides in the family automobile be made safer for the family. On the constituency side, he has fought for such needs as the bypass of the Welland Canal, cleansing the Great Lakes, the non-transfer of the unemploy- ment commission office to dis- tant St. Catharines and the ex- pansion of the Welland - Port Colborne airport. On the personal side, he weighs the fulfilment of his am- bition against his family's de- privation of a husband and father from Monday to Friday. Degpite his good intentions to assist.\jn the work of his law practice when at home at week- ends and in parliamentary re- cesses, he finds Saturdays ab- sorbed by constituents with problems, and there have been no significant recesses in what is now a full-time job at Ot- tawa. The hours of work on Parlia- ment Hill--and Don Tolmie is one of those who work--pre- clude any. golf or curling to counterbalance the increased intake of calories. Se, in com- mon with many of his fellows, Don Tolmie pays more than lip service to "my diet." So, on this almost the anni- versary of his maiden speech in the House of Commons, Don Tolmie presents a picture typi- cal of a conscientious and prom- ising back - bencher: talented, worthy but with unresolved questions. Reform Party Won Election Became Grit, Then Liberal By BOB BOWMAN It might be said that the Lib- eral party came into power in Canada for the first time as the result of an election' Jan. 24, 1848. Actually it was the Re- form party, under Robert Bald- win and Louis Lafonetaine that won the election, and it gradu- ally became the Grit party, and then the Liberals. The Reform party obtained responsible government for pre- Confederation Canada the fol- lowing year and became known as the Great Administration. A new principle had been enunci- ated by the British govern- ment: "It is neither possible nor desirable to carry on the government of any of the Brit- ish provinces in North America in opposition to the opinions of its inhabitants." Nova Scotia was the first British North American colony to obtain responsible govern- ment, in 1848, largely as the re- sult of a campaign by Joseph Howe, who was then a member of the Nova Scotian legislature. British Colonial Secretary Lord John Russell had taken a stand that while Canada would probably become an independ- ent nation sooner or later, until that happened London must have the final word in Cana- dian affairs. The Queen ruled Canada as well as Britain, and as the Queen's advisers were in London, then the final authority must be there. Joseph Howe took issue with Lord Russell in four brilliantly written letters asking why a Nova Scotian would be less wise than an Englishman in trying to save his country from ruin? His letters were so convincing that Nova Scotia was granted responsible government, with the British government an- nouncing the policy quoted above. OTHER EVENTS JAN. 24: 1885 -- CPR telegraphs com- pleted coast to coast. 1888--Grand Trunk Railway united with Northern and Ham- ilton Railway. 1903 --Britain and U.S. re- ferred Alaska boundary dispute to international commission. 1923--George H. Murray re- signed as premier of Nova Sco- tia after being in office for 27 years. a RL ntsc cya BY JACK GEARIN Starr Faces Crucial Test In Leadership Race JOHN DIEFENBAKER, once again, has resumed his daring high-wire performances in the PC's leadership arena. This naturally puts the nat- fonal spotlight on those who could be his successor. The group includes Michael Starr, the popular and perserv- ering sitting member from On- tario riding who has yet to taste defeat in a 16 - year car- eer as an MP. What does the future hold for the former mayor of Oshawa, the former Federal minister of Labor? That is the pressing question, not only within the confines of his own riding machine where his greatest popularity is un- daunted, but in Tory circles across Canada. Many who love "Mike" don't love Dief. Few members of the Com- mons have proved so durable in the rough - tough political climate of Ottawa, year in and out, and few in the higher pla- teau have played their cards more skillfully than "Mike"' While the inner - party cas- ualty toll has been high and some promising political careers have been smashed nearby, Mr. Starr has made certain of at least one import- ant thing -- he has kept his personal political house meticu- lously clean, * There are strong voices with- in the party that say "Mike" (in fact, many forgot there was a harbor commission). Remember Dr. energetic and persuasive gener- al -"manager of the now de- funct National Proprietary Corp. Starr (and former Agriculture Minister Alvin Hamilton) would be unacceptable for leadership consideration because of their undying allegiance to Mr. Dief- enbaker. Such thinking may be in or- der, but there is another strong school of thought. It points out clearly that politics at best is a game of compromise, strange uncertainties, wherein the un- expected can and often does happen. It is unrealistic to think that Mr. Diefenbaker, if he steps down, may have the trump card in that his succes- sor must be a man who has his blessing? In such a case, it is not difficult to assume that Mr. D. would give the nod to the Ontario riding member, Ltd. NPCL had attractive options on valuable city lands in In- dustrial Park. His job was to sell his firm's grandiose idea for an elaborate warehousing set - up ("Where the trade and industrial buyers their comparative shopping and purchasing in one place, at one time, under one roof," read the enterprising NPCL brochure). Magee's plan gained consid- erable support on and off Coun- cil, but it eventually folded. Now the Oshawa Harbor is back in the news for an en- Magee, quate in five years. It cannot accomodate large ocean vessels, the he said, especially if the ship is required to turn around. It is not deep enough and can not be deepened much more. There are some conditions of can do all Lake ly). Mr. whose loyalty has been long tirely different reason -- City and well tested. Council, in commitee of the ever, 'Mike', meanwhile, is wait- whole, has agreed in principle ing in the wings, his leader- to transfer the second marsh ship ambitions undaunted It's been a long, hard haul from those Oshawa aldermanic days (he was defeated three times before he ever made it), and the lessons learned won't Are to the Oshawa Harbor Commis- sion for future port expansion. the newly Board of Control and the City Council giving matter enough profound study ment - appointed this important Mr. period. course -- the OHC must meet conditions acceptable to Coun- cil and the Ontario Water Re- sources Commission. so start development of marsh within five years OWRC report on pollution of It must the (an Ontario is expected short- Millen, a city realtor, was quoted as saying that the deeding over of marsh was necessary if Oshe awa was to progress. When ful- ly developed the harbor would be capable of handling 20 large ocean vessels at one time; how- the second he said, it is planned to develop the second marsh in stages during a 15 to 20-year The Federal govern- would pay the costs, but the city would benefit from tax- es paid by incoming occupants of the area. Millen may be quite right soon be forgotten. He won't to make such an important de- in his contention that the City's give up. cision in their first month in progress was dependant on the SO THE OSHAWA HARBOR office? harbor expansion plan; but fs back in the news? It came as a bit of surprise Council ahd the board should It hasn't had so much big publicity since the 1960 . 61 era when Dr. Charles W. Ma- gee was in his heydey locally to many to hear Harbor Com- mission Chairman Harry Millen tell the board of control that the present harbor Pda be inade- i reserve any final opinions until its members have a longer per- . fod in which to take a closer look at the elaborate project. Ste, * BEING A MEMBBR FOR THAT LENGTH OF TIME DOES NOT IN ANY WAY IMPAIR ONES HEALTH OR CAPACITY FoR SERVICE ee 'TRIOUTE To HH. STEVENS CB BY THE PRIME MINISTER, AND "THE LEADER OF "THES THE NEW GENERATION tnt GIRONA Maaneonstytneesrenne ait nasa FOREIGN NEWS ANALYSIS Salisbury View Queried By PHILIP DEANE Foreign Affairs Analyst The charge that U.S. bombing in North Vietnam is ineffective has not been effectively proved by the two distinguished Amer- ican newspaper men who have just been there, Harrison Saiis- bury of the New York Times and Harry Ashmore, who won a Pulitzer Price for his cour- ageous stand against segrega- tionists in Arkansas. Both reported that North Viet- namese lines of communications were intact, bridges standing and functioning but dwellings, schools, churches and even hos- pitals near such dwellings were utterly destroyed. This is pre- cisely what I saw in North Ko- rea just before the war there ended; I had been a prisoner then, in Communist hands. Those U.S. officials who pro- fess to detect disloyalty in fac- tual reporting by Americans out of North Vietnam are only do- ing their job which, even in a democracy, consists. of casting doubts on the veracity or the motives of critics. There was TODAY IN HISTORY By THE CANADIAN PRESS Jan. 24, 1967... Canada was appointed to the UN atomic energy com- mission 21 years ago to- day--in 1946--as one of the three partners in building the first atomic bombs. The commission was set up by the world body in order to plan international contro] of atomic development but could not agree _ unani- mously, owing to the Rus- sian veto. After reaching a deadlock it reformed itself as the world disarmament commission, of which Can- ada, because of its unique position in atomic history, is the only small power to be a permanent member. 1556--The world's worst earthquake killed 830,000 people in Shensi province, China. 1908--The first boy scout troop was formed in Eng- land. First World War Fifty years ago today--in 1917 -- Russians retreated one mile before a German attack in the River Aa sec tor; the Greek government formally apologized to the Allies for civilian riots against the attempted oc- cupation of Athens. Second World War Twenty-five years ago to- day--in 1942--the U.S. com- mission investigating the Pearl Harbor disaster charged the army and navy commanders with derelic- tion of duty; Japanese units occupied Rabaul, capital of New Britain; Chinese air- craft' bombed Japanese in- stallations at Hanoi. POINTED PARAGRAPHS A neutral is a person who sits on a fence and gets shot in the pants by both sides. Instead of getting rid of his prejudices, the average person whitewashes them and tries to pass them off for principles. A woman gets _ suspicious when a man asks her a ques- tion. Even if he only asks her what time it is, she wants to know what he wants to know for. A no disloyalty, of course, on the part of the two distinguished American newspaper men who went into North Vietnam. But they might be accused of superficially analysing what they saw when they assert, as hoth do, that the bombing unites the leaders and people of Viet- nam in the resolve to fight on for many years until victory. There is no good reason for assuming that North Vietnam's leaders and people cannot now think of, even long for alterna- tives to being bombed as a means of strengthening their unity and resolve. "Hate the enemy" is a useful rallying cry, but so is peace, so is safety, s0 is hope of a better life. HEAVEN ON EARTH ' Communist leaders, whatever else one might think of them, are people dedicated to the idea that by diligently and sacrifi- cially pursuing a_ particular form of economic organization, they will build heaven on earth. Their prime compulsion is to get on with this job. They get their fun, their kicks, their excite- ment, not out of military en- deavour, but out of five-year plans. Otherwise they would have become militarists not Communists. For the Commu- nist leaders of North Vietnam, the material destruction raining from the skies is a frustrating and ruinous postponemeni of their life task; for their follow- ers, the bombs are terror and death. Despite their brave re- solve, their David-versus-Go- liath heroism which impresses compassionate newspaper men like Salisbury and Ashmore, the North Vietnamese, being hu- man, want the bombing to end and may concede much to that end;-as did the North Koreans who were also strengthened in their unity and resolve by American bombing and who made ,peace for the bombing to 0; Messrs, Salisbury and Ash- more, who are decent, men, have proved that U.S. bombing is repugnant to them. They have not proved, however, it is not effective in forcing North Vietnam to talk, which is the purpose of the bombing. Liberal-Labor Line To Blur With Jo Grimmond Gone By HAROLD MORRISON Canadian Press Staff Writer Now that Jo Grimond has stepped down, much of Britain concludes it is just a matter of time before Grimond's hardy little band of Liberals is swal- lowed whole by the powerful Labor party. The leadership change came too quickly, like the snap of a camera shutter, to allow dedi- cated followers of Grimond suf- ficient time to sever their per- sonal allegiances. Grimond had an appeal, especially te women voters, that transcended his party's policies. As bright and as witty as he may be, Jeremy Thorpe, the new chief, will have a long way to go to court and recapture the admiration of those who voted Liberal because Grimond was at the helm. Grimond drew admiration not only from his own fold but among his political enemies. A Tory editorial describes him as the most popular of the political leaders in post-war, years. A prominent Labor moderate says YEARS AGO 20 YEARS AGO January 24, 1947 Mr. Norman Down was re- turned as president of the South Ontario Agricultural Society at its annual meeting. It will be his fifth term as head of the society. During the year 1946 the con- gregation of King Street United Church raised over $21,000 in all departments. 35 YEARS AGO January 24, 1932 J, A. McGibbon, county crown attorney, has been elected pres- ident of the Ontario County Law Association for the coming year. H. W. Quantrell, Whitby's Chief of Police, in his report submitted to Ottawa shows that fines and fees collected in 1931 amounted to over $2,000. BIBLE "Seek ye me and ye shall live." --Amos 5:4. God has laid down something that we can stand on. "'My word shall never pass away." he was the last of the great Liberals, vanquished by the shape of British polities which condemned him to a life of words without real _policical power. There seemed to be little hope that the Liberals would ever be called to form a British government. HAD RECENT GAINS To those who argue that the Liberal party, with only 12 of the 630 Commons seats, is not dead, there always is_heart- warming recollection that in a decade the percentage of the Liberal vote increased to 11.2 from 2.7. Also, under the left- wing philosophy of Thorpe, the party can have more hope of attracting disenchanted social- ists. But the image that Grimond managed to convey, of a politi- cal party distinct from both Tory and Labor, providing a middle road of. moderation through private enterprise, gradually may disappear. Under Thorpe, the distinction between Liberals and Labor is likely to be blurred. If voters see no real differ- ence, there may be many more inclined to vote for the party with greater prospect of wield- ing power. There was a time when a Liberal-Labor alliance seemed to be in the works. The Liberals appeared to be in a strong posi- tion to pull off something to their benefit when they virtually held the balance of power after Wilson squeaked into office in 1964. But the Liberals hemmed and hawed and squabbled, with the result that nothing occurred. Now any Liberal-Labor alli- ance would have to be on Wil- son's terms and these are un- likely to leave much room for a distinct Liberal personality. QUEEN'S PARK Timing Out On Medical Proposals DON O'HEARN TORONTO -- There is alarm now over a future shortage of doctors, particularly of men to staff the new medical schools and facilities which will be opening up in the next six or seven years. To this the pertinent com- ment is: Why now? It has been apparent for years that we were facing a shortage of doctors. At least half a dozen years ago it was reported in this space that young men were not being attracted to medicine. With the high incomes of doc- tors today, this situation evi- 'dently has changed. But to anyone with foresight it should have been apparent at least a dozen years ago that we were going to face a crisis in medical personnel from about this point on. All you had to do was take the future population projec- tions and weigh them against the existing facilities for train- ing. TIME TO PLAN The time to plan the new fa- cilities was then--not two years ago when a new program was finally undertaken. And also that was the time when ways and means should have been considered of getting young men to go into medicine. As it is today, many of those who do enter the field probably will be largely attracted by the potential income and will not be prospective teaching material. It is true that Ontario is far from being alone in this plight. Other jurisdictions on both sides of the border are facing the same crisis. But is also true it does show lack of foresight and imagina- tion, and demonstrates once again that these are probably the two qualities most needed in government in our rapidly changing times of today--and that they are apt to be the qualities least often found. Pedestrian politicians are in- clined to be suspicious and jeal- ous of imaginative men, and those that do get into partia- ments and governments can find themselves as semi - outsiders fighting frustrating battles. DROP PROSECUTIONS? As the Rand inquiry into labor relations continues, you get more and more faith that this commission could turn out to be a remarkably good inquiry. Commissioner Ivan C. Rand is asking the blunt, and deep, questions--or at Jeast many of them--that have needed to be asked in labor. For instance, he asked the Ontario Chamber of Commerce why, when employers arrived at a settlement of contract dis- putes, they almost invariably dropped charges that had béen laid against strikes for violence and other acts. Mr. Rand said in effect that this made a mockery of the law. And a lot of us on the side- lines must have been pondering the same question. Certainly to the writer this has always been a weak and offensive part. of our labor relations, Satellite Plan Due This Month WASHINGTON (AP) -- The Communications Satellite Corp. plans to inaugurate commercial communications service be- tween the United States and Japan late this month via its new Lani Bird satellite. Lani Bird II, officially known as Intelsat Satellite II, was launched Wednesday from Cape Kennedy, Fla., and reached a 300 miles above earth. The new Lani Bird, replacing Lani Bird I which failed to achieve synchronous orbit, is designed to serve as a new communications 5 link between the United States and the Far East. A spokesman said Comsat will begin today 10 days of tests to determine the spacecraft's communications capacity. It is expected to have about 240 cir- cuits. The first, for use between the U.S. and Japan, is sched- uled tentatively to be opened Jan. 26. Comsat sent the. spacecraft Saturday into a stationary orbit over the Pacific at the inter- national date line. Because Lani Bird I did not reach a synchronous orbit, it could be used for communica- tions only on a part-time basis. Its 35 circuits now will be used only during emergencies. 725-6553 RENT-A-CAR | DAY -- WEEK -- MONTH 58.00 PER DAY 725-6553 RUTHERFORD'S CAR AND TRUCK RENTALS PLUS LOW MILEAGE CHARGE 14 ALBERT ST. Oshawa WHITBY Cente Open: WHITBY (Staf will get their | have a look ro centennial proje vated County ( the day of its o The opening ¢ building, now t cultural and re will take place then be open to 2:30 p.m. to 5 p. day from 2 to 5 An inaugura dance, for whict already sold ov Saturday evenin Renovations | pleted in the m cept in the the work will be su by Feb. 18. Plan Hi Don't call tl ment, just go to That is the Whitby Centenr Committee whic Friday will light on Hopkins Stre south of Highwa The committe hundreds of C Ratepa WHITBY (Sta in the Blair Par! in danger becau play on the str ratepayers' exec appealing to tov park in the are Mrs. Betty Ki: has written to | out that the. ri told last year t! would be priced of 1967. Pupils \ WHITBY. (Stz "full house" at meeting Monday of Colborne Stre turned up to w government at \ The visit by t classes will be visit by five ot other night. P Sarles explained the pupils' cen was the investig levels of govern: pal, county, pro eral. Council Ti WHITBY (St town's special Urban Renewal with represent Planning Branc of Municipal A Central Mortgas Corporation. The town is | developing _ the blocks north, s¢ west of the Fo D. Little, re { town, explained steps to an urbi gram were a si 'and = implemen scheme. The te a temporary for six month change In the « Counci WHITBY (Sta Desmond New! sibly some of | leagues hope t tional Research ises at Ottaws Whitby Harbor CWL Pl. Several annou made by Mrs. president of St. gelist CWL at meeting. A card party 18 at Denis ' torium. The will be held A Denis O'Conno H. T. Donihee, dent of the CW) speaker. The public s for Grades 7 an Feb. 14 and th test will be held St. .Gregory's 26. WH Royal Canadia Auxiliary exec! met at the hon dent, Mrs. Phyl final arrangeme birthday dinner made. The dinne by the men's bi Mclvor in chat members of Zone Commane trude Williams, awa, will presi stallation of of the dinner. St. Mark's 4 W's Couples members were presidents, Mr. don Mifflin, at to make arrans annual "'Trish § be held in Mar also outlined for tion Sale"'. Mr. and Mrs. | Burlington and 1 Vacq, Vancouve guests of Mr. a MacCarl, Colbor Mrs. Richard ed her home t Presbyterian W The president, 1 derson, said t *Tea" will be he!

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