Oshawa Times (1958-), 1 Feb 1967, p. 13

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here Rabbiah All I can say | custody. The 'BI are both -scale search fercome EETH nd Worry d or feel ill-at- , sprinkled on. . n firmer so they . Avoid embar- ose plates. Get rug counter. WELLINGTON Opium, heroin and _ possibly other dangerous narcotics are} departments. Importation and distribution distribution. New Zealand "'on a mail-order|Chinese, the report asserted. issued here. (glied into New Zealand from|sample which is "various Eastern ports," said| quality. the report, compiled by the de-| partment of health in co-opera-ithe shipment is delivered and! {converted by the dealer into ) Mail Order Basis For Drugs "=«" re then distributed by mail! packs. A similar arrangement exists being distributed throughout/of opium was controlled by|for the distribution of heroin. | It is known that Negro crew basis," says an official report} A dealer and smuggler first)/members in cruise-ships plying| {get in touch by letter, then, in|between the United States, the} Large quantities of opium and|port, the smuggler, usually a/Pacific islands, New Zealand | / small amounts of marijuana\seaman, visits premises namedjand Australia, carry marijuana.) ; |W and heroin were being smug-jby the dealer and delivers a| The report said that illicit)were treated at hospitals in|riod of years. tested for|production or manufacture of|1965 and that it has been esti-| dangerous narcotics in New/mated that, counting those in on the forei Once a price has been agreed, |Zealand is negligible. It added that 130 drug addicts|total is probably 270, These packs Major Issue At Next Election Throughout New Zealand)": "2: 11: 0» w«| Foreign Owned Factories generally consider the mail or-| (Reuters) -- ZS with the police and customs|der system the safest means of| HAMILTON (CP) -- Foreign ownership of Canadian industry will be a major issue in the next federal election, Walter Gordon of banks, riaries and controlling ownership newspapers, maga- zines, insurance, trust and loan | compan ies. The out portfolio, told an overflow) Ministerial would be committing "political | exaggerated. Progress had been achieved |the care of private doctors, the lem through legislation giving| United States' on \guidelines for Canadian subsid-jhe replied, "Yes CANADA GRADE "A" VAC PAC -- 6 TO 10 LBS *AVERAGE*WEIGHT OVEN-READY TURKEYS' OO ill SWEET PICKLED, VAC PAC, HALVES COTTAGE ROLLS +59: MAPLE LEAF SKINLESS, PURE PORK SAUSAGE | 49: PORK HOCKS SUPER-RIGHT QUALITY SLICED MEATY 33 "45 | BEEF BOLOGNA ---.-. » 39 | SHOPSY WIENERS 2 -59: (WITH PORK) Reg. Price 2 tins 47¢e -- SAVE 8e CLARK BEANS = 21% 39 AYLMER FEATURE PRICE! PEAS & CARROTS 2s: 3% AYLMER CHOICE QUALITY DICED HARVARD BEETS 2.137 AYLMER (HALVES) FEATURE PRICEI BARTLETT PEARS 2»+--69 (27¢ OFF DEAL) Reg. Price box $1.47 -- SAVE AN EXTRA 8 TIDE DETERGENT «~::---1.39 DELSEY (WHITE or COLOURED) Reg. Price pkg. 33c -- SAVE 4e TOILET TISSUE = 2.» 2% WHITE or COLOURED FACIAL TISSUE FEATURE PRICE! KLEENEX 3 ++ 1,00 BALLET (WHITE or COLOURED) Reg. Price pkg. 670 -- SAVE 4o TOILET TISSUE = 53. GERBERS (ALL VARIETIES EXCEPT MEAT) FEATURE PRICE! JUNIOR FOODS = 5 +=: BY BILLY BEE Reg. Price etn 68e -- SAVE 4e CREAMED HONEY 22-6 5¢ CARNATION SKIM MILK POWDERED Reg. Price $1.35 -- SAVE t4e INSTANT MILK 1,19 NU-FLUFF (5e OFF DEAL) Reg. Price bit 63c -- SAVE AN EXTRA 4e LAUNDRY RINSE «59% KING OF HAWAII \ PINEAPPLE JUICE «29% PEACHES = 3=+=1,00 A&P BRAND FRESH "THE REAL THING" . ORANGE JUICE seer | x It's Your Dollar--Make the Most of it! Shop and Save at AsP! KRAFT COLOURED PARKAY (QUARTERS) MARGARINE McCORMICK'S PLAIN OR SALTED CRACKERS MONARCH TABLE SYRUP DR. BALLARD'S (CHICKEN, BEEF OR LIVER FLAVOUR) DOG FOOD CROSBY PURE BARBADOS MOLASSES FANCY QUALITY CREAM STYLE BRIGHT'S FANCY QUALITY APPLE JUICE LANCIA 5 VARIETIES MACARONI OR SPAGHETTI SALADA ORANGE PEKOE TEA BAGS Salutes Canada's AMGOOD, SMOKED, SLICED, RINDLESS SIDE BACON 34.39 latest move was federal cabinet as minister with-|Stablishment last week of a $ committee headed crowd of more than 400 students| PY -- which cig co on bce [that any party which ignored|'he foreign ownership and con- jtold a McMaster University au-\the issue of foreign control! 'Tl question. dience Monday night. The former minister of ti-| suicide." : nance, who recently rejoined the) He said the problem must be! about pressures and retaliation] for a clear-cut interpretation of from the United States on the} controversial | worked out gradually over a pe-| Mercantile Bank question were|Conservation Authorities A THE OSHAWA TIMES, Wednesday, Februory 1, 1967 13 sections of . Ontario Supreme Court Asked To Clarify Bill CHATHAM (CP)--The Ontario, Mr. Donovan, acting city solic-;OMB rejected the city's conten- He said that press reports) supreme Court should be asked itor, said the OMB decision last|tion that "'benefits" under gece week in the city's appeal against/tion 38 of the Ontario Conserva- the/the apportionment of costs in ajtion Authorities Act should mean c t}$4,800 LTVCA emergency dyke|clearly definable objective bene- hich have sparked an 18-month| repair project not only went|fits. Donovan advised issue. VAsP. Cares. . About Youh *, 2 ' * CANADA'S FINEST RED BRAND STEER BEEP CH OF BEEF BLADE ROAST, SUPER-RIGHT QUALITY : = NJ is lb % 75 TO 90 LB AVERAGE . STEW; BEER, POT ROAST, GROUND K, AND SOUP BONES CUT AND FREEZER WRAPPED ALLOW A MINIMUM OF THREE DAYS FOR PROCESSING 8 & CROSS RIB ROAST, "FOR YOUR HOME FREEZER > a Reg. Price pkg 37¢ -- SAVE Se 2:69 Reg. Price pkg 39¢ -- SAVE 4e 235 FEATURE PRICEI Seafood Buys! , 16-fl-oz bil 3 3 ¢ Reg. Price tin 25¢ -- SAVE 5e Qn 5. FEATURE PRICE! 26'A-02 perga cin 2 5 ¢ FEATURE PRICE! STOKELY CORN 2.39% FEATURE PRICEI 3 «89. Reg. Price pkg 47¢ -- SAVE 4e nai: Reg. Price pkg 87¢ -- SAVE 4e nooo & 3: -- = \/\/\G /\/\/N 100t4 Birthday! \367\ 1967 ALL PRICES IN THIS AD GUARANTEED THROUGH SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 4th, 1967 OSHAWA, WHITBY & BOWMANVILLE pkg * Fried In Batter LAKE PERCH FILLETS ey | 7 A&P BRAND SEA SEALD COD FILLETS 39 ' (Regular or Buttermilk) Value-Priced! FEATURE PRICE! PANCAKE MIX Aur Jemima 21bpks 3 De Pillsbury (Regular or Buttermilk) PANCAKE MIX Old Tyme TABLE SYRUP White or Coloured KLEENEX TOWELS Colgate DENTAL CREAM Regular, Slenderline or Super EX PEANUT BUTTER KOT York Tomato or AYLMER SOUPS POND'S CREAMS (Cold Cream, Dry Skin, Vanishing or Moisturizing) Reg. Price 39e -- SAVE 17e 3 2b rks: 1.00 Reg. Price bt! 690 -- SAVE 4o 324loz bl @ Se Reg. Price pkg. 550 -- SAVE 60 pkg of 2 rolls 49« Reg. Price tube $1.19 -- SAVE 200 family size tube 99 Reg. Price pkg. B30 -- SAVE 40 pkg of 12 49: FEATURE PRICE! Vegetable 32-02 jar 7 9 € FEATURE PRICE! 4 10-fl-oz tins 49 Reg. Price jar 690 -- SAVE 100 small size jar 5 % or sometimes . - THE AeP RAIN CHECK > it is A&P policy to always have an ample supply of cny advertised special. Sometimes . . . not often, but . » the special Is more popular than we Imagined. So we do run out. But if we do, please ask the manager for a "RAIN CHECK", It entitles you te buy the item at the same special price the following og ---- Asked by a' student if Canada|battle within the Lower Thames|against Chatham, but did noth- gn ownership prob-|would continue to "buck the|Valley Conservation Authority,|ing to settle basic problems at|on the appeal of Chatham, Til- the question,/William A. " r Chatham city council Monday. | Mr. Donovan said that the) townships also made j Mr. Donovan said the ruling bury and Raleigh and Howard t clea jboard refused to consider 'an eral legal questions raised by Protesting municipalities, These included the Suggestion that dykes repaired in four lower watershed municipalities under the emergency scheme were built under the municipal drainage act, and the LTVCA had no right to take over their repairs. Pa per Quotes . Walter Gordon TORONTO (CP) -- The Tele gram quotes former finance minister Walter Gordon as Say- | ing the sooner the younger gen- jeration takes over the job of governing Canada "'the better it will be for all of us.' "I think we underestimate jnot only the knowledge, the in- jtelligence and the breadth of | view of the younger people in | this country but also I think we underestimate their idealism and the fact that they want to be an influence as Canadians in the world and for good," Mr. Gordon said, He made the remarks in an interview with John D. Har- bron, associate editor of 'The Telegram. "I don't know many younger people who seem to be ambi- tious in personal terms, whe think for instance it makes much difference if they become personally wealthy. "The ones I know and respect want to make some contribution to this country because they be lieve this country can make @ contribution to the world at large."" Mr. Gordon, who has re-en- tered the cabinet as minister without portfolio, said Canada won't have 'much influence in the world unless it remains free and reasonably independent. CPR Policy For French And English MONTREAL (CP)--The Can- adian Pacific Railway says in a letter to the St. Jean Baptiste Society of Montreal that it is company policy to have ticket collectors here speak both Eng- lish and French. The French-nationalist society complained after two French- speaking commuters were put off CPR trains recently when they refused to do business with ticket collectors who spoke Enge lish only, The St. Jean Baptiste Society said in a telegram to the CPR Jan. 20: "We demand an imme- diate stop to the persecution of the French-speaking majority of Quebec on CP trains." G. E. Benoit, a CPR vice. president, said in reply that the company insists that its employ- ees ask for passenger tickets in both languages and employees had promised to co-operate. Any oversights brought to the come pany's attention would be rectie fied immediately. Mr. Benoit noted that 20.5 per cent of the CPR' employees have French as their mother tongue and that the company has "'shown its confidence in the future of Quebec through its in- vestment here of $300,000,000.°* Employees Fight Union NEW YORK (AP)--A lawyer has disclosed that 23 advertising employees of the New York Times will go to the U.S. Su- preme Court in a fight against fines levied by the New York Newspaper Guild. The 23 were fined for crossing picket lines during a 1965 strike. The fines of four weeks' pay each -- about the duration of the strike -- amount to as much as $1,500 in some cases. In a similar case involving about 200 auto workers, the U.S. Court of Appeals in Chicago ruled the fines illegal. But the National Labor Relations Board, which upheld the fines, has taken that case to the Supreme Court. reat ck aleS 128: SPOTTED THE ERROR VERO BEACH, Fla. (AP)An error that .the textbook firm missed didn't slip by Connie Pickett, a junior at Gifford high school. She wrote to Dr. Eugene Nichols, author of Pre-Algebra Mathematics, to point out that he incorrectly said on page 75 that 21 is a prime number. He 'wrote back saying, "You are absolutely right' and congratu- lating her. How to relieve Use Dodd's Kidney Pills for prom; relief from the systemic condie tion causing the backache. Soon you feel better -- rest better. Dee pend on Dodd's,

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