2 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Friday, Febrwery. 10, 1967 GLANCE AROUND THE GLOBE One Canada Car Company Shows Interest In Meeting OTTAWA (CP)--Labor Minis- etr Nicholson said only one Can- adian car company has shown any interest in meeting the gov- ernment's request for joint dis- cussion of any production changes which affect employ- ment. He said in a Commons reply to NDP Leader Douglas that a collective approach to the com- panies had not been to success- ful. The approach now was to in- dividual companies and some progress was being made with one company. Take Steps | OTTAWA (CP)--The centen- nial commission will take im-| mediate steps to have the, Queen's photograph placed In the Confederation train, Prime Minister Pearson said Thursday in the Commons. He said in reply to Opposition Leader Diefenbaker that the commission will "rescind its omission" of not having the Queen's picture in the train. Mr. Diefenbaker called the omission unjustifiable. Royal Assent OTTAWA (CP)--Chief Justice Robert Taschereau, acting for Governol - General Vanier, gave royal assent to five bills in the Senate Thursday, including the government's long - awaited transport bill. The transport bill establishes a national transportation policy. The other measures passed were: --An act approving a series of CNR capital expenditures. An act to amend the Judges Act to provide an additional county court judge in Ontario and British Columbia, An act to establish the Evangelical Covenant Church of Canada. --An act to amend the Can- ada Corporations Act to pro- vide letters patent for non- profit corporations as an al- ternative to incorporation by special act. Fed Up VANCOUVER (CP) -- The president of the Canadian In- dian Youth Council says Can- ada's Indians are fed up with their image as '"'bad guys" in western movies, "Weare tired of being the white man's burden," Harold Cardinal, a 2i-year-old Cree from Alberta's Sucker Reserve, told a student symposium Thursday. "We are fed up with being regarded as the villain in mo- vies or as a tourist goodie," Mr. Cardinal said. "'And we are tired of seeing statistics stress- ing the poverty of our people." Wrong Medicine MOSCOW (Reuters) -- A So- viet woman doctor alleged to- day that Chinese medical per- sonnel in Peking deliberately gave her wrong medicines for Soviet embassy children. Dr. Nina Zolotova, pediatri- JOHN R NICHOLSON - « Not Successful Confiscate Cash CAIRO (Reuters)--The Egypt- ian government today placed a confiscation order on all the property and cash in Egypt of Saudi Arabia's King Faisal and most of his family. The order did not include Saudi Arabia's former king Saud who was deposed by his brother, Faisal, in November, 1964, and who has been living in Cairo. There was no immediate offi- cial indication of the extent of King Faisal's property but sources said he and members of his family owned palaces and villages in Egypt. Mini - Skirts Out OLIVER, B.C. (CP) -- Stu- dents have conformed to rules against girls attending classes in mini-skirts and boys with long hair, Principal A. E. Reid of the South Okanagan senior high school said Thursday. Mr. Reid said students at- tended classes Thursday as usual and only five or six boys persisted in wearing their hair long and no girls wore mini- skirts, The principal announced a ban on mini-skirts and long hair earlier in the week and a group of about 100 students staged a one-hour boycott of classes. Tenant Bill QUEBEC (CP) -- A bill de- signed to protect tenants in the Montreal area against land- lords seeking to take unfair ad- vantage of the city's expected xpo boom now is a law of Quebec province. The bill was approved by Quebec's Heutenant - governor Thursday after final passage through the legislative council, the province's upper house. With some amendment along the legislative way, the finished act protects from rent in- creases and unjust evictions tenants who, as of Jan. 1, had occupied a particular lodging for six months. & Good Harvest MUNICH (AP) -- Prospects for a. good harvest of Soviet winter wheat have been blighted by unusually dry au- tumn weather when the grains were sowed, says a survey by the Munich-based Radio Free Europe. It is a private organi- zation that monitors develop- ments in the Soviet Union and Eastern Europe. An RFE agricultural expert said today, however, there has been no evidence so far to show that other East European grain producing nations had been affected to the same ex- tent. . Legal Action HAMILTON (CP) -- A down- town restaurant was threatened with legal action Thursday night after five Toronto musicians were refused service because their hair was too long. Raphael Markowitz, manager of The Mandalas, said his law- yers will file a protest with the Ontario human rights commis- sion charging discrimination. Centennial Flotilla EDMONTON (CP)--The Yu- kon's travel and publicity di- rector said Thursday hundreds of small boats will travel 460 miles down the Yukon River this summer from Whitehorse to Dawson City in a centennial flotilla. W. J. M. Gibson said the boats will leave Whitehorse Aug. 7 and are due at Dawson City Aug. 16. lg | By DENNIS ORCHARD OTTAWA (CP) -- Political care dedicated to the govern- ment's deposit insurance bill al- most went for naught in the vote of a Commons committee Thurs- day night. A clause designed to encour- age provincial co - operation-- especially Quebee co-operation --survived a Conservative amendment by two votes. Four Liberal MPs hurried into the fi- nance committee to provide the 8-to-6 government majority. Davie Fulton (PC -- Kam- loops) had two other Conserva- tives, two New Democrats and a Creditiste with him and would have carried his amendment if he had not tipped his hand ear- lier in the sitting. Mr. Fulton argued that the federal government is creating ST. JOHN'S, Nfld. (CP)-- Moby Joe, the 80-ton whale that was the pet of the Newfound- land government for two weeks, lay dead and dangerous today on the surface of an isolated south coast salt water pond. Ironically, the infection threatening anyone who touches the huge carcass apparently was the result of the only un- kind hand raised against Moby Joe during his imprisonment behind a reef. Doctors have decided the whale died of blood poisoning caused by massive infection of wounds suffering Jan. 21 and 22 when "a handful" of the 1,600 residents of Burgeo blasted away at the helpless creature with rifles. There are no available anti- biotics capable of curing any- one who contracts the infection from the whale, doctors said in warning residents not to try cut- ting up the carcass for dis- posal. The whale may be towed out Hy sea and sunk with naval gun- ire. CAUSED A CTIR This would be an ignomini- ous end for Moby Joe, who prompted uproarious legislative high-jinks and probably was re- sponsible for the shortest-lived civil service career in provin- cial history. The 70-foot fin whale was pur- suing a school of herring on the Dead Whale Poses Threat No Antibiotics For Disease pond, half a mile from Burgeo. It never got out. Farley Mowat, shots had been fired whale. March, when he rescue, Premier Joseph Smallwood promptly made the whale a ward of the government, set aside $1,000 for purchase of her- ring and officially appointed Mr. Mowat Keeper of the Whale. For this, the whale was named Moby Joe. WOUNDS FESTER U.S. scientists were en route to the isolated pond to observe the whale when it was learned Monday his wounds had fes- tered. An appeal for antibiotics brought a quick' response but Moby Joe died during the night. Mr. Mowat, bitter over the death, said a "small minority" of the people of Burgeo was responsible. "The local hardware store was sélling cartridges for two days straight and there's enough brass along the shoreline of the pond to sell for scrap." Mr. Mowat expects to write a book about Moby Joe: "but it won't be pleasant." Canadian author - naturalist who lives about a mile from the pond, called an RCMP officer. to si- lence the gunfire after about 500 at the He then appealed for aid and funds to feed the whale until hoped high spring tides would enable a Deposit Insurance Bill Almost Gets Naught a provincial jurisdiction where it does not exist by allowing the province a veto over participa- tion of near-banks in the insur- ance scheme. He warned that he might make an amendment unless he could bring Finance Minister Sharp around to his way of thinking. CHALLENGES FULTON Liberal strength at the com- mittee table was quickly bol- stered and Bryce Mackasey (L --Verdun) challenged Mr, Ful- ton to the division. Mr. Sharp said the power of veto was placed in the bill as a practical measure to inspire a "climate of co-operation" be- tween Ottawa and the prov- inces. He did not contradict Mr. Mackasey's suggestion it was to "avoid another incident" with Quebec. The federal government, he said, is confident of its right to extend insurance to provin- cially - incorporated trust and loan companies, but has de- cided that the only way to get such a system into operation quickly is to make it voluntary for these institutions, upon con- sent of their provinces. Mr. Fulton also promised that he will try to amend the flat- rate premium within the bill to provide for relatively lighter premiums on the top 50 per cent of bank and near-bank deposits. This will come to a vote today as the committee attempts to get the bill quickly back to the Commons and Senate for ap- proval. BOLSTER CONFIDENCE The government hopes to have coverage extended to banks and near-banks by this spring. Mr. Sharp said the Pru- dential Finance and Atlantic Acceptance failures have ad- versely affected Canada's finan- cial reputation and Ottawa is joined by the 10 provinces in a desire to reassure the public. The bill will protect demand deposits and term deposits of up to five years, with a limit of $20,000 per account. The committee switched to Boy Late BALTIMORE, Md. (AP) wt Young Joseph Simmons, late for church, was just about to enter! the side door when he heard a noise which "sounded like thun- der." "Then the walls began to shake and I heard people screaming," the 13-year-old boy said, "I ran out to the street and I saw the roof cave in." The roof of St. Rose of Lima Church collapsed, dumping tons WEATHER FORECAST TORONTO (CP) -- Official forecasts issued at 5:30 a.m. EST: Synopsis: Southerly winds and mild temperatures continue over southern Ontario this morning. The strong rising tem- perature trend in the province is occurring ahead of a storm centred over Minnesota. The storm is already spreading snow over parts of northwestern On- tario. Snow will continue to injured pital. neath." of debris on about 100 worship- pers, most of them children. No one was killed. But 48 per- sons, 32 of them children, were and nine were admitted to hospitals after the mishap at Thursday's Lenten mass. BOY CRITICAL One 13-year-old boy, struck on the head by a falling chandelier, was in critical conditica at hos- The collapse came at 8.11 a.m. Rev. Francis O'Brien was saying mass. "The people were sitting down," Father O'Brien said, "The debris fell across the pews. The children were under- "{ think only God's interven- caused the tragedy to be as mild as it was," said Mrs. Jo- seph M. Balonis, 42, a second- grade teacher at the St. Rose of Lima School next door. Rescue workers said more in- juries were averted because the roof fell across the pews. Paul Gaudreau, architect of the church, discounted the theory that three inches of snow on the pitched roof had caused the collapse. Truce Unlikely In Union Strife WASHINGTON (AP) -- Pres- ident George Meany of the AFL-CIO is drafting a massive "white paper' of his own to hit back at UAW Chief Walter Reuther's 7,000-word attack on the giant labor federation. But while the two co-found- ing northwesterly Saturday. loe, Haliburton regions: Variable cloudiness becoming windy and mild today. A few showers or melting snowflurries late today and tonight. Mainly cloudy, spread eastward through north- ern and central Ontario today and some showers or snowflur- ries are forecast for late today and tonight in southern Ontario. Northerly winds, colder weather and snowflurries are forecast for most areas Saturday. Lake St. Clair, Lake Erie, Lake Huron, Niagara, western Lake Ontario, southern Geor- gian Bay regions, Windsor, Lon- don, Toronto, Hamilton: Windy and mild today. Sunny periods this morning becoming mainly cloudy this afternoon with a few showers or melting snowflurries late today. Mainly cloudy windy snowflurries Saturday. Winds southerly 20 to 30 today becom- Eastern Lake Ontario, Killa- and turning colder with a few|* For Church |Mild Temperatures Linger Hears Noise Showers Or Snowflurries Saturday morning. Mild today colder again Saturday. Winds variable mainly southerly 10 to 20 today becoming northerly 20 Saturday. Ottawa and region: Mainly cloudy today with a few periods of light snow late today and to- night. Milder. Winds light be- coming southwest 15 by eve. ning, Saturday becoming sunny 7 colder. Winds northwesterly Forecast temperatureg Low overnight, high Saturday Windsor ......+00+. 20 25 St. Thomas ..++00.. 18 25 London ....... 18 25 Kitchener .... 18 25 Mount Fores: 215 22 Wingham ... soe 18 22 Hamilton .......... 20 25 St. Catharines ..... 20 25 ODODLO scsvesevsea 3 25 Peterborough . 28 Kingston .... 30 28 28 20 15 15 10 15 Kapuskasing ....... 5 10 White River .. 0 5 Moosonee ..... 0 5 BUMINS siccrescse 8 10 windy and turning colder with a few snowflurries Saturday. Winds light increasing to south- erly 20 to 30 this afternoon be- coming northwesterly Saturday. Northern Georgian Bay, Ti- magami, Cochrane regions, North Bay, Sudbury: Overcast. Windy and mild with intermit- tent snow and drifting snow to- day becoming heavier and more continuous tonight tapering off to flurries or ending by Satur- day afternoon. Winds southerly 20 to 30 today becoming north- west to northerly Saturday. Algoma, Sault Ste. Marie, White River, western James Bay regions: Overcast. Snow to- day and tonight ending or taper- night of Jan. 20 when it crashed over the reef into Aldridge's!tions here at the time." "It will describe the condi- Japan 15 - Per - Cent Surcharge GEORGE HEES + « « Nominated Nominated BRIGHTON, Ont. George Hees, former (CP) trade minister, Thursday night was nominated as Progressive Con- servative candidate in the next federal election for the new riding of Prince Edward-Hast- ings. The riding, created by redis- tribution, contains part of the riding of Northumberland, which Mr. Hees now represents in the Commons. cian at the embassy until she returned with evacuated women and children last week- end, also accused Chinese dem- onstrators outside the mission of using 'psychological tor- ture." Soviet Union BERLIN (AP) -- Despite re- ports that the Soviet Union is Pao to withdraw 50,000 sold- lers from East Germany, West- ern sources said today there are no indications yet that the So- viets are pulling out sizable numbers of troops. Diplomatic sources say the Russians plan to remove 10 per cent of their 500,000 troops in Eastern Europe to bolster de- EDMONTON (CP)--For the first time since Admiral Peary accomplished the feat in 1909, an eight-man group is planning an overland expedition to the North Pole. Unlike Peary, who made the trip with dog teams, the seven Americans and one Canadian will have the advantage of the latest refinements in transpor- tation, food and clothing when fences along the Chinese border. they set out in March on their HERE an APPOINTMENT D. H. Haverson, son of Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Haverson, 193 Athol St., has been appointed general manager of Robertsteel (Canada) Ltd., of Hamilton. Mr. Haverson was educated at O'Neill Collegiate in Oshawa and was formerly employed by the Pedlar People Ltd. He has had 20 years' experience in the aeeet drainage products eld. SHINE TO BRITAIN Frank Shine, business admin- istrator of the Oshawa separate school board, has been authoriz- ed to interview London, Liver- pool and Glasgow teachers for the school's needs next fall. He will leave during the second week of March. About 15-20 teachers are needed for next September. GERMAN FILM Explorer Neil Douglas will present a color film, 'The Un- discovered Charm of Germany" to a Kingsway College audience : Glenholme School for retarded|the pole has be isited b i fn tte é : . pole has en visite y ii suc' [) Th 3 aerial ag hi Me 1l.|children in the city has beenjaircraft in 1926 and by nuclear psig rcs Bo them to the Town of Ajox through a cal ie ustory|donated by the Allied Wrecking|submarine in 1958 and 1959. Society and art, cultural and industrial!Company, Burk Street, Osh- : contributions of Germany. awa : : = | ORRECTIO the owner in geod condition. KINSMEN CLUBS FLOOD RELIEF | ¢ In RECT ba . d one i. -- of the) A cheque for the Flood Re- 730 - 87 Any p kindly shawa Kinsmen Club, pre-|lief Fund of Italy was present- Should Have Read ! Mrs. Ruth Benson, Chairman sented a gavel and gong tojed to the International Rela- 790 - It Wee Sitsseitégl Seclaty af Alex. A nye od Park Apts. Whitby Kinsmen Club president|tions chairman at the Oshawall CHAMBERS' FOOD || eT eee James McTeague and later|Kinsmen Club's dinner-meeting Alex. -- Phone 942.1398 both clubs exchanged new|Thursday night. peiafeaAde ( d THERE Kinsmen flags. The Whitby club was sponsored by the Oshawa Kinsmen club 25 years ago. Among the special guests at the dinner last night at the Kinsmen Hall was Kinsman deputy district governor James Gartshore of Lindsay. MONTANA STUDENT Wilma King McLarty of Osh- awa is one of 78 persons who have excelled academically in the Missoula unit of the Univer- sity of Montana. FRENCH TEACHER The Oshawa separate school board has aproved the hiring of a conversational French teach- er for Grade eight next year. The board is the only system teaching oral French in the city. Grade seven pupils receive 20- minute lessons from Mrs. An- nette Leblanc who will teach on a rotary system again in Sept- ember. PLAYGROUND Playground equipment at the "current labor dispute" as the reason for the surcharge. rise to the surcharge no longer exist," Johnson, Vancouver port man- ager, in a statement released through his office here. national harbors board busi- ness, Goes Into Effect VANCOUVER (CP) -- A 15- per-cent surcharge imposed by Japanese ship owners on car- goes destined for Vancouver from Japan was to go into ef- fect today amid a storm of protest from angry West Coast shipping officials. The surcharge was an- nounced Thursday in a_tele- gram from the Japanese Trans- Pacific Freight Conference to the Vancouver Merchants' Ex- change. The telegram cited a "The conditions which gave said Capt. B. D. L. Capt. Johnson, in Ottawa on said in an interview at In B.C. Today firm here, said that if the ship- ping. conference sticks to its guns, the surcharge would have a serious impact on the B.C. economy. He said he believes the con- ference is also considering im- Position of a surcharge on goods moving the other way-- from B.C. to Japan. This, said Mr. Sakaurachi, would seriously hurt B.C. ex- ports of iron, copper and nickel concentrates, grain, pulp and paper. Japan, he said, is the port of Vancouver's second-big- gest customer after the U.S, the deposit insurance bill after concluding special hearings into charges by James Coyne, presi- dent of the Bank of Western Canada, against the Toronto- based companies which own 51 per cent of the bank's shares. Mr. Coyne said British Inter- national Finance (Canada) Ltd. and associated companies under financier Sinclair Stevens have betrayed their undertakings to Parliament by borrow from the bank and by attempting to offering its shares to a U.S. bank. After jthree days of hearings, the committee had given Mr. Coyne no indication that it sup- ers of the 11-year-old AFL-CIO continued their war of words, ing off to occasional flurries by it was learned today that Pres- ident I. W. Abel of the United Steelworkers is trying to get them to talk peace. Some labor leaders fear the rapidly escalating fight between HEAT WITH OIL DIXON'S MR. ROY YEO Oshawe Cable TV Ltd. are Reuther and Meany might split labor's united front. Reuther tore into the leader- ship of the federation Thurs- day in a lengthy letter to locals of the United Auto Workers | Union. Descriptions today of pleased to announce the appoint- ment of Mr. Roy Yeo os @ repres- entative of their firm. Mr. Yeo, @ lifelong resident of Oshawa, Is well known in this rea having been in the Real Estate business for the OIL 313 ALBERT ST. 24-HOUR . SERVICE 723-4663 the reply that Meany is pre- paring ranged from "sizzling" to "icy cold." Meany's statement will be made at the AFL-CIO executive SERVING OSHAWA OVER 50 YEARS past 5 yeors. For information regarding Cable TV, call Mr. Yeo ot 723-5278. ported his case more than that|council meeting starting Feb. of Mr, Stevens. And Finance Minister Sharp, closing with the government's view of the matter, suggested 20 in Miami Beach. TRUCE UNLIKELY Reuther's charge that Meany violates the AFL-CIO constitu- tion at his pleasure, and Meany's forthcoming rebuttal, | indicate little chance of a truce. the two sides should resolve their "internal dispute" between themselves. Coyne"s Stay As President Lies In Directors' Hands Most high officials in other labor unions, while refusing to be quoted by name or organi- zation, said Reuther appears to have already made up his mind to pull his 1,400,000 auto work- ers out of the 13,500,000-mem- 15- on Overland Attempt Planned For Pole to 20-day journey from Eureka on Ellesmere Island, some 800 miles from the pole. They will travel weight motorized toboggans, fitted with special linings that will float if they break through the ice. A plane, operated by Welland Phipps, Atlas Aviation in Resolute, N.W.T., will keep fadio contact and will pick them up when they reach the pole. TEST CLOTHING light- president of The expedition will conduct medical tests and hydrographic and weather studies and assess equipment, foods and clothing materials. A color film record will be kept for possible presen- tation as a television feature. Ralph Plaistad, 38, of Minne- Dr, sota is the leader of the expedi- tion. Cpl. John Austad, 35, an RCAF eurvival expert based at Namao, Alta., will be weather and ice adviser and backup radio operator. Arthur <Aufderheide of Duluth, Minn., will study the effect of cold on cholesterol. The others are Donald Powellek, an the capital he has sent a "strong note of protest" to the Japanese freight conference. Officials believe the Japa- nese based their decision to impose a surcharge on a water- front dispute last November and December between long- shoremen and the B.C. Mari- time Employers' Association that tied up West Coast ship- ping for 28 days. ORANGE SHIPMENTS HURT Christmas season mandarin orange shipments to Vancou- ver and movement of other Japanese-made goods through British Columbia ports was se- riously affected. Japanese ship owners estimated their losses at $100,000 a day during the dispute. However, the dispute was re- solved in early December and port officials announced two weeks ago that the big back- log of ships had been cleared. Port activities, they said, had returned to normal. Capt. Johnson said in his message to Japan the conges- tion has been cleared and that at present, there are no dis- putes or strikes threatening shipping along the B.C. coast. Vancouver importers of Japa- nese goods are worried that the extra 15 per cent on the cost of shipping goods from Japan will seriously impair their Canadian operations. Takeshi Sakaurachi, an offi- cial of Mitsui and Co. Ltd. a major Japanese export-import OTTAWA (CP) -- James Coyne's future as president of the Bank of Western Canada lies in the autonomous hands of the bank's directors, Sinclair Stevens said Thursday. But the Toronto financier told reporters to 'draw your own conclusions" as to whether a Coyne presidency remains com- patible with the future of a bank that lies under the control of the Toronto companies Mr. Coyne has publicly attacked. Mr. Stevens, who bore the brunt of the Coyne charges at special hearings of the Com- mons finance committee, de- scribed himself as "pleased"' and "satisfied" at their conclu- sion Thursday, He said Mr. Coyne's position is a matter for the bank's board to consider, Its next meeting is Feb. 17 in Winnipeg. The bank president did not speak to reporters at the end of the sitting. He had taken a seat at the back of the committee room when he left the witness chair, and then slipped quietly out to catch a plane back to Winnipeg. Mr. Coyne has claimed sub- stantial support among the 11 directors from Western Canada. The other six are all associated with British International Fi- nance (Canada) Ltd., and a number of subsidiaries. Mr. Stevens is president of BIF and chairman of the bank. "Contrary to the impression electronics engineer; radar and radio operator Blair Woolsey, navigator Gerald Pitzil, me- chanic Walter Pederson and cameraman Robert Clemens. Chain saws and explosives will be among the modern equipment pulled by the expedi- tion's toboggans on sledges weighing up to 500 pounds apiece. Since Peary's 1909 expedition, AJAX CENTENNI The Historical Society of Ajax in conjunction with the ere in the process of compiling « Pictorial History of Ajax from the eorly days up to the proent time, and AL COMMITTEE would apprece either loani the Historical Mr. Coyne has tried to create, the Bank of Western Canada is an autonomous bank," the 40- year-old Mr. Stevens said. "It has its own board, there go and it's a shame, b it will hurt all of us," spokesman for one of the larger unions. ber federation. NEIGHBORS CRIED YESTERDAY 1563 Simcoe Street, North Oshawa and 1105 Athol Street, South Whitby listed and sold last weekend by Douglas Cormichael to out of town buyers, We honestly didn't have time to put "FOR SALE" signs up. Our apologies to the neighbors, Toronto's population explosion ond new rapid transit system hos created the area homes. For quick service Toronto's largest realtors, 725-4841. biggest demand for Oshawa call H. Keith, Ltd., one of "J think he (Reuther) will said a are 17 members on that board, and I think the decision on the future of Mr. Coyne is up to that board. We're willing to abide by the decision of that board," He described Mr. Coyne's public statement of charges against the BIF group last Fri- day as "very unfortunate' and 'needlessly. rash." He hoped the committee hearings had established that the statement should not have been made. Mr. Coyne had charged that the group was trying to get a loan from the bank contrary to a government order. But, ac- cording to Mr. Stevens' version, the intention was only to get clarification from the finance minister of terms under which certain transactions between the bank and the group might be allowed. good names to remember If you have a Commercial Property To Sell or. Lease REG AKER, pres. BILL McFEETERS, vice-pres. SCHOFIELD-AKER "%) AUTO Helpful \ pyicient ) SERVICE TUNE-UP NOW FOR TOP PERFORMANCE When LANDER-STARK are your heating suppliers advisers and service con- tractors, you know you enjoy the acme of heatingcom- ~< fort. ' 3581 for prompt attention. Call 725- -- i) : NOW ! BETTE CAR SERVICE For Sefe Sure Driving e@ BRAKE @ ond 723-2265 Over 33 years in Business New Home Recipe Reducing Plan It's simple how quickly one may lose pounds of unsightly fat right in your own home. Make this home recipe yourself. It's ae , no trouble at all and costs little. 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PHONE 728-1633 ALUMINUM OSHAWA FREE PARKING ' Rober John, healthy outdoor on Sair 1885 ani have a Fo In OTTAW position | Commons but were minority | a test of budget de Financ mini - bu mainly as position a went 87 1 ment. Meanwh embodyin; tation poli sent in th years of Transpo held a chi celebrate | way execl lation as wards gre The bill to wipe ou eight year the railw: abandon 1 scrap pas doesn't p guards ar excessive ing servic public inte FALL SH In the ( tion parti voting tog rare time: ment. Hov produced many MF pendent n lard (Sher 75th oppos So 87 | defeated 3 Conservati crats, four cial Credit Standing House are servatives istes 8, S pendents 3 The vote ment by (PC--Pertl barred the posed Dec The ame "Tra In Sc OTTAWA shown "tt bulk drug which are dosage fo plants, th prices ing Thursday. All the 3 official Cai for identit tency. But ' to identify determine any toxic e The infor ted to the Ross Chap! eral of th drug direc mark, assis eral, and D the 'directo cal chemist Dr. Levi t