Oshawa Times (1958-), 14 Mar 1967, p. 2

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2 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Tuesdey, March 14, 1967 A GLANCE AROUND THE GLOBE Economics Must Be Clear To Canadians Says Greene TORONTO (CP) -- The worl of finance and economics must "clean and under- so Canadians can take pride in their system as the best one, federal Agricul- be made standable"' ture Minister J. J. Greene sai Monday. : In a speech to the Canadia Club, he asked if it is possible for Canadians to give their con- fidence and loyalty to the fin- ancial structure on which th country's economic system 1 founded. The agriculture ministe d id n e s Tr Peso Value Down since 1964 in an attempt to in mists say is an ailing economy devaluations in Argentina. BUENOS AIRES (Reuters)-- Argentina de valued its peso Monday night for the ninth time ject new life into what econo- Economics * Minister Adalbert Krieger Vasena, in a television and radio broadcast, said the government's decision assured that there would be no further He spoke shortly after the AUTO PACT Continued from Page 1 Shipments of parts and acces sories jave jumped 29 per cent in value to $775.4 million in the first 11 months of com- | pared to the similar 1964 period. This expansion has created ling | force. EXPORTS CLIMB -jlion in 1964 to an estimated $778 million in 1966. Imports have -|almost doubled from $716.6 mil- lion in 1964 to an _ estimated $1,347 million in 1966. Welland Canal Lock Fee Increase To Be Introduced By BEN WARD { nd Canada wanted both the toll OTTAWA (CP) -- A Wellandjincrease and the lockage fee, |about 20,000 new jobs, amount-|Canal lockage fee, starting at|but the toll proposal required to roughly a 25 per cent in-|$160 a trip and rising to $800 by|U.S. agreement. During public | crease in the industry's work/1971, will be introduced thisjhearings last year there was season, but the United States|sharp criticism of the proposals |has successfully blocked a pro-|by shipping lines, big industries, : |posed 10-per-cent boost in tolls}western ™ eto OP jgndthagr ie Psy on the international section of|lake ports. sa Ss le U.S. St. Lawrence Seaway. | have climbed from $99.3 mil-|" get Sitar eweit dues tor the| DMA PROTESTS lakes shipping industry was an- nounced in the Commons Mon- tested Monday by the Dominion day by Transport Minister Picg- Marine Association, | ersgill after almost a year of|Great Lakes D 0} negotiations with Washington. 'sociation. cargoes. farmers and major| Stuart Armour of Toronto, president of the development The new Welland fee was pro- the piitent As- This response to the trade pact has narrowed Canada's automotive trade deficit with the U.S. from a high of $727 million in 1965 to an estimated Interim Postage Changes government declared Argentina $569 million in 1966, below the urged tougher U.S.-style securi- ties and anti-monopoly controls to reshape Canada's economic system into 'a true people's capitalism." "We cannot profess to be a free enterprise system if in fact we are not," he said. "IT suggest it is the. function for all of us, including the gov- ernment, to make the game clean and understandable so that the system is something that all our people can take pride in as being the best of all systems." Housing Approval TORONTO (CP) -- Provincial | JOSEPH GREENE . « . Agriculture Minister Pipe Line 'i i" _jordered to prepare plans ay waned eee re its northern natural gas val of six Ontario Housing e in case its proposal for a pole. erolene Metropolitan | counters further delay Toronto representing an invest-|~ oe Beas ment of more than $19,000,000.| Energy Minister Pepin Mr. MacNaughton said five of|the Commons Monday the step the developments will add 1,152|i8 being taken to make certain dwelling units to OHC holdings.|neW The sixth is a land development and Quebec are ready by next facilities to supply Ontario} the U.S. dollar. 'Commies Arrested bian government nearly 200 other leftists follow: jing an upsurge in guerrilla ac- tivities, jthe national Security Counci j}were killed. new line through the U.S, en-|Gilberto Vieira, secretary - gen- jeral of ,the Communist party, told and seven members of the par- ty's central committee. a free currency market and an- nounced the devaluation of the peso by 40 per cent to 350 to! has arrested 15 Communist party leaders and 1964 level of $617.3 million. the performance to the money and has fallen the Explains Walker: jas we did in the base year, )1965. But it is difficult to get a | President Carlos Lleras' gov-|bigger share of something that ernment also placed the armedjis getting smaller -- and the forces on a state of alert and total North American market is The automakers agree that date has been phenomenal; after all, they were the ones who spent installed the letters 'will be 'cents from 35 cents. the acknowledgement of receipt 1964. That wasn't a problem in|cards will be raised by five \cents to the new rate levels of |15 cents and 25 cents. | The changes due Oct. 1: For domestic parcel post, Effective June, Oct. 1, '67 OTTAWA (CP)-- Interim ad- justments to a number of post- i age rates will go into effect BOGOTA (AP) -- The Colom. | Capacity to'increase production. | June 1 and Oct. 1, 1967, the post But they point out, that this|o¢fice department announced performance was achieved on a|Monday. The changes will not/available for indemnity up to rising market which permitted| affect first class mail. the Canadian automakers to in-| The changes due June 1: crease their production by ex-| The arrests were ordered by/Porting more autos to the U.S. /delivery 1} And while the trade pact did/creased to 40 cents from 25/$50 and 30 cents for coverage after guerrillas blew up a train |allow for "off" years, says Karl|cents, and for parcels to 50 from $50 to $100. last week near the oil fields in|Scott, the market OTTAWA (CP) -- Trans-Can-|the department of Santander |far more than anticipated, pre- ada Pipe Lines Ltd. has been|300 miles north of Bogota. Seven|cipitating to|Policemen and three civilians | woes. Domestic rates for special | cents for a $10 coverage, 20 in-|cents for coverage from $10 to The number of registration | charge will cover all aspects of automakers' | fee Jevels will be reduced to two from four. The fee will be 50 "The trade/cents for $50 indemnity and 70 Among those arrested were|pact says we've got to produce|cents for indemnity from $50 to|amount to be collected is less jcars in the same ratio to sales|si99, Rates for both forms of|than scheme involving provision 0 f| winter. 700 rental units for families and| Trans - Canada is facing de- 300 units for senior citizens. The minister said the senior citizens' units will be developed by Metropolitan Toronto Hous- ing Co. Ltd., and the family units "by private enterprise in addition to OHC on a geared-|Man., to Sarnia, Ont., to-income basis."' termined opposition from coal and utilities interests in an ap- plication now before the U.S. Federal Power Commission. ja 39-inch He said OHC has built, Pur-|tario and southern Quebec. chased or begun planning on a total of 7,822 dwelling units in Metro Toronto. Of these, 2,901 had already been built or pur- chased and 1,255 were under, construction. Separatism OTTAWA (CP) -- Separatism is a dying issue Resources Minister Pepin told a conference Monday. | Speaking to the Ontario Assoc- | iation of Real Estate Boards, he said separatists are making | | no more progress in Quebec be-| in Quebec,| To prevent a possible gas Trans-Canada to have the al- ternative proposal ready to go before the national energy board by early summer, Mr.) |Pepin said. | Moonlighting CHATHAM, Ont. (CP) -- The thinking behind union opposition to moonlighting was stated Mon- day by Harvey Barber, inter-| jcancelled all leaves to cope with jthe threat of more violence by| down." \there will be a minimum coun- Because so much of their eX: try-wide fee of 15 cents for | guerrillas. |panded_ production oriented, the is export- U.S. market is the }parcels up to eight ounces in |weight and 30 cents for parcels Bargaining Agent automakers' main concern. The| weighing from eight ounces to TORONTO (CP) -- A new | a ; Trans-Canada wants to build/group, the Ontario Technical | line from Emerson, |Teachers' Association, is trying | PRODUCTION DOWN through|to set itself up as bargaining) OV ; the U.S. to supply southern On-/agent for teachers in Ontario|Mobile production in Kanada community colleges, it |learned Monday night. was shortage in case the proposal is} The group is in competition |!evels, and total car and truck turned down or further delayed, |with the Civil Service Associa-|Production is down 11.11 per the government has asked|tion, which claims it should be|cent. the bargaining agents for the teachers, A CSA spokesman said the teachers are Crown employees|*' : 3 because the colleges of applied| tive vice-president and mana- arts and technology were cre-|8°! of the Automotive Parts ated by an order-in-council. The technical teachers' asso- ciation, which represents 515 of 610 teachers at four vocational) centres and three trades insti- tutes, says the community col- se of Canada's acceptance of national representative for the|leges have been established un- cause of Cana \United Auto Workers in Chat-|der separate boards and their "the French fact." "We have been separated from Quebec since 1760. Only now are we getting out of sep- aration." He said a federal-provincial conference to examine the con- stitution, as suggested by On- tario's Premier Robarts is un- necessary. Florida Frolick FORT LAUDERDALE, Fila. (AP)--College students have be- gun their annual Easter inva- sion of Florida's beaches. The first contingent, 3,000 strong, got a head start when a strike closed Ohio University two weeks early. Now they're lolling on the sunlit sands at Fort Lauderdale, where 30,000 frolicking collegiants are ex- pected on Easter weekend March 25-26. Dances, singalongs and other entertainments are planned in hopes of cutting down the drink- ing and rowdyism which flared into riots at Fort Lauderdale in Apostle To Jail ST. JOVITE, Que. (CP) The acting head of the Apostles of Infinite Love, Rev. Jean Marie de la Sacre Coeur, was taken into police custody Mon- day in an apparent move to make him divulge the where- abouts of some 45 children be- ing hidden by the breakaway Roman Catholic sect. The provincial police raiding party which descended on the sect's monastery in this com- munity 80 miles north of Mont- real was armed with arrest warrants for 14 persons. Social welfare court in St. Jerome, Que., has awarded cus- tody of the 45 children to social welfare officials but, so far, has not been able to enforce its order. Judge Leandre Prevost, in a test case, ruled that the monas- tery was an unfit place for children to live. \ham, teachers should be represented Commenting on a case where|by @ professional teachers', a worker was dismissed by On-|8roup, not the CSA. tario Stee] Products Co. Ltd. be- Barber said: lat two jobs and do justice to either of them. "The man. holding down two jobs is denying someone else a job. We want our people to have more leisure. That's why we're fighting for a shorter work week." The agreement between the UAW and Ontario Steel Prod- ucts, signed in 1962, says: "The employment of any employee may be terminated immediately upon it being established that such employee is or had been engaged in other gainful em- ployment while working for the company... ." Seals Skinned Alive SAINT JOHN, N.B. (CP)--Dr. Forbes MacLeod, managing di- rector of the Saint John Society for the Prevention of Cruelty, said today he is offering $1,000 for proof that seals are skinned alive in the annual East Coast seal hunt. Dr. MacLeod, who spent three days observing the hunt last week in the Gulf of St. Law- would offer the money if Grain Davies, executive secretary of the New Brunswick SPC, would find proof of cruelty. He called on Mr. Davies, who said last week that seals are definitely being skinned alive, \to offer "satisfactory scientific proof that a seal pup can be skinned alive and be still living at the end of the operation." Any evidence would be con- sidered by a three - man board of the New Brunswick Veterin- ary Medical Association, of which Dr. MacLeod is a mem- ber. HERE and THERE MILITARY TATTOO - A slide presentation of the mi- litary tattoo, to be presented April 2 and 3 at the Oshawa Civ- ic Auditorium, was enjoyed by members of the Oshawa Rotary Club at their Monday meeting. The tattov, covering 300 years' of Canada's military history, is the centennial project of the Ca- madian armed forces. INTERNATIONAL DAY The Rotary Club of Oshawa will observe its International Service Day, April 3, when the club will entertain some 20 stu- dents attending Kingsway Coll- ege and Scarborough University. All the students, from outside North America, will be lunch- eon guests of the club and later tour the General Motors south NAME WRONG The name of a complaint in a court case Friday was incorrec- tly reported in Monday's paper as Donald Emery when it should have been Donald Imrie. Mr. Imrie filed a claim against a | "A guy can't work full-time cause he had another job, mr.!Newspaper Control' OTTAWA (CP) --Canada's newspapers are controlled by the financial system and "say what they are told" by the fi- nanciers, Creditiste Leader Ca- ouette charged in the Commons Monday. Mr. Caouette pointed to the press gallery during debate on the bill to amend the Bank of Canada Act. He recalled how packed it had been while the Commons was embroiled in such scandals as that over Gerda Munsinger's ac- quaintance with members of the former Conservative govern- ment. Only a handful of report. ers were present at this point. The question of control of a country's finances is of no im- portance to the press gallery, Mr. Caouette said. This was because newspapers were controlled by the financial system. The public mind was "being poisoned" by them. Dairy Farm | s . rence, said in an interview he Subsidies OTTAWA (CP)--Federal sub- sidies to dairy farmers on man- ufacturing milk or cream will be paid on the basis of indivi- dual quotas in the dairy year beginning April 1, the Canadian dairy commission announced Monday. It said each producer's quota will be "'related to" the amount of milk or cream on which he received federal subsidies in the current dairy year. There was no indication of the size of the subsidy or whether the new quotas would be larger or smaller than the amounts on which subsidies were paid in the year now ending. Each producer. should be reg- istered with the agricultural stabilization board by March 31 to have eligibility established, the commission said. But those who have received subsidy cheques for milk and cream already are registered. |group which benefits most from |Canadian market is not quite so weak, Over-all, however, 1967 auto- was down 17.6 per cent a 25, compared eb. to year ago "We in the |pretty well written off 1967, al-| jthough 1968 may be better,"| | says Donald S. Wood, execu- Manufacturers' Association, the the production commitments imposed on the. automakers. Although their proposals range from an outright gutting of the trade pact to merely one pound. Rates for parcels |weighing more than one pound will be charged according to jzone destination. SET NEW ZONES | There will be a reduction to \five from nine present rate ice and mail room procedures. The new zones will be the At- industry havellantic, made up of the four At-| retirement On-/Commons defence commit- lantic provinces; Quebec, Labor Deals Blow To LBJ | WASHINGTON (AP) -- Labor leaders have dealt what could be a death blow to President modifying it, the automakers support the idea of automotive free trade to a man. "T still say it would work -- if we force through the changes," says GM's Walker. "A great piece of legisla- tion," says American Motors' Brownridge. "I have sympathy for the rea- soning behind the trade agree- ment; if we spend more than we earn, we're going to go broke," says Chrysler's Todg- ham, "The fact is that everyone is |yelling about it on both sides of the boarder, says Karl Scott of Ford. 'With everyone being so displeased it must be pretty good."' But whether the auto pact can be repaired or whether it is a write-off depends on Indus- try Minister Drury, and he doesn't have too much room to manoeuvre. If he tried to de- tour around the market ob- stacle, he will run into opposi- tion from the auto parts in- dustry. "We would be definitely against any easing of commit- ments," says Donald Wood i'From a standpoint of cold |logic, the problems of the auto- }makers can only benefit the parts producers, since the threat of paying duty is likely to intensify demand for parts in Canada." However, if Drury leaves the situation as it is, he will run smack into union demands for wage parity -- something he says he does not want. But companies will -be forced grant wage parity if lower- wage Canadian plants are kept running while U.S. plants are closed. admit he has a problem. (First of 2 GUARANTY TRUST 32 KING ST. E. Open To Serve You Mon. - Thurs. $ te § to} First of all, however, he must Johnson's proposal to merge the| labor and commerce depart- ments, it was reported today. At a briefing last week ar- ranged by Johnson, AFL-CIO President George Meany and other leaders told two high ad- 'ministration officials they unani- mously oppose the merger, it was learned. While the AFL-CIO leaders took no formal vote on the merger proposal during the briefing by Labor Secretary W. Willard Wirtz and Budget Di- rector Charles Schultze, they left the impression "they would not support it" if Johnson sends the proposal to Congress, infor- mants said. Johnson first mentioned the merger in his State of the Un- ion speech in January. TURNED OPTIMISTIC The Cape of Good Hope at the southern tip of Africa was first called the Cape of Storms. zones to streamline wicket serv-|"@dian sailors. __|vatives have said they would Manitoba and Saskatchewan and the western, embracing Al- berta and British Columbia. Free parcel post insurance '$50 will be discontinued. The new insurance rates will be 10 A new single C.P.D. service a transaction including collec- tion, remittance and insurance. Fees will be 50 cents when the $10 and $1 when the |amount is between $10 and $100. For third class mail, ad- dressed printed matter will con- tinue to be three cents for the first two ounces, but subsequent ounces will be subject to higher rates. 'Loss Of Navy's | Blue Uniform OTTAWA (CP) -- Vice - Ad- |miral Herbert Rayner says loss of the navy's blue uniform |would be "'catastrophic" for Ca- Admiral Rayner, 58, chief of naval staff from 1960 until his in 1964, told the tee Monday that Canadian sail- ors will be a "laughing stock" if they have to go to Norfolk, Va., Cherbourg, France, or Portsmouth, England, in green uniforms. Green is most often mentioned as the color of the common uni- form to be worn by servicemen in Canada's unified defence force. A committee, studying the armed forces unification bill, questioned Admiral Rayner 34 hours after the Liberals with- drew, temporarily at least, a motion that the bill be sent back to the Commons for third and final reading no later than Fri- day. Today the committee is sched- uled to question the defence de- tario, the midwest, composed of P. R. Hurcomb of Ottawa, vessels using the canal. There was no justification for inflict- ing higher costs on Canadian group, called it "the rankest discrimination of all against Canadian ports on the Great Lakes." Mr. Pickersgill defended the lockage fee as a justified con- tribution by users to the $9,000,- 000 required for annual opera- tion and maintenance of the Welland, where eight locks carry ships over the Niagara escarpment between Lakes On- tario and Erie. A seaway official estimated that the fee would bring in rev- enue of about $1,500,000 this year. IMPACT 'NEGLIGIBLE' "The impact of these fees on transportation costs will be neg- ligible,' Mr. Pickersgill said. They would not affect either traffic growth on the Welland or the cost to Canadians of lake- shipped goods. He said 50 per cent of the land is of non-Canadian origin. In recent years Canadian tax- payers had spent $50,000,000 on Welland improvements and an- other $100,000,000 on a new pro- ject to bypass Welland and straighten the canal. The minister told a press con- ference that the American gov- ernment wasn't happy with the Welland fee, which will affect much of the U.S. lake traffic. But it was a Canadian canal and they had no say in the matter. There have been no charges on Welland users since 1962 when the Conservative govern- ment of the day removed tolls that had been introduced when the seaway opened in 1959. The Welland had previously been toll-free since its construction in 1932. TRAFFIC DOUBLES In the last full year of toll collections, 1961, revenue was about $1,400,000. Since then traf- fic has almost doubled and tolls would have raised about $3,- 000,000 on last year's record WEATHER FORECAST Mainly Cloudy With Rain DMA manager, said it will dis-| criminate against smaller lake) Colder Wed., Wet Snow cargo traffic through the Wel-| TORONTO (CP) -- Official/Hamilton .......... 28 35 forecasts issued at 5:30 a.m. to-/St. Catharines ..... 35 day. Toronto .. 35 Synopsis: The boundary be-|Peterboroug 32 /tween cold and very warm air| Kingston .. 35 is located just south of lakes|Trenton .. 35 Erie and Ontario. Colder air|Killaloe .. 30 has begun to move into North-| Muskoka ... 30 ern Ontario and this will likely|North Bay ... 20 find its way into southern On-jSudbury ....++++++« 10 20 jtario tonight or Wednesday. A|Earlton .....++...0 0 20 cloud cover is more persistent|Sault Ste. Marie... 15 30 over southern Ontario but some|Kapuskasing ..... -20 10 sunshine is likely in the area to-| White River . 15 15 ay. Moosonee .. -25 5 Toronto, Hamilton, London,|!i™mins ... "15 1S Windsor, Lake St. Clair, Lake Erie, Lake Huron, Lake On- tario, Niagara regions: Mainly cloudy, Chance of some rain or . wet snow Wednesday. A little pipes Ontario Trust glace tonight and Wednesday. & Savings Corporation Sudbury, North Bay, Geor- gian Bay, Haliburton, Algoma RETIREMENT |regions: Variable cloudiness. A jlittle colder Wednesday, Winds! northeast 15. | Timagami, White River, west-| ern James Bay, Cochrane re-| gions: Mainly sunny today. Var-| iable cloudiness Wednesday. A} little colder tonight. Winds light. | Ottawa region: Cloudy with| Paviventn made Gatos Feb. chance of a few flurries this | ruory 28, 1967 are deduct- morning becomin g mainly | ible for 1966 Income Tax Py 1 sunny this afternoon. Wednes-| ease SAVINGS PLAN Saves Income Tex end provides Retirement Income Government Approved No loading fees or charges day cloudy with few sunny} Investment options -- Stocks batt : ; pedis -- |periods and little cooler. Light | cores <7 venoomee | winds. Official receipt for Tax pur- poses, 'CENTRAL ONTARIO TRUST Forecast Temperatures Lew tonight, high Wednesday Windsor 33 age lO 8 HT & SAVINGS CORPORATION London 35 19 Simcoe Street North Kitchener . 35 723-5221 Mount Forest $2. | 23 King Street West, Wingham ......... 32 | 623-2527 PLEA FOR TEETH | BERLIN (AP)--A crisis in| East Germany is reported by a Dresden newspaper. The only toothpick maker in the whole country has died. An appeal is being made for a successor. OPEN FRIDAY NIGHTS end SATURDAYS Now you can hop the Pacific with BOAC cargo movement. The government now has en- gineers studying a plan for re- placement of the Welland by a new set of locks capable of han- dling vessels up to 1,200 feet in length, Present maximum is 730 feet. This project could run to $500,000,000, about $50,000,000 more than the entire interna- tional section of the seaway which was shared by the U.S. and Canada. The proposal for higher tolls on the Montreal-Lake Ontario international section was de- signed to help the waterway get out of debt. At the last re- port the seaway was $40,000,000 behind in its schedule of debt partment's chief lawyer, Judge Advocate-General W. J, Law- son. Air Marshal W. A. Curtis, former chief of air staff, is scheduled to testify Wednesday and Lt.-Gen. Guy Simonds, for- mer chief of army staff, Thurs- | day. No agreement has yet been |reached on the calling of further {witnesses although the Conser- like to-hear Air Chief Marshal Frank Miller, former chief of defence staff, and Vice-Admiral Kenneth Dyer, former chief of personnel. | CITY OF Reporting to the Deputy City T | work on own initiative. training in accounting. rising to o maximum of $6,750.00, ore available, Apply in writing enly, giving perti education and experience before TREASURY DEPARTMENT REQUIRES AN ACCOUNTANT (MALE) accounting data preparation of 4 varied nature with the ability te | Required to have full high school education, with additional formel A starting salary of $5,597.00 for @ 3614 hour week will be paid, OSHAWA teosurer with the responsibility ef and comprehensive welfare benefits nent details of ad marital stotus, March 23rd, 1967, to: The Personnel Officer, City Holl, Oshewe, CITY OF up to four other draftsmen. Prepore and ba responsible for oll ground services, culverts, btidges, sitions, etc or have equivalent experience. Apply in writing only stating age, 23rd, 1967, to: PUBLIC WORKS DEPARTMENT DESIGN DIVISION | Requires a DRAFTING SUPERVISOR SALARY RANGE -- $6,760.00 to $8,058.00 (36% Hour Week) Under the direction of the Chief Draftsman, to supervise a.team of Design Division. for municipal projects such as Must be registered os o Senior Technician with the A, 0. C. E. T. T, fications, and other pertinent information before 5:00 P.M., March The Personnel Officer, ity c , Oshewa, Ontario. OSHAWA types of plans produced by the @ and below municipal buildings, land acqui+ morital stotus experience, qualle Friday 9 to 9 Saturday & te { company for payment of back wages. PAST PRESIDENTS Members of the Rotary Club of Oshawa, next Monday, will mark their Past Presidents' Day. Judge J. C. Anderson, of Belleville, a former Oshawa} mayor, will be the speaker. EASTER SEALS | The Easter #Seal Campaign, sponsored by the Rotary Club/ of Oshawa, has attained 47 per | cent of its $18,000 objective. The club was told. Monday that the} | | | plant. In the evening they will be guests at the homes of Osh- awa Rotarians. campaign is slightly behind the} same period of last year's ~ Peal, What does a great taste look like? It looks like this... Nec are your heat advisers and tractors, you fort When LANDER-STARK enjoy the acme * of heating com- 3581 for prompt attention. ing suppliers service con- | know you Call 725- repayment. mes Sttting April 1, BOAC has brand new hop... we can fly you right across the Pacific, all the way to Australia. At the same time we're introducing new low fares--from only $817* return. That's $274* less than the current lowest South Pacific fare. We'll jet you direct from New York or San Francisco to Sydney. And, if you wish, you can stop over in Honolulu, Fiji and New Zealand at no extra fare, On our flights Down Under you'll find all the famous BOAC features . . . gourmet foods, vintage wines, Magnificent Rolls-Royce 707 jets. And a new luxurious economy class seat with loads of legroom. Sound too good to miss? Hop along to your BOAC travel agent and he'll give you all the details. *14/28 day economy excursion from Canadian and U.S. west coast to Sydney. Subject to government approval. (For exchanges = Just touch the buttons! musical impulses speed If you want to be among The phone of the future -- the magnificent new TOUCHGJTON E telephone number with amazing new speed, ease and accuracy. Electronic on its way -- give you the biggest change in phoning since the dial! Order the phone of your choice in the colour you like -- there A Bell Canada NOW AVAILABLE starting with 576, 723*, 725* 728*) Tap-a- is no colour charge. Touch-Tone service costs only $1.75 extra a line per month after the regular low installation charge, no matter how many phones in your home. Special phones--such as Princess -- costs more with Touch-Tone than with regular dial service. your call the first with the phone of the future, order soon! *In these exchanges, Touch-Tone Service will require the allocation of @ new tele- phone number, y TO Board ommend civic si police s for one decide t few wee The T if counc with pl structing Russel Beaufort ceed as haps a | is based depresse but thes tempora an en (Wvatcnnaensnengat OTTAV British C risdiction off the | Monday | general's Frank onto, arg Oni 196 OTTAWV 1967-68 s $75,603,76 Ontario i $21,705,00 $29,842,00! operation cial proje The ov $75,603,76! $59,589,10 federal p a year a cal year the 1966 was for | year fig creased | propriatic The lis costing | dollars: improven Burling repair $150,000. Chelms' $75,000. Cobour; and impr Cochras addition 000. Durhan $65,000. Fenelor ing $70,0( Ganano Fac AACHE (AP)--Cr announce makers tranquilli: the birth formed c tries incl More 1 the world effect of women, | entists of thal phat accused bodily i manslaug Local _ dence c proved a the drug formed b expc Four Are excl DIANA | dotion--/ (250 _yare $6.00 Also inqu Ph

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