Bhe Oshawa Zines 86 King St. E., Oshawa, Ontario Published by Canadian Newspapers Company Limited T. L. Wilson, Publisher E. C. Prince, Associate Publisher OSHAWA, ONTARIO, MONDAY, APRIL 24, 1967 Results Of Retraining True Gauge It may not always considered prudent to look a gift horse in the mouth. However, when rumors of a provincial election are rife it be- comes a necesary risk to do so. In this case the gift horse is the On- tario Manpower Retraining Program in Oshawa. Considerable political mileage was made at Queen's Park with it last week. The minister of education was exceptionally well prepared to reply to a question put by the Osh- awa member regarding provision of expanded facilities for the program. Education Minister Davis is quoted as saying the program in Oshawa has been "one of continuous and rapid expansion during the past year". The statistics show 800 are now being retrained where only 150 were being retrained Jast year. But surely the pertinent point for the politicians to make lies in the results of retraining. Are people be- ing placed in jobs through the pro- gram? Are they being guided along lines in which they can find work? Once retrained, are there further roadblocks to hurdle -- such as ap- prenticeship regulations -- before they can get work? Retraining cannot be an end in Of Worth itself if it is to be a real benefit to the individual and the society to which he belongs. A reason given by Mr. Davis for the expansion of the program is bound to raise considerable doubt as to the educational incentive of the program. He said perhaps the most important reason (for the ex- pansion) is "the increased allow- ances which were put into effect last fall". It has been said these have been so attractive that there have been instances of people quit- ting their jobs because -they could make a better living "retraining." There are certainly times when society must subside those -unable to provide for their own livelihood. We have considerable welfare legis- lation to cover such situations. Cer- tainly it should not be done under the guise of an education program. Retraining can have value. How- ever the success can only be assessed on the basis of the future employ- ment of the graduates. Enrolment figures by themselves can mean only that it is a popular program. Perhaps, if an election is not called in the meantime, the Oshawa mem- ber could ask Mr. Davis a question or two at Queen's Park on this vital aspect of retraining. Signs Of Decadence ? There's a move afoot in the Soviet Union to put the Russian woman on a pedestal. And, by so doing, to improve the image the West has of her as a factory hand, a ditch digger or a railroader. A weekly paper, the Literary Gazette, is advising women to pay more attention to their looks and charm. What is needed, it is said, is a cult of women's charm. She Oshawa ines 86 King St. E., Oshawa, Ontarie T. L, WILSON, Publisher @ C. PRINCE, General Monager ye C. J. MeCONECHY, Editor SUBSCRIPTION RATES The Oshawa Times combining The Oshawa Times lished 1871) and the itby Gazette ond icle (established 1863) is published daily ys end Statutary holidays excepted). Cc Publish- o Daily ers Association, The Canadian Press. Audit Bureau .» The Canadian Press is exclusively 'entitled to the use of republication of all news patched in the pa credited to It or to The Associated Press or Reuters, and also the local fhews published therein. Ali rights of special des- potches are also reserved, 86 King St. E., Oshawa, Ontario National Advertising Offices: Thomson Bulldi 425 University Avenue, Toronto, Ontario; 64! Cathcart Street Montreal, P.Q. Delivered by carriers m Oshawa, Whitby, Ajax, Pickering, Bowmanville, Brooklin, Port Perry, Prince Albert, Maple Grove, Hampton, Frenchman's Bay, Alverpoo!, Taunton, tyrone, Dunbarton, Enniskillen, Orono, Leskard, Broughom, Burketon, Claremont, Manchester Pontypool, and Newcastle not over 3 Tg week, By moil in Province of Ontario Dutsl eorrler delivery area, $15.00 per yeer. 'Other pr and © Countries, $18.00 per yeor, U.S.A, and foreign $27.00 pe yeor, Of course, the Western idea of Soviet women is no doubt distorted. Not all of them are 150-lb, mus- cular, factory workers. Many do devote themselves to being as com- pletely feminine as possible and many, from pictures we have seen, have obviously succeeded. Still, the Literary Gazette is not satisfied and feels they could do better. Even those in the academic and technical professions. The Soviet Government is appar- ently right behind the drive to put women on a pedestal. It has re- cently increased its purchases from the West of high-quality apparel from important fashion centres. Soviet buyers have just bought 80,- 000 pairs of fashionable women's shoes in Britain. Two more orders for fashion shoes have also gone to the British Shoe Corporation. One is worth $500,000 and involves purchase of 100,000 shoes and the second is for twice that amount. In comment, The Guelph Mercury says, if capitalistic decadence is as much a misery as the Communists have always said it is, these signs of decadence ought to comfort the. West. Misery loves company, they say. OTTAWA REPORT Postman Cometh With Exciting Tips By PATRICK NICHOLSON OTTAWA -- A_ columnist's mailbag, I have always found, is forever interesting, some- times exciting, often helpful with tips or representative opin- fons, and occasionally surpris- g. Mr. Kelvin Gordon Mackenzie of Kamloops, B.C., wrote me a long letter which hit all four. He spoke well of the resigned Social Credit leader, Robert Thompson; he wisely suggested that Paul Martin should be drafted to the Liberal leadershi will also release hospital beds and lessen the pension pay- ments. This is not an honorable course, he says. I wonder if that writer--who asks me to withhold his name--has sought relief from his suffering by © communicating with David Fin- gard, of the Resperin Inhalation Hospital in Toronto? I have heard Dr. P. B. Rynard MP speak highly of the Fingard treatment, which has achieved remarkable benefits for suffer- ers from emphysema, asthma and iated miseries. as an interim caretaker. Sur- prise No. 1, he warned against surprise if a federal Liberal leader should emerge from Saskatchewan. This must refer to the greatest Liberal head-of- government in Canada today-- Ross Thatcher, who was the first of the miscellaneous rene- gades quitting the socialist party to join the newly left- swung Liberals. More recent converts have been the three unwise virgins from Quebec, Jean Marchand, Pierre Elliott Trudeau and Gerard Pelletier, the first two of whom have been embraced into' the innermost bosom of the federal cabinet with supersonic speed. It is whimsical that Thatcher should find himself in the same boat, for he is the furthest right and the most economically right thinking Liberal leader today. Then Mr. Mackenzie turns to the Conservatives and predicts that neither George Hees nor Davie Fulton will get the leader- ship, although they are leading the pack in the preliminary can- ter. Fulton, says this writer from Fulton's home town of Kamloops, is not 'a unanimous choice here even in his own party." We are not surprised. A revealing letter from a vet- eran, who mentioned favorably his constituency's able former MP, J. Warner Murphy. He slashes the federal government on the grounds that its medical staff permit sick vets to smoke cigarettes, when they know that this will shorten their lives, but Questionable ' SUGGESTS O'QUEBEC From Oshawa comes a witty letter about the new national anthem, Mr. Pearson says that O Canada is not suitable; an appropriate name for the new mess, suggests this writer, would be O'Quebec jn the Irish Spelling; I repeat," O'Quebec-- "this has the most desired fa- vor and would compliment the taste of Mr. Pearson and his well chosen committee." Marjorie Shaw of Quebec City read my recent column about bilingual lyrics.for a new anthem, composed, by Tootsie Ouellet, whose mother is Sena- tor Quart. Was she, asks my correspondent, Josie Dinan, a beautiful brunette and accom- plished singer' with a most pleasing personality, who at- tended the Good Shepherd Con- vent in Quebec City many years ago? Yes, Josie Dinan now is Senator Quart; she tells me that she will write to Marjorie Shaw to renew that schoolday friendship. The favorite topic with writers is the unpopularity of our high, and increasing, taxes. John Turner has tarnished himself by suggesting that taxes should be raised, and government do even more of our spending and providing. This readers don't like. A reader says that the last four years will be known as the LBP era, The initials stand for Lester Bowles Pearson and La Belle Province. Value Seen For 'Death Strip' In Jungle By JOHN T. WHEELER DA NANG (AP) -- American and South Vietnamese bulldoz- ers are gouging out a 12-mile- long "'reath strip' in the jungle south of the demilitarized zone that appears to be of question- able military value and certain to cause a high toll of U.S. casualties. U.S. military spokesmen in Da Nang refuse to discuss the subject. Senior marines say the part of the strip above their positions near the demilitarized zons is being cleared only to give. their troops a better field of fire. Officials in Saigon have claimed the strip is designed to make any invasion of South Vietnam certain to cost the Communists high casualties. But competent. South Vietna- mese and American sources agree that the main routes of infiltration from North Vietnam are far west of the strip being cut from Con Thien east of the South China Sea. They also agree the strip will do nothing to halt heavy artil- lery, rocket and mortar attacks that have hammered American forward positions. Viet Cong and North Vietnamese gunners can fire effectively from well north-of the strip. A South Vietnamese regimen- tal commander said the entire length of the strip would be turned into a death zone with pillboxes, mine fields, barbed wire and watchtowers guarding it--like the Maginot line that failed to save France from the Germans in the Second World War. An American source said he understood that the South Viet- namese government is pressing to make the zone 1,000 yards wide--instead of 220 yards as now planned--and to extend it from the sea to the Laotian border, a distance of 45 miles. At the present rate of Ameri- can casualties a yard cleared, this could mean about 1,300 dead or wounded U.S. troops as a result of mine and mortar at- tacks. The first 2.6 miles cost 66 casualties and dangerous areas still are ahead. The strip idea appears to have been aimed originally at improving fields of fire but has become a much larger proposal being pushed by the Saigon government. Even if the strip was driven through the rugged mountains to the Laotian border, it would only force the North Vietna- mese infiltrators to setour through Laos. READING THE T-LEAVES FOREIGN AFFAIRS ANALYSIS Scientists Lead, But Where? By PHILIP DEANE Foreign Affairs Analyst America's Surveyor satellite sending pictures from the moon is a reminder that our world of tomorrow is being shaped in the laboratories and research estab- lishments of today, not only in terms of gadgetry but also as regards the direction towards which education will move, the avenues into which human in- genuity will be channeled. Only the scientists, possibly, fully un- derstand the implications of this trend but they seem to have foresworn--as a body--any dis- cussion of where they are lead- ing us; they say their business is pure research and they. shun the word "consequences." The United States spends more on research than the rest of the world; what the U.S. does di i for competitive rea- sons, what Russia will do and the rest of Europe too. Thus, it matters to all of us that in the last 10 years the U.S. spent a total of $111,000,000,000 on re- search and development and of this sum, under the impetus of the cold war, $100,000,000,000 or nine-tenths were spent on de- fence, space and nuclear re- search. Existing plans call for more of the same: For instance, there is a plan to place a 120-inch telescope in orbit at a cost of $500,000,000; the 2,000 high- energy physicists in the U.S. will each receive $5,000,000 in research funds during the next 20 years. The orbital telescope; will give us better pictures of heavenly bodies than heretofore; costly and gigantic billion volt accel- erators may enable high-energy physicists to discover more so- called fundamental particles. These are, no doubt, worthy ob- jectives but are they nine times more worthy than research ob- jectives of all other scientific and intellectual disciplines, than SELF - CONFIDENCE SHATTERED | EMOTIONS TAUT Racial Unrest Bubbles Again In Rochester By JULES LOH ROCHESTER, N.Y. (AP)--A screaming, bloody race riot shattered this city's self-confi- dence three years ago. Now ra- cial unrest is bubbling again in Rochester. And again Roches- ter is asking, why here? The fact is, Rochester's woe results from Rochester's weal. There has been a great influx of poor, mostly untrained Ne- groes lured by jobs and oppor- tunities offered in greater abun- dance in Rochester than in the United States as a whole. Emotions are taut. People are choosing sides. And the impas- sioned , Pn of one side pre dicts -- the other side says threatens -- another "'long, hot summer" unless Negro anger is assuaged. The dispute centres around a Negro organization called F.1LG.H.T. Part of the contro- versy is over just how many of Rochester's black poor F.1.G.H.T. actually represents, ".1G.H.T's current target is the city's largest and most in- fluential industry, Eastman Ko- dak Co, DEMANDS EMPLOYMENT F.1.G.H.T, demands that Ko- dak hire and train during an 18- month period 600 otherwise un- employable Negores whom F.1.G.H.T. would select. To agree, Kodak says, would mean surrendering to an outside or- ganization its right to hire whom it chooses. Nor does Ko- dak see how it could commit in advance to a specific number of new employees over a specific Kodak employs 40,000, roughly 13 per cent of the area's labor force and one out of three in industry. About 1,400 of the em- ployees are Negroes, some in managerial jobs. A year ago the company began a new pro- gram of hiring unqualified ap- plicants and training them. The Rochester struggle offers a study in microcosm of racial complexities facing large cities across the U.S. On the one hand, a militant "black power' organization that purports to speak for the restless and exploited poor. On the other, a major corporation that reflects "the establish- ment." Caught in the crossfire are the churches, which helped give birth to the city's new Negro militancy; traditional civil- rights groups, which find in Black Power an uneasy alli- ance; civil and social leaders, watching in anguish as a wedge of discord knife through the community. The Kodak-F.1.G.H.T. dispute began last fall. It simmered fit- fully for a time, then boiled an- grily just before Christmas ~ when the company repudiated an agreement with the Negro group signed by one of its as- sistant vice-presidents. Kodak felt justified. F.I.G.H.T. felt double-crossed. The Rochester turmoil, sym- bolized by the Kodak-F.1.G.H.T. controversy, has its roots in a decision made during the weeks following the 1964 riot Members of the board for ur- ban industry of the Rochester Area Council of Churches were convinced then that the funda- mental cause of the Negro's discontent was his lack of a po- tent organization to voice his hopes and needs. The ministers turned to Saul Alinsky and his Chicago-based Industrial Areas Foundation. Alinsky describes himself as a professional organizer, Kodak as a transplanted southern plan- tation, Rochester as a place where property and power are less fairly distributed than any city in the U.S. Critics claim his methods écar a community; supporters insist his approach offers the only real hope for the have-nots, "The haves," says Alinsky, "never do anything unless forced," SEEKS LEADERS His technique is to send staff professionals to the slums to seek out "natural leaders." These leaders, with his help, build their own "'people's organ- ization' whose aim is self-de- termination. To attain this goal they rely solely on the force of organized numerical strength, with no quarter asked or given. The organization that emerged from Alinsky's efforts was F.1.G.H.T. The initials stand for Freedom-Integration- God - Honor - Today, F.I.G.H.T. came to life in April, 1965 led by a dynamic negro, "a nat- ural leader." He is Rev. Franklin Delano Roosevelt Florence, 33, a min- ister of the Church of Christ. He prefers to be called Minis- ter Florence. About 35,000 Negroes live in Rochester, roughly one-tenth of the Metropolitan population. Nearly half of them have ar- rived during the last six years. Since 1960, Rochester's white employment rose 11 per cent and Negro employment 43 per cent. Nationally, the figures are eight and 10 per cent. But, dur- ing the same period, the City's Negro population soared 46 per cent. Today, of the city's 5,000 unemployed, 2,000 are negroes. KODAK DREW LINE Late in February, Kodak told F.1.G.H.T. in a letter that it wasn't interested in any more 'meetings about meetings" and that the jobless would be better served by 'employment refer- rals that result in jobs." F.1LG.H;T. called the letter a "slap in the face." In a telegram to Eilers, Minister Florence re- plied in part: "What happens in Rochester in the summer of '67\Ns at. the doorstep of Eastman Kodak Co." F.1.G.H.T.'s aims go beyond getting jobs. They include how jobs are obtained. "We don't want'any of Ko- dak's paternalism," says Min- ister Florence. 'The training program we've proposed is something we can do our- selves," Despite Kodak's dispute with F.1G.H.T., Rev. Lloyd A. Pe- terson,. executive secretary of the Presbytery of the Genessee Valley, announced in mid-April that 40 Rochester-area 'irms-- including: Kodak--had agreed to deal with a new organization, the health of the human mind and body? Is it better to orbit a telescope rather than clear a slum? This the scientists do not discuss; they often deny reading the dis- turbing reports about trouble in our neighborhoods. They talk to one another, and not even about their work, but about the good gadget-laden life that is their reward. Admittedly, the pres- sures are on them not to ques- TODAY IN HISTORY By THE CANADIAN PRESS April 24, 1967... Donald Alexander Smith embarked on his first diplo- matic mission for Canada 71 years ago today--in 1896-- on his appointment as high commissioner to Britain. He had come to Canada aged 18 in 1838 to work for the Hudson's Bay Company and, after 30 years in La- brador, rose to become its resident governor. He took part in the financing of the Canadian Pacific Railway and later became president of the Bank of Montreal. He was created Baron Strath- cona and Mount Royal in 1897. 1800--The U.S. Library of Congress was founded. 1908--A tornado killed 100 people in Wayne County, Miss. First World War Fifty years ago today--in 1917--British troops routed Turkish forces at Shatt-el- Adhaim, Mesopotamia; the French government mission arrived in the United States under ex - premier Viviani and Marshal Joffre. tion; questioners have their se- curity clearances lifted. But by not talking, the scientist allows others who are interested in re- search for strategic-political or monetary reasons, to assert that his explorations wil]l lead us all to the promised land. The sci- entist should help the rest of us determine whether such asser- tions are true; he deals, after all, with concepts incomprehen- sible to most of us, expressed in what amounts to a foreign tongue. Only he can really tell where he is leading and he will not tell. His silence is taken as affirm- ation for the claims made on his behalf--universities -that want money and see how easily sci- entists get government grants, may turn incdeasingly to tech- nology, exploring outwards rather than inwards. Our edu- cational system, thus, could con- tribute eventually to making us all silent, unquestioning, mas- ters of technique at the cost of our immortal souls. Rugged March By Militia Freed Besieged Citizens By BOB BOWMAN It was no April Fool's joke on April 1, 1885, when Indians rushed into Battleford, and 500 citizens had to seek shelter in the North West Mounted Police compound. They had to live there for nearly a month, al- though the area was only 200 yards square. The Indian attack was part of the Riel Rebellion on the Prairies. Troops were rushed from the east on the far- from - completed Canadian Pa- cific Railway. In order to get around Lake Superior, sections of track were laid on the ice. Troops often travelled in open freight cars in bitterly cold weather. Before the rebellion ended with Riel's surrender, more than 7,000 men had been called into service. As Riel had less than 500 Metis, and about 1,000 Indians, the fight they put up can be appreciated. HEARD BAND MUSIC Battleford's liberation came on April 24, and the besieged citizens could hardly believe their ears when they heard band music over the rolling hills. Lt.-Col. Otter had led a force of 500 militia and police from Swift Current. It had been a tough march in cold weather, but the Indians melted away when they heard the troops coming. In the meantime, fighting was breaking out in many isolated areas. Riel's able military leader, Gabriel Dumont, was trying to incite all the Indians on the Prairies to go on the warpath. If he had succeeded every white person might have been massacred, but fortunately missionaries including Father Lacombe and Rev. John Mc: Dougall persuaded the Black- foot and some other tribes not to take part. Tronically, Gabriel Dumont eventually died in bed, an hon- ored citizen, but Louis Riel was hanged. One of the North West Mounted Police who was active in the fighting against Riel was Inspector Francis Dickens, son of author Charles Dickens. Dur- ing the confusion Dickens lost a gold watch that had been given to him by his father, but it was recovered after the rebellion. A small picture of his mother and a lock of her hair still were in the case. OTHER APRIL 24 EVENTS: 1926--Champlain sailed from Dieppe on 11th voyage to Can- ada. 1629 -- Britain and France ended war by Treaty of Susa, but Kirke brothers captured Quebec in July. 1851--Prince Edward Island got responsible government: George Coles, premier. 1885 -- General Middleton fought rebels at Fish Creek. 1896 -- Lord Strathcona was ppointed high commissioner to Britain. 1951--Princess Patricia's Ca- nadian Light Infantry were in action in Korea and were later awarded a U.S. president's ci- tation. QUEEN'S PARK Key Factors Can Favor Vote In Fall By DON O'HEARN TORONTO--Will the election be held off until fall? You want to say, "Oh, no, not that!" Everybody here and through- out the province has been se prepared for a spring election that the thought of it being de- layed until fall is almost shock- ing, not to say disappointing. But the way things are going here, you suspect more and more that it may be fall before we mark ballots. Premier Robarts gave a slight indication of this when he dressed down opposition mem- bers in the house for elecion+ eering rather than paying at- tention to the business of the legislature. And he told the members the government had '@ full program of business to get through. In itself this wouldn't mean too much. It could be just a routine attack. But other factors tend to fa- vor a fall vote. Most pertinent of these is that it now appears that the timing could be much better for the government in the fall rather than this spring. One important reason for this is that it would give the gov- ernment a chance to do some- thing about municipal taxes. TAXES A BIG PROBLEM There is no question that local taxes are thé biggest political problem facing the government. Tax bills are going out at present and the whole province seems up in arms about them. Audiences of 500 people and more are turning up at protest meetings in relatively small municipalities. Some radical action is called for from the government here. But any such radical action will have to be based on the Smith report on taxation, And as of now it appears that Mr. Robarts doesn't even know when he will get this report. He will get it sometime this spring, however, and by the end of the summer could have defi- nite proposals ready. Again, 'a milk price increase is due in mid-May and will bring a big protest from house- wives. By fall it will have been absorbed, and the consumers will be used to it. By fall also the Shulman af- fair will be well out of the way, And of course delaying the election can mean the govern- ment will complete a full legis- lative program. Nobody is saying the vote won't be in June. But the chances would appear to be that it will more likely be in Oc- tober. YEARS AGO 15 YEARS AGO April 24, 1952 Mr. Stanley F. Everson, past president of the Oshawa Rotary Club has been named District Governor of Rotary. Oshawa's new $36,000 aerial ladder truck arrived yesterday afternoon, The local fire depart- ment has been testing it all day today. 30 YEARS AGO April 24, 1937 The first boat of the season, The SS Coalfax started to un- load her cargo of coal today. Today is Boy Scout Apple Day. All citizens are urged to get out and buy an apple te help the Boy Scouts. BIBLE *. . . Man looketh on the outward appearance, but the Lord looketh on the heart." 1 Samuel 16: 7 He reads our minds and knows our hearts and in the balance hangs our eternal souls. 'Ie thie heart right?" IT HAPPENED IN EUROPE TO H:AMERICA CANAD wis eS - . SEs 5 ee ARRIVING AT W866) WAS A JINXED SHIP» WHICH SHE UNDERWENT HEARTS CONTENT, NEWPRUNDLAND us ee E CLAIMED SAE WAS CURSED BECAUSE 2 RIVETERS HAD BEEN SEAL- CONSTRUCTION: ORIERS RIDICULED INT HER HULL DURING HER 17) THE [DEA THAT THIS COULD HAVE HAPPENED +» - 80/7 AMEN Tilt NUKE LEVIATHAN WAS BROMEN UP FOR SCRAP, 1 1BB9, WORKMEN DISCOVERED THO SKELETONS wre! RIVETERS TOOLS « St. An Plans. WHITBY (Staff) -- Men of St. Andrew's Presbyt Church, at a largely atte eongregational meeting Su afternoon, voted unanimous approve plans for a new cl duilding and church hall. It is hoped to start cons tion in July of the cong: tion's new church on Cock Street, adjacent to the Ma: Temple at an estimated cc $188,000. The new church replace the present buildin Byron Street South which erected 108 years ago. The congregation's _ ste: committee was' authorize proceed with plans for the church. Approval must be tained from the Presbyter East Toronto and the plans also be approved by the Ge Assembly's committee on z tecture. The congregation has apy mately $68,000 in a bui fund. The remaining funds be raised through a mort from the synod mortgage PLANS PRESENTED During the meeting W Morrison of the planning mittee, L. F. Campbell of worship committee, Mrs. V Andrew of the Christian e WHITBY, A MONDAY, APRIL 24 Co-op Credit Union bar night; ist. Whitby Scouts; | by Baptist Church Explo: St. Andrew's Presbyt Church Women Group 2; | by General Hospital Won Auxiliary; St. John's Ang Church Ruth WA: Vimy F LOBA 639; All Saints Ang Church 3rd Scouts and : Ladies Auxiliary. TUESDAY, APRIL 25 Al-Anon Family Group; | by Whittlers TOPS Club; | by Shrinking Violets T Club; Whitby Happy Ho Af'ternoon TOPS Club; | by Duplicate Bridge Club; Cross work room; Faith tist Church Pioneer Girls Mark's United Church We Unit 4; Whitby Baptist Won Society for Christian Se Pentecostal Church Won Missionary Council: Ajax V en's Institute; Pickering P Peelers TOPS lub. WEDNESDAY, APRIL 26 Whitby St. John Ambula Salvation Army Prayer : Bible Study; St. John Nu The Reeve, Council! The Township of We have audit the attached financi We hereby repe 1, The financial trat 2. The audit has be 3. The figancial stot for the yeor ende February 21, 1967, License No, 3046 General Fixed Due from School Ratep (for Debentures) Public and Continue Debentures Assumed by) Municipalities Cian ana 4 Investments .... eeee Cash om Hand . Accounts Receivable Sundry Province of Ontario . Dominion of Canada Other Municipelities Other Local Board and ¢ School Area Boord Taxes Receivable Toto] Assets ..seeee Balance et Jonuery I, Surplus er deficit inelud in Current Budget . Surplus for the Yeor