2 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Saturdey, June 10, 1967 A GLANCE AROUND THE GLOBE Severe Electrical Hail, Heavy Rain LONDON, Ont. (CP)--Severe electrical storms accompanied by heavy rain, half - inch hail stones and winds up to 70 miles an hour struck most of western Ontario Friday. Lightning struck three houses in London but there were no ig injuries or serious damage. However, Mrs. Savetta Ivan- cic, 63, of London, dropped dead while standing beneath a tree at the height of the storm. Doc- tors believed death was due to natural causes and possibility of a lightning strike was ruled out. A barn near Thorndale was hit by lightning and destroyed. The weather office said a fun- nel cloud a quarter-mile wide was five miles west of Woodstock at 3:30 p.m. a A "funnel cloud" is not called|® a tornado unless it touches the ground. This one dissipated moved off. Large trees were uprooted and provincial police said some secondary roads were tempo- rarily closed. Hydro was off at Wallaceburg for three hours. Ten minutes of heavy hail in the Bothwell area threatened os . gare backward Law Research OTTAWA (CP)--Mr. Court of Canada told the Can dian Association of Law Teac teach from past cases Hard hit were Clinton and Goderich. Power was off at Clinton for 96 minutes and for almost four hours in Goderich. Goderich stores stayed open English - Canadians, with the common have never produced an inte Air Force Chief Brandon, has been a quarters at Ramstein, Ge i by the defence department. A: Kitchener, who is retiring. Rehearsal! Halts ; advanced to be plying all power to the mai theatre building at the Stratfor Festival Friday afternoon. Th |production manager, said th been restored. 4 s ' Sade 'On Trial KITCHENER (CP) Th writings of the Marquis de Sad were criticized and praised b and honorary-colonel of the ANNUAL 'CONFERENCE The annual conference of the Association of Municipal Elec- trical Utilities, Eastern Ontario division, Accounting and Office Administration section, will be held next Thursday and Friday at the Carousel Inn, Oshawa. PARK OPENING wide range of activities has lanned to mark the open- North Oshawa Park to- . A parade will mark the park opening at noon. for sale. i terly's Lover. Aubrey Golden, g : <> Arab - Israeli war, Justice Emmett Hall of the Supreme ers Friday that law schools and courts rule by precedent. "'Our gaze is directed backwards." law background, using candles. nationally known legal philoso- . pher, he said. He urged la Power Fails schools to initiate legal re- search. KITCHENER (CP) -- Hail- OTTAWA (CP) -- Air Vice- Marshal Frank W. Ball, 60, of ppointed chief of staff for the 4th Allied Tactical Air Force with head- many, it was announced Friday vice - Marshal Ball, now dep- uty chief of operations at Cana- dian Forces Headquarters, takes up his new assignment July 18. He succeeds Air Vice- Marshal W. W. Bean, 54, of STRATFORD (CP) -- Light-| ning struck and damaged 150 feet of a 5,000-volt cable sup- DINNER strike forced the cancellation of of the Ontario Regi-|a technical and public dres: t hold a formal dinner|rehearsal of the play, The Gov- ernment Inspector. John Hayes, company would have been "in real trouble" if power had not witnesses Friday in magis- trate's court where M. F. Land- man, a bookstore owner, is on trial for having obscene matter Magistrate A. J. Barron heard five hours of testimony and ad- journed the case until Aug. 2, when he will have read two volumes of de Sade's writings and Fanny Hill and Lady Chat- a Toronto Storm, In London Bankruptcy Study OTTAWA (CP)--A committee studying revision of bankruptcy law will visit Europe soon to meet with similar groups work- ing for standard bankruptcy legislation in the Common Mar- ket area and in the Scandina- vian countries. Registrar-Gen- -jeral Turner announced Friday that the three-man committee will visit five countries to study legislation. "| Aid To War Victims, TORONTO (CP)--Ten cases of serum albumin, a blood frac- tion reduced from serum, has been shipped to the Middle East to help victims of the the Cana- "\dian Red Cross ed Fri MIDDLE -EAST WAR Continued From Page 1 Thant said Norwegian Lt.-Gen. Odd Bull, head of the UN Truce Supervision Organi- zation in Palestine, reported an Israeli official had told him Israeli forces are not in Kunei- tra and asked him to send ob- servers to see. But Damascus radio, broad- casting Syrian Army communi- ques, said fierce fighting was still raging in the streets of Kuneitra, a strategic city which controls the lone highway pass through the mountains between the plain of Lake Galilee and the Syrian capital. In an earlier communique, the Syrian Army said Israelis had captured Kuneitra. Damascus radio also said three Israeli planes had been shot down over the Damascus area. A large number of Israeli tanks were destroyed, one com- munique said. In Tel Aviv, unofficial reports said pitched battles--with Isra- eli tanks finding it hard going on the rocky terrain -- were raging on the high plateau of Syria between the border and day. The shipment contains 40| units of the serum -- valued at $11,000 -- which has replaced dried plasma in the treatment of war victims. One unit is us- ually required for an emer- gency transfusion. «| Cardinal Dies ST. LOUIS, Mo. (AP) -- Jo seph Cardinal Ritter, Roman Catholic Archbishop of St. Louis since 1946, died today. He 'was 74. r.|. A. spokesman ir for the St. Louis archdiocese reported that wihis doctor said death came at 5:45 a.m. The cardinal had suffered two heart attacks since enter- ing hospital Monday. President Retires GUELPH (CP) -- Dr. J. D. MacLachlan, president of the University of Guelph, retired r-|Friday after 28 years with the institution. ir} Dr. McLachlan, who joined the faculty of the Ontario Agri- cultural College as a professor of botany in 1939, became pres- ident in 1950 and on the forma- tion of the University of Guelph jin 1964, was named its first | president. But Israel kept complete of- ficial silence on the progress of operations. At the UN in New York, raeli Ambassador Gideon - fael denied that Israel had attacked Damascus. He said Syria had been shelling Israeli border villages for 36 hours and if it would stop, "our defence action would cease." BOTH LEVEL CHARGES Despite agreements from both capitals to a UN call for a ceasefire, Associated Press dis- Patches from: the Syrian-Israeli border reported exchanges of artillery barrages and Israeli air attacks on Syrian gun posi- tions. Each nation accused the other of violating the agree- ment. Nasser said Friday he was responsible for Egypt's "grave setback" in the war and that he was leaving the government. But his National Assembly voted to insist that he stay in the position he has held 15 years, and there were expres- sions of support from Iraq and Lebanon. Vice - President Zakaria Mo- hieddin, to whom Nasser said he would give the presidency, declined today to take it. The Communist-bloc countries "us leaves the university June rare Send '| Mid-East Help s| TORONTO (CP)--In response to a cable received Friday from the World Council of Churches e|in Geneva, the' United Church of Canada said it is sending $20,000 toward the assistance of all victims of the conflict in the Middle East. The World Council of Churches is asking its 223 member denominations to raise e | $2,000,000. le| The Anglican Church of Can- yjada Friday announced a grant of $5,000 from its world relief fund. Additional aid may be made available as the need is deter- mined, committee members ad- ministering the fund said. The fund was established sev- eral years ago to provide money in cases of human distress in the world. demanding that Israel give up meanwhile, met in Moscow and vowed to go to the aid of the AP correspondents Hugh Mul- ligan and Hans Benedict re- ported from the border on ex- changes of shelling and Israeli Mirage jets pounding Syrian artillery and mortar positions. The Syrian government an- nounced it was freeing political prisoners to aid in defence. There are scores of them in the politically unstable nation, including Gen. Amin Bafez, for- mer strongman ousted in a coup of February,' 1966, and his one- time defence minister, Gen. Mohammed Omran. It was on the Syrian-Israeli border that the Middle East crisis began a month ago. After Syrian-supported raids into Is- rael and Israeli threats of re- prisal, Nasser moved 80,000 troops into the Sinai Peninsula facing the frontier of the Jew- ish nation. If Israel started war, he said then, the Arabs would set out to crush that na- tion which was carved out of Palestinian land in the 1948-49 war. TELLS OF PLAN In what he called a farewell speech Friday, Nasser said he acted because 'there was a plan by the enemy to invade Syria." "There was ample evidence .|of this. Our friends in the Soviet Union informed a_parliamen- tary delegation visiting Moscow that there was a scheme against Syria." A general strike was pro- claimed in Beirut, the' capital, and other Lebanese cities in support | of _Nasser. Pr Abdul Rah Aref of Iraq pleaded with Nasser that "the Arab nation is in great need of your stay," sources in Baghdad said. But in Algiers, several thou- sand persons marched on the Egyptian cultural centre, de- nouncing the ceasefire and shouting: "Nasser, march or die!"' On fronts other than Syria, Israeli troops showed confidence by allowing Arabs in Gaza City, Egypt, to walk the streets Fri- day for the first time since they captured it in fierce fight- ing Tuesday. Some sniper fire still was reported. LIFT BLACKOUT The Israelis lifted the black- out in their major cities and normal traffic on the streets Friday contrasted remarkably with the previous four days. Planes streaked low across stra- tegic areas, demonstrating their Arab nations if "Israel does not stop the aggression and with- draw its troops behind the 1948- 49 truce lines." The Soviet Union, which saw Arab armies equipped with $4,- 000,000,000 in Soviet aid fall --. to the Israelis, was tal- lying its Communist brothers in gains made in the war. These included Jordanian cities of religious significance to the Jews and Egyptian ter- ritory of strategic significance, such as Sharm el Sheikh, where Nasser tried to block Israeli shipping into the Gulf of Aqaba. There was no sign Israel would surrender them. At the call of Syria, which charged continuing aggression by Israel, the Security Council went into today's pre - dawn meeting. Damascus radio exhorted Sy- rian troops to "hit the enemy, strike them, let your fire fall on them like rain. Destroy settle- ments after settlement, burn their positions, shoot down their planes." over the Middle East. been bombed Friday but Israel denied its planes were over the city. Reporters there saw none. Mixed Armistice Commission as saying Israel had used Napalm --jellied gasoline -- in attacks mander of a Jordanian, army hospital told reporters that Is-\f, Israel does not withdraw behind the 1948-49 truce lines was signed by the party bosses and govern- would lose their jobs. complete contro] of the skies Egypt claimed Cairo had Thant quoted the Irish chair- man of the Israeli - Syrian WEATHER FORECAST TORONTO (CP) -- Official forecast issued at 5:30 a.m. EDT: Synopsis: Little change is ex- pected in the weather pattern during the weekend with thun- derstorm activity across the lower Great Lakes. have spread across the northern regions where overnight temper- atures dropped into the 40s. The boundary between the cool and warm air masses will remain almost stationary throughout the weekend across the upper Great Lakes. Lake St. Clair, Lake Erie, Lake Huron, Niagara, Lake On- tario regions, Windsor, London, Hamilton, Toronto: Continuing warm and humid today and Sun- day with scattered thunder- storms oceurring mainly in the afternoons or evenings. Winds southwest 15 to 20 with briefly higher gusts in thunder storms. Georgian Bay, Haliburton, Kil- laloe, Algoma regions, North Bay, Sudbury, Sault Ste. Marie: Variable cloudiness with chance of a few scattered thundershow- ers and not much change in temperature today and Sunday. Winds light. White River, Cochrane, Tima- gami, western James Bay re- continuing} Cooler air and clearing skies|t Thunderstorms Continue For Lower Lake Region gions: Sunny with a few cloudy intervals today and Sunday. Not much change in temperature. Winds light. Montreal and Ottawa region: Cloudy at first but becoming mainly sunny by late morning. Not so warm and humid. Clear i Sunday cl ding over with 8 or thundersh Legal Abortion Urged By CMA QUEBEC (CP)--The general council of the Canadian Medical Association Friday worded a strong plea to the federal gov- ernment to make abortion legal where the life and health of the mother is in danger and were substantial risk exists of the child being mentally or physi- cally disabled. In asking that the Criminal for legal abortion--where there are reasonable grounds to be- lieve a sexual offense was com- mitted from which pregnancy resulted. Council's action at the 100th annual meeting of the CMA came as federal authorities are considering reference of the subject to a parliamentary com- mittee, The subject is expected to be referred to a committee in the fall. At present, the Criminal Code permits ending a pregnancy only to protect the mother's life. But- doctors c that its interpretation is vague, Warm and humid again. Winds light. Forecast Temperatures Low overnight, high Sunday WRN os svcnceecs St. Thomas ........ 65 London . Kitchener ........+. 65 Mount Forest ...... 58 Wingham ... Hamilton . Code be ded, the il|}eading to varying practices in also proposed a further ground! different parts of the country. eaten DR. ROSS A. LANGMAID announces his association for the practice of GENERAL DENTISTRY ' with ~ DR. DOUGLAS G. LANGMAID and DR. NORMAN A. FREW 167 Simcoe St. N. 725-3221 Earitton .. TORONTO (CP) Repre- sentatives of five faiths Friday formed a Committee of Chris- tian Concern and offered an invitation to others to join in "a rallying point through which Christians can react imme- diately and in unison on moral questions that suddenly arise." Father Edward Bader, direc- tor of the Catholic Information Centre, was named chairman of the ad hoc committee which also includes Anglicans, Bap- tists, Presbyterians and United Church members. The committee said in a oa Representatives Of si Faiths Organize "To Read In Unison' need to communicate with our Jewish brothers," the commit- tee statement said. "Christians obviously need channels to speak quickly and Trelevantly on this and other crisis situations whenever they arise." It said the first task is to draft and publish a statement on the current crisis in the Mid- die East "which will unequivo- cally condemn as genocide the Arab call for a holy war to ex- terminate Israel." ment "'the Christian c was shocked to learn of the strong reaction of several Jew- ish leaders to the silence of Christians on a matter of vital concern to Jews." Rabbi Stuart Rosenberg said Wednesday night that Chris- tians were Builty of "again equivocating" while Jews faced extermination in the Middle East fighting. "Their bitter grief and feel- ing of standing absolutely alone against Syria. Earlier, at Amman, the com- raeli planes had dropped na- palm on hundreds of military | and civilian targets. | The Communist statement promising a "'resolute rebuff" if ment heads of Bulgaria, Czecho- slovakia, East Germany, Hun- gary, Poland, the Soviet Union and Yugoslavia. } Meanwhile, diplomatic observ- ers believe some officials who administered the Soviet military aid progran: to the Arab nations a ,j|lawyer defending Landman, said this is the first time de Sade's writings have been scrut- inized for obscenity in a Cana- dian court. DRUG STORES OPEN SUNDAY 12:00 A.M. to 6:00 P.M. 530 SIMCOE ST. 28 KING ST. £. JURY & LOVELL LIMITED KARN DRUGS LIMITED 725-3546 723-4621 SERVICE STATIONS OPEN THIS SUNDAY 7:00 A.M. to 9:00 P.M. OSHAWA ESSO SERVICE KING ST. W. AT PARK RD. -- 728-1601 PRESTON'S SUNOCO SERVICE 925 SIMCOE STREET NORTH CRANFIELD'S B.A. SERVICE 331 PARK ROAD SOUTH FLOYD PRICE SUNOCO STATION 531 RITSON ROAD SOUTH GANGEMI SERVICE STATION 809 SIMCOE STREET SOUTH SIMCOE ESSO SERVICE STATION 89 SIMCOE STREET SOUTH -- 723-6951 June 11th . comr June llth... June June June 16th... W7th . by invitation June 18th A June ore NATIONAL VETERANS WEEK ALL VETERANS Wear your Service Badge Branch 43 Canadian Legion has arranged the following events. 11 A.M. -- Special Church service at St. Mark's Anglican Church, Stevenson Rd. N. for branch members. Rev. Woolcock, Padre Br. 43. or Attend your own church on this day to pray for our missing S. 1:00 P.M. -- Wreath-laying ceremony at the Cenotaph, Memorial Park. 12th -- Evening visit to our new hall. Open House for all veterons. june 13th -- Regular meeting . 14th & 15th -- Open House for Veterans. 8:30 P.M. -- Film Night & Open House in the Audi- torium. Veterans and Wives or girl friends . . . "Centennial" 6:30 P.M. -- Branch 43 . . . 25-year members banquet . Refreshments. only. M. -- Decoration Day Laying of wreath at the Cenotaph then by car to Union Ceme- tary, Mount Lawn Cemetery, and Catholic Cemetery, Nonquon and Simcoe Streets. GOD SAVE THE : QUEEN . Ladies Auxiliary. Showing of film before the latest threat to Jew- Fast Action HOUSE SALES! Call @ Member of the OSHAWA end DISTRICT REAL ESTATE BOARD and List Phote Moy s) MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE ish survival reveals anew our PLAN to attend the ' FUN FOR YOUNG * STREET DANCING * BABY CONTEST *& CENTENNIAL CONCERTS * MONSTER Sponsored by the Oshewe FESTIVAL JUNE 25 fo JULY 1 NOW AND OLD ALIKE! PARADE Folk Festivel Committee o STEPHENSON'S GARAGE @ Wheel Alignment Specia! e yore and Wheel Mtrclohenios + vee <igatgts: Cor i 15 CHURCH STREET Ph. 725-0522 Lee Bishop RADIATOR REPAIRS Clee: end Reco New pry Used Redistes 42 Bond St. W. 725-1633 There's More To See with... REESOR Fuel and ie, in Ngesscuthd a Fuels. Phone 895-7951 Port Perry @ FREE DELIVERY Ph: -- 7. ™m sa tT BILENDUKE"S ESSO SERVICE 1004 Simcee St. South at Wentwerth 28-1411 3 MECHANICS TO SERVE YOU! Tune-Ups - Brake Service - General al Repair Oshawa's Finest Hotel For--Parties-Sales Meetings Benquets -- Conventions Air-Conditioned Coffee Shop pee Od OR | Wi aeman] OPEN 24 HOURS A DAY | PUT BOYD'S | Esso Service Ley Specialists Hwy. Ne. 2 & Thickson Rd. Whitby, Ont. Phone 725-7622 A R_IN YOUR TANK Sheet Metal Work PHONE 668-5281 30 Years Experience @ !NDUSTRIAL © COMMER CIAL ; RESIDENTIAL East Mall, 600 King Street East BOB HOY CONSTRUCTION Lumber Telephone 723-5278 FOOTE'S Towing Service TELEPHONE ANSWERING SERVICE CAR & TRUCK RENTALS Est, 1945 726-9493 4 Nelson St. -- Oshawe OSHAWA 103 King St. Bast Guerenteed Used Cars ROY W. NICHOLS Courtice and Bowmanville EVROLET, CORVAIR, OLDSMOBILE SALES AND SERVICE PHONE 728-6206 44 Years Serving You HOBBIES Oshawa's Hobby Supply Centre @ PLASTIC MODELS @ FLYING MODELS @ ELECTRIC TRAINS @ RACING CARS 92 Simece St. North 723-9512 You Like lt... SMITH Beverages LTp, 723-1011 -- Oshawa SUDDARD'S BICYCLE SHOP Golf end Fishing Equipment. FULL ig ll KEYS MADE PHONE 725-3979 497 SIMCOE ST. S. It Likes You }iz 77 27 Selina St. (Comer Bruce) St. |} TOD, panne at 7:00 p.m. . SUNDAY, JUNE 1 EOBA Tyke Leag eg yr and Distriet Oshawa Green Gaels; BASEBALL --Leande Junior of ALL -- Civil Service » Coors TUESDAY, JUNE 13 Park, 8:15 p. ee teen Alex TACROSSE--OLA Senior 'A' Leeque- Redmen; at Brooklin Community pe 8:30 p.m. Y League--Oshawa Green Gaels at Brampton, 8: 30 p.m, SOCCER--Oshawe end District 1 BALL--Eastern Onterie Midget bi wa 'A' Legionnaires; at Kinsmen Stadium, jue--Cobourg p.m. and Belleville at Whitby, eague-- ; at Civic Auditorium, ires; at Kinsmen Stadium, ie . and 8:30 p.m. and si deed agpirn ian Motel; at 'North ¢ Oshawa court vs Oshowa "Woodview, at North: Oahowe ar 8:30 _¢ ~ GANADIAN CONSERVATORY OF MUSIC Bay Ridges @ Whitby Information Phone 723-0101 -- District Office 735 Erie Street (Station is in your FOR BETTER-BUILT FURNITURE ae. Frat ian (Corner Bruce) Upholstery Co. RE-UPHOLSTERING end REFINISHING 728-5342 SRSRERECHERTINES Oshawa-Whithy SPORTS Highlighis Assoe.--Polonia vs Napoli; at Kinsmen Darlington Senier Leegue--Zion at Salem d Courtice at Maple Grove; both games at 7:15 p.m. awa 'A' ae ve 206 Om... eee, ot Anon: Park, 2:00 2:00 p. istriet Assoc Ukraine vs Loco! 222, et 7:00 vs sald at 8:30 p.m.; beth games at Kinsmen 'A Toronto Neng PCO's va 8:30 Stfin, 7 Vor Rinumen vs Oshawa 7:30 p.m. at A Park, at Radio Park, 700 be. ot Aes, $200 pm. ond Park, 8:00 p.m. WRESTLING--Exhibition of professional wrestling, at Civie Auditorium, 8:30 p. _-- iL -teitern Ontarie Bentem capt at Whi a A Pee Wee League --Whitby 36 pm. ond Belleville ot Boge sod LE 730 en Scugog Cleaners at Markhom, 8:00 p.m.; cial al Motel vs Mr, Towers, at Alexandra Fok 6: Ny po. ee and Alexandra popes at Port Perry, 8:15 pm Hans vs Pams, at Ladies' League--Agin- perents present. Guiters CLEANIT SERVICE LTD. Dry Cleaners and Shirt Launderers ® Phone 725-3555 Phone ° vs * OLA Sonlon ARNOLD PAVING ONTARIO LIMITED Quality Asphalt Work. Leader and Truck Rentels Pickering © soviet GEORGE'S FINA SERVICE Tune-ups. Licensed Mechanie Free Check-Up Get reedy for Spring. Come in for a full tune-up now! PICK-UP & DELIVERY 668-4232 932 BROCK ST. N. WHITBY HOUSTON'S GARAGE Aute Tune-Ups @ Camplete Brake Service Guerenteed. 67 King St. West 723-7822 Park Creat OTTAWA (CP)--The g ment was accused in the mons Friday of not exp: the national parks syster Northern Affairs Minister said there is a "cris plenty" in the present par cause of high tourist inter them, Walter Dinsdale (PC-- don-Souris), the former servative northern affairs ister, said Terra Nova Pz Newfoundland and Kejimi in Nova Scotia were "the developments . . . in the six or seven years." "'We all recognize, or at give lip service to the fact we must expand our na parks system," Mr. Din said. "We all agree that there crisis in the use and avai ity of land area in Canad park purposes, not only fo tional park purposes but 1 ational parks," the former ister said. "All we need now is actic the government." Introducing his depart $228,583,720 in spending mates for 1967-68, Mr. ] said the government is cerned that many person: Canadians are buying sea: properties and that the go ment is considering acqu similar land for parks, VISITORS INCREASE Some 1,380,000 persons vi national parks last year, minister said. This was ¢ per - cent increase over which he expected to cont Mr. Dinsdale accused the ernment of a '"'high.- hande: titude". in revoking lease Alberta's national parks. The Conservatives had ized when they were in po Mr. Laing said, that the le would have to be termin but had been pressured. ou doing so, Pressure from the posite side had grown so g "that I cannot afford to treat" and neither could Dinsdale if he were still : ister. Tom Barnett (NDP--Cor Alberni) said he opposed petual leases in federal pi but that the government o the Alberta lease holders si consideration. Instead the 1 dents had been given a ¢ plete brushoff. Thomas M. Bell (PC--S John Albert) said the gov Millions In Wasted In C WALKERTON, Ont. (CF Liberal Leader Robert Ni said Friday the Ontario gove ment has wasted millions of lars in federal grants availa from the Agriculture Rehabil tion and Development Admit: tration program. The province lost $8,500,00( federal grants between 1962 : 1965, he said in an address p pared for delivery to the gional meeting of the West Ontario North Liberal Assoc tions. Mr, Nixon said ARDA was signed to promote more eff tive use of land, conserve z develop soil and water sources, retrain rural peoy improve living standards = develop employment opportu ties, F inancial . k For Municir TILBURY, Ont. (CP)-- D ald C. MacDonald, Ontario N Democratic Party leader, s: Friday the government shot not adjourn the Legislature ur it has brought in specific legis tion dealing with the finance crisis facing the province's m nicipalities, Mr. MacDonald told the : nual conference of the Onta Municipal Association's to and village section that the gc ernment should act now rath than wait for the Smith repo a five-year study of the fine cial picture at the provinci and municipal level. To help meet the immedia financial needs of municipalitic Mr. MacDonald proposed t following five-point program: -- Provincial governmer grants in lieu of municip taxes on all government buil ings. At present, municipa ties collect no grants in lie of taxes at all for some typ of government buildings a1 grants to cover only gener taxes, not including educatic taxes, on others. A speedup in governme! payments to municipalities ' DECORA' SER Sunday, June UNION | SPONSOF ODDFELLOWS anc OF OSHAWA °