Oshawa Times (1958-), 26 Sep 1967, p. 4

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-- The Oshawa Cimes 84 King St. E., Oshawa, Ontario Published by Canadian Newspapers Company Limited T. L. Wilson, Publisher E. C. Prince, Associate Publisher OSHAWA, ONTARIO, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 1967 Liberals First On Carpet' About Over-Spending Scrambling for a larger share of the taxpayer's fast diminishing dol- lar has become a highly competitive pursuit at all levels of government. Jn its annual review the Economic Council has added its voice to the ever-rising volume of protest heard across the couniry. The ever-increasing taxation is a consequence of governmental over- spending. The over-spending is an integral part of the inflationary cycle of which governments them- selves are victims. The higher the inflationary spiral the more they pay in wages and for materials. The taxpayer is hit on two fronts with higher taxes and higher prices: The concern has reached the Osh- awa council chamber, it should echo on the hustings during the provin- cial election campaign but more im- portant it should be expressed in Ottawa most forcibly as the new session of the Commons begins. In the Economie Council warning the key word is "priorities". The demand is that governments estab- lish machinery for continuous and detailed reviews. of spending pro- grams to keep priorities in order. The present Liberal government has unquestionably earned the council's rebuke. Finance Minister Mitchell Sharp has constantly urged business and labor to practice res- traint while overlooking the fact that the government goes merrily on its way, spending at an ever- increasing rate. In so doing, the The Guelph Mer- cury underlines, it is contributing to an inflation that now threatens to seriously hamper the economy at a time when the Council sees im- mediately ahead a renewed period of expansion. The federal government in puarti- eular needs not only to consider the advice of the Council, but to act quickly on its recomendations. It has been labelled as a big spender. On a purely political basis it must mend' its ways, adhere to priorities. It faces leader and an Opposition with a new look intent on exploiting the discontent with Liberal excesses. a new Downright Stupidity! It is self-evident that many traffic accidents are the result of stupidity. Newspaper reports of tragedies often reveal evidence of utter folly. Such as teenagers who try to switch ears while driving down hill, side by side; men so befuddled by drink that they speed for miles down the wrong side of a divided highway; young lives lost as the result of play- ing "chicken." The best drivers are usually clever people, according to a study by Professor Hans Eysench, then head éf the Psychological Department of London University. Reckless driving is not only stupid in itself -- it is often the sign of a person of below- average intelligence. Test. proved, he said, that people with an intelligence quotient of 80 (the average is: between 100 and 110). had many more accidenis than people with a higher IQ. He felt Bye Mstyaroa Simes &4 King StF T. L. WILSON, Publisher #. C. PRINCE, General Manager C. J, MeCONECHY, Editor SUBSCRIPTION RATES The Oshawo Times combining The Oshowa Times \established 1871) and the Whitby Gazette and Chronicle (established 1863) is published daily (Sundays and Statutory holidays excepted). Membeis of Canadian Doily Newspaper Publish- @rs Associaton, The Canadian Press Audit Bureau Association. The Canadian Press is exclusively entitled to the use of reproduction of all news despatched in the paper credited to it or to The Associoted Press or Reuters, and also the local rights of special des- Oshawa, Ontorio news published therein. Ail catches are also reserved 6 King St. E., Oshawa, Ontorio National Advertising Offices: Thomson celal P University Avenue, Toronto, Ontario; 40 Cathcart Strect, Montreal, P.O. Delivered by carriers in Oshawa, Whitby, Ajax, Pickering, Bowmanville, Brooklin, Port Perry, Prince Albert, Mople Grove, Hampton, Frenchinan's Bay, siverpool, Taunton, Tyrone, Dunbarton, Enniskillen, Orons, Leskard, Brougham, Burketon, Claremont, Mencheéster, Pontypool and Newcastle not over 55c per week. By mail in Province of Ontario dutside carrier delivery orea. $15.00 per year. Dther_ provinces and Commonwealth. Countries; $18.00 per year. U.S.A. ond foreign $27.00 per year eT that considerable caution should be shown before granting licences to the dullest 20 per cent of the popu- lation Dull-witted people prefer to con- ceal their deficiency, as a rule. But when driving, they often advertise it blatantly. Too many people glorify reckless, aggressive behaviour behind the wheel. 'To some minds, to drive dan- gerously and selfishly is to show courage, and strength of character. Whether or not brains and good driving always go together, says the Ontario Safety League, there is no doubt that recklessness in a car is always a mark of stupidity. Other Editors' Views ALL INTERESTED Toronto Board of Control has de- cided to ask Prime Minister Pearson to explain what the Company of Young Canadians is doing in helping to stir up Yorkvile's hippies. More than Toronto's Board of Control will be interested in the PM's answer. (Port Arthur News Chronicle) WALLS OF APATHY The riot-torn cities and their quiet, comfortable suburbs often seem separated by invisible but im- penetrable walls of apathy and in- difference. But much that 'appears to be apathy is really ignorance. Many genuinely well-motivated per- sons are at a Joss to know what they ean do in an immediate, personal way to reach the slum child or the violence-prone teen-ager or the fam- ily is that city that is of another color and another cultural back- ground. (New York Times) OTTAWA REPORT Ins ns QUEEN'S PARK Santa Claus 'Portrayal Detrimental? By DON O'HEARN TORONTO -- Are Premier Robarts strategists doing him a bad turn? Are they making him so mich of.a Santa Claus that the public will revolt--or throw up? The early stages of the gov- ernment campaign in the elec- tion have been almost unques- tionably the greatest attempt the province has seen to woo the public with promises. .., and gifts. As was noted here before, this started off with the opening of the campaign in Hamilton. Mr. Robarts promised the city $2,000,000 for a civic audi- torium, a project which called for fine-line thinking to justify it for provincial assistance. Then in the premier's next major appearance, at the Lake- head, he announced a new pro- gram of financial incentives for manufacturing and tourist development. AIRPORT PROMISED In between he had more or fess promised Dryden an air- port, and told the Indians in the Kenora area he was ordering a study of the wild rice crop. Where do we go from here? There will be something for everybody it would seem. And if there is it would also seem there well might be a kick-back. The whole approach is just so blatant. The public could rebel against it. An example was at the Ham- ilton meeting. A prominent Con- servative, and a man who wanted the auditorium very much, shuddered when he heard the announcement by the premier. "I wish he hadn't made it here and now," he said. '"'It looks too much like a bribe." INCENTIVE PLANNED To thinking people in north~ western Ontario the incentive plan announcement must have had the same appearance. If the program has actually been developed, is in shape to go ahead, the announcement could have been made before the election. (It probably should have been made some years ago. North- western Ontario has been ask- ing for some such approach for a long time. Holding it off until the cam- paign appears as just too much of a much. People, at least some of them, are bound to think as the Hamilton man did. That they are being bribed. NO SUCKERS? The strategisis obviously don't think this will do any harm. Their bélief must be that its the gift that matter, not the conditions. But the publie can be strange. And one of the first rules of human relations is that nobody likes being taken for a sucker. YEARS AGO 20 YEARS AGO, Sept. 26, 1957 The Oshawa Registered Mu- sic Teachers Association presen- ted 11 leather bound volumes of phono records to the Public Library. The cafeteria at 0.C.V.J. was operated at a loss of $3,700 this year. 35 YEARS AGO, Sept. 26, 1932 The cafeteria at 0.C.V.I. was operated at a loss of $3,800 this year. 35 YEARS AGO, Sept. 26, 1932 1.. F. McLaughlin of the Mc- Laughlin Coal and Supply Co. is bringing to Oshawa Harbor the first cargo of Scottish anth- racite coal. W. J. Dungar of Bloor St. W. has had two potato crops in the same ground this sum- mer. Mj) Ki iy Uf iayretes, anit nan ARs SUN DOESN'T ALWAYS. SHINE FOR HAY MAKING FOREIGN AFFAIRS ANALYSIS ~ Agony Of Race Relations By PHILIP DEANE Foreign Affairs Analyst The marriage of two. young people should not be a cause for fear, yet in the case of Mr. Dean Rusk's daughter it was; the parents of the bride sur- rounded the affair with great secrecm in case some fanatics --of wfiém there are very many in California--should attempt to disrupt the ceremony. And this is only the most superficial les- son one derives from this mar- riage. Mr. Rusk and his wife are not tacisis. On this issue, Mr, Rusk is a man of such strong princi- ple that he probably did not even tell his daughter she might beget children who would suffer from racial prejudice. Being a public man, publicly committed to integration, he could not permit himself this admonition which even the most progressive parents would feel constrained to voice should their child decide to marry a negro. It lies at the root of the violent opposition against school integration. If my daugh- ter goes to school with negroes, the white parent says to him- self, she may meet a _ nice attractive negro boy and fall in love with him and then she will as India, one reads marriage advertisements in. which an bridegroom is prepared to marry a girl from a lower caste, provided she is fair skinned. One never reads an advertisement suggesting the reverse. The other side of the coin is that the groups lower on the accepted social scale consider that their worst disability is the unacceptability of their males as mates for the upper social group. In a sense, this "'keeps a man in his place," denies his right to "rise above his sta- tion." Nelson Went In Que. Sent By BOB BOWMAN When King William 4 died in 1837 (succeeded by Queen Vic- toria) his last words were '"'the Church, the Church'. They did not exemplify his life, most of which was spent with the Royal Navy, first as a midshipman, have to face all the prejudice and eventually as the captain of and heartache--I am not refer- ring here to bigots but to decent people who, being par- ents and older, know more of the world's ways and see the storms ahead. They would honestly deplore the prejudice that exists, be prepared to combat it but, being parents, would fervently hope they would not have to combat it with their child in the front line. DRIVE EXISTS There is, even in the descent, non-bigotted parents a deep and very old drive recognized by sociologists: hypergamy. From time immemorial, man _ has been strenuously reluctant to Jet his daughter marry into a less advantaged social group; the son can marry and "ele- vate" a girl from the lower stratum but the daughter must not. This may well be more than custom; it may be an expression--perhaps mistaken --of the natural selection laws. In caste-ridden societies, such by Patrick Nicholson ..And If Wives Of Politicians Took Up Pens OTTAWA -- Are our top poli- ticians of all parties unfairly or unduly criticized by the press? There's. a first-class row on this subject now raging in the press in Britain. It was sparked by a letter written to a widely- read weekly, the New States- man, and signed simply "Eliza- beth Longford." But the writer is in fact the Countess of Long- ford, wife of the Earl of Long- ford, who is Lord Privy Seal in the cabinet of the socialist lead- er Harold Wilson. Inspired by great courage and seemingly by considerable wifely resentment, she writes with the pithiness which made so readable her recent success- ful biography Queen Victoria. INK OF VITRIOL Her letter said, in part: "Why do the majority of politi- eal journalists make such a pit- iful job of manhandling their human materia}, the politi- cians? All light and shade, all subtlety of analysis, al] bal- anced assessment of good sgainst bad qualities in the pol- fticlan under review are jetis- soned. In return for what? At Why? Each at one time and made Quebee leader. When best an amusing send-up; but far more often a dull sour bludgeoning. Brutally monoto- nous attacks on all party politi- cians, irrespective, are unlikely to improve the breed--if that is indeed the aim of our modern press of cruelty. On the contrar- y, they will probably inhibit the sensitive and idealistic spirits, while putting a premium on the hard of hide. No other form of press criticism, whether liter- ary, dramatic or sporting, appears to suffer from the same kind of chronic bilious- ness which afflicts political journalism. Why should politi- cians alone be expected to thrive on column after column written, not in blood, but in spittle?" The wives of the three living Canadians who have sat in the prime minister's. office might each have earlier uttered Lady Longford's cry from the heart. St. Laurent, Diefenbaker . and Pearson were al] at one time lavishly praised by the press, yet each also saw the press a | spittlishly against him, pleased by his performance and promised by his prospects; each later appeared to fall short of the overblown rosiness which a prematurely laudatory press had painted, thus also wounding the press' pride in the validity of its judgment. Two of those three gavé back as good as they pot, and that certainly, but as certainly wrongly, turnéd a disappointed press bitchy. And what do Mrs. Gordon, Mrs. Favreau, Mrs. Thompson, Madame Sevigny and others think about political writers? Are those parliamentary wives hard of hide? Certainly not, so they suffer with and for their husbands. Maybe they would have difficulty in restraining their vocabulary to the word "spittle." For sometimes our press lacks the balanced t rec ded by Lady Longford, failing to bal- ance bad against good in good times, and vice versa. The late Guy Favraeu was a ease in point. As a rookie MP, he was appoinjed to the eabinet as minister of justice he donned the mantle of the great Ernest Lapointe, he was assumed to have Lapoinie's political stat- ure, whereas he had not had time to shed his political dia- pers. He was hoisted onto such an unduly high pedestal by an unperceptive press that when he even stubbed his infant polit- in. toe, he suffered a mighty al. ' What Lady Longford wrote about the sensitive being inhib- ited is surely true; what she wrote about balanced assess- ment is a turism, which every political writer knows. But in fairness to any of us who ever slip in a journalistic 'hot room," remember that the tyr-. anny of the deadline and the deprivation of calm re-reading in proof form deny journalists the great advantage enjoyed by the historian. : But still and all, those critical words written about Britain are sometimes in place here; [ would love to seé a Canadian Lady Longford take up her pen, a frigate. Some sailors are said to have a girl in every port. William went them a great deal better. He had several, including every port from Halifax to Montreal. His popularity was not confined to women, He made such a big hit in Sorel that the people of the town changed its name to "William Henry" but it was ehanged back to Sorel later. William 4 and Horatio Nelson were lifelong friends. They met originally at Staten Island, New York, when Nelson was the captain of the frigate "Alberm- arle" and William was a mid- shipman in the '"Barfleur.'"' Wil- liam said that Nelson was the youngest captain he ever saw, and recognized his ability right away. He said that Nelson was "no common being.' Nelson also paid young William a trib- ute and said he was "a sea- man." Later Nelson rescued William from an irate mob in Havana where William was caught having an affair with the daughter of a Spanish admi- ral. Probably Nelson never told William that he once had a deep love affair in Canada. It was in 1782, during the Ameri- can Revolutionary War, and Nelson's frigate "Albermarle" was patrolling the coast of Nova Scotia. His ship needed a refit and so he. sailed for Que- Where color enters the pic- ture, those of darker skin--a- gain as in India--have tended to be kept in the lowér racial group and by not being able to marry 'above' to practice hypergamy that is, they are denied the chance to lighten the color of their group. This creates a tremendous inferiority complex since in most multi - colored societies lightness of the skin is appar-. ently equated with beauty. The darker ones are condemned to think of themselves as ugly: hence the posters of militant U.S. negroes proclaiming "it's beautiful to be black." Acourting Back To Sea bec where he spent the month of September, one of the most pleasant of the year. It was on September 5, while the leaves were changing to gold, that Nelson was courting 16-year old Mary Simpson, daughter of the provost-marshal of the Quebec garrison. Nelson fell madly in love with Mary Simpson and wanted to marry her then and there. His friends tried to talk him out of it because they felt that marriage to the daughter of a relatively poor civil ser- vant would be harmful to his career. The facts are obscure, but it seems likely that the marriage was only prevented by his friends getting in touch with the Admiralty which ordered Nelsdn to put to sea immediately. One story says that he had to be carried on board his ship, almost kicking- and screaming. In any event, Nelson never got back to Que- bec, or Mary Simpson again. OTHER EVENTS ON SEP- TEMBER 26: 1659 Bishop Laval began cam- paign against trading liquor to Indians. 1668 Rene Gaultier married 12-year-old Marie Bouchard of Three Rivers. They were' the parents of famous ex plorer Pierre de Ja Verehdrye. 1862 British surveyors Milton and Cheadle explored route through Rockies. 1875 Normal School opened in Ottawa. 1917 Compulsory military service went into effect. 1958 Right Honorable John Diefenbaker became first prime minister to visit the Yukon dur- ing his term of office. TODAY IN HISTORY Ry THE CANADIAN PRESS Sept. 26, 1967... The Queen Mary, first British liner to exceed 1,000 feet in length, was launched 33 years ago today--in 1934 --after a royal christening in Glasgow, Scotland. The 81,235-ton giant of the seas captured the Atlantic blue riband from the French vessel Normandie four years later, crossing the Atlantic at an average speed of 31.7 knots, taking 4% days. In July, 1952, the American liner United States won the blue riband, making the crossing at 35.59 knots (about 41 miles an hour) in three days, 10 hours and 40 minutes. 1945--Composer Bela Bar- tok died. 1958--Prime Minister Diefenbaker arrived at Whitehorse to become the first prime minister to visit the Yukon while in office. First World War Fifty years ago today--in 1917--British troops advanced on a Six-mile front east of Ypres. Ger- THEN AND NOW Piano Builders Thrived In Home- Harmonizing Era By FORD LINDSAY Of The Times Stagg the nineteenth century, whee life was less hectic than it is today, much of the life of the cummunity centred around the kome. Most eyed ie ed means owned a piano or a - gan and every member of the family was Leer iP bd de- lop their musical talents. | 7 a period the Williams Piano Co. was a thriving con- cern in Oshawa, the Dominion Orgat: and Piano Co. had a Jarge plant in Bowmanville and an organ plant was operating in hitby. Wine. Dominion Organ and Piano Co. had' particular sig- nificance for me as my family owned one of its pianos and the church I attended as a small boy had one of its three-manual organs. In fact, the first job I ever had was pumping the organ for the munificent sum of 25 cents a Sunday. The Dominion plant in Bow- manville had an interesting his- tory extending over nearly 70 years to about 1875 when the main section of the building on Wellington Street was built. Dur- ing that period it was operated under the management of the late William Darley. ~ Bus.vess was evidently not too flourishing in 1879 as the firm was re-organized with the Jate J. B. Rice mainly responsible. He had sold organs and realized the market potential. He went to the United States and re- turned with about a dozen ex- perts. George Piggott became' gen- eral manager, W. S. Russell handled tuning and John Wesley looked after financial matters. The late J. B. and Anthony Mitchell were brought from the United States and were em- ployed for many years. Under the new management the busi- ness boomed for several years and as many as 350 employees worked daily in the plant. Eventually the three man- agers, who had amassed - con- siderable wealth and lived in large homes, relaxed their ef. forts until J. Farewell, of De. troit. purchased the controlling interest and sent his brother to take cover. Four additions were built -- two to the south end to provide larger offices and two toward the east. Mr. Farewell was not par. ticularly interested in continuin the business and when the Be! Orgen Co. of Guelph was sold to British interests, John Kidd, a former employee in the Bow- manville plant and knew pianos and organs so thoroughly he held several patents, returned and, with J. McConnell and J, W. Alexander, purchased the factory and operated it for seven years. Eventually Mr, Alexander bought out the other partners and with J. B. Mitchell as manager took over produc. tion in 1903. With the introduction of the phonograph and the growing popularity of radio, the demand for pianos and organs dropped and business fell off until 1937 when the plant was taken over by Bowmanville Town Council for back taxes, and the firm went into bankruptcy. Davis-Hoult and Company, a subsidiary of Canadian Patent Leather Co., of Toronto, took over the plant in July 1938, The firm manufactured store fix- tures, hotel and restaurant fur- niture and custom-made furni- ture and employed between 30 and 75 workers, Late in November the north- east wing of the three-storey factury was destroyed in a fire which taxed the efforts of the Bowmanville and Oshawa Fire Departments. The only factor which prevented the destruction of the entire factory was that it was equipped with fire doors, fire walls and was of solid brick construction..The loss. was esti- mated at between $25,000 and $30,000. Tucay the plant is occupied by the Specialty Paper Co:, which employs about 70 em- ployees, Kremlin Change Of Heart Indicated In Emigration? By PETER BUCKLEY MOSCOW (CP) -- Almost unnoticed in the tide of Soviet visitors crossing to Canada this jubilee year is a smaller wave of people who may, hopefully, represent a change of heart in the Kremlin. These are the ones who are being given permission to leave this country and join their families in Canada. For years such emigrants constituted a bare trickle. This year the number has swelled dramatically and there are grounds for believ- ing the increase will not just be temporary. The consular section of the Canadian embassy in Mos- cow, hard pressed to keep up with the demand for tourist visas, has had no opportunity yet to compile definite fig- ures. But a rough guess indi- cates that as many as 500 people may emigrate to Can- ada from the Soviet Union this year. Compared with previous years, when each case of emigration represented an individual triumph over Soviet reluctance, the 1967 figure hints at a distinctly new Soviet approach that goes beyond any official desire not to rock the boat during the year of Canada's Centennial and the 50th anni- versary of the Bolshevik rev- olution. VISAS FOR FAMILIES Although the majority of those permitted to leave are parents and other elderly rel- atives of emigres already in Canada, there have been cases where younger people and even families have been granted exit visas. In one almost unprecedented case, a father and mother with seven children were permitted to go. 7 Canada has been making official representations to the Soviet government for years on behalf of the thousands of emigres from the Ukraine, the Baltic States and other parts of the Soviet Union who have been separated from their families. Until recently, the pleas Soviet government has BIBLE "For whosoever shall do the will of God, the same is my brother, and my sister, and ther."' Mark 3:35, many, in a ary note to the Vatican, offered to evacuate Belgium '"'on conditions." War Minister Soukhomlinov of Russia was given a life sentence for treason. Second World War Twenty-five years ago today--in 1942--five enemy submarines were sunk by British ships in the Mediter- ranean. British sea losses in three years of war reported by AP as 1,207 warships and merchant- men. The Japanese retired slightly in Owen Stanley Mountains of New Guinea, The people close to Christ will be those who have chosen His will above their's. "Thy will be done." 'POINTED PARAGRAPHS "Nothing is certain but death and taxes," and this.is particu- larly true now with reference to death, as in this dangerous world today you may get killed before your next tax payment becqmes due. met with littlé success. The always frowned on those who forsake their "'people's revo- lution" for life in a "bour- geois" society. It has been particularly reluctant to let young people leave. There's no reason to sus pect that the official distaste for emigration has changéd. But the Soviet Union seems interested these days in a genuine improvement in réla- tions with Canada, and the new trend is likely to repre- sent one way of demonstrat- ing that interest. MANY MORE TOURISTS Another indication of the change--on the surface, a more striking one--has been the number of people author- ized to visit Canada as tour- ists in 1967, Working 12-hour days and six-day weeks with monoto- nous regularity, the consulat staff at the Canadian embas- sy has already issued more than 5,000 visas this year to Soviet citizens for temporary visits to Canada. The figure for the whole of 1966 was less than 1,800. By far the biggest number has been going to see Expo. But there have also been sub- stantial groups going for tours of Canada beyond Mont- real and numerous other cases of people whose visits to Canada are sponsored and largely paid for by relatives and friends there. Aeroflot, the Soviet airline, has added a second weekly flight to Montreal from Mos- cow to help handle the increased traffic, and Air Canada's single weekly flight is heavily booked. In addition, the passenger ship Alexandr Pushkin has been making regular sailings up the St. Lawrence. REWARD FOR SERVICE Although the embassy rare- ly sees the people going to Ex po--visas are handled through the Soviet foreign ministry--the majority are believed to be government officials, scientists, techn i- cians and other members of the new Soviet elite. Perhaps as a_ safeguard Against defections, there are almost no known cases of an entire family being allowed to make the visit. For many of them, a trip to Expo could be either a reward for work well done or a chance to study some of the methods and technology ' on display there. The number of Expo visi- tors has been swelled sub- stantially by special groups. For example, about 400 per- sons were in the company that went with the Bolshoi Theatre and there have been sizable groups of officials and performers going for each of the Soviet Republic days at Expo. Of the tourist figures, H. F. Clark, counsellor at the embassy, remarked: 'Wheth- er it will be a continuing thing when Expo is over remains to be seen. We hope 50. U gamer WHI WHITBY (St agreed by tow day night, that helpful if a quo town council an ship Council att the joint amal mittee until the Coun. Vernon this would pern ings of both cot vened immedi the council me Pub Reje WHITBY (Staff) recommendation b cil that the W School Board cons tional four teachi the Dundas SI School as part of planned to replac damaged by fire board has notifie its intention to | plans previously 'These plans had ceived tentative a the Ontario depar' cation. The board, in council last nigh' ere underway for Mayor At Gui WHITBY (Staff) of town council he vited to attend th denominational Bo Girl Guide church held Sunday at United Church. Mz Newman will be t It was decided tc wrecking yard on two weeks to clear ises. Mayor Newt yard, protected by dogs, contained m vehicles. Coun, Eileen Moi the job of investig plaint, concerning lodged by a comr prise. The comp Coun. Don McQu: in what position i clubs who hold bu jokingly suggested might be handled tion committee; w Forbes McEwen sounds as if busin ahead." Due to the U Drive-rally Oct. | council committee be held at 7:30 p. Coun: McQuay the engineering 4 the speed, efficien: damage occasione stallation of the on Annes St. Ron Bernardi permission to i tanks to service family dwellings | §., provided he in for future sanitary Subject to a le architect, St. Ar pyterian Church | a building permit church at a nomi Council moved Oct. 8 to 16 as F Week, Citizens wi clean out their c cordance with fir Councillors Tho Call For B If Plans Fi WHITBY (Staf fario Housing C advised town should it be able gotiations for th the property at corner of Ontar Streets, it will it vertise for a bui call for the erect citizens units. Council, at a | passed a resolut a grant of $8,000 the vorporation purchase of the The corporati copy of the le; authorizes count palities to contri and expend me housing projec' moneys therefor debentures, witt of the electors # erence to the Or Board. GET SEA KARACHI (A stan merchant fi ships by 1970, D A. R Khan says. three ships whe became indepen _ SIRES NEON FREE _Estimetes Retes, Repair Sp 24 Hour Service Fast Dependable Plumbing SERVICE W Coll 72: A ae

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