Oshawa Times (1958-), 17 Oct 1967, p. 4

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She Oshawa Times 86 King St. E., Oshawa, Ontario Published by Canadian Newspapers Company Limited T. L. Wilson, Publisher E. C. Prince, Associate Publisher OSHAWA, ONTARIO, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 17, 1967 More Women To Enter Labor Force In Future A pattern radically different from most forecasts. of Canada's population growth has emerged in recent years, according to a Bank of Montreal Business Review. This will lead to such profound social changes as a higher proportion of small, re- latively affluent families, and more women in the labor force, the Re- view suggests. Despite a trend to eariler mar- riage and an increase in the number of marriages, the population rose by only 9.7 per cent between 1961 and 1966. This compares with increases of 13.4 per cent between 1956 and 1961 and nearly 15 per cent from 1951 to 1956. The survey attributes this shift from predictions to a marked change in fertility patterns. In response to influences of changing social stan- dards, the fertility rates for young- er women levelled off during the late fifties and, following the wide- spread introduction of new methods of family planning, sharp down- ward trends emerged in the rates for all age groups. The change in the birth pattern led to a lowering in the "natural" rate of increase, but net immigra- tion has acted as a counter-balance to keep the overall rate of popula- tion growth roughly constant through the sixties. The Review expects the reduced rate of entry of young people into the working population to be offset by increased participation of women. Despite the trend to younger mar- riages, a pattern of both limitation of family size and the postponement of child bearing is emerging; conse- quently, more women than ever be- fore have been entering the labor force. "Not only is the labor force like- ly to expand at a faster rate than the population, but patterns of de- mand for consumer goods and hous- ing will be influenced considerably by the existence of a higher propor- tion of small, relatively affluent families", the Review predicts. Because of a need for longer edu- cation in today's society -- and a consequent tendency for a higher proportion of people between 15 and 24 to delay their entry into the labor force--no lessening can be foreseen in the heavy demands for funds for overall educational facilities, despite an actual decline in primary school- ing requirements. Eight Degrees Of Giving In this 50th anniversary year of the united way of giving to voun- tary health and welfare agencies in Canada, here are some thoughts on charitable giving by the 12th century Jewish scholar, Maimonides. He talks about the eight degrees of giving. The steps, in order of im- portance, starting with the lowest, are: -- To give, but to give grud- gingly. -- To give less than you should, but at least graciously. -- To give, but only after one has been asked. , -- To give before one has been asked. -- To give, but in such a way that the poor know from whom the gift came, even though the giver does know to whom he gives. -- The donor knows to whom he gives, but the poor do not know from whom the gift has come. (An example of this is when the great scholars in Talmudic times used to She Osharwon Times 84 Kino St. E.. Oshawa, Ontorie T. L. WILSON, Publisher &, C, PRINCE, General Manoger C. J, MeCONECHY, Editor SUBSCRIPTION RATES The Oshawa Times combining The Oshawa Times (established 1871) and the Whitby Gazette and Chronicle (established 1863) is published doily {Sundays and Statutory holidays excepted). Membe:s of Canadian Daily Newspaper Publish- ers Associaton, The Conadian Press Audit Bureau Association. The Canadian Press is exclusively entitied to the use of reproduction of ali news despatched in the paper credited to it or to The Associated Press or Reuters, and also the locol news published therein. All rights of special des- patches ore also reserve: * "86 King St. E., Oshawa, Ontorio National Advertising Offices: thomson Bullding, 4 University Avenue, Toronto, Ontario; 640 Cethcort Street, Montreal, P.O. Delivered py carriers in Oshawo, Whitby, Ajax, Pickering, Bowmenville, Brooklin, Port Perry,. Prince Albert, Maple Grove, Hampton, Frenchman's Bay, wiverpoo!, Taunton, Tyrone, Dunbarton, Enniskillen, Ueskard, Brougham, Burketon, Claremont, Pontypool and Newcastle not over By mail in Province of Ontario $15.00 per year. Orono, Monchester, S5c per week outside carrier delivery oreo Dther provinces ond Commonwealth Countries, $18.00 per year. U.S.A. and foreign $27.00 per year. ornare ct artes f mun OTTAWA REPORT go about in secret and leave their money at the doors of the poor.) -- To give to charity and not to know' who will receive the gift, nor do the poor know from whom the gift has been received. -- There is only one degree of giving higher than this, and that is to take hold of a man who has ben crushed, give him a gift, or a loan, or find work for him, and put him on his feet so that he will not be dependent on his fellows. The last two degrees of Maimon- ides' dictum articulate the purpose of many of our present voluntary health and welfare agencies and the organizations that support them -- our united appeals, united funds and community chests. These agen- cies, because they carry out the two highest forms of giving for us, deserve the attention -- and the individual support -- of us all. Other Editors' Views ADOPTION There are claims that sending children out of the country for adoption in other lands is a violation of their Canadian rights. That is true and it is regrettable that this has to be done. But in the pinch, a couple of loving parents in any country are a lot more important to a child than having to live with his "rights" in a foster home. (Port Arthur News-Chronicle) MAN AND DREAM What with all the screams from Toronto, Montreal Mayor Jean Dra- peau's proposed Man and His World exhibit on the Expo site may end up as just another example of Man and His Dream. (St. Catharines Standard) TR eat 'MOOD, "SNARLY' Congress Says 'No' To Tax Hike By ARCH MacKENZIE WASHINGTON (CP)--More than a year ago, Finance Minis- ter Mitchell Sharp of Canada said here he had expected a U.S. tax increase to help cool off the Canadian economy. President Johnson didn't want a tax increase last year, however. And this year, when he is asking an extra 10 cents on every dollar of personal and corporation income tax, Con- gress says no Congress is in a snarly mood. At work for more than nine months, it has yet to act on 10 of 14 major requests for spend- ing. : It has told the president, through chairman Wilbur Mills of the key ways and means committee of the House of Rep- resentatives, that there will have to be fundamental reap- praisals of the whole shape and size of assorted spending pro- grams. Guns, yes. Butter, less of it There has been speculation that President Johnson wants to pin all the blame on Congress for its attitude, as former presi- dent Harry Truman did in 1948 when he won re-election against all odds. But Truman was shackled by a Republican congress; this one is controlled by Democrats, members of the president's own party BLAME VIETNAM WAR Many think the real villain is the Vietnam war, costing annually with the defence budg- et absorbing an all-time peak of more than $70,000,000,000 more. Others say congressmen are restive only because the folks back home are up in arms about rising costs that include rising taxes States and counties are get- ting into the act, too Congressional mail is report- ed running heavily against many spending programs from anti-poverty efforts to space and beautification of highways, The president has challenged the states to consider cutting feder- ally - subsidized highway build- ing Twenty-five of the 50 states have raised taxes of various sorts this year. Thirty-eight states now impose their own income taxes. Two are doing so for the first time. Five have raised their rates this year. Forty states impose corpora- tion taxes and 44 charge sales taxes, some as high as five per cent. Taxes on gasoline, tobac- co nd alcohol are virtually Standard and many states and local governments have raised them. U.S. News and World Report magazine estimates that annual tax collections Have increased nearly 300 per cent in the last 20 years; that the rate now is higher than in the Second World 'War, taking 28 cents from each dollar of production against 24 cents 20 years ago. YEARS AGO 20 YEARS AGO, Oct. 17, 1947 Two hundred and twenty new members were inducted when the General Motors 25-year- Club held its second annual din- ner last night. Harry M. Brooks, local con- tractor, has been awarded. the contract for the construction of the addition to Ritson Rd. Public School 35 Oct. The apple crop for the Osh- awa and Bowmanville district for the year is estimated at 80,000 barrels. It was announced today that A. W. Armstrong has been ap- pointed manager of the Osh- awa Arena. ronnemnanann THAT INVESTM FOREIGN AFFAIRS ANALYSIS ENT CLIMATE ' fl r Case Of USS. Self-Interest By PHILIP DEANE Foreign Affairs Analyst Dean Rusk, the U.S. secretary of state, in passionately defend- ing his government's policies on Vietnam, cleared the air by af- firming that these are based on American national interest. The protection of those South Vietnamese who have so far supported the U.S. stops being an end in itself and becomes part of American self-interest: how much will its reputation for good faith suffer if these "pro- western'? South Vietnamese are 'abandoned? Indeed, these South Viet- namese are constantly under at- tack. They are assassinated, ter- rorized and hounded by the Communists. Inthe past--but not any more apparently--Mr. Rusk's argument has been that his country has fought to safe- guard such people from annihi- lation; this argument, however, has become almost untenable for several reasons: Since the Communist guerril- Jas shelter in South Vietnamese villages, such villages have been subjected to bombardment and other forms of destruction. Few Communists have been killed in the process--this is admitted; but tl ds upon th ds of peasants, including children, have lost their lives or been maimed simply because a guer- rilla fired at a helicopter from among them. The arithmetic of the situation is not cimpletely clear, but there is no apparent desire to deny that the innocent bystanders killed directly or in- directly through U.S. action ex- ceeds by now the number of South Vietnamese who might be killed in a Communist purge. ONE BILLION CHINESE Thus, Mr. Rusk falls back on American self-interest pure and simple. In the next 10 to 20 years, he says, there will be 1,- 000,000,000 Chinese armed with nuclear weapons, and the U.S. therefore must hold the line BIBLE "For if ye love them which love you, what reward have ye? do not even the publicans the same?" Matthew 5:46 The world is still in search of Christians who care. mnt mn m HAN by Patrick Nicholson Politics Rather Than Prudence On Inflation? OTTAWA--If a story being whispered in top circles on Par- liament Hill can be believed, the newsmaker of the day must be Louis Rasminsky, the 59- year-old native of Montreal who, as governor of the bank of Canaa, places his facsimile signature on every dollar bill. As Ottawa Report has suggest- ed earlier, Canada seems to be fast approaching a financial cri- sis. The most obvious warning flag for all Canadians is the rapid increase in the price of all goods and services which we buy. This inflation is being fed by the usually rapid increase in our money supply. The whis- pered story suggests that Gov- ernor Rasminsky told the cabi- net early in August that he could not increase the money supply any further; that prompt- ed an emergency all-day cabi- net meeting, at which next year's estimates got their first modest pruning. Yet statistics reveal that the money supply has nevertheless been substan- tially increased during the past two months It is therefore a reasonable deduction that the Pearson Cab- supply shows up in the bank's This demand-pull while the gov- inet has invoked section 14 of the amended Bank of Canada Act. Has it? If so, this would be evidence of an omnious disa- greement between the cabinet and its chief monetary adviser, and a hint that politics rather than produdence is now govern- ing our runaway inflation. WHAT THE LAW SAYS The governor of the Bank of Canada has day-to-day control over the country's money sup- ply. Section 14 defines the rela- tionship between him and the cabinet in this field; it makes clear that the two sides shall hold regular consultations, and it provides that, in the event of a disagreement, the cabinet has paramount power and may issue a written directie to the governor setting out the mone- tary policy it must adopt The significance of Governor Rasminsky's reported warning to the cabinet is that he, in ihe interests of all Canadians, is at- tempting to hold the line against further inflation. The increase in the money statistics. These show that the total of currency held by the public, and of deposits in chartered banks, at the end of September was $23,759,000,000. This total had leaped by over three quar- ters of a billion dollars during the preceding two months. It had skyrocketed by $3,051 mil- lion during the preceding year. It had in fact soared by a stag- gering $8% billion in the 53 months since the Pearson gov- ernment took office. This in- crease in less than 44% Pearson years is approximately double the total increase in nearly six Diefenbaker years. THE CRISIS LOOMS This rate of increase in our money supply is a factor in in- flation, as more money chases a supply of goods which has not been similarly increased. This explains the demand-pull factor adding to our inflation, which is coupled with the cost-push fac- tor stemming from the intolera- ble Pearson pattern of 30-per- cent wage increases last year, ernment is increasing its expen- ditures produces a total demand running ahead of the country's total production which, disas- trously, has not enjoyed the op- timum increase recently -- be- cause government actions have curtailed the expansion of our factories and other productive capacity. Canada now is deep in the pe- riod of developing crisis. The onset of the actual crisis may be earlier than the mid-1968 date predicted by some econo- mists; that crisis will probably last at least two years while the readjustments are made to en- able us to become competitive again in world and even in Ca- nadian markets. The major weapon in this readjustment will almost certainly be a devaluation of our dollar, already heralded by the flight of money out of Can- ada. Ottawa Report in past times suggested that Prime Minister Pearson's centennial project appeared to be "A 67- cent dollar in '67." We are cer- tainly heading that way. against them. And Mr. Rusk's critics ask: why? Is an American military com- mitment on the Asian continent less likely to provoke Chinese aggression than the absence of such a military commitment? Are not the chances of a nuclear war between the U.S. and China greater if the two confront one another militarily in Asia than if they are separated by the breadth of the Pacific? But can the U.S. afford to let China take over Asia? Leaving aside the fact that China may continue too weak to undertake such a task, one must ask wheth- er the U.S. would rather stand and face 1,000,000,000: Chinese in a series of Vietnams, all along the rim of Asia. One Vietnam costs $2,000,000,000 each month now. Four Vietnams might cost up to $10,000,000,000 each month, plus countless lives. And would Chinese communism retain un- changed its worrying character- istics if it became bogged down in India's insoluble problems-- should China even conquer India? Would not American en- ergies be better spent and her interests better served fighting poverty at home and abroad rather than fighting guerrillas in Asia? These are the questions Mr. Rusk's critics ask, and these are questions to which he has not given answers that satis- fy his domestic critics who are patriots no less than he. Sir John A Back In Power After Clever Waiting Game By BOB BOWMAN In 1873 Sir John A. Macdonald and his government had to re- sign and were defeated in a general election as the result of a financial scandal involving the building of the CPR. It was a development that would have relegated many political leaders to oblivion, but not Sir John A. He believed in his destiny, and bided his time while the Liber- als under Alexander Mackenzie struggled with a depression and other problems. Macdonald was preparing for the next election which would have to be held in 1878 at the latest. - Mackenzie perhaps made a mistake in delaying the election as long as possible, but eco- nomic conditions were improv- ing gradually, and he also had been joined by a brilliant young French-Canadian, Wilfrid Lau- rier, who showed promise of be- coming the vote-getter needed in Quebec. Macdonald played a clever waiting game. One big issue was whether the government would move towards protection or free trade. If the Liberals had chosen protection, Macdon- ald would have advocated free trade. When they announced a policy of "no change' Macdon- ald introduced his famous "Na- tional Policy' of protection. Macdonald also developed a highly-successful technique of vote-getting by appearing at carefully arranged country pic- nics. First there would be a pa- rade led by a brass band, while political leaders rode in car- Yiages (they would be in open convertibles today!) and the mass of people followed behind. Buffet tables were laid with cold chicken, ham, tongue, cakes, pies and fresh strawber- ries, There were buckets of iced lemonade and raspberry cordial for drinks. Sir John knew how to take advantage of such occa- sions. Macdonald even campaigned in Quebec although he could not speak French. He recalled the great leadership of George Etienne Cartier, who had died, although Cartier led a conspira- POINTED PARAGRAPHS In trying to guess what Pi- casso's sculpture in Chicago rep- resents, has anybody guessed weirdness, "What. fools these mortals be"'.... Who take a trip on LSD (With an apology to Bill Shakesptare, if he requests it). ad cy to get rid of Macdonald after Confederation. Fighting in Parliament was vicious and Macdonald got a lucky break when the Macken- zie government 'appeared to be involved in a railway scandal on Vancouver Island. Even up- right George Brown was re- vealed to have written letters urging a big push for campaign funds. Tue election was held in Sep- tember and the Conservatives won 137 seats to 49 for the Lib- erals. Sir John A. Macdonald was back in power again on Oc- tober 17, 1878, although he lost his own seat in Kingston, and was given a "safe" seat in Vic- toria instead, in an effort to keep British Columbia in Con- federation. OTHER EVENTS OCT. 17: 1760 Sappers under Jack Byron (grandfather of the poet) destroyed fort at Louisburg, NS. 1777 General Burgoyne was defeated by Americans at Sara- toga. 1794 Captain Vancouver sailed from Nootka after third voyage ef exploration. 1873 Royal Commission report- ed on CPR bribery charges that had defeated Sir John A. Mac- donald government, 1877 Sitting Bull refused to re-. turn to U.S.A. 1910 First cruiser for Royal Canadian Navy "Niobe" ar- rived at Halifax. 1920 Canadian Air Force com- pleted first transcontinental flight. 19388 Trans Canada Airlines (now Air Canada) inaugurated mail and freight service be- tween Montreal and Vancouver. THEN AND NOW Many Memorials - To Dr. Kaiser Here By FORD LINDSAY Of The Times Staff Down through the years Osh- fwa has been called home by many prominent men who have made their mark in commerce, industry and the professions. One of these who left his im- print in some form or another on the life of the community was Dr. Thomas Erlin Kaiser, whose many projects remain as a living memorial to his work. Not only did he serve as a councillor for many years, but also as mayor in 1907 and 1908, served 15 years on the board of health, the town planning com- mission as well as two terms in the House of Commons. Prior to the establishment of the de- partment of health by the pro- vincial government, he served 14 years as a member of the provincial board of health, in- cluding at least one term as chairman. It was my privilege to inter- view him in his office at the rear of his residence, where the Biltmore Theatre now stands, prior to his death in 1940. On that occasion he told me he had been the moving spirit in the establishment of the water- works system, inspired and worked for the erection of the Oshawa General Hospital, de- veloped the city's park system, assisted in the promotion of the South Ontario Agricultural So- ciety and was one of the prime movers in having the fair moved from Whitby to Oshawa in the early years of the pres- ent century and conceived the {dea of an annual dinner for senior citizens. The first Kaiser on the North American continent settles near Johnstown, Pa., on a grant of land from Queen Anne as a re- ward for gallant service render- ed Elector Palatine. Dr. Kaiser's great-grandfather was given the choice of losing his lands or his British citizenship and came to Canada when there were less than 5,000 British folk in what is now Onfario. With such a tradition, it was not unusual that Dr. Kaiser was a natural born fighter, but a purposeful one. Coming to Osh- awa in 1890, Dr. Kaiser was al- most at once engaged in his greatest fight. Oshawa at that time was a village of 3,500 peo- ple which each year had be- tween 150 and 250 typhoid cases. He fought the typhoid breeding conditions with facts. On his professional rounds he obtained water samples from every well. These were sent to the government analyst and the results tabulated on a map in his office. The character of every well was shown by pins. Black pins denoted homes blighted by typhoid. Oshawa, it is recorded, look- ed, criticized, doubted and even laughed. But its citizens could not get away from the facts even if they wanted to. The battle was really won by Dr. Kaiser's typhoid map. In 1904 he became a member of Osh- awa's first board of waterworks commissioners charged by the People with supplying the town with pure water from a com. mon source. That marked the end of the typhoid era. His second battle was for beauty, a beauty dedicated to the service of health. He saw the possibility of farm lands which now form Alexandra Park. Council had the right to buy land for park purposes but not to lease it or rent it. With this in mind he secured the establishment of a parks com- mission, the lease of Alexandra Park and the old Athletic Asso- ciation grounds, It was the be- ginning of the city's fine park system. Following the First . World War, Dr. Kaiser conceived the idea of erecting a memorial to the men who laid down their lives. Aided by his daughter, Josephine, an ardent stamp col- lector who had correspondents around the world, he asked for and obtained postcards and pic- tures of the memorials in many countries and worked out the theme of the present 'Garden of the Unforgotten" in Memor- ial Park. It was his idea to build the memorial incorporating stones from each of the 12 countries which fought with Britain and her allies. He wrote to those of- ficials he deemed proper ex- plaining the idea and in no instance was turned down. The final cost of the stones was $85.50 as every country that could paid transportation costs. The CPR picked up the tab for ocean and rail transport for those countries which could not afford the cost, The 48 stones, each bearing the name of the country of its origin, incorpor- ated in the memorial, are the results of his efforts. Another of his interests was the preservation of pioneer gravestones. His idea was to collect these markers of the last resting place of Ontario County's pioneers from neglect- ed or abandoned cemeteries and place them in one location to stand as a lasting memorial. Groveside Cemetery, near Brooklin, shows this idea splen- didly. The markers have been embedded, face upwards, in concrete, Steps were built so people could walk between the rows of tombstones and read the inscriptions. There is a plain pillar at the head of the memorial bearing the simple wording "Whitby Township Pioneers". : Dr. Kaiser was a firm be- liever in Oshawa's future. He foresaw there would be no sat- uration point in automobile sales and believed Oshawa would expand in direct propor- tion to the growth of Canada. He is quoted as saying on one occasion: 'With the faith of its citizens, its economical admin- istration and sound manage- ment, I am confident that Osh- awa has a splendid future be- fore it -- one of the most solen- did in the whole of Canada", 'Rawhide' Carries Humor Smoothly In Written Word Five days a week, Max (Rawhide) Ferguson gets up before dawn and makes his way to the CBC radio studio in downtown Toronto. In a tension-filled couple of hours he scans the morning news- paper and puts together one or two satirical skits based on news stories that capture his fancy. As in the old days, when he created Old Rawhide and his other radio characters--Gran- ny, Marvin Mellobell, Scott C. Mulsion--at CBC Halifax, Ferguson provides all the voices, switching easily from John Diefenbaker to Lester Pearson and back when the story happens to be political. Listeners across Canada hear the Max Ferguson Show around breakfast time except during the summer months when he heads for his sum- mer place in Nova Scotia to recuperate from the hectic schedule. This summer was different. Ferguson wrote a 167-page book--And Now ... Here's Max (McGraw-Hill)--de- scribed on the dustjacket as a "funny kind of autobiogra- TODAY IN HISTORY By THE CANADIAN PRESS Cetus AT British general John Burgoyne surrendered to the Americans at Saratoga 190 years ago today--in 1777. Burgoyne, who com- manded British reinforce- ments invading the Ameri- can colonies from Canada, was denounced by the Brit- ish government for losing the battle. Eventually gen- eral opinion agreed it was not Burgoyne's fault that superior forces defeated him, especially after his lines of communication with Canada had been cut. 1907--Transatlantic wire- less opened for public serv- ice. 1951--Britain rushed troop reinforcements to the Suez Canal Zone. pa First World War Fifty years ago today--in 1917--the Russian fleet was bottled up in Moon Sound at the entrance to the Gulf of Riga; German naval units sank the Russian battleship Slava; nine neutral vessels and two escorting British destroyers were sunk by German cruisers in the North Sea. Second World War Twenty-five years ago today--in 1942--94 Lancas- ter bombers attacked the Schneider armament works at Le Creusot in occupied France; Russian troops made the fourth of a series of withdrawals in the Sta- lingrad area; eight Axis planes were destroyed over Malta. 4 phy." It demonstrates that he has a facility for the written word as well as the spoken one. me More of a series of reminis- cences and anecdotes than an autobiography, Ferguson tells some witty stories about celebrities he has encoun- tered in his 20 years with the CBC. But he's at his best when he tells about the develop- ment of Old Rawhide and nis associates. And although he was born in London, Ont,, and got his start in the 1940s with CFPL there, he displays deep feel- ing for his adopted province and the people of the "Mar- times." Eyewitness accounts and quotations from participants on both sides provide a vivid account of the Battle of Brit- ain in Eagle Day, by Richard Collier. Published in Britain by Hodder and Stoughton and distributed in Canada by the Musson Book Co., it gives & day-by-day description of the struggle for air supremacy over beleaguered Britain from Aug. 6 to Sept. 15, 1940. The words of the men who flew the planes recreate the agony and the ecstasy of the air duels. And the book adds a realistic footnote to the memorable tribute of Winston Churchill to the defending air- men: "Never in the history of human conflict was so much owed by so many' to so few." The footnote, added by Flymz Officer Michael Appleby whose air force pay was 14 shillings sixpence a day--a- bout $3.60--was "'and for sG little." The author times the end of the battle simultaneously with the German decision to switch from British air fie'ds to British cities as prime tar gets for the Luftwaffe--a decision which cost Germany aerial victory over the RAF. QUEEN PICKED TOWN Queen Victoria picked Ot- tawa, known then as Bytown, as the capital of Upper and Lower Canada in 1857, mere WELF PICKERING ( Clifford Laycox | proval of Pick council last nig favor of a coun tem but in oppo posed county-w service. : Both question agenda of count Speaking in fi avant ten Counc To 10: PICKERING (Staff ering Township cot night endorsed a rec tion of a joint planni committee of adjustm tition the minister of affairs to eliminate t lot expansion from th subdivision control. The move, if approv mean that the com adjustment would | same power in dea land separations of acres as they now ha' separations of under 1 Township Planning John Faulkner, speaki motion, said that 1 present provisions the was being quickly into. 10. acre parcels. the proposed new would eliminate th allowing property ow more than 10 acres and sell their land wi receiving approval. Council also endors ommendation from committee with respe: dential accessory dw agricultural uses an Unlawfu Charged WHITBY -- During week at Whitby deta: the Ontario Provinci: there were several o¢ involving the seizure fully transported liqut Summer weekends | crowded highways n ended, the report cont it didn't seem to 1 number of accident: gated by the Whitb: ment. Last week, ther persons injured in 30 That's exactly 30 more than were neces more accidents that « more policemen are r investigate them. T used to pay policemen duce taxes -- drive s: "AUTU \ RIVING' "Octover is a transit for motorists. Now is we must adjust ou Reservoi Work Se PICKERING (Staff tracts for the long awz bank reservoir and w were awarded by towr cil last night. The contracting firr ly and Reed was aw contract for the watermain at the revi of $274,000 while H. bridge Construction w ed the reservoir cont: cost of $396,984. Council also passet authorizing the bor $628,000 for the const the watermain and 3, lon reservoir. The lack of the caused a water ban ir section of the townshi; NORTH! 1968 DAI (NOT AS | HIGH PERFORMAN 3 SPEED AUTOMA' DRESS UP GROUP | 700 x 13 WSwW TIF FULL WHEEL COV! VINYL INTERIOR AND ALL STANDA 1968 D SE Be Only $9 TRADE & TI NORTHSII

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