Oshawa Times (1958-), 21 Oct 1967, p. 4

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

She Oshawa Cimes 86 King St. E., Oshawa, Ontario Published by Canadian Newspapers Company Limited T. L. Wilson, Publisher E. C. Prince, Associate Publisher OSHAWA, ONTARIO, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1967 Strike Looms Over City As Community Crisis In January of this year The Times suggested that a worthy Centennial goal in Oshawa would be the settlement of automotive industry contracts without a strike. The proposals had all the impact on the community of a feather flut- tering to rest on an eiderdown pillow. It attracted brief acerbic comment from the hierarchy of the United Autoworkers Union and silence from General Motors. Both reactions have come to be expected. It is the bleak resignation with which the prospect of another strike is awaited by the community as a whole that is difficult to counten- ance. As was stated here previously, and is all too well known in Osh- awa, strikes today are hell. They are laden with violence, always near the flashpoint. They engender un- reasoning bitterness. They bring harsh hardship and cruel mental an- guish to wives and children. They disrupt community life and serious- ly stall and setback the economic pace of the city and of the country generally. When this prospect was forseen months ago an appeal was made for enlightened and receptive attitudes on behalf of both management and labor in working toward a settle- ment. It was pointed out that the United Autoworkers and General Motors have proved themselves many times over as exceptionally good citizens of Oshawa. As such they were urged to avoid the ter- rible tug-of-war of the power politics of modern labor-management strug- gles. There is still time for the resour- ces of reason on the part of the union and the company to come into fuller play. The decision on the part of the 1,500 autoworkers who at- tended the meeting last week to strike has been made. But this is just part and parcel of modern negotiation, a necessary show of muscle to maintain strength at the bargaining table. It does not follow that a strike in Oshawa must mush- room to grim reality. On the crucial question of wage parity, this newspaper expresses no opinion. Certainly, however it must be generally recognized that the shaky condition of the economy and the clouded course of future develop- ment in the automotive industry -- on both sides of the border -- make it inadvisable for a decision to be made at this time. In this time of grave concern in Oshawa, The Times is in neither the camp of General Motors nor that of the union. It is however very much in the corner of all those men and women who would be, directly or indirectly, victims of a strike. And it cannot be a neutral corner. Before the final round begins, The Times calls upon the mayor and all those elected to civic govern- ment, the newly-elected member of the provincial legislature and the member of parliament as well as all other citizens of influence to bend their efforts whole-heartedly to a fair and peaceful contract settlement. The impending crisis is very much a matter of community con- cern, Exhaust System Okay ? Plan to do a lot of driving this fall? According to the Garage Oper- ators Association of Ontario, one of the major items on your car that you should check is the exhaust system. Odorless carbon monoxide, seep- She Oshawa Sines 86 King St. E.. Oshawa, Ontario T, L. WILSON, Publisher &. C, PRINCE, General Manager C. J. MeCONECHY, Editor SUBSCRIPTION RATES The Oshawa Times combining The Oshowa Times {established 1871) and the Whitby Gazette ond Chronicle (established 1863) is published daily (Sundays ond Statutory holidays excepted). Members of Canadion Daily Newspaper Publish- ers Associaton, The Canadian Press Audit Bureau Association. The Canadian Press is exclusively entitled to the use of reproduction of .cll news despatched in the paper credited to it or to The Associated Press or Reuters, and also the focal news published therein. All rights of specia! des- potches are also reserved, 86, King St. E., Oshawa, Ontario National Advertising Offices: Thomson Building, 25 University Avenue, Toronto, Ontario; 240 Cathcart Street, Montreal, P.Q. Delivered by carriers in Oshawa, Whitby, Ajox, Pickering, Bowmznville, Brooklin, Port Perry, Prince Albert, Maple Grove, Hampton, Frenchman's Bay, civerpool, Taunton, Tyrone, Dunbarton, Eriniskillen, Orono, Leskard, Brougham, Burketon, Claremont, Monchester, Pontypool ond Newcastle not over 55c per week. By mall in Province of Ontario outside carrier delivery area. $15.00 per year, Other provinces and Commonwecith Countries, $18.00 per year. U.S.A. and foreign $27.00 per year, xy temnerremmetern ing into a car's interior from a defective exhaust system, can cause headache, un ijousness and even death to an occupant when the gas is in concentrations of just a few hundreds of a percent. A concentra- tion of 1000 parts per million (.10 percent) can cause death after an hour and a half, Isn't that a good reason to make sure your muffler, exhaust and tailpipes are not corroded and leak- ing? Besides the safety factor, says the association, there is an im- portant economic reason for having a healthy exhaust assembly. The ex- planation is that gas pressure builds up in all mufflers. Excessive build- up of this pressure tends to push back into the engine and act as a brake against full driving power. Backpressure, says the associa- tion, can reduce built-in perform- ance by as much as 45. h.p. and actually reduce miles-per-callon as much as 10 percent. Surveys show that one out of every three cars on the roads re- quires exhaust system service. Is yours one? QUEBEC EDITORS COMMENT 1,000 MORE EACH MONTH ~ MANY NEW AGENCIES Civil Service Growth Unmatched Since War By BEN WARD OTTAWA (CP) -- Employ- ment in the federal civil serv- ice grew last year at an aver age rate of better than 1,000 a month, a pace unmatched since the crash buildup dur- ing the Second World War. Although precise statistics on this year's growth are not yet available, most officials believe the rate is continuing. At Jan, 1 there were 222,385 persons on the payroll of gov- ernment departments and their direct agencies, a 12- month increase of 13,711 or 6.6 per cent. This figure does not include independent federal corpora- tions such as the CBC, CNR, Air Canada, Central Mort- gage and Housing Corp., Atomic Energy of Canada Ltd., or any of the special agencies set up for Centennial Year and Expo 67. Civil service employment has been creeping up steadily from its wartime peak of 116,000 in 1945. But it didn't TODAY IN HISTORY By THE CANADIAN PRESS Oct, 21, 1967... Japanese troops captured the south China port of Can- ton almost without a strug- gle 29 years ago today--in 1938--nine days after land- ing forces at Bias Bay near Hong Kong. Canton had been heavily bombed for months and many citizens fled. The capture of Canton cut off the Chinese govern- ment from the Pacific Ocean and left the Burma Road, Indochinese railway and the Russian roads the only routes for supplies and trade. 1805--Lord Nelson defeat- ed the Franco-Spanish fleet at Trafalgar. 1936--The siege of Madrid began. First World War Fifty years ago today--in 1917--German troops landed on the Werder peninsula on the Russian Baltic coast; the Russians withdrew on a wide front between the Gulf of Riga and the Dvina River; German. troops counter-attacked at Ypres, capturing part of Houlthoust Forest. Second World War Twenty-five years ago today--in 1942--Allied bombers made large-scale raids on the El Alamein battle zone; Russian forces advanced in the Mozodok area of the Caucasus; Aus- tralian troops drove the Japanese from Eoram, nine miles south of Kokoda, New Guinea. Oct. 22, 1967... First World War Fifty years ago today--in 1917--British and French troops advanced on either side of the Ypres-Staden railway, northeast of Ypres; British airmen bombed Zeebrugge Mole and Melle railway sidings near Ghent, Belgium; Rus- sian authorities reported 16 vessels sunk in the Gulf of Rig Second World War Twenty-five years ago today--in 1942--Field Mar- shal Erwin Rommel was put in supreme command of land, sea and air forces in the Mediterranean area; Admiral Jean Darlan reached Dakar in French West Africa from Vichy; Canadian Defence Minister Ralston announced a_ riot Oct. 10 in Bowmanville camp where German pris- oners were held. vnc really start to surge until the start of 1965. Since then it has increased by an astonishing nine per cent. CAPITAL BOOMING Ottawa, home base for about a quarter of the force, is experiencing boom times as a result of the expansion. Office buildings, both govern- ment and private, are spring- ing up like dandelions, each with a waiting list of federal tenants. A severe housing shortage has developed. Many officials think federal hiring will be greater this year than last, when the strong private demand on the labor market made it difficult for some departments to recruit new personnel, partic- ularly in the high-skill cate- gories, The budget estimate for civil service payrolls in the current fiscal year is §1,- 300,000,000, an increase of 44 per cent in three years. It will take the combined per- sonal income tax revenues from Toronto, Montreal, Van- couver, Winnipeg and Hamil- ton to cover the bill. Most of the staff increases can be traced to an unprece- dented upsurge in the crea- tion of new departments, agencies and programs. Some call the process "empire- building" but the bureaucrats defend it as an_ essential expansion of government services. Between 1957 and the start of this year six entirely new departments and 21 agencies were added to the federal structure. PORTFOLIOS SPLIT This year alone one new department and 10 agencies are being brought into exist- ence. Early last year the govern- ment decided to make four departments out of two. It set up the solicitor-general and the registrar-general depart- ments as distinct entities by giving them certain fields for- merly handled by justice and secretary of state depart- ments, The two old departments had a combined staff of 4,771 at Oct, 1, 1964. At the same 'date two years later the four departments reported 6,095 persons on the payroll. By Jan. 1 of this year the figure had jumped to 7,539. The same sort of thing hap- pened when the manpower department was brought into being, combining the man- power functions of the labor department with the immi- gration service. At Oct. 1, 1964, labor had 4,216 employees. Two years later labor was down to 635 but the manpower section of the new department was employing 5,045. Together they had 5,680 for a gain of 33 per cent from the original labor staff. GROWTH RAPID But the industry depart- ment, which started in 1963 within defence production, has to be rated the best (AAA INFLATIONAR emeENTS ™ nso ns mst ge EVERYBODY HOPES THEY LAND ON ANOTHER LAWN FOREIGN AFFAIRS ANALYSIS Y WAGE -PRice tongs netic Rockefeller Plus Reagan ? By PHILIP DEANE Foreign Affairs Analyst A Washington cynic says that a Rockefeller-Reagan ticket is sure to win next year's United States presidential election be- cause it will unite those Repub- licans who hope Reagan will die politically by becoming vice president with the other Repub- licans who hope Rockefeller, once elected president will die physically so that Reagan can succeed him. Stranger combina- tions have reached the White House--Kennedy and Johnson, to mention the most recent. The possibility of victory for a LONG-TERM EFFECT INDEFINITE Liberals And Levesque Both Weakened This is a selection of edi- torials on current topics, translated from the French-lamguage press of Canada. Montreal Le Devoir--It will take weeks, perhaps even months, to assess fully the events that marked the Lib- eral convention in Quebec City during the weekend... . The truth is that a major surgical operation was per- formed, but no one can say today what the long-term ef- fects will be. The Liberals first of all had to pronounce themselves on the independence option and the federal option. ... As a result of Rene Levesque's de- cision--which we consider premature and not very clev- er--the delegates had to chocse between two major op- tions. They had, according to Mr. Levesque's express wish, to stand up finally and be counted. Despite what Mr. Levesque and his friends may say, the convention freely pronounced itself by a crushing majority in favor of the federal option, In the face of this general wish of the convention Mr. Levesque announced at 6 p.m, Saturday night his de- cision to leave the Liberal Party. o« What will be the conse- quences of this split both for the Liberal party and Mr. Le- vesque? That is the main badly the opinion of Quebecers on the constitutional issue. If that is really the case, Mr. Levesque real state of the bec 1960. their victory in 1960 and espe- cially in 1962. But, as Bona has experienced since The Liberals owe him question that is raised and to which, unfortunately, it is pos- sible to answer only with pru- dent approximations. At the outset, we believe both were weakened by the test. The Liberal party owes an important part of its dy- namism and its accomplish- ments in recent years to the strength of Mr. Levesque. He in turn owes the Liberal party a more important part of his own success than perhaps he would be prepared to admit. As far as the Liberal party is concerned, it must prove, in the months ahead, that it is capable of incarnating, with- out Mr. Levesque, the social and. nationalist objectives which won it the support of Quebec at the start of the cur rent decade. Unless Mr. Le- vesque is replaced in key functions by men who can arouse the same dynamism-- without a certain nationalist exasperation which can only lead to excessive conclusions --the party will quickly sink into mediocrity... . As to Mr. Levesque, his fu- ture rests on the justice of his fundamental option. The short-term view is that he ap- pears to have judged very will slip very quickly into the obscurity which he merited through his temerity. But he claims, and certain of his sup- porters with him, that what occurred on the weekend was only a surface phenomenon and that sight has been lost of the support received for his independence thesis. We strongly doubt the number, the quality and the perma- nence of such support, but if Mr. Levesque is right, he probably will be called on in a short time to take over lead- ership of the forces supporting independence for Quebec... . ~--Claude Ryan (Oct. 16) Trois-Rivieres Le Nouvel- lis te--T he Quebec Liberal party has succeeded in elimi- nating all ambiguity as far as its stand on the constitution is concerned: It has opted four- square for a federalism which would include a special status (for Quebec) in a revised con- stitution, and it has clearly thrust aside the suggestion of independence. .. . The departure of Mr. Leves- que certainly constitutes an important loss for the Liberal party. There is no doubt that he was the artisan of the "quiet revolution" which Que- 4 Arsenault said Saturday night, it is not impossible that Mr. Levesque was somewhat responsible for the defeat in 1966 because it was precisely the grandiose policies of the Liberals that led to their de- feat... One can only admire Mr. Levesque and Mr. (Francois) Aquin (who resigned because of the party's stand on the de Gaulle visit) for having split with a party whose political ideologies they could no longer espouse. On the other hand, they should have the courage and the logic to go a step further. Both were elected as Liberal members by a majority of people who share the Liberal ideology. They were opposed in their constituencies of Laurier and Dorion by those who support the independence theory. To be truly logical with" them- selves, Mr, Levesque and Mr. Aquin should resign as mem- bers and try to get themselves elected under their new im- ages. If they haven't the cour- age to make this gesture, then they will place themselves in an untenable position, which could be called false represen- tation. .. .--Sylvio St-Amant (Oct. 16) Rockefeller-Reagan ticket, the views of these two men on cur- rent events and their undeniably attractive personalities, obscure some of their main traits as men and politicians. The latest utterance of each, divorced from context, is paraded as re- presenting considered policy. We are reminded, for in- stance, that Governor Rockefel- ler has been a hawk supporting President Johnson on Vietnam until recently. The recent change is advanced as a sure sign that Mr, Rockefeller has decided to accept a draft and to that is why he is in trouble. Rockefeller would study, with his experts, what the best policy is and would pursue it regard- less of the political conse- quences to him. Being a fighter he would fight to win with all means at his disposal, including political maneuvering. But his aims and methods would be clear, There would be no feeling of his being devious--a word that is increasingly used about Mr. Johnson. Mr. Reagan, in this context, does not matter, if Mr. Rocke- feller lives through a term as run for the presidency--which makes him sound more oppor- tunistic than he is. WILL TAKE ADVICE Without being a man given to missing opportunities--no suc- cessful politician is--Governor Nelson Rockefeller is a man of principle; his prime motive for entering politics was the desire to exercise power for. the greater good. He takes the aris- tocratic view that the most fun one can have is to have the most responsibility and to dis- charge it well. He could be the first to recognize that there are aristocrats in every social class and consequently he is much better at taking advice than is Lyndon Johnson. Rockefeller, like Kennedy, has always been able to attract people of quality and character --and to keep them. In contrast, Washingtonians wonder at what makes a man like Defence Sec- retary Robert McNamara put up with President Johnson. jf Lyndon Johnson would weigh the political considerations first before deciding what to do about Vietnam--at least so peo- ple think in Washington and POINTED PARAGRAPHS Is marijuana calied 'pot' be- cause it can be raised in a flower pot or a window box, as some are doing. And who was Mary Jane (Marijuana in Spanish( for whom this weed fs named, and what was ske ike. When a man reaches the point where his wife unques- tionably trusts him, he's not long for this world. president. But if Mr. Rockefel- ler dies, then the question of who Ronald Reagan is becomes extremely important. He is not a public spirited aristocrat like Rockefeller. Who or rather what Reagan is, tomorrow. YEARS AGO 25 YEARS AGQ, Oct. 21, 1942 The Very Rev. Dr. G. C. Pid- geon was the special speaker at the 109th anniversary of the founding of St. Andrew's United Church, The new Gray Coach Lines Bus Terminal building on Prince St. was officially opened yesterday afternoon by H. C. Patton, Manager of Gray Coach, Toronto. 40 YEARS AGO, Oct. 21, 1927 The new GMC. truck and coach division will turn out fifty trucks daily. Nearly two thousand people attended the Knights of Pythias Carnival in the old West End Rink last night. BIBLE "Jesus answered and said unto him, Verily, verily, I say unto thee, except a man be born again, he cannot see the kingdom of God." John 3:3 The old life surrenders only to the new birth. "If any man be in Christ He is a new crea- ture, old things are passed away behold all things are be- come new." example of empire-building Ottawa has seen for some time. When it first got rolling in the fall of 1963, industry had 33 employees, defence pro- duction 3,276. By January of this year industry was up to 529 and defence production 4,523 Total spending by the industry department in the 1963-64 fiscal year was $14,- 800,000, including $1,375,000 for administration. This year it has a budget of $146,800,000 with $10,500,000 earmarked for administration. Both Conservative and Lib- eral governments have added to the proliferation of special agencies in the last decade. During their 1957-63 reign the Conservatives produced, among others, the Board of Broadcast Governors, the Atlantic Development Board, the National Energy Board, the Farm Credit Corporation and the National Productivity Council, later reshaped by the CURRENT COMMENT By COLIN McCONECHY Editor Of The Times PERTURBED POLITICIANS have a lot in common with jealous wives. They're doubt- ing, demanding and generally difficult to get along with. (That this be true of the politicians I can testify; of the wives, it 1s only hearsay.) At election times they (the Politicians) can be at their most trying. Whatever the party and whoever the candi- dates, the complaint is always the same: They're not getting enough play in the newspaper and the other candidates are getting too much. 'The closer the contest the more concerned they become. One of the closest contests in the triple-crown of provincial politicking this October climax- es in New Brunswick next week, The campaigning there has been more vigorous than it was in Ontario and more vicious than the battle in Sas- katchewan. SO IT FOLLOWS there are more perturbed politicians. And to cope with them, the Mari- time newspapers are playing it safe. One down-east report has it that the newspapers are lit- erally providing coverage by the inch--ensuring equal space regardless of content to all con- tenders. Editorially, they have yet to take a stand. Such an obsession with ob- jectivity as this is self-defeat- ing. Election campaigns are news and the candidates should be the newsmakers of the day. The depth of coverage they re- ceive should depend on the en- thusiasm their campaigns cre- ate, and their adroitness at making news. Newspaper cov- erage should reflect the enthusi- asm of the candidate and his constituents for his cause. To calculate coverage by the inch each day to what, in es- sence, is the limit set by the least active campaigner repre- sents a ridiculous gauge. Such Liberals into the Economic Council of Canada. The Liberals. have since 1963 come up with such agen- cies as the Company of Young Canadians, the Munici- pal Development and Loan Board, the Science Council of Canada, the Canadian dairy commission and, among this year's crop, the Canadian transport commission and the Cape Breton Development Corp. Each new agency has required separate staff and office space, and it has become an accepted fact of Ottawa life that each strives for its own perpetuation. One classic example was the Halifax relief commis- sion, set up after the Halifax explosion of 1917 to adminis- ter disaster funds. It didn't vanish from the books until 1960. Back in 1946 the veterans affairs department had 12,830 employees. At the end of last year it still counted 12,162. it utenti a system can distort the news as much and more than over- playing a particular candidate on a partisan basis. NEEDLESS TO SAY this was not the approach taken to cam- paign coverage by The Times. We made no attempt to manage the news. We endeavored to give each candidate a fair break but always on_ the premise that the candidates made the news and we report- ed it. However yesterday afternoon, after reading of the Maritime method of reporting elections, my curiosity got the best of me. The files of Oshawa Times pub- lished since the election date was announced early in Sep- tember were put to the yard- stick test. These are some of the findings: In some 35 publishing days during the campaign, more than 100 columns of editorial space (nothing to do with paid advertising) were devoted to the election in the Oshawa area. That's a full page of election news and pictures every three days. Just over 50 per cent of that space was used in coverage of the campaigns of particular parties, visits by party lead. ers, special meetin: and so forth. The remainder told of the campaign in general -- what the candidates were do- ing each day, the reports of forums and information on voting. In the coverage by parties, the breakdown was 37 per cent New Democrat, 33 per cent Con- servative and 30 per cent Libs eral. And as for those pictures Politicians so dearly love, 1¢ were published of New Demo crats, 16 of Conservatives and 14 of Liberals. THERE HAVEN'T been any reports of perturbed politicians here, Boundary On 49th Parallel Agreed Unwillingly By U.S. By BOB BOWMAN In 1846 Britain and the United States agreed that the 49th paz- allel should be the boundary across the Rockies to' the Pa- cific and dip south to give Brit- ain all of Vancouver Island. The agreement ended a period of considerable bitterness. Presi- dent Polk of the United States wanted the Pacific coast all the way to Alaska and was pre- pared to go to war. However, war with Mexico seemed likely and some mem- bers of the U.S. government did not want to fight Britain at the same time. Secretary of State Buchanan, who later became president warned Polk that if he pushed north of the 49th paral- lel he could not rely on the in- tervention of God' to save him. So Polk agreed to the Oregon Treaty unwillingly which said that the boundary was to be "the middle of the channel which separates the continent from Vancouver Island and thence southerly through the middle of said channel and of Fuca's Straits to the Pacific Ocean". This left the ownership of San Juan Island in doubt, and led to the ludicrous situation in which the shooting of a pig might have caused a war! San Juan Island had been oc- cupied by the Hudson's Bay Company since 1843 mostly for the purpose of raising cattle, pigs and sheep. It also built a salmon fishing base there. How- ever Oregon Territory claimed the island and tried to collect taxes from the Hudson's Bay Company which refused to pay. Then the sheriff of Whatcom County seized 30 sheep and sol@ them for back taxes. The H.B.C. presented the county with a bil! for $15,000. These petty disputes contin- ued and became serious in 1859 when 29 Americans settled on the island. The H.B.C. had 19 employees there. One of the company pigs got into the gar- den of Elzear Cutler, an Ameri+ can, and dug up some potatoes. Cutler thén shot the pig and got a bill from the H.B.C. for $100 which he refused to pay. The Americans had a military commander on the mainland, General Harney, who was a fire- brand. His hobby was killing Indians .. . good or bad. Har- ney sent a force of 70 U.S. troops to occupy San Juan, and protect the Americans from fur- ther demands by the Hudson's Bay Company. The British then sent three warships from Victo- ria. i Montreal Oshowa Windsor Winnipeg Edmonton Oshawa DELOITTE, PLENDER, HASKINS & SELLS with whom are now merged MONTEITH, RIEHL, WATERS & CO. Chartered Accountants Associated Firms in United States of America, Great Britain and other Countries throughout the World. Oshawa Shopping Centre Toronto Hamilton Regina Calgary Prince George Vancouver 728-7527 ° THE FOLK - singit "The Second Time 'WHITBY Mrs, J. L. Hughes, St. S., opened her members of the Hous sor Chapter, IODE, tober meeting, chair regent, Mrs. Claren Centennial scholarshi presented by Mrs. Jo: to Miss Valarie Guth commencement exer urday at the Ande legiate Vocational Plans were further for the annual bazaz of Nov. 18 to be hi home of Mrs. Joseph Dunlop St. W. Eacl brought a Christmas distributed to Eskim« Four members, M1! Roblin, Mrs, John Mrs. Robert Just and Howe, volunteered tc tients at Ontario Hos; by. For more than | IODE members ea have spent an even taining patients by them slides, playing cards and discussing topics. During the s¢ a wig and hair piece « tion was arranged b; ess. Refreshments we Dinmer guests at th Mr. and Mrs. Elwin 1720 Brock St. S., on sion of their son Dar birthday were: Mr. George Popescu, Mr. Rod Barter and Mr. Peter Davis. Rev. R. B. Wylie, 1 Almonds United Chi conduct the worship St, Mark's United Ch day morning. Mr. Wy time served the Colu Port Perry charges 0 ed Church. Fairview Lodge, W! its annual bazaar. Wir Mrs. Phyllis Linton, Hanke, Oshawa, Mrs: Mrs. E. Ross, Mrs. Mrs. Mowbray, Beave L. Mitchell, Brooklin, Gear, Mrs. Ida Hay Perry, G. Granger, Mrs. J. Hatch and M Whitby. Almonds Unite: Women, evening gro ing was held at the Mrs. Fred Otter, with liam Hicks giving the reading. Centennial books were distribute: bers. This is a proj afternoon group. A fF be sent to Hong Kor children's -- mission. were reminded of Time Musical Concer held Nov. 1 at Almont The next meeting of will be held at the Mrs. Robert Guy, Ha St. Andrew's Pr Women, group 3, will | day at the home of h Craig, 713 Burns St. V Gardenview Unite Women members are bring articles for the the Oct. 23 meeting, | at the home of Mrs. f bins, 945 Donovan Cre period has been arrai The following infa baptized at Gardenvie Church, with Rev. Wi terson officiating: Re son of Mr. and Mrs. R aes) STAFFORD E LTD. MONUMENT 668-3552 318 DUNDAS EA

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy