Oshawa Times (1958-), 28 Dec 1967, p. 4

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ase Ter one rw Of rem x4 OF fyi 20 in lis She Oshawa Times 86 King St. E., Oshawa, Ontario Published by Canadian Newspopers Company Limited : T. L. Wilson, Publisher E. C. Prince, Associate Publisher OSHAWA, ONTARIO, THU ernment eewonadiln RSDAY, DECEMBER 28, 1967 ia Essential In New Year A qualified and rather cautious atatement of prospects for the new year was issued today by the Cana- dian Chamber of Commerce noting that the country is "entering 1968 in a relatively well-balanceed posi- tion, from an economic standpoint". Most urgent and fundamental problems in the financial field and in the area of costs and prices are underlined by the chamber presi- dent, William M. Anderson. "There ~~. jg an obvious necessity to break the strong inflationary trend without precipitating a financial crisis," he says. "This is a delicate and difficult task. Canada is of course strongly influenced by developments in the United States and much depends on how the inflationary problem is tackled there. Canada's own infla- tionarv problem is magnified and our competitive position worsened by the push of U.S. - Canadian wage parity" To prevent economic backsliding p . in 1968, the careful attention of government, Jabor and management in their own spheres of influence is required. Government must deal firmly with spending programs and make significant cuts so that it is living within its means. (The post- ponement of universal medicare is a prime consideration in this re- gard). Co - operation NDP Constit The New Democratic party -has set itself a formidable task in plan- ning a thorough nation-wide survey to try to find out what Canadians in general think should be done with their constitution. It could well be that the findings will throw some entirely new light on the matter, At least, it should be helpful to find out the opinions of the mass of ordinary people instead of forever basing policy on the thinking of the comparative handful who have come to regard themselves as the nation's intellectual elite. It is the NDP's plan to question as many Canadians from the At- lantic to the Pacific as is -- 'Bhe Osharon Times 86 King St between manage- Oshewo, Or A | €. C. PRINCE, General C. J, MeCONECHY, Editor SON, Publisher Monager SUBSCRIPTION RATES The Oshawo 7 a ae despotched t and also the local Associated news published the des- patches ore clso re RBA K -] Netione! Adve ding 425 University A 640 Cathcort Street. Mo Prince , Enniskillen Orono Monchester 55¢ pi outside Other ¢ $18.00 rer yen S.A Commonweolth © ond foreign $35.00 per year, rer MAJORITY DOWN, ment.and labor is required to cope with the cost problem. Management shares in the responsibility for pro- duction and wage costs. are a part of Jabor's responsibility. Canada can price itself out of both markets and jobs if wage costs keep climbing far ahead of productivity gains. "The year 1968 promises to be a highly competitive one but there should be some overall growth in the economy," Mr. Anderson pre- dicts." "However, it is quite possible that with the inflationary situation facing us our growth in real terms half as much as the because of higher we must bring spending may ars gain in prices. This is why our costs of government under better control" It is not a year of buoyant gress that has been forecast. It is pro- rather a year in which labor and management. in Canada with a major assist from government can price the country right into an era of serious unemployment. This is a prospect which is openly predicted by prominent economists and actu- ally adyocated by the more cold- blooded ones. It is not a pleasant prospect. To avert it successfully will require great responsibility by those in management and labor and govern- ment who plot our country's future course, utional Poll and to build from the results a na- tional consensus for basic reform of the constitution. This, apparently, is going to be more than just another public opin- jon poll in which a few hundred people, comprising what is known as a scientific sample, will be ques- tioned. The party pians to train thousands of volunteer canvassers and thousands, instead of hundreds, of people will be questioned in every federal constituency. If the work is properly done and the reports ex- pertly evaluated it should provide a valuable addition to the sum total of Canadians' knowledge about themselves. It might be vastly more useful than the multi-million- dollar effort of the B and B com- mission which provided an excellent sounding board for special interests and groups but did not have much opportunity to take notice of the views of the man in the street It is likely that once the work is completed the NDP will make the findings public. It will be most interesting to learn approximately what percentage of Canadians from provinces outside Quebec favor changing the constitution to accom- modate French Canada's growing- pains and aspirations -- and how radical those changes should be. And, as The News-Chronicle notes, it is also interesting to ponder , on what might happen if the survey showed that a tremendous majority of Canadians outside Quebec like the constitution the way it is and want it to stay that way. PRESTIGE HIGH 'Peerless By GWYN KINSEY TORONTO (Special) -- John Robarts. w lead his Progres- sive Conservative government into 1948 a sharply re- duced majority and facing a much tougher and more num- erous opposition -- but with his personal prestige at an all time high Polls still show him running ahead of his party in popularity, with just as they did before Octo- ber's general election. There is no murmur about his, leader- ship After the October voting, there were questions about the leadership qualities of Robert Nixon because the Liberals failed to ground; there were even suggestions that Donald MacDonald should be replaced because the NDP fail- 1@ the official opposi- tes ite an almost resentation in the / diiee. But not a word about John Robarts, the leader whose party lost substantial- ly in number of seats and in percentage of vote. PEERLESS LEADER There is, it appears, a sort of THEN AND NOW AND NOW Adventure Attracts Young Men By FORD LINDSAY Of The Times Staff The spirit of adventure was to the fore among the young smen of Oshawa during the sums mer of 1933. Despite the wide spread lack of money some found ways and means of edi- fying their desire to see the country. Whereas today they might take motor trips or enjoy a trip to Europe, they utilized the facilities at hand. What might be termed a vag- abond vacation was taken by Douglas Henderson and Mar- wood Black who went to Hall- fax and worked their way on a@ cattle- boat to the British Isles and returned on a freighter. During their visit to London, England, they had the interest- ing experience of crashing the 10 Downing Street residence of Prime Minister Ramsay Me- Donald. Passing the residence they spotted a button labelled "Visitors" and, despite the presence of a police officer, rang and were admitted, After some coriversation they were shown the prime minister's of- fice by a butler It was only when they went outside again that they were questioned by the policeman and learned that no one was supposed to enter the building 'without permission and they were fortunate they had es- caped paying a fine for break- ing the regulations Later in their tour, while visiting the British Broadcast- ing Corporation headquarters where they were taken on a tour by a relative of Hender- son's, they had the privilege of having a short conversation with the famed Bernard Shaw. Another traveller that sum- mer was John Chappell, son of Col, and Mrs. Frank Chappell, Connaught Street, who was a member of the 8th Oshawa Sea Scouts. He was chosen by the Boy Scout Association of Osh- awa to attend the World Scout Jamboree at Godollo, Hungary, and returned with glowing ac- counts of the scouts he had met from other lands While they did not travel as far afield, Bill Burnett and Church Cowlard had just as in- teresting an experience. Their mode of travel was their bi- cycles which they used to pedal to Halifax, Nova Scotia and return Following main highways through Ontario, Quebec, New Brunswick and Nova Scotia, they made the 1,500 mile trip to Halifax in 18 days. Along the way they called on officials in the provincial capitols where they collected letters from Premier Taschereau of Quebec and Premier McDonald of Nova Scotia. In addition they were given letters to Oshawa offiriais by the mayors, chambers of commerce and boards of trade in all the centres where they made overnight stops The desire to see new places and faces must have bitten Bill Burnett, one of the men who pedalled to Halifax as that fall he announced plans to bicycle from Oshawa to Hollywood, California YEARS AGO 15 YEARS AGO, Dec... 28, 1952 George Stamp of Kingsville was the winner of the Junior Chamber of Commerce TV set draw held Christmas ae k Chief Wesley R. Elliott will mark his silver jubi a" 'Sat- urday as chief of the Oshawa Fire Department. 30 YEARS AGO, Dec. 28, 1937 Joeph P. Mangan, barrister of Oshawa, was one of the 117 lawyers in the province to be honored with a King's Counse! Peak day at the Oshawa post office Dec, 24th when 73,810 and 3,712 other pieces of mail were handled by employees was letters 12 Hey Never dace "To MENTION e/ Bony. lifes WHEN YOU'RE INVITED ON scuihinananies CANOE RACE ® sour wii t um iit CP YEAR-END REVIEW i) Baffling Problem Faces North Atlantic Alliance By HAROLD MORRISON BRUSSELS (CP) -- Twenty years after its inception, the North Atlantic Alliance faces the baffling problem of how to maintain cohesion when the menace that was the main reason for its existence has faded into the shadows. Co-operative military plan- ning, exercises and training-- at least among 14 of the origi- nal 15 members--continue. But the spirit is more relaxed. The threat of a Soviet-inspired war in Europe has declined. A quest for a more stable peace that could embrace an agreement on gradual and mutual disarmament probably will be a major preoccupation of many of the NATO powers during 1968. The problem is whether NATO members can work as a team or whether conflicting national ambitions will get the upper hand Some experts suggest it will be to the Soviet Union's ad- vantage to. hold country-by- country talks, hoping thereby to increase fragmentation within the alliance. But Mos- cow has its own troubles with fragmentation already show- ing up in the Warsaw Pact group. COST WORRIES BRITAIN Most authorities agree that money spent on NATO has brought beneficial returns. Communism has been kept at bay. But in some countries, such as Britain, the strain of military spending on internal politics has produced grum- bling. Military. contributions as well as the personality of NATO itself probably -- will come in for close inspection in the new year. Much-debated proposals by Belgian Foreign Minister Pierre Harmel to adapt the alliance to changing political conditions provide one lement of that study, Ex- perts acknowledge that har- 'Trent Affair' Risked War, Canada As Battleground By BOB BOWMAN In 1861, during the Civil War in the U.S.A. a northern' war- ship stopped the British ship "Trent" out in the Atlantic and forcibly removed two southern- ers who were going to London and Paris as ambassadors, The incident nearly caused a war between Britain and the north- which Canada ern states in would have been the battle- ground. Britain rushed 12,000 troops to Canada but war was averted because President Lin- coln could not risk adding to the conflict. All the attention was on the but it is possible that if war had broken out Canada might now own the west coast as far south as the Columbia east, tytn Mtr CAUTIOUS WAY WITH IDEA Leader' Mystique About Robarts Mystique about Mr. Robarts, is characteristic, because It is fat with public relations He is The Peerless Leader. ie Robarts government has a men -- quick with a glittering There is nothing in his con- very cautious way with an phrase or a snappy slogan -- duct of the affairs of the prov- idea approaches it with but apparently thin in the man- ince to explain stealth and suspicion, surveys it agers who could restrain the this mystique. One can only attribute it to a from several angles at a dis- brilliant performance in image- tance, and appoints either a making. He looks, acts and committee to study it further talks the part of the imper- or a royal commission to en- In turbable, tough but under- case it in cement-like prose. Standing, shrewd chairman of Then, if the idea has managed the board -- a father figure to survive these eroding influ- treasured in a business-consci- ences, it may be draped in the ous province underclothes of legislation -- : the full garments won't come ane ihewe On es ae until the undies have been to brightness with his centennial the laundry a few times. the year activities, giving it a This is not necessarily a bad patina of statesmanship, thing. The legislation that ulti- mately emerges is generally But his ability to run a taut, pretty sound. machinery analysis and decision-making is largely obsolete. empire building within depart- ments and the completion and confusion between departments. all fairness, it should be noted that governments every- where have been unable to mas- ter the new techniques of gov- ernment demanded by the rapid and diverse growth of the administrative establishment -- a growth generated, in turn, by demand of for expanded services. The old the governed for co-ordinated business-like government can But a government has a jot Mr. Robarts is not the type to still be questioned. Now that more to do than just to legis- change the machinery, al- the fat years of negligible op- late. It must look after 'the though the combined opposi- pee sn on are ended, the ability daily business of government, tion may force him to pay syed Pay itself under pres- And it is in this area that the more attention to maintenance, pier That is "something 1968 Robarts method must be ques- The Robarts method of co- Sriaeeeas tioned, and at least a quizzical ordination is to appoint com- Under Mr. Robarts the legis- glance directed at the business- mittees -- cabinet committees, lative record of the govern- like image. deputy ministers' committees, ment is quite good, even . inter departmental commit- though advances in most areas OBSOLETE MACHINERY tees and what might be called have come only after a painful The Robarts organization committees at lange. There is -- and characteristic of study, appraisal, a) and revision, -- process reapprals- seems better designed to create a good impression than to con- duct a tight, efficient operation, little workings of government that is particularly effective, evidence in the daily River, which would be "the St. Lawrence of the Pacific." The Americans had gradually forced the Hudson's Bay Com- pany to discontinue operations in what are now the states of Washington and Oregon. Gover- nor Douglas of British Colum- bia, who had been a leading H.B.C. employee, wanted to hit back. Moreover, he felt that the Americans would gradually try to occupy British Columbia, and the pressure could be taken off by taking over the territory as far south as the Columbia River. On Dec. 28, 1861, Douglas urged the British government to allow a small naval force based at Esquimalt to attack the Puget Sound area, supported by Royal Engineers and Roya! Ma- rines who were already in Brit- ish Columbia. The Royal Engi- neers were building the first roads in B.C., and the Marines were occupying San Juan Island just south of Vancouver Island until its ownership could be es- tablished by arbitration. After capturing the Puget Sound area, Douglas proposed that two addi- tional British units could go all the way to the Columbia River and establish it as the border The British government re jected Douglas' plan when the "Trent affair" was settled tact fully. In fact the northern states allowed British troops, sent to fight them if necessary, to get to Quebec from Saint John, N.B., by driving across the State of Maine in sleighs! OTHER DEC. 28 EVE? 1602--Merchants of Rouen and &t. Malo were organized to fi- nance fur trade and colonization in Canada 1720--British Lords of Trade proposed expulsion of the Aca- dians which eventually hap- pened in 1755. BIBLE "The tongue of the just is as choice silver: the heart of the wicked is little worth," Pro- verbs 10:20 God has given every believer a silver tongue and a_ good heart. He ought to use both to magnify His Creator. Man shall give an account of every word and every deed, monizing approaches to a de- tente by all 15 NATO mem- bers won't be an easy job. The rise of national ambitions may take precedence over consultations among the West- ern allies. There are even questions . raised whether NATO is the right vehicle for negotiating a detente, It was organized as a military shield when the Rus- sians turned their heat on Berlin. That shield now has been renounced by one impor- tant member, France, -which booted the military alliance out of France in 1967, BUILDS MISSILE FORCE Though quickly and com- fortably relocated near this capital, NATO's military structure faces the problem of an exposed southern flank. France is building a global force of its own--a_ nuclear missile establishment that may become totally independ- ent and even competitive with NATO, In Britain, critics who de- mand the government aban- don its independent nuclear deterrent are told by Defence Secretary Denis Healey that he has not met any ally-- other than one--"who would wish France to be the only country on this side of the At- lantic possessing nuclear weapons."' This creeping mistrust of old friends and allies has been accentuated by President de Gaulle's rfusal to allow Brit- ain into the Common Market. The implied threat in de Gaulle's position is that if he is pushed too far he may join up with the Russians. Some of th allis were surprised when it was disclosed during 1967 that France had been conduct- ing joint parachute exercises with Soviet troops. While the allies are not sure how far de Gaulle intends to carry his anti-American and anti-British campaign, the French government has given assurance it intends to main- tain its political membership in the alliance through the NATO council. But France will retain its military inde- pendence. U.S. PREOCCUPIED The weakness in NATO arises not only from the less- ening military threat and in- creasing dissociation of France but also from increas- ing United States preoccupa- tion with Vietnam and events in Asia Twelve years ago the three "wise men"--Lester B. Pear- son, Halvard Lange and Gaetano Martino--proposed that NATO cohesion and strength be sustained through increased co-operation in non-military matters. But the alliance would not listen, The Common Market brought some of the allies into economic unity but kept oth- ers out. The split widened. Its weaknesses showed also in the recurring threats of war between two Mediterra- nean NATO members--Tur- key and Greece--over Cyprus. Towards the end of 1967 it took all the skill of NATO and the United Nations to prevent full bloodshed. One prominent Canadian source suggested a Turkish-Greek war could have finished off NATO altogether, The alliance has been shak- en but it has its optimists, in- cluding NATO Secretary-Gen- eral Manlio Brosio, who pre- dicts that even the monumen- tal reappraisal expected in 1968 will merely re-establish NATO's permanency. READERS PARKING AND POLICE IMAGE Mr. Editor: While the downtown mer- chants spend thousands upon thousands of dollars on adver- tising to bring shoppers down- town, the police with their park- ing tickets drive them out of the downtown area and often right out of the city to a jrear- by shopping plaza at the out- skirts of town. The lost busi- ness is often never recover- ed and the lost revenue is tak- en not only from the merchants in the city of Oshawa who pay heavy business taxes, pay for sidewalks and local improve- ments in the downtown area, but goes instead to firms who pay no taxes, nor for services to the city of any kind. Instead of allowing citizens to park in any metered space for a week or so before Christ- mas, busy shoppers are charg- ed for % hour parking on the south side of King Street, and fined if they fail to fill the met- ers, while right across. the street: others park for a full hour free. The same crazy pat- tern exists on Bond Street in reverse. Rather than relaxing ticketing for busy last-minute shoppers the police are seem- ingly harassing the shopper even more At appox. 4 p.m. Tuesday De- cember 19th with only four more shopping days till Christmas a Police Sergeant slapped tickets on shoppers cars at the corner of King and Victoria Streets while a police Inspector stood and watched from the sidewalk. (total yearly cost to the tax- payers for the two policemen is $15,350.00), When the victims rush to the Police station (as directed on the tickets) to pay before the 30 minute time limit expires, they are faced with a sign prominently displayed to the left of the policeman's win- dow in large fluorescant letters "RESPECT THE LAW' I am sure those who are made to feel like some kind of cheap criminal because they failed to put enough money in the met- ers lose a great deal of respect for the law and those who ad- minister - it. I always thought that Christ- mas of all times was the time for peace (of mind) on earth and goodwill to all men! Trying to find a place to park at the Police station is the second trial by ordeal they face. Everywhere there are signs post- ed No Parking or Aldermen only or city employees parking only. It seems city fathers have es- tablished two classes of citizens. the 'favored few" who park all day free, and the other, "Mr. Average"' citizen who must pay or be summoned to court. May- be they should be reminded of what happened to the last coun- WRITE cil that failed to give proper consideration and yield to the de- mands of the citizens of Osh- awa on another traffic matter. The establishment of a long needed Oshawa Parking Auth- ority with meter attendants could alleviate the problem and create. a better image for the police, P.S. Assessment office reports current downtown core at $22, 500,000 up only 7.1 per cent while overall city figures up 40. 2 per cent in same period. Yours for a better Police image Dean J. Kelly (Past - President, Oshawa Businessmen's Assoc.) 288 Kaiser Cresc., Oshawa Ontario. PENSION FOR PM Mr. Editor: The future, pension of the Prime Minister, $19,666, brings to mind the pittance received by many retired federal em- ployees, especially those who retired before 1960. However, I do not speak grudgingly, as Mr. Pearson will soon be ell- gible for membership in our or- ganization of Federal Super- annuates' National Association. As an example, I quote the amount of $135 a month re- ceived by one pensioner who contributed 5 per cent and later 6 per cent of his salary to the Superannuation Fund for 30 years. There are hundreds of similar cases. The combined contributions of employees and the govern. ment have built this fund to the, staggering total of nearly $3,000,000,000 on which the government pays only 4 per cent interest for its use. The Auditor General's report con firms that the interest alone is sufficient to cover all super- annuation payments. If the in- terest rate were increased by only 1 per cent it would fi- nance the increases to pension- ers recommended by a Join& Senate and Parliamentary Committee on May 8 last. This the government refused to im plement. It will be seen that these upward adjustments should be paid out of the fund without resort to increased taxation. And where is the $3,000,000,- 000? Most of it has over the years financed the building of roads, bridges, canals; largess to under-developed countries, where it often falls into ques- tionable hands; the payment of welfare allowances; even the increased salaries of members of parliament. Yours truly, Cc. P. DOLLEY, Sec.-Treas., Oshawa Branch, FSNA, 625 Creighton Ave., Oshawa, Ontario, FOREIGN AFFAIRS ANALYSIS English Language Blots Many Mother - Tongues By PHILIP DEANE Foreign Affairs Analyst It is not only in Quebec--and France, of course--that people worry about English blotting out their own mother-tongue, Simi- lar complaints have come in the past month from defenders of German, Spanish and the major languages of the Indian sub-con- tinent. Those frightened by the English language, claim it is "coca-colonizing"' the world, spreading like a virus for which there is no immunization so that only stringent quarantine meas- ures will do. What is there about English that makes it so infectious? This is a subject on which I am qualified to speak; I could have earned my living writing in any of four languages but picked English, which is not my mother-tongue. One reason, of course, was marketing; more words are printed in English than in any other tongue: the world's richest country speaks English, the most numerous jobs for "word-merchants" sre in the English speaking world-- reporters, novelists, script-writ- ers, advertising copy-writers. Just as I, in search of readers, wrote in English, so must any man, in any country, seeking an export market, learn English; the U.S. is everyone's richest trading partner and if you are a salesman, you want to be under- stood by your clients. The same is true in technol- ogy. The U.S., Canada and Brit- ain together spend more on re- search and publish more on re- search than the rest of the world combined: if you know English, you can keep up with more than half the technical and scientific developments of the world. USED IN INDIA The above reasons would be enough to explain the spread of English: the prewar extent of the British Empire is another reason; in India, for instance, where there are 17 major lan- guages and hundreds of di- alects, English is still the only language understood throughout India by educated people. Then, those with great eco- nomic and political power tend to bet. imitated. The German parliament recently decided to hold public hearings by its com- mittees, as the U.S. congress does, These hearings were called just' that--hearings--an English not a German word and though the purists of the Ger- man language raged, they could not come up with a good substi- tute. The Germans complained that English words stick out like sore thumbs when included in a German sentence and this is one of the secrets of the success English enjoys; it seems better able than any other language to absorb and anglicize foreign words, like automobile, cinema, photography, "roulette' does not sound foreign in English; black jack sounds foreign in French, Better able to make foreign words its own, English is growing towards being a uni- versal tongue. There are other strengths the English language has: the greatest may be its simplicity and flexibility. It has gone fur- ther towards abolishing gram- mar than any other major. Eu- ropean language, It has no noun declensions, fewer verb con- junctions and a system of rela- five pronouns, prepositions and conjunctions that allow you to shift verbal gears in mid sen- tence and still make sense, still stay grammatical, And general- ly, you can say more with fewer words in English than in any tongue since ancient Greek, TODAY IN HISTORY By THE CANADIAN PRESS Dec. 28, 1967. The last ruling monarch of Italy, Victor Emmanuel, died 20 years ago today--in 1947--w hile in exile in Egypt. He had divested himself of all powers in 1944, after the Allies entered Rome, and abdicated in favor of his son, Humbert, three weeks before the pop- ulation voted to end the monarchy, In the First World War he did not inter- fere in the conduct of the war but lived the life of an active soldier. This constitu- tional policy led him, after 1922, to radify the Fascist decrees which contravened his own oath to protect the people's freedom. 1622--St. Francis de Sales died. 1908--About 84,000. people died in the Messina earth- quake. First World War Fifty years ago today--in 1917--British forces in Palestine captured Ramal and Beltunia; Austrian air- men bombarded Pa dua, Italy; a special conference of British Labor accepted a Labor memorandum on war Whitb Aparti WHITBY (Staff) -- The 1 of Whitby Wednesday with an appeal against a decisior the Ontario Municipal Boar lowing Onurb Construction to have and rent 11 apartm in a Whitby building, The peal was withdrawn durin hearing at the Whitby Mu pal Building. William Thompson, a for private lawyer and yer and new n "AT HOME" IN ¥ Many His Mark Ina WHITBY -- A wide rang historical items will be on play in the 'general ste during the 'At Home' of Whitby Historical Society Saturday, Jan. 6. The 'At Home" will mark inaugural meeting of the council of the Town of Wh following the amalgamation the town with the Townhip Whitby. Proceedings will s at the Whitby Centennial Ce: at 2 p.m. The public is invi Mrs, Alex Ingram, presic of the Historical Society' is general convener of the disp! which will be set up in speci. shop style after the custom the displays by pioneer cra men, Displays will incluie a pres tation of brasses anr glassw by the Antique Society; ha: crafts and decorative pie convened by Mrs. Jack Wils William Hoag will display sn mechanical farm implements pioneer days; the Broo) Women's Institute and the W by Women's Institute will h: a showing of household a facts; Mrs. Reginald Owen ' have a display of early Ca dian glassware. Keith Lynde, descendant one of the pioneer families WHITBY - Al The "Swing and Sing" pa will be held Saturday at Whi centennial centre, with chairman Ronald Hawkins ¢ Gordon Kenzie in charge. Ca eron Warner, Pickering, 1 play the organ. A buffet sup] will be served at midnight. Whitby Senior Citizens +: asked to meet at 7 p.m. night at Whitby centennial c tre for a sightseeing tour Christmas lights and deco tions. The bus will stop at Fa view Lodge to pick up m¢ passengers. 711 Dune in the Nor is spending 1 with | Charles Kadis, St. W., who is west territory, Christmas holidays wife and family. Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Lack and children Debra, Greg, L da and David, spent Christm day in Colborne as the gue of Mrs. Roy Chapman. Holiday guests at the hor of Mr. and Mrs, Douglas Lar 147 Lupin | Dr., is _his _moth Five Rabid I Durham, Nc COBOURG -- Five rabid a Mals -- two cats, a dog, a f and a skunk -- found in t Campbellford and Seymour a Hope Township areas were | ported to the Durham a Northumberland Counti-: Health Unit during Novemb Rabies vaccine was dispens to one person Fifty - six cases of co municable disease, of which were chickenpox, were ported. Chest clinics were held Bowmanville, Port Hope, bourg and Campbellford, wh 115 persons received free rays. One new inactive case w discovered. There was one j mission and one discharge fri sanatorium. Seven hundred and nine four Heaf tests and 17 Manto tests were given. Of these, 7 were negative and seven po tive. Of the Mantoux tests, were negative and six pusitir Students with a' positive st test will be X-rayed and giv further supervision. The He BROCK a" WHITBY L'AUGHTER, L'AMOUR, LE } With--Maourice Chevalie Dean Jones--Yvette Mimi ALSO--Walt COUNTRY COYOT SATURDAY THE MANAGE) EXTEND TO "A HAPPY ~

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