Ontario Community Newspapers

The Era (Newmarket, Ontario), September 7, 1977, B07

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Good Things To Drink NEWMARKET FRESH BLUEBERRIES more youngsters are helping charities through their Hard work and dystrophy carnival in games fish pond and Dawn found thatj their Red Deer St foods When all people came to backyard last week tickets were counted carnival raising j J Dawn Clarke with the assistance of Debbie and Susan Fox Heather Jackson and Dawns mother put on a Jerry Lewis muscular The girls were in spired by Tom Jolls a television per sonality on the Com mander Tom Show The carnival featured a fortune teller several c Newmarket Theatre Centre members prepare he new extended stage at the Old Town Hall for the groups fall season Scheduled productions Include Taming of the Shrew Billy Budd The Penny Farthing Look Back In Anger and Street Siege For seasons tickets call or Taming of the Shrew is set for Oct and i FROM CANADAS IARGEST OF FASHION FRAMES AND SUNGLASSES POPULAR PIANO INSTRUCTOR BBL OFF ON PARTS GM CARS ONLY WERE SOLD ON SERVICE i NEWMARKET By MARIE WHEELER Era Correspondent KESWICK Muriel Pollard has some definite Feelings about her own youthful attitude I associate with young and thats what- me young she Born and reared on her parents farm Mrs Pollard has resided in the Keswick area all her life and since her marriage 35 years ago to Harold Pollard retired builder has lived in the home that her grandfather owned many years ago at North For years the people of Island Grove knew her as their friendly postmistress and for the past years she has been a faithful organist at Keswick United Church Muriel has been described as a kind- hearted warm and loving person with a real teal for life Next to her husband and married daughter who shares her musical talent the main love of her life Is her music and she puts everything Into it MURIEL POLLARD Keswick piano teacher PETER VAN VERWNGEN DC WISHES TO ANNOUNCE THE OPENING OF HIS OFFICE FOR THE PRACTICE OF Hi chiropractic AT 423 PARK AVENUE NEWMARKET ONTARIO MR OFFICE HOURS BY APPOINTMENT She has been playing patient instruction to her the piano since the age of pupils She has often six and since retirement given extra time to those from the post office has who needed it especially given many hours of before a music exam Mrs Pollard recalls only once having a child heme for pouting In order to be able to teach It was necessary for Mrs Pollard to overcome a severe speech Im pediment She has done it through sheer will power nd determination In ap proximately SO students came to her for music lessons and many have since received firstclass honors in theory One young lad was also presented with a scholarship after playing Grade music at a Newmarket festival IV Put Your Lazy To Work- With UmHOIT Dump Conversion your on you kiting and J dump a lot All itn nh lhf e flip A HO ST dOInp Ions in pickups and no Iht to make pickup fii DONCASTER AVE 1 STOP N OF STEELES OPEN MONO AY TO FRIO AY I AM TO PM SATURDAYS AM TO 5 PM your and lh See a of ho punp into trucks color ONTARIO UNIHOIST Steelos Avo West Although its necessary for her to wear y OTTAWA REPORT by sacuuR suras MPYarkSiM g A Upper Canada Maland The Newmarket Lions Club their Annual am I T t nada Mall AN OXFORDCAMBRIDGE DEVELOPMENT j to to Located at St It Davis Di Newmarket It would be May next continues to delay calling year before the general parliament back to effects of a November consider such a budget budget could be felt yet As It is now planned the government parliament will not sit until Oct Parliamentarians dont need their present 10week recess in spite of what the Prime Minister states As we wait grizzly economic figures pile up Unemployment now over eight per cent twice the level forecast by the Economic Council of Canada for this period likely result in over one million being out of work this winter Inflation roars on at over eight per cent well above the governments target and three times the level anticipated by the Economic Council Trade in the last quarter fell into an an nualized deficit of billion the highest in history and at a time the administration an ticipated the deficit would lessen Productivity among our workers continues to lag compared to other countries making us relatively uncompetitive internationally Investor confidence is at a low with stock exchange values crumbling year by year In real terms The impact of this lack of productivity and sagging business con fidence has been reflected in our area with layoffs and plant shut downs such as we have had or will have at HarperOak and Sismans Our economic morass is illustrated by our real growth That Is growth without In flation For the past three years such growth has been stalled at onehalf of one percent per capita per year Expressed another way we have been In a recession since the spring of We have not had full employment in Canada since With his background it is sur prising to hear Mr McDonald the minister of finance state We have gone through an leresting process But plans no new budget That is sad news It is not whether our a hearing aid she cer tainly doesnt need It to hear a wrong note being played When asked If she has any plans for the future she said she can play ARTC In piano passed her Grade organ exam Just last year and Intends to carry on with it this faU Adults Children under 12 Bait available Trophies and prizes Limit 5 fish per entry ACROSS CANADA r present recession will slip Into a dont Ihink it knowing that we could do so much better that hurt BEER AT ITS BEST WELCOMES ONE AND ALL TO ATTEND fc THE MOUNT ALBERT DISTRICT LIONS CLUB I I i ANNUAL FAST BALL TOURNAMENT r R

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