/ KR THURSDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1962 u;vdl!llll' Poultry Department at the Ontario deals in detail with the preparation of turkey, the care of turkey meat, directions for such dishes as moz pie, and turkey salad. and photographs are proâ€" ‘This is the advice extended in a the Markets Laboratory of the Irving 8. BECK SHOES LTD. 21 MaANST. N. WESTON CH. 1â€"4981 Welding and General Repairs including ‘Engineering Services, Custom shop welding, Steel fabrication, Machine work and Welders for rental. AAAAA Bâ€"4 to 11 Xâ€"Ray Fittings Malton, Ontario. Telephone (7th line & Malton Rd.) Toronto CHerry 1â€"4311 16.95 DUGALD CAMERON ASSOCIATES LTD. Superbly fashioned pump in seft, black It‘s a TREADEASY JOE ZEACGMAN 17 roint SPECIAL TUNEâ€"UP FORDâ€"1949 and up CHEV.â€"All ..z DODGEâ€"PLYMOUTH EUROPEAN CARS . 1. Compression Test 2. Vacuum Test 3. Test B!tter{ 4. Clean Terminals; 5. Service Distributor 6. Clean and Gap Plugs 7. Check Ignition â€" pr by the Food c’l,mnkl Institute Wires The Canadian Bank of Commerce $20.00 B.A. SERVICE STATION Jane & Lawrence Phone CHerry 1â€"3262 Ford e o xt | CWea : Ainekd sls Bs is . _A § : C ,. i & _ Cmmg i es f THIS JOB INCLUDES: Mail Orders Promptly Filled Fou a conlyes ‘tter{ 10. erminals, _ 11. Distributor 12. nd Gap 13. 14. gnition 15. 16. 17. Waterproof BRAKE SPECIAL 8 ahwoys buy Cheques at vided to assist housewives in makâ€" ing use of the inform@tion. Copies When Sir / phen Ho‘mes leaves to be UK u;: commissioner in Australia he will be replaced as deputy under secretary of state at the Commonwealth Relations Ofâ€" fice in London by Mr. A. C. B. $yâ€" mon, CMG, OBE, an assistant unâ€" der secretary of state. O.A.C., Guelph. When Sir © phen Holmes leaves Clean Fuel System Adjust Carburetor Check Starter Check Generator Clean Air Cleaner Clean Air Vent Adjust Fan Belt Ti‘rhten All Hoses Adjust Timing Ignition Plyth. $22.00 $22.00 $6.175 $6.15 $7.50 $6.15 SPECIALS Brake Fluid, 20 oz. Chameois, 21â€"24 ... Two Weeks Only 600x 16â€"17.50 and your tire 670x15â€"22.00 and your tire ‘These tires are nameâ€"brand tires. JOE ZEAGMAN SPECIALS B.A. SERVICE STATION Jane &_ Lawrence CH. 1â€"3262 Hemlines and waistlines continue to loo different in the fall fashion picture as shown by the leading deâ€" signers. Above are two gray dresses, similar only in color and full skirt. At left is the latest thing from Paris by Alwynâ€"Gamble, featuring ‘a longer skirt than women have been weéaring for years and no waistline. The one at right is by Canadian designer Scientists In Shirt Sleeves Are Making Success Of UNESCO Lessons From a $5 Lab Written for Unesco by Daniel Behrman Twentyâ€"five bright red pins are scattered over the face of & world map in an office at the Paris Headâ€" Loca nelsical aftastsne oopninen en quarters of the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Culâ€" tural Organization.‘ The pins repâ€" resent international teams working in 25 countries and sum up, at 8 glance, Unesco‘s share of the United Nations‘ twoâ€"yearâ€"old proâ€" Om oC Bc Augll UMNd Aminne ues n 1 gram of technical assistance for economic development. This year, Unesco has a budget of $3,500,000 to handle requests for aid in education and science from 37 countries. Viewed from headquarters in Paris, this proâ€" gram seems an intricate machine fueled by budgets, projects and international agreements. But, in | the field, it is a process of men shedding coats and protocol to get & job done. Represent 130 Members > To look behind some of these red pins â€" all told, they represent 130 men and women in the fieldâ€" I have recently visited Unesco technical assistance teams in four Southeast Asian countries â€" Ceyâ€" | lon, India, Pakistan and Thailand. In all four countries, technical assistance was proving its value, in â€"immediate and â€" long â€" range terms, for in each place it was adapted to the country‘s own proâ€" gram of economic progress. These projects illustrated how technical assistance can work in such varied fields as harbor engiâ€" neering, the technology of indusâ€" trial production, fundamental eduâ€" cation (that is, education to raise standards of living), scientific reâ€" search and general education. It cannot be said that any one project, or any one expert, is TIRE M TIMES AND GUIDE, WEETON VARIANCE IN NEW FALL FASHIONS ON HlMLIâ€hWAIï¬LINI 15 "typical" of technical assistance, for the projects are as varied as the special needs they are meant to meet. Here is a firstâ€"hand glimpse of the work of just one of these 130 scientists, educators and engineers who personify techâ€" nical assistance, \Fiveâ€"Dollar Lab. mantni "Singto does most of the work," he explained, "I helped get things started, but now I spand most of my time watching him." PR aiia Pmmetscacy: ts MTD Sm m oo en ons Their collaboration started in June, 1950, when Mr. Pukahuta and Dr. Obourn visited a science class for the first time together at Cha Choeng Sao, 70 milés from Bangkok. Cha Choeng Sao, a town of 45,â€" 000 and the capital of Thailand‘s 71 provinces, had bean chosen as a laboratory where Thai educators \nnd a United Nations team intendâ€" ed th test new methods of educaâ€" oduc A. W. BRODIE Weston Plumbing & Heating ' Am conprtionINnG BURNERS _ + AIR CONDITIONING UNITS NOT WATER BOILER UNITS By DHLCO, & Product of General Motors â€"â€" ASK FOR PREE EQTIMATES â€" "We watched the teacher lecture for 50 minutes straight, reading out of a book, to a class of eightâ€" h yearâ€"olds," Dr. Obourn recalled. 'co "She was trying to tell them how rice was grown â€" and yet, fifty assistance, | feet out of the school window, you varied as | could see a farmer planting it." are meant | Sun‘s Hot! So What! firstâ€"hand | The next day the lesson was on f just one | the sun, and again the teacher read â€" educators | from her book. She was telling her onify techâ€" |class that the sun was hot, a fact !‘which did not appear to interest | the pupils. tion to determine if they could be adopted throughout the country. "Singto and I borrowed the prinâ€" cipal‘s reading glass and focussed it on a piece of paper. The paper burned. We burned a figure on & board, we let the children feel the sun‘s ray on the backs of their hands. "Then they all told us; ‘Ah! the sun is hot‘ That was the first science experiment ever conducted in the school," he said." The next lesson was on boiling water and it was not too convineâ€" ing. The teacher had been conâ€" verted to the principal of showing rather than telling, but she had only a candle to heat the water. Here Dr. Obourn took a few lessons out of his $5 laboratory. He found an empty ink bottle, punched a hole in its metal cap, and inserted a piece of tin rolled in a tube into the top. Down the tube went a wick of wadded string and a supply of alcohol. From the ink bottle burnér to the light bulb flask was no probâ€" lem. He chipped out the bakelite base of a burned out bulb, leaving only the glass and the metal neck. Then a tin can, with the aid of a apir of sheears, became & triped with the burn r undereath and the light bulb flask nestling in a hole eut in its top. This was the beginning of the transforication of his original kit into a 160â€"tical laboratory (there are 20 Thai ticals in one United States dollar). We saw a list of the equipment that went into this laboratory and it was an impresâ€" sive one. . From Cups to Turtles It began with cups and saucers, ran down through shaving mirrors, darning needles, rubber balloons, wire coat hangers, milk bottles, and curtain rods to automobile seat springs, worn out dry cells, cigarâ€" ette tins and fruit jars. This is the raw material of the science rooms now flourishing the Cha Choeng Sao‘s ten elementary schools. _ School janitors . have pitched in to help children build animal pens, chicken coops and bird cages. In ever school, you will see an aquarium, pigeons, turtles and even a few mynahs, the Siamese talking bird. "When you teach science to eleâ€" mentary _ school | youngaters, it‘s often bebtter to use this type of equipment," he explained. "It‘s CH. 1.5661 Record sales of $157,514,101 and net earnings of u,lq_z_.g_oo: or $3.84 per Class "A" and "B" share, are reported by Loblaw Groceterias Co., Limited for year ended May 31, 1952, compared with $125,961,â€" 074, $2,595,848 and $3.13 a share, respectively, in preceding fiscal year. Income taxes of $3,750,000 (equivalent to $4.53 per share) are an increase of $1,400,000 over 1950â€" 51. Justin M. Cork, President, states that the Company, as the largest retailer of food products in Canada, more than maintained its position in an increasingly competiâ€" tive market. Proceed «With Confidence Best Year in Loblaws History Sees Net Profits Up 23 Per Cent On the outlook, Mr. Cork says that the Company is entering the \ new year with confidence and that results so far fully justify the beâ€" ‘ lief that the current year will rank among the best in history. Working capital of $4,972,910 at May 31, 1952, is a decrease of $414,084 from a year ago. This reâ€" duction is due to the substantial expenditures on the expansion and modernization program and the acquisition of additional properties. Additions to fixed assets amounted to $4,809,861 and proceeds from sale of properties under sale lease transactions totalled $2,388,492 of which $1,369,895 was shown as an made of familiar materials, Chilâ€" dren have a tendency to become fascinated when they see a strange object and then its difficult for them to concentrate." Dr. Obourn emphasized that, picturesque as it may be, homeâ€" made equipment has no place in higher level science instruction, especially in the training of teachâ€" ers. Precisionâ€"built, factoryâ€"made equipment is going into laboraâ€" tories being built in Thailand‘s 21 teacher training colleges in the provinces. When he is in the United States at his home near St. Louis, Dr. Obourn retreats on weekends to his den which has a desk 25 feet long and not an uncluttered inch on it. Mrs. Obourn takes care not to disturb it. As far as she is concerned, the $5 laboratory is a mixed blessing. She approves of her husband‘s work and the results he has achieved, but the housewife in her occasionally rebels. ‘"Some 'dvl,v," she told us, "T‘d like to be able to throw something out of the house." 11 456 d nourlahies you betler. Don‘t feer getting too tat. o a oo rex Ton! Tl_b’«q for new pounds, lovvdy -ryng new pep. Thousands who never could 'dï¬ht betore, now have . sttractive o more bony timbe, es Ostrex, It ;m Aash on y because lacks fron Paps you up, too. Improves appetite, digestion so How"Skinny‘" Girls Get Lovely Curves Gain 5 to 10 Ibs. New Pop Tok bor e e aiat Be a Lovelier Youâ€" â€" This Fall For a Customâ€"Style Permanent Wave _ < "Especially For You" | visiTt Nydia Beauty Salon:= 22 MAIN $T. N. .Cm. 1â€"4521 .. . A flattering hair style, created especially for you ... eyebrows and nails pertectly groomed and your skin glowingly clear and youthful. It‘s so easy to attain this important extra loveliness. Just come in. Our expert beauticians will do the rest. _ s account receivable last year. lalk' | loans of $2,000,000 outstanding at May 31st have been paid off. ‘ | Heavy Income Tax \ _ Referring to the severity of inâ€" | come taxes ($3,750,000), Mr. Cork lpoinu out that while operating | profits were $1,987,000 higher, the iimproument in net earnings was 1 only $587,000 and that Federal and Provincial taxes took 2.38 cents of | CRUICKSHANK 1939 MERCURY, black, new tires for this year of car. A good 1949 MERCURY PANEL, blue, in Aâ€"1 shape, good tires and motor. Just the ticket for economical service. 1946 TWO TON 158" MERCURY, with a 12‘ platform. In nice shape. Good motor and tires. MERCURY â€" LINCOLN â€" METEOR s»« ) 122 MAIN ST. N. > CHerry 1â€"1T61 1951 1949 Meteor Club Coupe Black â€" with . whiteâ€" walls, heater and wadio. â€" Very sporty and clean as a whistle. HARD TO BELIEVE TRUCK SPECIALS THIS IS CLASSY Time pay ment phl} can sed car and truck lot open until 9 o‘clock every evening. Meteor Green with only 4000 actual miles _ with _ heater and radio. This buy will be hard to dupâ€" licate GARAGE â€" ANOTHER ‘39 MERC n can easily be arranged to suit the individual budget. new tires, condition far above avérage . A good car for cold weather driving. every dollar of f Company‘s net gl under review opened 18 and completed several modelling j6bs. The / stores in operation at %{ was 148, compared with year before and 127 at 1950. Customer acceptance. new store . recently Willowdale has been most gra ing. Many large markets ap various stages of planning and struction and remodelling of « units is continuing. L T\ccmh? der review opened 18 1 1946 1940 BUDGET SPECIAL Ford Green, g 0 0d m o t o r and | tires, body _ and_ exterior like new. Check this for price Ford 5 passenger coupe, in good shape. T he payments on this can be handled by anyone. 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