Ontario Community Newspapers

Terrace Bay News, 24 Jan 1957, p. 1

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

Volume 7 No, 4 MONSTER ENTERTAINMENT NIGHT PLANNED BY HOCKEY ASSOCIATION Reserve the night of February 22nd., on your calendars, folks because that is the night the Terrace Bay Amateur Hockey Association is sponsoring a huge enter- tainment night in the High School Gym. Line up baby sitters now as this is one night you can't afford to stay at home. All kinds of prizes will be given away and to top the evening off some extremely lucky person will become the preud owner of the 1957 Pontiac being raffled off by the Hockey Association, So keep open the night of February 22nd., it could be a night to be remembered by you. Plan on taking part in this gala event. FLASHIUS!1) Sunday's game with the Fort William Beavers has been cancelled. The Superiors will not be playing the Beavers this Sunday. tt HOCKEY TONIGHT IN SCHREIBER Terrece Bay Superiors play Schreiber Colts tonight in the Schreiber Arena. Ht LARGEST CIRCULATION IN TERRACE BAY January 24th., 1957. "MARCHING MOTHERS" CAMPAIGN TO ASSIST VICTIMS OF POLIO Mothers throughout Terrace Bay will be on the march from seven to eight P.M., on Thursday, January 31st. Their aid has been enlisted for the March of Dimes Campaign which is held each year to aid the victims of poliomyelitis. In a blitz campaign, the marching mothers will call at homes and while any size donation will be welcome, the can- vassers will be prepared to issue receipts at the door for donations of one dollar and over. These may be used for income tax deduction purposes. The campaign, which is being held all over Ontario, is being done by women, because "it has been learned that when women handle this type of campaign the results are more effective and more re- munerative", according to Mrs. Aileen Simpson, Lakehead area secretary with the Ontario Chapter of the Canadian Foundation for Poliomyelitis. Mrs, Simpson reports that the camp- aign has had one very satisfying result before it even begins. One team captain, & paraplegic victim herself, has been kept so busy telephoning canvassers and is so engrossed in the campaign that she has found herself able to move her legs which were previously paralyzed for three years. Mrs. Simpson thinks the campaign work has provided this woman "with the best therapy she could have had", In conjunction with the Ontario (Cont'd, on Page 13)

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