Ontario Community Newspapers

The Oshawa Times, 11 Dec 1958, p. 21

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TTY Ay FOOD IS gr TT THE IDEAL bs ae GIFT! Now, right pefore the holidays: it easy for you to send : to friends who would app ALP is making available C enomin aoa done in Cana BUY YOUR GIFY o apis Christmas Items CRACKERS noi IO = AP MIXED NUTS rks 89 CHRISTMAS CANDLES 3 10 candies D J LIFESAVERS wn it58: CANDY CANES io25¢ MIXED PEEL porsis 23 GLACE CHERRIES 1... 35¢ Super-Right Quality Meat Specials' GRADE A OVEN-READY FOR FRYING, ROASTING OR BROILING 2 GIBLETS REMOVED CHICKENS -31 rt |80 Wheatley Brand v2.9: Perch Fillets +45: Fish Sticks 3 5¢ SPECIAL! EXTRA SPECIAL! POPULAR BRANDS AsP INSTANT CIGARETTES COFFEE wn 100) 89 wore @ Be Fresh Fruit & Vegetable Specials! British Consols, dhe, "AY, CAM Florida, No. 1 Grade ORANGES 49 Ontario Grown, Faney Grade, Cold Storage Stock, Excellent Eating COURTLAND APPLES ---39. Fresh, No. 1 Grade, Curly Leaf, Washed and Trimmed CRANBERRIES ':.:25¢ SPINACH 2 cobs 2.9 Florida, No, 1 Grade, Pascal, 2 Hearts Per Bunch Imported, No. 1 Grade, Fresh, Crisp, Large Heads CELERY HEARTS 2:+29: VIGOROUS & WINEY = CUSTOM GROUND Rich & Full Bodied -Custom Ground 3.1b bag 2.07 AP VAC PACK YUKON CLus Contents Only THE GREAT ATLANTIC 4 PACIHC TRA COMPANY LTR LETTUCE 229: BOKAR Te RED CIRCLE 8 O'CLOCK 59. 100 "1s" GINGER ALE NEW LOW COFFEE PRICES: I-lb bag 67: --_-- SPECIAL CASE SALE! P ) Super Markets ease of 12 30.02 bils 1.39 reg 2 for 25¢ - Save Ie 210 3.LB AVERAGE Porterhouse or Sirloin STEAKS or ROASTS Bliced Sweet Plokled, Vae Pas Cottage Rolls Sugar Sweet «= Finest for Juice Prizes In This Ad Guaranteed Through Sat | 2-45 | xtyr 4 they tried to get to Montreal. | E " Specials!' {The Icebreaker D'Iberville es Reg, 2 tins 30¢--~BAVE do The Foaming Cleanser SUPER AJAX Libby's PINEAPPLE JUICE Family Mix DARE'S COOKIES Fancy Quality, Whole Kernel A«P CORN A&P Fancy Quality TOMATO JUICE 2 scrim 53¢ Nectar TEA BAGS Monarch SPONGE PUDDINGS Choice Quality A«P PEACHES A&P Sunnyfield POPPING CORN 2 16-02 pkgs 27: A&P Salted MIXED NUTS Frozen Food Specials! Southland French Cut GREEN BEANS Fancy Quality AsP STRAWBERRIES 3 1s: pies 9 5¢ Jane Parker Spanish BAR CAKE Jane Parker Caramel PECAN ROLLS Jane Parker BREAD Cracked Wheat 2 24 Jane Parker POTATO CHIPS Reg. p Rog. pk ANN PAGE FAMOUS FRUIT CAKE 1-1b place 4 Q ¢ 2lbplece Q 7 4bslhb1.93 JIM DAN NEW LIQUID DISCOVERY fox, all HOUSEHOLD CLEANING GIANT 32:00 80. PRAISE More than Just a Soap RICHEST IN COLD MOST EFFECTIVE DEODORANT Bath Size 2 Reg. 350-8AVE 6e Reg. loaf 18c~SAVE 3¢ Regular Size The Os how Times ------------------ OSHAWA WHITBY, _ THURSDAY, DECEMBER nN, ve = Ice- Jaws Snap Shut On Trapped Ships MONTREAL (CP)~A fleet of (ships through the nine-mile at #| bow cut the ice apart for her fol- foreign ships, its last-ditch flight|steady clip, The last two foreign lowers, 4 tu escape an icy and profitless ships cleared into the harbor| Transport Minister. George winter berth in Canada almost|within an hour and five minutes Hees Inspected the canal Tuesday |won, faced fresh obstacles today of each other, and promised it would stay open as winter's cold jaws closed on| The broken lock--Iit was the until every ship has been cleared, the mouth of the St. Lawrence(third one to break within twolor until it becomes physically | River, days--held up movement for nine impossible to Jeep it open, The ocean freighters steadily hours. Stuck behind it was the| "Even then," he said, "we will cut and hammered their way German freighter Leada and keep our men on stall and wait through the narrow, Ice-choked|seven Canadian canallers, |for a break in the weather, then Lachine Canal Tuesday and/FOUR CAME WEST start again," moved fnto the comparatively| Pushing their way fato the| About the only ships appearing open Montreal Harbor. {canal from Lake 8, Louis to the | | permanently frozen in are the But between them and the sea "¢5t Was a fleet of four foreign; canallers Acadian and Stare lay more ice, forming rapidly and ships and three Canadian ones, mount, stuck in the ice at Sous pr Bovis the narrower paris of | led by the little Swedish Tor-|langes Canal 30 miles west of the 8t. Lawrence between here| |sholm, whose specially-reinforced| Montreal, TE Take Stock Of Human Rights hirtoen salt - water ships cleared the canal Tuesday and (were Prof. R. O. MacFarlane, |of Ottawa's Carleton University; only five were left, one of them already in the canal system, (Prof, Bora Laskin of the Univers sity of Toronto; David Walker, But at Quebec City, even the {help of a transport department] |feebreaker couldn't get three | freighters through pack fice as| Progressive Conservative MP for Toronto Rosedale; and Eamon Park of Toronto, assistant na- [tional director of 'the United Steelworkers of America (CLC). The conference Tuesday heard panel discussions on civil liber rights and soclal By ALAN HARVEY Canadian Press Staff Writer | corted the freighters Ttransiream re and Novaport but the trio had to] OTTAWA (CP) -- An unprece- turn back to Quebec after mak- jd nted national stocktaking of 2 14-0z tins 3 5¢ ing only about 20 miles Canada's record on human rights Reg. tin 30c--8AVE 17¢ The Fredborg tried a lone run|ended today with a detailed anal 3 48.02 inn1,.00 of the pack but couldn't get Y®ls of the federal government's rough the 3 t the narrows proposed new bill of rights Reg, pkg 79c--8AVE 106 through the piléup at the n I'he legislation, Introduced in under Quebec Bridge * | y | Iherville and! the Commons last September and| 2.1bpkg @ Qe | Monday, the Dl Reg. 2 tins 33c--8AVE Te Montealm broke a path through | lated for defailed discussion in| a4 14.02 tins 50 w not He, economic [to Trols-Rivieres for five freight [the new session starting next iohts, Reg. 31c~BAVE Bo ers headed for Montreal. They {month, came under scrutiny from SOME COMPLAINTS -- a four-member panel at final ses were the last to get through. Ainng the taking points. were { the national human More ice is forming at the nar-|sions o row neck of Lake St. Peter, 50| {rights anniversary conference. {complaints that Canada is unkind miles east of Montreal Knowing | The conference Is timed to|lo Its Intellectuals; that minority SAVE 160 this, some of the ships that suc mark the 10th anniversary of the opinions aren't welcome in Cana Rey, phy 850uBpr ® |cessfully cleared the Lachine[UN universal declaration of hu: Yay Newspapers: a thst Buse C ve ceded up their {man rights, The 30-article declar.| Ness 'e retice . phpel 0 49 ichedulen. : ue [ation was adopted by the UN|INE their opinions known publicly, that crac ed at Lachine' s Cote years ago Yoday. 2 5.02 pkgs 3 Clg : | the panel grou [heavily on captains of Won fou. 9 135¢ St. Paul lock, workers moved' Members of p group preg Mo BO dost University industrial relations ex« 2 28.01 tins 5 5¢ pert, It was notable that execu- rion vie | JURY & LOVELL SUGGESTS tives and middle « management personnel seldom ran for publie office, didn't identify themselves with political parties and gener ally tended to 'play it safe." In a separate discussion, Mont« real newspaper man Jean-Louis Gagnon sald North America is building an industrial civilization in which the intellectual has "lost his place." If a man like Britain's Earl (Bertrand) Russell had been born In Canada, he wouldn't res main there long, Mrs. Saul Hayes of Montreal, member of a women's group sald "maybe it is because we don't have any Bertrand Russells tat we don't hear from them." Rev. Willlam Jenkins, Unitars |lan minister from Toronto, said the high cost of publishing pree [vents wide dissemination of min. [ority opinions, "Minority views are not wel. comed by our newspapers and radlo stations and few people can afford to start their own news. papers or radio stations, nor can they afford to publish hooks." Willlam Mahoney, national dis rector of the USWA, said 'glows ing promises" by management haven't solved the problem of une employment, - Statistics showed that last March in industrialized Ontario unemployment affected 14 per cent of wage and salary earners, And the "worst of wine ter unemployment" was still to come, Pierre Elliott Trudeau, Monts real lawyer-economist, said Cane adr can't be proud of the eco- A i wir flomie gesiton of pope Norker, re e sa 2 per cent of all wa ® | Photographic earners and 56 of all a ae family wage-carners receive an | SH AWA CERISE TER BN | annual income of less than $2,500, 0 RA 5-3546 The average Canadian family needed $2,670 a year to maintain a decent standard of living. Mr, Mahoney and Mr, Trudeau { both expressed support for the idea of a new political party deds [cated to social and economic re- form, Rog, pky 69c~8AVE 100 FOR THE MOVIE FAN ON YOUR LIST 12.02 pkg 59: THE NEW ARGUS m-s00 Reg, 23c~8AVE 3o 2 10-02 okos Je Rog, 350~8AVE 100 Vital statistics: rugged, aluminum case; 400 ft, reel capacity; f:1.6 lens; easy, easy loading. FOR PRICE OF PROJECTOR ONLY 30 x 40 Screen and Quick Splice Outfit each 29 ky 45c--8SAVE 6o pkg 39 "Everything 8 KING ST E RA. 8:2245 MA. 3-5778 MO 8-2338| «oz loaves 3 3c g 50c--SAVE 108 12.02 pkg 49: BQWMANVIL.E WHITBY PLAZA 15 KING ST. W. * 317 BROCK ST. §. FRIDAY Is "Lucky Shopper's & Day! in DOWNTOWN ok AWA Use the Convenient Municipal Parking Lot On Athol St. West! i Ha -- DY CREAM 33 | Open FRIDAY Unti re -------- N----------------

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