Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 17 May 1967, p. 4

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~-- «She Oshavon GNwS INTEREST LOW IN QUEBEC FOR CANADA'S CENTENNIAL 86 King St. E., Oshawa, Ontario Published by bt ie ws! Newspapers Company Limited L. Wilson, Publisher e¢, got Associate Publisher OSHAWA, ONTARIO, WEDNESDAY, MAY 17, 1967 It's Costly Undertaking To Raise Family Today 'A U.S. Government department recently issued a set of statistics which proves it costs a lot of money to raise a child from birth to 18 years of age. This of course comes as absolutely no news at all to parents. Apparently the department concerned did a survey on the costs of child-raising in North America (including Can- ada) and came up with some sur- prising figures. "According to the statisticians, it costs about the same to buy a new home as it does to bring up a child, anywhere between $12,000 and $27,- 000," notes the Sault Daily Star. "The figure varies depending on living standard of the family and the section of the country in which itlives. "Although dealing with Canada and the United States collectively, the department points out that the cost of bringing up an average C4nadian child is only slightly less. It'includes the cost of housing, food, clthing, education, health care, transportation and incidentals. "The Department of Agriculture took a middle-class 'income family in the north-central region as typi- cal and based its totals on this. Here they computed that to bring a boy up to 18, the cost was $21,- 769, the cost per year increasing from $860 during the first year of life to $1,470 for the 17th year, an inGrease of 71%. "In his first year the boy costs only $160 worth of food. However, in, his ten years, with pizzas, hot dogs and the local hop hamburgers with the crowd, all thrown in, and not forgetting his usual food at home, manages to rack up almost $400 in food. "Girls are reckoned to be less ex- pensive during those years, since they eat less. The sum total for food alone from birth to the end of 17th year is estimated at $5,440. "Clothing for the child under two years takes about $40 a year. How- ever, from two to six this figure more than doubles to around $90 and finally for going-to-school clothes and entering high school, the bill sits at some $240 a year. The total cost of clothing is placed at a hefty $2,640 by the time the child is 18, 'Depending on the region, of course, transportation of the child to and from school and other inci- dental trips sets the parent back a further $3,849 for 18 years. "Never ones to leave us with a happy note, the statisticians warn that in the next ten years there is every reason to believe that these figures will be upped by about 40 per cent," the writer concludes, It might be added says The Galt Reporter that most people, most of the time, regard children as jewels of priceless value. They represent the embodiment of ongoing life -- a symbol of immortality. However, by the time parents have to cope with teen-agers and their problems they may wonder sometimes if it was all worth the effort and ex- pense, Tolerance Outside Law Discrimination is certainly a con- cegn for those who enact our legis- lation. Yet it is in error to believe that legislation in itself can ever end prejudice. Further confirmation of this fact was given in charges by the Jewish Labor Committee recently that civil servants in 17 out of 21 Manpower Services offices were accepting orders from employers stipulating that certain minority groups were unacceptable to them. The finding was the result of a Jewish Labor Committee survey conducted in Saint John, Montreal, Toronto, Windsor and Winnipeg. She Oshawa Zines 86 King St. E., Oshawa, Ontérie T._L. WILSON, Publisher & C. PRINCE, General Manager C. J. McCONECHY, Editor SUBSCRIPTION RATES The Oshawa Times combining The Oshawa Times {established 1871) and the Whitby Gazette and Chronicle (established 1863) is published daily and Statutary holidays excepted). Members of Canadian Daily Newspaper Publish- ers: Association, The Canadian Press. Audit Bureau Association. The Canadion Press is exclusively entitled to the use of republication of all news r credited to it or to The r Reuters, and also the local mews published therein, Ali 'rights of specio| des- patches are also reserved. 86 King St. E., Oshawa, ional Advertising Offices: onan Bulldi Carvecaity Avenue, Toronto, Ontario; 64! oat Beis Montreal, ia Q. y corriers Whitby, Ajax, higkerng earn Brookiin, Port Perry, Prince jople Grove, Hampton, Frenchman's Bay, Sp nly sora Tyrone, Dunbarton, Enniskillen, Orono, Leskard na ites la Burketon, Claremont, Mancheste: 'and Newcastle not over 5S¢ vee By gi gel in Province of Ontario outsi carrier delivery area, $15.00 per year. ey provinces and Commonwealth Countries, $18.00 per yeor. U.S.A. and foreign $27.00 pe year, The director of the Jewish Labor Committee said Manpower Services personnel, when asked by employers to find applicants for jobs, didn't put up any argument if they were told not to supply Negroes, West Indians, Orientals or Jews. (Man- power Services is the new name for National Employment Service). An insidious factor in the inci- dents was that these civil servants were apparently trying to do their job. They were definitely in the wrong, of course, morally and in contravention of regulations against discrimination by reason of race, color or creed. Federal reaction was quick. Man- power Minister Marchand being "greatly concerned", A new operation manual for the federal Manpower offices was be- ing prepared and it would include a strong statement on non-discrimina- tion. In addition, and immediately, special instructions were sent to all centres to insist on, the implemen- tation of non-discrimination. Yet, The Welland Tribune States, all the "fair employment" legisla- tion in the world will not force, nor should it, anyone to give em- ployment to an individual he doesn't feel can do the job adequately. It is the home, the school, the workaday associations that develop real tolerance. It cannot be legis- lated. By THE CANADIAN INSTITUTE OF PUBLIC OPINION (World Copyright Reserved) A majority of Canadians express great interest in Canada's Centennial year. But this national majority (53 percent) would be much highter were it not for the people of Quebec who profess little interest in the cele- brations. In Quebec less than four-in-ten (37 per cent) say they are very interested in celebrating 100 years of Con- federation. About six-in-10 evince little or no interest in Centennial activities. Ontario people, on the other hand, (62 per cent) and those from the Western provinces (59 per cent) express enthusiastic interest in their country's Centennial cele- brations. In the Maritimes, average, with just over 50 terest in Canada's birthday The Question; citizens follow the national per cent claiming great in- festivities, "IN GENERAL HOW INTERESTED WOULD YOU SAY YOU YOURSELF ARE IN CANADA'S CEN- TENNIAL?" TOTAL Quebec Ontario West Very interested ....seeece hag 36% 62% 59% Not very interested 39 28 33 No interested at all ° ec 22 5 5 Undecided ....scccccsesees 3 3 5 3 OTTAWA REPORT Success Carries Moral Obligation By PATRICK NICHOLSON OTTAWA -- Canadians who have achieved material success have a moral obligation to serve the country which made that success possible. This theme has often been argued in Ottawa report. The successful businessman, for instance, who has been able to accumulate enough money to provide for his latter life, owes the patriotic duty to his country to devote his talents and his time for several years in that latter life to the service of his country, in repayment for the opportunities his country gave him. Canada certainly could advan- tageously use top business ex- perience and ability in the House of Commons; and espe- cially in the cabinet, operating the heavy spending '"'business"' departments such as defence production, the post office, pub- lic works and transport. Yet very few successful men: have responded to that obliga- tion, and one must applaud the patriotism of those who have unselfishly given .up rich pri- wate careers to enter public life. Trade Minister Bob Win- ters, for instance, exchanged an income of some $100,000, as the president or director of several large companies, for a cabinet post at $35,000. Former Trade Minister Wal- lace McCutcheon had longer and more successful experience in law and business; he was a great builder of Canada and cre- ator of jobs and wealth for Canadians; yet for the past four years he has worked as an out- senating senator for $15,000 a year. Another former trade min- ister, the late C. D. Howe, was drafted from a prosperous busi- ness career to operate busi 100% 100% 100% 100% the age of 14 and with scholar- ships. From schoolteacher's son to millionaire is a creditable ca- reer, and deserves applause. And the fact that he will pre- dictably be criticized as a Bay Street Boy is indeed an un- intended compliment to him; it will show that his foes cannot find anything illegal, improper or immoral to charge him with; and not all persons in public life have been able to claim that. POLITICS IN BSUINESS Another objection may be that Senator McCutcheon has only been active whole-time on Par- liament Hill since 1962, suggest- ing that he has not been famil- iarized with politics through long exposure. But what is so mysterious about politics? He has a keen and decisive mind and speaks fluently without the text which is the prop of so many professional politicians. Was newness to Parliament Hill a barrier to Finance Min- ister Sharp, Justice Minister Favreau or State Secretary Lamontagne? Prime Minister Pearson appointed all those to his cabinet before they had ever sat in Parliamer vlier, that applied also to (rade Minister Howe and Prime Minister St. Laurent. Politicians feel that an un- reasonable and unsophisticated resentment applies against the successful man when he enters politics. If this is true, it can rightly be said that Canadians get the governments they de- serve; it would be more reason- able if voters would beat a path to the door of successfel men of affairs, begging them to make their services available to run the biggest business in Can- ada. For doing just this, Sen- ator McCutch deserves in-government, which he did ef- ficiently for 22 years. TYCOON SEEKS THE TOP Senator McCutcheon has now offered himself as a candidate for the leadership of the Con- servative party. I can think of no person on Parliament Hill today whose previous experience should make him more capable of shaping policies for prosper- ity for Canadians--not to men- tion, more capable of eliminat- ing waste from government operations, and hence reducing taxes. But there are several para- doxical twists to our political life. Although we boast of Can- ada as The Land of Opportunity, we do not applaud those who successfully use that oppor- tunity. So Wally McCutcheon will be resented in his political ambition by his foes -- in all parties--as a Bay Street Boy. Yet he worked his way through college and through law school, with jobs every summer from credit; may many more suc- cessful men of affairs follow his patriotic example. POINTED PARAGRAPHS If the future is as dark as Seeress Jeane Dixon sees it, she must have used infra-red rays to peer into it. "How Crowded Should We Be?" -- Title of magazine ar- ticle. Well, now, that would de- pend upon who "we"' are, where *we" are, and the surrounding circumstances. 'T like hillbillies in their place," said Old Sorehead, "and their place is in the hills, They ought to be in high, steep and rough hills, so a lot of them would fall down and break their necks on the way down to radio studios." CANADIAN BOOK CORNER x= By DONALD PHILLIPSON Although Sarah Binks, the Sweet Songstress of Saskatch- ewan, has passed on, her ad- mirers will be glad to know that her work goes on in Wil- lows Revisited by Paul Hie- bert (McClelland and Stew- art.) For 28 years professor of chemistry at the University of Manitoba, Hiebert won a Gov- ernor-General's Award for hu- mor for his first Sarah Binks book. His new one takes up :the same vein, a gentle par- ody of Prairie ways and poetry. Last time he invented one writer. Now he has created a Group of Six and he feels Saskatchewan can be just as proud of John Swivel the Great Dean and Bessie Udder- - ton as it can of its provincial beast, the sneart, another Hie- bert creation. Willows Revisited tells how the Six become Seven when Purge Potatok the DP gate- erashes their ceremony at SFISLAESI ARG HLA SESRLELARTE as yResess GENTLE PARODY OF PRAIRIE WAYS Sarah Binks, Sweet Songstress, Revisited Sarah's grave from his ad- joining "quarter - section of sand and alkali." He is in- vited to stay when the Six dis- cover the poems he carries in his head and the lunch-basket he happened to bring along. The arts do not go un- acknowledged in Hiebert's Prairies. All seven poets are honored with the Saskatche- wan Order of Merit and their work appears in such public documents as Fifty Years of Progress and Agriculture Bul- letin No. 4506 (Bird Houses and Bee Culture.) In this book one finds out the real truth of the Saskat- chewan poets and much more too, when the "poem-of-the- month" movement b reaks over Canada and thé nation's prime minister and leader of the opposition join in--'My Fellow Canadians . . . you've been betrayed." Finally, it is a tonic to real- ize how anxious the West is to project its sincere friendship for Quebec. Here is the defini- tive bilingual national anthem, . | ' from "'O Canada, chez nous et native pays' to "Oooh Can- ada, Quebec is nous amis." In a more serious vein are two new books of poetry from Ryerson Press, Dorothy Live- say's The Unquiet Bed and Heather Spears' The Danish Portraits. Miss Livesay, 58, has won three Governor-General's and Royal Society of Canada awards for earlier books of poetry. The pieces in her new book were written since her return from a three - year teaching assignment in Zam- bia. She now is writer-in-resi- dence at the University of New Brunswick, Fredericton, There are 43 poems in the collection, in four sections: Zambia, love poems, nature poems and personal responses to people and places. It is 10 years since Miss Livesay published Selected Poems and she says he has been influenced since then by the young poets she met in Vancouver, who specialize in A reading their work out loud in coffee bars. Compared with the earlier book, these poems are much terser and tougher but preserve her special fine- ness of diction. Heather Spears, born in Vancouver in 1934, lives in a Danish fishing village with her Canadian husband and three children. The Danish Portraits is a sequence of re- lated poems followed by 14 independent poems. They are all "place" poetry, about her peaceful life in the family in the village and how she responds to it. The long title sequence is interesting in being a love poem about the whole family, including her children, not just about love for one man. Mrs. Spears is a painter as well as a poet and her verses are almost exclusively visual. By contrast, Miss Livesay re- sponds to a wider range of senses, including sound and touch, but then she's been writing poetry 25 years longer. pleat TAKING OVER? Sompxine FOREIGN NEWS ANALYSIS Fight... To Last Vietnamese By PHILIP DEANE Foreign Affairs Analyst China's Premier Chou En Lai was quoted this weekend as say- ing that his troops would invade Vietnam rather than let the Vietcong's "national liberation war' end in "negotiated de- feat," such a Vietcong defeat, he explained, would be a dis- astrous refutation of China's theory that the world's poor will overthrow the rich through "national liberation wars." American might will have been proved invincible and revolution shown to be hopeless. For the Chinese government which be- lieves that the present world order is intolerably unfair and must be forcibly overturned, vic- tory by the Americans, the prin- cipal guardians of the status f 's unacceptable. Wuite House strategists agree with this Chinese view of the Vietnamese war, though they see it from the opposite .per- spective; they too believe that they are fighting in Vietnam primarily to demonstrate that "national liberation wars' and any other form of violent revolt against the status quo, are fu- tile. Changes in the status quo, they say, must certainly come and soon, but through reform, not revolution and they want to hammer home the lesson that revolution does not pay. INVOLVES VAST PRINCIPLES In other words, both Peking and Washington see the Viet- namese fighting in terms of vast principles, as a contest of funda- mental dogmas about man's entire future. History has sel- dom held any dogmas to have been so fundamental as their proponents said; but history has often shown that no contest grows so pitiless as one in de- fence of dogma. The very magnitude of the ef- fort America is making demon- strates her determination to prove, as Mr. Dean Rusk says, that "aggression does not pay." Few South Vietnamese can have the illusion -they would be al- lowed to negotiate directly with , compatriots their Communist for a compromise solution, Chou En Lai has just served notice on the Communists that they TODAY IN HISTORY By THE CANADIAN PRESS May 17, 1967... The U.S. Supreme Court ruled that racial segrega- tion in public schools is un- constitutional 13 years ago today--in 1954--reversing a ruling of 1896 that '"'separate but equal" facilities were legitimate. In the following 12 years a total of six per cent of the South's Negro children of school age were registered in racially-mixed schools. In Louisiana, Mis- sissippi and Alabama, fewer than one per cent of Negro children went to mixed schools in 1966. 1630 -- The belts of the planet Jupiter were first observed, by Zucchi and Bartoli. 1666--Newark, N.J., was founded. First World War Fifty years ago today--in 1917--it was announced that U.S. destroyers had begun operations in the North Sea; British units occupied Bulle- court, near Vimy, first at- tacked May 3. Second World War Twenty-five years ago to- day--in 1942--US newspaper correspondents from Axis Europe were released in neutral Portugal, too should harbor no. illusions about Peking allowing them to negotiate a compromise. Each battered and bleeding Vietna- mese is enjoined to fight for nothing less than the tt] vic- tory of the dogma for which he has been made the symbol. "Tt hardly matters whom you listen to," a senior UN official told me bitterly. "'Both the Chi- nese and the Americans seem to be saying that they will fight to the last Vietnamese to retain his allegiance; and if he dies in the process, then there will be no one whose allegiance can be lost and no defeat, therefore, for either America or China, But for the Vietnamese this is World War III already, and not one of the conceivable but pro- hibited solutions can possibly be worse for him," Controversial Quebec Act Debated Secretly In 1774 By BOB BOWMAN Among the most controversial legislation of. all time must be the Quebec Act, introduced to the House of Lords in Britain on May 17, 1774. It was debated in. such secrecy that members of the House of Commons were excluded, and the Lords were not even allowed to carry any scraps of paper on which they might make notes. The Quebec Act gave Roman Catholics in. Canada all the privileges they had enjoyed un- der France, although Roman Catholics in Britain were not allowed to hold public offices, be officers in the army, or even be apothecaries (presumably they might poison the Prot- estants!) Anti-Roman Catholic sentiment was so strong in Lon- don that there was a riot in 1780 when some minor priv- ileges were granted. The Quebec Act anncyed the British colonists in America be- cause it extended the boundary of Quebec to the Ohio River, and cut off expansion to the west. As the Americans were already angry over the stamp act and the tax on tea, the Que- bec Act was the final blow that led to war the following April. Congress cut off all imports from Britain in September, and, by coincidence, on May 17, 1775, prohibited all exports to Que- bec, Nova Scotia, and Cape Breton. At the same time, Con- gress sent a message to the people of Canada urging them unite with the American col- onies in defence of their com- mon liberties. One of the men responsible for the Quebec Act was Sir Guy Carleton who had been one of Wolfe's officers at Quebec, and who later succeeded Gen. Murray as Governor of Canada. During his term as governor, Carleton went back to Britain for four years and convinced British statesmen that French Canadians must have their own laws, land system, and church. He felt that Canada would al- ways be French because British settlers would prefer Florida or other more balmy areas in the south. OTHER MAY 17 EVENTS 1654--Pierre Radisson arrived in Canada after escaping from Iroquois. 1657--Jesuits left Quebec to establish mission in Iroquois country. 1667--Father Allouez crossed Lake Superior in a canoe. 1673 -- Joliet and Marquette began exploration of Mississipp! River. 1794--Edward, Duke of Kent (father of Queen Victoria) made commander of British forces in North America with headquar- ters at Halifax. 1841 -- Landslide at Quebec Citadel killed 32 people. 1871--New Brunswick school bill caused great dissension. 1882--Queen's received uni- versity status. 1896---Roman Catholic bishops issued mandamus re Manitoba schools. 1919 -- Winnipeg citizens or- ganized committee to provide public services during general strike. 1939--King George VI and Queen Elizabeth arrived at Quebec for visit to Canada until June 15. QUEEN'S PARK Relations Improving With MD's By DON 0'HEARN TORONTO -- The situation with regard to the medical pro- fession is apparently one for great concern at the moment. The annual meeting of the On- tario Medical Association launched plans to prepare for strike action, and produced at- tacks by spokesmen for the as- sociation on our '"'politicians," It would seem that the line between the profession and the public is widening and that re- lations are deteriorating rap- idly On the actual happenings to date, however, appearances may be more depressing than they really warrant. For while it is slow, progress actually is being made in rela- tions between the doctors and the government. CAN SIT IN At the same time the OMA was announcing the strike proj- ect its council also was agreeing that a representative of the gov- ernment could sit in on all its committee meetings in the fu- ture. And it also was considering the setting up of an OMA government committee to con- sider future fee increases. At the-time of writing what decision was reached on this second question isn't known. But both matters were gov- ernment requests, and that they were even seriously considered indicates that liaison with the profession is getting better. There aren't any easy an- swers to the problem of the position of the medical profese sion in our society. Doctors are highly - skilled, highly-trained people who come under extraordinary demands. Who really is to say what they should receive for their services? (No matter what other issues may be introduced, fees really are at the heart of the problem). IS RESPONSIBLE But on the other hand govern- ment also has a responsibility. It is spending large sums of public money for medical serv- ices. And it also knows that excep- tionally big incomes for doctors tend to set an inflationary pat- tern for the community. It has to try and exercise an influence, yet in view of the sensitivity of the situation it can't do anything that could ap- pear as a direct control. All it can do is try and per- suade the profession to hold the line where possible. Obviously this calls for reason on both sides. Which in turn means good liaison. There has not been this to date. But now there at least seems to be an opening for it. YEARS AGO 25 YEARS AGO May 17, 1942 Roy W. Nichols, Courtice automobile salesman, has turn- ed 44 old model automobiles over to the Bowmanville Red Cross. Two hundred and fifty dollars was realized when they were scrapped for salvage. Col. R. S. McLaughlin was host at a luncheon at the Royal York Hotel for Anna Neagle, star of the Red Cross film. There Too Go I, 40 YEARS AGO May 17, 1927 Dixon Coal Co. has purchased the Oshawa Transportation Co. gravel and sand pit with all equipment, on the Oshawa- Columbus highway. It was pure chased from Frederick Ed- mondson at a price of $50,000. BIBLE "O Lord my God,. I eried unto thee, and thou hast healed me." Psalms 30: 2 The one who made us can surely mend us. "I am the Lord thy God that healeth thee." "Is there anything too hard for the Lord" IT HAPPENED IN *KLONDIKE | Dawse . "cnn ear ael py np RIVERS * DISCOVERED ITS GEOLOGICAL *SERVED ON COMMISSION THAT FIXED CANADA-D5- BORDER FROM LAKE OF wle WOODS To THE ROCKIES. BECAME HEAD of tile CANADIAN GEOLOGICAL SéRvEY * ONCE MADE 1300 MILE CANOE TRIP FROM BASIN oF LIARD RIVER TO THAT of thls YUKON » MADE SURVEYS of ile STIKINE, DEASE ELLY ME WAS CRUELLY CLUAA BD WITHA HUNCHED BACK AND HAD PYSIQUE OF 4 FRAL By OF TWELVE CANADA Guana FORCED A SURRENDER - ENTERING THE FORT HE BROKE Hig , PROWKEAN ANGE ALT ht @ AND LED MADAME LA TOURT Te GALLOWS WITH A NOOSE AROUND HER Ni fo tig WITNESS THE WADAME LA TOUR p DIED OF SHOCK 7" f res a WHITBY DAY 33 Distric Receive ( WHITBY (Staff) - ' three residents of the ¢ were presented with thei adian citizenship certifice a session of the Citiz Cout at the Ontario Co Building last week. The new citizens are: Antoni Aksiuczyc, Mrs. ilie Anlauf, Jan Floria L Mrs. Barbara Domitrovic Hahn, Tapani Rainer, K Daniel Hermanus Korte, en Lelka, Emanuele M Dario Molinari, Mrs. Ing Seneco, Stanley John § Mrs. Brunhilde Stender, bert Henry Wurbs and | Joseph Geypens, all of O: Centennial V. Final arrangements made at the regular m of the 5th Cubs and © Mother's Auxiliary m conducted by Mrs. Thoma: len, for the centennial v fair, May 20, at St. Jot Evangelist parish hall. The general convener, Harold Forbes, said don could be left in boxes : back of the Church. Mrs. Frank Canzi, first president, tendered her Whitby Studen Alison Cunliffe, a Cla 12A student at Henry St High School, Whitby, is . tawa this week taking p the Adventure in Citiz project being sponsored | Rotary Club of Oshawa. . is sponsored by the Rotary of Whitby. Two hundred and thirt senior high school students each of the provinces an Northwest Territories are : ing the week discovering national capital and lez about other parts of C from their fellow advent Among the speakers th dents will hear are Hon. Turner, registrar general; John G. Diefenbaker, leac the opposition and His W Mayor Don Reid of Ot 10 Persons In; Officers of the Whitb tachment of the OPP last patrolled 14,361 miles an vestigated 23 accidents in 10 persons were injured. en drivers were charged. of those injured was an school boy who was : down after alighting fro school bus. During the week 103 ve were checked on the high Sixty - six drivers were ¢ ed and 37 warned. The detachment also i igated 75 general occurr which included four brea! enter, seven thefts, five icious damage, one as three escapees from St. J Training School at Uxbridg 80 miscellenous occurrenc eluding traffic complaints, WHITBY - F St. John's Anglican Ch t Junior Auxiliary will cele its 70th anniversary this ing Sunday with a special vice at 7 pm, All f members from 1897 to 196 cordially invited to atter display of work and a 8 tree planting ceremony wi low the service. A time ¢ lowship will be held at Church hall and refresh served. St. Mark's United Chu W'S Couples Club has final arrangements for it nual Auction Sale at ¥ Community Arena, June | attending the sale will be to gen | r candy, garden supplies, pod The children a Couples Club members will a pet booth with tropical guppies, etc. There will white elephant table a large supply of books. Pro are for the Club's activitie the support of a Foster in Greece. A request is for more articles, for pic telephone 668-2678. The Women's Auxiliary Catholic Church Extensic meeting this evening a home of Mrs. George | ricks, 305 Chestnut Street Whitby Chapter no. 248, | of the Eastern Star, has invited to attend Markham ter this evening. St. Mark's United C 'Women, Unit 3, will meet 1 day afternoon for its re meeting Mrs. David Falloy be in charge of the progr It was announced at the fing of Units 1 and 2, Mark's United Church W¢ that at the June 6 general ing there will be a pane cussion on 'Education'. oe One-Stop DECORATING SHOP @ Wallpaper ond Murals @ Custom Draperies @ Broadloom @ C.I.L. Paints end Varni @ Benjamin Moore Paint: DODD & SOUT! DECOR CENTRE LTD. PHONE 668-5862 107 Byron St. S., Whit! a

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