Ontario Community Newspapers

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

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The Oshawa Cines 86 King St. E., Published by Canadian N Oshawa, Ontario ewspopers Company Limited T. L. Wilson, Publisher E. C. Prince, Associate Publisher Teen-agers Appreciated Every Day, The newly -organized Optimist Club in Oshawa deserves commen- dation for its sponsorship of "Youth Appreciation Week". Yet the fact that it is considered necessary to ar- range such a special week is an in- dication of how far our perspective has slipped off course. Appreciation of youth (and envy of it too) is always present, every week of the gives ample indication of its appreciation and hopes for the younger genera- tion every day. Examples can surely be found in the emphasis on educa- tion; the concern for technical train- ing, the many, many projects under- taken to provide opportunities for young people to develop their minds, their bodies and their talents. And equally evident, for those who wish to see it, is the conscientiousness of by far the majority of those classed as youth to put these opportunities to worthwhile purpose. These teen-agers and there must be hundreds of them in Osh- awa -- who are doing what logically could be expected of them, are mak- ing good use of the opportunity their society affords them. In their hands, the future--of society and year, socety Every Week theircountry can be confidently Jeft. They have an awareness and a sense of social conscience far beyond their years. > Their problem stems from the proneness of their elders to gen- eralize, Because there are young people who step out of line, fail to accept either opportunity or respon- sibility, the tendency too often is to tar the whole generation with the same stick. However the prob- lem is one that the teen-agers also share-with those who have gone before them. A speaker at the youth apprecia- tion dinner told the young people "you people had better undo the mess we've made", referring to older generations. You see we're all victims of unfair generalizations. The progress made in Canada over the last hundred years can hardly be classed as "making a mess of things" Mistakes have been made, there are many instances of other genera- tions "muddling through". But there's much of good on-which the youth today can build. The challenge to them is to find a better way. It is one they'll strive to meet. of Want To Stop Smoking? Can so simple a device as a breath- ing exercise really help you stop smoking? According to an. article in the November Reader's Digest the basic answer is ves. But no single way works for everyone, since, as medical research shows, each person smokes to meet his own physical and emotional needs. Some of the common causes of smoking are tension, habit, addic- tion to cigarettes and behaving by reflex. Smoking. often begins in adolescence, to meet adolescent needs, but then persists as a habit when the needs are long outgrown. The first question to ask yourself js: What kind of smoker am I? Un- less you have such knowledge, and an appropriate plan, your chances of quitting are slim. One survey re- vealed that 86 percent of smokers would be willing to stop if help were available, The important point in stopping is to find a program that meets your own personal smoking problem. Begin by making a record of when She Osharva Sines 8&6 King St SUBSCRIPTION RATES The Oshawo Tir es cor (established 1871) ond the ette ond Chronicle (established 186 daily (Sundays and Statutory holidays Members of Canadian Daily Publis mews published therein. Al! rights é es Patches are also reserved x 86 King St. E., ationol Advertising Thom 425 University Avenue, Toronto Ceotheart Street, Montreal, P.O carriers in manville, Broo Oshawa, Onter Oshawa, Whitby, x lin, Port Perry, Prince Frenchman's Bo Tyrone barton, Enniskiller rono | ' "t ' Ss le ere, ask iS. Brougham, Burketon, Claremont per cee tyPoc! and. Newcastle not over S5c per week. By mo i) ovine outside carrier delivery in Province of Ontario es Other prov nd Papo $15.00 per. year, ' Commonwealt $18.00 per yeor, US.A. ond foreign $3500 cer aor Berens vn OTTAWA REPORT amoke, -to learn what the reasons for your smoking are. Plan delays for smoking such as putting your cigaretes in a different pocket each day, not carrying matches, hiding ashtrays, etc. Eliminate the least important cigarette each day, then the next more important and so on. Meanwhile try to inhale less. Get vigorous exercise, especially when you. crave a smoke. Exercise replaces some of the effects of nicotine to which smokers are ac- customed and discharges the ten- sion of stopping. you A cigarette provides a few of the same stimulations as adrenaline, producing a physical state like that of fear or anger; the heart speeds up, blood vessels contract, excita- bility increases. This is one reason why smoking is hard on the heart and circulation. Having spent years learnirig to smoke, learning to use cigarettes for many needs you must' now learn how not to smoke. To give it up is as hard as losing someone close. The 'addicted' type of heavy smoker may succeed hy sudden separation and going through a kind of 'mourn- ing' period. He thinks he cannot survive alone, But if he must, he finds he can, Other Editors' Views COSTLY LOTTERY The state operated New Hamp- shire lottery, a poor idea to begin with, is proving even worse in prac- . Expenses are gobbling 52% of gross revenue, prompting some ob- servers to note that an experienced racketeer could handle the lottery half that, including police pay- Lice for offs. The moral, though, is not that the job should be turned over to "private enterprise." It should simply be abandoned. (Milwaukee Journal) QUEEN'S PARK Significant Step Taken For Schools By DON O'HEARN TORONTO -- The govern- ment's action on school boards 1s a most important--and signif- icant--step. In doing away with smaller boards and sefting up larger units, which will be responsible for their own taxing, a number of results are achieved. First of all, of course, the step will tend to bring about more equality in education It will put the less-populated areas of the province in a better position to compete with the cit- jes in both staff and facilities And, as Premier Robarts noted in announcing the new policy at Galt, it will mean that fringe programs, such as spe- cial classes for slow learners, will be available in all areas of the province The most important potential benefit, however, is one that has been somewhat overlooked: the influence on community devel- opment in the province Under the new scheme county boards will do the planning and taxing for all the schools in the county--that means in a large area Individual communities no longer will have to worry about providing the. school facilities for their children This means that, in turn, they won't have to hold back new housing developments while they wait for new industry to pay for the cost of education This will be the problem of the county as a whole, And pre- sumably if it is short of industry the province will make some al lowance for this in the formula under which it pays its grants in the program due to start in 1949 This is a big step forward in the physical development of the province Due to the necessity of having fo obtain industrial assessment to help carry the education load, this development has been both haphazard and retarded. Municipality after municipal- ity in areas where housing has been needed has held back resi- dential growth because of this obstacle It_ also, of course, back proper planning So long as municipalities have had the desperate need for new industry they have been reluc- fant to agree to plans which would do anything to bar it. Yet under proper planning in- dustry should be developed in designated areas The program isn't a cure-all, There still are many problems in the path of proper develop- ment. But it is a big step for- ward. has held TODAY IN HISTORY By THE CANADIAN PRESS Noy. 1, 1967 To advance his Atoms for Peace Plan, United States President Eisenhower an- nounced 11 years ago today in 19546--a program under which the Atomic Energy Commission was to offer nu- clear materials for sale to eo-operating countries at the same prices charged to domestic users 1993----St. Margaret, Queen of Scotland, died. 1558--Bloody Mary died, succeeded by Queen Eliza- beth | First World War Fifty years ago today--in 19i17--British forces in Palestine captured Jaffa, the port of Jerusalem; Ger- man naval units escaped to H land Bight after an en- ement with a_ British €; an enemy patrol ship was sunk and a light cruiser set on fire Second World War Twenty-five years ago to- in 194) he Chinese announced osses at 2,513,800 men killed and wounded from July 7, 1937 until Oct. 31, 1942 oS by Patrick Nicholson PHOTOGRAPHING THE CATCH FOREIGN AFFAIRS ANALYSIS Little Miss Marker Forever Ry PHILIP DEANE Foreign Affairs Analyst Mrs. Shirley Temple Black, defeated in what she says is only her first-bid for public of- fice,. insisted throughout her campaign for a congressional seat that Shirley Temple, the curly4iaired moppet of the sil- ver screen was not running-- Mrs. Black was running. She lost because, in fact, it was still the moppet who was running, looking older, with a flattened beehive hairdo instead of sau- sage curls, but still spouting the sort of nursery wisdom. that looked so cute in her moments of make-believe adversity. "Big brother in Washington is telling the moms and pops of America what to do," said the matronly moppet, "it is time mom and pop took big brother to the woodshed."' Mrs. Black's message was that the good old moms and pops who know best, as any cute moppet would admit, should run America and the world, of course, the way a well regulated nursery is run. Naughty children--regardless of the color of their skin or their nationality--would be sent. to bed without supper and if that did not work, would be put across the knee and given the business with the back of a hair brush, after which there eventu- ally would be a tearful reconcil- jiation, forgiving hugs and kisses all around and a bedtime story compiled by a studio writing team inspired by the works of Horatio Alger, Ayn Rand and Poor Richard's Almanac. Even the rich middle-class suburbs whose moms and pops are tired of naughty children, colored or white, foreign or domestic, did not agree with Mrs. Black that things are quite as simple as Shirley Temple thinks. She obviously has led a BIBLE "Know ye that the Lord He Is God: it is he that hath made us and not we ourselves: we are His people and the sheep of His pasture." Psalms 100:3. The strain out of life and the sting out of death is removed when we come to sit at the feet of the dear shepherd. Jesus siad, "I am the good shepherd that giveth his life for the sheep. wii Price Protest Originates In Oshawa OTTAWA Halt Inflation-- cies, amounts to a 'massive mond 'is whether of praise or mesh recently' she had added igs by plea contained n ro is e pouring in = Fines: Minister Mitchell Sharp's office on Par- liament Hill from Oshawa. This is the outcome of a one- man crusade to save the dollar. which has been launched by Dean Kelly, past president' of the Oshawa Businessmen's As- sociation i Mr. Kelly printed and distrib. uted tens of thousands of copies of his broadsheet in Oshawa, with the evidently well-received uggestion that the recipients should' sign these, and mail them to Mr. Sharp as a protest against ri The Keliy salvo includes re- prints of several recent news- paper articles reporting infla- tion and coming tax boosts. One of these described the now fa- mous speech hy hank president Neil McKinnon, in which he as- serted that the inflation being not just permitted but actually aggravated by government poll- swindle" of helpless Canadians His broadsheet also reprinted in full a recent Ottawa Report" headed "Massive public anxiety about inflation", carried in the Oshawa Times, WRITE YOUR MP FREE Mr. Kelly pointe, i i broadsheet that it eas Bey to the finance minister without a postage stamp. Judging by the number of envelopes which come stamped to MPs' Offices many Canadians are unaware of the privilege of writing to any MP, your own or even a Minis- fer, without using a postage Stamp; any letter addressed to "Mr. So-andSo MP., House of Commons, Ottawa" is carried by the post office free of charge. This provision should be uti- lized by the voters much more than it is: there is nothing like a bombardment of letters to im- press upon a minister, even the prime minister, what the public censure A large number of readers have written to me to ask where they can obtain copies of a new booket, Balloons and Ballots, describing the recent Conserva- tive leadership convention, which was recently discussed in Ottawa Report; they say that they cannot get this in their local bookshops. In reply to these readers in Quebec City, Port Arthur, Orillia, Sarnia, Guelph and elsewhere, this booklet can be obtained by sending $1 to the publisher, the Toronto Telegram, 440 Front Street, West, Torontp. Thanks especially to Mrs. Ella James, Chatham, who said how Much she had enjoyed reading the Somments on this booklet in PARtatham Daily News. xa NT A LA MODE ashion note from Parlia- pen Ail 'Which you may not for 4 read: Judy LaMarsh has ome Months been wearing hippy stockin : vd & in white or to her working wardrobe a pair of spectacles with square frames. Mrs. Jean Wadds, M.P., of Prescott, has joined the with-it crowd, appearing on Parliament Hill in the new knee-length boots. And P.E.L.'s staid professor Heath Macquar- rie, not to be left behind by Jus- tice Minister Trudeau's artist- colony sandals, sports one of those skull-tight Parisian berets atop his rotund and rubicund visage. My own. eye-opening contribution to colorfulness is an ultra-wide tie in Union Jack pattern which a traveller sent to me from London's Carn:by Street. On a more serious note of what's in, The Hill has a re- verse on the now widespread ploy: a parliamentary wife who is teaching French instead of learning it. This is Mrs. Eleanor Winters, wife of Trade Minister Bob Winters; a native of Mont- real, she now teaches a class of wives of senators and MPs, very sheltered life indeed if she still talks like her movie scripts. One wonders if she can learn a little about life before her next try for elective office. She said she now knows "'how the game is played."' She will have to con- vince the voters of America and the anxious spectators in the rest of the world, that running for the legislature of the United States is not, in her opinion, a game of play This should help to clarify a few things about actors in poli- tics. Neither Senator George Murphy or Governor Ronald Reagan over displayed Shirley Temple Black's naivete about public affairs. Whether one agrees with their views or not, one must remember that they both had considerable political experience of sorts. George Murphy acted for years as public relations adviser to the Republican party. Even as an image-maker, one has to learn basic facts about the electorate and its problems. Governor Reagan was a labor leader. He assisted in the campaign of Helen Gahagan Douglas against Richard Nixon. He spent years addressing political meetings, and facing questioners and hecklers--activities that teach some lessons. Mrs. Black seems to have spent the years watch- ing her old movies. Compromise Deal Halted B.C. Secession Movement By BOB BOWMAN When British Columbia joined Canada in 1871 the most impor- tant part of the deal was that a railway would be built to the Pacific within 10 years, and construction would begin within two years. The deadline for the work to start was July 20, 1873, but nothing happened, B.C. was seething with anger. Then Sir John A. Macdonald's govern- ment was defeated, and a Liber- al government under Alexander Mackenzie came into power just at a time when North America was in the>throes if depression and financial panic. Prime Minister Mackenzie in- sisted. that the work could not be done on the schedule planned by the Macdonald government. Instead he proposed the building of a wagon road through the Rockies, for the time being, and using water transportation through the Great Lakes instead of building a railway around them. This was too much for most people in British Columbia, and there was a growing movement to secede from Canada. Pre- mier De Cosmos had to resign after a-near-riot in Feb. 1874, when 800 people stormed the legislature singing "We'll hang De Cosmos on a sour apple tree', and drove the Speaker from the chair. LOOKED DOWN UPON George A. Walkem then be- came premier, but he had a dif- ficult time because Lord Duffe- rin, the Governor-General, looked down on him. Lord Dufferin wrote to British Colonial Secretary Lord Carnar- von "Mr. Walkem is not I imag- ine a person of any great consi- POINTED PARAGRAPHS If you wish to top those who are beefing up their "status" by having unusual animal pets, it is suggested you secure an Argentinian one - ton armadillo, It is wondered how many ba- bies whose mothers wear mini- skirts are being hurt through falling off inadequate laps. Americana, more's the pity: Calling a pitcher who wins a ball game a hero! As we understant it, an atom and a shadow come within a billionth of a smidgen of hav- ing identical weights. An editor says giving a man a square deal won't make an enemy of him. No, but' giving him 100 and then quitting will. deration. He 1s a lawyer in a small village, and the son of a clerk in the Dominion Militia department, so that in one's in- tercourse with him, one has to be on guard against the intellec- tual frailties engendered by his professional antecedents". Premier Walkem proved to be a great deal smarter than Lord Dufferin believed. He reminded the Colonial Office that it was Britain which had urged B.C. to join Canada, and asked for help to settle the railway dispute. Lord Carnarvon himself worked out a compromise deal, announced on Nov. 17, 1874, and accepted by Canada and British Columbia. There was still a great deal of discontent but B.C. remained in Confederation. OTHER NOV. 17: EVENTS 1623 Roadway was completed to Upper Town, Quebec City 1775 American privateers cap- tured Charlottetown 1815 Chippewa Indians ceded 250,000 acres now part of Sim- coe County, Ontario 1837 Police ambushed rebels outside Montreal 1856 Grand Trunk Railway completed between Guelph and Stratford, Ont. 1896 Clifford Sifton appointed as Minister of the Interior - 1903 N.W.M.P. occupied Her- schel Island and raised British flag Silver discovered at Cobalt, Ontario. i miter GOOD EVENING Snow-Ice Control May Cost $225,200 | By JACK GEARIN Of The Times Staff SNOWSTORMS CAN BE costly things. If you don't think so ask Robert Richardson, deputy City commissioner of public works, who has far more snow prob- lems than most of us. For example, the City last year. set aside $225,200 alone for snow and ice control in 1967. .. To date $183,000 of this amount has been spent, including $96, 000 for sanding and salt opera- tions. If it doesn't snow too much before New Year's, the City may have some of that $225, 200 left; but don't count on it. One good winter blitz can put an awful hole into it. The $225, 200 covers the entire snow and ice control operation, including snow plows, snow - clearing of walks adjacent to municipal buildings, clearing around catch basins and gutters. Mr. Richardson said that the 1966 snow and ice control bill was $113,000, some $70,000 less than our 1967 bill to date. The 1965 bill was $154,000 and the 1960 $141,000. The lowest in re- cent years was in 1961 when $82,000 was expended and the total snowfall no more than 50 inches. THE TYPE OF SNOW, of course, can drastically alter the amount of the removal bill; last winter the granulated type that drifts incessantly caused considerable trouble for Board of Works yard_crews,-Occasion- ally it would be necessary to clear main thoroughfares two or three times. Mr. Richardson says his crews: have 3,000 tons of salt and 6,600 tons of sand current- ly on hand in anticipation of the big blows that could strike at any time. BOARD OF WORKS operations are traditionally targets for irate tax-payers; because of their large operations, they are before the public far more than most civic employees. The chief target of all, once the heavy snows come, is the chairman of the Board of Works, Alderman Bruce V. Mackey People phone him in the early hours of the morning and heat- edly demand that he send a crew to clean out their drive- way. On a recent day Mackey de- voted eight hours to the Board of works committee. There was a morning - long conference at City Hall with four senior en- gineers.. In the afternoon he was at the corner of Eulalie and Chadburn to watch a crew clear off a great pile of rubbish and debris from a private prop- erty. In 'the evening he ad- dressed the Contact Club. of the Oshawa Chamber of Com- merce. SO CLIFFORD PILKEY will serve as the NDP"s new labor critic in the Provincial Legis- lature? The Oshawa riding member, who scored a decisive win in the recent election, has devot- ed much of his life to the trade union cause since the early 1950's. It. can truly be said that he is a product of the trade union school of politics; not only did he start in the lowliest com- mittee roles, he also served as president of Local 222, UAW- CLC and the Oshawa and Dis- trict Labor Council. He should play an import- ant role on the party's new Legislature team, alongside names like MacDonald, Ren- wick and Shulman. DID YOU NOTICE Rod Kerr's name in that Ottawa CP story this week? That's right, dear reader. This is the same Mr. Kerr who presided over an historic tribunal in Oshawa in 1962. What memories his name brings back! The City owes him a debt of gratitude. He was chairman of the Board of Transport Commiss- af TA UAE oners which heard an applica- tion for the removal of the gruesome King St. railway tracks, a thorny political issue that split the town wide open for many years, dating as far back as the days when Frank McCallum was a baseball play- er. The 65-year-old Kerr was sworn in as a judge of the Exchequer Court of Canada this week. He was chief commis- sioner of the old board of Trans- port Commissioners since Jan, 1, 1959, after serving for a per- iod as assistant counsel and as- sistant chief commissioner. He became chairman of the trans. portation committee with for- mation of the Canadian trans. port commission earlier this year. WHEN HE PRESIDED here he sounded tough, unyielding to the Let's - Get - Rid - of - The - Tracks supporters, but one fac- tor must be admitted - his hands were pretty well tied legally by the restrictive nature of the antiquated Canada Railway Act, It did not allow for such re- moval simply hecause a city could prove that the tracks' location caused economic hard- ship, plus embarrassment no end to many. Neither was Mr. Kerr moved by strong displays of public anti - track sentiment. He pub. licly rebuked one civic - mind- ed executive because. the lat- ter, by mailed pamphlets, at- tempted to fill the City Coun- cil Chamber (where the inquiry was held) with supporters. -- To Mr. Kerr this was a form of intimidation for the com- missioners, Perhaps he was right, but the 'tracks were a loathsome eyesore to many. The board's local appearance only tended to bring such emo- tions to the surface. The tracks issue wasn't de- cided by the Kerr board. But the latter' chairman ren- dered a worthwhile public ser- vice strongly suggesting that all interested parties - the corpor- ation, the CNR and the three downtown firms that used the tracks for commercial purpos- es - sit down and work out a solution. AGREEMENT was reached lat er when City Council, fearful that the dispute would become a red-hot election issue, finally decided to pay the three firms the amount requested - $10,000 to each. But don't forget Mr. Kerr. He uttered the right words at the right time. Be- cause of his prestige, his ad- vice was followed. For this we will always be grateful. There were many colorful performers in the saga of the tracks, including Russell Hum- phreys, QC, as counsel for the three firms, He never appeared to better advantage than be- fore the Board. Few citizens had such an intricate grasp of the fine legal technicalities in- volved as Mr. Humphreys, and why not? Some 14 years be fore, as a city alderman, he had fought equally as hard for the tracks' removal. YEARS AGO 20 YEARS AGO, Nov. 17, 1947 The Oshawa Railway Co. has suspended bus service on Park Rd. §. due to the terrible con- dition of the road. It will resume when the street is fixed. A St. Andrews Society has been organized in Oshawa and J. H. McDiarmid has been elected as the first president. 35 YEARS AGO, Noy. 17, 1932 Dr. H. A.- Fricker has con- sented to again act as conductor for the Oshawa Choral Society. The local Boy Scouts are hold- ing a "Toy Matinee' at the Regent Theatre in an effort to provide poorer children with toys at Christmas. Me aun nti ©1967 - Accor rearurss-- LeomDon', ort Aa MADE WERE THE FIRST SHELBURNE COUNTY, NOVA SCOTIA - ABIGAIL WAS KNOWN AS A RESOURCEFUL PIONEER WOMAN -- EY HAD SEVENTEEN CHILDREN AND THE TEN BOYS SLEPT IN ROUND BED, WIT AbL tHE BED COVERS UNEQUAL PORTIONS: TUS FASTEST RECORDED BIPLANE WAS THE CANADIAN FDB-1 DESIGNED BY MICHAEL GREGOR- ITS <PEED WAS B00 M:RH: AT 9000 FEBT. IGAIL BOWERS SETTLERS oF OHIO- CIRCULAR 1N ORDER Te PREVENT ~~. memes NOMINATIONS TO? Forme PICKERING (Staff) -- Sher- man Scott, former township reeve and County Warden, will again test his strength at the polls as a candidate for reeve on Dec. 2. A nomination. meeting for council and school board posi- tions will be held tonight at the township hall in Brougham from 7 p.m. to 8 p.m. Two- year term nominations will be received for reeve, deputy reeve, five councillors, five trustees in school area 1 and five trustees school area 8. Mr. Scott is mgzried, has two grown children' He was on township council from 1955 to 1963. He was deputy reeve in 1957-58 and reeve from 1959 to 1963. He has served as a mem- ber of the executive of the Mayors and Reeves Association and was vice-chairman of the urban-rural municipal associa- tion. As his achievements his four years as _ township reeve, Mr. Scott lists: the ap- proval of the official plan; the approval of the Bay Ridges subdivision; the water filtration plant in the township; the pur- chase and sale of industrial lands and a successful piebis- cite on Sunday sports and liquor lounges. HISTORY Mr. Scott traced the history of the township back to 1791 when the boundaries were sur- veyed. He said by 1809 the pop- ulation was 180 and this grew! to 6.345 by. 1850. Mr. Scott said) in 1850 the township, had more industries than it does today! with 24 mills, a shipyard at the mouth of the Rouge river and a busy Frenchman's Bay port. With the introduction" of steam in the 1850's the popula- tion began to drop and by 1921 it reached a low of 4,407. In 1941 the population total set a new high with 6,602 but again dipped in 1945 when 5,308 per- eons resided in the township. Mr. Scott said many summer cottages in the township were converted during and after the war consisting mainly of small structures with no basement and a low assessment. He said the township still faces a diffi- cult problem with these low assessed areas, many of them in subdivisions dating back 100 years. "In the 1950's the water in many wells became inade- quate and it was obvious that the township needed adequate water and sewage facilities." Mr. Scott said the township asked the federal government in 1948 for the opportunity to purchase the Crown interests in Ajax, pointing out that -the pumping plant in the improve. ment district could serve part: of the township. The govern. ment replied pointing out tha the capital costs might be toc great for the township te assume. Mr. Scott said the conclusior Population | Now Totals OTTAWA (CP) -- Canada's population at Oct. 1 was 20, 548,000, up 296,000 since the start of the year. A report by the Dominion Bu reau of Statistics Thursday saic British Columbia has beer growing fastest since the las during population census to June 1 1966. The total population is uy 633,000 or 2.7 per cent sinc mid-1966. In British Columbia the growth was 5.3 per cent a the province added 99,000 peo le. J Ontario grew by 256,000 or 3. per cent, Alberta by 39,000 o 2.7 per cent, and Quebec b; 113,000 or two per cent. Populations by provinces Oct 1, with comparable totals fo June 1, 1966: Boys Brigade Organized WHITBY (Staff) -- Enrol ment night for The Ist Whitb Company of the Boys' Brigad will be held Nov. 21 at 7:0 p.m. : This is a new organizatio started in St. Andrew's Présby terian Church for boys, age 114% to 17-years. The program will includ sports, Bible class, drill, phys cal development, camping an many other activities The object of the Boys' Br gade is, the advancement ¢ Christ's Kingdom among boy and the promotion of habits ¢ obedience, reverence, disc pline, self respect. The four leaders include Vit tor Agnew, B. J. Clifton, Jame Hill and Alan Smith, who wi be in charge. All interested boys are we come Tuesday evening at 7:0 p.m. DEDIC Of Meme Honoring Fire Chief B Sunday, N et 2: WHITBY 201 Broe

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