Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 29 Nov 1967, p. 4

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She Oshawa Times 86 King St. E,, Oshawa, Ontario Published by Canadian Newspapers Company Limited T. L. Wilson, Publisher E. C. Prince, Associate Publisher OSHAWA, ONTARIO, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 1967 Whitby Election Comes As Critical Era Begins The electors of the Town of Whitby and the Township of Whitby have a date with destiny, Dec. 9, when they will have the opportunity to cast their ballots for reeve, council, board of education and public utility commission of the new town of Whitby. This is not just another election but rather the start of a new era in this area which holds much promise. The amalgamation of the town and township makes possible the unification of two municipalities whose roots go back to the founding of Ontario County. The town has the services; while the township has the land necessary for the in- dustrial and residential expansion which is inevitable and which are the life blood of healthy civic ad- ministration. The proponents of the amalgama- tion plan are confident the founda- tions have been laid for a future bright with promise. All that re- mains to make this promise come true is for the electors to vote into office those whose foresight and dedication will make that promise come true. That the electors will have ample choice is indicated by the fact that 89 candidates are in the field for the various offices. All but two of the present members of the two councils -- Donald McQuay and Neil Grandy, who sat on the town and township councils, respectively -- are contesting the various offices, This means that with the many other candidates, many of whom have had previous experience, the new town is assured of good gov- ernment. The re-election of Mayor Desmond Newman and Deputy Reeve Robert Attersley assure the new municipal- ity of the type of leadership it must have. Strong advocates of amalgamation,they have both the youth and ability to give the guid- ance needed to solve the many per- plexing problems which will arise in coming months. All that remains to assure Whitby of the realization of the dreams of those who worked for. the unifica- tion of the two municipalities is for the electors to turn out in large numbers on election day. In that way they will be able to say they have personally had a part in the inauguration of an administration whose future is limited only by the abilities of those who direct it. A Peak Or New Plateau A suggestion that Centennial en- thusiasm be sustained in a program to make this province a more pleas- ant place to live and to bring added tourist dollars has been put forth by the Ontario Centennial Planning Branch. In a review of the many programs successfully undertaken, the plan- ining branch puts particular em- phasis on the worthwhile accom- plishments of the Centennial Beau- tification and Improvement Pro- gram. The proposal is that the suc- cess of this year's efforts should serve as a spring-board to launch a future long-term program. During the years of planning and implementation on Centennial pro- jects a strong spirit of co-operation was forged between the province and local councils. Key people in more than 850 Ontario municipal- ities were united under local com- mittee chairmen in a single force working to make this year a success. She Oshawa Fines 86 King St. E TL Ww f. C, PRINCE, General Monoger €. J, MeCONECHY, Editor SUBSCRIPTION RATES The Oshawe Times combining The Oshawo Times (established 1871) and the Whitby Gazette dnd Chronicle (established 1863) is published daily (Sundays end Statutory holidays excepted Members of Conadion Daily Newspaper Publish- ars Association, The Canodian Press Audit Bureau Associotion. The Canodian Press is exclusively entitied to the use of-reproduction of ali news despetched in the poper credited to it or to The Associated Press or Reuters news published therein. Al! rig patches ore also reserved 86 King St, E., Oshawa, Ontario Notional Ad: ng Offices; Thomson Building, 425 University enue, Toronto, Ontario; 640 Oshowa, Ontario SON, Publisher s of speciol des- Cathcart Street, Montreal, P.Q Delivered by carriers in Oshawa, Whitby, Ajox, Pickering, Bowmanville, Brooklin, Port Perry, Prince Albert, pto nchman's Bay, Enniskillen, Burketon, Claremont, and Newcastie not over SSe per week. By mail in Province of Ontario outside carrier' deliver $15.00 per year. Other provinces and Commonwealth Countries, $18.00 per'yeor. U.S.A. and foreign $35.00 per year, reste OTTAWA REPORT 'Jobs For The written question ad- dressed to the Cabinet has be- come the backbench MPs most fruitful field for industry on less answered, of which six had been asked more than four months earlier. The organization already exists. Ontario communities have proved that they have the imagination to carry through such a project, and they have made it abundantly clear that they are willing to expend the necessary time and effort once their enthusiasm is aroused. A five-year community improve- ment plan is proposed that would allow each municipality to progress at its own pace toward easily attain- able goals. It would provide for the annual reviewing of, and renewing of further goals. The suggestion comes at a time when that warm glow of satisfac- tion with the success of so many of the Centennial projects in this area is still present. For most of the organizers and workers is it a period for a well-earned "time out", However, if enthusiasm can be banked and kept burning, the plan- ning branch suggestion is one that merits consideration are all the local Centennial committees are dis- banded with thanks. It would be wonderful if the exciting awareness of the potential of our province could be maintained at a new high plateau of enthu- siasm rather than just peaking for this special year. Other Editors' Views WITHOUT POLICE FORCE What happens when a community is left without a police force? Pelee Island has found out the hard way. Vandals have struck again and again. There have been fire bomb- ings, breakins and other crimes. It does not take long for the hoodlums to take over once they know. there are no active police on the job. (Windsor Star) aan AeA ° The Boys, A Costly than 178 remained un- pose the wide field of political patronage, since the question covered the Pearson era, two days later a "PLASTICS' STAY True Hippies | Quit Scene In Yorkville TORONTO (CP) -- The flow- er children are leaving Yorkville, the midtown Torone to home of the hippies for the last few years. For some the exodus has led to a small farm 30. miles north of Toronto where a col- ony of "'senior' flower chil- dren has retired to escape the "hassle'--the running _fight with city hall, police and the criminal elements who prey on hippies. For others, escaping the yil- lage has meant cropping their hair and taking jobs. Some have gone back to university and others have moved in small tribes to old houses on working-class streets in Toron- t 0. The __ boutique-and-coffee. house village is still frequent. ed by long-haired youngsters wearing beads and buttons, But these, says David DePoe, the hippie specialist with the Company of Young Cana- dians, are "plastic hippies""-- runaways and 'mixed-up kids' who dabble in pot, acid and sex just for kicks, DePoe estimates that only a handful of the original colony of 300 true flower children re- main in and around Yorkville, One who has departed is Pete, who sits cross-legged on his rough sandals, smoothes his shoulder-length hair and contemplates his new para- dise--a frozen field and a cabin covered with psychedel- ic daubs of bright paint. "I've found the greener grass," says Peter. "I'm happy now." Pete lives with five other young men and a girl. They're trying to build the "perfect" rural commune on a 15-acre patch hidden from neighbors by tall trees. The rent is $175 a@ month. Pete is typical of the young- sters, many of them with high IQs, who reached a stage of disillusionment two years ago and became hippies. When they physically dropped out of society here and in other cit- ies in North America the love movement was born, Now tey say it's dead, or at least removed to a "higher plane." In San Francisco's Haight- Ashhury -- district the long- hairs buried Hippiedom in a mock funeral ceremony. Many of those who inhabited New York's East Village have gone. Yorkville has undergone the same change. They have responded to a message that drummed through the hippie colonies late in the summer; "Go out and do your own Thing." For Dennis, the "thing" is a part-time job behind the wheel of a taxi. He has cropped his hair to collar- length and lives with former flower children in a commu- nal house in Toronto's east end. YEARS AGO 25 YEARS AGO, Nov, 29, 1942 Dr. T. W. G. McKay, MOH has reported a few cases of scarlet fever in Oshawa dur- ing the past month. OCVI students have raised $151.99 in their Furlong of Pen- nies drive to purchase Christ- mas boxes for former students now overseas. 40 YEARS AGO, Noy. 29, 1927 A. W. Jackson, Warden of On- tario County was presented with a gold watch by the Coun- ty Council. E. Kaiser, M.P. pushed the button to set the Oshawa Daily Times new press in mo- tion. BIBLE "And whosever of you will be the chiefest, shall be servant of all."' Mark 10:44 There is something noble about a person who has the abil- ity to be a servant. By ECONOMIC BRINKMANSHIP armen rennenunenaenmnememan nnn INN FOREIGN AFFAIRS ANALYSIS Crisis Weakens U.S. Case By PHILIP DEANE Foreign Affairs Analyst The Cyprus crisis, which seems headed now for a peace- ful settlement--barring sur- prises--has weakened the American case agains de Gaulle's attacks on NATO, weakened the right-wing Greek regime and may even eventu- ally have helped the emergence of a neutralist, left-leaning gov- ernment in Athens. In Cyprus it- self, the anti-American faction has been strengthened and the reconciliation between the 80- per-cent Greek majority and the 18-per-cent Turkish minority made even harder than it was. Last time there was a crisis over Cyprus, in 1964, Greece had a regime equivalent ideo- logically to Canadian liberal- ism. When Turkey threatened then to attack Greece, despite their common membership in NATO, the Greek government said publicly that if such an at- tack occurred and was not stopped by Turkey, Greeks sould have to question the use- fulness of NATO for their coun- try. Rushing in to exploit this apparent dissatisfaction with NATO, Russia made threaten- ing noises against Turkey. Since then, power has been taken over in Greece by a right-wing government believed by much of the world--and especially by the Greeks them- selves--to be a creature, or at least a friend, of the American CIA. This time when there is a crisis over Cyprus, the U.S. does not warn--as it did in 1964 --that its fleet would be used to prevent fighting over Cyprus be- tween Turkey and Greece, and consequently the Turks have been able to prepare openty for an invasion of Cyprus, confident of the military superiority they enjoy over Greece thanks to ar- maments furnished by the U.S. CIA BLESSING The moral -- however mistak- en--for the average Greek: NATO is for Americans conven- ience. As de Gaulle says, "'hav- ing a completely pro-American right-wing dictatorship blessed by the CIA helps Greece a lot less than having a more inde- pendent, Liberal government; Russia, which might be willing to pressure Turkey if Greece has a liberal government, Is not willing to do so when Greece is run by a regime the CIA sup- HVACR Patrick Nicholson Not. surprisingly, Tradition who might be classed as burnt: out ministers, embarrassing al- batrosses, or men who were just in the defeated candidates Parliament Hill. The subject matter of such a question tells a lot about the MP who asks it. It may reveal him as being politically astute, diligent in the interests of his constituents, industrious--or plain bumbling. Some questions call for @nswers based on tables of sta- tistics. The preparation of these may take many man-hours of work, and beexceedingly costly. Some years ago, even before the Pearson Pattern in- flated wages and costs, a cabi- net -minister estimated that it could cost as much as $2,000 of the taxpayers' money to answer one question. MPs should there- fore exercise discretion in phrasing their queries. This has been perhaps the most questioning parliamentary session ever known. In its first $2 days, no less than 714 written questions were addressed to the government. In that time, no JOBS FOR THE BOYS The most barnacled un- answered question was one of those politically astute ques- tions, exceedingly age | to the government. This ha been posed more than six months previously by Warner Jorgenson, the Saskatchewan- born Conservative MP for Prove encher. | It asked: 'What are the names of all individuals who were federal candidates for any political party since Auril 1, 1963, and who have been : ed to the senate, the Bench, any federal government board, com- mission, agency, enquiry, study or advisory group or to any civil service position or who have been employed in any ca- pacity by the federal govern- ment?" Jt went om to ask the annual pay and allowance of each. That question sought to ez- Liberal MP posed exactly the same question but covering the period of John Diefenbaker's prime ministership. Appointments which are in the unfettered gift of the prime minister of the day are a deli- cate question. Sometimes such patronage is flagrant, and to have such a list made public would of course be bitter read- ing for the taxpayers, who can- not be sure that a defeated can- didate or burnt-out MP was in- deed the most. suitable' ap- pointee for any particular job on the public payroll. So one must assume that the long delay in giving the answer was caused by red faces rather than by long hours of toil, YOUR EMPLOYEES When the answer. does appear, {t will show, as examples, that Prime Minister Pearson has ap- pointed to the lifetime post as senator no less than ten mep way. This is in addition to the herd of party hacks similarly appointed. Then there was the widely criticized appointment of Jack Pickersgill as Canada's first "Transport Czar." Alistair 'Fraser, twice a defeat- ed candidate, was appointed as Clerk of the House of Commons, succeeding a former Liberal MP. The late Guy Favreau was appointed a judge. Ex-Cabinet Minister Watson MacNaught of P.E.I. was appointed chairman of the Dominion Coal Board after his electoral defeat. And so the list goes. The few mentioned represent some quar- ter million dollars a year in sal- aries and allowances. "Jobs for the Boys" has al- ways been a way of life for the Liberal party, which traditional- ly looks after its own. The Dief- enbaker list will contain several cases, but--to the chagrin of many Conservatives--fewer than the Pearson list. ports; consequently, Greece's interests might best be served by a neutralist administration which would save money by re- ducing armaments. and get fa- vours from both Russia and from the Americans who appar- ently respect neutrals more than friends." In Cyprus itself, the American failure to "forbid" Turkish mili- tary action' strengthens anti- U.S. sentiment among the Greek majority. The massive Turkish threat makes this ma- jority even more suspicious than before of any solution giv- ing Turkey a foothold on the is- and--a foothold that the Greeks ing Turkey a foothold on the is- and--a foothold that the Greeks now see as beach-head for fu- ture invasions, just as they see the Turkish minority as a fifth column in the event of such an invasion. Destruction Of Saratoga Greatly Impressed Iroquois By BOB BOWMAN A shadowy figure who slips in and out of the pages of Cana- dian history towards the end of the French regime wa@pe parti- san officer, Joseph Marin, Early in 1745 he commanded a force of French and Indians who attacked Annapolis Royal. It was part of a plan to regain Nova Scotia from Britain, but it was spoiled by the capture of Louisburg by a force from New England supported by units of the Royal Navy. et Marin to help him defend uisburg but Marin evidently realized that the New England- ers were going to win, and went back to Quebec. He knew how to look after himself as subse- quent events proved. Marin made a big effort for France later in the year. He led a force of 500 French and In- dians against Saratoga, N.Y., and completely destroyed it on Nov. 29, after a surprise night attack. The destruction of the fort at Saratoga left the route to Albany unprotected and might have been the springboard for the long-planned campaign to drive the British from New York and New England, IROQUOIS IMPRESSED France never achieved the ob- jective, but Marin's destruction TODAY IN HISTORY By THE CANADIAN PRESS Nov. 29, 1967 ..... George Brown, founder of the Toronto Globe in 1844, was born 149 years ago to- day--in 1918--in Scotland. He emigrated to the United States with his father as a youth and moved to Canada in 1842, The Globe became the chief organ of reform under Brown, He was an arch-rival of Sir John A. Macdonald but was at the same time a prime mover of Confederation. 1314--Philip IV of France died. 1942--Coffee was rationed in the United States. First World War Fifty years ago today--in 1917--the British advanced west of Bourlon' Wood, in the Cambrai area; repre- sentatives of the 16 Allied nations met in a war confer- ence at Paris; Lord Lans- lowne urged the restate- ment of Al'ied war aims. Second World War Twenty-five years ago to- day--in 1942--Japanese re- sumed their occupation of Attu Island in the Aleutians; the new Russian offensive in the Veluki Luki area pene- trated German defences; Allied bombers attacked Tripoli, Tunis and Bizerte in North Africa, of Saratoga greatly impressed the Iroquois. They began drift- ing away from the British, and later many of them supported General Montcalm in his cam- paigns before the fall of Quebec, Marin then became the com- mander of a French fort which was a very profitable business under the crooked intendant Francois Bigot. He is said to have made 312,000 francs for himself. Montcalm's great offi- cer, the Marquis de Bougain- \ ville, commented that the finan- / cial y i Governor Duchambon tried to / ¢" advantages of commanding a fort for three years were enough to provide for matrimo- nial intentions! Bigot wrote to De Vergor, commanding the fort at Beause- jour (now in New Brunswick) "Profit by your place so that you can come soon to join me in France and buy an estate near me."' The corruption was a fac- tor in France's loss of Canada to Britain. OTHER NOV, 29 EVENTS 1729--F rench settlers were massacred at Fort Rosalie. 1760--British troops captured Detroit from France. 1773--British citizens in Que- bec petitioned for establishment of an Assembly. 1798--Legislature of the Isle of St. John voted to change name to Prince Edward Island. Royal assent was given on Feb. 1, 799 1808--Francis Burton was ap- inted Lieutenant Governor of wer Canada but remained in Britain until 1822. 1918--Canadian Council of Ag- riculture, meeting at Winnipeg, issued national farmers' plat- form including lower tariffs, free trade with Britain, and re- ciprocity with U.S.A, GOOD EVENING Adult Re-training Enrollment Low By JACK GEARIN of The Times Staff IS INTEREST lagging in some of our new Adult Re- training programs? After so much early enthusi- asm and promise that maximum attendance would be the order of the day, is the glamor start- ing to wear off? Perhaps not, but attendance is low for the recently-inaugur- ated 40-week course for UAW members held at the Oshawa Airport in the daytime and Eastdale Collegiate at night. Ontario Manpower Retraining Program officials, who adminis- ter the course here, said last week that the total enrollment was 122, but that they soon hoped to get it up to 135 -- this is far off the 300 atten- dance figure originally esti- mated for the program started Oct. 30 and known as the Pro- vincial - Industrial Work- ers Training Course. Students attend twice weekly, for three hours each session, while upgrading on such sub- jects as Maths, Science and En- glish. Successful graduates with good marks could possibly qual- ify for admittance to some courses at Durham Junior Col- lege, In this phase of the pro- gram, there is an optimistic re- port from the 12 teachers. The latter have been impressed by the "'general quality" of the stu- dents, according to Lee E. Evans, co-ordinator and princi- pal of OMRP here. "IT IS QUITE a challenge to return to school after so many years' absence and to buckle down to our curriculum, but the results have been most encour- aging," he said. "At first they just sat back and listened, as was to be expected; but now many ask penetrating questions which clearly indicate that they are learning. That is the most encouraging aspect of the pro- gram. If we could only get that attendance up we would be very happy." Evans said that $30,000 was budgeted originally for the 40- week course, but that this did not include such items as books, pencils, and classroom equip- ment. The total cost can only be kept to a minimum by max- imum attendance, he said, "The course is running, can make a real contribution to adult re-training, but the atten- dance is disappointing," he added. The total enrollment is also down for the other local out- lets of Adult Re-training at Mc- Laughlin, Eastdale and _ the Adult Re-training centre on Al- bert St., possibly because Can- ada Manpower has had a more restrictive admission policy since last April. Will the clamps be put on fur- ther when Finance Minister Sharp's new budget comes in? THESE ARE THE days when only the political pros think ser- fously of the next Federal elec- tion. To them it is constantly a grim reality and preparedness is the key word if they are to survive. Nobody realizes this better than the NDP's William "Bill" Cumpsty, an honored member of the cult in his party's circles since the provincial election. Cumpsty's tenure of office here (as a_ paid, full-time political organizer) will termin- ate officially Dec. 31; but, be- fore he goes, there is some im- portant unfinished party busi. ness for him to wind up. What he wants to do is to leave the party's Oshawa- Whitby Federal riding associa- tion a proposed plan of attack for the next election ("NDP headquarters in Ottawa think it will come either next Spring or Fall," he says). Party executives proudly re- fer to this uncompleted docu- ment as "Cumpsty's Blueprint for Victory in the Oshawa-Whit- by Federal Riding'. CUMPSTY FULLY realizes that this district has failed to produce a Federal NDP or CCF winner since the late 1940's when Arthur Williams won a by-election, but he has amply proved one point -- he knows how' to organize for victory, right down to minute detail. "Organization" is his pet word, painstaking and time - con- suming organization of the type which paid off so handsomely for Cliff Pilkey. He will ask the NDP to quick- ly appoint poll captains for each Federal poll in the new riding, They will recruit help- ers to deliver pamphlets, litera- ture. He also wants section or- ganizers ("They are the real key people," he says, "because they are responsible for blocks - of polls, not individual ones). He wants the association to double its present membership of 720 and to quickly appoint a seven - man Federal election committee (four from Oshawa, three from Whitby). Frequent seminars and social events are also planned. The 44-year-old graduate of New York University (in Politi- cal Science) does not want the local NDP to lose what he calls "Its victory momentum". He says the party has at least three "good' potential candidates, all from the dis- trict. He did not seem to think that Oliver Hodges, the dignified Winona fruit farmer and trade union negotiator, would be the next standard-bearer here, Cumpsty's first job at NDP national headquarters will be a trans-Canada_ fund-raising .tour ("My objective will be to raise $250.000 personally, but we will need much more than that, of course," he said), CLEAR JDEA OF VIETNAM WAR CLAIMED BY 53 PERCENT By THE CANADIAN INSTITUTE OF PUBLIC OPINION (World Copyright Reserved) Just over half the people hove a clear grasp of what the n This ratio of knowledgable people is higher in Canada (53% feel they Vietnam war is all about. here than in either the United States (48%) or Britain (35%). The question: "Do h @ clear idea of whot the Vietnom war is sil ebout, thet is, what the Americans are fight- mn fort US. U.K. Canada Yes 48% 35% 53% x BS N ini 4 sic il 100% 100% 100% When Gallup Poll interviewers asked these respondents, thot is the ones who were informed on Vietnam, to explain whot the Americans were fighting for, about six-in-ten said to end Communism. Far below this group are 16% who talked vaguely of "preserving democracy', These answers were given by five times as many people os from critical adults who blamed the war on American imperialism or "to preserve their own prestige."' The second question wos asked of those who said "yes" to the first question: "What do you think the 'Americans ore fighting for in Vietnam?" 1. To stop, or end Communism in Vietnam 61% 2. To preserve democracy, give Vietnamese freedom 15 3. Fighting for American imperialism, private interests, keep economy up 9 4. To preserve their own prestige, trying to save face 5 5. Other 9 6. Can't say 2 * More than one answer given. 101%* mann Ht .,17. HAPPENED IN CANADA Cig6s. (4 1944) WORLD FAMOUS CoNSERVATONIST = His WATERFOWL SANCTUARY aT KINGSVILLE, Ont. CREATED m 1904 WAS "WHE PIONEER EFFORT in THs LINE oF ENDEAVoR: SUCH GREAT ADUBDN soci iu uc IETY (USA) WASN INCORPORATED UNTIL 1905. IN 1942 WE RECEIVED nh OBE HIS ACHIE: AND IN 1947 HE WAS NAMED ONE oF He IB GREAT PERSONAGES of te WORLD 2 STRANGE AS IT MAY SEEM OVER A MILLION CANADIANS DION! SET PAST GRADE 4 AT SCHOOL j OF THESE, TWO HUNDRED THOUSAN DIDN'T G0 To SCHOOL AT jag e SO TO SCHOOL AT ALL LIKE His FATHER ~ le FAMED WRITER FRANCIS DIEKENS (WHO WAS IN FROG LAE, SASK. Jus. PRIOR To THE MASSACRE IN 1BBS) = COULBN'T SLEEP UNLESS CHARLES DICKENE, M$ BED FACED NORTH .6aid, "I have never forgotten had been working on plans to . Japan ' , 1 f ' t ; »coming year, a mission study of}! ; 1 Mrs. : 1 ' ¢ -AMALGAMATI North BROOKLIN (Staff) -- Amal gamation was the key topic last night as 17 candidates for the Dec. 9 Town of Whitby elections .Spoke to an audience of about 70 at the community center here. None of the candidates had a bad word to say about . amalgamation. The "meet the candidates" session, sponsored by the Cham- ber of Commerce, allowed the politicians four minutes each to speak. The talks were followed by a question period of which the audience did not always make use, First of the two candidates -for reeve to speak was Gordon Hanna. "I cannot tell you the name Brooklin will last forever," he said. "But, today, it will prob- ably be best to keep the name of Brooklin alive. The name may gradually die out -- the 'new people of Brooklin may want to be known as the town of Whitby." He alluded to Quebec, saying, "They made a mistake 100 years ago when they let Que- 'bec have its own language and culture,"" Mr. Hanna said he wanted the new town to be a blending of the farm and the town. 'The 10 - lot development is wrong," -he said. Present reeve George Brooks the lessons I learned on the farm in Seaforth. I don't claim to be a farmer, but I understand their problems." Mr. Brooks said experience was needed to understand the job of being a reeve. He said he develop a marina in Whitby -- "this can become the great harbor it was at the beginning of the century." . "Industrial development is the key to the whole problem," _ WHITBY / AJA St. Mark's United Church, Women Unit 8 leader, Mrs. R. A. Smith opened the meeting with a reading entitled 'In ap- preciation of Grandmother." Mrs. Ida Simpson took the de- votional period. Her theme was "What plans have you Made." Plans were made to assist with the United Church Senior citi-|: zens luncheon of Dec. 7. Next Unit meeting of Dec. 14 will be}; in the form of a pot luck lunch- eon at 12:30 p.m. Mrs. K. Mc- Kelvie gave as her topic "How|i the Church came to Us,"' telling the history of the church through the ages to the present day. Mrs. Smith discussed brief- ly the study program for the Panorama of the bible. Mrs. Percy Pascoe and Leith Jones were tea es. Pickering Pound Peelers TOPS Club meeting and social evening was held at the home of}, Mrs.. Donald Loscombe, 39 Georgina Ave., Pickering. Dawn McCombe who reached the}, TOPS level was presented with ; a gift. Also honored was Jenny|, Stewart "Queen" of the month. |; An invitation to attend Whitby P Whittlers meeting Nov. 28 was : accepted. A diet lunch was I served by the hostess. : t 6 i The success of the recently held bizarre bazaar was dis-|; cussed at the Whitby General Hospital Women's Association meeting and members are an- ticipating another bazaar for the next year. Members will not meet in December, the next meeting will be held in Janu- ary and the new meeting place will be the centennial building. Mr. and Mrs. Bonar Hervine, River Hebert, Nova Scotia, are visitors at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Donald Irvine, 526 Kent St. | Mr. and Mrs, Francis Stub-} bert, 216 Rosedale Dr., recently celebrated their 16th wedding anniversary. Guests in the eve- ning were Mr. and Mrs.| Thomas Humphreys, Mr. =| (@ AGES | Created To Individual Requirements STAFFORD BROS. MONUMENTS -3552 318 DUNDAS EAST | 17 Years of Civi

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