Oshawa Times (1958-), 20 Nov 1962, p. 35

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HE'S TRUCKING ALONG _ with a new heavy gaug@ steel sanitation department truck -- realistic "and" accurate Co-Op Expert Off To India To Give Help in every miniature-scaleq de- tail. It boasts such extras as white wall iires, windshield | wipers and a horn. What a toy for a boy. Toyland, 1962, is as topical as today's newspaper. Whether the nlayroom project is the newest achievements of space travel, the latest design in Spin dry washing machines to ease home- making labors, etc., the toy is sure to be an authentically-de- signed, purposeful miniature, reports Mel Freud, president of Toy Guidance Council. Besides keeping up with the frenzied advances of modern science and technology, toyland also provides a broad range' of streamlined versions of classic play favorites like ABC blocks, the whirling top spired play- things, ds well. There is .a boom in career- oriented play kits , including such novelties as a set for mak- ing cotton candy and a minia- ture plastics extruding plant. The young, highway engineer will have his own paving de- Toys Combine Latest Ideas, Old Favorites The scope of playroom scien- tific projects now extends to the upper teenage level of ia terest. Most ambitious projec! is a kit for building a digita! computer. Thrills on the science front include a taenaue with an operating camera and a micro- scope with a group viewer. Along with the trend toward extending the age level of sci- sence experiments in the home, right up to college level, is a drive to. make science simplified enough to be equally interest- ing to the youngsters in the pri- mary grades too. The many surburban Canadian can families invite a high inci- dence of large scale play activ- ities, such_as a hockey rink that folds away when. not in use, More realistic, bigger and big- ger replicas of familiar struct- ures such as the supermarket are created in fiberboards. A partment set complete with bull- dozer, cement mixer, crane and| ltoyland's first operating sand hopper -- all of heavy gauge) zi steel. new deluxe version of the mo- dern food store even features trading stamps and is equipped) with signs to. indicate night shop- 'ping hours. |lamp. New for the young marksman s an electronic gun which re- gisters at the target without benefit of ammunition... New .n musical toys is a miniature bag pipe which requires no more breath investment than what is required to inflate a ballon, Honors for the most novel sound effect in toys for the pre- school youngster may well go to the push and pull~style hippo who roars with zestful realism. for the playroom architect is a which enables youngsters to lay) out a vacation resort complete with lake and docks for pleasure boats, The vacation theme has a novel echo in a new camper truck of heavy guage steel that allows for double decker beds and has .a boat trailer. History - oriented science toys continue to. provide youngsters with meaningful building pro jects. The latest is a kit which provides materials and instruc-| tions for reproducing Edison's) ie | 10- Year Record Of Immigrant French Critics Hail Canadians By Paquerette Villeneuye Canadian Press Correspondent PARIS (CP)--Novels by two) yours Canadian writers have| een welcomed by the critics of Eurepe's French - janguage/ newspapers. One of the recently-published | works is Dure est ma Joie by) Jacqueline Dupuy. Miss Dupuy | is the daughter of Pierre Dupuy, | Canadian ambassador to France| and an author in his own right.) The otner is Le Poids de Dieu, | the first. novel of Montrealer| Gilles Marcotte. Miss Dupuy's is not her first! Most novel building enterprise) attempt. 'An earlier novel won a prize from the French Acad- kit of blocks and accessories|amy. Dure est ma Joie deals| jwith the experiences of a Pa-| risian girl in Italy. "A little book of certain, charm," wrote. critic Christine) Arnothy in the daily Parisien| Libere. | Gilbert Ganne, reviewer for) the Paris daily L'Aurore, de-/ scribed it as "a beautiful and charming story, based on au- thentic occurrences.' "A weighty and graceful| novel,"'. said Marcel Prist of! Brussels' Nouvelle Gazette, Reviewers were equally en- thusiastic about Marcotte's| book. Paris criticism was summed) up by Luc Estang, criti for the Figaro Litteraire. He wrote: "The significance of this novel, Mr. Marcotte's first, goes beyond a bare outline of the plot. Mr. Gilles Marcotte is de-; Ej PLE RS Me CRIM 088 SAY... Mery witt REED'S NOW is the time te come into our twe stores end browse cround for Christmas ideas . . . Plan now te decorate your home with @ fashionabl i +++ Let your mantel come alive with a 'Christmas errangement .. . You can make your home say WELCOME with one of our bright and cheery door-knockers . . . And you are welcome te both of our stores to come in end look around ..+ THIS YEAR remember thot specie! family you like so much with o flowering plant from our colorful selection. 'Let them know you cere for them ; . . Bright red poinsettios ore terrific this year... THE BEST WAY to say merry Christmas 'to your loved ones in other places whether neer or far is to send them a Chri gift of fl hrough F, T. D. We ere hended t | | bs nouncing a_ religious situation | peculiar to French Canada. j i Said Jean Nicollier in Swit- zerland's Lausanne Gazette: "This first novel, which I find engaging, has local color--that a milieu abroad, very) ; shrewdly studied. As an added virtue, it revives the problem of) the Social aspects of Christian life of this ¢ d service. Order early and save the tel- egraph or phone.charges because we can send early orders by mail. (CP)--Ten, concrete manufacturing com-| years ago Peter Christensen, an/pany- He was able to invent emigrant from Denmark, signed new methods and machines up with 80 others to work on a which elped the company pros- government project in Labra- per and on the money he earned dor. He'd never heard then of he started another business on Labrador, and didn't care where his own it was, but he accepted the job) The Second World War andl and landed with total assets of the German occupation of his /$120. country ended this venture. VERNON, B.C SEAFORTH, Ont. meer in the dairy movement is Canada's recruit for the ev United Nations share- edge program, T. Everard Cl Rome for briefi Agriculture O quarters before g (CP)--A pio- co operative atest) anding | e-knowl- REMEMBER! REMEMBER! lark is off to} at Food andj h ad-| we have two stores to serve you . . . DOWNTOWN on King West, neor Woolworths and our DRIVE-IN SHOP at our Greenhouses on to plan the organization of da co-ops. His task is to submit a for establishment of 10,000 Vv lage co-ops, 400 distr f 100 regional bodies and co-ops. "It's urgent the go ment of India to speed gantic co-operative ple for said in an interview before de- parture. "Millions of Commu nists are work v India and its 400,000 "000 pe may soon become discour, with their hard lot. in to India he orousty IM) lovely ople} aged these WHEN THE LADY says,. "Make mine fur' -- think mink -- as long as it's a mink portrait collar atop a versatile, lovely broad- | tail jacket. New broadtail furs come in an exciting array of Today people in Seaforth, 24 miles northwest of Stratford, say Peter Christensen: has ac- When he came to Canada he started work at 90 cents an hour, later raised to $1.00 He) complished more in Canada in worked as many hours as he) those 10 years than most Cana-| could and within four and a half} dians accomplish in a lifetime.;months he had $1,000 and had He has organized three com-|paid his family's passage to ipanies, raised his family in a their new country. new home -he built with is own Me in were not easy. Mr. ,\Christensen pia Ac) construction company and is}. "Trouble is here to conquer,' manager of Seaforth Sewer Tile and he soon had trouble. He da: | | Limited, a company worth more veloped eczema on his hands) than $1,000,000, which is em-|and |barking on a large expansion|a skin' specialist. |program in Toronto. He worked in the Arctic Circle| his savings went to pay for| | | | ALL THAT GLITTERS this | holiday is a "Ban-Lon" knit Both books were published by La Maison Flammarion, a firm that has provided an outlet for| many Canadian authors. Flam-) marion fas handled all five nov-| els of the successful Quebec writer, Gabrielle" Roy. SETS PRECEDENT 1 WINNIPEG (CP) -- Joseph) Andrew Kee per 34, has been) named the first provincial de-| velopment officer of Indian an-| cestry. He will be stationed at! Cedar Lake, Man., northwest of} here. | Bloor St. West, where there is lots and lots of free parking .. . easy to reach,.. R. B. REED & SONS DOWNTOWN 10% KING W, FLORISTS LTD. OSHAWA DRIVE-IN SHOP 163 BLOOR ST. W. times of techno! ogical- revolu- tion and innovation Even without this motivation, however, the project could be justified simply on the grounds colors and a fashion-wise jac- ket such as this one will cer--| tainly put stars in her eyes. VETERAN SCOUT Concrete pipe that Mr. Chris-| jtensen designed has become the eczema dwindled his ifirst tile of its kind to be made away. successfully in Canada. When he eard the loudspeak- to restore his savings, but again money} STARTED BUSINESS ensemble in sparkling silver. |~; Its pearl - buttoned cardigan and softly-pleated skirt rate center stage with easy-care and easy-to-wear qualities. that the Indian people urgently| require better organization for the dairy industry and agricul- ture marketing. SHERBROOKE, Que. (CP) -- &'S ge pp "Immigrants 'this; Undeterred he started his own, Senator Charles Howard, 77- ing pg Fs gti agchons |business manufacturing small) and today can say: year-old Liberal member of the before about his future in Cane\ oncre'® Products and within a) "My boy is in hig school, my SET UP CO.OPS upper chambey, was among ada. He found many Canadians ¥¢@! he was building supermar-|girl is training to be a nurse, lkets, bridges and swimming| @"d I think they will do as I do Organization of co-ops is no eight charter members of the Ut of work. basis | rever count this big country, oe job ive the Now a coms a-|First Sherbrooke Troop of Boy/ HIT BY DEPRESSION pools.'He no longer makes con-\ vith ali its variations te natere Se ee nian or the Scouts who met at a banquet) He was born in Denmark and|°'ete Products and has closed) its richness, its peaceful people Alberta dairy industry. here to celebrate 50 years of aj age 20 had started his own|the contracting company. and good democratic system of _/ Scouting in the area. business, but the depression left, Despite the destruction of his|8°vernment, as the country of A Mn i man in his. mid. i alia @0s who still enjoys ng on {him with little and he joi ined aloriginal Cc anadian company jn a' 'our r future," land and water, Mr. Clarke is @ raduate of Mount 'ei all) MONTREAL (CP) -- The 12th College in Calgary and the Har-jannual Canadian Constructton| vard School of Business Admin-| Association competition for the| istration. best thesis on construction sub-| He was sent here in 1925 by jects went this year to Lars} hen the| Erik Vikander, 24, a Stockho!m-| was in|bofn: Monrealer, who gradu- his manage: aed his year in engineering| ment the dairy indu was|from McGill University. organized on co-operative lines He made the Shuswap Okana- |history, economics and other gan Dairy Industries Co-opera-| jaspects of Indian affairs. 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