Daily Times-Gazette, 24 Jan 1951, p. 3

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} Public Health Nursing Activities Are Increaed In 1950 & > 4 THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE Combining The Oshawa Times and Whitby Gazette and Chronicle OSHAWA WHITRY VOL. 10--No. 20 OSHAWA-WHITBY, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 24, 1951 PAGE THREE Oshawa Kiwanis Club Honors the Memory Of Immortal Robbie Burns * "There must have been a Spark | of genius in whoever coined that | § y F WwW phtase 'The Immortal Memory of | a S € er Robbie Burns' for the central theme | of a Burns celebration, for as we | read of the wayward but brilliant | realize that that which was mortal in him was weak and misspent, Complaints career of the Scottish Bard, 5 Are Pr obed : while that which has become im- mortal in him was strong, true, sin- cere and destined to live forever." With this statement, Kiwanian M. McIntyre Hood, special speak- er at Tuesday's luncheon meeting of the Oshawa Kiwanis Club, not only stirred the blood of every Scot present, but also made an instant appeal to every Kiwanian and guest present. Yesterday's meeting, being the closest to January 25th, anniversary of Robbie Burns, fea< tured a program honoring the great Scottish poet. Lorne Slaght, sanitary inspector, | in his report to the Oshawa Board | of Health states that 97 housing | complaints were investigated | 1950 as compared to 104 in 1949. | Last month four were investigated. | Housing inspections | numbered 263, compared to 303 in in| during 1950 | | 1949. Twenty-seven inspections were | | made in December. | Some 399 plumbing permits were | | issued in 1950, compared to 342 the | previous year, he reported. Sixty-| | two were issued in December, Prim- | Kiwanian Bob McNab, a fellow | ary plumbing inspections last year | Scot, introduced the speaker of the | nymbered 342, compared to 348 in | day in.novel manner, presenting |1949, Thirty-three were made in| Kiwanian "Mac" with the gift of | December last. Final plumbing in- a pencil, symbolic of the speaker's | spections last year totalled 414, com- | calling as a newspaperman. Fol- | pared to 335 the previous lowing the extremely interesting | Thirty-three were made last month. and informative treatment of the | Restaurant inspections in the City life of Robbie Burns, the speaker | numbered 368 last year, compared was thanked in sincere manner, | to 386 in 1949. Thirty-thre2 inspec- year. | Among the souvenirs which Cpl. Everett Butler of Woodville, Ont., year-old - Korean mirror, with reverse side of polished metal, which Fraser McIntyre Butler's return home is are seen admiring. "Among My 5 aftermath of a two-mont Kiwanian Rev. Hugh Davidson act- | tions were made last month, 'Bac- | 345-man company, Royal Canadian Regiment, was sent as an advance ing as spokesman for all the mem- | teriological samples taken in res- | special brigade. One of his brothers, E. H. Butler, lives in Oshawa. bers. Lived In Troubled Times Reviewing the early portion of Burns' brief life, Kiwanian -"Mac" Hood pointed out that the Scottish | were made. last year, compared to | Bard was born in the midst of a raging storm and lived in troubled times. "Into a world of hard toil, of easy mora] standards of intolerance and hardship, came Robert Burns. Pov- | erty was his lot from childhood. He made little out of his poems and life was a constant struggle, constant strain of brooding and in- trospection, of struggle against cir- cumstances. From his circum- stances, although they brought him | to an early grave, he drew his in- spiration. "Burns' spine Mad been bent by excessive labor and insufficient food at an early age. His instincts had been thwarted by a crippling moral code and his mind was often misled by the turmoil within. it. Yet as much but the futility as by the violence of his struggles, as a | | taurants last year numbered 181, compared to 290 in 1949. | The sanitary inspector reported that 55 beverage room inspections 54 in 1949. Five were made last month. Bacteriological samples tak- jen 'in beverage rooms numbered | nine in 1950. compared to seven the | previous year. | Some 140 barber shop inspections | were made last year, compared to | 158 the previous year. Four were | made last month. | 'Water samples taken in 1950 tot- | alled 441, compared to 471 in 1949. Twenty-seven were taken last | month, Twelve court cases were attend- ed by the inspector in 1950, com- | prred to eight in 1949. 'After-Church Concert 1s Much Enjoyed An appreciative and capacity much by his defeat as by his mast | audience attended the After-church ery of untoward surroundings, as| Musicale held at Adelaide House much by his lapses as by his aspira- On Sunday evening when a pro- tions, he extracted the vital ele- [87am was presented by the Osh- ments from a forbidding soil. Be- neath the dreariness and false ideals, between the submissions and | the rebellions, the acceptances and | the evasions, between belief in his father's. God and the truancies from Him, the slow distillation of his emotions proceeded to draw out his genius. Was The People's Poet "Understanding all that, we ap- proach the immortal part of Rob- bie Burns with understanding and sense the 'reason for his appeal. Burns was the poet of the peasant | people of Scotland. His hatred for hypocrisy stands out. His sympa- thies for the common people made him their spokesman and their champion. "Robert Burns was not only a great poet. He was one of the greatest philosophers, and prophets of his day and age. He visualized and expressed the doctrines = we are still hoping to see realized to- day--that of the brothérhood of | He visualized that doctrine | man. far in advance of all others, for it is expressed in that incomparable poem, "A Man's a Man for A' That" --"That man to man, the world o'er, Shall brithers be for a' that." "That was the deam of Burns of over 150 years ago but it expresses exactly the thing that the frée peoples of the world are yearning | for today. "The common people were sym- bolized, immortalized and idealized. in the poems of Robbie Burns. His genius took the common things of life, clothed them with beauty and made them glow with the splendour of gems. He found his subjects in all that went on around him, in the fields as he plowed, in the bar- rooms of Tarbolton among conviv- 1al fellows, in the humble homes of his friends. The simplicity and beauty of his language make the | simplets: of his poems live. Illustrious Characteristics Kiwanian M. M. Hood brought to his fellow Kiwanians quotations from the poems of Robbie Burns, quoted titles and lines of certain of his songs, songs which-are sung today not only for their music but for the tenderness of their senti- ment. The beauty that Burns saw Branch of Association of On- awa Music Teachers' tario. | The concert opened with 'Alex | Dobos who played a violin group-- Sonata in F Major", Handel; * legro-Fiocco"; "Concerto in Mozart; and "Adoration," Borow- | ski. | A vocal group was contributed by Marion Stone who sang "Most Holy Night" -- Muriel Herbert; "How | Beautiful are the Feet" (Messiah) | -- Handel; "Creation Hymn" | Beethoven, Mrs. Stone was accompanied by [R. G. Geen and Alex Dobos by John | Lopham. The program was ar- | ranged by Mrs. G. R. Booth. | | Oshawa dnd | District. | | STRONG DEMAND It is reported by H. L. Fair, agri- cultural representative for Ontario County, that there is a good demand for feeder cattle and weanling pigs. Good weanling pigs are selling from $10 to $13 each depending upon quality. There is an active market in dairy cattle for export. FIELDS ARE BARE E. A. Summers, agricultural rep- | resentative for Durham County, [states the mild weather has had the effect of making fields com- pletely bare throughout the coun- try. He believes there should be sufficient good seed in the country to meet the demand. Generally speaking there is an ample supply of feed to last until pastures will be ready. 'HE MADE MILLIONS - Freeport, 111, Jan. 24--(AP)--Wil- liam T. Rawleigh, who made mil- lions by sending wagons loaded with extracts and 'spices over the rural routes of the United States and Canada, died Tuesday. He was 80 and still active until recent months in the management of his internationally known concern, the W. T. Rawleigh Company. | {| -- SA Newspaper Development Is Outlined The inside story of, newspaper | publishing, with a review of the | change in publishing trends since the first newspapers were published in Canada about the middle of the eighteenth century, formed the subject of an address given to St. Gregory's Council, Knights of Col- umbus, last night by M. McIntyre Hood, managing editor of The Times-Gazette. Woven into his in- formative talk was the theme that a free and uncontrolled press is the keystone of the democratic way {of life of the free nations of the | world. | Introduced by George Finley, the | speaker traced the beginnings of | newspapers back to the days of the Roman Empire, in which the "Acta | €0 the Associated | Djurna" was the first newspaper | his report. Good .gravel roads en- { recorded. One of the earliest news- | papers which is still appearing | regularly after a history of over | 1,300 years, he said, was the Pekin , | Gazette, established in China dur- | ing the Tang Dynasty which began | in the year 608 A.D. Canada's first | | newspaper was The Halifax Ga- | | zette, founded in 1751, with The | published | | Montreal Gazette; still | under that name, being the second, __ | established in 1765. | advances Reviewing the great made in newspaper publication during the present century, Mr. Hood spoke of the changed me- thods of news transmission, which made if possible for news of events in any part of the world to reach The Times-Gazette news room with- in a few minutes of the time they happened. Advances in mechanical equipment, from the time of the old hand-operated flat-bed press, to the present high speed. rotary press, were reviewed. The speaker also gaye an outline of the news- gathering - organization of The Times-Gazette, which covered like a blanket the whole Oshawa and district area. . Contrasting the free press of democratic countries with the con- trolled and state-operated 'press in countries behind the iron curtain, Mr. Hood said that the free press was one of the bulwarks of liberty and democracy, and that where the press was state-controlled, there was -autocratic dictatorship, and rampant abuses of the rights and privileges of the individual. , A strong, free press was a positive check on the assumption of arbi- trary powers by' governing bodies. Mr. Hood also spoke of the news- paper as a community asset, help- ing.to mould a sound and healthy public opinion, and giving support for the betterment of the com- munity and its people. Grand Knight Ed. Clarke and Charles Johnson expressed the ap- was presided oyer by James Gib- bon, to the speaker. for his in- formative speech. Refreshments meeting. to, all projects which were designed | Souvenirs" Mrs. Conant Temporary Theatre Head Mumps Most Prevalent Acute Communicable Disease During Year Some 4,996 visits were made-by the Public Health nurses during 1950, an increase of 282 visits over the previous year, Gertrude H. Tucker, Reg. N., Supervisor of Public Health Nursing stated in her report to the Oshawa Board of Health The newly formed Oshawa Little | Theatre, which presents * its first | production, Patrick Hamilton's sin- | ister melodrama, "Angel Street" at | last night. One hundred and twenty-four demonstrations were given to mothers by the nurses, including demonstra- tions of bathing infants and preparation of infant feeding. | Prenatal cases carried during the year numbered 201, an in- crease of 117 for the same period in 1949, During the month of December , 276 persons, representing 200 homes, were visited by the nurses. Fifty- O.C.V.I. on February 1, 2 and 3, 'eight infants and two pre-school | will have a direct link with Osh- | children attended the Child Health | Reviews Year awa's past dramatic history through Mrs. Gordon Conant, last President of the successful Oshawa Little Theatre of the late 1920's and early 1930's. Mrs. Conant has con- sented to act as chairman of a temporary executive of the new movement until its meeting on February 15. The Little Theatre plans to pre- sent "Angel Street" as a demon- stration project and hopes that the production will result in an inter- est in the theatre in Oshawa com- parable with that of 1928 to 1931, when some 500 memberships were sold annually and regular produc- tions of a high calibre were pre- sented. Mrs. Conant will have the help of organization | | Centre at the Legion Hall during | the month. { Acute Communicable Disease Cases of acute communicable | diseases reported in December numbered 129, of which 66 of the cases were mumps and 45 measles, A' break-down of acute com- | | municable diseases reported during | | December, the whole of 1950 and | { 1949 is as follows: | | Dec. 1950 1949 | Measles 45 89 22 | Chickenpox 5 65 471 | | Mumps ....... sense s 86 215.193 | | Scarlet Fever 4 5 | Whooping Cough | Meningitis | German Measles 5 0 -6 | Syphilis 6 brought back from veterans of the previous movement in M. McIntyre Hood and Mrs. Cliff Henry, while other members of the temporary executive are Sarah Quin, who directs the "Angel Street" presentation, Joan Lambert who produces it, George K. Drynan, President of 'the Oshawa Radio Drama League, Al. Perfect, Chair- man of the Central Council of Neighborhood Associations and Louise Thomson, George Roberts and Alan Quin of C.R.A. rea was this 400- | and Sharon Mayers | hs-long stay in Korea, where his party to pave the way for Canada's | . --Central Press Canadian Counties Council Approyes | $349,600 For Roads In 1351 over CKLB at 6.35 p.m. on Sunday, January 28th, to review the history | Mrs. Conant will go on the air of the Little Theatre movement in and objectives of the new group. On the air program with Mrs. Con- | ant will be the director, producer Cobourg, .Jan. 23 -+ There has { been little for the snowplows to do |so far this winter but unseasonal { thawing caused considerable break- | up on the Brighton-Carrying Place | road, the report of road superin- | tendent Jack Jordan, revealed at | |the January session of Northum- | |berland and Durham Counties | | Council. Council approved a road | | appropriation for 1951 of $349,600. | The road appropriation, about | | the same as last year, is made up | | of $129,600 for construction; $154,- 000 maintenance; $31,000 for ma- chinery and repairs; $20,000, mis- | | cellaneous and $15,000 for - the : Trenton suburban road. | Gravel roads were a headache to | the department, Mr. Jordan told | counties council when he presented | tice motorists to drive fast on them |and when they did the roads de- & | teriorated quickly. Mr. Jordan dd- | vised that bituminous paved roads | be increased as soon as possible. | Advises Against Acquisitions The road superintendent advis- ed- against any more roads being taken into the counties road Sys- tem. Road commissions in recent | years had tried to spread the work among as many townships as pos- | sible, patching and fixing, here and | there. However a more effective | | system would be to concentrate on | | one or two-mile projects in each of | | three: townships at a time, : | | Reeve Frank George of Bright- | ton township said that he would like to learn why the road com- | mission called for tenders for more equipment than was recommend- ed at the November session. Reeve Art Wartman of Percy township, member of the Road Commission, replied that no purchases had been made. Tenders had been called and opened, subject to the decision of the 1951 Road Commission. It was good business to get prices by tender early than to wait until they went up, Reeve Wartman said. The road superintendent re- ported that it would cost about $20,000 to instal a new bridge, known as the Factory Bridge, on King Street west, in Cobourg. Co- bourg had applied to have the bridge taken over as a county bridge. ; District Engineer Speaks Council was addressed on Friday by E."F. Marsten, district engineer of the Dept. of Highways. Refer- ring to the matter brought up by Reeve George regarding equipment tenders, he said it was sometimes better to get orders early so long as no delivery was received until orders had been given an ok. by the incoming council. Insofar as the 1951 road appro- priation was concerned he hoped {it was a reasonable amount be- | the week of the department en- | gineers in Toronto it had been ob- | served that last year certain re- were served - at the close of the |ductions had been made to by-laws Board; W. Roche to Port Hope | submitted to the department so as 4 | director who has been associated '| with Mrs. Quin in some of the later | rehearsals of Patrick Hamilton's | psychological thriller. t | At the close of the third night {of "Angel Street" on February 3, there will be a reception for the di- rector, cast and production staff at the Oshawa Y.W.C.A. immediately after the show. Arrangements for | the reception are in the hands of | Mrs. Henry and she is anxious to get in touch with members of the Oshawa Little Theatre of the 1920's and 1930's who have a con- tinuing interest in the movement. The temporary executive will lay Operating Business | open to all enthusiasts of the Lit- | tle Theatre which will be held at Thursday, February 15. At that meeting officers of the new move- ment 'will be elected and plans for {the development of the Little Theatre discussed. Guest speaker ELDON SOUTHWELL Drama Advisor to the Ontario De- Who has taken over the irterest of Partment of Education and well- the late F. C. Davidson in Davids known for his work in connection son's Shoe Store, Simcoe and Bond | With the Dominion Drama Festival, Streets. Mr. Southwell was a partner in. the business prior to Mr. Davidson's recent death, T. . ames Re-Elected rooms on the ground floor needed H 1th H d by the counties. The county prop- | ca cd erty committee had indicated that | the counties might be willing to on the cost of repairing the base- ment of the town hall for use by the corporation in order to release Dr. H: B. James last night was { help to the extent of 60 percent in | re-elected chairman of the Oshawa the cost of the work, which was | Board of Health at the board's in- Oshawa and to explain the aims | | and leading lady of "Angel Street," | | and Michael Sadlier, British actor- | | the Oshawa Recreation Csntre on | [for the occasion will be Edgar Stone, | | Gonorrhoea 6 | |. At the Child Health Centre there | were 458 new .infants during 1950 | ° as compared to 347 the previous | year.. In December there were 14. |New and old infants totalled 1,685 | : {during 7950 as compared to 2,298 {in 1949. In December there were 58. New pre-school children' at the | Centre during the past year num- | bered 69, as compared to 21 in 1949. There were two during the month of December. The number |of new and old pre-school children numbered 73 in 1950 as compared | to 48 in 1949. were two. 335 C leted I tion munization for combined antigens, diphtheria, whooping cough and tetanus during 1950 as compared to | 341 the previous year. In December | there were 15. Two-hundred-and- | forty-four children completed im- munization with diptheria toxoid {and tetanus toxoid compared to 252 in 1949. Children | who received vaccinations against | smallpox in 1950 numbered 448 as | compared to 493 in 1949. Thirteen | received vaccinations in December. | Some. 1,962 doses of combined | antigens, diptheria, whooping cough land tetanus were given at the | Health Centre in 1950, as compared [to 2,781 in 1949. In December the {number was 66. Doses of diptheria | toxoid and tetanus toxoid num- | bered 676 in 1950, as compared to |252 in 1949. Doses of vaccinations | year, compared to 493 in 1949. The | number in December was 10. Combined antigens recall doses | numbered 488 in '1950 as compared | to 383 in 1949. The number in De- | |cember was 11. Diptheria toxoid |recall doses numbered 645 in 1950 | as compared to 163 in 1949. There were none in December. Visits to new-born infants, under | one month old, totalled 746 in 1950, | compared to 660 in 1949. Visits in December numbered 42. other infants, one month to one year old, numbered 1,373 in 1950 as compared to 1,284 the previous |year. In December 64 visits were | made. Visits to pre-school children [in 1950 totalled 378, compared to | [411 in 1949. Visits in December | numbered 26. | Visit 382 School Children Visits to school children during | 1550 numbered 382, compared to 411 in 1949. There were 20 visits in | December. Visits to adults during 1950 numbered nine. There were none in 1949 and only one in De- In December there | Some 335 children completed im- | last year as | Visits to | MISS GERTRUDE TUCKER, REG, N. | Supervisor of Oshawa Public Health | Nurses, who presented her report previewing activities during 1950 to the Local Board of Health at its | inaugural meeting last night. | | visits the previous year. In De- | cember 26 visits 'were made. | Post-partum, with pre-natal nurs- |ing care visits numbered 179 in { 1950, compared to 286 in 1949. The | number in December was 11. Post- {param without pre-natal nursing care visits numbered 468 in 1950, compared to 588 in 1949. The num= | ber in December was 34: Visits to cases of tubercuiosis dur- | ing 1950 numbered 89, as compared [to 119 in 1949. Four visits were | made in December. There was only one office visit re-tuberculosis last year. Visits to contacts of tuberculosis in 1950 totalled 486, compared to 30 in 1949. Two visits were made in December. Visits to suspect cases of tuberculosis in 1950 numbered four, as compared to 19 the previous year. Visits to cases of acute communi | cable diseases during last year numbered 123, compared to 202 in down office at a public meeting against smallpox numbered 507 last | 1949. Seventeen visits were made | last month. Visits to contacts of | acute "communicable diseases in [1950 numbered 21, compared to 30 |in 1949. Miss Tucker reported that 68 visits were made to licensed board- {ing homes during the past year, {compared to 31 in 1949. Two visits { were made last month. ' Visits to handicapped individuals {during 1950 numbered 11, Theres | were none in 1949. | Visits regarding orthopaedic de= | fects Wa 1950 numbered 35, compared | to 31 the previous year. | Social welfare visits numbered 17 |in 1950, compared to 35 in 1949, | Three were made last month, Unclassified Visits A break-down of unclassified | visits is ass follows: | Dec. 1950 1949 24 ed 222 | Not taken | under care | Not home or not found . | Special Activities. . Organization and 1,1 in a mountain' daisy, his solicitude | ~ for a field mouse, all these were | each brought home with a depth described with simple, sincere senti- {of feeling and appreciation by the | ment and yet, as the speaker aptly | excellent choice of quotations given - showed in the quotations, Burns | by the speaker. had the habit of injecting into the | In closing, Kiwanian "Mac" Hood simplest of poems, great gems of [stated that there were numerous get | to make the amounts comparable VISITS BOYHOOD HOME | to other years. Certain concessions Fort Erie, Ont., Jan. 2¢--(CP)-- | were made in connection with ur- James Lewis Kraft, 76, founder of (gent work. He said he hoped that the Kraft Food Company, Tuesday | municipalities will appreciate the returned to Fort Erie to revisit the | necessity of definite budgets for scenes of his boyhood and to spend | this work. estimated at from $18,000 to $20,- 000. Reeve E. Scott of Hope town- ship said he would favor a grant but not to the extent of 50 percent. On motion it was left to the county property committee with the understanding that if the coun- ty property committee found that it was going to cost an excessive amount, to call in the finance committee. Increase School Area A bylaw was passed which add- ed Alnwick and part of Hamilton Township to the Cobourg high school district. Another bylaw added part of Manvers township to' Victoria county high school district. A bylaw authorized the assumption in the counties road system of the Victoria county boundary road. Elected to the county , road system were Elmer Scott, Mervin Greer, J. H. Lowery, Art Wartman and Warden Walton. Appointed to the board of manage- ment were L. H. Giddy and A. B. Billen. D. McLaughlin was ap- pointed to the special schools com, mittee; George Broadworth and C. preciation of the gathering, which | Cause at the conference earlier in| Nichols to the Children's Aid So- | ciety; A. W. Hayes to the Board o { Health, Other appointments, G. F. | Jamieson to Bowmanville Hospital { Hospital Board; Rod Dodge to Cobourg and R. J. Locke to Camp- bellford Hospital. URGES SUPPORT OF U.N. Detroit, Jan. 24--(CP) -- Support augural 1951 meeting. He has held the position for the past 16 years. "Dr. James has been an outstand- ing success as a chairman and I believe he should continue in that capacity," Dr. W. S. Millman said, "He has done a splendid job and knows the functions of the Board of Health well," The chairman noted that he had been chairman of the Board for a long time and said he would be glad if some other member of the Board saw fit to take over the job. "I don't wish to monopolize the Board chairmanship," Dr. James told the Board members. He thank- ed members for the confidence they had placed in him. Dr. A. F. Mackay, Medical Of- ficer of Health, told the chairman "at times I don't know what we w uld do without you." He was of the opinion that Oshawa has a bet- ter Board of Health than some city." Decision Is Reserved On Pickering Co-op THe Ontario Milk Control Board | reserved decision Tuesday on the application of four Pickering farm- | ers to transport milk to the Toronto | market as a co-operative venture. | The board decided to withhold a)' decision until the joint trans- | Rort committee had been given a | chance, to study the application. other municipalities and one which | operates at a "minimum cost to the | philosophy. highlights of the genius that has Burns' own deep 'religious. con- | made the memory of Burns im- victions, his own feeling of the need | mortal. "He gave Scotland to the of the power of a Higher Being, his | world, presented it as a picture great genius as displayed in his | fair to see. Long ago, his weak- knowledge of his fellow men which | nesses and failings have been for- reached its greatest height and his | given and nearly forgotten in the work its greatest immortality in| peasant family life, as portrayed | honor his Immortal memory," he | "Cotter's Saturday Night" were | concluded. | paean of 'praise "and thanksgiving | the beautiful story of a Scottish | that rises from Scottish hearts to some time with his sister, Mrs. Ar- | the idea of blending cheese while working in the old Ferguson gro- cery store here.- He went to Buf- falo, N.Y., and opened a small food store there. Anna Pavlova, famous Russian ballerifia who died in 1931, entered | age of 10. thur C. Rose. Mr. Kraft said he got | Explans Chamber Work H. O. Taylor, secretary-treasurér of the Cobourg Chamber of Com- merce addressed council on the | tourist work of the Chamber of Commerce and said that any fin- ancial assistance would be appre- ciated. Deputy-Reeve George Galbraith the Imperial Ballet School at the [of Cobourg, advised council that quet marking | the town of Cobourg had got prices A of the Unifed Nations as the best |The four farmers claim that by means of maintaining a free way.of | forming a co-operative and truck- | life was urged Tuesday by Don H.| ing milk to Toronto they ¢an cut Murdoch of Winnipeg, international | the price of a quart of milk by Kiwanis Club president. "The world | one cent. {felt new hope when the U.N. ac-| SE {cepted the challenge of aggression| ©Oslo--(CP)--The winter's fish- in Korea," Mr.-- Murdoch told 400 |eries in Loften, northern Norway, representatives of Michigan and |are expected to attract hundreds of | Ontario Kiwanis clybs at a ban- | Firnish and Swedish tourists. i the 36th anniversary Chartered motor-boats will take the |of the 'organization's founding. | visitors to the fishing grounds. cember last. Visits' to pre-natal casés num- bered 366 in 1950, compared to 286 PUBLIC HEALTH (Continued on page 5) ------------ THE OSHAWA LITTLE THEATRE PLAYERS' First Presentation of 1951 Patrick Hamilton's i Directed by Sarch i AW by Joan Lambert At the New . .. CENTRAL COLLEGIATE AUDITORIUM Thursday e Friday « Saturday ~~ FEB. 1-2-3 gua 8.30 P.M. Get Your Tickets Early for Best Seats! Reserved Seats $1.00 Unreserved Seats (Balcony) 75¢ NOW ON SALE AT HENDERSON'S BOOK STORE Anyone interested in any phase of amateur theatre is invited to contact C.R.A., Phone 1800.

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