Daily Times-Gazette (Oshawa Edition), 16 Sep 1955, p. 21

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\ make _ histor |aiioed was spent visiting various ¢ § i J comprehensive title "Between Two § Worlds," Hi Ld lacksonville Long-range weather forecast for the next 25 days has most ' SUMMER TO LAST LONGER of Canada basking in near-nor- | tures. Moderate rainfall is an- mal or above-normal tempera- | RIAN. cntealliress Comaitan By JOHN NORMILE, A.LA,, and CURTISS ANDERSON in "Better Homes and Gardens' at is the Ideal Home of the Year? Better Homes and Gardens in building -- from th first plan- ning stage through years, perhaps, of making the home complete. For it is a realistic house --- not one that is built on a set of ideal conditions. Its -distinetion is not in licated, costly details," but an honest use of the materials of building." Size was held to 1,626 uare feet. - hy is it being built? Our editors want to pass on to you the best results of research, know-how, and fresh thinking from a constant study of the design and planning of houses. This exchange of ideas is more important today than ever before because more people are building Idea Home Of Year Result Of in (Homes and Gardens Idea Studies family size is growing, houses have come more veraatile, In our Idea Home of the Year, we offer an actual house you can visit and study -- and see now on the next 18 pages. Where - can you visit it? More than two million of you visited our Home for All America last year. It was built in over 90 cities across the country. This 1 Better Home of the Year can be sen in Osh- awa on Glencairne Street in the Brookside Acres sub - division, where it has been built by the | McCullough Construction Com- | pant, Limited. at does it mean to you? In| hoth visiting it and studying it your planning, remodeling, decor. | ating, landscaping. And it is a house you can actually built from our Five Star Home plans. New Unemployment Will Produce 26-P lay Series Reflecting LONDON ish Brodca ce) The g Corporation will this fall with the production of 26 plays designed to fraflect the social changes of the last 35 years. The series presented under the will be. carried on the WA BBC home service in the 13 weeks | J 4 3 from Sept. 19 to Dec. 12. | Donald McWhinnie, assis- tant head of BBC drama, ex- plained the purpose of the project: "It is an attempt to mount a| i whole season of plays which, while 8 chosen primarily for their appeal as good dramatic "entertainment, do the same time mirror the real world around us as it has changed and is changing during i our lifetime.' | "J been broadcast before, many are 8 All ® will | vintt SOME NOVELS INCLUDED Only eight of the 26 plays have dramatizations of novels and two were written specificlly for radio. be "presented in - chron | ological sequence. | e list of authors includes | George Bernard Shaw, Aldous Huxley, EM. Farster, Jean Paul Sartre, Alan Paton and J.B. Priest- McWhinnie said the period cov- ered by the plays one of the most fascinating and highly charged in history. "Society has literally found itself between two worlds, unable to shed all the old, secure, estab- lished values without a mortal struggle, unable yet to assimilate and live by the new values which | circumstance forces upon it." | McWhinnie will produce five in the series and Val dlepartmen &ieleud, drama it chief Social 'Conditions gud, will produc two. Casts have not been announced. Here are the plays to be heard; 3. .-B Insurance Groups OTTAWA (CP) -- Seven new categories of Canadian workers now are eligible to receive unem- ployment insace benefits. The workers, expected to number now are eligible to receive unem- ployment insurance benefits, The workers, expected to number | about 7,000, have been covered by { order-in-council amendments to the Unemployment Insurance Act pub- Brit land brother of actor John Giel may be taken out of ourselves and | lished Wednesday in the Canada |at the same time have our expe- Gazette. rience of life extended and en- The seven groups are those em- and marketing of poultry ; egg grading; breeding or raising race, saddle or light harness horses; landscape gardening or mainten- ance of private, public or commer- cia! parks or gardens. erly those engaged in the seven categories on a full-time basis will to a farming, yardening or nursery | cperation, the employee will not be | ehgible. { Approximately 2,500,000 Canadi- | ans earning sa'aries or wages now | are covered by the Unemployment | those engaged in farmiig, fishing. | ployed in breeding or raising poul- teaching and domestic service. | | Li " "Heartbreak House," G. : Yriched Shaw; "Put out more Flags," | Evelyn Waugh; "Antic Hay," Al- dous Huxley; 'The Conquering | Hero," Allan Monkhouse; "From | Morn to Midnight," Georg Kaiser; | "Love on the Dole," Walter Green | wood; "The Great Gatsby," F.| Scott Fitzgerald; "Watch on the | Rhine," Lilian Hellman; | "No arms, No armour," Robert | Henriques; "Cry, The 'Beloyed Country," Alan Paton; *A Pas-| sage to India," E. M. Forster: | "The Heat of the Day," Elizabeth Bowen; "Prater Violet," Chris topher Isherwood; "All my Sons," Arthur Miller; "The Guests," Leo-: nid Zorin; "Three Men In New | Suits," J, B. Priestley; 'Crime | Passionnel," Jean Paul Sartre; "Little Boy Lost," Marghanita | row," Albert Maltz; "In The Fool- ish Ranges," Jean Morris; 'Lucky Jim," Kingsley Amis; "A Day by the Sea," N.C. Hunter; "The Queen and the Rebels," Ugo Betti; "The Creedy Oase," Ed-| ward Crankshaw; "The Last of the | Wine," Robert Bolt; "A Sort of | Traitors," Nigel Balchin. Some observers believe the new | series may fit into the overall | BBC effort to fight the pull | of commercial television, .which begins in the London area Sept. 22. "The BBC," said McWhinpie, "since it is not governed by purely 'boxoffice' considerations, is free, to experiment: entertainment re-| mains the first object, but es | capism is not the only form of | entertainment -- and we believe that this series will show how we Rustralian Ambulance Worker { Tums Holiday Into Business MONTREAL Higgins, general secretary of the St, John Ambulance Association of New South Wales, Australia, has turned a long-planned holiday into a Business trip. Miss Higgins arrived in Mont- real after a six-month tour of Britain and the Continent, and said "originally I planned it as a holi. day trip. 'But when I got to England I naturally wanted to find out all about the work of St. John Ambu- lane there--and most of my time (CP) -- Marjorie Miss was scheduled to Nay = branches in Mont- redl, Ottawa, Toronto, Winnipeg, Bdmonton, Calgary and Vancouver. before returning to Australia. NO SKI PATROLS | She said work of the St. John! Ambulance in Australia is similar to the work done in Canada by the organization, 'except we don't have ski patrols." / | "My main occupation is organiz-| ing the classes in first aid, home| nufsing and child welfare which we give to the public and to gov-| COLOMBUS Children At School By MARY M. DYER Correspondent Last week sees many happy chl-| dren back'to school. Many mothers | #ay good-bye to little tots as they | venture out all bug-eyes and full | of enthusiasm about their first day | at school. | The Home and School Associa: | tion are planning a bazaar which | they will hold this year in the eve-| ning from seven to nine-thirty, | October 19th. Please keep this date in mind. | During the summer 'the Colum- bus United Church has received am interior ,paint job. The community were sorry to lose from the village Mr. and Mrs | Sah Cuthbert and Gary. They have been in charge of the White Service station and were of all. { Mr. and Mrs. Frank Simpson | have taken over the White Rose | Station. Mr. Roger Latham of Oshawa | Spent = a days last week with | c en of . and Mrs, Bill| a rs. Bill Mr. and Mts. Earl Squelch call. | ed on Mr. Mrs, Grant Ormis- | ton, at Wick also on Mr. and Mrs. Sam Cuthbert on Sunday. | "hme Dyer spent Sunday | Mr. and Mrs. Jack Nesbitt | John spent Sunday with Mr, J A it A + Solina visited with his uncle Mr. Ww. Tutsday Morn ; byer on rs. Roy Hall began her' duties § teacher at Dryden's school on | ernment employees," she said. There are 74 branches under her jurisdiction in New South Wales. Miss Higgins is the 'St. John rep- resentative on the Road Safety Council which is trying to lower the accident rate on highways. She ex- plained that the 'traffic accident rate is extremely high in New South Wales. St. John also provides trained workers who take over a home for a day while a mother goes to the 50 SWITZER v thé idea home . . . The home of YOUR future is here to- day! The IDEA HOME OF THE YEAR is now open for inspection in this pic- turesque residential community. Come get a completely. new idea of what your money will buy right now in a well-planned, well-built home! And of course, all by KASTEL AND BIRO, Woodwork Specialists. big kitchen cabinets, the hardwood shelving in the family room, and the pass through counters . . . | | CABINET WORK is done Look at the wonderfully Woodwork Specialties DIAL RA 5-2944 hospital. "INTERIOR WOODWORK" PAINTING . .... This is a new exdlusive process of interior woodwork painting that is practical, economical, and beautiful. It's of interest to every homeowner that wants the best for their home. 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