SEEN HERE ARE four of the members of the Dwyer Heights (Oshawa) Home Builders' Co-operative who re- DWYER HEIGHTS Work Is Started Lake Dumping oo I) cently started construction of 15 new homes in the Ross- land-Garrard roads area. The completion of the homes in On 15 New Homes Dwyer Heights (Oshawa) Homebuilders' Co-operative be-| gan construction, May 21 The remaining officials of the company are Mike Kostiuk, 2. £8 September will bring the total of co-op homes in the Osh- awa area to 137 representing | a - a value $2,000,000. of more than Commons Moves! In High Gear By ROBERT RICE Canadian Press Staff Writer OTTAWA (CP)--MPs are re- ally starting to roll through their business in the Commons It could be because the heat is on--summer is coming. Or it could be because the heat is off--now that four fed- eral byelections are out of the way. Whatever the reason, the Commons is knocking measures off the order paper just about as fast as the government puts them there. So far this week, MPs have spent a full day on a death pen- alty debate, approved four items of government business, moved earnestly into several other measures and whipped through a hefty slice of the 1961-62 spending estimates of the sec- retary of state. Ahead of them is the target date of July 1 for the wrapping up the current session which started last November. MPs are working a six-day, 42-hour week now--as well as] --Oshawa Times Photo todd | sitting in on a number of com- mittee meetings. Mayors Attack | | HALIFAX (CP) -- Canadian| {municipal officials don't like {vessels to dump waste in inland waters, But if they must, it {should be packed in metal con- |tainers. | Some 700 delegates at the an- and|manager; Walter Dyl, purchas-nual conference of the Canadian| expects to complete 15 homes by|er; Ron MacCarl, finance sec- Federation of Mayors and Mun- Sept. 15, 1961. These 15 units|retary; Dave Goodwin, internaliicipalities Wednesday passed a will bring the number of co-op-|auditor; Arthur Boland, plansiresolution asking the govern- erative built homes in the Osh-and materials; Bob Boneham, iment to amend the Canada awa area to 137 and represents|bookkeeper; Ward Appleton, su-|Shipping Act to that effect. | well over $2,000,000 in value, |Pervisory secretary and Matt| The conference also asked the| The Dwyer Heights (Oshawa)|Valckx, supervisory chairman. government to: | Homebuilders' Cooperative A parcel of land, on Garrard) Force Crown corporations to| first met in April, 1960. Under|road was purchased but due to|pay municipal taxes instead of| the direction of A. Goreski, the|the necessity of a school in the making grants. : | rous|area, approximately five and aj Exempt municipalities from 15 men were assigned to various| | u committee work of organizing|half acres were sold to the|sales and excise taxes. the co-operative. | Three committees set up were finance, sites and plans and ma-| terial. | The duties of the finance com- mittee were to arrange for mortgages and help members to control purchases according to their wages. Looking for suit- able property was the job of the sites committee. Many types of houses, involv- ing various materials and cost| estimates, had to be examined; this was the task given to ie, plans and materials committee. By Sept. 8, 1960 they were school board leaving land avail able for 15 homes. After spending the months in preparation with stu- dy group and various sub-com- mitee meetings, the co-op was ready to start construction. The first homebuilding co- operative in the Oshawa area was formed in 1954 through the efforts of Rev. J. P. Lawlor, a former assistant pastor at St. Gregory's Roman Catholic Church. His purpose was to en- courage family owned homes at a reasonable cost. Father Lawlor, now in Bol- incorporated as a limited com-|ton, Ontario, still keeps a watch- pany through the assistance of(ful eye on each group and as- George Wilkey of the Ontario|sists them in different problems| |which may arise. : responsible for forming the Oril- lia Co-op Group which has just begun constructio cial position. Six members who! group is the first in tha Co-op Union of Ontario. All members of the Dwyer Heights Homebuilders' Co-op- erative Co. Ltd., have an offi- make up the board of directors] He also was n. This t area. A new group the Sun Valley are John Fleming, president; Co-op is in the process of being Mike MacArthur, dent; Peter Kroll, secretary: Harry Schraer, treasurer; Har- ry Van Alebeek and Cornelius Van der Loo, plans and mater- als chairman trustees. | | vice-presi-| formed. Meetings are open to| XIV. all interested persons, regard- ¢ less of color, racial origin or|wardrobe plans and appeared | Krawezyk's port of exit from religion. The Sun-Valley group| Wednesday night in the pink|P meets each Sunday at 7.30 p.m.|and white straw lace gown she November, 1939. She was sent in St. Gregory's Auditorium. OBITUARIES MRS. BIRDIE I. ALLIN In failing health for several years, Mrs. Birdie I. Allin, be- loved wife of Harry Allin, died at the family residence, 6 Ed-| sall avenue, Bowmanville, Wed-! nesday, May 31. A lifelong resident of Bow- manville, Mrs. Allin was in her 85th year. The former Birdie I. Dilling, she was a daughter of} FUNERAL OF JAMES MICHAEL HIGGINS High requiem mass was sung in St. Gregory's Roman Catho- lic Church at 9 a.m. Thursday, June 1, for James Michael Hig- General Hospital Monday, May 29. er sang the mass. Interment Assume full financial respon- {sibility for homeless and un- winter|employable indigents. | Jackie Given 'New Hair-Do PARIS (AP) -- A leading |French hairdresser gave Jac- queline Kennedy what he called {a "gothic Madonna" look Wed- inesday night, clipping more than an inch from her locks and| pinning a tambourine - shaped | wigpiece and a dazzling dia-| mond high on the back of her| | For tonight's state dinner in the Hall of Mirrors at the Pal-| ace of Versailles, the hair-| |dresser, Alexandre, said he | would style Mrs. Kennedy's coif-| | (a Mrs. Kennedy changed her | had originally intended to wear] {to Versailles. | LIFE UNDER REDS Oshawa Woman ' Recalls Massacre This is the first of a two- part story dealing with an Oshawa woman's ordeal at the hands of the Russians in the Second World War. The first half of Maria Kraw- czyk's story deals with the circumstances under which she found herself more than 5000 miles away from home. The second half, to be pub- lished tomorrow, tells of her life beliind the Iron Curtain. It serves to document life in that part of the world, whch is almost as much a mystery to the Western World today as it was then. Llow, Rolshaja Bukon, Tarna- pol, Gangestoby . . . it sounds like something out of Cook's Eurasian itinerary. But between 1939 and 1941, countless thou- sands of oppressed Europeans k the tour, not in pullman coaches and buses, but in cattle trucks, and sometimes by foot. In the early days of the Sec- ond World War, when the Ger- mans and Russians were jug- gling for territory in heavily-in- dustrialized south-east Poland, one of the victims of the sub- sequent Russian persecution head. |was Maria Skrzos, now Maria |Kraczyk, of 684 Myers street, Oshawa. HUNDREDS MURDERED Llow was near the site where |feur in keeping with the scene, many hundreds of Polish po-| style of the period of Louis|lice and army officers were|struck by her serenity; that is murdered by a Russian goon squad. Llow was also Mrs. oland early one morning in to the feared 'place of no re- turn" -- Siberia. Tarnapol was OLD W a OODBINE ENTRIES Friday, June 2, 1961 FIRST RACE | (3) ""CROWNHILL" maidens,|(5) "SEDGEWICK" Maidens. | encounter with the equanamit claiming all, purse $1,900, 2-|Purse $2200, two-year-olds, foal- for which the oar ba id {year-old fillies, 41, furlongs 1 Apache Princess, Coy, 118 | gins, who died at the Oshawa 2 Delightful Devil, Roy, 118 | 3 Black Champagne, Wright, (A)X113 the late Mr. and Mrs. G. B.|was in St. Gregory's Cemetery-| 5 Gentle Queen, Parnell, X113 Dilling. The six members of the 6 Xmas Candy, Grasby, 111 Mrs. Allin was married at| Knights of Columbus who acted| 7 Spikerdrink, Dittfach, 118 | Oshawa in 1903. Her husband is|as pallbearers were Ed. Clark,| 8 Twist-of-Fate, NB, (B)118 well known in the Bowmanville| john Meagher, Frank Meagh-| 9 Fire Queen, Parnell, X106 | area, where he operated a gro-\or Jack Bawks, Ed. McCaffery|10 Ad Valorum, NB, 111 cery store for many years until} his retirement. The deceased was a member of Trinity United Church and a| member of the Women's Insti-| Requiem mass was sung in/Flight, NB, (B)118. tute. She is survived by her hus- Church at 10 a.m. Thursday, | band, four daughters, Margaret, | at home; Mrs. W. B. Miller, (Una), of Oshawa; Mrs. J. C.| Snowe, (Gertrude), of Willow- dale and Mrs. Maurice Proctor, (Marion), of Brockville. Two sons, Lorne, of Bowman-| ville and Jack of Cobourg also survive. In addition, five grand- and John Fox. FUNERAL OF THOMAS DEMPSEY St. Gregory's Roman Catholic June 1, for Thomas Dempsey, a former bandmaster of the On- tario Regiment Band, who died at the Cedars Nursing Home, Monday, May 29. Rev. Francis Skumove sang the mass. Interment was in Mount Lawn Cemetery. The pallbearers were F. Kel: | 11 Dutchfilli, NB, 111 | {12 Kitty Zenith, Hall, X106 Also eligible: Tantrum's Last, [Morreale, (A)1ll; Patty's 1(12 and 2) [(A) View Hulloa Farms Entry | | | {(B) Mrs. N. Peconi Entry [SECOND RACE {(2) "BERESFORD" claiming {all $2,500, purse $1,800, 4-years land up, 7 furlongs | 1 Roman Whirle, McComb, 120 | 2 Canuck John, NB, 110 3 Eudy's Dream, Bobinson, | | X110 | children also survive. Mrs. Allin| jor Norman Dunford, Ciarence| 4 Bull Tour, Brown, 110 was predeceased by a son, Wil-| liam, in 1938. | The remains are at the F. F.| Morris Funeral Chapel, Bow-| manville, for service in the| chapel, Friday, June 2, at 2.30| p.m. Interment will be in Bow- manville Cemetery. Rev. Wil- liam K. Houslander, minister of | Trinity United Church, will conduct the services. COMING EVENTS REMEMBRANCE Association, Oshawa Silver Cross Chapter, is holding its an- nual tag day, Saturday, June 3. Pro- ceeds Veterans' and Family Assistance, BINGO At the Avalon Thursday, June 1, 7.30 p.m. North Oshawa Park, $6 and $10. Seven jackpots. NOVEL BINGO THURSDAY EVENING, 8 P.M. at ST. GEORGE'S HALL (Albert and Jackson Sts.) Games $6, $12, $20 May be doubled or tripled. $140 JACKPOT INCLUDED Door Prize $15 AUCTION AND BAKE SALE ST. MATTHEWS CHURCH et Hoskin & Wilson South | $AT., JUNE 3rd, at 11 AM. | Foster, Robert Brownlee, Har- old Flintoff and Jack Hunter. FUNERAL OF MIKE MATYCIO The memorial service was {held for Mike Matycio who died|11 Sultop, Trombley, 115 at the Oshawa General Hospital | 5 Briny Deep, NB, 120 { | 6 D'Accord 2nd, NB, 120 7 Red Spray, Olah, 115 8 Post Cibos, NB, 115 9 Eastern Thirty, Mattini, 115 10 Repp Supply, NB, 120 | 112 Royal York, Uyeyama, 115 | FIFTH RACE ed in Canada. 4, Furlongs. 1 Crystal Glass, Gomez 115 2 Ivey Okey, Coy: 115 3 Caesar's Woman, Adams 115 4 Court Royal, Remillard 115 111 Rt. Rev. Monsignor Paul Dwy-| 4 Tipton's Tempest, Robinson| 5 Bright Gold, NB 115 6 Saturday Jones, Nash 115 7 King Gorm, Dittfach 118 QUINELLA -- BETTING SIXTH RACE (7) "CHESTNUT" claiming all |$4500, Purse $2100. four-years| and up. One mile 1-16 1 Dadswood, Gibb 116 2 Rio Branca, Gomez 116 3 West Four, McComb (A) 114 4 Little Skip, Gomez 116 | 5 Barley 2nd, McComb (A) 116 yUSBAND DISAPPEARED 6 Norwin G., Olah 119 7 Sun Ep, Warme 111 (A) G.AM Stallwood and Bar- wood Stable entry SEVENTH RACE (6) "ROSENEATH" allowances Purse $3000. four-years and up. One mile 1 Handshake, NB 114 2 Royal Director, Clark 114 3 Leon K., Trombley 114 4 Hooker, NB 117 | 5 Strongboy, Fitzsimmons 120, 6 Harris County, NB 114 7 Dorval, Dittfach 109 8 Percy Yates, Coy 109 9 War Eagle, Mattini 126 9) EIGHTH RACE in his 63rd year from the Arm-| Also eligible: Pine Ator, NB,|(g) «pROADVIEW" Claiming strong Funeral Chapel on Wed-|115; Doris Ator, NB, 110; Bos- a) 2500. nesday, May 31, at 2 p.m: Willie Shpakowich, of Toron- to, conducted the services. In- terment was in Oshawa Union Cemetery. Pallbearers were G. Kulyk, D. Halenda, M. Kapeluck, M. Moly, P. Fuller and S. Lechan FAMILY MONEY PROMOTES BLISS Extensive study of family relations showed that agree- ing on money matters was vital to marriage success. Also, couples who agreed on this, usually agreed on other things too. There's agreement about the quick, inexpensive way to get cash for articles you want to sell . . . put in an Oshawa Times 'for sale" Classified Ad. A call to RA 3-3492 will start yours. (ton Bay, Dittfach, 120; Scarboro {Lad, McMullen, XX108; Emu, NB, 115; Bright Page, NB, 115. |(12 and 6) | |THIRD RACE (1) "SHERRIDON", maidens, purse $2,200, 3-year-olds, 1 mile, | foaled in Canada 1 Illume, Fitzsimmons, 118 2 Major Bingo, Rock, 118 3 Mr. Disney, NB, 118 4 Ess Jay, Dittfach, 118 5 Quick Shore, Gomez, 118 6 Richburn, Biamonte, 118 7 Mrs. Fish, NB, 113 (4h) FOURTH RACE (4) "GRASSY LAKE" claiming all $7,500, purse $2,200, 3-year-| olds, 7 furlongs 1 Dalotn Run, Gomez, 115 2 Tolnger, Gomez, 115 3 Hollow Hills, Coy, 115 4 False Start, NB, 110 5 Star Shadow, Matfini, 110 6 Mrs. Cessford, Olah, 103 6) Purse $1900, years and up. One mile. 1 Para, Uyeyama 111 2 Slave Lake, NB 119 3 Two Saints, NB 122 4 Fabulous Gem, Gordon 119 5 Alpine Joe, Brown 114 6 Bullish Force, Fitzsimmons 116 7 Some Steed, Gordon 122 8 Good Field, McMullen (A) X104 9 Lauraiane, NB 109 10 Electress, Robinson X109 11 Deckle Edge, Robinson X112 12 Miss Blue Ice, Biamonte 111 Also eligible: Skylark Road, Warme, 122; Bright Wind, Mec- Mullen (A) X104 four- {(A) A. J. Halliwell entry. Post Time 2 p.m. Cloudy and Fast. AAC X-5 Ibs, XXX-10 1bs. TiNY STATE Leichtenstein, a principality between Austria and Switzer- XX-7 Ibs. land, has an area of only 65 square miles. DISTRICT CANCER EXECUTIVES HEAR PLEASING REPORTS Although all the money col- lected during Cancer Month has not been collected and counted, these smiles on the faces of executive members of the Canadian Cancer So- ciety suggest the final results might be record-breaking. The occasion for smiles was Wednesday evening, at Hotel Genosha, when campaign re- ports were heard from repre sentatives of branches and units of District 3 of the so- ciety. From left are Dr. S. George Werry, vice-chairman of the Ontario County Unit; Brian Kilpatrick, field secre- tary of Ontario Division; Mary Donahue, secretary, District 8; Mrs. Aileen Holt, president, District 3; Walter Famme, chairman, Ontario County Unit and T. Long, president of the Port Hope branch. --Oshawa Times Photo | CITY AND DISTRICT to town, sick with worry. a letter from her sister saying: Tarnapol, prisoners lying face-down in a|giemaker {had two alarms between Wed- inesday morning and this morn: TWO ALARMS The Oshawa Fire Department ing. One was a false alarm. The other was a. car fire on Oxford street. Ambulance crews answered five routine calls during that time. band was dead, Maria walked to the scene of the blood-bath of the previous day. Unable to find his body, and supposing that he was hiding, Maria returned One week later, she received "Your husband was seen near one of a group of field. Come quickly." WALKED 25 MILES walked 25 of the 50 miles to/we would not have our cars, Tarnapol in three days. There, | trains, planes, appliances, etc., her sister told her Frank had|to which we have all become so been taken by train to Russia.|accustomed. In this widely de- MARIA KRAWCZYK ithe place where her husband was last seen alive. His: body was later found in the infamous "Katyn Pit" -- one victim of mass murder. Bolshaja Bukon and Gangestoby were Siberian hell spots. Mrs. Krawczyk spent 15 months in Siberia because she refused to learn the English language. | Talking to her at her Prince| street fabric store, one is until one talks about the past. She is blessed with imperfect recall; this is kinder because] it hurts her to discuss it. This is her story: War came very quickly to the Poles in 1939. The German blitzkrieg swung through Po- land like a scythe. As the Hun approached Llow, a large in- dustrial town of hall-million peo- ple, town police were quickly mobilized to join with the army. Police sergeant-major Frank Skrzos and his wife faced the {nowned. | On Sept. 17, reached the outskirts of town -- and dug in. The same day Russiant roops did likewise in| {the east. Llow Town Council| (was politely asked by both | sides who shall occupy] |your town. | | The Germans must have sold| only the steak. The Russians] sold the sizzle, promising to as-| | sist the nationals repel the land-| {grabbing Germans: The Ham-| {mer and Sickle moved a little| closer. German troops with- drew 100 miles to Przemysl. the Germans | The day held more surprises. All military and police person- nel were ordered by the Rus- |sians to throw down their arms {and walk east out of the town. | Thousands of men, some with wives and children, started the trek. Frank Skrzos ordered his wife to remain in their apart- ment. She never saw him again. The massacre started in a small village, two miles from Llow. Town-folk could hear the chatter of machine guns. Men were mowed down like corn at harvest time. Reports filtered back of women and children be- ing run off the road by trucks. Russian militia entered the {village that night, dragged es- {capees out into the street, and shot them either in the head or throat. The night air was filled with the sounds of shooting -- and screaming. No bodies were found in the village next morning -- just blood and service caps. That day soldiers entered {Llow and patrolled the streets | with fixed bayonets. Forced to] carry on their work, people scur- {ried to their jobs, hugging the| (walls. There was nothing fickle | {about the Hammer and Sickle in| East Poland in 1939. | Receiving word that her hus- | ON A LAXATIVE | MERRY-GO-ROUND? Take NR Tonight . . . Tomorrow Alright! For over seventy years, NR . . , Nature's Remedy . . . has been giving folks | pleasant, effective overnight relief. No | restlessness, no sudden necessity. A de- pendable all-vegetable laxa- | tive. Take NR Tablets tonight! | Helps you | | feel better... | | and look better! | | IEGULAR +» CHOCOLATE COATED + anions | were futile. | Maria left immediately. She| Pleas to local army authorities "Go home woman," they said, '"'or you will go also". Maria plodded back to Llow in despair. Life went on. But the period of re-adjustment with- out her husband was a long one {for Maria Skrzos. In February, 1940, Mrs. Skrzos was offered a job at 350 roubles a month. Although she had never worked before, and was living on .savings, the offer was tempting, if confus- ling. She was visited three or four times by a member of the MKVD who, aware of Maria's ability to speak Ukrainian, Ger- man and Russian, in addition to her native Polish, was keen to put her to work. One day, catching up with her in the public library, he gave her a copy of Staniviasky's Eng- lish dictionary, and urged her to learn the language in two months. "Why?" queried Maria. "We would like you to wear nice clothes, talk to nice people and ensure your husband's safe- ty," the political policeman said. "I will never work for you," Maria said. "If you change your mind, ere is my address and tele- phone number." He pressed a card into Maria's hand and walked away. She didn't see the man again. Just two months later, on April 13, at 1 a.m., Maria found six soldiers in her bedroom. "I didn't believe them- when they told me they were going to take me to my husband. But they forced me to dress in front of them and prepare myself for the unknown. I knew what was coming, the procedure is always the same. They only pick up deportees between one and three in the morning. They al- ways find people in bed at that time. You can't even go to the bathroom. Too many people were committing suicide by cut- ting their wrists, or leaping out of the window. We left the house and started the drive to the station . . ." TOMORROW -- SIBERIA. h little Machine Shop Courses Open Lucrati Following is the third in a series of articles dealing with various phases of the techni- cal education program in Osh- awa secondary schools. We in Canada, as citizens of a modern country, live in a ma- chine age. Most products which we use so casually today owe their existence to the presence of a machine shop somewhere in the background. This in turn provides one of the major tech- nical fields open to a young man in search of an interesting oc- cupation with a rewarding fu- ture. Without the highly devel- oped skills of the toolmaker, the the machine tool builder, and even the vigilant inspection for quality to which we submit manufactured parts, {veloped and diversified portion | of our industrial life there are {many interesting occupations |for a young man who has had a basic training in machine shop ve Fields enjoys when he takes a piece of raw material and fashions a tool or a part for one of the many complex machines which help to make modern living so much easier. this varies with locality and in-| dustry. In all probability he will| start somewhere between $1.10 and $1.70 per hour. As a fully qualified tool-and-die maker he| can expect to earn in the neigh-| borhood of $2.75 per hour. How | far he will go beyond this point depends entirely on his own am-| bition, ability and desire to reach the top, and the opportu-| nities for advancement in the area where he is employed APPRENTICESHIP No, it is not. For the student who wishes to obtain advanced | FOUR SEASONS TRAVEL CONFIRMS YOU ON THE ARRANGEMENTS RA 8-6201 technological training as a tech-| nician before entering industry there are excellent courses| available at the Ryerson Insti- tute of Technology or at Water- loo University. While it is pos-| sible to enter some of the me-| chanical courses at Ryerson or| Waterloo with high Grade 12| standing, it is considered advis-| | Grade 13 before proceeding to one of the centres of alvanced work. WHAT FIELDS ARE O{FN After basic training in mach- ine shop work he may select a particular trade such as die maker, machine tool builder, jig and fixture builder, gauge mak- er, etc., in which to specialize. On the other hand he may wish to become a general machinist capable of operating many dif- ferent machines in the process of making a particular product needed by some other industry. Is my field limited to this se- lected field? No, decidedly not. Many of these men subsequent- ly apply their highly deveioped skills in such fields as tool de- sign, sales engineering, methods engineering or machine tool ser- vice. Others go on to become general foremen and manufac- turing superintendents in indus- try. The careers of Henry Ford, founder of the Ford Motor Co., and Knudsen of General Motors are outstanding examples of the {pinnacles which may be reached |by the young man who has abil- lity, drive and the - desire to |learn. How much can I expect to |earn in this field? Through a program of appren- tice-training and gaining experi- ence in your chosen field. Most of these apprentice-training pro- gram are of 8,000 hours dura: tion and many firms require the apprentice to take advanced technological training at schools such as the Ryerson Institute of Technology. A very similar course is given in Oshawa for the General Motors apprentices at the training centre and for other apprentices at the O'Neill Collegiate and Vocational School in the form of evening classes. QUALIFICATIONS The majority of firms which have apprentice-training pro- grams will accept only students who have completed Grade 12 WON'T SEND MESSAGE WELLINGTON (AP) -- New Zealand's Prime Minister Keith Holyoake did not send a mes- sage to President Charles Swart of the new South African Re- public on the inauguration of his regime Wednesday. Ques- tioned at a press conference, Holyoake said only "I do not intend to send a message." These firms prefer graduates of the machine shop course in the Technical Department but will accept graduates of the academic course if they indi- cate through tests that they have a high mechanical apti- tude. It is difficult to forecast -ex- actly what wage a young man may expect as an apprentice as REGISTRATIONS FOR FALL CLASSES Are Now Being Taken For The SCHOOL FOR RETARDED CHILDREN Applications Must Be In By June 20, 1961 For Further Information Write To: MRS. W. CAMPBELL 848 FLORELL DRIVE-OSHAWA training. With this additional basic training, the student will be better equipped to tak: ad- vantage of the advanced train- ing' courses, and to graduate as a technician. The present trend in industry is towards automa- tion, thus making the opportuni- ties for technicians unlimited. Recent surveys show a serious shortage in this field, as five technicians are needed to com: neer. SHOP TRAINING VALUE The academic studeat who shop work gets an opportunity not only to develop his manipu- lative skills but also to obtain a good general knowledge of in- dustrial practices. This informa- | tion may be of inestimable val-| ue in his subsequent business or| industrial career where an un-| derstanding of how parts are made might perhaps enable him to understand more readily a cost sheet, a requisition for a particular tool or steel or pro-| plement the work of one engi-| takes a shop option in machine |% SPECIAL! STAIR CARPET and HALL RUNNER SPECIAL CLEARANCE » 69° FT. Did You Know THAT NU-WAY RUG CO. has the lowest prices in Oshawa 174 MARY ST. i | | | | | | | SALUTE TOMORROW'S EADER... / duction in general. In all events| he will get the opportunity to experience: to a limited extent the pride of accomplishment which the skilled journeyman Words Can Work | Wonders For You! Want to land a better-paying job? Increase your self-confi- dence? Earn better grades? June Reader's Digest helps you discover the right way to begin building a better understanding of words and the secret of retaining more of what you learn. 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