ee ae etieaeaeeaanntttiniiniandse Tae a ey nee ET SA nei en ae = Sa sree agg gene pment werner NEWS FROM THE CHURCHES Whitby Church To Mark Its 119th Anniversary DID YOU KNOW THAT the} first rector of St. John's An-! glican Church, Whitby, horseback in the old days to Oshawa to do pioneer mission- ¢ ary work? us He was Rev. John Pentland who founded St. George's An-, glican Church, Oshawa, in 1843) and later served as its first rector. These facts will be recalled by many tomorrow at an his- toric ceremony -- the 119th an- niversary of the founding of St. agg Anglican Church, Whit- . DY. The service will be celebrat- ed in the church grounds, Whit- by, at 3 p.m. The preacher will be Canon F. G. Ongley, rector of St. George's Anglican Church, Oshawa. : Editor's Note: The first St. George's congregations held ser- vice in the old town hall at Centre and Albert, The first St.) George's Anglican Church was built about 1848 at King and Park road. The LYMAN GIFFORD At second St.,music will be provided by the the service tomorrow, (located at Park road south and Highway 401 with the modernis- tic architecture symbolizing the Holy Trinity) and president of He said the church took some historic steps at Detroit that will affect the Lutheran Church in Ontario. Major decisions were: | 1. Approval to the formation of a Lutheran Council in Can- ada to embrace all Lutherans in) the Dominion. At present there are about 660,000 Luther-) ans in Canada, one-third of} them in Ontario. 2. The synod decided to meet! in Toronto in 1975. } 3. At the 1967 convention in| New York City, decision . will) be made on a study concerning} the possibility of setting up a Lutheran Theological Training! Centre, possibly in association) with the University of Toronto.| The Polish people of St, Hed- wig's Roman Catholic Church recently observed the Corpus} George's Church was built on|Whitby Brass Band and St. the site of Memorial Park John's Choir. Refreshments willl across from the E. A. Lovelljbe served in the grounds after! School about 1858. The present|the service, and exhibited in structure on Centre street was|the Church Hall will be an his-| built in 1922). torical display of pictures, cloth-| Captain James Rowe was one|ing, articles, newspaper of the first Churchwardens of|Pings, covering activities of par-| St. John's and served Whitby] ish and community from the in-| * gs its first Mayor. Captain Rowe|Ception of the church in 1846. The building fund campaign living, during the beled aga Te ae ¢ for the new St. Luke's Presby- 1840's, at Shoal Point to the) west of Whitby. ' riners included Jos. a pnd the group owned the harbor.|the $6,000 mark, which .repre-| Captain Rowe built two/ sents one-third of the objective.) ers. He made a bargain with) The announcement was made} John Welsh, also a first Church-\this week by Lloyd Pigden,| warden of St. John's. Jo hnjchairman of the finance build-; Welsh owned the only store for|ing committeé, who said: 'The! miles around. Captain Rowe committee is quite enthusiastic wanted to ship grain to King-| with John Wish, also a first ston. John Welsh wanted build-|their appeal as a large number} ing stone for his store. The ves-/0f the congregation. | sel required ballast on the re-| Some members of the com-| turn journey, so that the stone|mittee thought the timing of} served a double purpose. Indeed, |the drive was bad as many fam-| it served a third purpose also,jilies are away; but all names) for these two men were ardention the list will be canvassed and) churchmen and they broughtithe committee is hopeful that) from Kingston enough stone tothe objective will be met. | Gordon W. Riehl, chairman of} 'the building committee, this} week announced plans for a} membership drive. He said) there are many new residents locally of the Presbyterian faith! |who would like to be associat-| ed with a new and growing' | church. | MAYOR LYMAN GIFFORD! Siwas the guest speaker last Thursday night at a meeting of the annual summer conference of the Seventh-day Adventists in Ontario and Quebec. | This was no innovation for His Worship, a frequent speak-| er at College Park Seventh-day|t | St. George's Anglican Church onjt Centre street. | The summer conference REV. : iday event averaged 2,500-3,000.' - P. L. FIESS ltt will conclude tomorrow night. | | Oshawa residents who played|day for 120 members of the Sun- build a place of worship. It is|prominent roles in the summer|day School class at King Street of interest that the stone was|conference included the a Church. J. Ernest Fel ows, J. W. Bothe, president of the'ter, took as his theme: "Train- Church|ing to Succeed" and used illus- in Canada; Carl Klam, general|trations from the world of sport) secretary of. the Seventh-day|to emphasize his points. He is quarried by the prisoners at/ing: Kingston Penitentiary. Captain Rowe and John Welsh donated the stone and made themselves responsible for the erection of the church, now St. John's. Seventh-day Adventist | Adventist Church jrated by the Felician Sisters. is|The ceremony reminded many jone of the Seventh-day Adven-jof the older jtist's largest annual events --|religious week-end attendance for the 10-/homeland. in Canada; ja Divinity student at Emmanuel Darren L. Michael -- secretary/College, Toronto. | Christi feast day with a religi- ous procession. | It was headed by altar boys, followed by the Polish Girl} Guides and the Boy Scouts.| St. Rosary group, present foreign policy drive is! the Ontario District of the Luth-/some i eran Church-Canada. jand positions toward this end. (Canada Plays The Pacifier Between U.S. OTTAWA (CP) -- Canada's aimed at preserving and en- hancing the two-year-old de- tente between the United States] and Russia, highly qualified sources say. | Canada has even sacrificed External Affairs Minister Martin is striving to get nege- tiations started on Viet Nam not only to try to end a dangerous situation there but because -of the damage continuation of the conflict may do to U.S.-Soviet relations. He told the Commons exter- nal affair mittee June 10: "I thik is reasonable specu) might be thou: ' ter- est to see the war (in Vie Nam) continue as a means of increasing the gap. between the longstanding principles' And Russians ons under independent, national control. , Informants said the list of Ca- nadian concessions aimed at easing relations between Russia and the West now is fairly long. Some of them: --Canada has pledged an ad- ditional $4,000,000 to the United Nations to help defray the $108,000,000 debt Russia, France and 'other countries owe the UN for peacekeeping costs. This country had held that peacekeeping costs must) be a collective responsibility} of all UN members. --Canada won't insist at the fall session of the UN Gen- eral Assembly on the appli- cation of article 19 which dis- qualified from voting mem- b fiyancial arrears, Mr. this was a nec- desirable retreat. --Canada/has agreed with the Soviet Union and the West. 'An intensification of the war} could very well have the result) of making the gap between the) East and West greater and of! moving the Soviet Union closer} to China." | |SEES BOTH SIDES Mre. Martin has been sympa-! thetic to both the American and Russian positions in Viet Nam. He told the committee "ET am sure the Soviet Union is greatly concerned about de- clip-|Thy were followed by the Holy|velopments in Indochina. I wish Hedwig's|it were possible for the Soviet Ladies' societies and the Feli-|Union to tkae a more positive cian Sisters. Altar boys censers preceded the chim, Rev. A: Bagsik Balda- the pas-| His business|terian Church in the Rosslandjtor, carried the Blessed Sacra-|problems. . Cotton,|road - Nipigon area has reached|/ment in the monstrance andjtations of the Soviet Union in was assisted by a special honor! guard The procession stopped at the first outdoor altar where the CANON F. G. ONGLEY | raditional Gospel was sung and} hird altar was beautifully deco- parishioners of traditions in their Last Sunday was graduation summer assistant minis- |when jmight go. with|position. "I think I understand some of its concern and some of its| Some of the hesi-| this matter involve these com- plex relations with China and) North Viet Nam." The minister said the initia-| tive for the 1963 partial nuclear} test ban treaty was taken by! the U.S., Russia and Britain. | It now was up to the non-nu- clear powers to make some c.n- certed move toward prevention) of. the spread of nuclear weap- Pope Not Sure | Of Visit To UN VATICAN CITY (AP)--The| Vatican press office said today} Pope Paul has been invited to visit the United Nations, but that it is premature to say or whether the Pope! The Vatican's UN observer | said in New York Thursday he! expected the pontiff to visit the! UN assembly this fall or winter) and conferred with Secretary-| General U Thant about a possi-/ ble trip The observer, Msgr. Alberto Giovannetti, told reporters Pope) Paul was considering such a | : i |trip, which would be the first | Adventist Church and Kings-|prayers said. The same Oray-lever by a reigning Pope to the | |way College, its affiliate, in re-\ers and proceedings were: re-Western Hemisphere. | cent months. He is a member of|peated at a second altar. The|/-- -- _ Commufiist view that the Viet Cong guerrilla force in South Viet Nam should be repre- sented in any peace negotia-| tions. | Canada now has accepted the Soviet view that one-the spot inspections would not be required to police an interna- tional treaty banning under- U.S. Viet By RONALD E. DEUTSCH DA NANG, South Viet Nam (AP) -- Covered with massive, red napalm burns, the boy whimpered in pain as the nurse removed the bandages from his skinny, scorched body. He would die. A pretty girl dozed in a twi- light state of semi-conscious- ness with a bullet wound in her chest, She also had been shot in the thigh eight months ear- lier. Another boy, suffering deep Sees War Horror Hospital The U.S. surgical team--one of two such civilian teams in South Viet Nam on loan from the U.S. public health service-- has been here since early 1963. Its function under the U.S. Op- erations Mission, an overseas aid program, is to help counter Communist insurgency and spread American good will. One U.S. aid official calls the program an enormous success, on balange, but adds that it faces oveFwhelming odds in a land where the practice of mod- ern medicine is virtually im-| shock, looked into space with an expressionless stare. He had seen his mother, father and two) sisters killed in their peasant! village. These are victims of the Viet- namese war. They are Vietna- mese children with no future and a past filled with horror. possible. The medical experiment Started off with four civilian teams but dwindled to half this number because of lack of re- cruits from the U.S.. The Amer-| ican doctors, who volunteer their services, wind up frus- trated and embittered, victims They were brought to Da) Nang's only civilian hospital where a skilled team of Amer-| ican doctors and nurses try to| practice 20th century medicine} under 19th century conditions. | Wolfe Monument | Remake Planned | ground nuclear tests. It has taken this view on the tech- nological grounds that such! tests can QUEBEC (CP) -- The Wolfe} of what they call cultural shock. Dr, Vernon Fitchett, 37, of Ne- well, Iowa, the chief medical officer, describes the condition) this way: "You come here think ng you're going to change things. Then you find out the hospital THE OSHAWA TIMES, Seturday, July 3,1965 15 Woody Allen HOLLYWOOD = (AP)--Woody 'Allen, the offbeat comedian, had his own offbeat way of breaking into the movies: He wrote his own script. : Allen draws the sole screen- play credit for What's New, Pussycat, a wild, sex - oriented comedy staring Peter O'Toole, Peter Sellers, Romy Schneider, Paula Prentiss, Ursula Andress and, not incidentally, Woody Allen. "T had never written any- thing with a plot beyond that of a Sid Caesar sketch, say," he said during a brief foray into Hollywood. ; "As a matter of fact, What's New, Pussycat doesn't - really have a plot per se. As I wrote it, I realized it was sprawling and formless. But so were a lot of good comedies, particu- larly those with the Marx brothers. Their pictures made} no sense, but they were hilari- Wrote A Way Into The World Of Movies them, but he has other fieidg to conquer. SEEMS UNLIKELY Short, slight and insignificant. jlooking, Allen seems the least likely candidate for a movie star. Yet that's what he wants to 'be. Not just a featured comic, as he is in Pussycat, but a star. He now is hard at work on his second film. It is called Take the Money and Run. "This next one will be dif- ferent. There 'will be two im- portant male roles, and one of them will be mine." Allen knows precisély . what he is about. He the comedy ladder _ methodically, beginning at 17 as gag writer for Peter Lind Hayes and Mary Healy, continued to put quips in the mouths of Herb Shriner, Garry Moore, Jack Paar, Art Carney and others. ;ous. So I decided as long as the a a e keeps don't need a plot." . Pussycat stems from Allen's medium, the avant-garde night) » youl | has no hot water, no sewage system and often no electricity. | "The flies in our wards) sty. Hospitals in the states have} be distinguished/monument, destroyed presum-|semi - private rooms, but we] from earthquakes by modernjably by separatists on the his-jhave semi-private cots, two or seismographs anywhere in the|toric Plains of Abraham in 1963,|three patients to a cot. world, has been rebuilt and will bear "You perform a five-hour op-! --Mr. Martin has said that he/inscriptions in both English andjeration, but the patient dies be-| could not logically object if} Russia gave Communist East French. cause no blood is available or} . 5:30 to 6:00.P.M | at 9:08 ain The inscription on the old|there's a lack of trained) _CKLB -- DIAL 1350 i p.m. -------------- --------, German nuclear weapons un-| monument was in English only. | ®UtSeS. der the same arrangements that Canada has been given! them by the U.S. . On the other side of the coin,| Canada has refrained from all! but the most discreet criticism of the American intervention in the Dominican Republic and has generally supported U.S. policy in Viet Nam. In short, the government hopes its practice of restraint will rub off on other countries, especially the U.S, and Russia.| Police believe extremists who! seek independence for Quebec! by violence were responsible} for destroying the monument.| They believe the monument was| pulled from its pedestal by a! cable attached to a truck. No arrests were made. | HEAR The REORGANIZED CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST OF LATTER DAY SAINTS (World Headquarters, Independence issouri) ORANGE TEMPLE Back to the Bible Broadcast DAILY Mon. to Sat. 9:30 - 10:00 am. CKLB radio Diol 1350 club. He is working, or rather, | writing his way out of the) jwouldn't be tolerated in a pigiclubs -- not that he dislikes) i) l LISTEN TO THE FAMILY BIBLE HOUR SUNDAY | every night "The World Tomorrow" is heard Monday to Saturday CKLB Radio THE PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH IN CANADA KNOX SIMCOE ST. NORTH (Four blocks from King) Minister Rev. G. W. C. Brett, B.A 454 Boder Ave 728-6122 Musica! Director Mr, Matthew Gouldburn, A.L.C.M. 11:00 A.M "The Salt of the Earth"' Come ana Worship With Us SIMCOE & BRUCE, OSHAWA ST. LUKE'S Rossland Rd. W. et Nipigon Minister REV, BD. R, SINCLAIR, B.A, 492 Masson Street .-- 728-9178 11:00 A.M, PUBLIC WORSHIP Rev. D. R. SINCLAIR will preach "God's Care ond Ours" All Cordielty Invited ST. PAUL'S Wilson Rd. N. ot King St. &. Rey, Welter Jackson Minister Mr. Fronk Walter Musical Direetor 11.00 AM, CHURCH SERVICE "You ect but you heve not enough, you drink but you ere not filled, you clothe yourselves but there Is fon warn: he thot eorneth wages, earneth wages to put it inte « beg with holes."--Haggal, Sanremo an 10:00 A.M.-- CHURCH SCHOOL | FREE TICKETS POPULAR PICTU AT THE TO SEE THESE RES BROCK THEATRE| for Children and Adults 11:00 A.M. MORNING WORSHIP ALL ARE INVITED PHONE 728-9606 GOSPEL 40 NASSA HALL U STREET The CORNER PIZZA SPECIAL!ZING IN . © PIZZA =e SPAGHETTI © BAR-B-Q CHICKEN @ SPARERIBS HOME DELIVERY 668-8807 107 COLBORNE ST. Ww. ALL WE Sheriff Nelson Gilbert Rey- nolds was a Churchwarden from 1860 to 1861 Sheriff Reynolds was the commander of a horse for Public Affairs of the Sev enth-day Adventist Church in| St. Peter's Anglican Church) Canada; William G. Soloniuk --/held a patronal festival last Sun- Director of Welfare Services for|\day to honor the apostle after troop in the Rebellion of 1837. He was appointed Sheriff of the|Brock Wells -- Director of County of Ontario at Whitby in) youth and Education. it 1854. The Seventh-Day Adventist/i | Returning from a visit to Eng-|Bible Conference ends tonight/the pastor, on the subject:| land, Sheriff Reynolds found|with Pastor D. J. Handysides|'Peter's Love For Christ) that John Ham Perty had built/from London, England, as/Brought a Task." Mr. Ware! a castle on the location of the/speaker. {quoted from St. John, Chapter present Kinsman Park. Not to} a be outdone, the Sheriff builtjof the Ottawa Church, was or-) Trafalgar Castle of which thejdained to the gospel ministry)|t present Ontario Ladies' Col- lege now incorporates two orig- inal sections. In 1857, while still living at|Pastor J. M. Howard, Sr., Trafalgar Castle, the Sheriff/ Toronto. gave presented communion silver to| admonition St. John's each piece of which! bears an initial of a member of} the family together with the date. This beautiful silverware|' ' sati tary ; constant use at cducation from_ elementary -_ Pond srl coin bs ischool to college are educated [Ontario and Quebec. His father, | 0 the Church in Canada; and F./whom the church is named John M. Howard, Jr., pastor|21--Verse 15 by L. L. Bock, president of the/afternoon -- this was followed Seventh-day Adventist Church in}hy an Evensong service before an altar in the open. the ordination, J. W. Wilson, Adventist yoni citer ie cate at St! leader for Ontario and Quebec, | peter's for the wa | said that six out of every ten),); ae i re Adventist youth at each level gd Mr. Ware is on vacation of the Ontario Regiment. There was a celebration of he Holy Euchrist at the morn- ng service and a special ser-| More than 77 of the congrega ion attended a picnic in the DRIVE-IN GOSPEL SERVICE at New Dominion Store KING and JOHN STREETS SUNDAY -- 7:00 P.M. Speaker; WM. BUNTING OF IRELAND LCOME BAGOT AND ST. GEORGE'S ANGLICAN CHURCH The Reverend Canon F. G. Ongley, M.A.--Rector The Reverend R. G. Brooks $.Th.---Assistont for Matchless Livin GO ELECTRIC & REPAIRS FREE ESTIMATES ea 668-4278 AGUE (JIM) ELECTRIC LTD. D, Nix 1402 Simece S Oshawa EACH WEEK 12 PEOPLE RECEIVE TICKETS FREE Each week for 26 weeks there will appear in the advertisements on this page the names and addresses of 12 ky people nome should eppear an" you locate it, all you are asked to do Is clip the ed end present it at the Oshawe Times Office in Whitby or Oshowe. You will then receive your guest tickets to the Brock Theatre. lucky in this eres, 1¢ your BROCK WHITBY (WEEK OF JULY Sth) MONDAY -- TUESDAY -- WEDNESDAY One Complete Program Each THE PLEASURE SEEKERS -- In Color Starring -- ANN MARGRET -- TONY FRANCIOSA Plus 2nd Feeture Attraction CODE 7 VICTIM Starring -- LEX BARKER --- RONALD FRAZER THURSDAY -- FRIDAY -- SATURDAY Evening Programs RIDER HAGGARDS ' Sterring -- URSULA UNDRESS -- PETER CUSHING Evening -- Starting At 7:30 VIC'S SPUR a SERVICE STATION MURPHY OIL CO. LIMITED 501 Brock N. Whitby Roland Pilon, 235 Bloor West Oshawa 5 -- In Color At 7 and 8:45 'SHE" -- In Color @ COLLISION CUSTOM BODY WORK 0 @ SATISFACTION KONRAD CSER---OWNER 324 ASH ST., WHITBY 24 HR, ROAD SERVICE GUARANTEED EVERY 'OCCASION Make it... FLOWERS by 668-3142 131 Brock S. Whitby L, Mothersill, 63 Harmony 8. Oshawa DEAN CENTRE STS, Sunday, July 4th THURSDAY Holy Communion Services: 9:00 a.m. -- 11:00 A.M. -- 7:00 P.M. Trinity Il II Buying -- Rent ing -- Selling -%.. Use TIMES ACTION WANT ADS W. T. Lovelock $r., Kendalwood, Oshawa OLIVE HOWE REAL ESTATE COMMERCIAL -- INDUSTRIAL AND RESIDENTIAL PROPERTIES K. Chomko, R.R. No. 1, Whitby a , JULY 8th -- 10:00 am Rev. Ronald A. Sharp, pastor f St. Matthew's Anglican road south, next. month Sharp is Protestant padre in the church's own schools. Ad-| Sheriff Reynolds died Janu-\ventists, he said,. are firm be-| ary 18, 1881, at 67 and is. bur-jjievers in parochial education} ied in St. John's Cemetery. for youth. | A native son of the parish is the Rev. N. C. S. Goldring, Rec-' Rev. Philip L. Fiess of Osh-| tor of St. George's Episcopaljawa returned this week from! Church, Rochester, N.Y. His sis-|the Detroit convention of the ter, Miss Olive Goldring, pres-|Lutheran Church -Missouri ently a member of St. John'sjSynod and the Lutheran Choir, retired from the Sunday|Church-Canada. j School in 1964 after a record! The 40-year-old pastor is head| 52 years as a teacher. THE SEVENTH 'of Grace Lutheran Church here} CHRIST MEMORIAL CHURCH (Anglican) Mary and Hillcroft Streets SERVICES 8:00 A.M. 11:00 A.M MASONIC You Are Invited to FAITH LUTHERAN CHURCH SCUGOG CLEANERS yuh LAUNDERERS ron sToRaes WHITBY OF in 668-4341 524 CROMWELL, OSHAWA THE FIRST WITH THE NEWS IN OSHAWA & DISTRICT OSHAWA TIMES Walter Ostheimer, 333 Gibb St, . (Eastern Canada Synod) Oshawa Pastor: THe REV. HENRY FISCHER i Sein COPPING CARPET SERVICE | COMPLETE INSTALLATIONS @ IN YOUR HOME OR IN OUR PLANT SUNDAY, JULY 4th | i CARPET AND UPHOLSTERY CLEANING @ GUARANTEED & INSURED, FREE ESTIMATES i W. T, Sr. Lovelock, Kendelwood Oshawa 11:00 A.M.--The Service TB 942-0535 "WE OPERATE OUR OWN PLANT" AJAX TEMPLE BUILDING j= 91 Centre St. at Metcalf St: Worship With Us NURSERY CARE--11:00 AM. WEDNESDAY --~ 10:00 A.M. HOLY COMMUNION DAY SABBATH Is It Still In Operation? A comprehensive survey of this great questior. COPY FREE BULK SUPPLIES, TWO SHILLINGS (Australian) K each. Write:--The Gospei Publicity League P.O. BOX 14, EPPING, N.S.W AUSTRALIA GRACE LUTHERAN PARK ROAD & HIGHWAY 40) Rev? Philip Fiess, Minister Vicar Stephen Stohimon SUNDAY SERVICES I 9:45 AM. ! SUNDAY SCHOOL | 11:00 A.M, . | DIVINE WORSHIP 7:00 P.M.~--WED. NON-CATHOLICS A who s nterested FOR: CHURCH SCHOOL 7:30 P.M. DIVINE WORSHIP | FURTHER INFORMATION 194 SIMCOE ST. NORTH OSHAWA, ONTARIO. Begining: Monday July Sth-- 1965 At 7.30 p.m. the Catholic Church' and its Teachings A&T MOTORS @ 2 Licensed Mechanics HARRY'S JANITOR SERVICE , 668-8873 © INDUSTRIAL © COMMERCIAL | © COMPLETE JANITORIAL COMPLETE TRANSMISSION § See Our Displey Of New ¥ oi ay '65 RAMBLERS SERVICE Quantity of Good Used Cors" F. Pfeiffer, 90 Elizabeth Cresc., Whitby INFORMATION CLASSES * seal tdagga SERVICE ' ABNER'S ' 668-4932 NY Bs slike posohnuaie areas @ Complete Tune-ups ESSO SERVIC Y 668-8873 WHITBY A REGARDING dct 609 HARRIET = - =~ WHITBY 668-5391 TRAREMINSON RepUNDNRS © THE CATHOLIC CHURCH 701 Dundas E. Whitby W. M. Brockie 712 Newman 1003 Brock 8. Whitby |] Gien Metnenny 608 easy 'e AND ITS TEACHINGS \| : WHEN: MONDAY AND. WEDNESDAY EVENINGS WHITBY AUTO WRECKERS |, BEAVER LUMBER CO. LTD. EACH WEEK @ RE-CHROMING e@ GRILLES e@ BUMPERS HOME IMPROVEMENT HEADQUARTERS" s @ NEW AND USED PARTS @ NEW FIBRE GLASS FENDERS 668-5818 Ties 7,30 P.M 'LATE MODEL WRECKS BOUGHT AND SOLD sis wii WHERE: ST. GREGORY'S AUDITORIUM -- ROOM 1, NO. 12 MWY.--? MILE N. OF WHITBY 668-3223 Se by WHITBY H, L. Thompson,. 114 Bowman Whitby ND: CATHOLICS - n learning Anyone more about -- PHONE 725-8444 SUPERIOR PROPANE 'SALES & SERVICE' , 668-3328 VICTORIA ST. E. -- WHITBY BUD'S ORNAMENTAL RAILINGS * CUSTOM WORK @ INTERIOR & EXTERIOR RAILINGS (OVER 30 YEARS EXPERIENCE) 5-YEAR WORKMANSHIP GUARANTEE R.R. NO. 1 PICKERING -- 942-0720 Ed. Maunder, 209 Lee, Whitby T 515 BROCK S. -- 668-5853 0