Oshawa Times (1958-), 25 Apr 1967, p. 12

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. 12 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Tuesday, April 25, 1967 Dairy Dear Ann Landers: Every- body cries on your shoulder and I want my turn. I honestly don't know what -you can do to help me, but just letting off steam is worth something. I'm a dairy worker who wants to stay on the farm but 1 don't see how I can. Most dairy farm- ers work almost 16 hours a day and don't make enough money to support their families. We have to keep up a good front for the cows because if they catch us looking sad they get depressed and you know Old|Tell this to your cows, too. We Bossy's output dends on how happy she is. I know I could make more|income will go up. You deserve money and work shorter hours if I went into another line of work, but I like dairy farming and I think I am_ needed. I don't want to quit. Please give me some advice, Ann Landers,|actly one year ago today that and some hope, if you can.--/he left me. I was 30. He was 33. C. P., Rudyard, Mich. Dear C. P.; much about dairy farming, bu I have a good friend who does.|now the times he asked me to I have asked U.S. Secretary o Agriculture Orville L. Freemanjsaid, 'I refuse to put myself to respond to your letter. Here| through the agony. I can't stand is his answer: Dear Mr. C. P.: Please don' quit. We need you. Every word of your letter is|tails. I told him to keep his true. Dairy farmers are over-| business friends out of our home worked and underpaid. Most|because they were not our so- dairy farmers get up at four|cial equals, and it wouldn't do o'clock in the morning seven/to mix the two. THE STARS SAY By ESTRELLITA Mixed stellar influences. Fi- nancial matters and business negotiations conducted with persons of good repute and ex- perience should work out ex- tremely well, but have no deal- ings with anyone whose motives are open to question. Natives of some Signs could be deceptive in their approaches. FOR THE BIRTHDAY If Wednesday is your birth- day, your horoscope indicates that, as of July 1, you will enter an excellent two-week cycle governing your monetary inter- ests--one which will be followed by an even better period which will last from Sept. 15 through Nov. 15, It will be important, however, that you avoid specu- lation of any kind during the first two weeks of September. In fact, speculation is "out" for ANN LANDERS Long Hours, Short Pay I don't know|three handsome sons who look Farmers Lament days a week, and their average Pay runs approximately 60 cents an hour, When dairy farmers began to leave the farms in droves last year to take jobs offering better pay and shorter hours, the de- partment of agriculture gave milk supports a healthy boost. This kept some of the dairy farmers on the job. You were one who stayed, and we are grateful. Please don't give up. We are keeping an eye on you fellows. want them to be happy so they will give more milk and your it--Orville L. Freeman, secre- tary of agriculture, Washington, D.C. Dear Ann Landers: It is ex- We had a beautiful home and t}like their father, I remember fjinivite his mother to dinner. I her." And then there were the t}times he asked me to invite his business associates for cock- One morning he left for work as usual. He telephoned from his office to say he was coming back at 3:00 p.m.--to pack his bags. I asked him where he was going. He answered: bag | am); leaving you." Faessler, house owner who came up from There are coats for fine, sunny weather and coats for bleak rainy days but the one that can double in duty is the one to treasure and to buy for summer wear. This attractive cotton pop- lin raincoat designed by Fabiani will do just that. Actually, it is so smart in line that it can also serve as an all-occasion casual DOUBLE DUTY Teacher To Lead Centennial Team Of Mountaineers VANCOUVER (CP)--At five- foot-three and 133 pounds, Ger- trude Smith looks more like a school teacher than a mountain- eer. And five days a week she is a teacher, at David Livingstone elementary school in Vancou- ver. It's on those other two days, and on holidays, that she climbs mountains. For 20 years she has been enjoying her hobby--"mainly to get away from the rat race"-- and now she has been chosen to climb a mountain to cele- brate Centennial Year. Miss Smith, a former Lon- doner, has been assigned to con- quer an unexplored Far North- ern peak. She will lead an all- female team up 11,387 - foot Mount Saskatchewan in the St. Elias Range on the British Co- lumbia-Yukon border. Thirteen other teams will climb 18 other peaks in the area. All teams will plant Cane ada's centennial flag atop their mountains. Miss Smith applied to the cen- tennial commission at Christ- mas to be one of the climbers and figures she was picked be- cause of her experience. That includes a recent climb of Switzerland's Matter- horn which '"'went with the topper. Neutral in color -- greatest of ease." | EXPERT RE-FINISHING | On all Types of Furniture French Polishing - Restoration of Antiques Oshawa Upholstering Co. 725-0311 : ZELLER'S CoO\OR! it's running rampant e « « in dazzling prints that explode all over the summer scene with the impact of a firecracker! THE MOST FEMININE LOOK IMAGINABLE at ZELLER'S BOUTIQUE a soft slate grey -- it has long sleeves and an inter- esting high-rise collar as well as front and side pock- ets, And as an extra bonus, BARBARA'S BEAUTY SALON Fabiani has added a 10th Anniversary ana ig ae head . sca. al ranosats. gfe a3 25% OFF All Cold Waves --By Tracy Adrian During month of April--Until Recalls Girlhood, Sells First Story TORONTO (CP) -- Shirley a Toronto rooming- he wrong side of the tracks, I replied, "You can't go. I love you." He said, 'That's the first time you have uttered 1 those words in three years. I've waited a long time to hear}, ing audience when was the last a hard-working husband. I have said those words many times lately, but my husband has not|,, been around to hear}me.--Still|q Hurting : are smart enough to learn from], week Dear Hurting: Sothe People/Faessler has owred a rooming- has joined a select group of writers whose first story has appeared in the magazine At- antic Monthly. The April issue of the maga-|No education. And the Atlantic i ir Faessler's|Monthly is willing to pay me them, It's too late now, baby."'!9 g99.word account of her girl-/800d American dollars for what Ask the women in your read-lnooq in the 1930s. It is called|g0es on in my head. Now I n whe 2S") Maybe Later It Will Come Back| Want time they said "I love you" to|jr) My Mind and earned her here." $500, ine carries Mrs. Daughter of a man who once ollected garments for a ped- ler who sold them on a $1-a- instalment basis, Mrs, ouse in rundown east-central the mistakes of others. Here's|Toronto for 18 years. She caters your letter for those favored|to actors as clients. few, Thanks for writing. li months of June, December and next January. the Taurean for the next 12 gains will For years, her friends, after stening to her talk about her September,|past in Toronto's Jewish com- munity, urged her to write Personal interests will be|down her stories and publish months, at least. Your financiallespecially star-blessed within/them. come throughi|the year ahead, with emphasis "What held me back chiefly conservative management only.|on social life, which could prove|Was that in telling stories you Next good periods along the|unusually glamorous -- especi- aforementioned lines: Earl yla December, next February and/a lly between now and Sept. 15 nd between Nov. 15 and Jan. 1. rely on tone and inflection. But to sit down when you have only a typewriter, that's very differ- March. These two periods will also be|°"t, that's harder." In occupational affairs, fine|propitious for romance, as will opportunities for recognition/next April and May. There will and advancement are indicated/not be too many auspicious in July, late September, early/days for travel December and throughout Jan-|short trips) during the balance uary, March and April of next} of year. Those in the musical and|ward to enjoyable prospects artistic fields should do excep-lalong this line during the early tionally well during the entirel|part of 1968. But about a year ago she Mey. 15th started and her first story 75 CELINA ST., OSHAWA Toronto Woman emerged. She sent it to the New 725-9572 Yorker and it was rejected. She sent it to Atlantic Monthly, waited six weeks for a reply then wrote an indignant note demanding that it be accepted or returned. Next day she re- ceived a letter of acceptance. Mrs, Faessler called her roomers together and told them: THE 1967 STYLES IN SPORTSWEAR © Sabre Slims ® Sabre Shorts i 'Cole' Swim Suits "Now listen, people of my house. I'm a poor kid, born on the wrong side of the 'tracks. Now on Display WARD'S Simcoe St. at Athol Quality Since 1919 a little respect around 725-1151 125 WEEKLY Special Offer on Silver Care products FOR THE FINEST Custom. and Ready Made DRAPES in the latest Shades fObHeS: 5... 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Wonderfully easy-care a fabrics in misses, women's b& and half-sizes. \ FROM 0.00 Zeller's Fashion Boutique JUST SAY CHARGE IT ' brighten your day with color and fashion Just a Few Example of SO EASY TO OWN y 5.00 CHARGE-IT Cocw, me, CENTRE ond ZELLER' OSHAWA SHOPPING DOWNTOWN--SIMCOE STREET The past Women's Chr ence Union' vy in a skit bein part of th> p Centennial T IN ST. JOH Church, Port tario, May 27 Lynne Guzzell the bride | Thomas Abth The bride-to-be daughter of M ST. VINCEN Church, North | the setting for t! ceremony uni Sylvia Margueri and Joseph Lec son. The weddir place Saturday, 1967 at 2.00 p.m. elect, the daugt and Mrs. Alfre North Bay, re bachelor of a from the Uni Western Ontaric '66 and is on the Dedicate Your Op By ROBERTA Charles and Susz are a husband ar are proving you ga ties when you co what you want ¢ yourself to achieve In their joint ¢ graphic arts team the artist and Char ager. And when y 67, which opens April 28, you will s art work in many « terior and exterior For the Canadi complex, for exam did 26 triangular pa scribe periods in history. In Expo's World, her designs fibre glass panels i dors leading to the t on the Serpentine the Serpentine Sli the reconstructed Fort Edmonton, she deal of work for Garter Saloon, the Jake snack bar, the Museum, the hat s shop and~ general Street banners and gallery, "TI was born in H studied art in Bud sanne said, when I

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