Oshawa Times (1958-), 31 Aug 1967, p. 4

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The Oshana Times 86 King St. E., Oshawa, Ontario Published by Canadian Newspapers Company Limited T. L. Wilson, Publisher E. C. Prince, Associate Publisher OSHAWA, ONTARIO, THURSDAY, AUGUST 31, 1967 Progress In Prospect On Constitutional Issue Prime Minister Pearson's decision to. postpone until 1968 a federal- provincial conference on writing in a Bill of Rights into the Canadian constitution is a wise one, removing as it does one source of friction be- tween the federal government and Queen's Park. Earlier, Mr. Pearson said he was' going to call the conference for this fall which could have been con- etrued as a political ploy to interfere with Premier John Robarts' Confed- eration of Tomorrow talks which had previously been set for Novem- ber. Mr. Pearson has suggested that his conference be held in January or February. In addition to being an act of courtesy, it should be a big help in assuring that some real pro- gress will be made in the delicate task of straightening out our jum- bled constitution. Mr. Pearson's decision to post- pone the federal-provincial confer- ence until after the Robarts' meet- ing, as The Welland Tribune points out, sets the timing straight. It has been generally agreed that the Confederation of Tomorrow Con- ference will not make decisions -- that the role will be that of discuss- ing what is wrong with the present constitution, considering collective- ly the problems that confront them, and perhaps express opinions as to changes that might help to meet these problems. There are, of course, the prob- Jems of Quebec. There have been many demands for reform from that province. Some will be acceptable to most Canadians, others not. The conference should be helpful in find- ing out what they are, and how the other provinces feel about them. To the credit of provincial pre- miers is the decision to hold open meetings with the press in attend- ance to enlighten the public. And here, certainly, is one area in which every citizen should be fully inform- ed. All this seems like a very logical first step to the federal-provincial conference called by Mr. Pearson. Working out a Bill of Rights is a practical second step which offers hope of agreement. As The Tribune says, the time has come when Canadians want to see some progress made towards bringing the constitution home so that it will not again be necessary to apply to the United Kingdom Parliament, and setting out in black and white jurisdiction in federal and provincial matters. Given the will there is no reason why the two conferences cannot make a substantial contribution to- wards that goal. Tire Taken For Granted The tire, one of the most vital pieces of automotive equipment, is taken for granted by too many mo- torists, according to tire manufac- turers and safety officials. "Motorists fail to realize that a tire is a highly engineered piece of equipment that must be maintained properly," said G. L. Andrus, mer- chandising manager -- tires for a The Oshawa Zimes 86 King St. E.. Oshowa, Ontorie T. L. WILSON, Publisher &, C. PRINCE, Generol Manoger Cc. J, MeCONECHY, Editor SUBSCRIPTION RATES The Oshawo Times combining The Oshowo Times (established 1871) and the Whitby Gazette and Chronicle (established 1863) is published daily (Sundoys and Statutory holidays excepted). Members of Canadion Daily Newspaper Publish- ers Associaton, The Canadion Press Audit Bureau Association. The Conodian Press is exclusively entitled to the use of reproduction of all news despatched in the paper credited to it or te The Associated Press or Reuters, and also the local news published therein. All rights ef special des- patches are clso reserved. 86 King St. E., Oshowo, Ontaric National Advertising Offices: Thomson Building, 425 University Avenue, Toronto, Ontario; 40 Cotheart Street, Montreol, P.O. Delivered by corriers in Oshawe, Whitby, Ajax, Pickering, Bowmonville, Brooklin, Port Perry, Prince Albert, Maple Grove, Hampton, Frenchmon's Bay, Liverpool, Taunton, Tyrone, Dunbarton, Enniskillen, 'one, Leskard, Brougham, Burketon, Cloremont, Manchester, Pontypool and Newcastle not over S5c per week, By mail in Province of Onterio putside corrier delivery crea. $15.00 per year. Other provinces and Commonwealth Countries, $18.00 per year. U.S.A. end foreign $27.00 per yeor, leading Canadian tire manufactur- er. A tire has three basic parts: the beads, which anchor the tire to the rim; the carcass, which contains the air that supports the vehicle, and the tread, which is in constant con- tact with 'the road. Each of these important tire parts can suffer from neglect and misuse. When any one of them is allowed to deteriorate to the point of failure, the life of the driver and the lives of his passen- gers are threatened. The Canadian Highway Safety Council is current. ly campaigning for proper tire in- spection and maintenance programs by motorists. Proper inflation, Mr. Andrus says, is the most important mainten- ance factor. "Either over-inflation can induce tire damage and place car occupants in danger," he warns. He recommends motorists refer to their owner's manual to deter- mine correct tire pressures for their ear, then check monthly to ensure they are maintained. Mr. Andrus notes that strict attention to proper inflation lengthens a tire's life sub- stantially and adds to driving satis- faction. "YEAR OF LAND' (oe mrmeremnrn senerecememanenentanneet A Lavish Salute To Canada By JAMES NELSON OTTAWA (CP)--A lavishly « Mustrated and lyrically - writ- ten salute to Canada, its land- scapes and its people, is being published by the National Film Board and the Queen's Printer as a joint Centennial year pro- ject. Price has not yet been set but when it goes on public sale, it may be for $25 a copy. How- ever, it could become a collec- tor"s item among photographerg and writers, and a. presentation prize for corporation gift-giv- ers. Published in two editions--in English with text by Bruce Hut- chison, editorial directo: of the Vancouver Sun, and in French with text by Jean Sarrazin of the CBC at Montreal--the large 12-by-15-inch book cyntains 260 photos, many of them full pace and all in full color except for 20 in black and white. It is titled Canada--A Year of the Land, and is intended to combine the best of Canadian photographic, design, and print- ing craftsmanship obtainabie from private and public enter- prises. Its publication cvincided with the opening Tuesday night of a new NFB gallery here designed to display collections of creative photography. DIVIDED IN 4 PARTS Mr. Hutchison's text divides the book into four parts, according to the season3. His prose reaches the poetic in tts description of the regions of Canada, its economic develop- ment, and--more particularly ~--its sights, sounds and even smells. In his essay on writes: "The best of waves on a lone- ly beach, wind shredding through the first frail foliage, the chortle of an upland brook, the loon's wail from an inky lake, the marmot's whistle close to timberline, the honk of geese, the chirp of robin, the splash of trout, the frog's love chorus from the swamp, the insect buzz and everywhere the rustling in the new grass--such sounds, faint and pianissimo, are heard in other lands but for the Canadian have their private music." Of summer, he writes this of "tthe symphony of scent: ' "Tart, astringent fumes from pine and cedar, sweet, cloying emanations from alfalfa, wild roses and cottonwood, salt fla- vors from drying seaweed, the spring, he city smell of hot pavements, melting tar and gasoline--all these and a thousand more, unclassified but clearly distin- guished by the nation's experi- enced nose, forecast the larger change ahead." YEARS AGO 15 YEARS AGO, Aug. 31, 1952 The official opening of the Bond St. Bridge took place yes- terday morning. Mayor Michael Starr MP cut the ribbon end drove the first car across the broad span. A $140,000 sewer job to end the danger of flash floods in east Oshawa has gotten under- way. T. Marino is the contract- or. 30 YEARS AGO, Aug. 31, 1937 The nasal spray treatment for infantile paralysis is being used in Oshawa as well as in Tor- onto it was reported by Dr. Grant Berry. aw COULDN'T 'OH, WE'RE CUTTING TO THE BONE' OTTAWA REPORT 'Tax On Illness' Removed By PATRICK NICHOLSON OTTAWA--The federal gov- ernment has removed the "tax on sickness" which imposed a levy of 12 per cent on all phar- maceutical prescriptions. Start- ing on Sept. 1, your prescription wil be cheaper. But not by 12 per cent. This is because that federal tax is imposed at the manufac- turer's level; so it becomes a factor in the price before the wholesale and retail marks-ups are added. The effect of this is that the wholesaler makes his gross profit not only on the cost of the drug, but also on the amount of the federal tax added; and the retailer or drug- gist makes his gross profit not only on the cost of the drug, but also cn the amount of the feder- al tax and on the amount of the wholesaler's mark-up on that tax as well. This may sound complicated, but can easily be fllustrated for clarity. HOW DRUGS ARE PRICED The Canadian Pharmaceuti- cal Association, which is the national association of your local drug stores, has broken down the cost of an average prescription: Manucacturer's price $1.30 Federal tax 14 Cost to wholesaler 1.44 BIBLE " ,., give attendance to read- ing, to exhortation, to doc- trine." 1 Timothy 4:13 The need of our day is the same as it has been with every generation, spending more time with the author of the greatest book ever written. "Thy word is a lamp unto my feet and a light unto my path." tines snniittn ann MANY SMALL MEETINGS nn HALE-FELLOW MANNER, PLUS Organizational Skill Backs Hees' Drive By TOM MITCHELL OTTAWA (CP)--If natty clothes, an athletic appear- ance and easy-going manner were the only criteria for hectic stretch drive to the convention. Grey Cup, city's social set and kept upa into the mon ter, swung 'T feel 'm presenting military. connection through myself to the delegates in the the militia. serv sib asian tae ALMOST A LIBERAL MEETINGS SMALL After war broke out in 1939, Af s, five as a cabinet minis- George Hees was any- thing but the stolid, grey Con- ative politician. ATE HIS SHIRT ter losing a_ byelection deciding the next federal Con- servative leader, George Hees would win in a walk. Don't count him out just because they are not. The big frame--six feet, three inches, 210 pounds--and hale-fellow manner tend to overshadow a demonstrated ability of George Harris Hees to organize things so they turn out pretty much the way he wants. The 57-year-old former cab- {net minister has taken dead aim on his party's top post and is running as hard as he knows how to reach it by the time the leadership conven- tion ends in Toronto Sept. 9 He has set up probably the most high-powered organiza- tion among the nine contend- ers. The Toronto head office has 47 staff members. Anoth- er 100 are working coast to coast to drum up support for Mr. Hees. The candidate has crossed the country several times. In the countr several times. In the final days, he is concen- trating on conference dele- fates and alternates who will actually vote on the leader- ship. "IT don't feel that I could possibly be running a better campaign,' Mr. Hees told reporters as he headed into a This is at smal] meetings-- as many as five a day--of constituency workers. Every- one gets close enough for a full-power exposure to the Hees smile and charm. Mr. Hees says he favors these cosy gatherings over the platform-style meeting with set-piece speeches. "You can discuss the issues of the day intimately. The people get to know my think- ing on issues that concern them." Determination is something George Hees has had for a Jong time. It showed in his Sports and military activities and, when he moved into poli- lies, changed the minds of many who tended to regard him as a mere fashion plate and lightweight in the think- ing department. The son of a wealthy Toron- to manufacturer, he had a well-to-do upbringing that ineluded private school, Royal Military College, the University of Toronto and Cambridge in England. He became a top-notch boxer and football player. When his education was fin- ished, he worked for the fam- ily firm, married, played as a lineman, for Toronto Argo- nauts fen they won the he went into the army as a lieutenant. He came out of the war as a major with a distinguished combat record and a yen to get into politics. In Canada near war's end fo recover from an arm wound, the major was steered by relatives toward the Liber- al party. But a byelection was being fought in Grey North with conscription as a key issue and George Drew, Ontario Conservative leader, persuad- ed the major to talk on front- line experiences. From the platform, he told how men were dying because of insufficient time for train- ing. Conservatives spread these views widely and Gen. A. G. L. McNaughton, the Liberal defence minister, was defeated in the contest. Now tied to the Conserva- lives, Mr. Hees ran in the 1945 election in Toronto's Spa- dina constituency but was defeated. He ran again in 1950 in a byelection in Toronto Broa't- view, using techniques then uncommon. He stumped the riding on foot, shaking hands, introducing himself on streets and in homes and stores and won handily a In his. 12 years c the Come * prediction in 1962, he ate a shirt made of icing sugar before the TV cameras. Also while a cabinet minister, he appeared as Prince Charming opposite TV personality Joyce Davidson as Snow White in a play at an Ottawa charity ball, He quickly set his sights on the party's national presiden- cy and took it in 1954. He grabbed Conservative orgami- zations by the roots ard shook hard, travelling widely to insti! vigor into a party shut out of federal power for 20 years. When John Diefenbaker led the party to victory in 1957, he gave George Hees much credit. for engineering it. Political circles--and Mr. Hees--expected the reward to be the trade and commerce portfolio the handsome Toron- tonian coveted. Instead, it went to Gordon Churchill and Mr. Hees was named trans- port minister. Many politicians thought Mr. Hees would be speared by the Opposition when he started fielding questions on the big department. Instead, he was one of the best-pre- pared ministers in the House. In 1960, he was shifted to trade, the department he had hoped to get first, Wholesaler's mark-up 29 Cost to Pharmacy 1.73 Pharmacy's mark-up 1.74 Cost to patient $3.47 This table shows that the wholesale distributor's mark-up is about 20 per cent of the price which he pays, including the amount of federal tax. And the drug store's mark-up is about 100 per cent, of the price which it pays, again including the amount of the tax and also be, removed. If the wholesaler mark-up on that tax. Thus, through this foolish method of levying a tax at the manufacturer's level, the patient pays an extra 34 cents to yield only 14 cents to the fed- eral government. On Sept. 1, that 14 cents will bre removed. If the wholesaler and pharmacist reduce their profit on the transaction by the amount of their mark-up on the tax, the patient would pay 34 cents less. But it is improbable that either could afford to do so. So the price of the average prescription will probably be cut by only 14 cents, or about 4 per cent, Since the average prescrip- tion price was analysed, two things have changed. First the government raised its tax from 11 to 12 per cent. Second, many pharmacists adopted a new method of pricing prescrip- tions: instead of a flat mark-up of 190 per cent, they now sell the drug at the cost to them- selves, but add a professional fee of $1.75 or $2.00 for dispens- ing each prescription. This fee would be unaffected by the removal of the tax. ARE DRUGS TOO COSTLY? The Canadian Medical Asso- ciation has estimated that the average Canadian spends about $9.50 a year on drugs; this is not a burden on the average Canadian. Yet some _ govern- ment spokesmen and _ others have suggested that the price of drugs should be cut by about one-third; on the average pre- scription, this would amount to $1.15. Looking at the above price break-down, it is not easy to see where such a reduction could be made. Those same spokesmen have been stressing that drug prices in Canada are among the high- est in the world, and should be reduced. So are Canadian wages, and taxes, and MPs' pay, and the prices we pay for automobiles, and bacon and houses, among the highest in the world--are all these to be reduced too? We. suffer from progressive inflation of all prices; the logical step is for the government to impose poli- cies which would curb inflation, not te waste time nibbling away at individual situations. Britain Took Away Profit From Smuggling Of Tea By BOB BOWMAN Smuggling has been a favor- {te Canadian sport for many years. In the roaring twenties it was mostly liquor, both in and out of the country. Rum run- ners would bring cargoes from the West Indies and then trans- fer them to small boats off the coast of the Maritime prov- inces, Then there would be a race with government patrol boats to land the liquor safely on shore. On the export side, there were instances of houses being built across the 'border. The front door would be on the Canadian side, and the back door on the American. Liquor went in one door and out the other. Smuggling cigarettes into Canaaa from the U.S. has also been & popular pastime. Before the railway building boom about 1850, there was a grea! deal of illicit trade in tea. Canadians preferred American to British tea but were rot allowed to buy directly from the U.S. The Americans import- ed green tea while the British sent a more mild black tea to Canaaa. The only way to zet green tea was to buy it in New York, have it shipped to Brit- ain, and then to Canada, which increased the cost. ALMOST A SPORT Tea smuggling became almost a sport. Even people who were supposed to be highly respectalbe took part and it was estimated that three-quar- ters of the tea consumed in Canada was smuggled from the U.S. As there were no railways and few roads across the bor- der it is difficult to establish customs checkpoints. A favorite joke of the era was that many prominent citizens were ardent protectionists by day but practical free-traders at night. On Aug. 31, 1825, the British government began to spoil the fun. It allowed tea from India to be shipped directly to British Nortt American ports, and the first cargo arrived in Montreal. From then on tea smuggling was no longer necessary or profitable. OTHER AUG. 31 EVENTS 1670--Hudson's Bay Company sent first agents to Nelson River to establish posts. 1644--Beggars were ordered to leave Quebec, a movement begun by five women. 1694--British ship William and Mary defeated seven French warships at Ferryland, Newfoundland. 1696--British recaptured Fort Nelson taken by Iberville in 1894 1814--British troops based in Nova Scotia captured part of Maine. 1851--Montreal and Cham- plain Railway opened from St. John's, Quebec, to Rouses Point. 1859--British Columbia adopt- ed Gold Fields Act. 1852--First issue of Calgary Herald. 1950---Railway assumed after strike, service THEN AND NOW First Home Established For Aged In Whitby 1902 By FORD LINDSAY Of The Times Staff With the opening this fall of a mew home for the aged at Beaverton, the Ontario County area and Oshawa will have ac- commodation for approximately 600 aged residents. This is in- deed a far cry from the first such institution established at Whitby in 1902, which provided beds for only a small group of people. In view of the controversy which has been under way in the Whitby Town Council in re- cent months regarding the future of 300 High Street -- the former Ontario County Home for Aged -- it is interesting to look back to the days when the home was built. An old issue of The Oshawa Times-Gazette states the home was constructed at a cost of $25,476.66, including furnishings. County council minutes of the meeting of Dec. 22, 1902 contain a statement of the cost of the building, barns, site,: wells, windmill, etc., as follows: T. G. Deverell, masonry contract, $6,775; Brown and Cooper, car- pentry, $6,375; A. Matthews, roofing contract, $920; E. Livingston, paint and glazing, $820; Bennett and Wright, con- tract, $3,151; G. M. Miller, ar- chitects, $556.30; Mr. Stephen- son, barn contract, $1,555.60; livestock and _ implements, $477.28; 'furnishings, $824.18; cost of site, $3,113.50. CONTRACT AWARDED In 1949 county council began discussions regarding the con- struction of a new home. The contract was awarded in 1950 and Fairview Lodge, Dundas Street West, Whitby, was offi- cially opened in December 1951, by the Hon. G. Arthur Welsh, provincial secretary and minis- ter of civil defence. Mr. Welsh, at that time the member for Muskoka-Ontario Riding, was later the sheriff of Ontario County. The opening of the building, one of the first of a new type of home for the aged pioneered by Ear! Ludlow, director of homes for the aged, was attended by a large number of provincial and civic dignitaries including Pre- mier Leslie M. Frost, many former wardens of the county and civic officials. Arrangements for the opening were handled by Reeve Duncan B. McIntyre of Whitby, who was assisted by Reeve Mrs. Helen McKenzie of Beaverton and Reeve Rae M. Ferguson of Ux- bridge. Warden Ferguson Munro presided. Rev. Robert Scott, minister of the Whitby United Church and Rev. James E. Har- vey, rector of St. John's Angli- ean Church, Port Whitby, took part in the dedicatory cere- monies. Bible and testaments were presented by Sidney Par- rott, president of the Oshawa Camp of Gideons International. Rounthwaite and _ Fairfield, Toronto, were the architects and George Hardy Limited were .he general contractors. Mr. and Mrs. James Read acted as superintendents of the old home for the aged on High Street and later at Fairview Lodge for a total of 19 years. Following Mrs, Read's retire- ment these duties have been performed since 1953 by Mrs. Muriel Coates. JOINT ENDEAVOR Fairview Lodge was first operated through a joint ar- rangement with the City of Osh- awa whereby Oshawa as well as county residents were cared for. However, due to the need for more accommodation Osh- awa constructed Hillsdale Manor in 1960. Fairview Lodge had since accommodated only residents. Mrs. Coates said this week the 220 beds at Fairview Lodge are fully occupied and there is q waiting list of between 60 and 7¢ persons. The opening of the new home at Beaverton will provide an additional 150 beds. Hillsdale Manor today has 304 beds following the construction of a 100-bed addition two years ago, It also has a waiting list, Time For Heart Searching For Indians And Leaders By RAM SUNDAR NEW DELHI (CP)--A great wave of self-analysis is sweeping across India as the country begins the 2ist year of its independence. Politicians, government Officials, editors, trade union- ists and ordinary people have been assessing the fruits of self-government. Thousands of rallies have been held all over the coun- try, and even the remote vil- lages of the Himalayas organ- ized month-long ceremonies to commemorate the anniver- sary of the end of British rule in August, 1947. "This is a time for heart- searching and plain speaking for the people and leaders of India," said one newspaper. "Unless we are absolutely honest with ourselvse, the freedom we have won may prove to be worthless." This self-analysis has led to conflicting comments from various quarters. As Prime Minister Indira Gandhi put it: "Some people say we have achieved nothing in these 20 years. There are others who point out that a lot of pro- gress has been made in many nation-building spheres. The truth lies somewhere between the two statements." ATTACK CAPITALISM The government has Taunched a massive publicity drive to counter Communist and Socialist party propa- ganda to the effect that only a "real revolution" can solve the nation's basic problems. "We cannot be said to be free until the capitalist sys- tem is abolished," says Shri- pad Dange, top Communist leader. "What the Gandhi government and its predeces- sors have given us is only indigenous maladministration as against British maladmin- istration." Responsible observers say that the real picture is far different from what the goy- ernment"s leftist critics paint. They say India has made striking progress in the last 20 years despite droughts, an explosive population growth, TODAY IN HISTORY By THE CANADIAN PRESS Aug. 31, 1967 The Japanese fleet bom- barded Port Arthur, China's largest naval base, 73 years ago today--in 1894--and captured it a few months later, after the conquest of Korea, When peace was made the following year, Europeans insisted the port be returned to China, so 'Russia quickly obtained its use as the only ice-free base for her Pacific fleet. Meanwhile, Japan began to menace Korea, which, being nominally neutral, asked for Russian protec- tion setting the stage for the Russo-Japanese War of 1904. 1811--Louis Antoine de Bougainville, French explorer, died. 1962--Trinidad won inde- pendence. First World War Fifty years ago today--in 1917--German attack began on Riga as the Dvina River was crossed. Serbians attacked in the Drobopolis- Moglena sector of the Bal- kans. Second World War Twenty-five years ago today--in 1942--German armored units advanced 10 miles through British mine fields at southern end of the El Alamein-Qattara line in western Egypt. Chinese reached outskirts of Nan- chang in continuing offen- sive, \ mass Illiteracy and external and internal uncertainties, An Indian child now can hope to live for 51 years ag against only 29 at the time of independence. This is the result of the massive public health plans which have near- ly wiped out malaria, plague, typhoid and other scourges. GROWS MORE FOOD The current drought situa- tion has obscured the fact that annual food production has gone up by nearly 62 per cent since 1950. The total cule tivated area has increased by 24.6 per cent. The number 'of children af school has trebled to 72, 000,000. Today, eight out of every 10 children in the 6-11 age group are at school as br a only four out of 10 in Observers add that India has made striking progress in industrialization, oil explora- tion, steel production and the peaceful uses of atomie energy. The Times of India wrote that 'for a country where bullock carts outnumber auto- mobiles 12 to 1, India has come as far as being able to build jet engines and a pluto- nium plant, design comput- ers, develop a new rocket fuel and manufacture transform- ers, steel mill machinery, oil rigs, electronic equipment and television receivers." There now are more than 12,000 scientific research workers in India. The country Publishes some 600 scientific journals and organizes train- ing programs for Afro-Asian students in various branches of technology. PEOPLE ANXIOUS But, paradoxically, India's mood today cannot be said to a joyous one, In fact, here is deep anxiety that freedom has not produced the expect- ed results. Left-wing parties are busy exploiting the public misgivings for political pur- Poses. Most Indians who argue that the fruits of tenditen have been disappointing also hasten to add that the demo- cratic system cannot be blamed for the shortcomings. As Pran Nath Mishra, a Young electronics engineer here, said: "All this only means that we have not put democracy to the best use. In any case, the country is not prepared for regimentation of the Chinese or the Russian type." Indians are particular proud that a country pei inheried so many crushing problems from British rule has been able to hold four free and fair democratic elec- tions at regular intervals. Last February's massive election in which 200,000,000 people took part came off in the midst of the worst famine in a century, In the words of Adi Bharu- cha, a local school teacher: "The mistakes we have made are the mistakes of free men. There is no reason to be unduly despondent,." FRI Frenchman's popular place for Bay Ridge: Firs' For BROUGHAM ( tory in Action Da in Brougham for secutive year, bu time 't will be Sept. 16 and 17. Chairman of | Township Museun ert Miller, Bro boar? members Bay Ridges, M Brocklin, Mrs. W Squires Beach an Fox, Locust Hill : Storry, museum tary, have made and hope to dot triple the 2,000 | last year. The Canadian ih will participate 11 starting at in Action parade 1,30 Brougham park, way 7 to the mu at the western Brougham. They will be tumes, and acc the beat of the tell the story | from father to go snake, eagle, p war dances, steam gas Also taking pai rade will be old 1 engines, engines, tr: drawn buggies, d and democrat wa be in Various women' period c young school child pioneer dresses. ] awarded for the 1 costume. PIONEER CRAF1 All pioneer art will be on displa two days. Weavi quilt:ng, candle 1 sage making wit tions being given. Of special inte ladies will be a « of 40 to 50 diffe: herns used to pickle making a medical purposes. Workers Help Pa WHITBY (Staft of volunteers are | for another winter to help the patien tario Hospital, Wt The first meeti the Volunteers' will be a council ; representatives fro of volunteers will October, and man. individuals will be Anyone wishing services, or to le: garding the volunt ded are asked to Louise Hart, co - volunteers at the pital Whitby. BROCI WHITBY Feoture At: 6:55 and 9:21 a PAKULA-MULLIG et Starring Academy / SANDY D) SATURD.

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