Oshawa Times (1958-), 13 Sep 1967, p. 21

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lece of canvas. Then place @ ress on the rack with all the vatched accessories pinned te ie fabric. When you arrive mply whisk a complete en. mie from suitcase to closet, nsellor.will show you bright. Here's a. real leaning. --.and save cou SSUPON) Af}! mini! 2 one to choose? Resnick makes it with this exciting fe little swingers, own personality. on't let their mint fool you... with . us one, two and ipartments they'll feminine frippery. hardware look ie showing up en @ rings and clasps. love their smooth inish, Have yours een, coffee bean, new tan, black or ~ prown, 9.00 R's +a CONTE ihe ver 9 P.M. THE OSHAWA TIMES, Wednetdey, September 13, 1967 $5,000 In Prizes Talented teen-agers across Canada will share over five thousand dollars in prize money in a writing contest exclusively for secondary school students. Canada Permanent Trust Cen- tennial Writing Contest offers great scope to young imagina- tions. The rules state that en- tries of up to 2,500 words can be on "any subject that makes you eager to talk on paper." Juding emphasis will focus on imaginative treatment combined with lucid expression. Entries may be in either English or French. Top awards are $1,500 first prize, $1,000 second and $500 third. There will also be sixteen regional prizes of $100 and twenty honorable mentions of 25. Distinguished writers will judge the Canada Permanent Trust Centennial Writing Con- test, headed by the noted Can- adian educator, poet and critic, Earle Birney. Marijuana Warning BLACKPOOL, England (Reu- ters)--Marijuana may contain cancer-producing agents more deadly than those in tobacco, a scientist told the British Phar- maceutical Conference here Monday. Prof. John Stenlake said the agents in Marijuana may be "for all we know, more deadly than those from tobacco." Stenlake, head of the pharma- cy department of Glasgow's Strathclyde University, also éaid that those who want mari- juana legalized lack a sense of public responsibility. There is definite evidence, he declared, that for many usage of marijuana is a sure road to heroin addiction. Civil Action Started PORT DOVER, Ont. (CP) 8 operators of a refreshment booth on a local boardwalk have started civil action against the mayor, police chief and three councillors over the Aug. 11 closure of their stand. Summonses claiming dam- ages have been received by Mayor Harold Schneider, Police Chief Ivan Irwin, and Council- lors Oral Misner, Pius Miller and Jack Irving. The booth, operated by Irene Domaszlay and Zoltan Deme- ter, both of Simcoe, was closed by the town for violation of Sunday hours of ration, and also by Dr. H. H. Washburn, medical health officer. Police Chief Irwin said Mon- day night he didn't know what objections were held by . Dr. Washburn. A town bylaw restricts Sun- day business operations to 1:30 p.m. to midnight. New York Paper Lauds Stanfield NEW YORK (CP)--The Times says Canada's Progres- sive Conservatives "are clearly looking forward, not standing still" in their selection of Rob- ert Stanfield as their new lead- er. The paper says in an editorial that the party's emphatic rejec- tion of John Diefenbaker's lead- ership suggests the Conserva- tives "will endorse more ration- al and constructive policies than the erratic, opportunistic and frequently anti-American course" followed by Diefenba- ker. The Times says Diefenba- ker's 'uncertain foreign policy and his indecisiveness on domestic issues cost him heay- ily in Canada but he retained a surprisingly tenacious hold over his party that stemmed in part from his personal magnetism and in part from his effective- ness in political debate." Stanfield, the paper says, is a 'quiet, modest man" respected for his integrity and his moder- ation and regarded by the Con- servatives as the man to unite the party and forge construc- tive alternatives to Liberal party policies. "Constructive alternatives are sorely needed," the paper says. "Canada will miss 'Dief's' inflamed oratory and impas- sioned debate but Mr. Stanfield shows promise of being attuned to political realities, appealing to reason rather than emotion in disavowing anti-American- ism as 'immature' and pledging 'to work for full equality for all Canadians." Games Provided Time Of Testing SASKATOON (CP) -- Cana- dian scientists made use of the Pan-American Games in Winni- peg to study the performance of the human body under stress. At trials held in Saskatoon before the games Prof. Lee Coyn of the University of Mani- toba and his assistant, Don Fletcher, set up a test room at the University of Saskatche- wan. 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