Oshawa Times (1958-), 22 Dec 1967, p. 19

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VISION NA 725-1685 u the glory aS, > holiday and heart, APPY NEW YEAR "and Staff of LES LTD. BOWMANVILLE With thanks many friends appy Holiday . ESTATE © TD, ER RES ORE Edna Lawton, a_ school crossing guard at this Essex County town 17 miles south- east of Windsor, had an added hazard to her job late THE OSHAWA TIMES, Friday, December 22, 1967 19 iota natn eee eM COUNTY LINES Ceresmore Farm Awarded Durham Com King Crown BLACKSTOCK (TC) -- Ceres-jnece . . . The Maple Grove {more Farm, operated by Garn-|/Brownie Pack, which will hold) jet Rickard and Son, has woniits first meeting, Jan. 2, is seek-| jthe Durham County Corn Kingjing new members... A Christ-| 2 |crown with a yield of 135.4 bush-|mas Eve Family Service will be els per acre. A close secondjheld in Maple Grove United was Newton Carl Selby with/Church at 7:30 p.m. ... Mr.) |133.8 bushels. The awards were|and Mrs. Ivan Mountjoy, Black-) announced at the annual ban-|stock, entertained at a dinner! quet of the soil and crop as- party, in honor of Mr. and Mrs. | STOP, LOOK, SPLASH! $s * |, ecco' with the crop produc-) 4 |tion department of UCO, told \of the development of future} varieties. Harvey Wright, soil -\and field crop specialist, O: tario department of agriculture, showed slides and spoke regard-|are: % ling corn production in the coun-| Willia ociation. ' {Harold Hocken, on the occasion! North Durham top prizes went of their 50th wedding anniver- 0: Clarence Brown, 124.7 bush-|sary ... A host of friends and s jels; John Bonsma, 118.1 bush-|relatives called to extend con-} jels; Harvey Graham, 116 bush-|gratulations to Mr. and Mrs.) els and Roy Strong, 116 bush- Norman Wright, Blackstock, on) jels. the occasion of their 60th wed-) Dr. Ramsis Girgis, a plant ding anniversary. | | ORANGE LODGE BLACKSTOCK (TC) -- The n-|Officers of Loyal Orange Lodge, |No, 133, were re - elected. They) John Hamilton, master;| m Ferguson, deputy mas- jter; Herbert Swain, chaplain; | ly. : {Richard VanCamp, recording| ® Thursday when almost three inches of rain, with tempera- tures in the 50s, doused the following slate of officers was elected at the December meet-} men: Mrs. J. Forder, y| | president; Mrs. T. C. Graham,|for 1968 are: Jean Mahaffy,| in a |secretary; Roy Ferguson, treas-} BI caetaee vane, the Ber Ernest Swain, marshall. | ONO CLUB ng of the Anglican Church Wo-| BLACKSTOCK (TC).-- Offi-| honorary|cers elected by the ONO Club) resident; Mrs, John Hamilton,|President; Joan Graham, vice-| ce'- president; Mrs. J. A. Mc-|President; Shirley Turner, sec- |Arthur, secretary; Mrs, F. Stan-|Tetary; Pat Fletcher, treasur- iland, treasurer, er. The club made a donation jto the Tuberulosis Association | SPECIAL SERVICES land held an exchange of gifts. | BLACKSTOCK (TC) -- Spe- é cial services were held in the UCW PROGRAMS United and Anglican Churches) BLACKSTOCK (TC) -- Christ- last Sunday. Special music andjmas programe featur-| sands a candlelight service were heldjed the meetings of the Can-) (CP Wirephoto) EUROPEAN COMMON MARKET FACES BIG DECISION IN 1968 By CARL MOLLINS Canadian Press Staff Writer Europe's Common Market, 10 years old Jan. 1, has some uncommonly tough decisions to make in 1968. The six-country European Economic Community is in @ state of siege a decade after the Treaty of Rome, its found- ing charter, came into force. Partly because of the pres- sures from outside, internal dissension threatens to balk progress towards even the first tanget--the free flow of materials, manpower and money throughout the com- munity--let alone the longer aims of social and political unity advocated by staunch Europeans. The community's difficulties --whether to expand the club's membership, how to avoid stagnation--result ironi- cally from its success during the last decade. The skeptics and the ultra- cautious Europeans who stood aloof in the late 1950s are scrambling now to get into the club. Britain, Ireland, Norway and Denmark say they want right in, while most other Eu- ropean countries are petition- ing for at least associate membership. ATTACK FARM POLICY From outside Europe, trad- ers are chipping away at the community's common exter- nal tariff wall, due to be fully in place by next July along with the removal of the last customs duties on manufac- tures traded among members France, West Germany, Italy, Belgium, Luxemburg and The Netherlands. The Kennedy Round of world trade talks completed last May was partly an exer- cise by the United States, Canada and other outsiders to weaken the community's com- mon tariff against imports. Even before digestion of the Kennedy Round tariff cuts has begun, the community is under renewed attack on several fronts. The market's farm-products policy, with common pricing system and elaborate subsidies, is said to be disrupting world trade even before it comes into force fully next summer. An agreed unified system of tax- ing manufactures, due for im- plementation by 1970, has been criticized on the ground it will discriminate against imports. Such continuous pressure from an anxious and envious outside world naturally cre- ates echoes of dissension among the six. Should the community react defensively and concentrate on consolida- | tion of internal progress, as | President de Gaulle urges, or | should the six be expansive and outward-looking, as the Dutch among others advo- cate? STRAINED BY JEALOUSY Opposing attitudes toward proposed new members and other pressures from outside are current expressions of a basic conflict about the com- munity's very nature, whether it is to be a full confederation, as some Brussels Eurocrats foresee, or a loose consor- tium, as the Elysee Palace in- sists. at the United Church. Carols|dace and Anna Units of the) were sung in the evening at the| UCW. Mrs. W. Mahaffy and Anglican Church with members|Mrs. P. Romeril took part in of the local and Port Perry|the Candace Unit program churches taking part. |Those contributing to the Anna} The Maple Grove Wolf Cubs|Unit program were Mrs. S.| and Boy Scouts presented a/Van Camp, Mrs. Fred Dayes, Christmas program and the|/Mrs. L. Byers, Mrs. Hill, Mrs.| pageant "Peace on Earth' to a\Samells, Mrs. Mountjoy. Mrs.| large. and appreciative audi-|Skelding and Mrs, Taylor Centennial Prayer Book © Covers Ups, Downs Of Life By GERARD McNEIL \Elizabethan era didn't make} y sens to | mis comme nial Anthology of Prayer, 8 An exception is The Lord's milestone in religious litera-|prayer, rendered not only in| ture, might have been high and)mnglish and French but in Es-/ mighty. kimo syllabics, Mohawk, Cree, | Instead it is as humble 45\Gaelic and Esperanto. | The Prayer for Elevator Oper-| The editors dug deep to come ators, one of its 185 invocations. up with prayers appropriate to| "Lord, you understand my|Canada's 1967 celebrations of| The strains are exaggerated by inevitable personal and na- tional jealousies. The angry reaction of some non-French |of the job and of life. leaters to de Gaulle's anti-An- glo attitudes has been as much pique at the idea of France dictating community |faiths. The editorial committee} policy as any feverish desire jincluded Roman Catholics to get Britain into the club right now. |Church clergymen. | As the December session of | The conference is so broad| the community council of min- | isters convened, there was an- | position," begins the prayer of/100 years of Confederation. | the elevator operators | It goes on to an acceptance LINES FROM SHAKESPEARE lof the inevitable ups and downs Even Shakespeare contributes | something, with the following jlines from Henry VI: "Bless this food, O Lord, we pray "On this glad centennial Publisher of the anthology is the Canadian Interfaith Confer-| ence, which has 34 member| ay "May this land be strong and free "As we live O Lord for Thee, Amen." ' The anthology bounds un-| evenly at times from beauty to) Jews, Anglican and United that the word ecumenicism,| which refers to a_ Christian) xious talk that a French {movement of unity, is avoided thos, focus Pal Telthatd de blackbal] against Britain could split the market in 1968. | However, few experts on the | Continent appeared to believe | that even an open, blazing row over Britain's application would be enough to unwind the formidable commercial bonds strung among the six during the last decade. | FEAR STAGNATION What troubles some Euro- peans is the danger of stagna- tion. Now that the six have | agreed on a customs union, | farm-products policy and | common external tariffs, the next. obvious steps are to- wards harmonized programs on everything from transport, energy resources and indus- | trial research to social wel- | fare, government spending and economic planning. The need for greater harmony among the six on so- cial and political issues be- comes greater as free internal trade begins to disrupt old patterns of employment and | industry. But as pressure for deci- | sions on such basic questions mounts, the community is still searching for a consensus on its future. What is required is something to reconcile the Gaullist view that member nations must retain freedom of choice and the Eurocrat idea that surrender of nation- al sovereignty is inevitable. Wool Protein Feeds Rats WELLINGTON (CP) -- A New Zealand scientist has pre- cipitated protein from wool to produce an edible substance which has kept rats alive for 31 days. The protein is gritty and looks fibrous like some animal meals. So far the product is not ypal- atable to human beings. But the extraction of protein suggests that it might be developed at some future time as food. Dr. F. B. Shorland, of the De- partment of Scientific and In- dustrial Research food chemis- try division, says most wool contains about 60-per-cent pro- tein, compared with about 11 pér cent for meat, : NEWS BRIEFS A LOT OF TALKING LONDON (CP) -- The post of- fice has just got around to in- stalling a 29-year-old technical advance in the telephone sys- tem. Known as Pulse Code Mo-} dulation, it allows up to 24 con-} versations to be carried on si-| multaneously on two pairs of wires. Although he patented the system in 1938, the inventor says it needed modern transis- tors and circuitry to work. EXPORTS RISE LONDON (CP)--As miniskirts go up and up, so do garment manufacturers' exports. Makers of man-made fibres reported ex- ports have gone up by more than $25,000,000 in the first nine months of 1967. The increase was mostly due to the heavy de mand for extra-long stocking and Baits worn with thigh-hig! elaine Weatherbee 675, Lisa Prusinski|Bees 3, S$ and H 2 | in deference to Buddhist, Mus- ; ; im. Tawigh and other non-|Chardin's majestic Hymn to the Christian members. Universe to the anonymous Even the cross can't be used|Prayer for the Era of Alumi- as a general symbol by the con-|num and Steel. ference. Instead, the imagina-| Mennonites, Doukhobors, Sev-| tive cover of the anthology car- enth-Day Adventists, Quakers ries the white swirl of a galaxy|ttead through the pages in com- in the blue-black depths of/Pany with the Metaphysical So- space. jciety of Canada, Albert Schweit- lzer, Mary Baker Eddy, Karl SOME IN FRENCH Barth, Reinhold Niebuhr and Editor Ramsay Armitage, an|"'possibly Cardinal Newman," Anglican who is principal emer-/as one entry is signed. itus of Toronto's Wycliffe Col-| The Interfaith Confer- lege, was swamped with mate-|ence headquarters here mailed rial by enthusiastic members. | more than 20,000 copies to The foreword contains a can-|clergymen across Canada. dur- did admission that not all the|ing the winter, with order forms psalms, graces, benedictions,|through which more can be had litanies and even playlets "are|at $1 a copy. on the same level of creativ-| The anthology may become ity."' the definitive work for inter-| "The sense of unity of all Ca-|faith services. Besides prayers nadians praying together was|for Expo and the Centennial, | what we hoped to achieve,"|there are more for Parliament, | writes Montreal businessman|the provinces, industrial work-| Lavy M. Becker, the conferencejers, scientists, travellers, writ-| chairman and a former rabbi./ers and broadcasters. | Though more than one-third) Midway through the anthol- of the contents is in French,/ogy is a page bearing a series the anthology generally avoids of dotted blank lines and the translation. heading Priere pour tout Cana- "Everything suffers in trans- dien--A Prayer for every Cana-| lation," says Mr, Becker. "Prot-|dian, The idea is that the! estant prayers written in the|reader write his own. } OSHAWA BOWLING NEWS -- LADIES MAJOR "B" LEAGUE Earl Schaefer 642, Guy Williams 425 and High Triples: Ruby Lane 698, Anne|Fern Buechier 600 { |Knop 685 (311), Wilma McQuade 679, Vi) High Singles -- Royce Weatherbes 325,| Rorison 670, Pheobe Mullen 658, Nan 243, kK 316, 279, 255, + Pat| Bennet 619, Rose stovin 617, Hazel Rum-| sith s97, 'tae elaine Westherbee 2% pel 616, Cella Wigg 608, Annette Burrows|237, june St. ie 260, , Lisa Pru- 607, Betty Campbell 605 and Bert Cole cae 258, 246, Susanne Bowers 250, a A Ralph McCullough 249, Bob Spooner 245, dant night. ab Ries "Sano ee ode Earl Schaefer 241, 229, Brenda Willlam- Meanie. Ui, Mn Nee lee a ee ee ee Burden 219, Beth Shortt 213, Irene Moore) "Team Standing -- First Downs 14, The | 209 and Molly Sweet 207. Joneses 14, DeHartless Ones 14, Civic! Points Taken: Mister TV Towers 4,|Squares 10, Charlie Browns 7, Bob) Henderson's 0; Burn's 1, Motor City 3;|Nickels 4, | | | 235, | J.J Sayweil's 4, Mitchell's 0; Flowers 6 Penrose 1 and Whites 3. | Team Standings: Saywell's 19, Mister | TV Towers 12, Motor City 11, Flowers by; High Triples -- T. Cusack 760 ( Penrose 10, White's 9 Burn's 9/294, 2317, N. Bocher 759 (270, 318), Mitcheil's 8 and Henderson's 3. Gwilliam 727 (236, 283, 208), R. Wright. 724 (266, 259), W. Hare 714 (371, 233),| Rivoire 711 (265, 224, 222), S. Law-| CATHOLIC LEAGUE rence 701 (220, 259, 222), R. Holmes 692 High Triples: John A. Cardinal 907/(212, 282), J. Huband 686 (216, 273) and (287, cells Lo Read Sd 7 (287),|F, Melonson 680 (222, 274). | Bruce England 65! D D Mac- i ee Doneid 60 (iy Jin Brady. 4S (23), late' ashe Dubedu ath De enh Sheila Infusini 645 (273), Art Cardinallosp °c. Jackson 250, R. Graham 248, A, 624 (264), Joe O/Malley 622 (230), Rose| joynt 245, D. Dow 245, P. Small 243 and Chipman 610 and Michele Brady 600|i° "Hare 247, Di | (247). | High Singles: Jean Dickison 260, Linda} Team Standing -- Beatty Haulage 28, Losier 250, Oben Arsenault 246, Colin|Dodgers 24, General Printers 21, Maple) MacKinnon 244, Carmel Simkins 242,|Cleaners 19, Honyokers 17, Doyles 16, Earl Marshall 241, Bob Rorabeck 240,|Rebels 16, Hambly's Bev. 15, Western Loretta Gates 231 and John MacDonnel|Oll 11 and Patte's Paints 8. 2 | COMMERCIAL LEAGUE 25. Points Taken: Leaders 4, Swingers 0; Champs 3, Jet-Set 1, Hippies 3, Gliders 1; Pin piste %, Tigers 1; Night Hawks 25 jes 1, sdigine is High Singles: Shirley HiIl 271, Fran |Bradley (239), Mary Driscoll 219, Jessie CITY HALL LEAGUE |Hamacker 214, Marg Rak 213, Ethel High Triples. -- Jack Goodman e50,|Thompson 211 and Ella Smart 207, 2at Smith 739, Royce Weatherbee 675,| Team Standing: Tinkle Bells 3, Locals 1. _ UAW. LADIES AUX. No, 27 wid NE eae Ellen Burrus 640 (188, job Spooner 485, June St. Onge 453,12, Stars 2, Go Go Girlie 1 and They enjoyed getting it! They're proud of if! CHARBRL ERT AV 600 King St. E. (east mall) Their friends had got it. They wondered what it was like: Then their friends invited them over. It was very nice. They went home and thought about it. Then they got it. They enjoyed it very much. They had their neighbours over. Soon their neighbours had it. Now just about everybody's got it. They all like it. What a happy community! Isn't that nice ? You haven't got it yet? Oh dear! It's very easy to get. All it takes is a phone call. You'll like it. Why don't you... GET IT! INSTALLATION ONLY $9.95 @ MONTHLY ONLY $4.95 Christmas Gift Certificates Available At Our Office CALL NOW! Phone now 723-5278

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