Durham Region Newspapers banner

The Oshawa Times, 29 Mar 1960, p. 4

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

4 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Tuesdey, Merch 29, 1960 REVISE DEBENTURES Classroom Est Were $15,000 Light HAMPTON (Staff) -- the lowest tender for four addi-|by September tional classrooms for two Darling-|be required in the next two years. ton schools was $15,000 above] Council decided to ask the what the school board figured! OMB for approval of a revised they would cost. Darlington coun- bylaw for $75,000. The new class- cil will be forced to ask the On-rooms are required for Maple tario Municipal Board to author- Grove West school and West ize a bigger debenture. [Courtice school, s The township had decided to] From a report submitted by horrow $60,000 for the project, public schools inspector T. R ahd gave a bylaw first and second McEwan, it was learned that 19 readings. The bylaw is now in the new classrooms will be required hands of the Ontario Municipal by 1962. Mr. McEwan"s report Board awaiting approval. was based on suggestions by de- Tenders were called, and the partment of education officials, board was aghast when seven Mr. Hobbs stated tenders opened revealed prices. The projected figures for the above $65,000 for construction area school population and the ad- alone. This did not include archi-|ditional classroom facilities re. . Preserve 1mates | By ELSA STORRY BROUGHAM -- Jeanne Ar- mour, home furnishing special- ist, of the home economics branch of the Ontario department of agriculture, told members of Pickering Women's Institute to recapture the loveliness of old by 1962. There are at present 280 living, students and the number will in-| The members brought nistor- crease to 323 by 1962 ical pieces to the meeting, held shool iL ton, willjin St. Andrew's Presbyterian Koi os Ba, |Chureh, Pickering, Friday. class-| : 4 Miss Armour said people in the rooms by 1962. There are at pres. ed os Tad ae oi 13 stwdentis oy oe ore" more interest in their history % : ,. than Canadians, but recently, School No: 12, Mitchell's Cor-\ yore concern had been shown ners, will require two additional|; ec She mentioned the Pioneer classrooms by 1962. There are at|yillage near Woodbridge; Hali- present 125 students and the|p, ton House in the Maritimes; number will increase to 188 by william Lyon MacKenzie House 1962 in Toronto, and a proposed his- School No. 9, Salem, will re-|torical museum near Cornwall, quire three additional classrooms| Canada has a long history of by 1962. There are at present 75(fine cabinet and furniture mak- Urges Need To Relics (dry sink, the dough box, in which | bread was placed to rise, and the| » {Mammy bench, part enclosed in| § {which a baby might recline : | Miss Armour stressed the ur-| 3 | gency of preserving these old ar-| ticles. If there was no place for| |them in the home they could be| Because|the new classrooms be provided) Schoo) No. 6, Maple Grove, will pieces hidden in attics, and re- donated or loaned to a local mu- Many more will require two additional classrooms new useful articles for modérn|seum, she said. She added (hat {too many had been lost or de- {stroyed. OLD RELICS On display were a number of] fascinating old pieces, most of them dating back 100 to 150 years. | An intricate china dog, fashioned in 1845 at a pottery near Brant ford; an early Canadian delicate corsage holder,; a charcoal bura-| ing iron, used many years ago Rosebank in Pickering Township, were displayed by Mrs. K. H. J.| Clarke, of the Post House. Pick. | ering. | A large Brittania metal teapot of graceful lines, a stool worked | lace scarf, copy books with beau- Guide Meeting At Maple Grove Brownies Association met at the home of Mrs. Bruce Stalker Monday, with Mrs. William O'Neil presiding. Brown Owl Mrs, Wally Both. well reported progress in sales of oven-savers. The Guide Tea will be held April 9 and mothers of will donate candy and mothers Guides will provide home bak- ng. Tests for the Girls Gui hostess badge will take place the tea. It was announced that Guide cookie day will be April 30. Corres spondence was read concerning the provincial convention at St. Catherines and Mrs. O'Neil said it is hoped to hold a Guide's Own meeting later on with Mrs. Line ton of Orodo as guest speaker, A discussion was also held on the Guide summer camp, Lunch was served by the host ess, PERSONALS i Priscilla Wagner, Belleville, {spending this week with Mr. and in petit point and needle point; .l iMrs. A. E. David. | Mrs. Pear] Cornett, Mr, and Mrs. Harold Baker, all of To- ronto, were guests of Mr, and tectural fees and furnishings, quired are as follows: siudents and the number will in-/ing, Miss Armour said. A School |l2 which will amount to around, School No. 8, Courtice. will re- crease to 125 by 1962 of Arts and Crafts was estab-|tiful $9000. quire eight additional classrooms! The total attendance in South lished as far back as 1663. Early manuscript EXPECT BIG INCREASE by 1962. There are at present 413 Darlington area schools is 1041, styles were predominantly were all part of School board building commit- children attending the school, By 1962 the number is expected French, from the straight, sim- viewed at the meeting. ; i . # ; Mrs. Fred Gow, Sunda tee chairman Herbert Mackie told and this will increase to 69 by/to increase to 1300, Mr. Hobbs|ple lines of the Louis XIII period, Tea and refreshments were) . te i ur : Vi : 444 ! ow, N ny. Good eountil that it is imperative that 1962 aid to the curved, more ornate lines/served by the Pickering host png org et Conger 4 ; i au Mire Toownd Hind me THE VLASICS , AND STJEPAN, 1 SRIPRAY- al) % = Sated Gurisy the reign of Lovis/estes : WITH 2 SONS, TOMISLAY, § man visied "Ir, Hindman, whe : Fear F loods COMPLETE INTEGRATION "Staple Grove Choir held a so Way Of Peace HonestJohn =" SE cnet day evening in he Sustay school In Tanganyika For Amy ST . In Canada United Empire Loyalists. wit Tammy Rogers has returned Eu- penmanship, and music| inscribed by the collection styles the task of clearing the land, i making shelters, seeking food . [] i LJ and clothing, used simple. home- n 1C ering made furniture | © { { 11 11 [nome from Sick Children's Hos GOLDEN AGE AJAX (Staff) There is some] |pital, Toronto, after undergoing | Meanwhile, the golden age of apprehension of heavy flood con-| |cabinet making was in progress ditions in the Duffin Creek val-| {in England and Miss Armour out- (ley in the near future ™ OTTAWA (CP) -- Army head-|lined the styles that were brought! A sudden rise in temperature tive to the vi pe © nly as-| ( p © " p 9 v i Hive iv the Viviere Summonly a Bl Hse « ounLY 3 300,000 pec quarters is expected to announce|to Canada, reminiscent of the|coupled with warm rains could] ence movements, Julius. K. Nye-|African 000 Batopeony hui soon, possibly today, the adoption work of the Adams brothers, the bring down a record torrent of 3 y 4 I o 28 t ie Q 3 _ . rere offers the Tanganyika way. 75,000 Asians of Je American Honest John Jee Soastalions of Spey. flood water. i It emphasizes peaceful agita- Non-Africans opposed to" colon. 2 HWErY rocket. Rais : pre bj hd a Sseraton,} One perennial trouble hl tion as opposed to eruptive dem-|ialism have supported the African] The weapon will be called the Many books skip the Victorian|the Riverside Drive area north| te fapmi i i i style, Miss Armour said, as the|of Pickering Village. There have|and their families onstrations and conspiracy; unity nationalists and accepted their '"point-762" in the Canadian army|St¥'€: said, of Pickering ag i ] iy ian Tif a Orieste ri y Y1old mixed with new, elaborate de- |b, occasions in past vears/grated into Canadian life as suc-|at Trieste . of purpose among the African, |leadership rather than attempt to|because it is thought that Honesticions were: somewhat despised | ten Casio av %s -escued cessfully as the Hungarian refu-| The young Yugoslav applied for apartment. European and Asian communities follow the pattern of minority : : a Ens were: son pise when yésidenis have heen rescued, ees in 1957 admission fo Australia as an im-|husband will be released from the| rather than enmity and suspicion. domination that has caused bit-|90N" Might have a reference to During the period from 1840 to/from their inundated homes by Be The Migrant and was accepted. But|sanatorium within two months, Mr, Nyerere, president of the terness in neighboring territories,|Prime Minister John Diefen 190, the Victorian lives were iboats c A tots (anata NA ie Manira was rejected because she|cured." Tanganyika African National The non-Africans, says Mr. baker. "'Point-762" will stand for ' ded into early (Gothic), middle] Rising in the hills of Uxbridge Canadian Press shows tha Of Satfering Irom. tubercolosis f the 100TH: cas ' lily, Hamilton, were weekend i 2 leader 8 rere. | BOOZ! that in ANY French i lat which em-|townshi ' alls|the 100 TB patients now have been| "<0 = 5 WerCILOBIS. | Of the cases, five were Union and leader of the 30-man Nyerere, have recognized that in| 769 metres. the diameter of the rel anc hg v } el |township, Duffin's Creek falls he ! Pp : ~ digi Ferid decided against going to|accepted for treatment by Nova| guests of Mr. and Mrs. Charles opposition in the territorial legis-|the final analysis their best guar braced the square or pulpit type rapidly on its way to the lake-|released from hospital, and al-|, ior 2nd married Manira. (Scotia, 15 by New Brunswick 15( Snowden. lature, gave an insight during ajantee for the future is the good. @MMmunition furniture. Many Canadian "'par-(front in Ajax most an equal number have pei. hreak came when Canadalpy Quebec, 3 by Ontario, 10 by, Mrs. Fred Gow and her mother, two-day visit here into the work- will of the majority The government has ditched lors" were like their British coun'| From Highway No. 7 there is|found jobs decided to accept T as| Manitoba and 10 by Saskat- Mrs. F. Dresser, called on Mrs, " lea' ea 8 ~ ~ gp " 4 of i " x H 1 - » | R " ings of Tanganyika's independ- SWEPT 1958 ELECTIONS ans fo acquire the American|terparts, with ornate furnishings,|s fall of 75 feet to Pickering.| It's expected that most of thela contribution to World Refugee!chewan [John Campbell who is a patient ence machine . When the first elections ere L ground-io-ground mis- waxed flowers, woolwork, shell-igy the way there are many|refugees still in hospital will be|Year The siz proviices are bearie it Oshawa General Hospital. In printed and oral statements, held in 1958, the African National sile. though Mr, Diefenbaker an- work and curios displayed inipiaces where ice jams can form. |discharged within two or three! Mrs. Foco si Toronto ya cost of treatment and the fod.) Mr, and Mrs, Sam Castle, Paul he outlined the Tanganyika way, Union formed four years earlier nounced Oct 1, 1958, it would be/What-nots One of these is north of Riverside months. By that time most of the sanatorium and her child is be- ,. TE ae o|and Roger, Peterborough, were proudly noting that it bas obvi- by Mr. Nyerere put up its own obtained for the army DN Drive on the east branch, Water!males and a large number of|ing cared for by the Toronto|c,. oo Sect e='., : 1 lguests of Mrs. L. C. Snowden ated the nightmarish tug-of-war|candidates for the 10 African Def . Mini P ; y OLD AND NEW dammed back and when broken|women will be working Protectant. Children's Home. : Her sponsibility for care and mainte-| unday. between ruler and subjects thatiseais the. logiial i efence nister Pearkes has, Miss Armour spoke of the place X oy a 0 raf i Bt tc " OrRing 3 he Tor. nance. Ottawa also is paying the M d Mrs. H J eats on e legislative col 14 . hh : " by verwhelming pressure re-| The 342 refugees brought tolhusband is working at the Tor A Ir. an rs, Harry tak lace i ther 1 aid the uracy of the Lacrosse|old furniture formerly used in the|PY OVE g : a {treatment costs of 10 cases. . has taken place In other in-iand supported certain candidates .i short ranges leaves something 'rural ar had 1 MC leases a deluge which rises sev-/Canada from Italy, Austria and onto Granite Club. He is a gold-| oY land family, Bowmanville, and dependence-seeking territories of the other two races for the 10, desired : Ture Areas 450. present fay eral feet in as many minutes Germany in December, January smith, and as soon as he learns| The federal government now ising. and Mrs. Len Goodmurphy NEARBY VIOLENCE European and 10 Asian seats ¢ avin Bird's ore Saale, fruit Flooding occurs also acrossjand February have been in-lenough English the immigration|/ making plans to bring handi-| were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Ron Tanganyika "a 362 000-square Union and Union-supported ecan-| The Honest John can carry a|'oods. pe aud hire, 'were Ia Highway No. 2 in Pickering Vil-|creased to 345 by iwo births in department hopes to get him a|capped refugees to Canada and| Rogers Sunday. m itary adminitered didates swept the field conventional or nuclear warhead Sioned in Bg 1 Rg 4 lage There is no way around and|Canada and one in Iceland job in his trade I osel Mr. and Mrs. Dawson Beckett I $ N 11 At present the 3 lecte MR " : Hh 4} i u ieces ong with! § 3 [they an N 4 . by Britain, "is bordered on three! A present he 30 elected mem- and 5 intended for use with the, k 4 Dieces, lon niche pase year Brock road aM pan : ' ; : 2 rw She pared t 'lattended a family gathering to ] " bers--23 others are nominated by|Canadian Infantry Brigade gr 100ked pint curtains and , > CANADIAN BY BIRTH ICELAND STOPOVER itional numbers. Four provinces| a 00 jes by countries where the : Sl Sa V| -ana(ian yamry Urigace group: iio tery Station road leading to Highway| "my Yi : : ; A i ">I honor Orville Beckett, Tyrone, on sides hb) untries "I€the British governor--form the stationed in West Germany jcalico upholstery § £ y The two children born in C The third child--a boy--was|--Prince Edward Island, Alberta, the occasion of his birthday march of nationalism has been official opposition to the colonial Sr Miss Armour suggested that 401 were both closed _ ,,.|ada--one in Montreal and » born in Iceland to 28-year-old Newfoundland and British Colum-| Mr and Mrs, John Aitchison marked by bloodshed administration It is supersonic and has algucn historical pieces still fonnd| YF 0oding can also block the giner in Toronto--are Canadian|Mrs. Angela Benkovic, now in Re-/bia--have made no offer to par-| = Billy, Blackitock ware gle To the north is Kenya, to the the September range of some 12 miles. Tt 8; "aitics could blend well with underpass at Pickering Clover-ioitizens. The child born in Ice- gina with her husband and an-|ticipate in the refugee movement. | M:. and Mic. Alaa gies west the Belgian Congo, to the I be propelled by solid fuel and has a| modern furnishings. She mention-|1€af The creek crosses Churchijand and the other refugees mustiother son, She was one of 65 re-|-- -- -------- ba S av bans ow. south the Federation of Rhodesia) f 71 elected members. The ex. length of 27 feet ed the low four poster bed. the Street and runs almost parallelljive in Canada for five years to|fugees aboard an aircraft that MARRIAGE PALACES ed a Fred Gr i and Nyasaland. 0 Tanganyika &| ecutive council or cabinet willl The rocket weighs nearly three to the road and this area has|pe eligible to apply for citizen-\made an emergency stop in Ice-| MOSCOW (AP) -- Success of a|ramily Leaside visited roa and eastern doorstep is the Indian|, 0 ,oiority of elected mem. tons, The launcher is self-pro- | {flooded several feet deep in other ship {land when it was realized the|g, ip arniage palace" in Len-|Mrs Clarence Gibson Sunda Ocean. bers, presumably led by Mr, pelled. Because the Honest John years. A situation like this leaves| A refugee kitchen worker de- baby would come before thel; o =. 1 lans for a sim- The oy "Independence 0ow can Nw, 5 y Mr, onest | La : : a . oft aa? ingrad has led to plans for a sim- The Cubs held a party Monday . P ed. sos Mr | Nverere as prime minister. The is a free-flight rocket it requires] {only the Ajax and Liverpool en-|/livered the child born in Mont- plane reached Canada. {ilar place in Moscow. A reno: ping to commemorate the taken, jor grant Hl a i a|BOVernor will still hold the right no electronic controls and is| ROAD PROGRAM frances to Highway 401 {real i o She 200 18 [tients brought ye palace in Leningrad, con-|founding of the Cubs and Scouts. Nyerere, = y tr «fb Ther x bres "Ther asn't all any-/to Canada, 59 still are in hospital. | ' sribal chief. He doesn't attempt of veto, fairly simple to operate, There has not ben any Jredk boi € Waglt tame to call snyito anada, 5 A i he Bae verted to serve as a place for| The Scout Mothers' Auxiliary HAMPTON (Siaffy -- Dar [UP Of creek ice His year, oe of Glina in Croatia, afte his|cs 3 [holding weddings, has proved|will be held at the home of Mus, . a snow coverage h re r Im Croatiz 5 lington township council Mon thi : =m thick ice formation roup resents day 'afternoon approved esti ' A Roman Catholic, father of two children, and regarded as Mont- | adult refugees are attending Eng- | for maintenance Justine hospital saidilish or French-language classes! ganyika"s evolutionary success School Saturday ceeds of the Pickering present : 4 3 oy Bat. Deen what he termed thet "George and Margare on will go to the Pickering V sary owing to the abnorma hen it nearly severed its|he will be given a job as a cook.| Mr. Filipovic is a patient in the has been at 4 Gerald Sa s lv high cost of snow removal Mountain Sanatorium at Hamil Vatican post office will issue allies brought to Canada so far un-|bedside studying English from | 5 h " ri in ; {les 2 | $ $ \ A E f | comfortable family of whole winter will amount to new series of stamps April 7--|der federal government sponsor- books supplied by the immigra-| | Mother Alice is a approximately (CP1--George 20,000 bottles of | absentmindedness to predict how soon it will come sed within a few : wife Anics. g birth to their ; highly popular, Ron Pingle April 19. yy vy lies r. all the mated expenditures of $130. Heayy snow lies ove Eo one of the ablest of Africa's Roads superintendent R. M that he had done an'and all children of school age » 3 . ir » situation comedy by lag the re | right rear hoof in a broken cul- ' n . é 1 readiness of three main ethnic situation comedy b age band for the purchase off 4... the winter hi [STORY OF HARDSHIP ton. His attractive wife works as| June 30, commemorating the UN-|ghip tion department. Mu- fuss budget. Father care. He's a good|sublime. Daughter F {surgery. Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Gibson |X the Sportsman's ettles In Canada i&5=k ' te 1 "" ee oa oo land" family were guests Mr. By JOHN BIRD childhood sweethearts in Yugo-jin Canada," Mrs. Filipovie says (2nd Ping Be 0 fo Canadian Press Staff Writer slavia, Ferid escaped to Laly in{in her mpetiect Eaghss, been|d2Y da os : European tubercular refugees|1956 and Manira joined him three, 'In the sho ime we've been ""Lr a oi " are being inte-/months later at a refugee camp here we've shed filth and futility. Mac Laverty, Dunnville, visit- |Now we have a nice furnished © By JACK BEST primarily as Tanganyikans Canadian Press Staff Writer stead of Africans, Asians or OTTAWA (CP)--As an alterna- ropeans trouble spot is Mr. and Mrs. Jim Laverty ' i ,{ Tuesday I'm working and my Ethel Axford, Bowmanville; Marion Snowden, Toronto; Mr and Mrs, Albert Brown and fam- survey by Crosse 1 is in ¢ elections made up fourth sor CITY OF OSHAWA NO OVERNIGHT PARKING OF VEHICLES ON CITY STREETS Notice is hereby given to all vehicle owners thet Section 248 of C lidated By-law ber 2365 of the City of Oshawe, os amended, provides, in part, thet -- No vehicle shall be parked on any street for o period longer than two hours between the hours of a.m. end 6 a.m. LIKE MOTHER part Wn the group's chen Vehicle © are d te Pp by secing to it that their vehicles are not left on the sreets over night. L.R. BARRAND City Clerk independent Tanganyika would decide to remain in the British from a sapatorium them former TB patienis, now Commonwealth Of this $80,000 is slated for Mr. Vlasie had never delivered are working and 17 women have] s 380, L alar d hope for a gentle I asic ha red are working and 17 women have) road construction, and the (2° ang. nop a baby before, but he said he was been placed in jobs. Many of the| remaining $50,000 is required |" . {not nervous, Doctors at ister | group presented its third produc Affer ex \ y nt B 2 a pre L penses are paid, the N° he 1 Ye mp 1 1 nl oy 3 BYE 3 : al TRA {tion, "George and Margaret" in!proceeds are used for | tion will have to be trans vas born on R. Mulhoun's farm helper for long. His employer husband. Ivan, are a typical fam-| TANGANY TRANS FIEST f Tan-|the auditor ge of Pickering High or He cause hv or Some ver! ferred to the- maintenance near here, The Ayrshire cow|says he is a good worker, and as|ily attempting to fit themselves | ie essential ingredi 0! . Avo | reserve. This will be neces vhich gave birth was a month in|soon as he learns enough English/into the Canadian way of life, humor for amiability and mild-|at Ajax High School. The pro- Manira Foc whose story of GRATEFUL COUPLE ioat : vint " " d February this vear ' AN " anira Foco, whose story of ATE L UPLE Wine Cellar Man ness. Dedicated to the principle|ceeds will be donated to the Ajax a area y. a VAT VATIC AN STAMPS hardship is perhaps the most] When Mrs. Filipovic is not | that everything is for the best,|Hockey Association mately $15.000 . d. Yor: the ATICAN CITY (AP) -- The pathetic of all the refugee fami-| working she sits at her husband's] For Royal York revolves around a zy bu -- rset smemersenen | sey 32,008, an five wens Retive Service TORONTO ghinsky has wine in his but it may be within five years val and another He adds that he is certain an Kresimir. at midnig : atm 4 «« Feb. 8. She had earlier been re- males. some of ; area in the watershed. Oldtimers ) r tow ads in 1960, . + leas 000 for township roads in 196 view the situation with some|leased autonomy-seekers, he stands a pICKERING Picker- like to take s . : th good chance of hing prime min-|in g Township L Th e.atr elactivities Max) Short! sald some of PUKERUA BAY, N.Z. (CP have been placed in schools. the money slated for construe- bull calf lacking a right an HO won't emain a ki Mrs. Maria Filipovic and her f th yes|vory. The play lives up to the more instruments vert, but government experts be-|" Tv © i Tor . 4 groups to think of themselves . al d ment Mr. Shortt said tt "0 ¢ % : he baby born in Toronto Jan.|sz cleaner in the institution | 1 - reputation of urrent Englis Nexi Saturds 1 3 | r, Shortt said the cOSt ol lieve it is just a coincidence. y a" Aatsahie op 4 his | puta C h € iturday it will pe staged saow removal during Janu J 21 is the daughter of Ferid and sponsored World Refugee Year. | Ferid, 20, and Manira, 24, were| "I still can't believe that we're! verges on the SSSR ---- SE TR RE rankie suf Today Gold Seal Congoleum is a greater "buy" than Li TEC man for the job. He never drinks I just don't like it says the ar-old Ukrainian-born som- melier--wine cellar man--at the Royal York Hotel here Besides making sure the cellar vell-stocked, he must see that the right temperature is main- Group Meets By MRS. LORNE JONES BALSAM AND MT. ZION * |The Active Service Class met at UPD EXEr- {he home of Mrs. Earl Disney Tuesday. Mrs. Disney was in the gather over the break-|chair the maid, An invitation was accepted! kie re- from -the Good Fellowship Class of Claremont to pay a visit April fers from the vestal restlessness piano playing brother Dudley} spouts Noel Coward and badgers stuffy brother Claude ho buil houses and does cises "louds fast table when Gladys is found crying and F ports she saw Claude acting sus- seiting tained for the wine, about half ! : | piciously white and half red Two acts and two weeks later his duties is to es just in time for the a al of Customers much discusséd and dreaded the domestic weather be- comes fair again which is Another of cort through the cella vho are arranging banquets and gests want to sample wines Sometimes the gets hand, Mu producing several bal 'But they tasting Mushinsky ou of SAYS emply bottles pay for it.' 12 Mrs. Jack Mansel of Clare mont showed slides of Germany and the Yukon | Mrs. Mansel was presented! with a gift. Refreshments were) served PERSONALS Mrs. William few days in Toronto daughter, Mrs. Stan Harbron returned Oshawa General Harbron speat with ther Neale. M home from Hospital ' "mon- perform- day ond Hakier and crackling crisp be cause they're "AQUAFLAKED" o baking process have 10] 45 evidenced by expressions of ap- because it was the first time ei- To City Of 1958 under the auspices of the Chief Frank Pelletier of the Fort! ri the possibility that most of Fort support the view right bank of the Kaministiquia exclusive to east to the right bank of the Director George Dallin ex preciation of the audience Alan Aldridge as Malcolm and ther had taken part in a play of any kind . . township recreation committee 0 1 1am Talent is drawn form the sur-| rounding municipalities. George| William Indian band says he and | William is built on their land Chief Pelletier said in an inter The treaty gave Chief Joseph Peau-de-chat and his tribe a re. River. The boundary was set as running westerly six miles, paral river The site would be the same as pressed satisfaction vith the work of his cast. All were good Peter O'Shaughnessy as Claude . - were excellent. Their n 1an alin ance was the more remarkable The Pickering Township Little Theatre group was organized in Tw v {Dallin is always inferested in C Ww AM, Ont )-- A ' FORT HiAM, O {cp hearing from anyone who would + T } his council plan to consult Indian} = Senator James Gladstone about | view the band has a copy of a treaty signed in 1850 that may serve starting about two miles inland from Fort William on the lel to the shore of Lake Superior, then five miles north, and then that now occupied by much of > the city, Weslons (74015 7 Eline Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Disney Sheila and Ivan visited Mr. and Mrs. Noel Marshal of Pickering Sunday Mr. and Mrs. Allan Carson and family visited Mr. and Mrs. | Robert Monahan of Orilila Sun- day Phyllis Jones has taken a nursing post in Bermuda where she expects to stay for a few! months. GOLEUM It pays to look for the Gold Seal of Satisfaction. ever before. No other floor covering offers you this... a first quality floor covering for so few dollars plus a gener- ous 3-year Guarantee against wear. See your floor cover- ing dealer soon! If your Gold Seal Congoleum shows undue wear within three years, it will be replaced free of charge by another Congoleum floor covering. Congoleum Canada Limited will fulfill this guarantee at any time over a three-year period dating from time of purchase CONGOLEUM CANADA LIMITED WIDE RANGE OF PATTERNS... MODERN AND TRADITIONAL Find the very pattern you've been looking for in glowing Congoleum colours that fresh- en up any room wonderfully! EASY INSTALLATION A Congoleum floor isn't a complicated job. Instructions are easy to follow, and then you just roll it out for new, sparkling beauty, LIES FLAT No ripples, no curling with Congoleum! It "takes" to a floor as if they were made for each other... which they are! EASY CLEANING Congoleum' surface of baked- on enamel is the secret of its easy upkeep. Dirt disappears just the whisk of a damp 0p. SO ECONOMICAL to cover any floor with Gold Seal Congoleum, Note the price for approx. 9' x 12' room! 156 SIMCOE STREET SOUTH RUTHERFORD FURNITURE CO. " PHONE RA

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy