the Stampede Parade, The Stampede was really terrific and the two days spent there I enjoyed the Chuckwagon races the most. The group. of us bet on the races among ourselves with my wagons winning six of the . |seven races. They'll never know I just picked the fanciest wagon. The Stampede concluded our three week stay in Alberta but Delmer-and I thought t was too soon to 'return home yet, On-a FOR GIRL FARMER : Alberta Trip Still .-- Seems Like Dream ped with snow, f wouldn't have/Mrs, Neen (nee ss 12 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Tuesday, September 15, 1964 traded in one minite of the/a former cnngiares of the Bow: ' 2 ; trip. : manville Statesman; i We stayed one aight in Van-| Delmer's cousin took us {0 2 couver then headed yon for|logger's carnival in Sooke; & 'Vancouver Island where we|day filled with log cutting both had friends to visit. I went|events, log rolling and 'ree immediately to see a former|climbing contests. Delmer and Sunday Schoo] teacher of mine,!' then parted company. ~ YOUNG PEOPLE -- when you are thinking in terms 1 was selected by the Junior Rockies was realibed quite un- Pat Knox, R.R. 1, Hampton, Farmers Association of On- tario to go on a travelling scholarship to Alberta this summer. She has been active in 4-H Club work, having com- pleted 15 homemaking club units and 13 agricultural club projects. Pat has attended the Provincial Junior Farmer Camp, has been a director. for six years in the County Junior Farmers Club and was on the champion inter club grain team at the OAC im 1961, Pat wrote the following report of her Alberta trip. By PAT KNOX My old dream of seeing the thousands of acres of the vast |beng constructed to expectedly this summer. As i} think back on it new, it seems} like it is still all a dream. | Each year one of the} projects of the Junior Farmers of Ontario is to award to Junior, Farmers travelling scholarships, | are homesteading on a 500-acre farm, just a tiny portion of the Peace River country just wait ing to be cleared. { When we had_ recuperated from our flight, we set out on a three-day trip. by car. to investigate some of the points of interest of the Peace--the cairn commemorating the spot on the Peace where Alexander McKenzie stopped, Grand Prairie, the Experimenatl farm at Beaverlodge, Dawson Creek, Fort St, John, and Hudson Hope where we saw the new dam produce power for all of B.C. On the way home we got caught oa terrible storm and ended up walkng home over a mile through three inches of mud in our barefeet. Mud was everywhere All along our journey in the Peace we had the feeling we had stepped back into history There was land being cleared lake (the water never gets above- 35 degrees) at the' foot- hills of the Rockies about 200 miles west of Red Deer. The bus we hopped and headed for the Pacific Coast. We rode on that bus for 25 hours, although we di have a break when we important to LEGE in its 2 Living Proof of cabins have been built from the trees they have cleared from the land. It was truly a beauti- ful setting. : The ride through the Rockies) Our third hosts picked us upjfijied you with.such a feeling of| at tihe Camp and took us tojinsignificance and awe, to look) their ranch about 40 miles west|4 Pall around you and seg of Re Deer. We went horse/&fand towering mountains top- back riding but even with my = 10-gallon hat I'm afraid I didn't make much of a cow-girl. With! them we spent a day in Banff and what a day it was!--riding/ in a gondola lift up the side of} a mountain, ambling through) Banff Springs Hote! and watch-' UR j ing Delmer hop through the: 0 - stopped at Oliver, the base of the Okanaghan Valley, to see my uncle. Then: and responsibi' | nd higher up. lbushes of the buffalo paddock,| calling for a buffalo \STAMPEDE | No sooner did we get to bed that night then it was time to' get up to leave for Calgary so' "The Smart Solon for Teens and Women." . ' incent 4 stvLnG 110 KING ST. E. 725-8631 e@ Parking at Reor @ providing them with an oppor-jon every farm, some farmers) we would be there in time for| HAIR ||| of your own future, consider these factors; are . THE OSHAWA USINeSS COL- rs has hundreds of Graduates - facts. What will you be doing five years from now? What income will you be earning? What will be your possibilities for advancement? NOW -- Relate these questions to a BUSINESS COL- LEGE GRADUATE. Assuming you start as a Junior Clerk, stenographer, bookkeeper, accountant, etc. @ in five years a, will have a position of trust @ your income will have almost doubled 'our employer will be grooming you for a position You May Start Your Course At THE OSHAWA BUSINESS COLLEGE ANY MONDAY MORNING GET THE FACTS -- FREE LITERATURE DIAL 725-3375 -- ACT NOW seamen tunity of seeing other parts of|<til) living in little cabins, the the ~-- eed how other | main streets of the little towns] lpeople live, exchanging with|were just dirt. them ideas of Junior Farmer "ee : |work, LANDSCAPE When I learned that ! was one| We drove down from Peace of the two Junior Farmers to|River to Edmonton, giving us a represent Ontario in an ex-|wonderful opportunity of seeing i change trip to Alberta for three|the varied landscae, although weeks; I just couldn't believe|the varied landscape, although) it! It- was too good to be true. forests completely stripped by ;iBut it was true and June 21\caterpillars and some by forest | found me, accompanied by Del-| fires, We were met in Edmonton} mer Cavanagh from Kinburn, /by another couple who Hons, 35 | the other Junior Farmer dele-| to a about 60 miles ate, mounting a huge jet to) west of Edmonton. ons our way to Edmonton After two days of touring the Alberta. Edmonton area, we went to Leaving Malion =: 4.10, we|Gold Eye Lake where the Junior arrived at Edmonton at 5.00,|pranch of the ace gap og allowing of course for a time|Alberta has their camp. The #|change. We spent our first four| Junior F.U.A. is comparable to days at the University of Al-jour Junior Farmer Association berta "in Edmonton for Farm!The camp 'is situated on this Young People's week He! 0 as young people from the entire : | province of Alberta were beng BIRKS introduced to college life, in Oshawa Shopping Centre ZELLERS RETAILERS TO THRIFTY CANADIANS Open Every Day From 9:30 A.M. -- 6:00 P.M, Thursday and Friday 9:30 A.M. -- 9:00 P.M. clothes with TEEN MISSES AND TEEN SHIRTS © gal's wardrobe . wear cotton classic sleeves, French cuffs et. Sparkling white, pink, blue Sizes 10-18. FROM hopes of encouraging the farm youth to continue their educa- tion following high 'school. ROUGH FLIGHT } We left Edmonton, flying to Peace River in a structure they call an airplane. At the end of our three-hour journey, both Delmer and I agreed that we felt like we had spent three weeks on a storm swept sea. | We were met by a young! couple of Junor Farmers who : THE f 4 WAY SUIT Association on Gibb street and each Saturday in the Whitby Arena. All members are from O'Neill Collegiate and will be playing at school dances this winter. IN SLEEK TAILORING IN SWINGING SKIRT "BUYS" STEM-SLIM WOOL SHEATH that's fully Mined to pre- vent 'seating'. Highlighted by "'coltish" kick-pleated back for free-as-cir movement. Neat french waistband and side zipper. Brown, black, green, red or blue rep wool. Petite, regular 9-20. 3 99, 1 99 FROM HIP-STITCH PLEATED SKIRT. For o sleek silhouette with "swinging" good looks, you can't beat. this all round hip-stitch pleated skirt in quality wool rep. Black, green or blue. Proportioned sizes: petite, regular or tall, 8 to 20. 6.99 o 10,99 ft T Nn FROM Chives same eee STRETCH KNEE HIGHS HEAD TURNING TEEN HOSE Ribbed and fancy stitch nylon knee hose also in diamond patterns to warm and win fa- If DEAR NANCY TAYLOR: produces energy. All life ac-| vor I'm always being told to\tivities depend upon this energy "count my calories', if I de-|The more active you are physic- sire to lose weight. And I do./ally and mentally, the more} But it suddenly occurred to me energy you need that I.don't know what a cal- orie really is. Can you tell me? from top to bottom Jim Clark, group but since then Bev has lor grandmother who rose at ABOUT CHARM jdawn and worked all day on the |to convert into heat and other | that which her grand-|§ able of creating more energy! M.C.| voy eat. Certain foods can pro-| cussed and seldom understood.|other words, richer in calories.|A"4 this brings us right back] A calorie is simply a unit of measuring heat). value of foods are measured in The Silvertones featuring in the first edition of Teen Bev Gibson as vocalist and Talk, we ran a picture of the lead guitar, Brian Twaites, joined the boys. They have rhythm guitar and Rene been playing each Friday Pleau, drums. Six months ago, night in Oshawa Recreation farm until after sunset. - Since! . |we are less active, we require| Count Your Calories lrequiré less fuel for our cells | | energy. | The obvious solution for the | ut n erstan em | average American woman is to jcut down on her food intake mother required. But this can-| not be done just indiscrimin-' ately. Certain foods are cap- Bee Rial ch tis tual (heat) than others. So to. intel-| eC Dass 0 e fuel thatiiigently bring your diet into/4 |feeds your cells is the food that) proper proportion with the type! ; f lifé you lead, you must know | ¢ DEAR M. C.: duce more fuel for your cells|° a aly j | You're not alone when you and are therefore "richer" in tt agsren oat Producing ca-14 say that calories are often dis-\heat producing capacity -- in| ?2City the food you eat contains So let's get down to basic facts (Remember, as I just pointed|*® the subject of your question--| once and for all. out. calories are a unit of|Calories. The energy producung) measuring heat. That's all it is. The main reason that calorie| fisher in PA er ge: emg od A calorie is a unit of measure-- counting is so important to the| amount of calories you burn uplg a calorie isn't food average American woman (and! i ' in energy, your body will store ¢ 4 The reason that calorie count-| man! ) is that in this modern|the excess food in the form of § ing is important to dieting is mechanized age of automobiles fat, That's why calorie counting, this and washing machines, thelis so important to you and to| vour, Gaily coloured to metch your Every cell in your body isjaverage modern American is| your figure. like a microscopic furnace that far less physically active than) ------------ skirt or jumper. FR takes in fuel, _burns.* it, : and'was his great great-grandfather; SEARCH FOR sais | .e 1.29 To 1.99 SOUTH OCKENDON, Eng- ' TIGHTS It'S NEW. x. IT'S DIFFERENT... land (CP)--Taverns in Essex ¢ Tights and leotards fit fash- are sponsoring a competition to § , \find the district's champion eel- ionably into the new casual eater. The trophy will be a/ shield donated by a local mer-| hant. The rage in nylons, Legs are going in lovely directions for FALL. Steckings in ladylike laces and open meshes - open fer compli- ments, Sizes 814 to 11. if 1.29 1.50 It's a notural vested suit, with the vest reversing to match the extra flannel slacks. Wear it as « Dress Suit ~ Sport Suit -- Sport Jacket and Extra Flannel Slacks -- with MIRA-CREASE® for permanent pleating and shape retention -- Young Moderns! Build Strong Bodies Two Ways Use WEIDER WEIGHTS Eet _ HEALTHFUL FOODS Get both et The Sunshine Shop 24 Prince St. trend. In medium, bold or available ently in pure wool worsted fabrics. Ay . WATURALLY Joel sci BY CLINTON CLOTHES large diamond design. Red, green or blue gaily colored. 2.99 to 3.49 "CHARGE |B baad ZELLER' QUALITY BEGINS WiTH PURE WOOL And it's 'so easy to have a "'Teen-Man" ward- robe the TCA* Way... People's" Teen Charge Account for the Men of Tomorrow. Established 1924 ; : People's: Clothing for Men & Young Men Shoes - Hats 36 Simcoe St. North COOK'S Office Equipment 75: SIMCOE ST. NORTH | CANDID SHOT Amateur photographer Peter neatly in the eave of a farm house, To get the shot Peter had to stand his cdmera on a tripod then hide*behind a door while he pressed the button. | DOWNTOWN STORE SIMCOE ST. SOUTH OSHAWA SHOPPING CENTRE O'Hare, 364 Simcoe street south, shot the above picture early this summer near Port Perry. A mother bird is feed ing her young in a nest built Downtown Oshawa