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Oshawa Times (1958-), 28 Feb 1967, p. 53

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oo Oe alk i lin wil Minas, adhe hi ladle alan etek yp idl ang sae i RE LE it) cl cad | « A TIMES, sary 28, 1967 GE THE OSHAWA TIMES, Tuesday, February 28, 1967 7 The exhibit, the centennial! Other items included in the project-of-the-Library--Associa= display will be the first authen- Plans To Skate | -- tion of Halifax, will also stress|tic history of the province writ- |two Canadian firsts in the field|ten by Judge Thomas Halibur- To Montreal O'Grady says. 4d Printing History . Housewives Organized Shifts dempar ti frome oring teat. in route! Exhibit Project Provide Extra Money For 225 {at the beginning," he said, "go- Ss with our home life," "If we could get a cavalcade|ing 14 to 16 hours a day. Then | would be appreciated. Maxine Wolfe. § e . : ic: ton and printed by Joseph Howe} ite: phintit husband eee ioe HALIFAX (CP)--The history . ee cares Gan Ate in 1899. : ; é VANCOUVER (CP) -- Roller)going it would be just tremen-'I'll take it easier on the Prair- BECKER ST. THOMAS, Ont. (CP)--yof three boys who finds the shift| daughter ®"lof printing and publishing in pu cgncleerst Steet 4 Hal rp Pl eo SeBter Chie Price, $0 wholddis." ies." ' dinitanite eit. oeeanieed tola rine she uf mises : Nova Scotia, more than two/first newspaper, the Halifax) dRAFFIC CHANGES LAW |plans to skate to Montreal from| Price plans to leave late in| He'll carry only a sleeping so uit famil hours, ave roviding| « ey ? : "I was bored sitting at home. |centuries of it, will be the cen-/Gazette, and publication of) GLASGOW (CP) -- Britain's|Vancouver as his centennial/April and says he hopes tojbag and extra' parts for his jpionship Play) . ws hey for 295 be a We needed a little extra in-/Time was heavy on (ifyhands |tral theme of an exhibit at the/Canada's first periodical, the/first night court was opened' project, is looking for company.|/average about 100 miles a day|skates, but will mail clothing ea " «-9 women andicome and this was an oppor-|and I wanted something else to historic Citadel here in July and|Nova Scotia Magazine, which in this Scottish city to deal) He says the trip will be long on the 3,000-mile trip, jon ahead to be picked up as he allowing full production at the tunity to get it without inter-|do." | August. \first appeared in 1789. (with a backlog of traffic cases.jand lonely and- any company| "I'm really going to push itlhits different towns, rable, plants they work for. The first shift is from 9 a.m. ORTH to 3 p.m. to let mother get the 37 family fed and on its way, and . y 742 be home before the children a aes: bi 9863 and in time to cook dinner. A ¥ later shift allows mother time : EAST to prepare and eat dinner with $26452 the family but might mean #106 father has to get the children @K752 to bed. #103 The shifts are being tried by IUTH the Essex Wire Corp., manu- 9 facturers of electrical wiring QJ8 systems for the car industry. The company was faced with KJ852 a labor shortage when it opened a plant in Ingersoll and ex- s panded the St. Thomas plant. rey sae To find people it distributed ny Pass 9,000 letters to every household 7 Pass in the two communities. In a 74 Pass month the company had 600 ap- - queen of dia- is the key fac- many hands, two-way street by either the ence, This deal fence can ex- pr trumps to vid was a slam 1, to identify previous raise to four hearts the slam after e that North the . diamond and played a king. The out- 1 now hinged took the king what would id West taken int. He would -ontinued. with uth to ruff. then cash the ruff a club; to the queen club. This is remaining d all he would lead a spade ' West's last the rest. mat if he took s this might ywed the king ith could no ontract. If he clubs in dum- overruff the e ten. 'd instead to d of trumps, clubs, West slam by wine and leading a imps, This ead to West's g trick with the assump- had four bs. By duck- arts he main- r trumps. ult rotests filled jainst Presie decision to speech after of the cam- unday's Na- ction. lates accused ally hogging nd TV nete one explana: er premier 'rance. "For afraid." The y ends 24 ion day, or nidnight. De ced he will ry Saturday Vignancour, date, called o strike half de Gaulle's ygested that trike also. e opposition one will be > Gaulle on During the priod the op- esent Gaull- - ie assembly / time. But vaign officl- y night. DOLLS hinese Red jostling for shop wine 2m to have » stores in *y appeared the annual anese Girls' plications. Last fall 300 women were hired, and though about 75 of them just stayed long enough to earn Christmas money, the rest are still working. UNIONS CO-OPERATE The shifts were set up in co- operation with the unions, the International Association of Ma- chinists in St. Thomas and the United Steelworkers of America at Ingersoll. Patrick Daley, international representative of the steelwork- ers, says the union feels the short shifts are helping to keep the company's work in Inger- soll, and are therefore benefit- ing full time workers. The housewives do not get health and welfare plan bene- fits, but most of them are covered by their husbands' plans. Most of them are paid $1.30 an hour in St. Thomas and $1.25 in Ingersoll, where they are due for an increase in August. Mary O'Grady is the wife of a railroad employee and mother Dartmouth Medal* For Collectors DARTMOUTH, N.S. (CP)-- Dartmouth's centennial medal became a collector's item as goon as it was struck. The medal, which bears the old town crest and the new city coat of arms, is the centennial project of the Dartmouth Mu- seum Society. After being designed, draw- ings were sent to Toronto for die-making. But unintentionally a rough cast from the die failed to reach the society and about 850 bronze medals were cast with several minor discrepan- cies. Missing were several chim- neys shown in the original drawing of a factory in the town crest, and the designer's initials at the base of the medal. When the errors were discov- ered the society asked to have the medals recut. However this proved fruitless when the med- als split when heated, Rather than delay distribu- tion to waiting customers the museum society decided to ac- cept delivery of the 850 medals already cast. NEWS IN BRIEF COINS RETIRED COPENHAGEN (AP)-- Greenland's currency, portray- ing polar bears and icebergs, is being replaced by Danish money, which shows. European farmland scenes, July 1, It will be the disappearance of one of the last vestige of colonialism in Greenland, the world's larg- est island, which became part of the Danish kingdom after a referendum in 1953, CHECK SLACKS OVER BERLIN (AP) -- The whole staff of a Berlin hotel, from director to doorman, were taken to a fashion show to do their homework on women in trousers. The question was not whether or not to admit trou- sered women, an official said, but to determine correct trouser wear for day or night occasions in bars, restaurants or ball- rooms. OLDSTER WIN GRADE FRUITLAND, N.M. (AP) -- Mrs. Alfred Bowman has earned her high school diploma, 58 years after she gtarted. An instructional aide at' the Indian boarding schosol here, she com- pleted an Indian affairs adult education course. Her educa- tion began in 1909 at a New Mexico mission school. GUNS LOSE FAVOR TUEBINGEN (AP) --Fewer West German children are play- ing with guns than did so a year ago, a public opinion in- stitute reports. It found toy guns in 29 per cent of homes with one child, compared with 34 per cent a year ago, and in 21 per cent of homes with more than one child, compared with 27. OLD MURDER FOUND BUDAPEST (AP) --Hunga- rian anthropologists have de- termined that a 'male skeleton found on Maragaret Island in the Danube was that of a 13th century man 20 years old when someone smashed in his skull. He has been identified as Prince Bela of Macso, grand- son of the king of Hungary at the time, but the murder re- mains unsolved. SPIRIT OF THE GAME YPSILANTI, Mich. 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