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Oshawa Times (1958-), 28 Sep 1967, p. 29

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lepartment of agriculture as of Wednesday: A large 49.1; A nedium 40.5; A small 28.6. Eggs: Wholesale price to ountry stations fibre cases juoted by the Toronto Board of 'rade from wholesale egg deal- rs: extra large 45-46; large 42; medium 33; small 20; B 7; C 20. $$$ << NORTH BAY YARDS! & C ARTON QUANTITY! ot) diel | EACH IN é ] crates! & Smaller Lots r 9 Add 20e § ] Panel! 5 tage Canadian Made DMMON NAILS " $5.76 3" 55:83 $569 4" 5" BR 50-LB. CARTON! $1.18 an $1.08 . ere 1055 32 eq. ft. May Be a pee ga $5.40 is = $9 1-%5 ws $22.85 mNEYs 522-25, $1555 one! $4 775 Purchase 100', 250', ¢ 1000" Relat 1 : : per ft. ters © $69:85 OGANY $10.60 wm Hi $13.76 oe Overhead Steel " GARAGE : DOORS 95 [exes $47.55 5 exroe 48,95 ettoxre" 64,76 3 100° $11.70 j 100° $13.45 * Distributed by King Features Syndicaim, "SS DONALD DUCK BLONDIE EY HAVE A CERTAIN -ER-MEDICINAL EFFECT!! 9 LI'L ABNER YOUR LIMOUSINE |f GET ME A-ctlo'pr. 1S WAITING, MR. J) MOTORCYCLE, BUZ SAWYER JANE ARDEN THE OSHAWA TIMES, 29 Thursday, September 28, 196 BRIDGE By B. JAY BECKER (Top Record-Holder in Masters" Individual Championship Play) TT, WHAT'S KEEPING KARL AND CHRISTY? see AND THE LIONS? }} THEY HAVEN'T COME (i South dealer. i TO FINISH THEIR : Both sides vulnerable. SECRET AGENT X9 e © « for S F FE the all new + WisH 1 HADN' I MENTIONED \t/ ENOUGH TO CORRUPT TRUSTED SCIENTISTS %, INTO BECOMING TELEVISION LOG Channel 2--Buffalo Channet 3--Barrie Channet 4--Buftalo Channel é--Toronte Channel 7--Buffalo Channel @--Rochester Channel 9--Toronto Channel 11--Hamilton Channel 12--Peterborough THURSDAY BVENING 5:00 P.M. 12--Rocky and his Friends --Jericho 8&--Mr. Ed HENRY THAT MAKES HER AN ACCES PLANS THE COLONEL JULIET JONES MICKEY MOUSE IL GOT INTERESTED IN THIS ARTICLE. ?- 4--Gentle Ben 4--Perry Mason 3--Trallmester 5:3 P.M, 12--Flintstones 8--Truth or Consequences 7--News ~Scouting 2--Of Lands and Seas 6:00 P.M, 1--Pierre. Berton 12--News, Weather, Sports t--How's Business 7--Movie 6--Rango 4--News, Weather, $--My Three Sone 230 P.M. 12--Premiere Theatre 1--Mothers-In-Law 4--News 3-6-9--News, Weather, and Sports 2-8--Huntley-Brinkley News 7:00 P.M, WW--That Girl 9--Flying Nun 4&--Four Winds to Adventure 6--Day It Is 4--Movie 3--That Girl 8--News, Weather rts 7:2 P.M, y--News, Weather, Sports 7 P.M, 12--Bewitched 11--Hockey 9--Star Trek 2-8--Danie!l Boone 7--Batman Accidental Family 3-NYPD 6:00 P.M, 7--Flying Nun 3-6-12--Hogan's Heroes 8:30 P.M, 9--It's Happening 7--Bewitched 3-6-12--Telescope 2-8--Ironsides 9--University of the Alr | 7--Dream Girl o11-Ed Allen T J--General Hospital ee gies cane 4--To Tell The Truth 8--Pastor's Study Pe iR--T eke 90 4--Cariton Fredericks .. |*#--Another World 2--Pat Boone 3:30 P.M, 9:30 AM. 11--Bullwinkle 11--Donna Reed 9--It's Your Meve 9--Cartoon Playhouse 7--Commander Tom 4--Love of Life 3-4-6-12--Edge of Night 10:00 A.M, 248--You Don't Say 11--Movie 4:00 PLM. 9--Uncle Bobby 11--Super Heroes 8-2--Snap Judgment 9--! Love Lucy 4--Candid Camera 8--Match Game 330 A.M. 4--Secret Storm 8-2--Cencentration 3-6-12--Communicate 7--Dateline: Hollyweed 2--Mike lee 4--Beverly Hilibiilles 4:30 P.M, 11:00 A.M. 11--Gilllgan's Island 9--Tugboat Annie 9--Movie 2-8--Personallty 8--Leave It to Beaver 7--Honeymoon Race 4---Truth or Conse 4--Andy Griffith quences 3--Good Morning 3-6-12--Barney Boomer 9:00 P.M, | 11:30 A.M. 9--Dean Martin 1i--Marriage Confidential 7--That Girl 9--Mr. and Mrs. 4--Movie 8-2--Hollywood Squares 3-6-12--Man_from U.N.C.L.E, bai Van Dyke Ns | 3~Ed Alien Time | aeweae 12 NOON 7--Peyton Place 2-8--Dragnet 12--News, Weather, 10:00 P.M. Sports | 12--Dean Martin | 11--Little People |-\1--The Merv Griffin Show | ribefelled Teday -$--Jeopardy --Mannix lars T--Movie a lll é--Luncheon Date 3--Run for Your Lite gs lad elcald 2-8--Dean Martin pore PM 10:30 P.M. %--Super Heroes | bpp Hundred 12:30 P.M, 'ears ee | 6--The True North pigs el A eg | 11:00 P.M. 8--Merv. Griffin | 12-11-9-8-7-6-3-2--News 12-6-4-3--Search for Weather, Sports To 1:10 P.M, a erine 1--Plerre. Berton cee ks aad 11:20" P.M, 12--Movie : 46--Viewpoint 11--Mike Douglas 11:25" P.M. 9--Mevie s--News, Weather, Sports | g--eiating Por Dollars, | 11:30 P.M, Virginia @raham | pusiviag 1--Fugitive --Movi ih 2-4--Johnny Carson stuncheon: Date 11:35 P.M, Movie 3--Merv. Griffin 1:30 P.M, 11:40 P.M. | 44--As The World Turne | 11--Movie | &--Let's Make A Deal 9--Perrys' Probe :00 P.M. | 11:45 P.M, J--Newlywed Game 12--Movie é--Culsine 6--Time Tunnel 4~Love's a Many &Splen- dored Thing FRIDAY @2--Days of Our Lives :00 A.M. 2:00 P.M, 11--Schnitzel_ House he Bee takach 4--Captain Kangaree a el sa 1 9--People In Cenfliet 4--You and Your famil 4--House Party 8:55 AM. i 4--Coronation Street 7--Dialing for Dollars, 24--Doctors Virgini hay 3 .M, oF :0t ore " 9--Magistrate's Court 'SECONDS ON COFFEE AND MUPFINS! LUXURY, GLAMOR and EXCITEMENT '68 PONTIACS, BUICKS, BEAUMONTS, ACADIANS VAUXHALLS and FIREBIRDS at... The CLIFF MILLS MOTORS Lid. HUBERT ARGUE WITH YOUR MOTHER, EUSTIS!/ JUS NORTH 4A62 9Al1083 ters weer * a Pr 5 9QI74 Save Sires3 sotrn OEKI8543 b 2) AKG AKG 'The bidding: South West North Kast 2@ Pass 26 Pass 3@ Pass 39 Pas 4 Pass 4@ Pass to Pos SY Pass Opening lead--queen of elubs. There is one attitude of mind you must incorporate as part of your. general outlook if you want to be a really fine card player. If there is the slightest doubt about making a contract, especially one which depends upon how the adverse cards are divided, you should exercise every possible precaution to re solve that doubt. Most of the time the prepa- rations you adopt to allow for a farfetched possibility turn out to be wasted, but occasionally these efforts pay off hand- somely. South was in six spades, and, since he had to lose a diamond trick for sure, his only real problem was to try to escape a possible trump loser. In the actual hand, this proved to be impossible--since West had the four missing trumps -- but, despite the unlucky spade divi- |sion, South brought home the jcontract. He won the club lead with the ace, played a low heart to the ace, and ruffed a heart. This unusually farsighted play of im- mediately shortening himself in trumps eventually paid tremen- dous dividends. South learned of the 40 trump division when he led a spade to the ace. With East showing out, South's early pre- cautions began to bear fruit when he ruffed a heart, cashed the king of clubs, ruffed a club, and then ruffed dummy's last heart. As a result of this succession of plays, South's last five cards were the K-J of spades and A-K-6 of diamonds while West's hand consisted of the Q-10-9 of spades and 10-2 of diamonds. And when South now cashed the A-K of diamonds and exited with a diamond, West was forced to ruff and return a trump into declarer's K-J, thus telescoping South's three losers into one trick and giving him NEVER MINP THE F F the contract. SONG OF THE ROSY- All of which would have been impossible had South lacked the foresight to prepare for a 4-0 trump division by ruffing @ heart very early in the play. BEAVERS CUT PLAYERS MONTREAL (CP) -- Mont real Beavers of the Continental Football League cut four plays ers Tuesday, signed one an@ have two other newcomers ig camp. Those cut were Gene Keliikull, guard; Milt Kanahe, offensive tackle; Judd Porter, offensive tackle, and Scott Playground Players Invite Participation ie By ELINOR READING EDMONTON (AP)--An aspiring actor doesn't expect to be pelted with crabapples, or to have the audience mob him just because he's playing a bad guy. But the five former theatre students who are Edmonton's Playground Players count on wesWITH LIGHTWEIGHT STAINLESS STEEL POTS?| ERE EC T-Bar Posts 98¢ each days to 9 p.m. nd y 12 55-3313 Fanaa ome Wars mabe nemereee Ging Foceores Spmdinatn, tne. 1967. Workd ghee reserved MUGGS AND SKEETER (ATS THE ONLY PLACE WE GET MORE FOR A PENNY THAN ~ CROSSWORD ACROSS DOWN 15. Strings 1, Forehead 1, Satan 18. Fuel 5. Lath 2. Small 19. Um- 9. Net streams pire's 10.---- 3. Cape call pneumonia Horn 20. Shellac 12, Wide- native 23, Tele- mouthed 4, Mets' graph jars Westrum 24. Turf T 13. Custom 5. Veers 25. Drowse {Y/EILILISMMAIDI! {O[s) 14. Wire 6. Missing 26.Couples MERIAIKIEREMIEIAIN| measure 7. Arabian 27.Peculi- Yesterday's Answer 15. Place garment arity 35. Frau's 16. Ger- 8. Labeled 29. Loafe help- manium: 9. French ers meet sym. river 30. Stories 38. Legume 17. Navy goat 11. Bamboo 32. Ventilated 39. Trim and Army like 33. Parts of 40. Ostrich- mule, for grasses churches like bird example 20. Guided Pie ee ae 21. City train Y 22. Possessive yy" " pronoun VAT 28. Stuffs iY, 4} . 24. Devilish VIVA 26, Puddle Y YG /} WY) Ag 28. Conjunc- 6 119 YAS tion Yi. 29. Pronoun V7 7" 31. Affix a Ghd 32, Things V7 7, added VW 24 2s Y 34. Fish 7, 35. Possessive ee Vi, - Y oe hes pronoun 36. Entire - Oia lee 37. Mellower V7 39. Dike Gia Wy 41. Cubic Y rr) sates 3 Wi) 39 42. Hebrew dry Y 4 measures //) 43. Spar 44 44, Face: ° Wi _ os 146 the audi getting into the act. They are part of the parks and recreation department's year-round program of crea- tive drama for children. Dur- ing a 10-week summer run, they tour the city's 94 play- grounds and give three per- formances a day, all tailored to the spectators. There's no curtain and no stage. The two girls and three Boys, all in the plain blue shirts of city playground staff, get out of a car and head for a grassy spot. While someone opens the one beat- up suitcase that holds their costumes, they ask the flock of children around them to pick out a story. The costumes are a crown or two and various lengths of cloth that become robes, capes or turbans at need. Duelling swords and even Aladdin's lamp are imagi- nary. AUDIENCE TAKES PART The basic repertoire of about 20 fairy tales and fables ranges from Sleeping Beauty for pre-schoolers to King Arthur legends adapted for evening performances for older children. Some playlets are impro- vised entirely from audience Suggestions; others, such as the Wizard of Oz or Robin Hood, have planned bits of audience participation. Chil- dren take the parts of six of the seven dwarfs in Snow White, Tyler, defensive back. Signed Tuesday was Claude Watts, who had been with Akron. Two ex-Toronto Rifles arrived but have not yet been signed. They are Bob Blakeley and Al' Hine Impromptu comments abound. "IT shall have you tram- pled!" said the emperor to the chamberlain in The Emperor's Nightingale. "With what?" asked a voice from the front row. Small children_ shout "Watch out!' when danger stalks a hero, or tattle on the magician who disappears with Aladdin's palace. "It's like shaking up a Coke bottle and taking the top off," said Phillip Silver, 24, oldest of the players. "For a couple of years on one playground the giant in Jack and the Beanstalk was always mobbed. They'd pile on him and pound him as soon as he got down to the The players want children ground." "involved instead of watch: . ing." wage YO CONTEY d that Sometimes they leave the The players stopped Wrji last playlet unfinished and let but they have subtle ways of r ad complete it Se doing it. They interrupt the the children P! action only when someone 8Foups. might be hurt. 'KIDS ARE WITS' "When kids throw grass or Danny Jellis, 20, says the crabapples, you can usually nint is to treat the audience channel it so they don't have ',. individuals, not as carbon to do it any more," said copies." Dianne Couves, 20. "'Once 'phe nine- and Il-year-olds Phil just told everybody to \15 start things are the take as much grass as they 4, work with," said Mel Blitz could and throw it. They 9 99. "Kids are wits." couldn't believe we'd really All five of the players say let them." they want professional acting "There's no real problem Of careers and all say the play-: control," said Shirley Scott, round job is good--if: 19. "If you ask older kids not Ge manding--training. to spoil it for the younger "When we do a play, we ones, they understand, If the ao. have set lines, which younger ones are heckling, yayes it very hard in the what we usually do is take bevinning to create a charac their suggestions." ter," Dianne said. The troupe was created They meet for two weeks at eight years ago to replace a the beginning of the season to program that sent out teen- sketch out standard stories, age actors armed with cos- and three mornings a week tumes, makeup, portable during the rest of the sum- stages and prepared scripts mer. They figure the pro- that sometimes failed to gram's cost in salaries, trans- interest the playgrounds' portation and other expenses unconfined audiences. at $10,000 to $12,000,

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