10 Th Candian tateman owmanville, November 17, 1976 Section Two DurhamlCounty. Club of Toronto Learns About Indians and Needs The Durham County Club of Mrs. Milîs is a graduate of It is much better to live Toronto held its first mee ting Victoria College and the wife among and work with the of the seasofn Friday, October of Ralph Milîs, Q.C. Both she Indians-in this way one is 22, 1976 at the JEducation and her husband are active in more aware of their ineeds. At Centre. United Church affairs and present some of the Indians We were pleased to have as. Victoria College. During the are being trained as ministers our speaker Mrs. Ralph Milîs summer while at their cottage and police as they can whose topic was 'lndians and in Muskoka, Mrs. Milîs bas communicate with their own. their needs." Mrs. Milîs was written several articles on the The language is a bit of a introduced by the President Indians and the Yukon for the problem as we have a jargon Dr. Liane Dickinson. local paper, for whicb they have no # la At present she is the compromising word such as SITS A S l National Chairman of the Arts Sbeep, shepherd etc. TO and Letter Club. The Chruch is very promin- HMARO7 Mrs. Milis had sldes which ent in their lives. One particu- GET A MAN TO STA Y illustrated her talk. The area lar one is Adam Fiddler HOME A FTER YOyIVE remarks was just below tbe founders and many of bis MARR/ED, AS /T, #As James Bay at the Ontario- descendants are still there. Manitoba border Gods Lake,: Some churches have small TOGET/M TO 6o Sandy Lake and Red Sucker choirs and, have recently HO ELake. At one time this was ail received gowns which they MONEone area but have since been wear with'pride. BEPO Edivided for cburch purposes. Tbey are grateful for u The big draw back in these belp but like to do the work VOU ee7 areas is mud and marshes themselves thus if we send the r 1 ~ ~~thus vegeaton is very limit- materials they will make hi fis hg an ntng. grivw ctes , a sense of cmpisd fihey aean unindia.Fien- ent.seseofacmpih ship, Centre wbicb is the bub of- On of their immediate needs MA RTY'S nîl Community affairs. is woodstoves with ovens. This Aut RpajrMrs. Milîs feels. that the wouldf serve a twofold pur- Aut Reairyounger people should be pose--beat the home (they 3 Queen St., Bowmanvî1lie encouraged to go north and' have plently of wood) andi 623-3896 make a career rather than learn to bake which would short term stays. ýgîve variety to their meals. At one time they had a Menonite msinary and bis wife tagtcooking. The faces of the young girls glowed with pride wben they bake a loaf of bread or buns or a cake. These young girls will one day be wives and mothers and r bave a home to look after s0 they want to learn cooking and sewing etc so they can lîve in more modern conditions tlhan their forefathers. They also need hobbies too. I~L~ As we know they are accom- ~IflI plisbed at bead work and L~JOi weaving but are anxious to further explore the arts and crafts. The Indians are a proud people and the younger gen- eration are going to move out STA E F RM into our culture and take their STATE FARM-place beside us., For tbis they ~ must be prepared and wbo TW % IdI Nul&ly0Mbetter to help them but you Hemauim~w~e7,~and 1. ]ffo-i-o-- - oeamewr More people insure their homes with State Farmn than with any other company. Thats because they've found State Farm offers the best in service, protection an'd economy. Give me a cali. l'Il be glad to give you ail the details. DIRO"K BRINKMAN Scugog St. - Bowmanville Telephone 623-3621 Like a good neighboi; Stte Farmn is there. STATE FARM FIRE AND CASUALTY COMPANY Canadian Head Office: Scarborough. Ontario Take Part in Skit at St. Pou /'s Revue Several amusing slutswere presented recently when the St. Paul's Couples Club performed their Happy Daze Revue in the church hall. In this one, Harold Yellowlees and Jim Coombes combined talents and, after some bantering came through with 'an hilarious punch line. There were others interspersedi throughout the evening's program, with packed audiences enjoying the show each night. i Lose 5-4 Trenton On Saturday, Nov. 5, Bow- manville lost a close 5-4 decision to Trenton. Bowman- ville got off to a slow start and neyer caugbt up. Goal scorers for Bowman- ville were Rick Simpson witb 3 goals and Brent Clemens witb one. Picking up an assist eacb were Terry Riggers, Bmad Hockin, Ken Hoy, Pete Keene and Stan Greenbam. Sbarîng the goaltending duties were Brook Cole and John Storguard. . HONSTY OWI CANT UY ETER"WEGUARANTEE ,,YýU i I T? "NOBODY BUT NOBODY BEATS US?" î"FREE ,INSTALLATION?" "FREE UNDERPAD?" HONESTLY NOW! Here's our prices. Shag 100 per cent Nylon From $3.99 sq. yd. Hardtwist (Room Sizes) From $3.00 sq. yd. Patterned Carpet for fa mi ly or Rec Rooms F rom $4.00 sq. yd. Indoor-Outdoor level loop From $3.00 sq. yd. Plus up to 60 per cent Savings on Remnants HONESTLY NOW Ut FREE ESTIMATES- Yes! We Instal CAR PET WAREHOUSE 110 King St. W. - Oshawa Tel. 728-0292 DURHAM CAR PET 60 Water St. - Port Perry Tel. 985-3773 Ci I5 ! I :!B m imý Are crlowded mails taking thelo-y out of your Chnristmas shopping? Choose a gift where you can browe at your leis.ure ..0 bowmanville FPet .Shop and Hbbes LEGO BUILDING BRICKS WOODEN BUILDING SETS (Imported from Austria) REMOTE CONTROL' CARS 34A King St. W. AFX CAR RACING SETS LARGE AS SORTM EN T of ga mes ...and much more to choose from 623-2921 -ý a -Ar w.. FeunoI W XW &W New Bowmanville Water Proiects Over 1 one million dollars worth of projects that will provide more water for Bow- manville were approved by Regional Council last week with little fanfare. 11 The Buwmîanvilie items came before council as part oi a report of the public works committee report and tbey were passed as part of the council's routine business. -The largest of two items approved Wednesday involves the spending of approximately $1.2 million on improvements at Bowmanville's water sup- pîy plant.,, This would include the construction of a new intake pipe and according to a report by womks commissioner, RF. MAPLE GROVE W.I. The Novemi-ber meeting of the W.1. was held on Nov.,8th at 8 p.m. in the C.E, Hall. Meeting opened witb the singing of "The Ode" and the repeating of the Lord's Prayer in unison. The Roll Caîl was "Name a City in India". The 4-H Achievement Day will be on Nov. 2tb at Bowmanville High Scbool. The girls project is "Focus on Living". A Senior Short Course on "Choosing and Using Fab- rics" will be held at Maple Grove at 1 p.m. on Nov. 25tb Bowmanville. WL . will be our guests. Our short course "A Festiv- al of Dairy Foods" will be at, Maple Grove on Nov. 29th at 1 p.m. t was decided to donate $10 to the expenses of 4-H girls. t was agreed to sponsor our adopted Korean girl for anoth- er year for $108. Our Christmas meeting will be a Pot Luck Supper on Dec. l3th at 6:30 p.m. in the C.E. Hall along witb members of the U.C.W, Lt was decided to go along witb the U.C.W. and bring a gift for Streethaven., Mrs. A. Vandergaast gave ber report of the Area Convention OBITUARY LULU MARGARET COUSINS The death occurred of Lulu Margaret Cousins, aged 80, on Friday, November 5th, 1976 in Belleville. Born in Clarke Township and educated at Starkville, Mrs. Cousins was the daugh- ter of the late Mr. and Mrs. Thomas McMullen. She was married on November 8th, 1930 to Arthur R. Cousins. A resident of Belleville for the past four years, she had previously resided in Toronto. A member of the United Church, she is survived by a sister Winnifred Cameron and was predeceased by Harry, George, Charles, Nicholas, Clifford and Marjorie. llevcrend John Peters offije iated at the service held on Monday at the Northcutt Elliott Funeral Home.* Palbearers were Messrs. Sèott Cameron, Ewart Robin- son, Harold l-ancock, Roy, Carl and Franik McMullen. Interment Bowmanville Cemetery. Richardson, the improve- ments would boost the capac- ity of the Bowmanville plant from two million gallons daily to four. Also approved at the region last week was the purchase of land on Sturrock Avenue, near the Mill Pond for a booster pumping station. The purpose of the station would be to improve water pressure north, of the CNR railway tracks. The cost of' the design and purchase of pumping station sitewas placed at $33,000. "The new intake will pro- vide a much improved supply of water for the Bowmanville water s.upply plant," the commissioner said in a report to the works committee. world. Tbree tbings we are to, govern, are our temper, tongue and conduct." Meeting closed, with the repeating of "The Collect" in unison. Lunch of fruit bread and cheese. tea and coffee was served by the group in charge. At SEAP Hugh Spence, an informa- tion officer with the Atomic Energy Control Board (AE- CB) will be the speaker Thursday evening, at a meet- ing in the Newtonville public school. The meeting is sponsomed by SEAP (Save tbe Environment from Atomic Pollution) and it gets underway at 7:30. SEAP is a group tbat was set up in the eamly summer to oppose the dumping of residue from Eldorado Nuclear Limit- ed at a dump site near Port ,Granby. held at Toronto. It was plain to see that Trixie enjoyed her- self, learnt a lot and was- happy to pas.s on hem knowl- edge. Mrs. G. Besse, convenor for Cultural Activities was in charge of tbe following pro- gram. Mrs. Besse read a short report of the Habitat of tbe United National on Human Settlements that was held in B.C. earlier this year. The topic "Women of India" was given in tbe forms of an interview witb Mrs. C. . esse asking questions of 3 sup- posedly Indian Women. Those taking part were Mrs. J. Hurrie, Mrs. E. Foley and Mrs. W. Laird. Mms. W. Laird commented on the motto 'A sufficient measure of civiliza- tion is the influence of good women". She said "the total culture of the people is civilîzation. The influence of good women is important to lîfe. It is said that the band that rocks the cradle, ules the AManagement Semînar I AT HE FLYIKNG DUTCHMAN MOTOR INN ON -Tuesday, November 3th 1976 9:OOAM to 4:30PM REGISTRATION 8:30AM Would you lke t0 attend? Ifso, please compleie the coupon and return i, along wiih vour cheaue 1 othe Iaddress.below. For turiher information please contact Mr. Peter Cash ai F B.D.B. Oshawa, Ont. 1 Tel. 416-~576-6800' - ------ -u M --- - The Manager Federal Business Developmenl Banl< 22 King St. W., p.O. Box 980, Oshawa, Ont. 1 will attend the business managemnt1Te ov Oh sern, l BowmanvilleonTeNv.3t,1 Nam e(s) Address Postal Code Tel Letters to the Ediltor Dear Sir: been n, Who lies to suffer are ver3 injustice? the mai Are we flot indignant or vices of angered when someone does Unfoi injustice to us? Indeed, injus- to inflai tice seems to strike at the very back on foundation of any co-operative inl the1 relationship, whether this 's this and between man and wife, busi- again tc ness partners, labour- and CHUC1 management, the governed Mentaîll and those governing, or be- This3 tween nations. If the one party Appeal is continually doîng injustice Novemb to, the other party, a co-opera- bourgê tive relationsbip will break East Au down and often end in vio- be carri lence. commer Our Western industrialized PleasE society, and the benefits that goal of$' we derive from it, will not be contribi possible when the general conveniE population no longer believes We rec in or understands that import- maiîed t ance of being just to the C. Ash, persons that we deal with. Not Cobourg, only will marriages break Radio St down and many children become, mentally disturbed misfits, but industrial enter- prises cannot function when no one feels an obligation to perform the duties for which bie is being paid. Communal and government systems will not longer function to give us the necessary services of water, roads, electricity, etc. when officials steal the moneéï entrusted to them by the public. This is the reason that millions of people live in misery and some starve to death in India, Africa, South America, and many other places. Their private and public systems cannot func- tion because of thef t and corruption. A sense of justice is missing. Then we sbould expect that the leaders of our society were anxious to inculcate a sense of justice in the next generation. It may be true that the Christian Cburcb bas per- formed that function in the past, but the Churcb is rapidly losing its influence as a moral teacher of the young. Our secular governments have not sbown mucb interest in teach- ing morals. As a matter of fact, it is, interesting to note that the laws enforced in a democracy, like Canada, do not have to pass any test to make sure that they will not do injustice to some part of the population. Ail they need is the support of a majority of the politicians in power'. We will be in serious difficulties the day that majority is crooked. Our judges commit them- selves to judge by the law and are not obligated to do justice at a-1l. Our public system of education does not seemn to be aware of the need for teacbing justice, eithem. Tbey just repair their vandalized scbools and caîl for more police. If there are persons still who like justice, and who think that justice sbould 4~e taugbt to the next generation, please drop me a line. Ivan Jensen, P. O.Box 1537 Innisf ail, Alberta Ladies & Gentlemen: Youm support for the Mental- ly Retarded in the past bas TELEPHONE 723-9843 e Siding e Soffi * Fascia * Wde Range most generous and we ry grateful on behaîf of any requîrîng the ser- Df ARC Industries. ctunately, due largeiy Lion, we bave bad to cut m some of our services past year. We regret rd appeal to you once to support our Annual Radio appeal for the [y Retarded. year our lltb Annual 1will be beld Friday, iber l9tb, in the Co- & District Collegiate £uditomium. Lt will also ied live on CHUC Radio encing at 6.05 p.m. se help us achieve our '15,000 by sending your )ution at youm earliest Lence. equest that cheques be to our Treasurer, Mr. 1120 Chapel Street,ý g, or leave at the CHUC Station or the Toronto- I t I 'M ie 976 Dominion Banks in Cobourg or Port Hope. Once again thank you for your support in past years. Yours truly, W. Gadd President IISSaleS' and Service TE LE VISION SERVICE CO. Mel Sameils, Prop. 185 churchst.,, Bowm anvilIle Telephone 623-3883 I A PUBLIC AUCTION bALE 0F USED CARS, TRUCKS, TRACTORS, SNOWMOBI LES AND MISCELLAN ECUS ITEMS Tcobe heid 10:00am. THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 250h, 1976 At the Ministry of Transportation and Communications 138 Nope Street North, Port Hope, Ontarea. 7-1971 to 1974 Automobiles - 4 door seda-is, s C y1. auto., P-B & P-S (Ambassador, Chev- roieti_ 1-1971 &1-1973, Ford 1/2 Ton EXgFM$ - 6 cyl., auto. 1-1972 Dodge 1/2 Ton Ex- press w-box cap . 6 cyl., auto. 1-1972 International8.1 1973 Dodge 1/ Ton Express w-5 man cab. 1 cyl. 1-1972 Ford 1 Ton w-stake boiv 8& holat - 6 cyl. 1-1971 International i1Vs Ton Cab'- Chassis - 8 cyl. 1-1970 Obeg-e 3 Ton w-dump box & hoist - a cyl. 1-1967 Dodge 5 Ton w-fixed 1-1965 Ford 5 ýon w-dumo box &hoist - O cyl. 1-1967 Ford 6 Ton w-fixed 'box - 8 cyl. 1-1958 Michigan Loader, Model 75AG - 4 wheei drive - 6 cyl., gas 1--1960 & 1-1963 internation- ai Tractor, Model 240, 4 cyl., gos (j has front end loader and P.T.O.> 6-1972 to 1974 Snowmobiies 2 c y1i (Alouette &~ Ski-doo) 2-ý Chausse M41nten. ance Kett les - 4 BBL Capacity, w-englue 1-1911 Turner Mammer Knife Mower - Tractor Drawn - 72" 1-1957 Simcoe Steam Gan- erator - oi f ired, low pressure, portable 1- Paint Mixer, por- table - 45 gai. drum capacity, w-angine 1- Sprayflame Weed- saerattachmenint 1. - Swenson Tailgate Sandspreader 1. Truck Sub-frame - Assembly W-2 hoist c ylinders 1. Stake Platform Body w-racks and hj'drauilc tailgate faftchl-ii-n" 8- Pioneer Chain Saws 1- Box Cap for 1/ Ton Express 5- Dump Box Crew Compartments - 3 psseng er 7- Fuel Storage Tanks (200, 250 and 500 gai. capacity) 5-1965 King Seagrave Hy. draulic Sandsrread- ers, 5 cu. yd. ess 2«.1967 =wnsn Hydrauiic Sandsprea dors 2- Scarifier Attach- ments for Adams Grader wlilfting arms 1-1958 Champion Snow Wing Hydrau lic Tower - truck mounted 3- Oue Way Piows 3- 'V' Plows 134- (Approx.) 2" Gai- vanized Pipe Elbows -90 degrees Qty. of Gaivanized Pipe Elbows and Tees - 6" and 8" 1- Firepiace Screen Grate Misceilaneous Win- dow Drapes and Cur- tains Chambers Deep Freezer - Modal 225 Items may be inspected et the aboya location trom 9:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. on Novembor 22nd, 23rd, 240h and Thursday, November 250h, 1976 until time of sale. Further information may b. obtained from: District Suppiy Supervisor, Materiai Control Office Port Hope, Ontario Downsvlew, Ontario (416) 805-6201 (416) 240-3725 TERMS and CONDITIONS: Eacly lentem il e lcjo~ n, "A en Whre e"baste., Vehicies wil be soid wlthout a Safety Standards Certificats anv without licence plates., A deposit of $100.00, or full peyment lu the amount of the bld, whichever le less, must be paid on'each item at tha time of sale. Payment must b. compieted and items remoeved wlthin f ivo (5) working days. Failure to comply will resuit in forfaiture of doposit. Ail payments must be cash, CERTIFIEO CHIEQU.E, money orooer, or bank draft made payable to the "lTreasurer of Onta rio". Vehicios cen only be removed wlth (a) a Dealer's Licence Plate (b) another Province's Licence Plate (c) Proper towing or car transporters. Ail oliier Terme and conditions as posted at place of sale. SUPREME ALUMINUM Of fiýce a nd Showroo m a t 894 Simcoe SÉ~ N. Oshawa eCash und Carry o Repairs e Doors e Windows a Awnýings SITE FARM :NSURfANCEM -- -- - - - - - The Registation Fee of $15.0 per person m( indes luocheon &fàW 1 mm mu mm-m