BRA Se fate LH a he i Tea Te dd et ly a 4--THE PORT PERRY STAR, THURSDAY, JANUARY 6th, 1966 LOCAL Mr. and Mrs. L. Warriner, Patsey and Shirley spent holidays with rela- tives at London, Ont, and Detroit, Mich, Mrs. E. A, Collins, Executive. Sec- retary of the Ontario County Tuber- culosis Association: made Christmas vidits ta;all patients in Sanatoria, tak: ing gifts of money from the Assdcla~ tion. i se The Dediraber meeting of the ont. ario County Tuberculosis Association was held in Beaverton, when Dr. H. A. Ames, Beaverton and Dr. J, R. Phillips, Brechin attended. The Jan- uary meeting - of the full Executive Council will be held in Sunderland. At Home Mr, and Mrs, James Carnegle df' Uxbridge will be at Home on the oc- casion of their 80th Wedding Anniver- sary on Saturday, Jan. 7th from 2 to 6 and from 7 to 9 p.m, at tho home of- Mr. and Mrs. Harry Phoenix, Greenbank. Mr, and Mrs. F. J, Barnard of Union Ave. will be at home on the evening of Jan. 10, on the occassion of their 60th Wedding Anniversary. Engagement Mr, and Mrs. Gordon Jeffery of Epsom wish to announce the engage- ment of their daughter, Yvonne Jane, to Mr. John Edward Moore, son of Mra. Amy Moore and the late Clarke Moore of Oshawa. The marriage to take place Saturday, Jan. 28, 1956 at 2.80 in St. Paul's Pr cabyterian Church, Oshawa, Card of Thanks Mrs. Reg. Boundey wishes to ex- press her heartfelt. thanks-and deep appreciation for the many acts of kindness, messages of sympathy and beautiful floral tributes which have done so much to help during her dark days of sorrow in the loss of her be- loved husband. Special thanks to Rev. R. Wylie, the officers and members of _Warriner Lodge, No. 76, 1.0.0.F. and Silverwoods Dairy and Staff. Many tharike to Dr. Dymond, the staff -of the Port Perry Community Memorial Hospital, Rev. R. Wylie and others who treated me so fine during my recent stay at the hospital, --Mrs. C. O. Clay. In Memoriam MARTYN---In loving memory of a dear mother and grandmother, May Frances who passed away Jan, 5, 1955. Two dear bright eyes, .a tendet smile, A loving heart that knew no guile, Deep trust in God that all was right, Her joy to make some other bright If sick or suffering one she knew, Some gentle act of love she'd do; No thought of self, but of the other, I know He sald "Well Done", dear Mother. Sadly missed and ever remembered by her husband Howard and family. t Sunday, January 8-- | Minister to Name NEWS THE CHUBCHES CHURCH OF THE ASCENSION : ANGLICAN Rev. K. W. Scott, L.Th., Repor Sunday, January 8-- | 9.30 a.m. --Holy Communion 11 a.h.--Sunday School * I | p-m.--Evening Prayer and sermon PORT PERRY UNITED CHURCH Rev. R. H. Wylle, B.A., Minister Sunday, Jan. 8th-- 10 a.m.--Sunday School 11 a.m.--Sacrament of the Lord's Supper. : 7 p.m,--One Thing Thou Lackest. Jan. 22nd--Anniversary Services. PENTECOSTAL CHURCH Sunday, January 8-- 10 a.m.--Sunday School 11 a.m.--Morning Worship, 7 p.m.--Evangelistic Service Wed., 8 p.m.--Prayer Service. Fri, 8 p.m.--Christ's Ambassadors. : CHRIST IS THE LIFE Pastor K. R. Sprackett. ST. JOHN'S PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Sunday, January 8-- 11 a.m.--Sunday School Vd 7 p.m.--Evening Worship PORT PERRY BAPTIST CHURCH Pastor: Paul Delaney Sunday School at 10 a.m. Morning Service at 11 a.m. Evening service at 7 p.m. Wednesday, Prayer Meeting at 8 p.m. Young People's on Friday at 8 p.m. THE SUNDAY SCHOOL OF THE AIR Radio Station CKLB, © 1850 on your Dial Every Sunday Morning at 10.05 "We need our Church-- +" * our Church needs us." dec.16-66 Oshawa Chairman OTTAWA.--The chairman of a con- ciliation board dealing with contract demands of 160,000 non-operating rail workers will be named by Labour Minister Gregg. Companies and Unions have failed to agree, on a chairman. it was learned Friday, and the appointment has been left in the minister's hands. Union contract requests are estimated to cost more than $90, 000,000. OPEN BOWLING THURSDAY and SATURRAY EVENINGS WEDNESDAY 2.30 to 6 p.m. i COMING EVENTS | Canadian Club "Canadian Club of Ontario County, 6.16 p.m., Jan.' 11th, Northminster Church, Oshawg. Speaker Alan Jar- vis, director National Gallery of Can. ada. - Topic "Is Art Necessary?" & A) Home Baking Sale The Women's Guild g the Church of Ascension will hold a Home Baking Sale and Afternoon Tea in the Parish Hall on Saturday afternoon, January 21st from 2.80 to 6 p.m. Euchre and Dance In Manchester Hall on Friday, Jan. 6, 1966 at 8.30 p.m. Proceeds in aid of Utica Hall Building Fund. Draw to be made for dressed chicken. Prize donated by Carnegie Hardware for highest total score for remainder of season. Euchre The Cancer, Polio and Tuberculosis Fund of the I:0.0.F, and Rebekahs are holding a Euchre at the 1,0.0.F. Hall on Friday, Jan. 13, 1966. Lunch ser- ved." Rebekahs please provide lunch. Everyone welcome. All proceeds for charitable purposes. -------- Euchre Scugog Home and School Ass'n are sponsoring a euchre on Friday even- --| ing, Jan. 6 at the Community Hall. Admission 36c. Prizes and lunch. 'Everyone welcome. Favorite Apy Apple Recipes APPLE COTTAGE PUDDING % ¢. butter 2/8 c. sugar 1 egg, well beaten 1 cup milk "2% ec. flour 4 tsps. baking powder 4 tgp. salt G large apples Cream butter and sugar. Add beat- en egg. Beat well. Sift flour, Bak- ing Powder and Salt and add altern- ately with milk, Slice apples into baking dish. Sprinkle with 1/3 ec. sugar and cover with the batter, Bake in moderate oven 36 minutes. = APPLE CHEESE CRISP 6 cups sliced apples 1 tsp. cinnamon or mixed spices 1 tbsp. lemon juice Sprinkle of salt 12 ¢. corn syrup 14 ¢. granulated sugar 2/3 c. sifted all-purpose flour | thinking. 1/8 ¢. butter % 1b, grated nippy cheese. Method: . Arrange apple slices in greased baking dish; sprinkle with cinnamon, salt and lemon juice and pour syrup over all. Combine sugar, flour, salt and spice; cut butter into with the grated cheese. Top apples with this crumbly mixttire. Bake 850° F. for about an "hour untif-lightly brown. Serve hot or cold. Se HAM & APPLE CASSEROLE 3 cups' ground cooked ham % tsp, mustard (dry) 1 thsp. grated onion 1 egg, slightly beaten Y% c¢. milk . 1 cup fine bread crumbs 2 medium size apples % c. brown sugar 2 thsp. butter ' Combine ham, mustard, onion, egg, milk and crumbs; place in greased bake dish. Peel, core and slice apples about % inch thick. Arrange slice to overlap on top of ham mixture around edge of dish. Sprinkle with brown sugar: and dot with butter, Bake uncovered in moderate oven (876°) about 40 minutes or until ap- ples tender and brown. a APPLE RINGS IN HONEY Select 4 large cooking apples, wash and core, Slice in rings % inch thick. Put slices in greased pan and pour 1 cup honey over them. Heat slowly until simmering and continue to sim- mer until apples are transparent. Expert Says Teachers Must Bid Against Security TORONTO -- Dr." A. W. Trueman former university president, said teg- chers must fight the. desire for se- curity. among students, He told the Ontario Secondary School Teachers' Federation that this of an inner compulsion to make great- er demands on himself until he rose above day by day achievements and performed great work. Too many men and women are gra- duating from colleges without a men- tal makeup that promises outstand- ing achievement, Dr, Trueman said. ~ sioner who has served as president of the universities of Manitoba and New Brunswick said teachers could impart this kind of education as early as the elementary schooling age so that by the time a young man or woman gra- duafes he or she has developed a sti- mulus "for fresh and independent FEW GREAT WORKS Minds occupied with security have produced few great works, he said. At its best, security has come to mean safety from outside -interfer- ence; at its worst, protection against the consequences of laziness. Vi tsp. salt The basic aims of 'education he said small pieces; stir all together lightly desire denied the student's discovery | The national film board commis. | - should be development of the inner compulsion and the ability to teach diserimination. The Ontario Public School Tenchere™gederation, holding its an- Men nual assembly here simultaneously with the OSSTF was told it should unite with. women public school tea- chers into one Ontario federation. Clarke Macdonald of. Port Arthur OPSMTF president, said it" is import- ant that the two federations be in tune with each other's thinking. BIG CONFEDERATION ~ The move would unite 6,000 men and 156,000 women public school "tea: chers. Mr. MacDonald added that the pro- blem of finding money for education is squarely on the shoulders of tea- chers, CUA new aspect--willingness to pay --is being studied in current educa- tion finance research in the maritime provinces. It puts an entirely new slant on the search: for finances. It puts: definite "responsibility upon the teaching profession for finding in- creased financial support for educa- : ton" he sald, i 4,649,799 Cars, | Trucks Made By GM In 1955 | DETROIT--General Motors Corp- poration reported Friday it produced an estimated 4,649,799 passenger cars and trucks in the United States and Canada during 1965, Harlow Curtice; corporation prési- dent, said this was by far the gregtest number of units produced in any one year by the company, The previous high was 3,838,033 units in 1950. 14 QUAKER MUFFETS 2 ror 29¢ BEST BUYS " CLARKE'S Fresh -- Side Swift's Premium WHITE SWAN TOILET TISSUE 2 for 21¢ RED & WHITE PURE PEANUT BUTTER 16-02. jar 31 BACON Young -- Tender JEWEL SHORTENING an. AB ee em a Ee RSS RED &- WHITE ORANGE PEKOE TEA BAGS "GAY LIQUID DETERGE 12-0z. Bottle -- 5¢ Off 29¢ --- Bags I5¢ NT ih New Crop -- Tender CHIEF BRAND Sturdy 4-String 99¢ Ea. HABITANT v : BLACK PEP PEA SOUP 150; tn & For 23¢ SUPREME BRAND PURE Well Cured -- No. 1 CELERY" PER SPARERIB § Veal Front Rolls Tender -'Juicy - Meaty -- Standing Short Cut Prime Rib Roast Swift's Oriole -- Store Sliced PORK LIVER YELLOW ONION i| New Crop -- Crisp uf 1 Swift's -- Rib End -- 315 1h. average = Pork Loin Roast Ib. 39 PORK & BEANS ; 15-0. tin 2. for 29¢ NIAGARA K!ST PURE ORANGE MARMALADE 24-0z. Jar 25¢ Ib as. Ib. 39 Ib 23 1.39 Ib, 33: FRESH PRODUCE | Rine. Sweet, Easy to Peel - Sunkist - Size 200 ORANGES . Florida -- Zipper Skin -- 176 Size TANGERINES go; 35¢ | doz. 6 3c 1 GREEN CABBAGE 210519. 3-1b. bag 19. : 8, 19. bo Stalks ize 30's FROZEN FOODS Birdseye French Fried Potatoes, 9-0z. pkg. 2/41¢ Birdseye Turkey Pies, 8-0z. pie, each _____ 37¢ re Birdseye Fish Sticks, 10-0z. pkg. _.__..._____ 39c¢ a B © doz tin 37¢ "Birdseye Freezes Flavor" Oshawa Memorial | ramwy pousLes, " 15 ; Service FRIDAY 7.30 to 9.30 GR i "; i : ROSE BRAND SWEET ROUT KISH 5 aths Rise w © Mercury ' p On No. 2 Hwy. East of Oshawa i N A sudden wel of hot weather brings a shar increase in deaths, WAFER PICKLES b REE N P 5 A S City Limits SATURDAY AFTERNOO especially syong the Fi oul the chronically ll, and increases the : 16-02. 33c . .8td. - 15-0z tin MONUMENTS, -MARKERS 2 10 5 pan. . hay {ge M pop Bl ny OO temperatures for six days VALLEY GOLD MEDIUM 2-or 23¢ : CORNER STONES, and Public School children 10c. gos wesh rap Shove B egress -4nd on four successive days above 0 P R U N E S . SNYDER'S STATUARY, High School children 16c. 90.7 per cent over those for the ue. 29 GREEN BEANS also comparable week in 1854, The Lb. Pkg. £90 " 5.00. th Markers and Works of Bronze degrees, wih a high of 85 2m HAWES LIGHTNING "9 ; Ne : ; * : 4 " For [4 \ ~4 Manufacturing Memorials to in- i goths from igh bleed Fm FLOOR CLEAN E R : dividual requirements from the Causeway Bowling hod igersated vm A ROSE BRAND finest Granites and Marbles Available. For Information without Obligation write Box 218 or call RA. 56-6611 Lanes tf. G -- 1 Yl | YORK TOMATOES, 28 oz. ... YORK PEACHES, 20 oz. BLUE SURE, large size - MIXED CANDY ...... fos Week-End SPECIALS, January 6-7 ILRI EE EE TE EP PPE REPRE ETRY ERIE V.8 JUICE, 20 oz. ............0.i... DovPE GENERAL STORE 24d, A PTO cern 170, Rag Suing assis 32¢. "for an increase of 61.1 cent and arterioscleriotic heart disease for 82.7 per cent. Cancer deaths increased by 31.6 per cent in the 1966 hot week over the figures for the 1964 week of moderate tam. perature. As the numbers of réons past 66 in our population Increase, the fatal effects of heat may expected to become a matter of ever- growing concern. There ware approximate Ly millions in that age group today and, by 1980, the wok will have ircreased to about 14 millions. Althofigh diseases involving the heart a § blood vessels are still common' causes of death among the elderly, new scientific develop- ments are producing drugs to com- bat them For the painful heart condition known as angina pec: toris, a new drug called Peritrate a first cousin of the explosive nitroglycerin--has been establish. ced as the most effective in pre. vention of anging attacks . For high blood pressure, there is i few drug, hexamethonium chloride, taken by mouth. It has been adjudged the most valuable agent for the control of runaway pressures Its originel oral form N has recently been combined with reserpine, the "tranquilizing agent" derived from the a Rau. wolfia which Indian physicians have been using for hundreds of years. Studies have shown that the combination relieves symptoms of high blood pressure with amall doses Heat is becoming less of a haz. ard_to life and health as a result of medical discoveries, of new temperature controlling devices, and new advances in enginesring. Single-room air conditioning units are now commonplace and the promise is made by heating engi. "neers that year-around (Jeating. epoling units, run by nuel sal pow. er, may be available for private homes in less thar a decade Quart Can 49c HAWES LEMON OIL 14-02. bottle 29¢ JOHNSON'S PASTE FLOOR WAX Lb. Tin 59¢ NESCAFE INSTANT COFFEE 6-02, Jar 1.84 CHEESE SLICES me ------------ = : - There's a Red & White Store near you ~ DOWSON'S FOOD MARKET Phone 91. MARGARINE 29¢ KRAFT DELUXE 1-1b, pkg. wn ve DT . BLACK DIAMOND OLD WHITE CHEESE 8-01. wedge 37¢ : FA rt