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Star-Phoenix from Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Canada • 4

Publication:
Star-Phoenixi
Location:
Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Canada
Issue Date:
Page:
4
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

I 4 SaakaUuii Sia Phoenix Monday, November 17, 1969 Sask. entries win at Toronto Royal Assistance to needy countries said higher priority than military on the road to independence. Many Canadians were disappointed in the results of the recent foreign policy review. The decision to maintain token force in NATO seemed development of poor countries. Stress should be placed on promotion of arms control and disarmament, the neutralization of the North, and diplomacy to reduce tensions.

Professor Warnock says that instead of spending on an obsolete military establishment, Canada should focus spending on programs which will truly assist in the and S. Gjesdal of Birch Hills in the pedigreed flax classes. Other top award to date include: two third prizes in Hereford steer classes to Martin Kovar of Makota; second prize in the crossbreed steer section to R. Traynor of Delisle; third prize in the crossbreed senior calf class to Paul Kendal of Langen-turg; third prize in the Percheron mare class to H. A.

Bexsin of Meadow Lake; second prize in the sheaf of wheat competition to A. Pet-racek of Langenburg; and second prize in Durum wheat to D. Thompson of Vautage. Potash rules too hasty in making, claims NDPer Whist drive, at Victoria School auditorium, sponsored by the Home and School, 8 p.m. Wednesday.

Mount Royal Home and School 8 p.m. Tuesday, a panel on drugs. Lunch served. Riversdale Unit, St. Andrews Presbyterian Church Womens League meet 2.30 p.m.

Tuesday in church parlor with Mrs. J. W. Horton. Caswell Hill Unit, Third Avenue UCW meet 2 p.m.

Tuesday at home of Mrs. R. V. Humphreys, 1012 Ave. north.

Essie Johnson Unit meet with Mrs. Emma Creuse, 520 Avenue south, 8 p.m. Tuesday. Heather Unit, St. Andrews Presbyterian Church meet 8.15 p.m.

Tuesday at home of Mrs. L. SpitznageL 111 8th east. University-City Park New Democratic Women meet at main branch Saskatoon Library, 8 p.m. Wednesday.

Public welcome. Mayfair Recreation Centre, ladies slim-n-trim group, flower arranging demonstration, 8 p.m. Tuesday, Mayfair school auditorium. St. Marys bazaar, 2 to 10 p.m.

Wednesday in the parish hall, Avenue and 20th Street, west. Tea from 2 to 4 p.m., turkey supper 5 to 7 p.m. WHATS ON TONIGHT THEATRES Broadway Belle de Jour, 7.00, 9.15. Capitol The Christmas Tree, 1.10, 3.10, 5.10, 7.10, 9.10. Odeon Battle of Britain, 12.30.

2.45, 4.55, 7.20, 9.45. Paramount The Best House in London, 1.30, 3.25, 5.25 7.30 9 30 Roxy World Safari, 6.00, 8.00, 10.00. BINGO Turkey Bingo 310 Ave. South, 8.00. OTTAWA (CP) Canada should direct its spending to helping poor countries rather than to maintaining obsolete military establishment, 6ays Professor John W.

Warnock of the University of Saskatchewan. In a paper prepared for the Liberal conference at Harrison Hot Springs, B.C., Nov. 21-23, Prof. Warnock says also that Canadians realize that a different approach to relations is required. Since the Second World War, he says, Canadas political and business leaders have felt that the Canadian national interest was in general identical with that of the United States.

But today the Canadian people are beginning to realize that the United States is not Utopia and therefore a different approach is necessary. This has led to a renewed search for a separate Canadian Identity and concern over lack of Canadian sovereignty. The paper says the military-alliance system has strength-tened Canadas close ties with the U.S. but at the same time withdrawal is one of the easiest steps that could be taken ico industry, Mr. Romanow said.

If the federal and provincial governments joined forces on the potash question, a potash marketing and development board could be established through which sales could be made and production properly rationalized, he said. There appears to be no guarantee that international companies will not sell their U.S products below the fixed price. In the end, companies may give up on Saskatchewan because of the economic squeeze the MLA said. The solution of a fixed price was hasty and piecemeal in its approach to longterm needs of the potash industry, Roy Romanow, MLA, Saskatoon-Riversdale says. 1 Mr.

Romanow was addressing a banquet at Central Butte sponsored by the Morse Constituency New Democratic Party. Because of the fixed price policy, some of the potash companies may find themselves in grave financial difficulty, he said. He called for a total re-ex amination of the economic relationship between the potash companies and the provincial government. The export policy should be to find new markets in as many countries as possible. But the government has given up seeking new markets and looks instead to Saskatchewan subsidizing the declining United States industry, he said.

The premier is gambling with our potash economy when he asks our companies and our working men to buttress a failing New Mex New type combine tested further i I i i 4 Several championships and top prizes have already been captured by Saskatchewanians for their entries at the Royal Agricultural Winter Fair. The fair, which opened Friday in Toronto and runs to Nov. 22, saw Paul Kendal of Langenburg win first prize and a championship for his summer yearling steer In the crossbreed division. Bill New house of Birch Hills had a champion entry in the grass seed section, and A. C.

Jaenen of Fairlight was declared grand champion honey exhibitor. Reserve championship went to restamen Farms of Lloydminster for their junior Yearling Hereford steer. George McKenzie and Son of Moose Jaw won the reserve champion Belgian gelding award, and Rudy Fraitag of Alameda took reserve championship with i Percheron stallion. In addition, first prizes went to George McKenze and Son of Moose Jaw for their light draught Belgian team, Frank Cruch and family of Lloydminster for a junior yearling crossbreed steer, Sask. pioneer died Friday Alexander M.

McMillan, 87, of 1212 Osier an early pioneer of the Asquith district, died at his home Friday after a lengthy illness. Funeral service will be at 2 p.m. Thursday from the chapel of the Saskatoon Funeral Home. Mr. McMillan was born in Glengarry, came west to Neepawa, Man.

in 1901 and, in the following year, to Saskatoon. He homesteaded in the Juaniata district from 1902 until his retirement from farming in 1951, when he moved to Saskatoon. Mr. McMillan was active in community affairs in the Juniata district, serving as a councillor for the RM of Perdue from 1917 to 1921, and as president and managing director of the rural telephone company. He initiated the first open air rink in Asquith in the winter of 1908-09.

On his retirement he was appointed an elder of Grace United Church. He was also an active member of the Nu-tana Curling Club. He is survived by one daughter, Mrs. B. T.

Johnson of North Battleford; two sons, Donald K. of Saskatoon and Wallace A. of Asquith; and two brothers, D. D. McMillan of Saskatoon and R.

D. McMillan of Rosetown. Former reeve dies in mishap HAFFORD (CP) Peter Strelioff, a former reeve of the Rural Municipality of Hafford, was killed in a single-vehicle accident near this community 85 miles west of Prince Albert, RCMP said Saturday. tests in the U.S, but will still undergo further test at the universitys school of agriculture engineering department. The combines have a rotary separation system which, Mr.

Habicht says, is more efficient than the conventional combines in use today, and has less loss of grain. He said he believed it also could be produced and sold more cheaply than conventional combine models. The self-propelled model features a direct connection between the hydraulic pump and hydraulic drive in each wheel, eliminating transmission and any mechanical drive. Priest killed in B.C. crash DUNCAN, B.C.

(CP) Rev. Wilfred H. Molloy, 58, a Roman Catholic priest, died in hospital in Victoria after his car hit a bus near this Vancouver Island community Saturday night. Father Molloy was alone In his car. None of the people in the Vancouver Island Coach Lines bus was injured.

Th Oblate priest was bom in Sturgeon Falls, and was ordained in 1939. Funeral service will be held in New Westminster, Saturday. He served in Fort William, twice in St. Josephs Parish in Saskatoon, Lethbridge, Flin Flon, Prince George, B.C., New Westminster and Duncan. A memorial Mass will be held tonight at 7.30 in St.

Josephs church. M. McCormack died Sunday Michael Patrick McCormack, 79, of 317 25th west, a resident of Saskatoon for the past 38 years, died in hospital Sunday. The funeral service will be held at 3:30 p.m. Tuesday from Park Funeral Chapel.

Mr. McCormack was bom in Montreal and came west to Calgary in 1919. He moved to Saskatoon to become a bookkeeper for Palm Dairies in 1920. In 1922 he moved to Edmonton, returning to Saskatoon in 1931. He was a veteran of the Second World War, serving with the Canadian Army overseas.

Surviving are his wife, Barbara; one daughter, Mrs. Peter Le Gatt of Carrot River: one son, Kenneth of Inglewood, and one brother, ONeil McCormack of Verdun, Que. Youth killed ROSETOWN (CP) Bruce Douglas Anderson, 20, of Rosetown was killed Sunday when a car rolled over on highway 4 near this community 75 miles southwest of Saskatoon. Tom Wilson, 21, of Rosetown, a passenger in the car, was listed in satisfactory condition in a Saskatoon hospital with ankle injuries. Family savings are big with us.

One big, happy family! Theyre the people taking advantage of CNs Family Fares. We make it so easy, so inexpensive for the whole family to go along no matter what its size! Family Fares give everyone in your family a 10 discount if two or more members of the same family travel together, including at least one parent. In addition, children between the ages of 5 and 11, inclusive, travel for half the rail fare, under 5 it doesn't cost a thing! Try family travel with us. It might even cost less than a babysitter! Get all the facts from your Travel Agent or CN Passenger Sales Office. The prototypes of a new concept in combines, developed in Saskatoon, have returned from a summer-long test program through the United States grain belt and are undergoing further tests at the Unversity of Saskatchewan.

The combine is the invention of Streich Bros, of Clan-deboye, has been hand-built here by John East Iron Works Ltd. under contract to Western Roto Thresh Manufacturing Ltd. in Saskatoon. Bernard Habicht, president of Western Roto Thresh, said the test models successfully completed their in service Off with Police found them during the weekend 18 of them all without their heads. Whoever did it was just after the money, said a police spokesman, not revenge on the city traffic department.

But they would like to get their hands on whoever chopped the heads off all those parking meters. Six of them, at Spadina Crescent and 1st Avenue, and 12 at the 1st Avenue No. 1 parking lot, were found Saturday and Sunday mornings, some minus their money boxes and most minus their heads. Police believe the meters may have been beheaded through use of a hammer. Some of the meters were snapped from their mounting posts and only a few have been recovered, the spokesman said.

their heads No estimate of the amount of coins taken from the meters or the damage to them was available. Cyril Van Impe rites Tuesday Funeral mass for Cyril Van Impe, a pioneer businessman in Saskatoon, will be said at 10 a.m. Tuesday from St. Marys Church. Mr.

Van Impe, 84, of 311 Ave. south, died Friday. He was one of the founders of Belgium Dry Cleaners and later founded Saskatoon Dry Cleaners. Surviving are two sons and a brother, all of Saskatoon. Westwood Funeral Chapel is in charge of arrangements.

1.49 1.49 SVz pot, 1.49 anmdil CHECK THESE TREMENDOUS BUYS! WOOL HAIR TIES ASSORTED BRUSH AND COMB GIFT SETS LADIES TERRY CLOTH SLIPPERS SCOTT TOWELS i SCOTT TOILET TISSUE 3 ASSORTED TROPICAL PLANTS including Rubber Trees, Split Leaf Philodendrons 3 BOBnMBEBBBB 1-LB. TIN K-MART NUTS 51 PACK CHRISTMAS CARDS PANTI HOSE MBBBDI CANDY DEPT. PEALS CREAM BISCUITS CHILDRENS WEAR 1.49 2 2 1.49 1.49 2 INFANTS STRETCHY SLEEPERS BOYS UNDERWEAR BOYS FLANNEL SHIRTS (Sizes S-6x) BOYS FLANNEL SHIRTS (Sizes 8-12) CHILDRENS SWEATERS (Sizes 4-Bx) CHILDRENS BULKY KNIT HELMETS PICK-A-M1X BASSETTS LICORICE ALLSORTS i FRESHPACK CHERRIES AND ASSORTED CHOCOLATES i4 LB. CHOCOLATE BARS TOY DEEP SEA DIVER TOY HOUSEKEEPING SET GYRO POWERED TOYS FERRARI RACING CAR METAL FARM TRACTOR KIMMIE DOLL TEA SETS MATCH BOX TOYS 2 1 .49 2 1 .49 1 .49 DEPT. 2'" lor 2" 1.49 1.49 1.49 1.49 1.49 1.49 1.49 1.49 for 2 1 .49 2 1 .49 1.49 1.49 AT OUR LUNCH COUNTER Home-Made Cabbage Rolls With creamy whipped potatoes, rich brown gravy, warm roll dinners 4 and butter l3 HARDWARE and HOUSEWARES FIBREGLASS for 4 JQ FURNACE FILTERS 3 PLASTICWARE for 4 IQ ASSORTMENT I IRONING BOARD 4 AQ PAD AND COVER 3 OVEN 9 for 4 4Q MITTS GARBAGE BAGS A for 4 AQ (Pkg.

of 10) MEMO 9 for 4 AQ MINDERS MISCELLANEOUS FLORAL 9 for 4 AQ toss cushions DECO-WRITE 9 for 4 AQ PEN 50-50 KNITTING YARN 9 for 1 AQ (2-oz. ball) PHENTEX 9 for 1 AQ YARN a LADIES 9 for 4 4Q APRONS I 21 CHRISTMAS 9 for 4 IQ BLESSING CARDS 2 1 .49 2 lor 1 .49 2 1 .49 5 3lto' 1.49 3 2b 1.49 S'" 1.49 1.49 2'" 1.49 2 3 3 1.49 1.49 LADIES WEAR BEAUTY AIDS MENS WEAR HEALTH and SCOTTIES FACIAL TISSUES CERAMIC MAKE-UP MIRROR LEE ANN COSMETICS FRANCIS HARRIET BUBBLE BATH 16-oz. Jar ELEGANT LADY DRESSER SET SUDDEN BEAUTY HAIR SPRAY LADIES LONG SLEEVE BLOUSES MINI AND PETITE HALF SLIPS LADIES SNUGGIES OR VEST LADIES FULL SLIPS LADIES TROUSSEAU BRIEFS LADIES VINYL GLOVES LADIES FUR HATS MENS DRESS SOCKS MENS BOXER SHORTS MENS TIE AND SOCK SET MENS THERMAL UNDERWEAR I.

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About Star-Phoenix Archive

Pages Available:
1,255,099
Years Available:
1902-2024