PAGE 2 TERRACE BAY NEWS MARCH 28, I973 Go fo the CHURCH of your cies TERRACE BAY ST. MARTIN'S CHURCH - Rev, A, Greengrass SUNDAY MASS - 8:30 and 10:30 A.M. SATURDAY MASS ~ 7:00 P.M. CONFESSIONS = 6:15-7:15 P.M. and after evening Mass on Saturday COMMUNITY CHURCH - Rev, P, McKague SERVICE OF WORSHIP - 11,00 A.M. Care for Babies and Pre-Schoolers CHURCH SCHOOL - Grades 5 & 6 9:45 A.M. Juniors - 11,00 A.M. ROSSPORT ST. BERCHMAN'S CHURCH MASS = Sunday 1:00 P.M. SCHREIBER ST. JOHN'S ANGLICAN CHURCH - Rev, A. L, Chabot SUNDAY SERVICE - 1st and 3rd Sunday each month at 7 PM, end Communion EVENING PRAYER - 2nd, 4th and 5th Sunday each month at 7 Pelle HOLY ANGEL'S CHURCH - Reve Fo Jo Meyer DAILY MASS - Monday, Wednesday, Friday = 5:00 P.M. Tuesday and Thursday 7:30 A.M. Saturday 9:00 A.M, & 7:15 P.M. SUNDAY SERVICE - 9:30 and 11:00 A.M. CONFESSIONS ~ Saturday 4:15-5:15 P.M.; before Saturday evening Mass; before Sunday morning Mass and before all daily Mass. GRACE BAPTIST CHURCH - Rev. R. L. Dye MID WEEX SERVICE - 7:00 P.M. - WEDNESDAY SUNDAY SCHOOL = 10:00 A.M. WORSHIP SERVICE = 11:00 A.M. EVENING PRAYER - 7:00 P.M. SR A Schreiber Council Quotes - cont'd ...... holders in the new post office will be explor- ed. Councillor Robert Krause presented detailed reports of costs of various types of loaders and attachments and it was decided to purchase a construction loader and backhoe plus sweep- er and ripper attachments at approximate cost of $17,000. Councillor Harold Fischer wished to vote as opposed registered. Reeve Harold McParland reported on his recent meeting in Toronto with Dr. Copeman when it was felt a medical centre in Schreiber would be a great advantage to the community and possibly an inducement to doctors. Letters were sent to various organizations in the town asking their opinion in the matter and a public meeting will be held later for expressions of opinion. Signs have been posted forbidding dumping garbage in the pit on Langworthy St. - only refuse may be placed there. Prices of public address systems will be sought and considered at a following meeting. Junk Mail - cont'd ...... If you did, then, you're obliged to pay up. Same with unsolicited magazines - read them at leisure then throw them away. Ignore the bills. They'll stop some time,probably after the "we 're-reluctant-to-do-this-with-a-favour- ite-subscriber-but-we're-gonna-take-you-to- court" warning. If they don't, wait for the summons and then reach for a lawyer. Don't ask the postman to stop putting un- solicited mail through your letter box. He can't do it. The law says that if someone addresses a letter to you, then that letter is yours and nobody else's. It's not for the postman to decide what you should or shouldn't 3 get. He can't sift private letters from junk mail; he's not allowed to do that. The Post Office does have legal authority to interfere with anything mailed that is obscene, inde- cent or immoral, with schemes to defraud the public, with false or fraudulent advertising or information on betting, wagering or book- making. But 99% of the junk mail you probably get is clearly above the law. Somebody wants to sell you something and the mailbox is a way of reaching you. People are often puzzled by the discovery of their name and address on somebody's mail- ing list, even when they've never before con- ducted any transaction with a direct mail firm. Where did they get your name? Lots of places! Direct mail selling is more than a sophisticated run-through of a telephone dir- ectory. to another as a means of reaching proven dir- ect mail purchasers. cont'd page 3 ceeaies Mailing lists are sold by one company