Fi'- WHITBY FREE PRESS, THURSDAY, MAY 24, 1973, PAGE il Continued from page 9 THE REDS season. Cairns gave up only one walk through eight ini- nings, chalked up six strike- outs, and gave up six hits. The Reds tagged Eric Moore on the mound for Kendall with seven safeties. Randy Sorochan, Harold Moore and Gary Borchuck each had a pair of hits and Harry Long added a single. Upcoming home games for Whitby clubs in the E.O.B.A. have Oshawa visiting Peel Park on Wed. May 23 to open the sehedule for the K of C Tykes who defend the E.O.- IB.A. Tyke crown won last season and on Sat. afternoon the Cobourg Pirates are the visitors as the Whitby Leg- ionaires open their home sch- edule in defense of the E.O.- B.A. Pee-Wee title, at 6 p.m. Belleville will be the 'visitors on the saine day at E.A. Fairman as the Canadian T'ire Midgets get underway trying for another e.O.B.A. Midget crown, and on Sunday the Reds are home to Peter- borough in a Junior Double- Header which gets underway at 2:30. Next week the Lasco Steelers host Port Hope at Fairman in an E.O.B.A. Bantamn contest starting at 6:15 on Tues., while at the same hour Oshawa wiIl be the visitors at Peel meeting the Legionaîres in a Pee-Wee hook-up. LIBRARY NEWS Durîng the month of lune the Whitby Public Library will be featuring stories and crafts on the wonderful world of na- ture. On lune 2, using the scratchboard tech- nique, the children will be doing pictures dep- îcting their animal friends. On lune 9, they will be presenting one of their popular puppet plays, The lion and the Mouse, adapted from the Aesop fable "One good turn deserves another". A tribute will be made to fathers ini story form on lune 16. The children will be ma- king special Father's Day gifts. Nature films will be shown on lune 30. They hope to feature the film 'The Beaver Dam'. The ast Satur- day story hour to be held for this season wîll lune 30. The children wilh be making paper flowers. During the sum- mer months, story hour will be held Wednesday mornings between 10:30 and 11:30 a.m. lb. FRiENDLY FLEA MARKIET n3 KineS ST. WEST 72"70 Tho Day Thoy, Stopped Avrising More times than most of us can remember we have looked'out on the front lawn or porch to spot yet another advertising flier and we have expressed displeasure to some degree.. And how many times have we groaned when yet another commercial interrupted our favour- ite television programn? There seems to be no escape. Even Henry Morgan, now in Canada, who always was an establishmenlt bucker even- tually gets around, after his message to the world, to. .. ..advertisinlg for a motor oit. The natural reaction to the deluge of daily advertising is to fondly daydream about the eutopian time when there is no advertising. At the Free Press we don't have such dreams so please read on and discover why..... There was an election coming up. The Prime Minister told his cabinet: "Boys, we need a dramatic gesture to regain the love and votes of the Canadian public. The old charisma doesn't seem to be holding up." Mitchell Sharp said, "Listen. Bill Davis really pulled a honey when he stopped the Spa- dina. Expressway. His Detroit research con. sultants showed him there were two big pro- blems - jobs and pollution. He blamied the jobs on the Federal Government and killed the Spadina expressway as a quality of life, anti-pollution niove." ""Weil, now" the PM said; "that's flot a bad idea. What do Canadians hate more than ex- pressways?" Ron Basford: "The thing that bugs people the most is advertising. Why don't we elimin- ate advertising the way Davis. eliminated the Spadina? Zap,just like that?" The PM thought it was a great idea. "Those men's hair-dryer commercials irri- tate me no end", he agreed. Naturally, the whole idea went through Par- liament like shibboleth through a goose. By using various legal devices, the government a- voided the usual first, second and final readings and got the thing into effeet from midnight that night. Advertlsing was made unlawful. Thus, with a stroke of the pen, more than one billion dol- lars was eliminated from the Gross National Produet . about $45 a year was "saved" per capita. The terrible burden of 121/2cnet Continued on pageS1 KIWANIS CLUB WHITBT- ANNOUNGES 4th Annual Apple Blossom Sunday tour ai Red Wing orchards on fL 2 hwy. between Ajax and Whitby Sunday May 211h. il a.m. to 6 p.m. Tractor drawn wagon rides4 throughout 150 acres NO0W OPEN FOR THE FINESTe UN GARDEN PLANTS A. VAN1DERMEER " Begonias Prniisf "impatients Prenasf Gerauiums and inany oflier garden plants or Rockgaà rdefls IHwy. 2 NURSERIES WHITBY-PICKERING TOWNLINE OPEN'PAILY MON- SUN 10OA.M. TILL DUSK A. Vandermeerm 4J -Ajax I.- j> J401 Baseline Whitbv FLVANSTAVERN &SON TOP QUALITY NURSERY STOCK and EXCELLENT VÀRIETY to CHOOSE from . .and, PRICED to MEET YOUR BUDGET BEGONIAS IMPATIENTS GERANIUMS Free - potted DAHLIAS $5.00 with a purchase Garden Bark REDWOOD 3 eu. ft. bags $3.95 This weekend only. 668-8190t OPEN DAILT MON. TO SOlDAT. 10 A 10 AN.e TILL DUSK North Side of llwy. 2 West, just past Lynde Creek , , 1 ' V ý k , W e s t - n ', 4 e c o r n e r s r o a d . ' - i