SET ARGUMENT DATE home for more than a week and ton, victims of a recent fire. Holliday, Mrs. Dave Coates and | with Mrs. Douglas Jackson andloch, 88%; Mrs. Sanderson, Miss leigh pr d an Easter ser-| The Quilt commitlee reported|Mrs. H. Schnabel conducted de-|Mrs. Lloyd Prouse as the com-iForsythe, 87%. WINDSOR (CP)--An injunction (nad received no medical treat vice. two quilts completed and others|votions. Mrs. E. Acton presid- mittee. PERSONALS issued by Judge Joseph A. Legris ment before arriving at Vietoria "entative plans were made to in preparation. ed and the group decided to en- Mr, and Mrs. Sydney Lockyer of Windsor to stop an election in cater to the Mens' section of the] ter an exhibit at Brooklin Spring BRIDGE SCORES were guests of Mr. and Mrs, John 13 Ontario branches of Local 938, [Hospital Saturday night, His fl Oshawa Presbytery, April 27, in LEND-A-HAND GROUP Fair in' June with Mrs. H. Broodin Driggs Cli hod in Lockyer, Whitby, Sunday. International Brotherhood of|ness was complicated by a severe . the Christian Education Building.| The April meeting of the Lend- Schnabel as convener. weekly meeting in the Township ¢ : : Teamsters (CLC) will be argued|qiabetic condition. It was decided not to enter an|a-Hand Group was held at the| Mrs, E. Acton was appointed|Hall Wednseday with the follow-| Edith Cochrane of Jowlte spent | Supceme: Court Wetlnesiay.io > n eefting i] exhibit at Brooklin Spring Fair. (home of Mrs. Floyd Jones. Mrs. convener for the WA bazaar from|ing registering high scores: fhe weshend with Mrs. A. I. Me- Me i lo iin . Mrs. Mantle reported $15.00 to-|S. J- Hillier conducted devotions. Sunshine Group. North and South -- Mrs. Cyril "Sic pooh Kennedy has|president of the local, applied for| Don't Neglect Slipping ward funds from sale of cars. Mes ter Stevenson Toad the Mrs. Roessnel, contributed = a|Davies, Mrs. Robert Heron, 115;|,.4 ergone surgery st mei the injunction claiming two can- WA Grou £ a we Dave Burleigh conducied wg the chair when it was de- om Sorte, for the Korean Re-ylter Wadell, Jack Patterson, |General Hospital. didates running for election as FALSE TEETH P i cided to make a quilt for Korean|" Mrs Harris served lunch. 106; Mrs. W. Medland, Mrs. Stew-| Ralph Milner is also a patient precklen of the local are in-| pn, rice tenth drop. stp ar FRIENDSHIP GROUP MEET relief. art, 102; Mr. and Mrs. W. A.[in Oshawa General Hospital. [eligible. Po a Mrs. Ralph Thompson was RELIABLE GROUP Heron, 97%; Mr. and Mrs. Ken-\WMS MEETING by Such handicaps. PASTEETH, an BROOKLIN GH izensiin was night Avr ia og 20 ol 8 I noses (on the. April Tecting. of, Tentative plans were made RELIABLE, GRO! f We SCARLET FEVER DEATH ii -- Citizenship was|nig| pr at .m. while a hostess for the April meeting of], ~ e Reliable Group of om- 1 aline (non-acld) powder to the topic for an address given at|euchre party will Lag April the WA Friendship Group. Mrs, lo cater to lunches at a farm. ;"accociation held its April beth Holliday, 92%. : oS AR eruoon Ausiliany of De LONDON, Ont. (CP) -- Oliver|kle on vour piates. keeps false Spencer's School SS No. 6 Home|30, a Spencer School. {Robert Dingman, Mrs. J. H, Mec-| ' ¢| meeting at the home of Mrs.| East and West -- Mrs. M. Fair-|,, at 2.30 p.m. at the home of Hubert Ormond, 49, of nearby |ing of my sat, Gives enmfident Teele ,! and School meeting by Mrs./ABC MEETING Kinney and Mrs. Fred Disney P| dias os d a painting OliDouglas Jackson. service, Mrs. D. Wiseman, 99; Mrs. E. Kay, Queen street. Com- Byron, became London's second |No gummy. gooey. pasty taste or feels Lloyd Akins, formerly of Jam-| The ABC Group of Brooklin|based the meditation on a lenten Broo 1 United CAUICh Were Of The Lesson was read by Mrs.|*-rs. Ron Watkinson, Gladys mittee: Mrs. Lloyd Bradley, Mrs. [scarlet fever fatality this year.|Inf Get FAST today at asp aica, B.W.I. She said Canadians|United Church WA met Thursday | theme. spay. Stanley and Mrs. Louis Bird gave Pugh, 95; Mr. and Mrs. Dave|Walter Stevenson and Mrs. Lam-(Dr. J. B. C. Robinson, coroner, . are fortunate to have freedom of|at the home of Mrs. Victor Par-| Mrs. Ralph Thompson presided SUNSHINE GROUP a reading while Mrs. Robert Saun-|Coutes, 92; Mr. and Mrs, McCul-|bert. said Mr. Ormond had beén ill at | education and worship. kin with Mrs. W. A. Heron pre-|for the business session when a| Mrs, Herman Harris was host.|ders read an article. | An Eskimo film and carvings|siding. contribution from the group was|ess to the April meeting of the| The May meeting will be held | were also shown by Mrs. Akins.! Mrs. Arthur Boyes, Mrs. Frank'sent to Mr, and Mrs. Ray Ingle- Sunshine Group. Mrs, Kenneth|at the home of Mrs. Lloyd Prouse Another Admiral First! Wide Angle 19" TV 16 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Wednesday, April 13, 1960 AT BROOKLIN Ormiston and Mrs. Dave Bur- New Picture Size! New Picture Shape! New Exciting Models! Admiral--first with 23" TV--is first again with the brand new wide angle 19" 'movie-screen' picture tube that gives you 109, more viewing area than last year's 17" TV! There are many exclusive features that your Admiral dealer is waiting to demon- strate right now! Go see him--soon/ 279% Compact new consolettes, table models and portables ...10% bigger picture than 17" Model P19J31X, The Thinman Custom 19 Wide- Model C19J21X, The Canfield. Ultra-slim Consolette with legs included. World's first wide angle 19" aluminized 114° tube with Optic Filter. Transformer-powered horizontal chassis. Front speaker and tuning controls. Walnut, mahogany or blonde grained finish. angle 19" slim, luggage type portable TV with 114° aluminized picture tube and Optic Filter. Hideaway "Power-Tower" antenna. In brown, yellow or green finish on metal. HE Admiral TELEVISION-APPLIANCES . CANADIAN ADMIRAL CORPORATION, LTD., PORT CREDIT, ONT. Be Sure to Watch the STANLEY CUP FINALS on TV. OSHAWA COBOURG FOWLER TELEVISION & RADIO COBOURG ELECTRIC 41 King St. W., Cobourg B. F. GOODRICH STORE HERBERT APPLIANCES 30 King St. W., Cobourg IRVINE APPLIANCES PORT HOPE PARKWAY T.V. COLEMAN & PHILP ELECTRIC CO. 34 Walton St. ... mark of quality throughout the world! TNEO-Y 306 King St. W. 88 King St. W. 50 Bond St. E. 918 Simcoe St. N. | The Canadian Open--comes back to { | | GOLF BASEBALL. TRENT FRAYNE The poise and calm assurance that were once as sure a trade-mark of the Yankees as their pin-stripe suits, were gone from the ex-champions this spring. They stumbled and fumbled and threw to the wrong base just like people, making it difficult in a long-range look to put them ahead of the White Sox. The Sox can pea ApLNg p ers Survive, eveland pitching is patchy. Only certainty in the National League is that the Phillies are the worst team in baseball, possibly excluding the Washington HORSE RACING \ Vai ! FINISH LINE ment this time of year--smelting fever. This urges men to head for the north shores of Lake Ontario, Lake Erie and various parts of Georgian Bay. It can be blamed on the fact that a tiny silver colored fish, the Atlantic smelt, that somehow managed to get into the Great Lakes, is mating. When word gets round that the smelts are running, men and boys, armed with dipnets ranging from dishpans to garbage pails, or I RE g Woefuls and the Sunnyside Swing Skirts. Blanket the other seven and pick one. The Dodgers, who didn't expect to win last year, do this time around. The Braves could if Manager Charlie Dressen can shake the club's 1959 divine right complex. With Leafs, the Cleveland tie-up has SWeD OQ ne whee 0g 8 100 gl carries the disadvantage ol a parent club s whim causing a farm-club crisis. Cooke owns enough players outright to form a strong nucleus and skipper Mel McGaha has a fine name in baseball, adding up to a vast improvement over '59. Officials of The Jockey Club have ar- ranged for Ontario tracks to have thor- oughbred horse-racing every afternoon (Sundays excepted) from now until the pumpkin is well frosted, Thursday, November 24. The thoroughbreds already are in full gallop at Fort Erie and when the current meeting is concluded, racing will return to Old Woodbine on Monday, May 9. The traditional Summer Meeting at the great New Woodbine will open on Mon- day, June 6. Then it will be "Waltz-Me-Around- Again-Willie" for another three meet- FISHING. pere mcoiLLen | Substantial citizens, faithful husbands, loafers, and other males are affected by a spring ail- brave fog, rain, cold, mud. Th «JIM COLEMAN ings: Fort Erie (July 18 to September 8), 0ld Woodbine (September 5 to Octoberl) andtheNew Woodbine (Oct.3toNov.24), The 101st running of the Queen's Plate will be raced at the New Woodbine on Saturday, June 11. Other major events will be: $25,000 Dominion Day Stakes (Woodbine, July 1), $25,000 Prince of Wales Stakes (Fort Erie, August 22), $25,000 Anchor Stakes (Fort Erie, Sep tember 8), $25,000 Breeders' Stakes (Woodbine, October 10), and $50,000 Canadian Championship (Woodbine, October 22). It adds up to 196 days of racing and purses of $3,800,000. perhaps with a 80 foot seine, sally forth. They ey shiver around shore fires, get smacked into the lake by huge But they bring back smelts. fic. He's a foreigner. before spring comes in force. hl #5 EWE S&F « JOE MASKO The world's third-ranking golf competition from the standpoint of age and prestige-- Toronto July 6-9 after a lengthy absence. The venue will be St. George's, where Dutch Harrison made his dramatic--but unsue- cessful --assault in 1949 on Bobby Locke's record. Locke had carded a 268 to win in 1947. Bobby's mark, as much as the money | and the honor, sparked Harrison's brilliant | play. His putter betrayed him. He settled for a 271, standing off big Jim Ferrier. | Mention almost any great golfer and you will find his name among Canadian Open Whether it's you in a flat bottom row- boat or Bob Hayward in Miss Supertest's cockpit trying to win another Inter- national Harmsworth Trophy, it all adds up to the same thing--boating is be- coming the number one recreation. It won't be long before Ontario's quiet lakes are resounding to the burp and belch of outboards and the hcrizon will be dotted with white diapers which sig- nify that here is a man who scorns automation. _ - The loudest sounds will come from Picton when Hayward tries to keep the Harms- worth Trophy for Canada. He won it « MILT DUNNELL champions--Tommy Armour, Walter Hagen, Byron Nelson, Leo Diegel. There's another angle of the Canadian Open which is often overlooked. It has been the spring- board from which big money winners have grabbed their first important cheques. Lawson Little 'arrived' in the Canadian Open. Arnold Palmer's first rich pot was in Canadian funds. So was George Bayer's. This time? It could be a practically un- known shot-maker whose name will be in world headlines about 1962. It's the un- certainty of it all that makes golf such a fascinating sport. PUBLISHED 1 ~N\/ MARL 101 the enjoy! [NIGNT - l oanDH or good SPU \ N waves, fall into holes filled with ice-cold water. Oddly enough the more they take out of these waters, the better. The smelt has teeth, eats eggs and tiny fry of other fish. He's too proli- He's available when no other fishing is possible --during the great period of impatience, just last year after 89 years of U.S. dominae tion of the world's unlimited power boat division. The real boom started in post war years and has grown steadily. The resulting competitiveness, has placed this wonder ful summer pastime within easy reach. A moulded plywood kit with a 13' hull, complete with 25HP motor with manual starter, windshield, remote control and a trailer has been put on the market for $1,000. Remember one thing. Traffic is increas. ing on our waterways. Play it safe and enjoy yourself,