Oshawa Times (1958-), 18 Jan 1962, p. 4

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@ THE OSHAWA TIMES, Theredey, Jenuery 18, 1962 j WHITBY SPORTS PARADE By GERRY BLAIR St. Andrew's The annual meeting of St. Andrew's Presbyterian Church was held on Monday, Jan. 15, at 7.30 p.m., following a pot luck supper for the congrega- tion at 6.00 p.m. in the church hall. Mr. J. R. Frost, Clerk of Ses- INTERRUPT LOSING STREAK Just when the Whitby Mohawks were about to em- bark on a prolonged losing streak which could have escalated to five games by next Tuesday, they pulled up their socks, and decided it was about time to rally for another victory. The magic number for halting their losing ways is three, Four times in 22 outings in Metro Junior "A" league play, the Mohawks have dropped two in succession, but managed a win or a tie on the third night. In other words, if it is an ex- treme necessity they can get up enough steam for a win. But it's very seldom they find it necessary to exert themselves away from home. Tuesday night was an exception. It was only their second victory on the road this year, and both have been against Unionville, who have yet to beat Whitby at home. On the other hand, the Seaforths have taken two in three meetings from the Mohawks on Whitby ice, ANOTHER DULL SUNDAY AFTERNOON? On Sunday afternoon the Mohawks will try for the fifth time to win in Maple Leaf Gerdens when they go against St. Michael's College Majors. They have failed miserably on two occasions, being shutout 6-0 by St, Mike's and 5-0 by Marlboros, but made it close in a couple of efforts against Marlboros. Sunday afternoon TV watchers yawned through most of last Sunday's listless showing put up by the Mohawks, and unless there are drastic changes, may have to do like- wise again this week. Not too many clubs give such a weak effort that they manage only 14 shots on goal as did the Mohawks last week against an underman- ned Marlboro crew. At least this Sunday they will sion, reported that 1961 was a year of decision for St. Andrew's because of the retirement, in February, of Rev. David Marshall after a long and suc- cessful ministry of 22 years, and the choice of his successor. After hearing several ministers, the congregation finally extend- ed a unanimous call to Rev. W. J. S. McClure, who was induct- Church Has Successful Year 1961. They also approved an a!- location of $2,800 for the Budget and $425 for Synod Corporation for 1962. After some discussion about enlarging the church building, the congregation requested the Session and Board of Managers to bring in a report to be con- sidered at a special meeting of the congregation to be held on Monday, March 5, 1962. Mrs. John McKay was elected treasurer, and secretary for "The Presbyterian' Record" fcr 1962. Mr. T. R. Scott and Mr. John Frost were reappointed auditors. Oshawa Brothers Plead Guilty To Indecent Assault BOWMANVILLE (Staff) -- Two Oshawa brothers were re- manded out of custody for sen- tence in Bowmanville Magis- trate's Court after pleading guilty Tuesday to a charge of Porter and T. R. Scott were re- appointed trustees of the con- gregation for 1962. The membership of the Board of Management was increased to 15 and the following were elected to fill vacancies; for a indecent assault involving a 17- year-old Oshawa girl. Roy James Duncan, 18, of 59 Buckingham avenue, and his brother, William Dun- can, 17, of 215 Court Oshawa, The eldest, a GM worker with two children, and the younger, who helps his father on his east Oshawa service station, were originally charged with rape after an alleged Sept. 22, 1961, offence in Darlington Township. This charge was dismissed after Magistrate R. B. Baxter decided after a November pre- liminary hearing that there was not enough evidence to commit'two youths. Ford Cars, Trucks Set 5-Year High Up for sentence on Feb. 6 are Oshawa, street, company states. rape charge. Called by defence counsel Terence Kelly of Oshawa, the accused's father Tuesday gave character evidence. Magistrate Baxter ordered two pre-sentence reports on the ierm of three years, T. R. Scott, C. Sarles, T. Semple, A, C. Rid- dell and L. Mathison; for two ears, D. Kernohan; for one Messrs. D. A. Wilson, Walter y year, Dr. G. Beatty. ed on Dec. 7, 1961, as minister of St. Andrew's. Under his guidance the congregation looks forward to continued success. Mr. Frost reports 257 com- Mmunicant members on the roll at Dec. 31, 1961. The total amount raised, as reported by the Board of Man- agers and by all other groups, was $14,979. This included a contribution to the "'Budget" of the Presbyterian Church in Can- ada of $2,698. Also reported was a gift of $1,128 to the Corpora- tion of the Synod of Toronto and Kingston of the Presbyterian Church in Canada, which is a church body created to make loans for church extension, par- ticularly in districts where popu- lations are increasing rapidly and help is needed. Also in- cluded is an amount of $120 raised by the Church School to FiRST TiME ON FILM! FuLE-LENGTH AND FABULOUS! PANAVISION' COLOR THRU UNITED ARTISTS, a Feature Times? 2:00-4:20-6:45 TORONTO (CP)--Retail sales of cars and trucks by Ford Motor Company of Canada Ltd. set a five-year high in 1961, the Sales of cars and trucks, in- both youths for trial on the, 449 of 1956. cluding 11,742 British models, totalled 126,826 vehicles or 11,-|type passenger cars totaled 049 units more than in 1960/$3,036, an increase of 12,577 over and the highest since the 130, Deliveries of North American -| 1960 and the highest since 1957'g total of 98,668. CLL en LAST DAY DEBBIE REYNOLDS "Second Time Around" in technicolor STARTS TOMORROW Sax JOAN BLACKMAN-ANGELA LANSBURY-NANCY WALTERS parcito or NORMAN TAUROG: setcewssr ev HAL KAN Regent ¥ GUIDES YOU THROUGH 4 PARADISE 4 OF SONG ! a S em eae OE TER* A PARAMOUNT RELEASE PHONE 723-2843 Last Show 9;00 support a Korean orphan boy. The congregation approved the estimates of the Board of have ace Bill Collins in their presence after he miss- ed last week's tilt because of a journey to Pittsburgh for his first Pro engagement. Collins and Bill Smith returned to their true form on Tuesday accounting Managers for 1962 in the amount of $13,255 which represents an) increase of 30 per cent over) for three of the five Whitby goals. Smith, with a pair vaulted into the goal-scoring leadership with 17. TOWN AND COUNTRY .. . With only 13 play- ers, the Kingston Frontenacs, finally grabbed the EPHL leadership from the Kitchener-Waterloo Beav- ers, right in the Twin-City, with a come-from-behind 5-4 victory. Bobby Attersley, the pride of Whitby, set-up lin te, and league-leading scorer, Tom Mc- Carthy on his three goals. Attersley is among the top three in the EPHL race. Orv Tessier, also of Kingson and another linemate of Bobby's is the third party of the monopoly . . .Whitby Mohawk forward Julie Kowalski was chosen as the most valuable play- er on the Mimico Mounties lacrosse club this past summer, and will receive his award tonight during the Metro Junior "B" All-Star game. Toronto Maple Leaf players, Al Arbour and Johnny Bower are two special guests* . . Rickey Charren, netminder for the Unionville Seaforths will receive a similar award in Ottawa on January 23, where he performed for the Notre Dame junior lacrosse club . . . Trenton RCAF Globetrotters are the visitors on Bowmanville ice to- night in Lakeshore Intermediate league play. The Shamrocks outscored the Lindsay Regents, 12-7 on Tuesday night in Lindsay. Bob Marjerrison and Don Masters dominated the scoring, each with seven points. Masters had four goals, while Marjerrison fired the hat-trick. Afternoon Aux. Sonley by the president, Mrs. E. Kay. Various secretaries reported Holds Meeting By MRS. ARTHUR ELLIOTT BROOKLIN -- The final meet- activities of the closing year of this group which has been merg-| Church Women. | Sinclair's H-S Plan Purchase Record Player Sinclair's H and S$ held its first meeting of the year on Jan. 11. The president, Mrs. W.! Bryant, opened the meeting and welcomed all the members, with! a special welcome to all the men members. | It was reported that $165.17) was made through a chocolate) sale drive which was held for) the school. The president thank- | ed the mothers who helped to make this sale possible. A dis-| cussion then took place on how} this money should be spent. It! was moved by Mrs. A. Camp-| bell to purchase a record player for the school, and seconded by Mrs. K. Cullen. The purchasing committee for the record player consists of Mr. R. Lappin, Mrs. H, Sonley, and Mrs. M. Morri- son. | Plans are under way for a! games night to be. held in March. Mr. McCall of the Bell \Telephone was introduced by Mrs. Bryant. He showed a color-| ed film on the weather called ed with others into the United)'ynchained Gods", which proved to be very interesting. | no lunch, wasiHe was thanked by the presi-| 'ing of the Afternoon Auxiliary|broken for this final meeting of|qent and pamphlets were pass-| of the WMS of Brooklin United Church was led by the presi- dent, Mrs. E. Kay, in the Chris- tian Education Hall, recently. A special worship service, Candles of the Lord, was pre- sented by Mrs. Ruby Sonley, Mrs. E. Acton, Mrs. J. H. Mc- Kinney and Mrs. W. G. Doidge. Mrs. Charies Elliott and. Mrs. Charles Wilson read selected passages of Scripture. During the business session, mittee. READING SWITCH AUCKLAND, N. Z. (CP)-- Booksellers report that books by New Zealand authors for the best sellers last Christmas. made up about 25. per cent of total sales, compared with lower a life membership certificate than 10 per cent five years ago. Books by New Zealand writers) | WMS workers and a cup of tea/eq out to each member on what and lunch was served by com-|t eat to be healthy. | The senior attendance banner) went to Mr. L. Meek's room.| The meeting was adjourned by| Mr. F. Riff and lunch was} served by the Grade 4 mothers. | Next executive meeting will } first time headed their lists of|be held on Jan. 22. I Flashing Thru The Skies! -- with -- GUY MADISON VIRGINIA LEITH JOHN HODIAK DEAN JAGGER 'THRILL YOU "ON THE THRESHOLD OF SPACE" IN COLOR "PARATROOPER" & "TANK FORCE" BOTH IN TECHNICOLOR } eairT hy SEE YoU... SATURDAY NIGHT 8:30 AT Ai, GET-TOGETHER CLUB SPOT PRIZES -- DANCING -- REFRESHMENTS 0.C.V.1. Auditorium DRESS - NOT HARD TIMES but CASUAL ADMISSION:-- Members 40¢ Non-Members 60¢ AGES 15 - 21 Tickets on Sale for "GET" Formal Jag, 27th WILSON & LEE LTD. OFFER YOU AN IDEAL ARRANGEMENT | "TRY sBerore rou BUY" CHOOSE YOUR PIANO -- KEEP IT IN YOUR HOME FOR SIX MONTHS -- TEST YOUR CHILD'S ABILITY AT THE KEYBOARD THEN DEDUCT THE RENTAL CHARGES FROM THE PRICE OF YOUR INSTRUMENT. USE OUR RENTAL - PURCHASE PLAN If you aren't sure your child will take to piano lessons, WILSON & LEE LTD. will rent you a brand new small piano and bench for less than 3.00 per week (plus cartage) for a period of six months. Here then is an economical way to test your child's ability at the keyboard. All the rent plus cartage paid by you will be deducted from the price of the instrument should you decide to purchase. FAVOURITE WINTER RIGHT HERE IN ONTARIO! Enjoy a swift ski ee run, tobogganing, | skating, winter | carnivals, curling or fishing through the ice... try these winter sports throughout | Northern Ontario, lakehead cities of Port Arthur and Fort Milliam, east to Rideaus, | Muskoka, Haliburton, Georg- ian Bay or any of Ontario's resort areas. Have a family holiday, or make up a party of friends--Ontario offers the fins est.in winter sports for every- body. There's a wide choice of good hotels, motels and restaurants with comfortable accommodation and food just right for winter appetites. Don't miss the fun of On- tario's winter sports this year! Budget Terms Available -- Take Up To 36 Months To Pay EASTERN ONTARIO'S LARGEST MUSIC CENTRE WILSON & LEE LTD. wusic store 87 SIMCOE ST. NORTH CLEARANCE! GENUINE | ARBORITE and FORMICA AS LOW AS de re toad NO SECONDS OR DAMAGED STOCK! UTILITY PARTITION STUDS or x 4" pe Y ag EACH 35¢ ANY QUANTITY VINYL ASBESTOS FLOOR TILE B83 each In 5 Carton Lots ALUMINUM COMBINATION WINDOWS (Up to 100 United Inches) of 5 or each 2 SII. Aluminum Doors: $22.95 Up In lots WHITE CEILING TILE r/c FOOT In 5 Carton Lots NO. 1 QUALITY DOUGLAS FIR HOUSEHOLD 4' STEPLADDER STEEL REINFORCED STEPS ONLY Fully Guaranteed 99 EACH OSHAWA PHONE 725-4706 OPEN FRIDAY TILL 9 P.M. MAHOGANY PLYWOOD OPEN DAILY TILL 6 P.M.--SATURDAY TILL 5 P.M. SANDED FIRPLY NAME BRAND ROCKWOOL INSULATION 2" (70-foot cin.) $2.69 3" (60-foot cin.) $2.79 In Lots of 25 Cartons or More Random "Veed" Sugar Maple PANELLIN 4' x 7's. $3.37 33.85 ANY QUANTITY « BU CHOICE QUALITY Ontario Department of Travel and Publicity W18 Parliament Buildings, Toronto, Ontario Please send me your folder listing*Ontarlo's winter resorts, hotels and motels and winter sports facilities. FREE! | NAME PLEASE PRINT ADDRESS P.O. PROV ONTARIO DEPARTMENT OF TRAVEL AND PUBLICITY Hon. Bryan L. Cathcart, Minister RANDOM "VEE" GROOVED xT' SHEETS | 4 Big Yards To Serve You Complete "Nh" Grade 8 ace BATHROOM 5' TUBS, TOILET, LARGE BASIN, TOILET SEAT AND COVER, BATH FIL- LER SET, P.O. PLUG, BASIN CENTRE SET, WASTE AND OVER- FLOW For only 58g. ILDERS « 4%" y & x9 3%" x 4' x 8' "x 4x8' .15¢ per sheet. G 2x4) 2x6 ) 10° 2x8 ) to 2x10) 16' 58 Check our prices on all ltems! CASHWAY LUMBER "x 4x8? $4.88 Above prices apply on 50 sheets mixed or more, Small lots add Examples of Volume Prices All Approved for N.H.A. PRPPIPPAIPPPPPPPP AS PREMIUM SPRUCE 2x 3-8 . $71.00 2x4-8' . $79.50 GRATE LOTS Low prices on smaller lots too! Price guaran- teed till 5 p.m. Sat. Jan. 27th, $2.79 $3.94 YARD SERVING OSHAWA & DISTRICT BROOKLIN | 3 AJAX YARD Corner of Highways No. and No. 12 'Phone 655-3313 i" x 4' x 8' BIRCH Chipboard core $9.98 SHEET Mahogany SHEET 675 8'0" x 66" GARAGE DOORS Complete $38.77 8"x7' .. $39.99 Just off No. 401 on Thompson Rd. 'Phone WH. 2-1221 STAINLESS STEEL SINKS ony 5G 25 each Strainers $1.70 each 7 BIG 4a' x 8' SHEETS COLONIAL BOARD PANELLING $9.69 Each In quantities of 16 of more

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