repetere. | @ THE OSHAWA TIMES, Mondey, March 19, 1962 | UNITS, GROUPS, AUXILIARIES MARGARET HAMILTON GRP. The March meeting of the Margaret Hamilton Group was held recently at the home of Mrs. Donald MacDonald, Guelph street, with the presi- dent, Mrs. Derek Allen, presid- ing. Final plans for the rum- mage sale to be held at the CRA March 21 were discussed. It was decided to hold a Spring Smorgasbord April 11 at St. Paul's Church, Wilson road north. Door prize for this meet- ing was won by Mrs. Charles Cornelius. Refreshments were served by Mrs. Alex MacDon- ald Sr. assisted by her grand- daughter, Miss Linda MacDon- ald. HARMONY UCW The March meeting of the Harmony United Church Women was held Wednesday, March 14, in the Christian Education Centre with the president, Mrs. H. W. Hoskin presiding. and a) large attend of memb and guests. : Mrs. A. Sinclair led in the de- votional period and Mrs. L. Martin provided piano music. The members of the UCW agreed to conduct the evening service of worship in Harmony United Church on March 25. An Easter film will be shown) at this time as part of the pro-| gram, | The date of the fall bazaar was changed to November 7) due to a conflict with another| group on the date previously) set. The date of the turkey din-| ner was discussed and remains} as October 20. A rummage sale) ness and announced the county convention at Albert Street Unit- ed Church on April 4. Mrs. Har- old Parrott gave the missionary report of used cards, books, sentyto orphanages and mission stations. The nominating com- mittee will meeting. George's Church Jr. CWL was held re- cently. at the parish hall, The Rev. J, C. Pereyma opened the meeting with prayer with Mrs. James Planeta presiding. jnesday, March 21, 8 o'clock at the parish hall, Mrs. Edward 's|Hrycanuk, Mrs. Alex Korkush, \Mrs. Patrick MacAvoy will be the Spring dance which is to Mrs. Lee conducted the busi- scrap- clothes and sweaters report at the April ST. GEORGE'S JR. CWL The March meeting of the St. Ukrainian Catholic The minutes were read by Mrs. Michael Kawzenuk and Mrs. John Hrico read the trea- surer's report. It was announced that the So- cial Bingo will be held on Wed- in charge of the decorating for take place on May 26 at the parish hall. It was agreed by|{ all members to hold a bazaar, to take place in November or December of this year. The president, Mrs. James Plan-| eta, expressed her hope for the co-operation and support of all the members. Further plans for the bazaar will be discussed at the next meeting. | The meeting was closed with prayer and refreshments were served by Mrs. Patrick McAvoy and Mrs. Alex Korkush. will be held March 21 at 10.30)The next meeting will be held| a.m. Following the business meet-} ing a social evening followed| and several games were played| with an Irish theme and some Irish songs were sung. WCTU The WCTU met at St. An- at the parish hall on Monday,} April 2, at 8 o'clock. | FAITHFUL UNIT 2 The'regular meeting of Unit 2 of King Street United Church was held March 13 with Mrs. Wellington Trainer presiding. The devotional period was led drew's United Church with Mrs.'by Mrs. Leonard Kellett, the Clayton Lee presiding. Mrs. Charles Langfield led in devotional period on the theme "Light". A panel on 'Alcoholism', in-| troduced by Mrs. Langfield,| was led by Mrs. Lee assisted) theme being '"'Lent". The scripture was Mrs. William Mitchell. Mrs. Roy Hood was pianist for the evening. Mrs. Lawrence Allen spoke on the studies of United Church read by by Mrs. L. H. Muldrew, MIS. Women's topic "Family Life in Howard Brown and Mrs. J. L. Pegg. Mrs. Brown read an ar-| ticle entitled 'Is alcoholism a| disease?" pointing out that, if it is, it is the only disease that is bottled, sold, provides reyen- ue for the Government, is habit- \Changing Times". The minuttes were read by |Mrs. George Twiddy and trea- surer's report by Mrs. William Mitchell. Plans were made for a des- forming and is spread by adver-/sert luncheon April 4 at 1.30 tising. |}p.m. Refreshments were served Mrs. E. C. Henley spoke on|by Mrs. Leonard Kellett and memorials to Frances Willard.icommittee. LAURETTA, AGED FOUR TODAY Daughter of Mr. and Mrs. | granddaughter of Mr. and Charles Terry, College ave- Mrs. Percy Davidson of nue, is Lauretta Diane, who is | Hampton and Mr. and Mrs. celebrating her fourth birth- | Charles Terry, Oshawa. --Photo by Ireland day today. Lauretta is the | ANN LANDERS ° Dear Ann Landers: Four years ago my husband became attached to an attractive and lively student in his high school class. She was 35 years his junior. He was friendly with a great many students but this relationship was different. The other students often came to our home. This girl never did. My h died y three weeks ago. It was my un- pleasant duty to go to the school and remove the personal belongings from his desk. What I found left me dumbfounded and heartbroken. In his appointment book he had recorded light-hearted de- tails of their meetings. They met almost daily for four years. eae re Ox FASHION SHOW OSHAWA KIWANIS PRESENTS Terylene Show Time '62 Courtesy of C.LL. LTD. -- at the OSHAWA CENTRAL COLLEGIATE WEDNESDAY, MAR. 21 at 8:30 P.M. Tickets available ot: JAYN-MODDE DRESSES -- 77 King St. E. BLACK'S LADIES' WEAR -- 72 Simcoe St. N. WARD'S DRY GOODS -- 33 Simcoe St. S. SEIGNEUR'S SPORTSWEAR -- Shopping Centre or at the door -- Admission $1.00 They'll make 300 payments before it's theirs Now they have a house . .. and a mortgage. But it takes time and money to own a home completely. You can't be absolutely sure of having all the time it takes... but you can guarantee the money, through Life Insurance. This is the only way you can be sure your home will belong to your family if you do not live to complete the payments. Undoubtedly you are presently insured but your circumstances are changing, so make sure your life insurance keeps in step with@your life. Tell your life insurance agent what it is future. Guarantee that yo you want for your family's ur family will always enjoy the comforts and security you have provided for them. Make sure of tomorrow, today. ONLY LIFE INSURANCE CAN PROTECT YOU THESE FIVE WAYS . Guaranteed protection for the home. Your family will never inherit an unpaid mortgage. . Guaranteed immediate protection, from the moment you qualify. . Guaranteed protection, no speculation, no guessing. You know exactly the number of dollars to come. ~ oa . Guaranteed benefits at big expense times. You can guarantee funds for future expenses such as sending children to college. . Guaranteed retirement income. You have an in- come you can never outlive. WHEN PEOPLE DEPEND ON YOU .,. YOU CAN DEPEND ON LIFE INSURANCE THE LiFe INSURANCE COMPANIES IN CANADA after her high school gradua- tion. I found snapshots of them picknicking, boating and fish- ing. There were no snapshots or photographs of me, or of his own children--not even in his bilifold. I don't need advice, Ann-- what I need is strength. I'm writing this letter as a warning to others who may be leading a double life. In heaven's name, don't leave any evidence around! You never know what tomorrow may have in store for you. NUMB Dear Friend: While the evi- dence may be convincing, it is still circumstantial. There is an outside chance that your hus- band's relationship with this student was a neurotic but still innocent father - daughter atf- tachment. Please give him the benefit of the doubt since he is not here to defend himself. Dear Ann Landers: Please say something in your column about those hideous things called P s. My I think they loves them, but are the ugliest contraptions ever invented. Last year I bought him two beautiful belts which are still in gift boxes. When I remind him he says: "I know. I see them every day." Frequently we go to the homes of friends. If it's an in- formal party the men remove their coats and I die of em- barrassment. A few other hus- bands wear suspenders and their wives don't like it either. Don't you feel that a wife has the right tc insist that her husband wear a belt if it means so much to her? I've considered throwing out his suspenders which would leave him no choice. Do I have your 0.K.? BOBO BRUMMEL Dear Bobo: Don't toss out your husband's dearly beloved suspenders. If he dislikes belts he may choose to go without either and then you could be in for even greater embarrass ment. ¢ Most men decide on the basis of comfort--and this is one de- cision no woman can make for her man. Men's fashion experts claim suspenders do a better job of keeping the trousers up. One ex- pert told me point-blank that a meticulous dresser would never use a belt. Another said "I wear both." Dear Ann Landers: Two years ago I was engaged to marry a fine young man. He suffered a complete mental breakdown a few months before the wedding so we postponed everything. We decided not to marry un- til we were both sure of his stability. He'd seem fine for a while, then he'd go into a sud- den rage, accuse me of far-out things and become violent. Last week he phoned to say he never' wanted to see me again and de- mended that I return his dia- mond ring. Is his shame and guilt re- sponsible for his rejecting me? Is this known as "projection" or "transferral?" His doctor will tell me nothing. Please give me the informa- tion I need. Dear Hazel: I am not about to psychoanalyze your boy friend through the mail. My: ad- vice to you is return the ring (although it is legally yours) and stop playing tor. If he has one psychiatrist taking care of him, that's plenty. CAKE FLOUR Not all flours are the same. They are milled from different types of wheat for different types of baking. Cake and pastry flours are much better than other kinds for cake- making. INFANT MORTALITY In Romania in 1961 tne infant mortality rate was about six per cent, compared with 17 per cent in 1938. ITF vou WANt Pocket Pleosing ECONOMY! You'll rejoice at Acadian's budget-wise price...and the way Acadian travels on such a miserly amount of regular gas! Acadian's one-piece body is crafted to give longer, rattle-free life. TF v0 Wane Heat -Surning SMES The simplicity of Acadian's clean, _ uncluttered lines lends an air of classie refinement to this good-looking car. Interiors, too, are designed to combine practical hard wear with dis- tinctive luxury ... harmoniously color-keyed with many fine appointments, TF vou want 6 possenger COMFORT There's almost 5 feet of hiproom, with equally generous legroom and headroom both front and rear . . . plenty of space to seat six husky adults. Wide-opening doors make Acadian easy to get in and out of, too! TF vou Want Easy, Nimble HANDLING! True family-size comfort! Acadian's wheelbase is a trim 110 inches--long enough for comfort, but short enough to give you surprising agility in a car this roomy. Ball-Race steering is responsible for the light yet positive feel of the road. JF vou wan theitty yet Peppy PERFORMANCE! Choose Acadian's 90 hp Econoflame 4-cylinder engine, or peppy 120 hp Econoflame 6-cylinder power . . . both available with smooth Synchro-Mesh or popular Powerglide* transmission. Invader 4-Door Sedan the answer is the family-si with full-size value... ec POTION *Optional at extra cost A GENERAL MOTORS VALUE Whatever your family's motoring needs may be. .._ ze car _--_»=\ -- 2 Whitewall tires optional at extra cost A-12628 Be sure to see 'The Tommy Ambrose Show" on the CBC-TV network on Friday evenings. Check your local listings for channel and time. THE CLIFF MILLS MOTORS LIMITED 266 KING ST. WFST, OSHAWA, ONTARIO PHOME 723-4364 WHITBY MOTORS LIMITED WHITBY ONTARIO