Oshawa Times (1958-), 6 May 1963, p. 8

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FIRE CHIEF AND Holy Cross WA Night Of Cards Draws Big Crowd The Women's -Auxiliary of Holy Cross Roman Catholic capacity crowd recently when th annual night of cards was held in the parish hall. The. gui were welcomed by the presi , Mrs, James Hanson, assisted by the conven- er Mrs. John T. Mullen, Miss Mary. Fitzgerald was in charge of the tickets, assisted by Mrs. William Patterson. The candy table was convened by Mrs. Stephen Bondford and Mrs. Steven Rigo, Jr. Mrs. Frank Hoar was in charge of favors. Mrs. Steven Coe and Mrs. J. J. Maher ushered players to the tables.. Mr. Leo Karnath dir- ected the euchre players. The decorating and prize com- mittee, convened by Mrs, Leo Kryhul and assisted Mrs. J. J. ||Maher, chose seasonal colors and the theme "April Showers" to decorate the hall and wrap 7 |\the prizes. In the centre of the MRS. H. R. HOBBS Surprise Reception For Pair Celebrates 40th Anniversary Fire Chief and Mrs. H. Ray- mond Hobbs, Lauder road, celebrated their 40th wedding anniversary and were honored at_a reception at their home. A surprise party was ar- ranged by their sons, Donald and Robert, who were assisted by Mrs. Roy Wellman , Mrs. Leonard Anderson, Mrs. Har- vey Hobbs, Mrs. Morley Thompson and Mrs. Duncan Foreman. A number of friends also call- ed on the couple on Sunday afternoon and in all ,aver one hundred brought good wishes and congratulations. Several came from Ottawa, St. Catha- pines, Scarborough, and a o. Greetings were received from Mr. Michael Starr, MP, and Mr. T. D. Thomas, MLA. The couple also received flow- ers and numeroiis cards anda kitchen suite from their family. Mrs, Hobbs is the former Elizabeth. Hester of Oshawa. Mr. and Mrs. Hobbs were married in St. George's Memo- rial Church by Canon C. R. de Pencier and Mr. and Mrs. Milton Oster were their wed- ding attendants. Chief of the Oshawa Fire Department, .Mr. Hobbs has been associated with the depart- ment for 43 years. Mr. and Mrs. Hobbs -have Toronto. three grandchildren. UNITS, GROUPS, AUXILIARIES OPA AUXILIARY The May meeting of the La- ies Auxiliary of the Oshawa Police Association was held at the home of Mrs, William Hayes, Tecumseh avenue. The president, Mrs. John Powell presided with 17 mem- bers present. Mrs. Carman Whyte read the minutes and the correspon- dence and Mrs. Ernest Barker gave the treasurer's report. Mrs. John Powell gave a re- pod on the April visit to the dale Manor Tuck Shop and informed the members that the next visit would be June 11 and volunteers would be called for at the June meeting. Mrs. William Moring gave her report on the rummage sale. It will be held at the ORC on Wednesday, May 29 at 1.30 p.m. Mrs. Ernest Barker will be in charge of advertising the sale. At this time in the meeting Mrs, William Hayes took over the meeting and conducted nom- inations for the officers of the auxiliary for 1963-64 term. ~The meeting was adjourned to a@ penny sale after which re- freshments were served by Mrs. Douglas Cox and Mrs. Kenneth The June 5 meeting will be in the form of a dinner at the Plaza Restaiirant with elec- tions to be held after the din- ner. CALVARY BAPTIST WMS Meeting opened with a song service led by Mrs. Henry Mc- Ghee, and prayer by Mrs. Grace Moncur. The members are reminded of the invitation to Faith Bap- tist on June 6. Mrs. Arthur Alloway brought a message from Hebrews 10. Mrs. John Dugan closed in prayer. Next week's meeting will be a com- bined meeting with the other groups of the church, on Tues- day evening, May 7 instead of the usual Thursday "please take note" at 8 p.m. The speaker will be Mrs. Alfred Ruscoe of the Worldwide Evangelization Cru- sade. Mrs. Lois De'aney will be the soloist. A. E. Johnson 0.0. OPTOMETRIST 723-2721 14% KING E. ¢ Ostler. -- stage was a large lawn umbrel- la covered with mauve foil pa- per, This was surrounded by a shower of many attractively wrapped prizes. Refreshments were served by members of the auxiliary. The social convener, Mrs. Jack Langley, was assisted by Mrs. Joseph Callahan and Mrs. James Hickey. Monsignor Philip Coffey made the draw for prizes, go Church were hostesses to a) Posing for his picture is Paul John Butka, who cele- brated his fourth birthday yes- CELEBRATED BIRTHDAY terday. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Butka, Gib- bons street, ed by Mrs. James Hi rs. Leo Kryhul and Mrs. John Mul- Jen assisted in distributing the prizes. Ladies' euchre prizes were won by: Mrs. William Dit- trick, Miss Eileen Worsley, Mrs, Joseph Konarowski, Mrs. William Lowery, Mrs. , Albert Harris. Men's euchre prizes were won by: Mr. Steven Coe, Mr. Joseph Taillon, Mr. Pat- rick McGarry, Mr. John Car- dinal, Mr. Allen Dillon. Bridge prizes were won by: Mrs..M. Coulson, Mrs. Joseph Riotdan; Mrs. Alec King, Mrs. Gregory O'Regan, Pat Kacz- marski, Miss Theresa Jordon, Mrs. Dennis Beauregard, Mrs. Helen Esihy, Mrs. A. Hanson, Mrs. Charles Fehrenbach. General Draw: Dolores Rore- beck, Mrs, John Sagriff, Olivia Pesuchuk, Pat Hraynyk, Mrs. Albert Crowells, Mrs. Dolores o'Connor, Mrs. S. Packer, Mrs. D. Harlow, Mrs. Bea Coe, Mrs. Agatha Dittrick, Mrs. Doug. Marshall, Mrs. R. Courtney, H, Cardinal, Mrs. Terry O'Connor, Mrs. Douglas Thackeray, Mrs. J. Sloan, Maurice Taillon, Laura Cardinal, Beatrice Hale, Mrs. Gordon Holbrook, Mrs. Marg. Garland, Verda Packer, Helen Koss, Mrs. Donald Smith, Maureen McGrisken, Vi Wilkin- son. The door prizes were won by: Helen Koss, Helen Caukaj, Helen Forestell, Mrs. R. Kel- lett, Mrs. Black. d The Right Reverend Philip Coffey thanked all those who at- teded, those who donated prizes, and all those who helped to UNITS, GROUPS, AUXILIARIES S@UTHMEAD PARK AUX. The April meeting of the Southmead Ladies' Auxiliary was held at the home of the president, Mrs. Jack Shearer. The treasurer's report was given by Mrs. Thomas Kidd. Plans for the park opening to be held June 1, were discuss- ed. Anyone wishing to donate sewing for the fancy work booth may take it to Mrs. L. W. Bow- ers, 1209 Cloverdale street or Mrs, Adrian Grotenhuis, 71 Grassmere street. Also members wishing to contribute to the home-baking booth may leave it with Mrs. Gordon Whyte, 68 Grassmere street or Mrs. Ross Twinning, 1267 Meadowvale street. The clubhouse is well under construction. The cement blocks for the basement are now being laid and the septic tank will be installed by the end of this week, Help is urgently required to carry on with the construction of this building. It is not neces- sary to be a skilled worker to assist, All interested men may contact Mr. John Murdock, 1259 Meadowvale street. The next meeting is to be held, Tuesday, May 28 at the home of Mrs, Jack Shearer, 85 South- lawn avenue, Refreshments were served by Mrs. Adrian Grotenuis and Mrs. Jack Shearer. 13TH SCOUT MOTHERS AUX. The Reverend Wesley Her- bert was the guest speaker at the April meeting of the 13th Scout Mothers Auxiliary held re- cently in the Ladies Lounge of King Street United Church. A comparison of the qualifica- tions for the Religion and Life Badge in scouting and guiding was made by Mr. Herbert, who pointed out that a scout or guide, working towards this badge, was strengthening his or her spiritual life. A discussion of the various parts of the scout law brought to light some gol- den rules which could well be utilized by parents. Mr. Herbert was introduced by Mrs. R. J. Manning and thanked by Mrs. Frank Ball. The business meeting was con- ducted by the president, Mrs, R. J. Manning. with reports present- ed by the secretary, Mrs. Rob- ert Hall and the treasurer, Mrs. Z. M. Warencyia. Fourteen members answered roll call. A report of the district coun- |i cil meeting was given by Mrs. William Eddie. To conclude the meetings for the season, members will take a tour of the Bell Telephone Com- pany in May. Refreshments were served by members of Mrs. Eddie's Brown Patrol assisting the so- cial convener, Mrs. William Marlowe. the two years--the cards, notes, ANN LANDERS Dear Ann Landers: So it's the woman who pays, is it? Not al- ways. In 1962 my salary was $25,- 000 plus a generous bonus. In 1963 I will make $15,000 after several months .of unemploy- ment in Chicago--and then only due to the loyalty of an old friend who is also a disgraced exile from New York, The reason? A woman. who luxuries, love, and swore she'd wait forever for God to free him so they could oy, and enjoy their love pub- cly. ' Afte two years she changed her mind and insisted he get a divorce and marry her or she would ruin him, He refused. The woman then set about harassing him at home with telephone calls at all hours of the night. She gathered every scrap of ev- idence carefully collected over letters and pictures. She handed it over to the president of the company. He lost his job, The woman has been pro- moted in the firm and is doing better than ever. And the word is around that she is now the mistress of another executive. The woman pays? Not al- ways.--FOOL Dear Fool: You got yours, bub, double in spades. But) what makes you think she is home free? The jury is still out on that doll. Check her in about five _ if she's still around, that ' ' Dear Ann Landers: I am the mother of three pre-teens who follow your column closely. You make a lot of sense most of the time, but your views on going steady need clarifying. The phrase "going steady" does not mean the same thing to all people. When I was in high school (13 years ago); "go- ing steady' meant virtually en- gaged. Today it can mean the boy-girl combination that works best that week. The most nerve - shredding example I can give you oc- curred yesterday. Our 10-year- old daughter, Dora, came home' from school and announced that she and Freddie, the freckle- Two-Timer Wrecked By Jilted Mistress faced kid (also age 10) who lives next door are "going steady." I was shocked at this state- ment, and asked, "What do you mean, going steady? -- Where do you go?" Dora replied, "Oh we don't really go any place, mother. He dag me --_ recess." pe I've made my point.--' DAVENPORT MOTHER Dear Mother: "From _ the mouths of babes . . ." Some NEWS IN BRIEF CRITICIZES REPORTERS LONDON (Reuters) -- Alexei Adzhubei, editor of ssa eons government newspaper Izvestia, said in Moscow Western report- correspon-| dent might "give you a friendly slap in the back in some press bar," in his newspaper he ee it." HAS LITTLE SUCCESS WASHINGTON (AP) -- The program for taking Cuban refu- gee volunteers into the U.S. anmed forces is something short married people behave the same way. Dear Ann Landers: I fell des- perately in love: with a di- vorced man. Two weeks before we were to be married his for- mer wife telephoned and asked me to have lunch with her. She had heard I was a fine young woman and wanted to "do me a favor." I agreed out of sheer curiosity. How surprised I was at her refined and soft-spoken manner. She was extremely intelligent ~ didn't fit his description of er. I listened for three hours as she outlined her 14 years of marriage, described his exces- sive drinking, violent outbursts and temper and women on the side--including a 17 - year - old baby sitter. I told myself she was lying and I discounted everything she had said. Now, after two years of marriage everything that happened to her has h d Ronald W. Bilsky, DC CHIROPRACTOR @ HEADACHES © SLIPPED DISCS 100 King E.* 728-5156 © WEDDING PORTRAITS © WEDDING ALBUMS t) --by-- i 21 ATHOL ST. WEST FREE MOTH PROOFING ODOR PROOFING MILDEW PROOFING on EVERYTHING We Clean ! to me. A woman who wants to learn all about a divorced man should talk to his exwife. Who knows better than she?--ALSO AN AUTHORITY | Dear Also: The woman who has been there is bound to know something that a future wife can never know. Such informa- tion might be useful, but who listens? CARRIED WEIGHT Women in 16th-century Eng- land wore hooped petticoats and brocade gowns that weighed as much as 45 pounds. COLD STORAGE 4 CENTRES PROTECTION| """"™. for your @ 434 -- 249 FURS rf 16 Bond GARMENT | @ 688 Hortop STORAGE | 1728-5138 "Expert work -- Courteous, Prompt Service -- Personal Care" i ae ae PICKWICK CLEANERS | STOP AT Ansus-Ga sutee. ree oie BROADLOOM TILE make the party a success. BUY YOUNGER People in Canada are buying homes at a. younger age the average buying age in 1962 being 34.5 years. ORDER CANVAS We Also Rent Chairs, Tebles, etc. CLEVE FOX 412 Simcoe North Oshowa | ; NOW! | | Before YOU BUY ANY WINDOWS... SEE THE NEW KOROSEAL. RIGID VINYL STORMS! They Won't pit, corrode, chip, pee AIRTIGHT FRAMES Draft-free, becouse corners ore hermetically sealed. Unit- ized frame for extra strength, @ FREE "ON-THE-SPOT" ESTIMATES °@ . » + @ product well worth investigating! |, tarnish, rust or crack NOW ON DISPLAY AT LES EVENISS SALES! GLASS SEALED IN VINYL Built-in seal holds glass firm- ly in frame, no rattling. Eos- ily reglazed. MAINTAINS OWN BEAUTY Some 'bright WHITE year after year . . . never needs paint. LOCKED-IN SCREENS Screen material never needs painting, con't rust. Screen locked in Vinyl. Your * Heedquerters eo For ® ALUMINUM SIDING ALUMINUM AWNINGS ALUMINUM WINDOWS { | 1 | LL 15 PRINCE ST. "Serving Oshawa and Ared Over 11 Years" 5 EVENISS SALES 11. PHONE 725-4632; EVENINGS 723-2707 smiled all the from. parking. time. OK MOM... RELAX! This Sunday is YOUR day, the day you put your feet up and relax. Open up those small tokens of affection. Do you like that sweater? Dad bought it at the OSHAWA SHOPPING CENTRE. You know its highly fash- ionable but, well Dad needed a little help from the salesgirl. They're very co-operative and she Sis and |? we thought you'd like these flowers. Yep, bought them ourselves at the OSHAWA SHOPPING CENTRE. Had a hard time deciding what to get for you. There's such a lot to choose Aw Mom don't fret. Dad had no trouble THE INTERESTING PLACE TO SHOP TAMBLYN SAVES YOU MONEY SPECIAL VALUES FOR THIS WEEK NYLONS 51 GA SEAMLESS MESH UGE-- 15 DENIER Zen Qe .25 | RUBINSTEIN'S COLOR-TONE SHAMPOOS -- '2,00 AS-A SALOTYN TABLETS Si! 67° SUPER BLUE BLADES BRECK HAIR SET MIST _ __» 69° uo. 1.89 SHULTON-CREAM OR ROLL-ON DESERT FLOWER Deodorant 2.50 VALUE TWIN PAK | .09 ARPEGE Eau de Lanvin WITH FREE TRIAL Flacon of Perfume 2-02. 3.75 CREPE DE CHINE 5.3" 1-02. 1.50 TABU %,,. Cologne 2.28:4.50 Perfume :: 3.50 '7... 3.75 KODAK INSTAMATI€ OUTFIT FILMS TAKES GOOD PICTURES MORE COMPLETE Big ---- +s er EASILY THAN EVER. KRIH-135 3. payee ct BATTERIES 19.95 vr 6a : 9 oon 9a Smiles 'n Chuckles ASSORTED 1 bb. 1.35 CHERRIES IN LIQUID w 1,05 %. 1,95 ~. 1.10 2 1.8 Rowntrees BLACK MAGIC « 1.00 i 1.90 0 3.00 | DAIRY: BOX 90 « 1.65 it. OOO VY. tb. 1 i) . 1.35 % 2.70 CHOCOLATES Neilsons 1,90 GOLD BOX 10 = eo ee 1,65 Every Piece Different MAX refreshi Spri #02... 6-0Z. ... 8-OZ. ... NEW AS SPRINGTIME / Delicate, Refreshing " Jonquille" COLOGN E Surround yourself with the delicate, FACTOR ing feel of ngtime. 0 seal 1 Be00 FOR YOUR ESSO-KODAK | HAWKEYE MOVIE CAMERA. As Featured During NHL PLAYOFFS BROWNIE 8 MOVIE PROJECTOR 44.95 i) | =e 6 KING ST. E. 723.3143 FREE DELIVERY OSHAWA SHOPPING CENTRE 728-5101

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