Siig tive ing D itso ATR SLE SEF GIR ES, MAYOR ACTS AS COMMISSIONER WHITBY (Staff) -- Mayor Warren Mowat will serve the community as industrial commissioner, it was an- nounced Thursday, The task will be performed until the council. either appoints a new. commissioner or finalizes a decision on v;hat should be done about the position. Mayor Mowat stated his appointment was only tem- porary and would be in force until a new industrial commissioner was hired, The mayor is taking over the job previously held by Larry M. Cond who turned in his resignation this week. The resignation was ac- cepted by both. the indus- trial commission and town council, Cards Night Is Planned WHITBY -- Mrs. Walter Nor- ris chaired the Royal Canadian Legion 'Ladies' Auxiliary meet- ing March 23 at the Legion Hall. Arrangements were made for a card night to be held April 5. Everyone is welome, Lunch will be served and prizes awarded to winners, Mrs. Vernon Moore, sports convener, announced that the one bowling tournament will be held April 4 at Ajax recrea- tion hall at 1 p.m. President Norris held an ex- ecutive meeting Thursday eve- ning at her home. Mrs. Keith King, sick com- mittee convener, reported that Dave Thomas is' in the Oshawa '|General Hospital. Mrs. George Brown was welcomed back by members after her lengthy ill- ness. Mrs. Earl Ormiston mention-} ed that she had great success in obtaining favors and prizes for the rally. The ladies' auxil- iary's annual bazaar will be held Oct. 19. Members will pre- pare various articles during the summer, The winner of the draw was Mrs, Charles Dalby. | A delicious lunch was served) by Mrs. William MacCarl, Mrs. Albert Carr, Mrs. Walter Nor- ris, Mrs. Keith King, Mrs; Vi Taylor and Mrs, Earl Ormiston. THE OSHAWA TIMES, Friday, March 26, 1965 5 ; the months of March and April LJ s only. vi Smelt Fishing (dp 24, dmmie o * exc: six or six Confined To Lake feet rectangular, may only be LINDSAY --Because smelt| "Sed. (No licence is required.) fishing in streams south of Highway 2 has interfered with spawning activities of other spe- ces, smelt fshermen this year must confine their operations to Lake Ontario. Arthur Walroth, district for- ester with department of lands and forests, said today the fol- lowing regulations will apply to) smelt fishing in the Lindsay dis- trict for 1965: Smelt fishing is permissible in the waters of Lake Ontario only, fronting Durham and Northum- berland and Ontario Counties. No smelt fishing is allowed on' any creeks or rivers flowing into Lake Ontario or any inland waters north of Lake Ontario. Smelis may be taken during TRAVELLING LAWYER The University of Chicago's new visiting professor of law, Georges Briere de l'Isle, has practised law in Viet Nam, the 1 \Congo, the Ivory Coast and , |Paris, Wall Washing Floor Cleaning Drapes Cleaned Rug & Chesterfield eh. Pp ing Window Cleaning Basement Cleaning FREE ESTIMATES HARRY'S JANITOR SERVICE Call 668-8873 RUMMAGE & BAKE SALE Sat., Mar. 27th 10 A.M. to 4 P.M, Held In BAND SOCIAL ROOM Under the Auspices of the WHITBY BRASS BAND AUXILIARY passes a stick full of money to Jim Bishop. --Oshawa Times Photo NOW OPEN all over Ontario, A lacrosse stick full of money will help the team financially and at the viher end the selection of players for the team is good which gives the team a fine chance of winning the new Canada-wide champion- ship. Jeffery Heffernan, president of ASCO, left, THANKS TO THE financial support of the Lake Ontario Steel Company a new Jun- ior "'B' Lacrosse club, the LASCO Steelers, will wear the town colors this year, The Steelers are part of the new Ontario Lacrosse Asso- ciation Junior "B" Division which includes teams' from Steel Firm To Sponsor : | One-Stop Junior Lacrosse Team DECORATING by Attersley, president; John| SHOP McCormack, vice - president; | Gordon Bolls, secretary-treas- | urer; Len Gibson, Wilf Batts,| Wall eee Art Moore and Jim Bishop. ' tango - an "Without men like Jeffery Ruston prepares i | Heffernan and the LASCO com-|] ® ©:!-L. Paints and Varnishes |) pany, lacrosse would not be the Flo-Glaze Colorizer Paints big thing it is in this county," poDD & SOUTER DECOR CENTRE LTD. 107 Byron St. S., Whitby PHONE 668-5862 Lumber and Supply Ltd. || YOUR C.P-1. DEALER 701 BROCK ST. N. 668-4451 Township of Whitby Recreational Committee Afiy groups or organizations in the Township of Whitby interested in the use of the facilties offered by the Township of Whitby Recreational Committee rh a gg to contact the chairman at the following address: WHITBY (Staff) Whitby LASCO Steelers have entered the newly formed Ontario La- crosse Association Junior "B" Division. The new club is spon- sored by the Lake Ontario Steel Company and tryouts will com- mence within several weeks. Teams in the league will be:} Whitby, Huntsville, St. Catha- ------|rines, Toronto, Markham. Sev- LASHES ORDERED jeral others are expected. TORONTO (CP)--Two broth-| The first Canada-wide cham- lers were each sentenced to five|pionships will be staged this) llashes and 10 years in peniten-|Year by the Canadian Lacrosse| tiary. Thursday when convicted| Association with the Junior "B"| of a robbery in which they) teams taking part. oy? threatened the lives of a 23-/ The club is being formed ncl S C 'ele) L@ hi ] year-old woman and her two- year-old son and stole $132. under the patronage of the steel company and with more than Sentences were passed on Wal- ter Martin, 37, and his brother| FAIRY TALES WHITBY ICECARNIVAL THEME The Whitby Arena will be built around a group of old flowers, Susan Mesher, 6, the scene of gay colored and well-known fairy tales. peed rallies lights and flashing skaters Groups of children of all than. oile..way..to..catch a Saturday night, when the ages will don their skates bunny. She latched on to members of the Whitby and costumes and_ whirl 6-year-old Janice Comer- Figure Skating Club present about on the ice. Many of ford's fluffy tail and held their Annual Ice Carnival. the small children are dress- on, This year the theme is ed as forest animals and --Oshawa Times Photo William H. Wallace, Clerk "Ont REGISTRATION WHITBY SEPARATE SCHOOLS Parents are asked to register children for the school term commencing September 7, 1965. AGE REQUIREMENTS KINDERGARTEN--S years old by December 31, 1965. GRADE |---six years old by December 31, 1965. Note--pupils now attending Separate School Kindergartens de not need to be registered for Grade |, Birth or Baptismal C should be presented if available. TIME OF REGISTRATION: 1:30 to 3:30 p.m. Monday, March 29 -- St. John the Evangelist School, 1103 Giffard St. Wednesday, March 31 -- St. Bernard's School, 220 Dundes St. W. Thursday, April 1 -- St. Theresa's School, Craw- forth Street. Children may be registered ot the most convenient school, Mr. Bishop said. The new league will play home games in the arena this summer. It is hoped that Whitby will gain a spot on the! championship. I PUBLIC SKATING FRIDAY, MAR. 26 8:30 to 10:30 P.M. AT: ows WHITBY COMMUNITY ARENA | 1,000. boys taking part in local! minor lacrosse the field to pick from offers a first rate team. Only local boys will be con- sidered for places on the Steel- ers Club as the clus is an aid |to the promotion of lacrosse in! Ontario. Several years ago there were than 100 boys involved in se in the county. Today jwith the lacrosse booming they Supported By Letter ""* | mind, it makes one wonder if} we are obtaining the capacity of jwork from our teachers which |we should." : | The writer wondered if posi- fewer this amount the largest portion) Turning to the school costs,|tions are being made on the staff|i4¢r9s WHITBY (Staff) -- Applaud- ing the town council's objections to the local school board bud- gets, Mrs. Bruce Brandt, 1000 Giffard street, Whitby, forward- ed a letter to the council this week. | The letter supported the coun- crease in taxes would bring the|they are taxed out of the mar- Brandt tax costs to approx-|ket of interested people'. imately $130 it was stated. Of TEACHING STAFF Records would be an increase in taxes| which were held responsible for|that could be filled at another on a triplex recently purchased|the rising tax rate, the writer|time. when it wouldn't be an|number in the thousands iby the Brandts. examined the school enrolmentjextra burden on the taxpayer. | The team will be. aftiliated|-- "We now feel it was a mistake|as applied to number of teach-|"'It also makes one wonder ifiwith the Oshawa Green Gaels investing our money in thisjers on staff. The writer stated/the board of education is spend-|y nigr "A" Club. The new cil on its 'stand' suggesting it}town," the writer stated in her|"'An approximate enrolment of/ing money unwisely on too many) oojore will be royal blue and should not be criticied for try-|jetter, "If taxes double on this|1,330 high school students is ex-/frills because the money is there! orange. ¥ ing to save the taxpayer's|triplex in the next eight years,|pected next term, and with ajfor the spending," she sai The club executive are: Bob- money. las they have on our house dur-|staff of 76 teachers this aver-|"The money could be spent|-- ----- Mrs, Brandt stated: 'We feelling the past eight years, it is un-,ages 17 pupils per teacher. It is|without keeping in mind the} The people of Slovenia con- our councilmen have a better)jikely we will be able to keepjour understanding the class-jbest interests of the taxpayer's|sume only a pound of coffee a knowledge than most of us ofithis triplex." /rooms were built to accommo-|pocket book," Mrs. Brandt/year, but use 45 pounds of sugar the expenditures of the boards) m,. jetter further it\date 40 pupils. With this injadded, each, Our own Service Men will look after your oil furnace if They're on call 24 hours as it were their own. Stated of education. Being taxpayers) | SER they have every right to voice) their disapproval of the bud-| gets," she said in her letter. | The letter further suggested) the above feeling was ' unani-| mous amongst the taxpayers} with whom the 'writer' had dis-| cussed the tax increase. "It is} hoped a petition will not be necessary to make the board of} education realize that the tax-} payers cannot afford any fur-| was unlikely the triplex could be sold in eight years unless rents increase out of all propor-| tion. "This would mean an apartment now renting for $125 per. month will have to rent for $250 per month in eight years (which seems very unlikely), The writer stated she is now faced with the decision of "whether or not we should sell our house and triplex before ther burdens," Mrs. Brandt} stated. FAMILY AFFECTED The letter suggested the Brandt family, in particular,| would be definitely affected by} the new tax increase. The in-| WANTED Experienced Saleslady Please Apply To Young Moderns 135 Brock St. S. Let Us Help You Plan The MORTGAGE Best Suited | To Your Needs old bottle? Well it doesn't anymore. That fine old bottle has launched its last sip. We've designed a new container for Gooderham's WHITBY | 308 Dundas St..W., Whitby, HELD OVER 'BROCK One Complete Program Each WHITBY Evening -- Starting at 7:30 THE INTERNATIONALLY ACCLAIMED HIT JUST AS IT WAS SHOWN IN THE MAJOR CAPITALS OF THE WORLD! From The Book By Cornelius Ryan DARRYL F. ZANUCK'S LONGEST --- OF THE YEAR National Boord of Review 42 International Stars SHOWN AT REGULAR PRICES Bonded Stock. Tall and refined with classic lines. (Our whisky's now in the best shape ever), And we age Bonded Stock longer now as well, To make every drop just a little more mellow, One thing though. Bonded Stock's smooth lightness we don't change. Our blenders know a good. thing when they taste it. Judging from the number of people who buy Bonded Stock Whisky, 8o does the rest of the country. Gooderham's have been distilling fine whiskies since 1832 Remember when Bonded Stock Whisky came in that plain a day. Call Us Anytime Abs ee, 43 KING STREET WEST, OSHAWA 725-3581 a WHAT GAS IS RIGHT FOR YOUR CAR? If modern automopile engines ore a wonder of efficiency compactness' and power we can give a hefty share of the thanks to equally modern gasoline that is almost twice as good as it ised to be. Compared with 1930 when one ton of car weight wes moved about 33 miles per gallon, present-day fuel will move @ ton about 50 miles under the same diti The impro is largely accomplished in higher octane ratings thot have crept up to the point where most gasolines today are higher-rated than fighter aircraft fuel of World War Il. What fuel rating is right for your car? About 30 percent of all cars on the road today require a premium fuel and their owners would sacrifice performance without a corresponding saving in miles-per-gallon 'by failing to use it. G Ily ki if the pression ratio of your engine is 8.7 or less, standard grades are sufficient, Upwards of that ratio you ere saving nothing with standord gos and you could do real harm to your engine. Whatever the compression rating of your engine, your ignition timing must be set correctly for best performance and economy. Oil company researchers making spot checks report an average 86 percent of cars have their ignition timing set imperfectly, Ninety percent of these had advanced timing agd the balance retarded. ' You'd be wise to bring your car in for a timing check and then evaluate it for the right gas octane in case your compression is border-line. Hove you tried our Allen-Tronic Engine Annylis- er? If not why not!! You'll be more than pleased that you did. NORTHSIDE CHRY (WHITBY ) 918 BROCK STN WHITBY ONT if B uv iw? A' SPRING 65" presents light, bright, fun living fashions for YOUNG ADULTS For the young adult girl who is the Miss-in-be-tween, Stylish spring coats in the newest knits, boucles and wools in beautiful pastel colors, All weather coats, loose and belted styles and also very smart coots with matching umbrellas, all in the lovely postel and dark shades of 65", All Pre-Teen Accessories for your growing daughter et YOUNG MODERNS, "Chic, smart dresses for the young adult featuring the 'Chelsea look "Skimmer" look and the "A" line, in a beautiful collection of materials and colors, Young Moderns have a lovely selection of suits in wool knits and boucles in outstanding spring col- ours, in sizes 8 to 14, Young Moderns | 135 BROCK ST. SOUTH WHITBY 38 KING ST. EAST OSHAWA