ing. Looking over the shoul- ders of Mrs, E, Ferris, The new executive of the Senior | Citizen's Club of WHITBY SENIOR CITIZENS NAME EXECUTIVE Mifflin, treasurer and Robin Nicholson. The clubmeets each Friday from 1.30 p.m. BEFORE THE MAGISTRATE Court Delays Judgment In Case Involving Deaths' COBOURG -- Magistrate R.| Killed in the accident were B. Baxter reseryed judgment|Donald H. Graham 30, of Co- Friday after hearing evidence|bourg a social worker with the in the trial of an Oshawa man) Northumberland - Durham Chil- charged with dangerous. and dren's Aid Society, and his 28- careless driving. year-old wife Joyce. Clayton A. Wilson, 49, 4814; The accused remained in Port Bond St., was charged in con-| Hope and District Hos th nection with a two-car collision | multiple injuries to his head and at the inte-section of Highway upper body for several days. 28 and Garden Hill Rd. Oct. 16,| A witness: to the accident, 1965, which left three children|Keith Lashley, a Cobourg land orphaned. i surveyor, testified that the inter- He will appear before Magis-|section was known as a danger- trate Baxter next Friday to have! ous one. judgment passed. "T saw him coming over the The accused testified he was|knoll and it looked like the travelling home from his Rice| driver didn't realize there was a Lake ie ager He said he was'stop sign there," he said. blinded by the late afternoon pane . . sun as he approached the high-| BLINDED BY SUN : way stop sign. | Mrs. Layton Benson, a regis- He told the court that "Before|teted nurse who was called to I knew it, I was over the knoll|the accident scene from her and into the intersection." {nearby home, said the sun blind- Police evidence revealed that')¢4 her as she came over the the Garden Hill road (County | hil! Rd. 9,) meets the highway from} the east after coming over a sharp knoll. |KNEW ROAD he said, made no attempt to | Wilson said he had travelled) slow down when he was blinded. |the road for five years but he| The accused told the court the jwasn't sure that he was ap-|sun blinded him and he reached proaching the highway on the for his sun visor, and then he hit day of the crash. 'the other car, nite! wi Peal wi Feb. 21-25 -- Farmers Week | | s Sui s At Soviet Dry By JOHN BEST MOSCOW_(CP)----_When--you take a suit to the dry cleaners jin Moscow, it helps to have a jlittle sewing experience. .That's for sewing the buttons back on. Before handing the sult in at) ithe cleaners you'll be presented | with a razor and told to cut the | butions off, The girl at the counter ex- | plains it's for your own good. In jthe dry cleaning fluid is a chem- jical agent that will discolor but- 'tons if they are not removed. So you take them off and then sew them on again after you get jthe suit back, If you still have: the buttons, that is. For a well-organized charac- ter there is usually no problem, He'll have his needle and thread, plus buttons, ready for action the moment he returns from the dry cleaning establishment. For thers, there are prob- lems. Take me, for.instance. A day or so after taking my Crown Attorney Geoffrey Bon-| Suit to the cleaners I carelessly | tablishments, Moscow has a lim-| neycastle asked for a conviction |Pulled a glove out of my over-|ited number of modern, Ameri- on the Criminal Code charge of coat pocket and about a dozen'can - style places for both dry dangerous driving. The driver, |Shiny, buttons went flying in all|cleaning and shoe repair. These! a complete, self- directions, And it's not easy to buy good buttons in Moscow. That meant one suit out of commission, JOB DONE WELL Aside from the problem of the buttons my experience with Moscow dry cleaning has been t Buttons Are Cut Off Cleanere Wawwmsswew | Another complaint is thai |shirts at times are returned with rust stains on the collar. | To get started.as the regular |customer of a Moscow laundry jis 'no small feat, First time you |go there, they give you a small roll of cloth tape with a number stamped on it at close intervals. The customer has to sew this toned late taped laundry number on every piece of clothing he ever sends to the laundry. One day I took a pair of brown shoes into a repair shop for soles and heels, The cost was about $3 including 40 cents extra for one-day service. They did what I considered a workman- like job, and the shoes came back with a polish on them--a bonus that you don't always get today in Canada. |PAY IN ADVANCE | Payment in all three categor- ies--dry cleaning, laundry and |shoe repairs--is in advance. | In addition to the Russian es- were importe contained oper' ibe having a be tions and may ficial effect on standards in these spheres gen- | erally. As for haircuts, thy are com- p --and cheap, although I[still r letely done--by woman barbers THE OSHAWA TIMES, Monday; Jenuary 17, 19 fa' V . AW. Fy ne-Month Limit | |Time Extended | | TORONTO (CP)--The Ontario} | Supreme Court has extended the normal one-month limit to serve appeal notices on acquittal of three Toronto brothers because police can't locate the trio. =| Mr. Justice F. G. MacKay} granted the attorney general's/ application Friday to serve pa- pers on Paul Volpe, 38, Albert | Volpe 40, and Eugene Voipe, 53. | Police said the brothers have |gone to Haiti for the winter where Paul Volpe and Pasquale Natarelli, 53, of Buffalo operate a casino. The appeal notice was served Dec. 17 on Natarelli ins Buffalo. f | | } | March 17, 1965, on charges of conspiring to extort $17,500 or when one of the jury com- plained he couldn't tnderstang Enclish English, A second ended in September after jury disagreement and a4 third was stopped in November while police investigated an al- leged bribe attempt. The four were arrested) | 100,000 shares of Ganda Silver | Mines Ltd, from Toronto broker} | Richard Angle. The first trial ended i ' n June One-Stop DECORATING 'SHOP Wellpaper and Murals Custom Draperies Broadioom C.1.L. Points and Varnishes Flo-Glaze Colorizer Paints DODD & SOUTER DECOR CENTRE LTD. 107 Byron St. $.,,Whitbw PHONE 668-5862 BROCK WHITBY 1S THE KEY IN HIS MIND ve ') Grecory PECK One Complete Program Each Evening -- Starting at 7:30 ban ' OR IN HER ARMS? a DURHAM COUNTY Whitby took office, Friday, at the club's weekly meet- haven't figured out exactly how) treasurer and Mrs. Mary | a A |'66, War Memorial Hall, Uni- nderson, president, are W. versity of Guelph, Guelph. 10.00) FARM CALENDA a.m., 2ist Soils and Crops |Day; 22nd -- Dairy Cattle Day;'| | 17, 10.30 a.m. -- East|23rd -- Farm Building Plan- |Central Soil and Crop Improve-{|24th -- Livestock Feeders Day| | ment Association Annual Meet-|ning and Farmstead; 25th | jing, Department of Agriculture,| Farm Economics Day. Lindsay Feb, 22, 1.15 p.m. -- Dairy Jan, 17-19 Ontario Fruit and|Herd Health, farm clinic, Odd| | Vegetable Growers Association | Fellows Hall, Orono. | Annual Meeting, Toronto Feb. 22, 9.30 a.m. -- Canadian Jan, 19, 8 p.m. -- Durham}Hereford Association Annua Ux. Junior Farmers' Association| Meeting, Prince Edward Hotel, Annual Meeting, Agricultural) Brandon, Manitoba. Office, 14 Frank st., Bowman-| yep, 23.24 -- Ontario Associa- reasonably favorable. The job it-| self is well done, though the cost | cheap. is stiff: about $3.50 for a suit. | Sometimes 1 am charged 20 There has been a lot of pub-|kopecks -- about 25 cents--and licity in the press recently about | sometimes 50. A couple of times, the need to.improve such serv-|on being charged the higher) ices as dry cleaning, laundry, | price, I tried to get an explana- shoe repair and men's haircuts, |tion for the discrepancy but the My own general assessment of | women just looked at me quizzi- all these services is: not bad. | cally. My wife takes the laundry to| J haven't bothered to press the | ~ a little cubbyhole down the|matter. After all, how can you street, the kind of place that| quarrel with 60 cents for a hair- you have to reconnoitre a bit} cyt? first before you're quite sure; -- how to get in and out. to 4 p.m. --Oshawa Times Photo Farm Safety Council Plans 1966 Activities UXBRIDGE The annual|moving vehicle signs were sold!}Mrs. Walter meeting of the Ontario County|to interested farmers. Fire ex-| bridge RR 1. Farm Safety Council was' held) tinguishers were sold to farmers; Chairman, Norman Smith, Ux- DIANERAKER ~~ <8 Jan A UNIVERSAL PICTURE Also -- Second Feoture Attraction "TAKE HER SHE'S MINE" in Color Starring --~- JAMES STEWART and SANDRA DEE so" Carruthers, ee Gee MASS IN ESPERANTO in the Department of Agricul-|through safety projects spon- ture "Board Room, Uxbridge,/sored by the Brooklin and Jan/10, at 1:30 p.m. Beaverton Junior Farmers. Z The projects, carried out in|599 CALENDARS 1965, were reviewed. These pro-) Five hundred safety calendars jects included a Farm and Home) were given out to farm people in Safety Poster Competition with|the county. Five thousand farm rural school pupils. In this com-| safety serviettes are being dis- petition 714 posters were re-|tributed to farm organizations ceived, and prize, money|in Ontario County. amounting to $216.00 was paid' The Ontario County Fair out. During the month of June Safety Council was supported 4-H club safety meetings were/ financially in 1965 by grants beld. ; from the Province of Ontario, A farm safety exhibit was set the Ontario County Federation up at Beaverton Fair. Slow/of Agriculture, the Ontario New Citizen and a number of Townships in| Welcomed the County. The projects planned for 1966 will be similar to those carried out in 1965. WHITBY (Staff)-- Thirty- four residents of Ontario Coun-| ty received their cretificate of) Canadian citizenship at the OFFICERS ELECTED The election of officers County Court House ast Thurs- day. directors for 1966 resulted The new citizens are: follows: Honorary Mic@ael Bock and Mrs. Char- lotte Elizabeth Bock, 87 Dotig- las ave., Bay Ridges; Johann Cepecauer and Mrs. Elisabeth | Cepecauer, 252 Trent st., Osha-| wa; Mrs. Maria Vincenza Colev-| ecchia, 385 Nipigon st., Oshawa} Mrs. Czeskawa /Dobroleski, 250; poRT PERRY-- More than Marquette ave., Oshawa; Hein-|159 members' of the 12 4-H| tich Goschli, 217 Nonquon rd.,/ Homemaker Clubs in the south- Oshawa. ern of Ontario County took Peter Hilnar Horst Hilscher, part in the Achievement Day 70 Wilson rd. sz, Oshawa; Ru-|program last Saturday at Port pert and Mrs. Irma Jocher, 1290! perry High School Haller_ave., Bay Ridges, Stan-, Members from gach of the {slaw and Mrs. Felicja Lasek,|cljybs took part in the morning 360 Guelph st., Oshawa; Alfred) activities. This included judging Theodor and Ilse Anna Elisabth| classes of tea biscuits and men- Luettenberg, 1047 Colmare ave sues and a quiz on general nut- Bay Ridges; Mrs. Anna-Maks-|ritional information ymiw, 589 Crerar ave., Oshawa; Ferdinand and Mrs. Marta Min- SKIT PRESENTED na Illi Mohoric, 345 Olive ave.,| The afternoon program start- Oshawa. ed with a skit, "Qur Daily Mrs. Anna Maria Ormiston, Food" from Bethesda. Siena 1137 Brock st, s., Whitby; Mrs.|Bucking, Altona and the Zephyr Johanna Rienstra, 51 Garrard |Club exhibited variety in supper rd., Oshawa; Georg and Mrs.|menus. Table setteng and ser- Charlotte Posefine Rosskopf,/vice for the farm 'family was 1329 Tatra dr., Bay Ridges; Bela| demonstrated in a skit from the Sabo, 55 Celina st., Oshawa;/Quaker Hill and Prince Albert Wladyslawa Slawecki, 301 Osh-) Clubs. awa boulevard n., Oshawa; Vin-| Barbara Carson from tie Cla cenzo Stablile, 511 Bond st. w Oshawa. irrow gave a three-minute com- Mrs. Rozalia Sydor, 96 Elgin mentary on "A Supper Menu" st. w., Oshawa; Ernst Gregory exhibiting the main dish. The Taus, 896 Mary st., Oshawa; same exhibit was later presen- Petrus Wilhelmus and Mrs. ted by Goodwood. "Let's Make Maria Wilhelmina Van Ham, Tea Biscuits' by the Green- RR 2, Seagrave; Hendrick and wood Supperettes was enjoyed Mrs. Geertruida Adriana Ver- by ail. woerd, 931 Bayview ave., Whit-- Towards the end of the after- by; Richard and Mrs. Lydia noon Debbie Griffen, Port Perry Eleonore Wagner, 313 Wilson rd. ere entire Oshawa and| as Chairmen, Larry wHiTsy District <"! BOWLING SCORES Wins British WHITBY. LADIES WHITBY (Staff) --A Union- , remont Homemakers of Tomo-| bridge RR 4; vice-chairman, Aubrey Carson, Claremont; sec- retary, Lynn Fair, Uxbridge; Treasurer, Gordon Ewen, Ux- bridge RR 1; Auditor, Ralph Veitch, Uxbridge RR.-4. Directors: Anson Gerrow, Port Perry RR 3; Gordon Ewen Uxbridge RR 1; Aubrey Carson, Claremont; Lloyd Wilson, Ash- |burn RR 1; Robert L. Nesbitt, Guelph. Claremont RR 1; Ralph Veitch, Uxbridge RR 4; Les Meyers, Goodwood RR t; Heber Down, Brooklin RR 1; Ches Oldham, Zephyr; Mrs. Sam' Cawker, Port Perry; Morrison Colville, Sun- derland RR 2; Mr. and Mrs. Norman Smith; Mrs. Frank Barkey, Claremont RR 3; Mrs. W. A. Brown, Locust Hill RR 1; Mrs, Walter Carruthers, Ux- bridge RR-1; Wallace McLean, Udney. Norman Smith and Armour McMillan will be attending the Provincial Farm Safety Con- Doble, Uxbridge RR 4; Norman| ference at Guelph on Feb. 7, 8,|tyral Careers Seminar," Crest- Lehman, Claremont RR 2 andiand 9. or ie : County Homemaker Club Hold Achievement Day and Janetta Hoskins, Mt. Zion, commented on Tea Biscuits with Variations and Ways of Serving! Fruits, respectively. The whole club of the Port Perry Dinettes put on the fina skit, 'Food Makes a Difference". Two visiting home economists, Mrs. M. Taylor, Newmarket and Miss Sandra Kay, Alliston, gave comments on the demonstratins and exhibits SPOONS PRESENTED A sterling silver spoon was awarded to each club member who completed the project, and to each of the leaders The highlight of-the afternoon came. with the presentation of the county and provincia) honor awards. Mrs. M. Annis, district president of Ontario South Wo- men's Institute, presented the girls-with their cerificates, County Honors went to; Gail Britton,' Helen Lewis, Donna Morrison, Linda Johnson, Jane Andrea Flett, Carol Anderson, Linda Eastwood and Marilyn Roberts. Provincial honors, the highest award in 4-H Homemaking Clubs went to: Doreen Jones, Mt. Zion and Dorothy. Carnochan, Port Perry Rink From Unionville Consols Down but not out, Unionville ville. Jan. 18, 1.15 p.m. -- Fertilizer recommendations school. A. O. |Dalrymple and Harvey Wright, Odd Fellows Hall, Orono. tion of Agriculture Societies, An- jnual Convention, King Edward | Hotel, Toronto Feb. 23-24 -- Bankers School, elleville. Jan. 17-20 -- Dairy Farmers of Canada Annual Meeting, Royal York Hotel, Toronto, Jan, 18-20 --Junior Extension Workshop, University of Guelph, Mar. 1, 1.15 p.m. -- Odd Fel- lows Hall, Orono. Men -- Farm Clinic on weed control Grover Smith and Harvey Wright. Ladies -- Farm clinic on "Kitchen planning and time saving in the kitchen." Miss Pat Wray, Home Economist. Mar. 8, 1.15 p.m. Jan. 20, 8 p.m.--"Agricultural Careers Guidance Night" by! Ontario Institute of Agrologists, Ontario Department of Agricul-|stead Beautification for ture Building, Brighton. entered in Centennial Farm- Jan. 20--Durham Dairy Com-|stead Improvement Competi- mittee Meeting, Department of | tion, Odd Fellows Hall, Orono. Agriculture, 14 Frank st., Bow-| Mar. 10, 9.30 a.m. - 4.00 p.m. | manville. Farm Pond __ Contractors Jan 20-21 Annual Poultry|School; Odd Fellows Hall, Industry School, Memorial Hall,!OF0n0. SS University of Guelph. 7 Jan. 22 -- Ontario Hereford . Association Annual Meeting, | Firm Stand Royal Hotel, (Guelph. | |By MDs Seen Jan. 22, 1.30 p.m. --"Agricul- wood High School, Peter-) OTTAWA (CP) -- Organized borough. medicine is expected to reaf- Jan, 26-28 -- Ontario Soil and) firm its stand this month that Crop Improvement Association) in any national medical care in- Annual Convention, Coliseum,|surance programs the doctors Canadian National Exhibition,| must be allowed to collect that Toronto. (Programs and passes! part of their fees not covered available at 14 Frank st., Bow-| by insurance benefits. manville.) | Representatives of the Cana Feb, 1, 1.15 p.m, --Hay and) dian Medical Association, voice Pasture Production farm clinic.)of organized medicine, will |Harvey Wright, Soils and Crops) meet Jan. 25 with Health Min- |Specialist, Odd Fellows Hall,| ister MacKachen Orono. It pvill be their first encounter Feb. 3, 1.30 p.m. -- Hog pro-|since Mr. MacEachen assumed ducers Annual Meeting, Odd/the health portfolio in De- Fellows. Hall, Orono. Guest! cember speaker, Eric Alderson, Mc-| While the meeting is being Leod- Farms, Aurora ;arranged on a getting-to-know- Feb. 3, 10. a.m. -- _ District| you basis, it appeared likely the Extension Staff Meeting, board|/ CMA representatives and Mr. room, Ontario Department of| MacEachen would devote some Agriculture, Bowmanville. attention to the No. 1 interest Feb, 8, 1.15 p.m. -- Income) of the profession these days -- Tax farm clinic for farmers) medical care insurance. and. their wives. Tentative) -- ----~ - -- speaker, Mr. McGrogan, from Ottawa, Odd Fellows Hall, Orono. Feb. 7-9 Ontario Farm Safety Council Conference, Uni- versity of Guelph, Guelph, Feb. 9 -- Farm Building Con- tractors School, Ontario Gov- ernment Building, Brighton. j 130- pan Durham. reeders, Place rev. 9; Unit of Eastern B to be announced. Feb. 10 -- Concentrated Air} Blast Machine Course, Ontario} Government Building, Brighton. | Feb. 10 Farm Building | Contractors School, Department of Agriculture, Lindsay. Feb. 14 Ontario Swine Breeders' Association Annual} Meeting, Royal Yorked40otel,| ~ | Toronto Feb. 15, 115 p.m. -- Grain) Corn Production farm clinic. | George Jones is tentative speak- er. Odd Fellows Hall, Orono. Feb. 17 Ontario Sheep} Breeders Association Annual) Meeting, Royal York Hotel, Toronto. | Feb. 17 and 18 -- Training with} Farm-| those} She waits in line in a dim} little ante-room until summoned by the woman at the desk, then goes forward to have her laun- dry weighed. Cost by | pounds--and is more than reas- \onable: 24 cents for unstarched jclothes and 45 cents for starched. Shirts are separate. They cost 13 cents unstarched and 20 cents starched. After waiting a minimum of a week she troops back and picks up 'the laundered things, entering this time by a different entrance. Another woman, at another desk, counts each ar- ticle of clothing before handing jover the bundle. Personally, we've never lost janything in the though we know people |have--just like in Canada. NUMBERS ESSENTIAL On the other hand, my shirts show a disconcerting tendency to come back with smashed but- tons. "T spend half my time-replac- ing buttons on shirts,"' my wife sometimes remarks. is who the kilo -- 2 1-5] laundry here | MEXICO CITY (AP) -- The ifirst Roman Catholic mass in |Esperanto was celebrated here lin St. Hipolite temple for dele- gates at the fourth national Es- jperantist congress. | | | | SAVE TAX DOLLARS WHILE SAVING FOR RETIREMENT INCOME | Ask folder about | | for the Retirement Savings Plon. | | our | | | Another Industrial Expan WM. J. ANDE | Congratulations to the On the expansion of 4800 sq. ft. to their present facilities for warehousing. RSON Co. Ltd. Whitby Industrial Commission SALE DODD & SOUTER HOLD-OVER SALE! PAINT & WALLPAPER FLOWER LEAGUE ville rink, skipped by Bob Har-| came back Saturday morning Team Standings, Thursday ris, won the British Consols dis- afternoon, Jan. 13: Roses 3 \trict playdowns Sunday morn- Pansies 6, Asters 2, Tulips 2,/ing at the Whitby Curling Club! Pom-Poms 2, Violets 4, Lilacs 5,/by scoring an 11 to 5 win over Lilies 0 an Oshawa rink skipped by Gor- High Double Flat -- Dorothy don MacMillan. Quantrill, 442. Other members of the win- High Double with ning rink were Ted Westlake Joan Coulthard, 510 vice; Howie Nobert, second and High Single Flat -- Ey. CurtisiGlenn --Jewett, lead. Members 272 of the Oshawa ring were Bob High Single with Hdcp.--Edna Walker, vice; Rich. Vesey Bedard, 308 ond and Bob Johansen, lead 175 and Over Unionville now Lind cock 191, Marg say in the next round of the Eileen Swerdfiger rovincial playdowns which will Holley 195, Dorothy t in the naming of a rink 213, 178, Bea |to. represent the- province in the Ena Gaine 179 Dominion single rink champion- Cellar Dweilers Vv. Phil-ship lips 97, D. Geoghan 88, J. Millar; Unionville started its camp 90, M. Willison 71, 98, 1. Wolffjaign Friday morning with a win 90, D. Gunn 77, M. McLaughliniover Uxbridge. In the -after- 96, J. Hockley §8, D. Brown 99,|/noon, the Unionville rink down V. Kosa 96, B. Beckley 85, 60. ed an Oshawa rink skipped by VY. Evans 39, §. Gerhardt 982, P. Rez. Smith then dropped Richardson 95, 85, J. Coulthard! same to a second Oshawa tink 91, P. Sutton 02. iskipped by Gordon MacMillan. Hdep sec lrene Connelly 199, Qt Aikenhead meets 180 rink in the evening draw, with a victory over Cannington, beat Uxbridge in the afternoon and finished the day with an 10-4 victory over the MacMillan in only eight ends, During the three-day ation event, an , skipped by Gordon elimin Oshawa rink MacMillan finished with three wins and two's losses. Uxbridge's entry, with Earl Arksey's Cannington ent- ry, picking up one win and two losses Reg. Smith's Oshawa rink drew one win, one loss and a bye. Beaverton had two straight losses 'and retired from the com petition Friday afternoon TRIBES WERE The Berber people light kinned and fair-haired, 'have there since came FIRST of Algeria, | sometimes been living Romans before the School for 4-H Homemaking members. Place to be an- nounced. Feb. 16, 9.30 a.m. Crop Extension Branch meeting, Ontario Department of Agricul- ture, Lindsay Feb: 21-22 --Ontario Plough- man's. Association Convention, King Edward Hotel, Toronto. SKATE EXCHANGE ' 2.97 Pius Your Trade Field CORNER 103 Byron St. $., Whitby One Block West- of 4 Corners SPORTSMAN'S| | | Cc Oo NTINUE GIGANTIC SAVINGS SAVE! DODD & SOUTER DECOR CENTRE LTD. 107 BYRON ST. SOUTH WHITBY ONE BLOCK WEST OF FOUR CORNERS THEN TURN SOUTH FREE DELIVERY PHONE 668-5862 OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT "TIL 9 PLM.