Oshawa Times (1958-), 30 Jan 1967, p. 6

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COUNTY BUILDING CONTRACT AWARDED WHIT BY CLUB ChL ean. |... 14 mwa TIMES, Monday, Jonuary 30, 1967 § a love MONDAY, JAN. 30 |FRIDAY, FEB. 3 any CANADA oe ~--_ " Soop ee Dalen banking cont Cross Senior Citizens' | cig esos (AP) -- Swe- nro ) en _-- This is the third in the instead of £92,500 the correct which had the largest number Gibbs, Farewell and Grierson. er. ae tby _ Scouts;/Club; Pentecostal Churchiden's biggest morning newspa-|life and a speci + assigned series of articles dealing with amount. The Oshawa represen- of names on its assessment roll, James Rowe's election to the coned aren Charen Byler fi ey g bef , Am-|per, Dagens Nyheter, devoted |Photographer va Sem t the early history of Ontario tative, who had fought against é acaba bitter pill oe. {pee ors; Co-Op Credit Union| 15 of 16 pages of a special edi-\°°V°T@8e- County. This article deals with paying anything for erecting the MUCH BITTERNESS wardensilp was @ diver pill tq TUESDAY, JAN, 31 |banking night; Salvation Army Hon Sunday to © presentation] ea cinemas the awarding the contract for county building at Whitby, now . The historians of that day re- swallow but it seemed to have Al-Anon Family Group; Timbral Brigade. i Canna "th uy ail the construction of the county complained of the lightness of call the proceedings in connec- the effect of bringing better Whitby Whittlers TOPS Club: |SATURDAY, FEB, 4 aaah asso gs ties Wiateeinel As ac building at Whitby and the their taxes for that purpose, tion with the organization of the understanding, as at the first Whitby Shrinking Violets TOPS| Salvation Army Young Peo- the year. Four of the paper's separation of Georgina Town- They had previously been tak~ new county were fraught by meeting Mr. Gibbs, voted with Club; Whitby Happy Hopeful/ple's Band. | ' . -- ship from Ontario County. ing advantage of the error of bitterness and the tenacity of Joseph Gould of Uxbridge and Afternoon TOPS Club; Whitby at the : under - valuation and paying purpose with which each inch Peter Taylor of Pickering Duplicate Bridge Club; Red|SUNDAY, FEB. § One-Sto Columbus Club rst coun Jess taxes than their just pro- of ground was fought by both against a_ resolution of the Cross work room; Faith Bap-| St. Mark's United Church p session When the provisional county portion in the United Counties sides, hah ee teemed with Georgina Township representa- tist Church Pioneer Girls; Ajax} Hi-C Group. DECORATING 133 Brock St. N ond ane council met June 7, 1852, the Council. letters full of charges and tive which asked that no further Women's Institute. ----"-"~_- WHITBY . five-year bylaw to raise £6,000 for the They had sought to take ad- counter charges impeaching the action be taken on the cori- RENEW CALL d county building was finally vantage of their own wrong with motives and actions of in- struction of the county building WEDNESDAY, FEB. 1 nee 4 SHOP pe a passed and the site agreed upon, a view to.quashing the bylaw. dividual members. Public meet- as it would be in the interests Whitby St. John Ambulance;| WINNIPEG (CP)--A renewed EVERY 'slaced The contract for the work was G. H. Grierson got the credit ings and demonstrations of all of the townships to remain part Salvation Army Prayer and Lo pg eyo @ 04 a US] @ Wellpoper end Murals TUES. NIGHT if tg axe awarded to James Wallace, of for making the discovery of this kinds were held to maintain the of York County. Bible Study; Knights of Colum- ai Sn gy Aiet or ee ib Gites nanan . ne NDP. Whitby. legal point. The courts. were excitement. Georgina Township was not bus Council 4895; Almonds Manitoba F: aa ay tL ON eS Mkedisgia : There was then a breathing resorted to but the attempt to To be the county town was a represented at the Mar. 23 United Church Women's After|Manitoba Federation of Labor | i 'aly Doors Open at 7 P.M, ed, is an spell, but only of short duration quash the bylaw failed. prize worth fighting for and no meeting at Whitby, having ap- noon Group; Four Leaf Clover|made its annual submission to} @ C.I.L, Paints end Varnishes . haut and as it was discovered that Osh- At the Feb. 10, 1853, meeting representative could be blamed plied to the legislature for a Parent - Teacher Group; Bene- oe Reeriecial. -- tg =) @ Benjomin Moore Paints Bingo Starts at geod awa as a municipality was not of the provisional council T. N. for doing his best to secure it special act to be reunited to volent Rebekah Lodge 132. Galton 4 e 4 rt sb 8 P.M, SHARP d tor rated high enough in the aggre- Gibbs, reeve of Oshawa, was for his own municipality. York County. Mr. Hartman's THURSDAY, FEB. 2 'ail withi be rg on sie ie DoDD & SOUTER Adasen S00 a ate assessment of the county elected provisional warden. The claimants with Whitby presence helped to assure the ' ; : : m the scope o e - & : ei : i rare Brocidia 'Manch ee ssage of the act over the ob- Whitby Baptist Church Cubs;|Manitoba Labor Relations Act, DECOR CENTRE LTD. : I ones te ec Gras lec tc Gece: fn MF thecounty uk cxtep, itigh Gk Giewe Wi tte» ooltoie oF Gamiets Caely Salvation | Army | Women's|asked for "an end to the strang- | 107 Byron St. S., Whitby ]|J No Children Under 16 Years levied to -ounty "ep. E i r y. 4 : . : : three = and fatatna? oe the £6,000, This, tion to certain of his remarks publication of the proclamation The construction of the county --, ay Faith Baptist fom nel trade unions by. In- PHONE 668-5862 of ege please Ing cos it was believed, would be fatal with the result that he resigned appointing Whitby, all but Osh- building progressed rapidly uid SURCHONS, - nan $12,- to the legality of the bylaw. and James Rowe, reeve of Whit- awa succumbed, The latter under Mr, Wallace's direction ame = ERROR IN AMOUNT by, was elected by the casting fought it out as long as there and on June 30, 1853 the corner- But Oshawa was rated at £61,666 vote of the Township of Whitby, was a hope led on by Messrs. stone was laid. am ay ermine tee TL osm tngr f ' i" Mi el NN to ques- sichiatacaiialad tei | we whether oe Va M T t vorkable. Li ' ; x uSIC es ion mark ' mon one a ° gat i.e Results Out| y: onnel be "SH : =< 222 ram? Following is a list of success- S: : = 124 nnounce- ful candidates in the examina- SS p 5 : AW . 224 partially tions held recently by the Royal SH : 5 \\ oe N 2 Conservatory of Music of Tor- p = P onto in Whitby. The names are By wt nter the ital and and ine d to im- individ- it pose lity; the and the y doing it under ee it in r quite the staff nel are iter how by can't trained 'tractive ts, par- ind psy- @ avail- itee the t them ng the so with ele) ases @f 951. St. Am ave to 1951. cil met ee and 1 be no ng that e, until . Coun- sed the Canada Lindsay e lamb all kill viticus e lamb whole no sin ght be of God amb of the sin DOL ig SMR aCe ie The first Burns Supper and entertainment ever held in the area was held Sat- urday night in Raglan Unit- Large Crowd Attends Raglan Burns Supper RAGLAN (Staff) --The first Burns' Supper ever held here was a tremendous success Sat- urday. Nearly 200 people at- tended the function, held at the Raglan Christian Educational Building and organized by Rag- lan UCW. Among the guests were former Oshawa mayor Lyman Gifford and his wife. Chairman for the evening was Irwin Ormiston, a lifelong resident of the district. The speaker was Dr. C. H. Vipond, whose theme was the life and try of Bobbie Burns. eg oo introduced by Jack Sym, a member of the St. Andrew's Society in Oshawa, who also gave the address to the haggis and proposed the toast to the lassies. Three sisters, _ Elizabeth, Anne and Roxy Denniston, came all the way from the Ottawa valley to give dance and song selections at the sup- per. A Scotch song sung by R. Metcalfe preceded the entrance of the haggis, borne by D. Ferguson and G. Ormiston. The Police Disturb Two Men In Club Whitby (Staff) -- Two men who had just broken into Whitby Curling Club, Brock Street North, were disturbed by Whitby police early Friday morning. Nothing was _ stolen from the club, William George Smith of 203 Boulton Avenue, Toronto, will appear in Whitby Magistrate's Court Tuesday charged with breaking and entering with in- tent. A warrant has been issued "fh a ed Church with nearly 200 in attendance. Seen here are Mark Foster, one of the pipers; Irwin Ormiston, who pipers were Mark Foster and B. Pollock, and Rev, S. J. Hillier said grace. The meal included roast turkey, haggis, and lemon and apple pie. After the chairman's re- marks Mr. Pollock and Mr. Foster played a skirl on the ¥ = at chaired the gathering; Jock Sym, who proposed the toast to "The Lassies'; Dr. Claude H. Vipond, of Osh- pipes. The entertainment also included Scotch selections by Ross Metcalfe and accompan- ist, further pipe selections, and awa, who proposed the toast to 'The Immortal Memory" and Brian Pol- lock, a piper. Oshawa Times Photo WHITBY AND DISTRICT MEN'S LEAGUE (Thursday) Triples 660 end over -- Tom Per- row 917 (352), Bill Jordan 879 (313), Jim Kirk 823 (285), Ed Brush 814 (285), Paul Frank 808 (306), Glen' Doak 747. (291), Bob McAllister 737 (281), Jim Ross 712 (313), Joe Izatt 690 (319), Ed Samanski 690 (279), Ron Andrew 680 (283), Bruce Croner 680 (255), John Pisani 679 (276), Myrle Reeson 679 (253), Dick Adams 671 (261), Warren Watson 671 (246), Doug Rowden 668 (259), Roger Reeson 664 (240), Jim Atkinson 663 (264), dancing by the Denniston sis- ters. The program concluded with) "Auld Lang Syne." | Burns Supper At Whitby Outstanding Success | WHITBY (Staff) -- "The best in 20 years" was how many of the guests summed up the Burns Supper at St. Andrew's Presby- terian Church Hall, Whitby, Friday night. About 200 people were present. Rev. W. J. S. McClure, min- ister of St. Andrew's, acted as chairman. A humorous and well-constructed address on the Immortal Memory of Robert Burns was given by Rev. Scott Duncan, of Armour Heights Presbyterian Church, Toronto. He included quotations from Burns' poems. The pipers were Bob Gowans and William Rutherford, mem- bers of the General Motors Pipe Band, and Highland danc- ing was performed by Miss Sheila Scott of Oshawa. The traditional song, "The Star O°' Robbie Burns' was sung by Victor Agnew, a mem- ber of the congregation, ac- companied by the church or- ganist, Barry Devereux, on piano. The also led the guests in community singing. Frank Warman gave accord- ion soloes, and Mrs. Janet Kins- for another man. man sang Scottish songs, ac- Area Organizer Reports To Executive Of NDP WHITBY (Staff) - A report on the progress of Project '67 in the area groups was presen- ted by William Cumpsty, area organizer, at a meeting of the New Democratic Party's On- tario South Riding Association) at the Rubber Workers Hall.| Louie Rousseau, membership secretary and Larry Deschenes, organizer, are completing plans for the beginning of the second stage of Project '67 which will be the start of the new mem-| ber drive in Whitby. Don Read, Whitby; Tom Pol- lock, West Rouge and Amby Ferrin, Brooklin were appoint- ed to the election committee. They will screen candidates and report to the executive board at the next meeting. The date of the nominating convention wil Ibe announced in the near future. Mr. Ferrin, chairman of the entertainment committee, re- ported on the dance to be held in the Port Perry Legion Hall, Feb. 28. Murray Wallace, president of the Ajax area group, reminded the executive of the St. Valen- tine Dance to be held Feb. 10 in the Ajax Legion Hall. Margaret Klim, a_ delegate to the provincial council, re- ported on the meeting in Tor- onto. She said many vesolu- tions, dealt with at the provin- cial convention, were consider- ed by the council. The highlight of the two-day council meeting, she said, was companied by Mrs. P, N. Spratt, | jack Peebles 690 (285), Bill Vesters 685 | her mother. Some humorous} solo were presented by Ross Metcalfe of Bowmanville. The haggis bearers were A. Telfer and W. MacDonald, and John Gray, a member of St. Andrew's, addressed the hag- gis. The man r 0. ible for the| Team Standings--County Bow! 11, Ken arranged in order of merit. Janice B. Hall; Helen M. Cox Gove jnie Sorichetti E. Clarkson Glen V. Darwen, WHITBY BOWLING Catherine M. Harvey, Cynthia GRADE X PIANO Pass -- Louise Pogson GRADE IX PIANO Honors -- Lucille Chapman GRADE VIII PIANO Honors -- Susan Davidson Pass -- Elizabeth Herbert; GRADE VII PIANO First Class Honors -- Anne Honors -- Catherine Shannon GRADE VI PIANO Honors --David Pos Pass -- Mary J. Spratt; Bon- GRADE V PIANO Honors --Diana Henwood Pass --Nancy A. Kaiser GRADE IV PIANO First Class Honors -- Diane Honors --Isabel McNeil GRADE III PIANO Honors -- Louise J. Urech GRADE II PIANO Honors -- Tamara Nelipa; I Patricia FE. Pickard, Betty Surridge (equal) GRADE I PIANO First Class Honors -- Ronald A. Urech Honors --Brian D. Darwen, Smith (equal); Johanne Kirby Pass --Phillip Kirby; James E. Harvie GRADE VIII SINGING Honors -- Sylvia Cartwright GRADE IV SINGING These, RN ae First Class Honors --Kathryn Neal GRADE II SINGING Honors --Leslie Neal Pass -- Catherine Robinson Smith Const. 9, Kalser Aluminum 9, Dia- mond Insulations 8 Mercantile Dept. Store 8 K. of C. 7, Red Wings 6, Fire- men (B) 6, Legionnaires 5, Deboys 5, Legion Old Sweats 5, Firemen (A) 4, Shorty's Cigar Store 4, Andrew's 3, Post Office 3, Whitby Hardware 3. WHITBY AND DISTRICT MEN'S LEAGUE (Wednesday) Triples 660 and over -- Ed. Hutchinson | 790 (293), Don Duncan 775 (308), Bill Hewis 749 (290), Hans Zimmer 735 (308), Barry Denyer 727 (344), Bob Carter 725 | (263), Al Hammers 722 (301), Doug) Warankie 699 (256), Les Reed 693 (324), | 1965 PONTIAC Strato Chief 2 Dr., Automatic Lic, No. J5645 1695 Jenuary Clearance . (303), Clarence Moore 679 (249), Cec} Bowler 668 (248), Tom Ainsworth 664 (308), Toni Stigter 664 (243). | Team Standings -- Wilson's Food Mar- ket 9, A. and T. Motors 9, Bathurst 9, Ramblers 8, Whitby Police Assoc. 8, J. B. McMullan Real Estate 8, Whitby Barber, Shop 8 Jim's Stage Door 6, Joker's 6, Lambert Oil Ltd. 5, Mitton Machinery 5, Golden Gate Restaurant 5, The Golfers 4, Storrar Ltd. 4, Andrew's 2, The Ollers smooth organization of the sup- per was Jimmy Fraser. The ladies of the congregation, con- vened by Mrs. W. J. Mowat and INDIANS DIE SOON Life expectancy in India is 45 HEV. OLDS. WHITBY 300 Dundes St. £. years. Mrs. G. Stott, did the catering. A vote of thanks to everyone concerned was proposed by E. McLeish. Junior Farmers: Name Officers UTICA + David Hawthorne, Claremont, was elected pres-| ident of the Ontario .County Junior Farmers' at their an- nual meeting here. The annual banquet was held later in the Greenbank United Church. Other officers are Anne Dry- den, Brooklin, past president Fred Catherwood, Uxbridge, vice - president; Doreen Jones, Ashburn, secretary - treasurer and Carle Parliament, Cannint- ton, county director. NICK VAN DEN BROEK Sales Representative Following the banquet Dr. J.) GORDON OSBORNE REAL ESTATE 218 Dundes St. £., Whitby HOMES--FARMS-- ACREAGE & BUSINESS C. Rennie, head of the depart- ment of animal science, Uni- versity of Guelph, who is a native of Ontario County, show- ed slides of his trip to Japan with the 1966 trade mission. The Junior Farmer trophies, awarded in various competi- tions throughout the past year, | were presented to the 1966 winners by Jynn Fair, assisted by Bill Cooper. A further presentation was made by the B.P. Canada Lim- ited to the Ontario County Junior Farmer debating team, consisting of Doreen Jones, Ashburn, Sheila Disney, Brook- lin, Bob Hunter, Seagrave and Ken Stickwood, Claremont. Tribute was also paid to the retiring county president, Anne Dryden, Brooklin; and to the retiring county director, Neil! a rally at which the NDP Pro- vincial Leader Donald 'McDon-| ald launched the second part of Project '67. McLeod, Blackwater. The evening concluded with a dance in the Utica Hall,. with Bruce McMillan in Charge, BROCK Now Playing -- One Complete WHITBY Program Begine 9:05 Each Evening ot 7:30 Eastman Color SAR) COLUMBIA PICTURES Se LPR Preis JAMES COBURK -Eo-Rou RECOMMENDED AS ADULT ENTERTAINMENT Also 2nd Feature Atrrai ction ---- Begins 7:30 "THESE ARE THE DAMMED" With MacDonold Corey --~ Alexender Knox ba ce eit Want To "Drum -Up ' Little Busin Around Your Home... ! Use TIMES If you are an average type person with normal everyday problems and bills to pay, then this is your lucky day. Today Is the day that you are going to decide to sell some of those articles that gather dust around your home, for cold, hard cash. You're going to get rid of them the simple and easy way by placing a Times "Action" Classified ad. You're going to sell them to someone who will make good use of them and at the same time that you are doing someone a favour you will be putting some of those greenbacks into your pocket or purse. The easy way to place a Times "Action" Classi- fied ad is to simply pick up your phone and call The Times "'Action" number 723-3492. One of our friendly "Ad-visors" will be pleased to help you word your ad so that you get maximum results. If it's more convenient for you to drop into our office we're located at the corner of King and Mary Streets. If you prefer, mail your ad to The Times, 86 King St. E., Oshawa. acti CLASSIFIED PHONE A TIMES "AD-VISOR" 723=3492 "ACTION" CLASSIFIEDS

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