hi Re a eid SEE TERRACE rh Meo RM -ex1ze BED RM 10-5X 11-5 LIVING 20-0' 1%O° el cL BED RM | eX 130 14-8 X10-T° 1 1 |] WORK BENCH | GAR LIE X208 STOR study this layout you can see it has many step-saving fea- tures. Contemporary exterior | features a very new roof de- sign. Standard Builders' blue- prints costing $9.75 a set are obtainable in Canada for this Design No. 375. Now available from address below a new and enlarged Book of House De- HOME DESIGN NO. 375 For those who think tri- levels are for hillside lots-- here's one that can be built anywhere! Street level front entry permits easy traffic to all parts of the house. Ledge rock fireplace and planter add contemporary touch to living room which has access to rear terrace. Dining nook, signs entitled "A New Selec- | tion of Low Cost Homes for Canadians," priced $1.00. Con- tains 114 designs including 1- storey, 1%-storey, and split level homes, plus much useful information on building terms and requirements. Order your copy today. Also included in this Design Book is full infor- mation on how to order the blueprints. kitchen with well placed cabi- nets and ample work area in- cludes handy planning desk. Lavatory, clothes closet and garage complete street level floor plan. Three bedrooms, full bath and stall shower, linen closet and cleaning equipment closet are on upper level. Front to back recrea- tion room, lavatory facing street, laundry room, fur- nace, storage and fruit rooms | fhe Building Editor, Oshawa Times, Oshawa, Ontario, $1.00, "A Enclosed please find House Designs entitled Name Address for which send me Book of New Selection of Low Cost Homes For Canadians." (Please make remittance pay- able to The Oshawa Times.) esse teseseesssesEsseRRsIRRTI II ITRIL TITIES J TT TE EE EEE EEE EE EEE ad are on lower level. When you Furniture Refle Mood Of One By JEAN SPRAIN WILSON, AP Newsfeatures Writer FURNITURE is like music. Like popular songs, certain styles such as Victorian, Swe- dish modern and today's Danishled into semi and pure, tradi- reflect moods of various era. |tional is separated into formal| Like classical music, some and provincial. music, many of us cannot iden- tify one traditional influence in furniture from another. Perhaps this guide will help. In a way that classical is divid- furniture designs survive the centuries and become timeless in their usefulness and emotion- al satisfaction. As with a good pops program, classical and contemporary mix well, complimenting one an- another, depending upon how well the pieces are put to- gether. But just as some are con- fused by so called long hair THE HOME WORKSHOP * |period is characterized by bul-| = |bous Ee prtem 220 FORMAL GOTHIC -- In the dark ages between the 12th and 15th cen- tury all skills were concentrated on churches, Gothic therefore is dark, massive, ornately carved with carvings of church screens and altars as inspiration. RENAISSANCE -- 1350-1550-- Italian furniture of this period is essentially palatial. Chairs are rectangular and straight, tables large with legs ending in lions' paws. The wood, mainly oak, is heavily carved in low relief. Upholstery is in the form of heavily fringed velvet covers with tassels and flat {brass nails. TUDOR -- or English of this ornaments «nd massive turnings. Chair arms slope downward. Among the principal motifs used for carvings are the Tudor rose and "'linen-fold" paneling. (The latter was in- spired by folds of linen that coyered the bread on commu- nion table.) men | | cts Period or collared feet; chair backs in form of ovals interlacing hearts or shields, with the famous three plumes of the Prince of Wales in the shield backs; mar- Announce Draw WOODBINE RACE CHARTS Copyright, 1961 by McMurray Publishing Co. (Daily Racing Form) THE OSHAWA TIMES, Seturdey, July 15, 198} BASEBALL GROWTH European Cup Soccer Playoft By M. McINTYRE HOOD Special London, England Correspondent to The Oshawa Times LONDON -- Four league championship teams from Great Britain and Ireland have been drawn to take part in the first round of next season's Euro- FRIDAY, JULY 14, 1961 First Race 1 1-16 Miles, purse $2,100, maiden, H WtPPSt % Ya 114 4 32 107 7 42 ... 114 4 2 32 L'st 111 110 7% 119 9 2h 115 10 3 3-2% 41% 32% 5-4 1-2% 6h Mr. Epthratah Graybrook's Air Bridge ... Rough Reward Saran Tan .... Lady Moocher 107 6 Queen's Warrior 109 6 8 82% 7-2 Winner ch f 3 War Relie--Riskabule. Start good, won driving 8. yea CLEAR AND MUDDY 1A-EPHRATAH (en) ..6.30 360 2.50 6MR PI "ee . 350 250 3-BYAWHISKER . 2.80 Jockey Owner MeComb--Janley Sta Fin. 1-n0 Str. 25 1h 25% r Springs 3h 3% D'fach--Caimburn Farm 42% 43 Brown--McMillen, ) 51% S5.nk Nash--W O, R W Young 61 6-1% Hale--F inson 7-1% 7-1% Harrison--L A Clits Dimarco 9 Grasby--Gaylands Farm Trainer J D McLean Pool 21,231, Double pool 41,932 By JACK SULLIVAN Canadian Press Staff Writer "Hey, Bowsie, what're yeh pean Cup competition. In all, 29 teams are taking part in the competition. Home- and-home games will be played in the first round, with the aggregate score on the two y games deciding which teams go on into the second round. Three teams, including Benfica of Portugal, the present cup hold- ers, have drawn byes in the first round, so that there will be 16 teams left for the second. Tottenham Hotspur, English League champions, have a 1,000- mile journey for their first game in the European Cup. They have been drawn to meet dows the Gornick Club of Zabrze, a - suburb of Katowice, near the Third Race border of Czecho-slovakia, thes ggriongs. Polish champions. The return| Horse game will be played in London Sue Pics; in September. | Buzzin is Glasgow Rangers, cham- Boval Kitty pions of the Scottish League, | Jamie Al Star is 2 ¢ onl i {Sma ype uy pins, Soler] is frags Seoul French Football League. | Merrill Jr. $5,000 Linfield, champions of North. Pl 82% x ern Ireland, have been drawn| against the strong A. S. W. Vor- Fourth Race waerts club, champions of East ¢ furlongs. Purse $1,800. 4-year-olds and Germany. pore WELPPSt % Drumcondra, the champions of Phantom Boy the 'Eire Football League, face Rackie Creek Nuremburg, the champions of Toujours West Germany, in the first Windsor Forest Tulassee round. {Vee Gee Cee | Prerogative Cairn Boy 12 Winner dk b § 5, Son Windsor Forest claimed by Start good, won driving, Fifth Race 1 Mile and 70 yards, pu Wt P. Second Race ,800. 4-year-olds PSt % WH Happy's First ousin Fleet (F)Moralist Take No Notice Electress (F)Just Water Sea Trap 3 5 Kingwood 117 712 11.-0k 12-h (F) Queen of Spts 113 14 11 13-2 14- Winner ch g 4 Air Hero -- Sunny F -- Field Start good, won ridden out. DAILY DOUBLE 133 9-h 07 112 11 6h Purse $2,000. 2-year-olds, 108 4 106 10 110 112 112 115 115 109 ance = wooden slats and canopies are ange a part of the New England pic- ture. Later, as colonies pros-| pered, these furnishings were | painted bright colors. Over-all| and colorful patterns in floral| : Pst 1% designs are used for upholstery | sundry. 118 4 3 32% 1h and slip covers. Rag, hooked Blue Moss ... 4 21 or braided rugs are typical hon ed Brat ) Early American decore. Savi br4to Market--Sunny Coie Pennsylvania Duc although siri'gond. won ridden out ese people were soberly clad|---- - and deeply religious, they loved Sixt color Superstitious, they paint- ed symbols such as four-leaf| . clover, weather vane, tulip, and Amber Morn . wheel of fortune to remove Hooker hexes. Otherwise, furnishings | Coprian Cat 3 Wore much like Early Ameri- | Gvere Gior, h 5 Amblorix--Bre Start good, won easily rse $2,400, 3 ki) 1351} 106 2 4 5 k 0' Q Seventh Race $2,300, Wt P French Provincial -- During the reigns of Louis XIV, XV, or XVI, craftsmen visited the courts, returned home to create 1 a simpler, fruitwood sfyles. woe, i While the originals are heavier, Dadswood gilted and more ornately carved jan"gnos'® typical Louis XVI is character- Percy Yates ized by curving lines, especially | Winn! us LJ] legs like an elongated S, called| -- doe's feet. | Spanish - Mexican -- From| California where Spanish Fran- 11-16 Miles, Marshal turf course, ciscan monks once spread the Bn gospel comes simple, hand- Prince Robert 4-year-olds & Miles, purse and i % 33% 5- 113 4 5 § Blue Warrior--Bingo Bs purse Ya 6-1% Wt PP St % 39 97 : 5-2% quetry or inlay are standard decorations. Thomas Sheraton -- Charac- teristic of his style are: Curved arms on chairs join backs with- out a break; side chairs with { straight, tapering reeded legs, {tapering feet or collared toes; square chairs with vertical balu- sters, latticed bar work, splats or cane backs; chests with bow- ed fronts and oval drawer pulls in brass, hardware according to classic motifs. . urns, swags, fruit, flowers, lions' head. AMERICAN 'COLONIAL AND FEDERAL ERA -- 1720-1830-- Furniture made in America be- fore the Revolution is called |Colonial. The term, Federal, ap- |plies to: furniture made immedi- |ately after the Revolution. The {most famous is Duncan Phyfe |whose principal characteristics |are: Lyre-shaped chairs, backs land pedestal bases for small |tables. Dining tables have bases Jit sabre-shaped - flared legs; sofas have straight backs and cornucopia legs. VICTORIAN ERA -- 1837-1901 a are flawine enrves and! -nka Mister DP sewn, leather - Mister 42 backed chairs, griiliant 2nd dignified oak refectory tables, Balaguillo Ship Bottom 7 6 7AMBER ATOM .... UINELLA § AND 4 PAID $1140 3 2. SHANNON Eighth Race | throwin' today--snowballs? Al- right, fellahs, let's show some respect for the Queen and tip our caps; here's one of Her Majesty's mounties." This is some of the ribbing Ted Bowsfield got in 1958 when the young Canadian southpaw walked out of the Boston Red Sox dugout to throw against American League ball clubs. And Bowsie, from Penticton, B.C., heard every word of it. "I'll tell you, I certainly felt sort of inferior when I made it to the majors," the 24-yar-old pitcher said in an interview in Toronto the other day. He was in town with Los Angeles Angels for an exhibition game against the International League Tor- onto Maple Leafs. "I took a pretty good ride, but I found out soon enough that there is no prejudice in the big) leagues against Canadian ball players. I've changed a lot and I've made a lot of good friends in the States. FEEL INFERIOR { "The trouble with Canadians] in major league ball is that they develop a complex. They seem to get the idea that they're in- ferior to the American players, but all they need is good coach- ing. And that's what you get in the big time. "Canadians going down to the States to play ball don't know how to relax. They feel like a bunch of bums which, of course, _|they aren't." One of Bowsfield's major problems was trying to absorb tips from well-meaning players "All kinds of guys had some- 3-CAPTAIN HOOK .... 11-FLICKAMAROO 8-RUBE'S ACE TY and up. Claiming ail $2,500. Str. Fin, . Jockey 22 12% Coy -- H Katz 11 22% Harrison -- Stafford Farm 42 3% Wright -- Shermanor Farm 3.1% 4-% Despirito -- R Glan 52 52% Wick -- Connor Sta 1310 1315 Hale -- Leroy Tobey 14 14 Gubbins--Mrs R Hemstead Hook. Trainer J. C. Meyer. Pool 39,370. 1 and 3 PAID $28.70. ARDONYX cv... 9.80 5.10 2.90 RARE FLIGHT . > 5.70 3.20 3-BUZZIN .......c..ccoo0 Canadian Foaled. Claiming sil $5,000. Str. Fin. Jockey Owner 1-4 1.5% Harrison -- Stafford Farm 23% 22 Gordon -- D M Strom 31% 3-2% Coy -- Bo-Teek Farm 62 41% Potts -- Kantar and Kiss 52 53% Grasby -- McMacken Sta ." 6% Robinson -- C Smythe 7 Trainer Buzzin Despirito -- T E Hays John Passero. claimed by S. Rotenberg. F. H. A PHANTOM BOY ... 10'ROCKIE CREEK up. Claiming all $3,500. Str. Rob! 43 '214 Dittfach -- Red Hill sta 63 51% Parnell -- J B Lauder 5% 64 Coy -- Rosemary Sta $2 7.2% Gubbins--Mrs R Hemstead 7h 84 Hale -- Mrs V G Cardy 95 910 McMullen -- F Korzelius 10- 10- Gibb -- Cairnburn Farm Amber Sun. Trainer John Passero. Dressel, L. Hozak. $3,500. Poo) 56, 2 FAIR LODGE and -y id Str. Fin. fillies. Jockey Owner Coy--Stafford Farm thing to pass on and the thing h--La in nal I did wrong was that I didn't Farm Robinson--Windfields Farm Olah--Gardiner, Be Gibb--J C, JH Mackinnon r John Passero 33 43 5 2nd. Traine Pool 43,288 up here," he said, tapping his temple. % "] was fold lots of things I couldn't use and it took me three years to battle this stuff out. Now I'm as hapy as a pig with the Angels and I think I'm doing okay, but it was a tough haul." RIGNEY PLEASED Manager Bill Rigney also thinks the six - foot - one 190- pounder with a 5-2 record is coming along "just fine." "He's developed a little screw- ball and it works pretty good against right-hand hitters," Rig- ney said. "I'm tickled with him." 1t took the big crew-cut Cana- dian a long time to get into pro ball. And there was a period when he was sure he wouldn't make it and would end up sell- ing real estate for his father in Penticton. Tony Labello, scout for the old St. Louis Browns, had his eyes on the lefty for four years. "I was doing pretty good, get-| ting 17 and 18 strikeouts a game, and Labello was the only major league scout to come up to Canada to look at me. | "I was all set to sign with| the Browns' organization when| they folded. | SIGNED FOR $4,000 "The Red Sox then put a scout in Seattle and he gave me| $4,000 to join the Boston organi-| zation. From then on, it was a matter of playing in their farm system until they called me up in 1958." He stayed with the Sox until 1960 when Cleveland Indians got him and then went to the Angels when the American League ex- panded this year. Who is the best hitter he has ever faced? "It's got to be Ted Williams. let them go in one ear and out|I was fortunate enough to play the other. I kept 'em bottled with him and pitch against him. SAMBER MORN 420 270 2.70 «HOOKER 0 2.50 2.40 1-LEON K © SPORT FROM BRITAIN . Fin. Jockey Owner 1-5% Coy--Stafford Farm 2nk 22 D'fach--Bridle Bar Farm 3.1% 31% Adams--I Tenney 4 4 Robinson--C G Uteck outdistanced--Gibb--E Berla Morn. Trainer John Passero Pool 24,490 Quinella pool 28,510 WAR BANG D censne DALE up. Claiming all $7,500. Str. Fin Jockey Owner 13 14% Coy--J R Mcintyre 2.2% 2-nk Despirito--W D Stable 32 32% B'gmenke--S Rotenberg 412 417 Robinson--C Bordonaro $s. 5 Potts--Mrs W J Yates ngo. Trainer Frank Higgins. "7.80 380 240 1-ADSWOO oe. 830 2 arena, is to get a £5,000,0 facelift. The owners, television 'company, aim to make it the finest sports sta- CRINGE ROBERT 17.70 9.60 670 STRINCE ROBERT N70 35 $4 2. BRILLIANT 2ND (B $2,000, 3- and 4-year-o Italy and $ for the Wembley blueprint. High on the list of improve- ments is the building of a multi- storey carpark, considered es- sential because of the eVer-in- creasing number of car users en.) 5.7 ids, claiming all Fin. Jockey Owner 1.9% Hale--G A Fischer 24 22% McComb--D D Cardells 41% 3-1% Potts--S Mocko 3h 4% Despirito--Luxiana F'm 62 51% Adams--B S R Farm 51 62% Coy--A, L Poloniato Str. 1-7 dium in the world. Experts|soccer club, have been sent to South Africa, [Sports Centre--and pain to gather ideas|World Cup from | Wembley Arena Will Be The Best LONDON (CP) -- Wembley|with the luxury bowls of South Stadium, Britain's show pie ¢ e| America and Europe. i | a commercial | A few months ago architect Bernard Brown announced plans to turn Stamford Bridge, |! West London home of Chelsea into a National Canadian Southpaw Is Accepted Now He's just tremendous. I've heard him call his shots when he went up to the plate and, brother, he did what he said he was going to do." Mickey Mantle of New York Yankees? "You want to know some- thing? He's never hit 'a homer off me. But, boy, he hits me awfully hard." Bowsfield is married and has a 3%-year-old boy, "Teddy the Second." His off-season job is what he terms a dandy. "I'm a bartender in a Pentic- ton cocktail lounge." Real Estate Douglas L. Gower ® REALTOR © For all your Real Estate Needs PHONE RA 8-4651 D. W. WILSON LTD. REALTOR | OSHAWA SHOPPING CENTRE ! RA 5-6588 Rugs and of: 7:71 1 IF IT'S RUGS . . . CALL NU-WAY Wall-to-Wall Broadioom Carpets -- Stair Runners, ete. 171 Mary St RA 8-4681 ws... | McLaughlin Heating for | eo FUEL OIL eo STOVE OIL eo Prompt Delivery 104 King W. RA 3.3481 IT'S DIXON'S For the BEST in FUEL end Heating Equipment "steal" the Wembley. Now it is doubtful whether his scheme will go through. DELCO f by GENERAL MOTORS | 313 Albert St. RA 3-4663 1699 -- These furnishings are(shortened cabriole legs 'with a {lavishly carved but lighter in|less formal version of the styles ES rE " SPR |scale, with smaller melon bulbs TE Re SPEAKS i lon table and chair legs. Chair be carried on top of a car Dou, legs. aften have spiral tismngs z LIA] \ with oars or outboard Molo chairs have high, curved backs which gives a complete bill of| ith a conte Splat Shated like materials and illustrated step-|3 ign ot ig ner a by-step directions oh making ong S-curve turning out below ue boat, yg Ble. is pattern|pe" chair seat and in towards also i Packet No. 24 which contains|.,me important in this era. a variety of fullsize patterns) QUEEN ANNE -- 1702-1714-- for hunting and fishing aids--ip typical detail is the cabriole all for $L75. {leg with an exaggerated turn at Send orders to The Home|iha knee, heavily carved in a Workshop Dept., The Times, shell motif. The foot of a chair Oshawa, Ont lis a club, hoof, claw or ball { Chair backs are spoon-shaped to fit the contour of the body. Tops are rounded, with a fiddle- shaped splat; and seats are narrower at the back. EIGHTEENTH CENTURY -- 1700-1800 -- Among the great | designers of this period were-- Thomas Chippendale. charac- teristics of his works are chairs with fretwork backs and {straight Chinese legs; pierced, |ladder - backed chairs; ribbon- back chairs with cabriole legs, claw and ball feet; camel-back- ed sofas with high curved backs; heavy pieces with rich carving. ee ---- jenn WINDMILL IT'S A BREEZE that starts Sportsmen's iho foot is the cabriole leg be-| lof Louis XV. Characteristics are tufted camel - backed sofas, marble, fringed glass shaded lamps, etc. INFORMAL OR PROVINCIAL Styles stem from the informal {or country of less sophisticated {regions of various cultures. For lexample: | Early American -- Character- istics stolen from the Dutch include straight backed, square chair with spin- dles across the back. Chests made from planed split planks grew from mere trunks to credenzas, to highboys, to com- modes, to wardrobes and hence to the modern chest of draw- ers. 5 Stools, settles, trestles and {drop - leaf tables, beds with and finely carved, beds. From Western Indians and Mexicans come the in- fluence of lusty colors, painted tin lamps, lanterns, bright pot- tery and textured rugs in primi- tive patterns. MODERN From 1912 on. in Europe and here designers revolted against the past with grotesque un- adorned forms using pipe with assorted woods. Modernists experimented, in- troducing the Morris Chair, waterfall veneered straight line bedroom and dining room furniture, and stark, Swedish modern in bleached woods. Now designers have swung from these extremes to softer lines, using warmer -woods, such as Danish modern, and occasionally borrowing design inspiration from the past. This transitional compromise is term- ed contemporary. MIX STYLES? Contemporary often requires accessories to soften and characterize it just as trad itional is sometimes accented by modern room jewelry. Even various kinds of period furniture go together as long as they blend in spirit and feel- ing. That is, formal styles will work effectively, one with an- other, and informal periods will harmonize together You can mix Chippendale with Duncan Phyfe, for exam- ple, but you can't use rank oak with either one. Some people do. But the re- sult is simply not good music. BRITISH AUDIENCE Of the 15,104,329 receiving li- cences recorded in the United Kingdom in 1960, 10,702,131 were for radio and television com- bined. painted | Have Gun Royal Bolero Chopnik Brenda's Reward 97 |Wilwyn Street 106 1 Ya | Winner b g 4 Morocco Prince--Barbe: Start good, won easily | 406,881. Attendance 7,247. 7 5 9 8 1 6 2 4 0 T 8.1% 7-2% Olah--Red River Sta gnk Grasby--Gaylands Farm 9.1% Har'son--Gormley Stud 10- Rob'son--Gormley Stud Trainer 4 Bou ette. ool 54,470. Total pool 'European Champs Racing At Picton PICTON (CP) -- Four Euro- |pean outboard racing cham- {pions will be among the com- petitors in this year's John Ward Trophy races during the Civic Holiday weekend Aug. 5-7. Three outstanding American drivers and one Canadian have also entered. |" The Ward Trophy is emblem- atic of world supremacy in C | class racing outboards. The rec- oid, held by Jack Leak of Wash- lington, Ore., is 79.046 m.p.h. Entered from Europe are Die- |ter Konig, West Berlin, Erich |Wietz, Essen, Germany, Dieter |Schulze, Austria, and Freddie |Roggers, Gersau, Switzerland. The American entries are Bud {widoett, Lakeland, Fla., and (W. H. Bartless and Homer Kin caid of Illinois. The Canadian |entry is Maurice Belleville of |Quebec City. | 'REMEMBER WHEN. . 2 | By THE CANADIAN PRESS | Bert Pearson, 18-year -old {Hamilton schoolboy, beat the {Olympic record and equalled {the world mark for the 100- {metre dash 29 years ago today |in the Canadian Olympic trials lat Hamilton. His time was 10.04 | seconds, but two weeks later he failed to qualify for the Olympic 100-metre final. Canada's Harry |Jerome now shares the world | mark, 10 seconds flat, with Ger- |many's Armin Hary. . .. LOOK FOR [ THIS SIGN | Before You Buy Your NEW HOME! The terraces will be com- pletely covered in to protect customers from the erratic| British climate. Bars, wash-| rooms and entrances to the || grounds will be modernized. SECOND VERSE - SAME AS FIRST RICHMOND, Va. (AP)-- Department of sports coin- cidence, statistical division: A crowd of 2,102 was on hand May 20 when lefty Bob Veale of the International League Columbus Jets blanked the Richmond Vir- ginians 4-0 on two hits. A highlight of that game was a homer for the Jets by Don Clendenon. Wednesday night 2,102 fans were again on hand as Veale gave up two hits, whitewashed Richmond 4-0 --and Clendenon hit another homer. SOCCER STAR SOLD LONDON (AP) -- Centre-foi- ward Brian Clough, one of Brit- ain's leading soccer players, was sold by Middlesbrough to Sunderland Friday for a re- ported $126,000, the third high- est price ever paid for a British soccer player's contract. FIGHTS LAST NIGHT By THE ASSOCIATED P%ESS Madrid--Luis Folledo, 145%, Spain, outpointed Fred Galiana, 145%, Spain, 12. ¢ | | IMPROVE YOUR HOME L AND SERVICE | Special Sale! (ss3) FURNACES DEMONSTRATORS and The present 100,000 capacity | will be increased by at least half, probably by the use of double-tiered stands. The adjoining ice rink will also take on a new look An indoor running track, the first of its kind in Britain, will be| built over the ice. i This sign Is your assurance that your home to be has been built by a professional builder, a member of the OSHAWA BUILDERS ASSOCIATION. BANFIELD CONSTRUCTION 725-6577 Jas built in the ely ous. Is GOLDELL HOMES LTD. 725-7272 puted to provide the best soccer | JESS HANN & SON .. .725-4218 pith ib Be ward, JACKSON & SON LTD. -... .725-6343 or hy Ne er gos. H. KASSINGER CONST. LTD. 725-9121 hound racing and American LOUPAN DEVELOPMENTS LTD. ..725-8171 WM. RIDGLEY CONSTRUCTION . 723-7324 football. This year it even| staged a ski-jumping contest-- JAMES ALLEN, Construction Ltd, ..725-6126 723-7122 with the help of artificial snow. The indoor arena is used for| swimming, hockey, boxing, ten- : nis, basketball and ice seating, | in 1948 Wembley hei g venue of the Olympic Games. It was there that Emil Zatopek || first caught the world's atten- tion by scoring a runaway win in the 10,000 metres. One reason for the improve- ments is the 1966 World Cup, which is being staged in Britain The Football Association, which will organize the money-spin- |} ning soccer tournament, de- (|. mands a stadium comparable!" FINE TURF FIELD Wembley Stadium, situated on | the western outskirts of London. was built in the early 1920s. Its sess see" BE JAMES O'MALLEY, BUILDER R. JEFFERY, BUILDER W. ROTH, BUILDER H. GRUYTERS, BUILDERS ....... W. TONNA, BUILDER . .. .. 723-7711 it LEON B. WALLIS, BUILDER ......725-7107 G. RUSSELL HARRISON, BUILDER . .725-5490 The Oshawa Builders' Association For Information Telephone 725-9771 .725-9478 725-9991 728-5210 ONE - PIECE CONCRETE li | WHEDUTE DELIVERY OW AL U2 & FLOOR MODELS WHILE THEY LAST! PRICES SLASHED TO Robert Adams -- Characteris- tics are classid details and mo- tifs such as urns, wreaths, | CANADA'S 2 GREAT HEATING UNITS all the action. The mill whirls and the little man begins to saw wood at top speed. His deject- 5085 as "ee ed hound dreams hopefully of swags and medallions; oval or wheel - shaped chair backs; square and tapered legs with spade - shaped or collared toes; low-relief carving on aprons and legs. George Heppelwhite -- Chests, sideboards, and consoles have serpentine, or wavy fronts. Home| Other characteristics are slen- Times, |der, tapered, plain or reeded, | square or round legs with spade happier occupations. Pattern 202, which gives actual-size cut- ting and painting guides and assembly directions, is 50c. This pattern also is in the Windmill and Weathervane Packet No. 11 which gives four other designs all for $1.75. Send orders to The Workshop Dept. The Oshawa, Ont | | "CONROY" | "GARWO0D" | oIL BURNERS and FUBNAGES! | | I f A ivi 104 KING ST, W. n of McLaughlin Coal & Supplies A 1 .) WA -- 723-3481 SHEET 292 KING ST. WEST METAL PHONE 725-2734 "YOUR FIRST STEP TO BEAUTY AND SAFETY" OLIVER 3-3311 © REPLACEMENT FOR OLD STEPS © NON-SLIP SURFACE ON TREADS AND PLATFORM