Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 19 May 1964, p. 2

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2 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Tussdey, Mey 19, 1964 GOOD EVENING -- By JACKGEARIN -- LANCASTER HOTEL PLANS APPROVED Reg. Lancaster of Oshawa's Lancaster hotel said Sat- urday the Ontario Liquor License Board had approved his building plans for two cocktail lounges and a dining lounge with liquor license. This is the first important step before granting an official license, Cocktail lounges should be here by mid-July. This was the first official indication that the City will have these types of liquor outlets (following the plebiscite last November). The Ontario Liquor License Board will sit at Peterborough Friday, June '12, to formally hear the application of the Lancaster and others from Oshawa. It is expected other licenses will be granted, especially to hotels like the Genosha, where building renovations have al- ready started (as in the case at the Lancaster). The Board has already held preliminary hearings in To- ronto, undoubtedly to eliminate some applicants whose loca- tions and buildings would not meet OLLB standards. All applicants at Peterborough must run newspaper adver- tisements to this effect prior to June 12. As another prelude to the opening of cocktail lounges in Ushawa, a Canadian distillery will conduct a "'school for bar-tenders"' at the Kinsmen Civic Centre June 15,27, inclusive (except Sundays) from 10-12 a.m. and 2-4 p.m.), There will also be a one-day course for managers on such subjects as "stock control" LAURENTIAN TRUST SUBSCRIPTIONS TOTAL $250,000 Some 25 subscribers of the proposed Laurentian Trust and Savings Corp. held a two-hour meeting at the Oshawa Golf Club last Thursday -- bylaws were passed and Robert "Bob" Vincent was added to the list of trustees (with Ernest Marks, Q.C.; J. A. Yanch, QC; S. T, Hopkins, all of Oshawa and James W. Doswell, Toronto accountant, who is president- manager.) Mr. Doswell said Saturday that approximately $250,000 of the required $500,000 for incorporation had already been subscribed -- according to the terms of the contract, the bal- ance must be subscribed by June 15, or the original $250,000 will be returned. "We are anxious to get more Oshawa and district sub- scribers," said Mr. Doswell, one of the founders of Metro- politan Trust and secretary from incorporation until August, 1963 (when he became general managet of Commonwealth Savings and Loan Conp.) ~ 'The Ontario Gazette last week had a Notice of Intention to Apply for a Charter from Laurentian Trust -- this will be fallowed by two similar notices in the publication. BELLEVILLE TO LOSE MAIN STREET TRACKS Time is fleeting. ~- Oshawa's tumujtuous tracks removal celebration had its first anniversary recently (rumor has it that the final coating of asphalt for downtown King street will be put in by tiie end of May, and that will really be progress.) * Remember how 50,000 wildly cheering spectators gather- ed that historic day, Saturday, May 11; to mark the end of an age-old municipal struggle, how they cheered Lyman and friends on the antiquated hand-car, the passage of the last train along King street? Our neighbors in Belleville will soon have a similar cele- bration, June 22-28, to mark the lifting of the CN tracks from a main street (Pinnacle) where they have been in place for nearly a century. An important railway exhibit is planned. Three different displays will be open to the public at the Belleville station-- steam and diesel locomotives, freight cars and the latest passenger equipment, "Of interest to railway buffs: "The display will include No, 40, built in 1872 for the Grend Trunk Railway. It's the only woodburner-type loco- motive used in Canada for exhibitions. It once operated between Portland, Maine, and White River Junction. No. 6400 will also be displayed -- it operated for many years through Belleville; in 1939 it was the centre of attrac- tion at the New York World's Fair. It pulled the Royal train that year. Another famous has-been on display will be No. 5700, fastest steamer ever operated by the railway (for many years assigned to the afternoon flyer between Montreal- Toronto.) There will be excursions pulled by steam-engines, horse racing, military and name dance bands (Tommy Hunter, etc., and the Hastings and Prince Edward Band, scheduled for an early appearance at the Pasadena Rose Bowl Parade.) LITTLE NOTES FROM HERE AND THERE This is undoubtedly the age of costly and elegant new buses. There was another reminder this week. Gray Coach Lines, Ltd., will take Ontario mimicipal councillors for a demonstration ride May 27 in Toronto on the company's new "tuxury coaches". They're soon to be introduced on the Ham- ilton-Toronto-Oshawa runs. Despite some irreverent obser- vations herein about luxury buses, .they're perfectly all right in the right atmosphere--this Would certainly seem to be the Oshawa-Toronto TTC bus run, about the most physically ex- hausting transportation trip available in this part of the country . . . Two cars will again be drawn for at the annual picnic of Local 222, UAW-CLC in Lakeview Park in July -- an F85 Oldsmobile and a Buick Special. Pensioners of the Local will again hold their picnic in Niagara Falls -- the date is Wednesday, June 17. There are 29 great whiskies 4 1h] | Adams Private Stock KY \a motor vehicle must first have sie, See ci th. Sieh i. Solin Unity Symbol Nicholson Says EDMONTON (CP) -- Post- \master-General Nicholson said |Saturday night that Canada's newest postage stamp is a sym- bol of the nation's unity and therefore one of the most impor- tant issues ever put out by the department. He told the Royal, Philatelic Society of Canada that the post office has decided to print a much larger run of the stamp than normal and keep it in pro- duction longer than usual. The minister said the post of- fice had rejected another design for the unity stamp showing "the lions of England, the lilies of France and other heraldic symbols" because they re- flected divisions in Canada and) also mean little to millions of} Canadians whose forefathers) didn't come from either Britain| or France. The design chosen--three red maple leafs on a blue field-- lsymbolized the two major founding races of Canada as well as other ethnic groups. | 'The fact that all three leaves| jare firmly united on a common) |stem signifies that we are all junited in a common purpose-- jone Canada," said Mr. Nichol-| | son. | Mr. Nicholson said in an in- jterview earlier the stamp de-| jsign has nothing to do with the) jnational flag issue. | Running Lights Running Risk Of $50 Fines TORONTO (CP) -- Thousands of Ontario motorists who have installed small running lights on the fronts of their cars are breaking the law, W. M. Earl, Ontario registrar of motor ve- hicles, said Sunday. The fine could be from $5 to $50. But Deputy Chief John Mur- ray, head of the traffic division of the Metropolitan Toronto 'po- lice force, indicated no charges would be laid unless someone| |complains about the lights. | But lights, latest fad in the} jautomotive accessory business, lare 2l-candlepower units. The glare eliminator on the unit has never been approved by the provincial transport min- ister and until it is motorists are using the lights illegally. Highway regulations require that all lighting devices of more than four mean candlepower on | the flare eliminator device ap- proved by the minister, -- | NAB ARTHUR MURRAY NEW YORK (AP) -- Arthur Murray was arrested Thursday on a federal warrant from Min- neapolis, Minn., seeking him as a witness in a grand jury. probe| | of dance studio practices. Mur- |ray, 69, whose name is syno- nymous with ballroom dancing, was released in $5,000 bail for) appearance in Minneapolis June ROCKD BY QUAKE... SANTIAGO (AP) -- A sharp! |earthquake shook this Chilean |capital Wednesday night, but first reports indicated little dam- age and no injuries, ; to 60 vears old .. . each dead | into a | heart has_ nine SPOTTING THE VILLAINS | turely, The ba v9 3-Leaf Stamp | YOUR HEART HAS NINE LIVES: PART 1 Risk Factor Control Editor's Note: A_ prize- winning science writer and a nationally known heart specialist have teamed up to tell you what positive action you can take without much trouble to fend off or fight dewn a heart attack or stroke. This is the first of twelve articles condensed from their new book, "Your Heart Has Nine Lives". By ALTON BLAKESLEE . and JEREMIAH STAMLER, MD Every hour the roster lengthens, name by name. Siouffer ., . Jones... : Baker ,. . Wendt . . . Sulli- van. .McFadden., Rad- cliffe , . Cohen... only 31 of a heart attack. None died from either bug, bullet or bomb. Each had lived his way premature heart at- tack. By habit or choice, each had run certain risks that raised his chances of being stricken, His seemingly sud- den heart attack had been buiiding up to crisis for years. Yet -- had he known. and had he acted -- each could have reduced any of nine risk factors which, by all we know, make a man more susceptible to a heart attack far too early in life. He could have acted... and you still can. Control one of the nine risk factors, and you take a step to boost your chances for longer life. Control them all, and then in a sense your lives. In a month or a few months time you can reduce your risks. Each day, on the average, heart disease kills 1,400 Am- ericans, and cerebral brain strokes take another 500 lives. In total the toll is more than a life a minute, and uncouned hundreds of thousands are crippled every year. We know the name of the killer. It is atherosclerosis, the hardening "and thickening, clogging and narrowing of the vital arteries carrying nour- ishing blood to the muscle tis- | sue of your heart, and to the cells of your brain demand- ing life-sustaining oxygen. Your heart is the sturdiest, toughest muscle of your body. In our epidemic of heart dis- ease, thousands of hearts are stilled which are actually too good, too sound, to die prema- cause is in- terference' with the heart's own supply lines or arteries from atherosclerosis, a kind of biological rust. Secondly, we know from | half a century and more of | brilliant medical detective | work, that atherosclerosis really is due to a conspiracy of factors, There is no one single cause, but rather a constella- | tion of causes. Now we know | the chief suspects in this dead- ly syndicate. Look to the roll call: } High blood pressure. | High levels of cholesterol, a material, in the bloodstream. _ Overweight. Excessive eating, especially of certain types of fats and cholesterol, : : Too little exercise and phy- sical activity. Diabetes. Excessive Cigarette smok- ing. Tensions and stresses. Hereditary. If you are beset by any one of them, your risk of a pre- mature heart attack is boost- ed two. to six times above the risk of the person free from such a burden. With a com- bination of factors, your risk is far higher. A man's chances of having a heart attack before age 65 are only about 1 in 20 to 1 in 50 if he has normal weight, nor- | mal blood pressure, average or low levels of blood chole- sterol, no diabetes, is not a heavy cigaret smoker, is mod- erately active, has a normal eectro-cardiogram, and has ho damage to his kidneys or | thyroid gland, YOU CAN DO SOMETHING His chances rise to 1 in 2-- or 50 per cent!--if he is being shadowed by two or three of the syndicate members, such as high blood cholesterol, high blood pressure, or obesity. These odds are not drawn from a hat, They are based upon what actually happened to apparently healthy middle- aged men who live with one or more of these risk factors. But you are not helpless. You can do something about | AMERICA'S NO. 1 -- Take 2 each of these risks. You can | plan to enjoy a longer life. With diet, or diet combined with drugs, you can control high blood pressure and di- abetes, reducing their dangers. The cigaret smoker who quits his habit finds his risk falling toward that of the non- smoker. The obese man who reduces begins paying the standard rate for his life insurance, in- stead of an extra fee. The amount of cholesterol in | the bloodstream can be re- duced through moderate | changes in what we eat. We have, now, a very solid foundation of scientific know!- edge from which to fight back against the toll of premature heart attacks and strokes, es- pecially among the middle- aged. We have. strong pros- pects of saving hundreds of thousands of lives) and adding 10 to 20 more veers to our lives. HEAT WITH OIL DIXON'S OIL 313 ALBERT ST. 24-HOUR SERVICE 723-4663 SERVING OSHAWA OVER SO YEARS particularly dangerous fatty termPian Joan, $ 500 $2,000 $3,600 Oshawa Branch Oshawa, King and Wilson Branch Oshawa, 532 Simcoe: Street South Typical low-cost termPlan loans You receive You repay over 12 months 30 months 36 months Finance in advance at Monthly payment 66] saved enough with my termDlan loan to buy the model I wanted 99 Yes--many car buyers find their financing costs less when they finance in advance at the Royal, so that they have more money to spend on the car itself. A Royal Bank termPlan loan puts buying power, bargginthg power in your pocket -- lets you shop around for the best deal. Use your credit this businesslike way. To finance acar or any other big purchase, the first thing to do is see Royal Bank about a life-insured $ 43.93 $ 75.44 $115.73 ROYAL BANK $. F. DONNELLY, Menager J. M. WADUELL, Manager C. F. GIFFIN, Manager Can Save Your Life Take careful account of these primary facts: Coronary heart disease: to- day is our leading killer, and the toll is increasing. The very FIRST attacks are fatal to almost 40 per cent of victims, either immediately or within six weeks time. Almost 2% per cent die in the FIRST HOUR. Millions of us live with dan- | gerously high risks. There is no germ or bug that causes heart attacks. Its causes involve the way we've been living. Heart disease has risen to tragic prominence at a time when so many Americans are enjoying the "good life' and prosperity. The thought is in- escapable that somehow this epidemic is fundamentally due to aspects of our new modern way of life. Some experts call it the "disease of prosperity" and blame it particularly upon the ABUSE of our prosperity, Our life habits and customs have changed remarkably in the last 40 to 50 years, and we've heartily welcomed most of them. But 'many of these new habits and boons are associated with our high rate of premature death from heart attacks. The heart plague flourishes in those countries, like ours, where modern urban industrial life is most developed, where the changes from a rural agri- cultural society -- in habits of eating, exercising, working, smoking, and other ways -- have been most profound. But we can do something about it, a very great deal. None of these steps can hurt us in any way. Rather, you will very likely feel better and be healthier. They do not call for the rigors of any spartan existence -- far from it. The time to begin is now, whether you are 20 or 4, a young man or woman, hus- band or wife, or parents of young chidren whose lives might be lengthened by 20 to 30 years because of habits being formed and followed now. (Tomorrow: Myths and Mis- conceptions) (Condensed from "Your Heart Has Nine Lives", pub- lished by Prentice Hall, copy- right 1964 by Alton Blakeslee) Forecasts issued by the Tor- onto weather office at 5:30 a.m.: Synopsis: A vigorous storm moving eastward above Lake Superior is expected to dip southeastward along the Ottawa | Valley this evening. In the ex- jtreme southwestern sections a ifew locally severe thunder- {storms with hail are possible iJate in the day. Wednesday will 'be cooler in most localities jacross the province although a return of sunshine to extreme northern sections will take much of the bite out of the very |chilly weather currently being | experienced, | Lake St. Clair, Southern Lake |Huron, Lake Erie, Niagara, |London, Kitchener, Hamilton: /Sunny with cloudy intervals | Wednesday. Scoattered thunder- showers developing this after- noon and mostly ending before midnight. A risk of hail and briefly strong winds accom- companying the thunderstorms. Cooler Wednesday. Winds north- west to north 10 to 20 Wednes- day. Toronto; Sunny with a few cloudy intervals Wednesday. Scattered thundershowers de- veloping this afternoon and mostly ending before midnight. Cooler Wednesday. Winds northwest to north 10 to 20 Wed- | nesday. Northern Lake Huron, Geor- gian Bay, Haliburton, Lake On- tario, North Bay, Sudbury: Cloudy with sunny intervals and cooler We dnesday. Winds becoming westerly 10 to 20 to- night, northwest 10 to 20 Wed- nesday. Cochrane, Timagami: Turn- ing much cooler this afternoon. Overcast with periods of light Carson Leaves | Agencies Cash WASHINGTON (AP) -- Two national conservation agencies are beneficiaries under the will of Rachel Carson, author and biologist, they said Monday, Miss Carson, whose book Sil- ent Spring created international controversy with its change that man is poisoning the earth and himself by his efforts to control nature with chemicals, died of cancer on April 15. Officers of the Nature Con- servancy of Washington, D.C., and the Sierra Club of San Francisco said they have been advised that Miss Carson's will sets up two trusts, each amount- ing approximately one - half of her estate. Weather Forecast ~ Rain Ending Overnight, Cooler ? ge Ee eng oe rain or drizzle and possibly wet snow in northern sections to- night. Wednesday mostly cloudy and cool. Sunny: periods in the afternoon, Winds be coming 15 to 20 tonight and Wednes- day. Algoma, southern White River: Cloudy with sunny in- tervals Wednesday. Winds be- coming northwest 15 to 20 to- night, north 10 to 20 Wednesday.' Northern White River: Sunny; with cloudy intervals Wednes- day. Winds northeast 15 to 25. Today and Wednesday. Forecast Temperatures Low tonight, high Wednesday 50 see eeeenee Peterborough ... Trenton ....++ Sault Ste. Kapuskasing . White River. Moosonee ., 25-Hour MW > - Drop Barrier For Negroes NEW YORK (AP) -- New York's 10,000 construction elec- tricians have a new contract which provides two pioneering innovations as well as a sal- ary increase. They won a 25-hour work week two years ago. , One feature of the new con- tract, announced Saturday, cre- ates an educational trust fund for union members and their families, It is to be built by the employers contributing a sum equal to one per cent of their payrolls--or $700,000 to $1,000,- 000 a year. , The other major innovation the contract was termed a "ma- jor breakthrough" in employ- ment of Negroes and Puerto Ricans. Of 1,000 apprentice- shisp covered by provisions of the contract, 200 were for Ne- groes and 100 were for Puerto Ricans. The union also won a 25-cent hourly wage increase from the 600 electrical contractors after 90 days of secret negotiations. The two-year contract raises the hourly wage for journeymen to Timmins $5.20. YOU CANT MISS SAVING WITH pop Find saving difficult? Then PSP can help you. Ask any member of our staff about PSP, the lite-insured personal savings plan. exclusive with lor , 4) 2ANK: NU-WAY RUG CENTRE THE LARGEST BROADLOOM STORE IN EASTERN ONTARIO. GRAND OPENING SALE! THANK YOU OSHAWA. Your warm response to our newly opened Nu Way Rug Centre at Church and Richmond Streets has been wonderful . . . SO wonderful in fact, that we owe a few apologies. We apologize to those of our customers who have not received our usual We apologize rompt service because of the enormous volume of orders. to the Cuhawe Times and to radio station CKLB for cancelling adver- tising originally scheduled for the week-end as we couldn't handle much more bus- iness. But, if you would like a bargain ina rug or wall-to-wall broadloom, and you're the patient type, drop in to see us now while our Grand Opening Sale is in progress ++. Thanks again. Bill Frobel NU-WAY RUG CENTRE Corner of Richmond and Church 'Streets, Oshawa,

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