Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 19 Sep 1966, p. 19

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a ea SMITH, Lile At Memorial son, 3 Veterans Avenue, Bowmanville, |i her Wite Service In the chapel on 2 p.m. Interment Lakeview Cemetery. ER, Christina (Tine) way suddenly in Bristol, sd land, (resident of 821 G: awa) in irlerson 'St., her 75th year. beloved wife of Willlam Steer deer aunt Fred and gh ti Smith, Further de- er. of talis will follow ta Hospital, Bowmanville, on Sunday, September 18, 1966, Lila Emmer. the late Fred This picture of Tashkent's theatre district was taken before earth tremors began ayy Oy BEAUTIFUL CITY SHAKEN shaking the central Asian city earlier this year. Now possibly as many as half of the city's 1,000,000 inhabi- tants are homeless, How- ever, Soviet authorities seem determined that the world will know as little about it as possible. --CP Photo Metallic By BOB MacKENZIE OTTAWA (CP)--A row of 10- foot metal saucers is keeping tabs on the sun's daily progress across the sky over Algonquin Park as the National Research Council's new radio observatory Saucers Keep Tabs On Sun scientists are specially inter- ested in the 10-centimetre band because it follows the same pattern as x-ray emissions, The X-ray emissions are absorbed in the upper atmosphere, f the jonosphere--a layer aroun the earth vital to long-distance stage. - The saucers--there are $2 of them s out along a 700-foot, east-west line -- are parabolic reflectors collecting radiation from the sun. Linked together and operated in unison by re- mote control, they make up & multi - element interferometer, the newest research tool at the observatory. But they are dwarfed by the giant 150-foot-diameter dish of the radiotelescope at the instal- lation in a secluded section of the provincial park, 120 miles northeast of Ottawa and away from most man-made sources of electrical interference. The giant telescope already is in operation, although much of its present work program con- sists of tests, 'It is essentially complete and the tests will gradually pe- ter out," says Dr. G. A. Miller, "\head of the radio astronomy section of NRC's radio and electrical engineering division. The interferometer array is geared to follow the sun for four hours in the middle of each day to record the sun's emis- sions on the 10-centimetre wave- length. COMPUTES EMISSIONS Kindness, beyond Price, yet within reach of all GERROW FUNERAL. CHAPEL 390 KING STREET WEST Telephone 728-6226 J. G. MELLAND-SMITH In failing helath for three months, John Gerald Melland- Smith, a resident of Hillsdale Manor, died, Sept. 17, at the Oshawa General Hospital. He was in his 80th year. Born Nov. 24, 1887, in Wales, the deceased had been a resi- IN MEMORIAM dent of Canada and this area for 58 years. An employee of General Motors, prior to his BENNETT-- dear wife and passed away September 19, 1965. The depths of sorrow we cannot tell Of the loss of one we loved so well, In_ loving mother, Marie And while she sleeps a peaceful sleep Mer me we shall always k mory eep. --Always remembered by husband Leslie and daughter May. memory of & Bennett who retirement in 1942, he had 23 years' service with the firm. During the First World War, .|Mr, Melland-Smith served with 'ithe Royal Canadian Engineers. Predeceased, Feb. 17, 1948, by his wife, the former Olive May Torr, Mr. Melland-Smith is sur- LOCKE'S FLORIST ingements end ements for. all "OSHAWA SHOPPING CENTRE 24 HOUR PHONE SERVICE 728-6555 vived by two daughters, Mrs. H. G. Roughley (Betty) and Mrs. H. Michael (Barbara) gn@ a son, Hubert Smith, all oS OShawe: Also surviving are two sis- Miss Gladys Melland- Smith, Essex, England and Mrs, Lillian Rose, Victoria, A LASTING TRIBUTE For Permanence ond dignity 'we suggest. MOUNT LAWN MEMORIAL PARK BRONZE MEMORIALS For courteous advice please visit the Park Office. 723-2633 B.C., and nine grandchildren. The memorial service will be held at the Atmstrong Funeral Home at 2 p.m., Sept. 20. Interment will be in Oshawa Union Cemetery. Rev. Winni- fred Bridge, minister of Col- umbus United Church, will con- duct the service. STANDS AT CROSSROADS Halifax is exactly halfway be- tween Vancouver and Dublin. KEEP OLD LANDMARK The city of Rotterdam is 'to preserve for ever the "Prince's Mill," built in 1648, FUNERAL OF HAROLD D. FOWLER The memorial service for Harold Douglas Fowler, who died Sept. 14, at the Oshawa General Hospital, in his 59th year, was held at the Arm- OSHAWA TIMES PINEAPPLE PET BY ALICE BROOKS That favorite of crochet, the pineapple! This one is done in rounds and rounds of it. As a centrepiece this cheted square will ton; for cloth, cotton. Pat. 7357; Thirty - five cents Toronto 1, Ont. plainly Pattern Number, Name, Address. 210 + Most craft Designs in new chet fashions, afghans, quilts, embroidery, toys, gifts. 2 Free Patterns. Send 25c today. 12 remarkable heirloom. quilts -- complete patterns in color in Museum Quilt Book 2.--Quilt- *, ing motifs. Send 60c. Send also 'for Quilt Book 1-- 16 ¢gomplete patterns, 60c. cro- interest everyone. Made of No. 30 cot- a heavy jiffy directions. (coins) for each pattern (no stamps, please) to Alice Brooks, care of The Oshawa Times Needle- carft Dept., 60 Front St. W., Ontario resi- dents add 2c sales tax. Print Beautiful Needle- 1967 Needlecraft Catalog! Knit, cro- PATTERNS SCHOOL SEIDOFF | BY ANNE ADAMS The skimmer rules school! Brightest, bounciest version has a kicky pleat in front, shirt tab trim. Sew it in plaid or vibrant wine, green or blue solids. Easy-sew. Printed Pattern 4533; Chil- dren's Sizes 2, 4, 6, 8. Size 6 takes 1% yards 35-inch. Fifty cents (50c) in coins (no stamps, please) for each pattern. Ontario residents add 3c sales tax. Print plainly Size, Name, Address, Style Number. Send order to Anne Adams, care of The Oshawa Times, 60 Front St. W., Toronto 1, Ont. Fall's 130 best designs -- lively school, sport, career, glamor styles, all sizes, extra features in new Fall-Winter Pattern. Catalog. Clip coupon OBITUARIES strong Funeral Home at il a.m., Sept. 17. The service was conducted by Rev. Ronald Sharp, rector of St. Matthew's Anglican Church. Interment was in Osh- awa Union Cemetery. The pallbearers were Albert, Fred, Herbert and George Waite, Daniel Willoughby and William Willoughby. FUNERAL OF THOMAS WILLIAM SCOTT The memorial service for Thomas William Scott, Colum- bus, who died Sept. 15, at the Oshawa General Hospital, in his 73rd year, was held at the Armstrong Funeral Home at 2 p.m., Sept. 17. Rev. Winnifred Bridges, min- ister of Columbus United Church, conducted the service. Interment wes in: Mount Tawn Cemetery. The pallbearers .were..Grant Pascoe, Allen Scott, William Werry, William Snowden, Doug- las Love. and Robert Fiett. Storie Park Wins Series Dave Wilson hurled a one- hitter Friday to lead Storie Park Squirts to the Neighbour- hood Association city cham- pionships as they defeated Fernhill in the final game 11-0. The win gave Storie a second straight win in a best-of-three final. Wilson also hit two singles in the win. Storie Park has been un- defeated in regular season play, as the Ontario Amateur Soft- ball Association representa- tives, as city tournament cham- pions and in the city finals. Dave Laveque was the big hitter for Storie as he hit a triple, a double and a single. Bert Hoefs and Frank Schram followed with a double and a single each while Wilson and singles. Dale Wilson and Ron Williams each hit singles to complete the hitting. Schaeffer was the spoiler for Fernhill as he singled in the sixth inning to ruin Wilson's no-hitter. Storie Park's championship lineup is: Tim Logeman, Jeff Rorabeck, Bert Hoefs, Frank Schram, Dale Wilson, Bill Coe, Dave Leveque, Ron Bessie, John Hoefs, Sam Marmara, Bill Ferguson, Gorde Locke, Dave Wilson, Dave Parfitt, Hho Morrison and Bob Clif- ord, Battersea Ties Series Battersea tied up the Inter- mediate "C' OASA playoffs at one game each as they defeat- ed Brooklin Concretes 10-2 Sa- turday, Battersea took an early 3-0 lead and had Concretes blank- inning. Vern Ferguson helped to close the gap as he homered with no one out in the fourth inning. Bill Cronish doubled and Garnet Warriner drew a walk. Don Ferguson singled to score -- and make the score 5-2. In the fifth, Battersea added another run as Jerry Darling scored on an error to Doug Scott. Darling scored again in the seventh on a single by Bill Ball to complete the scoring after he had doubled. Ball had earlier tripled and hit a single. Darling drew two previous sin- gles. from Chas. Connery, Dalton Smith and Harold Lake. in Catalog -- choose one free jpattern. Send 50c. Elmo Gibson and Scott each had singles for Concretes, Jeff Rorabeck each had two) Ronny Williams, Glenn Aldred, | ed 5-0 going into the fourth|" Other hits for Battersea came|--_-- By JOHN BEST ZAVIDOVO, U.S.S.R, (CP)-- One of the delights of living in Moscow is being able to get away now and then to Zavidovo, The lure is not Zavidovo it- | self. It's much like thousands of other villages. The attraction is a large compound a few miles outside town on the Volga River, 80 miles north of Mos- cow. Foreigners, mainly diplomats and newspaper men, escape the itensions of living and working in Moscow with occasional trips to the baza (base) or dip dacha, as the spot is called. | tt js maintained. year round by the Soviet government and is much appreciated by foreign- ers living in the U.S.S.2. It consists of a small hotel and nine or 10 dachas (cot- tages) costing 10 rubles ($12) a night during the week and 15 rubles on weekends. The dachas, cosy bungalows that come equipped with bedding and kitchen utensils, have all Russian Village Draws Foreigners From Moscow been refurnished with East Eu- ropean furniture. The resort is comfortable enough to accommodate Pre- While the sun's radiation in- cludes all parts of the spectrum, Radia' m the 10 - cen metre band goes right through the atmosphere and can measured on the ground, pro- viding an accurate index for the unmeasurable x-ray radiotion. Scientists will use these meas- urements along with informa- tion on sunspots cycles--22-year periods of deviations on the sun's surface--to investigate the effects of the sun's radiation on the earth's magnetic field. The long life of the sunspot eycles probably will make this a long-term job. But the interferometer can handle more than one project. "Tt can do six or eight short- term projects at the same time," Dr. Miller said in an interview. "We have one al- ready under way." The interferometer also could increase in size over the néxt few years, While no firm plans for expansion exist at present, the initial array was designed so it could be extended to form a giant T. This would involve adding new units to make the east-west line run 2,800 feet--four times its present length--and a 350- foot north-south line running down from the middle of the east-west section. ADVANCE--PMs THUR Sept 22 NOTE FUTURE DATE ,.. «- Russians By JOHN BEST mier Kosygin and Communist party chief Brezhnev who some- times come here with state visitors to hunt. In winter, besides hunting, you can go ice-fishing, snow- shoeing or cross-country skiing or, if you're not the outdoor type, you can sit in your warm dacha and read or play chess and perhaps sip a thimbleful of vodka. You can also wander over to the hotel and have a game of billiards if you don't mind play- ing on a table in poor condition. im summer there aro all sorts of things to do--swim, water- eli. nlay tennis, tramp. through the nearby wilderness, go boat- ing or just sit and watch the vessels plying the Volga. But the biggest attraction, especially if you're from a country the size of Canada, is the joy of relaxing in the great s MOSCOW (CP) -- If there were such a thing as a pri- vate-enterprise lock salesman in the Soviet Union, he could make himself a bagful of money. Locks are possibly the heav- jest-selling durable goods in the whole Soviet economy. Many Russians seem to have an obsession about them. It's not uncommon to see three locks on a single apart- ment door and sometimes you see four. The only possible conclusion io be drawn from this phenom enon is that Russians--at least the urban component of the population--tend to be dis- trustful of other Russians. One of the most vivid recol- lections I have of my first days in Moscow, two years ago, is of stepping into a hardware store one day for outdoors. a look around and noticing the ENGLISH LEAGUE Division I Arsenal 1 Blackpool 1 Aston Villa 2 Chelsea 6 Burnley 2 Tottenham 2 Everton 5 West Brom 4 Fulham 2 Leeds 2 Man United 1 Man City 0 Notts F 3 Newcastle 0 Sheffield W 0 West Ham 2 Southampton 1 Liverpool 2 Stoke 3 Sheffield U 0 Sunderland 2 Leicester 8 Division 11 Jean 2 Norwich 0 Cc ardiff 2 Bolton W 5 |Coventry 1 Bristol C 0 \Crystal P 2 Dérby 1 |Huddersfield 4 Charlton 1 | Ipswich 1 Carlisle 2 |Milwall 2 Hull 1 |Northhampton 2 Plymouth 1 |Preston 3 Birmingham 0 {Rotherham 0 Portsmouth 1 | Wolverhampton 4 Blackburn 0 | Division I \Brighton 0 Grimsby 2 \Bristol R 3 Swindon 0 Darlington 1 Mansfield 1 jGillingham 0 Bournemouth 0 ,Leyton Or 1 Peterborough 1 Oldham 4 Shrewsbury 1 Oxford 1 Colchester 1 Queens PR 6 Doncaster 0 OLD COUNTRY SOCCER Scunthorpe 3 Middlesbrough 2 Torquay 5 Walsall 2 Watford 1 Reading 0 Division IV Aldershot 3 Barnsley 2 Bradford C 3 Hartlepools 0 Chesterfield 0 Rochdale 0 Exeter 0 Portvale 1 'Lincoln 0 Southport 4 Luton 0 Stockport Cy 3 Southend 3 Brentford 6 Wrexham 2 Newport 2 SCOTTISH LEAGUE Division I Aberdeen 3 St. Johnstone 2 Celtic 2 Rangers 0 Dundee U 1 Dundee 4 Dunfermline 5 Hiberinian 6 Falkirk 2 St. Mirren 0 Hearts 1 Airdrieonians 1 Kilmarnock 1 Ayr U 0 Motherwell 1 Stirling 1 Partick ¢ Ciyde i Division If Albion 4 Stenhousemuir 1 Alloa 1 Hamilton 3 Berwick 2 Cowdenbeath 0 Dumbarton 0 E Fife 3 Forfar 0 Brechin 2 Montrose 2 Arbroath 1 Morton 4 E Stirling 0 Q of § $ Thad Lanark 2 Queens PK 4 Stranraer 0 Raith $ Clydebank 0 brisk trade in locks, It almost seemed as though there were a run on them. I remember idly speculating Are Keen On Locking Doors that, in some vague way, this probably reflected a preoccu- pation with privacy among a citizenry only just starting to enjoy reasonably tolerable housing accommodation. Now I know that the cause goes much deeper than that, The Russians are noted for their inordinate suspicion of foreigners, Not so well known is the fact that they are also inordinately suspicious of one another. FEAR BURGLARY The vast amount of pub- licity given in the daily press tothe problem of 'hooligan. ism" only serves to intensify this built-in characteristic, of Which the lock is @ symibdi. - Many Russians, rightly or wrongly, are scared to death of what would happen if they left their doors unlocked, even during the daytime when they are in their apartments. When a Russian moves into a new apartment, he is handed the key to the door lock. The trouble is that every other apartment in the same block---and in any number of Dodgers Take Nipigon Final Houdaille Dodgers and Doug Wilson's Yankees went down to the wire in their final playoff softball round with Dodgers emerging the victors. Dodgers defeated the Yank- ees 10-2 Sunday and took the Nipigon Park Tyke final three games to two. Dart and Palmer were the big hitters for Dodgers as each hit a home run, both in the first inning to provide that in- ning's only runs. Dart also hit a single in the third. Willmore had a triple while Wetherup had a double and a s Fudger and Hansink each had one single to com- plete the hitting. Hitting for Yankees was Seel- ey, a double and two singles, Sucee a triple and two singles and Brunat with a lone single. Seeley was the loser, allowing eight hits, three walks and 10 runs, Dart went the distance for Dodgers allowing seven hits, no walks and two -runs. TORONTO (CP) -- Saturday's Wood- bine race results: First--$2,000, Minoru, eleiming, + and 4-year-olds 6 furlongs. Cangal (Kornblum) 6.80 5.40 3.70 Great Promise (Alter) 25.40 9.50 Northern Miner (Dittfach) 3.00 Time: 1:12 3-5, Viva La Bell, For Wyn, Lady Alex- Ina, Some Missile, Valley Royal, Fort Rouge, Dixie Pet also ran. Second--$2,600, Stockwood, 2-year-old filles foaled In Canada, 6 furlongs. Dalton's Pamela (Fitz's) 7.80 3.00 2. Kan Jive (Gomez) 2 Oratress (McComb) 'ime; 1:13, Young Gerry, Winsome Sailor 'an. 2.70 also Daily double (7) Cengal and (4) Dal- 1,70, ton's Pamela paid $31. Third--$2,000, Pacific Plate claiming, 3 and 4-year-olds, 6 furlongs. Canadian Flash (G'mez) 3.30 280 2.30 Canacia (Kornblum) 4.20 2.80 Sweet Polly (Fitzsimmons) 2.50 Time: 1:12. 25. Phantom Flyer, Kenteek, Tondehar also ran. 40 50 2.20) ¢, Fourth--$2,000,, Old Rosebud claim- Ing, 3 and 4year-clds, 6 furlongs. Steel Leader (Coombs) 9.80 5.70 4.00 Twilight Tango (McComb) 8.70 6.00 Dans Flight (Gordon) 20 Time: 1:11 35. Grecian Slipper, Tony's Count, Forty Carat, Idle Scholar, Esprit De Coeur also ran. Fifth--$3,000, Ringwood, 2-year-olds, 4.90 2,20 += 6 furlongs Runways (Gomez) Amber Tea (Dittfach) 20 2: . Sweet Dreams (Berroby) 2.70 Time: 1:10 45, O'Boot Hill, Charming Blue, Princess Selket also ran. LUMET TAKES CHARGE Sidney Lumet is to direct Bar- bra Streisand in the movie ver- sion of Funny Cirl. WOODBINE RESULTS Sixth -- $10,000 added, Greenwood Up Stakes handicap S-yearolds and one ward, one mile and Robinson Blanks Russell's Texaco (Gormez) 2.60 2.10 Sunstruce (Berremy) we unstru ar Thme: 1:42 35. : Royal Tara, One Sunday also ran. Exactor (1) Victorian Era and ( Gauchesco pald $6.40. Seventh--$2,300, Syear-clds and upward, 7 fur' . Quill (Dittfach) 8.20 retaceous '{Gomez) Sabre (Turcotte) Time: 1:23 35. Wee Wabush, Bighth--$2,200, North Country, Ing, 3-year-vids and upward, one and one furlong. Top Cote (Gordon) Red Purse (Waish) Ann's Reply (Turcotte) 2 1:50 15. Ayershire, Baranof 'also ran. Elm Wood, Supreme Chief, also ran. 2.10 2.10 2 claiming, longs. 3.60 2. 3,00 2.30 2.80 Lassie, Royal Staff, Maytown, chim mile 49,70 10.00 6. 7.10 5. 5.60 Silver Run, Five Loves, Meteor, Royal Doctor Earl Robi tossed a no- run, no-hit ball game Saturday as Nurse Chevrolet won the UAW softball quarter final two games to nil be defeating Rus- sell's Texaco 3-0 Saturday. Robinson fanned 11 batters and hit a single for the win. With two out in the last in- ning Bill Lawson homered to put Nurse's ahead 3-0, Lawson had earlier hit a single. Vic Grabko tripled in the sec- ond while Ron McKeegan doub- led and singled, Jim Strachan and Jim Carmichael each hit lone singles in the win. Wayne Goring was the losing pitcher as he allowed eight hits and three runs. 10 3) 0 30 Now Is The Time To Order Your Winter Fuel .... Save eeeee On Premium Quality FUEL OIL PHONE 668-3341 DX FUEL OIL Serving Oshawa - Whitby - Ajax and District other blocks--has the same lock, which can be opened with the same key. The potential for burglary is practically unlimited, So the first thing the new tenant will do is rush out and buy another lock, or possibly two or three, The variety is limited, otherwise he might buy more. He will proceed to have these extra locks installed on the door to augment the origi- nal one. If at some time the man changes apartments, he will go through the same process all over again--on the theory that the previous tenant could come. back with his key some night and rob the place. As in most lines of goods, a foreign-made lock is held in much higher esteem than a Russian one. The owner of such a lock can sleep content knowing that nobody else has a key to fit it. we THE OSHAWA TIMES, Monday, September 19, 1966 19 The index of wage in- creases is climbing faster than the production creases index in Canada and now they are within one percentage point of be- ing equal, based on a 1961 level putting both indexes at 100. From 1961 until 1964, industrial. productivity . in- creased at a faster pace than wages and salaries until in 1964 productivity was 3,8 index points higher, Since 1964, wages have moved ahead faster, and in Eke ond WAGES OVERTAKE PRODUCTIVITY the first three months of 1966 the wage index was at 145.6. Productivity was 145.7. It means that the pro- duction return on wages and salaries are now about the same as they were five years ago at the start of the current boom period, Economists wage acceleration will be even greater as new con- "tracts won in the last five . months show up in the" figures. --CP Newsmap By JONATHAN FENBY AN KHE, South Viet Nam (Reuters) -- One of the world's most modern fighting units is rolling down its sleeves to go into battle with an enemy even more elusive than the Viet Cong. For centuries, the central highlands of South Viet Nam, where the "flying horsemen" of the United States Ist Air Cav- alry Division carry out many of their operations, have been plagued with particularly viru- lent forms of malaria. Despite all their technological resources, including the mass- ive helicopter fleet which gives them their nickname, the cav- alrymen have been unable to defeat, or even avoid, the com- mon central Vietnamese mos- quito. aes About 3,000 soidiers division have goas down with malaria since they arrived in -- Viet Nam in September, 1965. On some operations, the inci- dence of malaria has been as high as 25 men per 1,000 a day, medical records kept at the di- Anes headquarters here re- veal, NINE HAVE DIED Nine deaths have been rec- orded from complications which Bonen irom the Medical Outfit Prepares For Battle Against Malaria set in after soldiers had caught © malaria in the rugged, moun- tainous country, about 250 miles _ northeast of Saigon, ' The division's doctors set up an anti - malaria pregeaste in- cluding weekly pill taking, 'but they admit it is difficult to ad- minister under war conditions, In a new move to reduce the _ casualties inflicted by the ma-. . laria - carrying mosquito, the ~ cavalry commander, Maj,-Gen. John Norton, has ins troops to take a new, stronger, brand of pill once a day, and to keep their sleeves rolled down at dusk and other times -- when the insects are likely to:-- swarm, Field commanders have also been told to pitch camps well away from possible mosquito, breeding grounds. if this is tac- lcaily feasibie, anu t> snsure w Sues thas shale on Wiat tices Ses THOUSANDS HEAD SOUTH South Africa admitted 38,319 immigrants in 1965, 25,159 from EARN UP TO $100 A WEEK OR MORE BIG PAY JOBS WAITING for MARVEL GRADUATES Marvel Hairdressing Schools in principal cities offer ex. clusive "MARVEL TOUCH" training. Complete course, DAY or EVENINGS. For free brochure, write or visit. MARVEL BEAUTY SCHOOLS Established over 40 rs. Europe. Dept. OT. 219. Bloor St. W. TORONTO . Top M.L.S. Salesmen For The Month of August MLS LISTING SALESMAN ITALO BORTOLUSSI GUIDE REALTY MULTIPLE i. LISTING SERVICE -- For -- 172 KING ST. EAST RESULTS "* HYMAN REAL ESTATE THE OSHAWA and DISTRICT REAL ESTATE BOARD FOR EDUCATED TASTES CANADIAN WHISKY SELLING SALESMAN FRANK SMITH 725-6914

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