Daily Times-Gazette, 24 Jul 1954, p. 12

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-- EE ---------- 42 THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE, Saturday, July 24, 1954 TIMES-GAZETTE HOME OF THE WEEK HOUSE DESIGN NO. 267 Here is an ingenious idea -- a low-cost twin apartn™™( design which provides plenty of space for | retired or newly married couples | and with a separate fental unit to! Provide a regular monthly income! imilar to a duplex, the two apart- ments, each about 13x18 feet in- clude living and sleeping areas with a mutual kitchen. If desired, you can construct a kitchen in each separate apartment for added priy- acy. There are stall showers in the tv o roomy baths and a trellis arranc-ment or attractive draw drapes between living and bedroom areas. The-attractive long, low ex- | terior looks like a single ranch home. An alternative basement plan is supplied. Standard Builders' blueprints costing $8.75 a set may be obtained for this design No. 267. For further information use the Ready - to - paint furniture has great appeal, particularly to the budget i home pl A Many of the newer designs are in smart contemporary styles, har- monious either in traditional or modern settings. This furniture can be finished in many ways--painted, papered or stained. It can be stencilled, dress- ed with decals or decorated with other designs which suit the fan- cy. Y tere are some general tips on painting furniture. 1. Surface must be smooth, clean and dry. Wash off grease, wax or oil with turpentine. Re - move dirt with soap, water and ammonia. Fill holes and cracks with wood filler. Use paint remov- er if finish is cracked or peeling. 2. Sandpaper rough or glossy surfaces, new wood or rusted me- tal. Wipe with cloth dampened with turpentine. 3. Spread newspapers on the floor to protect it from spills and Shlashings. Stir coating with pad- dle or stick. Use a clean, soft- bristled brush. ' 4. Start right for perfect results. Paint It Yourself It's Economical As a rule tables and chairs should be placed upside down. Paint legs first. Paint around carved sur- faces and finish with light verti- cal strokes. 5. It is easier and faster to paint horizontal surfaces than vertical ones. Remove drawers, handles and turn ayer furniture for horizontal painting, if possible. Finishing ready-to-paint furni- ture is easier these days with new paints and finishes Ww! create professional finishes for amateur stains, for instance, which can be 3pplied easily, after a light sand- achieved with a minimum of effort wih another popular paint. This finish dries in two hours with a soft lustre, free from brush marks. It eliminates . laborious rubbing stone. ishes such as pickled ne Swed- ish blond, driftwood, only necessary to add two parts of tur- sion of which will take effect Oct. 1, 1955, abolishes rationing and eases res- taurant restrictions. over 21 will be able to purchase as much liquor as he likes. There knobs, | will sumption of spirits in restaurants, although the customer still "will Bave to buy a sandwich with his finishers. We have waxed effect Noor Jaws. date Swedish male can buy up to three quarts a month 4 Hand. rubbed. Nnish Can. be stricted to one quart and lose their close watch on are liable to cancel the books of fhose Whe behave Srunponly in : - public. s a stan with sandpaper, pumice and rotten | Sweden that liquor officials have t & Se orda to. get plod in Tore orm ion about the pri laws is the restrictions on serving pentine to one part of this special | the Swedes Revise Liquor Laws By THOMAS HARRIS STOCKHOLM (Reuters) -- Revi- e Swedish liquor laws, Under the new laws, any swede be no restrictions on con- The country's present stringent ck to 1916. Un- the rationing system every . Women are re- on marriage. The liquor authorities keep a book holders and ke in the police. Another feature of the liquor alcohol in 'restaurants. At present, quota for a mele guest is five Harleigh's HAS THE WONDERFUL NEW . . walktile The Textured Wall Covering With lasting Beauty -- It's Fun... Ifs Easy To Apply! 1] B LIVING, LADIES' HOME JOURNAL, BETTER HOMES & GARDENS, TODAY'S WOMAN, GUIDE FOR THE BRIDE, MII Do-it-yourself with Bolta Wall-Tile and Sins new decorator Dasiiy fo eve! Nome! Flexible 8" is easy to handle. Fold it, rr Bg RR ARE oy Rel AR ERX 8 have to be bsolutely smooth. ve A) Durable vin lastic tile won't shrink, warp or «+ + DOVER EE er Be Seat PE Sd glamorous, new a 5 decorator colors. Tool kit available. 4 paint. ronto, from spending holidays with their grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. ALARA IAS US SNALAR A JndV 36-0" No 267 - 648 eft The Building Editor, Oshawa Times-Gazette, Oshawa, Ontario. coupon below and mail it to The Times-Gazette, Oshawa. A new home planner book, which includes | this design and 68 others, may also | be obtained for 75 cents by using | the same coupon. Place For TV HH remittance payable to The Address Please send me further details about how to obtain stand- ard builder's blue prints for House Design No. 267. or. enclosed please find 75¢ for which send me Book of Plans entitled "69 SELECTED HOMES." Name . shes asanss (Please make Oshawa Times-Gazette. Depends Upon How It's Used Where you place. your television | set depends mostly on how it is| used. pe your family watches it, why not keep it out of the liv-| ing room entirely. A den, study| or playroom is large enough, and | conversation, reading, working or| other ordinary activities carried] on in the living room wouldn't have | to be interrupted. ENNISKILLEN Church Mission Band Holds Interesting Party MRS. RUSSELL GRIFFIN Correspondent ENNISKILLEN -- The annual with Mr. and Mrs. C. Soper, Osh- awa. Mr. and Mrs. L. Stainton and family were with Mr. and Mrs. C. N. Wright. Mr. and Mrs. N. Wright are visit- ing their daughter, Miss Marguer- ite Wright, St. Catharines. Mrs. E. Strutt, Mrs. Clifford Pet- hick and Ruth are spending a few days with Mr. Ed. Cain, Pontypool. Mi and Mrs. Gordon Yeo and family are gone to their cottage at Sturgeon Lake. Mr. and Mrs. John E. Griffin and family are still on holidays. ELDERLY SNOWMAN MEMPHIS, Tenn. -- Mrs. Erie T. Dollar has snowman almost two years old. It hasn't lost a bit of weight, she says. Mrs. Dollar AMATEUR FROGMAN VENNA (AP)--A Czech grocery|" ounces and for a female guest 2% ounces. This regulation has led to there being practically no bars in Sweden. clerk has escaped from Commun- ist Czechoslovakia by swimming three miles under water in a sub- marine suit fashioned from a pie- ture of a Navy frogman, American officials said Thursday. Olrich Lopada, 41, made his get- away June 28 across the rain- swollen waters of the Dyje river. WILL PASS ON CUTS TORONTO (CP)--Shell Oil Com- pany retailers said Thursday half- cent gasoline price cuts will be passed on to motorists as soon as old stocks are sold. The company, which announced the changes Wed- nesday, was the fourth major oil concern to reduce the wholesale made the snowman and keeps it in the deepfreeze, price of gasoline in the last two days. CEE_ yarrison -- 337 SIMCOE ST. S. FROM HARDWARE DIAL 3-4425 ® Looks and washes like baked enamel. NE---------- YOU BUILD FOR THE FUTURE WHEN YOU BUILD WITH HENDERSON'S CONCRETE BLOCKS You get ow.oble, low-annual-cost construction with our new con crete block construction -- your is equally adaptable to the con- struction of your home, your farm, the community school or commercial 'building. Ask the men who are experienced in con- crete block. A Henderson Block ighborhood cont: or arch- itect -- to specify Henderson Concrete Blocks. Box of 54 8" X 8" tiles covers 24 sq. ft. Beauty Bonded FORMICA >, H . "Where Particular People Buy" HARLEIGH MFG. CO. Baby Band party was held at the|,.. WHO WATCHES SET? | spacious home and lawn of Mrs. Mis: Port Ferre =o tally oo If you class your television set{R. J. Ormiston with over sixty... wMrc Ed. Jennings, Acton, : as an essential entertainment for | present Mrs. E. A. Werry called Mrs. Jennings and Jim returned our family and friends -- much |the meeting to order with the Call fy ok with them for a holiday. e a family piano or radio -- you|To Worship". Lorna Jean Wearn| "ar. "204 Mrs. Sheldon Pethick will want to place it in the living | gave the devotional message in| iended the ' Anderson - Moncrief KEM: THE MIRACLE LUSTRE ENAMEL J LH room. However, it should be an unobtrusive unit that doesn't dominate the entire room. If your living room is decorated according to a certain period, choose a television cabinet that fits into that period. Match the cabinet to the other woods in the room, Some people want to conceal the television set, and all sorts of arrangements, such as screens or sliding panels, can be made to hide the set's blank screen. The, set may even be placed in a com- Jaftmenied storage wall which olds other things, such as books or records. CAN COME TO YOU Your floor plan may call for an arrangement that allows the tele- vision set to come to you. Put it on a wheeled table, so it can be mov- ed readily around the living room or downstairs. If you mount the set on a base which swivels, you can turn it to face different parts of a room. Whatever your personal prefer- ences about placement of a tele- vision set, think and plan carefully Before you settle on a permanent spot. Singapore Sitting On Powder Keg BY WARREN WHITE SINGAPORE (Reuters) -- Singa- pore's "pleasant isolation" from | the neighboring Federation of Ma- | laya, which for six years has been ighting 5,000 Communist jungle terrorists, is being shattered. | There nov is a feeling that Singapore may be sitting on a pow- | der keg which could blow up at! any time. | One high British official com- pared the signs of Communist in- filtration into this British colony to an iceberg because, he said "for the few signs of Communist organization and influence which Ls * on the sur ace there is a huge under- probably neath." Special oficers whose job it is to | track down wisps of evidence through the tenuous thoroughfares | mass of this oredominantiy Chinese city | claim that they are finding in-| creasing evidence of outside in- spiration for acts against public order. Their special concern at the mo- ment is Chinese students. The police commissioner, Nigel Morris, said that police know of at Inst 2,000 Communist party mem- | bers or helpers among Singapore's | population of 1,100,000. | Most are members of the illegal anti-British league, an association with affiliations throughout the towns and jungle kampongs (com- | minal villages) of the Federation | of Malaya. TO ORGANIZE JOBLESS SAULT STE. MARIE, Ont. (CP) A plan for organizing the unem-| loyed in this area was endorsed | Piaredas at a membership meet-! ing of Local 2251, United Steel-| workers of America (CIO-CCL).| The executive was instructed to] establish an unemployment com-| mittee to work with a special city 'council committee on unemploy-| ment, President Dick Johns said | nearly 2,200 persons were regis-| tered for work and hundreds of others probably were not regis- tered. The spruce budworm which en- dapgers Canadian forest areas is | only three-quarters of 'an inch long. her mother's absence. Mrs. Alvin Boyd welcomed the mother and Ba y Band members and called on the following program. Recitations were given by Dor- een Trewin and Martha Boyd. A song was sung by Sheryl Ash- ton; Mrs. G. Yeo played nursery rhymns on the piano; a chorus was sung by the beginner's class and i mon and Mrs. H. McGil. Mrs. F. McLaughlin distributed the gift boxes and gave a very interesting story about each child's picture on the pink box. Mrs. O. Ashton then entertained the chl- dren on the lawn with games after which Group 3 served a delicious lunch. The new hour for church services at 11.30 a.m. proved popular as a goodly number attended to enjoy a splendid sermon by Rev. R. Seymour assisted by Mr. J. A. Werry who opened the service. Miss Elenor Heard presided at the| piano and the juoinr choir render- ed an anthem. Mr. and Mrs. E. J. Harrison, Mr. Arch Pickard, Toronto, Miss Betty Jane Werry, were with Mr. and Mrs. O. C. Ashton. VISITED SUMMER CAMP Five cars conveying 32 young people made their annual trek to Rev. and Mrs. Seymour's summer camp' at Stephenson's Point on Lake Scugog for the party when the TUC boys and their leader, Rev. R. M. Seymour, played host to the CGIT. _ Most of the young folk had a dip in the lake. Then with appetites well whetted, they surrounded the glowing camp fioe to enjoy a wien- er roast and marshmallow toast with pleasant music provided by Ray Ashton's record player. Mrs. Seymour directed some games. Shirley Mills, president of CGIT, expressed appreciation to the hosts. Party closed with Taps and "Good Night Ladies". Mr. and Mrs. Sheldon Pethick accompanied by Mrs. Mable Hump- hries and Mrs, P. F. Bradley, Bow- manville, attended the funeral of their cousin, Mrs. Robert Carney, Toronto. Mr. and Mrs. Milton Stainton, Dorothy and Clarence was with Mr. yg Mrs. Sid Parsons, Bowman- ile. ' Miss Betty Jane Werry was with Lois Ashton. | Mr. and Mrs. R. McNeil visited Esso OIL BURNERS $55 vom No Further Payment till September As Low as 9.57 Monthly No Interest - No Carrying Charges MOSIER SHEET METAL 21 CHURCH STREET 5.2734 -- -- 5-2751 © The best enamel were told by Mrs., T. Sle- the W wedding in Peterborough on Satur- day. Mr. and Mrs. F. H. Orchard, El- wood, Alvin and Alice, Sandusky, Mich. Misses Laverne and 'Elva Orchard, Bowmanville, were with Mr. and Mrs. Milton Stainton. Mrs. John Slemon, Kathryn and Robert, recently visited with Miss Betty Knox, Toronto. Mrs. Oswald Pethick, Barrie Mrs. Lacey, Leonard and Vernon, Toronto, were with Mr. and Mrs. 8S. R. Pethicks, Miss Gail Pethick returning to Toronto for holidays. Mr. and Mrs. T. Stainton, Hamp- ton, were with Mr. and Mrs. L. Stainton's. Lawrence Wearn has returned home from Bowmanille, Memorial Hospital, and is doing nicely, but the Wearn's seem to have had a streak of bad luck. Lately his daughter Lorna Jean has been tak- en to hospital and operated on for appendicitis, but she is getting along nicely and soon will be home Bill Western, Toronto, visited with the Wearn's on Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Brunt, ac- companied Mr. and Mrs. Adam Sharp, who all visited with Cecil Robinson's of Newtonville. Mr. and Mrs. Slack, Bowman- ville, Mrs. Wm. Slack, Stouffville, were recent guests of Mr. E. Mec- Nair's. Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Pethick and Robin, Mrs. Verna Wood, Mr. E. 0. Pethick, Toronto, were with Mr. and Mrs. S. R. Pethick. Mrs.' Addie Trewin, Toronto, is visiting with Mrs. T. M. Slemon. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Ashton and boys were with Mr. and Mrs. S. Rodman, Port Perry. Mr. and Mrs. A. Telfer, Paul and Jannette, Toronto, Mr. and | Mrs. Harold Western, Geulph spent to weekend at Mr. and Mrs. L. earn's. Mr. and Mrs. L. Winkworth, Bar- rie, in company with Mr. and Mrs. Carl Ferguson and family were with Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Sander- cock, Orono. Miss Janice and Master Robbie Wright have returned home to To- for kitchen, LITE woodwork: undercoater. .® Needs no CONCRETE & CINDER BLOCKS PHONE 3-4412 OSHAWA OSHAWA 163 KING WEST 22 Bloor St. East -- Dial 5-3012 WHITBY 613 Henry Street -- Phone 2840 One-Minute News A" from Johns-Manville Safety Is a "Must" at Johns-Manville ® There is nothing more tragie than an accident that might cost a human being his life, injure him permanently, or deprive him of his earning power. To avoid such tragedies, Johns- Manville established an accident- prevention program years ago. Today J-M plants and equip- ment are inspected regularly to see that they are safe. Safe "methods of working are engineered into every job, and plant safety meetings are held frequently. To protect the health of em- ployees and prevent accidents, J-M spent more than three quar- ters of a million dollars in 1951 alone for improved and safer working conditions st Johns- Manville plants. Year after year most J-M plants have better safety records than the nation-wide average of industrial plants. If, in spite of all precautions, an accident does occur, the in- jured employee is given the best of medical care and receives com- pensation while he is uneble to work. J-M is typioal of American in- dustry in constantly striving to make jobs safer and better. This is one of a series of brief articles bringing you facts of community inter- est about Johns-Manville or about conditions affecting eur i 1 Seed out summer's sum and winter's icy drafts. Save on fuel Aslittle as 10.00 = ROOFING Give new We and better protection for your home with economical asphalt shingles. Prom 15.004 WINDOWS AN styles ond sizes te provide hun dreds of exciting window arrange. ments, Priced from free asbestos sid ing. Never needs economy. MJ ARR. EARTH MOVING EXCAVATING and GRADING BULLDOZING On all types of work SAND - GRAVEL Prompt Service on All Orders LILLEY BROS. PHONE 5-4902 OSHAWA R.R. No. 2 Bowmanville ARRAS RR. . SPECIAL SALE! COMBINATION DOORS ® CLEAR PONDEROSA PINE Complete with sash and bronze screen Millwork & Building Supplies Ltd. 1279 Simcoe St. N. HOURS: 7:30 a.m. to 6 p.m.; Saturdays 7:30 to 2 p.m. LY Dial 3-4694-5-6 {J As Hirle "15.00 me Stock... SHINGLES SHEATHING BOARD WALLPANSL HARDWOOD FLOORING FLUSH DOORS FLOOR JACKS WINDOW UNITS FIR PLYWOOD DOOR FRAMES TRIM CABINETS CEILING TERMS No Money Down 2 Years to Pay DOORS Add style and charm te your home with new in- 'side - outside doors from a complete wack Aslitfle os Headquarters for Your Building, Repairing and Remodeling Needs! When it comes to supplies for improving your home, come here! Our one-stop service saves you time becquse everything you'll need is available, here. And to save you money, we advise you on the proper grades of materials to use. You can also see interesting displays that ex- plain and demonstrate the advantages of new products used in home building and remodeling. 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