HILLSDALE MANOR ON ROSSLAND ROAD EAST NEARING COMPLETION Within a matter of weeks the first of Oshawa's senior citi- zens will move into the modern new home for the aged, known as Hillsdale Manor on Rossland road east. The building, which is modern in every way, will be one of the finest in the province and reflects much credit upon the city council committee which laid the plans. The erec- tion of the building will relieve much of the pressure on Fair- view Lodge at Whitby in which the city had an interest and to Given $2477 For Rebate Suggestion | For the second month in suc-| cession a large award has been made by the General Motors Suggestion Plan Committee to an employee of the firm's Oshawa plant. | It was announced recently that an award of $2477.04 had been made to Gordon E. Pierson of the accounting department. He sug-| gested that the Canadian govern-| ment rebate customs duties paid on material imported from the| United States by General Motors which is later scrapped. After the suggestion was made, consider-| able time was spent fo obtain a ruling from the federal authori-| ties that the duty would be re- bated. DeBeaupre, D. Greentree, Walter Spratt, H. G. Messerschmidt. Standards: O. E. Carrington, J Plant Protection: Robert J. Ab-| bott, Douglas M. Bennie, George|f E. Bobier, A. V. Brearton, A. Campbell, Philip L. Cann, George V. Cheesman, J. V. Cle, a ment, George R. Dunbar, T. R Farndale, Bert Howlett, K. 8. Ka. beck, B. J. Lack, C. L. McFeet-| J. A. Newell, F. Wright. Handling: Hugh J.| su ers, Material ack E. Scammell, W. A. Dyl. | k : which the city's senior citizens were sent for many years. Hillsdale Manor will be official ly opened Oct. 15. Built by Wil- kinson Construction, Ltd., of Fhe Oshawa Times SECOND SECTION OSHAWA, FRIDAY, JULY 22, 1960 PAGE THIRTEEN Oshawa, it was designed by J. B. Parkin and Associates of Willowdale. Capacity of the home is 200 residents. | --Oshawa Times Photo | Om Tie $ERIOL Morrison, R. A. Neilson, L. J./# Weeks, Kenneth Mossey, R. J.| Ouellette, J, A. Tregunna, John Kietz, L. A. McGriskin, Henry| Downing, Earl Marshall, Wilbur Stacey, J. S. Brain, Clifford A. Shred, Gordon A Ovenden, G. J. The list of awards made to|wpute A. D. Dangelo, pany during the month follows: Traffic: Lloyd Pigden. Purchasing: Ronald Boissoin,| J. Jermyn. C. A. Langlais, L. Gray. | Wilfred J. Edwards, W. R. Smith- Production Control: Mary L.|ers, Wm. R. Eyre, William Rob- Wales |ertson, Douglas Buller, Don T. Labor Relations: Frank Owen, Lenihan, R. J. Monaghan, Henry David F. Murphy. Suddard, Harry Hughes, John W. Personnel: G. Wesley Luker. | Webster, John W. Sym, Robert Chassis Plant: Ivan H. Ormis-|Gowans. : ton, Donald N. Hurst, H. F, Hop-| South Plant Maintenance: kins, Roy Miller, J. J. Neate, G. H. Coombs, J. w. Doble, Wm. J. M. Kovacs, J. F. Siebarth, Grueneberg, Harris Kennedy, James Woodward, McLaren Laun-|V. C. Phipps, Fred A. Johnston, drie, L. Gosick, W. H. Davis. Elmer G. Ryerson, H. H. Hopson, South Plant Shipping: Howard|P. A Forgett, James Nemish, D. Graham, P. J Gaudet, Don-[J. O, Wichman, M. D. Charuk, ald P. Wiskin. [N. L. Brownell, J. J. Kelly, Guy Body-in-White: J. T. Gamble,{N. Chamberlain, Howard Smith, T. Griffin, George R. Juranics,|N. Sweet, D. M. Lenehan, A. K Klaus Watpool, J. F. Cochrane, | Craig, Maurice P. Dutheil, Sidney A. J. Santos, William G. Brown. Sheridan, J. Allison, George Rit-| 8. E. Hocket, C. S. Campbell, |chie, Stuart G. Wagner, Sydney B. F. Estabrooks, Neil F. Mc-|Leffen, J. McMullan, John K. Mahon, R. J. Kerr, F G Shane,| Campbell, Murray Halliday. J." BE. Saunders, R. €. Jeffery,| West Plant: James E. Ballard, L. R. Guthrie. Carman Tapscott, R. C. Van De| Trim and Hardware: A. A.[Walker, Edward F. Andrews, | 0. F.l& Oshawa employees of the com-|gejjy J T. Davis, Mike Tureski, ; North Plant Maintenance: Wil- ; liam Heard, Ralph F. McMackin, | G. E.|G. 8. Coppin, M. C. Zubkavich,| Waller, R. B. Adams, Malloy, Donald Gordon, Haxton, Fred C. Ballinger, E. L.| Tool and Die: R. Talvak. Leahy, W. P. Woolacott, C. R.| Stamping Plant: James F. Mor- Brown, W. S. Stevenson, Donald|ris, C. R. Bebee. H. Badour, W. F. Thompson. North Plant: Joseph Host, Body Tooling: Craig M. Boyle, Frank Preston, J. Pickup, G. H. E. J. Liebscher, Donald J./Dawson, H. D. Logan, D. T. Wil- Mitchell. son, W. B. Branton, W. T. Mal-| Inspection: R., P. Wallace, J.|lette, R. T. Bryant, Keith F.| Hobbs, W. G. Lamb, Tom Han-|Rudkin, E. R. Smith. | na, R. M. Bouckley, W. F. Lowe,| Engineering: Edward J. W. J. Ord, Wayne Chidley, W. A.| Wright. Leaming, P. Corbeil, S. S. Com-| Parts: George W. Hughes, Mer-| erford, Murray M. Hainer, J. D.|vin Potter, W. Sloos, Doreen Hall, Fudge, W. H. Morrison, Eli T.|Ed Kunkel, R. Leyden, Walter G.| Lamb, Harry Gibbard, R. J.IReid, A. G. Sytsma. | Backyard Chefs In Full Flower will R. M.|W. T. Gutsell. Charcoal fires glow in more than grills in the United States this|by landowners with vast wooded summer, bringing new life to an|tracts to be cleared for crops. ancient fuel. Woodlands of northwestern Penn- The aroma of boiling steaks sylvania and the Catskill Moun- wafted from a large brick fire- place or a portable metal brazier has become a familiar part of the warm-weather scene. In fact, C02) helged (ohes sie backyard chefs are given a large| Ty. share of credit for the small CHEMICALS ARE DISTILLED important centres of - charcoal state's | boom in charcoal since the end of| Improved kilns allow charcoal World War II | burners to distill chemicals from| Production has steadily in- escaping gases. Some of the creased until it now amounts tomost important are methanol | some 300,000 tons a year. Almost| (wood alcohol), acetic acid, and two-thirds of the output is sold as| furfural, a solent used in re- pillow - shaped briquets, destined | fining motor oil. for home grills, picnic grounds,| When coke was introduced for railroad dining cars, and the smelting, charcoal began to de- countless restaurants that of f e r|cline in importance. Coal, gas, | "Charcoal - Broiled Steaks." Be- and electricity replaced charcoal| fore the war, briquets accounted for heating and cooking. Develop- for only about a sixth of char- ment of synthetics and petro- coal sales. leum carbon chemicals in recent | years has reduced the demand| PALE BLUE FLAME for wood chenicals. | Almost pure carbon, charcoal] Charcoal still is found in such is an excellent fuel. It produces! products as air conditioning fil- nearly twice the heat of an equal ters, poultry feeds, pencil points, volume of wood, burning with a brake linings, and black jelly pale blue flame at high tempera-| beans. It cures tobacco, filters tures. It glows at lower temper- water, and controls the gas con-| tent and flavor of beer. Charcoal is made by heating] Charcoal now is used principal- wood in an enclosed space where|ly as a domestic fuel. This has there is a limited amount of air.|created the sometimes nerve- The wood glows but does not! frazzling problem of lighting the atures. burst into flame. Sometimes the briquets. One retailer .esitmates|# wood is heated for more than| that more than 100 companies two weeks: The kilns are watch-| make fluids and gadgets to help ed night and day. A skilled char-| ignite charcoal. dition of the wood by running his FUNNY LAWS STILL IN FORCE hands through the escaping smoke to determine whether the! heat is wet or dry. Primitive man made charcoal simply by setting wood on fire ASE and spreading earth on the logs. t It 2 Mega to gg a A small amount of charcoal still i a pi is. made. in _sod-coverad pits, shoes in railraod stations. In Charcoal has been used tol Minneapolis, a railroad con- smelt metals from ores for atl ductor can be jailed for fail- least 6000 years. European smelt-| ing to arrest a gambler. ing and glassmaking industries There's no law that says concentrated near forests, result-| you can't build a better bus- ing in destruction of many wood-| ness by using the Oshawa lands. Charcoal burners had so| Times Classified Ads. More decimated the forests of Great| and more businessmen are doing so. Join them today by calling RA 3-3492 for com- plete information. | | Britain by 1664 that diarist John Evelyn lamented: '"Fruly, the waste and destruction of our| woods has been universal." Generally below - normal temperatures are predicted in Canada east of Saskatchewan and along the west coast from mid-July to mid-August, accord- ing to the 30-day outlook of the | United States weather bureau. Maps detail predicted temper- atures and precipitation across | Tables YARCOUVER LEI ON 17 \ rithvy (4 COOLER WEATHER FORECAST the period. give mormal readings for various centres, These mans are based on predictions of the weather office which says its monthly outlook is not a specific forecast and that a change in weather pattern may produce major errors. --CP Newsmap the country for Satellite-Spotting By HAROLD TILLEY Canadian Press Corr SYDNEY, Australia (CP)--| With cameras for photographing truck, | Thousands of people here, caught th up in enthusiasm for star-gazing, | satellite-searching and amateur / are spend-| scope complete with motor and s range finder. He is also building|0! Oshawa, won the Mackey Tro- astronomy in general, ing a lot of money on telescope and cameras. There is a growing demand, too, for opportunities to see through telescopes that really penetrate the heavens. Sydney observatory authorities have had to set up a waiting list. ! Retail optometrists report that the enthusiasts include taxi their hobby on nights off. But customers are by no means limited to a few occupa- judging from the amount and photographing the skies. One store reported telescope sales of around 20 a week. Popular lines sold for between $75 and $100 with lenses of 2% inches There are other models with | lenses of three, four and six| inches. A number of people paid teurs a lot of pleasure. and some practical results. MOTOR-DRIVEN For $360 there is a four-inch| lens model with motor to drive it for tracking heavenly objects. Star-Searchers Telescopes with lenses of four . dent |inches and more can be fitted|was the driver of the delivery| Eight employees of the Oshawa e sky or a particular planet. a planetarium. building their own telescopes and mountings and there are in- Other sky - minded people are/ment at Lindsay on Wednesday. stances of people who are grind.|ond place with three wins. ing their own reflecting lenses. The Sydney Observatory handles many visitors a week but there were 6,000 on the wait- ing list. Interest by amateurs in In colonial America, however, | drivers and other workers whose astronomy and space matters is 12,000,000 outdoor |charcoal burners were welcomed |Jobs take them into the open at growing steadily. Visitors were {night and who want to indulge conducted in parties of 15 and| see the heavens through an 11%- inch telescope. On cloudy nights visitors tains of New York once were/!ions or a uniform income level, seemed to find plenty to interest of them in models showing move-| production. Pennsylvania's char. money they spend on exploring ments of the earth and planets| and there are lantern 'slides of constellations. Mayor Suggests Tax Exemption TORONTO (CP) -- All muni- | between $135 and $150 for three.|CiPal taxes paid by Canadian |inch telescopes which give ama. ome owners should be exempt from federal income tax, Mayor Phillips proposed today. He said that under present con- ditions home ewners are subject to double taxation and pay full income tax on money they earn before they pay it out. PERFECT CIRCLE PROMOTIONS W. BLAKE DODDS Announcement was made re- cently of the appointment of W. Blake Dodds as president of Perfect Circle Limited, of Don Mills, succeeding Charles E. McTavish who has been presi- C. E. McTAVISH dent since 1951 and now be- comes chairman of the board. Both men were formerly well CELEBRATING BIRTHDAYS Congratulations and best wishes to the following resi- dents of Oshawa and district who are celebrating birth- days today: Steve Nimigon, 111 Cedar street, Whitby; Marian Hen- ning, 37 Duke street, Bowman- ville; Allan Lane, 164 East- haven street; Bernard Brad- shaw, Box 54, Oshawa; Jean Adams, 232 Bloor street east; Norman Lilley, RR 3, Bow- manville; Melvin Alchin, 1494 Oxford street; Larry Rogers, 17 Garrard road; Laurie Gay, Courtice. The first five persons to in- form The Oshawa Times of their birthdays each day will receive double tickets to The Regent Theatre, good for a Alderman R. Cecil Bint is shown being presented with a cheque for $300 by Donald Iver- son, president of Branch 43 of the Canadian Legion. The money is, to be used to pur- chase a television set for use in the Hillsdale Manor Home for the Aged. From left to right are: Harry Brown, first vice- president, Canadian Legion Branch 43; Douglas Johns, superintendent, Hillsdale Manor; Ald. R. Cecil Bint; Ben LEGION PROVIDES TELEVISION FOR HILLSDALE MANOR Jacklin, business manager, Ca- nadian Legion; Don Iverson, president and Maurice Procter, second vice-president. --Oshawa Times Photo four - week period. The cur- rent attraction is "South Pacific." Reports on birthdays will be received only between the hours of 8 am. and 10 am Verandah Is Demolished By Truck Witnesses to an accident Thurs- day said it was fortunate the |family at 119 Celina street was away when an automobile went out of control and crashed on to a verandah on which children are usually seen playing. Garry Lattikhuis, 451 Philip Murray avenue, travelling north on Celina street, passed a deliv- ery truck on the right hand side, {went out of control and demolish- Belgian Troops 'Back To Bases BRUSSELS (AP) Defence | Minister Arthur Gilson said to- |day Belgian troops being dis- placed by United Nations forces| in the Congo are pulling back to| Four Oshawa boulevard north Belgium's two military bases in| home owners were given a 25 Hillman the Congo. cent reduction in square foot as-| Deputy Assessment Commis-| Asked by reporters if the reso-|sessment plus a 5 per cent loca- sioner Ralph Found said the de- lution voted by the UN security|tion allowance on their homes at| partment was prepared to drop | council meant the Belgian troopsia Court' of Revision meeting the square foot assessment 'on | also should withdraw from these| Thursday night. these four homes." bases, as Congo Premier Patrice] The owners were represented] Mr. Found objected to Mr. Hill- Lumumba insists, Gilson replied: | by W. A. Hillman, who compared|man's lot assessment argument, "jt does not appear so." {his clients' Beau Valley homes|saying that the court hearing was Premier Gaston Eyskens then|with Grandview subdivision|dealing only with building assess- commented: "The Problem Is ot homes. ments. raised. The presence of the Bel-| "To equalize is the only fair gians in those bases is guaran-| THREE ARGUMENTS way," icin up court Y teed and authorized by a treaty| He argued that: man Louis Hyman as he granted |signed by the Congolese govern-| |) square foot assessment on|ihe five per cent location allow- ment." 5 s X the Beau Valley homes was 25 ance. As for possible intervention of|cents higher. | UN troops in Katanga province| 32) Grandview homes had a 20| ASSESSMENT ON TANKS the Belgian minister said: "There pep cent location allowance, the| Two Field Aviation represen- Four Home Owners Get Assessment Reduction said Mr} assessment before but had been missed Goldstein Investments won a two-cent reduction on cubic foot assessment on a Bond street east property Industrial and commer cial buildings are figured on a cubie foot basis, residences on a square foot basis. John Wacko, Simcoe street south, argued that his business fax was too high, as he was "away from the downtown area and (I) don't get the traffic." He lost the appeal. In a losing argument against a business assessment( M. Zye gocki, Southlawn avenue, told the court he was a part-time builder only. |discriminated against," | are no reasons for UN troops to One man's enthusiasm set him back $4500 for a six-inch tele-| WIN DOUBLES TROPHY ed a verandah at 119 Celina| move to Katanga. Order prevails street. | there." The car then veered across the! -------- pean car parked onthe over (;M] Veterans On Pension side of the road. The small car, owned by Walter Stahl, 814 Myer street, was extensively damaged. | John Gannon, 165 Verdun road, | |plant of General Motors of Can- ada Limited gave a total of 255 years' service to the company i i irements. Mr, and Mrs. John Morrison, raion Grant Coates, UMS-AC, 41 |vears; Frederick E. Brooks, in- |spection. 38 years; John A. |Ewart Carswell and Mrs. C./Cameron, final trim and hard- Oatway, of Oshawa, were in Sec-|yare 29 years; Francis E. Free- |man, inspection, 33 years; Lalio |M. Mitchell, body sub-assembly, SPICY FLAVOR 97 years: Harry Timmuck, main- Garlic has been used to spice|lenance, 14 years; George Wil- and strengthen the food energy con, final finish, 35 years; Wil- of meals for at least 2,000 years|liam E. Yourth, body sub-assem- [in Europe. bly, 38 years. Hurricanes Have Names Of Girls them in the past, the Weather Bureau has come up with Quella, phy in the mixed doubles tourna- | Names of hurricanes for the | 1960 season range from Abby to clients' homes only 10 per cent./tatives appeared to protest as-| The court explained that the 3) lot assessment in Beau Val-|sessment of six tanks and two issuance of even one permit dur- ley homes was, at six dollars, pumps on their Oshawa Airport|/ing the year makes a person one dollar higher than compar- property. {liable for business assessment. able Grandview homes. | Mr. Found explained that the| Ten other listed persons didn't "My clients feel they are being|tanks and pumps were liable for'appear to argue their appeals. 'Turkish Ministers Await Tribunal By MAUMMER KAYLAN ISTANBUL (Reuters) -- Some 450 cabinet ministers, officials and National Assembly deputies of the former Menderes regime now under "protective custody" on charges of violating the Turk- ish constitution await a 'grand tribunal." General Cemal Gursel, the new head of state, premier and leader of the 28-man National Union Committee which now rules the country, has said that the former government was "dictatorship of a cliquge" which 'violated the constitution and became a disaster for the na- tion." . The accused are held on the island of Yassi, a naval training| base on the Sea of Marmora, 11 miles from here. paid personal expenses with pub- lic money, and in some cases re- ceived houses as gifts. The prisoners will not be al- lowed counsel while appearing before the investigating commis. sion, nor will they be permitted . to see documents submitred as was dissolved in the army coup|evidence. There will also be no d'etat May 27, Fatin R. Zor'u, | right of appeal against the come ex-foreign minister, and Hasan|mission's decision. Polatkan, ex-finance minister. | Before the high court, how- Only one in 20 of the accused |ever, each of the accused will be were reported to be mn good allowed up to three counsel. The health. high court's proceedings will be | Namik Gedik. former interior|in public and no adjournment minister, was officially stated to|will be allowed for mere than have committed suicide while|three days, though the defence under detention in Ankara {may be given a longer time to The supreme commission of prepare the case. investigation recently set up has US Missile Bases [ begun its preliminary work. . The commission will be em. Thailand Ma BANGKOK, Thailand (AP) == | Prime Minister Sarit Thanarat powered to hand the accused over to the Supreme Court if it| is decided that there is a case| ity. ; 3 | says he will ask the United States TAKE OVER PROPERTY |to set up missile bases in Thai According to a aew law, the 'and if any of Thailand's neighe to answer. Decisions will be by| |unanimous vote or by a major- Winny. They are not mere whim- Udele, Xmay, Yola, Zenda, and sy. The Weather Bureau has a|the like. serious reason for giving hurri-| Though there are only 21 names canes girls' names. |on the list, there is little chance Use of short, easily remember-|of running short. The largest ed names avoids errors and number of tropical disturbances speeds transmission of vital in-|recorded in the Gulf -Atlantic formation between widely scat-|area in one season is 21; the | tered stations, ships at sea, and|least, two. The hurricane season hurricane-hunting planes that fly| runs from June 15 to November |into the center of the storms. |30. Only a few storms have been The names reduce confusion|ivcorded before or after those | when two or more tropical cy-|dates. clones occur at the same time.| In the Pacific where there are In 1950, for example, four un- more tropical storms (called ty- named hurricanes simultaneous-| phoons), four sets of girls' names lv whirled across the Gulf of | are used each year. The practice Mexico, the Caribbean Sea, and | of naming storms after girls be- the Atlantic Ocean. Warnings|ca about one storm were mistaken| during World War II. +f d iles OF nother hundreds of miles =) MES AROUSE COMMENTS | Weather Bureau officials re- | peatedly declare that the names | do not designate particular in- dividuals. This does not prevent angry husbands from complain- ing that a nasty storm bears their wives' name or women from writing: 'Please name a hurricane after me." Suggestions have been made to designate hurricanes by Greek letters (Alpha, Beta, Gamma), names of animals (Antelope, Bear, Coyote), descriptive adjec- tives (Annoying, Blustery, Churn- ing), or infamous men (Attila, Bluebeard, Cain'. One classical- lv inclined editorial writer pro- posed names like Agrippina, | {STORM CALLED ALICE To avoid this kind of misunder- standing, hurricanes were desig- nated by a phonetic alphabet | (Able, Baker, Charlie, etc.) in 1951 and 1952. In 1953, the Weath- er Bureau began christening trop- ical disturbances in the Atlantic, Caribbean, and Gulf of Mexico with girls' names. The first was a'minor early-season storm call- ed Alice. | In 1960, a semi-permanent list | of four sets of names was intro- |duced. A separate set is used | each year, beginning with the first name in the group. After four years, the sets are used over in the same manner. If any of|Briseis, and Clodia. thece becomes a major hurricane] Naming hurricanes is not new. affecting the United States, its|For several hundred years many name will be retired for 10 years| West Indian - hurricanes were and another substituted. named after saints on whgse The 1960 names are Abby, days they arrived. Residents of Brenda, Cleo, Donna, Ethel, Flor-| Santo Domingo called an 1834 ence, Gladys, Hilda, Isbell, storm Padre Ruiz for a priest Janet, Katy, Lila, Molly, Nita,|who was being buried when it Odette, Paula, Roxie, Stella, struck. known residents of Oshawa where they were both employed by General Motors of Canada Limited. Trudy, Vesta, and Winny. A hurricane that hit Florida in| Because so few names start November, 1935, was dubbed | with Q, U, X, Y, and Z, those "Yankee Storm" because it letters are not included. Using! moved in from the north. | |the me widespread in the Pacific [J may sequestrate the property of an accused and bring from abroad any wealth and pos- sessions which have been de posited there. Evidence in the hands of the prosecutors is said to show that] officials of the Mendres regime made money out of contracts, MENDERES ILL The fallen premier, Adnan] Menderes, is reported to have had a nervous breakdown, with partial paralysis. With him are Celal Bayar, former president, Refik Koraltan, ex chairman of National Assembly which bors go Communist, the Bangkok World reports today. The World quotes Marshal Sarit as saying Thailand is "a pivot of the free world alliance in Asia, so if any of our neighbors become dominated by Communists, rocket bases will be an absolute neces- sity." a Enjoying a friendly game of crib dering a lull in exercises conducted by the 2nd Canadian Infantry Brigade Group ¥ Camp Petawawa, Ont., are, from the left: Sergeants '"'Len' Delaney of Montreal, P.Q Tom Dickson of Oshawa; 'Des' Se Teg, Shelnin ENJOYING LULL IN EXERCISES Murphy of Ottawa, and Gune ner Tom Burgess of Charlottes town, P.E.L--(DND Photo)