Oshawa Times (1958-), 9 Jun 1962, p. 13

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HOME OF TH E WEEK | YOUR GARDEN looking lot of ugly stakes and strings} more conspicuous than the blooms. The neat gardener in-| variably paints his stakes green} or brown or at least uses weath-} ered material that will not stand) out. He wili also use colored) string cr neutral raffia for tying) up. And in this tying up, he will) do it loosely so as not to bunch| the plants into looking crowded) Stakes, String Can Spoil View How often one sees a goodjthe results of certain new var-|anq hand-shaking in the federal flower bed spoiled by alieties, or sprays or of new me-| constituency of Northwest Terri- : y *\thods of cultivation. Date Of| tories. 4 . the first corn or tomatoes and pictures will all add to our fu- ture interest and satisfaction. A lot of people go around won- dering why they can't get the good things to eat that their mothers used to serve. Well, so far as vegetables are concerned, the answer is simple. Despite the wonders of .modern ship- ping, refrigeration, packaging Puzzled Natives Amused ' By Candidates' Antics By JIM WHELLY CONTWOYTO LAKE, N.W.T. (CP)--There's more to election campaigning than kissing babies On a snow-covered hill of rock near frozen Contwoyto Lake, 250 miles northeast of Yellowknife, Liberal party candidate Mrs. Isabel J. Hardie, 40, paused out- side an Eskimo tent to put a diaper on a naked infant named); David Alinidrod. The emaciated four-month-old is the youngest of a family group of nine Eski- mos who had moved into can- THE QSHAWA TIMES, Seturdey, June 9, 1962 13 In an interview later at Yel- lowknife, Mr. Rheaume criti- cized Mrs, Hardie's use of a sin- gle Eskimo interpreter at all her stops in the central and) eastern Arctic. | SEVERAL DIALECTS "I'm using local interpreters wherever possible," he said, "and using line-by-line interpret- ing, not bulk interpreting as Mrs. Hardie has done. I've found it's the only way through! 4% years of experience with Eskimos and Indians in the} Mackenzie District. And respect! for native culture and languages dictates that I use as many in-, itired of | against a brick wall to stop the pe. 110% 128 NOx ® ----'s & fa] | | ic DINING _* KITCHEN |42xgtM B%9% Mh LIVING or artificial. and preserving, there are some Instead of stakes one can fix|things that one cannot buy, and brush. firmly in among the tall-|that is the freshness of radishes, er plants while they are stilljpeas, lettuce, corn and several growing and encourage ihem tojother vegetables that are grown grow around and cover the sup-|just outside the kitchen door porting material. This is a par-|and harvested only minutes be- ticulariy good way to handle del-|fore eating. Fven in city phiniums and other tall bushy) gardens there should be a place, plants. lit need not be large, for a few sere ove (favorite vegetables, if one.really Practically all big flowers,} : like cosmos, delphiniums, holly [wants 0 quality and flavor. |= sR ter alge ogy ---- cred : "ine"al Plan Provided 145,000 Jobs some firm support. For the tall] straight plants and also toma-} itoes, five or six foot stakes are} jhammered firmly in:the ground} jand the plants. tied at intervals vas tents from their melting terpreters at. any meeting as) igloo a few days earlier. there are languages represented Hardie, who refers often to South seat on the Northwest! housing conditions at Eskimo Territories Council to enter the Point, on the northwest coast of campaign and said in a recent Yellowknife speech that he was} "beating my head) dictatorship of our northiand." The Pacific Western Airlines charter aircraft pilot, based at Fort Smith, N.W.T., is a veteran of 20 years of northern bush fly- ing and heads his list of cam- paign promises with a pledge to work for better living condi- tions and better housing for the Indians and Eskimos of the con-) stituency. | Mr, Rheaume says the gov- ernment has begun to provide better housing for the natives and needs only time to complete the job. Mr. Carey's better: - platform is shared by housing} 4 | Hudson Bay. "You can put your finger through the cardboard walls of those houses,"' she says, "and look at Eskimos lying on wet blankets inside." Her husband, Mervyn Hardie, who died of cancer during the last session of Parliament, had held the Mackenzie constituency for the Liberal party since it was separated from the Yukon constituency in 1953. IT'S DIXON'S Heating Equipment DELCO by GENERAL MOTORS 313 Albert St. RA 3-4663 Interest and amusement)pby those who attend." showed on the little circle "Both Mr. Rheaume and Mrs. Eskimo faces as Mrs. Hardie, Hardie credited themselves with herself a mother of four, took a) getting an enthusiastic turnout piece of cloth hanging over a wherever they visited the newly, tent rope and used it for a dia- enfranchised Eskimos, but! per. Many Eskimo mothers Abraham Okpik, an Eskimo who don't use diapers. began life as a hunter and fish-|f | The results of a good caribou eprman among the nomads and! jhunt, large thin strips of meat now works for the northern af- |blackened from drying, lay eX-\fgirs department at Frobisher posed to the sun on wind-bared Bay, offered anothef explana- rocks. 'tion. PLEASED WITH POSTER "They've called us happy, Mrs. Hardie gave her picture, smiling people when we were on a campaign poster, to one!fighting for survival and work- of the Eskimo women. With an! ing ourselves to death. We were expression of real gratitude the not happy, but when you see SERVICE STATIONS OPEN THIS SUNDAY 7:00 a.m. to 9:00 p.m. GLEN'S TEXACO SERVICE 380 SIMCOE ST. SOUTH CROWELL'S SHELL STATION 4 UPPER | LOWER HOME DESIGN NO. 231 Here the designers have Captured: all the simplicity of colonial styling and bined it with the convenience of modern split level con- struction. There are no long flights of stairs in this at- tractive home The partial basement, beneath the sleep- ing area, houses the garage, laundry, extra lavatory, and utility room, with Living-Din- ing-Kitchen area on the mid- dle (entrance) level. Up- stairs are three bedrooms, with ample cupboard space plus a four - piece bathroom. While not shown on the illus- tration, the Blueprints now include a fireplace (with chimney) on the right hand end wall, and a full base- ment with a recreation room, including an additional fire- place, under the living area Construction is frame with stone accent. Standard Build com- FLOOR D FLOOR Blueprints for this de- sign No. 231 cost $15.00 for the first set and $5.00 for additional _ set They arej| available in Canada re- turn mail. (Ontario resi- | dents must remit 3 per cent Sales Tax.) Now available at this Newspaper Office (or | from address below) is the New. 1962 Design Book en- | titled "Canadian Guide to Home tanning and ers s by Ln ne SF me Sk BLUEPRINTS NOW |NCLUDE LTERNATIVE FULL BASE- MENT DINING -- KIT | cludes | popular and new designs of about a foot For this it jwell to use some twine or spe- cial twisting material. available at any seed store. rs PLANTING mOx " TIMELY HINTS 4 lot of mistakes in using the jhose, are made by those un- likes of grass and other plants. lawn or garden that will take} the moisture down a couple of inches is worth a dozen sprink-| lings and it wiil last for some} time. Sprinkling never gets the} moisture down: more than aj} fraction of an inch and the roots must come up to the sur- face te get it, thus exposing themselves more and more to drying and kiliing by heat and} sun Fibs 1134 SQ.FT. UNDER LIVING - TCHEN AREA, zies on full blast. The nearer we get to a fine mist the better jand as soon after watering as} possible it is advisable to cul- tivate to create a loose {top on the soil to block evapora tion. sign, price $1.00, and 's tax free. This new edition in- information on Fi- Canada, Building Details, Land- Selection, In Furniture De- 100 to choose from. Also included in this book are full details of how to order blueprints nancing in Construction scaping, Color terior Decorating, Arrangement, Custom signing, etc., plus over How often have you said that inext year you were going to lhave this or that and then for- |}gotten all about it when next jyear comes? A garden diary iwill help to prevent these omis- lsions. In these records we jot |down anything that appeals to us ina what we have discovered on The Building Editor, Oshawa Times, Oshawa, Ontario, {-] Enclosed. please find of Plans entitled "HOME Mail requests 10c extra. (Please make remittance notation to come to our atten. tion af the proper time next year. In this we can also note! open| - OTTAWA (CP) -- Last Win-| woman took the poster, asked in your first visitor in six months ter's municipal incentive program, which from Oct. 15 to May 31, em- 'on the wall inside her tent, then winter works|broken English and by signs if jt's very hard to ignore him or ran|she might really keep it to pin! jook sad." Ayliffe (Pat) Carey, 53, first ployed more than 145,000 men, |found in her tiny white man's| Social Credit party candidate in Labor Minister Starr said Fri-| vocabulary a "Thank you, Tib-| the short political history of the day The statement based on pre- through Mr. Starr's office here. tario constituency The figures represent a 20- per-cent increase over the pre- vious year when 121,000 jobs were provided A total of 2,745 municipalities took part in the program last winter, a 28-per-cent increase over the previous year During the program, $81,395,-| drilling and aeromagnetic sur-| ---- Heavy svaking, however,|000 was spent on payrolls, of|veys by helicopter. One of their does not mean turning the noz-|which the federal government| contributed $40,417,000. Man-days of work totalled 5,- 784,000 Ontario had 1,503 projects MANAGER HURT TORONTO (CP) Dressen, manager Maple Leafs of the Interna- tional Baseball League, was taken to hospital early Thurs- day with head injuries suffered in a fall. The club said Dressen fell Charlie of Toronto his apartment. His head hit a some trip and arrange for the|night latch catch on a door on|took the way down. Doctors took 19 stitches to close the cut. 50c, for which send me Book PLANNING GUIDE" THE HOME WORKSHOP payable to The Oshawa Times). BECU noch FIRST AID TO THE AILING HOUSE By ROGER C. WHITMAN STUDDING ON CONCRETE QUESTION: We have a large room built as an extension to the house which we use for dining during the summer. This has an asphalt tiled floor on a concrete slab. I want to di- vide off part of the room to use for storage. How can I fasten the studding for the wall parti- tion to the floor? ANSWER: First put down a sill plate (2 x 4, laid flat); for this, drill a hole through the tile into the concrete to receive a lead anchor or expansion shield (available hardware deal ers), then fasten the sill plate in place by bolts. Then nail the studding to the sill plate. REMOVING FLOOR WAX QUESTION: Use liquid, self- polishing wax on kitchen lino. leum. Tried removing wax with warm detergent as recommend- ed on label, but not completely successful. Any way to get all wax off floor? ANSWER: Wax removing preparations, widely available supermarkets, housewives and hardware dealers; follow man- ufacturer's instructions careful- ly. REMOVAL TAR STAIN QUESTION: Tar was used for a roof repair job and some of it to paint it a different color as| we are changing our furniture.| What kind of paint should we use? ANSWER Marine. supplies dealers carry epoxy coatings used for fiberglas boats. Con- sult the classified telephone di- rectory under '"'Marine" Equip- ment and Supplies." Or use a polyester primer, followed by marine paint, Be sure to wash the fiberglas surface first and have it absolutely dry; then sand it down for better adhe- sion. Wipe off all dust before applying any new coating SHELLAC FINISH TACKY QUESTION: A few weeks ago I shellacked a small table; (walnut). The shellac hasn't) hardened, but still sticky. What should I do? ANSWER: The shellac you used may not have been a fresh mix, or it may not have} E CART a - UNDER-BED ROLLER " PaTTERN 428 lamp? Replating wouldn't pay, as it wasn't an expensve lamp} to begin with. By RUTH W. SPEARS ANSWER: Wipe the metal] Load this cart with food from) surface with turpentine. Then|the house and wheel it into apply a couple of coats of a| patio or yard. The lower tray good brand of metallic paint, injmay be lifted out for serving any desired color, bronze orjand the drop-leaf top makes a "'gold'"" would be closest to the|useful table. Pattern 443, which persent brass. {gives illustrated directions and pee init jactual - size cutting guides for) Toner We te le shaped parts, is 50c. It also is raiggpch Hoyo peop ,|one of four full-size patterns in smoke, our rooms are blue withlthe Aids for Outdoor Dining smoke. Is this due to poor Ven-| packet 58 -- all for $1.75 tilation and how can it : al ; < remedied? gag riche ANSWER: Inadequate ventil- The Times, ation (plus heavy smoking) is Send orders to Workshop Dept., Oshawa. Oshawa. Storage problems may tern 428, which lists materials and shows construction, is 50c. The bed-head unit shown made with Pattern 383 which jalso is 50c. Both of these pat- terns and two others are in the /Storage Unit Packet No. 46 -- all for $1.75. The Home The Times, Send orders to Workshop Dept., be, solved with this set of chests. All three fit under a double bed) /or two under a single bed. Pat- is)" bie," | which the nickname by Hardie is known using Mrs ifamiliar with the likes and dis-|liminary figures, was releasee|throughout the north The other Eskimos were given Mrs. Hardie climbed into a red muskeg tractor for the two-mile jtrip back to her chartered Cessna aircraft on lake-ice runway. Tractor and runway were pro-| vided by a 70-man Nicke] Company mineral explor- ation crew beginning its second summer in the area for diamond) a comfortable pl y wood shacks will house the N.W.T. electoral \division polling station number |57 June 18 for 24 eligible voters, jincluding some of the Contwoyto |Lake Eskimos, DON'T UNDERSTAND Said one of the survey crew: | 'We've been trying to explain to these Eskimos what the elec. tion is about, but they still jthink it has something to do |with staking claims.' Explaining the election and voting procedures to Eskimos, |who number somewhat less neighbor's garden, or|While ascending a staircase to|than a third of about 13,700 eli- gible voters in the Territories, up a large part of the |speeches made in the eastern jand central Arctic by Progres- sive Conservative candidate Eu- igene Rheaume, 29, of Fort Smith, N.W.T He employed Hugh Anugai, 19 of Baker Lake, 175 miles inland from Chesterfield Inlet on the northwest coast of Hudson Bay, as an interpreter for this non- political approach at Baker Lake, Chesterfield Inlet and Coral Harbour, on the south coast of Southampton Island But inevitably, late in each speech, came the explanation of why any Eskimo's best bet was to make his X for Rheaume. Buying or Selling ! GUIDE REALTY LTD. @ LLOYD CORSON, President @ DICK YOUNG Vice-President @ LUCAS PEACOCK Sec-Treas. 16 SIMCOE ST. S., OSHAWA 1 Canadian} Territories, was buzzing about among Mackenzie River settle- ments like a hungry mosquito, ably piloting his own aircraft One thorough soaking of the|He is campaigning in his On- cigarettes, gum or candy before over a familiar campaign trail. He resigned his Mackenzie kg: Gees McLaughlin Heating for @ FUEL OIL ¢@ STOVE OIL @ Prompt Delivery 104 King W. RA 3-348) | 1271 SIMCOE BOWERS B.A 261 22 BOND ST, EAST RUSS BOSWELL'S SUPERTEST STATION CORNER WILSON AND OLIVE SARGANT'S TEXACO STATION 278 PARK RD. SOUTH DOVE'S FINA STATION 792 SIMCOE ST. SOUTH MEADE'S SUNOCO STATION 74 SIMCOE ST. SOUTH BRAMLEY MOTOR SALES . STATION KING ST. EAST ST, NORTH PHONE 723-7122 Another Kitchen .. . FASHIONED BY JAMES O'MALLEY CONSTRUCTION 254 CEDAR VALLEY PHONE 723-1121 _ the cause. Frequently keeping windows open on opposite side of the house, for only an inch! or two at the top, will overcome} this kind of stagnant air. Install-| ing exhaust fans, vented to the} oudoors, will also remedy the! condition. been pure. Another cause for tackiness is applying shellac over oiled or waxed surfaces Remove the present shellac with liberal quantities of de-| natured alcohol. Then refinish, | being sure the surface is abso-| lutely clean and free of any! trace of wax, grease, etc., and) that the shellac itself is pure and fresh, } Let Us Show You!!... HOW TO HEAT that COLD ROOM or RECREATION ROOM -- WITH -- ELECTRIC HEAT USE OUR HYDRO Cr 50-Ibs. covers over 300 sq. ft. 30 Non-Burning Long-Lasting eates a Beautiful Lawn LB. BAG 4.95 gS --lindane, phaltan, sulfur, DDT. Result: ORTHO Rose Dust wards off aphis, black spot, mildew, rose rust, red spider mites, Japanese beetles, rose slugs, thrips and o ™ 13s ORTHO Rose Dust saves roses from insects, disease! -- .\ ORTHO Rose Dust in the pliable plastic squeeze duster takes the work out of rose care. One puff releases a power-packed combination of insecticides and fungicides REG, TMs 22 Se Re (epee aR EE Bee eee oe PHALTAN was accidentally spilled on the TESTING WATER patio at the back of our house.! QUESTION: My home is on a I scraped off as much as p0s-\community water system. How! sble and tried to remove thejcan I test the water for hard-| stain in the concrete with kero-\ness? Is there any chemical I sene, but this only seemed to\can purchase for this? | enlarge the stained area. Is) ANSWER: At your pharma- oer any ne "ey remove the cist's purchase tincture green stain successfully? soap and a bottle with straight ANSWER: The stain was en-|tin dropper supplying 50 drops Jarged by the solvent action of|per c.c, To'a clean bottle, con the kerosene on the tar, spread-\tgining about 50 c.c. (one- sr ecg Mo -- TO) fourth cup) of the water to. be vere his, er areaitested, add ; ree than the stain should be treated soap at a "es ee «hae to absorb the spread also.each drop. The number of Make a thick pane of fuller S!/drops necessary to produce per- earth or other dry absorbing) manent suds is approximateyl powder and kerosene (or 24S0-|the same as the grains of hard- line), and apply as thick a layer/ness of the water, Water of as possible, covering more than over three grains of hardness is just the stained area. As the called "hard". The county paste dries, replace with fresh, health department or a water- poco y Pgeredelchr waa 'O'softener dealer usually makes reta P auion, place/ analyses, if sz é p- a sheet of thin plastic or metal! jiiog en over the paste. TIME PAYMENT PLAN ! COOK'S ELECTRIC} PHONE 725-6109 many more...brings roses safely from bud to bloom! Advertised and recommended by gardening expert John Bradshaw ORTHO AGRICULTURAL CHEMICALS LIMITED ¢ Oakville, Ontario New Westminster, B.C, 2G OG NS EO A ET A I CT A A ES A AN Gar vere mem eee -- se DOODEL Mult La eg CHINA pv il SUPPLIES SINCE PRONE 723-2312 Nae Aluminum AWNINGS Aluminum SIDING ® Eliminates Costly Painting ® All-Weather Insulation ® Save On Fuel Bills Finest Materials -- Expert Workmanship Now On Sale At... SWAN'S [.H.A, HARDWARE "It It Belongs In The Garden--We Have It" 3 Miles East of Oshawa (Highway No. 2) Phone 623-5757 Oshawa Shopping Centre 725-7513 Authorized Dealer . . . Garden Centre "Where Satisfaction Is Guaranteed" LES EVENISS SALES 15 PRINCE ST. 725-4632, Evenings 723-2707 WORN BRASS LAMP PAINTING FIBERGLAS QUESTION: I have QUESTION: We have fiber-;brass finish floor lamp. The gias panels around our 'patio/brass is worn off in spots, Is for privacy. Now we would like|there any way to refinish. the! 1015 King East 725-1764. an. old "Serving Oshawe For 10 Yeors"

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