Oshawa Times (1958-), 24 Jul 1964, p. 5

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* SO OE RR tea gh maleate et $ WHITBY, Manager: John Gauit They're off, but not to the moon. Trying out the child- ren's play rocket at the newly - opened Peel street Bureau Office: 111 Dundas St, West ~~ ust cod a park, three members of the playground equipment in the Kinsmen Club study their park and have donated much handywork, The Club recently of their time in secding and spent more than $3,500 on renovating the land for use Kinsmen -- And DISTRICT «3. Tel. wena New P lark are scheduled to happen to the Town's new Peel Street Park. Under the sponsorship of the Whitby Kinsmen Club. swings and playground equinment are sodded land that last year was a vacant field. Whitby apparently, has more This is the opinion of an elderly Green street resident yesterday with a few words to No-Noise A Boon To One Bylaw "Town Council," he said, than its fair share of Stirling}« ha Big things are happening and/Mocses and Juan Fangios. now have very similar powers to those of the police. And now they have taken this step they who came rushing into the|Should have the courage to Whitby office of the Times|make use of it." Or in other words if Towh say about the Town Council's springing up on the freshly-|new anti-noise bylaw. Council introduces clauses in its bylaw to combat the youths who For reasons best known t0/screech and throb around town himself he preferred to remain|in mufflerless cars, they should Members of the Kinsmen Club|anonymous, But he was aMigo out and prosecute them. have doriated much of their time an@~money to improvingjabout the town's boy racers. the park which will provide a safe place to play for the child- ren in the south-east section of town Improvements te the park, costing more than $3,500, have been completed so far this year * and further larger projects are on the club's books. Installations inciude: swings, teeder-totters, a play rocket, merry-go-round, lacrosse box, and a soon-to-be installed base ball back-stop. The town Works Department » in co-operation with the club leveled the lacrosse box base- ball diamond. Seeding and other work around the park has occupied much of the spare time of the Club's members but has provided a smooth, safe and clean play area for the small fry. * Picnic tables for the older (peanone using the facilities and ja drinking fountain will be in- of the children, Top to bot- |stalled. tom: Howard Souter, Cec | Long range plans include a Thomas, and Joe: Ottenbrite. | wading pool for the toddlers angry man with plenty to say town," he went on, "that re- semble drag strips. Something has to be done, Henry and Green streets are the worst. "I have been awakened up at 12.30 at night by these fools with their screeching brakes. These kids think they are smart. Found In Pit "Town Council now has the 8 Thin Bodies "There are streets in this from : THE OSHAWA TIMES, Friday, July 24, 1966, § La Presse W: Canvass Unions For Cash Help MONTREAL ternational June 3 by a labor dispute. The syndicate, affiliated with the Confederaton of National Trade Unions, said it is seek- ing contributions of $1 from each member of the general president of the journ- alists' syndicate, in a statement. The dispute started when some 300 members of the In- At Voodoo Camp teeth. Let's see them use PRETORIA (Reuters) -- The them." emaciated bodies of seven Afri- can youths and a witchdoctor TO MAKE YOUR SAVINGS GROW were found in shallow graves when police raided a traditional OPEN AN ACCOUNT AT VICTORIA & GREY "initiation school" a few miles north of here, police said Thurs- Gey Another eight boys were taken to hospital by police and 30 more back to their homes. Rv African tribal] tradition, boys,on attaining puberty go to "initiation school" for ceremo- nies, incliding circumcision, after which they are regarded as adults. SAVE A LITTLE FROM EVERY PAY 342% helps VICTORIA as a multi-service club treat for the future. | So far five of the park's seven acres have been cleared and the remaining land wil come -- Oshawa Times Photo jand a full-size pool is planned under the plow next year. and GREY A Look At 1904 In Three Have you ever been curious about the way things were 60 years ago in this area? The essays submitted concerning the origins of the Ontario County Building have relived a part of our past, but there is more. In a booklet published in 1904, thumbnail sketches were made for the County and its three "towns" -- Whitby, Uxbridge, and Oshawa. "Whitby is the County Town. Here are located the County Buildings, including the Court- house, Jail and Registry Office, the County of Ontario House of Refuge and Industrial Farm, the Armory of the 34th Regi- ment and one of the Govern- ment Experimental Fruit Farms. "It 4s an. educational centre with three well-equipped public schools, an efficient Roman Catholic Separate School, and one of the Ontario County Model | Schools. "The Whitby Collegiate Insti- tute was established as a Gram- mar School in 1849, and has during its long history, held a foremost place among the High schools and Collegiate Institutes of the Province, "The Ontario Ladies College was established in 1874 in Tra- falgar Castle, the former resi- dence of Sheriff N. G. Reynolds Two very extensive additions, School, and three well-graded Towns and aggregating with the origin- al outlay upwards of a quarter of a million dollars, have since been made. | "It is so well equipped, and . has such a numerous and able| « staff of instructors that it has) attracted pupils from all parts of the Dominion and the United States." | OSHAWA: The Town of Oshawa has ap-| propriately been called the Man-| chester of Canada, | "It has a number of the larg-/ est manufacturing establish- ments for pianos (GM was not a byword then), carriages, mal- leable iron work and woollen goods for the Dominion, be- sides many smaller but prosper- ous industries. | "It has an excellent High Public Schools, and Bishop! Bethune Ladies College. "The latter occupies Elle3- mere Hall, the handsome resi-| dence of the late Hon. T. N.| Gibbs. There is also a convent! School in connection with the Roman Catholic Church. UXBRIDGE "The Town of Uxbridge has several important milling and manufacturing establishments. It is one of the best market) towns in the Province, and has eo an excellent High School, as well as a well-graded Public involving a large expenditure school." WHITBY PERSONALS Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Kingston| of Olympia, Washington were recent guests at the home of Mr, and Mrs. V. C. Moore, 508 Perry street. Mr. and Mrs. Kingston are former Whitby residents. In Belleville they at- tended the christening of their first grandson. They also visited their son, Wayne, stationed with the Canadian Army in Petawa- wa, and their daughter - in - law in Pembrooke. Mr. and Mrs. Harry O'Brien! have left for a month's vaca-| tion in the East where they) will visit relatives. oe Mr. and Mrs, Frank Mitchell of Deep River have been visi- ting Mrs. Mary Mitchell, 306 Colborne street west, Mr. Mit- chell's mother. Salvation Army Major and) Mrs. Claude Simpson and four children, former Whitby resi- dents now stationed in Montreal, are enjoying their annua] fur- lough at Jackson's Point, they were sts at the home of Mr. and . Jake Reid, 1448 Brock street south. Mr. and Mrs. Richard Willetts Wardman crsecent are celebra- HAROLD SLICHTER, READY FOR CHRISTMAS SCIENTIFIC PLANNING IN PLANTS Christmas Is Long-Range Project For Greenhouses TRUST Our 76th Year 308 DUNDAS ST. W. WHITBY. your weekend with cooling A fig for hot weekend weather, when you keep your refrigerator amply stocked with Holiday Beer. A delightful plan, and a cooling way to do thi Holiday is brewed to quench summer thirst. {t's Ontario's light-tasting beer, and it's a// beer, all the way down, O'KEEFE Holiday . BREWED FOR SUMMER THIRST 2 So Buy just et's talk "cents about entertaining! Nearly everybody likes to entertain. And everybody Here's the solution that will delight everyone--and , wants to be considered a good host or hostess. Problem is that a family income budgeted for mortgage, car payments, insurance and other fixed expenses won't stand big entertainment bills. It doesn't make economic sense. what to do --when you knowthat among your guests some prefer gin, others rye, vodka, rum, sherry or beer--and your budget won't stand such an assortment? keep your entertainment cost at a ie' one liquor: A special brand of extra light rum. Its name: TROPICANA, Made by Woods, who have been distilling fine rums for over 75 years... ting their 10th wedding anni- versary today, July 24. Their By BRIAN McCALL | Or his flowers could burst (Times-Staff) linto glorious bloom in Novem- Ever wonder where your next|ber and by the time old St. friends wish them every hap-| ™' y P |Christmas' bunch of poinsettias, piness. \chrysanthemums, or carnations Mrs,\come from? | Even now, in the hot days of| | The many friends of Reg Molyneaux, 201 Byron St. north, are sorry to learn that|summer when the closest| she underwent surgery at the thought to Christmas is the} Oshawa General Hospital] and)next instalment on 'the lawaway| wish her a prompt recovery. plan for presents, men like} Harold Slichter count the days! Mrs, J. S. Moorley, 425 Dun-|to ¢he date very carefully. | das street east just 'returned) Mr. Slichter is a greenhouse! from a week's visit with her|/operator and centres his busi- daughter and son-in-law, Mr-.|ness in Whitby's north-east cor- Nick came sliding down 'the chimney the gay flowers on the table would be a_ withered mess. Fortunately he does. know his business and a rigid schedule of a combination of the many factors which make plants grow and flower is followed, and poinsettia blooms, with all their gay Christmas color, ap- pear every year right on sched- jue -- to the day. and Mrs. K. R. Pople of Cape! ner, May, New Jersey. Now guests| A day of' too much sun or| Under 15,000 square feet of at the Moorley's residence for/to9 much shade, or one day|glass he grows, carnations, one month ere Mrs. Pople and! late or one day early, or too|Chrysanthemums, and the poin- her son David, much water or {00 little, or too/Settias in long "'growing- Mr. and Mrs. Charles Hendry.(™UCh or too little of this and benches" about two feet from : that make Mr. Slichter's busi-|the floor. Ee mek wadting sabveroary nest a close and highly-skilled! The plants are carefully affair. watched from planting to cut- Satodny, Jay 1. To celebrate ot the above hazardsting and seca fetliners ae added at each stage of growth. Watering is all: done with automatic sprinklers and as the cool liquid sinks to the roots of the plants it carries the plants lunch with it in the form of various dissolved chem- icals, The soil used in the growing benches is of a straw humus variety; which is liberally spiced with the right amounts of chemical: fertilizers at pre- cisely the right time. When, in the case of the 'mums, the flowers are ready to be cut and shipped to his outlet in Toronto the soil in 'the bench is steamed to purify it and allow for a fresh planting. Carnations are cut from plants that grow to a_height of four or five feet, and are in the ground for two or more years. The basic plant keeps bloom- ing and many fong-stemmed beauties can be cut from the same root system. Not so in the case of the 'mums. Plants of many vari- eties of flowers are cut and cleared to ready the bench for a planting of fresh. root sys- tems. Large 'mum flowers are achieved by removing all but one healthy bud from a stalk allowing the full food pro- viding powers of the root to concentrate on one single, near- perfect flower. Next time you press your nos- trils to a fragrant bloom on a cold winter night, think of the months of scientific planning, and the large amounts of spe- cialized hand labor that make it possible for you to enjoy a small splash of the long hot summer, in the middle of the cold, ice-bound winter. And what's special about TROPICANA? It's so versatile, it's practically a one-brand bar! Besides being a superior light rum by itself, your guests will enjoy it in any rum drink imaginable. It makes delightful versions of almost any drink you can name! Just try TROPICANA with three or four quite different mixes. You'll realize you're on to some- dry and their daughter and Coud leave him with a crop of noel « in - law Mr. eo Mrs.|Poinsettias (a red-pointed Christ- Denis Reinhardt, Oshawa dined|™as flower) in the middle of at the Robin Hood Inn. \January when no one around| jig particularly interested in Evening WHITBY (MIRACLE of the a Waite COLOR SATURDAY MATINEE AT 1:30 A HANDFUL OF HEROES \ and the day a war stood stil// WALT DISNEY........ "TAYLOR: PALMER -JURGENS Christmas anymore. | ADDITIONAL WHITBY NEWS ON PAGE 17 Mrs. Diana Couture, Buck- jingham, Quebec and Miss Daisy) Wall, Toronto were recent guests at the home-of Mr. and Mrs. Adelard Morin, 117 Cedar street. CORN: Fastest Relief Barf aintu Foot Trouble J Shows Start 7 & 9 P.M. Between] ot tor lovew Toes @osier, CL is if corns pain al- STALL most instantly ... speedily remover them when used with the separate medicated disks included. | D! Scholls Zino-pads } NS itself. \t's not just a building but a specialized farm toa! laid out to make work faster and 4, BEAVER Engineered Farm Buildings BUILDINGS THAT PAY FOR THEMSELVES A farm building today has one job ond one to help you get better production ot the lowest cost. Thot way a building pays for This is hew the ferm with engineered plens, custom Beaver farm "rep" can heip you fitted te your for more duction at the least ning help end BOWMANVILLE, WHITBY AND OSHAWA ROMKE STEL Phone 987-4597 NEWCASTLE BEAVER LUMBER, BOWMANVILLE 523-3388 WHITBY 668-5818 cost. He is et your service for on-the-farm plon- estimates, Phone DISTRICT No, 1, Newcastle Tropi-cola, for instance! Lots of people have already dis- '*A refreshing change" thing good! covered Tropi-cola, They will be delighted with your Tropicana and Ginger, Tropicana and Tonic, Tropicana and Bitter Lemon, or what will you have! ».-"a delightful idea". . "mighty satisfying". .. With TROPICANA your reputation is established... and your budget saved!

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