Oshawa Times (1958-), 11 Dec 1964, p. 7

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

JOHN HALL, manager of Canada Limited, is seen with of house paint made in the the Ajax plant of Du Pont of the first gallon of a new type plant on Dec. 4. Acrylic House Paint Made In Ajax Plant AJAX (Staff) -- The first gal- lon of acrylic house paint was produced Dec. 4 at the Ajax plant of Du Pont of Canada Limited. A $3,000,000 addition to the plant expected to be completed by the end of 1965 will put Du Pont of Canada into the domes- tic house paint market, Du Pont recently bought out the Imper- fal Floglaze Co. of Toronto and is planning to use its employ- ees and some of its equipment in the producing of the new paint. One of the qualities of the paint is that it will not drip off the brush but will stick to the surface to be painted. Emply- ees at the Ajax plant will be in- creased from about 75 to 130. The paints will go on sale in the spring. The Ajax Du Pont plant is under' the management of John Hall. Mr. Hall, an industrial ac- countant, since coming to Ajax two years ago, has served the community as Deputy-reeve for the past year and was returned by acclamation on.Dec. 5. Mr. Hall began his career with the Du Pont organization in 1946 and his rise to manager of the Ajax plant, which at present makes industrial paints fluorocarbon resin called "Tef- 'on", can be attributed to his personality and awareness. He addresses all his employees by their first names. LABORATORY ENLARGED The changes in the Ajax plant are due to the fact that people are more quality-conscious The laboratory space in the plant will be largely increased as well as technical services. Over-all floor space will be increased from 35,000 to over 90,000 square feet. On Dec. 14 the factory will change from two to three shifts. Chemicals will be coming' in rail tank cars rather than by partial truck loads and barrels. Teflon, the non-stick interior coating for pots and pans, was discovered 25 years ago through experimentation with freon, a gas used in refrigeration sys- tems. Teflon, a Du Pont tradename, has been used in industry and government for many years, to make chemical resistant gas- kets in the Second World War, to insulate wires for the Mer- cury space capsule and to coat enormous commercial cooking machines. This new plastic is now being and solvents as well as the Hockey Clinic Is Arranged BOWMANVILLE (Staff) -- A hockey clinic and a referee's school will be conducted by the Bowmanville Recreation De- partment in the next two months . The hockey clinic will start on Dec. 28 and will run to Dec. 31 and will be for all boys and girls taking part in the recreation department's minor hockey leagues, The referee's school will start sometime in January and will be for all Bowmanville and dis- trict teenagers and adults who wish to attend. "We hope to bring in in- structors for the hockey clinic, to teach the fundamentals of hockey," T. A. Bud Fanning, Recreation Director, said. "In the referee's school, Bud Perfect and Joe Crombie of our recreation department will handle the instructions. | "The referee's school will) run for four weeks, one night @ week and will include ail] ases of refereeing and mov-| Ss on refereeing. "We are setting up a com-| mittee to work out a schedule| for the hockey clinic which will} start at 8 a.m. and run until) 8 p.m. during the three days,"| he said. | Space Program applied to the inner surfaces of aluminum, porcelain enamel or glass cooking utensils after sandblasting or chemically ech- ing the cooking surface of the utensil. A primer coat is first applied, which is about the only thing Teflon will stick to and then the final Teflon coat is baked on along with color pig- ment. EASY TO CLEAN Teflon's big advantage to the housewife is that it is easy to clean. Even though some foods tend to cling to the surface, they are easy to remove with a cloth and water. Du Pont sells the new product in liquid form to Supreme Alum- inum Industry in Scarborough and Westband of Canada Co. in Barrie, Du -Pont inspects the finished products at these plants and their seal of approval is given on the basis of appear- ance, thickness of the Teflon coating, the interior coat adhe- sion and the oil resistance. Tef- lon is now available through the Ajax plant in 26 colors. 723-5241 OSHAWA'S Newest Taxi Offering Safe, Courteous Service 46 King St. W. Oshawa Gets Setback CAPE KENNEDY, Fila. (AP) A last-second engine misfire on a Titan II rocket dealt a severe setback to the U.S. man-in- space program Wednesday, stponing the final unmanned launching of the two-man space- craft until January. The National Aeronautics and Space Administration also said the delay will shove: the first manned Gemini flight into the second quarter of 1965, The three-orbit trip by astronauts Virgil Grissom and John Young had been scheduled for the first quarter, in February or March. Of the 35,000,000 pans annual- ly marketed in Canada 40 per cent or 13,000,000 are made of aluminum and can be treated with Teflon. A word of warning about the new product, it de- composes when it reaches over 600 degrees. Like any synthetic plastic, Teflon is softer than metal or porcelain and can be scratched. Food and grease may als» stain the surface. To keep scratches at a minimum metal scoring pads or abrasive cleansers should not be used on the coat- ed surface. Teflon coated cookware is now available in such items as cookie sheets, casseroles, fry- pans and electric skillets. Be- fore using these pans best re- sults are obtained by precondi- oe the surface with salad oil. Manufacturers predict that by 1965 one-third of all metal cook- ware sold will be Teflon coated. In Canada it will be made in Ajax. WHITBY (Staff) -- The elec- tion trail in Whitby Township is drawing to a close and local voters will be going to the polls tomorrow to elect their choice to two civic bodies. Candidates are in the running for both municipal government and school board. Many of the local politicians predict a scant turn out at the polls. "I hope the residents of the township will get to the polls and exercise their franchise, said John Goodwin, a candidate for school board. MAJOR CHANGES "There are major changes coming up in our school sys- tems and if ever good adminis- tration was needed, we need it now. "Many men use the school board as a stepping stone to municipal politics. "T have been a municipal poll- tician for years and for the last two years I have held the high- School Board Faces Problems est office in local politics -- that of the Reeve, "I have resigned my chair as reeve and will not seek re-elec- tion to that post. "I do, however, have a sound interest in building an education system second to none for your children and mine. "School board spends more than half of the tax dollar col- lected from township property owners and I plan on ensuring that they get a dollar's worth of value for a dollar in tax. UAL CHANCE eT believe that the new Robarts Plan for education will mean that all children in the township will be afforded the chance to avail themselves of the best education possible. "Instead of seven school boards we will have one board handling the educational system of the entire township. "T believe this will streamline education and raise the stand- ards to a uniform high level. "I do not believe the school @ DIAMONDS @ WATCHES CREDIT jEWELL 20 Simcoe St. $.--Oshewa Shoppi board should spend its time planning ways to replace broken windows or any of the other minor tasks sometimes assigned to them, "Instead they should spend the largest part of their time planning ways to make a sys- tem here that would be envied in the rest of the province. "I believe we can have such ja System, and have it without |breaking the taxpayers back. "A lot of hard work and thought will have to go into it but as the future of our children is at stake | am the man who can and will do it. "Tam not using school board as a stepping stone to council-- T"ve been there and the chal- lenge for me is here. "In the past a poor turnout at the polls has marred election records. "T urge you to go to the poll and vote for the man of your choice." TO EVEN TAXES Dean Fry, seeking election to the school board said: "Our most immediate problems will be of administration and organ- ization of the new educational amalgamation, "Over all I do not feel that taxes will rise considerably but they will be evened out across the school area. "Transportation will become THE OSHAWA TIMES, Fridey, December 11,1964 7 centralized, and will expand due to the increase in population. "Our main problem will be to try and find out what is needed in the new system and meet those needs. "There is a lot we don't know yet about the amalgamated area." } Ray Hatter, school board can- didate, said: 'There will be a great mahy problems we will have to face in the coming years. "Most of us have been dealing with small schools and must change to meet 'the changing needs. "We are involved in a I term project which will call increased school con: and better means of transpo: tion, . ie ust continue We m = the people ve and school ations." . SNOW PHOTOGRAPHER Wilson A. Bentley, who 33 years ago in Vermont, more than 6,000 mi gravhs of snowflakes and pioneering studies became standard reference for me! ologists. mon | Santa Loves It, Too! McMURRAY'S Flaky, Deliciously Tasty FISH "n CHIPS ENGLISH STYLE OR COUNTRY STYLE FRIED CHICKEN McMURRAY'S DRIVE-IN RESTAURANT SIMCOE ST. NORTH AT TAUNTON RD. 0 clave A, E. JOHNSON 0.D. OPTOMETRIST 14% King St. East 723-2721 People's 36 SIMCOE ST. NORTH We'll take care of Your Man this Christmas CLOTHING FOR MEN AND YOUNG MEN hot io" hows vera cove. All he paves about is Coquetel Now just @ minute, Coquetel is the So if he enjoys 8 wonderful din 'Brig perfect ending to a perfect meal. his Coquetel, it proves you must have given him ner, See? hts Wines CANADIAN WINES SINCE 1876 of the cocoa bean. CERISE «+» leaves the palate tingling with cherry. ABRICOT ++. with the high spirits of the apricot itself. Pleasant gift ideal Nothing more welcome than a bottle of Coquetel, the newest after-dinner delight. All three decanters beautifully packaged, triply welcome! 4 NO DOWN PAYMENT Zoom from wide-angle shots "SAVE ON Reg. $74.50 "Sowyers 500s" compact model features 4" with blower--cooled 500 wat focusing. Complete with easy: "MView-Master" for life-like re fogues, cartoons, fairy tales ee 21 full-colour scenes in _ ZELL CHARGE-IT Sn lamp for exceptional brilliance + +. plus manual controls micro NO DOWN PAYMENT THE CHRISTMAS GIFT STORE RETAILERS TO THRIFTY a7 Merry Christmas fo Moviemakers, Shutterbugs ! BELL & HOWELL AUTOLOAD REFLEX ZOOM AUTOMATIC GAMERA 123-77 "Charge-It" -- 2.50 WEEKLY Not quite os shown! We cropped the handy pistol- grip from the picture, But then . . @ movie camera by a drawing? Could you try the convenient cartridge autoload system? See the od- vantages of reflex viewing with the exposure indi- cator in the viewer? Touch the three-position Meni . could you judge to close-ups? . . . Of course, you couldn't! So, come in ond see all the Voluable features: cooted f/1.8 lens, ultra-sensitive CDS electric eye, built-in filter--and the dependable Bell & Howell craftsmanship, REG, $144.99! COLOUR SLIDE PROJECTORS slide projector--this sleek, F/3.5 colour corrected lens OT NO DOWN PAYMENT---1,25 WEEKLY FULL COLOUR STEREO SLIDES 'olism! Trave- come to life each pocket. * ER'S OSHAWA SHOPPING CENTRE 226 STEVENSON ROAD 723-2209 ZELL CHRISTMAS SHOPPING HOURS ALL-AUTOMATIC! Open to 9 p.m. Every Shopping Night Until Christmas CHARGE IT! \ CHOOSE CONVENIENCE WITH "VERNON" ELECTRIC DRIVE Pick up and shoot! No setting, no winding -- completely outo- matic 8mm comero features electric drive, coupled electric eye (CDS cell with 10 to 320 ASA ronge), fixed focus f/1.8 lens. Zoom-range from 12 to 30rnm, porallex-free reflex viewing, © automatic footage counter, Foolproof with insufficient-light warn- ing ond battery tester. Bonus features:. focusing eyepiece, remote control attachment! The ideal camera for newsreel-quick shooting. "Charge-It" 14, 9 9 NO DOWN PAYMENT -- 1.75 WEEKLY PRO-TYPE EDITOR Mansfield 2000 8mm Editor. Large bright viewer, double handle control, 22 49 t frame moker, ..........05+ NO DOWN PAYMENT -- 1.25 WEEKLY LIGHT WHERE YOU WANT IT "SMITH-VICTOR" Movie Light assures maximum light in picture area with "True Aim" mount, 8 hr, lamp, 15, 99 adjustable head, REG. 17.99. SPECIAL ti NO DOWN PAYMENT 1.25 WEEKLY FAST 8MM COLOUR FILM "DYNACHROME" in double sided. 25' rolls; 25 ASA for daylight, 40 ASA Type A for artificial light use. REG. 3.19! ve THE GIFT TO BE OPENED FIRST: COMPLETE "KODAK" CAMERA Just unwrap and stort to snap -- right under the Christmas tree! Outfit includes camero, film, flashbulbs, flashguard, batteries --- nothing else to buy! The camera is the auto- matic instont-loodi KODAK "Instamatic 100" with built-in Never, ter day or night, indoor or outdoor photography. REG, $18.99 VALUE! Stort them on a new, exciting y this Christmas! 1 3 9 i COMPLETE NO DOWN PAYMENT -- 1.25 WEEKLY OUTFIT ER'S 3 BUDGET PLANS ~% TO CHOOSE FROM

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy