oto earnest a 24 'THE OSHAWA TIMES, Fridey, May 14, 1965 Pilot - Executives Now Rule, Rather Than An Exception VANCOUVER (CP) -- Com- pany executives who fly their own aircraft are becoming the rule rather than the exception in British Columbia. Between 600 and 900 of them are buzzing around B.C. skies, visiting remote mining and lumbering camps, meeting cli- enis and sizing up develop- ments, says Gordon Brown, manager of the B.C. Aviation Council. He says it is money in the bank for the executive to spend $12,000 on a light aircraft if he puts in at least 120 flying hours one of a growing number of in-)been flying planes to booming vestment counsellors who are|grounds all over the Pacific taking to the air to talk with|coast for years. His company, clients face to face or examine) Antle Scaling and Grading Ltd., the properties behind the min-jowns two planes and four of ing shares. the company's log scalers are This fly-yourself businessman licenced pilots. | says his plane makes it pos-| Mr. Antle said he was 56 sible for him to take off with a/when he got his pilot's licence mining engineer, fly to a re-jless than 10 years ago. He says mote mining property for an on-\the aircraft. have multiplied the-ground appraisal, and be) many times the effectiveness of home again in time for dinner./his company's service. Considering the saving in his} tebe gor blogg ® soggld the ona' |cause of the difficulty he had pin : . plween driving cars and hiring boats $200 and $300 a day, Mr. Hall oq planes to reach isolated log a year. More expensive aircraft --hetween $30,000 'and $70,000-- require that an executive travel at least 250 hours annually 'to make them pay. Mr. Brown said in an inter- view that the average plane used by the executive is a four- seater costing between $12,000 and $17,000 and capable of fly- ing up to 120 miles an hour. OPERATION COST LOW He says that, excluding the capital cost of the aircraft, op- erating costs come out as low as 45 cents a mile for the lighter aircraft. Robert Hall of Doherty, Road- house and McCuaig Bros., is Queen's Printer Store On Coast VANCOUVER (CP)--A Queen's Printer's book store has opened here, providing a new outlet for the mass of gov- ernment publications aswell as other books. With 5,000 titles available now and the number expected to reach 10,000 by the end of the year, the downtown store gives the public access to many books not handled by commercial es- tablishments. considers his plane a profitable booms, He said the cars. and investment. ; lboats consumed time and the Philip C. Maclaughlin of Pem.|poats te were too expen- berton. Securities Ltd., got his sive pilot's licence before the Sec- |" jond World War and now ranges all over British Columbia an') Private planes are becoming standard equipment in the fish- i S in| eries 5 industries. est United States inj@ties. and forestry in ia origcbgt plane Interior loggers and lumber et Z : manufacturers who want to OWNS TWO PLANES |keep an eye on both the forest Ernest Antle, who operates ajand factory find the private B.C. log-sealing company, has'plane a boon. FOR AS LITTLE AS 72c PER DAY. A TIMES ACTION WANT AD WILL WORK FOR YOU € PHONE 723-3492 A major controversy over drug- taking among the students in His decision to fly came be-|-- was recorded at an inquest Wednesday after medical evid- ence that death was caused by this ancient university city|a combination of drink and loomed Wednesday night after) madicine he was taking in an ef- disclosure that former primelfort to overcome addiction to minister Harold Macmillan's|heroin and cocaine. grandson died after becoming) His doctor said he had been an addict. jmixing with undergraduates Joshua Macmillan, who wit-|who were taking drugs and had nesses said appeared to be a/to stimulate himself to keep up fit, happy and intelligent 20- with them. | year-old studying at Balliol Col-| The coroner commented that) iege, was found dead on his bed|j¢ one undergraduate was ad-| April 29 in his room at the uni-' dicted, there might be others--| versity. '"a very serious state of af- OXFORD, England (Reuters) MONTREAL (CP) -- The postman doesn't call these days at Joseph Pashley's place, and all because of two inches. That is how much higher his maximum height allowed for such receptacles by the post office. So Mr. Pashley, 62, has to trek two miles to the local post office branch and pick up his mail himself. "I've got two wars behind me and | can't even get my pension cheque delivered to me," he says. Shortly after moving into a néw Montreal North triplex two weeks ago the mailman advised there'd be no more letters delivered "until that mailbox is fixed." A post office rule says boxes should be no more than 66 inches off the floor and no less than 18 inches. Mr. Pash- ley's box is 68 inches. A post office spokesman, asked the reason for the rule on box heights, said: "tf a short mailman drops a letter in the wrong box, he may not be able to get it out." Mr. Pashley, plans to com- plain to Ottawa. A verdict of accidental death fairs." | Dope-Student Controversy THE POSTMAN NEVER CALLS; Science Flakes Turnips Rages After Addict's Death PERHAPS HE FEARS FALLS! Just Add Water And Stir OTTAWA (CP)--The federal section. They might one day Food Research Institute has de- find their way to the commer- veloped some dehydrated food "4! market. products that prove good things -- ae is wont -- to eat come in convenient, little gunce package of dehydrated packages. And they keep much rnjp would produce about longer. -- __ eight servings for a meal. The On display at an_ institute housewife just adds water and open - house are packages of|butter and whips it up into a, flaky turnip with the bulk of|mash for heating. the water removed by a drum- pry. Tape predicted. de- drying process. |hydrated foods -- prepared by These and other products a variety of methods--will take such as dehydrated potato mixja larger share of the market and frozen-dried cottage cheese|hecan<e of rapidly improving were developed by the three-'techniques that produce a bet- year - old agency's processing|ter product. : EATON'S in OSHAWA SAVE 30%! COMPANY-WIDE SPECIAL SELLING OF TECO Deluxe PAINTS Ends Saturday, May 15th! } THE OSHAWA BUSINESS DIRECTORY ¢ BROADLOOM ° ANGus-(;RAYDON | CARPET COMPANY 282 King Street West, Oshawa RUG CLEANING 728-6254 TILE © CORLON @ Modern Dry Cleaners & Shirt Launderers _ Oshawa, Ltd, "Fer the ultimate in Dry Cleaning GO MODERN" 725-7193 321 OLIVE AVE., OSHAWA DEPENDABLE AINTING ERVICE RESIDENTIAL & COMMERCIAL PAINTING & DECORATING years experience to serve you' "DELUXE PAINTERS 216 MeNAUGHTON 728-1373 ;) BILL'S SERVICE ROSE} STATION 2. Licensed Mechanics General Repairs @ Front-end Alignment @ Wheel Balencing 352 WILSON S. 723-4812 Oshawa Quality Fuels STEVE KISIL, Prop. "We Stress the Quality Products and 24-Hr. Free Service" 30 BLOOR E. 728-0762 McKEEN'S Used New and Used Furniture "The Prices ore KEEN et McKEEN'S" For the finest in service and top quality workmanship visit or call the following business, You will find they have the finest in mer- chandise at prices yeu can afford. Oshawa Stenography Service | , STAN'S SHARPENING & RENTAL LTD. SALES LiLicttdias SERVICE @ Typing, Mimeographing © Club Bulletins, ete. 'If its office work... We can do it!' 130 KING ST. E. 723-1157 |} "We Sharpen Almost | Everything" (Give Us a Call) CAPITAL 723-3224 T.V. SERVICE 223 KING W., OSHAWA | Operated by Oxford T.V. Enterprise Ltd. Radio and T.V. Service and Repair "Specializing in one-year contract service" STATION PLAZA 728-9481 Business of the Week WESTERN ELECTRIC Western Electric was estab- lished in 1957 by Paul Ten- L. ELDON NELSON INSURANCE AGENCY Westeneind, now president LIFE of the company, Mr. West- FIRE eneind came to Canada MORTGAGE INSURANCE 723-3584 from Holland in 1953, mar- 53 HILLCROFT, OSHAWA ried in Canada in 1957, and has lived in Oshawa since 1955. Western Electric spe- cializes in Electric Wiring, and in Electric Heating Ser- vice. This company was the first to instal) Electric Ra- diant Cable Heating in Osh awa and District. Western Electric, a community-mind- ed company is a co-sponsor of an Oshawa baseball team. Mr. Ten-Westeneind started this firm on his own efforts and has grown with the demand until the pres- ent when a staff of six is OSHAWA wooD PRODUCTS LTD. needed to assist him. Do not hesitate to call for a a na prompt, courteous service, no matter how minor the problem may seem. West- ern Electric has only one ob- jective in mind . that is to give you a complete and [| & BUILDING SUPPLIES " Builders' Hardware 728-1611 = Special Prices on Alum- inum Siding for Gables. @ Railing 160 Wilson S. 723-2619 426 SIMCOE S. 725-5181 satisfactory service. BOX 368, OSHAWA | This Ad is worth $20.00 off any water system, softener, or 3-piece Ry $ remodelling job --- one per customer - March 1 to July 31, 1965. v, We sell, install and repair plumbing faucets, fixtures, water sys- | tems, softeners, rental water heaters, disposals. DO IT NOW! | 723-8563 JIM HURVID PLUMBING & HEATING | ; | HOME LEWINGTON'S o WESTERN Aluminum FLOWERS 1 ELECTRIC Wire Service RESIDENTIAL & COMMERCIAL OE po end vias beblatitg Guoronteed Workmanship F.T.D, - U.F.C, ELECTRIC HEATING "Flowers speak for SPECIALISTS | all Occasions" 728-6211 24 KING E. Dryers, Heavy Tanks, Ete i Di Ranges, Hot water H OSHAWA -- 725-0842 EXTERIOR HOUSE PAINTS ACRYLIC LATEX HOUSE PAINT A low-lustre, weather-res'stant finish for wood, masonry or asbestos siding. minutes to form a hard, durable surface. 2050 CERAMIC BLUE 2110 CASTLE GREY 2060 GLEN GREEN e@ 2000 INTENSE WHITE e 2070 INDIAN RED e@ 2010 TURQUOISE e 2080 SKY BLUE e@ 2030 CORAL e@ 2020 CHARCOAL @ 2040 BEIGE e 2090 SAND ° ° e e@ 2130 e@ 2140 @ 2150 e 2100 e 2160 APPLE GREEN LIME YELLOW PINK 2120 SUNFLOWER YELLOW LATEX HOUSE PAINT PRIMERS @ 2170 Wood Primer (bare wood, peeled surfaces), @ 2180 Emulsion Primer White (dull surfaces), @ 2190 Masonry Conditioner (powdery surfaces). Reg. 9.95 gal. 2.85 qt. SPECIAL, 6.96 ». 1.99 « ALKYD OIL BASE HOUSE PAINT Leaves a glossy, protective finish on all exterior wood surfaces Reg. 9.50 Gal. 2.75 Qt. SPECIAL, EXTERIOR TRIM COLOURS e@ 1130 SCARLET e 1150 BRIGHT AQUA Reg. 10.95 Gal. 2.95 Ot. SPECIAL, 6.6 @ 1230 WHITE @ 1090 TERRACE GREEN @ 1180 SUDAN IVORY e 1030 LEMON YELLOW @ 1100 TERRACOTTA RED e@ 1190 JAVA BROWN e 1040 GRANITE GREY @ 1110 CORAL RED @ 1200 DARK GREEN e 1050 SHUTTER BLUE e 1120 BRIGHT YELLOW e 1210 SASH BLACK e 1060 CARIBBEAN BLUE e@ 1140 VENETIAN RED @ 1220 EXTERIOR UNDERCOAT e 1070 OAK BROWN e@ 1160 COLONIAL CREAM e@ 1080 CLOUD GREY @ 1170 SUNFAST GREEN 7.66 ». 2.06 «. FAST-DRY HIGH GLOSS ENAMEL For kitchens, bathrooms, cupboards, shelves, interior and exterior furniture, bicycles, etc. e 6050. PRIMROSE YELLOW e@ 6000 CORAL FLAME e@ 6010 PEIDMONT GREY e 6060 IVORY e 6020 BRAZIL GREEN @ 6070 TAHOE BLUE @ 6030 GRECIAN, PINK e 6080 NUT BROWN @ 6040 TURQUOISE e 6090 VERMILION Reg. 2.75 Qt. aa @ 6130 WHITE available in quarts and gallons Reg. 2.75 qt. & 9.50 gal. SPECIAL, ° e e 6120 BLACK e 6150 FNAMFI SPECIAL | 92 at. 6.65 =. 1.92 « TECO DELUXE BLENDED BRISTLE BRUSHES 50% NYLON, 50% NATURAL BRISTLE 1" -- Reg. 1.35 SPECIAL, each 1¥a"" -- Reg. 1.75 SPECIAL, each 2" -- Reg. 2.95 SPECIAL, each ae 94 ee <a Looe TECO DELUXE MOHAIR ROLLER SET HATON'S LOWER LEVEL, DEPT. 274 24%" -- Reg. 3.50 SPECIAL, each 3" -- Reg. 4.75 SPECIAL, each 4" -- Reg. 6.95 SPECIAL, each 72" size. -- 30% OFF! Reg. 2.98! SPECIAL, each ., PHONE 725-7373 Dries MAGNOLIA WHITE CHOCOLATE BROWN al. 1,92 « 6100 CHIFFON BLUE 6110 EVERGLADE GREEN tINDERCOAT WEATHER-RESISTANT 'TECO' DELUXE in: 30 1/310 1/2 OFF! COATS Reg. 39.95 to 119.00 ! fashion 9.95 to 79-30 PERSONAL SHOPPING ONLY Styles . ... fabrics and colours galore! White... navy... pink... beige... yellow ...green...and tweed mixes! Lightweight wools and wool blends with carved slim lines or full styles! Women's and Half Sizes. Reg. 39.95 to 119.00! SPECIAL, each Exciting Misses', detailing! In Junior, UITS 4.86 19-95 to 79-30 Two -- and three-piece costumes in plain and novelty weaves! Dolman and set-in sleeves . . and Half Sizes in the group. EATON'S UPPER LEVEL, DEPTS. 244-644 SPECIAL; each . wide variety of colours, Misses' STORE HOURS: 9:30 a.m. to 6 p.m. Monday to Saturday. Open Thursday and Friday Nights until 9! San ERLE Asin mai