Oshawa Times (1958-), 10 Jul 1965, p. 15

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GARDEN GUIDE Garden Mulchers Useful In Conserving Moisture Serious gardeners are sure to have discovered the usefulness of garden mulches. ; ick ayers of mulch coi serve moisture and lessen the need for weeding and cultivat- ing. Organic matter gradually builds up the humus content of the soil and increases its water- holding capacity. During hot summers, mulches effectively lower the soil temperature and so aid in better plant growth. The usual garden mulch is any kind of fibrous material that is cheap and easy to obtain and slippings, shredded r,jlocal sawmills, make excellent eed Gare. | 7. mulches. But it is well to add|maintenance and construction decayed leaves, buckwhes Renovation Job In the Summer A classroom at Donevan Col- legiate is' being turned into a perimeter science classroom- lab as part of the Oshawa Board of Education summer improve- ment program. Russell Lunney, director of hulls, shredded bark, wood shav-ja dressing of high nitrogen fer- for. the board, said desks are ings, sawdust, peat moss anditilizer before applying, for oth- being moved towards the centre sphagnum moss are some thatlerwise, in order to decompose|and lab tables with sinks and are easy to get. this material, the bacteria thatigas jets for experiments are At the Plant Research Insti-\do the job would need to use|being set up around the edge. tute a few years ago spent/nitrogen from the soil. This loss hops were tested as a mulch.jof nitrogen would result This material proved to be ideal/smaller and fewer flowers. from the standpoint of moisture conservation and as an additive,ine sure to soak the mulch oc-| but the odor was so strong for &|casionally to help decomposi- Wire fencing is also being inlerected around the school's property, said Mr. Lunney. If you use shavings, or straw! | Wooden Floors few days after application thatition; by so doing you will also) ; spreading had to be confined to|nelp to prevent the mulch from! Are Replaced the winter season when visitors catching fire. The Oshai\e Board of Educa- Gang Slayings Plague Boston ii. little more than a year when today, police said. on a sidewalk. THE OSHAWA TIMES, Saturday, July 10, 1965 15 /f The victim was shot | six times, five times in the chest. The long list of g Stunt Flyer, 61 BOSTON (AP) -- Ex convict|slayings began to build-up after Joseph Romeo Martin, 41, be-/William J.. Sheridan, came the 2ist victim of gang-jchot in the head after being|Stunt flyer Paul Mantz, 61, was land slayings in greater Boston) oy shed as he walked. along|killed Thursday in the crash of|j he was found fatally shot early|@ sidewalk in May, 1964. 21, was '| Killed In Yuma a makeshift airplane, built--ac- cording to the movie script--, Since then, what police havelfrom wreckage of a real plane Martin's body was foundidescribed as a virtual war of/that crashed slumped on the passenger sidejthe underworld has broken out of his red convertible, parked/in Boston and surrounding com-|Wally Rose, 64, was injured se- munities. , n the desert. Another oldtime stunt man, eriously, KING WEST OSHAWA YUMA, 'Ariz. (AP)--Veteran|| ednaieen adel Chore ak ADMITTANCE res ALL TECHNICOLOR PROGRAM ign 3 e | ELIZABETH TAYLOR 'RICHARD BURTON eee CTO ee ae a ee eee 5M ano FILMWAYS esse EVA MARIE SAINT Wefhondpinen FEATURE AT:--1;30 - 3:35 - 5:30-7:35 - 9:40 TONY one that can be spread around|were absent. plants two to four inches deep.| Shavings and sawdust, easy mill Shredded bark from @ PAaPeTjign ig putt * sid : - 4 putting down vinyl-asbes is excellent. Cocoa-bean|i,. agors in various schools "4 ELVIS CURTIS OLD RUSH Lounge and Dining Lounge ~OSHAWA'S FINEST NIGHTLY ENTERTAINMENT Cocoa- \to obtain from workshops and ; a-bean shells, straw, hay,|to 0 op: shells seem to be the material| 'it mer to ites cere weod-| , most easily available in stores). ones Russell Taney, direc: s in eastern Canada. Other mater tor of ihaintdnos and: cont: tari0: S e S a e ials sold as commercial prepar | action told The Times today. - ations are corncobs, buckwheat O'Neill Collegiate and Ritson ; huls, peat moss and a bartipgbic Schoo! are sated ipo nl ' to get the new floor treatment! In North America: Randall se sitsccn nut nacieness i tena the chs [hulls cocoa bean shells and30 schools will be painted out-| MINNEAPOLIS, Minn. (CP), A local plant also could OT ean chips ais Hecomine in. (Ue ee five will eet Stanley Randall, Ontario'sjter into a licensing arrange-| easingly important as 8 mulch| ren nterior coat, said nS minister of economics and de- ment with an Ontario firm tol ond oll amendment. They are| unney. | velopment, told a group of Min-|produce and distribute its prod-| wade by a special machine nesota businessmen Thursdayjucts there, or a contract deal} sed mainly by farmers, forest-| Boiler Re aired | his province is the fastest vote pe which ha ---- Posed ane and tree specialists. Nitro- p ing and most profitable piece of/pany wou market products lied with the} e : real estate in North America. turned out for it by an Ontario oo, be appli | At Simcoe School Randall came here with of-|associate. ! ; lets an en " i U ..| A compost heap with lots Of) The 40-year-old boiler at South ficials of his department's trade) Randall said bye dy: POeti is one of the most econ-|Simcoe School will have a new| United States investment in On-\Per cent below that of Minne-/omical sources of mulch pov? bottom to start the fall term in tario -- particularly the estab-/on the dollar, low hydro costs,|ial and all raga ge ve September. lishment of branch plants of|an abundance of raw materials,|build such a pile. A pl 4 Russell Lunney, maintenance| American companies or the set-/good transportation, and a pool/polythylene sheet over the heapiand construction director for) Americ eae a facturing|of skilled workers. will keep it moist and the pile}the Oshawa: Board of Education| ting up joint manuta & Minnesota firms establishing,will decompose quite rapidly|told The Times today th board) RrFengemneys. . themselves in Ontario could ex-| without a noticeable odor. jexpects another ~ » to 10 years) More than 2,000 Ontario manu-| 6+ profits to rise at a rate of Black polyethylene plastic isjlife from the boiler which is| --, mh nr ogy Reamorag sony about eight per cent a.year, the|peing sold as a mulch and if alljalready twice as old as a boil-| of manufacturing alliance w minister added, lother materials are unavailable/er's normal life expectancy. -- | US) Sompenies, be said. He said Canadians are notjor too expensive it should be; The boiler improvement will} A Minnesota firm and its On-janti-American, but rather pro-\ysed. This plastic will reduce|cost the board from $1200 to| tario partner could share in the\Canadian. Rather than being\the need for cultivating andj$1500 compared with an esti-| ownership of a new companylantagonistic towards U.S. in-| weeding and conserve moisture,|mated $15,000 to $18,000 requir-) through provision of capital,!yestment, they encourage it. /but it will not, of course, im-jed to instal a new one, said personnel, plant and equipment,) «py 1979 Canada will require|prove soil structure or add nu-)Mr. Lunney distribution and technical knowl-\net foreign investment funds at!trients or organic substances on en ---- edge. the rate of $1,600,000,000 annu-| yfyiches should be applied any| DEAL OFF LARY | ally. In short, we need youritime during the summer, par-| NEW YORK (AP) -- New, ticularly now before the hot dry) York Mets shipped Frank Lary, | NEAL JACKSON QUARTET | PRESLEY --in-- "KISSIN' OOUSINS" --WwiThH-- YVONNE CRAIG BIG --in-- HITS "WILD AND WONDERFUL" --With-- CHRISTING KAUFMAN 'Maple-Leaf' -- 13,711 VISIT weather of July arrives. But do /apply a mulch whenever ma- terial is at hand. Use a shovel- iful of decomposed leaves from veteran righthander pitcher, to/! Chicago White Sox in a waiver! deal Thursday and recalled left- hander Gordon Richardson On Tour to appear at leading night spots of LAS VEGAS with tops in pops and western TONIGHT LAST TIMES "MASQUERADE" in Color & "LOVE IS A BALL" In COLOR (Adult) STARTS TOMORROW! NEVER BEFORE A SPECTACLE LIKE IT! : "THE FAL OF THE ROMAN EMPIRE" In COLOR with SOPHIA LOREN ~* ALEC GUINNESS STEPHEN BOYD FIRST OSHAWA SHOWING! Meet Secret Agent 909! PULSE-POUNDI SUSPENSE! "Master Spy' : STEPHEN MURRAY JUNE THORNBURN > ? DOORS SAT. AND AT AUDITORIUM Attendance at the Osh- awa Civic Auditorium dur- ing June total! * 13.711 General Manager William Kurelo said today. He stated that the attend- under a tree or some good or-jfrom their Buffalo farm club of | e * ganic material from around the) the International League. CooL JAZZ for YOUNG MODERNS BILTMORE 59 jsummer cottage, grass clippings) |from the lawn or even "iney| A @ LAST DAY @® PHONE 725-5833 jweeds that are cut before they iad -- a Don't Miss This Entertaining Quartet " ance was boosted by three 5 " Next Week a= saa lacrosse games held at the jonly in the form of organic seein ie een Se ee sews mc THE STAGEMEN tendance. total of 3,577. Mr. | these fibrous mulches. | the 3,600 people attending | the annual Corpus Christie Holy Hour; 1,024 attending | a matches and 1,145 in torium since the opening date Dec. 11 last year has now reached 177,638, Mr. Kurelo stated. Most soils need humus and Kurelo also said that the |\essss IZZA ay ne Commencing MONDAY, July 12th wrestling events. Meat Prices Quite Legal Canada Flag By HAROLD MORRISON LONDON (€P)--The Econom- ist suggests free trade in auto- mobiles between Canada and the United States can increase Canada's capacity to produc more wealth, and help the Ca- nadian automobile industry be- come more efficient. But it does not believe this agreement will lead to cross-border integration. "Economic integration is impossible," the influential ma- gazine says in a 40-page supple- ment on Canada featured in this wek's issue. "A North Amer- ican common market or even 4 customs union between the two countries would show up the enormous disparity between the two economies, renew Canadian SUNDAY § 1:30 vm. , OPEN e@ Entertainment Nightly at 9 P.M. ALLAN MoaeMILLAN ---- Manager telephone 728-0192 EPI'S humus can be added to the soil June figure was raised by Attendance at the audi- Homes Heated | i fears of political absorption, | and present a hundred prob-) tems of industrial adjustment." Removal of trade barriers be- tween the two countries should have limitd objectives. At the have limited objectives. At the! not be too concerned about the} flow of American investment) capital in Canada, the magazine! says. Increasing wealth is the ob- ject of a national policy and Canadians "must not be pre- occupied about American in- tentions and offer insults in re-| turn for American money." | The Economist's Canadian survy concludes that despite its problems, Canada has great future. Currently, Prime Minister Pearson is seeking the basis for a general election,| while "'every one knows" that/ Conservative leader John Dief-| enbaker "'must go," though no| one in Tory ranks seems able) | to oust. him. } BOTH FELL FLAT Both Pearson and Diefen-| baker, the magizine says, "fell! flat on their faces'? in their! | | {| Leap Upward | OTTAWA (CP) -- Retail beef and pork prices have risen sharply in the last months and the spiral may not be over } Although the bigger jumps/ tend to be recent, prices for) some products began to edge| up early this year. | Dominion Bureau of Statistics | figures show that sirloin| jumped from $1.01 a pound in| January to $1.09 in June Round steak rose from 89 to 96 cents, These are average tig-| ures based on samples taken across Canada. Still among beef rib roasts rose four cents to 96 and leg roasts four cents to 61. Stewing beef and hamburger had one-cent increases. In the same six-month inter- | val, rib chops rose four cents to 80 cents a pound, pork shoul-| der from 55 to 60 and sausage) one cent to 63. Bacon rose from | 49 cents to 53 for half a pound. | Government economists think | the price may rise a little more | before they level off in the fall. | Blamed for the increased products, | rmstrong hg DEPENDABLE (Gonsumers ('as omes "Your Design For Modern Living At It's Very Best" IN BEAUTIFUL Southwood Park HARWOOD AVE. S. -- AJAX Your "AT-HOME" Family CONVENIENT WINTER PLAYGROUND HOME! COMFORT : @ Close to public schools and high schools @ Close to magnificent view of Lake Ontario @ Complete beach and swimming facilities @ Excellent boating in Lake Ontario @ Handy to golf, picnic and complete family recrea. tional facilities. early leadership roles. But both|Prices primarily is a slowdown) seemed to have recovered,|im the rate of meat production Pearson should be given credit|increase in the United States, for strengthening Canada's roots| Which has an important bear- of nationhood, The Economist/ing on the Canadian situation. @ Reasonable distance to the church of your choice @ Complete shopping facilities in Ajax Shopping Plaza @ Only a few blocks from East - West main traffic arteries. suggests. ------_ --_-- Chaos Tackled By Linguists _ PORT MORESBY (Reuters) Linguistic experts are attempt- ing to, bring some order into Papua-New Guinea's "language chaos" by means of detailed studies of language patterns. Although there has been no definite count of the number of languages in the territory and its surrounding islands, a rough estimate made by Rev. I, Buckman of the British and Foreign Bible Society, which helps in much translation work, is 700--excluding local dialects. Of the total, only a few are well known and there are some areas where no attempt at all has been made even to record tribal languages The earliest work on the lan guage problem was done by| missionaries operating in Papua! in the 19th century. In recent! years, however, missions have more or less ceased their work on local languages. because of the administration's desire to seek a language embracing all the people of the territory, | , OSHAWA DRIVE-IN THEATRE x ® 723-4972 NOW THRU TUESDAY tarkis repnelds sone "Recommended os ADULT FIRST SHOW AT DUSK BOX OFFICE OPENS 8:00 Live In Year 'Round Comfort and Pleasure In Lovely SOUTHWOOD PARK -- AJAX ALL ARMSTRONG HOMES INCLUDE THESE FEATURES AT NO EXTRA COST . Copper tone headed exhaust fan in 8. All electric light fixtures kitehen. 9. 100-Amp. heavy-duty electric wiring Stainless steel kitchen sink installed 16 . Colored ceromic wall tile for both- 10. heehine bosements with recreation room and colored fixtures , eae 11. All services Included; paved road, 17 Valance boxes in living room sonitary, and storm sewers, individ- . Kitchen cupboords and doors natural ual water cpnnections, curbs 18 stoined imported mahogany (custom 12, Front and side yards sodded 19 built). 13 Sidewalks installed from front to 20. - Double laundry tubs driveway and side door to driveway. Forced e@ir gas heating -- or forced 14, Faney ceiling: in living room ond 2). air oil heating extra dining room. 23. Some Plans Provide For Walkout Basements --- Many Optional Extras Available To Your Taste See, Also, ARMSTRONG HOMES in ROLLING HILLS ESTATES - OSHAWA Grandview Ave. at Olive Ave. Phone Pickering 942-3310 or Oshawa for Appointment | 15, Oak floors throughout where Asbes- tos Vinyl tile is not installed. Meta! iron railing installed on front porch where there are three steps or more. Copper toned built In triple paper towel rack Clay brick Built in Kleenex dispenser Poured concrete basement (with life- time guarentee). Mahogany trim. Electric heating installed as on extra. Finet IGRMAN += CARL REINER - PIERRE OLAF - MIIKO TAKA. LAZA%S STARTING TO-MORROW LAST DAY -- BURT LANCASTER in "THE TRAIN"

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