dispute could cause vases and hinder vi ' fruit, vegetables and. eekend shoppers. The ere being trucked in. RROW ul piece nchanting tertainment! ily entertainment! ce ais NT" In Color EWS -ORDS@ inary ntaining ; plus! Plus bonus: 1 sensaliGaal 1 _ Plusa stic bonus: oto book starrin 2 and The Gold Star A Group of the # LIMITED : SUPPLY "EREO , 3.98 Y'S 723-0731 RS 1 9 PLM, to 6 P.M, BEFORE THE MAGISTRATE Stolen Telephone Calls Get Youth Thirty Days WHITBY -- "'Stealing tele- phone calls !s a sneaking job," said Magistrate H. M. Jermyn/mings, Marcel Proulx and Rob- here Tuesday as he 'sentenced Malcolm Gardner, 21, no fixed address, on three charges. On a charge of assault caus- ing bodily harm, the accused was sentenced to 30 days in jail. He was also sentenced to 30 days on a theft charge and 30 days for consuming liquor while under age. The sentences for theft and consuming will run concurrently with the first. A fine of $50 and costs or 10 days in jail was imposed on Jerry Abramczuk, of Oshawa, on a charge of consuming liquor while under age. Pleading guilty to a charge of being intoxicated in a pub- lic place, John O'Neil, of Whitby was fined $50 and costs or 10 days in jail. Charged with' breaking, en- tering and theft, David Coul- ter was convicted and remand- Traffic Charges Bring Fines To Newtonville Resident BOWMANVILLE -- Pleading guilty to charges of driving while his licence was under suspension and having a per- mit issued to him while his li- cence was suspended, Gordon Chester Brown, Newtonville, was fined $50 and costs or 10 days on the first charge and $25 and costs or five days on the second charge when he ap- peared before Magistrate Bat- ten, CHARGE DISMISSED A Toronto driver with only three months' experience ap- peared in a wheelchair three months after an accident on sentence. Roy Jen- ed to Aug. 15 for Three companions, ert Sypher, were remanded to the same date for hearing of the charges. The charges arose out of the breaking, entry and theft from a summer cottage, in May of this year, in Pickering Town- ship. Charged with breaking, en- tering and theft from a Pick- ering Township cottage, in May last, David Allan Coulter, 17, of Pickering Township, was re- manded out of custody to Aug. 15 for sentence. Goods, valued at slightly more than $1,000, including a radio, record player, records, a portable radio, television set, floor polisher, 10 bottles of liquor and other household goods were taken. Only two blankets and a_ bedspread, valued at $75 have been re- covered, ple lost their lives. John -Ro- hacek, Indian Road, had a) charge of careless driving dis-| missed. His car left the westbound lane when the driver attempted to pass two other vehicles, crossed the median and ran head-on into an eastbound ve- hicle, Two Newcastle brothers, Selby and Bernard Steeves, charged with carnal knowledge of a 15-year-old girl, pleaded not guilty. They later changed their election of trial by judge and jury to trial by Magistrate R. B. Baxter. Evidence, in part, was heard and the mat- Highway 401 in which two peo- ter adjourned for a week, Montreal's Expo Housing Proves Sufficient So Far MONTREAL (CP)--After al- most two months of operation of Expo 67 it looks as if the faint- hearts called it wrong when they said Montreal could not accommodate the millions of visitors, There still are kinks in the system for getting out-of-town- ers a place to sleep, but it ap- pears there will be enough beds and that Expo and the provin- cial government are determined to give tourists a fair shake. Andre Mercier, head of Expo's visitors services says: "We can provide at the mo- ment $30,000 beds within a 25- mile range of Expo and at gov- ernment-controlled prices. And if that isn't enough at peak times we can tap thousands more at very short notice." Jean-Jacques Bertrand, Que- bec's justice minister, appointed Montreal lawyer Yves Mayrand May 29 as a special prosecutor to deal with any cases of fraud arising from Expo lodging res- ervations. June 10, another 20 lawyers and notaries were sworn in as justices of the peace to hear cases involving failure by land- lords, hotel and motel owners to comply with provincial laws designed to protect visitors. SERVICE CLEANUP Already Mr. Mayrand has an- nounced preparations for a "tast"' cleanup of the Provin- cial Lodging Service following a series of complaints by accom- modation operators in the Mont- real area of questionable prac- tices by some service inspec- This service, when approved by the government, will be passed to Logexpo, the agency of the world's fair corporation which supplies a free service to visitors of directing them to this accommodation. Logexpo has been so success- --60,000 in camp and trailer sites at $2.50 to $3.50 for a tent, $3.50 to $5 for a traile: mobile home. . "Our projection was that with 11,000,000 visitors coming to the fair we would have to accom- modate 175,000 persons on the worst night. "New_figures indicate a pos- sible 15,000,000 visitors and we already have nearly doubled our THE OSHAWA TIMES, Thursday, June 22, 1967 7 | | Peter Mewett, son of Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Mewett, 497 Byron Crt., received his Bachelor of Science in Physical Education, from Oregon State University, June 4. Peter received his early education in Oshawa and is a graduate of OCVI. He plans to return to 0.8.U. in the fall to work on his Master's Degree. GOING OUT OF BUSINESS A Hampton man, with cruelty to seven puppies, was sentenced by Magistrate Baxter to pay a fine of $100 and costs of $73.80 or spend 15 days in jail. Elmer Huggins, the accused, assured the court he is going out of the business of supplying dogs to univer- sities for research purposes. Pleading not guilty to the theft of trees, just before last Christmas, from Thomas Manetta, of Pontypool, Thomas Scown of Toronto was fined $100 and costs or 15 days in jail. $100 AND COSTS A Hamilton resident, who went on a bender, stayed at a Highway 35 motel and then drove his car to a garage for repairs, was found guilty of driving while his licence was suspended. William George Boyd, 52 Division Street, Ham- ilton, was fined $100 and costs or 15 days. A Ryerson Institute of Tech- nology student, who left his home in Madoc to drive to To- ronto, was charged with care- less driving after his car turn- ed around on Highway 401 and ended in the median, The accused, Charles Pigden, 20, who was fined $25 and costs or five days, said he had worked until 3 a.m: and felt drowsy as he drove. A me- chanic said he thought carbon monoxide was responsible for projected needs," the accident. There's never harm mature brown bark. 4 ae Ss ' , wae LEE . WEEDRITE New weedkiller kills weeds and unwanted grasses where others cannot. been a garden weedkiller like i WEEDRITE kills everything that's green, yet seein pletely inactivates it, so it cannot harm planted seeds nor can it run off on to adjacent sat You can safely spray, as recommended, around trees and shrubs, beneath hedges, along driveways, even close to "ee plants, flowers and vegetables, NEW WEEDRITE i (CUPRA CHEMICALS LEBITED, MONTREAL, HAMILTON, WIRIPES ' - Contact with soil com- charged| SIU Ordered To File Defence MONTREAL (CP)--The Sea- farers' International Union of Canada has been given 10 days to file a defence or pay a sea- man $30,000, the amount of his suit against the union, it was announced Wednesday. The suit was launched several |months ago by Donald Leonard of Shallow Lake, Ont., who charged that the SIU had black- listed him nine years ago when Hal Banks, SIU president at the \time, placed him on the "do- not-ship list." John Schlesinger, Leonard's lawyer, said his client had been asked by the defence attorney to forward $750 to cover possi- ble court costs. "It took him a long time to raise the money but it was re- ceived yesterday and the SIU has until June 30 to file a de- fence or pay up," he said in an interview. Banks, the former SIU presi- dent who fled Canada to the United States almost three years ago while facing other court action, claimed Leonard had been placed on the list for not paying union dues. Mr. Schlesinger said receipts show Leonard had paid up his dues. Bus Drivers Back At Work MONTREAL (CP) -- Grey- hound Bus Lines drivers here returned to work Wednesday, ending a 20-hour wildcat strike that forced cancellation of a number of scheduled runs and charters. W. R. Robinson, regional man- }ager of Greyhound in Montreal, said the Amalgamated Transit Union which represents the drivers, ordered the men back to work Wednesday afternoon. He said the drivers walked off in objection to a company deci- sion to change the working schedule from two days on and two days off to two days on and one day off. Greyhound's principal routes from Montreal are to Boston, New York, Syracuse, N.Y., and Saint John, N.B,, and all of them were affected by the walkout to some extent, he said. A tnion spokesman in New York City said drivers of 30 Greyhound buses refused to cross picket lines at the en- trance to the Port Authority terminal and discharged their iat ae WAS rr 5 5 ar hs = Warecitoran » HERE e Sold wherever you see this sign, ful that it now is suffering from an unexpected problem--land- lords are complaining that they are not being sent enough visit- ors, Logexpo's 330,000 beds were available in the following types of accommodation: FIRST CLASS NURSERY STOCK AND GARDEN SUPPLIES © JOHN BROUWER Garden Centre HWY. NO. 2 -- Between Whitby & Ajax 668-3396 --75,000 in hotel, motel, tourist and efficiency apartments with a $10-$30 price range. --10,000 in trailer motels on permanent lots ranging from $30 for four adults to $49 for eight adults. --150,000 in private homes at & "WEEDRITE" AVAILABLE AT... G. 5. WHITE & Son Lid. 1300 SIMCOE ST. N., OSHAWA 728-4696 $6-$12 single, $8-$14 doubl $10-$18 for three persons and $12-$22 for four persons. 35,000 in institutes and col- leges at $3 to $5. Westinghouse 1015 KING ST. RUNDLE GARDEN CENTRE 725-6551 Strike Ends HAMILTON (CP) -- A strike by workers at three Canadian Westinghouse Co. Ltd. plans ended Wednesday when the workers voted by a 79.6 per- cent majority to accept the JOHN SWAN HARDWARE LID. OSHAWA SHOPPING CENTRE 725-3527 company's settlement offer. The members of Local 504, United Electrical, Radio and Machine Workers of America, got a three-year contract pro- viding wage increases ranging from 44 to 75.9 cents an hour. The 3,300 Westinghouse work- & & & 16 CELINA ST. COOPER-SMITH COMPANY "EVERYTHING FOR THE GARDEN" passengers on the sidewalk out- | side. "Summer Time and the Living's Easy" With this "Rustic Redwood" SAVE $15 ON THIS SPECIAL Reg. 49.95, Quality NOW two benches as shown. | Chaisette | Chaisette Picnic Table s34ss With this redwood picnic table you bring indoor convenience outdoors. Whether it's an impromtu cookout or a gathering of the clan this picnic table will make outdoor entertaining easier. This big five foot table seats six easily and you have room for "'extras" on the end. It features "Rustic Sawbuck"' styling and weather resistant redwood, Complete with Colorful Fold-Away Lawn Chair A. Sturdy aluminum frame, folds down in e jiffy. Take It to the beach or cottage, Has rust ond weatherproof Saran webbing, gives you spring comfort at a low cost. Each ...... Comfortable Saran Webbed B, Adjusts for easy sitting, relaxing or for stretch- out comfort. Specially priced now. Matches the lawn choir. .. 7,98 Adjustable Heavy-Duty C. Has a sturdy locking frome that odjusts te positions shown, Made of woven plastic tubing. Exceptionally strong. Breeze te carry or store, .. 16.88 ee ey Stylish Rattan Basket Chairs Hand-woven of natural ratten. Sturdy, comfortable and stylish on © sturdy wrought 398 lron foundation, eeeeee OSHAWA WYo i. LES SHOPPING CENTRE YOU NEED NO MONEY DOWN .. Fun in the Sun With Table and Umbrella Set Reg. 32.88 Now for 25.88 s2 588 HERE'S an old fashion easy comfortable way of beating the heat end staying out of the glaring sun. This pleasont blue and white colored umbrella with a 4" fringe has 8 ribs and opens up to 7 feet. Regardless of the time of day you're alwoys in the shade because the umbrella tilts ot the ongle you want it to. The 33' table is roomy for outdoor eating, Hove fun in the sun with this table and umbrella set. A special buy for you et YOLLES, Special Buy Just 20c a Day Buys this 6-Pc. Patio Set ee cd $ Se al This practical patio set is one of the best values we have ever been . eble to offer. Just as shown with big six foot tilting umbrella complete with sturdy steel table and anchor spike. Also includes two fold-up aluminum lawn chairs and handy patio chair side table. A real value now. INCLUDES Tilting Umbrelle Umbrella Table Ground Spike Anchor Steal Patio Table Two Fold-Away Chairs Just 33c' a Day Buys this New 7-Pc. Redwood Group t INCLUDES NOW SALE PRICED = Tilting Umbrella -- Um § 8 brella Table -- Toble cover oD with Fringe -- Four Red- + wood chairs. $ tel It's a real beauty --- and you can have alt this luxury, loveliness and comfort for a lot - less than you've ever paid before. Includes the umbrella table with floral tablecover with fringe that matches the umbrella an four lovely redwood chairs with aluminum. fold-up frames with plastic arms, A bigs! value outfit during this Outwoor Outfit Sale, ; os a) Sate itn 723-1139 | WOLLES osHawa SHOPPING CENTRE 725-3519 ers went on strike May 9.