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Daily Times-Gazette, 26 Jan 1953, p. 12

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12 THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE, Monday, January 9, 1958 Rose Bowl Restaurant Has L New Establishment | Can Seat Two of the biggest words in the 60 People Oshawa restaurant Mg Bowl--will flash during week days starting Tgesday, January 27, Paul and Helen Plishka, owners of the mbst modern fish and chip shop and restaurant in Oshawa, h seating capacity ' for 60 persons, who may be served the fi and chips dinner or ! light lufiches, such as hamburgers or safdwiches. . WL interior of the restaurant every bit as luxurious-looking the unique designs that form exterior of the building. Pink s and backs of seats make exgellent harmony with pastel n seats in the 12 four-person sufes 40 by 21 feet, brown wood panellin, 'places, making the general design pleasing to the eye. our mirrors enhance the west rior wall for sixteen feet looring is done in light grey green square panels of tile excessive noise from walking the Floor is absorbed by a solind-proof ceiling. acilities .are all of modern de- Located behind a long coun- of "formica," four deep fries, e mixers, freezers and er mechanical equipment are e completed final touches to seven months building. e Rose Bowl, which is located | atZBond and Prince Streets, has | us: of he latest design for restaurant y 100-record machine contains d | every type of music, from '"'pops" to classics. The outside of the building is as impressive as the interior, having a 'large rose (with neon) placed on the top left corner of the front wall, which is made of smooth, grey cement block. The letters 'ROSE BOWL" are more than two feet high and eight inches thick. Théy are also lighted with neon. Yellow-orange brick is used on the front of the building. Doors and moulding are painted pink suggested by motif; rose). Concave brick work on the west side of the building, in contrast with flat, grey-red brick work on the same wall, shows thoughtful and expensive designing. Paul Pliska, the owner has lived in Oshawa all his life and the Rose Bowl is his first at- tempt at the restaurant business. Mr. Plishka, who has worked at General Motors of Canada for the past few years, owns the rest of the building at Bond and Celina Street, which will be rented. arthworm Turns [nto Big Business FAMILTON OP) -- The lowly worm is beginning to turn-- big business, Nick Christopher, graduate of McMaster University, has hired 0 students to care for his cur- t bate of 6,000,000 wrigglers. d the McMaster students, bas- ball players Ernie Darragh Lorne Wrigglesworth, are ing enough money at'it'to pay way through college. 4 ick will sell the worms to fish- en in a patented earthworm er. Nick says his device 't tip over, the worms can be removed easily, and it reduces the trouble of getting at the worm- can in crowded boat. STARTED SLOWLY An. insurance salesman, Nick started in the worm business in a small way with only about 10,000 glers. These he collected the hard way, by hand, in nightly forays on Hamilton golf courses, prowling the grass with a flash- light. : As long as the worms are healthy production possibilities are almost | limitless, he says. He recently purchased a green- house, installed an oil furnace and | a sprinkling system to keep his products fat and healthy. PINNED BY CAR, DIES AURORA (CP) -- James White- head, 48, chicken farm owner, was uxurious Interior | f |a period Should Sow Good Germinated Tobacco Seed OTTAWA -- Probably the fore-! most advantage of sowing reliable | tobacco seed is the certainty the! grower has of obtaining the proper _|stand of plants when the seed is sown at the recommended rate. Good germinating seed sown at the rate of one ounce of seed to six- 'teen hundred square feet of plant bed will produce' under fabourable growing conditions 150 to 175 to- bacco seedlings pér square foot of plant bed. For practical purpos- es tobacco growers may provide one hundrefi square feet of plant bed for each acre of tobacco to be grown. On this basis an ample supply of seedlings will. be avail- able for the transplanting season. Good tobacco seed usually shows complete germination within a period of six to eight days whereas poor seed may require three weeks before all the live seeds have germinated. In the former case the seedlings are usually sturdy and of uniform size while in the latter case seedlings may lack uniformity, some may be weak and fail to survive and a poor stand of plants in the seed- bed is often experienced. The use of good seed also is reflected in the growing crop since sturdy, well developed seedlings usually start uniformly when trans- planted to field conditions. The even tobacco crop matures uni- formly and topping can he done in one operation which is a definite advantage, because the tobacco crop that ripens evenly usually cures to good advantage. At the Experimental Station, Harrow, Ont., says R. J. Haslam, foundation stock seed is maintain- ed for the production of registered seed of the proven types of Ont- ario tobacco. This seed which is available to registered seed grow- ers undergoes official germination tests at the Toronto Seed Labor- |atories. Seed which gérminates 90 per cent or better the first year frequently is found to maintain | this high germinating power for | of six to ten years whereas seed germinating at a lower level is known to lose its vitality in a relatively short period of years. Since' the price of tobacco seed crushed to death in his garage |is a comparatively small item in Sunday. The accident occurred as the cost of producisg tobacco he was helping his son, Fred, 22, growers are well advised to pro- an Ontario Agricultural College |cure the most reliable seed student, unfreeze the brakes of the |aple, . 4 latter's car. The older Whitehead | removed a wheel after putting one | corner of the car on blocks. The homes in England car rolled off the blocks and pinned | Court Palace, him. gvail- Largest of all surviving Tudor is Hampton built by Cardinal Wolsey more than 400 years ago. Looks For In Drama LONDON (CP) -- Jovial John Allen ho wo see "plenty of guts 'and some typically Canadian" when he adjudicates Canada's 13 'regional drama festivals early this year. 4 . Attached at present to the school broadcasting department of the BBC, Allen, 40, was nominated to this year's adjudication post by, the | 2 British Council. He is bilingual, an author and a drama examiner. The first regional trial starts at Ottawa, Jan. 12. And Allen insists that, though forewarned by predecessors of a gruelling, 10-week trek lying ahead, he's anxious to get under way. "PLENTY OF GUTS" . "I am hoping to see productions that aren't afraid of having a bash at it--that have plenty of guts," Allen said prior to leaving. "I'll be watching, too, for some- thing typically Canadian -- some- thing between Broadway and Brit- ish drama. back to St. John's, Nfld., the tour is scheduled to end 'Guts' Festival "I'd like to see lots of young people, ds well." This will be his first visit to Can- ada. From Ottawa he goes to Quebec d the Maritimes, west to the iries and Pacific coast ang then here arch She plays he chooses will gather for final adjudication in Victoria in May. Allen leaves behind him five children and a: wife 'who once ranked as the youngest magistrate | in Britain. She was appointed five years ago at the age of 26 and still holds the pesition. Asked how she coped with her career and five children, Allen re- plied: zer." 4.00 Allen began his career at the Old Vie in 1931 and broke his theatre connection only once -- for five years navy service. He joined the BBC in 1949. '"She's a jolly good organi- Strad Sets Pace At Rural Dancés BROWNVILLE JUNCTION, Me. (CP)--A"- $65,000 violin that has knocked around country dances in rural Maine and New Brunswick: is ensuring Leonard Lyons a com- in Maine and neighboring New Brunswick. In those days it was played by Lyons' son, Robert, who died in 1932. Neither father nor son realized YWCA MON, JAN, 26 STUDIO CLUB: To study diction, make-up, play reading, stage-craft, DOG GUARDS MAN'S BODY WELLAND (CP)---Police had to shoot a huge dog to reach the body of an aged Thorold township far- mer who died from a heart seizure within a few yards of his barn Saturday night. For more than ha half an hour three provincial police officers tried to lure the dog away from the body of its owner, William Neskoronny, 73, but with each ap- proach the dog sprang menacingly at the officers. ; prompting, etc., 8.00 p.m. ART EXHIBIT: All day. "Young Contemporaries", I1.0.D.E. "Prince Phillip", 3 p.m. Y.W.C.AA. ANNUAL MEETING: 8,00 p.m. Speaker: Miss Agnes Roy, executive director, National Council, Y.W.C.A., open to public. TUES. JAN. 27 MORNING NURSERY: 9.30 - 11.30 a.m. CRAFTS: 2.00 - 5.00 pm.; 7.00 p.m. to 10 p.m. KEEP FIT CLASS: A rhythmical activity class for business girls, 7.30 p.m. KEEP FIT CLASS: activity Slats ne married ladies, 8.15 p.m. T EXHIBIT: All day. oF LEADERS CORPS, Leader- ship Sourse for girls 14-16 yrs. age, WED. JAN. 28 MORNING NURSERY; 11.30 p.m. STUDENT NURSES' 9.30 - Gym SLIM AND TRIM. CLASS: " Weight reducing and weight nor-| malizing class for married ladies, | 3.00 p.m. ART EXHIBIT: All day. ~ Good Rose Bowl Luck Restaurant COMPLETE ELECTRICAL AND FIXTURE INSTALLATION POLLARD eiccrmicn sence COURTICE fortable old age. For 20 years the 62-year-od teles graph opertor for the Canadian Pacific Railway here kept the valu- able instrument tucked away in a clothes closet. Now it's locked in a Bangor, Me., bank vault, pro- tected from fire and theft. Lyons doesn't intend to sell the violin at present, saying he hasn't any particular need for $65,000 now. "I'd just as soon keep .on going as I am now. I'm just as well off | working as doing something else. Sure, I could travel, but that would | get tiresome." DECLARED A "STRAD" Not long ago, at the insistence of friends, the railroader placed the violin in a battered case and journeyed to Boston. There experts declared it a Stradivarius, made by the Italian master in 1771, and estimated its value at $65,000. "I had known that for 20 years," Lyons confided. "I had it appraised in New York once when I was working there." Before 1932 the Stradivarius set address a luncheon meeting Jan. i then that a $65,000 fiddle was call- ing the -tunes and no particular care was taken of it. LONG IN FAMILY Lyons said the instrument was handed down from his grandfather, Porter Lyons, born in Lee, Me. When Porter died the violin went to his son, Millard, father of the | present owner, Lyons isn't sure how | possession. {a look at the violin, Lyons popped ! | it into a clothes press, keeping the | revelation pretty much to himself. | He hasn't any for the fiddle. "I guess I'll just keep it in the | bank vault until I get too old to | | work," Lyons said. BAR ASSN. TO MEET Association here Jan. 30-31. Andre | Taschereau, Quebec, president of | the Canadian Bar Association, will | the pace for many a jig and reel | 31. the Stradivarius came into Porter's | After the New York experts had | immediate plans. WINDSOR, Ont. (CP)--Some 400 delegates are expected to attend | a mid-winter meeting of the On-| tario branch of-the Canadian Bar | | Congratulations . . H. R. STAR 251 SIMCOE ST. S. ROSE BOWL RESTAURANT on the occasion of your grand Qpening WE ARE PLEASED TO HAVE MADE THE COMPLETE INSTALLATIONS OF THE PLUMBING & HEATING REQUIREMENTS PLUMBING HEATING DIAL 5-0243 FA Announcing the Opening of Oshawa's Smartest Eating Place . . . A # NRE SPECIALIZING IN o TASTY FISH and CHIPS o DELICIOUS SANDWICHES APPETIZING LUNCHES FOR A WELCOMF CHANGE IN EATING . 24 BOND ST. W. CSHAWA YOU WILL APPLAUD the fine service, the extra tastiness and goodness which will be yours to enjoy at the Rose Bowl Restaurant which opens tomorrow. For light lunches and zestful snacks or delicious fish and chips for perking up your appetite you are sure to find just the right appeaser at our modern, new grill. The wel- come mat is out. Make it a point to drop in and try one of many bright menu suggestions which we feature here. YOU ARE WELCOME AT THE ROSE BOWL \ N MPS EEL AN

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