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Oshawa Times (1958-), 25 Apr 1962, p. 26

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26 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Wednesday, April 25, 1962 CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING (Continued from Page 25) 31--Automobile Repairs 32--Articles for Sale HOUSTON'S GARAGE and SERVICE STATION BRAKE SPECIALISTS,COM- PLETE BRAKE SERVICE MOTOR _TUNE-UP AND GENERAL REPAIRS 67 KING ST. WEST 723-7822 GUITARS and amplifier, Gibson double- 34--Lost & Found LOST -- Boy's wrist watch, white gold, in vicinity of Shopping Centre and Osh- awa Creek, Tuesday morning. Reward, Telephone 726-8826, PAY envelope containing g large » sum of money urgently needed, Lost vicinity of four corners, on Thursday afternoon. ae 728-6002, Reward. Large Walker hound, male, binek, white, tan. Wearing collar. Vicin- ity North Enfield, Telephone 728-8958. pickup Spanish electric guitar ($250), Gretch single-pickup Spanish electric guitar ($125) and Fender Harvard am- plifier $107). Telephone 725-1348. 'CAR radio, in the dash, transistor, $32.50. Aerial and installation extra. Try I Tire, 48 Bond Street West. _|_ 1 will not 35--Legal be responsible for any debts contracted in my name by any one on or after this date, April 25, 1962, without my written consent. Powers, 287 Elgin Street W., SCARFE'S paint sale, gloss, semi-gloss and flat, one low price. $4.55 gallon, $1.45 quart. Telephone for free color 32--Articles for Sole GUNS wanted, old lever action rifles and hand guns. Telephone 728-5574. BABY CARRIAGES Strollers, Cribs, P! ns, etc. by Thistle, Lioyd & Gendron + AT LOWEST PRICES! BARONS' HOME FURNISHINGS 424 Simcoe St. S, charts, Upton's Paint and Wallpaper Store, 25 Bond Street East. 7 723-2977. FURNACES, forced air, lyear guar- antee. $2.25 per week, no down pay- ment, package deal, $130. Telephone 725-4729, Want-Ads Don't Cost-They Pay WE pay highest prices in the city for used furniture, Pretty's Used Furni- ture Store, 723-3271. 444 Simcoe South. VACUUM cleaner repairs, parts, attachments, brushe: teed rebuilt machines. Estimates, 'tree. Rentals. Vacuum Cleaner Repair Serv- ice, 728-0591 anytime. GOOD RECONDITIONED REFRIGERATORS RANGES AND WASHERS All parts and service AJAX BARGAIN CENTRE HARWOOD AVE. NORTH AJAX -- WH. 2-6410 VALLEY CREEK FURNITURE In @ new location 16% Bond Street West. Top price poid for used radios, televis- ions, furniture and applian- ces. We buy, sell ond ex- change. Phone 728-4401. FILTER Queen Sales and Service, lib- eral trade-in allowance. Free demon- stration. Telephone 728-4683. 95.90 BUYS one room lot of ready pasted, plastic-coated wallpaper. 1962 stock, Upton's Paint and Wallpaper Store, 25 Bond Street East. Telephone 723-2977 CaS pee RUMMAGE sale, basement, St. An- drew's Church, Thursday, April 26, 1 p.m. WE buy, sell and exchange used fur- niture or anything you have, The City Trading Post Stores, 446 Simcoe Street South and 31 Bond Street East. 723-1671. BOAT -- plywood, , fibre glass covering, 40 motor. 1070 Ravine Road or Good condition. 728-6711. Pee ee se eo 3 HP SIMPLICTY tractor, Lioyd car- Triage 16-foot Gator boat trailer, all in excellent condition, Telephone Brooklin 655-3738. Ree SHOWCASES, glass tops and sides, 36" The finest in fishing tackle and supplies. Smelting Equipment Chestnut Canoes FISH MOUNTED PAUL'S Sporting Goods 589 Albert Street x €0". Price $55 each. Telephone 725- 2330. MAPLE syrup! Take No. 35 Highway from 401 to Concession 12 Manvers. Andrew Heaslip, telephone Bethany 17R111, DININGROOM suite, walnut, nine pieces, good condition, Telephone 723- 3341 after 6 p.m. LAWNMOWER repairs hand). Free blade sharpening and bal- ance with every motor cleaning and tune up, $3.95. Parts extra. Free pick- up and delivery. Telephone Sportsman's Corner, MO 8-451] PRAM Dinghy, unused, 8-foot overall, fibre glass construction throughout, built-in tanks, vinyl gun- "(power and 16° CHRIS-CRAFT INBOARD RUNABOUT Powered by 135 h.p. 6-cyl. motor, Includes 7 racing propellors. Natural lacquered finish. Top speed--45 m.p.h. Phone 725-6266 BOATS UP TO 60% OFF Larson, Traveler, Weymouth, Cruisers Inc,, Evinrude Motors, Volvo Penta Engines. MARINE STORAGE AND SUPPLY LTD. BROOKLIN PHONE 655-3641 OPEN EVENINGS AND WEEKENDS UNTIL 8 P.M. SEWING SUN DRESSES PLAY CLOTHES COTTON DRESS FABRICS 3 yds., DAN RIVER COTTONS 98c¢ yd., up M & C Dry Goods 74 Celina St. 723-7827 whale trim. Telephone MO 8-8684. STUDIO couch, converts into bed, $15; Electrohome televison, 21 inch screen, $65. walnut cabinet mbdel, Ideal for cottage. 725-5223. 21" PHILLIPS, floor model televison, walnut with doors, A-1 condition. Tele- phone 725-2257. 16" CUSTOM made runabout ski-boat, 40 hp Evinrude Lark, electric starter, trailer, loaded with extras, $1,250. See to appreciate! 728-2179. CASE tractor with 3 furrow drag plow in good condition, reasonable. Tele- phone Brooklin, 655- 4619, TV RENTALS, by the day, week or month at Parkway Television, 918 Sim- coe North 723-3043. TYPEWRITERS, adders, cashiers, ren- tals, terms, service. Hamilton Office Equipment, 137 Brock South, MO 8-8442, AWNINGS, canvas. Prompt service, free estimates, Chair, table rentals. Cleve Fox, 412 Simcoe North. BOAT and motor, $795. 16-foot cedar strip, top and curtains, controls, 40 hp Royal Scott electric with bail-a-matic. 559 Dean Avenue. CHESTERFIELD and chair, brocaded, blue. Trilight, all in good condition. Ap- 4 Bf McLaughlin Blvd. Telephone 23-9716, REFRIGERATOR, General' Electric, deluxe model, 7% ft. good condition, $75. African Violets, 15 Brown Street, Bowmanville, MA 3-3106. PHOTOGRAPHY equipment, "good "con dition, i tank and print box, automatic tray, siphon trays, chemicals, paper, instruc- tion booklets, 728-9536, TENTS, camping supplies, marine hardware, outboard motors, guns and bicycles. Best prices. Try Dominion Tire, 48 Bond Street West. OLD guns wanted, rifles, shotguns, re- volvers and pistols; also old cartridges. Telephone 725-8183, Oshawa. ECONOMY water softener of Canada, 90,000 grain capacity, like new. $175 or best offer. 728-5004, GARDEN tractor, cultivator and plow; sump pump with pipes; 9 x 9 tourist tent. Reasonable. 728-7120. WORRIED? Then see us and find out for yourself how a food freezer service con toke out the wor- ries ond expense of food, A family of four spend with us epprox. $16:50 per week for food and freezer. Includes opprox, 80% of normal groc- eries. PHONE 728-9141 for your own personal anolysis. NO OBLIGATION GLECOFF'S SUPERMARKET 174 RITSON ROAD S. OSHAWA DRUG AND CLOTHING DEPT. Specials for Thursday, Friday and Saturday April 26, 27, 28th LADIES' & GIRLS' POPCORN KS, poir .... 49¢ BOYS' WHITE T-SHIRTS. Smell, medium or heise > . $4 MEN'S GOOD QUALITY SOCKS, in Kroy-nylon, orlon, solids or fancy, poir 59¢ "UNIVAC" THERMOS BOTTLES, made in Englond. Special, each 88c MEN'S KNITTED SHIRTS, assorted colors. Reg. $2.95. Special, each $2.59 BABY ESMOND BABY RE- CEIVING BLANKETS, lovely gift item. Each .. 98e WOODBURY SHAMPOO -- eg. $1.25 for TONI HOME PERMANENTS, Reg. $2.00: Each $1.49 WASHED -- Bagg 8 BAGS : 95¢ SHOP AND SAVE at GLECOFF'S OPEN'TO 10 P.M. DAILY "" WE good r 728-9900 after 5. PAIR single matching steel beds, ma- hogany finish, springs and mattresses in excellent condition, $18.75 each com- plete. Chest of drawers, walnut finish, $18.50. Telephone 728-2868, REFRIGERATOR, stove, washing ma- chine, new condition, power mower, barbecue, garden tools, kitchen furni- ture, lamps, china cabinet, sleeping bags, camping equipment, roll away bed, HO gauge electric trains complete with table, numerous other household articles. 705 Newman Crescent, Whitby. WEST "electric range, Tel 16 FOOT cedar strip canoe, green, used one season. Like new. Sacrifice $100. Apply 669 | Shakespeare Avenue. THISTLE baby carriage, beige arid brown, very good condition, metal body, sell half price. Also baby swing, MO 8-5918 after 4, TILLER, Gibson, with motor, one-row model, nearly new. Cost $139, selling $85. 965 Ritson Road North, 723-4793. BEAUTY Line deluxe belt mass ager, in good condition Original price $130, Selling for $86. Telephone 725- 3783, 21" MOTOROLA floor model, wainut TV. Good working order. $75 or best offer. Telephone 728-7734 after 6 o'clock. BEES for sale, Apply 604 Centre Street North, Whitby. KLEMCO | OAK u used typewriter desk, swivel chair, duplicator, pop cooler, meat slicer, grill, safe, file cabinet, electric typewriter. 137 Brock South, MO 8-8442. DANISH loom, floor model, $65, Can be seen at 173 Garrard Road North. 728-2888, ee WE buy, sell and exchange used furni- ture and appliances, for top cash offer. Phone 728-1131. Community Furniture, 19 Prince Street. ENNIS piano, small_ 'upright, in "very good condition, oe MO 8-3501 between a and 5. DINING room suite, platform "rocker, large set of dishes, lamps, pots and pans, pictures, other household arti- cles, 17 Park Road South. CABIN cruiser, 17-foot, with inboard engine and outboard drive. Will sell baie. drive separately. Dial MO LLOYD | baby carriage, sliver grey, blue interior. Very good condition, $15. Telephone ' 725-4008. 1&PIECE Normac, "aluminum, set of kitchen utensils, like new in excellent condition. Any reasonable offer accept- ed. A. 728 9247. BEFORE buying or selling { televisions, furniture, refrigerators, stoves, wash- ers, call Elmer Wilbur, CO 3-2294. B, F. GOODRICH Stores -- Tires, bat- teries, Kelvinator refrigerators, tele. vision. Thrifty Budget -- Plan. 725-4543, TYPING paper on sale, teiter "size, white newsprint, buy in bulk lots and save. 4% Ib pkg. $1.00, 9 ib. pkg $2.00. Circulation tion Dept., Oshawa Times. YOU'LL agree that the Oshawa Times Want Ads will sell your unused house. hold items fast. Check your home now then call 723-3492 to place a buyer- getting ad, SPECIAL OFFER > Self - storing ALUMINUM DOORS, complete, grill and lock. $45.00 installed WINDOWS $15.00, installed. 728-5253 CITY OF OSHAWA WELFARE DEPARTMENT Sealed Tenders plainly mark- ed "Welfare Vehicle" will be received ot the office of the Purchasing Agent, Civic Ad- ministration Building, Osh- awa, Ontario, up until 5:00 P.M. (E.S.T.) May 4, 1962, For the following: One (1) 1962 Model, Two- door, 4-cylinder, Chevrolet or Pontiac Sedan Trade-in on above: One (1) 1958 Model, cylinder Chevrolet Coach, 6- Further specifications, and in- formation to Bidders may be obtained from the office of the Purchasing Agent. Lowest or any Tender not necessarily accepted. W. J. Crompton PUCHASING AGENT. IN THE COUNTY COURT OF THE COUNTY | OF ONTARIO IN THE MATTER OF THE CHANGE OF NAME | ACT R.S.O. 1960, CHAPTER 47 AND AMENDMENTS THERETO |_ TAKE NOTICE that the ap- plication of GARRY GABRIEL KUTZINER of 98 Wood Street, Oshawa, Ontario, to change his name to GARRY GABRIEL KERR, will be heard by His Honour Judge J. de N. Kennedy at the County Court Judge's Cham- bers in the Court House in the Town of Whitby on Fri+ day the 11th day of May, A.D. 1962, at the hour of eleven o'clock in the fore- noon, Daylight Saving Time. DATED this 13th day of April, A.D. 1962. MANNING F. SWARTZ and RONALD L. SWARTZ, Barristers & Solicitors, 26 King St. East, Oshawa, Ontario, Solicitors for the Applicant, TENDERS OSHAWA, ONTARIO Tenders for addition to St. Joseph's School, Sealed tenders plainly marked as to contents will be received by the undersigned not ioter thon 5 o'clock in the ofter- noon, (5 P.M.), Wednesday, May 9, 1962. for construc- tion of a seven (7) Classroom School and Gymnasium. Plans and specifications may be obtained from the office of the Architect, upon de- posit of $100 (one-hundred dollars) for each set of docu- ments, Drawings may be seen at the following places: . Office of the Architect, Toronto, Toronto Construction Oshawa Builders Exchange Deposit will be returned to bidders when all Documents are returned in good order within 30 (thirty) days of the closing date of the ten- ders. 10% ten per cent Bid Bond shall be included with Tender, Lowest or any tender not necessarily accepted. Georeg C. N. Tonks, Architect 57 Bloor Street West, Toronto, Telephone 924-9953 CITY OF OSHAWA ENGINEER'S DEPARTMENT Sealed Tenders plainly mark- ed "Road Oiling" will be re- ceived at the office of The Purchasing Agent, Civic Ad- ministation Building, Oshawa, Ontario, until 5 p.m. (D.S.T.) on Monday April 30, 1962 For the following: Supply and Application of ap- proximately 248,000 gallons of D.H.O. Primer( to be haul- ed, stoed and heated if re- quired in accordance with the City of Oshawa specification for Bituminous Prime Dust Layer. Specification, and, conditions may be obtained from the of- fice of the Purchasing Agent, or by mail upon request. The lowest or any Tenders will not necessarily be accep- ted. W. J. Crompton PURCHASING AGENT All-Out By FRASER WIGHTON LONDON (Reuters) -- Brit- ain's ruling Conservative party will make an all-out bid for big gains in the country's munici- pal elections next month to help restore the government's flag- ging prestige with voters. Success in the municipal con- tests would offset the damage caused in recent parliamentary byelections through a militant upsurge by the middle-of-the- road Liberals. These blows to the govern- ment--climaxed by the loss of the Conservative stronghold of; Orpington to a Liberal -- are viewed grimly by all cabinet ministers from Harold Macmil- lan downward. But the prime minister's ad- herents see little prospect that the electoral tide now flowing so strongly against them will} turn for some "months yet. FEAR VOTE SPLIT | Their main worry is that Lib-/ erals--who still number only six} in the 630-member House of| Commons--may be marshalling a huge force of candidates for} the 1963 or 19 tion and so split the vote that) the labor party will gain the vic-) |tory. | In the recent parliamentary|# | contests where Labor party was defending seats it increase its) majority--in one case more) than trebled it | The Liberals in some cases) ousted Conservatives from run-| ner up position and in others| nearly equalled the gov ernment} vote. Five parliamentray byelec-| tions still are outstanding, pre-| senting fresh worry to the gov-| ernment party. | In ministerial circles it is be- jing said that the Conservative] mage s failing to' get over to} ja secton of the electorate. | Many Conservatives ~ believe) \the main explanation is the un-} |popularity of the government's current economic measures to| strengthen the economy. ACT AS INDICATOR _Th e forthcoming 'Chinese Food Shortages Reported ROME (AP) -- Russia's 1961 grain production was 4,000,000 tons below the 1958 record and! Communist China was hit by in-| creasing food shortages, the} Food and Agriculture Organiza-| tion reported Tuesday. The United Nations agency's)| 1962 world commodity review! bore out the admissions of So-| viet and Communist Chinese of- ficials that they have serious ag- ricultural problems on_ their hands. | | ; municipal It said Communist China still was having serious. diffi-| culty with drought and reduced crops. The review said grain produc- tion in the Soviet Union last} year amounted to 137,000,000) tons--well below the 141,000,000; tons grown there years before.) World prices for farm prod-| uce continue to drop. An impovement in anid tural prices in the immediate} future "is hardly to be ex-| pected," the agency added. Stocks of many commodit remained excessive. Unsold sur-| pluses of grains, coffee, sugar, | butter and soy bean oil were} jespecially high | DEATHS By THE CANADIAN PRESS | Addis Ababa, Ethiopia--) Prince Shale Selassie, 31,| youngest son of Ethiopian -- perior Haille Selassie. Elizabeth, N.J. -- Robert c.| i. Crane, 41, former publisher of} the Elizabeth Daily Journal. | Cornwall, Ont.--Robert Tur-/} ner, first Negro recreation di- rector of Cornwall who played) baseball with the Chicago White Sox and basketball with the Harlem Globetrotters. Pomfret, Conn.--Mrs. Mabel |Brittain Bigelow, 85, co-founder | lot the Rectory Elementary; School for Boys at Pomfret. | Huntington, N..--Sam Ochil-| tree, '73, who retired in 1952) after 42 years of traffic and! editorial service with The As-' sociated Press. Montreal--Moses L. Gutman, | 47, vice-president of the Canada} Spring Company. Toronto -- William F. Mc-| Nurney, vice-president and gen-| eral manager of General Tire and Rubber Company Limited of Canada. Stratford--F. Stewart Cooke, | 48, president of International | Arterafts Company. Toronto--Dr. John Davidson Ketchum, 68, retired psychol- ogy professor at the University of Toronto and one-time master of music at Trinity College School, Port Hope, Ont. |35--Legal TENDER FUEL OIL REQUIREMENTS NORTHMINSTER UNITED CHURCH JULY 1, 1962 to JUNE 30, 1963 Aply in writing to GJ 1020 Somerville Street, Oshawa For U.K. elections, mainly between May 7 and 12, will be watched eag- erly for factors giving any in- dication of a swing in national politcal opnion. hitherto been considered an un- reliable indication of what would happen in a general elec- tion. But Orpington has sounded an alarm on this point. Liberals beileve their triumph there was related to the strong position they had previously established in the town's municipal govern- ment. pal contests is basically social- ist versus anti-socialist wth the ant-socialigsts labelled variously Conervative, Liberal, |pendent, Progressive, Moderate jor Ratepayers' | streng \tres 64 general elec-/§ Bid Predicted Ruling Tories areas. Labor controls 130 of the 392 English and Welsh borough councils 180 out of 564 urban district councils and 35 out of 493 rural district councils. WOULD RECOUP LOSSES Labor's minimum target this year is to recoup the losses the party suffered over the whole field of municipal government Local government voting has Starland. County Approves Rain-Making Plan CALGARY (CP)--A plan to initiate a hail supression and rain - making program in two southern Alberta counties was approved by one and rejected by the other Tuesday. The counties of Wheatland and Starland, about 70 miles northeast of here, were voting on bylaws authorizing their county councils to enter agree- ment with a commercial firm for initiation of the weather mo- dification program. Wheatland turned down the bylaw but it was approved in s 4 National Council . sge,e For Disabilities OTTAWA (CP) -- Appoint- ment of a 25-member national advisory council on the rehabili- tation of disabled persons was announced Tuesday. It will be headed by Brig. James L. Melville of Ottawa, retired chairman of the Cana- dian Pension Commission. The council members, ap- pointed by the federal govern- ment on the advice of Labor Minister Starr and Health Min- ister Monteith, will advise the labor minister on matters in- volving the rehabilitation of the disabled. First meeting of the new ad- Powers' Wife Said Recovered WASHINGTON (CP) -- The wife of former U-2 spy pilot Francis Gary Powers is re- ported to have recovered from what police descibed as an overdose of sleeping pills last Friday but cause of the overdose is still locked in mystery. A spokesman for the Central Intelligence Agency where Pow- ers is still employed said Tues- day the matter is a personal one and that the agency will not comment on it or conduct any in 1959, when the party's total lasses then were 322 seats. Before the current Liberal challenge the tendency would have been to regard any Lib- eral wins as a strengthening of the anti-socialist "front"--which at present controls about 70 pe cent of Britain's local govern- ment. Now Conservatives might re- gard any big liberal gains as uneasily as they do the party's foots, } in parliamenary con- The alignment in the munici- Inde- Representative. Socialists have greatest in large industrial cen- and heavily populated tests. viet Union. WANTS CO-OPERATION TORONTO (CP)--Mark Gayn, editorial page writer for the Toronto Star, said Tuesday Can- ada can--and should--co-oper- ate with Russia. Mr. Gayn told the! history section of the On- tario Educational convention that co-operation is necessary for an understanding of what is happening in the So- investigation. Freed from a Soviet jail last February in a Russian-Ameri- can spy swap, Powers, 32, has been living with his 27-year-old wife in a suburban Alexandria, Va., apartment. They have no children. Police in Alexandria, where the case originated, said that at the request of the family they have agreed not to disclose any further information about Mrs. Powers. They said there will be no further investigation. visory group has been set for May 14-15 in Ottawa. Groups represented include provincial governments, volun- tary agencies, medicine, unl- versities, employers and labor. SET COCKTAIL VOTE KITCHENER (CP) -- Kit- chener council Tuesday night approved a city-wide vote on cocktail bars to be held durin; next December's municip election. Association ATTENTIC ALL SONS AND DAUGHTERS OIN IN THE USHAWA TIMES MOTHER'S DAY CONTEST! "WHY I Think MY... MOM'S GREATEST contestant. $35.00 IN CASH PRIZES Read These Simple Rules! All letters to this Mother's Day Contest must be written in Son er Daughter's own handwriting. Letters MUST be legible to aid in judging. Written on one side of poper, letter should not be less thon 25 words and not more than three hundred words. Any son or daughter from school age to fourteen years is eligible to enter this Mother's Day Contest. Judging will be made on many points such as: Originality, sincerity, -- eppeal, etc. All letters must start with the slogan: "1 think my Mom's the greatest', All letters received at the Oshawa Times for this Mother's Day Contest will remain the property of this newspaper and may be published or used as this Mewspaper sees fit. Three Judges will be appointed by the Oshawa Time and their deci: to all f of this be final. The Oshawa Times will not enter into or discuss one Mother's Day Contest with any will Decide Now To Enter This Mother's Day Contest Ist PRIZE 20.00 -- 2nd PRIZE 10.00 -- 3rd PRIZE 5.00 "ainsi oan TY ena se aerate AWARDING OF PRIZES Prizes totalling $35.00 will be awarded as mentioned above for the three letters that the. judges decide -- in their opinion -- best describes the -- _ "| think my Mom's the greatest", because seeeecees WHO IS ELIGIBLE? All sons and daughters from school age to fourteen years are eligible to enter this contest. However, ALL LETTERS must be accompanied by the official entry blank clipped from this paper. Remember, the winning letter could be won by the youngest school child, depending, of course, on originality, sincerity, human appeal, etc. Fancy enclosures will have no bearing on the winning letters. WINNERS The three winners of this Mother's Day Contest will be chosen and their names published in a special Mother's Day supplement to be issued by the Oshawa Times on or about Friday, May 11. Employees of the Oshawa Times and their immediate families will not be eligible to participate in this contest OSHAWA TIMES MOTHER'S DAY ENTRY BLANK Please enter my enclosed letter in your Mother's Day Contest. I hereby agree to abide by all the rules set down as men- tioned in this Mother's Day advertisement, and to permit the publication of my letter if the Times desires to do so. srosbienns co's TROIS Mother's Name ALL ENTRIES MUST BE DEPOSITED STREET EAST, ON OR BEFORE 5 O'CLOCK P.M. APRIL 28. IN THE TIMES, 86 KING | REMEMBER! To be eligible, all letters must reach the Oshawa Times office on or before 5 P.M. APRIL 28th, 1962.

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