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Oshawa Times (1958-), 29 Feb 1964, p. 17

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"16 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Seturdey, Februsry 29, 1964 seem to have for- ae tooth brush. Fluorides of a daughter Lisa Anne weighing 6 tbs. 13 o7. Saturday, Feb. 29, 1964 at the Osh- awa General Hospital. A sister for Paul. Thenks to Dr. Hall and 4th floor staff. POWERS -- Wilford and Cerroll (nee Reduce Cavities Brant County. Butt hey also have the dirt- jest mouths because they've stopped brushing their teeth, Dr. E. Aenid Dunton, county medical health officer, said Thursday. She told the county health board that city residents are depending too much on the de- BRANTFORD (CP) -- Fluor cont idation has given the city's chil-)" .,° dren the lowest cavity rate in cay preventative qudlities of fluorides in the city water sup- municipality in Ontario to in- troduce fluorides to the water supply in 1946. Dr. H. P. Martinello, head 4 the county dental services, said' Brantford's rate for poor oral hygiene is 73 per cent compared) with a county average of 61 per He verified, however, that Brantford children have the low- est cavity rate in the county. SIGN FISH PACT CAIRO (A?)--The Soviet Un- ion and the United Arab Repub- lie signed a fishing agreement Friday for joint operations in the Red Sea. The agreement also calls for training Egyptian technicians in the Soviet Union. Kemp) are happy to the er rivel of @ son, Kemp Douglas, 7 Ibs. 1) oxs., on Thursday, February 27, 1964. A brother for Ricky, Nicky and Vicky. OBITUARIES WM. LAWRENCE. MOUNTJOY' DEATHS MOUNTJOY, William Lawrence " Entered Into rest in the femily residence, East Whitby Township, Ontario on Satur- day, February 29, 1964, William Lewrence Mountioy, beloved husband of Augusta Louise Luke and father of Mrs. Joseph Starkoskl (Marion) of Kedron, Mrs. Ever- son Norton (Willa) of Markham, Miss Bery! Mountjoy of London, Ontario and Mrs. Marvin Hannah (Eleanor), Oshawa; brother of Miss Beatrice Mountjoy, Osh- awa; In his 69th year. Resting at the Armstrong Funeral Home, Oshawa, with funeral service in the chape| Monday, March 2, 2.p.m. Interment Oshawa Union Cemetery. In Heu of flowers donations to the Heart Fund will be appreciated. Friends are asked not to call at the « funeral home before Sunday. STROUD, Ethel At Oshawa General Hospital on Friday, February 28, 1964, Ethel White beloved wite of the late Robert H. Stroud and joving mother of Mrs. Albert Rattew (Marlorie) Bay Ridges; Mrs. Wallace Vanderkool (Kathleen) and Robert Hy Oshawa; Ernest L., and the late Freder- ick Stroud of Dunbarton in her 71st year. Resting at Mcintosh - Anderson Funeral Home, Oshawa. Service in the Chapel on Tuesday, March 3 at 2 p.m. Interment Prospect Cemetery, Toronto. LOCKE'S FLORISTS Funeral arrangements floral requirements for all SSHAWA SHOPPING CENTRE 24 HOUR PHONE SERVICE 728-6555 Kindness beyond Price, yet within reach of all GERROW FUNERAL HOME 390_KING STREET WEST TELEPHONE 728-6226 IN MEMORIAM ALLEN -- In loving memory of e@ deer grendmother end grest - grand: grandime tien, who passed avey March 1. 1963. Dear grandmother you are not forgotten Though on earth you ere no more. before. --Lovingly remembered by Gordon, jnarle ond great-grandchildren Bradiey and Berry. DANKS -- In loving memory of @ dear husband end father, Charles Danks, who passed away March 1, 1957. --Lovingly remembered and sadly missed The death of a lifelong East Whitby Township resident, Wil- liam Lawrence Mountjoy, occur- red suddenly today at his resi- dence near Kedron. He was. in his 69th year and suffered a heart attack. He was born in East Whitby and was the son of the late Mr. and Mrs. John Mountjoy. In 1924 he married the former Augusta Louise Luke at Kedron. The de- ceased worked the family farm for many years. He was a trustee and an active member of Kedron United Church. He is survived by his wife and four daughters: Mrs. Joseph Starkoski (Marion) of Kedron, 'Mrs. Everson Norton (Willa) of Markham; Miss Beryl Mountjoy of London and Mrs. Marvin Hannah (Eleanor) of Oshawa. Mr. Mountjoy is also suryived by a sister, Miss Beatrice Mountjoy of Oshawa and five andsons. He was predeceased by two brothers, Everett and Harold. The remains will be at the Armstrong Funeral Home on Sunday for the memorial serv- ice in the chapel Monday, March 2, at 2 p.m. The service will be conducted by Rev. R. Love, minister of Kedron United Church. Interment will be in the family plot in Union Cemetery, Oshawa. In lieu of flowers donations to the Heart Fund would be ap- preciated. Friends are asked not to call at the funeral home be- fore Sunday. MRS, ETHEL STROUD Following an illness of three months the death occurred Fri- day, Feb. 28, at the Oshawa General Hospital of Mrs. Ethel Stroud. She was in her 7ist year. A daughter of the late Wil- liam and Charlotte White, the deceased was born at Sileby, Leicestershire, England, March 16, 1893 and came to Canada in 1909. She had been a resident of Dunbarton most of her life. Mrs, Stroud was married in Toronto and was a member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints and was ac- tive in the relief society of the church. Predeceased by her husband, lar, Stroud is survived by two daughters, Mrs. Albert Rattew (Marjorie) of Bay Ridges and Mrs. Wallace Vanderkooi (Kath- een), of Oshawa and two sons, Robert H. Stroud, Oshawa and Ernest L. Stroud, Dunbarton. Also surviving are four sis- ters, Mrs. Clara Molson, Cali- fornia; Mrs. Alice Green, Dun- barton; Mrs. Mary Fryer and Mrs, Charlotte Aldridge; six grandchildren and six great- grandchildren. Mrs. Stroud was predeceased by a son, Frederick, in 1942 amd by a sister and six brothers. Bishop R. E. Sayers of the Church of Jesus Christ of Lat- ter Day Saints will conduct the funeral service at the Mcin- tosh-Anderson Funeral Home at 2 p.m. Tuesday, March 3. Interment will be in Prosect Cemetery, Toronto, The pallbearers will be six grandsons, obert, Leonard, Murray and Nelson Stroud and Frederick and Robert Rattew. FUNERAL OF MRS, HALES BARKER The memorial service for Mrs. Hales Barker, who died in Oshawa General Hospital last Wednesday in her 80th year, was held at the Armstrong Fu- neral Home, Friday, March 28, at 2 p.m. Rev. L. Wesley Herbert, min- ister of King Street United Church, conducted the service. He was assisted by Rev. J. V. McNeely, a former pasor of the Church. Interment was in Oshawa Union cemetery. Pallbearers were Robert Bar- ker, Dr. C. C. Stewart, William L. Pierson, Harry Pellow, Roy Flintoff and Robert Brown. FUNERAL OF ALEXANDER STUART REID The funeral service for Alex- ander Stuart Reid, 37 Arlington avenue, who died at the Osh- awa General Hospital, Monday, Feb. 24, was held in the McIn- tosh-Anderson Funeral Chapel Thursday, Feb, 27, at 2 p.m. Rev, Derek Allen, minister of St. Paul's Presbyterian Church, conducted the service. Inter- ment was in Oshawa Union Cemetery. Pallbearers were William Kel- William Sholdra, Ken Greentree, George Fraser, Wil- liam Keene and William Mac- Robert H. Stroud, in 1944, Mrs. Farland. BEDROOA 19-9'212°5" BEDROOA 2-07.12" thon BEDROOM 9-4" 210-6 2ND. FLOOR Pe "a, DESIGN No. =517 998 $a. Re 580" © First Fi. Second Fl Garage 2 Om, + SOI EE TERT EP. 20-7"s 9-0" a ces w week oe aes igi? 2 see FIRST FLOOR HOME DESIGN No. 517 There's more to this colon- ial design than plenty of floor area. Pivot point is the room- size foyer facing the en- trance. All areas hinge on this interior hub. Especially generous in size, the living room extends from front to back. A mammoth fireplace dominates one end. Combin- ed, the living room and fam- ily room monopolize the downstairs. The den would make an ideal downstairs bedroom for an elderly par- ent. Upstairs there are four bedrooms and two bathrooms. There is also 100 sq. ft. or storage facilities on the sec- ond floor. House with 2-car garage could be built on a 70- foot 'lot. Standard Builders Blueprints for this Design No. 517 cost $15.00 for the first set and $5.00 for additional per cent Sales Tax). FAMILY ROOA available at this Newspaper Office (or from address be- latest Design Book entitled Canadian Guide to Home Planning ahd Design," price $1.00 and is tax free. This edition includes in- formation on Financing in Building Construc- low) is the Canada, GARAGE 22-6". 23-2" tion rating, Furniture blueprints. Details, Landscaping, Color Selection, Interior Deco- Arrange- ment, Custom Designing, etc., plus over 100 popular and new Deisgns to choose from. Also included in this book are full details of how to order FIRST AID TO THE AILING HOUSE GOLD TEST QUESTION: I inherited an assortment of old jewelry. How can I test some of the pieces to gold? : ANSWER: Get 'a smal) quan- tity of nitric acid in a glass- stoppered bottle at a drug store. Touch the metal you want to test with.a drop of the acid on ihe end of the stopper. If it is gold, there will be no reaction; any base metal will show a blue tint. Be very careful not to let the acid touch your hands, as it is very caustic and will cause isevere burns on the skin. Be sure to wear rubber gloves to |protect your hands, If a drop should touch your skin, wash immediately with plenty of water. STAINED BARE FLOORS QUESTION: We moved into a resale house. The hardwood floors are very dirty and stain- ed. They have no shellac or fin- ish. How can I treat them with- out scraping? I do like clean shining floors. ANSWER: A floor-sanding machine (which you can rent from many hardware dealers) would really be the best, and easiest method; it would both clean and smooth the wood sur- face for a good finish. A liquid polishing and cleaning wax, used according to label dinec- tions, will remove dirt as the wax is applied, RUST STREAKS IN REDWOOD QUESTION: There are a num- ber of rust streaks under nails in the redwood screen-wall at our front entrance. How can these discolorations be re- moved? ANSWER: To remove the rust find out whether they are real we is caused by the metal itself, which expands when warmed, contracts when cooling, Stiffen- ing or installing some type of bracing may appear possible to some imaginative meee | en- with sound - proofing material. This would include acoustical tile, thick sheets of asbestos, etc. Any part of the ducts bur- ied in the wall space not worth the effort. Ear plugs, of course, are less expensive than any- thing yet mentioned. DARK STAINS ON SILLS QUESTION: The wood sills on our kitchen windows have dark stains from condensation form- ing on the glass and running down. We installed an exhaust fan in the kitchen and no longer have. the moisture on the win- dows. How can we remove the dark stains on the sills? ANSWER: Remove the pres- ent finish down to bare wood. Then apply a prepared wood bleach to the stained area, available at paint dealers, fol- lowing label directions careful- ly. Apply a matching wood stain if the bleached areas are too light in color after the sor shellac, as desired, to match the rest of frame finish. ENAMELING PLASTIC TILE . QUESTION: We want to have a different color bathroom. We Ihave plastic tile walls and 1 am wondering if they could be ee fe ISWER: Yes; use any good quality enamel. First, pelt the tile surface thoroughly of all trace of wax, grease, dirt, etc. with te yo owoe © Soa wi e r to slightly roughen the surface for auae adhesion of the enamel. Then follow manufacturer's instruc- tions on the enamel. container carefully as to first boat; if recommended, apply an enamel undercoater. LOOSEN ROOFING PAPER QUESTION: Our tool and garden shed was covered with an asphalt-impregnated roofing paper. One section repeatedly loosens in spite of our using roofing cement to fasten it bv Can you suggest any- ing? ANSWER: Some papers require hesives recommended by the roo! paper manufactuer; check with your roofer or deal- er. Or try the kind called lap cement which is a_ liquid asphalt. Nailing down with a batten should anchor securely. Buying or Selling! GUIDE REALTY LTD. @ LLOYD CORSON, ident ®@ DICK YOUNG Vice-President @ LUCAS PEACOCK Sec-Trees. PHONE 723-1121 bleaching. Refinish with varnish streaks: Apply a solution of four ounces of oxalic acid crys- tals (Poison) in one: gallon of water (mixed in a non-metallic container) to the discolorations, using a soft brush or cloth. Re- peat treatment, if necesary. Be sure to wear rubber gloves to protect the hands and avoid spatters on skin or eyes, while working. To prevent future streaks, if possible, recommend replacing present nails with aluminum or stainless steel or hot-dipped gal- vanized ones, recommended for outdoor use on redwood. NOISY HEATING DUCTS QUESTION: My home is heat- The Building Editor, Oshawa Times, Oshawa, Ontario, (1 Enclosed please find $1.00 for which send me Book| LEMON Juice Recipe "HOME PLANNING GUIDE" Mail reauests 10c extra. (Please make remittance of Plans entitled payable to The Oshawa Times). NAMe .coccccccccccncsecccccccescsvcebccvcevcescovcvcoses AMATESS co ccccccecccccccescvessvcceresccvecsecsscescocees ed with forced hot air. When the blower comes on and the ducts begin to get warm, they make Relieves Arthritic & Rheumatic Pain If you suffer rheumatic, arthritis or tay tate cone ve using. Get a can BAN DINNERS HARRISTON, Ont. Tuesday of a 69 - year - old Wellington County sets. They are available in |Health officials have banned|health unit officials said the ban} Canada by return mail. (On- {public dinners here until after|applies to privately-catered din-| tario residents must remit 3 |Easter as the result of the death|ners such as church suppers but Now |from infectious hepatitis lastidoes not include restaurants (CP)--| woman, EFFECTIVE ORDER YOUR BEFORE 8% SALES TAX BECOMES APRIL 1st | orders in. our office before IMPORTANT To enable us to obtain aluminum siding from the fac- tory ahead of the sales tax dote, we must have ell Mareh 17th. Act Now! @ Free Estimates 15 PRINCE ST. Evenings "Where Satisfaction is Gueranteed" LES EVENISS SALES LTD. -- No Obligation PHONE 725-4632 723-2707 by wife and family. | GERACE -- tn loving memory nl dear husband and father Charies Gera: who passed away March 1, 1958. And He did what He thought best, He put His arms around you And whispered "Come and rest'. --Sadly missed by loving wife Louise end deughter Augusta and son-in-law Bernerd. STEVENSON -- in loving memory of 8 dear husband and father, Thomas Steven- son, who passed away March 1, 1958. In tears | s@w you sinking, 1 watched you fade away, My heart was almost broken, You fought so hard fo stay. But when | saw you sleeping, So peacefully, free from pain, 1 could not wish you back To suffer that again. Lovingly remembered by his wife and family STEWART -- In loving memory of 8 * dear husband, syther and grandfather, * arthur Stewart, Who passed away ruary 29, 3900,' ° His memory is as dear today As in the hour he passed away. --Lovingly remembered by wife Kathleen and family. MONUMENTS -- MARKERS RIMAR MEMORIALS 152 SIMCOE ST. S. OSHAW. 'A OFFICE EVENINGS 723-1002 728-6627 CARD OF THANKS OSHAWA TIMES PATTERN BECKLEY -- ! wish to thank my reia- tives, friends and neighbors for the many » cards, gifts, flowers end visits while | e«was @ patient in the Oshawa General Hos- » pital. A Very special thank you is ex- « tended to the Reverend S. J, Armstrong, * Doctor R. K. Millar and Doctor G. W. » Lindsay, the nurses. and staff of SF for their and many to me: --WMrs. Leonard Beckley CLASSIFIED ADS With a CASCADE 40 electric water heating appliance you can use all the hot water you want at ONE LOW FLAT RATE. 'The CASCADE 40 produces hot water electrically 6 TIMES AS FAST AS AVERAGE USE DEMANDS...but... 'your water heating bill never increases. For information, call: your hydro LIVE BETTER ELECTRICALLY EASE AND ELEGANCE It's Spring's smartest switch able in Misses' Sizes 10, 12, 14, --jacket without sleeves, blouse 16 and 18. Size 16 suit requires = The nag oe Be one of casual 2% yards 39-inch fabric; hlouse elegance, a look favored by theand jacket lini require 34 top -- house Harmay. Turn eral oe . b: the jacket, i ther surprise to delight the eye, , Sead ONE DOLLAR for Print The sleeveless jacket is lined in &4 Pattern M485 to The Oshawa the print of the blouse. Note too, es, Pattern Department, that the skirt & : Oshawa, Ont. Ontario residents at the skirt is on a camisole dd to make sure the line hangs per-® 4 Se sales tax. Please print fectly always. Wear this chicPlainly YOUR NAME, AD- trio for Easter and after, for SS__with ZONE, STYLE icasual, travel or dress-up occa- NUMBER and SIZE. lerse Spring and Summer. Use Next Week -- Watch for a May be small, but they ore giants, powerful too, when it comes to getting things done. Let one of them sell your no fonger need household items. See for yourself, Oshawa Public Utilities Commission, Phone 723-4624 -- In Co-operation With -- WHITBY PUBLIC UTILITIES COMMISSION ... . AJAX HYDRO ELECTRIC SYSTEM PICKERING PUBLIC UTILITIES COMMISSION . . . . PHONE 942-2930 . PHONE 668-5878 Ls ee ee +s PHONE 942-0500 Telephone Now 723-3492 jersey, cotton tweed,' silk, linen. prominent Designer Pattern b' Printed Pattern M485 is avail- Mr. pl a wee

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