WHITBY DAY BY DAY September Date Set For Start On Paving WHITBY (Staff) -- About 70joff Janes at Thornton Rd. percent of the earth moving; One~culvert~ tas been com and reshaping for the recon- pleted and will be stripped this struction of Highway 2, between,|week. Another is half com- the Dundas and Rrock Sts.\pleted with the remaining halfim intersection and the westerly |to be poured and completed by boundary of Oshawa, has been the end of this week. completed. Bert Ritchie. work| The contractor found the re- superintendent for King Paving|mains of an old cistern near and Materials Limited Oakville,|the Whitby 'Four Corners," said Monday. lwhich it is believed was used Work on the project, which|for water storage and fire will cost in the neighborhood of |fighting. An old cordoroy road, $2,500,000, started April 26. Thejconstructed of 12 inch by 12 job will be completed about/inch timbers, which had been June 1,1967. Fifty-five men andicut square, was also found | 15 trucks are employed by the under the old pavement in this) fivim on ine joo, 1deal weather area. for construction work has pre-- One of the major obstacles vailed since work commenced.|to the rebuilding of the road The company has begun the| in the hollow, east of the Sunny- building of curbs and sidewalks|brae Nursing and Convalescent near the "'Four Corners" in|Home, was the swampy condi- Whitby. It is hoped to start'tion of the soil under the exist- paving in Whitby around Sept.'ing pavement. When the road] 15. was first built cordoroy con- In addition to the construc-|struction methods were used. tion of two 24-foot lanes, the This has meant that 35 feet of | highway will have a median marl and peat are being ex-| strip between the easterly cavated to get down to "hard boundary of the Whitby and pan." the Oshawa city limits. The job In one section in Whitby the also entails the reconstruction contractor found old curb and of three culverts and a railway |gutter work buried two feet! bridge. There will also be turn-'under the pavement, WHITBY SCOUTS TO VISIT U.K. | Ted McGee, son of Mr. and: guests of H. Baxter and P. J. Mrs. J. Clinton McGee, 202'Bird. They will also visit in Centre St. N., and Frank War- Kingston, Toronto, Nia- Built nine years before Confederation, the Mount Pleasant Public School was WHITBY -- AJAX Parents Guests As Camp Closes BOWMANVILLE weeks of fun closed Friday night when a Parents' Night was held Friday night by the recreation department day Bicamp. The theme of the camp, held at Thistle Valley Park, was built around "Pirates." The young campers presented a short play on Treasure Island and sang a number of songs which pleased their . parents. Don Gilhooley, chairman of the recreation committee, pre- sented awards to Robert Strike and Johnathon Gordon, the two best campers. T. A. Fanning thenked-the-day-camp-staff-for a job well done and also ex- PICKERING BOARD CLOSES MT. PLEASANT SCHOOL suggestion has been to re- open the old. schools for use as kindergartens at a Board this June, The board will retain ownership of all its outdated school struc- Two} pressed appreciation to the par- THE OSHAWA TIMES, Tuesday, July 19, 1966 ents for their co-operation, The parents were taken on a} guided tour of the forts built by the children, the nature an and a number of pirate rafts, Fire Fighters Stop | Newcastle Blaze | NEWCASTLE (TC) -- New- castle volunteer fire fighters quelled a blaze Jate Monday afternoon at the J. Anderson Smith Co. plant, King St. E. Besides broken windows very little damage was done. The fire started in the wood bin and spread to the coal bin. Two fire fighters, Dick Bier- steker and Jack Gray, with the aid of air packs, entered the building "and ~ directed streams BROCK Now Playing -- One Complete WHITBY Program Each Evening at 7:30 Also Second Feature A i in Color -- Begins -- 7:30 4 STARRING Recommended os Adult Entertainment Berbera Wi "Begins 9:10 acy be agains of water on the blaze. At Expo 67, you'll see "Man and his World". Get ready to change your ideas about both. man, son of Mr. and Mrs. George ,Warman, 716 Green St., will visit in England from Aug. 8 to Aug. 29. Ted belongs to 5th Whitby Scouts Venturers and Frank belongs to ist Whitby Scouts. Two English Scouts, Brian Swann of Pocklington, York- shire and Terence Rainbow, of West Molseley, Surrey will be visiting in Whitby. For the first week of their visit in Whitby they will be the guests of George Warman, trea- surer of 1st Whitby Scouts and Ben LaHaye, leader of Sth Whithy Troop. During their last week they will be house' AREA STUDENTS The following students are} taking part in the exchange student program sponsored by the Canadian Council of Chris- tians and Jews. The purpose of the exchange is to allow the gara Falls, Upper Canada Vill- age and will attend the CNE. While in England Ted, for the first week, will participate in a canoe trip from Oxford to Windsor on the River Thames and will stay in Essex for few days. Several other outings have been arranged. In_ 1964 Ted was chosen to attend the American National Jamboree held at Valley Forge, Penn. Frank for his first week will, be guest of the 14th Illford Boy late: date. --Oshawa Times Photo tures with an eye to later use of the buildings. One retired by the Pickering Township Area 1. School Newcastle Brownies | Hold Rice Lake Camp NEWCASTLE (TC) -- Eigh-jand after meals. Attractive pin|with neatness and personality Scouts Group camping at Cob-|teen Newcastle Brownies whojcushions, wall plaques, bird-| Prizes were given to Debbie | ham. Essex, England and will{attended camp at the Powell/houses and hula skirts were) Beerthuizen and Janice Wood-} spend sometime at Illford, Es- Cottages at Rice Lake, near|made during crafts. # land who tied first with five sex. Bewdley, returned home Thurs-| Swimming was made safe,|Points and to Shirley Hamilton day evening after three days/along with having a lifeguard,|and Jenny. Monroe for tying VISITING QUEBEC full of camping, fun and mem-|py using the Chum Svystem.|second place with four points. | ories for years to come Each swimmer had a partner; Only one girl, Jenny Mon- Melle Raymonde Lapointe,| Excellent guidance and super-| and on the blowing of a whistle,| roe, had the misfortune to have| St. - Leon - le- Grand Co., Ma-| Vision, along with good care|they had to grab their chum's|an item mislaid. This was her'| tapedia. Robert Gordon, Whit-| Were siven by the following) hand and raising it with their|sleeping bag which was in a 60 VIE Sein ven Rey leaders -- Mrs. W. Call, Mrs.! own showing all were accounted| green garbage bag. Hopes are ida ea Nenana *|R. Powell; pack leaders -- Iso-| for that it will turn up as Jenny is Cacouna, in the Rievier-du-Loup ; . ac j : 7 3 . uaehOUP-| bel Pierce, Lois Barchard, Nan- going camping again soon Laurel McKim, Whitby is visit-\.y and Linda Lowery: gradu-| Mary - : sete : , ted Thank-you gifts were present- Mclver celebrated her Next year, you're in for an eye-opener. Expo 67, the extraordinary universal exhibition at Montreal, will show you the world you live in as you've never seen it before. You'll be magically transported to the desolate polar icecap, to the eerie silence of the ocean depths, to the wheeling immensity of outer space. You'll step into a fascinating world in miniature, where more than two-thirds of all the nations on earth will present their achievements, their. way of living, their music, dancing, food and fun. All this is coming to your country, giving you the kind of opportunity that comes just once in a lifetime. Be sure to see Expo 67, and Man and his World. Once you have, the world will never seem quite the same again. students to live and speak as their hosts in a simple man- ner. Area students are returning from "La Belle Province' July ing Melle Jocelynne Boucher, ate nurse, Mrs. E Storks and who cooked Mrs. the Brooklin, is visiting Michel) Candy Emond, Rivier-du-Loup. Sharon arb ' y meals. 1 with their French-speaking|A"n Munson, RR 3, Oshawa, is mae : Seauere exchanging thelr visit, |Visiting Melle France Royer, Activities at camp included Allan Boland RR 3 Oshawa is|Causapscal. John Samue])nature hikes, crafts, scavenger visiting Danial Simard Chicout-|Porter, RR 3, Oshawa, is visit- ge ade Hand oat . bones imi. Ruth Anne Bryant, RR 3,\ing Philibert Dumont, Riviere- Ine Lend-a-Hand duties. before Oshawa is visiting Melle Andree|du-Loup and Ronald Smith, Tremblay, Causapscal, Alison| Whitby, is visiting Pierre Arse- Cunliffe, Whitby, is visiting'nault, Rimouski WHITBY PERSONALS PETERBOROUGH in New Brunswick borough County relatives and friends. places in the Central Junior Farmer's Mrs. Richard Hall, 721 Dun-| vacation das St. W., mother of Ross visiting Hall, celebrated her 98th birth- day, Sunday. Ed Brush and ; Sid Johnston, on behalf of the Donnithorne 328 Dovedale Dr.,|athietes from seven counties Royal Canadian Legion, pre- is in the Oshawa General Hos-|took part. The winners earned! sented Mrs. Hall with a dozen pital under observation of roses, Mayor Desmond New- vincial meet to be held Aug man and Whitby Councillors [ynn, daughter of Mr. and at Guelph sent a beautiful arrangement Mrs. Ted Jefferys, 213 Centre of carnations. During the day|St. N., is celebrating her ninth|Peterborough County an ins gare i rae: birthday today. team defeated Ontario County ives came to offer their bes rboroug Is ve wishes and gifts. Numberous Mr. and Mrs. Peter Solly, 118 et fig gg vie on cards and telegrams were also Allan St., entertained at their|rejay Ontario County won the received. Mrs. Ross Hall, residence in honor of Mr. and! ojpj¢° relay : served birthday cake and light Mrs. Norman McColm, parents |Gounty won the men's softball refreshments. of Mrs. Solly, on the occasion : of their 25th wedding anniver- . . Mr. and Mrs. Frank Doucett, sary. Present from out-of-town Nps ep ill pi -- 1027 Centre St. N., celebrated | were: Mr, and Mrs, Eddie Har-|jump for Ontario County, Raich their 47th wedding anniversary rison, Detroit Mich., Mr. and!Shier and Don ane July 14. For the occasion they Mrs. Douglas McColm_ and Ontario County took second were invited out for dinner and daughter Grace, Dewittville, |and third in the' 100 ' dd h the evening by their son-in-law Que Mrs. Pearl Sweetman, while John Sane pee and daughter, Mr, and Mrs. Port Daniel, Que.: Miss Carol| county Dplaced setand in the Ed Brush. ~ ats ye Mlgae ety a and |shot put and third in the 880- Mrs. William Cassaday and p;., : + S08 \vard dash " fen Ricky, Mr. and Mrs. Gordon her son, William, are spending .: a Mr, and Mrs, John Nystrom y ott i ae Wh coal: Weg cottage atinvetrom. Toronto. Mrs Me- ' presented with a Colm was Mr. and Mrs Gordon corsage and a boutonniere for Richardson and family, Galt, Mr. McColm. Numerous gifts, spent last Sunday at the home accompaniend by best wishes, of his sister and. brother-in- were received. A buffet supper law, Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Was served by the hostess Treen, Euclid St. Their daugh- Mr Mrs ter, Nancy, returned home with ." ° ig them after spending two weeks Mantle, 225 Green St., spent the visiting her aunt and uncle and weekend at their summer home other friends. at Carlton place. Belated birthday wishes to their daughter, Heather andiMrs. Cor Leitsig, 509 Peel St., son, Kevin and O'Neil Pare!who celebrated her birthday have left for a three werk/ July 18 : = MaKe Your| OUTDOOR | LIVING COMPLETE WITH Sorry to learn that Mrs. Reg| 6 June Parliament sad FREEMANS FORMALS FOR MEN Scat hin USS EEVE MEN'S SHOP 129 Brock St. S., Whitby PHONE 668-2091 and Norman Mr. and Mrs, Royce Cooling, IMMEDIATE DELIVERY PHONE CHARCOAL YELLOW BROWN \ GET YOUR FREE. BROCHURE ON PATIO DESIGNS TO-DAY! GREEN RED ithe right to compete in the pro- || In team sport competition the | girls' i} Northumberland || Ron Jones of Ontario County || Ralph || also of'|| Ontario | Beerthuizen; | 10th Victoriaville. Don Mitchell,/swim ming lifeguard -- Miss|and candles were put in cup-| p,|cakes. She was presented with Mrs good|a china pig and a fancy bar 0 soap 1¢ gi al F our First Places Won 'By Peterborough County Peter-|Graham, won four first)/placed second and third in the| sy. i ; re being too Ontario |girls' 75-yard dash s Field Day/ham, Ontario County, here Saturday. More than 200\in the high jump | | n Mianie || birthday while at camp ed to Miss Storks, Beerthuizen, and also to f|Mrs. Powell and to Mrs. W. Mcllroy who gave the use of their cottages. Mrs. Beerthuizen {kindly donated the prizes and awards. Special thanks to Mr. Gordon Garrod who, with the use of his truck, transported supplies and gear to and from the camp and to the parents who drove lea children there and back, Mrs. Rowe, Through ballots, the Brown- themselves, voted for the rl who they thought was the | around best camper, along) came from the Leaders and | Brownies. | Brownies, '}to attend were unable camp, due to many in num | ber to take at one time, will who Ontario this County Linda Gra- was third Ithe early fall BLOOD DONOR CLINIC TUE., JULY 19 CANADIAN LEGION HAL BYRON ST. S, -- WHITBY 2 Until 4:30 P.M. n rem, A PITFALL FOR PRICE SHOPPERS Looking for the lowest price difference on your next new car? Good. But don't § mistake it for a low order price that may disappoint you It's easy to do this since better than 50% of all new cars involve a wait for faetory delivery. The dealer has the right to reappraise for damage tc your used car since the order was taken, It is © practice with quality deolers to make little or no change in original appraisals. Trouble may arise if a so-called "price" dealer reaches to get an order from his competition with on inflated used car allowance he later plans to lower, He may claim excessive domoge, market decline or whatever The buyer usually poys the difference--sometimes as much as $200.00. He may be swoyed by the dazzle of the factory- fresh new cor. Or he doesn't went to disappoint his family by further delay. Common sense .soys that you should know your dealer, or his reputation for integrity, rather than buy on price alone. The clause is necessary on factory-ordered cars with a three-to- seven-week wait. Accidents con occur. But it can be costly to « reputable dealer who may frequently lose an order by quoting @ realistic delivery price he intends to honor against one his competition doesn't. At Northside, integrity and service are port and parcel of the purchase you moke en our New Dodges, Coronets, Valiants and Chryslert and Quality Used Cers. NORTHSIDE CHRYSLER DODGE attend an additional camp in! The history of winged flight and rocketry will be just one feature of 'Man the Explorer", which will show you man's endless voyage of discovery in every dimension. You'll walk through a model of a human cell, magnified one million times, watch the Operation of a giant trans- parent human brain. You'll see what the earth looks like from the moon, and marvel at the beauty of the seas of stars in outer space. "Labyrinth" will bring you a uniquely beautiful experience, a new conception of multi- screen cinema plus a misrered maze incorporating special ef- fects, Aimed at telling nothing less than the story of man, performances in Labyrinth will last 35 minutes, and be one of the big attractions of Expo 67, Admission, as to all the Theme Pavilions, will be free, "Man the Creator" will include a major exhibition of fine arts, de- sign and photography, 200 of the world's greatest paintings, selec- ted by an international jury from collections around the world, will be presented in a $2 million art gallery, The work of 50 leading contemporary sculptors will be shown in a sculpture garden. In HABITAT, you'll see a revolutionary concept of urban housing_a complex of prefabricated dwellings, 12 stories high, in which the roof of one house forms a garden for the one above. 36 of the 160 houses will form a shOwcase for the latest in interior decoration, we furnishings worth more than $1 million, ES | of Canadian Conf which covers over two-thirds o' devices for underwater exploration, "Man and the Oceans" will take you on a fascinating trip to the watery kingdom the earth's surface. Included will be aqua- riums, aquanaut displays. and a survey of navigation from antiquity to today's Your Expo 67 Passport will admit you to all the Thema, Na- tional and Pro- vincial Pavil- ad , pl is for unlim- ited rides on the Expo Express. Save by be at the redu advance prices, in effect through July 3st, (Higher prices apply from August Ist, $0 do it now.) A Daily Passport costs $1.80, a Weekly Passport (7 consecutive days) $6.50, a Season Passport, $20. There are also Youth Passports, for the 13-21 age group, and half-price Passports for children 2-12. (Ages as on April 28, 1967.) Available at banks, travel agen- ties, department stores, or wherever you see the official Expo 67 sign, ACCOMMODATION. Make reservations through your travel agent or, in case of difficulty, write or telephone LOGEXPO, the official Expo 67 accommodation bureau, The address: LOGEXPO, Expo 67, Cité du Havre, Montreal, P.Q. Tele- phone (514) 397-8817. A great agricultural exhibit will form part of "Man the Pro- vider". Spread over 7 acres, it will feature the Sun Acre of growing crops, and sections ealing with soil management, irrigation, fertility, and farm mechanization, You'll see the complete operation of a modern dairy, from the cow to finished products, and an automated egg factory. "Man and his Health" will use 'live theatre" on six separate revolving stages to demonstrate the strides made by medical science, and to give you a glimpse of the astonishing developments that lie just around the corner, MONTREAL CANADA UNIVERSAL AND INTERNATIONAL EX "Man the Dare- devil" will be seen in hair-raising stadium shows with human cannonballs, high wire and helicopter acrobatics, in the thrill- a-minute spectacle of the Gendarmerie Francaise, and in the great 1700- performer Canadian military tattoo. (© Fomroyhe tn bs Coenen Sommnan fe Te OO Re Len HIBITION + APR. 28- OCT 2