f PAGE FOUR THE DAILY TI MES-GAZETTE ™ TUESDAY, APRIL 20, 1948 LATEST NEWS OF THE COUNTY TOWN OF WHITBY | Business Office: Miss G. Macpherson. Editor: Robert Corbett, phone 2589 Phone 703, All Departments Council Approves H.S. District But Makes Condition Whitby council's approval was given last night to estab- _ lishment of a new High School area to include the town of Whitby, townships of Whitby and Pickering but only on con- dition that when a new High School is built the present sec- ondary school be available as a Whitby Public School. Text of the motion by Harry "Henry V" In Technicolor At Brock Thurs. Only Not a Dime For Survey Group Hears "I'm not prepared to vote a dime to the Whitby-Ajax-Picke) In- dustrial Planning committee," said councillor Harold 'Mace, at last night's council meeting. The other members agreed. : Council had heard a delegation from the committee ask for support and promise to pay a portion of $800 they propose to spend on a town planning and industrial sur- vey of the area from Scarborough to Whitby. Mr. Mace said he was prepared Enumerators Begin Big Job of Listing All for June 8 Vote Enumeration of voters for the purpose of compiling a list for use in the June 8 Ontario county by-election began in Whitby yesterday. The group of enumerators are directed from the Oshawa office of J. P. Mangan, returning officer. Chairman of the Whitby Liberal Association, Mayor Wil- LJliam Davidson said that the local 7 committee room is now open daily. Located over the Empire Life of. | fice it is staffed by Mrs. Edna Searched Africa Jermyn and John Strathy read: | "That this council request the | |= Board of Education to dissolve the || present High School district of the || town of Whitby in order to make || . way for the formation of a larger || High School district to include the | In Brief town of Whitby and all or parts of | ffl Accounts of sveial events and the townships of Whitby, Pickering, | of visitors to and from the town are appreciated by fo look after Whitbp's interests only, Joseph Bannigan explained 'why the survey would aid Whitby's growth and how industrial develop- ment along this 18-mile lakefront area could create a hazard to Whit- by if it is allowed to proceed un- planned and unzoned. He said Whitby would be in a vulnerable For Rare Plants Victoria, B, C.,.--(CP) -- Lionel Taylor, retired horticulturist, has returned from a 9,000-mile journey through South Africa in search of rare flowers and plants. Accompanied by his wife and daughter, Mavis, the journey was made in a caravan, and they slept Guthrie as clerk. The phone is not isted in the directory but the num- ber is, 2261. 2 Because of the nearness of the election, enumeration has to be complete by one week from today, Mr. Davidson said. A WARM WELCOME and that the county council be re. || quested to pass a by-law but only on condition that the said by-law | the present Whitby || provide that High School lands and buildings be transferred by the Whitby High School Board of the new dis. trict to the Whitby Public School Board as soon as a new High | School is built, the price to be paid | by the Whitby School Board not "to exceed the balance of the pre- sent debentures still outstanding at date of transfer." Aware of impending approval of his motion, Mr. Jermyn said: "No one can deny the advantages of a larger High School. Council has heard tonight several letters which seem to show that the cost of edu- cation has actually been lowered by incorporating an area. If we don't approve of this the outside townships may go ahead and leave us with a small, inadequate school." Brooklin W.I. To Hold Hobby Show April 28 The Women's Institute will hold their regular meeting on April 28, at the home of Mrs. W. Agar. The program, arranged by Mrs. Bald- win, convener of Home Economics, will include a hobby show. This is the annual meeting with election of officers, and the conveners of stand- ing committees are reminded to have their reports ready for pre- sentation at this meeting. A conference on "Care of Cloth- ing" is being held in the basement of the United Church on Wednes- day, April 21, fsom 10 am. to 4 pm. Miss Edith M. Collins of the Wom- en's Institute Branch and Home Economics Service of the Depart- ment of Agriculture, will conduct the demonstration. All women of the community are cordially invit- ed On Friday evening, April 23, in the Township Hall, Miss Anna P. Lewis, Director of the Women's In- stitute Branch and Home Econom- ics Service of the Department of this department A new Union Jack now flies from the mast over the county buildings adding color and dignity to the ad- ministration centre. The replace- matinee commencing at 3.30 @clock commencing at 8.30 p.m. THE FAMOUS BATTLE OF AGINCOURT! King Henry of England and his "merrie men" numbering 10,000 defeat the French Army numbering 50,000 in this scene from the Technicolor production "HENRY V" show- ing at the Brock Theatre, Whitby, Thursday only. Two performances only will be given, of "HENRY V," a tid hool date many position. Reeve W. H. Westney of Picker ing township spoke to endorse the survey. # Reeve. Andrew Muir wondered how a survey could be made of ts) and an evening performance | Such a large area for only $800. No (to one enlightened him. The question was referred to the Town Plan- ning commission for consideration. ment was badly needed. LJ ELECTED PRESIDENT Bert Baulch, of Brantford, mem- | | ber of the Rotary Club, whose work | | in connection with Crippled Child- | | ren's campaigns and the Easter | Seal campaign is well known here, | has been- elected president of the | ® Canadian Philatelic Society on Sat- | Did | urday, | LE A DOWN TO FIVE NOW A recommendation from the re- Five applications for the position 'tajl merchant's division of the |of town assessor and building ia- Chamber of Commerce left coun- spector will be interviewed by coun- ieil in a quandry last night. The cil Thursday night. Applications merchants said they want to close | committee has narrowed the field |at 12.30 on Wednesday down from 57. Deputy-reeve Mc-! Wednesday in the year, irre- Intyre stressed the importance of spective of holidays in the week. | finding a good maa, saying that if |Reeve Muir said that if they want | |citizens haven't faith in the as- la by-law they should have present- | Isessor it can be a source of unend- ed a proper petition. Deputy- | {ing trouble, reeve McIntpre added that it had | a {to be signed by 75% of the mer- | BOWLERS PLAY CARDS jchants. So on recommendation of | The Ladies' Lawn Bowling Club Seymour Whitney, the letter was | was entertained at the home of referred back to the C. of C. Mrs. J. Bell, Brock Street South on oo hk Thursday evening last when cards| A committee had been requested were enjoyed during the evening. | to bring in a report of flooding of Lovely refreshments were served by homes and lands in the vicinity of | the hostess. As the bowling season | Perry Street near Brock. Part of is soon to begin these gatherings |the report turned out to be an en-| will be discontinued until Fall, [gineer's estimate showing that Pol when it is hoped these get-togethers |tain drainage would $4,597. What Council cost LT 4 len on carrying out this work, but | FOR LUNCH WAGON? [Councillor Strathy said this wasn't A unique sight was seen on the his idea of what was needed to be | streets of Whitby on Monday morn- {done to alleviate the trouble there. ing. It was a street car, heing |[Mr. Jermyn added: "We had bet- destination. For a time it looked |it is we want a report on." as though the truck and unusual | dog freight would not be able to pass(. No action was taken on the re- under the subway east of the town: quest of the Jersey Club for a grant | But with careful maneouvering the towards its Parish Show. driver brought the vehicle through "Last year they left the park in | safely. {a mess," said Seymour Whitney. | "It should be a park for child- | 'Dirty Work' Alleged In Delay Asking For Disposal Plant Land ANOTHER RACKET? Kirkland Lake, Ont. (CP).-- Housewives here who bought paint- ings (cost $13.20) to become eligible for a "radio draw" were given an envelope by a door-to-door sales- man, then told they had won a radio. They are still waiting for the radios to arrive. ' Births Council last night received a. re- quest from the Public Utility Com- mission that the town acquire for it 4.16 acres of land from the Sleep age disposal plant for purposes of locating the proposed new $158,000. plant. Councillor John Strathy became incensed. Said he: "This is the first intimation this council had that every | property adjoining the present sew- | 1 T Of 13 Tons the Utility Commission needed any | land for erection of this plant. We | voted the $158,000. and now they want land! Why can't they expro- priate it themselves. I think the commission should do its own dirty work." Mayor William Davidson protest- ed Mr. Strathy's terminology, but the councillor insisted he had the right descriptive phrases. Mr. Strathy: "But why has this just come up now? I don't like the will be resumed. {Motion was that no action be tak- | jay they put it: 'thaf the town |Per at the curb . council be requested to acquire', Doesn't that mean expropriate?" Engineer Herd Pringle: "Of course it has been known to the commission that land would be transported by truck, to an Eastern |ter outline more precisely just what 'needed but we didn't send the re- quest to council until we knew just how much land was needed." Réeve Andrew Muir agreed that Mr. Strathy had a point and that council should have known sooner what land was needed. Town , solicitor John asked for his opinion. "This is a case where the town Hare was ] : . ALLAN--Doris and George Allan are y 0 eC happy to announce the arrival of a son, on Saturday, April 17th, at Osh- awa Hospital, a brother for Douglas. 'Waste Paper |Whitby Classified FOR RENT -- TWO UNFURNISHED Rousokesping, rooms to rent, Phone L, Henri, Whitby 2232. (93b) MOTHER WOULD TAKE CARE OF children throughout the day, five days weekly. Phone 2588, Whitby. (Apr.35) FOR SALE--GARDEN MANURE, ALSO Indian Runner Duck Eggs, cheap. ply 1399 Dundas street east, Wh ( Thirteen tons of old newspapers, | cartons and other waste paper were | removed from the premises of Whit. | by residents last Saturday when | energetic Scouts and - Cubs con- | ducted their second paper drive. | This exceeded the last 'collection by fully five tons. Three trucks, | well. manned with eager youngsters, | called at every home. Most people | FOR SALE34 TERRAPLANE A ¥ - | 800d rubber and motor recently over- | had cooperated by having the pa olla Bn BL UU SCeRLlY over: Whitby, atjer six o'clock. (A FOR SALE--1931 CHEV, SEDAN, $200.00, also 4!2 h.p. Johnson Outboard Motor, $85.00. Apply Sunoco Service Station Brooklin. (Apl.21 EXCHANGE -- WHITBY _ BUSINESS a FOR SALE--ENGLISH PRAM, GOOD gondition, Apply 329 Perry sireet; Wiis y. | Members f the Boy Scout Asso- ciation and Group Committees have asked that their thanks be ex. pressed to the people of Whitby for London--(CP) -- Prime Minister Attlee has sent a special welcoming message to those visiting Britain to participate in the Olympics. He wrote: "We shall be happy once again to be the hosts of the Olym- pic Games. . .What we may tempor= arily lack in material substance, we shall try to make up in the warmth most of the time in the open. The trip lasted 13 months. "I collect plants only as a hobby," he said. . "South Africa is a place for young men. Industry and agriculture is expanding rapidly taaroughout the Union." Hundreds of English families who had immigrated from the United Kingdom were starting new homes, | of welcome. . GRAIN and CLOVER SEEDS AJAX OATS 0.A.C. 21 BARLEY CLOVER SEEDS ALFALFA -- TIMOTHY -- RED CLOVER SWEET CLOVER -- ALSIKE -- PERMANENT PASTURE -- ALL NO. 1 COMMERCIAL GRADE No. 1 REGISTERED HYBRID SEED CORN H. H. GOODE MYRTLE STATION PHOMES: BROOKLIN 33r5 -- PORT PERRY 120r5 WTBY A couple will h t od apartment, unfurnished Qr partly fur- nished for similar acoormadation in Toronto, west end preferred, May 1. Apply Box 63 Times-Gazette, Whitby. SRR (Apl.22) FOR SALE--FOUR-ROOMED HOUSE, reasonable for cash. See Thieman, Pal- merston Ave., Whitby, (north of C.P.R.) (Apl.22) MAT- this splendid cooperation .They al- so wish to thank Everett Quantrill, Bill Underwood and King Brothers | for the use of their trucks. All| in all, the drive was a great suc- cess and provided needed funds for { Scout and Cub work. FOR BALE--COUCH BED, WITH Jase, extends double. Phone 352, y. N .Z. to Resurvey Whit- | Land Ady The THEATRE GUILD presents LAURENCE OLIVIER in William Shakespeare's Agriculture will present an illus-| 3 |ren, not for cattle," said Mr. Stra- trated lecture on her trip to Am- | Obituary thy sterdam last year, and will also| |" "I've no objection to the show but | land since it Is part of a town sewer present the sound film on the pa- | MRS. J. W. CAWOOD |I am against making a grant," con- | --not strictly a utility. If it had geant at the fiftieth anniversary | A former teacher. Mrs. Pearl Mil- cluded Mr. McIntyre. { been any other utility, the commis. | of Women's Institutes 4t Guelph. : " | + sion could have done their own €x- | Auckland, N. Z.--(CP)--Century- : i day La Proceeds are in aid of the Memori- fred Cawood Gieg Salulday ai hej A committee will meet the de- propriation," said Mr. Hare. ___ old errors in the map of New Zea- al Fund and it is hoped there will | a¢ter's Jong illness. She was in her |Puty-minister "of highways in re- | Mr. Pringle expressed the belief land will be corrected in a re-sur- be a good attendance to see these | ssi vear (gard to surfacing and widening [that there would be sufficient vey of the coast which is to begin fine pictures. | "The wife of John W. Cawood, Brock Street South. A report will moaey in the total of $153,000, t0 soon and may take 20 to 30 years Personals [ \ : .|be made to council. pay for the land as well, although 'to complete, Mrs. [this was not figured in the original | YOU MAY BORROW AS HIGH AB 90% of the cost of your new home under a National Housing A¢t Building Loan. Whitby and district needs many more homes. Prize-winning approvaq plans may be had at a nominal cost or you may submit your own plans for ap- roval. The National Housing Act oans are open to all who can meet the approval of the Central Housing and ortgage Corporation and the loaning company. It is easy. Don's delay get in touch with A. E. Murdoch, 23 Simcoe St. North, Oshawa. (901) FOR SALE--20 ACRES, LOT 20; 3RD. | has to expropriate or acquire the "HENRY V" In Technicolor I DAY ONLY! THURSDAY Entire Coastline | principal of Vaughan Rd. public ry : school and secretary of the Ontario * * The first systematic surveys were C. Reeson underwent an operation in 'Oshawa hospital, on Public School Men Teachers' Feder- The town hall is now 94 years old estimate. carried out between 1848 and 1855 Con., Whitby. Apply 7268 Brock street Friday, and is reported to be as well | as could be expected. : | The Horticultural Society will] meet on Monday, April 26, in the | church basement with John S. Hall, | noted gardener, as guest speaker. | There will be a question box and | anyone with a garden problem is] asked to write it and place it in the box for Mr. Hall's consideration. ation, Mrs, Cawood was born in Utica, Ont., and received her educa- tion in Port Perry and at Peter- borough Normal School. She be- came a teacher in 1923 and until her marriage in 1931 taught in pub- lic schools at Marsh Hill, Whitby, Bowmanville and Oshawa. Mrs. Ca- wood, formerly Pearl Sonley, resid- ed here with her parents. The fam- ily lived on Centre Street, and her jand not what it used to be accord-| Deputy-Reeve McIntyre: 'There | |ing to a repert of a government |is not much use of us sitting here | {building inspector, Footings, posts | hashing this over. We've got to have 'should be examined and some re- | the land and I think we should ap- |placed. Dancing in the up#tairs| point someone to negotiate for it." | {hall has been forbidden as too | Harold Mace: "I think the Utility | |menacing to the decrepit structure. | commission should be censured for | An inspection will be made to see | their "presentation of their prob- | {how far dry rot has damaged cer- | lems to us. One of the commis- | |tain portions of the building. | siners should have been here to- | | A letter from L. Love, 311 Dun- . night to back up Mr. Pringle." |stantly revised there are certain er- north, Whitby. PLOWING--GARDENS PLOWED, DISC- ing ets., wood sawing, Allis Chalmers hydraulic lift implements. Appl Sam. Metherel. 610 Maple street, itby, or phone 2559. WANTED TO BUY---ALL KINDS OF Poultry also new and old feathers Highest market prices. ALply J: Parker 321 Brock St..N. Phone 486 or Oshawa 7 - and although charts have been con- rors that can be corrected only by a complete re-survey. Ships' navigat- ors state that errors of three miles in charted positions are not uncom- mon and there are said to be cases where the difference between true and charted positions is as much as | seven miles. It is generally agreed that most GENERAL MATINEE AND EVENING PRICES APRIL 22nd MATINEE at 3.30 EVENING at 8.30 75¢c | GENERAL $1.20 WHITBY ELECTRIC Earl "Jake" Bryant INSTALLATIONS, FIXTURES WATER HEATERS, FARMS Phone 650 Whitby lop Street requ 1 Once again Mr. Strathy spoke | 2 quested = sireet light | out long. and strong to the effect that council was trying to "gyp" a citizen out of her property. Again Mayor Davidson protested the language. The Mayor will appoint a com- mittee to attend to the land pur- chase. ; S ar 3 | father had a barber shop herc. l : After her marriage, Mrs. 'Cawood |installed near his house, | moved permanently to Toronto and | > | 4 Ld | retired from the profession. A| Two residents of the east end | | member of the United Chureh of |(just out of town), Mrs. Eva | | Canada, she is survived by her hus- |Rutherford and T. C. Mygland re- | band, John Cawood; her father and {Quested that their garbage be pick- | | mother, Mr. and Mrs, Richard E.led up gd they would pay for it. | | Sonley, and a sister, Mrs. Lorne No action taken. | Kester, all of Toronto. " Convicts Learn "HOPPY'S William Boyd and Andy Clyde , wits LANNY REES - SAM LEVENE Produced by RICHARD H. BERGER + Directed by H. C. POTTER + wrines by siss rasrni PLUS AN ADDED ATTRACTION 'Skilled Trades In US. Prison | Joliet, 111, --(AP) -- "This is the | first prison I have ever seen where | anybody showed me how to make money without a gun. _ It was a 37-year-old Stateville | Penitentiary convict talking. He's | spent 16 years behind prison walls [in half a dozen states. He came 3% years ago on a five-to-15-year sen- tence for armed robbery. | Now he is one of about 2,500 pri- | soners out of a population of 4,300 | at Stateville and the o'd Joliet, Pri- | son Gere, who are fitting them- | selves for better lives. He's learning | to be a printer. He plans to use his new skill when he gets out, "A fellow can make more money in three months 'operating one of these machines than I got in all my robberies," he says. "And he doesn't | have to spend 16 years behind bars for it afterwards." Printing is one of 37 trades which | convicts cam learn al the prison vo- cational school. They are learning | to repair radios, watches, typewri- | | ters, shoes, auto bodies and fenders. | Other subjects include sign paint- | ing, carpentry, clay 'modelling, cook- ing, baking, farming, tailoring, bar- bering, landscaping, electrical, ma- chine shop and sheet metal work, glazing, powerhouse maintenance, rlumbing, masonry, painting, soap making, laundering, bookbinding, STARRING BILL WILLIAMS BARBARA HALE HOLIDAY" plastering, meat cutting, welding, mechanical drafting and photogra- phy. Thirty-two prisoners are full-time music students. Most of them couldn't read a line of music before they got here. The system, says Warden Joseph Ragen, is based chiefly on the idea that many men reach the prisons because they lack sufficient aca- demic' or "vocational training. "For one reaggn or another, they {have not had a chance fo develop their ability .to make an honest liv- ing," he says. "We try to fit men to compete, on an honest basis, wien they are outside again.' When Ragen took over as Warden here in 1932, he found 1,800 idle men. To put them to work he began | developing the prison shops and the Stateville correspondence school. The correspondence school offers primary, high school and college training, and about 1,000 inmates are enrolled. "A man can study everything giv- en in the average high sci100l course --except physics and chemistry," the warden says. "We don't want a student to come up with a home- made bomb." / Courses at primary school level are given in a specially designed school building. The classrocms are along a central hall that affords guards a view at all times. Convict instructors teach in the elementary grades. Most fig school and college work is handled by correspondence. ORIGINALLY PENAL COLONY Brisbane, Australia, was first set. tiled as a penal colony in 1825 by Sir Thomas Brisbane. marine hazards are presented with | reasonable accuracy, but long-per- | sistent faults in coastal line and | contour can sometimes create ap- | parently inexplicable discrepancies for navigators who are attempting to fix positions without local knowledge. | A start was made in correcting these errors before the war when RADIO SERVICE GUARANTEED -- IMMEDIATE BUTT RADIO & APPLIANCE 130 Brock St. N., Whitby, Tel. 707 STUDENTS 50c | STUDENTS 75¢ RELEASED THRU UNITED ARTISTS the survey ship H.M.S. Endeavour : |re-charted 662 miles of coastline in {the Auckland district; but the work | [came to an end at the outbreak of | war, Her work showed, however, | {how numerous are the errors on | leven the most recent revisions of {existing charts. . { In the Firth of Thames a pin- |nacle of rock shown on charts and {avoided by seamen for decades was |proved to be a myth. The chatted |position' of Cuvier Island light a lcommon landfall for overseas ship- ping, was found to be half a mile lout. The whole of one long stretch |of coastline notth of Auckland was | discovered to be charted one to two | miles away from its true position. | It is not yet known what vessel {will undertake the re-survey but it is probable that a ship fitted with {modern equipment will be loaned {by t tic iralty. . by the British Admiralty . The Following Initials, Names or Opposition Curlers Trim N.S. Cabinet Halifax,--(CP)--The Nova Scotia | government took a bad defeat half | way through legislature sittings but | not through a no-confidence vote. After a' year-old challenge, the] cabinet finally got around to an af- ter-work exhibition curling match against the backbenchers and took the 16-7 trouncing. Cabinet curlers were Premier Mac- donald, Highways Minister Rawd- ing, Health Minister Davis and Agri- culture Ministex Mackenzie. Opposing them were Henry Hicks, R. A. MacLellan, G. T. Purdy and | Adams, T.--R.C.AF. Anderson, F.--13 Batt. Bradley, E--~R.C.AF. Bratley, H. F.--~R.W.R. Carter, G. F.--~R.C.N.V.R. Charters, H~C. Inf. Corp, Coleman, F. J. A--G.G.H.G. Eldridge, E--~R.C.A, Fallon, M.--L.S. Reg't. Foster, W.--R.W.R. Griffin, R.G.--R.CAF. A PLAQUE IS TO BE ERECTED In The Canadian Legion Memorial Hall of Branch 112 -- Whitby, Ontario Men Who Were Resident in Whitby at the Time of Their Enlistment in the Canadian Armed Services, and Who Paid the Supreme Sacrifice in the Service of Roll Has Been Compiled From Information Available. Any Erfors in Units Should be Forwarded as Soon as Possible to the Branch President, W. H. James, or W. P. Ashton or F. J. Steffler. Harper, D. E~S.AR. Hogg, P.~Pictou Highlanders Holley, G. E--~R.CA/F. Howard, E. Johnson, L. C.--3 L.A.A. Reg't. Kapuscinski, W. S. --R.C.AF, Lynde, J.--Essex R. Marshall, T.--R.W.R. Michael, E, G.--A. & 8, H. Mclvor, J.--~R.C.AF, Oke, M--P.LD.G. IN MEMORY OF Their King and Country IN WORLD WAR Ii Perry, L--~Tor. Irish R. Phillips, G--R.C.A, Rea, W.--R.C.AF. Scott, G.--R.C.AF. Sutherland, J. G.--Glengarry Reg't. R, J~R.C.A8.C. Thomas, Y. L--R.CAF. Watson, J.-D. & G. H. Wigston, W. C.--R.C.AF. o Wilson, 8. A--R.CAF, D. D. Sutton, :