Ontario Community Newspapers

Daily Times-Gazette, 3 Mar 1953, p. 2

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2 THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE, Tuesday, March 3, 1058 ~ BRTHS | OSHAWA AND | DBURN--Mr. and Mrs. Harold Brad- | BRAD: are happy to announce the arrival ! of a baby boy, Robert Stanley, on Fri- | DISTRICT day, February 27, 1953, at the Oshawa | General Hospital. FAX--Mr. and Mrs. James H. Fax, an- | | nounce the birth of their daughter, Diane | of rol, on Sunday, March 1, 1953, at the ke General * Hospital. A sister for | Brian. J SON--Mr. @nd Mrs. Ken Gibson, (nee gine Shmyu), are happy to announce the birth of their daughter, Cathy Marie, on Saturday, February Wayne and Ricky. Hamilton are happy to announce the eth of a 51b. baby girl, in Grace Hospital, Toronto. : DEATHS __On Tuesday, March 3, 1953, Mar- | Lip gm Christie Mills, wife of Fred: | erick E. Hare, and mother of William | John, of Oshawa, Frederick Archibald of Toronto, and Wallace Arthur of Leaside, Ontario. al from Luke-McIntosh Funeral gh I 5 at 2:30 p.m. Interment: (Kindly omit flowers.) IN MEMORIAM 1G--In loving memory of a dear hus- i and father, James Craig, who passed away March 3, 1951. --Sadly missed and ever remembered by Jnion Cemetery. Rotary Club, who celebrate their birthdays this week were pre- sented with r {luncheon yesterday. Those honored were. George and Maurice Hart, George Roberts and Dr. W. J. Langmaid. Yes dent, in yesterday's issue, it was stated that Fred Mothersill resid- ed at 292 King Street East. Mr. Mothersill lives at 292 King Street West. ed yesterday, when they collided a Ritson road and William Street East. VISTORS AT ROTARY Vistors at the luncheon meeting | the Oshawa Rotary Club in Hotel | Genosha yesterday included Fred | {McCarthy of Toronto, Frank Down- | 'ey, Pete McMurtry, W. B. White, | {Harold Roughley and L. T. Boyd, | 'all of Oshawa; and Rotarians Ken | 28, 1983, at the | Paftridge of Camrose, Alberta; M. | Oshawa 'General Hospital. A sister for | nrayiin and A. Darch of Bowman- ville; MARSHALL--Mr. and Mrs. Larry Marshall | British Columbia and Ross Murison 'of Pickering. Douglas Weir of Vernon, PRESENTED WITH ROSES Four members of the Oshawa es at the club's WRONG ADDRESS In the report of a motor aceci- TRUCKS DAMAGED Two trucks were slightly damag- A. C. Robertson, 258 Drew . Engineers, Repair Crews Work All Night In Effort To Restore Chats Falls Power |Falls Off 7 oe BUSINESS SPOTLIGHT Britain's Shipping Any symptom of decline in Brit- ish shipping must be gravely re- garded. In peacetime the British Isles live by sea-borne trade; in! two world wars they have been saved by sea from starvation and defeat, relates The Times of Lon- on. Naturally and inevitably other countries, as their concern with overseas trade has grown, have made progress in shipping; and the wish of every country to keep hold of its carrying trade is as old as the mercantile system which once directed the navigation policy of this. country. ° DISTURBING . TRENDS There is a margin, however, which this country must keep in the world's shipping to be solvent in peace a safe in war. It is with this prim@ need in view that the course of shipping statistics must be anxiously surveyed. When shipping leaders foregather at the annual meeting of the Chamber of Shipping February 26, they will have some disturbing trends to consider. In the last half-century the share of the United Kingdom of the world's shipping has dwindled to less than a half of what it was at the beginning. In 1905 -the United Kingdom owned just over half the world's shipping and by the middle of 1951 this had fallen to just over | \ Drain Lakes, Shift Rivers In Seeking Mineral Wealth By FORBES RHUDE Lakes are being drained and | rivers shifted as Canada seeks out | her mineral wealth, Latest instance of such topogra- phical face lifting 1s the planned yraining of Black lake, near Thet- ford ines, in Quebec's eastern townshi s. This dy of water, about 600 acres, or nearly a square mile, in extent, will be lifted from its bed to uhcover a deposit of asbestos. The water course now leading into the lake will be diverted to another part of the area's drainage system, and the lake will be pumped out. United Asbestos Corporation, Ltd,, under recent action of the Quebec legislature, now owns the area of the lake's bed, and associated with it is Lake Asbestos of Quebec, Ltd., a subsidiary of American Smelting and Refining Corporation, United Asbestos plans to spend $15,000,000 to bring the property into production, including draining of the lake and building of an in- itial milling unit with a capacity of 5,000 tons daily. Expansion . programs by . other companies in the etford Mines area, which now produces 70 per cent of the free world's asbestos, will total about $25,000,000 during the next two years. Draining of Black lake, in rel- as a fairly simple feat, as such things go. A more spectacular job was the draining of Steep Rock lake in northwestern 'Ontario, 140 miles west of Port Arthur, which un- covered one of the continent's lap- gest bodies of high-grade iron ore. <There the water courses of the entire countryside had to be re- arranged before the lake was pumped out. This lake, shaped somewhat like the letter W, was about 15 miles long and one-half to a mile wide. . Steep Rock Iron Mines, Litd., was formed in 1939, the drainage job was completed in 1944, and iron-ore shipments started in 1945, The company last year shipped 1,275,000 tons of ore and aims at 3,000,000 tons annually by 1855, and 7,000,000 tons later on. Addionslly, Injend Steel Com- an, icago plans to spend $50.500,000 in the next seven years, developing properties in the area Xhich it has leased from Most dramatic of all jobs in the re-shaping of the Canadian face is, of course, that being done in British Columbia, where a water- shed of 5,400 square miles is being made to reverse its flow from east to west, to provide power for the Kitimat aluminum develop- his wife, Jean, and family. Street and William Gordon Mec-| Diarmid, 29 Sunset Drive, drivers of the trucks, were uninjured. Rob- 'ertson's vehicle was proceeding east on William Street east, while n < a fifth. The forthcoming report. of ment. ----- the Chamber of Shipping may be mm enpecied to show a further small _-- decline, and there is no sign that atively level company, is regarded loving memory of our GAGNON__In who passed away Feb- friend, Tommy, 28, 1949. Ever remembered by Allan and Pat McGarry. the truck driven by McDiarmid IN--In loving memory of a dear hus- 1 and father, Staniey Edgar Hann, who passed away from us March 3, 1952. was headed north on Ritson Road, when the accident took place. sed in life. Honored in death. Tove aed by his wife and family. CARD OF THANKS Mr. V. H. Corbett has returned. home after being confined to the hospital and would like to express Pi Shai hid iati ends appreciation to all 5 Jor theiy S n Ci flowers and especially to the nurses of B-2 and Dr. Miller. OBITUARIES MRS. FREDERICK E. HARE In failing health since last July, Martha Marion Christine Mills, be- loved wife of City Clerk Frederick E. Hare, died on Tuesday, March 3. She was the last member of family. Ber native of Renfrew, the deceas- ed was a daughter of the late John Mills and Marion Gordon. A resi- dent of Oshawa for 46 years, she was a brilliant high school teach- er prior to her marriage. A grad- uate of Queen's University, she taught in Port Hope, Oshawa and Aurora and as a girl lived in Lind- say. =a. Mrs, Hare was a member of St. Andrew's United Church and for a number of years was an active member of the Women's Mission- ary Society. Town Builds Own Airport In Civic Plan of this central | town and district have built their | own airport to keep in step with ted soon. Only single-engine craft have used it so far, but it is said to be capable of accommodatihg twin-engine 'planes and future ex- pansion is anticipated. long and 200 feet wide. co-operation and contribution--15, | 900 donated by district residents | an loaned by logging companies; fuel | donated by oil companies and la- | bor volunteered by almost every- | one, | donated by a resident, Jack, and the construction cam- | paign was laid proximately 500 MCBRIDE, B.C. (CP)--Residents | British Columbia | .C. growth, Full use of the airport is expec- The present runway is 1,800 feet The story of the airport is one of industry; heavy equipment | e The strip was laid out on land | Adolph | by D. A. Aker. | McBride has a population of ap- | Besides her husband she leaves 'u- mourn her passing three sons, William John Hare of Oshawa, Frederick Archibald Hare of To- ronto and Wallace Arthur Hare of Leaside and five grandchildren, The funeral service will be held from the Luke-McIntosh Funeral Home at 2.30 p.m. on Thursday, March 5, followed by interment in the Oshawa Union Cemetery. Rev. Dr. George Telford, 'minister of Andrew's United Curch, will conduct the services. Light Horse ToRide Again At Coronation SYDNEY, Australia (CP)--Aus- tralia's famous Light Horse, lead- FITZROY HARBOR, Ont, (CP)-- Engineers and repair crews worked through the night on the task of restoring power output at the 220, 000-horsepower Chats Falls hydro- electric plant, srippled by an ex- plosion and fire Monday, Three of the $20,000,000 plant's eight turbo-generators lay smashed beneath twisted girders and fallen walls and roof. Another generator was believed damaged and the others were shut down before fire burned through the main cable carrying power to the hydro lines. In Toronto Monday cnight, the Ontarib hydro-electric commission chairman, Robert Saunders, esti- mated the loss at $1,500,000--or $2,000,000 at the most. vis Mr. Saunders said he will visit the fire scene today with top offi- cials to map out reconstruction. He expected partial repairs would be made within two or three weeks. No one was injured in the blaze, which officials blamed on an ex- plosion caused by a technical fault in the oil circuit-breaker. They said sabotage is.not suspected. Loss of the plant's 220,000 horse- power, which is fed from this Ot- tawa river point 30 miles west of Ottawa into the southern Ontario "power pool," won't mean a power shortage. Steam generators at Toronto and Winsor were pressed into full pro- duction Monday to take up the slack. They normally operate at 25-per-cent capacity, since steam | generation of power costs about three times as much as hydro power. " O. S. Luney, Ottawa area mana- ger for the Ontario hydro commis- sion, said it would be many months before the whole plant could be put back into service. The five-hour fire caused havoc in a large section of the 500-foot- long three-storey power plant, The | plant was built in 1931 on a quar-| ter-mile Ottawa river dam---the first major power development on the river, It is Jointly owned by | the Ontario hydro commission and | the Ottawa Valley Power Company. | Two plant employees, Tom Tripp, 42, and Jack Ross, moved to save the valuable equipment as soon as they saw burning oil spistter from! the ' circuit-breaker. They threw | switches to cut off all eight turbo-| generators. | circuits from a water pump, em- ployee waited for outside chemi-! cal firefighting equipment to be| brought in. A chemical pumper | from the national research council | station at Arnprior, 12 miles' away, | was brought in along a one-mile | railway spur--the only entry--on | a relay of planks laid along the | track. A pumper from Ottawa was | brought in on a flatcar, Hustings Challenge Hurled At Liberals A (CP) -- An outspoken | Valley) SL botpohes | Thatcher if he was speaking for CCF member whose | sometimes get him into hot water with his own party has challenged the Liberal government to put the 1953-54 budget before the people. The challenge was issued in the Commons Monday by Ross That- cher, 36-year-old Moose Jaw, Sask., hardware merchant. He said that the Liberal government is "en- cumbered by deadwood and hang- ers-on;" that it lacks initiative to meet "overtaxation" and has em- barked on waste and extravagance which reaches "scandalous pro- portions." He added: "I think the only honorable course for this government to take is to resign without delay; by that immediately asked Mr. {his party. ; "I would not be surprised if I were," replied Mr. Thatcher. Some speeches previously have got him into difficulty with M. J. Coldwell, CCF leader. Last year Mr. Coldwell publicly spanked Mr. Thatcher for saying social security payments shou be scaled so taxes could be!' cut. Fisheries Minister Sinclair stepped into the fray. He recalled that last year Mr. Thatcher had charged the government was bleed- iing corporations white. He wanted to know what the Moose Jaw member thought of reductions in 13 County Centres Lift Rent Control - the fall has stopped. Since 1905 the volume of ton- nage owned in the United King- dom has increased from 14,497,000 to 17,900,000, counting only vessels of over 100 tons gross. Yet in the United States (excluding ships owned on the shores of the Great Lakes, but including the large re- serves of cargo ships comprisin many of the vessels built to mee the emergency of the last war) 'Our Way Or Else' Reds' Korea Stand UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP)= World diplomats today ruled out chances - for any new action on Korea in the current UN session the mercantile marine has increas- ed from a mere 1,339,000 1905 to about 28 million tons; ship- ping owned in oher countries has! Because of the danger of short risen from 12,907,000 tons to about | 44 million tons, and it increased by three million tons in the past year. AFTER TWO WARS The following table shows how after the two great wars which ended in 1918 and 1945 the British share of world shipping was sharp- | ly reduced. This was not only be- cause of the heavy losses suffer- ed by the British mercantile mar- ine through war at sea but also because of the impetus which war gave to the ownership of ships in other countries: Mid-Year U.K. as percent | 1905 | | TORONTO -- Rent controls were | 1950 lifted in the majority of Ontario | municipalities yesterday but they | remain in effect in Oshawa and | most cities. : Other Chatham and North Bay | were relieved of the war-time res- | trictions which the province assum- | ed when the federal government dropped them. City councils in| Chatham and North Bay speciic- | ally requested that they be freed! of controls, Whitby remains under control as does Uxbridge. The latter town was corpogation taxes made in the budget. scheduled for decontrol yesterday until the local council protested. 1951 21. Two wars have imbued fres countries with a wish to have ships in théir own control when battle begins. Countries with no need to rely, as the old maritime nations rely, upon trade hy sea for the means of existence have felt it in- cumbent upon them to encourage the growth of fleets of ships of their own. MAKEUP OF FLEET The General Council of British Shipping, at the wish of the gov- ernment, is to carry out a full in- quiry into the earnings of last year; it has been estimated that after heaing the uncompromising tons in| stands pronounced by both the Soviet Union and the United States. Foreign Minister Andrei "Vishin- sky of Russia fired a broadside at the new Republican administra- tion Monday. He told the general assembly's political commit- tee once again that the only way to stop the fighting in Korea was to accept his own formula for peace --a formula already rejected by . overwhelming majority in the Aside from Vishinsky's blasts at the Eisenhower administration, which. he accused of merely 'bor- rowing from the Truman-Acheson book," weary delegates found noth- ing new in the Russian's speech for which they had waited tensely after suspending three consecutive meetings. Vishinsky hinted he may pre- introduce as a fresh resolution his old proposal-rejected during the first half of this assembly session last fall--calling for an immediate cease-fire and an international con- ference on the question of prisoners of war, reunification of Korea and other Far Eastern problems, Other delegations still showed reluctance to take the floor after they heard Vishinsky's uncom- promising stand. None asked to speak this morning, and committee president Joao Carlos Muniz put off resumption of the debate until the afternoon. In his sweeping attack on the new U.S. administration's foreign policies, Vishinsky charged that the Americans--and not the Russians as Lodge had said--sought to pro- long and expand the war in the | Far East and were planning to use | Asians as 'Canon fodde¥." ; THE WEATHER TORONTO (CP) -- Official fore- casts issued by the Dominion pub- lic - weather office in Toronto at 9:30 a. m.: Synopsis: An area of very light drizzle moved into Windsor over night as warmer air from the southwest began moving back into Ontario. No significant amount of precipitation is expected, however, until late tonight when rain will fall over much of the lower lakes districts. Through Northern and Central Ontario, intermittent snow and freezing drizzle will complete the weather picture for Wednesday. Regional forecasts valid until midnight Wednesday: Lake Huron, Niagara, western No A-Bombs Are Dropped At Lakehead FORT FRANCS, Ont. (CP)es Headquarters of the 31st U.8. air | division, Fort Snelling, Minn., said Monday in an announcement that tests being conducted in ' the Upper Red Lake region of Min. nesota. It was reported recently that pocket-size atomic bombs were { being exploded in the area but the {report was denied by the U.S. | government, they 'will prove to have exceeded | £150m. These are vital figures in the balance of payments. In face of the busy, and often weighted, competition of other countries, the makeup of the mer- cantile fleet which plies under the British flag is changing. In 1939 passenger and cargo liners togeth- er represented about 8,750,000 tons; by the middle of last year this total was 8,500,000 tons. Within these figures there was a reduction of about 500,000 tons in the volume of liners carrying large numbers of passengers. Before the war tramps -- or ordinary cargo ships Thatcher made no direct |The same is true of Mara town- ehtember, put to resign this reply. { ship which stays under control, So or Sepre ul | "Mr. Sinclair said it now is ap- does Ajax. Those freed of controls in On- week. | | "TI challenge the Liberal party to parent Mr. Thatcher has reverted 1 : go to the I with this' budget | {0 the CCF party line. But it would | tarip County include Beaverton, as an issue. I say that the people be interesting to see how Mr, | Cannington, Port Perry. and the of Canada will welcome the oppor- | Thatcher voted on the CCF motion | townships of Brock, Pickering (by tunity to show their dissatisfaction |of non-confidence in the govern- |Special request. Rama, 'Reach, at the polls." {ment which was "critical" of the |Scott, Scugog. Thorah, Uxbridge, George Cruickshank (L-Fraser { Whitby and Whitby East, "Spare Rod' FUNERAL OF Monday's announcement said HARRY CANFIELD Rev. Duncan MacLean of 8t. George's Anglican Church conduct- ed the funeral service at the fam- ily residence, 589 Simcoe Street South, yesterday . afternoon for Harry Canfield who died in the Oshawa General Hospital on Fri- day last. The pallbearers were Richard Hamilton, Elmer Ferguson, Charles Stainton, Albert Weeks, James Reid and van Parrott. Interment was in the Oshawa Union Cemetery. I mean to resign not next August ing regiment of the Desert Moun- ted Corps in the Middle East dur, ing the First World War, will ride again as part of Queen Elizabeth's body guar at the Coronation, e. Light Horse is now part of history, but the uniforms, with emu plumes waving on felt hats, will be revived for the bodyguard. The Australians will wear the leather bandolier$ slung on their left shoulders and carry their rifles slung, No Light Horseman ever used a leather rifle bucket like other wavany, The last Light Horse unit was Lake Ontario réglons; London j % ios: ) | there are some explosions but none Hamilton, Toronto cities: Cloudy | ¢, exceed the power of the com: and mild today and Wednesday, a | See few showers or periods of very (mon INT bomb Jed In_the Seo. light drizzle this afternoon and to- | tests are being ducted in the night. Rain beginning about dawn |LeSi8 are g- congue n Ie Wednesday. Winds. southeast 15, | 27ea. shifting to northwest 15 Wed-| nesday_ evening. Low tonight and |, Miss Shells Smith, Assistant Cub- Whigham 32° and 40, Toronto, "St. | rio. Wolf Cub Pack played. the : » Su part o e Fairy Queen e Catharines and Hamilton 33 and | pantomime. "Puss in ts" recent- 40. Summary for Wednesday: mild, ly presented by the Roland House rain, Players in London, England, corporation tax reductions. is that they feel they must protect them," she continued. : si As an example, Mrs. MacKinnon 1 10Nn told of the death of an Eskimo | nurse and said how sorry they | 4 B.C. Off mechanized in 1940 and now, un like 40 years ago, it would be hard to form a mounted unit. Station hands don't use horses for muster ing now. e most famous battle of the Light Horse was in General Allen- by's first campaign in 1917 when Meaningless To Eskimos REGINA (CP)--That old proverb were. They believed the nurse | should have the sympathy because | she had been with the child at] the time of death. | It took Mrs. MacKinnon a while | to understand the Eskimos but af-| ter two years on Baffin Island she | Bunnies Bug Aussie Land SYDNEY, Australia (CP)--Ac- built to carry commodities in bulk --accounted for about 3,500,000 tons. In June, 1949, there were 595 foreign-going tramps afloat of 3, 138,000 tons gross. By June, 1951, the number had declined to 513 vessels of 2,793,000 tons. The figures for last June, which Industrial Aid To Business VANCOUVER (CP)-The Greater Vancouver metropolitan develop- ment commission is surveying plans to aid foreign industria! ists | to establish themselves in British | Columbia. | One.plan to be explored calls for {left with tears in her eyes for! S% ustrali "spare the rod and spoil the child" | "love of the country and the ma-|COrding to scientists there are . [tives in it." about 750,000,000 rabbits in Aus- ' doesn't mean a thing to Eskimo | y . tralia in an average year, said ne The Jodie squadrone 2s parents. | Richard G. Casey, minister ip |Jider ships Job, breakingup which oyec on the open plains before | nn. aA G MacKinnon who spent | : charge of the Commonwealth scien- |f0}0Wed a decline in freight rates. Beersheba om he southem border iy rs i a Prone tad «| Moming Results {ific and IhduSHIaL Toearat or- |p Oil pankers, on the Dther hand, , with rifles slung |, noon eting of the League of ss . | have increased in number and ton : 'Dominion Curling Se [takes on the spirit of an ancestor,| SUDBURY (CP)--Third roud ] ization, in a recent warning to and their bayonets in hand, they 4 o ganzat ; nage. In June, 1939, they repre- ; ' Y Women Voters that Eskimos be- farmers. He urged them to con- overran the Turkish trenches and | jive that when a child is born it |sented about three million tons . i /results in the Canadian curling Mrs. MacKinnon, who lived for | \hampionships. BETTER MANNERS 002 202 102 330--15 | will be included in the new report |of the Chamber, must show a fresh | reduction, in view of the sale of a brigade made what has been descri as one of the finest charges in the history of British tinue their efforts to control the | nl gross. By June, 1951, there were rabbit population. |449 ocean-going tankers of 3,502,- Mr. Casey said seven or eight 000 tons. The latest figures wiil rabbits ate as much pasture as show further expansion. The num- k the town and thousands of | |two years in Panghirtung, Baffin | formation of an industrial "foun- dation" to advance capital to for- sien companies seeking to build ere. Many are barred from bringing capital out of their own country, chief among them British manufac- turers. If capital could be advanced until blocked sterling is "unfrozen" JOHANNESBURG, South Afieed (CP)--In a country where most men and boys go Marist Brothers college here de- cided to make its boys wear hats. The principal of the college de-| clared no boy could learn to treat | women and elderly people with re-| spect if he is always hatless, hatless, the | Island, with her husband, a doc- tor, said that Eskimo children are a "carefree Jot." Eskimos have their faults 'the | Manitoba same as we have faults," she said but they are a very understanding people. "Their idea about white people | Ontario { Newfoundland Saskatchewan lberta 010 020 020 001--6 010 000 010 201--5 101 012 012 020--10 114 030 210 002--14 Nova Scotia 020 302 101 101--11 New Brunswick 102 010 010 020--7 N. Ontario 02 302 101 101--1 B.C. 330 302 102 000--14 joy enterprises might be set up ere. Many cities in the United States have "foundations" organized to bring industries to their commun- ity. Some finance the building of platns on a lease basis or sell them on a mortgage plan. Aus- tralia, too, has a government loan plan to encourage foreign industry. The commission will appoint a committee to include -a banker to survey the finance plans used in other countries. FIRE OUSTS WORKERS OTTAWA (CP)--Some 1,000 civil servants evacuated the nine-storey Hunter Building in uptown Ottawa Friday when fire broke out in the sub-basement transformer room. The blaze was first noticed about 4 p.m. EST. when smoke seeped out between the double walls of the uilding at Queen and O'Con- nor streets. There was no immed- iate estimate of damage. OSHAWA TRAFFIC TOLL Yesterday Accidents Injured Killed Year to Date Accidents CANADIAN SABRE SHOWS ITS TEETH In order to maintain pin-point accuracy, frequent gun chécks are held on ROAF aircraft, such as this held at Uplands air force station, near Ottawa, The dark- *ness of the night gives dramatic impact to the firing power of an F-86 Sabre as tracer bullets from Ms six B80-calibre guns | + punctuate the blackness in flam- ing lines of light. The Canadian- built Sabre can carry bombs and rockets in addition to regular armaments one sheep. If there were no rabbits, therefore, Australia could carry an- other 100,000,000. sheep, or perhaps double its sheep population. Each rabbit probably destroyed about 10 shillings worth of pasture each year. To offset - this, Aus- tralia exported about 100,000,000 rabbits a year in the shape of skins or carcasses, but these. brought a return of only about £6,- About a million' square miles of Australia was infested by rabbits in varying degrees. The virus disease of myxomato- sis, introduced in recent years from South America has probably killed-~about 750,000,000 rabbits in each of the last three years, Now, however, it was starting to Jose its | killing power and more ani more rabbits were recovering from it. ber may well have risen to about 460 and the volume by 275,000 tons to 3,775,000 tons. This continued growth reflects the expansion of oil consumption throughout the world, British tankers, like Scan- dinavian vessels, transport oil from many places of supply to many overseas countries. In this work they have replaced. in some de-| gree, the ships which once left! this country laden with coal. SETS PRECEDENT ABERDEEN, Scotland (CP)-- Jameg Adams, 30, is the first man in Scotland to be convicted by his toe-prints, He forgog the holes in! his socks when he removed his shoes to break into a warehouse and the toe-prints were sufficient to obtain his conviction and sen- tence of 12 months in jail. TV WHITT GTON'S General Electric Every fight isn't won with a knockout. The boxing you like to watch is the bout where every blow counts points. Our U.S. visitors aren't won by the striking beauty of ; Ontario alone. It's the punch we put into every service and all the little courtesies that clinch their decision to return, Everyone shares in the visitor business and every point for friendship counts John Labatt Limited. . Philco Motorola Electrohome 0

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