Ontario Community Newspapers

Daily Times-Gazette, 12 May 1953, p. 18

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¥8 THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE, Tuesday, May 12, 1953 J "AWAITS VERDICT" OF VICE-ADMIRAL The chief cook abdard HMCS Athabaskan, CPO Stanley John- son of Victoria, B.C. awaits the verdict of Vice-Admiral E. R. Mainguy, chief of Canada's naval staff, who is sampling the soup | in the main galley during his visit to the Athabaskan while on patrol off Korea. All Canadian destroyers serving in the war theatre were visited by Admiral Mainguy during his tour of the Far East. CHRISTIAN FAMILY (Continued from Page 4) practice for a try out. Roy Hall has oined the coaching staff and prac- i are every Tuesday and Thurs- day evenings a p.m. Jack Colbary, first vice-president of the Lakeside Ladies Softball League in Ontario, reports that the league will open their official sche- dule the week of May 18. Watch the Brooklin News for further in- formation as it is available. MUSIC FESTIVAL Dryden's, Sinclair's and Bagots- ville Schools will present a music festival in the Whitby Township Hall, Brooklin, on Friday evening, May 29, at 8 p.m. Mrs. F. Sandi- son, music instructor for these schools, supervising. Professor Olef of Ajax will con- duct the morning service at 11 a.m. in St. Thomas' Anglican Church on Sunday May 17. The evening serv- ice as per the summer schedule will not be held. The regular monthly meeting of the Woman's Association of the Brooklin United Church will be held in the Sunday-school room of the Church on Wednesday afternoon at 2.30 pm. The ABC Group will be responsible for the devotional; the Lend-a-Hand Group for the pro- am and the members of the 'aithful Workers Group will supply the refreshments. The annual meeting of the Home and School Association will be held in the Brooklin school next Tuesday evening; ~May 19. The nominating committee will present the slate of officers for 1953-54. JOOF AUCTION The auction sale, sponsored by the Beethoven IOOF Lodge, to help raise proceeds to go towards the Building Fund for the new Odd Fel- lows Hall, is to be held in Brooklin Community Park on Thursday, June 18. Anything in the line of machinery, livestock, furniture, etc., will be gratefully accepted. Committee in charge who will be glad to answer any queries are Oscar Bell, Blake DeHart, Dr. Keith Mountjoy, Morley Ross, Nor- man White, Alfred Fisher, Stanley Grills, Alfred Jackson, Ralph Jones and the chairman, Jeff. Bailey. PERSONALS Mrs. Bolingbrook returned home Saturday after spending a few days with her daughter and family, Mr. and Mrs. Myles, Linda and Dennis, in Bowmanville, Mr. and Mrs. James Routley, of Toronto, were weekend guests of their cousins Mr. and Mrs. Mar- tin Routley. Mr. and Mrs. Brock Pilkey, of Weston, spent the weekend visiting their aunt, Mrs. Charles Pilkey. Mr. and Mrs. George Cragg, Port Credit, were Sunday gus Mr. and Mrs. C. Davies, Friends are sorry to hear 'that Jack Davies is now a patient in Oshawa General Hospital having undergone an appendectomy last Thursday. He is doing very nicely and a speedy recovery is wished of of | for him. 3 Mr. and Mrs. Donald Grant, of Moffatt, were week-end guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Alex Blair, Senior. $40,000 Fire in Lindsay Plant LINDSAY (CP)--A $40,000 fire Monday destroyed the three-storey plant of J. A. Arnberg Co. Ltd., and for a time threatened a large warehouse and offices of National Grocers Ltd. The fire broke out in a pile of , sawdust at the rear of the factory and was extinguished by firemen from the station across the street. 'It broke out a second time and spread to the interior of the build- ing before firemen could bring it {under control. The factory makes {candy sticks. SALLY'S SALLIES ~~ Copr. 1953, King Featur , Inc., World rights seserved. _ "Before you start on these pre-election promises, dear, you'd * i better make good on some you made to me." Dr. Kenneth McFarland, MA. TONIGHT -- 8:30 PM. Dr. McFarland addressed the Oshawa Chamber of Commerce meeting last night in the Hotel Genosha. LB \ for him right now, Five furlongs Queen's Horse By STERLING SLAPPEY NEWMARKET, England (AP)-- In the space of four days early next month the Queen will be crowned and her favorite horse, Aureole, will run in the Derby. With a deal like the Coronation in the works, you wouldn't think the Queen had time for something as simple as a horse race but she takes the time. Her trainer, Capt. C. C. Boyd- Rochfort, is pleased that the Queen keeps a close 'check on him these days while he gets Aureole ready for Britain's biggest race, the Derby at Epsom June 6. disagreeing with me when she "She's the ideal owner," the trainer says. "She is very wise about horses and her knowledge is genuine. "The Queen doesn't mind at all disagreeing with me when she thinks I've been mistaken about a horse. She will tell me, 'Captain, you should not have run the horse over six furlongs. That's too far \would have been far enough.' "Of course she can't come up here from Buckingham Palace or Windsor Castle as often these days as she used to come, or as much Coronation Week Race In Derby, to drive up early in the morning and watch her horses work." The Queen personally owns 10 horses -- Auriole, Choir Boy and eight unraced two-year-olds. They are in the care of Capt. Boyd- Rochfort in this community which is composed principally of 2,000 horses, 3,000 horsemen and horse- women, seven race tracks, a few stores and a lot of pubs. In addition the Queen leases other horses from the national stud and they also race under her col- ors which, appropriately enough, are royal purple with gold braid, suatlet sleeves, a cap of black and old. 4 Aureole is the stable star and a great many people would like to see him win the Derby, especially since this is a Coronation year. But, Aureole doesn't rate as favor- ite, mostly because of another sen- sational three - year old named Nearula. Late in April Nearula, owned by William Humble, won the 2,000 Guineas classic race and Aureole finished an improving fifth. That and other results make Nearlua the 11 to 4 pick to win the Derby and make it a doubleheader in classic races. Aureole is bracketed with Premonition as second choice as she would like to come, but still one of her favorite things is at 100-9. Improves It is often said that sheep ruin a pasture for cattle because of their close Srexiig ability. Often the fault lies with the poorness of the pasture rather than the sheep, or that too many sheep are grazed in proportion to the number of cattle. Pasture area improved by re- seeding and fertilizing can be kept in good condition and better returns secured from them by grazing with mixed sheep and cattle than by sheep or cattle alone, judging by the average of seven years' results at the Central Experimental Farm in Ottawa. This seven - year experiment showed that a pasture treated with 10 tons of manure per acre every four years, and grazed with both' sheep and cattle, had a carrying capacity 23 per cent greater than an adjoining field given a similar application of manure but grazed with sheep alone, Compared with another adjoining field of perma~ nent pasture, receiving no manure and grazed by sheep alone, the increase was 50 per cent. On the fourth adjacent field, not manured but fertilized with 100 pounds o f sulphate of ammonia per acre each year plus 300 pounds of superphosphate and 75 pounds of muriatée of otash applied every four years, mixed grazing gave an increase of 43 per cent over the manured field grazed with sheep alone; 6.6 per cent over a similarly fertilized field, grazed with steers alone, and 74 per cent more than the untreated field. Each of these fields consisted o { four acres. In terms of actual meat Mixed Grazing Pasture ced, the untreated field show- ed 159 pounds average yearly gain in weight by the sheep grazed on it. The manured field grazed by sheep and cattle produced a gain of 126 pounds of the sheep and 145 pounds for the steers. The fertilized field produced & gain of 152 pounds for the sheep and 165 pounds for steers. A field given the same fer- tilizer treatment and grazed by steers alone produced a gain of 248 pounds of the steers, still below either of the mixed-grazed fields in total meat production. All gains are based on 150 days of grazing. P. E, Sylvestre a nd 8. B. Wil- of the Animal Husbandry Division at the Farm, state: 'Graz- ing with cattle and sheep resulted in a definite increase over grazing with sheep alone. This was not only due to the greater number of stock carried on the pasture but also to the higher daily gains of the lambs in the mixed-grazed fields. There was a better utilization of the grass available. Little of the herbage was noticed going to seed in the mixed grazed fields, while there was con- siderable waste on that account in | the fields grazed by sheep alone. | Thus the mixed-grazed fields did | not require clipping. The quality of | the sward was also improved. The | mixture of clovers and grasses | was considered almost ideal in the | mixed-grazed fields, while there was little improvement in the oth- ers, : "A certain amount of care must be exercise, however, in the propor- ation of sheep to cattle. Three ewes and their lambs to one two-year- old steer gave excellent results." Has Little By CLYDE BLACKBURN OTTAWA (CP)--Helplessness of {the United States administration against road blocks that may be thrown up by Congress was em- phasized in parliamentary discus- sions in Ottawa after Prime Min- ister St. Laurent's visit to Wash- ington. Mr. St. Laurent, in a hopeful and optimistic report of his talks with President Eisenhower, reminded the Commons that while the lat- ter could say what he wanted to do, he could not say whether Con- gress would let him do it. Speaking in the Commons Satur- day, an hour after he landed by plane from a 48-hour visit with President Eisenhower and high U. 8. officials. Mr. St. Laurent described a great deal of unanim- ity of views in the two govern- ments. The Eisenhower administration agreed with Canada's belief that there should be a lessening of trade restrictions between the two countries. They agreed, as have previous administrations in Washington and Ottawa for many years, that the St. Lawrence seaway and power project should be proceeded with as a joint operation. But Congress for years has re- fused to authorize the U. 8. admin- istration to proceed with Canada on the power project, and it has recently imposed trade restrictions interfering with Canadian exports to the U. 8. In Canada, if Parliament re- jected a major government policy. the government would resign and there would be a general eletion. In_the United States, where the pres, Js elected but does not sit in gress, and where his cabinet members hold office by appointment, Congress may reject the administration's most ardently- advocated policies and that is all there is to it. Thus the prime minister, answer- ing questions as to where the U. 8S. was going in respect of trade polic- des i affecting Canadian exports, said: "I.am sure that not even the nresident could 'answer that ques- tion. The president would be able to say in what direction he wants them to go, but he would not be able to say in what direction the majority in Congress will really 80." M. J. Coldwell, CCF leader, in- terjected: "That is wheré our prime minister has an advantage |over the president, and it is a | good advantage." U.S. Administration Power | '""The advantage," Mr. St. Laur- ent replied, "is in the good sense of the members of the House, and | perhaps to a certain extent, in the form of our constitution." Earlier, Gordon Graydon (PC-- | Peel) had touched on the same point when he said: "One of the problems that this government and this Parliament face in dealing with the U. 8S. government is that it is one thing for the (U. 8.) government to take a position and it "is another thing for the Congress to take the same | position and for that Congress to | carry out the decision that is made." 9 J. M. Macdonnell (PC--Toronto Greenwood) commenting on the prime minister's report from Washington, said: "We are disappointed, 8s he is, that he has had to be confined | largely to an expression of hopes. "Sometimes we think that the cabinet here has far too much power, but in the United States the cabinet seems to have too little. Perhaps if we can only aver- age up it will be a good thing." Members of the United States Senate are elected for six-year terms. They vote as they wish without regard for loyalty to their party leader. A Republican major- ity in the Senate does not mean that the policies of a Republican president will be supported. The same is true in the House of Representatives where the mem- bers are elected for only two-year terms and therefore are almost continually in an election atmos- phere and extremely sensitive to the views of their constituents. In the Canadian Parliament there is a strong tradition of loyalty to the party leader and the govern- ment leader normally has a party majoriiy--8 large majority at pres- Here the defeat of a major gov- ernment policy would mean that all the House members would find themselves in a general election because the defeat would express a want of confidence in the govern- ment, which would) almost cer- tainly resign. ' y STAFFORD BROS. MONUMENTAL WORKS 318 DUNDAS ST. E., WHITBY PHUNE WHITBY 552 Memorials @ Markers i TTWY YW WYew Dial 5-1109 FOR THE VERY BEST NO. 1 STOVE OIL At The Most Reasonable Price! L Co. Ltd. 78 Bond St. West A Storewide . . . a EZ WARD'S XZ an' A) Zi SIMCOE $9. S. AT ATHOL 5 Starts TOMORROW un C4 It's a Week -Long Parade of Bargains !! ® One Hour Specials | ® Daily Bargains ! ® See Our Windows Daily For Extra-Special Money-Savers ! IT'S OUR BIGGEST SPRING SALE YET!! "Caldwell" ' Tea ? Towels 24" x 36" Extra large and extra absorbent -- well-wov- en all-linen weft espe- cially treated to make NNN. NN A -- towels you have ever used -- slight marfufac- [= an] urine defects in this ; special quality, that should not hurt their Ladies' Socks drying or wearing qualities, accounts for the special 'saving' price -- Colored stripes of blue or red. Extra large size about 24" x 36". Reg. 79¢c. May Sdle, ea. ABSORBENT NYLON for wear and comfort -- priced right to save you money. Soft and woolly, knit from crimp-set absorbent nylon yarns that wash ized cuff and colors of yellow, blue, c pink, navy, white. Sizes 9 to 10)4. MAY SALE. Pair Lustrous rayon plated over sturdy cotton for ap- pearance and better wear . . . plain knit with ribbed cuff and spliced and rein- lish sock is well known to mothers, but is usually sold at a much high- er price Colors -- red, green, sax Timed right for summer selling -- styled right and dry so quickly . . . 2" elastic- i" I" Cherub"-made Socks forced heels and toes . . . This Eng- blue. Sizes 5 to 7. Pair All-Wool Blankets 100% wool, closely woven for warmth and wear . , . thick fleecy finish and shimmering wide rayon satin bindings at both ends . , . Buy them dur- ing our sale for cool Spring nights . , . for the Summer cottage .'. . and for brides-to- be on your gift list, Colors of Rose, Green, Blue or Wine. Size 60" x 80", Reg. 9.50 value, EACH" , OR 2 for 13.75 + PLUMP Feather Pillows Soft, comfortable pillows, filled to just the right plumpness with selected, sterilized ond washed feathers . , . Covered with striped- pattern 'featherproof' ticking. Col- ors of Blue, Pink or Pastel Green . and note the larger-than- usual size for this low price -- 18" % 26". i : Reg. $4.98 % pair, MAY SALE, each ® them the best drying Unbleached Sheeting Strong - textured, well- NZ woven sheetings, un- : bleached for economy -- will wash white after a few trips to the tub and sunlight , . . Absolutely pure finish and long- -@ staple yarn for extra wearing . . . Buy now for * sheets, mattress and iron- ing board covers, drapes, linings, etc. Regular 1.25. Width about 1 72" wide NRE REE A Regular 1.39. Width about ' '"' ~~ 1 82" wide . esses sssssense 36" wide. Reg. 98c value COTTON DIMITY Crisp, even weave for children's dresses, aprons, blouses or curtains . . . Narrow stripes of Green or Blue on White grounds. 36" wide. Reg. 8%9c value. YARD SUITINGS Bolt ends and odd lines of Woollen and "Celanese" materials in the 54-57" widths. Reg. to 3.79 yard Percale Pillow Cases 42" x 36" The lowest price yet, for these 'fine as silk' cotton percale pillow cases . . . snow-white and pure finish they are woven from fine combed cotton yarn of extra evenness and fineness . . . finished with 3" turn and hemstitched hem they will laun- der and be a pride for any home- % maker. Size about 42" x 33". SPECIAL SALE PRICE, Pair .. ® 9-10 AM. NO PHONE ORDERS, PLEASE NR A splendid drying quality, lint-free and very absorbent Spring-bright woven colour checks and borders. 2 for Ihe Colors of Green/Yellow or Red/Yel- low. Big size about 20" x 30" ..... Fine-woven cotton Gingham . . , just the material for Summer dresses, curtains and children's wear . . One color only, Navy/White in V4" check. 40: YARD 1 .00 Homespun spreads smooth down over the bed with never a wrinkle or crease . . , so easy to be a smart and thrifty housekeeper with these 'factory-special' spreads . . . Priced at a saving of 2.60 each due to slight imperfec- tions that should not affect their wear . . . Use them for drapes and couch throws as well . . . Color: natural ground with over-check in red, green or blue -- Double bed size approx. 86" x 100". Reg. 6.59 ea. MAY SALE 3 |} 4 4 SIMCOE ST. SOUTH at ATHOL WARD'S

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