2 THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE, Wednesday, July 15, 1953 BIRTHS | CLARK--Mr. and Mrs. William Clark (nee Harlock) are happy to announce the birth of their son. Ronald, at the | Oshawa General Hospital. on Monday, July 13, 1953. A brother for Jimmy | and Danny. | RUTHERFORD Lil and Bob Rutherford (nee Bailey) are proud and happy to announce the arrival of thelr daughter, : Janice Lee, 7 Ibs, 3% ozs, on Tues gers of Ontario. Mr. OSHAWA AND, DISTRICT WINS SCHOLARSHIP awarded a , $100 | 'scholarship in engineering b; the | Association of Professional Engin- W. C. Stark of Oshawa has been | undergraduate | Stark is in| day, July 14, 1953, at the Oshawa pig second year in the Faculty of | General Hospital. {Applied Sciene and Egineering at STEPHENS Mr. and Mrs. Austin Ste- | the University of Toronto. X J Alichin), wish to Ponce tthe "eate arrival of thelr EXPRESS AGENT daughter, jis fk Louise, T hursaey: | 'L. D. Eason, agent for? three ial Hospital. years at Bowmanville, has taken lover his duties as agent for the Canadian National Express at DEATHS BURGESS At Oshawa General Hospital on Tuesday, July 14, 1953, Norman Alson : d of | MAY MARRY Catherine Clements, and son of the | dy Tate Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Burgess | A certificate of and brother of Morley. Bowmanville. | authorizing him to perform mar- Resting at William Sherrin Funeral Home, 873 Kingston Rd., Toronto, the company at Peterborough, | Waterloo and Northern Ontario | points. {has been granted to Rev. Howard Everett McClure of Oshawa. INJURES BACK In Oshawa General Hospital with 1h Luke-Mcintosh Funeral | an injured back is Ceci an, 27, Home, on Friday. "July 17a 2 p.m. In- | Wilson Road N. Dean suffered his terment Union Cemetery. Masonic Sser- | mishap at the General Motors plant i ng at 7 p.m. Friends | hy lee ren ested not 10 call at the | about 4 am. this morning. It was Funeral Home until Thursday. JACKLIN--Suddenly at the family resi dence, 40 Bruce St., on Tuesday, July | 14, 1953, A. W. (Jack) Jacklin, be | loved husband of Mary A. McEachern and father of Wilfred. | reported that a crane axle fell on him while he was truck unloading SMALL GRASS FIRE OBITUARIES | saws anass rune JOHN M. THOMSON was called out this morning to ex- John McMillan Thomson, brother | tinguish a small grass fire at First of Walter Thomson, Q.C., of Pick- Avenue and Ritson Road. The fire- ering, former leader of the Ontario men used a high pres Liberal Party, died at his home put out the flames. Damage to in Owen Sound yesterday. | nearby buildings was prevented. Eldest son of the late Rev. Dr. | D. He Mrs. Thomson of Hast-| COUNTY CORONER RETIRES ings, Ontario, the deceased is sur-| Dr. Joseph H. Oliver, of Sunder- vived by his wife, Isabelle Ruth |jand, Ontario County Coroner for Thomson, a daughter, Ruth (Mrs.| many years, retired today. His re- E. Scarrow) and three sons, | ignation was accepted by the On James, lan and Paul, all of Owen | tario legislature by Order in Coun- und. : ' In addition to Walter Thomson | 1 there is another surviving brother Rev. E. A, Thomson, D.D., of Tor- onto. : Service will be held from his home, 262 Tenth Street West, Owen Sound, on Thursday, July 16, at 2.30 pm. and interment will be made in Greenwood Cemetery, Owen Sound. EDWARD ERNEST DUNK CAMPBELLFORD A well Jail Youths For One Year In Auto Thett ! Lindsay. He previously served with | registration, | |riages in the Province of Ontario, | sure hose to | "ALERT TO OPPORTUNITY "Big | French Foreign Minister Georges Three' Western powers are | meeting in Washington for the | first their "little Bermuda" | conferences. Left to right: | Shunter, Car J Involved In 'Accident | A railway engine crash and a three-car collision occurred yester- | | day in Oshawa. | The three-car collision happend | on King Street E., yesterday after- | | noon at 3.45 o'clock. | Bernard William Lockwood, 23, | 1108 Merrick Street, told police he | { was driving along King at 26 m.p.h. | | when a truck and two cars stopped | | in front of him. He braked his car | | immediately but, nevertheless, ran | | into the rear of the vehicle in front. | § | That vehicle driven by James E. | ° {Hahn, 19, 120 Elgin E., in turn | rammed the front car driven by Mrs. Melba Doberson, 44, RR 3, Newmarket. Mrs. Dobertson said | she applied her brakes when the | | truck in front stopped to make a | left turn. Hahn sdid he managed to get stopped in time but a bump | § from the rear knocked him info the | car in front. | Damage to the Doberison car was $20, to the Hahn car $160 and Representatives of the John Foster Dulles, and Acting Foreign Secretary of Britain, the Marquis of Salisbury. Mr. Dulles Bidault; U.S. Secretary of State | old his colleagues: "We must be alers. to create to find and seize | every 'opportunity to enhance the | prospects of peace, justice and well-being in the world." | t | i | | | 160 and 85. London, St. Catharines THE WEATHER TORONTO (CP)--Official fore- casts issued by the Dominion pub- lic weather office fn Toronto at 9:30 a. m. . Synopsis: The prevailing weather in Ontario remains quite settled. Skies are predominately clear, but during the late afternoon and early | evening hours isolated showers and | thundershowers are occurring at widely separated points across the province. The main factor influenc- ing the present weather picture is a stationary high pressure area centred over the Atlantic Ocean but extending back across the New Pngland states into Ontario. A series of disturbances moving up the Atlantic seaboard has effect- ively blocked the normal eastward progression .of high and low pres- sure areas which daily cross the continent. As a result of this im- peding action little significant change in the weather may be expected. egional forecasts valid "until Lake midnight Thursday: Lake Erie, Lake Huron, Ontario, Niagara, Georgian Bay, Haliburton, southern Kirkland Lake regions; Windsor, London, Toronto, Hamilton, North Bay, Sudbury cities: Sunny with a few cloudy in- tervals today and Thursday. Light change in temperature, Winds light Low tonight and high Thursday at St. Thomas and Windsor 60 and 90, Wingham, Trenton, Muskoka, Killaloe, North Bay and Sudbury and Hamilton 60 and 90, Toronto 65 and 85, Summary for Thursday: Far East Dock At By JACK BEST Canadian Press Sfatt Writer HALIFAX (CP)--Though traffic in some important commodities has ceased because of economic upheaval at home and abroad, this seaport has watched its waterfront business grow steadily since the end of the war. To some extent, Halifax has beaten the boom-bust cycle that used to bring partial TRcession when the St. Lawrence rivér open- ed to ocean shipping in the spring. A fairly steady stream of passen- ger and sargo ships has arrived here since the ports of Montreal and Quebec City opened this year. J. R. Mitchell, port manager, says Newfoundland's ent nto Confederation had a lot to 8 with the improvement. Much of the cargo formerly shipped to the 10th province from United States ports now goes through Halifax. In addition, large quantities of Newfoundland fish now are brought here for trans-shipment. Another significant development is increased trade from the Far East in crude rubber, tea and other cargo. Two or three ships arrive from the Orient each week whereas often in the past a month produced no greater volume, Mostly sunny. TORONTO (CP)--Observed tém- peratures bulletin issued at the | Toronto. public weather office at] 10 a. m. | Max. | Dawson 69 | Victoria ..... iar 66 | Edmonton i | Regina 4 a g | Winnipeg ... : 5 | Pt, Arthur ; | White River ... Kapuskasing S. S. Marie North Bay Sudbury Muskoka airport ... | Windsor London Toronto Ottawa Montreal LABOR (Continued from Page 1) | BUSINESS SPOTLIGHT Ships Halifax year, an increase of nearly 4,000, 000 bushels over the same period in 1952. \ Port authorities are expect! big things of a 2,000,000-bushe! elevator and steel conveyor being built at a cost of about $1,500,000 and scheduled for completion in December. . The jew elevator will b the otal waterfront capacity to 4,250, 000 bushels and permit Jargescals stockpiling of grain sdur the summer for shipment immediately after the winter season opens in December. Until now movement of grain to the Maritimes has not be- yn until the St. Laurence ports close and first shipments from here held up until January. " «Commodities which have risen in import volume include crude and fuel oils, 2,500,000 tons of which were handled in 1952 com- pared with 11,000 tons in 1937, and gasoline which jumped from 300,000 te 600,000 tons in the same period. On the export side, 28, tons of aluminum were Shiphed in 1952. It wasn't even mentioned in the 1937 report. On the other hand the shutdown of the Acadia sugar refinery at nearby Woodside 11 years ago erased imports of raw sugar which totalled 65,000 tons in 187. Mr. Mitchell estimates that vol- ume handled has doubled since be- {fore the war. In the forefront of | the expansion is grain, of which 13,779,750 bushels were shipped | | during the first six months of this | Exports of apples from the An. napolis valley, which sent 76,000 tons to the United Kingdom in 1937, stopped altogether last year as the UK continued to have ex- change difficulties. PRIGNS CAM (Continued from Page 1) artificial stimulus' to uneconomic manufacturing. | U.K. BARRIER The prime minister, like Mr. Drew, referred to dollar-sterling difficulties: *'The dollar-pound bar- rier is a United Kingdom barrier, not a Canadian barrier, and I don't know how a Conservative govern- !ment in Canada could lift that {barrier as long as the Conserva- | tive government in the United Kingdom feels it is needed to pro- tect their limited supply of dol- lars." At another point, Mr. St. Laurent to Lockwood's dump truck $5.00. {not be contributing. The proposed said he still isn't convinced that interfere with or the South Saskatchewan irrigation that month. But if he earned only $20 by subsidiary employment in the succeeding month, he would be entitled to the full amount of War Veterans' Allowance for that month. Veterans registered under Section 4 of the act, said Captain Philpott, are entitled to the full medical and hospitalization benefits available under the act, and at their decease, their widows are entitled to receive the widow's allowance under the provisions of the War Veterans' Allowance legislation, Captain Philpott pointed out that it. was obvious that this new pro- vision of the act was not generally known to war veterns over 60 vears of ager since out of about 25,000 in that category in Canada, only some 450 had taken advant- known resident of Campbeliford, | plan would not Edward Ernest Dunk, 47, died in Belleville hospital Sunday night af- ter a heart attack. A son of Ernest Dunk and the late Marjorie Hubble, he was born * € ; in Campbeliford. He was a team-|atory this morning. ster and a member of St. John's| Both John Smith and Donald Two Taronto youths, "pleading guilty of auto theft, were sentence to one year definite and one year indefinite in the Ontario Reform- Hi i investigated the | : Secti | PC. Xalter Higgins investiga [ | make obsolete the old age pension, and power project would be of | BE oF ee anion Je) istration At 7.45 in the morning a car 7 |he said "Who can live on $40 a benefit to all Canada. If he were eration of Legion officials and of- driven by L. Bannister came into | | pont o Je asked g peturned to over next month, be ficials of the National Employmet | collision with an Oshawa Railway hpi SAA ee | wouldn t recom! > | Service in encouraging the older engine on Simcoe Street S. Miss | CANADIAN TRUCKS FOR PORTUGUESE GOVERNMENT it js we can't zet | Parliament until he was Convineed | veterans to take advantage of it Bannister said she had stopped | with one of the 400 vehicles | the delivery of Canadian military | he i /Oré Ey ones i in order to augment their incomes ; 3 : ™ ; ist. 3 y | anywhere without a favorable gov- ul N ard Por United Chwel. rvivie are [Sham elected trial > Piagise about 150 feet south ow the Sond / slung overhead, Colonel Cos- | vehicles to Portuguese armed |ernment,'" delegate Tom rion |i Blculre ng AL without penalty under the 'act. his wite, the foi or Alma Sephens | of Scarboro Township gave the ER. JHorfection: Waiting thd traffic | Brove. Canadian representative | forces. Trucks were delivered declared. The plan, if approved, | said he has been advocating the | is wife, the orimer. a vitlc are {gine to move south past the traf hy in Lisbon, is shown, centre, shak- | in accordance with North Atlan- | would increase individual freedom. | go) ih Saskatchewan project for | aud five 30ns. f Campbeliford a0] Toe bovs. Tie said. nad stolen 4 Jens. losteatt the ram oye ing Dandi with the army during | tic Treaty Organization commit- | he said. Men would not be anchored | years y | YS, ' 0 . / i y i i s. | , 7 si y cause | oni ' RANT Everett of Oshawa, and one daugh- 1949 Oldsmobile from VanCourt| car which was sitting on the rail- | the delivery of Canadian military | ments 10 one LS ofupany bhi Phiri Ae | NO ENCOURAGEMENT : Ta ter Mrs. Kenneth McNutt (Au- Motors, 83 Ritson Road South, |way. | ET Ja "| pension there oF 10 or 15 Dare | Mr. St. Laurent said he doesn't ut SoNined from Page 1) drey) of Warkworth. He also leaves early in the morning of July 6.| She said she saw a flagman wav- ' | P%"The Tories and Liberals always | Want to make a "political football agatha JLheyciniogieally termed five brothers and four sisters. ~~ |Driving it to Toronto they stripped ing but didn't think the signal talk about individual freedom," he [Out of the project but it might | nang p! - The funeral service was held this it of white walled tires, wheels, a | was meant for her. She also stated | said. "Let's see them prove it." have been considered cowardly od PP nie Shock oe the man's afternoon at his home on Doxsee radio, camera and other acces-|that when she approached the rear | | * Alderman Powers suggested that | him if he hadn't stated his views. | 278nconec pate. true near New. Ave. The Rev. A. E. Toombs of|sories. of the train it was southbound. | ° pension premiums 'accrue to the | When he made a promise, he said. | tonvijle reveals a worl y- ® Ja. St. Andrew's Presbyterian Chureh The youths admitted selling the | Ken McLean, 24, conductor of the | {family after the man's death. A he wanted to be 'in a position to | S60 10K Tw oS 2sgetly s 4 ather, officiated, Burial was in Mount equipment to a fellow they met engine, explained that the train had J elr | man 'might retire and die within | eep it. But he could make di f th gerty, » anda pic. Pleasant cemetery. for from $40 to $60 | been northbound, had gone aver) two months, he said, Fag in tat Promise ye "They oh a te ite against + ar J] | vi hw » ha % {case the family would be denie: vas "new 3 : NORMAN ALSON BURGESS | GSarnett Johnson, Jlopheoihor of ian pen swith and then pulled | TEHRAN (AP)--Iran's . Parlia-| has, however, not issued any plans Lrg ily Tt Ai to for- Project would be built. his will, continued Haggerty. plowing a lougthy Miners which fo mother, appeared as witnesses. he proceeded north again only to ment was closed down in virtual FoF holding the referendum. ward the resolution to the C.C.L. C i) food of cold lobster, Mr. | apo) had M right to do iy : Hiss (MS Ty jit ; ; : : He he parliamentary crisis came | URGES VOTING oldwell told a Summerside, P.E.L | . My father's all right. - months Norman Alson Burgess, 261 | Mrs. Graham pleaded for len- | collide with the Bannister car. {collapse today following the resig- |... months of wrangling over un-| | Yd ; ith : { They shouldn't have d that i ry 3 : i ' n answer to an appeal to cut |audience that a national health | 'heYy st ave done that, and French Sree ain ws | was. her bo Tila Riggs a the le out of | Dttion of 27 deputies Supporting | precedened powers granted Mos. short holidays and return to Osh- plan. advocated by the CCF, might I'm going to get him out." General Hospital on Tuesday, July | FV Wo DS od health herself. | way wh it didn't he tried to Fremier Mohammed Mossadegh. |sadegh last summer, permitting | awa to vote on August 10, Roy | cost as much as $600,000,000, ° | SERVICE MAN ; 3, late M d Mrs. {she said, and the boy's father Was | stop. dng too late. The left | Their walkout left the aged premier |him to govern by decree. Fleming said the last vote was so| "This, according to the Liberals, | A stick of war service medals A the se was | not living. As a result, she said front side of the car was damaged Ho sovers without any legislative Parliament has josen Paraivzed small that even if everyone who is too costly. Trade Minister C. D. {or id Sound on apgenty's : : ! , 1 y igat- | ce. | since February when the opposi-| stayed at home would vote, they Howe say the go ill in- . § serv- born in Darlington Township and | the boy had been put on the wrong | P.C. Donald J. Wood investigat- | "with the resignations, the Maj- tion, led by Ayatullah Seyed Abol- pnb och The riding. Frogs 5 health Neen: seheme | with the Royal Canadian En- lived there wap} about ° Dawa. | In reply to questions trom Crown of lis, Iran's last remaining legislat- |ghassem Kashani, fiery Moslem | The government was fully aware as soon as it can be done without |B'2£ers during the Ist war in Italy. ago when he moved to Os Aa. | Attorney Ali Tol, Ge Me ive house, was unable to muster a religious leader. began boycotting that Labour didn't approve of the | placing an undue burden on the | ,11is belt and shoe laces removed Mr. Burgess was for SOME YET | Graham said her boy was 17 years quorum (69 of its 79 members). | session after session. Only nine of date, Fenwick said. "In an indust-| Canadian people." | Haggerty remained in cells at Bow- a driver for Collacut Coach Lines y vas ; Mossadegh dissolved the Senate the. last 40 scheduled meetings rial riding such as this, where| This js a "ridiculous" |manville last night pending exam- €XCUSe, | ination by a physician. old and had quit school in Grade 7. ked a driver for and later worked as 3 Answering Magistrate Frank E. 3 t Ltd. McCallum 1T¢anspor ing | Ebbs, the other accused, John He leaves to mourn his passi ) ) his wife, the former Catherine Cle- Smith said he didn't think anyone | was going*to appear on his behalf. d one brother, y to a gents of Torofte ant 3, Bowman-| Smith said his mother was work- 'ville. He was predeceased by his ing ad his father and mother vi i llie, some years dont live together. twin sister, Nellie | Magistrate Ebbs pointed out the youths had previously been found {guilty of a similar charge May 19. At that time they had received suspended sentence and were put on probation for one year. In view of the result of the len- jiency in that case, he didn't think it was called for 'again, Magistrate Ebbs said. He sentenced them to a vear and a month on each charge, the terms to be served concurrently. ago. ir. Burgess is resting at the William Sherrin Funeral Home, 873 Kingston Road, Toronto. FUNERAL OF MRS. NICHOLAS WASYLYK Rev. M. Fyk conducted the fu- neral service at St. John's Ukrain-! ian Orthodox Church at 2 p.m. yes- terday for Mrs. Nicholas Wasylyk, 587 Howard Street, who died on Sunday last. The pallbearers were Alec Solo- . mon, John Cross, William Hrynyk, Stanley Gnit, Daniel Shuplak and Peter Melenychuk. Interment was Union Cemetery. FUNERAL OF MRS. WILLIAM FREEMAN Licene Fined $25, Costs in the Oshawa Regulate Gushing 'Hose Pipes ST. CATHARINES (CP)----Resi- dents sprayed so much water on their lawns Tuesday that city coun- cil issued an emergency order re- stricting the ise of a garden hose to certain hours df the day. Some 18,000,000 gallons an hour was drained from storages tanks early Tuesday night. Council said it reduced water pressure to a dangerous point. | Under the restrictions, no hoses | {may run in the city, in nearby | {Port Dalhousie, or in Grantham { township between 6:30 .a. m., and {6:30 p. m. | Residents living in houses with !odd numbers are allowed to water | | --including 36 RCAF Sabre jets last October. have been held because of the lack The premier has announced he of a quorum. On July 1, Kashnai will hold a referendum on his poli-| was replaced as speaker by Dr. cies and will resign if the public's | Abdullah Moazemi, a Mossadegh vote does not back him up. He!partisan. 643 Planes In | Royal Fly-Past | ODIHAM, England (CP)--The Twelve RCAF Sabres and their might of Britain's Royal Air Force | Canadian crews figured in the --including top-secret jet bombers | ground review. The Canadian con- and supersonic fighters just off the | tingent from RCAF fighter wing | assembly lines--thundered in split- | at North Luffenham, England, was second precision over the Queen commanded by Wing Cmdr. Doug- today in her last armed services las Lindsay of . Arnprior, Ont Coronation review. Others included Fit. Lts. Dean | For over an hour the Queen and | Kelly of Peterborough, Ont., and | the Duke of Edinburgh shaded their | P. §. Walker of Ottawa. eyes and craned their necks as al Rain, which poured down when majestic procession of 643 planes | Elizabeth and Philip arrived at the | | field, gave over to bright sunshine | roared overhead. | as airmen marched by the review- | there are 100's, maybe 1000's away, it is very important." "What about people confined to hospitals?" W. G. Alkins asked. "If 1 was an expressman on the railroad 1 could Fel a vote even if 1 was away. If 1 was laid up in hospital, I couldn't," A few lighter moments cropped up in the reporting of various unions and boards. From the Religion-Labor Board, Fenwick reported that co-operation was increasing. The clergy are beginning to hear Labor's side, he 1 said, and he could report that the sermons had been much improved of late. Said one delegate: 'Is that hear- say or personal evidence?" Another speaker reported his union had won the right to five days sick leave with pay for every | year worked. "If 1 worked there for 20 years as a janitor, I'd get 100 days sick leave," queried one man. 'Yes," was the reply. "Goodbye General Motors,' * chor- | their lawns only three days a week, | Earlier on the ground the Queen, | ing stand. Mr. Coldwell said. "Canadians, as | individuals and through their gov- | ernments, are spending about $675,- 1 000,000 a year on health costs and | their protection is not adequate." IS ESSENTIAL | Canadians couldn't afford to be without a propet health insurance | program. Lac |tive health services not only con- | tributed to a lowering of the na- [tion's health standards but was to a large extent responsible for "ir- reparable damage' to the country's economy. "How many needless deaths have | occurred because the person who | needs medical attention has put off seeing a doctor for fear of not being able to pay for his treat- | ment' Mr. Coldwell asked. WVA AID of proper preven-| OSHAWA TRAFFIC TOLL | Yesterday Accidents Injured Killed Year to» Date Accidents Injured Killed (Continued from Page 1) Section 4 allowances under the War | | Veterans' Allowance Act has to be | made to the local office of the | The funeral service for Mrs. Wil-| Leo Squires, 322 Albert Street se living i : i ' | used several delegates. | liam Freeman, 181 Verdun Road, | pleaded not guilty to a charge of gd those living in Sven numbered || a paper-thin shantung duster | Almost 25,000 spectators jammed | ve who died on Sunday last, while driving without an operator's li-| Everyone has the go-ahead to use | C0at of air force blue and the Duke into the airfield's enclosures for | Misiting, her daughter in Wyan- cence, this morning in police court. hoses on Sunday. |in the uniform of marshal of the |the spectacular review, the biggest | dotte, Michigan, was held from the | Finding his defence inadequate, y | RAF, inspected row on row of |in the history of the RAF. Earlier | Luke-McIntosh Funeral Home at Magistrate Frank Ebbs fined him | | planes and men. | many of them had lined the road .2.30 p.m. yesterday. $25 and costs or 10 days. | PRINCE ALBERT | Overhead two jet fighters, sky-| from. the Odiham rail station to The service was conducted bY | Squires said he was sitting be- | | writing in vapor trails, traced out greet the Queen and Duke as they | Rev. William McRoberts, minister hind the wheel with the intention | "ER" for Elizabeth Regina. l arrived. F. E. SMITH A Correspandent Ho Unemployment Insurance Commis- | sion, which acts as the agent for | the Department of Veterans' Af- Ww ow | fairs, This invol ses reporting, each | month, the amount of subsidiary . jor intermittent earnings. On the {receipt of this report, the local of- 1C ow 7 {fice can compute th amount of | WVA payable, and issue a cheque FARMERSBURG, Ind. (AP)-- [for that amount immediately. Be- Jack Hayden needs the answer to|ing on a monthly basis, the amount For Footings, Basements, Garage Floors, Sidewalks, ete. For Lowest Prices Use READY-MIX of Cooke's Presbyterian Church, |, park the car but . 1 ri ES asiiny IyRev. SB.\oy ut he hadn't start Coles. minister of Knox Presbyter- jan Church. Burial was in Mount Lawn Cemetery. | Sgt. E. Barker testified that on OR 4 |June }9 he had traced a hit and | 5 UnCE ALBERT -- Mr. and] [run car to 322 Albert Street and as | M's: Carl Smith of Toronto were During the service Mr. McRob- he approached the car was moving erts sang 'The Old Rugged Cross". | a few feet along the curb. Squires The pallbearers weré Harry Rey- | was behind the wheel he said and nard, Freeman Reynard, Howard Reynard, Garnet Reynard. Thorn-|not produce one. ton Freeman and D. Freeburn " ~------ | fluence of alcohol, Sgt. Barker de- 4 clared. | May Start | Street, appeared as a witness. He The other two when asked for his licence could | | men in the car were under the #n- | the car, Anthony Jones, 217 Celina | {week-end guests of his daughter, | | Mis. Carl Newnham and family. | |" Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Newnham | and family, with Mr. and Mrs. | Smith, motored to Trent River on | Sunday. | Mr. and Mrs. George Webb and | |son Raymond, Plantagenet, were | week-end guests of his sister, Mrs. Ben Smith and family. Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Huntley Presenting Strattord's Second Play By CRAIG ARMSTRONG Canadian Press Staff Writer STRATFORD, Ont. (CP) -- A reigning actress of the British Unwilling |Blood Donor | MASERU, Basutoland (Reuters) | Chief Habofanoi Matsora and six | other Africans were sentenced to | death today for ritual murder. | They were accused of killing a| |tribesman two years ago because Habofanpi wanted human blood to | la $300 question, which of his 30 | cows ate the greens? ' | Hayden's wallet slipped out of his pocket as he fed the cows] uesday. When he found it an hour | later in the big manger, 15 crisp green 20s were missing. | A $700-cheque from the sale of some pigs was still in it, though. | The cow apparently considered it | indigestible as well as non-nego- | tiable. Hayden would slaughter the cul- prit to get his money back, but {and family visited with relatives Stage and a group of young Cana- in Cobourg on Saturday. Carl Hunt- [dian actors combined their talents refill his medicine horn. { pri which one? of income earned in a yearly peri- od does not influence the, amount of the allowance. For instance, if a man earned $200 in one month by intermittent employment, he would not receive any War Veterans' Allowance for DIAL 3-765) CURRAN & BRIGGS READY-MIX LIMITED Je) is Temsinimg for a few days' | Tuesday night for the presentation as {of "All's Well That Ends Well," On Sunday Mr. and Mrs. Euge i ; Ig Vr, ugenc |the second production at the Strat- {Huntley and family accompanied | | his father, G. Huntley of Whitby, |ford Shakespearean Festival. | to Toronto where they visited with | Irene Worth and the Canadians a sick relative, | shared most of the stage time, a Dan Lyle, Winnipeg, was in this [reverse of the opening night per- community on Thursday and Fri- [formance of "Richard III" in day calling on old friends and |which the play was carried by 39-| Hi Praonal Features Fast, Friendly Farm Service [fl acquaintances. Mr. Lyle, though |year-old Alex Guiness, famed Brit- | Meet Still | continually under doctor's care, is |iSh stage and film actor. Guiness REPAIRS -- Home, auto, tractor, SPRING PLANTING---~Sprays, | - | looking quite spry. are | appeared in Tuesday night's pres- barn, machinery, etc. fertilizer, seed. S Possible | Little Barbara Devitt, Oshawa, entation, which will alt:rnate with PAINTING House, farm build. LIVESTOCK. Poultry, cattle, is holidaying with. her cousins, | Richard III" throughout the five- gs, Implements, etc rses, sheep, etc. LONDON (Reuters) A Donald, Grant and Bryan Peacock. | week festival, but he took rather it ® Personal likes to make loans to farmers. Cash promptly . ,. level East-West conference Miss Agnes Strickland and Mrs. |a back seal. Hal : bankable security not required. Write for loan entirely by mail! foilon tne 1 oced meetin: « | Laverne Devitt and two children | All's Well," it is believed, has | Or phone first for 1.visit loan . . . or come in today. Western and Russian foreign min- eters 0 qc eign offic: spekemer visited at the home of Mr. and |never before been presented on | Loans $50 to $1200 on Signature, Furniture or Awte iv livete:" tooay. THAT LIKES TO SAY vas™ Mrs. Frank Vickery on Wednesday. | the professional stage in North | | He said the fact that the United Pu company, 2rsonal FINANCE CO. Miss Strickland, who is a teacher | America. It was in modern dress. States, Britain and France had 111/, SIMCOE ST., NORTH (Over Bank of Nova Scotia), OSHAWA in Oshawa is leaving this week-end |for a trip to France and the agreed at Washington Tuesday | night to seek talks with Foreign | Phone: 3-4687 « John P. Alexander, YES MANager OPEN DAILY 9 TO 5 ® SATURDAY 9 TO 12.30 British Isles. Her many friends | LEADS SCOUTS Minister Vyacheslav Molotov next Loans made te residents of all surrounding towns * Personal Finance Company of Cenode One of the men who had been in | said he had been drinking beer, but On Sea ay swore he was not drunk. He said he Bv Winter did not think the car had moved, but he was ndt prepared to swear TORONTO (CP) Engineers from the Ontario Hydre Electric 0. Power Commission and the New York State Power Authority will probably meet within the next two weeks to begin preliminary co-or- dination work on the St. Lawrence power project, Robert H. Saunders, commission chairman, said Tues- day night Mr. Saunders held a conference with Chairman John Burton of the New York agency during the week- end and offered the power author- ity all the St. Lawrence informa- tion gathered by the commission Mr. Burton will come to Toronto later this mont} for further discus- sions. The New York agency has to wait for 30 days before its lic- ence from the Federal Power Com mission takes effect Mr. Saunders said he is still hopeful that a start can he made on the project before winter, FRIENDS top- may THURSDAY, JULY 16th at 12:18 MIKE STARR and DONALD W. McQUAY Farmer, Kingston Rd. W. 'FRIDAY, JULY 17th at 8:30 p.m. MIKE STARR and MRS. MARY WITWICKI Oshowa. Housewife wish her Bon Voyage. MONTREAL (CP)--Edwin Clark 2nd FI. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Webb, and Gothard of Brantford is one of the | " fall, did not necessarily exclude daughter Donna, Haliburton, were leaders of a party of 64 Canadian] "another meeting on another lev. week-end guests of her parents. Rover Scouts embarking at Quebec oP Mn and Mrs. Alvin Hunter and Wednesday on the liner Scythia for CKLB -- 1240 ON YOUR DIAL attended the reception following the th World Rover Moot in Kander- Published by the Progressive Conservative Party of Canada (Onterie Riding) |Smith-Garvey wedding on Saturda 'stag, Switzerland. | 3 ublished by the Progressive s y ing He sidestepped other questions {from reporters. an Te a EH