Ontario Community Newspapers

Daily Times-Gazette (Oshawa Edition), 29 Dec 1955, p. 2

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=H --_-- ee ------ Thursday, December 23, 1955 THE DAILY TIMES.GAZETTE, 'USA Will Unload More Extra Butter By GEORGE KITCHEN Zealand, Australia, Sweden, Den! Canadian Press Staff Writer mark, and Te Netherlands, all| WASHINGTON (CP) The Producers of dairy products. { |United States announced Wednes-| Agricultural attaches of the six| 7 countries were notified Tuesday at Two of the babies born on | right is Mrs. Wasyl Fuke, with Christmas Day at Oshawa Gen- | daughter Ivanka, who was prob- eral Hospital are shown here | ably the first Christmas Day with their mothers. Left is Mrs. | baby, being born at 1.45 am. Mykola Szirezenko holding | on Dec. 25. She weighed 8 Ibs daughter Vera, who weighed 10 | 9 oz. at birth. The Fukes live at Ibs., 5 oz. The Szirezenkos live | 290 Conant street at 871 Ritson road south. At --Times-Gazette Photo TCA Carries More Passengers In 55 MONTREAL (CP) -- Trans-Can-/was a general growth of passenger, ada Air Lines carried approxim-|/freight, express and mail traffic. «ately 1,680,000 passengers this year,/ TCA's routes now spanned more ~gn increase of 13 per cent over than 23,000 miles in Canada, the | United States; the United Kingdom, sident G. R. McGregor Ireland, France, West Germany, report in a year-end review Bermuda and the West Indies. The that "memorable" 1955 activities airline, which began with a 122- marked the airline's carriage of mile route, today ranks with the ie ed trans - continental service was started 18 years ago.| , Revenue od unts las year totalled 814,000,000 on North TCA took the initiative in opening an services, while another a new era of flight in North Amer- 1954 TCA air fits, Mr. McGregor said. : He added that by introducing aay that it plans to unload another 10,000,000 pounds of surplus butter or. the world market at cut-rate | prices. | The butter; to be offered 'im- { mediately on the commercial mar- | ket on a competitive bid basis, will come out of government-owned Istocks of slightly more than 50,- {000,000 pounds built up through the |U.S. farm price support program, The U.S. agriculture department {announcement came just a week |aiter New Zealand, a major but {ter exporter, protested to Washing- {ton that its policy of selling surplus dairy products to the highest for eign bidder copstituted unfair trad. {ing and was undermining New | Zealand's traditional United King- | dom market, NOTIFIED OTHERS | Before Wednesday's announce- !ment, the state department made U.S. plans known to Canada, New a meeting here, arranged partly to meet protests that the U.S. was offering dairy surpluses without consulting them. Informants here thought it um- likely that Canada would protest the butter offering since she is not a major butter exporter. However, Canada has in the past protested the competitive bid method of sell ing agricultural products on the gromé it disturbs the price struc ure of world food markets. There was speculation that the butter offering, identical with one made last spring, marks the start of an intensified drive by the Eisen hower administration to unload |some of its food surpluses before {the 1966 congressional elections. The U.S. government how holds {nearly $8,000,000,000 worth of sur (plus foods stocked up since the jwar. Carrying charges run to $1, '000,000 a day. Many Bonds | Not Cashed ide = c OTTAWA (CP) The govern- ment has $53,400,000 waiting for several thousand Canadians who just haven't bothered to claim it-- some for as long as 40 years. | The money is for government securities, bought years ago, which matured without being presented for final settlement. They no longer {earn interest for their holders. The finance department, which | holds the money, has no way of estimating how many people there "OSHAWA AND Robot Control Of Gadgets DISTRKT _ Guides Today's Machines NARROW MARGIN In a recount in Clarke township Ernest 'Dent was elected to the ation no longer is accurate enough| Tanner and C. A. M. Canadian Press Staff Writer | OTTAWA (CP)--Human co-ordin- |are with rightful but still unmade claims. The oldest outstanding se- curities are $4,400 in 1915 First World War bonds. There are also many First World War savings | certificates, many of them sold | to students of, that day who now {would be adults. . . . Outstanding are $72,260 in 1915 causing a change in the relation war savings certificates and $8,000 of man to machine," say J. A.|in 1917 certificates. couficil by a margin of three votes to guide today's complex machin-| National Research Council's air- over Fred Lovekin. Mr. Dent re- ery or precise measuring equip| craft and instrument laboratory. ceived 392 votes and his opponent ment. It is being displaced by an-| "The resulting change undoubtedly 389. Following the election they {were tied with 384 votes. | Grants Union Prosecution other product of man's ingenuity-- automatic control gadgets. Man has a role to play where {his power of reasoning is prefer- able to the inflexibility and danger of failure of automatic control sys- tems. | | An automatic device that could | detect a change in the tone of an | aircraft engine or a weakness in [the controls, weigh the pros and {cons of a forced landing and then will affect our potential productiv- ity and standards of living." The two scientists quoted three Smith of the . I Foil Woman's - Niet "here ibe tack SI eon Holdup Bid difficult for the average unaided| human. | MONTREAL (CP) -- A "'pretty day was OBITUARIES W. E. C. WORKMAN | WwW. E C er and church organist in Bow- manville for many years, died sud- | denly of a heart attack in the Jury and Lovell Drug Store on Wednes- {day afternoon, December 28. Mr. Workman was talking with | Jim Stutt, manager of the store {and with Syd Scott of the prescri | tion department when he sudde | slumped to the floor. Mr. Stutt called the F. F. Morris Funeral Company for a stretcher and also | Dr. Derry Hubbard. | Dr. Hubbard gave Mr. Workman {an injection of a heart stimulant, but it failed to revive him. | Mr. Workman was born and edu- | cated in Ottawa. His father was a | professor of music and he began the study of music at an early age. |He held the degree of L.T.C.M. {from the Royal Conservatory of | Music, Toronto, and a spcialist's certificate in music from the De- | partment of Education. He taught rhusic in the Bowmanville Public | Schools for eight years and at the time of his death had many private pupiis, ~~ | He is survived by his widew, {two daughters and two grandchil- HOW TO ENJOY When winter sets in and the ) Christmas season offers a few hours of leisure, some people like to put on skates, skis or snow- shoes. Others just curl up with a good book in front of a fire. But no group is more enthusiastic about their cold-weather activit- ies than the bird-watchers of the THE WINTER Audubon society. They stalk their prey and stand for hours just watching orf taking photos. At Scarboro, Ont., Wishart Campbell counted his day an ung ed success when he found this screech owl, whose look of indig- nation is habitual and not neces- sarily directed at Mr. Campbell. Central Press Canadian complicated system of electing her| representatives to the National As-| sembly, the sovereign political body against whoe wishes neither | overnments nor the council of the epublic, the Upper Chamber of Parliament, can prevail. The system not only mixes up majority voting and proportional WEATHER representation as means of deter- mining a successful candidate, but it also introduces a system of inter- party alli The system was 1. Training periods for pilots and| and petite" woman Wed navigators of high-speed jet air-/ foiled in an Suempt to rob a down-| craft are becoming longer and the| town bank of $2, number of failures greater | Police said the woman entered 2. Precision of control required a branch of the Bank of Montreal TORONTO (CP) -- The Wwerna-| execute one still has to be in- in many industrial processes/and handed the teller a note de | tional Union of Electrical Worker | (CIO-CCL) Wednesday was granted 000,000th passenger since world's biggest air transport out-|permission by the Ontario labor| | relations board to prosecute Rem- ington Rand Ltd., for the com- award of a labor arbitrator. { The labor hoard gave the union ithe right to launch a prosecution | vented. Man's ability to think puts him above the machine in an emer-| gency of this kind. | Until recent years measuring in- struments were an .aid only to assenger miles this turbo-prop Viscounts last April 1{pany's refusal to implement the! manual measurements by man. As a result, the manufacture of ma-| | chinery, aiming of guns or driving) {of vehicles was good or bad de-| makes manual control uneconomi-| manding "$2,000--just hand it over, cal. | miss." 3. Scientists are finding it im- possible to cope with the speed|the note. The woman then waved and accuracy demanded by some|/a red handbag in a manner sug- of today's more complex experi- gesting she had a weapo ad ments. VARYING TIME LAG 1 shoot you. have shown there Teller Marjorie Labrie ignored) |said: "You'd better give it to me | EST. | Synopsis: Mississippi valley is feeding weather is forecast for all of On- TORONTO (CP) -- Official fore- |casts issued by the Dominion pub- lic weather office at 5:15 am. Mild air from the into southwestern Ontario, and after- noon temperatures will rise above | freezing in the lower lakes regions today. However, much colder air over the prairies is edging south- eastward, and a return to wintry| invented in 1951 to deprive the Gaullist movement of a decisive victory at the polls, and in this it succeeded. It is further complicated by be-| ing different for the Paris region. There, election is based on pro- portional representation and alli- ances are not allowed. The present voting system which will be used at the general elec- tion Jan. 2 has the following main ohavacteristies: 1. The electors vote for lists of French Election Systems Confusing, Unsatisfactory PARIS (Reuters)--France has a|LISTS UNLIMITED b 2: The of lists t- ing against one another is not fim- ited by law, except that all com- peting lists must legally regis- tered before the official opening of the election campaign, in this case Dec. 13. In 1951, there were some times 12 or more lists competing in the same constituency. 3. If any one list can get an absolute majority of the votes, all its candidates are elected, that is to say, all the seats go to the same party. A single party list geting an absolue majorly hardly ever happens. There was only one case in 1951 and his was a mixed list, including candidates from differ- ent parties. 4. It is much more common for none of the lists to get an absolute majority. In that case, propor- tional representation is the sys- tem used to determine the alloca- tion of seats. But here again the rules of calculation are extremely or I'l 4 The teller shouted for help and| o.oo iday. of about two-temdhs the woman fled. Police.said they! d candidates and not for one man. subtle and complicated. forecasts valid uatil Each list contains The system of alliances en- that all the seats are allo- ency. The number of seats is| STs roughly in proportion to the num-|cated to an allied group of parties ber of voters. Thus, Belfort, in} provided that, between them, fhe eastern France, with 52,000 voters, can get an absolute majority o has two deputies. The second con-|/the votes. In 1951, this happened stituency of Paris, with 530,000 vot-lin 38 out of the 103 metropolitan ers, has 11 deputies. constituencies. Predict Tax Cuts od As Economy Soars High today and low tonight at| OTTAWA (CP)--Tax cuts are for higher rentals when production Sn fl lica that will, "in due course see ! ing Mog Passenger carry. aircraft of the propeller-turbine a alist te Sm ade i (35 tion| pendin £ Ths Shan or fhe mindlis Fam i HY Was 'ncreased 16 periand lef types dominating the RET dos the decisions of arbitrators) °, the human controlling the oper-|of a second before the hand acts|could not recall any previous at. Regional |\ransportation industry. | ation {on a message recorded by the eve.|tempt by a woman to hold up a midnight Friday: It was the year in which propel- of The tests alto have shown that pank. Lake Erie, Windsor: Cloudy, A Viscounts now were operat-| dealing with employee grievances| "On eve hand demand: bin i Vick i rr : rcontinentally and had final and binding on both sides. | speed i - ing are' this time lag never is constant t mi 5 e. aircraft--the Vickers) ing trans-col : A] peec, power and precision are 5 time ag never stant. | milder with occasional rain today; -- were introduced to supplanted piston-engined aircraft -- T-- i colder with an occasional snow- The labor board, which heard lew York evidence at a hearing Dec. 19, was North America and scheduled all-'lon the Toronto-New York, Mon- t al Bhd ) flurry Friday; winds southerly 15 fargo service was inaugurated for|treal-New York and Toronto-Chi- old by the union that Remington protrude above the surface. ltoday, northwest 15 Friday. High the first time in Canada. There cago routes. The Glacier was the first vessel today and low tonight at St, Rand refused to restore a S$4-a- of operation Deep Freeze to reach thomas ® and 30, Windsor 45 and "a RC at eh ap rg O STOCK EXCH '3 T T Ji T . |week pay cut imposed on a $67 2 ithe original Byrd camp. Experts Lm "aime to camp, now 40 feet below the snow, | shelf to find an appropriate site| Summary for Friday--Cooler. for the new camp which will serve] Lake Huron, southern Georgian as a bate for U. S. Antarctic sci-| Bay, London: Cloudy; milder with entists here during the next three risk of occasional freezing rain this| | morning, and occasional rain this | | afternoon; colder with smow and| some drifting Friday. Winds south-/ . TTT week ty ewriter serviceman with S. Flag Raised ty A N E- i O B d g |aboard surveyed the Ross sea ice NOE n Byrds Camp 450 LITTLE AMERICA (AP) -- The il de x | United States flag has been raised INDUSTRIA 78 Bl t P once again over the desolate rem- =r a bi das S ress nants of Rear-Admiral Richard E. LONDON (Reuters) Distance Byrd's first two camps in the Ant- | 430 + Fas: mn. A r er Gord Pirie W sday arctic the towers remaining above the 4 : Wednesday. | Hi " 3 . : % Vad -- | #e0 night FR hi Fire Wednes ay Explorers from the navy Ice-|surface, this camp now lies under 1 by helicopter Wednesday {Wingham 40 and 25, Muskoka 35/ likely in store for Canadians as|and population increase --..| #10 | British press after receiving two breaker U. S. S. Glacier arrived about 60 feet of snow and ice 'I Si Mayor of ue Place," gon 15, London EB, w oF [tae Satlon's Scomy BOIS: day he officials say there likely will wards h Britain's No. 1 here Wednesday to find only the| Little America II was built on/was quoted as saying as he jumped) Summary for ay -- er | 400 bir Rll 38 © tops of two radio towers and five top site. Five|to the ground. "It's good to be with snow. predicted small tax cuts in 1956/57, though the government might 390 Ark : ) "» i -inot make any major reductions Millions of television viewers saw other poles sticking above the snow!wooden poles from the second back. It is beautiful, isn't it. Lake Ontario, Niagara,' Toronto, and, bigger Te vow fearing they ot A ues in- 280 Pirie read his prepared criticisms -- -- - Prm-- ~~ 0 Cloudy; milder with 2350 flation. from notes at the presentation risk of occasional freezing rain or of all goods and services produced | 220 ceremony. A |snowflurries today, colder with| lone to an all-time high of $26,- ECONOMIC EXPANSION ] 1955 Canadians Had Record | occasional snowflurries and a few {sunny intervals Friday. Winds 21 which buries the earlier camps The radio towers were originally years. 70 feet tall and were erected in I : y r n a dispatch from Little Amer- 1928 at Little America I, Byrd's ica, the Spal York Times reports| first camp. With only eight feet of that Byrd flew to his original camp| w Gordon Pirie of the original - Hamilton: " By FORBES RHUDE i a ------_ a ™ greater demand for scarce goods. Officials say this would boost prices and bring on inflation. Nevertheless, there may be some tax reductions next year, infor- mants said, possibly in commodity excise taxes and perhaps a slight reduction in personal income taxes. " 400,000,000 this year. Trade Minister Howe said in his I yas p f ie i Hlected Hop risnan of o> oritics Jete Frade Anotlier year-end review issued Tuesday ganized by the weekly newspaper, = . . southerly is today, northwest » ig rise in 1956--perhaps no that Canada can foresee a long Friday. High today and low son High-Spending Buying Spree usa ai oe 190 After receiving the Sporting Rec-| between $27,000,000,000 and $28,- Some federal officials say many n ord Trophy from Iain Macleod, land a bigger population. © tures, especially of the early U0. ational wealth. means Canadians as Well 53 lorsign Sus rg | i i anche es" pComadans fn 195, shopped as, A, Yotond al Uh, cxpaaynimee ut oe Jae progres) Sotho crepes Sau Sat ic bn a. econ foo Eh Mla Leh r i don ton, Kirkland Lake, North Bay i i : tack on the press and its London {Sudbury: Cloudy 'and milder with|Sovernment, though an increase iniof some goods. ; MN €loccasional snow and risk of oc- to jug would be as big or bigger inlyear" to use the Joris of one vi 4 casional freezing rain today: clear- Bont ; ; iles 1 ive. 1936. [retail executive--575,639 sets val- 110 Ww riters' Association, which named put new Sxiomobiles in thelr drive Even if some slow-down should|yed at $174,492,194 in 10 months steeplechaser John Disley as/ways and to provide spo develop in the over-all economy,!, red with 436,701 sets val- 300 | sportsman of the vear, had 'omit- play equipment for leisure hours. |. == oc "Co an Ep TT compare WY he 4 { ted from its list of leading sports-| Their buying accelerated as the income Wh ems 8 ued at $151,690,768 in the same 90 | men both him (Pirie) and British year advanced and was topped off 3°°IlS 80 HARE OPTICAL G.T. BAKER OPTOMETRIST 8 Bond Street East HOURS: 9:00 e.m. - 6:00 p.m. Closed Wednesdays EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT PHONE RA 3.4811 1955 Stock Market 'Had Best Year Yet Toppazzini Holds | Biggest Lead Yet CHILD SUCCUMBS POINT PLEASANT, N.J. (AP)-- Little Dianne Graff did not make it for Christmas. The eight-year-| old leukemia victim termed by hysicians as a hopeless case--| ied Saturday morning in her| Christmas-decorated room at Jer- sey Shore General Hospital, her toys on her bed. ongratulations! MRS, H. WESTERMAN R.R. 3, PICKERING, ONT. Tieket drawn by Mr. A. Powell, Powell Drugs. IS THE LUCKY WINNER OF A HAND- SOME MAN'S SUBURBAN COAT IN For the stock market 1955 was ranging up to $5,000 jo senior ex- |ecutives were reported. 4 Year of records. ' a Stock prices advanced with few Stocks were traded in record] ,ipa ks in the first eight months "yolume, record price levels were of the year. Then on Sept. 26, news reached and dividend payments) of President uSisenigwers Jliness a ' sent the market reeling. The Tor- wiry the Highest - Yu te onto exchange's. industrial index market ran into some heavy sell-| 5.5504 17 points from a record ing on the way, notably in late the United States political picture September when news of Presi- the market went through two fur-/ dent Eisenhower's heart attack ther reactions in the next three gave prices their biggest Jolt in weeks. The three declines were years. estimated to have wiped -$20,000,- On the Toronto and Montreal 000,000 from the book value of stocks listed on the New York ex- ¥ # a change. stock exchanges, volumes were While the sell-off involved heavy rising as the year opened. At Tor- trading at New York, there was onto, the peak was reached in Ap- a notable lack of urgency about vil when 12,815,000 shares were the decline on Canadian inarkels, re rices resumed their upward] traded in one day-the largest hal trend in mid-October but in Cih-| for any day in the exchange's 103- 4a" prices retraced their steps! year history. Dollar value of the with considerably more caution] year's trading was about $2,695,- than at New York. By the year's 000,000, more than twice last year's figure, itself a record. Dividend payments by Canadian .companies in 1955 reached $629, 7 TOPPED BY NASHUA MIAMI (AP)--Nashua, horse of the year and most expensive in urf history, heads a list of 65 horoughbreds nominated for the "Fleet street has done immeas hit some parts of the economy, june 30. the latest figure avail-| Timmins - Kapuskasing: Cloudy|,oerations in 1966. eel stree! as 0) immeas- Despite the whopping | ; : y . |for automobiles. northwest 20 Friday. High today next year for family allow- than they realize. I hope they will it reflected higher incomes and NOTABLE INCREASE | needed ye y ner, Emil Zatopek It reflected such things as the more than in 1954 and $500,000,|that the buying pace, if continued, make higher payments to the prov- furnishings for the hundreds of|/when all figures are in. "If there is any danger for ~ Car Drivers NEW YORK (AP) - creasing needs of hundreds of increases on the year. season--in the American Hockey country in every physical sense pliances and furnishings, were fea-supply only through rising prices." ment in the form of short jail som is total to 57. He has produced 22 F P courts where judges oster arents in Los Angeles' and handed out of second place with 9 points .af- : : of highways officials feel a stiffer week ago. Wharram is third with gowe has predicted another up-|0omic reaction will depend on the dren unger theit sare will be ib , : i ., f drivers : ueen's Park sources said this|Cated that "a hard core o have scored the most goals, 23 traint in their buying and [SOLIDLY BASED tains his goal-tending supremacy, stretch of expansion ahead. ng trip. Prospects for a relati-| foster parents will be able to ap- had regained only about half the, | peal is provided in existing legisla- on b. A : would avoid a repetiti f a Yor ,000 McLennan Handicap it was '4a the previous peak year of 1954. in penalties. parently none too sure that they ions of ingot steel this year, up ony oy phd pi AIL Fo ue ffunas P "WE SELL FOR LESS" night at the peak of the rush. And! year-old native of Ontario's Prince action lumber; nickel, aluminum, petrol-|others, although the foster per- for the $100,000 Widener | 35 SIMCOE N. (At Bond) The changes, it was reported, VETERAN OF BENCH OTTAWA (CP) Twenty-five vears as a police court mag in Ottawa were celebrated month by Glenn FE. Strike TROPICAL CLIMATE Trinidad in the West Indies has a tropical climate with monthly rainfall up to 10 inches from June to December, Sporting Record. Television view- big as this year's $2,500,000,000 stretch of economic expansion if the year's top personality. ines, and Hamilton 40 and 35, Tor- boost the gross national product to against speculative excesses. Summary for Friday--Colder. 1% they never shopped before forces which made 1955 Canada's|buying extended pretty well across 4 headquarters, Fleet street. y 000.000 to feed and clothe them. and forecasts anticipated that buy-| Television sets had 'a terrific federal revenue usually lags behind| Too sharp an increase in pur- iri i Jew. - s selves, to furnish their homes, k ci OICE igh 1 120 Pirie said the Newspaper Sports EE I as me AVE. CHOI aro. the: chaice. of sumers might possibly encourage today and low tonight at Killaloe|r «oo operations. Many now are Is Julicely that purchases period of 1954. {30 and 15, Earlton 30 above and) ving on their 1954 business when heavy weight boxing champion, Don Wik a record Chrisimiss trade {ou sa when a slow-down| . Instalment buying increased. Atland 5. Spay (owe (axes Ob this years ble d to Britis} i figures, | people continued to buy and were| able, consumer credit totalled $2-|with occasional snowflurries today; | "with "Canada's population stead- declared Pirie. "A few uptind he action could scarcely be called credited with year. Nearly half of the total was|day; winds northwest 15° today words will inflict more damage @ Puying splurge.or spree. Rather, serious recession. {or a i :(heavier government outlays will be be kinder in future." expansion throughout most of the| Late-year figures indicated fotall Some concern was expressed that and low tonight at Kapuskoatos 28lances, old age pensions, health] Czechoslovakia's ace distance run- high buying of recent years. [$12,600,000,000 -- about $700,000,000/ much of their future income and The central government also will : Pre} : | J {building of 125.000 new homes for more than-in the previous record might result in scarcities and in- May Jail Bad inces under the federal-provincial had to be bought and further|ever, may send the total higher | comented: { thousands of other homes built in| Prairie sales reflected reduced coming year it is that the aggre-| ii in-| i ths yielded i J NEW iy Veteran haps 40,000 children and the in- sales in the later months yielde and services may be temporarily TORONTO (CP)--The Globe and ellio. Toppazzini of - Providence d of other children born|EARLY FEATURES ) Ontaris today-- his largest advantage of the since the war, It reflected a bigger| Durable goods including ap-'vidle and may be balanced with may resort to judicial shock treat- -- t s for bad drivers. League scoring scramble. . " | enees pratt ton | : ia Bo Law Will Rid /scnetar' Soutien + itive oints uring t e weekend to boost owe Ie icts 1g om | report on Los Angeles traffic safety h dopted the goals and contributed 35 assists. | logan 'You can't buy bad driving moved into undisputed possession TORONTO (CP)-- Legislation de. | three-day jail sentences in lieu of | : The with Buffalo's Ken Wharram a OTTAWA (CP)--Trade Minister|step in to cause an eventual eco- better opportunity to adopt chil- it ov) A ; i | attitude toward reckless driving is' 16 points. ward sweep in Canada's record. consumers and businessmen, he|lroduced during the next session of ed 1n view of the Christmas and Providence's Camille Henry ; day night ported Wednesday. bide Mg pene My | But he has urged Canadians to| . ) had not been influenced by the cach. Toppazzini - is the assist|use res {will 'be among several changes in " Gil Mayer of: Pittsburgh main. upsetting the predicted long based and appeared to be in for aposed amendments to the act, ent adopted fn recent months." | : | ' «| peal to the board of the Children's end the Toronto industrial index having allowed an average of 2.80) The steady, huge build-up has al- | vely prolonged period of economic | Pea goals a game. He also leads in|ready caused some scarcities of expansion appear bright if Cana-| KALMAN"S GIGANTIC FREE DRAW. ground lost. {shutouts with three. Cleveland's goods. More may develop in 1936, |dians in all economic groups el 175,879 compared with $570,228,654 loop's bad man with 101 minutes steady, But Mr. Howe was ap-| Steel mills produced 4,400,000] Clerks, typists, taxi-drivers were would remain that way. Heavyiper cent from 1954, "and were girl who had lived in a foster home| The list includes Social Outcast, | CLOTHING brokers' staffs worked into the cause inflation and ecomomic re: months ahead. Pulp and paper.|foster parents and adopted by|78 stakes this year, and 53 candi-' of all workers, they were best re- Edward County and son of a Whether "speculative excesses eum and chemicals all made Fee | sul requested permission te adopt cap fo be run two weeks RA 5-7951 A ; be " rs of the BBC also picked him as jump--but possibly large h to di use restraint and guard onto 38 and 25 They spent close to $13,000,- | Diggest year were at full throttle the board. * OMITTED HIM business expansion, officials said. chasing power in the hands of con- erly 20 today, northwest 20. High paying on their previous year or dangerously. In 1955, zero, North. Bay and Sudbury 32| sic were lower. They will have declared Pirie. "A few unkind averting a more| 05,000.00. up $208,000.00 in 4 sunny Friday; turning colder 1o-yy" rising "federal authorities say Pirie three fimes this year beat COUNtry and was a continuation of|retail sales for the year of around customers might be pledging too|above and 10 below grants and other social programs. | which at least some furnishings|year 1953. Christmas buying, how-|flation. The Bank of Montreal tax rental agreements which call {recent years; and the birth of per-/farm income of recent years but| cate demand for Canadian goods Reds boasted an. eight-point lead thousan too great for the country to pro- Mail says it has learned Ontario The story says "the attorney- The classy forward collected five Paul Larivee, also of the Reds, ] For Canada's 1956 Economy roroyro cr, _sesssion efi | ter being tied for runner-up honors | 518 0. give 105 parents a) Globe adds that department| : : : needed in view of the Christmas Willie 'Marshall of Pittsburgh Soi, SeeeP 0 Canadit, said in his year-end review Tus. ne Ontario legislature, it was re-| pacemaker with 35. accumulation of goods to prevent! The upswing so far was solidly|the Child Welfare Act. Under pro.|More severe methods of punish- | Aid Society involved. No such ap- {Fred Glover continues as the Prices so far have remained restraint, he said. r NATURALLY, YOU'LL DO MUCH BETTER AT 48 on the booming market. Stock demand for scarce goods couldipooked to capacity for several|for 19 months was taken from the winner last season; 28 winners of membered at Christmas. Bonuses, Methodist minister. 'and other dislocating influences" ord productions in 1935, e

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