Be 3 . PAGE FOUR od £ The Oshawa Daily Times THE OSHAWA DAILY TIMES, SATURDAY, MARCH 5, 1932 case again J. W, McLaren for his terrible "lino block" on exhibition in Toronto by the Ontario Society of Artists, There is only one sav- Blots on our Public Highways Yi It Looks To-d pres as OO0RS lo-day deh ' Succeeding _ THE OSHAWA DAILY FEFORMER 3 (Established 1871) -- An independent newspaper published every after noun except Sundays and legal holidays at Osh- awa, Capada, by The Times Publishing Com- pany of Oshawa, Limited. Chas, M. Mundy, © President, A. R, Alloway, Managing Director. The Oshawa Daily Times is a member of The Canadian Press, the Capadian Dally News- paper Association, the Ontario Provincial Dailies and the Audit Bureau of Circulations, SUBSCRIPTION RATES Delivered by carrier in Oshawa and suburbs, 12¢ a week. By mall in Canada (outside Osh- awa corrier delivery iimits) $3.00 a year. United States $4.00 a year, TORONTO OFVICE 18 Bond Building, 66 Temperance Street, Tele- phone Adelaide 0107. H. D, .Tresidder, repre- : sentative, SATURDAY MARCH 5th, 1932. The Anti-Climax An anti-climax was reached in the dis- pute over the board of education estimates by the admission of Mayor Macdonald and Aldermen that "in this controversy we _ have not a leg to stand on so far as law is concerned, Added to this is the state- "ment that, should the board of education go to court to secure a mandamus compell- ing the city to fix the budget for education as requested by the board, of the city coun- ¢il would not contest the action, Boiled down, it would appear all along that the city counci was quite aware that it had no legal rights in the matter, and was simply depending on a policy of bluff to carry it through the controversy. The & board of education, however, has refused + to be bluffed and has, instead. offered a © compromise which the council may or may not accept. If it accepts it, the board of © education has won its point. If not-- if it still insists on the estimates as re- duced being allowed to stand, then the = board will go ahead, secure its legal auth- © ority, and in this event, also, it will have won its point. Yet it is not always true that the side == which wins its case in a court of law is 'also the winner before the court of public opinion. From public comments and dis- cussions, it is apparent that the sympathy of the masses of the people, in this con- troversy, lies with the city council. The © mass of the ratepayers is sympathetic with the council's effort to reduce expenditures, ~_ and, rightly or wrongly, the feeling has © been created that the board of education is balking the council's effort to reduce expenses for this year. After all, the court of public opinion, in a dispute of this kind, is the court of last resort. That is why The Times has sug- + gested on more than one occasion that it ©. would be in the best interests of the city to have the two bodies meet in conference + to reach a common basis of compromise. © In this way, an amiable settlement could | be reached, public opinion would be molli- fied, and the members of both bodies would ~~ be able to get down to real business, in- stead of wasting their time arguing over something which should not require any argument, Punishment of Drunken Drivers The Ontario Prohibition Union, at its annual convention in Toronto this week, expressed the view that the sentences ime posed on intoxicated drivers of automobiles were far from fitting the crime, and that more drastic penalties should be provided. A resolution passed at the convention reads as follows :-- "We believe that any individual who 1s , convicted of intoxicated while in charge of .a motor vehicle should he troanted as one who has been convicted pas having concealed weapons, Surely such an indi- vidual Is a direct menace to life on the public highways, and should be so con- sidered, In addition to penalties now [m- posed, there should be cancellation of driver's license for a period of one year for first offenders; and in additlon to the penalties now imposed on second oftendors there should he cancellation of the driver's license for a period of not less than three years." There will be few people who will dis- agree with this, no matter what their views may be on the question of prohibition. i Only the other night, an intoxicated car . driver gave the police a wild chase before they finally caught him, and during that chase, at a terrific rate of speed, many i lives were placed in jeopardy. The trouble is that when a man is intoxicated, he loses all sense of judgment, and is not safe to be in charge of a.car capable of travelling at a high rate of speed. Magistrates are handicapped by the law in connection with drunken drivers, for in many cases they would doubtless feel like imposing much more severe penalties than the law allows. being Economy is not achieved hy destroying efficiency, but by cutting out the non-. essentials and superfluous.--Detroit<Free Press, With both sides willing to stop fighting, the Sino-Japanese war should not last much re Declaring Canada's wealth of natural "scenery might be marred by over-zealous commercialism, J. Earl Birks, president of the Toronto Convention and Tourist As- sociation, in his presidential address at the annual meeting of the association in the Crystal ballroom of the King Edward hote] on Monday, issued an appeal to "those who have this province's best interests at heart" to consider the question of tourist camps which ultimately might discourage tourists from coming to Canada and thus mean a loss of millions of dollar to the Dominion. "It is beyond the bounds of reason to say that this country's greatest national wealth lies not in her mines, forests or wheat fields, important as they are, but in her wealth of scenery from Atlantic to Pacific--a wealth such as no other nation possesses in such abundance," said Mr. Birks, who added that he had no criticism of properly operately tourist camps, but urged that some incentive be given to the owners to improve facilities of the camp. It was important, he said, that the tour- ists' first impression of Canada should be a desirable one, "Our highways are cluttered up with all forms of structures that are anything but pleasing to the eye. Tourists do not come here to view countless hot dog stands and shacks--or so-called tourist camps, They see far too many of them in their own country," declared Mr. Birks, who inti- mated that tourists wished to hurry on to places that were free from those "unsight- ly blots on the landscape." Localities that possessed such camps were "get away" places rather than stopping places, he con- sidered, What Mr, Birks says is very true, Many of the hot dog stands and refreshment booths to be found on our highways today are in the same class as billboards, and a thinning out of them would be a good thing in many ways, Editorial Notes What price civilization when babies can be stolen from their beds and the abductors make a clean getaway ? : Oshawa may be all right for its ice supply, but farmers who depend on natural ice storage to cool the milk in summer are going to be in quite a quandary months from now, 1 ry a few + The way March has started, it will soon be ime to dig out the old tent and camping outfit. Hon. G. N. Gordon now claims his Hamil- ton speech was mis-reported. It has taken him a long time to find that out, so long, in fact, that few people will credit his efforts to pass the blame for his faux pas on to the newspapers, in her This is Britain has made drastic cuts military and naval expenditures. practical disarmament. It is apparent that in dealing with the kidnappers of his baby, Col. Lindbergh will have to deal with people who are ab- solutely heartless, The fishing season is now on--but only for the fishermen on the Great Lakes. | Other Editor's Comments "NORMAL TIMES" : (Strathroy Age-Dispatch) Most of us aré old enough to remember when it was hard times all the time, Hard times are nor: wal. Our fathers before us never lived in casy times, Life is a battle, not a picnic. We get a fleeting taste of prosperity once in a while, but permanent prosperity is simply ballyhoo, that you get on the radio during political campaigns, We ust face things as they are and go to work, There are people who reach for the paper in the morning to see if good times are coming back. They want to sec what the government is oging to do for them, They think the latter is Santa Claus, Let us all get down to real business and work, BITS OF VERSE _ OPEONGO Why do I hear the whispering pines-- I'he pines of Opeongo? I never have seen the land where they grow-- Far away Opeongo, Yet I've seen them reaching into the blue On a niorn when their needles were weighed with CW : Those pines of Opeongo. Are there rugged ridges above the lakes-- The lakes called Opeongo, Where the wild cat dens, does his how! through the night Re-ccho through Opcongo? Does the full moon: waken the urge tor the kill In the wolves for the deer which range on the hill-- The hills of Opeongo? - Are there amber tones to the rock shores Of the lakes called Opeongo? Are there waters still and black and deep In the bays of Opeongo? In the dark of the moon are they dusted with stars, In the full are they meshed with silver bars Those waters of Opeongo? I never have seen the place where they are-- The Blories of Opeongo, The life 'and the waters the pines and the stars And the moons of Opeongo. I only heard him speak in terms Of love for the waters which calléd, "Return, Return to Opeongo." The Town Crier OTE. ~'I be opinions sod in thi ao each Saturdey Pr rd fr be Pi 4 b, being Jose of The Oshaws A 4 pendent i contributed by The "Crier' iimse and must be interpreted as such, Comments this eolumn should be adiressed to Tun Shin) in care of The Oshawa The Canadian Senate is asked to answer the question "what is a bil- lion?" English authorities tefin this amount as a million millions, but United States authorities say a billion is a thousand millions, Why the Canadian Senate should be con- tinually worrying itself over what the United States does is hey the comprehension of the Town Crier, especially with the Imperial Economic Conference coming on: in the course of the next few months In the British Empire a billion is a million millions, and no qu asked, ond stions Apropos of graph the author of this column might as well confess that he gets madder and madder at the greatly increasing and accumulating evid ence of the peacetul annexation, be ing so foolishly concurred in by Canadians, which is prompted 1b the practice of adopting United Sta tes customs, manncrs and spelling (let us hope it docs not also spread to morals), It may not be gar 1 known, for | Ysceptic" cannot proper place' it every hundred dict buted in this Doni I as an alternative to skeptic", an vention of the Yankees, who prob ably fear getting it mixed up in a septic tank, "or sumpen", The « i" tinual use of "quartette" by dians when describing four male singers probably, is another instance of Yankee 'custom, the male word being, of course, "quar tet", 'There ens of such in stanceg every 1 own Crier | * tance, that Ciana- men, are doz day which t under the » . 1 make "Iv it hadn't b r this foolish usiness of cuttit nthe British navy" there mild h he i trouble between Jupan and Chin "The Bri guarantee of the world's peace, just as a sufficient French Army ig tl surest guarantee of Europe's peace." This is what th. famous Britt statesman, Rt. Hon, Winston Chur ehill, is reported to have said in Toronto during an interview with the press. The Town Crier hope that those misguided people of Osh awa who signed the big world dis armament petition will carefully consider this thoughtful opinion Navy 18 the Ire given by an expert on such matters, | a British expert at that, LJ Ld LJ The Town. Crier heard an abl sermon on the subject of "Faith not so very long ago, and came across a splendid example of this characteristic during the last few days in the press when Mrs, Char les Lindbergh was reported to have "broadcast the feeding hours, and instructions for treating his cold" a few hours arter her baby way kidnapped. While the "sym pathy of the entire world must, of course, co out to Col and Mrs Landbergh in their trouble, vet such an act of faith as this broadcast must appear ludicrous when the character of all kidnappers is taken into consideration. " * One of the questions most often asked on the streets of Oshawa dur ing the last few days has been "who is Mr. Laury:"" the answer being, of course, "Oh nobody in particu lar", Mr. Lowry, a Toronto man, charges that the Public Utilities Commission and Hydro permit il- legal meters to be used in this city thereby charging industrial con cerns too much for their electrical power, Mr, Lowry's language, how ever, savors too much of politi and in any event he was simply raking up something that was dealt with by the local Commission sev- cral weeks ago. Some people are continually running round trying to drop wrenches into machinery, cs pecially if the machinery is running smoothly and well, Mr, Lowry tried the same sort ot thinein Windsor but bit off a little more than he could chew in the Border City LJ . LJ The controversy between the City Council and the Board of Education appears to have reached: another deadlock. If the Board had gone as it threatened at first, and brought action inthe Supreme Court immediately its request was not complied with by Council, the whole discussion would have been over, onc way or the other, long agos (Apart from who is right and who is wrong the Town Crier does like a man, or an organization, who does just exactly what it says it will do, no wore and no less, and docs it just when it says it plans to do it, not a week or even a day later, "let the chips fall where they may." LJ . . 1f cartoonists ar, subject to the law of libel 'and slander then the author of this column believes that R. S. McLaughlin hag a pretty good RHEUMATISM? Neuritis? Neuralgia? T-R<C's bring two le relief. Mrs, S. Johnson, Stellarton, N.S,, writes: "For 20 years I have been bothered with Rheumatism till told about T-R-C's. I wouldn't be without them. A neighbour got them for his wife. She has Rheuma- tism in her arms. T-R-C's did her good." Equally for Neuritis, Lumbago, , Neuralgia, No harmful drugs, $0c and $1 everywhere, 236 You ewe it to yourselt to try T-R~C's Baas | testinal the preceding para- | ever, 1 bthe proper co ing grace to the whole production and that is no person would ever take it to be a picture of Mr, Mc- Laughlin unless his name appeared underneath, It looks just as much like Henry Ford or Sir Malcolm Campbell, or even Dick Turpin, and the Prince of Wales, so» P. M. Dafoe takes a sly dig at the! Town Crier in another of his serial communications addressed to the Editor of this paper and pub- lished on Thursday, The author of this column would like to ask just one question, how docs Mr, Dafoe interpret his own expression "in- fortitude"? Webster says mtestinal means "pertaining to the intestine of an animal," while the same authority says intestine is "ap- plied usually to that which is evil, disorders, calamities, ete," "Forti- tude", of course, means strength, It seems therefore, to put it polite: Iv that Mr, Dafoe suffers from 50 g internal disorder and sho an object. of sympathy rather than Full of wind, perhaps crilicisin THE TOWN CRIER Eye Care and Eve Strain by C. lH. Tuek, Opt. D (Copyright, 1938) iH { YOUR CHILD AND THE EYES Part 37 ever, tiny overcome but those onditions due to age can only find relicf with th fe / sistance ot and are never ry ulasse Relief with the asses, cure how very valuable help because yes normal y 7 well advanced fear that endangered b of cases and many the . fo meet advanced t expects t | r better and worn suit f glasse Ar guaranteed to 10m in every wi I ma ty that nothing can be done for this type unle the change their way of thinking here is none » blind as he who will not see." Why, oh why, do people of and with their experience in try one glasses fro , quacks who do not examine ny ¢ tl must this , buy 1 ped (To be Contintied) Los tot €D WAITER 8. E. THOMASON, PUBLISH. Ell OF THE CHICAGO ILLUS. TRATED TIMES, SAYS: "Romantic is the simple act of reading a newspaper! Only a short time ago this gheet of white paper was in another form of life It was part of a spruce or la'sam tree--flexing {ts green arms in the white silence of a north country, The woodsman's ax meant not death but new jfe to that tree. It meant that the tree was to hecome part of your life, that it was to hear the urg- ent news of the world to your doorstep, That tree was to know the big "Barking' drums that tear logs Into shreds. It wag to whirl along in the wide white wet 1ibbon of paper in the paper- making machine; someday to hear the roar of newspaper presses in the heart of the news- paper huilding, Defore this news- paper got into those presses it had felt the molten heat of the stereotype chamber, the steam of the matrix table; it had scuttled through the slam-bhang hustle of composing and enyraving and ed- 1torjal robms, : 'The newspaper is the hrain- child of a small army of news- hungry men and women who have In many cases suffered hard- ship and labored long that thelr reportings may be placed before you on thlg sheet of paper, "De as unworldly as a child for « moment -- focus your eyes and powers heyond the surface of this newsprint, Plcture in your mind the trees and the ships and the freight cars and the presses--vi- sion the faces of newspaper men and women, etched sometimes with fatigue, ablaze with the fire of a purpose, "Let your imagination he your companion as you read your newspaper and you'll never know boredom. Wouldn't life today be a dull business without the news- paper? IT'S A THRILLING BUSI. NESS TO BOTH OF US --- TO YOU IN THE READING AND TO US IN THE PUBLISHING!" y Tie Word of God THE. LORD IS NEAR :<The Lord is nigh unto them that are of a broken heart; and saveth such as be of a contrite spirit--Psaln 31: 18, Hicks: "I'm surprised that Flow- ers should marry that homely old heitess after saying that marrying for money would be the last thing he'd do!" Wicks: "Well, hg hasn't done anything since By T. KERR RITCHIE, IN THE TORONTO MAIL AND EMPIRE | piliare, | cases and the | on will make the | | #lde the dome, and three huglers "Wipers" can no longer he as- sociated in anybody's mind with "wiping up" or "wiping out", It is a reconstructed country town wholly risén from its ashes, and Is called, If you please, Ypres. The street fronts and main bulld- ings conform, as far as possible, to the former Flemish architec- ture, but they have not, as yet, acquired the weatherworn, fusty mellowness of old-age character- istic of the nelghboring town of Bruges or some part of the City of Quebec, Indeed to the return- ing pilgrim there is something rahter incongrous about Ypres In the rarity of ghell holes and rulng of 1916-1918, and In the manifest confusion betweén what fs anclently modern, such as a motor garage or town sanitation, and what is modernly ancient, such as a Gothie convent school or a church gteeple, Ypres, if one may hazard the expression, is now somewhat of a faked antique, _ Tho Menin Gate Memorial admits of no confusion; here fis definitely a style of architecture clearly Imperial, and ringing true to this 20th century. It consists of an immense high vaulted arch- way, set four square across the roadway, and joined at elther side to the town ramparts, Lit by three cirenlar openings in the dome, it {8 crowned on the east- ern facade hy a len couchant razing across the plains of Bel- glum, whilst the inner townside fncade {sg surmounted by a draped 'urn, in which a tame pigeon, at the time of my visit last Summer, seemed deiermin- ed 40 make his nest, The interior of the archway, the supporting and the ascending stalr- dalleg on elther glide, abutting on to the ramparts are covered with some 60,000. names, the whole monument heing erect. ed, as tha superb inscription un-« der the draped urn nobly pro- claims, "To the Armies of the British Empire who stoed here from 1914 to 1918, and to those of their dead who have no known grave." Each evening Muminated hy the olectrie archway fs lights in- sound the Belgian Retreat, The town policeman on duty rafses his hand to the salute as the first notes of the hugles ring out, whilst all ¢raffic stops, and sun- dry towns folk or visitors in the neighborhood remove thelr hats and stand quietly till the last long-drawn note. fades In the alr, Ag one climbs up on to the ram- parts and herins to comprehend, however dimly, the meaning of the immense multitude of names of missing Inscribed in black let ters on the grey Portland stone, one wonders whether we can ever honor enough these heroes who fought and died for the integrity of the Dritish Empire, and whether in these decadent day of piping peace we understand that sacrifice, The ramparts are the favorite promenade of the citizens of Ypres. Largely built in the time of Louis XIV by the much-famed ubiquitous Vauban, and further reconditioned since 1918, they rise ahove the sunken moat and offer a vantage ground where one views on the horizon the semi- cirenlar ridge comprising Sanc- tnary Wood, Hill 70, gt, Eloi Messines and----still further west. ward----the Mont Kemmell hill, a critical corner of our defence in the Summer of 1918, The countryside looks strange- ly green and flourishing, dotted with new villagse we: ancient names, and new farm wandings with the inevitable roofs, The trees replanted on the ramparts are quite large saplings, nowadays but there fs an entire lack of group-up timber wher ever one turns except in the di- | for, | rebuilt by rection of Poperinghe, though towns can h» man, a good tree | of God," By the Lille Gate on this ram- part Wa Ema British cemetrey with its rows of white stones and tall central cross, The young cypress have yearg in which to grow to, discretion, but the well- tended graves are a mass of flor- al color se! in a sloping expense of tidy English lawn grass which Inclines gently towards the water of the mont, There are fnnumer- able out the war area, but this Lille Gate purial place, eombining the work of the landscape gardener or engineer with that of Nature, is unique of its kind, In Ypres Itself the ruins of the Cloth Hall remain somewhat as they were in 1918, as well as the old powder magazine down by the prison, and a few other sites, Out in The Salient at Pass- chaendael, St, Jullen, and other places Numerous and cemeteries, all infinitely touching in their predominating note of stark simplicity and im- mensity; hut the site of Hill 60 is almost the only place where one can visualize something of the former atmosphere or strife and deadly combat, if one is not brought back suddnly to reality by the shrill whistle of the train from Lille ,a8 it passes the ad- joining cutting in the mound. yet "a mir- acle are Errant Epistle is Delivered After Sixteen Years Delay Winnipeg, Man., Mar, 5.--SIix- teen years, ago, J. A. Hood, train conductor tor the Canadian Na- tlonal Riallways at. Winnipeg, sent a letter to an old friend; fast recently the letter reached its destination, and Mr. Hood re- ceived a reply to the letter he barely remembered writing, In the meantime the errant eplstle travelled to the four corners of the continent and braved the vag- aries of wind and weather, tack- ed to a beam heneath freight car nmnber "6,000" of tho Fort Worth and Denver Rallway, The letter was written when Mr. Hood was working out of "ort William as a train conductor for the (irand Trunk Pacific Rail- way. He had spent the early days of his railroad career with the Fort Worth and Denver Rail- woy, but he had almost lost track CANADIAN SINGER | ef his old friends with that road, when, delight, he one day found car "6000" attach- ed to his train, He decided to write to the master car builder of the" Fort Worth and Denver Rallway, Henry Fletcher, and tell him that he had handled one of his box cars away up north where "men are men." He placed the letter in a heavy envelope, ad- dressed it in ink, and nailed it Leneath the car. Number "6000" travelled on many roads and pounded over thousands of miles of steel rail before {t was this winter discarded as "worn out" and sent to the shops for dis- mantling, Workmen discovered the letter but the address was completely erased by wind 'and rain, #0 they opened the envelope and found the name of the pro- per owner, Mr, Fletcher had since retired, hut the letter was forwarded to him, much to his red-tiled | British cemeteries throngh- | | by | laborated on the book with memorials | i plonghing, | record for Northern Quebec. DEPOSIT BOXES For vent H ; $3. and up per Annum | 'FOR SAFE 'KEEPING OF VALUABLE DEEDS, BONDS ETC. CENTRAL CANADA IPAN AND SAVINGS COMPANY 23 SIMCOE ST, N., OSHAWA IY £sTABLISHED 8s Yd BALLET TO DESCRIBE MODERN MECHANICS Pa,, March 5.-- the Mexican raurs 250 or so pound straight-hack- office of the Opera Comms Philadelphia, Diego Rivera wlivt, gettled hi precariously on a ed chair in the ['hiladelphia Crand | pany recently and described the iren, gasoline pumps and pine apples he has designed to dance to Leopold Stokowski's music in the modernistic ballet "H.P."" The ballet will have Its world premiere here March 31, and will he shown in New York next sea- on, Alexis Dolinoff will be the srincipal dancer, whose title stands composed col Mrs. Frances Flynn Paine in addition to designing the settings. The ballet, for horse-power, was Carlos Chaxez, Rivera The four-year work, Rivera sald, depicts the relation between the "sleepy south, which pro- duceg raw materials and the ma- chine-mad North which consumed them." The entire action tikes place ahoard a ship making a round trip hetween New York and Mexico, DANDELIONS WERE GATHERED AT AMOS QUE., IN JANUARY nn Quebec, Que,-~January, 1932, was the most peculiar month that the Provinee of Quebec has ever experienced from a weather point of view, Though a maximum tem- perature of 32 degree below zero was 'reported in the month, it was so warm on other occasions that aspens and willows were re- ported budding and dandelions were gathered at Amos, in Abiti« | bi County on January 15. Reports indicated done some establishing a from the same place that farmers hud thus STARTED BY CARTIER IN 1534 The work of measuring the real direction of the magnetic needle at different places in Canada is an incidental In the activities of the Topographical Survey, De= partment of the Interior, Cana= da, Thig work was started by Jace ques Cartier in the gulf of St. Lawrence in 1534, and continued] by Sir Francis Drake on the Pacl= fle coast in 1579, Master John Davis in Davis strait in 15685, Captain William Bafin in Baffh island in 1615, Captain Cook and (faptain Vancouver on the Paci fle ehast in 1778 and 1792, and Sir John Franklin in the interio in 1819, FOUND IN STORE, BS IAVA LANA L [chu fo 1H | awaits you in the NEW OLDSMOBILE Chance Discovery Leads. Singer to Place in Grand Opera New York, N.Y., March b.: Singhig softly to himself behind | a department store counter where he was employed as a salesman, Charles Cosmo Casentine, native of Toronto, Ont.,, was surprised one day when a composer over- heard him, She arranged an au- dition, He was declared a find. He Is booked to sing in Wash- ington soon before the Congress. fonal club, He is studying dili- rently every minute he can get from hig work, and he believes in a rosy future, So too, does a Lithuanian house painter out of a job who like Cosentino bids fair to em- urge from obscurity as possessor of 3 golden throat whose singing the world may yet pay handsome- ly to Rear, The house-painter, Maurice Awmbutter, with little education, a wife, two children, no job and ne money, was ginging in the rain for tossed pennies in an. apart. ment house courtyard ooe even- ing. A music student heard him and excitedly took him to a voice teacher, who was also excited. He has sung since he was a child and he knows many songs from operas, He learned them Lecause ho loved them, So he has been practicing for the de- but, and looking for a job on the tide, Judge: "You understand the na- ture of an oath, don't you?" Lady witness, a littleflurried: "I beg your pardon?" Judge: "What is the na- ture of an oath?" Witness, triumph- antly: "Profane, isn't it" i) FREE WHEELING RIDE CONTROL SYNCRO-MESH ENGINE DE Te CARBONIZER SOUND-PROOFED BODIES A GENERAL MOTORS VALUE o-13 oY 26 Athg] St. W., Oshawa PRODCED IN CANADA THE DEPENDABLE OLDSMOBILE Roger L. Corbett Ltd. Phone 428