Daily Times-Gazette, 27 Nov 1946, p. 5

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WEDNESDAY, NOVEMB «7 ER 27, 1946 THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE PAGE FIVE Premier Sick ' Delay Debate One Week guest speaker, tonight's Hart House University of Toronto de- bate will be postponed until next , it wag learned yester- 'is recovering from unable to attend the which dominion-provin- tion policies were to have ussed. resolution "That this house that the maintenance of an ive in Canada demands an assur- of the taxing powers of each ual government correspond- with the broad field on which ponsibility is given it under the British North American Act," will be defended by George Bettson of Trinity College and Sam Telford of ege, § - Allen a M. 2 oppose the motion. Premier Drew will attend next week's debate and will close the in accordance with parlia- mentary tradition. The debate will be held next Wed- nesday in the Hart House debates room at 8 pm. Canned Goods Shipments Up Forty Per Cent .. In its weekly crop and market report, for the Lakeshore District of Eastern Ontario, the Dominion Department of Agriculture states the shipments of canned goods by the Canadian Steamship Lines out of Picton.this season will be ap- proximately 40 percent. In excess of last season. ' The demand for apples is strong with few being left for sale in the district. Most apples are now in dealers' hands but some growers are pack- g L.0EEs figyct Li 1 8 2 if 1 federal system of govern- |' --Cut Courtesy Woodstock Sentinel-Review, Woodstock Collegiate And Vocational School The front of the Woodstock Col- legiate and Vocational School ex- tends the full length of the build- ing as shown in cut. It is of brick construction, with large windows and bright, well-ventilated rooms. A hall runs the entire length of the building on all three floors. At either end of the building projections jut back from the main edifice.- At the south end the pro- jection houses the gymnasium, on the basement and first floors; and the auditorium on the second and third floors. At the north end the projefion houses classrooms on ing for markets. Apples ripening rapidly in common storage and considerable late scab is now show- ing decay. Supplies of Tallman Sweet not nearly sufficient to meet demand . B.C. apples arriving in poor condition due to excessive bruising causing heavy losses to re- tailers, Gordon Brent Is Widely Mourned Raglan, Nov. 26--On Saturday evening, November 23, at his home, one mile east of Raglan, Gordon Brent passed away after four months' illness. Born in 1898, youngest son of the late William Brent who died in 1928 and Mrs. Brent, who passed away in 1900, he had lived in this com- munity all his life. In 1928 he mar. ried Miss Elorna, Cook of Columbus. Besides his wife he is survived by five children, two boys and three girls; one brother, Herbert Brent of Montreal; , four sisters, Mrs. N. Hughson of Myrtle; Mrs. T. Taylor of Burketon; Mrs, R. Radburm and Miss Rose Brent of Toronto. Many of us remember an older brother, John, and sister, Pearl, who passed away in 1924. His genial smile and good-natured friendliness will long be remember- ed by his many friends and associ- ates. The sincere sympathy of all goes out to the bereaved family. 'The was -a member of Masonic Lodge. Funeral service was held in Raglan United Church on Tuesday at 2:30 p.m. followed by interment at Pine Grove Ceme- tery at Prince Albert. Build $5,400 Road To Aid Legless Vet Capbtown--(CP)--A legless sold- ~ fer is to have a road in suburban Wetton especially surfaced for him so he can walk home safely. He is 8gt. Billy Conradie, a six-foot-four- ~" inch infantry platoon sergeant, who trod on a German mine when lead- ing his men into action in the clos- stages of the Itallan campaign. injuries were so severe that both ad to be amputated at the ees, Sgt. Conradie is in a Military hos- Johannesburg where artifi- are being made for him. be able to walk with prac- t only on a hard surface. ts, with whom he will stay returns to Capetown live Road in Wetton, which is sandy track about 100 It would be quite im- or the wounded soldier to from his home unless he carried or wheeled in a bath use of his predicament, his approached G. H. Pierce, 1. secretary, who appealed A. Bloomberg. t may seem a lot to ask that a should be especially made up one man, but it is little compar- | ed with the great sacrifice which | Bgt. Conradie has made on our be- half," he wrote, . The mayor sent the appeal to the streets committee with a strong re- | commendation that the road be 'built. The cost will be £1,350 te the committee has 'When Sgt. Conradie comes home tor Christmas, work will have start STUDEBAKER CO. BOOSTS PASSENGER CAR PRICES South Bend, Ind, Nov. 25--The Studebaker Corporation today ad- + vanced list prices of its new passen- : ger models an average of 3% per cent. effective imgmediately. myEs i BEERY g fi s 2 233 598,813 Lil: ES 223 1 i : i i Dr.CHASES | the first, second and third floors. | On the basement floor, which is | only excavated at the south end, are found the gymnasium flooring, boys' "and girls' aressing rooms, rifle range and boiler room, On the first floor are found classrooms and washrooms. The classrooms include manual training room, machine shop and art room as well as three ordinary class- rooms. Also on the first floor is the entrance to .the gymnasium bal- cony. On the second floor, which is the main floor, are the principal's of- fice, boardroom, library, household economics room and teachers room, also one ordinary classroom. The main entrance to the lower floor of the auditorium is also lo- cated on this floor, On the third floor are classrooms and washrooms, At one end of this floor is housed the commercial de- partment, including business ma- chines room, etc. At the other end of the hall is the chemistry labora- tory, etc, which includes two rooms, which are accessible through an archway at the front of one room and the rear of the other room. The entrance to the audi- torium balcony is also found on this floor. At the rear and directly access- ible from the main hall of the new building is the old building which houses 14 classrooms. They are of different types, including the sci- ence lab, music room, etc. 'The classrooms in the old building are on the first and second floors. The third floor houses a store- room for cadet equipment, etc. The third floor also is used for lunch- rooms for rural pupils, New Zealand Seeks Officers Dunedin, N.Z. --(CP)-- The New Zealand government intends calling for applications for commissions in the New Zealand regular army from ex-officers of the British and other Dominion forces, as well as from men who held wartime commissions in the New Zealand army. Announcing this, Defence Min- ister Jones said the normal intake of cadets from Duntroon, the Aus- tralian military college, which nor- mally trains all the officers needed for the Australian and New Zeal- land forces, was quite inadequate to fill all vacancies caused by war cas- ualties and retirements, Officers are required between 22 and 35 years of age. At the end of a preliminary training course they will be granted rank and seniority according to their qualifications, age and experience. New conditions and rates of pay are being drafted. The minister said it was not yet possible to give details, but intend- ing applicants could be assured that they would make the army a very attractive career, Sh -- Salco ART GLASS 141 ALEXANDER BLVD. Phone 123M GLASS OF ALL KINDS ® 2,000 ft. Double Dia- mond in stock for windows, © Plate for . . « Desk Tops Furniture Tops Coffee Tables, etc. to order. ® Mirrors . . . new, to pry Wie Old mirrors renovated. ® Sash Glazing ® Designs on Door Glass ® Drilling Polished Edges ® Full length mirrors in stock, IF IT'S "GLASS . . » TRY US! Pe ---- MISSIONS IN MALAYA GIVE AID TO AILING New Delhi --(CP)-- Two Indian medical missions, working in dif- ferent areas to avoid overlapping, have aided more than 180,000 people of different nationalities in Malaya. The missions worked in the interior of the Peninsula and in districts where there was a large number of Indians. The number of persons examiged by the Government of India Medi- cal Mission to the end of July, 1946, was 64,380. Of these 28,825 were treated for various ailments. LADY COUNCILLOR DIES Mrs. Clara Delany, veteran mem- ber of the Cobourg Town Council, who served for almost 12 years, passed away on Tuesday following Parcels To $25 No Longer Need Export Form Foreign Exchange Control Board Form B, (combined with Customs Export Entry Form B 13) need no longer be furnished by persons mailing gift parcels of goods not exceeding $25 in value, from Cana- da to other countries, it is announc- ed by the Honourable Ernest Ber- trand, K.C.,, M.P., Postmaster Gen- eral. This will be welcome news for thousands who are now preparing their Christmas boxes to the Unit- ed Kingdom and to other lands. The Post Office, however, calls attention to the fact that the regu- | lar Customs Declaration Form 91 B must still be affixed to all parcels mailed to destinations outside Ca- nada. Where the postal and customs re- gulations of those countries require the non-adhesive Customs Declara- an extended illness She was the | tion Form 15 B and Despatch Note second woman in Cobourg history to| 16 B must continue to accompany sit as a member of Council. parcels mailed to such destinations. Boards Of Trade Must Take The Lead And Aid In Improving Labor Legislation Toronto, Nov, 27. (OP) -- With movement faces the responsibilities of lending in- formed aid in improving labor laws where they are shown to need improvement and to exert its influ- ence to ensure that the laws are re- spected: and obeyed, G. V. V, Nich- olls of Montreal said in an address hy ere. Speaking to the annual meeting of the Ontario Associated Boards of Trade and Chambers of Commerce, Mr. Nicholls, manager of the re- search department of the Canadian Chamber of Commerce, said grow- ing disrespect for law and order was abroad in the land. This contempt for ordinary law had been apparent in industrial strikes in the last few months, es- pecially those at the Ford Motor Company plant in Windsor, a year ago, and at the Steel Company of Canada's, Hamilton works last sum- mer, Mr. Justice Ivan C. Rand, in his arbitration award in the Ford strike, had said that the Automo- bile Workers' Union's action in di- verting hundreds of motor cars in- to a barricade near public proper- ty "and the interference with inno- cent members of the public was an insolent flouting of civil order." Later he had spoken of the union's "abuse of . striking power" which "cannot be excused, much less jus- tified." . In the Hamilton strike, the Unit- ed Steel Workers of America (CI. 0.) beseiged upwards of 2,500 work- ers in a steel plant and insisted i had a right to prevent anyone fri entering or leaving the property. "One of the strangest things about the hearings of the Com- mons standing committee on in- dustrial relations into the steel strike was the almost complete ab- sence of any reference to the illegal siege operations going on in Hamil- ton at the very time the commit- tee was sitting," said Mr. Nicholls. When the committee was consid- ering an invitation to visit the steel plant, one of the members asked the union head whether, if the committee decided to go, its mem- bers would be allowed to pass through picket lines--"no one ap- peared to find anything strange in the picture of a Member of the a IR seeking per- mission from a union, which was engaged in an unlawful strike and o > = As C.1.O. Leaders Confer Philip Murray, RIGHT, re-el president of the Congress of Ind ted by fon to his h year as trial Organizations, is shown con- ferring with two of his aides during a session of the congress' annual convention in Atlantic City, NJ. LEFT to RIGHT are, George Addis, secretary-treasurer of the United Auto Workers, who has been elected to the executive board; Walter P. Reuther, president of the United Auto Workers, who was named a C.LO, vice.president at closing session of the convention, and Mr. Murray. in illegal picketing, to enter a plant where he had every right to go anyway." . It could only be assumed, said Mr. Nicholls, that the authorities had given up hope of enforcing the law and the committee had decided to ignore the question of law and order altogether, "Probably they were right. For the authorities run a grave risk when they wink at violations of the law for weeks and then suddenly try to enforce it against several thousand organized and deter- mined men. Mr. Nicholls listed three ways in which the average citizen could en- courage respect for law and order in the conduct of labor disputes. "First and foremost, we can ex- ert our influence to see that the law is observed in the little and big things of our day-to-day lives , . . if we are employers of labor, we can be careful to see that we our- selves respect the laws governing our relations with our employees . + « +» thirdly, while insisting that the law should be obeyed so long as it is the law, we must lend our ajd to improving it where it is shown to need improvement." W. C. Woods, president of the W. C. Woods Company of Guelph, said that in his opinion, econimic secur ity could not be gained by increas- ing prices and wages. "Increased productivitly should result in lower prices in order thas there may be an increased demand for goods which would make it possible to utilize the labor dis- placed by more productive mae chines," he said, "Some people contend that las bor should get the benefit of ine creased production made possible by better machine tools and better methods and that the benefits should take the form of increased wages. This, in my opinion, is not 50 labor should get the benefit of the average per capita increase in productivity in the form of lower prices only, Mr. Woods contended that the price of labor should be substan- tially constant and that the price level should fall at a rate equal to the per capita increase in produce tivity, To concentrate our effort on pro= duction, a free price and the coms= petitive system throughout the largest possible area of the world will be our best guarantee for peace and prosperity." Discussing labor-management ree lations in Great Britain, J. R. Lloyd Davies, deputy labor attache at the British Embassy in Washing« ton, sald the compulsory arbitra= tion system set up during the war had been continued through the first year after the war. He cred- ited it with averting much indus- trial strife during the first year of 456 CENTRE ST. ETAT hbhbdd db dd OSHAWA IND LAYER LAAT ING) LIMITED reconversion, IIIT EER ONTARIO BUY CHRISTMAS SEALS AND HELP SUPPORT CAMPAIGN TO STAMP OUT DREADED "T.B." "AN OPEN LETTER TO THE PUBLIC FROM CO-OPERATING IN THE 20TH NATIONAL CAMPAIGN OF THE CANADIAN TUBERCULOSIS ASSOCIATION THE KIWANIS CLUB OF OSHAWA ASK | EVERY CITIZEN TO BUY CHRISTMAS SEALS IN ORDER THAT THE SPLENDID WORK NOW. UNDER WAY MIGHT BE CARRIED ( eve ry ---- A. E. JOHNSON, CHAIRMAN T. B. COMMITTEE Dear Fellow-Citizen: Here are your 1946 Christmas seals -- $2.00 worth. is too many, please return those you are unable to use -- if too few, write or phone our office. All funds raised by the cam- paign will be used in tuberculosis prevention work in Southern On- tario County. Christmas seals are nancing a survey in this County during which every resident will be given an opportunity to nave a chest X-ray free of charge. urge you to make an appointment for yours. Your contribution is an allow- able deduction for Income Tax purposes -- Receipt sent upon request. Won't you USE these Seals on ALL your Christmas mail? They are bright cheery messengers of good-will and good health, telling the world you help fight tuberculosis. With the Season's warmest greetings. nm ot on 4 A AE now fi- We \ re r---- rors A. E. JOHNSON Chairman Kiwanis Christmas Seal Fund Chairman, Kiwanis Christmas Seal Fund If this Pre I ess Shaving and Mennen or Men Col. R. 8. McLaughlin W. E. N, Sinclair, K.C,, M.P, T. K. Creighton, K.C., M.L.A, Mr. Frank McCallum Medical Officer of Health Mr. W, A. Wecker Pres. General Motors Corp. Chairman Board of Education Rev. Father K. E, Morrow Rev. J. V. McNeely Pres. Ministerial Association 'Mr. L. M. Letcher Mr. Robert M. Deverell Oshawa and Dist, Labor Council Publisher, Pickering News Judge D, Coleman 'Box of 12 Cards 'with Envelopes' _ PATRONS Mayor of Oshawa Dr, A. F. Mackay Mr. J. L. Beaton Port Perry Mayor of Whitby James Cullen President Mr. W. E. Murkar Whitby, Ontario Mrs. Frank McCallum Pres. Women's Welfare Leag Mrs. T. K. Creighton President ¥.W.C.A40atiON yril Couch P) . Ki is Club of, ames Suu oGhildren Pres. Kinsmen CI " w, 1, FEMS Pres. Rotary tft E.Y o re. Drisfmas re. rojeting Cards Pres.' Canadian Craftsman Series Vl j=) A Very Beautiful Assortment of Selected Cards is 49:

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