Daily Times-Gazette, 3 Dec 1947, p. 2

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THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE WEDNESDAY. DECEMBER 3, 1947, -- Mr. and Mis. B. Dales, are th" announce the arrival of son, :Allsn Ross, on Tuesday, ber 2nd. 1847, st the Oshawa (Hospital. A little brother for Entered into rest suddenly at pme of his son-in-law, Mr. M. Barker, 814 Simcoe St. North, Tu December 2nd, Memoriam S_In loving memory of 8 ife and mother, Annie 'Esther ews, who passed away on Dec , 1943. . not forget her, we love her me to:tade from our lives .nobt k when our motirn sincerely, - dwells where it seldom n. ; : emambered by husband Percy rs, Nellie, ia, Emily, Cards of Thanks > Mf of thank alk; re of cams, 3 y thanking Dr. Stur- Bis, uring -our regent sad bereavement. J. Lifig, mother and family wish d. their heartfelt thanks to Dr. friends' apd neighbors, and inks to , -for kindness y 'during our 'recent sad Griffin and family wish to ¢ kind friends and neigh- Svety floral tributes and loan 1} ERT THOMAS SWEET Thomas Sweet died sud- ini Toronto in 1892 to Clara t. «He came to Oshawa from to £2 years ago. vilig besides his wife are two da s;*MT7s. M. J. Barker (Nor- 40! ude Hall, of Toronto, and ¢J. Godon,.-of Kirkland Lake; brother, Gordon 8. Sargent, of 0; 'and one grandchild, Don- ire Barker, of 'Oshawa. * funéral will be from Arm- g's Funergl Home, Thursday, Depemaber 4 at 2 pm. with interment in Mount Lawn Cemetery. Rev. H. D. erden, rector of Christ Mem- will conduct the ser- ba. £1946, to return -to her home i Mary: tit. : , Nursing Sister of the late » , Bt. Marys; two sisters, + Marys, and Maymie, New potatoes not marked, Jewis t, of Angus, was fined $10 .£osts on each count by Magis- % Ebbs . today. Charges were 3 the Farm Products, Gra- d Sales Act. W. Jackson, Belleville, and E. ton, Newcastle, inspectors of .and vegetables for the Federal irtment 'of Agriculture, told the that accused was owner of a y found here loaded * with 60 of potatoes October 9. Mr. stated that the law re- potatoes be marked with had told Mr. Walton the po- j on the truck were for his gise but the inspector later saw d selling some. day Only Day ¢ J dt rt Can't Sit onto, Dee, , 3--(CP)--Claim maf court should not have sat on brance Day was made by R. Ww. itty, K.C., to the Ontario Su- e Court yesterday, when he sought to appeal on behalf of Lloyd Lang, of Peterborough, an- interlo- cl order made ov A at, Co- e. urg, by.Mr. Justice G re. Justice Keiller kay -dis- mig¥ed the appeal.on of) or STounaE Hegdpald "that Suhday is e 'only dayie court; may not legally sit, Nete; 'killed ' last . of 'a private 'of Goodnight, Reast of' Amar. Farmers- : Markel Local Grain Local prices for gran $20-$30 ton; shorts $30-831 ton; baled hy $13-$20- ton; straw $16.$18 ton; pastry flour $2.85 a bag: bread flour $2.90 a bag. Dealers are a. Local eggs: Grade A large, 48; A medium, 45; 'A pullets, 30; grade B, 35; grade C and cracks, 24. Produce Toronto, Dec. 3--(CP)--FProduce prices in the spot market here to- day were reported as follows: Churning cream unchanged, No, 1 lb, 68 FOB, 72 delivered. Butter prints unchanged, 1st grade 67, 2nd grade 64, 3rd grade 62 . Eggs: Receipts of grade A large and grade A medium are up and prices have declined slightly, other grades firm with unchanged prices; wholesale to retail, A large 51-53, A medium 49-50, A puyllet 45, B 45, C 36-37; country. shippers quoted grad- 'ed eggs, cases free, A large 47-47%, A medium 45-45%, A pullet 42, B 42, C34. Butter solids, 1st grade 64%, 2nd grade 60%-62. Livestock -- Toronto, Dec. 3--(CP)--Early cat- tle prices were steady in the live- '| stock market here this morning. Brought forward from yesterday's market close were some 2,200 head of cattle including 1,500 stockers. Medium to good weighty steers were bringing $13.50-$14.85 a hundred- weight while canners and cutters were down at $5-87.50. Calves were steady at $17-$18 for choice. Hogs closed previously at $23 for grade A and $2260 for Bl. Lambs were steady at $1525 for good ewes and wethers by rail and $15 off truck. No early sheep sales were reported. Receipts reported by the Domiin- ion Marketing Service were: Cattle 290, calves 30, hogs 200, sheep and lambs 140. Fruit Toronto, Dec. 3--(CP)--Wholesale fruit and vegetable prices were un- changed here today. Hogs Toronto, Dec. 3--(CP)--Hog pri- ces remained unchanged at Strat- ford, $22.75 delivered to farmers, $2290 to truckers while at Hull unchanged, $22.75 delivered and unquoted off truck, in markets re- porting early this morning. Michael Denies Engagement Near ---- Lausanne, Switzerland, Des. 3-- (AP)~King Michael of Romania n today denied reports of his imminent engagement to 24- year-old Princess Anne of Bourbon- Parma. "There is absolutely nothing in it", the King told an interviewer. "I hear this story everywhere, and everybody knows more about it than I do." Sources close to the Danish royal family said yesterday in Copenhag- en betrothal of the 26-year-old King and the beauteous Danish Princess, who once worked as a salesgir] in New York, would be an- nounced within a month, Begin Delivery Of Plaques Some at least of Oshawa's ex- ' | service personnel will receive be- fore Christmas the plaques being presented by the city as a token tribute and of appreciation for their * | service in World War II. Ald. Rae Halliday, chairman of the committee, informed City Coun- cil last night 235 of the plaques had already been delivered although it was unlikely that the total number ordered would be available for dis. tribution by Christmas as planned originally. It was decided to forward the plaques to the various ex-service men and women as delivery is made. Price Adjustment Asked by Farmers Uxbridge, Dec. 2--More than 400 Uxbridge district farmers have signed a petition to Hon. James G. Gardiner, Dominion Minister of Agriculture, asking for an adjust- ment in price relationship between feed grains and livestock. Because of the sudden rise in the price of commercial] feeds and coarse grains, the petition said, poultry flocks and herds of swine were be- ing reduced, since the farmer could not obtain a profit on the open market. Mr. Gardiner was asked to re- turn to encouragement of the live- stock and poultry-raising industries. ab ------------ LITTLE ROSE BOWL Pasadena, Cal.--Chaffey Jun- for College of Ontario, Cal., and the Cameron, Okla., Aggies were lined up today to meet in the sec- ond annual Little Rose Bowl game, Dec, 13, TROJANS, MONARCHS WIN North Bay---Collegiate Trojans and Fischer Monarchs won the opening men's senior games in the North Bay Basketball Associ- ation schedule, while the collegi- ate girls also rang up victory in ihe feminine section of the cir- cuit AWARD FOR RATTERMAN Buffalo, -- George Ratterman, outstanding rookie quarterback of the All-America Conference Buffalo Bills, today owned Buf- falo's "Athlete of. the Year" award, He was given the award, a plaque, at the annual sports ban- quet of the Buffalo Athletic Club. UAW Official Sent To Jail Detroit, Dec. 3--(AP)--Ray Dooe, business agent of Local 415, United Auto Workers (CIO) and leader of the Detroit garage mechanical strike, was sentenced to 45 days in the Detroit house of correction yes- terday on an assault and battery charge, Dooe was convicted of assaulting a fellow member, Ted Allen, Oct. 31, at a union meeting. The U.A.W. International Execu- tive board last Saturday rebuked Dooe by placing 8 modified admin~ istratorship in charge of Local 415. Palestine Riots '~>ntin .d from Page 1) town Mea Shearim and Hayarkon Streets. Hagana informants said they had been told that Arabs dressed in Bri tish Army uniforms were grouping for attacks, on the Jewish .indus- trial area .and that '"large" Arab |' concentrations were observed in the Tulkarem and Beit Halevi areas, Curfew Imposed The government immediately clamped an ground-the-clock cur- few on the no-man's-land region in the border between the two cities, A curfew on the Arab districts' of Jerusalem, where renewed fighting also broke out this morning, was ex- tended for another 24 hours. The Jerusalem curfew had been sched- uled to end at noon. In Jerusalem, where thousands of persons--both Arab and Jew--fled from the trouble areas, two Arabs were reported shot and wounded by British troops while trying to break out of the old walled section of the Holy City in defiance of govern- ment orders. In Jerusalem bands of Arab youths armed with sticks and stones were reported attacking Jewish houses along the pathway leading to the historic Wailing Wall. The main points of evacuation were the slum quarters of Jerusa- lem, Haifa and the Tel Aviv-Jaffa border area, where hundreds of families loaded their poor belong- ings on trucks, wagons or pushcarts nd fled in <°2 _h of safety. Jewish souices expressed fear that the all-Jewish city of Tel Aviv might bear the brunt of Today's Arab demonstrations. One Hagana (Jewish underground army) source said early today "There's something cooking" in Tel Aviv, where two Arabs and one Jew were reported killed in fighting last night. The general belief among Jews was that events there would take a serious turn before the day is over. ; The bloody armed clashes which marked the first day of the Arab general strike yesterday began in Jerusalem but quickly spread throughout the land. An unofficial casualty list gave the following to- tals for the Holy Land: Eight Jews and six Arabs killed; 32 Jews and six Arabs wounded; Jerusalem 'pro- perty damage estimated at $1,000, 000, with 50 shops burned and dam- aged and some looted. Hagana, whose organized armed forces helped British troops regain control of the Jerusalem situation, charged in a communique last night that Haj Amin El Husseini, exiled Mufti of Jerusalem, was responsible for the riots. The Mufti, spiritual leader of Palestine Arabs, now is in Damascus. "The hirelings of the Mufti have succeeded in turning the first day of the strike into a day of blood- shed and rowdyism," Hagana said. Yesterday's violence began when thousands of Arabs roared angrily out of the old walled city of Jeru- salem and pounced on Jews, stoning and beating them, and fired Jewish property, Jews retaliated by putting Arab property to the torch. There also were mass demonstra- tions by Arabs in Syria, where Jew- ish property was burned; in Iraq, where an unidentified United States Army sergeant and his wife were pulled from a jeep and mo- lested by angry Arabs but unhurt, and in Egypt, where Arab mobs were told they would be an "abun- dance" of arms for a coming "re- gular armed struggle." Truck Drivers Put On Show Toronto, Dec. 3--(CP)--Motor- ists who claim the truck-drivers "hog the road" should have seen 66 expert truck drivers doing their stuff in the championship "roadeo" sponsored by the Ontario Automo- tive Transport Association, now in convention here. Frank Bell, 33, of Toronto, who drives a big transport for a brewery and has 200,000 miles without an accident, was acclaimed champion of transport-trailer drivers. Jules Chartrand of subburban Port Credit, a 34-year-old French- Canadian who drives one of those big oil trucks, was acclaimed cham- pion of straight truck drivers. Bell won a prize of $400 and Chartrand received $300. To get their prizes, Bell handled a transport trailer 38 feet long; making it do everything except sit up and beg. He parked it in a space which had only four feet to spare over all, backed it into an enclosure with four inches clear- ance on every side. He and Chartrand also sent their trucks through a lane marked by golf balls giving a two-inch clear- ance--and then brought them back in reverse. Second and third prize winners in the transport trailer contest were Wallace Miners of Brantford, who received $250, and Arnold Var- ley of Port Credit whose reward was $125. In the straight truck contest George Filner of Vancouv- ear won second prize of $200 and Joseph H. Fair of Millbrook, Ont., took the $100 hdd prize My T™isr was the only prize-winner among six British Columbia drivers who flew here for the contest. Los Angeles -- The 10.round main event scheduled at Olympic Auditorium between Bernard De. cusen and Gene Burton was post. poned until next Tuesday when Docusen pulled a hip muscle, . .ed tirelessly for agreement 'Tells It To Santa Mrs. Murial Jones, out from Birmingham, Eng. just five weeks, had a special request {0 make of Santa Claus at Brantford. What she wanted was her mother to come to Ontario, too. RAF pilot, works at a Brantford factory. Muriel's husband, a former Firemen Overcome by Fumes Clouds of smoke hindered firemen Dewitt Artificial Flower Co. plant, 333 King Street West in Toronto, Sa- turday, and several were overcome by fumes from burning lacquer and materials used in making artificial flowers and store displays, fighting $50,000 blaze in Josephine 'Big Four' Lack Proper Harmony By DEWITT MACKENZIE The Big Four Foreign Ministers' | sary. conference in London, summoned to write the German and Austrian peace treaties which are so vital to the rehabilitation of chaotic Eu- rope, technically has got under way after the usual bolshevist damning of the western democracines and sharp retorts from the latter. You'd think that, with the wel- fare of humanity at stake, this his- toric quartet (the United States, Britain, France and Russia) would get busy and produce the goods. However, from experience we know that the mere fact they've begun operations without actual blood- shed doesn't give any assurance that there will be real progress. The quartet of foreign ministers in this drama rank among the out- standing statesmen of our time. Naturally they must take directions from their respective governments, but developments depend in great degree on the wisdom and initiative of the individuals. So let's look in on them briefly: There's 66-year-old Ernest Bev- in, Britain's Foreign Secretary, who has been called "the first Bri- tish statesman to have been born a working man and to have re- mained one.' He's a big, heavy- jowled chap who rose from dock worker to be one of the foremast Labor leaders of his country. His language is colorful, two-fisted and often indiscreet -- sometimes ap- parently intentionally so. He has a sandpaper humor, with which he roughs his enemies no end. He is a foe of Communism, but has work- with Moscow Then we have General Marshall of the United States. He is 67, a military genius. Marshall has brought to the position of Secretary of State the logic which enabled him to ect American over-all strategy in the second world war, He is ordinarily quiet and soft spoken -- but he knows what he wants, is determined and is quite Quartette capable of raising the roof if neces- Georges Bedault, 46, is one of the men of the hour in France's battle to escape the clutches of Commun- ism. He has served in many posi- tions--as President of the Provis- ional Government in 1946, as Pre- mier and numerous times as For- eign Minister. A wartime resist- ance leader, Bideault now is titular head of Mouvement Republicain Populaire, the party to which France's new Premier, Robert Schu- man, belongs. Bidault is royally hated by Communism, because he has been staunchly supporting the Marshall plan, And finally we have Vyacheslav Molotov, 57, an "old bolshevist" who perhaps 1s closer to Stalin than any other Russian. In any event, Molotov stands at the Sov- {et leaders right hand, as he has done since the days of the bolshe- vist revolution in 1917. The Soviet Foreign Minister has a mind as quick as a steel trap, but it runs along one line--the furthering of Soviet interests. He is a direct- actionist and has been through all the viscissitudes of Commun- ism.' He is one of the chief rajlers against the "Anglo-American bloc" and "dollar democracies." Theres a quartet for you-- if it only would develop some barber- shop harmony. PREPARE FOR GRAPE BOWL Stockton, Cal, -- Coach Larry Siemering is putting his CCAA champion College of Pacific Tig- ers through intensive drills again this week as they prepare for the first of two Bowl games--against Utah Stat. Dec, 13, al Lodi in Lhe Grape Bowl. They meet Univer- sity of Wichita in the Raisin Bowl at Fresno New Year's Day. Welling, Kent, England--(CP)-- Rev. Frank Moore, who holds a mass christening service once =a month, sometimes christens 24 babies at.a time. Board Rejects Bid Of Sullivan Union As Bargain Agent Ottawa, Dec. 3--(CP)--J. A. (Pat) Sullivan's Canadian Lake Seamen's Union was described by the Na- tional Labor Relations Board Tues- day as not a "provincial, national or international employees' organiza- tion" as defined in the board's re- gulations, Formed by Sullivan after he left the presidency of the Canadian Seamen's Union on the ground that body was "Communist-dominated," the CLSU applied to the board for certification as bargaining agency for seamen of the Vincennes-Mc- Naughton Line of Montreal. In rejecting the application, the board said it was 'not. satisfied from the evidence. .. that it was, as defined. in the regulations, a provincial, national or internation- al employees' organization, or a lo- cal branch chartered by, or in good standing with, such an organization at the time it purported to select the persons. for whom certification was desired." The application had been 6ppos- ed by the Canadian Seamen's Un- lon (TLC) and the National Sea- men's Association. : The OSU contended the Sullivan union was "not a bona fide trade union" 'and also claimed it did not represent the majority of em- ployees, The NSA said it had a collective agreement with the company and also declared the OSU did not con- stitute a majority. Sabotage (Continued from Page 1) official vote was 412 to 183. The Communists have opposed the new laws. Shortly before the vote, the gov- ernment accepted an amendment by Socialist Deputy Adrien Mabrut eli- minating "false news, knowingly propagated" from the list of pun. ishable methods of encouraging strikes. During the hot debate on the sabotage measure, Finance Minister Rene Mayer rose dramatically and announced that saboteurs had un- bolted sections of track and thus derailed a Paris-Arras mail train a short time before. He said seven persons died in the wreck. A rail- way official later said 13 were dead and 30 in hospital, (Reuters News Agency, which reported 20 dead and 40 injured in the Arras wreck, said two other trains running out of Paris were wrecked during the night, both without casualties. (One was a Paris-Rouen mail train which left the rails shortly after leaving the capital when it struck a rail from which spikes had been removed, The other was a Paris.Orleans train derailed near Marolles, 50 miles southeast of Paris. Several coaches were upset and three of the four tracks blocked). Chamber Reaction Mayer's announcement brought a roar from the Communist: benches as Communist deputies turned to- ward the right side of the chamber and yelled: "It is you who are the assassins.' Charles Serre, one of Gen. Charles De Gaulle's partisans, shouted back: "Those who provoked it are on your side." Communist Deputy Charles Tillon turned on Schuman and cried: "There is the man who wants to find guilty those who derailed trains when people were being shot for it, when he was in London get- ting ready to put his business affairs back in order." This obviously was a reference to the wartime days of the French underground, in which Tillon was head of a resistance organization. "You need blood to cover your illegalities," Tillon shouted at Schuman. "If there was any crime, it is 'you who are the murderer." After Assembly President Edouard Herriot had brought order out of the tumult the deputies paused to pay tribute to the victims of the Arras wreck. There were some indicaions that the three-week-old wave of strikes caused originally by wage demands was beginning to recede and one highly placed neutral official went so far yesterday as to say he be- lieved the Communists were losing their first big offensive in the "cold war" in France. Labor Ministry sources estimated the number of strikers at under 2,000,000 for the first time in more than a week. Estimates of the number affected by the strikes at the peak ranged from 3,000 to 4,- 000,000 the highest figure having been suggested by the Communists. Trenton Officer Now Naval Pilot Ottawa, Dec. 3--(CP)--Cana- da has seven newly qualified navy pilots waiting to 'take up posts in the Royal Canadian Navy, Na- val Headquarters announced to- day. The seven Canadians completed their course in October at Royal Navy and Royal Air Force stat- fons in the United Kingdom and have returned to Canada. Train- ing was provided in the U.K, be- cause requirements for pilots in the Canadian Navy came at a time when the Canadian services were in a state of reorganization and facilities were more readily available there, The officers include: Lieuten- ants William J, Spencer, Seaforth and Trenton, Ont; Edmund G. Gigg, North Bay, Ont. Up Council Pay "(Continued from Page 1) by council that the office warranted it. +When put to a vote, the motion, seconded by Ald. J. N. Willson, was supported by all members except Ald. Harman who abstalhed irom voting, taking the stand that the matter should be referred to next year's council, 'Madamissimo' Prepares to Vote Curious bystanders look on as Mme. Chiang Kai-chek prepares her bal lot in a Nanking polling place during the first national elections in Chinese history. As a member of a women's organization, she voted for a woman delegate to the national assembiy. Latest reports indicated that Generalissimo Chiang's Kuomintang party would score a landslide. Balloting was said to be relatively light.. Kiwanians Hear About Key Club Objectives Glenn Bumer, International Trus- tee of Key Clubs Intetnational, the new training for service and citizen- ship organization for Secondary school students, sponsored by var- ious Kiwanis Clubs of Canada and the United States, was the special guest speaker at the weekly lunche eon meeting of the Oshawa Kiwan- is Club yesterday. The young 17-year-old student of Riverside High School, Riverside, Ontario, delivered a masterful ad- dress in which he outlined the pur- pose and procedure in the formin- of a Key Club at any High School or Collegiate Institute. Many of the Oshawa Kiwanis Club "Kweens" as well as a group of O.C.V.I. students and local youth leaders were present as guests, Tells of Movement's Growth Kiwanian Morley Wyman first introduced Kiwanian "Mac" Mac~ Millan of the Windsor Kiwanis Club, District Chairman of Key Clubs for the Ontario-Quebec-Mari- time Kiwanis District and a past Kiwanis Lieutenant-Governor of Division No. 8. Kiwanian "Mac", prior to intro- ducing Glenn Bulmer to the meet- ing, first gave a brief summary of the success already enjoyed by the Key Clubs recently: formed in the Windsor district and named nu- merous Key Clubs which have only quite recently received their char- ters or will be getting them in the near future. "There are roughly twenty-five Key Clubs receiving charters every month in United States and Can- ada today", the speaker declared. Belleville and East York (Toronto) are the two newest Key Clubs to be organized in.this district, it was revealed. At the outset of his address, Glen Bulmer pointed out that youtly of Germany was trained by Hitler in the ways of war and the greatest war of all time resulted. How Key Club Formed "I have ccme here to try and tell you how you can help the youth of today so that they may develop into good citizens and provide pro- per leadership in the future. The way that you can help is by spon- soring a Key Club, a Key €lub is a High School Service Club, composed of "key" boys, who are selected from the upper classes on the basis of good character, good scholarship and leadership ability. Objects of the Key Club are:--1. To. develop initiative and leader- ship. 2. To provide experience in liv- ing and working together. 3. To serve the school and the commun- ity. 4. To co-operate with the school principal. 5. To prepare for useful citizenship. 6. To accept and pro- mote the Constitutional Objects of Kiwanis International. The young speaker told that the first Key Club was formed in Sa- cramento in 1925 but the movement was not recognized by the Kiwanis until 1943, At the present time there are 356 Key Clubs in United States and Canada with a' membership of over 72300. The Key Club is an International organization with headquarters in Chicago. Fach year the Key Clubs have an International convention, thel ast one Heing in Macon, Georgia. The first Canadian Key Club was formed at Riverside High School by the Riverside students, under the sponsorship of the Windsor Kiwan- is Club, Large Field For Service Glenn Bulmer pointed out that although the Riverside Key Club is small, in a small school, already much fine service work has been performed. Enumerating various groups, the young speaker told of the various school organizations which his Key Club at Riverside High School has helped to form, The forming of an Assembly Committee to plan and operate school assemblies, a Monitor's Com- mittee to keep in the halls, an ad- visory council to give guidance to younger groups, a Teen Town Com- mittee to sponsor dances, operate games, ball teams, these and other projects to interest youth were named. Service to the school principal was another field of service ex- plained by Glenn Bulmer, who told how the Key Club can help the principal in many important school activities. Help To Individual Helping the individual, teaching Key Club members how to preside at meetings, how to discuss topics, giving a boy confidence to stand on his own feet, teaching through dis- cussions, and also having speakers to address the students.on vocation al guidance, were other valuable as- sets of Key Club activity which the speaker mentioned. ) J Service to the community in help« ing with tag days, assisting in com munity events and service work, or- ganizing special drives was still an- other phase of Key Club which Glen Bulmer explained. "Everyone of these things and many like them happen wherever there is a Key Club", he declared. "They can happen in a school in this community. They will not hap- pen however, unless you provide the leadership training service that only Kiwanis has in the form of a Key Club. "All that is required to sponsor a Key Club is just one Kiwanian'who loves boys and will spend an hour or two a week with them. There is no other cost. And there is no other high school group that performs the functions of a Key Club. Popular With Student "Every competent principal 'wel- comes this 'unselfish character- building co-operation to supplement and support his school program. Every superior high school or col' legiate student thrills to belonging to a high school 'service club that gives him "that certain something" ° which cannot be found in his text It is | books In closing, Glenn Bulmer declar- * ed "This is your challenge and op= portunity to build character and ci- tizenship in tomorrow's leaders, And remember, when you are work- ing the Key Club, you are working with the finest material on earth-- the young men of Canada." Following: Glenn Bulmer's {fine address, a question period as held, with Kiwanians and guests tossing numerous questions which were an- swered by Kiwanian "Mac" Mac- Millan and the- speaker. Not a Junior Kiwanis Club One thing which was y | stressed was that there is no obliga- tion to Key Club members to be- come Kiwanians after they leave school. They become an associate in- stead of an active Key Club mem- ber and they may join with Rotary, Lions, Kinsmen or any other service club they wish. Kiwanis Club mere- ly sponsor Key Clubs as another of their forms of boys' work. Another thing that was pointed out was that upon graduation of students who are Key Club mem- bers, the remaining members vote on the new members to fill the va- cancies and the list of nominees is submitted by the school principal. In this way, no clique is formed by the Key Club members. Kiwanian Keith Gahan voiced the thanks of the guests and Ki- wanians to Glenn Bulmer for his masterful presentation of his in- teresting topic. THE ARCADE DRY GOODS H. BATEMAN, PROP, 454 SIMCOE ST. S. PHONE 1062 Ladies' White Flannelette Nightgowns, short sleeves and long sleeves. Small, medium and large . $1.35 and $1.85 Ladies' Outsize long sleeve "Mother Hubbard" style .,........ $2.10 Women's Rayon Plated Hose, sizes 9 to 10% .... Ladies' Angora Gloves, assorted colours ... «es Pr. 65¢ «ees Pr. $298 "Babies Own" Toiletries, containing soap, oil, powder and "Q" tips set $1.10 Bath mat set, softly tufted chenille, assorted colours, 2-pc. set $3.95 Bath Towels, 42x22, white with rainbow colours ... pr. $1.69 Pillow Cases, good white cotton, smbroldered and' Hemstitched ........:........ Table Oilcloths, 54" wide, white and patterned . theese varies esses... pr. $225 vee yd. 85¢ White Flannelette, excellent quality, 27" wide ....cc00v000.. yd. 33c Striped Flannelette, good quality, 36" wide. Stripes of blue, mauve and pink . Boys' all wool Golf Hose "Made Colours gray, navy, wine, brown essssessnsees yd. 39¢ inn England", verses pi $1.15

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