Daily Times-Gazette, 20 Jul 1948, p. 2

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.PAGE TWO THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE TUESDAY, JULY 20, 1948 Deaths N--Buddenly at the family resi- , 473 itson Rd. South, on ¢, July 19th, 1948, Hazel T. Woodward, beloved wife of Gordon M. Dixon in her 53rd year. --The late Mrs. Dixon is resting at the Luke-McIntosh Funeral Home. Service in Salem United Church on Wednesday, July 21st, at 2:30 p.m. In- terment Salem Cemetery. Cards of Thanks I wish to extend my sincere thanks to Drs. Maroosis and Russell, special nurses, Misses Niddery, Bresett and Mrs. Sleeman, and regular nurses of Oshawa General Hospital, also Rev. Mr. McNeely, W.A. of King Bt. United Church, relatives and friends, who so kindly remembered me with visits, cards, flowers and gifts, durl my recent illness, Jo-Ann arge. Ohituary MRS. GORDON M. DIXON Stricken suddenly at her home, 173 Ritson Road South, Mrs, Gor- don M. Dixon died yesterday after- noon at the age of 52, She had seemed to be in her usual good health in the morning. Born Hazel T. Woodward, the daughter of the late James and Ann Woodward of Mariposa Town- ship, she spent most of her life in that township and in Manilla. She was married in Manilla in 1917 and came to live in Oshawa five years ago. She was a member of Manilla United Church. Surviving are her husband, two daughters, Mrs. Roy (Lillian) Kerr of Toronto, and Marion of Oshawa; .two sons, Ormand at home and Ted of Toronto; two sisters, Mrs. C. Archer and Miss Marion Woodward both of Mariposa, and four broth- "ers, William of Lindsay, Hezekiah of Sunderland, Leonard of Regina and Garfield of Toronto. Mrs. Dixon is resting at the Luke-McIntosh Funeral Home. The funeral service will. be held at Salem United Church, Mariposa, on Wednesday, July 21 at 230 pm, with Rev. W. R. Rackham conduct- ing. Interment will be in Salem Cemetery. Two Men Rule Great Britain's Betting Rings By ALAN HARVEY Canadian Press Staff Writer London, July 20.--(CP--A couple of men from Fleet Street rule Bri- tain' betting rings with a firm and undisputed hand. To fans familiar with mechanized betting in Canada and the United States, the methods of the inen irom Fleet Street seem haphazard and subject to human error. But 'Walter Meeds and Ted Dawson haven't been challenged by a gam- bler with a grievance in thé last 10 years, "Starting price" is vital in Bri- tish racing. "As nearly as possible, it represents an average of the fluctuating odds laid against any horse, from- opening to the "off," by dozens of bookmakers who set up stands on the rails. Meeds and Dawson are employed | prices at Stratford today were un- | Radical Socialists wanted to cut this and Sporting | changed. Grade A $31.10 to farm- | by $40,000,000. While Schuman was willing to al- by Sporting Life North American form charts. To LObtain the "S.P.", they fight through "jostling crowds to note prices laid by every large bookie at crucial Stages .in the betting. As post-time approaches their pace quickens. Large professional backers take the elastic off the crisp bank notes which send prices fumbling in a twinkling. And the Job is complicated by "blower" or- ders -- large sums sent to on-the- course bookmakers by an agency in Jondon which handles commissions for betting offices in large cities. .. When the horses "come under starter's order," Meeds and Dawson | Chronicle, Britain's equivalents of | ers: to truckers $31.25. Farmens- Market Local Eggs Local eggs: Grade A large, 45; grade A medium, 42; grade A pullet, 36; grade B, 34; grade C and cracks, 30. Local Grain Local seeling prices for bran $56 ton; shorts, $58 ton; baled hay, $25 ton; straw, $22 ton; pastry flour, $395 a bag; bread flour, $4,75. Deal- ers are paying no set price. Wheat $2.00 a bushel; oats, 85 cents; bar- ley, $1.00; and buckwheat, $1,30. Fruit Toronto, July 20--(CP) --Whole- sale fruit and vegetable prices here today were unchanged with the following exceptions: Raspberries, pints 18-22 cents; cucumbers, 11 qts., 50-90 cents. Produce Toronto, July 20--(CP)--Produce | prices on the spot market here to- | day were quoted as follows: Churning cream unchanged. No. | 1 73 cents FOB 177 delivered. Butter prints unchanged. First grade ®; | second grade 68; third grade 67. | The egg market is a little firmer | here today, Receipts are light and | are clearing well under good de- | mand. Top grades are up from half a cent to one cent. Country shippers quoted graded eggs, cases free. Grade A large 50-51; Grade A me- dium 48-49; grade A pullet 45; grade B 40-41; grade C 36-37. Wholesale to retail: grade A large 54-55; grade A medium 52-53; grade A pullet 48-50; grade B 45; grade C| 40. Butter solids are unchanged. First grade 67%; second grade 654-6611. Livestock Toronto, July 20 -- (CP) -- The livestock market here today opened slow with good butcher cattle .neet- ing broad demand at steady prices. Common to medium were slow at weaker prices to 50 cents lower for the week. Receipts reported by the Dominion Marketing Service wer2: Cattle 560) calves 165; hogs 110; sheep and lambs 205. Left from to- day's trading were some 1900 head. Cows sold from $14.50-$15.50 for good butcher animals with commoa to medium downward to $12. Can- ners and cutters sold downward to $21 and some medium to good | weighty steers sold upwards to $22. Stockers were steady up to $17.50. Choice veal remained steady nt $22-$23 with an odd top of $23.50. Common to medium calves met narrow demand at weaker prices. | Grass calves sold downward to $11. Previous close on hogs was $31.25 (for grade A; $30.85 for Bl. Sows | were $21 dressed. Good spring | lambs were steady at $23 for good | ewes and wethers with $1 discount on bucks. Good light sheep brought $5-$8 with a few at $9. Fat heavy | shéep were slow and hard to sell at $5-$6. . | Hogs Toronto, July 20--(CP) -- Hog | Says Russians Are "Milking" East Germany By RICHARD KASISCHKE | Berlin -- (AP) -- While Marshall | Plan millions are being devoted to | the economic rehabilitation of west- | ern Germany, the Russians ' are "milking" their eastern Germany | occupation zone on an increasing | race to a pre-arranged rendezvous, | scale, according to official Allied | compare notes and determine what | reports. each horse should pay if it wins. Despite all complications, Meeds and Dawson seldom disagree by more than half a point. If they dn they split the difference. Starting price determined, repre- sentatives of British Press Associa tions flash it to a "tic-tac" man. The tic<tac' is an agent wearing fwhite gloves, his job to signal the price by complicated gestures of ithe hands to a colleague in the grandstand. From there it goes jy telephone to London -- and the iprices start moving on ticker tape 'before the race is completed. t 49ERS OPEN PRACTICE { Menlo Park, Calif--A 57-man squad reported to head Coach Buck (Shaw as the San Francisco Forty- {Niners opened their 1948 training «amp with -one of the -strongest 'teams -- on paper -- in the All- America Pro Football Conference. i KELLOGG'S THMA Asie F & HAY FEVER A partial but graphic account of | how the Russians are exacting | their "take" was given recently by | British | commandant of Berlin, in a meet- | Maj.-Gen, E. O. Herbert, ing of the city's Allied Kommanda- tura, Herbert made his report in reply | to what he termed "wild assertions" and "travesties of fact" uttered hy the Russian commandant, Gen. Alexander Kotikov. The Russians had claimed that the standard of living of the Ger- man population in the western-oc- cupied areas was below that in the Soviet occupation zone and that the "anti-workers position" of the US, | British and French authorities was to blame for lowering of living standards. The British commandant quoted heavily from statistics compiled by the Russian zone's own German governments to support his asser- tions that the Soviets were con- ducting large-scale exploitation in industrial and manufactured rep- arations, building materials and :n public finances. Herbert asserted that the Rus- sians had so depleted public finan- ces of their zone that these now were largely dependent upon taxes on alcohol made from large-scale distillation of potatoes which should be used 'as food. In the industrial .fleld, he said, the Russians were covering up un- employment in their zone's run- down economy by sending thous- ands of German workers into their uranium mines in Saxony. On the state of industry and re- parations in the Russian zone, the British commandant reported: "Reparations are taken from cur- NOTICE SUGDEN & BROWN Car Upholstery Will be Closed from JULY 24 to AUG. 7 INCLUSIVE FOR HOLIDAYS | Socialist Justice Minister in the old | $6. A few butcher steers sold up to | | Communists are the largest single Maj.- | rent production in contravention of the Potsdam agreement. They in- clude large quantities of goods es- sential for Germany's rehabilitation as well as foodstuffs and consumer goods. The dismantling of Soviet zone railways is well known." After dismantling many German factories for reparations and cart- ing them off to Russia, Herbert as- serted, the Russians seized owner- ship of hundreds more factories and lumped them into their Soviet Aktiengesellschaften trust to pro- duce reparations goods. This tiust, he said, represented one-third of the remaining industrial capacity of the Soviet zone. "The Soviet foreign industrial trust," Herbert said, "not only has a monopoly in many industries but takes priority over German require- ments in the allocation of raw ma- terials and labor. : Gen, Herbert asserted that taxa- tion in the Soviet zone was 450 reichsmarks per head compared io 270 marks in the British zone (the pre-war value of the mark was 40 cents). In housing, Herbert said the Soviet occupation zone and Soviet sector of Berlin were behind be- cause the Russians took most of the building materials for their own purposes. France Finds Army Budget Hits Politics Paris, July 20--(AP) -- President Vincent Auriol began a search to- day for a new Premier after a dis- pute over the army's budget top- pled France's middle-of-the-road government. Auriol was expected first to try to find someone who could reunite the "third force" coalition of Mouvement Republicain Populaire, Socialists and Radical Socialists. Robert Schuman, the outgoing Premier, may be called upon to suc- ceed himself. He {3 an M.R.P, metm- ber. Foreign Minister Bidault, also M.R.P., was hurrying back from a | meeting of the five-power Western | European Union in The Hague in an | attempt to have his party head the new government. The Socialists and Radical Social- ists also had candidates. Political circles said that among those who might be considered for the Prem- iership are Andre Marie, Radical cabinet; Jules Moch, Socialist Inter- jor Minister, and former Premier | Paul Reynaud, an Independent Re- publican. First an Auriol's visiting list today was Maurice Thorez, Secretary-Gen- eral of the Communist party. The group in the National Assembly, and custom requires that the President | consult all parliamentary ieaders in | the order of their party's size. | Schuman's cabinet, which took of- | fice Nov. 22, 1947, contained no Communists, The dispute within Schuman's cabinet on the army budget came | when the Premier. and his Popular Republicans sought to spend the equivalent of $10,017,000,000 on na- tional defence. The Socialists and | low a cut of $23,000,000, he refused | to go along on the remaining $17,- | 000,000. The National Assembly sup- | ported the Socialist position, voting | 297 to 214 for the full $40,000,000 cut. There were 76 absentions, largely by followers of De Gaulle, when the | assembly voted. The cabinet then | resigned. Political circles said' Schuman's | manoeuvre of quitting before the | assembly called a confidence vote was designed to gét around the constitutional provision and prevent an election, Early Riser All of five months old, little Danny Murray of New York shows his ability to stand on his own two feet, although they don't quite fill his father's shoes. The tot has been able to stand by himself since he was one month old. | Laurent) Signatures Go On Wage Agreement General Motors and the G.M. Division of Local 222, U.AW.-C.L.O. today signed the new two-year agreement recently negotiated. Malcolm Smith, at left, chairman of the union bargaining committee affixes his signature to the contract as R. B. Reddoch, Industrial Relations Manager of the company watches. wage --Times-Gazette Staff Photo Leaders Outline Party Programs To Quebec Voters Montreal, July 20+(CP)--Quebec political leaders Monday night nailed further planks to their plat- form as the July 28 elections drew nearer. Premier Duplessis counter- ed Liberal Leader Godbout's prom- ise to make a taxation agreement with Ottawa and then submit it to a referendum, while Mr. Godbout sald his party "will dig into ex- aggerated profits of companies to bring down the cost of living." J. Ernest Gregoire, leader of the Union of Electors, predicted that | his party will win the election "with at least 60" of the 92 seats Speaking in Quebec City, the Union Nationale leader said voters should not trust the Liberal prom- | ise of a referendum on the ques- | tion of a tax agreement with the federal government. "Mr. Godbout has changed a bit," declared Mr. Duplessis. "His opin- jons teeter and that's the reason | way back from heavy going which why today we don't want people who are see-saws running the af- fairs of the province." "You - remember the referendum on conscription?" he asked. "The people said 'no' but Mr. St. Laur- ent (External Affairs Minister St. and Mr. Godbout said 'yes. In. Hull, party will are treated fairly. "I do not promise that you will become rich overnight but I will say that after July 28 my govern- ment will dig into exaggerated pro- fits of companies to bring down the cost of living," the Liberal leader said. Federal Works Minister Fournier spoke on the same platform with Mr. Godbout. He said federal mem- begs of parliament and cabinet ministers did not enter the Quebec campaign without reason, The Premier's campaign "was di- rected against the federal govern- ment and he defied members to participate," said Mr. Fourplier. "Once we got into the campaign and it began to burt him, Duples- sis began to say that federal mem- bers should stay at home and look after their own problems." At a rally in Montreal, Mr. Greg- oire said that when his party elect- ed Real Caouette to the Commons for Pontiac, the Liberal and Con- servative parties said it was an ac- cident. "Well, if it were an accident then, there will be quite a huge ac- cident next July 28," he predicted. "The union of electors will be elec- ted to power with at least 60 seats." Mr. Godbout said his St. Louis Browns Sign Paul Dean As Baseball Scout St. Louis, July 20--(CP)--st. Louis Browns Monday announced signing of Paul Dean formerly Manager of the Ottawa Nationals of the Border League, gs scout. Dean, a little Rock, Ark., busi- nessman, has not been connected with baseball so far this year. Paul, younger half of the famous Dean pitching combination for St. Louis Cardinals in the 1930's, will work for the Browns in Arkansas, Louisiana, Texas and Oklahoma. Paul's brother "Dizzy", broadcasts Brownie"s game over a St. Louis radio station, | seasons and bag limits see to it that workers | Duck Supply Rated Better By H. DENT HODGSON Canadian Press Staff Writer Ottawa, July 20--(CP)--That canvas-coated character who gets | up in the middle of the Autumn | night, to shiver in stagnant | swamps, will probably find the duck | season and bag limits as restrictive | as ever this year, | But duck hunters, in some parts | of Canada at least, may find more | ducks in their sights than they did last Fall. Surveys undertaken jointly by groups of Dominion, Provincial | and United States wildlife experts, indicate some limited improvement | in the population of ducks and geese in North America. On the basis of these surveys, the | 1948 regulations are being out: Canadian regulations probably | will be announced early next | month. However, North American's wa- | terfowl still are trying to fight their | | in three years--from 1944 to 1947-- cut their estimated population in | half. | U. S. and Canadian authorities working under an International | Conservation Treaty, are expected | to keep the ¢lamps down on open | until the | birds make. up these losses. | Improvement Is Slight The conservationists stress that | this year's improvement, where it | has occurred, has been slight. Some improvement in some spe- cies has been noted in Ontario, al- though black ducks are about the same. Reproduction of more North- | ern waterfowl, extremely poor in 1047, is not as bad this year. Quebec situation is described as | "fair", Duck men, who surveyed more than 40,000 air miles ' and 10,000 ground miles in Canada this spring, | have turned cautious now that the ducks are on their way back. Previously the U.S. Wildlife De- partment issues estimates of the duck population. In 1944 it was estimated at 126,000,000 this fell to 80,000,000 in 1946 and 54,000,000 last | January. This year they are con- fining themselves to guarded state- ments of "slight improvement." Canadian hunters, fewer in num- ber and hence less threatening to the duck population than their U. S. counterparts, generally get a slightly better break in the regula- | tions. However, considering the relative difficulty they may have in transportation, it is doubtful if they bag any more game in a sea- son than the U.S. hunter does. ~ Regulations Vary Regulations, varying by district and established by the Federal Government, after meticulous agreement with the provinces, gave the average hunter a 45-day season last year. The variations went as low as 30 days in some sections of New Brunswick and Manitoba and as high as 50 'in parts of Alberta and other, parts of New Brunswick. Bag limit for a day, was seven ducks in any province in Canada. Maritime, Quebec and B.C. hunters could take 100 a season, Ontario hunters 25, Manitoba 35 and Sas- atchewan and Alberta 56. The bag limit was not usually a restriction, however. Most hunters found they were lucky to find their limit, let alone shoot it. The | Australians See Inflation Ahead Canberra--(CP)--Federal govern- | ment ministers predict a long period | | of inflation in Australia. They base their fears on the abolition of controls on rents and | prices, and the possibility of the treasury abandoning prices subsidies following the government defeat on the prices referendum last May 29. | Some ministers say the states will | not take over effective control of prices because they fear to impose restrictive measures after the people voted against them. One minister | said in an interview that the people did not realize what, the government had been protecting them from and | attributed the huge '"No" vote to their general irritation with con- | trols and administration from Can- berra. The federal cabinets decision to | hand over price control to the in« ironed | dividual states within three months | has set the state governments a | problem. They have not the neces- | sary legislation or manpower to | take over and would have to sum- | mon their parliaments -- now on | mid-winter recess--to rush through | legislation to hold prices at their | present level when the federal gov- | ernment hands over to them. It is believed the federal govern- | ment will suggest that the states | "freeze" prices to allow themselves | plenty of time to get together and | form a uniform policy for all the states. Business men have welcomed the | government's decision. Retail mer- chants argued that control on such | items as leather goods, cosmetics, | travel goods, and millinery should be abolished as these things are in plentiful supply throughout the commonwealth, But the removal of controls on food and clothing is not contem- | plated at present because of its| possible effect on supplies to Bri- | tain, particularly in the case of meat and butter, { Totem 'Open' Golf Tourney Big Favorite Jasper, Alta., July 17--When Earl | Haig, leader of the Allied forces in World War I, drove his ball down the first fairway on the afternoon | of July 17th, 1925, to officially open | this famous golf course, little did | this great soldier realize that he | was breaking ground for one of the | most interesting golf tournaments in the Pacific Northwest. That little | golf ball marked the start of the now famous Totem Pole golf tour- nament, which attracts players from all parts of the Continent. The trophy, emblematic of the Totem Pole golf week champion- ship, is distinctly unique and has become a much coveted prize. Standing on a square base is a large silver totem pole, a replica of one of the famous totem poles made by the Haida Indians. On each corner, guarding the pole are silver bears, reminding the golfers of the playful black bruins seen clowning along some of the fairways. A rep- lica of this trophy goes to the win- ner as permanent property each year, : Some famous golfers have their names inscribed on the Totem Pole trophy, the winner in 1947 being none other than the great radio and screen star Bing Crosby, a 3 handicap golfer who has all the shots in the bag, and who became immensely popular here during his two long visits, R.A.F. An RAF Mosquito (right) and an RAF Vampire (left) one of 12 aircraft in contingent of six Vampires, three Mosquito and three 'York aircraft, | plays at Trenton tomorrow and Toronto on Thursday, rests on tarmac at RCAF station, Trenton, after completing the first Vampire and Mosquito at R.C.A.F. Trenton Station trans-atlantic flight of jet-propelled " i | aircraft, Jets will put on aerial dis- | seemed no longer to exist, | was all spirit, and that spirit was Today's Short Story THE BUTLER By Louis Arthur Cunningham il Lali I have a surprise for you, quite the best and most curious surprise. "Wallace!" A figure loomed out of the gloomy portiers of the door lead- ing to the servants' quarters. "This is your mistress, Wal- lace," said Dr. Benet. "And these little pests are Julian and Rose who will plague the life out of you if you let them." "I am at your service, madam, and the children's," said Wallace with a bow that charmed Julian and ravished Rose. But Mrs. Benet gathered her children closer to her and tried not to "I , + « I understand," sald Anna. look at Wallace as though he were Death resurrected and clad in the stately garb of a butler. Because it was dark and be- cause he was elated with his wife's return--she had been away for months--Dr. Benet failed to mark her agitation. Wallace was | as impassive, "Dinner at eight, sir?" he asked smoothly and departed when Doctor Benet nodded. "Come, Anna," said the doctor. "Has Wallace overawed you or so filled you with admiration that | you just want to stand and mar- vel? He is a splendid domestic. I acquired him through Colonel Tupper. The Colonel found him in the war or in one of the hos- pitals after. The man is entirely without memory of the past--not shell-shock, the usual thing; but some defect in the bones at the base of the skull where a bullet nicked him. I hired him so I could study him as well as bene- fit by his services." "I . . . I understand," said Anna Benet, and" the doctor at- tributed her tired, low-pitched | Voice to the fatigue of her jour ney. But Anna was not tired. Her body--the slimly-moulded, grace- ful body of a matron who has never forfeited her girlhood, She suffering. © She sent Julian and Rose away with Sims, the maid, and went quickly to her own room. Hat and coat she threw thoughtlessly on the bed and lay down beside them. Her temples throbbed. She had lost track of events and lived in a topsy-turvy world that was a shifting chaos --but out of the hurly-burly one thing resolved itself into rigid lines--the tall, sedate figure -of Wallace, the butler; for Wallace was Anna Carvil's husband and Dr. Benet . .. was just a man, and Julian and Rose . . . Anna Carvil and Wallace--he was Anton Riise then--had met and married in England a few weeks before he was sent to the front. Shortly after, he was re- ported killed in action and Anna had returned to America to find consolation in the love of Dr, Gene Benet, A year after An- ton's death they were married. piness had followed--years that had brought Julian and Rose, that had showed her the sterling | worth of Gene Benet and caused | her to forget.the two weeks with Anton Riise She had never loved Anton. It was a feverish impulse born of the fevered days of war, that had thrust her into his arms. | They had not been happy; it wai madness, compared to which th sweet, sane-love she had for Dr, Benet was the waking calm aftep a dream of passion. She realized that she must pre- pare for dinner. She would have, to face Wallace again. Gene had assured lier that Wallace had no memory of events, but at any time all might come back to him. And with her, wht had been his wife, always near . , . What would it mean to Gene, to the children? Would it destroy everything? Would Anton claim her? Would Gene want her? But perhaps she yielded to unnecessary fears. He might never regain his memory. She would ask Gene if cases such' as the butler's were often cured. It was Gene, at dinner, who gave her new fears and destroyed what little hope she had. "To-morrow I am going to operate on Wallace--a little cute ting at the base of the skull. T think T can restore his memory. It is a most fascinating piece of work." Anna did not speak. She would have liked to cry out to Gene . , to tell him he was destroying their happiness with his own hand. But there behind his chair stood Wallace, straight and ime passive. She did not speak. In the morning after breakfast she heard, as one hears the pre< liminary noises of a volcano that soon will drown peoples in de< struction, the opening and shuts ting of doors in her husband's laboratory. The operation, he had told her, would not take long. I# was almost sure to be a success.) An hour passed. Anna lived through several years. At any moment her husband and--hes other husband would come downe stairs to her and . , . Her emotion was too great for tears, but her hands clenched and her lips so tight-pressed, her eyes so wild, showed how she warred against fate and tried futily to master her anxiety. { Upstairs the door opened, they were coming along the hall, down! the stairs, talking. She heard the butler's voice. It sounded differ ent, less subdued to her, more like Anton's voice. They came into the living-room | where she sat. She feared to look | at them; yet a fascination not to | be resisted drew her eyes to Ane ton's face, then to her husband's.! The butler's face was ghastly., Gene Benet looked troubled, baf- fled, disappointed. "It did not work, Anna" he said. © "And I could have sworn! it would. Everything went as I had it planned. You're sure you recall nothing whatever of your past, Wallace? Perhaps in a day Or 80..." "I remember nothing, sir," said| Wallace. "I guess it will always be like that." A few weeks later Wallace gave notice. He was going back to Europe, he told Dr. Benet, and; much regretted leaving. Anna,! her hope restored, confident that! he would never remember, told him she was. sorry to see him go; but in her heart she was glad to be free of his presence. | She drove Wallace to the sta- tion; Gene was called to a patient, the morning of the butler's dea parture and had asked her to see the man away, | "Good-by, Wallace," said Anna, and gave him her hand just be< fore he boarded the train, "I amy sorry my husband could not do anything for you. Someday, per< haps, you will remember . . ." He looked at her in his impase sive, rigid way. "No, I will never remember « a » Anna" i (Copyright) - Five years of pure, corwded hap- Port Hope Woman Fined in Absentia A careless driving charge was heard by Magistrate Frank S. Ebbs in police court today, with the ac- cused, Helen Bebee, R.R. 2, Port Hope, absent. She was fined $10 and costs or ten days in absentia. The charge arose out of an ac- cident on June 5 near Hart's Hill on No. 2 Highway. Ontario Provin- yn [cial Police Constable Bathe investi= gated the accident and found that accused had gone off the shoulder of the highway and struck a tow truck operated by Joseph La Rocque, 120 Agnes Street, Oshawa, The truck was damaged to the exe tent of $35. EASY ON CIGARETTES Cigarettes burn more slowly at 8,000 feet in the air than on the ground. Di LATEX HO N CUSHIONING 20 Years OF PROVED SATISFACTORY SERVICE UNDER. ALL CONDITIONS In Furniture, Mattresses, Transportation (91 B1.N] Ko) EX o.N, V{\ BV. Also makers of Auto, Truck, Bus, Agricultural, Aircraft, Motorcycle and Bicycle Tires; Industrial Rubber Products ond Golf Bolis.

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