Daily Times-Gazette, 16 Nov 1948, p. 2

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PAGE TWO Eki) THE DAILY, TIMES-GAZETTE 7 Births EVERITT--Mr. and Mrs. William Everitt (nee Gloria O'Connor), wish to an- nounce the birth of their baby daughter at the Oshawa General Hospital on Saturday, November 13, 1948. HODGSON--Wayne Douglas wishes to announce his safe arrival to his proud parents, Mr. and Mrs, Douglas Hodg- son (nee Mary Goch), on Saturday. November 13, 1948, at the Oshawa General Hospital, Mother and baby doing fire. KELLAR--Mr. and Mrs. Stewart Kellar (nee Jean McTaggart), are happy to announce the birth of thelr son, on Sunday, November, 14, 1948, at the Oshawa General Hospital. A brother for Lynda. Mother and baby doing fine. MacDONALD--Mr and Mrs. James MacDonald (nee Idella De Mille), are happy to announce the birth of their baby daughter, 7 Ibs, 6 .. on Saturday, November 13, 1948, at St. Joseph's Hospital, Sudbury. Mother and baby doing fine. Deaths the Oshawa General Monday, November 15, 1948. Eileen Blanche Schofield, be- loved wife of Dr. D. R. Fletcher Resting at W. C. Town Funeral Home, 110 Dundas Street East, Whitby, for service Thursday, November 18, in the United Church at 2:30 p.m. Interment Mount Lawn Cemetery. (268b) In Memoriam COOK--In loving memory of a dear husband and father, William J. Cook, who passed away Nov. 16, 1947. 'We who loved you, sadly miss you, As it dawns a vear. In our lonely hours of thinking Thoughts of you are ever in°ar Lovingly remembered by wife and family. COOK--In loving memory oi our dear father and grandfather, W. J. Cook, who died suddenly Nov. 16t%, 47. Your parting wish We would like to have heard, And breathed in your ear Our last pariing word; Only those who have 'ost Are able to irl The pain in the heart, At not saying farewell Ever remembered by nis daughter, Blanche, sin-in-law, Fred, grandchil- dren, Harvey and Shirley. Cards of Thanks Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Hepburn of Kedron wish to extend *heir sincere thanks to Drs, Baldwin and Grant, and FLETCHER--At Hospital on to nurses and staff of Oshawa General Hospital on floor B-2 and special nurses, also to many relatives friends and Kedron Women's Association, for phone calls, cards, flowers, gifts and candy during Mrs. Hepburn's recent ill- ness. I would like to express my sincere thanks to the Oshawa General Hospital, doctors and nurses and Children's Aid Society office staff especially Drs. Mill- man, Bird, Mills and Patterson, and Nurses Polos, Mrs. Higgins and Miss Nidro, Simcoe and Albert St. Churches, also the Corinthian Order of Oddfel- lows and all friends who so kindly sent flowers, cards, etc. I would also like to thank the boys and girls of cur neighborhood for the thoughtful con- sideration on Hallowe'en night. shall be looking forward to meeting and visiting with you next year. Signed J. A. Bickell. | @bituary MRS. WALKER O. ROWDEN A lifelong 'Lily Clay, beloved wife of the late 'Walker O. Rowden, died at the family residence, 20 Gladstone Ave- nue, yesterday. following a. short "Ylness. "A daughter of the late Mr. and "Mrs. Gill Clay, the deceased was born here on January 23, 1883. She was married here on September 26, 1907. "She was a member of St. George's Memorial Anglican Church and was an active worker in the Women's Auxiliary of the church. Precdieceased by her husband on October 21, 1832, Mrs. Rowden is rvived by one daughter, Mrs. yd Bone (Hilda Maude) of Port Hope and three sons, D. W. "Doe," resident 3f Oshawa, | | ARMA Local Eggs Prices on the local egg' market (are quoted as follows: Grade A large 54; | Grade C and C cracks 30. Local Grain | Local eggs: Grade A large, 64; | grade A medium, 59; grade A pullet, | 52; grade B, 42; grade C and | cracks, 30. | Cheese -- | Kemptville, Oct. 28 (CP)--Board- led: 1,115 boxes of white, sold at 130s cents. | Fruit Toronto, Nav. 16--(CP)--Whole- sale fruit and vegetable prices here | | today were unchanged with the fol- lowing exceptions: Local tomatoes, 15-lb., cartons, $2-82.25; pepper squash, bus. 75. Livestock -- Toronto, Nov. 16-- (CP) -- The | livestock market here today opened slow with. the few sales made at steady prices. Receipts reported by the Dominion Marketing Service were: cattle 600; calves 380; hogs 110; sheep and lambs 610. Left from | Monday's trading were 3,400 head and the total supply includes 1,000 stockers. no other early sales of cattle. Calves were steady at $27-$29 for good to choice with plainer kinds downward to $16. | Hogs were unchanged at $30.75 for grade A and $30.35 for grade Bl. | Sows were $25 dressed. Lambs were steady at $23.50 for good ewes and wethers with $1 dis- count on bucks. Sheep sold mostly at $70. | Hogs a Toronto, Nov. prices were unestablished at Strat- | ford today. At Hull, hogs off truck | were unquoted. Dressed grade A | delivered were up 50 cents at $30.75. | Produce Toronto, Nov. 16--(CP)--Produce | prices on the spot market here to- day were quoted as follows: Churning cream unchanged. No. 1, 74 cents FOB; 78 delivered. But- [ter prints unchanged. First grade | 70%; second grade 69':. | Supplies on the egg market have | increased considerably and trade is | quiet. Country shippers quoted | graded eggs, cases free: grade A We | large 54-55] grade A medium 48-49; | grade A pullet 43-44; grade B 47- 48; grade C 38-39. Wholesale to re- tail: grade A large 60; grade A med- jum 54; grade A pullet 40; grade B | 52; grade C 42. Butter solids are unchanged. First | grade 68; second grade 67. Big Three (Continued from Page 1) this afternoon with British and | French officials. They will draft an answer to the appeal sent to the chief executives of Britain, the Un- ited States, France and Russia by Secretary-General Trygve Lie and | Herbert V. Evatt of Australia, pre- sident of the U.'N. General Assem- | bly. The appeal, sent last Baturday called for "immediate conversa- tions" among the four powers to end the Berlin dispute. Most U.N | officials expect Russia will be quick to accept the appeal and announce her willingness to take part in four- Gone] Grade A medium 50; | | Grade A Pullet 44; Grade B 40; | 16 -- (CP) -- Hog | Ralph and A. G. "Bud," all of Osh. | POWer talks. awa. Also surviving are six sisters, Mrs. tre, Mrs, T. Robinson, Mrs. vy, Mrs. Walter Rowden and Kelly all of Oshawa and W. Wray of Brandon, Mani- toba. Mrs. Rowden was predeceas- gd by her brother, George Clay of Oshawa, on May 28, 1947. , The funeral will be held from the Armstrong Funeral Home at 1 p.m. on Wednesday, November 17, fol- lowed by interment in the Union Cemetery. Rev. D. M. Rose, rector of St. George's Memorial Anglican Church, and Rev. E. H. McLellan, rector of Holy Trinity Church, will conduct the services. Mrs. MRS. GEORGE MOORE There passed away on November 3, 1948, at her home in Darlington Township, Maria Bray, beldyed wife of the late George Moore. She was born in East Whitby Township near Raglan on October 12, 1862, and had lived practically all her life in that district. She was a woman of sterling qualities and upheld Christian principles and will be greatly missed in the com- munity. ? She leaves to mourn her passing four sons and one daughter: John of East Whitby, James of Kedron, Clayton at home, Ivason, Port Perry, RR. 2; Luella (Mrs, Webber), Bowmanville, One son Edgar was killed overseas in the first world war. A brother, Will Bray, resides in Toronto. Rev. Mr. Seymour, of Enniskillen, conducted the service which was held from A. L. McDermott's funeral chapel, Port Perry, and was largely attended. Pallbearers were four neighbours, George and Cecil Hubbard, Charles and = Wesley Brown and two nephews, Russell Coater and Sandy Moore. Floral tributes were beautiful and were a silent tribute to the -es- teen in which she was held. DELAY VOTE Montreal,, Nov. 16 -- (CP) -- Montreal's French-speaking Catho- lic. feachers at a mass meeting Monday. night decided to postpone a strike vote and send a delegation to see Premier Maurice Duplessis, in an attempt to obtain salary in- creases for the presént school year. They > seeking maximum salaries of $3500 for men and $2,500 for women, LY Anglican | The British, United Btates and | French delegations maintained of- ficial silence on the appeal for Ber- lin talks outside the U.N. privately, their spokesmen have been critical of the Lie-Evatt proposal. The western-power line appears to be that they wish to thrash cut the Berlin case in the Security Council and that they will net ne- gotiate as long as the Russians con- tinue their blackade of Berlin. U.N. officials close to Lie and Evatt said they believed that Presi- |dent Truman can make or break {the latest effort to end the cold | war. Meanwhile, the six-natural" mem- | bers of the Security Council, includ- | ing Canada, were reported to have | drafted a new compromise propo- sal setting a Dec. 20 deadline for | ending the Berlin crisis. { The neutrals' plan, the informant | sald, would entail the lifting of all | travel restrictions and a settlement {of Berlin's currency problem simul- | taneously by Dec. 20. . | It provides for a gradual lifting of | the Russian blockade, starting with highways and later including rail- {waws and canals as the negotia« tions progress. Eight Months (Continued from Page 1) searching him. Chambers removed | & paper-covered piece of steel from his pocket, threw it on the floor and | said, "You might as well have that | too." - | The object was a "brakesshoe | pin," a long pointed piece of steel, | which, Chief William Elliott said, | was often used as a jimmy to force doors. Police also said that marks |on the rear door of the warehouse | corresponded with the shape of the | steel bar. The accused man had a lengthy record. He was convicted in 1943 as a vagrant, in 1946 for stealing a |car,,in 1048 for the same offense (and in July of this year, for tres- | passing on railway property. He {still was under suspension of sen- | tence for the 1948 car theft. { Roy | | WEIGHT OF HEART Weight of the average adult hu- i man heart is 10 ounces or about .46 | per cent of the total body weight. ; A wi: wa | Water level in Bark Lake is 10 feet a: * ) Tow the normal line. A neighboring lake, Kamaniskeg, has been kept fall for summer cottagers and lumber- A few good butcher steers sold men, whose rights must be respected. Water thundering over big dam at for export at $21-$22. There were | Bark Lake produces no power. It has been held in reserve to bolster Bark Lake Helps B clster Madawaska Power No Criminal Charge Laid London, Nov. 16 -- (AP) -- At- torney-General Sir Hartley Shaw- cross told a special inquiry tribunal Monday night that investigators have not yet found enough evidence the government. In a four-hour statement before the three-man board st up by the House of Commons to investigate charges that some officials took bribes, 8ir Hartley diselosed for the first time just what the allegations were. The Attorney-General said the key figure in the charges was an alien named Sidney Stanley, alas Eolomon Wulkan. Sir Hartley sald Stanley friends he had paid £50 ($200) week- ly to John W. Belcher, Parliamen- tary secretary to the Board of Trade, to relax trade regulations and quash a prosecution of a foot- ball pool company. The Attorney-General added that | the statement could not Be corrobo- "Mr. and Mrs. Belcher." Bir Hartley said Works Minister George Key would be called to tes- tify about an allegation that Stan- | ley bought a suit of clothes for the minister. | against any persons named. supplies lower down the Madawaska. "Head" of water at lake has net | Q 3: been thought sufficient to generate power. Dam operator is Tom Bracken | uality Steels (right), whose only direct contact with outside world is by radio. | Musical Ride Unit Holds Parade | | The Royal Canadian M . - > 3 ounted Police unit which will perform its famous musical ride At the Royal Winter Fair paraded through Toronto's downtown streets yesterday as a prelude to the opening of the big fair today. George Drew 'Challenges C.D. Howe Toronto, Nov. 16--(CP)--George Drew, National Progressive Con- servative leader, said Monday night | | | | he would challenge Trade Minister | | Howe to- meet him on "the: public | | platform" and debate Ontario's hy- | dro shortage. He was commenting on Mr. (urday in which the federal Trade {and Commerce | power shortage was a | calamity" Hor it | Progressive-Oonservative Party" at |Ottawa, Mr. George Drew." | In a prepared statement Drew said Mr. Howe's speech was a "low and unprincipled attempt to play dirty politics with a situa- | tion which affects every worker, every home and every producer in Ontario." He said he would meét Mr. Howe "anywhere , . , in Ontario where a radio hookup can carry our words to the people of every part of the province. In that way they will learn what the facts réally are and how to judge his réckléss effort to sabotage the fine spirit of co-opera- tion whieh has been shown eveiy- where since the lowest water lév- els on record in Ohtario and Que- bec created the serious and un- avoidable shortage of electricity." Mr. Howe's speech was "just an- other example of his complete and well-known disregard for the truth," the fortnér Ontario Premier said. Another Delay 'In Judgment Ottawa, Nov. 16--(COP)~The Su- een delayed again. Expected this week, the judgment on the validity of Parliament's ban on the butter substitute has been deferred by a continuing héavy roll of court cases. Court sources say the judgment now may be brought down next week but even this new date is tentative. ; The Supréme Court héad srgus ment on thé constitutionality of the prohibition early in October. 'The | legislation prohibits thé importa tion, manufacture and sale of mar- garine in Canada. It w 62 years ago, 'adopien ~--Photo by Turofsky Princess Elizabeth Making Fine Progress London, Nov. 16--(AP)--All was reported well today with Princess Elizabeth and her new son as re- latives gathered to peek at There was no Indication how soon | she would be up. Elizabeth always has enjoyed exceptionally good the | health and some sources believe her | --Globe and Mall Photo 'Closes Business London, 'Ont, Nov. 16--(CP)-- | Quality Steels (Canada) Ltd. sus- pended manufacturing at the close of businéss Monday and a staff of 180 was thrown out of work. ¢ John Allen, general manager, said rR factory .operations were stopped " a hw ; " when bank credits upon which the (Continued from Page 5) plant was operating, were Wwith- the work of both Matthew Arnold | grawn. and Alfred Tennyson. In the poem The general manager said money Dover Beach, Arnold draws an would be available to pay the staff analogy between the waters of the | wages owing them on their regular Strait of Dover and what he calls |pay-day Thursday. the "sea of faith." He continues this | Two weeks ago the company se- analogy to show how he finds his | cured an injunction in weekly high trust and his consciousness of faith | court against lawsuits by its unse= receding, leaving him with a feeling | cured creditors before Jan. 15. of uncertainty about things like love | meeting of creditors in an effort to and peace that had always seemed | reach a settlement of their claims to stand secure. . had been planned for Dee. 3. From the works of Alfred Tenny- son will be read selections from his | "In Memoriam, expressing some of | New Dynasty | | On the C.B.C. Tomorrow -- the losses of faith which he, in common with = Arnold, had faced. The writings of John Stuart Mill (Continued frcm Page 1) and of Charles Darwin will be used | the day, unspectacular as it was, |to exemplify a second element in| revolved around the plump little the "crisis of Faith", this being the | man who was bowing off the centre | absence of real beauty in a life of | of the stage. |arid reason and logic. The passage| A lonely man to the finish, his | to be read on Wednesday Night des- | only companions were his private cribes Mill's delight on first read- | secretary and his cherished Irish ing Wordsworth's poetry. | Terpehs Pat hia as he drove to | Q ! vernment House in a wet snow- | Between 9:00 and 10:08 on. Wed. | fall to offer his formal resignation | nesday night listeners will hear an | ® eg gd . |cpisode, 'taken straight from. the |} R13, Tive months ang Ave Lays § | pages of Italian Renaissance his- | ae. "Very Happy" | tory. The tale is told in the form Mr. St. Laurent was sworn in at of a drama based on doluments sss p.m. EST written under the seal of Niccolo | "Mr. King stayed Prime Minister Machiavelli. until that mcement, almost exactly Wednesday Night's presentation [five hours after he first had leit is called "The Beautiful Stratagem'" |home with his resignation. which is the translation of "IN Bel-| Mr. King told newspaper men he lissimo Inganno"--the term used by was "very happy" about leaving of- Machiavelli to describe the episode. |fice and would not hold a portfolio The play deals with the intrigue in Mr. Bt. Laurent's cabinet. and treachery of Caesar Borgia, but | He said he plans to "stay at this is used mainly to form a back- (home for a while and see my drop for Machiavelll"s own rather friends" and will sit in the Com- cynical conclusions with regard to mons at the next session of Paria human behavior and the art of ment. He is mémber for Gléngairy. government. At the press conference following "The . Beautiful Stratagem" was |the shuffle of power, Mr. St. Laur- written by Larry Henderson. It |ent was flanked by his two new {sticks very closely to the source from | ministers, but he did all the talk- which it was developed, in fact so |ing. to prosecute alleged corruption in. told | | rated and that it was denied by | No criminal charge has been filed two-day-old Prince who may be [stay in bed will not be prolonged. much so that the play might be | For Mr. Garson, it was his infro- Britain's next King. Buckingham Palace spread this good news in the third bulletin is- sued by Royal physicians since the Howe's speech in London, Ont., 8at- | infant's birth Sunday night: "Princess Elizabeth has had a "is the present leader of the [fant Prince continues to do well." The Princess was permitted to have her baby with her for a short Mr. |whtle Monday. Arabs, Jews Ordered To Halt Battle Paris, Nov. 18 -- (CP) -- The United Nations Security Council today orfiered Arabs aiid Jews to establish an immédiate armistice in Palestine, 'The council's' order said an arms istice would "facilitate the transi- tion from thé présent truce to a pérmanent péace in Palestine." The Council voted on the résolu- tion in sections. Russia and the Soviet Ukraine abstained. Previoukly, the Countil rejected a ussian. proposal calling for the ith- nediate establishment of a formal peace. The resolution adopted was sub- mitted by Oanada. Under the Colincil order, Arabs {and Jews should negotiate directly reme Court margarine decision has or Wout the acting mediator: "(a) 'The dellnéation of perman- ent derhareation armistice lines | beyond whieh the armed forces of the respective parties shall not move; "(b) Buch withdrawal and reduc- tion of their armed forces as will insure the maintenance of the drmistice during the tgAnsition to permanent peace in Palestine." Prior to the vote, Aubréy 8. Eban, Isinell representative at (hé United Nations, sdid that the Oanadlan resolution supports thé position of thé Iéraell government. Gen, A. G. L. MoNsughton, the Cansdian délegite, sald Dr. Ralph Bunche, ating U. N. mediator for the Moly Land, would be authorized . |liable to last for As for the yet-uhnamed baby doc- | tors' opinions were not needed to | | persuade those who saw him that {he was a "model" Prince. The youngest caller at the palace | Monday was six-year-old Prince Minister said the | good night and is making excellent | William of Gloucester who trooped "fade | progress," said the report issued at |in with his mother, the Duchess of | | if 1 and the man hn JiLi2 am. (6.15 a.m. EST). "The in- { Gloucester. He bore a gift of red roses and a letter he nad written to his 22-year-old cousin, beth. Willlam was a page at the | Royal wedding last year, | to enforce the demilitarized Zones | proposed in the resolution. | Postal Annex (Continued from Page 1) |tuation is not a temporary one; it is sevéial years," commented Commissioner William Boddy. | Disastrous Situation | Mr. Moran said he thought the {Post Office was being discriminated 'against since other businesses cb- | tained quotas. Post office work was on a 24-hour basis, he said, and the situation was disastrous to the busi- nesstmen of the city. The Totonto | situation did not apply to Oshawa, {he maintained, because the sub: | post offices there which are sub- | ject to cutoffs did not do the sort- | |ing. | The Commission finally decided [to instal the separate line to the Annex only, It was suggested "that if the Customs and Exercise office and the main Post Office wanted additional power, they install a missioners pointed out emphatically that thé concession was being made to the Annex because of its peculiar situation, A réquest from the Board of Edu- cation that a change he made in one period of the cut-offs so that schools would not be as drastically affected was refused oh the grounds that to change the hours of cut- offs at the present time would only serve to credte further confusion, QCOUPATIONAL PERILS Poisonous snakes, toads, spiders, eentipedes and insects are ainong the hagards faced by rubber gath- erers in the forests of the Amazon. / described as a dramatization of Mas [duction to federl politics. A veter- chiavelll's account of his embassy |&n of the provineial field, he has [to Caesar Borgia at the end of |never sat in the Cominons. He will Eliza- | generator between them. The Com- | | during the. week-end, are being ex- 1502. Machiavelli apparently had an! immense admiration for Borgia who | | was one of the most clever and most | unscrupulous of the adventurers | | who swarmed in Renaissance Italy. | Machiavelli's observations had led | [him - to expound beliefs such as| this: "Consider only the end. . .The | | means will always be considered | honest because the world never fails to be taken in by what a thing! sees to be and by what comes of | it." And this was a practice which Borgia exploited to the hilt. { Machiavelli built his famous trea- tise The Prince around Caesar Bor- | gla and although Borgia last all his power and eventually had to flee | Italy, the medieval diplomat's man- | uc! of dictatorship has lived as a compulsory text on totalitarian government. | Leo Barkin | The recital period of this Wed- nesday Night will prezénl one of | the best-known figures in Cana- dian music -- Leo Barkin, concert and radio planist and accompanist. During the half hour betweefr 10:30 | and 11:00 p.m., Mr. Barkin will play! "Caprice" by Johann Hummel, the Intermezzo in F minor, Op. 2, by Ernst von .Dohnanyi and "Varia= | tions on a Polish Folk Tune by Ana- tol Liadoff. Leo Barkin has been appearing as a professional musician ih Canada since he came to this country with {his family in 1926. At that tithe, he | was twenty-one years of age. He | was borh in Watsaw and studied {music there under his father and {later at the Warsaw Conservatory. Music seeths to be the comthon | characteristic of his family. His father was a gragfllate of the War- | saw Conservatory in voice and piaho {as well as theory. And his sistet, Sarah, a coloratura soprano, has | made frequent appearances on the | Canadian concert stage and radio. | ------ die 12 DEAD DUCKS | Guelph, Nov. 16--(CP)--The bo- jQles of 12 déad ducks, believed to [pase been fed poisoned food by visitors at Toronto's Riverdale Zoo | amined hete by animal pathologists at the Ontario Agricultural College. | It is expected the investigation will require several days, seek a seat in a by-election Dec. 20 for Marquette (Man., recently vacated by Hon. J. A. Glén, former Resources Minister. Mr. St. Laurent devoted his time largely to explaining the propor- tions of Mr. Winters' job. No Subsidies Mr. Winters would have cha:ge, not only of civilian hotie-building, | but of the armed services' $20,000,- 000 housing progratn, Mr. St. Laurent was questioned as to the possibility of federal hou- sing subsidies -- sought by the Canadian Federation of Mayors-- but he said he did not think tie point had come where government tage of materials and manpower -- not money -- that was holding up construction. Another tas of Mr. Winters, he | said, would be to stimulate the tuu- rist industry through use of the Travel Bureau and the film Board. In administéring the film board, Mr. Winters will become its chair= man, succeeding Revenue Minister MgCatin. Mr, McCann will become ice-chairman ih succession to De- eiice Minister Claxton. The Prime Minister said the name of Mr. Winters' department might be changed later, Also, it would be stripped of agencies whose functions were coining to an end. These would include Canadian Arsénals and Polymer Corporation, which produces synthetic rubber. The two agéncles likely will be pla- ced under thé control of the trade depaitment. Other announcements of the new | Prime Minister: The new session of Parliamens -is not likely to be called before Jan- uaty. A by-election probably will be held before then to fill the vacant seat of Nocolet-Vamaska (Que). Wilfred Harris, parliamentary as- sistant for Bxternal Affairs, has been named Parliamentary assist. 'aft to the Prime Minister, George Metiraith, Parliament assistant for Trade and Reeoks tion, now becomes Parliaén assistant for Trade alone. itis AGE OF MAN Beiéntlsts estimatd that human ary a tary life tas existed on the earth for at | least 2,000,000 years. TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1948 City & Dist. | News AUTO STRUCK BY TRUCK Mackenzie Penfound, 18 Maple Street; reported a minor accident to police on Monday. He was driv- ing north on Simcoe Street, he said when, just north of the inter- section of King and Bimeoé his automobile was sttuck by a trick owned by Christian Electric and driven by William BSennott, 176 Cromwell Avenue, who was pulling {away from the east curb. Damage {consisted of dents in fenders and bumpers. WINS TROPHY Howard Forder of Blackstock won the E. H. Stonehouse Memorial Trophy by scoring the highest num- ber of points in judging dairy cattle at the Royal Wintér Fair yesterday. He also won a gold medal for the Mile points in the judging of beef cattle. AIR DEBATE FROM HERE Representatives of thé Oshawa District Labor Council and the Osh- awa Chamber of Commerce will be {heard on a C.B.C. Trans-Canada network program on November 26 {at 8 p.m., when they will debate on the subject "Should Labor Unions Stay Out of Politics." The prograth | the "Citizens' Forum", is sponsored |by the Canadian. Association of | Adult Education. The broadcast will | emanate from the Blue Room of the | Génosha Hotel. It is understood | that Oshawa representatives were | picked for the debate due to the | support local unions gave the suc- | cessful C.C.F. candidates in the | last federal by-election and prove | incial general election. NEW SELF CONFIDENCE Fort Erie; Nov. 16 -- (CP). -- | Speaking at the annual cohgrega- | tional gathering yesterday of Knox | Presbyterian Church, now obsery= | ing its 59th birthday, Rev. Hugh | Davidson, minister of Knox Church, | Oshawa, a former R.C.AF. chap- | lain, stated since the Presbyterian advance movement was launched | three years ago," a new self confi- | dence," has been found in the church. This is resulting in a nation-wide revival of interest. | C.E. MILLS IN BUSINESS The name C. E. Miller, which ap- | peared in Saturdays issue of The | isa under the picture of a local war veteran who has estab | lished himself in a jewelry business {in North Oshawa, should have {been C. E. Mills, This unfortunate | typographical error is regretted. | Mr. Mills new jewelry store is lo- {cated at the Five Points Road, | North Oshawa, at "The Sign of the Clock." | G.M. PRODUCTION UP | Production of cars and trucks at | General Motors, Oshawa, for the first. 10 months of 1948 totalled | 77,596 units, compared with 67446 | units in the first 10 months of 1947. | Production in October of this year | amounted to 8,146 cars and trucks. | Of this year's output to date 54,462 | Were passenger cars ahd 23,134 were | trueks. | TEAM CAPTAINS ENTERTAINED | Team captains who took part in {the Greater Oshawa Community | Chest campaign were the guests of {the executive of the drive at an | Informal dinner held in Adelaide { House last night and received com- { bliments and thanks from Chair- | man 8. R. Alger. The secretary of | the drive, 8. T. Hopkins announced | the final figure of $102,108. Murray {Johnston, campaign manager, | brought up several points on which | he thought the drive could be im- proved next year and suggestions | were received from the guests. 'Wage Strike 'Halts Liners In America New York, Nov. 16--(AP)--The | Queens of the British and Ameri- {can passenger fleets were dock | bound today as a wage strike bloc- |kade of east-coast shipping grew i tighter. | The United States Lines' 8. .S. America, pride of the United Sta- {tess Merchant Marine, was held in |subsidies were needed. It was shor- port here instead of sailing today | for Europe. Hundreds of prospect- ive passengers were stranded in | hotels. Tomorrow's scheduled sailing of [the Cunard White Star liner Queen Blizabeth from Southamp- ton was cancelled. The World's biggest passenger ship, booked with 2,000 persons bound for New York, was to have docked at Halifax. Postponement of the Queen Eli- zabeth's sailing was announced Mohday night, shortly after long- shoremen in Halifax decidéd not to handle any more ships diverted to thelr port because of the long- shorémen's strike along the United States seaboard between Portland, Me. and Hampton Roads, Va. | Canadian affiliates of the strik- {ing International Longshoremen's | Association (AF.L.) sald the same idécision would affect the ports of | Montreal and Saint John, N.B. Four Cities Over Power Quotas Toronto, Nov. 16 -- (CP)--Of the | 10 Ontario municipalities for which figutes are available, four éxceéded their quotas of hydro power Mon= day. Following are the figures in kilb- watt hours: Under: Peterborough, 39,700; Kit- chener; 5,000; London, 8,000; Strat- ford, 1,800; Owen Sowid; 15800; Woodstock, 175; Waterloo, 300. Over; Budbury, 1,825; Brantford, 50; Kiftland Lake, 1,360; Brock 1,240; Kingston, 1,000, ° 7.000; | ville,

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