\ { Vo 'THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE SATURDAY, JULY 30, 1949 PAGE WO Births | There Ought To Be A Law! : By Hurry Shorten and Al Fagaly & Dist. Coast Guard YOURE ASKING US'/ | Wi iAT'S THE SAY, BOYS, WHAT KIND OF I THOUGHT ~~ __ \ DIFFERENCE? Py ACTS' SHOULD I SIGN LIP FOR THE SHOW? Ya Business And Markets CORBY--Mr. and Mrs. Robert Corby NONE OF THE BOYS WERE 'e happy to announce the birth of a ughter at the Oshawa General pital on Friday, July 29, 9. CUTTING--Mae and Vie Cutting are happy to announce the birth of a daughter, Joanne Laurel, at the Oshawa General Hospital, on Friday, July 29, 1949--a sister for Jim. HUNGERFORD Shirley and Bill Hungerford (nee Howe), wish to an- nounce the arrival of their son, Martin Lewis, at the Oshawa General Hospital, on Thursday, July 28, 1949 --a brother for Billy. LOGAN--To Mr. and Mrs. Logan, 484 Albert St., at Oshawa General Hospital on Thursday, July 28, 1949, a son, Kenneth Edward. SUGDEN--Mr. and Mrs. Robert Sugden (nee Peg. Beuhmer), are very happy to announce the arrival of their daughter, Susan Marlene, at the hawa General Hospital, on Friday, July 29, 1949--a sister for Lory. PAWLENCHUK -- Mr. and Mrs. John Pawlenchuk (nee Annie Elizuk), are happy to announce the birth of "daughter (7 lbs., 123; ozs.), on Fri- day, July 29, 1949, «General Hospital. Deaths I --Passed away in Vancouver, on July 18, 1948, Maude Victoria Kennedy Elliott, beloved wife of John W. Elliott, survived also by two sisters, Mrs. Ethel M. Barnard and Miss: FP. Gertrude Kennedy of Osh- awa, and three nephews of Ontario. Funeral service Saturday at 1:30 p.m im Nunn and Thompson Chapel, 10th Avenue, Vancouver. The Reverend A. E. Whitehouse will officiate. Interment Ocean View Park, Vancouver. * In Memoriam COVERLY--In loving memory of a dear husband and father, George Harold Coverly, who passed away July 31, 1945, A silent thought, a secret tear, "Kéeps his memory ever dear "Time takes away the.edge of grief, But memory turns back every leaf. Sadly missed and ever remembered "By wife and children. Donald DAVIDSON--In loving memory of a dear husband and father, Benjamin Davidson, who passed away in Brook- - Hn, Aug. 1, 1941. Often a lonely heartache Often a silent tear, fAlways a beautiful memory :Of him we loved so dear. «God gave us strength to fight it. And courage to bear the blow. But what it meant to lose him No one will ever know. "Ever remembered by wife and family. | HUGHES--In loving memory of our dear mother, Frances Hughes, who passed away July 31, 1937. »¥our end was sudden mother, You made us weep and cry, "But saddest thought of all was, You never' said goodbye. Always in our thought, Cassie, sand family. VAN DRIEL--In loving memory of a dear daughter and sister, Mona F. Van Driel, who passed away July 31, dear, Pat Oft times our thoughts do wander, To a grave not far away, Where they laid our darling Mona, Just two years ago today. Friends may think we have forgotten, When at times they see us smile, But they little know the heartache, That that smile hides all the while. ~--Lovingly remembered by Dad. Moter, sister Irene and brother-in-law Cecil. > MAPS IN CLAY "The oldest extant maps are sald to" be Babylonian clay tablets be- lieved made in 2300 B.C. BuyNow AVE $ [4 40 ON A PAIR OF 600-10 B. F. Goodrich . DEFIANCE | | | Market . | LOCAL EGGS :- | Following prices are quoted on | | the local egg market this morning: | Grade A large 62; medium, 59; pul- lets, 51; grade B, 42; grade C and | cracks, 33. | | GRAIN :- I Winnipeg Winnipeg, July 30 (CP).--There | has been some buying in oats and | barley today at the Winnipeg at the, Oshawa | Grain Exchange attributed to ship- | pers and routine demand. This was | the last day for trading in July | contracts. Offerings were light, Some light selling appeared in rye, with a few American account orders. Trading was dull. Prices: Oats--July | unchanged 73%z; T0'4 A. Barley--July 2'¢ higher 1.34%B; Oct. %-3 higher 1.16%; Dec. not | open. Rye--July 7% lower 141%; Oct. | 1, lower 143':A; Dec. 7s lower 1.42%. Flax--July, not open. Inspections: Wheat this year 308; last year 43; cars of contract | 200: oats 88-34; barley 67-43; flax | 33-7; rye 19-0; other grains 2-2; total 502-439. higher 80%; Oct. Dec. Alberta Eleven Wins Dominion Cricket Crown Calgary, July 30--(CP)--A game Alberta cricket eleven who unex- | pectedly wrested the Dominion Championship from Ontario in the title tournament are the toast of Al- berta sporting circles today. Calgary and Edmonton, turned back the champions by a 155-run margin | Friday to gain an unbeatable 22 points before the final matches, scheduled for today. Pre-game | opinion was that either Ontario or | { British Columbia would come out | with the championship. The fnal games today, which pit the new champions against B.C, and Ontario against Manitoba, will merely decide the runners-up. The point standings are: Alberta 22, British Columbia 15, Ontario 12 and Manitoba none. A victory is worth five, a tie 2'z, { and a draw 2. The draw is declared | when time is reached with one side { not out. In Friday's game, Alberta batters smashed through a well-planned Ontario defence to run up 243 runs, all out. Big guns were Pete Snell of Calgary and Captain J. V. Edwards | of Edmonton. Working together, they put 104 runs on the board. | Snell's 106, besides fulfilling his dream of scoring a century, was the top individual score of the tourna- ment to date. Ontario had 88, all out. This game and the fixture be- tween B.C. and Manitoba also pro- duced two "hat tricks"--three wick- ets on successive bowled balls. The first was recorded by T. H. (Jimmy) Richards as the British Columbians turned back Manitoba ! by nine wickets. The score was Ma= nitoba 68, all out, British Columbia 70 for one wicket. The other was by George Powell who pulled a faltering Alberta team out of a slump by bowling two Ont- ario men, while a third was out, LBW. Club Exonerated (Continued from Page 1) Reid hit the runway. He said Reid was not dragged by the chute, He agreed with other witnesses that Reid was swinging when he hit the ground. Dt. Pritzker, of the Oshawa Gen- i eral Hospital, stated cause of dcp.h was "lacerations and tearing of the brain and hemorrhages due to mul-' tiple fractures of the skull'. He performed the post mortem. Dr. M. L. Morris told the jury he was called to the airport at 7.45 p.m. ! "The ambulance arrived before I did. Reid was lying on the cement runway. not attempt to have him removed until I examined him," Dr. Morris said. "He was not completely un- conscious. Blood was coming from until death which occurred about 1.45 a.m. on the 19th of July. He never actually regained conscious- ness. After midnight on the 'day of his death he went into a deeper | state of comma. He got worse and ' | died suddenly". The verdict read: "We the jury find Royal Edward Reid met his | death July 19 while in the Oshawa | General Hospital due to injuries ! received at the Ontario County Fly- | ing Club the evening of July 17, | while making a parachute jump. N | While we are attaching no blame to rmony Motors 584 King St. East Phone 5503 i] | the Ontario County Flying Club, | we recommend the authorities in- vestigate use of crash helmets, pa- rachute jumpers' boots and all other proper equipment for parachute jumping". BLACK MARKET New York, July 30 -- (AP). -- A federal grand jury Friday indicted | four men on charges of million- dollar 'black market dealings in gold, United States Attorney John F. H., McGohey announced. The dmen, charged with conspiracy to | violate the 1934 Gold Reserve Act, | | allegedly set up a phony jewelry- making business and then diverted about $2,500,000 worth of gold into {the black market. They were | identified as Achille Parrilla, 48: | Allen James Geist, 24; Vincent | Angeloni, 48, and Elwood Ward, 32, all from the New York area, * unchanged | {The all-star team, recruited from: The ambulance men did! his ear and nose. I attended him ' Znsinnas Spotlight By FORBES RHUDE Canadian Press Business Editor | Stock markets maintained the le- | | vel of their summer rally this week, | | but trading slowed in the final two | days, with slightly easing tenden- cies. At the moment it looks as though some encouraging news is needed #0 set them on any new upward { movement. This may come with | the more hopeful view of American | business conditions, and, in fast, {the market rise of recent weeks probably is a reflection of it. That there was a summer rally | at all is interesting, because it had | to buck the rather discouraging in- | ternational trade and finance sit- uation. In New York, the Associated Press | | average of 60 stocks declined Fri- | day to 62.9 but was up .5 on the | week. : { Monday saw a resumption of the | | summer rally which had faltered in | | the closing days of the previous | | week, and on Tuesday pricés were at their highest level in 10 weeks. The rally stalled Wednesday, how- | ever, and tapered off in extreme dullness Thursday and Friday. The {heat may have had something to | do with it, | Canadian markets followed about | the sameg course. The Toronto ex- | change's index, mgade up from re- | | presentatives issufs, showed indus- trials ahead 1.64 at 170.61 after reaching 170.89 on Wednesday. This was its best figure since early May and a gain of 13.25 since June 14. Firming base metal prices and defence programs have kept these issues on a steady rise and the me- tal index closed Friday at 94.45, best since early April and up 2.15 on the week. The gold index also closed at its | | | | Brerore mie once swoxe, = | ABLE TO COME UP WITH ANN HELPFUL SUGGESTIONS FOR THE ENTERTAINMENT CHAIRMAN «= GOT ANY IDEAS? | Bur Arter mwas OVER, THEY SPENT WEEKS TELLING HIM WHAT HE SHOULD HAVE DONE Thanks lo~ CLARENCE MIRK, ; MILWAUKEE, WISC., (6 (Et LE E_NEWSPAPER "SYNDI -- BS TROUBLE WITH THAT SHOW, IT LACKED VARIETY! DOG ACT! RN ---- jus A) YOU SHOULDA HAD A TRAINED / COULDA HAD A PYRG 1 \ 7 AT LEAST YOU MAGICIAN! Semar RAIL -- Wasaga Beach Cott high for the week at 100.11, up 1.67. in the five days and since late April. The Toronto exchange will be closed Monday for the annual civic holitiay. , ST. KITTS OARSMF"l SHOULD TRIUMPH HEKLEY REGATTA By JACK SULLIVAN Canadian Press Staff Writer Port Dalhousie, Ont., July 30 -- (CP) -- Buffalo's Westside's four- year domination as club champion of the annual Royal Canadian Hen- ley appeared to be near the satur- ation point today. Its successor, de- pendent on outcome of the 13-event dinal-day card, probably will be St. Catharings. The writing was on the wall Fri- day when St. Catharines crews took almost everything in sight, particu= | larly in the fours and eights which have been Westsides' specialties for years. St. Catharines went into Friday's program runner-up for the club title, 1': points behind Buffa- lo and when crews finished chug- ging up and down the choppy Old Welland Canal waters, the score- card read: St, Catharines 211, Buf- falo 155%. The Niagara district club has en- {ries in nine point-scoring events today and in two of these--the sen- jor 155-pound eights and senior 155- pound fours, it has two crews. Two St. Catharines crews also are the high school eights but this doesn't count in the highly-com- plicated Henley scoring system. Only Five Events Westside is represented in only five events where points are award- ed. The club has two double entries, in the senior 145-pound eights and | senior 145-pound fours. | It should be a big day, finale to | the 67th annual Henley which has produced a record entry list of be- | tween 800 and 900 from American and Canadian clubs. Bands will be out, the Governor-Genera®and La- house finish-line grandstand at | 2,600 persons is a certainty. Big event of the regatta, the championship singles, is a five-man | affair--three Canadians and two Americans--and - is scheduled for 4:15 p.m. EDT. Canadian contenders are: defend- ing champion Ken Nunns, 22-year- old member of Toronto Argonauts; 38-year-old Theo Dubois of Winni- peg who defeated Nunns in the 1948 match; Gabe Beaudry, 22, Ot- | tawa, winner of the Association sin- gles Friday and coached by Harry Arlett of England who primed Jack Guest, Sr., Toronto, in his success- ful bid for the Diamond Scull in 1930, Name Americans The Americans are Joe Angyal, New York Athletic Club, winner of the open | mile washes earlier this week, and | Russ Reynolds, Ecorse, Mich. who won the association singles a cou- | of years ago. : { Tough luck crew of the meet is | the Winnipeg quartet of Derek Ri- ley, Bob Barkman, Barrie Watson and Tom Farnall who travelled 1,- 200 miles by automobile with their boat atop a hitched trailer, and had to drop out of the intermedi- ate fours Friday when an o#r broke. {| They were leading at the time by one open length.s The event was taken by St. Ca- tharines, a crew the Winnipeggers soundly trounced the day before in the junior four final. St. Catharines took five point- scoring totals Friday, including a 30-point victory in the junior eights and a couple of these whoppers to- day would just about make them a shoo-in for the championship. HOGS:- Toronto, July 30 (CP). prices at Stratford this morning were unchanged. Grade A, deliv- ered, paid $33 to truckers and $32.85 to. farmers. Other markets unre- ported, ' | dy Alexander are expected to cruise | {up and down the canal and a full- and 145-pound quarter- | Hog | its highest | | | ages Saved From Flames 0a | Smithwick. | Gi | Nows C.R.A. CLOSED The Community Recreation As- sociation building on Gibb Street | will remain closed for the Civic Holiday weekend. The building will | re-open on Tuesday morning. ---- BICE FUND DONATION A donation of three dollars, from "T.A.W." has been received at The | Times-Gazette office for the Mrs, ! | Iva Bice Fund. This contribution | | brings the 'total of the fund up to| $1,045.49. SLIGHT FIRE DAMAGE Richmond Street firemen, under | Deputy Chief Milton Oster, were! | called to the home of Mrs. K. Sears, | 263 Haig Street, shortly after 8 p.m. last night. Oster reported a short! | circuit in an electric stove. Damage | wus slight. | SUSPECT 'ARRESTED { Wanted by Niagara Falls police on uttering and false pretenses | charges, Richard (Ricky) Billyard | was arrested by Sgt. Frank Fewbert | lin Oshawa last night. Niagara Falls police were notified. Billyard! will be returned to Niagara Falls to | face the charges. | -- MURDERED Alice, Tex., July 30--(AP)--W. H. | (Bill) Mason, 51, veteran newspaper | and radio man, was killed Friday | {on a street of this South Texas | | town, Deputy Sheriff Sam Smith- | wick, about 60, surrendered follow- | ing the shooting. Mason, program | director of Alice radio station KBKI, Thursday referred to the | deputy in a broadcast as owner of a building which houses a dime-a- dance palace. Sheriff H. P. Sain filed a charge of murder against | PAY IN ADVANCE Oswego, N.Y., July 30 -- (AP) -- Residents of this Lake Ontario city will pay in advance for milk after Aug. 14. Charles Sivers, president | of the Oswego Milk Dealers Asso- | ciation, which claims to represent | | all distributors in the city, said | milk delivery men soon will begin | the sale of scrip tickets. Residents | | will give the tickets in advance pay- | ment for milk delivered, he stated. | No reduction 'will be offered con-| | sumers buying scrip tickets, Sivers! | cities. said. He explained that the system | : g i lis patterned after ticket systems in| Hot time in Wasaga was had by volunteer firefighters who kept fire at these burning cottages from spreading | to neighboring cabins and bush. Blaze broke out late Saturday evening, but was soon under control, use in Ottawa and other Canadian! Anything Goes at in! Calgary Stampede E Si, in less than 10 seconds this little calf will be roped, thrown ana hog- tied. Calgary is host to 70,000 spect. /life and limb are gambled in roping, riding and other Stampede events. ! ators of such events as this in which 2 Million In Canada Elephant Haven't Seen That's why the circus will come back next year. "Some old stuff," | says you. Same old animals. Same old stunts. Same old ballyhoo. tinually bringing new over | your ads. Good advertising of good merch- eyes | andise never loses its pull. Even if | [ to you your message, seems so fa- 'Montreal's Morgan | Leading |.L. Batsmen New York, July 30--(AP)--Each baseball season brings new sur- | prises, and today Montreal's Bob | Morgan is one of the International League's biggest wonders. { The blonde shortstop of the | champion Royals is amazing every- body--including himself--by mak- | ing a runaway of the league batting title. | Morgan, who batter an ordinary | 266 with the Royals last season, | is currently blasting at a .364 clip | --28 points better than his nearest | rival. Including games played Wednes- day, July 27, Morgan racked up 134 hits in 368 at bats. He has hit 27 doubles, 12 home runs and has batted in 85 runs. The doubles are | high for the league. Sam Jethroe, Morgan's teammate, is -a distant second at .336 and | Toronto's Johnny Blatnik is third | | with .333. Jetliroe is the leader in four in- dividual departments. The fleet out- fielder has scored the most runs, 103; made the.most hits, 135; the | most triples, 12; and has stolen the most bases, 58, Russ Derry of Rochester has lost the most baseballs, hitting 28 home | runs. Teammate Steve Bilko has driven in the most runs, 90. | Bob Hooper, Buffalo's ace right- | hander, has the best :'.ching per-! | centage. He has won 12 games while | dropping only two for an .857 | percentage. | Lightning Bolt New Technique To Catch Trout Toronto, July 30--(CP)--This is | y Maybe a few new frills, but main- | miliar as to be trite, to some read- | the' story of the fish that were |ly the same old circus | when you were a kid. All right! | Perhaps every business man should | be compelled by law to see the cir- cus every year because _of the | great advertising truth | therein, For the same old elephant walks | around, but between the time you | N. | The girl going away to college {is just as excited about finding | things to wear as was her grand- | the boy who has made up his mind | to pop the question next Sunday | night, your ad about diamond you saw |ers it will be News with a capital struck by lightning and were elec- trocuted. Pete McGillen, reporting it Fri- | | day in his Toronto daily Telegram | | column "Outdoors," attributes it to | taught | mother on a similar occasion. To | Herb Rodregue and J, Swan of | Harcourt, Ont., in the Haliburton | | district 100 miles northeast of here. | | The two men were camped on | |saw the elephant walk around this |Yings may be the most interesting {thc shore of an unidentified lake | { year, and the time when you'll see |ilem in the newspaper. There are |i next | stores advertising today who were | | the elephant walk around | year, two million Canadians and | Americans will have arrived in this {funny old world. And that's why, year after year, the elephant walks | around, ; Bach year brings throngs of new citizens who never saw an ele- | phant, who don't even know who | |operates the oldest retail store here {or which jewelry store has been | serving home owners in your city | for three generations. They're | starting right from scratch, |-+ Every year two million babies are {born on this continent. Every year {one million boys reach the girl- | crazy age and start shaving the down off their chins for the bene- | fit -of a million young women who suddenly become acutely clothes- land cosmetic-conscious, AND year after year, in spite of everything, two million young folks up and get married and start new homes. Kvery day in every year new people become interested in | ads of diamond rings, electric re= | frigerators, twin beds, plumber's | friends, lawn mowers, baby carri- | ages, high hats and evening gowns. | Yesterday they weren't interested. | Today they are. Tomorrow other | people will be, That's why it pays to keep on | advertising, and advertising and { advertising, The market is not sta- I tic, 'but changing. You are not ad- vertising to a grandstand, but to a | parade always on the move, con- | adveritising when Martin Van Bu- {ren was president or when Sir i John A. McDonald was Prime Min- ister, To some readers these ads are | i "old stuff," but to others they are | as interesting as is an elephant to a kid who never saw one. The circus will return, gay and noisy and flamboyant, Throngs of | kids will stare with goggle-eyed | wonder at that strange new ani- mal, the elephant, Older folks who never saw a circus before will con- ceal their astonishment beneath an air of sophistication, They'll betray | themselves with loud © laughter (when the clowns crack jokes that {Noah told the animals in the ark. | Is-it possible that some people nev- {er heard these jokes before? Quite so--and it's even more possible | that a lot of people who OUGHT, to know more about your product DON'T. | So the elephant walks around, ! serenely confident that among ev- ery blase group that says: "That's just an elephant," some eager voice will cry: "So THAT'S an ele- | phant!" His benign wisdom seems {to. apprehend the fact that every | ['yesw brings two million new peo- | {ple who never saw an elephant. | | The only way to deny these truths | !is to say, "There ain't no such ani- | mal as an elephant." ! Want to buy, sell or trade? -- Al I classified ad and the deal is made€ | the district when lightning split | tree on the opposite shore and | set it afire. They paddled across iand found a dozen Iarge speckled | | trout floating on the lake surface. | They picked up eight, all more than 15 inches in length, while the | (others revived and swam away, Two days later, they returned and counted more than 50 large trout { dead on the lake surface, They ap- | I parently were killed by the light-! ning stroke. : \ ! -- PRODUCE :- Toronto, July 30 (CP).--Produce | | prices on the spot market here this morning were quoted as follows: | | Churning cream unchanged, No. | | 1, 58 cents FOB; 62 delivered. | Stafford Bros. MONUMENTAL WORKS 318 Dundas St. E., Whitby Phone Whitby 552 MONUMENTS AND FINE QUALITY MARKERS Precise workmanship and care- ful attention to detall are your assurance when you chnose rom the wide selection of imported and domestic Granites an ° Marbles in stock. |May Change Lake Lights Cleveland, O., July 30 (AP).--For economy reasons, the United States Coast Guard is considering discon- tinuance of nine facilities on the here Friday by Commodore J. A. Great Lakes. This announcement was made Hirshfield, conmander of the*ninth district, after a three-day meeting of a Coast Guard board of survey. The. Lake Huron lightship, two lighthouses and six lifeboat stations will be the subject of individual hearings by the board, to determine whether they will be continued. The lifeboat stations are at Sher= boygan, Wis., Galloo Island, N.Y. and at four points in Michigan-- Eagle Harbor, Munising, Thunder Bay Island and Manistee, The lighthouses are the White River | light on the east shore of Lake 'Michigan and Alpena light on the | west shore of Lake Huron. If the Lake Huron ligntship, at the south end of the lake is dis- continued, the vessel will be sent to another district, Hirshfield said. It would be replaced by a fixed structure containing a fog signal. and radio beacon. The first hear. ing will be at Sheboygan, Aug, 15. The board also will consider re= establishment of the lifeboat sta=- tion at Pentwater, Mich. which was discontinued two years ago. A hearing will be conducted at Pentwater Aug. 19. ENGAGED New Yoik, July 30--(AP)--Rep=- resentative Franklin. D. Roosevelt, Jr., (Dem. N.Y.) will marry socially- prominent Suzanne Perrin, 28, of | New York. Their engagement was | announced Friday by Miss Perrin's { mother. It will be the second mar- riage for Roosevelt, who has two children, Franklin D. III, 10, and Christopher, seven, by his first marriage to the former Ethel Du Pont. STUDENTS AT C.N.E. Specially conducted groups of students from agricultural vocation- al schools in the north and central States will attend the Canadian National Exhibition again this year in greater numbers than ever. The Americans are placed in charge of competent guides and shown all phases of the agricultural display. ATTENTION! OSHAWA Hogg and Lytle Ltd. the same competent staff. We carry a complete line of Oui MASTERMIX FEEDS "are ® Master Feeds Grains and Chops ® Grit FARMERS of the We wish to announce that the business formerly. known as - been purchased by us and will be known as "MASTER FEEDS, OSHAWA". We plan on carry- ing on in much the same manner as Hogg & Lytle and with factured fresh daily at our Feed Mill. Master Feeds laboratory and ensure you of a consistently top quality product in each and every bag of feed. SAVE $-DOLLARS-$ Save $$ Dollars $ $ on each and every ton of feed you buy--by having our fresh MASTERMIX FEEDS put up in your own bags at our Feed Mill. We are 'also Carrying a Complete Line of: ® Master Pelleted Feeds ® Mills Feeds ® Sceds and many other feeders supplies DISTRICT MASTERMIX FEEDS, manu- all laboratory controlled by) ® Whole ® Oyster Shell ® Salt OUR PRICES ARE RIGHT Drop in and see us--we would be pleased to meet you. WE ARE IN THE MARKET FOR GOOD QUALITY FALL WHEAT, PRICES ON REQUEST. § MMMMM MASTER BALANCED FEEDS ALL CLASSES OF POULTRY FARM LIVE STOCK FUR BEARING ANIMALS & DOGS Y £] 1 b b ) § ' 4 * MASTER FEEDS R. J. (DICK) RUSK mM OSHAWA (formerly Hogg & Lytle) MANAGER CALLS-FOR DELIVERY - FEFEEESEEEEE LP -- = i; A rosa: _ a,