Daily Times-Gazette, 23 Dec 1950, p. 2

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

PACE TWO THE DAILY TI MES-GAZETTE SATURDAY, DECEMBER 23, 1950 Births POWERS---Mr, and Mrs. Howard Powers, (nee Adeline Koziniak) are happy to announce the birth of their son, Howard Richard David, on Tuesday, December 19, 1950, at the Oshawa General Hos- pital. McLEAN--Mr. and Mrs. Lean (nee Loretto Towns), are © happy to announce the gift of a daughter, Patricia Anne, day, December 22, 1950, oawa General Hospital. Deaths BORROWDALE--Entered into rest at Sunnybrook Hospital, Toronto, on Saturday, December 23, 1930, William Arkell Borrowdale, be- loved husband of Elizabeth Skeel, in his 80th year. Funeral from the Armstrong Fun- "eral Home, Oshawa, Tuesday, De- cember 26. Service at 1 p.m. In- " terment Oshawa Union Cemetery. . Friends are welcome to call at the Funeral Home Sunday evening 7 to * 9, Monday 2 to 5 and 7 to 9 p.m. * BROWN--At the Brantford General Hospital, Friday, December 22nd, 1950, Ida Mary Smith, in her 75th year. beloved wife of Lorne Brown, Brantford, and dear mother of Mrs. Reginald Locke, Oshawa, and Mrs. | Blanche Williams of Brantford. Resting at Thorpe Brothers Fun- eral Home, at 96 West St., Brant- ford. Service Sunday, December 2¢ at 2 pm. Interment - Farringdon Burial] Grounds, Brantford. CROWELL -- Entered into rest in the Oshawa General Hospital, on Saturday, December 23, 1960, Frank Crowell, beloved husband of Dor- othy G. Dyas, in his 54th year. . Funeral from the Armstrong Fun- "eral Home, Oshawa, on Tuesday, "December 26. Service 3:30 p.m. Ins # terment Oshawa Union Cemetery. * Friends are welcome to call at the «Funeral Home Sunday evening 7 to +9 and Monday 2 to 5 and 7 to § p.m. "HOOPER--Entered into rest in the family residence, 107 Brock St. E,, Oshawa, on Friday, December 22, 1950, Edwin 'H, Hopper, beloved husband of Annie C. Pieroway, in his T4th year. " Funeral from the Armstrong Fun- | " eral Home, Oshawa. Funeral ser- 'vice in Calgary Baptist Church on "Tuesday, December 26 at 2 p.m. In- terment Oshawa Union Cemetery. : Friends are welcome to call at the « Funeral Home Sunday evening 7 to _9, Monday 2 to 5 and 7 to 9 p.m. KELLAR--At 737 Cedar 8t., on Sat- urday, December 23, 1950, Nelson Kellar, beloved husband of Eliza- beth Scott, in his 68th year. Funeral from Luke-Mcntosh Fun- | eral Home on Tuesday, December 26, | at 3:30 p.m. Interment Union Céme- tery. LANG---Entered into rest at the Oshawa General Hospital, on Sat- urday, December 23, 1950, Thomas J. Lang, beloved husband of the late Julia Maud Mitchell, and dear father of Mrs. Walter Wright (Muriel) of Peterborough, Cyril Norris (Marguerite) and Mrs. Ivan McKenzie (Patricia) of Osh- awa, in his 84th year. Funeral service under the auspices Indépendent Order of Foresters from the Comstock Funeral Home, Peter- borough on Tuesday, December 26 at 2:30 p.m. Interment St, Paul's Cemetery, Cavan. In Memoriam FOUNTAIN-In loving memory of a dear husband and father, Thomas Fountain, who passed away Dec, 25, 1049. "The world may change from year to year, And friends from day to day But never will the one we love, From memory pass away. --Ever remembered by wife Edna and family. FOUNTAIN --In loving memory of a dear father, Thomas Fountain, who passed away December 25, 1949. --Ever remembered by his Milt and family. HAYES--In loving memory of dear wife and mother, Edith Ann Hayes, who passed away Decem- ber 26, 1938. A silent thought, a secret tear, Keeps her memory ever dear. --Lovingly rememberéd. by band, daughter Eva, Victor grandchildren. son. hus- and McCABE--In loving memory of my dear son, Bernard, who died of wounds in Italy, Dec. 24th, 1944. My lips cannot tell how I miss him My heart cannot tell what to say, God only knows how I miss him In a home that [s lonesome today. --Ever remembered by his Mother. PRESTON In ever loving memory of a dear hushand and father, James W. Preston, who passed away Dec. 23rd, 1941. You left me beautiful memories Often silent tears But you will always ne with me As T journey through the years. You are always in my mind, dear, No matter what I do All the time within my heart, There is a thought of you. . --Sadly missed and lovingly re- membered by his wife and oily Jack Mec- | on Fri-| at the | In Memoriam THURSBY--Memory's loving tribute to our dearly loved husband and father, George Thursby, who pass- ed away December 24, 1946. We count not the years since you left us, For time cannot make us forget The sorrow we felt at the parting | The grief in our hearts lingers yet. No words could describe your sweet nature, So loving, so tender, so kind, Your memory will always be cher- ished, By the ones you left behind. --Ever remembered by wife Ettie, and sons, | Mervyn. | THURSBY--In loving memory of my dear father, George Thursby, who passed away December 24, 1946. The depth of sorrow we cannot tell Of the loss of one we loved so well And while he sleeps in peaceful sleép His memory we shall always keep. --Lovingly remembered by daugh- ter Irene and son-in-law Johnnie. Obituary WILLIAM ARKELL BORROWDALE A veteran of the Boer War, who saw service with the Imperial Forces in India and in World War I, william Arkell Borrowdale passed | (Hilda) of Stouffville, Mrs. Walter | To- | Baker (Myrtle) of Claremont, Mrs | On Highw. ay 2 A away in Sunnybrook Hospital, ronto, on Saturday, December 23, 'in his 80th year. | poor health for seven years. | Born in Cork, Ireland, on August 9, 1871, the deceased was married land, on December 15, 19801. member of Christ' Memorial Ang- lican Church, he had been a resi- dent of Canada for 38 years and of Oshawa for 26 years. Mr. Borrowdale served with the 17th Lancers in India and with the 21st Lancers in the Boer War in South Africa. He also served as a sergeant with the 8th Royal Rifles in World War L Reginald, Clarence' and | to Elizabeth Skell in London, Eng- | A [2:30 pm. Tuesday, December 26, pital in an ambulance late last Frank Crowell, beloved husband of the former Dorothy G. Dyas, pass- ed away in the Oshawa General Hospital on Saturday, December 23, tin his 54th year, A son of the late Mr. and Mrs. | Willlam Crowell, the deceased was born in Oshawa on January 11, 1897 and was married at Whitby on November 10, 1936. He had been a resident of the district all his | life with the exception of 15 years {spent in Benton Harbor, Michigan, | He was associated in the opera- tion of Crowell's garage and ser- | vice station and was an ardent | hunter and fisherman. Predeceased by one daughter, | Carol, in 1939, Mr. Crowell is sur- vived by his wife and one son, Franklin, at home. Also surviving are three brothers, Norman of To- ronto and Harry and Albert of Oshawa. The funeral will be held from the Armstrong Funeral Home at 3.30 p.m. on Tuesday, Decembér 26, con- | ducted by Rev. H. A. Mellow, min- jister of Northminster United { Church. Interment will be in the Oshawa Union Cemetery, MRS. FRANK HAM The death occurred at Claremont jon Friday, December 22, of Hattie | J. Madill, beloved wife of Frank | Ham. . | The deceased is survived by four | daughters, Mrs. George Middleton {Donald McCullough (Marie) of He had been in [Claremont and Miss Nora Ham at home and one son, Lorne Ham of i Oshawa. ) | Mrs. Ham is resting at the family | residence, Claremont, for service at lin Claremont United Church. In- | terment will be in Claremont Cem- | etery. { MRS. LORNE BROWN i Brantford, Ont., Dee. 23 -- (CP) | --Mrs, Ida Mary Brown, a resident |of Brantford for 60 years, died in | hospital here yesterday. She was in | her 75th year, She was an active member of St. Mrs. | Besides his wife he is survived | ) 1 by one daughter, Mrs. J. Boyd Rus- | James' Anglican Church. Survivors seli (Edith) of Langley Prairie, Brit- {inelude her husband, Lorne Brown, | ish Columbia and four sons, William [and two daughters, Mrs. Reginald and John of Oshawa'and Arthur and [Locke of Oshawa and Mrs. Blanche George of Toronto. | Williams of Brantford: Also surviving are two sisters, Mrs. | Mrs. Brown ig resting at the | Thorpe Brothers Funeral Home, 96 Emily Lyons of Melbourne, Austral- | ia ult yor Alice Borrowdale in| West Street, for the funeral service England: a brother Sleigh Borrow-|at 2 pm. on Sunday, December 24. dale in England and three grand- | Interment will be in Farringdon children. | Burial Grounds, Rev. H. D. Cleverdon, rector of | Christ Memorial Anglican Church, {will conduct the funeral service at Brantford, Dec. 23--John Ruff, the, Armstrong Funeral Home at 61, one of Brant County's best- 1 p.m. on Tuesday, December 26. | known Masons, who died in hos- interment will be in the Oshawa Pital here Wednesday night, was) Union Cemetery. | born in Trenton, and had lived in | Brantford many years. | EDWIN HARVEY HOOPER | For the last 25 years he had been | A resident of Oshawa for the employed by the P.UC. He was past 27 years, Edwin Harvey Hoop- | member and a past master of | er, beloved husband of the former Reba Lodge AF. and A:M., and had | Annie Cordelia Pieroway, entered served as secretary to the D.D.G.M. JOHN RUFF Cold 'Halts Heligoland "Conquest" (Reuters) --Two German students | arrived here today in a fishing | boat, wrapped shivering in the flags of Germany with which they | ' set out Wednesday to "conquer" | | Heligoland, a North Sea island. | Georg Von Hatszfeld, 21, and | Rene Leudesdorff, 22, "quietly in- vaded" the uninhabited German island, once a U-boat base, to stop the R.AF. from using it for bomb- ing practice. A group of 15 to 20 other young Heligolanders planned to join them for Christmas to protect their "be- loved island." | For a day Hatszfeld and Leudes~ dorff marched about the island putting up the German flag. But yesterday they used their store of German flags as clothing and put out the white flag instead. Cold had defeated them. 'Woman Injured In Car Mishap | Lora Woychuk, 225 Sherhgurne | Street, Toronto, was injured and | | taken to the Oshawa General Hos- night when the truck in which she |was a passenger struck a pile of |snow on the shoulder of No. 2A | Highway near Corbett's Point, went {out of control and rolled and skid- ded some 250 feet. She sustained chest injuries, it is understood. Driver of the light truck, John R. Gilmore, Ottawa, suffered bruises. Employed in Ottawa the woman was enroute to spend Christmas at her home in Toronto. Provincial Police reported a sec- ond accidenf on No. 2 Highway at Pickering last night. While details | of the accident are not immediately | available it is reported, Robert Slade, Galloway Road, West Hill, and Gordon Reeve, Millwood Av- enue, Toronto, were involved in the accident. Skinner (Continued from page 1) death and dismemberment (employ- | ee only) $2,000. Weekly sickness and | accident benefits (employee only) | $24.00, maximum 26 weeks. Pay- ments start on the fourth day of either sickrfess or accident. Em-| ployees and dependents daily hos-! | pital benefit is $6.50 per day, the Cuxhaven, Germany, Dec. 23-- {into rest at the family residence, {of Brant district. | 107 Brock Street East, on Friday, | December 22. The deceased, who | was in his 74th year, had been in poor. health: since last fall. A very ardent and active mem- ber of Calvary Baptist Church, Mr. | Hooper was born in Newfoundland {on November 22, 1877 and was | married at Port au Port, New- | foundland, on May 24, 1902. | Besides' his wife he leaves to | [ mourd his passing one daughter, | Mrs. C. McRae (Rita F) of Dshawa and eight sons, Joan P. Charles E., Austin A, Cecil M., Walter A, | George A. Stanley E, and Harold | B. Hooper, all of Oshawa. | Also surviving are two brothers, Albert 'and Waiter Hooper of Bos- ton, Mass.,, 21 grandchildren and | two great grandchildren. Mr. Hoop- er was predeceased by five brothers. Mr. Hooper is resting at the Arm- strong Funeral Home, the 1uneral service will be held in Calvary | Baptist Church at 2 p.m. on 'l'ues- day, December 26, foluowed by in- {terment in the Oshawa Union Cemetery. Rev. R. W. Wigaton, pas- i tor of Calvary Baptist Church, will | conduct the services, NELSON KELLAR In failing health for the past two years, Nelson Kellar passed away | suddenly this morning at the fam- ily residence, 737 Cedar Street, in his 68th year. ; Born in Belleville, the deceased | was married at Belleville to Eliza- {beth Scott in 1904. A resident of | Oshawa for 30 years, he was a member of Cedar Dale | Church and was employed for many years as an assembler at General | Motors of Canada, Limited. Besides his wife he is survived by | {three daughters, Mrs. T. Holmes (Louella), Mrs, L. Malloy (Salva) | and Mrs, H. Cooper (Margaret), all | of Oshawa, and two sons, Allan of United. {THURSBY---In loving memory of my | Columbus and Russell of Oshawa. dear father, George Thursby. who | Also surviving are 10 grandchildren. passed away December 24, 1046. | Rey, R. E. Morton, minister of We lost a dad with a heart of gold | ~edar Dale : United "Ch . Who was more to us than wealth e urch, will untold, | conduct the funeral service at the Without a farewell he fell asleep | Luke-McIntosh Funeral Home at With only memories for us to keep. | 3:30 p.m. on Tuesday, December 26 We hays lost, ut God as gained Intermént will be in the Oshawa ne of the bes adas & wor, con- TOT Union Cemetery. --Lovingly remembered by daugh- ter Helen, son-in-law Bud and] granddaughter Sharon. FRANK CROWELL I~ Saturday, Dec. 23 Time 7:30 p.m. PROGRAMME A MOTION PICTURE "THE MIGHTY ARMY" ALSO A SHORT PAGEANT WHILE SHEPHERDS WATCHED Special prize to the largest family in attendance Place: Pentecostal Church COMING SUNDAY AFTERNOON. JAN. 14 PALERMO BROTHERS Surviving besides his wife, are one | daughter, Mrs. R. W. Hewson, | Brantford; and two sisters, Mrs. C. P. Foster, Oshawa, and Mrs. W. | H. Miller, Toronto. The remains rested at Thorpe Brothers funeral home, where serv- lice was conducted this afternoon, | | with interment in Farringdon burial | | ground. JOHN T. ORR Toronto, Dec. 23--The funeral of {John T. Orr was held from Tulner and Porter chapel, Roncesvalles | Ave, at 3:30 p.m. today, with in-| | terment in Park Lawn Cemetery. | He died Thursday at his home on | Rivercrest Rd. after a brief illness. | Mr. 7hompson' was supervisor of | | supply and control for the Massey- | | Harris Co. and had been with the] He was due [for retirement in a few days. He! | was born in Newcastle and was a| company 50 years. member of Corinthian Lodge, A.F. {anc AM, the Shrine and Runny-| ,mede United church. { He is survived by his widow, the | former Ethel B. Thomas, and two | daughters, Jane and Mrs. J. H. Dool. | | ASHFORD WESLEY WARNICA The oldest surviving member of the pioneer Warnica Innisfil Township, Ashford Wesley Warnica, 86, died on Wednesday, December 13, at his Painswick resi- dence. Up until late years, Warnica had always taken an ac- tive part in public affairs but he {had been in failing health. for the | past two years. His condition had gradually grown worse in the past | few weeks and he was confined to {his bed for several days before his | death. : Mr. Warnica was born and died | {on Lot 14, Concession 12, of the | | township, on the land which had | | been settled by his grandfather, | George TIrederick Warnica, first | | commissioner for Innisfil Town- | ship, in 1825. The property has! | keen in the family continuously up to the present day. On this lot, over 100 years ago, was built the {first brick house in the township, | | which is occupied. : The deceased was born on April, | | family of | maximum being 70 days. Maximum | miscellaneous hospital fee is $65.00 | for both employees and dependents. | fences in return for such reason- | | Employees surgical fee benefit fis] Tomb (Continued from page 1) that 10 years of digging in the long-hidden underground chambers below St. Peter's church yielded archeological evidence supporting the Roman Catholic belief that the prince of the apostles was buried on that site, In June, 1950, the Pontiff consecrated a central altar ded- icated to St. Peter and located over the reported site of the apostle'. last resting place. But as early as January, 1949, the Pontiff said that the tomb of St. Peter "was and is under the cupola of St. Peter's church." He declared then that this was demonstrated by archeological findings. Today's findings, of the sepulchre--as proof that the first of the apostles actual- ly ¢ame to Rome and died there-- was the most positive yet made by the Pontiff, . : The Pope's statement on the re- mains found in the grotto still left room for speculat' but the im- portant thing, he said, was that the discovery "leaves intact the historical reality of the tomb." > 1.8. (Cuntinued/ from page 1) withdrawing American defences to this hemisphere, deciding that could lead only to "surrender or defeat." | Shortly after Acheson spoke out, the State department made pub- {lic an American note to Moscow proposing a new meeting of the Big Four foreign ministers. Britain and France sent similar | notes, but State department of- | ficials were pessimistic about pros- | pects that Moscow would agree to | west, Toronto, reported to police Dec. 20, and was not located until |couver; Leo Doucette, first officer, | |such a meeting. | The American note rejected Rus- sia's two-month-old proposal that |the United States, Britain, . France | cow's - charges that the West is | rearming Western Germany in | violation to its pledged word. How- | ever, it expressed readiness to con- | on the "principal problems" | existing between East and West in | ternational | the world." | Senator Hickenlooper (Rep.- | | | tensions throughout Ia.), a foreign relations com- mittee member who has been in the vanguard of Republicans demanding Acheson's ouster, told reporters he thinks the United States ought to "adopt a realistic program that is founded upon the sound de- fence of America, as well as alding in the defence of the free world." "European countries must pro- duce concrete evidence of their in- tention to furnish a full propor tionate share in European de- able and sound aid as we may be | $225.00 maximum. Dependents sur- | justified in giving them," Hicken- gical fee benefit is $150. maximum. jooper said. Employee and dependents in hos- | | pital medical benefit is $3.00 per | day for 70 days. | The union negotiating committee | was comprised of Bill Rutherford, | | chairman, Jock Turner, Wilf Duf- | field, John Craggs, John Brady, | | president of the Local and Paul Siren, International Representative. Negotiating for the company were Walter Christon, director of labor | relations for Hershey - Houdaille Corporation and the assistant di- rector, L, G. Scouton. Representa- | tives of local management were L. G. Metcalfe, Industrial Relations | Manager and James Skinner, Plant Manager. | A film producer was going round | | the studios when he saw a face he {didn't know. "Are you on our staff?" he asked. me." "Is that so? What do you do?" "I'm .a writer." "Yes, sir." : "A writer, did you say?" he ask- ed, suspiciously. . "All right -- spell something!" Classified ads are sure to pay! Phone 35 with yours today. Mr. | 16, 1864, and was the son of Sam- ,uel Wesley and Martha Hannah Warnica. He farmer until his re- tirement several years ago. Mr. | Warnica was an independent in | politics and a member of the United | Church. Surviving are his wife, Bertha May Washington Warnica, of Bow- manville and Oshawa; one brother, Lou H. Warnica of Toronto; two sons, Roy of Oshawa, and Lieut. Col. D. C. Warnica of Windsor, and one daughter, Mrs. Frank George (Catherine) of Smithfield. The funetal service at the Peth- | ick-Smith Funeral Home in Barrie | on Friday, December 15, was con- ducted by Rev. J. W, Newton-Smith | Interment was in Stroud Cemetery. | In poor health for the past year, THE SALVATION ARMY COR. SIMCOE MAJOR and MRS. DOCKERAY 9.30 a.m.--~BROADCAST CKLB & OAK STS. 11.00 a.m. CHRISTMAS MESSAGE 2.00 p.m.--SUNDAY SCHOOL and BIBLE CLASSES 7.00 p.m. --CAROL SERVICE "THE CHURCHES' NEW YEAR MISSION" Jan, 6-1 Led 4, 1951 by Canon Quintin Warner | committees "Yes, sir. Your brother engaged | Acheson himself was reported to have told members of the for- eign relations and armed services in a closed session yesterday that assurances of this kind have been demanded from the western European countries. Korea (Continued from page 1) | perse and destroy enemy groups." But in western central Korea, reports of Chinese forces mass- ing along Parallel 38 mounted by the hour. MacArthur's headquarters said Eighth Army patrols had run into Chinese Reds some- where near Chongye, a village two miles south of the border. A captured Red Korean messen- ger told interrogators of heavy Communist artillery movements southv-ard toward Kuhwa, a village only six miles north of 38. Air force pilots have reported | other artillery movements farther | | north. | Since the Chinese Reds struck | in overwhelming sirength just four ! weeks ago as U.N, | rolling up the last 50-mile stretch {of North Korea, the Communists | have moved manpower masses and | supplies southward in slow, steady | streams. The Communists at last were in position--with enormous new man- power reserves thrown into the war for the second time in six months. MacArthur's Saturday afternoon war summary said four more Chin- ese army corps -- 64,000 or more troops--have crossed recently from | Manchuria into Korea. | . announcement of the' and the Soviet Union discuss Mos- | an effort to eliminate "present in- | troops were | from China--to invade South Korea | Only One Injured In Eleven Local Motor Accidents Christmas Joy Is Overcast By Fear of New World War Victor Budai, 19, of R.R. 3, Bow- manville, was injured and taken | New York, Dec. 23 -- (AP) -- to the Oshawa General Hospital [Prayers for peace -- punctuated by for first aid treatment when the |the rattle of sabres -- will go up car in which he was driving struck {throughout the world this Christ- a tree on Athol Street near Drely |Mas, celebrated in an atmosphere Street. He suffered severe lacera- | dread reminiscent of Christmases tions to his forehead and face, re- |JUst before the Second World War. : For many people, not I quiring several stitches to close, It ' ong is reported he was a passenger in| So tortured by a great war, i this will be the best and most a car driven by Daniel Hatcher, Bruce Street. prosperous Christmas in years. It was one of 11 motor vehicle But the threat of a new conflict h accidents reported over the past 24 peri LB Wg oy Dui Bours, "No persons were injured in| celebration. y e other mishaps. In the Anthony Bino, 103 Celina Street, | were ey Jana i dist nhs reported driving south on Simcoe once again will reign on earth Street North last night. When |Pilgrims making the journey from making a left hand tern onto El- |Jerusalem to Bethlehem the gin Street his car was in collision | route travelled on the first Christ- with a south-bound car driven by mas by Joseph and Mary -- will | East, | the manger of their civilization. John MacLean, 300 Arthur Street, | In Nazareth, where the boy was the driver of a car which was Jesus lived, a midnight Mass will in a smash-up with a jeep on |De celebrated at the Church of the Simcoe Street South, near the cut- | Annunciation, scene of Mary's visi- off at No. 2A Highway. Driver of !3tion by the Angel Gabriel. Again the jeep was Robert Classen, To- | 'ir prayers will be for peace. But ronto. around these worshippers will be Alvin Prentice, Port Perry, and |'®minders of war, Edward 8S. Bouckley, 111 Louisa | {Douglas Keith, 31 King Street | pray at the Church of the Nativity, | Nazareth still is under Israeli {military rule, as it, has been since | the days of the Arab-Israel war in 1948. The road to Bethlehem has to be cleared of dragon-tooth tank traps and barbed wire at the Israeli frontier with Jordan before pilgrims -- a limited number but many more than last year -- can pass on the storied road to Bethe lehem. 'Western Europe was ready to celebrate its most prosperous Christmas in years, and seemed doggedly determined to make it a happy holiday, despite gathering war clouds, | For Roman Catholics, Pope Pius had a Christmas message, remind- ling them to" pray that the world | be saved from disaster. In Britain, there was satisfaction | with the economic recovery which made the country able to get along without new Marshall-plan aid, Britons, still severely rationed, | would manage to have a fairly good Christmas, and would spend it at | their hearthsides. The Royal fam- ily was spending the holiday 'at | Sandringham, their country home, Street, were the drivers of auto- | mobiles involved in an accident at | the intersection of Bond and | Prince Streets. | An accident was reported at the | intersection of Albert and Emma | 15 persons aboard vanished into the | Streets, Drivers of the cars in-|darkness of the Pacific Ocean near | volved were Ronald Palmer, New- | here. |castle, and Arthur Cooper, Maple| It was never located despite a | Lake, Ont. | lengthy air-sea search. Arthur Alberta Road | In 1942, a C.P.A. airliner crashed Piane "(Continued from page 1) Parsons, | that he was driving south on Sim- mid-August of 1943. All 13 persons [coe Street North and opposite 640 |2150 homeward-bound Christmas {applied his brakes and skidded in- |avellers were killed when {to a hydro pole. fd Police investigated a truck-car | 5:Cv to Vancouver, crashed into a | collision on Centre Street near Mountainside 74 miles southeast of | King Street West. John Drozd, 553 ere, i Howard Street, was the driver of | --en he boon ner became the car while Maxwell H. Bassant, | 5 Ip was first y believed that Pilot Quinton Prince Albert, was the driver of : ; {the teak. Moore of Vancouver had set the | plane down either in Alberta or | R. J. Brown, 61 Elgin Street| numerou i East, reported colliding with a 8 landing sirips along he r . i parked car on Simcoe Street North. De outs, ie to'tur | There was a mishap at the in- | After Penticton, the plane was | | tersection of Simcoe Street South scheduled to pass up a landing 88 | {and Athol Street. A car, driven by | miles further east at Castlegar, be- |Jon James Davidson, 49- Alexander cause of bad weather, and come | | Street, it is reported, crashed into down at Cranbrook, B.C. another | | the rear of a truck, driven by Ken- | 92 miles east. From there it was to | ineth Elgin Savery, 648 Carnegie | Avenue. ; | over "the hump" of the Rockies to | Thomas H. Cole, 241 Mary Street, | Calgary. i | reported to police that his parked | Officials said the highest moun | | car was struck by a car driven by | t8ins would be encountered just be- |John E. Houghton, 849 Mary | | Street, | Two cars collided together at the | intersection of Park Road South and Gibbs Street, One car ended {up in a driveway beside house No. | 266, striking a fence. Drivers. of | | the cars were Albert E. Nothnagel, | {80 Orchard Averiue, and Sidney | | Goldenberg, 209 Nassau Street. | | | | fore the plane hit Cranbrook. West of there it would almost follow the main line of the Canadian Pacific | Railway through mountain valleys, | An R.C.AF. spokesman said the plane could clear the mountains by flying at 9,000 feet -- and that would give it a 1,000-foot clearance. Vancouver, Dec. 23 -- (CP) | Canadian Pacific Airlines officials the | | plane, bound from Prince George, | compléte its 490-mile trip by fiying | B | today released the following list of | passengers aboard the missing { DC3, which vanished near Pentic- | ton, B.C., late yesterday. 3 | The plane carried 15 passengers {and a crew of three. | Identity of one of the passengers S |is not yet known. i Those abaord: | Capt. Quinton Moore, pilot, Van- | Vancouver; Lana Franco, steward- | ess, Sundown, Man, Passengers: Miss Iris McLelland, 26, Pentic- ton, B.C. Mrs. I. R. Seymour, 26, Pentic- ton, B.C. . Miss Butler, West Summerland, BC. Mr. and Mrs. Lipsack, Cowichan Miss M. Wright, Rossland, B.C. Mrs. J. Blackmer, Castlegar, B.C, Mrs. M. Langpap, Vancouver. Mr, F. Sadincoff, Nelson, B.C. Miss C. Bond, Nelson, B.C. R. J. Fulton, Kimberley, B.C. Miss E. Ostrum, Lethbridge, Ita. Miss A R. M. Dawson, Creston, C. Mr. H, C. Clark, Chilliwack, B.C. FRUIT :- Toronto, Dee. 28--(CP)--Wholee sale fruit and vegetable prices wera prices were also unchanged. HOGS:- | 'Toronto, Dez. 28 --(CP)-- Truck | hogs were $30.50 at Stratford, Ont, | today. | Other markets werenotreported. Other markets were not reported, p Seaway proposal has - been debated for more than 50 years. Congress, in | CHRISTIAN SCIENCE First Church -- 64 Colborne St. East one form or another, has turned it down three times. Opposition to it, and the related | | power development, have come | mainly from port cities, railroads {and private utilities. The decision of the commission, | with one member dissenting, coin- | cided almost exactly with a rec- | ommendation made last December | by an F.P.C. examiner after hear- lings on the New York application. | Under the new proposal, and that advanced by army engineers, | i | (Continued from page 1) | | | Wednesday evening testimonies of healing 'The reading room, SUNDAY SERVICE AT 11.00 AM. SUNDAY SCHOOL AT 9.40 A.M. g located at the church, open Tuesday, Thursday and Friday from 2 to 4:30 p.m. excepting legal holidays, where the Bible and Christian Science literature may be studied, borrowed or purchased and subscriptions placed for periodicals, Subject "CHRIST JESUS" meeting at 8:00 o'clock includes . through Christian Science. the power yield would be shared equally between the United States and Canada. Each- country would ANA RAY contribute like amounts for con- struction costs. It would cost an estimated $800,000,000. The commission's decision said that international benefits from the seaway made it desirable for Congress to pass upon the com- bined proposal rather than "on a |' plece-meal basis." PRODUCE: | Toronto, Dec. 23--(CP)--Prpduce | prices quoted on the spot market | here today: . Churning cream: No. 1 truck price 61 cents; delivered 64 cents. ! Creamery prints: First grade 63- | 63 cents. 5 wir \ | Classified Ad and the deal is made. An Inquiry by M HEAD OFFICE KiLvingToN Bros. Lp. CANADA'S LARGEST BUILDERS OF MEMORIALS Would Receive Prompt Attention and Helpful Suggestions From Our Design Studios, Without Obligation. 1357 ST. CLAIR AVE. W,, TORON.O, ONT. -- PHONE XE 5591 Oshawa Branch Mgr.--S. Barber, Phone 4579W at 9. Through three generations the aim and inspirgtion of Kilving- ton Bros, Limited, has been the creating of memorials of distinction. The fact that we are the largest company in' Cénada and that our standard of work is recognized as the best in. memorial art does not mean that it is expen- sive. gether in 15 May we be of assistance to you in the designing and erection of o memorial? AND STUDIO Club Bayview 1 Sunday Sing Song We are running our Sunday Sing Song on Sunday, Decem- ber 24. Doors open at 8, starts mh On Christmas Eve. | December 24th we are proud to present the Harvey Brothers, first time to- A - Also TED RUST Comedian, Magician Extraordinary Also a Special Christmas Eve Act for Young People years. ZENER

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy