Central Colleg iate Upper School Results Are Announced Suggests Oshawa Fair Seek Higher Rating To Get Larger Grants The suggestion at the executive Agricul When such grant was received and # the city made a grant to the fair, the Ontario Department of Agriculture would match the city's grant, Guests of the service were Dr. W. H. Gifford, president of the fair board, who in turn introduced members of his executive who in- cluded Cliff Haggerty, Heber Down, Cyril Mumford, Alfred Ayre, . W. McConkey, Robert McMillan, ® H. Lynn Fair, E.'J. Umphrey, Stan- ley Bagg, Mayor Michael Starr and retary-treasurer. PLANS COMPLETE A member of the fair board for 14 years and the son of the late Hiram Gifford, who also served as . president of the fair board, Dr. Gif- ford said that plans for the fair on Thursday, Friday and Saturday of this week have been completed. Many changes had been made in the attractions and program which he felt sure would be of interest to the people of the district. Exhibits and displays were already coming in and all that is needed to make the fair a success is to have the support of the general public. Dr. Gifford expressed the appre- ciation of his board to the club, saying that the fair for some years had experienced bad weather so this year had -advanced its dates. It will be one of the earliest fairs held in Eastern Ontario and will not clash with Beaverton dates as had been the case in the past. In his address Mr. Lashley re- called that the first fall fair in Canada was held at Windsor, NS, 180 years ago. The first fair in On- tario was held at Niagara-on-the- > Lake 160 years ago. The first fairs were held with the idea of looking into the problems of agriculture, but . the societies which sponsored them also sponsored the formation of libraries which would indicate that the pioneers were also imbued with the idea of advancing the learning of those who tilled the * soil. MUCH HEALTHY GROWTH The first grants to fairs were paid in 1840 while in 1863 there were 63 established fairs and 217 township agricultural societies. Pickering and Whitby had the first fairs in Ontario County whilé the South Ontario Society was formed in 1888. The growth in grants could - be seen from the fact that in those days provincial grants amounted to $60,000 as compared with $115,000 today. Today, also, 260 agricultural Sopieties in Ontario operate 250 fall fairs. In the early days the agricultur- al societies were the only such or- ganizations in existence, but today each branch of agriculture had its own organization for the advance- ment of its work and discussion of common problems. that a good fair is something worthwhile, Mr. Lashley commented that not all the 250 . fairs in Ontario are good. Some need revision but there is hope of improvement in many cases. It is estimated that 5,500,000 people vis- ited the fairs in Ontario in 1949 including the CNE. A fair, he said, is the show window of what a com- munity is capable of producing. AN ACHIEVEMENT DAY A fall fair in addition is an ach- fevement day which shows products " in their best light and sets new standards. The exhibits are educa- tional and the displays tell a story. In this regard it was suggested that industry might very well take "a greater interest in the commun- ity fair as a means of getting across the story of labor relations and ac- cident prgvention. A fair was also the medium for an exchange of ideas. ' . Praise was voiced of the part the women of the community play in . fair work. Women, the speaker . commented, are the backbone of a fair at which they can demonstrate their arts in the home. Pleasure in some instances cov- ers up the agricultural aspect of the fair. This was disappointing in a sense. Mr. Lashley warned against the carnival or entertainment angle - covering up the purposes of a fair. It was the speaker's opinion that the local agricultural society can - perve an important purpose in the furtherance of boys and girls' work. In Ontario last year there were 288 <~junior farm clubs with a member- : ship of over 4,600 boys and girls. In addition 600 girls took part in demonstrations put on at larger exhibitions. ' ON SOUND BASIS Regarding the Oshawa Fair, Mr. Lashley said that it is staffed by able officers 'and is founded on a sound business basis. Last year 12,000 people attended the fair " which was small compared with the population of the city and dis- trict. Prize money paid out total- led $4,000 last year. The society's finances were sound with assets of $27,300 and liabilities of only $4,500. In addition the society had done quite a little building. The fair, he ' said, should have nothing to wor- Coming Events WEATHER PERMITTING, THERE 'will/be a public showing of films, | Thursday evening, August 16, after | cLaughlin' Band (Rotarian George McLaughlin while Band Concert, Shell, Auspices Oshawa Film © pa foi . | tended through to Alice To Get Price On Grierson Land Here City Council has decided to get a price on the Grierson estate, 239 Simcoe Street North. It will be needed if Loufsa Street is ever ex- Street and an east-west traffic carved through the northern end of the city. However council is just a little late -- the property has been sold only recently. Who the new buyer is and what he intends to do with the property was not known at last night's meet- ing of City Counril. What he would ask for the property assuming he were willing to sell was also not known -- or if it was known it was not revealed. : Alderman Finley Dafoe was against the whole thing from the start. It was a project which would entail major expenditure, he said, and the taxpaying public was getting pretty well fed up with these big financial outlays. "Furthermore," said Alderman Dafoe, "I don't think it is needed up there. When you get that far north you don't have any traffic prob- lem to speak of and anyway it is only half a minute's drive for a motorist to go on north to Rossland Road and then he can come south on any one of several streets." Other members of council, in- cluding Alderman Wesley Powers, thought differently. Why not face up to the fact that this east-west road was vital to the over-all planning in the city and to the gen- eral relief of a congested traffic condition, they said, If you were going to start dismembering your over-all plan you had better throw it all out right now. In any event, it was generally agreed, it would do no harm to get a price, Reward Of Virtue By JOSEPH LISTER RUTLEDGE It is generally assumed that people benefit from their virtues beyond the solider satisfaction of just having them. Following the rules of health, we may live longer and more comfortably. Following the dictates of conscience, we will not only live more happily, but are assured eternal well-being. + Even in our economic life we have been taught that the virtue of careful saving is a beautiful umbrella against some probable rainy day. We are not certain that the cause of virtue hasn't suffered somewhat as a result of this last 'teaching, because of the unpleasant knowl- edge that the dollars we withdraw from our savings have a somewhat distant relationship to the dollars we put in, Still, our spending dol- lars also have not been too constant. But if the crying need of the hour is to curtail the amount of money available for immediate spending, as our government, and other impressive authorities assure us is the case, then there is an- other angle to the virtue of the sav- ing habit. It it not only provides an umbrella, it provides a brake on the current spending for insufficient goods that results in inflation. We can't both save our mbney and spent it on current satisfactions. What seems to be the hitch in this argument of free-will saving is that the non-virtuous appear to benefit more largely than the virtu- ous. If you and I save our expend- able margin, we may so correct a dangerous situation that our fellow. citizen of the carefree, grasshopper type, who doesn't save at all may enjoy without any sacrifice the benefits provided by the unrequited virtues of us careful, industrious ants. We have sometimes wondered if there mightn't be some way of see- ing that here also virtue might be rewarded, beyond the reward of possible satisfaction and future benefit. In another phase of our economy our government did give some thought to such a matter when it allowed a percentage in- come tax deduction from dividends on Canadian common stocks. Might it be possible to slow up the in- cautious spender by making it im- mediately worth his while to save? If his spare money went into gov- ernment annuities or bonds or in- to life insurance, induced by a per- centage deduction from his income tax, it could not also complete for its share of insufficient goods. There would be the other advantage that we industrious, individual ants would be given the reward of virtue we_have long been taught to ex- pect. ry about considering the wealth of the community. 'Concluding his address, Mr. Lashley declared that' there are great possibilities for the agricul- tural fair gs the industry is on the verge of great expansion, and for that reason an organization such as the Oshawa Fair which had lived for over 100 years would not fold up and will go ahead to great- er things. Mr. Lashley was introduced by {the appreciation of the club was artery | P THE D AILY TIMES-GAZETTE Combining The Oshows Times and Whitby Gazette and Chronicle WHITBY VOL. 10--No. 189 OSHAWA-WHITBY, TUESDAY, AUGUST 14, 1951 PAGE THREE Swim Tests At Rotary On Thursday At Rotary Pool Thursday the beginning of the 1951 Red Cross Swimming tests will get underway. In the morning. the Junior test will start at 9:00 a.m. with the In- termediate tests in tne afternoon at 2:30 pm. and the Senior tests being taken in the evening at 6:30 am, Mrs. Moodie, Red Cross e: will be on hand to put the &ppli- cants through their paces. Last year Oshawa had quite a record in the most passes in Red Cross tests in these parts. All those who would like to try their Junior Intermedi- ate or their Senior Swimming tests are asked to register at either or Ritson Road Swimming Pool before Thursday morning. Every morning and evening till Thursday those wishing to try their tests will get an opportunity to practice up at either of the two swimming pools. Those already registered are ask- ed to report for Junior test at 9:00 a.m., Intermediate at 2:30 p.m., and Senior test at 6:30 p.m. If you have not registered, you are asked to do so immediately. The tests will be held at Rotary Pool, 9:00 a.m., Thursday morning. For further information regarding the tests see your CRA supervisor at re playground or swimming pool. Air Pioneer Now Switches To 0il Drills Edmonton (CP) -- Matt Berry, who quit Ontario farming to come one of the north's great bush pilots, Monday quit aviation to hunt oil and build houses. The 59 - year - old pioneer of airways announced he has sold his two northern airlines to Associated Airways of Edmonton so he can give all his time to some promising oil lands and a contracting firm. The sale involved seven aircraft and two air bases. It ends a 34- year saga of air thrills for one of the flying aavenwurers who helped open Canada's last frontier. Berry started flying in 1917 in the old Royal Flying Corps. After the war the lean six-footer from March, Ont., tried to be a farmer but it was no go. In 1927 he went back to flying, ferrying supplies and prospectors to northland mining camps. From then on he was uncomfortable out- side a plane's cockpit. It was strictly flying "by the seat of your pants," Matt said. The wild expanse of forest, lakes, muskeg, tundra and ice between Edmonton and the Arctic ocean be- came as familiar as his back yard. Would Admit Red States To U.N. Body Toronto (CP)-- Sir Gladwyn Jebb said Monday he did not think it would be wise to exclude Commu- nist states from the United Nations. Developments tending to make the U. N. an anti-Communist or- ganization "are not in fact tending to contribute to the strength of the resistance to Communism," the head of Britain's delegation to the U. N. told a joint luncheon of the Canadian and Empire Clubs. "It has become clear over the past year," said Sir Gladwyn, "that there are g number of coun- tires, including a large part of the world's population, who are very reluctant to take sides at this par- ticular time in the general conflict of ideas between the Soviet bloc and the democratic world. "It may be that they are wait- ing to see -whether what Stalin calls 'peaceful cooperation' be- tween Communist and non - Com- munist states is or is not a real possibility." 35 In Bus Drown In Plunge to Lake Bolzano, Italy (AP) -- Thirty-five persons were drowned last night when a crowded excursion bus plunged into an icy Alpine lake. Only one passenger, a woman, was saved. Police said she crawled through a bus window and was pulled from the waters of Lake Re- sia near the Swiss border by sev- eral men in a rowboat. The accident occurred when the bus lost a rear wheel and veered off the road, plunging down a 25- foot "embankment. It sank in about 46 feet of water. RAF PLANES COLLIDE Hudswell, England-- (AP) -- Two RAF planes collided in flight Mon- day, killing eight men and seriously injuring another. The planes, a Wellington bomber carrying a crew of seevn and a two-seater Marti- nette, crashed high over Hudswell and came hurtling to the ground simultaneously. They had been on routine training flight. Establishment of international standards for drugs and vaccines ig an aim of the UN. World Health er, - » Top Pupils at JOCELYN CAYLEY With a near-perfect score William Street East, Oshawa, won on three others, oCcVI Exams Eo T. MITCHELL ROBERT J. GAY eight firsts and one second, Jocelyn Cayley, daughter of Mrs. Florence Cayley, 40 Hillcrest St, Oshawa, carried off top honors in this year's upper school examinations at Oshawa Collegiate and Vocational Institute. Second was William Mitchell, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Mitchell, R.R. 1, Columbus, with six firsts, three seconds and one credit. Robert J. Gay, son of Mr. and Mrs. Harold Gay, 303 first-class honors on two papers, second-class on four, third-class on two, and received credit standing Among delegates to the annual convention of the Police Associa- tion of Ontario, to be held at the Royal York Hotel in Toronto, from August 14 to 17, will be Whitby's OPP Constable Steven Pointon of 8 George Street, Ajax; Sergeant Fred W. White of Pickering Town- ship Police, and ONR Constable Three Delegates To Attend Convention Robert N. Higham, 247 Drew Street South, Oshawa. The three, who are respectively president, 1st vice-president and secretary - treasurer of Ontario, Northumberland and Durham Po- lice Association, will be accom- panied by their wives as members of the PAO Ladies' Auxiliary, * For the first time in three weeks be- | council met last night. It may have been the fact that the city fathers were back from a holiday or it may have been the heat (the board room of the PUC building was a nice, humid 85 degrees) but whatever the reason they got through twenty-odd pieces of correspondence with ef- ficiency and despatch. Nothing of any importance was dealt with but a good deal of minor but none-the- less demanding items of business were taken care of. The Fire Chief was authorized to attend the Dominion Fire Chiefs Association cenvention in London beginning on August 20. A communication was received from the Trans-Northern Pipe Line Company which is constructing a pipe line, for carrying oil, from Montreal to Toronto to Hamilton, The line will pass north of the city limits of Oshawa. The City Solici- tor was instructed to get further in- formation, A resolution from the City of London asking that cities, including Oshawa, which were classified by the Wartime Prices and Trade Board under "congested areas" be removed from such categories was endorsed. The classification meant that certain zoning and building regulations which would limit mul- tiple housing in the city could not be enforced. Oshawa's offer to pay the amount of $2,700 towards the cost of a side- walk on the Ritson Road bridge did not find favour with the CNR. It was, in fact, deemed "unacceptable", The whole cost of the sidewalk, $9,000 should be borne by the city which will accrue the full benefit from its construction the railway thought. The letter was 'received and filed." An Oshawa Railway Company re- quest to have a section of the south side of Bond Street east of Mary Street declared a "no parking" area was passed along to the Traffic Advisory Council, Under a section of the Municipal Act any major change in the amount of remuneration paid alder- men has to he approved by the gov ernment. This - constantly irks the elected representatives of several cities ' including Oshawa. They feel that they should have the right to set the conditions under which they are and are not paid. They see, for example, no reason why they should not be paid when absent from meet- ings through illness. Several mo- tions have been received from cities asking repeal of this provision. An- other one went through last night. Despite its request for an increase of $100 in the grant in order to make up for a reduction by $100 in the grant allowed by East Whitby Township the South Ontario Agri- cultural Society will receive its usual grant of $300 from the city. The Chamber of Commerce sug- gested that a one car parking space be reserved on each side of the street in each of th business blocks to be used as an unloading port for trucks delivering merchandise to stores. The suggestion was turned over the Traffic Advisory Council. The City Council concurred in a resolution from the City of Hamil- ton asking that municipalities be exempt from payment of the gaso- line tax on vehicles such as those used by the Board of Works and Fire and Police Departments. Inas- much as a farmer is exempted from the tax on gasoline used in his trac- tor on his owh land so the people as a whole should receive the same consideration it was felt, Formal assent of the HEPC was - debentures to the fuse City Council Briefs the electrical system and the con- struction of a personnel building. Carl Ritchie, a tenant in the city- owned house on the city farm prop- erty, 1109 Simcoe Street South, gave notice that he will vacate at the end of August, Another tentant in the same house Valere Verfaille wrote asking permission to take the whole building over. City Property Committee will consider. Further correspondence will be carried on with the Dominion Gov- ernment about a portion of swamp land at the lake which the city would like to have and fill. The gov~ ernment is quite willing that the city fill in the land but wishes to retain title of the property. That just doesn't make sense to the city authorities and there will be more negotiating. Since passage of a by-law by City Council to bring trailer camps under control by licencing several appli- cations have been received for per- mits. Principal one is, of course, from Ben Corson, 419 King Street West, the only established trailer camp in the city. It was decided to turn all applications over to the Medical Officer of Health and the Local Board of Health for recom- mendations. A number of applications for licences were received from garage operators within the municipality. They will all be approved subject to the approval of the Fire and Police Chiefs. The General Purpose Committee will consider a petition from a num- ber of electrical contractors asking establishment of a Board of Exam- iners in the city. If a majority are found to wans the change it will be instituted. A petition was received from resi- dents of Lakeview Gardens asking that they be given bus service in their area. It was referred to the Traffic and Transportation Com- mittee. Cordova Road residents were per- turbed about the sewer situation in their area. Admitting that the sewer was not capable of accommodating the water it was asked to carry and that the residents' protest about flooding and quagmires was justi- fied, members of the Board of Works said that it was the intention to take immediate action. Thursday, October 25 was set as the day when a hearing will be held here by the Board of Transport Commissioners about the increase in bus fares recently proposed by the Oshawa Railway Company and not approved by City Council, The Bruell Paving Company was recently awarded a contract for $8,535 for top surfacing a number of Oshawa Streets. Formal third reading of a by-law authorizing the issuance of deben- tures to pay for the new police sta- tion was held last night. - A by-law was passed authorizing the signing of an agreement with the W. B. Bennett Paving Ltd, to pave Park Road South, A by-law was passed authorizing the laying out of Hortop Street north from Jones Avenue as a high- way. CONTEST PAGE POSTPONED Due to mechanical difficulties, the Contest Page for the "Know Your Oshawa Business Men Contest" was deleted from to- day's issue of The Dally Times- Gazette. This popular feature will appear in tomorrow's issue. Kannada is one of the major 18 million people in o Sor smtepuione he Bombay state # their discharge at the end of that MANY IN 25TH ASK RELEASE ATTERM'S END Ottawa (CP) -- The way things look now, a fair number of Cana- dian soldiers, quite possibly run- ning into the thousands, are likely to 1ind themselves still serving in Korea after their 18 - months term ow a special force service is finish- ed. The reason is that the army's rotation plan is to be based pri- marily on time spent in that theatre rather than on the 18-month terms, the basis of special force enlist- ments in the summer of 1950. No special effort to get mea home ahead of the 18 - month deadline apparently is envisaged now, No official figures have been made public but it is believed roughly half the special force men -- that is around 4000 to 4500 have indicated they would like term. Thousands are in Korea with the 25th Brigade -- the special force's operational name -- serving beside pre - Korean regulars and other special force men who have elected to join the regular army. Only broad outlines of the rota- tion plan have been announced but details are expected in a day or §0. City to Test No Turn At Four 'Corners Next to the universal favorite, the weather, the topic of conversa- tion most belabored by the people of Oshawa is the concentration of traffic in the business section and the resulting congestion. Well the people are going to get a chance to do something about it -- to par- ticipate in an experiment which may have the effect of relieving the condition. It is not a large thing that the City Council, acting on the advice going to ask -- simply that there be no right turning at the four corners. As there is no left turn allowed at the city's hub at the present time this will make through traffic mandatory at this pressure point in the city's arterial system. "We are going to ask the mem- bers of the automobile driving pub- lic -to co-operate with us for a period of sixty days from August 20 and try and see if this change which although small is important, will help," said Alderman Hayward Murdoch. - At the same meeting. it was de- cided to paint a solid white line down the Centre of Simcoe Street from Elgin Street to McGregor Street. Language, Not Union Cause of Kniting Timmins (CP) -- Police ' Chief Albert Lepic said Monday that two men knifed by an unknown assailant last week were wounded during a personal argument, not as a result of a dispute between rival unions seeking to represent Northern Ontario bushworkers. The chief said Gerard Benson, 22, and John Christie, 23, were at- tacked Wednesday night by.a man who objected to them speaking French in his company. Benson was stabbed in the hand, Christie in the back, chest and face. The men have refused to tell police any details of the incident. HUSBAND WAS MLA Lindsay (CP) -- Margaret Ann Carew, 86, mother-in-law of Pre- mier Frost of Ontario, died Sunday night. Her husband, the late John Carew, represented South Victoria in the Ontario legislature. of the Traffic Advisory Council, is |' Deseder G. Seles (ets Nine Firsts In 14 Subjects The results of the Upper School Departmental Examinae tions held at Oshawa Central Collegiate Institute were ree' ceived from the Department of Education yesterday after noon and released for publication last night. Ontario Spotlight SEEK MENTAL PATIENT Pefferlaw (CP)--Police in this Lake Simcoe community are seek- ing Edward Fitissimmons, 60, who escaped yesterday from the Ontario Hospital at Kingston. It is believed that Fitzsimmons will come here to visit friends. fo lee SWALLOWS NEEDLES London, Ont. (CP)--A varia- tion of "morning after" butter- flies in the stomach was the complaint of a Londoner last week. He said he had needles in his stomach after a party. An X-ray showed he was right --he had gulped two darning needles during a "sword swal- lowing" demonstration the night before. * 4 + 150 DEER KILLED Woodstock (OP) -- Deer have caused about $30,000 damage to au- tomobiles in the Huron district in the last year but they all died do- ing it. Approximately 150 deer were killed by cars in this period and on the average, each one caused about $200 damage to the car which struck | it, lands department officials say. * % + . CREW GOES HIGH HAT Brantford (CP)--Garbage col- lectors here went high hat one day recently. Astonished citizens saw them sporting top hats as they went about their rounds. The hats were set out for col- lection. * * + SAVES BOY FROM LAKE Burlington (CP) -- Michael Wal- ton, 11, was saved from drowning at the beach here yesterday. Stan- ley Hamelin saw the boy in diffi- culty; swam to his aid and brought him to shore. . + + FIND STOLEN GOODS Bracebridge (CP)--A. chain of housebreaking extending from Oshawa to North Bay is believ- ed to have been broken with the arrest of two Toronto youths here yesterday. They are John MacDonald, 30, and John Holli- day, 18. Stolen goods were found in their possession. * * FIRST VOTE LIGHT Bronte (CP)--It took this com- munity, 28 miles west of Toronto, 100 years to become a village but in its first council elections Mon- day only 30 per cent of the voters went to the polls. Alfred Jennings became reeve of the newly-incorpor- ated village by acclamation. Coun- cillors elected were Andrew Dalby, Charles Lawrence, Thomas Mill. ward and Charles Livingstone. * + + ASK BEER, LIQUOR Campbellford (CP)--A plebis- cite on sale of beer and liquor will be held here, town council decided Monday night. Council received a petition bearing 660 signatures calling for establish- ment of brewers' ware house ana liquor store. Council instruc- ted the town solicitor to pre- pare a by-law to be voted on. The date of the plebiscite will be set later. WINS CWL SCHOLARSHIP Ottawa (CP) -- Simone Leblanc of West Pubnico, N.S., has been awarded the $1000 annual national scholarship of the Catholic Wo- men's League, it was announced Monday night. Miss- Leblanc, an honors graduate this year from St. Joseph University at St. Jo- seph, N.B., will take postgraduate study in social service at the Uni- versity of Montreal. DECEPTIVE LOOKS The Arctic musk-ox, low-slung and heavy with massive horns, can wheel and turn like a ballet dancer if necessary, Madrid (Reuters) -- The peasant population of large barren areas in central Spain should be transferred to fertile coastal strips and the rich plat lands in the south and south- west, says Spain's No. 1 public works expert. . By storing more water and con- trolling the flow of her rivers, says Count Guadalhorce, Spain could settle her population in irrigated river valleys and abandon the cen- tral uplands where peasants toil ceaselessly for meager returns. Farming will always be difficult on the central plateau, except in certain limited areas, he said re- cently. But along the east coast, in the southern area of Andalusia and in the southwestern province of Estremadura the climate and soil produce "extraordinary fertility." Urging Spaniards to take his scheme seriously, he said: "These are no fantasies. In the near future the waters of Spain's rivers will flow from dam to dam, making fruitful | can then dwell." languages in India spoken by about | orchards where 15 million Spaniards One of the main proklems was: Spain's low rainfall, : Would Resettle Spaniards Along Fertile Costal Strips output. Consequently, the construc- tion of dams was most important. Since 1936, said the count, 23 dual- purpose dams have been. built, bringing the total to 92. Another 58 are under construction, scheduled for completion within five years, and a further 72 are in the blueprint stage. The whole program is expected to cost some $2 billion, the expense being shared between the state and private enterprise. Some observers consider Count Guadalhorce's proposals extremely optimistic. The speed with which the 58 partly finished dams can be completed, for example, depends on the availability of cement, steel, general building materials, trans- port and capital, and on social and economic stability. , Two key dams, however, are near- ing completion. The first is Madrid and will regulate the flow of the Tagus river. Really two dams joined by a tunnel, it will have a storage capacity equal to one-quarter of Spain's present total capacity. The second will control the Guadiana Mer the rich lands of Top scholar in the June examine ® ations was Deseder G. Seles, son of Mr. and Mrs. Geza Seles, 313 Ritson Road South, who had the double distinction of writing the most pap ers and winning the highest number of Firsts among Oshawa Upper Schoolmen. Seles wrote 14 subjects, in which he received 9 first class honors, 3 second class honors, one third and one credit. Other high-scoring students were N. Ronald Aldous, son of James Al- dous, 32 Valencia Road, who om eight papers made 6 firsts and two seconds, and Roy W. me, son of Mr. and Mrs. Elwood Rahme, 211 Albert Street, 'writing nine papers with 5 firsts, 2 seconds, a third and a credit. Following are the results of the examinations: N. Ronald Aldous--Eng. Comp, 2nd; Eng. Lit., 2nd; Alg., 1st; Geom.,, 1st; Phys, 1st; Chem. 1st; lat. Auth., 1st; Lat. Comp., 1st. P. George Andrinovich -- Geom, 2nd; Phys, C. Douglas B. Armstead--Eng. Comp., C; Eng. Lit, C; Geom., C; Phys, C; Chem, C; Fr. Auth, C; Fr. Comp., C. Charles 'A. Barnes--Eng. Comp, 1st; Eng. Lit, 2nd; Alg., 2nd; Geom., 1st; Trig. 1st; Phys. 1st, Chem, 2nd; Fr. Auth, 2nd; Fr. Comp., 2nd. Ronald W. Bilsky--Eng. Comp. 3rd; Eng. Lit, 3rd; Geom. 2nd; Trig., 3rd; Phys, C; Chem. 1st. Murray Corse--Eng. Comp., 2nd; Eng. Lit., 2nd; Alg., 1st; Geom., 1st; Trig., 2nd; Phys., 1st; Chem., 2nd; Sen. Auth, 2nd; Germ, Comp. rd. Joan B. Hickey--Eng. Comp., 2nd; Eng. Lit., 2nd; Hist.,, C; Geom., 1st; Trig., 1st; Bot, C; Zool. C; Chem. 3rd;,Fr. Auth, 1st; Fr. Comp. 3rd. Clare W. Kidd--Eng. Comp., 3rd} Eng. Lit., C; Phys, 3rd; Chem., 3rd, Nicholas W. King--Eng. Comp., C; Eng. Lit, 2nd; Hist, C; Geom, C; Trig, C; Phys, 2nd; Chem. C; Fr, Auth., C; Fr. Comp. C. Jean N. Kolodize--Eng. Comp., 2nd; Eng. Lit., 3rd; Lat. Auth., 3rd; Lat. Comp., C; Fr. Auth. 3rd; Fr, Comp., 1st. Lorraine-Mary McGuire -- Eng, Comp., 1st; Eng. Lit, 3rd; Lat, Auth, 3rd; Lat. Comp. 3rd; Fr, Auth., 1st; Fr. Comp., 1st. Walter Mozewsky--Eng. Comp, 3rd; Eng. Lit, C; Hist,, C; Trig. C; Phys, C. Stephen J. Pankiw--Eng. Lit, C3 Alg., C; Geom, C. Trig, C; Phys, C; Chem, 3rd; Fr. Auth, C; Fr. Comp. C. : Roy W, Rahme--Eng. Comp., 3rd; Eng. Lit, C; Alg, 1st; Geom. 1st; Trig., 1st; Phys, 1st; Chem. 1st; Fr. Auth, 2nd; Fr. Comp., 2nd. Ralph M. Risebrough--Eng, Comp, 2n; Eng. Lit, 3rd; Alg., 3rd; Geom., 1st; Trig., 2nd; Phys, C; Chem. C; Fr. Auth, C; Fr. Comp., 3rd. Diana E. Robertson--Geom., Of Bot., C; Zool, C. Deseder G. Sales--Eng. Comp. 1st; Eng. Lit, C; Alg, 3rd; Geom. 1st; Phys, 2nd; Chem., 1st; Lat. Auth, 1st; Lat. Comp., 1st; Fr. Auth., 2nd; Fr. Comp., 2nd; Germ. Auth., 1st; Germ. Comp., 1st; Grk. Auth. 1st; Grk. Comp., 1st. Nicholas Semenuk--Eng. Comp, 4 Geom, 3rd; Phys. C; Fr. Comp op. William C. Stark -- Eng. © 3rd; Eng. Lit., 1st; Alg., 15: Gon 1st; Trig. 2nd; Phys. 1st. Chem., 2nd; Fr. Auth, 2nd; Fr, Comp., 2nd; John J. Stroz--Eng. Comp., 3rd; Eng. Lit, C; Hist, C; Geom. 1st; Trig, 2nd; Phys, 2nd; Pr. Auth, 2nd; Fr. Comp., C. Peter P. Zakarow -- Eng. Comp. 2nd; Eng. Lit, G; Alg., 3rd; Geom., 3rd; Phys, C; Chem. C; Lat. Auth. 2nd; Lat. Comp. C; Fr. Auth, C; Fr. Comp., 3rd. a pant Harold W. St. John--Alg., 1st. Want to buy, sell or trade? A Classified Ad, the deal is made. 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