Daily Times-Gazette, 27 Aug 1951, p. 3

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ad Splendid Concert Is Much Appreciated By Capacity Shell Crowd 'With a balmy summer evening 0 enhance its tones, and a large crowd to appreciate them, the Osh- awa Civic and Regimental Band put on. & concert at the Mc- Laughlin Band Shell last night, un- der the expert baton of its direc- tor,. Sgt. George Hood. Due to the regretted absence of 1. W. McConkey, Frank Threadgold, secretary of the Whitby Legion (and recently honored with the vice- presidency of Ontario Command) took over as chairman, giving ap- preciative comments on the various numbers, As the lights blazed and changed against the pearly facade of. the shell, the band opened the rogram with Orde Hume's march, e Flying Squad," a spirited and distinctive number. Following this with an Offenbach overture, "Or- pheus in the Underworld," during which the lights glimmered an ap- propriate scarlet, the piece belied its 'classical title with a hearty fla- vor of "ta-ra-ra boom de-ay!" Guest artist' of the evening was Miss Joan Wilson, contralto, a mem- ber of Whitby's famed Treble Clef Singers, who sang Lohr's "Angus MacDonald" with appealing intona- tion, following it with the favorite "Where My Caravan Has Rested," to. much applause from the audi- ence. Her sensitive piano accompan- iment was provided by Mr. T. A. Jackson, . The bana returned with a lilting waltz, "Woodland Blossoms," by Greenwood, after which a young bandsman, Ron Walker, played a cornet solo by the same composer entitled "The Cornet King," which featured some adroit triple-tongu- ing; Perhaps the finest thing of the evening was the band's next selec- tion; "Sanctuary of the Heart," by Ketelby, distinguished by its ele- giac and Brahmsian melodic line. Chairman Threadgold addressed a few remarks to the .audience at this point, calling attention to Osh awa's many amenities for health- ful" recreation, particularly the Band Shell and the bands which graced it on so many occasions. He urged Oshawans to support théir civic band when it plays at the CONE on Thursday, August 30, with the hope of bringing back the do- minion trophy to this city for the fourth time. Miss Wilson returned with two more vocal selections, Sanderson's "My Dear Soul," and "Into the Night," by Edwards, tribute to which was the audience's receptive silence during their singing. This contralto has a pure, natural tone and a modesty of stage manner much to be desired and emulated. Again her accompanist provided a sympathetic background. Concluding numbers by the band were a "Cossack Patrol," attributed to one Johann Strauss, which sounded surprisingly like that rous- ing Red Army marching son "Mea- dowlands," and a medley from Rom- berg's "Desert Song," in which the trumpet line really excelled itself. « Sergeant Hood kept his instrumen- talists in flexible control through- out, especially in the moving hymn "Deep Harmony" and the regimen- tals march "John Peel" which breught the evening to a close. RCAF PLANE IN MERCY HOP T0 JAMAICA Montreal (CP)--Aa RCAF North star, whose usual run is the Korea airlift, Sunday night touched down at Montreal airport after a 5000 mile mercy mission to hurricane- ravaged Jamaica. Flt. Lt. Stuart Olsen, skipper of the ship, said he left Montreal Fri- day to pick up emergency supplies of blankets and food at Nort Bay, which had been flown in from Win- nipeg and then picked up a similar cargo in Toronto before the hop to Jamaica. . Flt. Lt. Osen said: "We had to stop over at Tampa, Fla., Friday night because there were no lights on the field at Kingston. We took off in the morning and landed in Jamaica about one o'clock. ""The field there was a shambles. The control tower had been blown over, hangers were just a mass of t girders and some aircraft had Pilot Killed In Air Crash Near Toronto Toronto (CP) -- A Calgary-born RCAF reserve pilot was killed Sa- turday when his jet plane crashed and: burned in suburban North York township while on a practice flight which his pretty wife and small daughter had been watching. Fit.-Lt. J. Brown, 31-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Brown of Calgary, had been going through a series of aerobatics with a Vam- pire jet in preparations fora spe- cial air show to be staged in about two weeks during the closing days of the Canadian National Exhibi- tion. He carried out his air re- serve duties on his own time, when off work from his job as sales en- gineer for a plumbing firm. As- his plane zoomed in for a landing at suburban De Havilland on the home of Robert Dunn, lopp- ed the top branches off a tree, swept across a lawn, -clipped off [buy them cannot have them," said three spruce trees and nosedived in toa field. tour fitful sleep by that margin. L ki Britai By M. MCINTYRE HOOD Article No. 13 London, England, August 20 --(By Airmail) -- An overnight journey from Edinburgh, Scotland, brought us this morning to the heart of the British Commonwealth, to this great city which the Cockneys used to, describe as "London--'alf the blin- kin' world." From where I sit look- ing out of the window of the Mount Royal Hotel, I can look right down on the Marble Arch and a corner of Hyde Park, can watch the traffic cros from Park Lane to Edgeware Road, and turn along Oxford Street. Thus another dream has come true, a dream of a peacetime visit to old London, which has previously been seen as a blacked-out and somewhat beleagured city of two world wars, We reached London after an over- night trip which had within it the acme of discomfort as it can be provided by a British sleeping com- Piment. Owing to the tremen- ous volume of tourist traffic on the railway between Edinburgh and Sl sleep- days ago, we were fortunate in being i "able to obtain any ». M. HOOD at all, In wartime travel days, we did not bother about sleepers in British railways. We took it as one of natural events of war that we had to make this trip sitting up all night in a coach, But we expected something better from the peacetime nationalized railway sytem. ACCOMMODATION SCARCE All we could obtain, however, was half of a four-passenger sleeping compartment, which we shared with a young couple from Falkirk, Scot- land. We were given the two upper berths, if they could be termed such, but the young man very kind- ly took one of the upper berths and turned over his lower one to Mrs. Hood. The so-called berths, how- ever, were simply hard cushions, the two lowers being normally train seats, and the uppers suspended from the ceiling of the coach. There was not the slightest degree of priv- acy, no curtains around the four berths, which were quite open. There was no bedding, no sheets, simply a pillow and a tartan rug with each berth. We could not think of undressing. We simply lay down on the hard pallet provided for us, and with the rug to provide a de- gree of warmth, tried to sleep, but with very little success. The train was due to arrive at King's Cross Station, London, at 6:30 am. At ten minutes to five, however, we were awakened the light in the compartment being switched on, and a cheerful voice saying "Tea, ladies and gentlemen." This was our introduction to the old English custom of a cup of tea before rising, but we would have ap- preciated it a great deal more an hour or so later, since it cut short However, we 'had our tea and two small biscuits whi®h went along with it, became thoroughly awakened and in turn went along to the tiny wash- room at the end of the corridor to make ourselves presentable for the arrival in London. The overnight trip, however, was not without compensations. We found the young couple from Fal-} kirk very congenial, and we had a most interesting talk before the lights were furned out, and after our rude morning awakening, DEALER'S DIFFICULTIES Of particular interest to me was the fact that the young man, Alex Shaw by name, was an automobile dealer for Vauxhall commercial ve- hicles and automobiles, Vauxhall being the British subsidiary of the General Motors Corporation. In conversation, he told us something of the difficulties of the automobile dealers in this country. "It is nothing unusual for our customers to have to wait from three to four years to secure de- livery of a new car. A large dealer pay have a quota of twenty cars a year. As our business is mostly com- mercial vehicles," he said, "we are lucky to receive five or six new cars a year. Any car we receive just now goes to a customer who probably ordered it back in 1947. And we are not allowed to sell a car to anyone who has already had one car since the end of the war, unless, of course, to commercial fleet operators, If a prospective buyer has a car now, it. has to be given a thorough inspec- tion and certified as not being road- worthy before he can secure a new one." Britain has taken steps to curb the practice, prevalent in Canada and the United States, of buying a car new, driving it for a day or so, and then selling it at a premium as a used car model, That was a common practice here until a regu- lation was enacted prohibiting the buyer of a new car from re-selling it within the next two years. That has effectively curbed the practice of making a nice profit on a new car by selling it as a used one. "It galls us to see eighty per cent of our cars being exported when our people at home who want to Mr. Shaw. "It seems extraordinary to. us in the trade to see tens of THE DAILY TIMES-GAZET OSHAWA Combining The Oshawa Times and Whitby Gazette and Chronicle TE OSHAWA-WHITBY, MONDAY, AUGUST 27, 1951 PAGE THREE atifal | Display at Annual Flower Show Miss Shirley Fielding admires a large bouquet of mixed flowers from the garden of Mrs. Earl Sandford, 37 McLaughlin Boulevard, Oshawa. Mrs, Sandford's garden won the Mike's Trophy for small flower garden and the E. Ewart McLaughlin Challenge Trophy for a rockery in the annual show held by Oshawa Horti- cultural Society which was staged at Centre Street School on Saturday. ~--Times-Gazette Staff Photo. thousands of our British cars going to Canada and the United States when your countries on the other side of the Atlantic have the great- est automobile production in the world. Automobile dealers in this country certainly cannot make much of a living on the numbers of cars and commercial vehicles 'we are allowed in a year's time." By a coincidence, at the moment he said this, we were passing a railway siding where great stacks of automobiles, crated for export shipment, were waiting alongside the tracks. "There they are," he said, "The cars that our own people would like to have, but which are going off to other countries. All our government can think of is how to bring in the dollars." ; As the train went on, #we passed a colony of prefabricated homes. Mr. Shaw gave us some interesting in- formation about them. They are small, he said, Their interior walls are of something like corrugated iron. To our view, one of the faults is that they are packed so closely together tyat their is room only for a narrow path between them, and little room for even a small garden patch. "For houses that are only tempor- ary" -said Mr, Shaw, "And which are said to have a life of only ten years, they are far too expensive. This is because they have been fit- ted up inside with all modern con- veniences, even refrigerators, such as should only be installed in per- manent homes, As a result, the people living in them are having to pay far too much for the accom- modation which they provide." As he spoke of these houses, we thought of a bus trip we made out from Edinburgh to Portobello, a seaside resort, yesterday afternoon. On the way back, we passed what was formerly a wartime military camp at Duddingston. The eamp, was made up of hundreds of cor- rugated iron Nissen huts, with which army men are familiar. They were there in long rows, now dirty and blackened by time, and they! were being used as houses by hun- dreds of Edinburgh families. There was no attempt at tidiness or neat- ness around the camp. Stanley Bar- racks in Toronto and the G.E. hous- ing project at Scarboro looked like heaven compared with this housing area. What their occupants thought of their accommodation was indicated in slogans painted in large white letters on the black walls of the metal huts. They read, "Edinburgh's Disgrace," "Homes Before Fasti- bals," "More Houses and Less Mus- ic," and so on, these words form ing a protest against the kind of accommodation in which hundreds of families were forced to live be- cause of the housing shortage. We arrived at London promptly on time this morning, and travelled by one of the quaint, square-topped London taxis to our hotel. VISIT TO ST. PAUL'S After breakfast, we set off to see a little bit of the city which we had known under a different setting in wartime. With .brief rests at inter- esting places, we walked along Ox- ford Street from the hotel, down Regent Street to Piccadily Circus Street, along the Haymarket and Cockshut Street, - past Canada House with its red ensign, to Tra- falgar Square, where we watched scores of people feeding the pig- eons, then up the Strand, Fleet Street and Ludgate Hill to St. Paul's Cathedral. Inside the Cathedral we spent a brief half-hour, viewing the many interesting features it- contains. Then we returned by bus to Lei- cester Square, where we were de- lighted to find the Quality Inn, a favorite eating place of Canadian and American soldiers in World War Two still doing business at the same place. This is the only res- taurant in London where one can secure a second cup of American coffee without an extra charge. We had a délgihtful lunch, which we topped off by having waffles and maple syrup for dessert. Quality Inn specializes in Canadian and Amer- ican dishes, which makes it a ren- dezvous for visitors from acioss the Atlantic. As one can imagine, we were tired folks by this time, so we re- turned to our hotel for an after- Stunter Suffers Minor Burns at Performance Here Saturday Night The Hollywood Daredevils, that aggregation of motor maniacs, put on the concluding show of a thrill- ing three-day stand, under the aus- pieces of the Oshawa Rotary Club, at Alexandra Park on Saturday night, 'The only slip-up in an otherwise well-run show oceurred when Roy Reynolds, the Nova Scotia stunt man who stars in the hazardous Slide for Life, soaked up a trifle too much blazing gasoline as he slid through the flames in his act, so that it required the combined ef- forts of half-a-dozen mechanics and drivers to smother the engulfing flames. As a result, Reynolds sus- tained minor burns to neck and shoulder, which were treated on the spot by A. C. Boyd, veteran driver of the Oshawa Ambulance Service. The flames appeared to have licked some skin off the stuntman's face as well. Repeating many of the thrills of the previous night, the real climax of the Saturday program came with a "roll-over" contest between two of the star drivers, the Indiana Fireball, Shyrl Wardlow, in a silver- daubed '36 Ford coach and the burly Tex Saxon in a Packard sedan of ancient vintage. Both cars were supplied through the kindness of Bramley Motors Limited of Osh- awa. Here the stunters drove their cars up a high ramp, with just two wheels on the ramp, after an ap- proach at speed, causing the old Jjalopies to roll over with a disagree- able crunching sound. If the motors were still turning after the roll- over, both Wardlow and Saxon would repeat the trick until the motors conked out. But on this oc- casion both roll-overs. were a suc- cess, and the battered wrecks had to be dragged away by the tow- trucks. It was quite thc climax of the show. Back to Foot-Slogging Korea's Terrain Not Suited To All-Out Mass Warfare By BILL BOSS Canadian Press Staff Writer With the Canadians in Korea (CP)--Is the Korean fighting a preview of the kind to be expected in any future war? Is the day of the long, armored thrust, or of the massed tank bat- tle gone? Has warfare put the soldier back on his feet for good? And does Korea's emphasis on fieldcraft mean, perhaps, a step back towards the trench fighting of the First World War? The answers all around are probably "no." "Apart from any ideological rea- sons involved, army officers here are beginning to consider Korea as another Spain--but only partly. Where the Spanish revolution of 1936 served as an experimental ground for battle drills and as a proving lab for weapons, Korea so far is discharging only the latter function. Tactically, experiences here of the United Nations forces have served only to confirm lessons al- ready in the book. In mountain-ridden Korea the principal problem is moinutain clearance. It is useless to send out long armored thrusts along main roads if the hills commanding them re- main occupied by the enemy. The "front" is vulnerable from behind, the lines of supply are open to attack and often difficult pockets of resistance are left behind to clear up, dissipating the command- er's forces. That was a lesson learned by the UN. command in Korea last year. Only in rolling hill country in some parts of Korea and in a few plains, such as that northeast of Seoul, is. the country suitable for armored deployment in mass. And wherever the land is suitable, it abounds today in the burned-out carcasses of enemy and U.N. tanks, lunch rest. Now we are ready to travel to the south bank Exhibi- tion Grounds at Waterloo, to visit the central show of the Festival of Britain, 'In. 'our 'nexd article; wer will: tell something of our impressions of our walk of this forenoon, and possibly a little about the Festival of Britain Exhibition. indicating that both 'sides have exploited the opportunity. As a field for police action, and for the clearance from a country of an aggressor, Korea's very nature has demanded the type of infantry warfare now being waged here. But it is not the type of warfare, nor the sort of battlefield, in which the west could fight a' showdown battle with world communism-- should such. a showdown ever be forced. In the event of a major stand against' communism, it is thought here, Korea would be abandoned. It just does not permit the maxi- mum mass deployment of the west's power, the only way to win wars speedily and with minimum cost of life. "Fire and movement" win today's wars, both as high-powdered as the land allows. Almost anywhere else in the world bus Korea that means tanks, self-propelled artillery, strong mo- bile columns of infantry and air superiority. Buf even in Korea, the applica- tion of fire and movement has kept the front flexible enought to ad- vance solidly and resilient enough to absorb enemy offensives--and, except from what clearly are in- tended to be "last-ditch stands," a far cry from the trenches of Flanders Fields. A Mouse anda Shot The Cat's Not So Hot Felpham, England (Reuters) -- It may have been Mrs. Catt's cat or it may have been Mrs. Catt's sherry. Anyway the field mouse made a monkey. out of the first and took a swig o f the secohd. The mouse was spotted outside her house my Mrs. Lanthe Catt. "Kill it, Bella that's the cat," she commanded and went back to her housework. Later she found cat and mouse playing. Saturday night the mouse bunked in with peaceful Bella, normally a sharp mouser. y Today a glass of sherry was placed on the floor by visiting friends, and the mouse had a snort. That did it. Happy with. wine, it waltzed up to Bella and virtually kissed him, He was put back in the field later. | Ontario Spotlight z BUILD DIESEL SHOP Fort Erie (CP)--Dieselization of all Wabash Railway mainline freight operations between Fort Erie and Windsor has made neces- sary construction of a diesel repair shop here. Work will start soon on the $250,000 project which will serve both Canadian National and the Wabash line. LEFT HOMELESS BY FIRE Ancaster (CP) -- A fire, be- lieved to have started from a short circuit in a radio, left a young couple, Mr. and Mrs. Tom Kelly, and their five-year- old son homeless last night. The house and their possessions were destroyed in the $8,000 blaze. SEEK TO AID FAMILY Brantford (CP) -- Neighbors of Lloyd Bonney, Mount Pleasant, whose home and contents were de- stroyed by fire Saturday, are con- ducting a farm-to-farm canvass in an effort to find furniture and clothing for Mr. and Mrs, Bonney and their four children. BEATS JOBLESS FIANCEE Sault Ste. Marie (CP)--Grant Howard, 24, of Peterboro wound up Saturday standing in the prisoners' dock instead of be- fore the altar because he beat his bride-to-be. He was fined $50 when the court learned he had beaten his fiancee who told him she had lost her job and could not comtribute to the up-keep of their prospective home, NEW KIND OF HARMONY Burlington (CP)--Citizens of this community blend musical notes and international understanding for a new kind of harmony. For three years the boys' and girls' bands have exchanged visits with student bands from the United States. This week a high school band from Warren, O., is visiting here. Concert Of Sacred Music Ends Meeting "Let us thank God for the gift of Music," so stated Pastor Ben Glan- zer, of the Ministerial Association, Washington, D.C., and the Seventh- day Adventist denomination's fore- most gospel song leader, at the sac- red concert in the auditorium on the campus of Oshawa Missionary Col- lege last evening. Mr. Glanzer's excellently-conduct- ed program marked the end of the 10-day assembly which had brought some 1500 eventh-day Adventists from all over Ontario and Quebec provinces, and visitors from other parts of Canada and the United States, to Oshawa. This" year's conference was the the presence of the world president of the Seventh - day Adventist Church, Pastor W. H. Branson, of washington, D.C. Other guest spea- kers beside him were Pastor R. R. Figuhr, one of the vice-presidents of the denomination, and Pastor W. P. Bradley, secretary of the Foreign Missions Board." Hundreds of those who attended the convention lived in tents on the grounds; others in the dormitory rooms of the College. $22,000 was contribufed to evangelism and the new hospital project in the Greater Tronto area by those attending the 10-day meetings. This amount is double ,the contributions given by the church-members at last year's conference. Members also bought $5,000 worth of books and Bibles at the denomination's Book and Bible house exhibit on the grounds. The closing remarks of Pastor G. Eric Jones, the president of the church's work in Ohtario and Que- bec, called for the dedication of every department and every church- member to a more intensive program of evangelism, Think Talks On Iran 0il May Resume Tehran (Reuters) -- An Iranian government spokesman 'today ex- pressed the belief that negotiations would be resumed between Bri- tain and Iran over the future of the British-owned Anglo-Iranian Oil Company, which has been na- tionalized by the Iranians. With Richard Stokes, British Oil negotiator, now back in Britain, and Averell Harriman, President Truman's special oil envoy, on his way home, the spokesman de- clared: "I ant sure talks will be resumed because the last proposals were not rejected by Stokes, but taken to London to be studied.' (Stokes said before he left Teh- ran Thursday he did not consider that Iranian so-called counter pro- nosals handed to him by Premier Mohammed Mossadegh Wednesday night, could be considered the basis of pew talks.) ) The Irdnian spokesman -- Hu sein Fatemi, personal assistant to the Iranian premier -- made his statement at a press conference. best in years. It was favored by | fi Port Perry Exhibitors Top Oshawa Horticultural Show 336 Entries Best In Long History Of Local Society A mother and daughter team from Port Perry swept the Oshawa Horticultural Society annual flower and vege- table show on Saturday. Mrs. S. Moore, of Port Perry, and her daughter, Evelyn, were the principal point gleaners in the senior and junior sections of the well-attended show which 'was held in Centre Str eet School. Mrs. Moore was 10 points in excess of her nearest rival, Mrs. D. MacMillen, of Oshawa who, in turn with 4 third-place winner, Leo Karnath. Miss Moore had 22 points and 6 points was ten ahead of the In the juvenile. section her nearest competitor, Anne Jean MacMillan and Mildred Lang, 11 and 10 respectively. The show this year was from the, point of color and excellence of quality as well as from the num- ber of entries, the biggest. In the past 15 years or so the annual horticultural show has become a recognized institution in a city which, despite its industrial pro- pensities, has a strong and intense- ly loyal core of ardent gardeners and horticulturalists. 336 ENTRIES IN SHOW There were 336 entries in this year's show as compared to 332 in 1950. Presentation of trophies and awards was made by Mayor Mich- ael Starr on Saturday night. His Worship said that he was quite sincere and honest when he said that he had never in the city be- fore seen such a profusion of fine flowers, fruits and vegetables, The society was one of Oshawa's treasured organizations, he said and had gone a long way to beau- tify the city and make its residents proud of it. Russel Heard, of Woodville, Dis- trict Representative of the Ontario Horticultural Society, who was judge at the show, was equally generous with his praise. The show indicated careful planning, he said, and hard work. The cactus col- lections were outstanding and the quality of the dahlias and gladioli was first class. MOST UNUSUAL FLOWER Mr. Heard said that he believed that although it was given a sec- ond prize, the entry of Mrs." W. MacDonald, 446 Athol Street, was the most unusual flower -of the show. It was a "penstemon glorin- iaflora hybrid." Chairman of the committee in charge of the annual show, Mrs. Thomas Fairbrother, spoke briefly. She thanked the members of her committee for the hard work they had done to make the show a suc- cess. The Horticultural Society, she said, was one of the agencies, along with the city planning board and others, which was working success- fully to make this a better com- munity in which to live. The work of florally decorating public grounds and buildings was one in which the society had taken a keen interest and the results of such an interest were everywhere evident. LIST OF TROPHIES Trophies awarded by Mayor Starr were as follows: Oshawa Horticultural Challenge Cup--MTrs. L. Guy. Mike's Trophy, Small Garden -- Mrs. E. Sandford. Ewart 'McLaughlin Challenge Trophy, Rockery -- Mrs. E. Sand- Flower ord. Cliff Mills Motors Ltd. Challenge Bowl, New Home and Garden Un- der Three Years--M. MacLeod. Cooper-Smith Challenge Bowl, Small Flower and Vegetable Gar- dens--Leo Karnath. Conger-Lehigh Challenge Bowl, Rented Garden -- Mrs, T. Fair- brother. F. L. Mason Trophy, Best School Grounds--Centre Street School. Felt Brothers' Challenge Cup, Best Flower Box -- Mrs. Charles Smith. Hart Challenge Cup, Large Flow- er Garden--T. J. Shortt. Horticultural Challenge Cup for Greatest Number of Points in the Show--Mrs, S. Moore, 'Port Perry. D. MacMillan Challenge Bowl for Most Points in Junior Show--Eve- |} lyn Moore, Port Perry. RESULTS OF THE SHOW Best collection of perennials and annuals arranged for effect with not less than 3 and not more than 6 blooms and not less than 8 or more than 10 varieties--Mrs. Leslie Guy, Mrs, S. Moore, Port Perry. African violet--Mrs, L. Goldsmith, Mrs. S. Moore, R. H. Branton, African Violets, Collection of 3, Mrs.'S. Moore, R. H, Branton, Mrs. L. Guy. Cactus and Succulent collection, \ Mrs. L. Guy. Phlox perennial, 5 blooms, Mrs. S. Moore, Mrs. L. Goldsmith, Mrs. B. Morgan, Begonia Tuberous, 4 blooms--T. J. Shortt, J. Gilson, Mrs. L. Kar- nath, Vase of Gladioli, 6 spikes, any colour--Mrs, D. MacMillan, Basket of mixed Gladioli--Mrs. L. Guy, Mrs. D. MacMillan. | Asters, 4 blooms, any variety-- Mrs. S. Moore, R. H. Branton, Mrs. C. Sandford, Asters Heart of France, 4 blooms--MTrs, 8. C. Moore, Mrs. L. Guy, Leo Karnath. Calendula, 4 blooms--Mrs, George Goddard, Bowmanville, S. Howlett, Mrs, S. Moore. Cosmos, 4 blooms--Mrs. A. Whit- mee, Mrs, S. Moore, M. MacLeod: Clarkia, 4 spikes, Mrs. B. Morgan, Bert Morgan. Dahlia, one bloom, large, decor- ative type, any colour--Mrs, W. MacDonald, Mrs, B. Morgan. Dahlia, 1 bloom, cactus type-- Mrs. W. MacDonald, R. H. Branton, Mrs. B. Morgan. Dahlia, 1 bloom, small type--Mrs. 8S. Moore, Mrs. 'L. Guy, J. Gilson. Dianthus, 4 sprays--Mrs. S, Moore Mrs. L. Guy, Mrs, W. Macdonald. Giallardia, 4 blooms, annual---S Howlett. Giallardie, 4 blooms, perennial-- Leo Karnath, Mrs. B. Morgan, B. Morgan, Gladiolus, 1 spike, white--Mrs. D. Macmlan, Mrs, L. Guy, R, H. Bran- =~ n Gladiolus, one spike, yellow--Mrs. _ D. MacMillan, Mrs, A. Whitmee. b Gladiolus, one spike, pink--Mrs. L. Guy, Mrs. W. MacDonald, Mrs. D. MacMillan, Gladiolus, one spike, salmon-- Mrs. D, MacMillan, Mrs. W. Mac-" Donald. Gladiolus, one spike, red--Mrs. E. Sanford, Mrs. D. MacMillan, R. H. Branton. Gladiolus, one spike, smokey--Mrs. MacDonald, . Gladiolus, one spike, any color, Mrs. D, MacMillan. Gladiolus, one spike, named vari- eéty--Mrs, D. MacMillan. Larkspur, 4 spikes, annual--Mrs. S. Moore, M. Maczeod. Marigold, 4 blooms, African--MTrs. ° T. J. Laughlin, L. Karnath, Mrs. L. Guy. Marigold, 4 blooms, French--Leo Karnath, J. Gilson, M. Macleod. Nasturtiums, 4 blooms, any type-- Mrs. George Goddard, Mrs, T. J. Laughlin, Mrs, S. Moore. Pansy, 4 blooms--Mrs, S. Moore, Mrs, D. MacMillan, Petunia, 4 blooms, double--Mrs. Geo. Goddard, Mrs. D. MacMillan, Mrs. L. Guy. : Petunia, 4 blooms, single--Mrs., C. Smith, T. J. Shortt, Mrs, T. J, Mrs. T. J. Shortt. Petunia, 4 blooms, ruffled or fringed--Mrs, C. Smith, Mrs. L. Guy, Mrs. George Goddard. Phlox, Drummondi, 4 spikes--R. H. Branton, Mrs. D. MacMillan, Mrs. S. Moore. Roses, 3 in variety -- Mrs. 8. Moore. Roses, one bloom, named variety, any color--Mrs. S, -Moore, R. H. Branton, O. Myers. Stocks, 4 spikes -- Mrs. L. Guy, Mrs. S. Moore, Mrs. T. J. Laughlin. Scabiosa, 4 blooms--Mrs. W. Mac - Donald, R. H, Branton, Mrs. Gold- smith. Snapdragon, 4 spikes -- Mrs, L Guy, Mrs. Goldsmith, Mrs. D. Mac- Millan. Sweet Peas, one dozen sprays -- « Mrs. Geo. Goddard, Mrs. S. Moore. Verbena, 4 blooms -- Mis. & Moore, L. Karnath, Mrs. Goldsmith Hybrid Zinnia -- L. Karnath, {. | Howlett, Mrs. D. MacMillan, Zinnias, 4 blooms, large--T. J. Shortt, O. Myers, Mrs. S. Moore, Zinnias, 4 blooms, pom-pom Mrs. B.. Morgan, Mrs. L. Guy, Karnath, ' Zinnias, 4 blooms, any variety-- Mrs. A. Whitmee, Mrs. 8. Moor:, Mrs. L, Guy. Any «other variety of flower nc' classified, 4 specimens -- L. Ka nath, Mrs. W. MacDonald, Mrs. C. Goddard. Miniature Flower Arrangement-- i. 336 ENTRIES (Continued on Page 5) BOY, AM | PLEASED WITH THESE GOODYEAR DELUXE TIRES! WHY ARE YOU | SO SATISFIED? | Sdiphinid G5 | | | IS THE LONG TROUBLE FREE | MORE PEOPLERID. MILEAGE THEY'VE BUILT UP. | ON GOODYEARS YEAH! AND THEIR NON-SKID TREAD STOPS 7 ie CARON A DIME, TOO. FROM MY EXPERIENCE, | ' DELUXE IS THE BEST CONVENTIONAL TIRE THERE 5! See us for GOODJYEAR x-@ CLIFF BARAGAR fo) 162 KiNG ST. E. ds (01) | SHFLYY bv] EXPERT-TIRE SERVHCE- TIRE REPAIRS & RECAPPING

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