Daily Times-Gazette, 22 Sep 1951, p. 5

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SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 1951 THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE PAGE FIVE WHITBY NEWS Many Types of Court Hearings In Whitby At least seven different types of court are held from time to time in the County Court House at Whitby. To the layman, there is considerable uncertainty as to what these courts embrace, what their functions are and who pre- sides at them. Best known is the police court which sits in Whitby on Tuesday mornings and afternoons and on Wednesday mornings, presided over by Magistrate F. S. Ebbs of Oshawa. This court may handle cases under the Liquor Control Act, Highway Traffic Act, certain types of criminal cases such as theft and it has the power to de- cide whether there is sufficient Crown evidence to commit a per- son for trial in a higher court for major offences. This court can also deal with special prosecu= tions such as non-payment of in- come tax, actions under the Vic- ious Dogs Act, Unemployment In- surance frauds and so forth. For the past two years, Ontario County has successfully operated a Family and Juvenile Court where special treatment is given to do- mestic troubles or to the offences by persons under 16 years of age. This is presided over by Judge Mason Horner of Cannington. From time to time, special judges come to Whitby to look af- ter the Rentals Court which deals only with the complicated land- lord-tenant regulations. , Judge F. J. MacRae is the County Court judge who has a mul- titude of judicial duties besides be- ing also judge of the Surrogate Court, Judge at the General Ses- sions of the Peace and of Division Courts. His duties also extend to assessment appeals from the muni- cipal courts of revision. Now sitting in Whitby, Mr. Jus- tice W. PF. Spence represents the High Court of Justice for Ontario. This court deals with major crim- inal prosecutions, major damage actions, divorce actions and other types of action which comes up from time to time, such as breach of promise. The Supreme Court. is a superior court of record having both crim- inal and civil jurisdiction. It con- sists. of two. branches, the Appel- late and the High Court, desig- nated respectively 'The Court of Appeal for Ontario" and 'The High Court of Justice for Ontario." Judges of the Supreme Court of Ontario ang appointed either to the Court of Appeal or to the High Court of Justice. Each upon ap- pointment becomes also a judge ex-officio of the branch to which he was specifically appointed. All judges of the Supreme Court of Ontario have equal jurisdiction, power and authority, except as may be otherwise expressly pro- vided. The sittings of the Court of Ap- peal for Ontario are at present practically continuous. Sittings of the High Court of Jus- tice for Ontario for trials with and without juries are held in Toronto and in the County towns through- out Ontario at such times as are appointed. Except during vacations a single judge sits at Osgoode Hall, Toron- to, as ang for the Court on Mon- day, Wednesday and Thursday of each week and in Chambers on Tuesday and Priddy of each week. During vacations a single judge sits at Osgoode Hall, Toronto, usually on Wednesday or Thursday of each week, for the purpose of hearing such applications as re- quire to be dealt with promptly. COUNTY COURTS Sittings of these courts for trials, both with and without juries, are held (a) in the County of York four times each year, commencing on the first Monday in December, March and May and on the second Monday in September, (b) in the Sunday Services In Whitby Churches St. Andrew's Presbyterian Church WHITBY . Rev. D. Morshall, minister Mrs. P. N. Spratt, organist and choir leader Soloist: Mr. 11 a.m.--MORNING WORSHIP AND SUNDAY SCHOOL Sunday, 30th September--Sacrament of the Lord's Supper James Reid Whitby Baptist Church REV. C. A. HILL, B.A, Th, minister MRS. W E.G. SUMMERS, A.T.CM., organist Ae SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 1951 10 a.m.--SUNDAY SCHOOL 11 a.m.--"THE CURSE OF MEROY" 7_p.m.--"THE NEARNESS OF GOD" MONDAY, 8 p.m. --BYPU WEDNESDAY, 8 p.m.--PRAYER MEETING AND BIBLE STUDY Rev. R. J. Scott, B.A, Minister WHITBY UNITED CHURCH Mrs. Vernon Rowe, ATCM, Organist Associate Secretary of ry 11 a.m.--WOMAN'S MISSIONARY SOCIETY Rev. M. C. Macdonald, B.A, D.D. 4 7 p.m.--""UPON WHAT ROCK?" Rev. R. J. Scott v) gO Bus Home Mission Board re . 'wil can 4 Lieut. Miriam A, Knaop WHITBY SALVATION ARMY 211 Brock St. S. -- Whitby Lieut. N. Green 10:00 a.m.--SUNDAY SCHOOL -- PICKERING TOWN HALL 11:00 a.m.--HOLINESS MEETING AT PICKERING TOWN HALL 2:30 p.m.--SUNDAY SCHOOL -- WHITBY 7:00 p.m.--SALVATION MEETING AT WHITBY Tuesday, 8 p.m.--Prayer Meeting friday, 8 p.m.--Youth Group MAKE THE SALVATION ARMY YOUR SPIRITUAL HOME : ALL ARE WELCOME Whitby Pentecostal Church 0. MacPHERSON, Pastor 7 p.m.--REV. R. SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 1951 10 a.m.--SUNDAY SCHOOL 11 a.m.--MORNING WORSHIP Guest Speaker Thursday, 8 p.m.--Bible Study and Prayer "Unto Mim thet loved us end vethed " Jrom our sins in His own Blood-- ov. 1:5. J. BALL, Oshawa ST. JOHN'S CHURCH PORT WHITBY Rector--REV. J). E. HARVEY the Blind. SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 1951 10 a.m.--SUNDAY SCHOOL 11. a.m.--MORNING PRAYER Preacher, Rev. Canon E. Jacques, director of public relation, Canadian' National Institute for 7 p.m.--HOLY COMMUNION 2 p.m.~--YOUNG PEOPLE'S 'BIBLE CLASS County of Wentworth four times each year, commencing on the the second Monday in May and September, and (c) in all other Counties twice each year, com- mencing on the first Monday in June and December. Sittings for trial of non-jury cases are also held in every Coun- ty except York and Wentworth twice in each year, commencing on the first Monday in April and October. In addition to the regular sittings special ones may be held for the trial of non-jury cases at such times as the judge may direct. SURROGATE COURTS In the 'Surrogate Court the usual procedure is to get appointments from the judge as required. GENERAL SESSIONS OF THE PEACE These Courts have jurisdiction to try .all criminal offences except homicide and those mentioned in section 583 of the Criminal Code. Sittings are held (a) in the County of York four times each year commencing on the first Monday in December, March and May and on the second Monday in September, (b) in the County of Wentworth four times each year commencing on the first Monday in December and March and on the second Monday in May and September, and (c) in all other Counties twice each year com- mencing on the first oMnday in June and December. In all Counties, a court known as "The County Court Judges' Crim- inal Court" sits out of Sessions for trial without a jury of such per- sons imprisoned on criminal charges within its jurisdiction as consent to be so tried. DIVISION COURTS Sittings are held throughout the Province at such times and places as may be appointed pursuant to rules made by the Lieutenant-Gov- ernor in Council. , In the City of Toronto the pres- ent practice is that the First Divi- sion Court of the County of York sits every week except during Au- gust, the sittings commencing .on Tuesday and continuing until Fri- day, Judgment Summons Court is held at 10 a.m. on the first Monday of every month except August. Matters which require to be heard in Chambers are dealt with as and when the necessity arises. Brooklin Win (Continued from Page 4) couldn't come up with a lucky blow at the right time. Neither team managed to score in the seventh but both managed to get one hit. The first half of the 8th saw the visitors take the lead for the first time in the game. An error, a walk and a hit accounting for this marker. The Stokers too, found the going good in the. 8th and they added a pair to go. one up for the third time in the game. A hit and an error with one gone put a runner on third base for the visi- tors in the first half of the ninth. He scored on a long fly ball, the next man up also flied out. The Stokers came to bat in the ninth with their backs to the wall looking out from behind a one run lead. They didn't fool and they tied the score on a pair of hits. Then the. game went into overtime. D. Mitchell, first man up, got a blow that was muffed in the field a couple of times and before he stop- ped running he had crossed the plate to give the visitors the lead again, Their was nothing doing for the Stokers in their half of the 10th but to tie the score, and they did. Neither team managed to score in the 11th or 12th as both hurlers had great respect for the opposing batters. Then came the old 13th inning. The Brooklin lads had the cats paw now and they got three runs off four walks and an error. The Stokers best in the 13th was a lone tally. It was a tough game to loose and a dandy to win. The Stokers have got to win three out of the next four while the Brooklin lads needs only a 500 average in the re- maining games. It is hoped that the second game will be played here on Monday night. So watch Mon- days paper for anouncement in this regard. Church Marks Anniversary MRS. WES ROUTLEY Correspondent Ashburn -- Special anniversary and Thank-offering services will be held in Burns Church on Sune day, Sept. 23 at 11 am. and 7:30 p.m. with Rev. 8. B. Coles, of Knox Presbyterian Church; Osh- awa, as guest speaker. There will be special music by the choir, ase sisted by Mrs. C. McCarthy, of To- ronto, in the' morning and Miss Catherine Fisher of Toronto in the evening, hse Mr .and Mrs, Nelson Ashton vis- ited at the home of Mrs. Ed Wil- son, of Locust Hill on: Sunday. Mr, and Mrs. Thomas Lilley of Markham, were Sunday visitors at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Wes Routley. Miss Glenys Stephen of Whitby spent the week end with her par ents, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Stephen. Mr. and Mrs. Donald Purdy of Toronto were week end visitors at the home of Miss A, Dowson. Messrs. James Doble. and Walter Anderson of Toronto spent the week end at their homes here. Several from here attended Bea- verton fair on Saturday and re- port a good show. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Cook visit- ed friends in Pickering on Wednes- day evening. ADMITS CHICKEN THEFT Stratford (CP) -- Joseph Miller of Rothesay, Ont., pleaded guilty Friday to a charge of stealing 15 chickens from the farm of Wesley Armstrong of Wallace and was ordered 'to pay court costs and make restitution. Six others facing similar charges wgre remanded to Sept. 28 on $1000 bail each Zr FZ BUT, BUT.. IT'S SUCH A PRETTY DOLL, AND IT ONLY QosT 50+. | KNOWS THERE OUGHT TO BE A LAW HALF A BUCK FOR A "<4 DINKY LITTLE DOLL wHAT 72) ARE YOU TRYING TO DO- SEND ME TO THE POOR HOUSE @ THAT KiD'S GOT MORE DOLLS THAN SHE WITH! YOU'RE TAKIN' THAT BACK RIGHT rr, WHAT TO DO . Thanks- ARTHUR PFAFE y-fodls NEW YORK CITY, N.Y. Ih By Al Fagaly and Harry Shorten ' Ze) 4 1 BUT THERE ARE |Z ER-OH-MISS-UH-'% DOLLS AND DOLLS. FZ ON SECOND THOUGHT I'D BETTER TAKE AN- ¥ OTHER DOLL- THIS ONE MIGHT GET LOST. HEH- -HEH-HEH AND ER -- AH - KEEP THE CHANGE, OF C \_course : WW, Monday, Sept. 24 9.30-11.30 am. -- Morning Nur- sery. 9.30-11.30 amé-Craft Shop Open. 2.00-5.00 p.m--Craft Shop Open. Tuesday, Sept. 25 8.00-10.00 p.m. -- Open House -- Craft, Camera club, and stamp dis- plays, Keep Fit, Junior Dancing, and Chess demonstrations. 8.00-10.00 p.m.-- Registrations -- Registrations will be taken for all activities and classes. Wednesday, Sept. 26 9.30-11.30 a.m. -- Morning Nur- sery. 2.00-5.00 p.m. -- Craft Shop Open. 7.00-10.00 p.m.--Craft Shop Open. Thursday, Sept. 27 9.30-11.30 a.m --Morning Nursery. 2.00-5.00 p.m.--Craft Shop Open. 7.00-10.00 p.m.--Craft Shop Open. Friday, Sept. 28 9.30-11.30 a.m.--Morning Nursery. 9.30-11.30 a.m. --Craft Shop Open. 415-545 p.m.--Jr. Leaders' Corps. 2.00-5.00 p.m.--Craft Shop Open. Saturday, Sept. 29 10.00 am--Sat-R-day Camp 9.00-1200 p.m, -- Over-20 Club Monday, September 24th 9-11.30 am. -- Nursery School -- 5 year olds, free play, music, story hour, finger play, rhythm band, books, crafts. ' 330-580 p.m. -- Indian Chief Club -- boys 6-8 years, woodwork- ing, games, ringers, Sports. Public Library -- Children's Dept. 7.00 p.m. Oshawa Nursing Cadets -- drill, Practical First Ald. Tuesday, September 25th 9.11.30 am. -- Nursery School -- 4 years olds, free play, music, story hour, finger play, rhythm band, books, crafts. 3.30-5.30 p.m. -- Girls Club -- 11 years and under, crafts and music. White Eagle Club -- boys 9-11 years, archery. Public Library -- Chil- dren's Dept. 7.00 p.m. -- Boy's Sports Club -- boys all ages. Wednesday, September 26 9-11.30 a.m. -- Nursery School -- 5 year olds, free play, music, story hour, finger play, rhythm band, books, crafts. 3.30-5.30 p.m. -- Black Hawk Club -- boys 12 years and over, wood- working, games, sports, woodburn- ing. 7 pm. -- Cérls' Teenage Club -- business meeting, choral singing, ballroom dancing. Thursday, September 27th 9-11.30 aon. -- Nursery School -- 4 year olds, free play, music, story hour, ringer play, rhythm band, books, crafts. \ . 330-530 pm. -- Girls' Club -- all ages. Club for boys all ages -- woodworking, dodge ball, ringers, sports, games. Public Library -- Children's Dept. 7.30 p.m. -- Golden Age Club -- euchre, bridge, checkers, dominoes, chinese checkers, sing-song, movies, refreshments. Friday September 28th 9-11.30 am. -- Nursery School -- 5 year olds, free play, music, story hour,. finger play, rhythm band, books, crafts. 3.30-5.30 p.m. -- Public Library -- Children's Dept. 400 pm. -- RCMP Youth Pro- gram -- boys and girls all ages, movies, - Saturday, September 29th 9 am.-noon -- Speech Training Classes. . 9 'a.m.-noon -- Acordion- School. 9 am.-noon -- Public Library -- Children's Dept. . . PACIFIC COLONISTS Organized colonization of New Zealand started in 1840 with _ the New Zealand Company's settlement at Wellington, Recent News From Tyrone MRS. W. RAHM Correspondent Tyrone--Mr. I. W. Larmar and Larry Rosevear of Millbrook vis- ited Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Rosevear. Mr. and Mrs. Clair McGill, Penn- sylvania, Mrs. N. Leach, Taunton visited Mr. and Mrs. A. Young- man. Rev. E. T. Lute, Mr. David Bent of the staff of Knox College, Spald- ings, Jamaica, spent Saturday with Rev. and Mrs. D. Lute and also visited Albert Hill's farm to see how farms were run in Can- ada. Mr. and Mrs. H. DeGeer and family, Bethany, called on Mr. and Mrs. W. Rahm. Rev. and Mrs. E. A. Cresswell, Lindsay, were dinner guests last week of Rev. and Mrs. D. Lute. Mrs. McMillan, Mrs. A. Brad- shaw, Miss Mabel Awde, Torcato, visited at Mr. and Mrs. R. Wright's home. . Mr. and Mrs. Joe Riddle and baby, Oshawa, with Mrs, W. Jones. Mr. J. Giles has a truck. Mrs, Howard Cole, Hampton, vis- ited Mr. and Mrs. S. McCoy. Mrs. K. Jacobsen and boys, Port Credit, Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Wismer, ' Islington, Mr. and Mrs. John Wismer, Messrs M. Beaton and L. Bullock, Toronto, Mr. and |. Mrs. J. Colbary, Brooklin, spent the week end at the Colbary home. Mr. and Mrs. G. Brent and Cloria. enjoyed a trip to Wark- worth on Sunday. Mr. arel Mrs. J. Broome and family visited Mr. and Mrs. A. Keith, Oshawa. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Hamilton and boys visited friends at Ham- ilton with Mrs. John Home return- ing home with them. Mr, and Mrs. Lloyd Broome and boys, Solina, Mr. George Awde, Mr. James McDougall," Drayton, visited Mr. and Mrs. J. Broome. Mr. and Mrs. M. Hamilton have left on a motor trip out west. Mr, and Mrs. Will Staples, Bow- manville, visited Mr. and Mrs. Ev- erton White. Mrs. McMillan, Mrs. A. Brad- shaw, Miss Mabel Awde, Toronto, Mr, and Mrs. R. Wright and Mar- jon, Mrs. E. Wight, Mrs. W. Wright were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Will Jewell. Mr. and Mrs. E. A. Virtue and John visited Mrs, Chas. Shaw, Osh- awa. 'Mr. and Mrs. O. Beckett, Mr. and Mrs. L. Alldread, Mr. Fred Page visited Mr. and Mrs. John Beckett, Scugog Island. Mr. and Mrs. N. Yellowlees and girls visited Mr. and Mrs. Francis Thompson, Bowmanville. Mr. and Mrs. E. Masters and Gail, Enniskillen, visited Mr. and Mrs. E, A, Virtue. Lloyd Stainton and boy friends, Bowmanville, visited the home of Mr. gnd Mrs. H. Hall. Mr. and Mrs. T. H. Tabb visited Mr. and Mrs. William Armstrong, Bethany. Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Davey and Lois, Burketon, Mr. and Mrs. Talbert Findlay, Thornhill, visited Mr. and Mrs. O. Virtue. Mrs. H. Findlay, Messrs Dean and Bruce, Unionville, Mr. Jack Richards, Oshawa, Mr. Roy Rich- ards, Mrs. J. Westlake, Bowman- ville, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Rich- dards, were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Clinton Bigelow. Mr. and Mrs. Roy Knox, Hamp- ton, Mrs. Douglas Sheppard, Doug- las and George, Millbrook, 'were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Harvey. Mr. and Mrs. M. Elford and fam- ily," Port Perry, visited Mr. and Mrs. Murray Tabb. Ontario Spotlight M. C. HENDRY DIES Toronto (CP)--Murray Cald- er Hendry, hydraulic engineer with the Ontario Hydro Com- mission for 30 years, died yes- terday. He was responsible for the early surveys in the pro- posed St. Lawrence river pow=" er development. BEATS MALTON MAMIE For Erie (CF)--Don't read the forecast, see what Jerry Adams has to say is the attitude of many who are wondering about forthcoming weather here. His predictions, friends say, are 85 per cent accu- rate and he bases them on such things as the depth of the bark on trees and where the bullrushes are growing in the creeks. His latest prediction? A long fall. GOES TWICE, GETS JAIL Toronto (CP)--John M. Wil- son, 19, of no fixed address, is a persistent young man. On Monday ' he was given a sus- pended sentence for breaking and entering a™ restaurant in downtown Toronto. Yesterday he again was found guilty--of breaking and entering the same restaurant Wednesday night. He got nine months. Says Oranges Help Prevent Dread Polio Shelburne (CP) -- Citrus fruit, particularly orange, may be a polio myelitis preventive, Health Min- ister Phillips said Friday night. Addressing a joint meding of the Shelburne and Orangeville Ro- tary Clubs, he described research done by Dr. Klenner in Virginia which indicated that an increased consumption of Vitamin C -- cpn- tained in oranges, grapefruit, to- matoes and some other fruits -- could act as a polio repellent. He recommended that persons take a double amount of vitamin C during the polio season, July to November, and a "normal" amount, the rest of the year. By normal he meant two oranges a day. Reds Veto Oklahoma Bérlin (AP) -- The Communists have issued their opinion of "Okla- homa", They don't like it. The American musical, a hit at home and abroad for eight years, is being received happily by West Berliners, but in the east zone, where the Soviet holds sway, a critic of the Russian sector news- paper Berliffer Zeitung am Abend took a dim view of i. "In the field of culture," wrote critic Hans Preuss, "there is no better proof for the deadly effect of the American presumption to 'protect' European culture, For 'Oklahoma' is not a start, but the end and death of art, a warning sign for all artists In West Berlin." Classified ads are sure to pay Phone The Times with yours today. { LAFF-A-DAY "If those fish are getting too heavy, I'll be glad to carry them the rest of the way." Overseas (Continued from Page 3) largest churches in all Christen- dom, being over 500 feet long. In St. Peter's, Rome, and in Milan Cathedral we were shown marks on the floors of the naves to dem- onstrate the relative lengths of the greatest of them all, these three and St. Paul's, London. In the 14th century the famous churchman, William of Wykeham, Bishop at Winchester, who is, also noted for having founded and built New Col- lege, Oxford, and Winchester Col- lege, undertook the complete re- building of the interior of the great church by altering the massive pillars and arches into slender and graceful Gothic. It was a stagger- ing undertaking and was never fully completed, but the great nave was transformed into a dazzling display of shapely pillars and arches. One of the most remark- able features of these buildings is the vaulted stone ceilings for every bit of the structure of a Gothic church is stone masonry from the foundation to the top- most ridge of the high roof. The interior pattern of the vaulted roof takes geierally the form of a love- ly geometric pattern of "groins" and "ribs" and "bosses" or curved stones forming a series of key- stones to the pattern. Winchester is a lovely and graceful example of a vast collection of medieval crafts of design, masonry, sculpture, woodcarving, stained glass and metalcraft united in a great work of art and a rich treas- ury of history. CATHEDRAL DOMINATES TOWN One afternoon after a few hours drive in the sunny countryside from Winchester we came to Sal- isbury, a quiet lovely town on the flat water meadows of the Avon. Here the high slender spire of the cathedral is the dominating fea- ture of the landscape rising as it does to a height of 400 feet. The great chlurch is in the heart of the town in a wide open area of green lawn enclosed m low walls and known here as elsewhere as the Cathedral Close. The English land- scape painter, Constable, used the country about Salisbury for- his work and his pictures frequently show this tall spire in the distance. We found a night's lodging in an inn called The Old Mill, which was in fact the subject of one of his paintings, a building reconstruct- ed several times during «the 800 years or more of its lifetime and serving at different times as a monks' hostel and, as its name implies, a mill. Across the mea- dows in the town we walked through the Cathedral Close and around the gently beautiful setting of this most gracious Gothic church. Inside we crossed the great nave just in time to witness the service of Evensong with the sweet and gentle voices of a boys' choir. If there were space and my readers' interest would permit I would like to tell of Exeter Cathe- dral with its richly ornamented in- terior and its amazing sculptured screen on its broad west front. Wells Cathedral too, where we sat through the Evensong choral serv- ice, had a completely lovely in- terior bright and fresh after its centuries, and outside on its west exterior a great expanse of sculp- tured figures, a sort of visual reli- gious education for the simple country folk of its early days. York, too, is a most striking struc- ture with its lovely windows néw being slowly replaced in position after having been safely stored away during the war. It will take another twenty years to finish this work. The big eastern window on which work is now going on has an area which our guide compared in size to a tennis court. This great church has a staff of about a hundred and fifty persons in- cluding artisans. BEAUTIFUL VIEW Our greatest delight, however, was Lincoln. We drove into the town one evening and up the long sloping. hill in the middle of it to the winding streets around the cathedral and the old castle in the upper town where from the "keep" or tower a splendid view can be had of the flat fen country stretch- ing for miles off toward the sea. Here we put up at the White Hart, one of the most perfect. smaller hotels we have ever seen. Only one hundred yards or so away stood the cathedral, dominating in its huge dimensions the entire city, with three great square towers each with pointed turrets on its four corners. It was the rich gran- deur of its perfectly symmetrical interior that amazed us. It is a stirring experience simply to stand SWEETEN A Sour STOMACH PHILLIPS | MILK OF MAGNESIA TABLETS BRING QUICK RELIEF MINT-FLAVORED in-the nave and contemplate it. Here on Sunday morning we join- ed a hundred people or so at the fully choral service, all of us easi- ly accommodated «in the presby- tery, although the great nave and transepts could easily have held thousands of worshippers. The Bishop was present along with the other ranking clergy of the cathe- cral staff, but the Bishop took no part in the service itself. In Lincoln, as elsewhere, there is a profusion of rich detail in the woodcarving in the choir stalls and in the structure of the many chapels and chantries scattered through the church. Here in par- ticular is a very beautiful set of three small chapels in the north transept, each furnished in mem- ory 'of the fallen in one of the three services, the Navy, Army and Air Force. The cathedral churches of Eng- land seem to me to present two great miracles. The first is the physical one of their actual con- struction in such elaborate gran- deur. of conception and minuteness of detail in an age when England was just emerging from the dark ages. The other is the spiritual one of the great inspiration which must have seized the English peo- ple of the time to stir in them the devotion and zeal of which these rich and gracious structures are the living monument. Sharp Slump In U.K. Auto Exports Here London, (CP)--Exports of British automobiles to Canada again slump- ed sharply last month, latest trade figures show. The August total was 348 compared with 1876 in July, 5482 in June and 7,613 in Augush, 1950. British manufacturers attribute the slump to Canadian restrictions on instalment buying, known here as "hire purchase." Despite the drop in automobile exports, Board of Trade figures for August show that exports generally at £226,200,000 were £4,000,000 high= er than in July and about three per cent. above the average for the sec= ond quarter of this year. Exports to North America were £800,000 be- low July's figure of £27,200,000. Britain's deteriorating trade posi- tion continues to be a subject of concern, with some commentators predicting a really full-blown infla- ticnary crisis in the months to come. On the other hand, some solace may be drawn from a recent slight improvement in the terms of trade paid for imports and received for -- the ratio between the prices exports. Find Hydro Not Negligent For Accident Toronto -- Right of the Ontario Hydro to take prossesion and make use of land without the owner's consent was upheld Thursday at Osgoode Hall by Mr. Justice R. E, Laidlaw. His Lordship dismissed an appeal brought by Harry Glober of Port Hope, claiming damages from an' accident involving livé Hydro wires overhanging his property. Glober runs a tourist camp at Port Hope on Highway No. 2. On Aug. 17, 1948, he used a long iron pipe to clear a blocked chimney on a bath house. The pipe touched the overhanging wires, causing an ex- plosion which resulted in damage to the building and injury to Glober. The court ruled Glober was "author of his own misfortune" and the hydro was not negligent. 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