Daily Times-Gazette, 7 Nov 1951, p. 5

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WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 7, $884 THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE PAGE FIVE Chest Drive Continued frox Page 3) Miss Marion Gould ...: ,D. Collis : Mr. K. H. Whittington Steve Bak Jr. ......... F.- W. Woolworth Co. Staff - F. W. Woolworth Co. Mrs. Alice Newey ..... Miss Estelle Russell .. Miss Betty Farks Miss Florence Hicks .. Mrs. Aletha Bobier .... Marg. 'Knowlton .. Princess Grill .. Donald Scott Robert Hoy--Trucker .. Russell Transport Limited Employees--Russell Transport Limited .. Sunbeam Chapter No. 73 Order of the Eastern Star .... Libby Plumbing... G. Reid Geo. Richardson ...... C. Richardson ... K. Lane E. Kirkpatrick W. Libby .... H. Ramshaw Muriel Souter H. Etmanski Employees-- The Skinner Company Limited (additional) . Mr. W. J. Salter Mrs. Gordon Summers Miss A. Oakley 8. P. Smith Oshawa Cycle Works .. A. D. Mullen Mrs. H. MacMillen ... M. D. Powell A. L. Powell .. Marjorie Carey .. Howard West ... : Davidson Shoe Store we Dominion Stores Limited Fred Goodman .. Frank Zochodne . S. Harmer Donald Kirby .... Rodd Transport Dr. Webster M. Leggette W. J. Butt E. A. Tattersall Pleasure Valley Ranch C. E. Mills Norman Woodward .... Sere Norm 8 8 383383838838 888 848% $ 3 NR mooioREme - bal a 2282228388888 > S -- bt | Russell Sunoco Service J. W. Alexander C. M. Smith United Trucking . White & Son Powell's Grocer *Bathe & McLellan .... Anonymous M.' Gray Ivan Sheppard ... Alan Maguire ... Orville Wright . Bill Turrell .... Wm. Tkatch eo W. J. Sergeant .. L. Armstrong Conger Lehigh Fuels Limited Lloyd Benson Kemp .. Walter G. Corbem .... Geo. V. B. Cheesman Loren English 7 A. 8. Callison ... H. Winstanley Miss M. Spencley Amy Jackson F, A. Cochrane S. Jackson & Son George Mallett . Dr. Walter Bapty ... Staff--Canadian Bank of Commerce as follows: Eleanor Hamilton ... H. B. McGimpsey .. Eleanore Tennier ... Doris C. Chartras ... Eunice Smales Norman F. Morton .. Monica Culley Lorna M. Kennedy .. June MacInally Hazel E. Fosigr D'Arcy Bell¥....... Beryl Mountjoy ... Dorothy Pellow . Ann Joy Kathleen Solly .. . Kaye Sheridan .... Joan Carol Walker .. Helen: Duncan . R. S. Valleau . Mrs. B, Crawford .. G. M. Piper Doreen G. Kennedy . N. 8. McFadyen .... Employees--Bank of Montreal as follows: Kay Patterson D. VanVolkenburg .. O. Tureski Wm. Saunders .... Joyce C. Cox Miss M. LeVesque .. J.C. Cluff - 4 Norma Skea .. Florence Horton 'aep G. K. Robertson ... Miss G. Frise ...... R. A. Jordan ....... Mrs. E. McGuigan .. Begin W. R. Richardson.... Helen Skuce The Bank of Nova Scotia The Dominion Bank .. The Bank of Montreal The Canadian Bank of Commerce Miss E. M. Everson .. Globe Cafe Mr. & Mrs. Hong Seto . Fred Lee ....civonvirs Henry 168 .qpepsnasren d | EB unnprnnnSwalBun BomusmrandnEsy SSSESLEESIIS232332823288 2383338238823: = po 3B 8 fo oN ne [34 Sn 828533388338 888 334kssss nN wr SR hk 4 BN bk ND 14 BSD 68 1 os D9 18 £14 63 10 NO 1 3823833833883 33383838388 fy MuHa sans Ease SnD e 3233333333333 3338388288 © Bibi i LADD Sn Din Se 3383888888888 Kung Ming Wel Chow's Restaurant .... Harry Chew . Roger Chor ... Peon G. Sing Dick Chow David Chow Mary Doughty Erma Goreham Embassy Tea Room .. Mr. & Mrs. Harry, Seto . Fon Seto . Woo Jim Chow Park ot Marion Tilburry ...... Arthur Chu Elina Nickle Wong Hue .. Anne Trick ..... bd ed GO ON Pe OB DO DN etd DO DN) OT 888288888338833533383883 -- t= < Grand Cafe Lee Yout .. Lee Soo ... Lee Kee .. Wong On ... Central Cafe Mr. & Mrs. Geo. Chow . Jue Louie Frank E. Woo . Richard Conton . ; Mr. & Mrs. Pinon Chow Joseph Shoni Chong Sidney .... Williami Grimsby T. N. Chow .... G. Chow Soo Min Staff of Eden Inn Star Laundry Lee's Laundry Mr. and Mrs. Chow Lee Ontario Laundry F. Lum Laundry ..A\.. Loblaw Groceterias Co. Limited ....... . W. P. Schoenau . Albert Porfer ... R. Glode M. Gannon .... J. 8S. Campbell . Nick Tulski J. Hasey A. Gannon Fred Wood ......... ves Garth Fairservice . Louis Seles W. Dixon Ross Westlake ... Fred Coleman ... J. A. Coleman Chas. Walters .... G. H. Bell F. M. Jamieson N. Knapp H. K. Jackson Kent's Service Station , Stephenson's Garage ... pd SO bd bd pd GYD bd 8852485828382 88s © 5888 £8 = 00 Ce CO CF CRO hd DN bd bd OT © 243358888, 8 2.00 10.00 1.00 | 2.00 | 1.00 1.00 | 2.00 | 5.00 10.00 | « 5.00 Tommy Goch Station . 10.00 Cooper's Service Station Jackson Supply D. J. Munroe ....eee.. Doreen Lukow .... Jim Elliott Betty Silver Andy Umbel .. Alf Garrard Ritson Food Market ... G. H. Hardsand Wasel Czerewaty Oshawa Cabinet Makers Max Greenberg & Sons Mary Cook Red & White Store (Wilson) Anthony Lazar ... Emily Wilson Samuel E. McCrum ... Nellie Gilchrist Anonymous . Fred's Drive-In Oshawa Auto Wreckers Rev.'& Mrs. J. K. Moffatt ... Anonymous ... May Henry The%erfection Bakery . drew Szikszay Samic Milivojie .. Alex Jambor Steve Komazac .. : Joseph Boshkovich .... Mr. & Mrs. Jas. Szikszay Michael Valentine Helen Mitchell Fox Ladies' Wear .... Mrs. J. Mahaffey .... Miss Mary Cotter .... Mrs. Irene Guy ... . Mrs. Harold Stephen . Mrs. Mary Johnston . Mrs. Julia Chaban ... D. S. Jamieson Mrs. B. J. Gay Employees-General Printers Limited .... Employees--Times Publishing Co. Employees--Times-Gazette Publishers Limited .. ceeans 10.00 1.00 | 2.00 1.00 1.00! 1.00 3.00 | 25.00 | 1.00 888888 SUR PTH =4 Be S C= bo nt NNN CTO To m8 ON =n CoS sponse 2832883888 3 5.00 | | Queen's Hotel ...... "ee Rene Sauve Stan Gurak ... A. Harper A. Babcock L. Pringle W. Allin A. Jancar John Normoyle . Total To Date .. Accidents (€ontinued from Page 1) car had ifs door sprung while the left front fender, right rear fender and hood of MacMillan's car were damaged. A dented fender was the only damage to Elgin's truck. The thick slush on the roads this morning caused three accidents in quick succession. At 4.26 a.m. Wil- liam MacDonald, 19, of 82 West- moreland Avenue, was driving a United Taxi Company cab when it skidded off Street east and wrapped itself around a telephone pole, The pole was broken and the taxi was damaged. A truck owned by the Pure Milk ssssesee cess pase sesesessene casssssens sesvenes 110.00 | pairy and driven by Cecil A. Hall, of 69 Celina Street, Oshawa, escap- ed damage when involved in a col- lision with a car driven by George Cowan, of 329 French Street, The accident took place at 7.15 aim. on Ye roadway leading south from the arena tor King Street, West. Cow- an's car had its left front door damaged. "He hit me" was the statement made by both drivers to policemen after a 7.30 am. collision at the junction of Bloor and Simcoe Streets. Drivers involved were Aus- tin Tait, of R.R. 3, Uxbridge, On~ tario, who was driving a truck 'and William Porgeroy of 115 Celina Street. Left front fenders on both vehicles were dented. Want to buy, sell or trade? A Classified Ad, the deal is made, 10.00 | 5.00 2.00 | early today and gangs of workmen | spow. The main snow front by- Seamen Saved (Continued from Page 1) ed seven of the 3 men---were-res- cued, A Coast Guard flier returned from the scene with word that the entire mid-sectio~ of the Walton was afiré, He said three lifeboats were in the water and all the boats showed signs of life. Meanwhilge a new storm moving in from th€ western Pacifie threat- ened rescue operations with added hazards. The weather bureau raised storm warnings at 3 a.m. for winds up to 40 miles an. hour, The George Walton radioed for aid yesterday afternoon, reporting its engine room and crew quarters swept by flames which followed an explosion. y "Three men are' dead and one seriously burned," came the fran- tic message from a radio operator who was driven from his quarters every few minutes by the smoke and fumes. He finally had to follow the crew overside, carrying a por=- table radio which sputtered out its last appeal for help shortly after p.m. Meanwhile, the Kenon Maru, a slow ship, turned from its course 60 miles away after picking up the SOS. It steamed directly to the George Walton. There, a Coast Guard rescue plane dropped flares to guide it to the flaming ship. From other directions came the Greek steamer Katherine and the American John Murray Forbes. Two Coast Guard cutters, ;the Wachusetts and North Wind, were dispatched from Seattle with me- dical crews. Two life boats and a life raft were carrying the surviveps. It was not known at Coast Guard headquarters whether the men had time to bring their dead off the blazing ship. Snowstorm (Continued from Page 1) | veered and the clouds poured down {four inches of snow. With a gr d- | ual warming up in temperature the | snow was in its worst possible state | this morning. Eaves dripped water | while more snow fell, Many motorists left their cars in | snow-banked garages and joined | the queues waiting for bus trans- | portation, Running behind schedule | the local buses were packed on their early morning runs, By mid-morn- ing the Oshawa Railway Company had overcome all ignition and brak- [ back on time once more. Accidents yesterday were few but ! with the snow fall cars started slip- | ping, | the road. Pedestrians were show- | ered with slush by passing vehicles. | City streets were in poor condition'| WIOIL i BA PIES] IA ELLER oy INES FIRES] NIE] DION 1 [CIE MIODIA] DAILY CROSSWORD ort 11. Swise river (poss.) 16. Moving part (mech.) 1. Mount 19, Ensnares again 21. Deity 2. Warp-yarn 124. Cutting tool 3. Saucy 26. Rowing 4. Killed implement 5. Club 28. Rodent lody 30. Pressin, 'esh 31. Cuts to fit water intoa algae (Bot.) mortise 8. Daub 33. Bark 9. Country of 35. Russian Europe news agency and 36. Angry Asia 38. Clothes DOWN 9. Insurgent 10. Fragrance 12. Inner portion of sunspot 13. Skin disorder 14. Thus 1 15.Muscular twich 17. Ata distance 18. Girl's nickname 20. Scold persistently 22, Bitter vetch 23. Taverns 25. Native of Morocco 27. Oil of rose IL IATL | (FIRIY ERE IRIARNPIE[P] (FIAMMEIVIAICIUIAITIE] S[TIAIRIEREKINII [TIS] [| IRIOINENEIAIRIL MICIAIS[TIMR|UISIE] ; "w Yesterday's Answer 41. Baking chamber 43. Unit of quantitative 'meter 46. Before 48. Forbid petals 29. Form of crane 32, Absent 34. Underdone 35. Metal can 37. Children's game 39. Anage 40. Constel- lation 42. Knave of clubs' 44. Negative reply. 45. Soothing Jointment 47. Bird 49. Guide 50. Broken coat of cereal grain (pl.) DALY CRYPTOQUOTE--Here's how to work it: AXYDLBAAXR "SLONGFELLOW One letter simply stands for another. In this example A is used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters, apos- trophies, the length and formation of the words are all hints. Each Quy the code letters are different. G A Cryptogram Quotation MVA FTUPBMFGA JCTA MC HT FT. SFLFJPHW FB BCNAMFNAB CX BASLe FGA MC MVA QPKWFG--UPTFPB" Yesterday's Cryptoquote: STRANGER! MAY FATE A MILDER ASPECT SHOW, AND SPIN THY FUTURE WITH A WHITER CLUE!--POPE. »-7 rain made travel hazardous on London district highways and caused the death of Sheldon David- 1.00 | ing troubles and the system was | son, 48, of Forest, whose automo- bile spun into the path of another car near Camp Ipperwash. * VMsibility dropped to 10 yards sliding and skidding all over |on No. 6 highway near Guelph, where drifting was heavy. Toronto counted itself lucky to miss an expected five. inches of | were sent out by the Works De- passed the city, which received a partment, BIG SHOVELLING JOB | | The Four Corners was the first | place to be cleared with goed shovelling snow into trucks, Stores and offices had men out shovelling | the slush off the sidewalks but gute | ters were piled high and storm | | sewers were blocked. Oshawa was a | running river of dirty water which | spread into floods down by the lake. | Telephone service remained good. There was not much local 'damage to wires but in' the country areas there were about 20 poles down. They were tumbled by the weight of ice on the wires and the high wind. Broken poles were reported from Uxbridge, Port .Perry, Brooklin an parts of Oshawa. Out in the 'country roads vieve' reported to be in very poor shape and were covered with about. four | or five inches of packed, codden | snow through which cars could only just travel at a snail's pace. Farm- ers' lanes were almost impassable. County and township organi- zations were caught. with their | snowploughs down by the early on- slaught of winter. Tow trucks were kept busy pulling autos and trucks out of ditches. From a statistical point of view November is breaking records for bad weather--and it isn't finished | yet. More snow tonight is the fore- | cast with a let-up tomorrow. Toronto (CP) -- A storm from Indiana swept across Ontario last night and today, dumping snow, sleet and icy rain throughout the province. It was the second snow storm in four days, and worse than the first. Trains arriving in Toronto were up to an hour late. Bus services were reported about on time but Toronto taxi service was demoral- ized. Telegraph communications were affected, especially in east- ern Ontario. Some Trans-Canada Air Lines flights east and south were cancelled. "We expect snow, sleet or rain until tomorrow morning," said a weather forecaster here. "You can decide which by flipping a coin. "If we get snow, there will be more' than five inches by night. "But the temperature will stay about .33 degrees. We could get sleet or rain instead of snow." Toronto got snow last evenihg, then sleet and rain. This morning it was snowing agains and the streets were covered by a inch or so of slush. Farther north the overnight fall was all snow. There was freezing rain and snow in the London-Wind- sor area. "We're lucky in Toronto it wasn't a couple of degrees colder," said the Toronto: forecaster. 'Total overnight precipitation was 1.7 inches. If it had been all snow, the snow now would be 17 inches deep." He said the heaviest snowfall apparently was in Wiarton district in the Bruce peninsula--about five inches. Baslleville was a ghost city as the storm knocked out the electri- city supply. Factory workers were sent home early today as their machines moaned to a stop. Four or five inches of slush kept traf- fic at a snail's 'pace. Three cars were damaged by trees broken by ice on branches. The snow started at midnight and continued until daybreak. At 9:30 a.m. it was thawing a little. Western Ontario bore the brunt of the storm. Five inches of snow fell in four hours at . Windsor. | mixture of snow, hail and rain. The storm brought Toronto some relief from a six-day cold snap. Weather experts said yesterday's minimum of 17 degrees made it the coldest Nov. 6 since 1853. Highway conditions in the south- ern part of the province varied from slushy to .ice-covered and slippery. In most northern areas, snow was packed on road sur- faces. The harp seal, main type caught off Canada's Atlantic coast, is from five to six feet long weighing "up to 400 pounds. and Committee (Continued from Page 1) $1 a year per capita of the Cana- dian population. In 1950 ~ 51, "the CBC had revenues of $8,301,379 and expendi- tures of about $9,573,253, leaving a deficit of $1,271,874. The revenues included $5,571,991 from the annual $2.50 fee on radio receiving sets, $2.463,344 from com- mercial broadcasting and _$226,043 from. miscellaneous sources. The commission recommended that the annual licence fee be re- tained and that the less desirable commercial programs be replaced by CBC - sponsored programs. It suggested that the difference be- tween the revenues from licences and commercial programs and CBC needs be met through a par- liamentary grant. That is the aim of the new legislation. A CBC official said the change will allow the corporation to plan ahead for at least five years assured of fairly - constant] revenues. It will engender im- provements delayed by lack of funds and also will enable use of more Canadian talent. The statutory grants will apply only to radio broadcasting. No provision has been made to finance CBC operations in television when stations start telecasts in Montreal and Toronto. Another change in the act may give the CBC broader powers to check the use of live talent by privately - owned radio stations. The majority report of the com- mission was critical of the part played by most private stations in the development of Canadian talent. The new act will appoint CBC Chairman A, D. Dunton, or who- ever happens to be chairman of the board, for a 10 - year - period. He also will be brought under the CBC's pension fund. The three-year terms of other members of: the board will not be changed. The proposed changes likely will be studied by a 26 - man all-party committee to be established to re- view operations of the CBC. European Tour (Continued from Page 3) ly, as they put it, to modest Cana- dian swim suits. Returning to Britain they spent eight days in London which whet- ted their curiosity to see more of their own British heritage. When they were in London the Festival of 'Britain was in full swing and the South Bank exhibition and pleasure gardens fascinated them. They were filled with gratitude for the friendly hospitality they received from the English and they said they met with a fine wel- come everywhere in Britain, | Visiting some relatives near | Alford, Doreen was amazed at some of Britain's modern schools | but she refused to follow the cur- rent fad for brilliant hair dyes. The two youngsters said that it was England that won their nearis. At one school they found pupils Jooking after their own gardens, 'cooking meals for the rest of the youngsters, running™a model farm with stock and chickens, pigs and ducks and building a cow barn. The children seemed very happy and worked hard with little super- vision. Staying with the rector of Alford, who was a relative of Doreen's, the Canadians got right into the stream of English life. CARTIVATED BY EDINBURGH In Scofland and ¥eland they vis- ited Willy's relatives and took in a great deal of both countries. Like thousands of other tourists they were captivated with Edin: burgh and flying over Dublin they discovered why Ireland is called the Emerald Isle. That flight was their last contact with efficient transportation in that country for they criticised Ireland's buses which never left on time. In spite of trouble with Irish and Canadian accents, the girls received great hospitality frgm the people of Wexford which was the place from which Willy's relatives originally left for Canada. They paid a short trip to Wales which they thought a beautiful country and then boarded the liner Scythia for # rough trip back to Canada. Doreen was. born in Manches- ter and is on her second year as | a teacher in Kingston. iously taught in Markham and Sudbury. ORDER RADIOS OUTSIDE Taipeh, Formosa (AP) -- A Na- tionalist newspaper said Commun- ist ordered radio owners in Shang- hai to move their sets outside their homes beginning Nov. 1. The rea- sons, the newspaper said, are to allow neighbors without radios to hear Communist broadcasts, and to discourage secret listening to sta- tions outside Soviet-Controlled terr- itory. U.N. Troops Recapture Vital Hill 8th A Amy Headquarters, Korea (AP) ied troops attacking through the mud today recaptured one of three hills lost to Chinese -{ assaults - since Sunday. The communists did not put up much of a fight to keep the peak northwest of Yonchon. Two batta- lions of Chinese had overrun it Tuesday. The Reds drove United Nations' infantrymen out of advanced po- sitions northwest of Korangpo, near the 38th parallel on the western front. The allies promptly counter- attacked and ran the Reds back to their own lines. Elsewhere along the western sec- tor rain dampened the savage in- fantry fighting of the last three days. Artillery duels thundered along the sector as the U.N. tried to soften up Chinese still holding two peaks they seized Sunday. Red gunners knocked out five allied tanks on the east-central She prev- front. 2 Storms deprived attacking allied troops in the west of all-out air support Tuesday. A dispatch from the front said improved weather might signal an- other all-out drive to push . the Reds off the hills. U.N. Command artillery has been pounding Communist positions con- tinuously. Communist guns have been almost as active. T00 MUCH LEISURE Bangkok (Reuters) -- Thailand's housewives spend too much of their leisure time unwisely, a government committee has decid- ed. The committee decided to ask industries to encourage housewives to devote some of their leisure to part-time jobs. \ LOAN FRO You get friendly, understand- ing, fast service! It's "YES" promptly to 4 out of 5 men, women--married or single. Come in . .. write . . . phone TODAY. Get a one-visit loan if you phone first. Loans $50 10 $1200 EMPLOYED 'WOMEN Married or single -- you can get cash here promptly. Use our Special Lunch Hour Service: Phone first and get the loan in one visit. 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