Daily Times-Gazette, 14 Jan 1953, p. 2

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) @ THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE, Wednesday, January 14, 1953 "OSHAWE AND DISTRICT NAME OMITTED . William Harris ; - BARRIE- Mr, ud_Mi1. rn nce the | In & report of the After Church ~ on Jan. 13, 1953,4 Musicale held a} Adelaide House on a ye] Hospital, A | on Sunday ev! g, a name was in- sister for Dianne ; advertently missed, It was ha of , Mrs. T. J. are |Mrs, J. J. Fleming, who acts as ery pleased io announce iho Birtn of » chairman at these pleasant musical mas James, Jr. on Jan. 14, at the Oshawa Hospital. 1958, occasions, introducing the artists and giving explanatory comments on the various selections. PLAN CHARTER NIGHT Lions Club Charter Night will be held January 23 at the Genosha Hotel, Lion President Stanley Turn- er announced last night at a dinner meeting held in the Genosha Hotel Blue Room. Lions are asked to bring guests for the gala "event that will feature Walter Fischer, past president of Lions Interaa~ VINSON--Entered General Hospital on Monday, January Ba i Vineon in ner Slat year inson, . Jate from Armstrong al Funeral the Home, Oshawa, Thursday, January , Service 2 p.m. Interment Oshawa Union Cemetery. CARD OF THANKS family wish anks and ap- Mrs. John McCullough Church, Ulster LOL ck Perceptory No. 763. 222, Mizpah Club for their beautiful of kind- bereave- kind expressions of sympathy, floral offerings and many acts ness shown during their recent ment. 1 wish to express m Drs. D. A. Smith and Ra West, for their and good care my " iliness. The hospital and staff of T'2 for the care and attention, I received. Thank- ing the two churches who Jemembered me their prayers and Special note of thanks go to College HIT folk for the bouquets, of 'mums and fruit ated, as I have lived such a short time on the hill. Thanks also to friends and acquaintances who sent cards and gifts, and those who helped in sincere thanks to y The funeral service for Mrs. Robert J. Brown, who passed away in the Oshawa General Hospital on Sunday last, was held from the Armstrong Funeral Home at 2 p.m. yesterday. 8. G. Saywell, lay pastor of North Oshawa United Church, conduct- ed the services, Interment was in Mount Lawn Cemetery. The bearers weré E. Brown, Cliff Brown, Earl Brown, Robert Brown, Paul Shuttler and James Shuttler. Dismiss Two Driving Cases Two cases of careless driving were dismissed in Magistrate's Court this morning. William Saw- don, RR 2, Pickering, and James Huggins, 51 Brock Street East, had their cases defended by George Boychyn, local solicitor. d Both cases should be taken care agistrate R. P, of in civil court, M Locke, QC, said, after hearing the and | District "'A"' Convention to be held " |in Hamilton, June 7-10. Applicants and | Turner or Mac Barnett. Mrs. [ted from a list published in the % | Monday issue of The Times-Gaz- tional, as guest speaker. PLAN FOR CONVENTION Reservations are now being made for Lions Club members for should get in- touch with Lion Stan FINANCIAL REPORT The financial report of the Osh- awa and District Labor Council, as presented at last night's inau- gural meeting, listed income up to and including December, 1952, as $4,191, expenses as $252.50, and a balance for the year of $3,938.50. ADDITIONAL DELEGATES Delegates to the UAW Conven- tion being held in Oshawa this weekend, whose names were omit- ette, are: Russell McNeil, chair- man of the GM Sub-Committee; W. Hall, E, Boote, L. Brisebois and Jas. Freeman, all of the sub- committee; Peter Chryk, chair- man of the Duplate Committee; Ernie Burrus, chairman of the Ontario Steel group; and John Turner, chairman of the compensa- tion committee. AUTQ STALLED Ernest Schwoegler, = Lakefield, charged with: obstructing a drive- way, had his case dismissed by Magistrate R. P. Locke this morn- ing in Magistrate's Court. His car had stalled in snow on Ritson Road South and his attempts to push it had failed. HEARING ADJOURNED David O'Connell, of Toronto, ap- peared before Magistrate R. P. Locke this morning in Magistrate's Court, charged with vagrancy, He told the court he had come to Osh- awa to participate in a dice game. His case was remanded to January 22 by the magistrate, after Chief Owen: D. Friend said the local pol- ice wanted to carry out further in- vestigations. EXCELLENT REPORT The Oshawa Police Department said today no accidents had been reported during the past 24 hours. This is the first time in. months that the department has had » completely-blank traffic sheet. ecutors' evidence, Both were No Sympathy For Careless Drivers There will be no sympathy shown to drivers who are charged with careless driving, especially if strong drink is involved, Magistrate R. P. Locke, QO, stated after fining David Evenden, 802 Simcoe Street South, $100 and costs or 30 days. Evenden appeared before the mag- istrate this morning, charged with Awarded $100 Fine For Street Brawl INGERSOLL (CP) -- Douglas Bruce of Ingersoll, one of five brothers involved in a street brawl here several weeks ago, was fined $100 and $44 costs or three months in jail on his conviction here Tues- day of resisting arrest. Magistrate R. G. Groom of Till- sonburg, also found Bruce guilty on a charge of intoxication and and fined him $15 and $3 costs 30 days. ' Evidence on a charge of assault causing bodily harm against don Bruce was heard. Magistrate Groom reserved decision until Fri- y. Only two species of the walnut tree are known in Canada, both occurring in southern Ontario. OSHAWA TRAFFIC TOLL 0000000 sess nne sees ssnne "sssssnsescasvessnne Year to Date ~~. Sess nesateenee land. that it protest alleged police '| meeting of the hospital association careless driving and having defec- tive brakes, He was fined $10 on the defective Arake charge to which he pleaded Evenden"s car was involved in a crash on Simcoe Street on Decem- ber 24, He told Police Constable . N. Smyth he "had a couple of beers." Considerable damage was done to both cars involved in the collision. Magistrate Locke added he would enforce the measures he had taken for 'future drivers. LABOR COUNCIL . BRIEFS Labor Council delegates at their inaugural meeting "last night pass- | ed a motion that all delegates be enrolled as members of the Osha~ wa General Hospital Association, at a cost of $1 per delegate per year. - Resolved to purchase a piece of equipment for the hospital at $500, and contribute $250 to the Bow- manville Hospital Fund. Moved to ask the Oshawa Gen- eral Hospital to give more labor representation on its board, and to submit a resolution to the annual asking such action. It was noted that Mayor Jack Naylor and T.D. (Tommy) Thomas, MLA, both uni- on men were sitting on the board this year, but some thought "To- ken labor representation' by some member or members of the coun- cil should be added. Recommend the associating of affiliates of the council with the Oshawa Ministerial Association in forming a branch of the Religion- Labor Foundation, but specifying the thought that churches of all religious denominations should be invited. The foundation would aid in the mutual" exchange of infor- "+ |in which he quoted Mr. Currie as Scene outside West Berlin's Spandau prison shows change in guards from Russian (left) to American (right), in keeping with US. TAKES OVER GUARD AT SPANDAU PRISON four-power administration of the prison where leading Nazis are serving terms meted out in the Nuremberg trials. The Ameri- cans are taking over for the month of December. Central Press Canadian, LIKE HITLER PACT"? By RICHARD O'REGAN VIENNA (AP)--Does Communist East Europe's new wave of anti- Jewish trials and purges mean Rus- sia is looking for a new version of the Hitler-Stalin pact of 1939? Will the Soviet Union offer divi- ded Germany unification and her pre-1945 territory now held by Pol- and and Czechoslovakia, in ex- change for neutrality or a new Moscow-Berlin axis tieup? Western diplomats in Vienna be- lieve these are possible explana- tions for the widespread liquida- tion of Jewish Communists, known to be basically anti-German, in the Iron Curtain countries around Ger- may's eastern periphery, and for the purge of Jews from public life in East Germany. This explanation, to the sources here, is more logical than the often- expressed theory that the current anti-Semitism is a bid. for Arab favor, Sources here see many similari- ties between the present and the years from 1936 until the Hitler- Stalin pact shocked the world. Then, as now, there was a liquid- ation of all potential critics of Stal- in's cynical foreign policy manipu- lations. Communist Jewry Purge Precedes Ruhr Overtures Before the 1939 pact, Russia's old Bolsheviks were eliminated. Many were Jews who could have been expected to oppose Stalin's deal with the Nazis. Leon Trotsky was murdered in Mexico, removing a potential rallying figure for the opposition, Maxim Litvinoff was ousted from the foreign ministry and replaced by V. M., Molotov. The Polish Communist party was purged of elements who would have opposed partition of their country between the two dictators. Today, Jews are being removed from influential positions in East Germany. In Czechoslovakia, 11 top Communists, eight of them Jews, recently were hanged. Their leader, Rudolph Slansky, was known to fear German rebirth. In Poland, former Communist boss Wigdislaw Gomulka and oth- ers soon may face a mass trial. They probably would oppose any Kremlin deal to revise the present Polish - German border in Ger- many's favor. Romania's drive on the Jews caught former foreign minister Ana Pauker and others. The French Communist party is purging leaders of the Second World War anti-German resist- ance, Western diplomats here reason this way: Russia's greatest aim is to lay her hands on the industrial wealth of West Germany's Ruhr valley. Without it, the Russians cannot hope to exceed the industrial might of the United States and gain world economic domination. But the Kremlin now realizes it cannot get the Ruhr by force, and must use trickery and stratagem instead. One answer would seem to be a deal with West Germany, neutralizing her until her economic wealth can be brought into the Sop viet sphere. A major obstacle is Chancellor Konrad Adenauer's anti - Soviet government in Bonn. If this fac- tion could be eliminated, the west- ern republic weakened politically and a purged East German Red regime strengthened, Russia could feel safe in offering West Germany a hard-to-resist package--unifica- tion of East and West Germany, elections, withdrawal of Russian troops, and--choicest bait of all-- return of the lost territories, es- pecially from Poland. The price, presumably, would be a Berlin - Moscow non - aggression pact. CCF STIRRED TO (Continued from Page 1) servative leader, objected that this was a move to block the opposi- tion's traditional right to move amendments. Mr. Knowles - also objected that the government was getting away with something the opposition had been denied for years. Mr. Knowles said either the amendment extended the powers of the committee or it was unneces- sary. In either case, it should be ruled out. Prime, Minister St. Laurent argued that the House has the right to tell a committee what to con- sider first. The Speaker allowed the amend- ment to stand. The Progressive Conservative sub-amendment he later threw out would have elimin- ated the Claxton amendment and asked that Mr. Currie be reap- pointed to make a far wider inquiry into the defence program. The CCF amendment read by Mr. Knowles also urges considera- tion of the appointment of Mr. Currie to make a far wider probe into expenditures covered by the poriginal resolution, that is all de- fence spending since 1950. Mr. Knowles' accusation that threats were made against Mr. Coldwell was based on a letter Mr. Claxton sent the CCF leader Jan. 8 saying he would welcome further investigation of how the CCF got hold of a draft. copy of the report. Mr. Claxton added: 'The RCMP are being insfructed accordingly. Before, 'however, they start, it would be of assistance if you could make available to me any informa- tion that you may have bearing on this" . Mr. Colawell previously had de- clined to tell how he got the copy and in replying to Mr. Claxton again declined to do so, -arguing that 'for me to divulge this inform- ation now would have the effect of deterring members of parlia- ment in the future from bringing to the attention of the House matters in the public interest because they were not in a position to disclose the source of their in- formation." Mr. Knowles retorted: "I thought threats by one mem- ber of Parliament to another were out of order." Yet here was a 'veiled threat' to use the Mounties unless Mr. Coldwell told what he knew. He contrasted this situation with one which broke in the British Commons in 1938 when a member came into possession of informa- jon which made him liable to a| mation between labor forces and! the church, y | Moved to ask City Council's op- | charge under the Official Secrets Act. ; One leading British parliamen- | ANGER is concerned to protect its rights. In Canada, there are threats to use the police. Mr. Knowles renewed criticisms of Lt-Gen. G. G. Simonds, chief of the general staff, and said his conduct raises the question of whether the armed forces or the government are running the coun- try. He said Gen. Simonds has im- properly asked that a memo of his objecting to the Currie report be tabled in the House; has instructed his army not to discuss the report, and then issued a message to the army in effect striking back at parliamentary critics. Such "arrogant and domineer- ing" conduct was not in keeping with democratic practices. Mr. Claxton, in his speech on the Currie report findings, said wrong- doing must be expected in the armed forces but that it is no more widespread, comparatively, than in any large civilian: undertaking. The loss at Camp Petawawa through thefts and fraud amounted to $50,000 and most of the things stolen had been recovered. Mr, Currie had not uncovered those ir- regularities and he had not been able to find others in a coast-to- coast study. ay The army works services had had troubles for two main reasons. They had had to expand tremend- ously after Korea and they had been unable to get the skilled man- power needed for expansion. Most of Mr, Currie's recommenda- tions had been or are being im- plemented. He himself had ap- proved the accounting system de- vised for the works branch. The only reason it didn't work was because there weren't the people to work it, Even laborers had had to be used to do accounting jobs. Mr. Claxton disclosed that it was he who proposed that a draft copy of the Currie report be submitted to the defence department to be checked for the accuracy of its facts, a check which led to some changes. He said Mr. Currie had agreed to this after initia! disin- clination to do so. Mr. Claxton defended his action on the grounds that "I wanted the truth" about a 'bad situation." "I wanted the kind of report nobody would" question. I did not want errors in fact. . .which would discredit the report and make it more difficult to implement recom- mendations." Gen, Pearkes said the govern- ment cut the armed forces to skele- ton proportions after the war and laid the foundation for what hap- pened in the works services. "It is do disgrace to men in the works services that they were few in number." He said his party welcomes re- position to any suggestion that the |tarian after an ot h e r--including | Stablishment of the defence com- present Public Library building be | torn down for parking lot purposes. | Community Welfare Counci] of On- tario to call a conference to dis cuss housing for elderly persons, and suggested this conference be held in Kingston. Appointed delegate Lloyd McIn- ally to serve on the co-ordinating committee on education as a re- presentative of council. Council delegates resolved to ask the Canadian Congress of Labor to offer support to tne textile strikers in Louiseville, Quebec, brutality there. mittee to study defence spénding Seek To Relax Standards For GM Jobs "Oshawa is getting to be like the old market place of Rome, where slaves were bought and sold, measured and sized up, by prospective owners," delegate Sid McCormack somewhat heatedly told Oshawa Labor Council at its inaugural meeting last night. He was referring to what he called the stringent physical yard- sticks by which the local National Employment Service office meas- ures applicants for jobs at Gen- eral Motors of Canada, Limited, in Oshawa. He said that girls had to be 5 feet 5 inches in height and weigh 120 lbs to pass these standards, and men had to weigh at least 150 lbs. and be 5 feet 8 inches tall. A girl over 30 couldn't get a job, he said. 4 Mr. McCormack wanted NES to make representations to General Motors to abolish such rigid hir- ing standards, so that local people could work regardless of weight, height or age. M. J. Fenwick, secretary-treas- urer of Labor Council pointed out that last year City Council had written a letter to General Motors management asking them to re- lax their hiring standards, and had been as good as told to mind its own business. Delegates passed a motion ask- ing National Employment Service to take corrective action on this question. Two Beers Prove Rather Costly Two beers, consumed prior to Christmas Eve celebrations, cos t Gordon Varty, age 18, 64 Orchard | Avenue, $400 damage to his car and | $100 for careless driving. He ap-! peared before Magistrate R. P.! Locke, QC, this morning on a! charge of careless driving. | The accused was involved in an | accident on Simcoe Street on No- vember 21. Over $1,000 damage, of which $400 was to his car, was done. William Monaghan of Osh-| awa was the driver of the other car, J Varty and his witnesses told the court he was unable to turn the! steering wheel of his car to the | left, in order to avoid the acci-| dent. J. Loucks, age 19. RR 1, Oso- | 2 Killed As Train Hits Car SUDBURY (CP) -- Two people were killed Tuesday night when their car was struck by a train at the CPR crossing in nearby Coniston. They have been identified as Leo Raymond and Lauretta Brunet, both of Garson, nine miles north- |, east of here. The car apparently was proceed- ing 'towards the Coniston smelter when hit by the eastbound Mon- treal train, Miss Brunet was brought to hospital here but was pronounced dead on arrival. Ray- mond was killed instantly. The accident was at the same level crossing where nine persons were killed in a bus-train crash Feb. 9, 1951. | Six Die As Flames Gut Home WARREN, Pa. (AP) -- Two elderly women, a man and four children were burned to death to- day in a fire which destroyed an isolated 14-room nursing home near ere. ' The victims were Mrs. Nettie Clark, 80, who died minutes after she was rescued; Mrs. Maude Stroupe, 75; Merle Nourse, 70, and the following nieces and nephews of Mrs. J. A. McCoy, operator of the home: James Durlin, 12; his brothers, Thomas, 10, and Joseph, 14; and a sister, Jo Ann, 16. The four children, Mrs. Stroupe and Nourse were cremated by the flames. The children were the sons and daughter of Guy Durlin, of Bear Lake, who killed his wife and himself in September, 1951. Patricia Durlin, 15, a sister of the young victims, climbed down a fire escape to safety, UK Cuts Bacon, But Ups Joints LONDON (Reuters) -- Britons will get an extra sliver of meat on their weekly rations starting Jan. 25, but their bacon will be cut to a quarter of a pound a person a week. - The news came from the food ministry Tuesday night along with figures indicating that if estimates pan out 1953 will be Britain's best meat year since the Second World War. The meat ration will be raised from 1s 8d worth a week to 1s 9d. Bacon goes down from five ounces to four. The price-based ration amounts to a medium-sized steak, about three lamb chops or--for a family of four--a small pot roast once a week. Dionnes Deny Quint Engaged NORTH BAY (CP) -- Oliva Dionne, father of quintuplets, said today a New York report that one of the girls is engaged to a lawyer is "strictly bunk', The story said the girl is Yvonne. Mr. Dionne said the report is untrue, None of the famous five is having a romance, he said. The quintuplets, 19 next May 28, have returned to a girls' college at Nicolet, Que., after spending the year-end holidays at their home at nearby Corbeil. COURT HEARS (Continued from Page 1) people living around Manvers Sta- tion, he replied, "No." HEARD WOMAN SCREAM The witness said that he, his brother Stanley, and some friends went out to the front steps of the dance hall as the evening progress- ed. He said that while there he heard people velling and a woman screaming, with thé sounds coming from the west. He and his brother and friends went to see what it was, he re- lated, and he saw a young man lying in the ditch, He said that at \ first he did not know who the per-, son was, but since has learned the man's name to be Ted Zarlko. The witness also said that some people were standing around and on a lawn at the far side of the ditch, about 10 feet away from where he and his brother and friends stood at the edge of the road, stood Wentzel Hendsby and Frank Derusha, Saying that his brother asked what had happened, the witness said that Frank Derusha asserted, "He got what was com- ing to him, and if anybody else comes near me he'll get the same. SAW MEN GRAPPLE The witness said that his broth- er and Hensby later grappled, with arms around each other; that they fell to their knees on the ground, and that his brother came away saying, 'I've been stabbed." When defence counsel question- ed the witness, he asked whether there had been loud talk and pro- fane language at the rear of the dance hall before the altercation outside, He asked whether the caretaker had thereby been oblig- ed to send some of the noisy ones outside. The witness replied that he had not seen this take place. Defence counsel produced a BUSINESS SPOTLIGHT 2 By FORBES RHUDE Canadian Press Business Editor Canadians now can get good de- sign in their furniture in virtually anv price range, This 1s in considerable contrast to a féw years ago when eye appeal generally went with the high price gs. This improvement in design is perhaps the most striking thing to be noted at the current Canadian Nie Mart in Toronto (Jan, Simmle, clean-cut lines have come into the lower-priced field, and even if today's pieces should be- come "dated" a few years from now, they should still be pleasant to live with, This is not to say, however, that bizarre effects do not creep in, or that there is not room for con- tinuing improvement. . The Furniture Mart now is in its fourth year and C. L. Stark, its managing director, gives it some of the credit for the improve- ment in design, He said a number of firms whose goods suffered in comparison with their competitors in the early shows made fast changes. ° Swedish designs seem to have been among the influences for Modern Design Available In Low-Priced Fumiture good, and some beautiful pieces] are being turned out in Canada under Swedish licence. i * For those who can afford high' price tags, there is plenty to look il both in modern and traditional es. Plastics, sometimes virtually like wood in appearance but harder to scratch, are creeping into occas- ional furniture. In general, new materials, or old materials such as iron new uses, are testing -out their places in the furniture and furnishings field. - : The use of iron recently led to caustic comment by a big Ameri- can buyer at an American show. He said: "You now sit on chairs which combine all the comforts of an over-sized coal scuttle, the soft feel of a window screen and the basic ingredients of a picket fence." Canadian "designs, however, if inclined to caution, also escape some of the more extreme efforts of American manufacturers. Improvement in design is most noticeable in bedroom furniture. Living room furniture also tends toward simpler lines, with much of the over-stuffing gone out of SCUGOG ISLAND SCUGOG ISLAND -- Commun- ion service will be held in Grace United Church on Sunday January 18, at 11.15 a.m. Everyone made a special effort to attend. The ane nual meeting of the Sunday School will take place on Wednesday and the officers elected for the new year. The list of new officers will be announced in next week's paper. Mr. John L. Sweetman and his helpers have made a start to reno- vate the walls of the basement of Grace United Church, and when it is completed it will certainly make a beautiful place for the children to worship during their Sunday School session. The walls are to be plastered and tinted and the floor painted. Mr. and Mrs. Clair Pogue from Sudbury visited Mr. and Mrs. Rus- sell Pogue on Sunday. Several of the school children have had the misfortune of con- tracting the measels and chicken- pox. Let's hope they will be back to school very shortly. Saturday evening several couples chesterfields. Workers Beautify Basement Of Grace United Church from the centre of the Island en- joyed a euchre in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Alan Martyn. High lady was Miss Shirley Eden; high man, Mr. Alf. Prentice; low man, Mrs. Robert Prentice; low lady, Mrs. Everett Prentice. The hostess served a tasty lunch. Mr, Victor Aldred wrenched his back while working and everyone hopes it isn't anything too serious. Mrs. Ralph Milner of Brooklin visited Mrs. Alan Martyn on Mon- day evening, Mrs. Jonathan Aldred and her sister Mrs. Jack Valentine spent a few days together visiting in To- ronto and Hamilton last week. Mr. and Mrs. Jack Valentine are leave ing this week for Winnipeg to visit their daughter and son-in-law, Mr, and Mrs. Ted Dalman for a few weeks. Choir practice will be held sgain {on Thursday evening in the centre {school at 8.00 p.m, sharp. All members are urged to be present. Mrs. C, L. Fralick visited with Me C. N. Ross in Toronto last week. THE WEATHER TORONTO (CP)--Official fore- casts issued by the Dominion pub- lic weather office in Toronto at 9:30 am.: Synopsis: Little change in tem- perature is expected in Ontario as the boundary zone between cold | and very mild weather remains for | the next 24 hours in the Vicinity | of lakes Erie and Ontario. South of the Great Lakes day-| time temperatures are in the fifties | but north of Muskoka they range | from 15 above to zero, Southern | Ontario will be somewhere in be- | tween. { Occasional snow is expected in Boilers areas today and Thurs- | ay. Regional forecasts valid until] midnight Thursday. Lake Erie, Lake Huron, Niagara, Lake Ontario, Georgian Bay, Hali- burton regions; Windsor, London, Hamilton, Toronto cities: Cloudy with little change in temperatures and light winds today and Wed- nesday. Low tonight and high Wed- nesday at Windsor 35 and 45, St. Thomas and London 32 and 40, Wingham and Muskoka 28 and 25 8t. Catharines, Hamilton, Trenton | and Toronto 30 and 35, Killaloe 5 | Ads in Newspapers Assure Big Sales NEW YORK -- Newspapers are; | the big guns of advertising, How- ard Mark, advertising manager of the Robert Simpson Co., in To-: | ronto, told the annual meeting of | the National Retail Dry Goods As- sociation here. '"'Any army which uses rifle fire when it should be using artillery will lose the battle, if not the war," he said, 'and any merchant who depends upon some lesser medium of advertising when _he should be using newspapers will lose sales, if not his shirt." ' LEBANON LODGE (Continued from Page 1) Seated at the head table were Wor. Bro, Gordon Houlden; Wor. | Bro. §. J. Babe, Wor. Bro. A. Pen- | found, Ruling Master of Cedar | Lodge, Rt. Wor. Bro. W. G. Bunk- |er, Rt. Wor. Bro. George Finnie, | Wor, Bro. W.'H. Gibbie, Wor. Bro. |J. H. Hunter, Wor. Bro. H. 8S. White, Wor, Bro. W. L. Piersca, {Wor, Bro. W. J. Sargant, Wor. | Bro. Charles Temmlar, Wor. Bro. iS. F. Everson, Wor. Bro. H, O. Flintoff. Mrs. J. A. Valentine, the lodge and 25. Summary for Thursday: | caterer, received the thanks of the awa, and Frederick Crowell, 19, broken broom, and asked whether 220 McKim Street, passengers in the witness had advanced on the Varty vehicle, appeared fog the | Hendsby, and hit him so hard with Cloudy. TORONTO (CP) Observed temperatures bulletin issued at the Toronto public weather office at 9 am. Min, Max, Dawson ......ce000 ves --_-- Victoria Edmonton .. Regina .... Winnipeg ... White River Sault Ste. Marie .. Kapuskaging North Ba, Sudbury Muskoka airport Windsor 50 22b 8b 3b 7 Montreal ... Saint John .. Halifax '38 DODGE COUPE $175.00 Dial 5-2587 or apply. 273 French St. | gathering from Wor. Bro. Gibbie and a box of flowers frem Bro. | Frank Mills for her services dur ing the past year. 1 ARREST SOLDIERS | FORT ERIE (CP)--The RCMP Tuesday arrested two Canadian | soldiers accused of being away {from their units without leave. | Joseph Bedard, 23, and Harry Long 20, were lodged in the jail here to await arrival of provost officers {from Oakville. F STOPS "HEADACHE W775 PIR CASH ON YOUR OWN SIGNATURE When bills pile up, get $50 to $1000 fast at Household Winston Churchill and Clement At- | lee--in a major debate had agreed |enerally, but argued that there that the member could be charged [Témains a need for a wider study but that he should not be because |P¥ Mr. Currie "into all aspects of this would strike at the indepen-|the organization, accounting and dence of Parliament and the prin. | Administration in the defence de- eigles of Semacracy. | was not a| Both Gen. Pearkes and Mr. government document his party Knowles said the defence commit- had obtained. There could be no|t€® could do little but whitewash charge' under the secrets act, It the government when the big ma- was & copy which belonged to Mr, | jority of members were Liberals. Currie, "The government," sald Mr.| One of the world's largest vol- Knowles, "has no right to question |cano chains is the 1,600 - mile Mr. Coldwell as to how he got it." | stretch from Alaska through the In Britain, he added, Parliament ' Aleutians. accused, | Loucks testified he was a passen- | ger in the ill-fated car. He stated | Crowell suffered a cut near his | eye and was taken to his girl friend's house to get patched up. The accident occurred in front of a doctor's office. the broom that he broke it. The * witness replied "no," but said that he had struck at Der- usha with the broom. After further testimony the case was adjourned for another week. "I disbelieve the evidence of the || witnesses and the accused," Magis- trate Locke said before limng Varty. | The magistrate said the accused | was "a menace on the roads, to! decent people", and suspended his driver's license for three months, YOUNG MARRIED MAN Six yeors selling ond collection ex- perience is interested in a position in Oshawa or close by. Late Model Cor PHONE 5-2744\ Finance! Loans made without bankable security. Repaymen$ plans to fit your income. Up to 24 months to repay. Phone or stop in today for fast, friendly, dependable service! 25th YEAR IN CANADA HOUSEHOLD FINANCE C. H, Brook, Manager an 11Va Simcoe St. South, second floor, phone Oshawa 5.1139 OSHAWA, ONT. fee

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