9 THE DAILY TIIMES.GAZETTE, Wednesday, January 21, 1953 BIRTHS and ses brose, (nee Bunny Moth), are pleased to announce the arrival 'of their son. Wayne Douglas, on Tuesday, J. 1953, at the Oshawa General Both doing well. CACHIA--Mr. and Mrs. Edward Cachia (nee Mary Laudi) are happy to announce the arrival of their son on Tuesday, Jan, 20, 1953, at the Oshawa General Hospital. Mother and baby both doing fine. anuary 20, Hospital. AS--Mr. apd Mrs. H. Dyas, Jr. proud- ad PROURCE the arrival of their daughter, Susan Deborah, at the Oshawa General Hospital, on Tuesday, January 20, 1953. KING--Mr. and Mrs. Stanley R. King (nee Eva Crawford) are happy to announce the birth of their son, Peter Stanley, on Jan. 19, 1953, at the Oshawa General > DEATHS At the family residence, 29 Charles BE on Wednesday, Jan. 21, 1953, Kate J. Welch, dearly beloved wife of Samuel J. Babe and sister of Mrs, T. B. Mother- sill, Funeral from Luke-Mcintosh Funeral Home on Friday, Jan. 23, at 2:30 p.m. Interment Union Cemetery. Friends are ly requested not to call until Thurs afternoon. day BAWKS--Entered into rest in the family residence, 106 Agnes St, Oshawa, on Wednesday, Jan. 21, 1953, Robert Hillier (Jack) Bawks, beloved husband of Catherine Quigley, in his 63th year. Funeral from the Armstrong Funeral Ylome, Oshawa, on Friday, Jan. 23, with | Migh Requiem Mass in St. Gregory's Church 11 a.m. Interment in St. Gregory's. Cemetery. CLAUS--Entered into rest in the family residence, 446 Simcoe Street South, Osh- * awa, Tuesday, Jan. 20, 1953, Leo Sea- bourne Claus, beloved husband Margaret Mitchell, in his 47th year. Funeral from the Armstrong Funeral Home, Oshawa, Thursday, Jan. 22. Service 2 p.m. Interment Oshawa Union Cemetery. of McCULLOUGH -- Entered into rest in Bowmanville Memorial Hospital on Mon- day, January 19, 1953, Robert McCul- lough, beloved husband of the late Edith Little and dear father of Robert B., at home (Bathisern M13, D. R. Davey, of rone, in his 83rd year. Tyrone. at the Northcutt and Smith Funeral Home, 53 Division Street, Bow- manville until Wednesday afternoon, then to his late residence, Tyrone, for service Thursday, January 22 at 2:30 p.m.. In- %terment Bethesda Cemetery. STACEY--Suddenly at his late residence, Columbus, Ont., on Tuesday, January 20, 1953, Glen E. Stacey, beloved hus- band of Elizabeth Hadley and father of Mrs. B. Ellis (Evelyn), and Oletta of Toronto, and Harold of Whitby in his 66th year. Resting at the Robinson Funeral Chapel, Brooklin, for service on Thursday, Janu ary 22, at 2:30 p.m. Interment Groveside Cemetery, Brooklin. IN MEMORIAM COOPER--In loving memory of a dear husband and father, Aubrey Cooper, who passed away Jan. 20, 1948. --Ever d by and family. DRINKLE--In loving memory of 'a dear mother, Harriet Drinkle, who ssed away on January 2ist, 1950. e depths of sorrow we cannot fell Of the loss of one we loved so well, And while she sleeps a peaceful sleep, Her memory we shall always keep. ~Lovingly remembered by Ruth and Susan Henry, OSHAWA AND DISTRICT LUCRATIVE PARKING METERS Brockville's 200-odd parking met- ers, which became the sole proper- | ty of the town in May of last year, collected the sum of $14,063.27 dur- ing the past 12 months. THREE AUTOS DAMAGED | Three cars received miner dam- | age when they collided at Albert] and Bruce Streets yesterday. The drivers, Frederick H. Wilson, 291 Courcelette Avenue; James S. Kinlin, 97 Hillcroft Street and Fred- erick J. Fox 600 Somerville Av- enus, were not injured. TRUCK DAMAGED Minor damage was done to a Bell Telephone equipment truck yesterday, when it wag In collision with a car driven by Gerald D. Mulholland, 429 Ritson Road North, at Simcoe Street North and Al- bert's Road. Donald W. Taylor, of Enniskillen, was the driver of the me r nL 17 X J T LADUI i dVul Abolition 0 Poll Tax: Any move to abolish the poll tax will have .organized labor's | "unqualified support," M. J. Fen- wick, secretary-treasurer of the Oshawa and District Labor Coun- cil said today, He was comment- ing on the proposal made by sev- eral civic department heads to Monday's City. Council - meeting that the tax be abolished. "The Oshawa and District Labor Council bas sought the abolition of this tax for many years," Fen- wick explained. "We are pleaséd to note that civic tax officials' agree that this unpopular tax be abolished." Fenwick said the tax had no place in our present machine age. "The tax belongs to the horse and buggy era when séttlers con- tributed a day's work to keep roads in good repair, They paid no motor license or gasoline tax Toronto telephone truck. The car received a damaged left front fen-| der, radiator, grille and bumper | in the morning accident. IMPOSE $10 FINE Charged with intoxication, Thom- |as Hefferman, Frankford, was fin- ed $10 and costs or 10 days, by Magistrate R. P, Locke, QC, in court this morning. NO NAME ON VEHICLE For driving a truck without a | {name marked on the exterior of | the vehicle and for failing to change {ownership of the same truck, James Hutchinson, Wolfe Street, [Peterboro, was fined $5 and costs |or 10 days, by Magistrate R. P.| { Locke, QC, in Magistrate's Court | this morning. DISOBEYED ORDERS | { Herman Campbell, unemployed |and father of three children aged | five to 10, was fined $50 (to be | submitted to. his wife) or 30 days, {by Magistrate R. P. Locke, QC, in court this morning, Campbell was | charged with disobeying the magis- |trate's order. The accused's ar- | rears in payments to his wife was (set at $75 by Magistrate Locke, who told Campbell he was in con- tempt of court by failing to com- ply with the first order. Queen's Sturgeon Saved LONDON (AP) -- A 40-pound sturgeon belonging to the Queen | was r d from a fish peddler | OBITUARIES MRS, SAMUEL J. BABE In poor health for the past three years, Mrs. Samuel J. Babe passed away at the family residence, 29 Charles Street, early this morning. Born Kate J. Welch, daughter of the late Richard Elwood and Eun- ice Welch, she was married to Samuel J, Babe in St. George's Anglican Church on April 18, 1800 4nd had spent all her life in Osh- pwa. A member of St. Andrew's Unit- ed Church, she was active in the Bunday School, the Woman's As- sociation and the Women's Mis- sionary Society, holding offices in the last two groups. She is survived by her husband; one sister, Mrs, T, B. Mothersill, and two grandsons, William and Robert Babe, all of Oshawa. She was predeceased by her only son, William E. » 943. The funeral will take place from the Luke-McIntosh Funeral Home on Friday, January 23, at 2.30 p.m. with Rev. George Telford, DD, officiating. Interment will be in Oshawa Union Cemetery. Friends are requested not to call at the funeral home until Thurs- day afternoon. FUNERAL OF ERNEST ALBERT LIDDLE Rev. J. K. Moffat, minister of Simcoe Street United Church, con- ducted the funeral service at the Armstrong Funeral Home at 3.30 p.m. yesterday for Ernest Albert Liddle, who passed away on Sun- day in his 75th year. The pallbearers were W. Pank- hurst, E. Powers, W. McKinstry, P. Kellar, M. Kellar and L. Gunn. Interment was in the Oshawa Union Cemetery. of FUNERAL OF WILLIAM THOMAS HAMILTON The funeral service for William Thomas Hamilton, who passed away in Whitby Township, on Sat- urday last, was held from Armstrong Funeral Home at 2 p.m. yesterday. Rev. H. A. Mellow of Northmins- ter United Church conducted the services. Interment wa. in the Osh- awa Union Cemetery. The pallbearers were George Hamilton, Charles Hamilton, Rob- ton and Kenneth Hamilton, Court Reserves Ballot Box Ruling TORONTO (CP)--Judgment was reserved Tuesday on a Cornwall application for reopening of ballot boxes used recently in that Eastern Ontario city's municipal election, Mr. Justice Wilfred Judson of the Ontario Supreme Court heard the application, brought by persons seeking a recount of the mayoralty vote. OSHAWA TRAFFIC TOLL Yesterday Accidents Rilled ............ A Yeor to Date Accidents Injured Killed i ., PLEASE DRIVE CAREFULLY 0 in the nick of time Tuesday and | delivered at Buckingham Palace. | The fish was caught Sunday by | fisherman F. E. Warman and sold | to Oscar Cleve, a Grimsby fish | merchant. | Since all Juupgeon caught off | Britain belong by historical pre-| cedence to the sovereign, Cleve | sent. a message to the palace] offering it to the Queen, | But so rarely does the sovereign | accept that Cleve had already | resold the fish to Tom Moore, a | Yeovil fish peddler, who had ear-! marked the catch for a local hotel. Then came a telegram from Buckingham Palace saying: 'Your very kind offer gladly accepted. Please send sturgeon to comp- troller." ! Cleve bought the fish back just | in time and rushed it by truck through the fog to London and | Buckingham Palace. | Brockville Paper Enters 133rd Year BROCKVILLE (CP) -- Anniver- sary celebrations by the staff of the Recorder and Times Thursday night will mark entry into the 133rd year of continuous public- ation. Ontario's oldest newspaper, the Brockville Recorder, was first pub- lished as a weekly Jan. 16, 1821. It has appeared as the Daily Recorder and Times for 80 years 'Planned | Mr. Justice Robert Taschereau and it took them a whole day to get to Toronto." "We hope the city fathers will agree to wire out the tax and recognize that it nas no place in our, modern society." Libel Law Definition LONDON, Ont. (CP) -- A justice of the Supreme Court of Canada will discuss contempt of court and libel with newspaper men at the Canadian Managing Editors' Con- | ference 1953 meeting here Feb. 6-8. will open a panel discussion on |""The Press and the Law," one of several on the three-day agenda. | Basil Walters of Chicago, executive editor, of the Knight Newspapers, {will 1éad a panel on the press and | | television. Other panels will dis- cuss components of a4 well-balanced | newspaper and the mechanics of new methods of picture reproduc- | tion. Bill Boss, Canadian Press cor- | respondent in Korea, will return to | Canada to address the conference. Dr. James Tallman of the Univer- sity of Western Ontario will discuss the development of humor in Can-| lada's newspapers. | Luncheon speakers included Er- win Canham, editor of the Christ- | {ian Science Monitor, Boston, and {Kenneth Harris, Washington cor- respondent of the London Observer. Editors from every province with the possible exception of Newfound- land are expected to attend. 400 Convicts Dety Police For 3rd Day BELLEFONTE, Pa, (AP)--Hall of the 800 convicts at Rockview state penitentiary carried their riot into its third day today while the other half awaited a "shakedown" by prison guards after acceding to a state ultimatum. The still-rioting convicts are a group in cell block A who started the outbreak Monday night when they seized six hostages and six revolvers and then barricaded themselves in the main cellblock of this central Pennsylvania prison. The prisoners who gave in to an ultimatum by Governor John S. {Fine Tuesday night make up the |400-0odd convicts in two other cell- 'blocks which joined the riot after the first outbreak. They held no hostages and were not armed, but burned mattresses and other arti- cles causing damage estimated by prison officials as running into the | thousands of dollar. . Their surrender came two hours after the main cellblock group shouted a defiant "no" to Fine's ultimatum and fired two shots Redd Harper, who played the | part of Jim Tyler in "Mr. | Texas', who will take part in the program at the World Vision LY Rally of the Oshawa Youth For Christ in Simcoe Street United Church on Thursday at 7.45 p.m. CNR Line Clear After Big Wreck SIOUX LOOKOUT, Ont. (CP)-- broken rail near here wrecked a Tuesday, killing one man and in- juring 74 other persons. The torn - up right-of-way was | mended 17 hours after the broken | rail threw the Canadian National {W. H. Campbell and brakeman W.|centre near and later were put aboard a spe- {The line was clear today where a cial train bound for western points. The dead man, 59-year-old Was- [trans continental passenger train ley Chelak of Unity, Sask: was found in an overturned day coach. A section hand, he travelled as a passenger. Two crew members, conductor L ] a ALL Immigr 1 | | | 1 MONTREAL (CP) -- A two-year investigation into what has been termed Canada's bigsest immigra- tion racket has been brought into the open following the arrest and arraignment Tuesday of three of six men, reported ringleaders {in the affair. : Released on bail of $2,000 each pending preliminary hearing Jan, 27, were Pascal Prtrecca, Montreal travel agency employee, Jean-Mar- cel Bourget former immigration officer, and Gustave d'Frrico, an- other travel agency employee. Warrants have been issued for the arrest of the three other men, but police said it may take up to two weeks before they are rounded up. One is believed somewhere in England, another somewhere in On- tario and the third somewhere in Quebec. Still wanted are Charles M. An- fossi and Lawrence Sullivan, form- er immigration inspectors, and Armand Theriault, former place- ment officer with the unemploy- ment insurance commission here. D'Errico was charged with of- for the admission of Italian immi- grants to Canada. Petrecca was charged on two separate counts of paying $595 to | Bourget as "gifts" and Bourget J ---- 2 Jet Aces 'Each Bag Eighth MiG SEOUL (AP)--Allied Sabre jet pilots shot down seven Communist MiG jet fighters and damaged three others in battles high over northwest Korea today, the U.S. 5th Air Fcrce said. Two U.S, jet aces, Col. Royal N. Baker, McKinney, Tex., and Maj. Robinson Risner, Oklahoma City, each was credited with his eighth IMIG destroyed. Today's bag was one of the biggest in several months, U.S. pilots destroyed eight MiGs last Wednesday--the most in one day since September. Thirteen Japan-based B-28 Super- | forts dropped 130 tons of bombs on ia Communist troop and supply Hamhung, 60 miles Railways crack Continental Limi- R. van Sickle, both of Winnipeg, north of Wonsan on the Korean ted into a pile of tangled coaches | as it raced through early-morning | darkness in snow-bound country | near here. The train, bound for Vancouver the outskirts of Ghost River, were reported in critical condition | but out of danger. Five cars, including two day coaches, tipped cover. None tele- scoped but most were badly dam- {from Montreal, s#tuck the rail on aged. Rails were ripped from their | a beds for 150 yards. Coach trucks | bleak whistle-stop trading post 25 land wheels littered the right - of - | miles east of here and 275 miles way. { east of Winnipeg. | There was no fire and surpris- The engine lurched past, but the |ing calm. | first of 11 cars following caught.|{ 'There was no panic at all," said | All 11 coaches lunged crazily to- |Sister Pulcharra of Humboldt, Sask. | ward steep embankments. Bob Wardle, 30, travelling from | Night - clad passengers, jolted | Britain to Stettler, Alta., said: "We | from sleep, scrambled into a dark | were fortunate more people weren't | world of scrub pine, rock and | killed. "The wreck was terrible | snow. Thirty-below-zero weather |, . . But there was no panic, Not | and snow drifts hindered rescue op- {even the children cried." | erations. | Soldiers on the train joined with | Seventeen of the 74 injured were | doctors and nurses in removing the detained in hospital here. Most suf- |injured. Many were crammed into | fered minor injuries. Other pas-|two coaches still standing at the sengers were taken to Winnipeg 'rear while waiting for help. Hitler Not Dead Say Unrepentant Nazis BERCHTESGADEN (AP) -- An had been filed, the Berchtesgaden anonymous letter-writter, apparent- | court appealed to the Bavarian ly an unrepentant Nazi, claims to [justice ministry for legal proof of know "the present whereabouts of |Hitler"s demise. The ministry re- Adolf Hitler and can disclose it |ferred this to the federal ministry at any time after proclamation of [of justice at Bonn. It in turn a general amnesty for his follow- asked competent officials of the ers,' the Bavarian justice ministry | Allied high commission. east coast Tuesday night. Crew | members said the area was ripped |by explosions, probably from am- munition stockpiles. Charge Soldier With Arson HAMILTON (CP)--A Hamilton soldier attached to the Provost Corps at Camp Borden, Hugh Walker, 19, was charged today with arson in connection with the de- struction by fire of the Leaders' Lodge at the Mount Nemo Boy Scout camp Dec. 28. Walker appeared in magistrate's court at Milton, this morning, where a remand of one week was asked by the Crown. The fire was discovered by mem- bers of the Hamilton troop of MacNeill Memorial church, West- dale, shortly after 8 p. m. on Dec. 28. The scouts were in Ram Lodge and saw flames through the wind- ows of the larger leaders' Lodge, where valuable camp equipment was stored. The scouts tried to halt the blaze with fire bombs and blankets but were forced out of the building. of seconds after the fering bribes of $2,500 to Sullivan and a weekly edition still is pub- | while dousing the electric lights in lished. ithe block. the | 9 ship reviewed the His Worship, Mayor W. J. |""Jack" Naylor was the guest speaker ot the Oshawa Kiwanis Club's weekly luncheon meeting yesterday at the Hctel Genosha. { The meeting was an annual |event of the club, which has made |a practice of having the city's chief magistrate as guest speaker, at their first meeting of the year, followirg. the installation of their own officers. Kiwanian Neil Fraser, of the Public and Business Affairs Com- mittee, ably introduced the guest speaker, reviewing Mayor Naylor's educational life and his career of public service in his native city. Kiwanian Bill Gibbie voiced the appreciation of the members, at the conclusion of the speaker's in- formative address. {EVERY CITIZEN HAS A DUTY | His Worship, Mayor Jack Nay- ilor, opened his address by lauding {the Oshawa Kiwanis Club for its { contribution in community service. | | "Everyone has a duty as a citizen, {and a contribution to make to civic administration, even if it is no more than to exercise his right of franchise," stated Mayor Nay- lor. "Every citizen who has the right and privilege to vote, should give serious consideration to his ballot. and vote. After all, who should be interestéd in how the city's busi- ness is comxiucted if the citizens themselves do not show sufficient interest to use their Iranchise. In a» brief summary, His Wor- progress of Imunicipal administration, |ing the. various . bills | and acts which were passed as the right to govern and control their own af- Mayor Tells Kiwanians How Civic Business Run |fairs was gradually made the re- | sponsibility of the municipality. The speaker stated that there are three main acts which embrace most of civic administration, nam- ing these as: the local improve- ment act, the assessment act and | the municipal act. Other acts, | which govern the control of other phases of civic business, were mettiongd The administration of civic busi- ness is carried on by various bodies, in addition to the duly elected city council, such as Boards and Commissions, two of which are elected by the eitizens, the Board of Education and the Pub- lic Utilities Commission, while oth- ers are appointed by the mayor and council. Reviewing the changes of level in administration and the acts and their significance and mentioning [such work carried out by civic tbodies, such ds welfare, town plan- ining, assessment, obtaining of grants, Mayor Jack Naylor men- tioned some of the problems which have faced Oshawa City Council {in recent years and problems | which stil] exist. | LOSING VIGOR | On the subject of grants, from |the Provincial Government, the speaker pointed out that for every- thing received, the city has given up some portion of its control and responsibility and so is losing its autonomy. . "Local municipality is losing a lot of its vigor by accepting help {trom other governmental agencies, {We gre perhaps accepting too much help," be said. "I feel that frate increase application into an disclosed today. | Justice officials said numerous | signed letters also have been re-| ceived by the Berchtesgaden dis- trict court from former Nazi party members protesting against a pos- sible ruling that Hitler, "our highly honored fuehrer," is legally dead. The Nazi letter-writing campaign was prompted by an application to the court by the government trustee of Hitler's sole remaining property in Austria--a painting by Jan Vermeer, Dutch old master, bought by the fuehrer in 1940 from an Austrian collector for 1,650,000 reichsmarks ($660,000). The masterpiece, "Artist in his Atelier," had been intended by Hitler for a museum which he planned to found in Linz, Austria, where he attended school: in his boyhood. The trustee asked the Berchtes- gaden court to issue him a cert- ificate that Hitler is dead so that clear title to the confiscated paint- ing can be taken by Austrian | government. | After the Austrian application ! But no Allied reply has been received. Still perplexed, the dis- trict court must attémpt to deal with the case in the near future. Bavarian authorities are con- vinced the Nazi letters, including the anonymous assertion that Hit- ler is still alive, are an attempt by die-hards to maintain for de- vious purposes the legend of his survival. By pretending that the fuehrer one day could return, these Nazis apparently hope to collect dupes to support their own ambitions for a political comeback, ' The Soviet Army which con- quered Berlin never publicly dis- closed any evidence of Hitler's death. But other Nazis who had been inmates of the fuehrer's air raid shelter reported later that he committed suicide April 29, 1945, and his body was cremated in ac- cordance with his orders. The only charred remains for- mally identified by the Russian at the air raid shelter were those of Nazi propaganda minister, Joseph Goebbels and his family. Freight Rate Mixup Confusing OTTAWA (CP)--A new freight rate tangle, involving a railway bid for a further rate boost of seven per 'cent, was to go before the board of transport commissioners today for possible simplification. Confronted with three phases of a railway case all pointing at| chief was trying to get the garriers to drop one $45,000,000-a-year ap-| plication temporarily to avoid com- | plications. | Mr. Justice John D. Kearney, | chief commissioner, called counsel for the railways and provincial governments before the board for this morning after the railways inserted a sudden seven-per-cent already-complex case being heard by the board late Tuesday. . This $35,000,000-a-year request came on top of a nine-per-cent ap- plication that has been pending since last July. Mr. Justice Kear- | ney proposed Tuesday, that the nine-per-cent application be held up To All Railway counsel declined to go along with the suggestion immed- iately, and the board was to hear today if overnight conferences had changed that view. Effect of the proposed seven and nine per cent freight increases would be to hoist to about 118 per | higher freight charges, the board's | cent the cumulative total of rate boosts since early 1948. These ure effective on roughly half the rail- ways' freight business. The seven-per-cent increase ap- plication was unexpected, for the board had before it two aspects of a railway application calling for higher freight tolls, neither of which involved an immediate rate boost. THREAT TO FARMERS VANCOUVER (CP)--High wages and the increasing use of margar- ine are driving dairy farmers off the land, Gilbert Macmillan of Huntingdon, Que., said in an in- terview Tuesday. Mr. Macmillan recall- we should try to bring back to gle [by the railways until the board |is president of the Dairy Farmers | municipality some of this vigor rules on another tase involving the 'of Canada, now in convention here. |and autonomy that has been grad- [board principle on which it is He said that future supplies of ually lost to outside control." J based, I N Y A133VS dairy products are thfeateneda A matter flames forced them outside, pro- pane gas tanks, used as cooking fuel, exploded. First Truck Brings Lobsters For Vets VANCOUVER (CP)--The pilot truck of Canada's first coast-to- coast trucking service arrived on among on Racket Halted By Arrests was charged with receiving the bribes. | _Anfossi and Sullivan were alleged to have helped d'Errico by failing {to make inquiries respecting such | application as they were required to make. : | Police said the charges were laid | following investigation into "an al- leged arrangement between travel agents and government employees |to expedite the admission' of cer- {tain immigrants from Italy." | The probe began in August, 1950, |after federal investigators discov- lered an unusually heavy list of [Italian immigrants had entered | Canada after January that year. Further investigation revealed many had entered the country with false documents. Details of the ring, believed to have its source in Italy, gradually {came to light and it is believed | between 200 and 300 Italian immi- | grants entered the country illegally, some to work their way into the United States. Some of the immigrants are re- ported to have paid up to $100 for up-to-date unemployment insurance books, Some of the immigrants involved 'have been deported while others | voluntarily returned to their home- land. Struck By Auto Has Leg Broken | Douglas Courtice, 39, of Cour- | tice suffered a fractured right leg | when hit by a car yesterday as he | was crossing Highway No. 2 to en- | ter Courtice Post Office. The car | was driven by Miltog D. Patterson, | {RR 3, Bowmanville, Removed by ambulance to Osh-! dwa Hospital, where he was treat- ed by Dr. D. A, Smith, he is said to be making satisfactory progress to- day. The accident was investigated by Provincial Constable Lorne Gal- braith of Bowmanville. LEGION CORNER It is expected that the Oshawa | Branch of the Legion will be well | represented at the zone rally of | Zone n which is being held in the egion Hall at Whitby on Friday evening of this week. Ar- rangements will be made at the {Branch meeting on Thursday evén- | {ing to provide for bus. transporta- {tion for those wishing to make the / trip, providing that a sufficient number wish to attend. At tomorrow night's branch meet- | |ing, appointment of the various committees of the branch will be | announced and confirmed, the exe- | cutive having completed the selec- | tion of cgmmittee chairman at its | January meeting. 3 Joseph Wilson, chairman of the committee in charge of the "Books {for Korea" campaign, is delighted {with the response so far. Hundreds of pocket-size novels were handed lin during the first two days, and the rush continues. It is suggested |that all members of the Branch |attending Thursday night's mect- jing bring as many books as possi {ble with them to be added to the collection. 'N. Oshawa Holding Neighborhood Assoc. 'Meeting Tonight This evening the North Oshawa Neighbourhood Association wll (hold their first meeting of 1953. All persons in the North Oshawa |Area are urged to attend this im- portant meeting at the School on | Simeoe Street North. This meeting is very important |and all persons should attend to |set plans for the coming year to make the North Oshawa Park a | bigger success than last year. The time and date again is Wed- nesday, January 21, 7 p.m, sharp |at the North Oshawa School. The jonly way it can be a success will {be through a large turnout. See iyou then, | | THE WEATHER Publisher : Fages Libel Action | BELLEVILLE (CP) -- Harold Blakely of Trenton testified Tues- |day he attended a meeting where a former Trenton mayor said Sen- ator W. A, Fraser of Trenton | threatened to prevent new -indus- {tries from coming to the town, Mr. Blakely, testifying in a libel suit against the publisher and edi- tor of the Trenton Courier-Advo- cate, said Kenneth Couch quoted Senator Fraser as saying in a tele- phone conversation that, if town |council approved a plan for an | economic survey, the senator would [see that industries did not come to Trenton, Victor R. Ryan, former Trenton councillor, is suing publisher L. Nolan Sisson and editor Gwyn Hopkin-Morgan for two editorials the twice-weekly paper published Dec. 7, 1951. Mr. Justice R. A. Danis is presiding. - The editorials charged Mr. Ryan with being more concerned, in council duties, with the interests of two Trenton business men than with the interests of the town as a whole, H. 0. W. Larry, Trenton clerk- treasurer, testified the survey was devised to bring new management to Trenton. He said the council approved the plan although Mr. {Ryan opposed it. A 'later motion by Mr. Ryan to rescind the ap- proval was defeated. Mr. Justice Danis rejected a mo-- tion by R. R. McMurtry, defence counsel, that the case be taken from the jury and the case is to continue today. Mr, McMurtry said it was ob- vious that Mr. Ryan was the per- son referred to in the first edi- torial, but claimed that nothing {said about him in that editorial |was libellous. As far as the sec- schedule Tuesday with, | 4 -. jond editorial was concerned, Mr. other things, 250 lobsters for veter Mts EE ns. To CAD IW ans at Shaughnessy Military Hos- pital. Three companies teamed up for Canada's first Halifax-to-Vancou- ver road freight Associated, Amalgamated and Refrigerated Express -- though the 4,200-mile route was mostly through the Uni- ted States. The trip began at Halifax nine days ago. 2 Toronto Men Killed In Crash DELHI (CP)--Two Toronto men were fatally injured Tuesday when the truck in which they were riding went out of control and crashed head-on into a tree five miles west of here. Dead are David Flom and Russell Hastie. Police said the accident occurred on a stretch of highway near this community 30 miles southwest of Brantford where visibility is poor because of a sharp curve on a hill. {reasonable evidence on which any ljury can say it referred to the | plaintiff. Liquor Licensing 'Complete Farce' { that granting and renewal of li- cences by the liquor licensing board of Ontario was a "complete |farce" was levelled Tuesday at a meeting of Middlesex Presby- tery of the United Church of Can- ada by Rev. Dr. G. W. Moore, {minister of Knox United Church, | London. | Dr. Moore, who said he had at- tended the annual meeting of the board in London last month at the {court house, said it was "the first !time I have ever been in a court (where a person felt he was not wanted." i | cence recelved one, he said. LOAN » Neighborly, considerate peo- ple tailor the loan to your best interests . . . without endorsers or bankable security. Auto loans featured here! Phone for one- visit loan, write, or come in. Loans $50 to $1200 "THE ie | 2nd Fl., 111), SIMCOE ST., N. (Over Bank of Nova Scotia), OSHAWA Phone: 3-4687 « John P. Alexander, YES MANager : PLES OF LOANS 15 MO. | 24 MO. | 24 MO. 154.19] 529.59 | 756.56 | aig, $12 | $28 | $40 Above payments cover averythingl Even $ Payments for ln-between omounts ore in proportien. (Con § Cash ou THAT LIKES TO SAY YiEsS™ FINANCE C0. 8 OPEN SATURDAYS 'UNTIL NOON Loans mode to residents of all surrounding towns © Personal Finance Compony of Conds ira4 | LONDON, Ont. (CP)--A charge | Everyone who applied for a li- | TORONTO (CP) --Official fore- (casts issued by the Dominion pub- {lic weather office in Toronto at 9:30 a.m. : Synopsis: If the present trend in the weather" continues, average temperatures for January 1953 may well turn out to be the warmest on record. So far this month each cold snap has been cut short by a return to southerly winds within 24 to 48 hdurs following the outs break of cold air. The trend con- tinues, and today temperatures are rising "across the north country as a developing low over Montana forces warmer air to return from the southwest toward the Great Lakes area. Temperatures will be five to 10 degrees above normal throughout Southern Ontario today, and Thursday promises tempera. tures in the low 40s. However, there is a distinct threat of rain spreading into the lower lakes region by Thursday morning, Regional forecasts valid until ° midnight Thursday: Niagara, Lake Ontario regions; Toronto, Hamilton cities: Cloudy with a few sunny intervals today, overcast and mild Thursday with rain beginning in the evening. Wind light today, southeast 15 Thursday. Low toight and high Thursday at Toronto, St. Catharines and Hamil- ton 30 and 40, Trenton 25 and 35. Summary for Thursday: Mild, rain by evening. TORONTO (CP)--Observed tem- peratures bulletin issued at th Toronto public weather office a innipeg Port Churchill Port Arthur White River Kapuskasing Sault Ste. Marie North Bay Sudbury Muskoka airport Montreal .. Saint John .. Halifax INIA 2 HALF PINTS W., Out West Where Men Are Male Folks Drink Milk And Never All When your children are drinking © g milk, you can be sure they are geiting their share of the heolth- ful vi i end p ins 7 thet are so plentiful in milk. Yoult know that this satisfying snack "fills- the-bill" for refreshment while it helps build strong young bodies. LISTEN TO WHITBY-AJAX NEWS CKLB 11 AM. -- WEEK DAYS E N 1