f THE DANY TIMES-GAZETTE, Monday, March 2, 1968 BIRTHS Mr. asd Paul Babarik son, Staphen nd; ane al Hospital, Mrs. glas McKay kwell) are happy to h of their daughter, Saturday, Feb. 28, General Hospital. rew, on Sunday, AMMELL--FEarly Sunday morning, Mar. 1983, at her: home, 85 Medland Cres., Toronto, Ada K. Thomas, beloved wife the late e James, Scammell, mother of Mabel E, Mary Mar: (Molly) and Ronald E. Scammell Toronto. Sydney J., Oshawa, Henry J. Scammell, A own, Penn., and the late Mrs. Susanna Payne, Resting the Turner and Porter Fun Home, 436 Roncesvalles Ave., Toronto, Monday evening. Service in the chap- hd , Interment Park IN MEMORIAM of a dear hus- yd, who passed BOYD--In loving band and father, John away March 2, 1951. a --Ever remembered by his wife and family. BROWN-In loving memory of dear sons and brothers, Tec.-S8gt. Norman (Duke) Brown, on active service, Feb. 29, 1944 and Pte. Willam (Bill) Brown, on active service, Feb. 26, 1945. God knows how much we miss, them, Never shall their memories fade; Loving ts will ever wander. Te the spot where they are laid. --Always remembered by Mother, Sis ters ond Sister-in-Law and Brother and -Law. memory of a dear wile Norma Jean Shortt, who Jasned away suddenly March 2nd, 1952. year has pas and gone Since one we loved so well, Was taken from our home on' earth With Jesus Christ to dwell. The flowers we place upon her grave May wither and decay; But the love of her sleeps beneath, Shall never fade away. ~--Lovingly remembered by Peter and TT-- , y wished no one a last farewell, bye. . She had gone before we knew And only God knows why. in God's beautiful gardem Away from sorow and pain Some day when life's journey is We shall all be together again. "Asleep in the arms of Jesus". --Lovingly remembered by Mother and Ded, Sisters and ended Brothers. You anty We loved you so. We miss you more, Than you will ever know. Sadly missed by neice and nephews. OBITUARIES MRS. ALFRED H. WRIGHT ARE Pn iy at the Oshawa General Hospital. She is survived by her husband I gsers, a son and sixteen Daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Wil- liam Willson and formerly Effie I. Willson, the deceased came to Oshawa as a small girl and lived in the city most of her life. She was married in July, 1917. She was born at Taunton in 1900 and ber last home was the family resi- 235 Edward Ave., Oshawa. five daughters: Mrs. Elva Laviolette, of Port Perry, Mrs. McQuaid Wi . ; Mrs, Marguerita Jobin, Oshawa and Miss Shirley Wright, of Oshawa, William Wright, of Oshawa sister, Mrs. Lena Rivard, Puneral services were held from Puneral Home today at p.m, jor Gilbert Dockeray the Salvation Army. conducted services. Interment was at Oshawa Union Cemetery. The pallbearers were Russell McQuaid, Wilfred Laviolette, L. 'ernand , B , Harold Allin and' Clifford Allin. OF GEORGE THOMAS BROOKS The funeral service for George Brooks, who died in the Oshawa General Hospital on Wed- nesday night, was held from the Armstrong Puneral Homie at 2 p.m. on Saturday. ; The many floral tributes and the ig Ain attending indicated the esteem in which the de- otasd was held in the commun- y. Rev. John K. Moffat, minister of Bimcoe Street United Church, condueted the funeral service. In- terment was in Mount Lawn Ceme- tery. Members of the Oshawa Kins- men Club of which the decease was a member, attended in a body and acted as flower bearers. Cox Miss | llbearers were Rev. R. E. s Wilson, Clarence Cox, Robbe, Joe Victor and M. Cran- Etobicoke Police Sqt. Faces Charge TORONTO (CP)--Suburban Eto- bicoke township police today laid careless iving charges against wil Martindale, 58, of the York county force after a collision Sunday night on Toronto's western outskirts . Martindale's automobile is by police to have collided with a car driven by Arthur Panell #f suburban Port Credit. Panell and his parents, Mr. and Mrs. John Panell, suffered minor injur- Martindale was uninjured in the erash, but there was a hole a big as a person's head in the past- enger side of his auto windshield Etobicoke police are investigating the possibility of another person being in Martindale's car. . Martindale was demoted from chief to a constable in 1938 after conviction of leaving the scene of a crash in which he was involved. "lished fast "OSHAWA AND DISTRICT DOWN TO ZERO : The recorded temperature at the Oshawa lakefront this morning was zero. WIN AT FESTIVAL Two Oshawa artists won prizes at the Kiwanis Music Festival in | Toronto on Friday. In the piano !accordeon solo class for contes- tants under 13 years of age Rose- marie Trotter, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas otter, secur- ed -second place while in the same competition for contestants under 15 Sears, Donald Hercia placed third. ' CHRISTIAN SCIENCE SUBJECT | "CHRIST JESUS" was the sub- {ject of the Lesson Sermon which |'was read in all Churches of Christ, Scientist, throughout the world in- cluding First Church of Christ, | Scientist, 64 Cplborne Street East, hawa, on Sunday, March 1. The 'Golden Text was "God sent not his Son into the world to condemn the world; but that the world through him might be saved." (John 3:17). BIG DIFERENCE ~ There is as much difference as { between night and day between the | appearance of the countryside north and south of the ridges. South of Myrtle Station there is practic- ally no snow 'while north of that point the fields are well covered and give a real wintry atmos- phere. > | { { | Above are two of the candidates nominated for the new village council of Pickering at the nomi- nation meeting, along with the my ow, NO PERMIT | Three men were fined $100 and costs or three months, this morn- | ing in magistrate's court, by Mag- | istrate Frank Ebbs. They were: | Daniel March, 340 French Street; John Morrison, 442 Simcoe Street | South and Joseph Ruth, 340 French | Street, who pleaded guilty to| | charges of having liquor not bought | lon permit. | BAIL SET AT $500 Ralph Jones, 170 Rosehill Boule- | vard, pleaded not guilty to charges | of selling liquor and having liquor | this morning, when he appeared before Magistrate Frank Ebb Bail was set at $500 for the ac- cused who will appear before the magistrate March 9, when the | case will be heard. | No Room Here For Lazy Boys Court Is Told There is no room for a lazy boy in Oshawa, according to Stanley Mason, a social worker with the Children's Shelter. This morning, Mason testified that John Wood, a sixteen-year-old, refused to work and he recommended he be sent 'to Brampton - Reformatory where he could learn a useful trade. On Friday, wood was given lodg- ing in the police station cells and was later charged with vagrancy. Mason stated that the boy ran {away from the Oshawa Children's | Shelter in August, 1951 and up to 3. These three men have qualified as candidates for the new village council of Pickering. Left to | December 1952, the welfare work} ers hal no idea where the boy | | had disappeared. They heard from | him by letter from Chalk River. | He asked for money. A telegram | was sent to Pembroke, but the boy had disappeared again. | Shortly after the first-letter, an-/| other letter reached the Children's! | Shelter. This too was from John. | Again he asked for money. The | shelter S20ed Polibioke. foul i Ww e 1 ' Whore Bp jeter ww, posicd fo Above are four of the candi- ter in Pembroke. | dates who have accepted nomina- | After the Oshawa shelter took tion and will contest the election € first reeve to be elected for the village. Left to right, Grant Mess er and John Balsdon, candidates for council, and Cyril Morley, right, they are H. Putvis, Erwin White and Jack Bryant, all of whom announced their inter 'ion for the new village council for | Pickering. Left to right, they are: | Gordon Bray, J. C, Bookey, Doug- CANDIDATES IN PICKERING VILLAGE ELECTION reeve-elect of the village of Pick- ering. --Photo by John Mills to stand for council --Photo by John Mills las Johns and John Ashton --Photo by John Mills | charge of John, they managed to {find-him a job. He held it for two {weeks. In court this morning, he said he was discharged for smok- BUSINESS SPOTLIGHT (ing. : | Then he applied to friends' and relatives but none would keep him | because of his lazy habits. He would not work. Last Friday he was turned out of his foster parents' home. He had no place to go. Finally, the police took an interest in the tall, thin boy and he was given lodg- ing. Magistrate remanded the case for one week for investigation. Elite US. Corps By FORBES RHUDE Canadian Press Business Editor The United States -- sometimes with distaste, sometimes with pain --ig learning the lessons of inter- national leadership. ; { The isolationist republic, which {turned down the League of Nations - oe |after the First World War, only A - to produce the Marshall Plan and eaay Lor ction other vast contributions to inter- na .onal recovery some 30 years By ELTON C. FAY later, apparently, however, has WASHINGTON (AP)~--The United more lessons to learn. : States Navy is developing a corps | A principal one is that the United of atomic bombardiers: fliers and States (or North America) can't ordnance experts train the safely remain a lone prosperous { high-level and secret schools of nu- oasis -in a world of want without clear weapon use. doing its utmost to improve the Graduates of these courses al- lot of the rest of the world. ready are with the fleet or at naval Part of the solution to this prob- air stations. lem is freer world trade. - . Pentagon officials today would Freer world trade would involve confirm only that such a program freer entry of the goods of other | exists, but published reports and | countries into the United States. previous brief comments by other [Even in this, the. United States officials make it ssible to sa {has moved far from its protection- that: w . Y 11st position of the 1920s, but she ill has a long way to go. It is not only other countries {which preach freer trade to the i United States, but many of her own citizens. For instance, on Baturday, a 52- page statement was issued by. the research and policy committee of the Committee for Economic hoi cians, both in bombing technique |YelOPMeDt, a private Inerican pragtice and in condicting fesearch organization a wile Semper and experiments for the scientists, | - dy thay ' erican industry. igor (Hal COMDOREDLS op Ine The statemen}, was entitled *Brit- some of the larger carriers, pub year, have gone with- out official denial. Comments by officials during recent months that the navy now was able to conduct atomic opera- tions were interpreted generally 0 4 mean that the weapons were the {newly - developed, small-packaged [a-bombs designed for tactical use {by fighter-type aircraft. However, the navy has at least one type of plane, operating from The navy.men receive their train- | st ing in atomic warfare at the same | joint armed forces schools used for alr force crews. | They use precise duplicates of | atomic bombs, complete in all de- | tails except the actual nuclear fis- sion charge, They work together with alr force crews and techni- ' SEOUL (AP)--Allied infantry battling at times inside their own bunkers, Sunday night smashed a 750-man Chinese Communist . as- CHATS FALLS Sarno Jrobably. able 10 Wie the {same size a-bomb car in the . (Continued from Page 1) along a railway spur to the scene long-range bombers. of the blaze, The AJ-1 "Savage" is the heav- Hydro officials said that costs |iest of the operational carrier- of replacing the installation would | based planes, with a gross weight ' ," far more than of more than 55,000 pounds and the cost when the equip- | powered by two piston engines and ment was put in 20 years ago. |a jet, Its range is given as '"'more Robert Saunders, chairman of {than 2,000 miles." - the 'Ontario hydro, sald the fire' The capability' for atomic war- will.prove "very costly." A plane fare, the navy holds, is needed as' with a special corps of engineers one of the methods of earrying out to assess e and try to re- its primary mission--gaining and 4 EB foe was being sept | keeping control of the sea in time . 'bays of the biggest land-based, sault against the main United Na- tions line on the western. Korean front. 3 | The 8th army reported the Reds iwere routed in a 3'%-hour close- {quarter fight. American, French iand Thal infantry joined in_the | battle and were supported by Brit- {ish Commonwealth artillery, | The Chinese. penetrated United | Nations - defences at one. point on a 5500-yard front ear Little Gib- raltar hill west of Yonchon and partly overran an. American pia- toon, but the Americans stood their ground and drove the Reds out, The 8th army reported nearly 1200 Chinese killed or wounded, } Meaning for America." It said that Britain and other free countries must be able to sell what they produce for export if there is to a solution of the difficulties posed by "the division of the world economy by the Iron Curtain, the continued and growing strength of economic nationalism, the hard problems of economi¢ development in Asia and Latin America -- all which our national interests and sympathies are directly involved." The American tariff and other protectionist commercial policies of the United States, says the statement, 'reduce the ability of other countries to earn the dollars they need to pay for American exports," contribute to keeping them dependent on American aid, and 'thus add substantially to our tax burden and lead to a less ef- ficient use of our resources." The committee recommended: Continued negotiation of "select- ive reductions in our tariffs through an extended Trade Agree- ments Act, free of weakening amendments such as the 'peril point' provisions." That the President be granted authority to reduce import duties unilaterally. Simplification of customs proce- dures, Progressive removal of ag- ricultura] auotas. Liberalization of outright appeal of the "Buy Ameri- can Act." Relaxation of laws re- quiring. preference to American ships under government programs. Reds Battle Way In To UN Main Bunkers It was the heaviest Communist attack in more than a month. Rain and wet snow fell on the battlefront today, after the Reds retreated to their own lines. Thé overcast grounded UN planes. American soldiers who held a spur on Little Gibraltar were hit by 175 Reds. The Chinese got through the Allied barbed wire and {into the American bunkers and fox- holes. The Americans, fighting hand to hand, ejected the Reds after 90 minutes. Thai soldiers hurled hundreds of p o£. Chinese who hit livision spokes- id 1 involved in considerable hand-to-hand' fighting The Thais estimated they kille five Reds and wounded 15. Britain Nixes U.S. Learns The Hard Way Exchange - Lesson of World Leadership 0f Prisoners ain's Economic Problem and Its' LONDON (CP) -- Britain today rejected Communist Hungary's offer for the immediate exchange of an imprisoned British business man' and a woman guerrilla con- demned to death in Malaya, Prime Minister Churchill told the House of Commmons: "There can be no question of bartering a human life or deflect- ing the course of justice of mercy in Malaya for the sake of ob- taining the release of a British subject unjustly imprisoned in Hun- gary." However, he added that the offer might still be considered once the guestion of the death sentence has been settled, MORE Livestock OK'd For Sale to U.S. WASHINGTON (AP) -- Agrichl- ture Secretary Ezra U. 8. borders to imports of Can- estic animals and their products, effective immediately. Imports had been barred for a year because of an outbreak of the dread foot-and-mouth disease in the province of Saskatchewan. Benson sald the disease no longer exists in Canada. Officials sald the action means that" import: conditions and regu- lations in effect' before Feb. 25, 1952, when the embargo was put into effect, go back into operation. The ban had applied to animals as well as to chilled or frozen beef, veal, mutton, lamb or pork, and straw, hay and other materials that might possibly bring the in- fect'~n into this country, Taft Benson TORONTO (CP Official fore- casts issued by the Dominion pub- lic weather office in Toronto at 9:30 a. m.: i Synopsis: An extensive area of snow lies just to the south of the Great Lakes this morning and al- though there is the risk of this snow moving northward into ex- treme southern sections of the province it appears more likely that the lower lakes regions will) remain a fringe area between snow and no or little snow for at least! another 24 hours. | The present trend indicates mod- | erating temperatures throughout | the entire province with a. return to cloudy skies and occasional snowflurries. Regional midnight Tuesday: Lake Ontario region, forecasts valld until Toronto: ternoon, with a few snowflurries| overnight. Cloudy with snow and! milder Tuesday. Winds light be-| coming east this afternoon and | shifting to southeast 15 Tuesday. Low tonight and high Tuesday at| Toronto 20 and:32, at Trenton 15 and 32. Summary for TueSgay: Snow beginning in the evening. | TORONTO (CP) Observed temperatures bulletin issued at the | Joronto public weather office at '2. M.} Max. Dawson ... 30 Victoria Edmonton Regina Winnipeg Port Arthur White River Kapuskasing aids Sault Ste. Marie | North Bay {Sudbury ' i Muskoka airport {Windsor ........ { London i Toronto . {Ottawa , Montreal . { Saint John .. Halifax . 10 Accidents On Weekend As the weather gets colder, the number of acc dents increases. Ov- er the weekend, 10 traffic mis- haps were reported for Oshawa. No one was injured. : A car, driven by John Peeling, 137 Simcoe Street North, rolled ov- er on Mary Street yesterday morn- ing. after skidding for 160 feet, Peeling was uninjured in the crash that occurred near Alice Street. The car landed on the boulevard on the east side of Mary Street, considerably damaged. Moderate damage was done to {cars driven by Spencer S8hutron, of Courtice and John Litovchick, {175 Celina Street when they col- idea on Park Road South, Batur- | day, | A Garton Coach Lines bus was involved in an accident with a Mercury Cab, driven by Winston Howarth, 221 Dearborne Avenue and a car driven by John Winters, 174 Church Street, on Saturday, on Prince Street, Minor damage was done to the three vehicles. | Over 8150 damage was -done to a car driven by Millard Whyte, 38', Simcoe Street rth, when the vehicle was in coXision with a truck driven by Patrick Elle- ment, 200 King Street West, on Ricnmond Street East, on Batur- ay. Fred Mothersill, 292 King Street East, was the driver of a car that collided with a hit-and-run vehicle on Saturday. Mothersill's car was proceeding east on King Street | West when the accident took place near McMillan Drive. Slight dam- age was done to his car. Considerable damage was done to the front end of a car driven |by Albert Gagnon, Albert's Road | West, when it was in collision with la car driven by Antoni Bzwed, 490 | Drew Street, at King and Mary | Streets, yesterday. Minor damage |was done to Szwed's car, A car, driven by Alfred C. Spald- | ing, Brooke Avenue, Toronto, was | involved in an accident with a car driven by Joseph Semon, 535 Al- bert Street, yesterday, on King Street West. Moderate damage was done to both vehicles. ' Minor damage was done to cars driven by Frederick Hayward, 150 Annis Street and Clarence Hayes, RR 4, Cobourg, when the vehicles collided at Bloor and Simcoe Streets, early this morning. The front end of a car driven by Charles Hawkins, 72 Wilson Road North, was considerably smashed on Saturday, when the vehicle was in collision with an 'unidéntified car, on King Street East. Payments Are | Reduced By | men Ci during year. Ajax Kins- | Barbara Knips and Alan Ward, Sunny, clouding over late this af-| | Bino. ThE weaTazR Winners of Diplomas And Awards At Pickering HS PICKERING -- Graduation dip- lomas, scholarships and other prizes and awards were present- ed to successful pupils of thePick- ering High School at the com- mencement exercises held in the school auditorium on Friday eve- ning, with Hon. M. C. Davies; speaker of the Ontario Legisla- ture, members of the high school board and of the teaching staff tak- ing part in the presentations, Fol- lowing is a list of the pupils who received awards: Honor graduation diplomas: Jim Bray, Catharine Falby, Keith Car- son, Alaine Lishman, Beverley Fal- by, Marvin Jones, Sonya Ronald, diplomas, general urse -- Gerald Allman, Jessie Bushy, Isabelle Nighswander, Anne Barclay, Albert Cail. Mar- ion Norton, Barbara Beno, Denis Dowling, Joe Pegg, Alan. Bentley, Ralph Irwin, Gladys Pugh, John Black, Fay McLeigh, Carolyn Graduation | Smith, Florence Burton, Barbara! | Mairs and Leon Zopola. Graduation diplomas, cial course -- Allan Carson, John Fiss, Evelyn Michael, Nancy Coady, Marie Hicks, David Norton, Mary Davis, Marylyn Johnston, Mary Thompson, George Duncan, Lillian Kentner, AGRICULTURE PRIZES Top member dairy claf club, Ca- nadian Bank of Commeice prize -- Alaire shman, Top showman in calf club, W. P. Neal prize -- Alain Lishman. OAC Short Course scholarships, donated by Pickering Federation of Agriculture, Alzine Lishman and David Pegg. SPORT TROPHIES | Junior girl champion, Dr. W. W. Tomlinson Trophy, Marion Smith. Junior boy champion, Dr. W. W.| | Tomlinson Trophy, Bill Max, Intermediate girl champion, Boyes Drug Trophy, Mary Waiz- man, Intermediate boy Boyes Drug Trophy, Senior girl eharmr Boyes Trophy, C Senior od am Boyes Trophy, Gerald Allman. CLASS AWARDS Grade IXA -- Girl with highest academic standing, Ajax worath's Institute Cup, Anna Philip. Boy with highest academic standing, Cyril E. Morley Cup, Ronald Kine, Grade IXB -- Girl with highest academic standing, W. L. Smith Cup, Marion Smith. Boy with high- est academic standing, W. L. Smith Cup, Terry Wensley. Grade IXC -- Girl with highest academic standing, J. H. Rapsey | Cup, Dollie Lubach. Boy with high- est academic standing, Miss E. Carson Cup, James Neil. Grade IXD -- Girl with highest academic standing, Claremont Wc- men's Institute Cup, Phoebe Baker. Boy with highest academic 'stand- ing, Claremont Women's Institute Cup, Edward Wood. Grade X -- Greatest improve- ment in year, Pickering Rotary Club plaque, Ted Cook. Girl with highest academic standing, Robert Simpson Co. Cup, Kathleen Nighswander. Boy with highest aca- demic standing, Dr. P, W. J. Loos | Cup, Edward Cook. Grade XB -- Girl with highest academic standing, Mrs. B. K. 8leightnolm Cup, Jane Miller. Boy with highest academic standing, W. 0. Bennett Cup, Ronald Price. Grade XC -- Girl with highest academic standing, Aga Steel Co. Cup, Georgina Duncan. Boy with highest academic standing, Lorne C. White Cup, Donald Crossley. Grade XD -- Girl showing great- est improvement during year, Pick- ering IGA Store plague, Dorothy Benson, Boy showing greatest im- provement, i year, Tom Luke champion, Joe n plaque, Jack Tyail, Girl with highest academic stand- ing, J. A. Bushby Cup, Shirley Ward. Boy with highest academic standing, Simpson Wood Products Cup, Prank Dunham. Grade X -- Art prize, Reeve's Artists Supply Co. Ltd, Frank Dun- am, | Grade XIA -- Girl showing great- est improvement during year, E. L. Ruddy plaque, Marie Maxwell, | Boy showing greatest improvement during year, E. L. Ruddy plaque, Robert Cowie. Girl with highest academic standing, George Todd ! Cup, Marilyn Wensley. Boy w highest ac mic standing, Ru Bus Lines p, Ralph Robertson. | Honor Roll for the name of two top { students, donated by M. 8. Chap- man -- Marilyn Wensley and Ralph | Robertson. Grade XIB -- Girl with highest academic standing, Rural Bus Lines Cup; Bernice Duncan, Boy with highest academic standing, Rural Bus Lines Cup, Gordon Rim- mer. Honor Roll for the name of | the two top students, donated by | Pickering News -- Bernice Duncan {and Gordon Rimmer, Grade XII -- Girl showing great- est improvement during year, Ajax Kinsmen Club plaque, Barbara Boy showing greatest im- men Club plaque, Leon Zapola, Bookkeeping prize, donated by {Dr. G. Jones, George Duncan, £ . 'Magistrate | | ~English prize, donated by Clare- | Institute, Jessie Pa i 'Magistrate Frank S. Ebbs today reduced the monthly - payments | 'mont Women's Bushby. commer- | erly Falb Prench prize, donated by Cath- olic Women's League, Carolyn Smith. History prize, donated by East- ern Star (Pickering), Florence Bur- ton. Home Economics prize, donated by Pickering Women's Institute, Jessie Bushby. : Industrial Arts prize, donated by Aga Steel Co., Major Robinson. Latin prize, donated by Catholic Women's League, Florence Burton. Mathematics prize, donated -by Dr. G. Jones," Marion No Music prize, donated by ham Women's Institute, Joe Pegg. | Science prize, donated by Ajax | Rotary" Club, Carolyn Smith, * | Girl with the highest academic | standing, donated by Wilfred Hunt, 1825, Carolyn Smith. Boy with the 'highest academic standing, donat- {ed by Oxford Paper Products, $25, |Joe Pegg. Special Commercial: Typewrit- {ing, Dr. E. R. Humphrey Cup, Mar- | Jorie Harvard. Shorthand, Clare Balsdon Cup, Evelyn Michael. > Penmanship prize, donated by J. {T. Stephenson, June Fiss. | Plaque for girl with highest pro- ficiency, donated by Rouge Hill | Lions Club -- Mary Davis. | Cup for boy with highest profi- | ciency, donated by The Brougham i Lodge, IOOF -- David Norton. | Grade XIII -- Biology prize, do- nated by teaching staff, PDHS, Marvin Jones English prize, donated by Dowty Equipment Co., Barbara Knips. French Piiie, ainated by teach- ing staff PDHS, Barbara Knips. Latin prize, donated by teaching staff PDHS --Alaine Lishman. History prize, donated "Jeach- ing staff PDHS -- Alaine{Lishifian. | Mathematics prize, dohated by J. 8. Balsdon -- Beverley Falby. 'Physics and chemistry prize, do- nated by teaching staff PDHS -- Beverley Falby. Cup for highest Proficiency Stu- dent, donated by Ontario Chapter, 8 n Star--Zeverley Falby. Prize for hizhdst academic stand-% ing, donated by A. W. Mitchell, - $25 -- Beverly Falby. Carter Scholarship, $60 -- Bev y. SCHOOL CRESTS Minor awards -- Jchn Black, Isa- belle Nighswander, Bert White, ata Mairs, Gladys Pugh, Leon apola, Marion Smith. ' Major Awards--Gerry Allman, 2arbara Knip, Ralph Robertson, Florence Burton, Alaine Lishman, Gordon Schmidke, Jessie Bushby, Marion Norton, Mary Waizman, 'afik, Joe Pegg, Carolyn PRINCIPAL'S PRIZE Prize for the student Prime Min- ister, donated by L. C. R. Biggs, Gerald Allman 4LL-ROUND TROPHIES Best All Round Gi' Highland Dairy Trophy -- Carolyn' Smith, Best All Round Boy, Dunbarton Kiwan's Club Trophy, Joe Pegg. Honor Roll, donated by Dr, N. F, Tomlinson, Carolyn Smith and Joe egg. INJERMEDIATE CERTIFICATES Sandra Alloway, Beverley Bar- clay, Joan Barclay, Erle Barkey, Lavirence pgatherson, M. Beare, Dorothy Benscn, Helen Bentley, Pa~ tricia Broo Beverley Bryant, Auprey Carson, . Grace Carter, Kenneth Chafen, Joyce Closson, Beverley Collins, Ted Cook, Donald Crossley, John De La Cour, Georgina Duncan, Frank Dunham, Alexander Fergu- son, Reta Finney,* Bettyie Fiss, Ronald Foster, John Found, Rich- ard Gibb, Loraine Gibner, Faye Gibson, Jimmy Gilchrist, Denton Grundy. Ilene Gunter, Gail Hannah, Regi- nald Harris, Verna Hartford, Thom- as Hearns, Janet Henderson, Mar- garet Hoare, Thomas Horne, Mari. iyn- Hornshaw, Barbara Johnston, Carol Johnson, Ruth Johnson, Hal- lie Karanduik, Joyce Keith, Wi} ™» liam Linton, Mary Levingston. Kenneth Locke, Carl Lovell," Lar- ry McGinnis, Bernard McGriskin, William. McKee, Elaine McMahon, Jean Madill, Stan Malcolm, Wil- llam Max, Jane Miller, Kathleen Nighswander, Gordon O'Riley, Da- vid Pegg, Gladys Pegg, Ronald Price, Jack Rimmer. Arthur Rennick, Joyce Reynolds, Rudy Rudat, Judy Shearer, Mary Schneider, Patricia Shipton, Don- ald Shortreed, Elinor Stork, Shire ley Taylor, Patricia Tovey, Joan Tran, John Tran, Jack Trafl Wi liam Tyas, Shirley Ward, Rosle Wionzek, Joan Wright, WEALTHY CLERIC LONDON (CP)--Canon Eric Sou- ' tham, one of the first preachers to broadcast his sermons by radio in Britain, die" ~ently leaving an estate of $115,000, OSHAWA TRAFFIC TOLL Yesterday Accidents Injured Kilict ! Year t) Date Accidents Injured PLEASE DRIVE CAREFULLY od r | which Joseph Maslack, 634 Albert | ler bo py to his wife from $30 to, | $25. e money was for the sup- port, of a one and a half year old child. Maslack, who was charged with non-support, went into a long and detailed story about alleged indis- cretions on the part of his wife, He said that he had repeatedly asked her to come back to him Why, asked the Magistrate, was Maslack always broke; why was he not able to comply with the terms of the order and pay for his child's support. The accused said he worked for the Cana- dian National Railway and earned $48 a week. Out of that he was paying for a $1,000 bond. adian cattle, sheep and other dom- | Street, was required by court ord-! FOLKS DET GENUINE LIFETIM AE Ventilated Aluminum LLL for Windows, Patios, Doorways, Porches HARDWARE FOR HOME AND FARM! Master Chick Starter s5.08 Vermiculite for starting bulbs, Master 16% Dairy Ration, ton 77.00 2 bus, baw an Master Pig Grower Pallets, ton 77.00 aster 247, Doiry Concentrate : re ton 88.00 cwt.. 4.40 Cocos Door Mots Heavy Rubber Door Mats ... 10 Rd. Rolis, 4 #1. high, Yard Fence . Milorganite for lowns H. & L. Dog Meal Bird Coges -- Complete Line of Pet Supplies MASTER FEEDS - OSHAWA DIAL 3-2229 54 CHURCH STREET 4 For FREE estimate, detailse o Call KOOLVENT = SALES AND SERVICE 49 ALBERT ST. PHONE 5-4632