Daily Times-Gazette, 27 May 1953, p. 4

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J. H. ORMISTON Editor and Manager PHONE 703 4 THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE, Wednesday, May 27, 1953 WHITBY AND DISTRICT NEWS | | Dare You Take Motto? peaker Asks Banquet | "will you--dare you -- take the of her 21st birthday. This noble dealt with at some length by Rev. {motto 'I serve'?" was the chal- motto, |1enge hurled at a Coronation Ban- | with this motto, Her Highness had parents, speeding along the high- | Whitby | declared that her whole life would way who advised their children to Chamber of Commerce. The ban- be devoted to the service of the keep a sharp lookout for the man S quet presented by the quet, very capably handled by President Robert G. Langford was held in the Legion auditorium on he said, was 'I serve" and people of her Empire, This motto, he said, was far from new. In fact, he said, it had first Rolls. He cited the case of the doors. | |in the car with the white e said, | They teach their children, | thet that man is a menace and a § Whitby High School Student Tells of Her Trip To Ottawa With confidence and clarity a 17-year-old upper school student in Whitby 'High School stood before Eo Whitby Rotary Club yesterday at the weekly luncheon and told in a most interesting manner of her recent trip to Ottawa under Rotary Club auspices in what has been : | described as an adventure in citi- zenship. She was Miss Helen Alves, daughter of Mr. and Mr. Norman | Tuesday evening, The guest speak- | er of the evening was Rev, Robert L. Rolls, of Hamilton, who deliver- ed a very fine address on the theme of Queen Elizabeth's motto "1 serve". In his closing remarks, Rev. Mr. Rolls hurled forth the been adopted by a British monarch | pest. They do not tell them, he | in 1346 at the end of the battle of |said, that he is there to protect | Cressy. Then, he said, Edward III, | them. He also mentioned the fath-/ of England, was leading an army |eér who announced before his chil- of 8,000 men to regain territory on dren that he had discovered a new | the continent. As battle was join- "beat" the Income ed, King John of Romania, blind, then, Tax | he | way to Branch. 'They have Alves, Brooklin, described by Prin- cipal Donald Tutt, of the High School, who introduced her, as a student of high academic standing who will graduate this year and in the fall go on to university. As guest of the Ottawa Rotary R. L. ROBERTSON | News Editor PHONE 703 and heard an address by the Hon. * Mr. Harris, minister of immigra- tion. The students were thrilled to see parliament in action and to hear debated several bills before thes House, » VISIT TO LIBRARY " There was the visit to the libe# rary, with its 600,000 volumes, the ¥ tower where they saw the Book of Remembrance, the national art. gallery with exhibits of various: periods, with those of the 20th cen-# |tury, in the speaker's opinion, the? {least interesting. Heard also dur-; | ing the trip were addresses by they | Liberal and CCF leaders, and there ABA K ERR ERMIANARENT RN SERTRRRE SE | G AT ALL SAINTS .. by and the groom is the son of oll Mr. and Mrs. James Edward Andrew Minto exchanged nub- | arin of Minden, Ontario. Hal yous. Se bride 18 the I | Photo Ballard and Jarrett, To- I and Mrs. Matthew Kerr of Whit- ronto. PRETTY ! At All Saints' Church, Whitby, recently Mr. and Mrs. Robert challenge to his audience. After dinner had been served Mr. Langford introduced the guests at the head table, They in- cluded, besides Rev. Rolls, who was later introduced, Chas. H. Chaytor, secretary and manager of the C of £; Mr. and Mrs. Horace J. Hiscox, Rev, David Marshall, Mr. and Mrs, Gordon Osborne, J. H, Ormiston, Mr. and Mrs.sTer- rence M. Moore, Mayor and Mrs. Harry Jermyn, and Mrs. Langford. Mr. Langford announced the pur- pose of the banquet stating that it had been called to pay homage to Queen Elizabeth II, who will be crowned next week. He asked the guests to remember two things that are symbols of the Coronation, the Crown and the Flag, The flag, he said, had been on hundreds of battlefields, fighting for the prin- ciples of free enterprise. "Don't| let us listen to anything else," he asked. Two buglers, the Messrs. Wilde, then played the Royal Salute and accompanied by Miss Jean Ashby at the piano, the guests sang 'Old One Hundredth'. NOBLE MOTTO Vice-president Terrence Moore introduced the speaker of the eve- ning, Rev. Robert Rolls, now a minister in a Hamilton church. He stated that Rev. Rolls had been | born in India of Missionary par- | ents and had been educated there | and in the United States. In ast | years he had been chaplain and | headmaster of boys' schools in| Australia and England but now liv-| ed at Hamilton, Ontario, where | he served as pastor in a church. After his introductory remarks, | Rev, Rolls launched into the theme [the most joyful way possible," he event, especially the ladies auxil-| 'Billed As Laughter Show ~ Edwin Heath Coming Here The Whitby Kinsmen Club is this |one of the first men to drop on week bringing something consider-|'D" Day and was badly wounded ably different in the way of enter- in the action. At that time his life tainment to the town. On Thurs-|was saved by Canadian comrades | day, Friday and Saturday evening, of the First Canadian Parachute | win Heath, a hypnotist, is ap- pearing at the Whitby Town Hall under the auspices of the Club. In the memory of many, this is the first time such an attraction has appeared in this town for a number of years. Edwin Heath, a native of Eng- land, has just .arrived in Canada following a tour of the British Isles and the Continent. His hypnotic powers were developed during World War II while he was serving with the Eighth Army, in Africa, and later the Ninth Battalion of the Parachute Regiment. He was Battalion who formed part of the | | same brigade in the Sith Airborne | Division. [ LAUGHTER SHOW | Heath's show is claimed to be | "the laughter show of the cen-| {tury." The exact program for | each evening is not known here | but it is believed to be an aud-| ience-participation show. Press| ! statements of Heath's show int Eng- | land state that it is "a perform-| ance that is educative as well as | {highly educating" and 'no ordin-| ary 'charlatan effort, it is the real | thing." Indecent Assault Brings $50 Fine To Father of 2 © Magistrate F. 8. Ebbs, presiding in the Police Court at Whitby, con- vieted a 40-year-old Pickering Township married man of a charge of indecent assault. Evidence in the case against William Sowerby wags heard in the Court last week but judgment was reserved for one week. On Tuesday His Worship found Sowerby guilty of indecent Canada Keeps ° NATO Promise " OTTAWA (CP)--The air force announced Tuesday that anada will complete her one-division air com- { mitment for NATO in August, months ahead of schedule. Group Capt. Robert Turnbull of | Govan, Sask., will leave his post | as commanding officer of the Sas- | katoon air station in July to go| | to Baden-Sollingen, Germany, as| head of No. 4 fighter wing, last of | the four that make up the division. | The original aim was to have] the division in Europe by the end | t ta | of this fiscal year, Next March 31. | and Court -costs. | In August the three squadrons | Rig Somplaiuait dogtifled that | that make up the wing will leap-. she had been waiting for a bus on | frog across the Atlantic. They are | the forenoon of January 26th when | No. 422, now at Uplands, Ottawa, the accused stopped his car and No. 444 at St. Hubert, Que., and offered her 3, Tide to Sorento. | No, 414 at Bagotville, Que. where she had been going. She - A aE claimed that the accused had con- | : ! tinued to make indecent overtures jot te yenide, He ves Spresemen all the way to Toronto until they |? y HI Humphreys, reached Danforth Road where she | ™5oro.0 gantence was passed, | had fled the car. | Alex Hall, QC, who had prosecuted In his defense, Sowerby stated | for the Crown, stated that he would | that he had been only trying to | be satisfied with a fine since there get the complainant to move over | had been nothing brutal or vicious | to the left of the front seat so she about the assault. In ordering a| assault against a Pickering Town- ship housewife and fined him $50 could get the benefit of the heat from the heater since it did not ordered Sowerby to be more care- Jor of $50 and costs, His Worship ful in the future. blow heat to the passenger's side BROC NOW PLAYIN EVENING SHOWS AT 7 P.M. LAST COMPLETE SHOW 8:20 ji 3 YEARS IN THE MAKING! | 4 3 MILLIONS TO MAKE} ~~ CAST OF TENS OF THOUSANDS! ROBERT HAGGIAG wera KK WHITBY PHONE 6138 boss? ao; Yi v | PREY mln loving memory of Pte. Leslie | and family. of Ms address, "a noble motto", | said, "or you can become so nasty | iary of Branch 112 of the Canadian | the motto adopted by the then that everyone else suffers." The | Legion who served the very fine! Princess Elizabeth on the occasion |third giant, 'Without Law', was dinner. rode into the battle but died. On the next day, the Black Prince rode over the fallen on the battle- | field and came upon the body of King John and emblazoned on his breastplate were, in German, the words "I serve'. This motto was then taken for the Prince of Wales and was again declared by Elizabeth. SAINT GEORGE "What do you want? What are | | you willing to die for? What have | you been praying for? Are you | willing to take the Queen's mot- | to?" These were some of the] searching questions asked by Rev. | Mr. Rolls ag he proceeded in his | theme. He then told the story of | St. George and his quest and con- | quest of the dragon. He told how | he had to meet and overcome | the three sons of darkness -- With- out Faith, Without Joy and With- | out Law. To meet the first giant, | Without Faith, Rev. Rolls stated | that one must have faith in some- | thing. '"There is no such thing as| an athiest,"" Rev. Rolls stated, | | | "there might be agnostics, those | who do not know, but there are no | athiests." He claimed that if one did not believe that there was any being which had composed one's | mind, then 'one must believe that | there is a chemjcal processin the mind which produces thought. If so, he reasoned, one cannot trust it. One must have faith in some- thing be it money, ambition or security. Dealing with "Without Joy', Rev. Rolls advised his audience to go about their duties with a cheerful. heart. 'Do your duty in no authority which he helped elect." He also stated that there were where children had been punished {at school, returned to their home only to be met by a parent who | loudly proclaimed that no teacher could do that to their children. "We teach then that the authority of the schoolmaster does not ma- tter and then wonder why children do not recognize the authority of | their parents." I SERVE His closing anecdote concerned the death of King Arthur. He re- called that Sir Bedivere, the last of the Knights of the Round Table, was alone with King Arthur as he neared death. The King ' ordered his knight to hurl his sword Excalibur out into the lake. Twice, he said, Sir Bedivere faltered and finally he threw the sword out into the lake, to, thought Sir Bedivere, be lost forever. Instead an arm said, "planted a seed that there is | § Club, with her expenses paid by | Was a visit to the museum. Dinner * in the government | a cases | § the local club, Miss Alves told of her varied experiences and many " ; of the famous places in around the Presiding at the Coronation visited. banquet sponsored last Right by | WELCOMED BY MAYOR the Whitby Chamber of "Com- | Miss Alves spoke first of the merce was President Robert G. Po Langford, who received warm and merited praise for the ef- forts he put forth to organize Whitton as an 'event she would never forget. Then there was the civic welcome by Mayor Charlotte | and make the event a great suc- WHITBY DAY BY DAY Accounts of social events and news items of local interest and names of visitors are apprecia- PHONE 703 reached from the surface of the lake and grasped the sword return- | ing it from whence it came. Such | was the case with one's life, said Rev. Rolls. "To give our lives in utter abandon to service seems to be throwing ourselves away," he said but actually this is not the | case. 'We are giving them back [to the One who gave us life first | of all." Concluding, Rev. Rolls ask- | {ed, "Will you -- dare you -- take {that motto, 'I Serve'?" | Mayor Harry Jermyn thanked |Rev. Rolls and the guests gave {him a standing vote of apprecia- tion. President Langford then tend- ered his personal thanks to those who had assisted in organizing she Whitby Classified NOTICE: | Classified advertisements for this column must be in the Whitby office by 5 p.m. the day preced- ing publication, i FOR SALE --- KELVINATOR, ALMOST new, 6' 2, 4-year guarantee. Phone 2388 Whitby. (1282) WANTED TO RENT--3 OR 4 ROOMS UN- furnished, in Whitby or district. Phone 2589. (123¢) FOR SALE---SPACE HEATER, GURNEY kitchen heater, bed, dresser, 3-burner gasoline stove; ladies' bicycle; lawn mow- er. Phone 2156. (122¢) WELLS DUG AND DEEPENED. ALSO septic tanks. Ferris, 639 Brock N. Phone 2961 after 6. (Jun22) LAWNMOWERS, SHARPENED, REPAIR- ed. Saws sharpened, Pick up and deliver- | ed. R., Bailey, 917 Centre South. Phone | 708. . (Jun22) DON'T SIMMER THIS SUMMER. INSU- late mow with PAL-O-PAK. Do it yourself | or have us do it. Phone 2374. PAL-O-PAK | MFG. Co., Ltd. (Jun23) | -'} ROCKWOOL INSULATION, FIREPROOF. | Cool in summer; warm in winter. Free estimates. Walter Ward, Insulation Con- | tractor, 204 Chestnut West, phone 2563. | (Jun19) | | Rad | FOR SALE--CIRCULATOR LIVING ROOM | stove, kitchen stove, oil burner, two oil | drums and carburettor, Apply evenings. 12 | Maple Street, Ajax. (121¢) FOR SALE--USED REFRIGERATOR AND Hot Point range. Both in working condi- | tion. Apply 1344 Brock South. Phone 434. | (122¢) ne WANTED--RELIEF NURSE FOR VON | work for month of July. For information | call Miss N. Greig 2914 between 6 and 7 | p.m. (122¢) | -- | PAINTING DONE IN SPARE TIME, $1.25 | an hour. Apply 301 Byron Street North, | Whitby. (Junel) | DESIRABLE LOCATION Three blocks north of Four Cor- ners, fronting on Brock St. Lot, 45' x 195', Reasonable for quick sale. STANLEY MANN { -- (1220) IN MEMORIAM PHONE AJAX 500, or WHITBY 2850 M. Perry, Irish Regiment, killed in action May 26, 1944. If all the world were mine to give, I'd give it, yes, and more; To see the face of one we love, Come smiling through the door. ~Alwfys remembered by Mother, Dad DEATHS W. J. H. RICHARDSON A life long citizen of Whitby, and one who had made rich contribu- tions to the business, civic, cultur- al, religious and fraternal life of Whitby, in the person of W. J. H. Richardson, passed away yester- day at the Oshawa General Hos- | pital, in his 79th year. He had| been in failing health for a long time. The late Mr. Richardson was born in Whitby, son of the late Mr. and Mrs. Joshua Richardson, in the house on Garden Street which was known as the *"Ever- greens'. He was educated in Whit- by public and high schools and in the Upper Canada College in To- ronto. For many years Mr. Richardson operated a stationery store in town, later entering the insurance business. He was a very close as- sociate of the late Reeve Albert W. Jackson. Mr. Richardson served his fel- low citizens in many fields of com- munity endeavor. He was a mem- ber of the Town Council for some years, also the Public School Board,. and he had lived to see the [town he loved almost double its| Guelph and Mimico, Tuesday night population and growth in import-| ance in many ways. In his earlier years Mr. Richard- son was a great singerg He studied voice culture at the Ontario Ladies' College and for years sang in the Methodist, later the United Church, choir. Furthermore, he gave freely of histalent to many organizations and - his services were always in demand. In min- strel show days of bygone years he was the popular "Mr. Interlo- cutor", and in this role was in a | class by himself. He was a mem- ber of the Board of Heydenshore Park. In fraternal circles the deceas- ed was a prominent Mason. He was a life member and past mas-| '| ter of Composite Lodge No. 30 AF | and AM, and the proud possessor of a 50-year jewel. For 56 years he was a member of Keystone Chapter Royal Arch Masons and of St. John the Almoner Precep- tory. Left to moun his passing are his wife, the former Frances Bowes, one daughter, Miss E. Hel- ena Richardson, assistant clerk and treasurer and collector of taxes, Whitby, and one son, Har- old, of Ottawa. The deceased was the last remaining member of a well known Whitby fantily. The funeral service will be held on Thursday afternoon: at 2.30 at the family residence on Pine Street. Officiating will be the Rev. Robert J. Scott, BA, BD, of Whit- by United Church, who will be as- sisted by the Rev. Dr. J. Bruce Hunter, of Toronto. Interment will take place in the Union Cemetery. Venice Starring "MARA MONTEL PA. CHRTAN HUNTZ HALL THE CARDS ARE STACKED . . , WITH LAUGHS! "Su \ § ; alll Fa Maintenance Men. APPLICATIONS FAIRVIEW LODGE . Applications will be received by the undersigned from persons desiring to be appointed to the staff of Fairyiew Lodge during the year 1953. Employment: full time or part time for Registered Nurses, Practical Nurses, Ward Aids, Domestics, Orderlies and Applicants must complete the regular application form and said form may be obtained from the undersigned. WM. G. MANNING, Clerk-Treasurer, County of Ontario, Court House, - Whitby, Ontario. ne 25 Cents Offer 'Tumed Down | BELLEVILLE (CP)--Cheese fac- | tory representatives Tuesday night |turned down the 25 cents a pound | offered them for their cheese and |the 6,620 boxes of cheese offered | at a board went unsold. Boarded were 5,075 boxes of col- ored cheese, 1,419 boxes of white and 126 of special cheese. The cheese board adjourned for a week, W. O. Coons, president of the Ontario Cheese Producers Associa- tion, told the 125 cheese men pres- ent he wanted to wait until he met with his executive before comment- ing on an Ottawa announcement that the cabinet has agreed to buy 5,000,000 pounds of cheese from On- tario producers at 30 cents a poun He said that, if cheese were sold on an open market, its price would break itself down. He said some- thing must be done to establish a floor price. GUILTY IN TRAFFIC DEATH TORONTO (CP)--William Baird, 46, former reformatory guard at was convicted of manslaughter in |the traffic death Nov. 22 of Wil- {liam Neville, 10, in Toronto. He | will be sentenced Monday by Jus- [tice E. R. E, Chevrier. Want to buy, sell or trade? -- A Classified ad and the deal is made. The May meeting of the Dundas {Street Home and School Assocla- t {tion will be on Wednesday, May | ister, Rt. Hon. Louis St. Laurent, 27th, at 8 o'clock, in the school. | Mrs. D. A. Wilson, past president, | wil] install the new officers and | there will be a talk on flowers and | visit to Carlton College where dis- | cussion groups were organized cn parliamentary procedure, the use of the mace and what it symbol- izes, the difference between United States and Canadian governments and politics, and questions con- what makes democratic govern- ment tick. Eventful was the visit 'to Rideau Hall, where they were received by the governor general, the Right Hon. Vincent and shown through the building and wonderful grounds. The stud- ents were the guests of the Ottawa Rotary Club and heard the minis- ter of agriculture, the Hon. James Gardiner, speak. At the parliament | buildings they met the prime min- Massey | |was served at Landsdowne Park} | where they learned from the fed-. | eral district commission the plans |for beautifying Ottawa, There® were, she said, five 15-year plans, * so that the program would take many years to complete. They are spending two and a half million. dollars a year now. Not to be forgoiten was the visit™ to the estate of the late prime min- , Gaineau, and a dinner at the Chat- . eau Laurier tendered by the mem-: eau Laurier tendered by the mem- bers of parliament where the' speaker said she met Michael | Starr, MP for this riding. Theres was also a tour of the city arrang- {ed by the federal district commis | sion, - including visits to Rockeliffa" | Park and the Experimental Farm. The four days were packed with |eyents never to be forgotten, and: Miss Alves said that she was deep-" ly grateful to the Rotary Club for. | Faking the educational trip pos-. | sible. | The youthful speaker was tend- | ered a hearty vote of thanks by' the Club. | Slichter. The program will be floral arrangements by Mr. M.| 0l- | lowed by refreshments and a so- | cial hour. ROTARY CLUB VISITORS Visitors welcomed at the weekly luncheon of Whitby Rotary Club Tuesday at Hotel Royal were G. L. McLennon, Burlington; A. J. Bell, Colborne; C. Merlin, Bowmanville; | Rev. B. Yourx, Timmins; T. Red- By DAVE MCINTOSH Canadian Press Staff Writer NORTH LUFFENHAM, Eng. (CP)--Fellow pilots here say Fit. Lt. Dean Kelly of Peterborough, Jet Pilot Is Ace Stunter In Sabre late John Derry, British jet ace. SOME EFFORT o One trick of Kelly's is to do a | slow loop over the field, come out. | this was never matched by the- der, Buernon; Thomas L. Wilson, Oshawa; B, Floyd, Toronto and B. Hunt, Ajax, Also Mr. and Mrs. Alves, of Brook- lin, parents of the guest speaker, Miss Helen Alves. BREACH OF LCA Claude Marsden, a 21-year-old Indian from Scugog Island, was fined $10 and costs when he plead- ed guilty to having liquor in a place other than his residence. Constable G. Keast of the Whitby Detachment of the OPP told the Court that he had been on the way to the Scugog Island Reservation when he found Marsden standing on Highway 7A a short distance outside Port Perry with a bottle of wine in his pocket. INTOXICATED Howard Fairfield, of Lindsay, K. Morley, Ajax; | Ont., puts his Sabre jets through of it with wheels down and land manoeuvres which the manufact- immediately. It's a stomach-lureh+ urer never intended that the plane | ing performance, not for Kelly but, withstand. | for the spectator, . How many times has he cracked | Other pilots say his timing is the sonic barrier? Kelly answers |uncanny., A matter of moving the. {this way: : stick a fraction of a second too, late could cost him his life. Wears COMMON THING ing a G-suit helps Kelly withstand" "I haven't any idea. Dropping | the enormous pressure on the body" the boom (breaking the sound har- rier) is' so common now that you might as well count the number of times you raise or lower your wheels. "I was reading in the paper that some guy in California has drop- ped the boom 60 times. I was thinking he can't have much to do if he counts the number of times he's gone through." Kelly, 32-year-old ace aerobatic in- lightning turns. It helps prevent {all the blood in the body rushing. {to the feet and consequent blacke {out by the pilot, " | BOOM-BOOM ' | Cracking the sound barrier means beating the speed of sound--s 760 miles an hour at sea level, less at higher altitudes, A boomy | accompanies it. Kelly sometimes | throttles back and scoots throug {the sound barrier a number of times in a few seconds, resulting. making his fourth appearance be-| pilot of the RCAF's No. 1 fighter in a series of booms. fore Magistrate F. S. Ebbs in less {than six months, was fined $50 and | with wrists costs when convicted of being in-| toxicated in a public place. Worship, after hearing from Con-' stable Peter White, of the Whitby | Police Department, that Fairfield | had been picked up as he dashed | |across Brock Street to halt traffic, | warned the accused to stay out of this section of Ontario. "Why do! you come 50 miles for a drink?' he | asked' Fairfield who claimed he| had had only a few drinks at the | time of his arrest. Fairfield was | convicted of being intoxicated at | Oshawa on December 24th, in Whit- | by on February 23rd and 27th. In| default he will be sent to jail for | one month. ! SNORKEL TRUCK A six-wheel drive vehicle which | wing, is a big, black-haired man like stanchions who almost blushes when somebody His | speaks to him. He has been flying | for 12 years, including Spitfires in Malta early in the Second World | War, Kelly gags aside almost every question about his flying ability. "Any of the other pilots here can do what I do," he says. That's not the way the other pil- | ots tell it. DARING "He pulls off stuff I wouldn't even attempt," says FO. Len Pap- pas of Toronto, who won the Dis- tinguished Flying Cross in Bomber Sommand during the Second World ar. | 'There have been so many coms {plaints from surrounding residents | here, however, that pilots now | rarely dash through the sonic bare | rier. How does Kelly's English wife [take her husband's aerobatics? * | "It leaves me a bit weak at the | stomach," she says. "I don't sea | him operste often. Maybe it's just |as well." Peerless lake in northern Alberts with an area of 75 square miles' | was so named because of its deep | blue water. | A w.c.TOWN & SONS can operate under water with the aid of a "snorkel" breathing de- vice is in production for the Cana- dian army at the Oshawa, Ontario plant of General Motors of Can- ada. During the recent visit of the | F R | G | D A | nd EF Duke of Edinburgh, Kelly used | only a small end of the field to| AUTHORIZED DEALER HITBY « PHONE 410 make a tight turn at nearly 700 | miles an hour, 50 feet above the | deck. Other RCAF pilots claim | TUESDAY, Applications are now being Decorated Boy's Bicycle, 1s $5.00. event being WHITBY CORONATION CELEBRATION PARADE Committee for entries in the parade, which starts at 2 p.m. for which the following prizes will be given: Decorated Float, non-commercial, $10. Decorated Girl's Bicycle, 1st prize, $3.00; 2nd, $2.00. Clowns, 1st prize, $3.00; 2nd, $2.00. Period Costumes, 1st prize, $3.00; 2nd, $2.00. Pet-drawn vehicle, 1st prize, $3.00; 2nd, $2.00. Oldest vehicle in parade, operating under own power, Let's moke this parade werthy of Whitby and the JUNE 2nd received by the Coronation t prize, $3.00; 2nd, $2.00. / celebrated. Applicants Name Type of Entry ... Fill out this form and mail to J. R. Frost, Town Clerk, Whitby WHITBY NSMEN CLUB ~ PRESENTS KI / | 8:30 EDWIN Is is. the eyes? with Laughs, Sc Admission $1.00 -- AT = Whitby Town Hall Thursday, Friday, Saturday May 28, 29 and 30 \ P.M. Sensational Attraction DO NOT MISS THE LAUGHTER SHOW OF THE CENTURY THE AMAZING WORLD'S MASTER HYPNOTIST HEATH M.B.H, : Direct from London, England and . Britain's Leading Theatres Is. it the voice? Is it the personality? It's Exciting -- Amusing -- Fascinating reams and Yells MUST BE SEEN TO BE BELIEVED!!! Reserved $1.10 Plan ot Snelgrove's Drug Store

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