Daily Times-Gazette, 8 Jul 1953, p. 2

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2 THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE, Wednesday, July 8, 1088 BIRTHS COOLIDGE--Mr. and Mrs. George Cool- idge (nee Marilyn Hall), are happy to , announce the arrival of their son, 7 Ib. 8 oz., on Friday, July 3, 1963, at Ross Memorial Hospital, Lindsay. HAY--Mr., and Mrs, Howard Hay, (nee Marion Stark ha) of their daughter, on Mon- 1953, at the Oshawa Gen- and baby do- the birth | day, July 6, | eral Hospital. Mother ing fine. "DEATHS JAY--At Oshawa General Hospital, day, July 7, 1953, William S. beloved husband of the late enet McKay, and dear father of Mrs. George Chariton, (Peggy), Whitby; Mrs. Bernard Shuter, (Mamie), of Toronto, and John Gray, Whitby. --Resting at the W, C. Town and Sons Funeral Home, Whitby, for service Thursday, July 9, at 2 o'clock, Inter- ment St. John's Cemetery, Port Whitby. HAWLEY--Suddenly in Oshawa, on Mon- day, July 6, 1953, Manley V. Hawley, beloved husband of Sarah Sweet, father of Mrs. R. Vallieres, (Lena), . Mrs. G. Ball (Gladys), Kendal Ont.; Mrs. W. Irwin, (Lillian), Oshawa, ! Mrs. C. MacDermaid, (Marguerite), Sault Ste. Marie; Harold of Napanee, Percy of Saskatchewan, in his 65 year. --The late Mr. Hawley is resting at Luke-Mcintosh Funeral Home. Service in the Pentecostal Church on Friday, July 10, at 2 p.m. Interment Mount Lawn Cemetery. KING--Entered into rest on Tuesday, July 7, 1953. Albert Thomas King, be- loved son of Thomas and the late Elisabeth King, in his 46th year. --Funeral from the Armstrong Funer- Home, Oshawa, Thursday, July al Cemetery. IN MEMORIAM KINGSTON--In loving memory of a dear husb. and and father, Charles William Kingston, who passed away July 8, ph 931. Love is a link death cannot sever Love and remembrance last forever. --Lovingly remembered by wife and family. SLOBODZIAN--In loving memory of our beloved mother and grandmother, Mrs. Jennie Slobozian, who passed away July 7, 1952. When days are dark and friends are few, Dear mother and grandmother, how we of you. Friends are friends if they are true. We lost our best friend when we lost you, Every day we miss you. --Daughter Helen and grandson Peter. CARDS OF THANKS The Oshawa and district chapter "Silver Cross Women" wish to express of the late Ethel (Mickey) to express their sincere to relatives, friends and neigh- Service 3 p.m. Interment Oshawa Union | OSHAWA AND DISTRICT CHANGE OF NAME Notice is published in the cur- rent issue of The Ontario Gazette that supplementary letters patent have been issued to Canada Dry Bottling Co. (Oshawa) Limited changing .the name of the company to Goode Beverage Co. (Peter- borough) Limited. REMAND CHARGE A careless driving charge against Donald Timms of Myrtle, heard by Magistrate F. S. Ebbs this morn- ing, was remanded to July 15. FINED $10 Telesphore Brezeau, 475 St. Law- rence Avenue, pleading guilty be- fore Magistrate F.rank S. Webbs this morning on a charge of intoxi- cation, was fined $10 and costs or 10 days. DISMISS CHARGE A charge of careless driving against Clarence Moore of Whitby, th | heard by Magistrate F. S. Ebbs this morning, was dismissed for lack of prosecution. AUG. 12 HEARING Charges of driving without an operator's license and of driving an | unsafe vehicle, laid against Alfred { McCue, R.R. 3, Port Perry, were {remanded by Magistrate F. S. Ebbs to August 12. CONTEST WINNERS Mrs. Ketten Seles, Oshawa and {Mrs. F. W. Noyes, of Pickering. | were listed as winners of $100 each in the "Happy Holidays" | contest conducted recently by Can- ada Packers, Limited. Winners of prizes of $50 each were Mrs. John Martyn and Mrs. C. A. Pany of Oshawa. HAYING DELAYED Haying in Ontario County has been slow due to the unsettled weather, However, the general quality of the crop has been re- duced. Spring grains have improv- ed and fall wheat appears to be an above average crop. Early po- tatoes are looking well. KIWANIANS MEET OUTDOORS | Members of the Oshawa Kiwanis Club held their weekly 'meeting yesterday, on the terrace and lawn at Adelaide House, the luncheon be- ing served by the cafeteria staff. Holding outdoor meetings during the summer season has become an ©. PROGRESS IN | One of the great engineering is still in progress at Steep | drained and now engineers are | removing the sludge from the iron ore under the lake bed. Some 60,000,000 yards of over- burden must be removed before PICKERING BARRY MURKAR Correspondent PICKERING -- The Ground Ob- server Corps organization here is nearng completion. | Canada's National defence is in the hands of fullt'me military men | the RCN, the Canadian Army and {the RCAF and excludes many thousands of highly trained per- sonnel and millions of dollars undertakings in Canadian history i GREAT ENGINEERING FEAT timated that it may take four or five years to completely drain the - lake, accomplished by high-grade ore can be mined. | The project has run into many | difficulties, one of the greatest Rock, where a huge lake was | the estimated half-billion tons of ! of which was that of dredging the lake bottom Two of the world's largest dredges, shown | here, were employed on the | job, but broke down continually | when they reached the solid | rock under the sludge. It is es- means of 3,000 feet of pipeline, | through which the silt is forced over a watershed. The old water line of the lake, 212 feet above the bottom, is indicated by ar- TOW. Central Press Canadian. Three Injured In Accidents When two-year-old Joseph Rock- burn, son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Rockburn of Oshawa, was hit by a car driven by William D. McNaugh- ton, 47, of 111 Ritson Road North, on William Street West yesterday noon, he received shoulder abra- sions, bruises and suffered shock. Examined by Dr. H. C. Hall, the boy was detained at the hospital briefly for observation, and allow- ed to go home. The accident was reported by Constable Walter Hig- gins. James F. Morris, 197 Church Street, received right leg abrasions and cut fingers when the motor- cycle he was riding on Simcoe Street North during rush hour last night came into collision with a car driven by Norman Crossman, 54 Arlington Avenue. There was some rear end damage to the car, ac- cording to Constable William Cairn- ey, who investigated. When cars driven by William D. Preston, R.R. 3, Bowmanville and by Leslie Raeside, 324 Drew Street, collided at the corner of Ritson Road and William Street this morn- ing, no damage resulted, but Rae- side sustained a cut left knee, ac- cording to Constable C. H. Smith, who investigated the accident. Constable Cyril E. Smith, driving a police cruiser, and a city bus {driven by Albert Poirier, 86 Olive | Avenue, collided at the same corn- {er during rush hour last night: {There was moderate damage to | {the cruiser and slight damage to the bus. ' | When a car driven by Howard | M. Fox, R.R. 3, Bowmanville, stop- ped in traffic on Bloor Street West |about the same time, another ve- BUSINESS SPOTLIGHT By KINGSLEY BROWN JR. Canadian Press Staff Writer HALIFAX (CP)--Seaweed is on the threshold of providing Eastern Canada with an industry whose products may soon turn up in ice cream, medicine and food. Dr. E. Gordon Young, director of the national research council's Maritime re g i o n al laboratories here, said in an interview that plants are expected to be estab- ished in Quebec and Nova Scotia "within the next six months" to produce seaweed extracts. The Maritime provinces have for years been exporting one par- ticular underwater growth, Irish moss, to the United States, where processing plants at New York, Chicago and New Bedford, Mass., have derived $500,000 worth of ex- tracts annually. Dr. Young said the two Canadian firms will extract jellies called carrageenin and algin from sea- weed. The jellies, for which scientists have found about 50 uses, are used in a number of industries to make products mix. Without them for in- stance, you couldn't have chocolate milk; the cocoa wouldn't blend with the milk. Seaweed Extracts Have Many Uses dation is also experimenting with the use of seaweed as a fertilizer and soil conditioner. Dr. Young said the processing plants would at first be competing with the United States, Canada's sole supplier of algin and carra- geenin. : Then, if low-cost production war- ranted, they could compete with England and Scotland. Seaweed on Canada's Pacific coast would not be adaptable to this unique industry because it is of the large kelp variety. Atlantic coast seaweeds are smaller and cling to inshgre rocks. Dr. Young said the present har- vest of Irish moss could be en- larged by five to 10 times. '"'We have not as yet estimated how much algin, derivative of the heav: ier seaweeds, could be gathered But we believed Canada's resour ces are far better than those of the Duited States, England and Scot and." The provincial research founda tion has already Jigtographed F] large part of Nova Scotia's ¢oast in an effort to find seaweed beds The plant is harvested by large {rakes which claw it from the bot tom. It is then cut off and allowec The Nova Scotia research foun-!to grow again. Young Sea-Dog | hicle driven by Richard Donald, | | Centre Street, Whitby hit it from | annual procedure with the Osha-|worth of equipment and supplies wa Kiwanians and yesterday's , | luncheon at Adelaide House, the first outdoor session for this season was thoroughly enjoyed. The club directors held a brief meeting, fol- lowing the luncheon. thanks bors for their floral sy eards, personal notes and many acts of kindness during their recent sad be- of the Kins- men Club of Oshawa, Lions Club of Oshawa, Canadian Legion Whitby, Em- y of the Parts and Accessories General Motors, Jerry Gray's Group General Motors, Gang from the Packing t Parts and Service General Westmount Home and School, Westmount Sunday School Teachers, Westmount W.A. Also special thanks to Dr. Shaw of Oshawa, Specialists and | Admit Car Theft Given Remand Two teen-agers, John D. Smith, 16 of Scarboro and Donald A. Gra- ham, 17, of Oshawwa, who pleaded guilty this morning to a charge of Nurses of Private Patients Pavilion, Toronto General tal, Blood Donors, Funeral Home, all those who cars and assisted in any way. stealing an auto before Magistrate Frank S. Ebbs, were both convict- for sentence to July 15. ed on the charge and remanded OBITUARIES GEORGE JOHNSON FLESHERTON -- George John- son died early on Sunday morn- ing in the Centre Grey Hospital at Markdale, having been in fail- ing health for six months. ~. A son of the late George John- and Margaret Sharpe, Mr. ohnson was in Artemesia gi i The car was allegedly stolen the night of June 6 from the used car lot of Van Court Motors on Ritson Road South. The boys took turns in driving it to Toronto, according to a statement read in court by Serg- eant of Detectives Herbert Flintoff, and removed the radio, rear seat, spotlight and battery, hiding them in a field near Pickering. Crown Attorney Alex C. Hall, QC, remarked that both the accused were under suspended sentence for a previous offence of the same nature. Psychiatrist ge of ye retired to the village it- 1945. He was a member of ted Church. . Johnson was twice married. ! wi Fes wife, Nellie Chard, died ears ago. A son, Mer- ckering, survives. He Mrs. Kate Best, who , together with a son, Roy- Meaford. surviving are two sisters, , Mrs. Ted Lyons, and Jen- , Mrs. John Parker, both of Brampton, and one brother, Wil- , of Flesherton. ALBERT THOMAS KING In r health for the past 18 months Albert Thomas King, Mill Street, Oshawa, died on Tues- day, July 7, in his 46th year. A son of Thomas King and the HH 8 2 y PE B » resident of Canada for 42 years, he had lived in Oshawa for 34 years. He was a member of Al Street United Church. { He is survived by his father, | Thomas E. King of Oshawa and | two brothers, Charles and George | King, both of Oshawa. : { Rev. S. C. H. Atkinson, minister | of Albert Street United Church, will | conduct the funeral service at the | Armstrong Funeral Home at 2 p.m. To Minister To Ajax Couple A charge of non-support laid by Mrs. Elizabeth Wilson against her husband, Henry Wilson of Ajax, was transferred to family court by Magistrate F. S. Ebbs after he | had heard evidence on both sides | this morning. Mrs. Wilson told the court that 24 | she had left home a week ago Fri- Iday, because her husband had | threatened to "wrap the telephone | around her neck." She claimed he { the support of herself and their two | small children. | Accused's story was that in the | course of an argument his wife had | slapped him, and he had slapped her back. "I have a good place," he told the court, "I wouldn't des- ert my wife and children for any money in the world." Rev. Andrew McLachlan, United Church minister in Ajax, said he had taken the couple to a psychia- | trist for advice, and was asked by | the magistrate to continue his min- | istrations prior to the family court | hearing with a hope of keeping the on Thursday, July 9. Interment will be in the family plot in the Oshawa Union Cemetery. | family together. FUNERAL OF es WILLIAM THOMPSON The funeral service for William isn we Trailer Trouble the Luke-McIntosh Funeral Home WINDSOR, Ont. (CP) -- Nearby at 2 p.m. yesterday. Rev. Canon | Sandwich West township council D. M. Rose, rector of St. George's | Anglican Church, conducted the | services and interment was in the | '| magic name "Jack Dempsey's family plot in the Oshawa Union jocided Tuesday night to meet Cemetery. The pallbearers were Fred Thompson, Lewis Thompson, Alden A. E. Plaskett, Bert O'Dell and Robert Eley. In his 71st year, Mr. Thompson was a son of the late Donald Thompson and Eliza Libby. He was born at Newcastle, Ontario, and had worked for the past 12 years as a pattern maker for the Whitby Malleable Iron and Brass Co. Previously he worked at his trade in Oshawa, Orillia and Ham- ilton. ; He is survived by a sister, Mrs. Bruce Anderson (Christena), of Oshawa. LIBERALS WON'T RUN PICTON (CP). -- The Liberal arty will not enter a candidate 'or the Aug. 10 federal election i Prince Edward-Lennox riding, it was decided Monday night at a meeting at Adolphustown. George J. Tustin of Napanee, Progressive Conservative member for the rid- ing in the last Parliament, and Donald Thompson, South Bay far- , an independent, appear to be : he only contestants. Fi ES CSS nl inext Tuesday with delegations | from three trailer camps who had | been ordered to vacate the camps {bY June 30. The township passed a by-law | last. year, effective June 1, which {would force the owners of the 70 {or more permanent trailer homes to move. Later. the law was ex- tended to June 30. The trailers are still at the camps although owners of the three camps were notified of the June 30 deadline. TRAFFIC TOLL | | Yesterday Accidents | Injured Killed { Year t» Date Accidents Injured | Killed | PLEASE DRIVE {in the regular force. In a quieter but none the less effective way other thousands of men and women of the auxiliary forces continue the part time volun- teer training that will help them maintain efficiency in their re- spective roles. country and important to the safe- ty of our homes and our loved ones is the part played by the the RCAF who man the Radar sites. Continually scanning the skies are able to detect the presence of all aircraft flying within range of their equipment. When an un- identified aircraft is indicated these radar operators telephone thir nearby fighter squadron either aux- {iliary or regular and defending air- {craft are ordered aloft to take ap- | propriate action. In this we see the need for close | liaison between - both the regular and auxiliary components of air- craft control and warning units and the figher squadrons. We have had the privilege of viewing the air force commands maps -- an amazing system of plotting and planning and establish- ing air observer stations through- out Canada. In this province alone some hundreds of these air ob- server posts have and are being | established. As we here in Pickering live in a vital industrial area close atten-| tion is Sven our particular dis- trict and a station has been es- tablished here with the high school as head quarters with Charles Jol- liffe in command. Mr. Jolliffe will be a capable experienced officer, having served in the late war with the 110 RAF Blenheim Bomber Squadron as a Flight Lieut. Ob- | server. He will be Chief Observer {here and at the moment has as- | sisting him Messers. Bill Barry, Gordon Found and Berg Hansen. Additional personnel will be re- | quired and we suggest anyone in- terested contact Mr. Joliffe. The Pickering News has offered to make available space in its col- umns to him by way of bulletins jor other communications he may wish to publish. An interesting course of instruction is available to | all posts and observers. SPORTS ROUNDUP 1 By JACK HAND street an electric sign blared the iil {bold orange letters. Out-of-towners | stopped in front of the door, hoping |to steal a look at the old mauler, |who probably was refereeing a wrestling show in Tacoma, Toronto {or Timbuctoo. | On the other side of Broadway, a few oldtimers of the fight mob talked about the old days, "the, {good old days" was the way they | said it. . | "I pear Mickey Walker wrote a| | book," somebody said. "Did you] {read it yet?' | |. The other fellow satd he hadn't. | | The other fellow happened to be Walter Friedman, also known as "goodtime Charlie", who was around in the gay days when the Mick and Doc Kearns were cutting a wide path through the 1920s. He didn't need to read any book about Walker. i "How about the time you and | him went to London?" another | said. Ground Observer Corps Organized At Pickering [BUILD STANDS Members of the Rotary club broke away from their usual com- fortable half hour after dinner of listening to a speaker by leaving the high school cafeteria immed- iately after dinner and getting ov- er to the Memorial Park where Ro- tarian Frank Prouse and several | helpers had spent the afternoon cutting up 2 x 10's; 2x 4's and other material to be put into form |by the evenings hammer-armed | {members who in an hour and a "NORTH OSHAWA | | ELMA FARROW i Correspondent } NORTH OSHAWA -- Now that {vacation-time has arrived, many | |people are availing themselves of | {the opportunity to travel and visit | |friends in other places. | Among those on holidays are Al-| fred Ayre, Simco Street north, who lis in Calgary and will spend a| few days in other western points; | Miss Constance Osmond of Bow- !manville is spending a week with her uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Taylor. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Lee, and | family, Simcoe Street north, with Mr. and Mrs. Charles Lee, Louisa Street, spent Sunday in Bobcay- geon. Mr. and Mrs. George Fisher, Or- behind, $200 worth of damage. The Bow- manville car was damaged to an approximate $15. Morley P. Trumpour of Raglan, driving his car across the First Avenue crossing at 5 p.m. last night, was hit by an Oshawa Rail- way shunter, with six box cars in tow, doing moderate damage to the car. Motorman on the shunter was : C. Wannamaker, while the conductor was C. Goodwin. Slight damage was done to both vehicles, when cars driven by James G. Boxall, RR. 4, Port Perry and by Thomas L. McEach- ern, 162 Oshawa Boulevard, col- lided at the corner of William and Ontario Streets this morning. THE WEATHER _ sustaining an estimated | Hates Dry Land MONTREAL (CP)--Tecddy is only; Years of plying the Great Lakes four years old but he is probably land the St. Lawrence river have setting international records in his [served only to increase Teddy's class for travel mileage. In addi- natural gift for the discovery of tion he has excellent sea-legs. food. Members of the crew boast The little brown-haired 'dog--his | proudly that he knows every water- breed is open to question--was in- | front Rating Place from Hamilton troduced to a sailor's life when he to Montreal. was too young to protest. He was| Teddy has learned a few undogly taken aboard the Canada Steam- tricks that are necessary for sur- ship Lines freighter City of Tor-|vival aboard a ship. He scrambles {onto while just a- pup. He has up and down ladders with an never shown any inclination to agility that comes from years of abandon ship. {practice and is able to keep his Once left behind at Kingston balance even in the heaviest seas. harbor, Teddy howled on the end He has nev-. fallen overboard of the pier for hours until port| Ev... for a dog, however, there authorities put him into a freight are hard knocks that go with a shed and telephoned his master, grizzled seadog's existence. When Captain M. J. Corkey. Teddy spent | he first came aboard, the captain {a miserable few days on dry land |said, Teddy dig--and in rough {until he v .s picked up on the ship's | waters still does--get sick as a Vital to the air defence of our | regular and auxiliary personnel of | half assembled these pieces be-| chard Avenue, had as weekend coming four, fourteen foot long, |guests her father, John West, and | three tiered bleacher stands around (her aunt, Mrs. Adelaide Coomber. the ball diamond. These benches| Harry Ferguson, Orchard Av- are. a gift from the Rotary club enue, is spending a week in En- to the village Park. | niskillen as the guest of his bro- The unfortunate bit of the whole 'ther, Walter, and Mrs. Ferguson. evening was in our not having an| Mr. and Mrs. John Turner re- |audience -- it was a good show-- turned on Sunday to Dartmouth, and no casualties and the job is N.S. after having spent the past done and they look good. . {two weeks with her father, Robert | We hear the Village council is | Brown, Ritson Road north. Jack | going to supply paint and the Ro- |Brown accompanied them for a TORONTO (CP)--Official fore- casts issued by the Dominion pub- lic weather office in Toronto at | returw ,oyage. dog. 9:30 a. m. Cool pt on owe) Mounties Fire UK's Enthusiasm James Bay swept into Southern | LONDON (CP) -- The RCMP |gent which sails from Southampton Ontario Tuesday evening, and | set off along its leading edge. As! Coronation contingent packed its |for Halifax. | the Great Lakes area gets deeper | into the cool air there will be showers and thunderstorms were | gradual clearing along the lower | ags today for home. Since they arrived, the Mounties tarians are to do the painting. Congratulations to Betty Grace month's vacation. i The Brown family picnic, which | lakes, and sunny weather will be general over the southern part of {have received some of the most The red-coated band leaves by rabid acclaim of any visitors this with electronic eyes of radar they ! Bryant ten year old daughter of was held on Sunday at Mountjoy | Mr. and Mrs. C. S. Bryant who |park, took the form of a miscel- was successful in passing Grade |laneous shower for Mr. and Mrs. six piano at the recent examina- |Fred Williams, a bride and groom | tions of Toronto Conservatory held | JH4ams, a brice anc £ the province today and Thursday.|sea Thursday. The Mounties summer. They took part in the | recently in Whiby. | { Rev. A. E. and Mrs. Young and | boys have gone to Kincardine | Beach on holidays. His pulpit was very ably filled on Sunday by Dr. Joseph Christian OTVOS, a psy- chiatrist on the staff of the On- tario Hospital who finds the Chris- | | tian faith the answer to the prob- | {lems of human emotions and un- | certainties. He was one of the first | | Christians to be imprisoned and de- | | ported from Germany for opposing | | Hitler in 1933 and out of a wealth of three weeks. Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Wallace, Taunton Road, spent the weekend | in Huntsville with her grandmo- ther, Mrs. G. G. Ward. | Mr. and Mrs. James Rodd, Simcoe Street north, had as guests | on Sunday, Mr. and Mrs. Ivan Rodd of Lindsay. | Mr. and Mrs. Fred Hurren and | family spent Sunday in Midland and Barrie. While in Barrie they | were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Keith Meyers. | However, skies will be mostly { cloudy north of Lake Superior both days and there will be a few scat- tered showers today. Regional forecasts midnight Thursday: Lake Erie, Ontario, Niagara, Georgian Bay, Haliburton, Kirkland Lake re- gions; Windsor, London, Hamil- ton, Toronto, North Bay, Sudbury cities: Sunny with a few cloudy intervals today and Thursday. Not much change in temperature. Wind west 15 both days, becoming light at night. Low tonight and high Thursday at Windsor 55 and 80, London and St. Thomas 50 and valid until Lake Huron, Lake | |of experience speaks with a full |heart of the peace which comes | to the human heart when we give | ourselves fully and entirely into Be U.S. Food Mickey Walker Didn't Recognize ' French From Gaelic--Didn't Care NEW YORK (AP) -- Across the | SAULT STE. MARIE, Ont. (CP) --Three cases of polio have been reported here within a week, two of them are paralytic patients. The first case was a six-year-old girl with bulbar polio. The other {two involved a 17-year-old girl and "Well, after the fight was over |a seven-year-old boy. | and we had won, there was a pretty | Nineteen cases were reported fair party. Lots to drink and eat here last year, one of them fatal. and a good time for everybody.| When it got rolling in high gear, ! . 'Kearns fished down in his kick Chain Stolen NEWPORT, Wales Walker, and some that didn't, | claimed to be a relative. And they | all wanted him to come back to the ould sod for a visit. and came up with a roll of bills. | | 'Go get some tickets to Duljin', he | (Reuters) -- said. He and Mickey practically pushed me out of the door. "I'm going down in the lift (you know that's what they call the ele- vator) and I'm saying to myself 'to hell with, Dublin, I got some acquaintances in Paris and that's where we'll go." So, I went and bought the tickets to Paris. "Next morning, everybody is still feeling great and Mickey is yell ing 'let's go to Ireland.' So, off we go. Now to get to Paris, you have to take a train to Dover and then the boat across the channel and another train to Paris "They all think we're taking the train to shove off for Ireland. | Monmouthshire county council has | sent out an urgent call for a silver | chain so the council chairman can | welcome the Queen in style today. | The chairman's badge of office, ta chain of 24 silver gilt links and an enamelled medallion worth about $350, has been stolen. The queen arrives on her state | Coronation visit to Wales. | PLANE CRASHES, 6 DIE CHESTERTOWN, Md. (AP) -- A | four-engine navy plane crashed in {flames on the west bank of the | Chester river south of here Tues- | day, killing the six men aboard. | | The navy in Washington said the | If you know fight managers it| When we're crossing the channel, | plane was a Constellation transport | didn't take long to get the story. ! If there is anything they like to {talk about, even more than their | new "tiger" with bared fangs and | a knockout in each hand, it's the {old days. | "We were over t here to fight | 'Mickey was the lar with the Irish. All the time, while: he was training, he kept | getting letters from the Irish invit- ing him to come over to see them. | | Everybody that had a last name Mickey thinks he's on the Irish sea. And when we get to Paris, all the Frenchmen are talking French naturally, and Mickey thinks they're talking Gaelic. "It wasn't until two days later that they found out. we were in middleweight | Paris. By that time we all were | champion and naturally very popu- having so much fun, it didn't make | any difference." Some oak trees are known to be 1,000 years old. on a training flight from its base | at the Patuxent, Md., naval sta- | tion, | STAFFORD BROS. . MONUMENTAL WORKS 318 DUNDAS ST, E., WHITBY PHONE WHITBY 552 Memorials @ Markers {80, Wingham 50 and 75, Toronto, Hamilton and St. Catharines 55 {and 80, Trenton 55 and 75, Mus- koka and Killaloe 45 and 70, Earl- ton, North Bay and Sudbury 45 and 65. Summary for Thursday: Mostly sunny. TORONTO (CP)--Observed tem- ratures bulletin issued at the oronto public weather office at 10 a. m. Max. Dawson 64 Victoria Edmonton Regina Winnipeg ............. Pt. Arthur White River Kapuskasing ......... S. S. Marie North Bay . Sudbury § Muskoka airport ...... Windsor ..........., London ... Toronto . Ottawa Montreal Saint John .... Halifax For King Billy OTTAWA (CP) -- Some 50.000 Orangemen from eastern Ontario 74 take and Billy, Jr., arrived from the | home. | ed Balsdon, Burford and Germ ans |dren Judith and Jamie of Stettler, : : | The death took place on Wed. ment are exploring the possibility | Ella Andrew in her 86th year. She| The step is being considered as | | Her funeral was conducted from | capitalizing on the unrest in So-| Whitby. Interment in Erskine cem- | learned, has cabled American High | j¥. C. Murkar, A. Jackson and |United States should attempt such! department some idea of what pub- - Ll | Polio Strikes will | brate the 263rd anniversary of the bring about 35,000 Orangemen from Mr. and Mrs. Billy Miller, Anne | « west last week to visit om ue | TV] R h v here and drive a new car back | ay eac | Mrs. | Dr. and Wirs. Wright and two chil- | Alberta visited their sister Mrs.| WASHINGTON (AP) -- Officials | { Harry Boyes and family last week. (of the United States state depart-| at Fairview Lodge of another of of offering surplus American food | the village's older residents, Miss |to hungry East Germans. { is survived by one brother William |a joint cold war - humanitarian | Andrew of Toronto. move, aimed at least partly at] {the McEachnie Funeral Home on |viet-occupied East Germany. | | Saturday by Rev. Mr. Marshall of | The state department, it was | |etry. Pall bearers were Mr. Frank | Commissioner James Conant in| { White, Robt. Reesor, Harry Boyes |Bonn for his view on whether the | Garnet Courtice. a project. | A Conant was instructed to give the lic reaction would be in East and West Germany to such an offer. jand Watertown, N.Y. (part in mammoth parades to cele- | battle of the Boyne here July 12-13. Special trains and busses will surrounding lodges. DROVE CAR OVER WHEAT STRATFORD (CP) -- Leonard ~ | Petrie, who pleaded guilty to level- | ling three-quarters of an acre of wheat by driving his car back and forth through it, Tuesday was given two years' suspended sent- ence for damage caused and or- dered to pay $75 restitution to Will- iam Anderson of Stratford. . For Footings, Basements, Garage Floors, Sidewalks, ete. For Lowest Prices Use READY-MIX DIAL 3-7651 CURRAN & BRIGGS READY-MIX LIMITED {wrapped up their tour Tuesday |Coronation procession in two | when they were inspected by the |groups and put their internation- Queen at the Royal Mews in an |ally-known musical ride on at the afternoon appointment that only [royal tournament here and at a the Royal Family and the 46-man | week-long exhibition at Alloa, Scot- group knew about. { land. | The Queen, the Duke of Edin- | Elsewhere they went they drew burgh, Prince Charles and Princess | crowds and fan mail reflecting the Anne inspected them astride their |breath of the old west they stfll coal-black horses. represent to Britons. An RCMP spokesman said the| The RCMP spokesman said to- inspection took about 15 minutes. |day that the Mounties had been The Queen chatted briefly with | asked by the palace to keep the several members of the contin- inspection a secret. $170,000 Diamond Has New Shape AIX - EN - PROVENCE, Ffrance (AP)--A Paris diamond cutter tes- tified Tuesday that the famous "La Marquise" diamond, stolen from the Begum Aga Khan four years ago, now is an emerald- shaped stone, seven carats smal- ler. "La Marquise," a great stone which gave off a pinkish light, was among $850,000 in jewels snatched from the beautiful wife of the fab- ulously wealthy Moslem leader in a daylight robbery in 1949. Ten Corsicans and Frenchmen went on trial Monday for the theft. Marquise" alone was worth $170,- 000 The diamond cutter, 55-year-old Henri Waffelman, a defendant, "La | | said he reduced it from its original |22 carats to 15 carats after 12 {days of intensive work early in 1950. | Waffelman said he received the | gem from a longtime friend, Hilar- ion Fromanger, 50, another defend- ant, who in turn got it from Jules | Battistelli, a jewel dealer, also on i trial. Waffelman"s testimony lent weight to the case of Lloyds of London which insured the Begum's jewels and claimed the 15-carat diamond is the transhipped mar- quise. Earlier, George Lindsay Watson, a French war hero who says he is the godson of Sir Winston Church- |ill, denied he had been the gang's tipoff man in the holdup. Begum Aga Khan Gives Evidence AIX- EN- PROVENCE, France K Watson. Paris-born son of a Scot- (Reuters)--The beautiful Begum |tish father and French mother, Aga Khan made a brief appear- denies the charges of aiding and ance in court here today to see the | abetting armed attack and receiv- opening of a trial of 10 men ac- ing stolen goods. cused of robbing her of $571,400 The prosecutor told how the Aga worth of jewels in a sensational Khan, his wife and her maid and hold-up four years ago. | chauffeur were waylaid by three The former French beauty armed men in an efficient, two queen, wife of the fabulously minute hold-up. spiritual head of millions of Mos- ---- -- fe is expected to give evidence FARMHOUSE BURNS on Wednesday or Thursday. NAPANEE (CP) --Fire Tuesday The prosecutor said Col. Lindsay | destroyed the farm home of the George Watson, 50, Franco-British | Henry Sizer family in nearby hero of two world wars, was the | Adolphustown. The farm, owned by tip-off man for the gang which | Earl F. Miles who is at held up the Aga Khan's car on the [living at Indianapolis, Ind., is man- road from Cannes to Nice airport | aged by Mr. Sizer who lived in the on Aug. 3, 1949. Itenant house. resent i PBesonof Features Fast, Friendly Farm Service REPAIRS -- Home, oute, tractor, SPRING PLANTING Sprays, barn, machinery, etc. fertilizer, seed. PAINTING -- Hoyse, form bulld- LIVESTOCK Poultry, cattle, ings, implements, etc. horses, sheep, etc. © Puonal likes to make loans to farmers. Cash promptly bankable security not required. Write for loan entirely by mail! Or phone first for 1-visit loan . . . or come in today. Loans $50 te $1200 on Signature, Furniture or Aube THAT LIKES 10 SAY ves~) Bineffizal Prsonal FixanNcE Co. 2nd Fl, 111/; SIMCOE ST., NORTH (Over Bank of Nova Scotia), OSHAWA Phone: 3-4687 « John P. Alexander, YES MANager OPEN DAILY 9 TO § © SATURDAY 9 TO 12:30 Loans mode, te residents of oll rorreonding lows: © Porvonsl Finance Company of Comedy

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