. AJAX AND DISTRICT NEWS John Mills, Representative a Phone Ajox 426. "DO IT YOURSELF" with FREE PLANS .. MASONITE 4, PRESDWOODS" ' . ° . THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE, Tuesday, November 17, 1058 ¥ Officials Say Korea Lines ric TEE i - » urch minister. . U Offi 1 He unsuccessfully contested Tor- . [Jd nion Cla onto Davenport riding for the CCF me From Home Be ETT Se Sct Tre 1 e ee ost Airew Brewin, Toronto lawyer, . on T announ candi- __About the only [were the first requiring the CO's, ture pictures every day in their| TORONTO (CP)--Fred Young, date for the leadershp left va- hardsnp. oh soldiers will on. attention in qu three weeks |0Wn lines. 46, political action representative |cant by the resignation of E. B. dergo here this winter will be their 1 in he A bus service will operate in|of the United Steelworkers of | Jolliffe. absence from home. =-tusua any army anywhere.|g.. prigade area between 4 p.m.!America (CIO-CCL), announced The forthcoming months will see |. One reason given is the troops' |and 11 p.m., furthering the com- | Monday night he wll seek the IDENTIFY BODY the Canadians' fourth--and snug- [interest in their . They see |munity atmosphere, in Canada | leadership of the Ontario CCF, moRONTO (CP)--The i. gest--winter in Korea. Brig. Jean fhe pay ut se AD, ar t-Inorth of the Imjin. party at its convention here next | oman found floating in Lake On- V. Allard's force will be almost as ' ' CEREMONIAL DRILLS week-end. tario near here Sunday, Monday well accommodated as troops sta-| RECREATIONAL CENTRE Apart from routine tactical train-| Born in Long Reach, N.B., be|was identified as Mrs. Luba S: tioned in Canada, will have more| An example is the brigade rec-|ing, with both day and night exer-|was at one time principal of a|tenko, 34. Friends said her hus- amenities and will get better train- | reational centre, Allard's personal | cises, one day a week is set aside |public school in Woodstock, N.B.|band and children live in Sudbury. ing. conception and his pet project. for ceremonial drills. The RCR is|He holds a master of arts degree |Coroner Julian Loudon said nits have all but completed| Tne units take turns in provid- (even doing march pasts in column | from the University of Toronto. was accidental. work on their Sampaites. Anore |ing work details. When completed i companies, amd he advance of like landscaped parks. ova the centre will embrace a 3,000- entire ba Alon Jig dR 22nd Regiment's boast even T0Ct| seat open-air amphitheatre (al- CIcutine ere but special even work terraces and stone fences. | .aqy used for the brigade boxing bad home. However. Nigh lis. gots WELL-EQUIPPED TENTS championships) a 700-seat 'jumbo' | afi Holly oct idan llr gh Floorboards and wooden walls | quonset theatre, with added stage ale, *, w fo eer is red In for the platoons' squad tents have |and dressing-rooms and a projec- the ess hy ee Eon nd begun to arrive and are expected |tion booth built on at the other) V itor. ae Ce on to be installed throughout before end; an ice-rink bull-dozed out of |9 sper) Kren iA edn » BO really cold weather sets in, Every |the paddies and watered from a noumees a on , peshaps Sus tent has one stove mow, and ulti-(pear-by stream; a library-hobby IP singly = S mately will have two. Most will |shop-dry canteen likely to.be staf- |' e have electric light. fod by Canadian Red Cross girls; |, On that one the soldiers express Steel quonset huts with concrete | 3 snack bar; a wet canteen unin the opiuions Jo be sxpecion ot aay. floors Jiouge nit headquarters, hibited by military policemen. | °F, SXRERTEng a_drop told, "the sis aang 31%) In the area will be the brigade' | patricias) are hot about their im- wn [own radio station, soon to be set|pending disbandment, consequent Wg mpl heir a up with equipment purchased in|ypon the reorganization of ing, units also own Xs 4 details for | Japan, and permanent quarters for [army and the reduction of their work on defensive positions. the army bands Ottawa will be| regiments to two battalions. Everyone is busy and morale is sending on six-month tours. "All we infantrymen have are high. This is reflected in discip-| First-run movies will have one: |our regimental traditions and when line. Two minor offences in the week runs at the recreation centre, | we're robbed of those what have Royal Canadian Regiment recently ' while units will have different fea- we left?" said one officer. Sea Trouble-Shooters Have Their Own Worries i By DAL WARRINGTON As a salvage job they rank it with stranded in Valparaiso harbor, to : Canadian Press Staff Writer the Flying Enterprise saga. Better Galveston, Tet, for Tans od . HALIFAX (CP)--Fewer salvage than ti at, they save e ship. |picked up other tow jobs along DAISY MAE AND LIL ABNER AT PICKERING H.S. (ALIFE (CF) sever lune lh, Ol 50 SEC "Bn Ban h | ning an all Dog Patch was | they are Mary Warzman and |East coast. Local shipping men say | from London to New York, roue Though the two most powerful |! goal, ems of, gh - an "Daisy Mae" and 'L'il John Delacour. the numbet may be fewer still if to beam ends when her ballast |tugs are gone, East coast salvage 1¢'s easier than you think . ..t0 build an off cient work and storage space in your gas age. Bring order out of the jumble of tools and equipment in just a few hours -- with strong, smooth Masonite Presdwood. Cabinet dooes and ends, shelves, snd the " i eral government doesn't |shifted 450 miles southeast of Hal-|men are still in business. Queen of ins Day" with a dance on Friday Auer' are Shows: Tn veal Je, Pio by John Mille the todoral i hy ifax. The 38-man crew, fearing she |the fleet now is Foundation Jose- A salvage tug to a seafarer is| would sink, abandoned ship. Six |phine II, based at Quebec City " bd - like' a tow-truck to stranded | were drowned, but the others were | during the St. Lawrence shipping ousewl £ 0 <3 154 10N 0 S motorist. It's the trouble-shooter picked up by passing freighters. | season, at Halifax or St. John's, ' of the sea lanes. The stricken ship was left to drift. |Nfld., the rest of the year. She y Since the post-war shipping boom Foundation Lillian found the Lei-| has 1,800 horsepower, a cruisi . ended there are fewer ships, fewer cester after a 10-day search. She range of 7,500 miles, can stay a (0) ov ~ oS 0Cla vent calls and fewer rescue jobs. had a 70-degree list and seemed |sea without refuelling for 25 days. Two of the five salvage tugs for- |likely to capsize. Joined by fhe Three smaller tugs, Foundation by GUY BRETTANY (Danish Wholesale Co - operative| AJAX -- A telecast of the Santa | ot Dt oS mcf "an los powertul Joscpkine, a, crew bustd. Vora, Foundations = meviex oh COPENHAGEN {Reuters} The Sogfety, i Claus parade was held in the Ajax Te a C a da's largest, the|get a line on her, and towed her |year ? biggest surprise in Denmark's new 1 was really Surprised at my Legion Hall on Saturday for the 5 20. hors na Fo ee Jon 85 miles to Bermuda. The trip Ye ivage crews are ready to go Socialist government was the ap-|appointmient," Mrs. Groes told children of members. From 'the | "+i nrsepowel \ in BE | took oth . whe I ee On or Mint intment of Mrs. Lisbeth | Reuters. "Lt It was a rather rapt gtiention on the faces of the om alt "in 1952 mot wer- The Lillian made her longest con- [calm or storm. Their tugs carry gl Bye ano housewife aud bold step by th, id Ra small fry it Yes evident it was fal. the 1,900-horsepower 'Founda: tinuous tow two months later. She | divers' suits portable pumps, un- mother e ¢ n, atly appreciated. 3 ; H ol ' tein. post of minister of commerce. able to do something to help Dan- ge Ay welcome is extended tion Lillian, was sold last month | pulled 2 Sertick Dost 3.400 Iles derwater glosirie Li > stile. Mrs. Groes had never been in |ish industry and commerce to run to Ben Severs and Al Evans who for service in Venezuela. " across e 3lantle rom Ha} an Oxygen cul ng a -- ding nSe publi office before and had never | smoothly. are returning as members. The owners say there wasn't{to Frenc uinea on Ci ay ouzali S vy en an active part in politics. | FREE TRADE The dance social held last Satur- | €nough business to keep them in |west Soak TRIP wig W .. sion Heel. THolF She is not a member of the Folket-| "I believe in free trade as far |day night was greatly enjoyed. service. \| 15,0001 / 1 cal salvage ie Wry tng, Denmark's single - chamber |as possible." i Jeannette Montgomery of Brooklin NOTABLE FEATS Her longest round trip was last |job of saving life Prope y al splinter -free of the drop-down Parliament. | Asked how she would reconcile | supplied the music. This group will Halifax salvage crews have some | year's 15,000-mile voyage from | sea is important enough to justify yy Juefack I Jam, . Her only apparent qualifications |the duties as the mother, of a large | be playing at future spcials which feats to their credit. One is the|Halifax to Valparaiso, Chile, and|some attention from the Sationdl wn oo EE rs pi for the post were that she received | family with the responsibilities of | will be good news to all who have salvage of the British freighter |back with stops at Texas and | treasury. If it isn't they say lac! grainless all.woo! . It's easy a degree in Jolitical scone. at |a cabinet minister, Mrs. Groes re- | heard them. There will be anoth- Leicester, caught in an Atlantic Venezuela ports. She towed the |of business makes the future not cut and fasten with regular carpenter's Copenhagen University and that ier social on Saturday, November hurricane in 1948. French freighter Rouen, which had | too hopeful. tools. Resists intemp and lied: e for the last three years she had "Well, I shall have to make ar- (21. All members, former mem- humidity. It won't hurt to leave it wopaine been chairman of the Danish Housewives' Association, which keeps a close watch on retail rangements for my home to run more or less without me as my main job now is at the ministry. "The children were enthusiastic es. Her hasband is chairman of the over my appointment." Care of Family Pets Can Run Into Big Money ByLAWRENC ELADER C From Coronet Dr. f. A. Mohr, a veterinarian of Sap a, Oklahoma, got up in the le of the night some 40 yearsago to answer an emergency call fom Sim Griffith's ranch. The docpr, pushing his horses to the lim!, made the 15 miles in his bukboard in two and a half hours, saved Griffin's ailing cow. ot long ago, another emer- cy call came in from the Grif- fi ranch. This time Dr. C. ohr, Jr., who had replaced his /ather as the local veterinarian, airing at the Griffin ranch in a mal of minutes -- in his white Consolidated Vultee Stinson, equip: ped with a - portable . X-ray t, sterilizer, inhalator, and a refrig- erated unit filled with serums an antibiotics. . HOSPITALS GALORE Dr. Mohr and his plane symbol- ize the amazing revolution that has taken place in the veterinary pro- fession. Back at the turn of the century, the average veternarian had a one-room office and Tr ated on a simple table. T day. there are 1,500 animal hospi throughout the country, gleaming with stainless steel opera tables and filled with expensive equipment. e investment in some animal hospitals with a complete layout of laboratories, surgery X-ray, dog runs and examination, bathing an clipping, isolation and kennel rooms, may run over $100,000. One large New York veterinary os- pital, han over 10,000 cases a ar, has a staff of five veterirar- ans and two technicians who work solely on X-ray and laboratory analysis. " Hollywood, quite naturally, is dotted with the most palatial hos- pitas of ho Set far back > sweep! lawns ' expensively oop gardens, they are gen- erally in white stucco, modern or sometimes styled like English manor houses. Some have ambulance service, lady nurses, even maternity wards where owners can ogle their pets and new offs) through hygienic glass windows. The ultimate touch is a deluxe rest home where cats relax in their own bungalows with private rooms, landscaping and dinner- time concerts. TWO-WAY RADOS A number of veterinarians have equipped their automobiles with two-way, short-wave radios, enabl- ing them to keep in constant touch with their offices and answer emer- gency calls at a moment's notice. A. | There are still active veterinarians, however, like Dr. Robert S. Mac- Kellar, Sr., in New York's Green- wich Village, who were practicing back in the days when the vet was known as a horse doctor. He compounded his own medi- cines--fever mixtures, colic and physic balls, all packaged in large capsules which were shoved down the horse's throat. A horse was treated for a bone wth with a firing iron, and cured of an assort- ment of ills by being bled with a fleam or sharp knife. Today Dr. MacKellar, like thou- sands of other city veterinarians, rarely sees a horse. His booming practice in dogs, cats and other pets employs almost every modern surgical and medical technique that can be found in the most up- to-date human hospitals. Today's veterinarian gives his animals blood tests, heart tests and diet checkups. He uses an oxygen tent for pneumonia and pos'sopera- tive cases, gives medicine by intra- venous injection, and performs his operations under nerve-block drugs that make them as painless and effective as any performed in human operating wards. His whole hospital, in fact, is a replica of the best human hospitals, down to such details as "Kennel-side"" charts that hang from each patient's kennel. $350 FOR TOOTH One major reason for this vet- erinary boom is that people have more pets today than they did 30 years ago. What's more, they are willing to spend a lot more money on them. One woman is known to have paid $350 for a gold filling for her Boston bull's tooth. Another Prairie Dogs Live In Weird Dustbowl City DOG TOWN, Sask. (CP) -- Al- though this place has 20,000 inhabi- tants, it can't be found under city, town or village listings in the Canadian Almanac. In fact, it's the only community of its kind in North America. Dog Town, 155 miles southwest of Regina, is a giant community of prairie. dogs--a small cing animal not much larger than a groundhog. Once they roamed the continent by the millions. Now they are almost extinct. Surrounded by desert, they live in the peaceful seclusion of Sas- katchewan's dust bowl. Where noth- in grows but grass and wild flowers, the prairie dog finds his hing. s Albert Swantson and Fred Lahr- man, field workers with the Sas- katchewan provincial museum, re- cently visited Dog Town to investi- gate "living conditions' and bring back specimens. "When you visit the community, You can't help being impressed by ow these creatures live," said Mr. Swanston. "We saw 500 prairie dogs in one colony where there were 200 bur- rows. On top of one mound six dogs were perched." . RAPIDLY DYING OUT At one time the dogs numbered 400,000,000 in an area of 250,000 square miles. Dog Town, the sole remaining community, is about 25 square miles. When a prairie dog meets an- other he stops to talk, kiss and then pass on his way. He rubs down his neighbor's fur and shares his food. The Jraicie dog's only protection is his burrow. This barking mound builder feeds on ntar'v ro x of vegetation growing on the. prairie but has been ki... . locust and mice. He spends his day gathering food and storing it away for winter. | bers and their ladies are welcome. | CAHA Threatens Frontenacs Club MIDLAND {CP)-Ceorge Dudley secretary-manager of the Cana- dian Amateur Hockey Association, said Monday that action will be taken against Quebec Frontenacs in the next day or two if the Fron- tenacs don't relinquish all claims on netminder Jacques Marcotte. Dudley said the Quebec Amateur Hockey Association, of which the Frontenacs are a ber, was informed last Friday that the Frontenacs will be suspended if they continue to use Marcotte. It is reported that Marcotte, who was ruled bythe CAHA to be the property of Quebec Cita- delles of the Ontario Hockey Asso- ciation Junior A series, played for Frontenacs Saturday and Sunday. Frontenacs took over the berth in the QAHA Junior A series left vacant when the Citadelles joined the OHA. ASSIST IMMIGRANTS OTTAWA (CP)--The federal gov- ernment advanced passage money to 4,698 immigrants coming to Can- ada in the fiscal year ended last March 31, Immigration Minister Harris Monday advised Parlia- ment. A 'report on these loans, tabled in the Commons, showed the amount advanced was $686,680. VALUABLE VENISON WOODSTOCK (CP) -- Someone shot Wilfred Dawson's pure-bred jersey cow during th» ~-~~r season. The Oxford Fish and Game Pro- tective Association onday ap- péaled to the 'true sportsmen' of Oxford county to attend an old- time dance on Wednesday being held to pay for Dawson's cow. dog owner, told by her veterinar- ian that X-rays revealed a bladder stone, insisted on paying for the services of one of the most eminent urologists of human medicine, whom she had persuaded the vet, to call in for consultation. Even non-veterinarians like Dor- othy Gray, once an important manufacturer of cosmetics, have gotten intoythe act. Having sold her business a few years ago, she settled down on a farm near Am- enia, N.Y. There she soon realiZed that animals had problems her experience in lotigns and skin creams might be able to solve. At calving, for instance, many cows deveoped swollen udders which prevented full milk produc- tion. So Dorothy Gray got to work and developed a salve which re- duced the swelling and allowed the cow to be milked with ease in a short time. 50000000000000000000000000 » GENTLE colsTATON ELIEF The children will have three suc- cessive shots of a vaccine made of killed polio virus, triple tested for safety. Most of the virus will be grown by the University of To- ronto's Connaught laboratories. The vaccine was developed by Dr. Jonas E. Salk of the Univer- sity of Pittsburgh. It will be given to second-graders in some 200 countries--none officially named as yet--across the United States, What happens to these young- sters during next summer's nat- Toronto-made Vaccine May Conquer Polio By ALTON L. BLAKESLEF NEW YORK (AP)--A hope laden polio vaccine--most of it to be made in Toronto--will be given to probably 1,000,000 American school children beginning Feb. 8 in an effort to learn whether polio has been conquered. details country-wide medical test were an- nounced this week by the National Foundation for Infantile Paraly- ural exposure to polio is expected to tell whether the vaccine is a success. The children will be com- pared with unvaccinated children of the first through third grades in those same counties. KNOW RESULTS IN '§5 The answer won't be known until some time in 1955 when careful scientific check-ups have been completed, says Basil 0O'Connor, foundation president. _ If the vaccine does really pro- tect, then large amounts can be made available for children of all ages in 1955. Those selected for the test will be areas which have had high polio rates for the last five years, especially among young children, and which give a good cross section of the U. S. geographically, economically and socially. Vaccinations will be confined to children in the second grade be- | cause youngsters of that age--b6% 'to eight--have the second highest Postmen Have More To Carry OTTAWA (CP)--Canadians are loading up the postman with more mail than ever. Billions of pieces handled by the post-office department in the fiscal year ended last March 31 brought record revenue of $129,388,364 Postmaster-General Cote informed Parliament Monday in hs annual report. But he reported, too, that the cost of running the service also was at a new high of $122,917,311, with the result that the surplus slipped to $6,471,058 compared with the $6,648,944 the previous year. incidence of polio among all age groups. County health officers will di- rect the vaccinations, given at school clinics. Parents must give written consent. All vaccinations must be com- pleted by June 1, before the new polio season starts. The first two doses will be given a week apart, with a third booster dose inected four weeks later. ed, or paint on a smooth, durable finish. There are d of other cts you can do to make your home beter looking and more seoble -- at low cost! See your building materials dealer now. He has the type and thickness of Masonite Presdwood you need for this and other home improvements. FREE PLANS! Diagrams and specifications of this garage work space will be sent you st no charge, when you fill out and mail ia the coupon. Do it now! "Registered Toade Mark bar havdhboordds Hr beth pemodtdh MASONITE PRESDWOODS INCLUDE TEMPERED TEMPRTILE QUARTRBOARD UNDERLAYMENT PANELWOOD LEATHERWOOD TEMPERED EXTERIOR SIDING TEMPERED PRESDWOOD FLOORING EE RE EN EN SE EE ES a.m To: International Fibre Board & Plywood Sales Limited Dept. M-83 -- Gatineau, Que. Please mail free plan No. AE 274 and complete + application instructions. NAME. ADDRESS cry. How much OVER ONE MILLION CANADIANS ARE INSURED WITH THE LONDON LIFE life insurance should I own? -. "How can I tell how much life insurance a man in my position should have--taking my family 29 situation and my gs into gh to take eave "Is my p! life ¥ of my wife and children if I'm not here to provide for them, im these days of high Nving eosts? «How can | make the dollars I pay im promiums go as far as possible ip making the right kind of provision for them? ASK THE LONDON LIFE AN