Daily Times-Gazette, 14 Dec 1953, p. 2

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2 THE DAILY TIMES-GAEETTE, Monday, December 14, 1068 - BIRTHS DANZEY---To Anne Denzey, in Londen Hospital, Ont., Sunday, Dec. 13. The birth of a daughter, Gail Anne. 8 Ibs. Both doing well. GUDGEON--Mr. and (nee Florence Mrs. J. erty) are happy to of their twin sons, and Robert Mi on Friday, Dec. 11, 1953, at the Oshawa General Hospital. Nan Hyderman HYDERMAN---Vern and (nee Piighiord) are, plessed to Bernard, at Oshawa General on Saturday, Dec. 13. Mother and .cember 15, 2 Pp. Union Cemetery. RE--On December 8, 1953, fisaricordia Hospital, John onl Hare, Ste. 4 34 Furby St. aged 82 years. Funeral service 3:15 p.m., Thursday in Gardiner « B. Funeral Home. 178 MAS St. Interment in Elmwood Cem OBITUARY JOHN B. HARE WINNIPEG -- John Beresford Hare, 82-94 Furby St., Winnipeg, died Tuesday, December 8, at the Misericordia Hospital. Funeral ser- vices were held at 2.15 p.m, Thursday last at the A. B. Gar- diner Funeral Home. Dr. J. L. Mclnnis officiating. Interment was in Elmwood Cemetery. Born in Picton, Ont., Mr. Hare had lived in Winnipeg since 1912, and was an accountant with G. B. Hare and Co. for 20 years, retiring in 1948. He was a member of the Corinthian Lodge, IOOF, of Osh- awa, Ont. : Surviving are his widow, Mar- aret Ada; one son, Seorge Bu of be: peg; one daughter, K. Haynes, of Winnipeg; two bro- thers, R B. Hare, of 2% Current, one x # Oshawa; six grandchildren and two great-grandchildren. REV. DR. E. W. YOUNG e A lengt 3: City Council OSHAWA AND DISTRICT JUDGE APPOINTED Everett Brown of Orono will be invited to judge at the Peterbor- ough Coun! Black and White Show next autumn. TV ON WATER TOWER Lindsay man nnedy is the local water standpipe for a vision aerial which he d serve as a master an- tenna for the district and elimin- ate unsightly poles on housetops. LENGTHY AGENDA -agenda faces Oshawa tonight when it meets in the Court Room of the Police Building. At least two deputations are expected to be present. There will be at least one more meeting this year. ASSISTANCE ASKED During the next week the Sun- day Schools of the various churches in the city and surrounding dis- trict will hold their Christmas con- certs. The Timts-Gazette would ap- preciate it if officers and teachers would make reports of these events available as soon as possible after they are held. SUNDAY WEATHER FINE As though it were not close to winter, operations at Whitby har- bor continued yesterday in the warm fall sunshine. An oil tanker was unloading, a dredge was work- ing 0lshore and one would hardly thi that the end of the naviga- tiin season was Uptown, a house ing th dence. CHRISTIAN SCIENCE SUBJECT 'God the Preserver of man' was the subject of the lesson-sermon which was read in all churches of Christ, Scientist, throughout the world including First Church of Christ, Scientist, 64 Colborne Street East, Oshawa, on Sunday, Decem- r 13. The Golden Text was '"Withhold not thou tender mercie from me, O Lord; let thy lovingkindness and thy truth con- timally preserve me" (Psalm ust one day off. uijlder was piant- e exterior of his new resi- » RAILWAY (Continued from Page 1) Transport Commission, Gen, Brian Robertson, was reported ready to ask for govermment in- tervention if the union refuses to cempromise. The unions are demanding a 15 ord | ner-cent hike in wages which now average £8 11s 11d ( of ail .07) a week. al, whose ruling National 1 unal, wi s always have been accepted in the past, awarded a Weekly increase only 4d G6 cents). The unions unanimously rejected the award, although unions of 70,- 000 engineers and firemen had of 90,000 salaries staff employees said they will accept it as basis for further negotiations. Flier Soug] By RCAF Men QUEBEC (CP)--Quebec oye Club has asked the RCAF I aed alte Ra a wa i ce Nov. when took off from Kingston, Ont. for Montreal A club spokesman said today - | Jack Lawson, 18, of Baie Comeau, VIOLET TAYLOR Correspondent NORTH OSHAWA -- The North Oshawa Group of Son Mothers held its regular meeting on Thursday, December 10, at the home of Mrs. Emil Rutishauser. The Theeting Shened with Py ' Cizmas_sarol fol. al Mothers' Promase g ioe Mrs. Glenford Taylor presided ting, Reports 32 nicl me on a recently held rummage sale was heard which showed it to be very successful. Soran, el) vilugicensd social convener for balance of year. A party clusion of the members then gathered around the table set in the tradi- tional Christmas colors for a deli- cious lunch and exchange of Christ- Mrs. Melvin Hodgson and Mrs. Edward Brown held Tucky cups. The next mee will be held at the home of Mrs. Noreen Diehl on Thursday, January 14. & but he | Until the hostess Mrs. Wi Jordon, . Roy Smith and Mrs. Clarence McLean. North Oshawa CRA will hold regular monthly meeting on Mon- day eve! , December 14, at the home of . 8S. C. Rundle, The 13th Guide and Brownie Group Committee will meet at the e of Mrs. Emil Rutishauser on sday, December 15, at 8 p.m. | Nos: - {with a Fleet Canuck bearing let- , and Quebec City, left here 19 on a three week cruise ters CF-ENY. The plane is owned by the club. The spokesman said Lawson, a vate pilot with 150 hours of fly- time, was last reported leaving at 4 p. m- for Eibgsion Nov. 28 C rville Jirport, Montreal. He never landed hy: Lawson was not due back here until Jest Wedne A a airports in eastern a brough no clue as to his whereabouts. The made to uest for a search was RCAF at Ottawa Sun- br Ghostly Face Fades Off TV BLUE POINT, N. Y. AP)--The "ghost lady's" face finally faded from a Long island family's tele- vision screen Friday. And the NBC network said it has solved the mystery. NBC said the face that looked steadily out of Jerry Travers' TV set for two days was that of Francey Lane, 3 singer on the Morey Amsterdam show. A network spokesman quoted a TV dealer who examined the set as s; : "An explosion of electrons burned the image of a face into of the pic- yg ation of why the image p- peared, unless it burned off. Shortly after lunchtime Friday, said Travers' wife, there was a sort a ,"" the face turned into a ball and faded into nothing. then, the face had e on the screen no matter what sta- tion was tun . 3 Day Death Toll Light THE CANADIAN PRESS A t plane collided in mid-air with another aircraft near Mont- real and crashed to the ground, killing pilot Pierre Desbiens, 20. The accident was probably the most spectacular those that brought violent death to 15 persons in eastern Canada during the week- e end. A Canadian Press gompilation to- day listed eight deaths in Quebec, five in Ontario and two in Nova Scotia. Ten were in traffic. mishaps. An elderly man was crushed un- der a freight train at Hamilton. Police said he carried no means of identification. In the Ontario traffic deaths, Er- nest Baker, 60, was killed a radial car near Simcoe; Frank J. Ki rek, 22, of St. Catharines, when his car hit a tree at Niagara Falls; Mrs. Neil McDon- all, 72, was pitched from her hus- and's car in 2 collision at Ko- struck down by a cer moka; and Frar Gilles, 4, . A check of | 9¢ Lord Pleads Not Guilty WINCHESTER, England (AP)-- Lord . Montagu, 27-year-old noble- man, plea not guilty ay to two charges of committing offences against a 14-year-old Boy Scout. Justice Lynskey, jying the case in Winchester's ancient Great Hall Bulli by William the Conqueror, that the direc boy's name uld not be ublished * although it had been: agowed dur the reliminary heal which rd Montagu's H Showdown Fight Is Threatened HANOI, Indo-China (AP)--The French high command said today is ready" for a show- with the Vietminh osing in on Dien Bien Phu, France's last stronghold in the mountainous 'Thai country of northwest Indo-China. The army spokesman said Viet- minh Division 316, the threatening enemy force, was still 12 miles northeast of Dien Bien Phu's for- tified plain and had made no move indica ng an attack was immin- ent. PARTISANS AID FRENCH diers, aided by partisan fighters of the Thai mountain tribes, con- tinued wide reconnaissance patrols in the area. ' French fighters and bombers flew 90 sorties against the rebel positions. Reinforced by 1,000 fresh troops and cargoes of war equipment flown from Hanoi, 200 miles to the southeast, the French Union troops were termed fully ready. NEGOTIATION OFFERED As the opposing forces man- oeuvred, Red leaders of the Viet- minh made another roundabout of- fer to negotiate an end to the seven-year Indo-China war. Moscow radio broadcast a Shanghai dispatch quoting Viet- minh chief Ho Chi Minh's informa- tion agency as saying he "'will be ready to accept" rench proposals for peace if '"'the French govern- ment really re ts the independ- ence of Viet Nam and is ready to start negotiations." « Coughing Crescendo LONDON (AP)---The coughing of music lovers just about on cked al the Wapiration out of German pianist Wilhelm Kempff at a re- cital Sunday night. In the midst of one of his own climbed up crescendos simultan- ig ughers seemed e co! TS to be get- ting the better of it when Boner lifted his hands from the keyboard and exclaimed pleadingly: "It's im le." Some of music lovers shouted "Hear, Hear." Thereafter the a Pl es dves was by some minor nose blowings. y _One critic, who confessed to a Jes coughing in a minor key, wrote: "I rather questioned the pro- priety of Mr. Kempff's protest. Anyone who schedules a winter concert in London should be pre- pared to take our respiratory ail- ments in stride." Defiant Judge. Alone in Court FRANKFURT (AP)--Suspended Chief Justice William Clark pres- ided defiantly--and alone--today in the/U. 8S. appeals courtroom in rmany. Continuing his opposition to state department orders suspen him for insubordination and dismissing him Jan. 8 as "surplus," the judge read a statement to photographers and reporters, heard two cases argued briefly and said he will not hold court Tuesday. "There wouldn't be any point in doing it all over again," he added. He said also he had not yet decided whether to appear for duty Jan. 18 when Acting Chief Justice Carl W. Fulghum of Glen- wood Springs, Colo., named by the state department to succeed Clark, ha scheduled the court's next ses- sion. Clark contends he was ordered fired because of his frequent crit- fcism of U. 8. high commission policy in Germany. He asserts he can be ousted only for a legal reason. Padre Slung Off Royal Ship ABOARD 8.8. GOTHC (CP)-- A note of sadness dg] this 8 carry n ike of > across the on their Common- Friday night a seaman was lost overboard from the New Zealand naval escort vessel Black Prince which that day had relieved from escort duty the British cruiser Sheffield. 2 The Gothic turned about and joined the Black Prince in a fruit- less search for the 20-year-old sailor. Searchlights failed to find any trace of him in the then choppy seas The Queen sent a message to the New Zealand naval ex- pressing sorrow at the mishap. The message said: / "I am greatly distressed to learn of the loss of Ordinary Sea- man M; att from HMNZS Black Prince whilst escorting the Gothic. Please convey to his relatives my heartfelt sympathy in their loss. Elizabeth R." ' The Queen and the Duke watched Sunday as a New Zealand naval chaplain, Rev. G. F. Senior, was transferred from the Black Prince to the Gothic to conduct morning service. Rev. Senior made the transfer on a's "" pulled on ropes slung between the vessels was | after Britis) 20 feet above the blue ocean. NAMED FOR SCIENTIST | The mineral miersite was named | to | Which French and Viet Namese sol-|F compositions, coughing and piano | mineralogist Sir Miers a 1008. | It is part of the duties of a BBC foreign correspondent to assess the political temperature of the coun- tries to which they are accredited, but recently the Corporation's Rome correspondent, Christopher Serpell, talked about temperatures of a very different kind, relates BBC Cal ht He had been to see Mount Vesu- vius, the great volcano near Naples in 79 AD destroyed the cities of Pompeii and Heculaneum. ERUPTED IN 19447 ' Versuvius last belched fire and smoke during the war, in 1944, when Allied troops stationed near- by had a front row seat for one of nature's greatest and most aw- ful spectacles. Since then Vesu- vius has been going through a rare period of inactivity. In the past such lulls have been followed by unusually violent erup- tions and today experts are study- ing the mountain ¢losely, for re- cently they have noticed a number of yellow blotches on the slopes near the crater. One scientist went to take the temperature of the mountain and inches below the surface Jellow spot the temperature registered was 1,220 degrees Fahrenheit. The last time Vesuvius' temperature was taken at this int was in January, 1952, when it was only 750 ., 80 it seems that the patient's fever is rapidly mounting. INSIDE CRATER The intrepid professor later went down inside the shallow crater and discovered, so Serpell said, that 16 | by Sharp Rise Noted In Temperature of Vesuvius started digging, with the idea of testing the temperature in the hole he dug. He had excavated to a depth of only four inches when he found that he was uncovering what seemed to be an extensive stretch of red-hot cinders. He went on to another yellow blotch inside the crater whe the temperature was -alre. 1,800 degrees. An escape of acid gases was noticeable on the surface over the blotch, and particularly the presence of hydrochloric acid-- observations which convinced that another eruption is near. RISING P] After 1944 the vertical tube in the bowels of Vesuvius which gives vent to the molten lava must have been blocked by rocks and also by the lava itself as it cooled. The ssure of molten matter beneath re | i¢ him | dence or oe de, Sudanese Tum To The Ballet WASHINGTON -- Elections do not come often in Anglo-Egyptian Sudan and when they do they are not the' one-day airs of the West. The Sudan is now in the process of electing its first Parlia- ment, and huge African land is devoting five weeks to a vote count, says the National Geograph- Society. The results should be known about Christmas. Then, after three years, the Sudan's first Parliament will or- der the election of a special as- sembly to choose full Jodepen- union with Beet. Since 1 Great Bri- tain an the Sudan. NILE FLOWS NORTH The Sudan is as the United States east of He Missis- s steadily increased since then 500 and it is thought that a new column of lava Is now forcing its way to the surface. ymptoms of this, say the scien- ts, are the acid gases on the yellow blotches which reach the surface only when pushed upwards lava. Red-hot cinders a few inches below the floor of crater ap- pear to indicate that the resistance of the congealed material of last eruption has now been almost overcome by the heat and pressure from below, and it may be only a short while before the rich, fertile slopes of this great mountain are again scoured by crawling streams lava. By STAN CARTER PANMUNJOM (AP)--U, S. spe- cial envoy Arthur H. Dean leaves Tuesday for consultations in Wash- ington, leaving his chief aide in Korea "to see if the Communists wish to resume" the ruptured ne- gotiations to set up a Korean peace conference. Dean, who met for eight weeks with the Reds in an effort to reach agreement, walked out on the Com- munist diplomats Saturday after they accused the Allies of "per- fidy. He told reporters today that his aide, Kenneth Young of the U.S. state department, will have "full authority to resume the talks . , . if the Communists withdraw the perfidy charges and give some sign they are ready to negotiate in good faith." owever, the Communists' Peip- ing radio already had reasserted the perfidy charges and laid the blame for the breakdown on the "contemptible cold war policy of the United States." Peiping, said Dean's walkout was | "an ominous sign that the U.S. | government might commit further | perfidies of graver consequence." an said in a statement that it is "the definite Policy of the United States of erica that every reasonable attempt should be made to work out the difficul- Dean Heads Home er Walkout ties and to convene the political (peace) conference, but could not compromise a slur on its in- RUSSIA RUSSIA CHIEF OBSTACLE Dean again repeated the United Nations stand that Russia be in- vited to the peace conference as a full Yoring participant on the Com- munist side and not as a neutral as the Reds have insisted. This yas the big stumbling block in the talks. The preliminary Panmunjom talks were aimed at fixing the time, date and composition of the long delayed peace conference. Bitter disputes over which na- tions should sit at the peace table bogged down the discussions. Dean walked out after the Reds accused the U.S, government of deliber- ately connivi in the release of 27,000 anti-Red North Korean pris- oners June 17-18. The Koreans were released by order of Presi- dent Syngman Rhee of South Korea. In Paris, where U.S. state se- cretary Dulles arrived to attend NATO council sessions, correspon- dents were told Dean's walkout was "not an emotional reaction to Communist provocation." Rather, the correspondents heard, it was due to "failure of the Communists to change one dot of an unacceptable plan." 'Workers Told By THE CANADIAN PRESS This is civic election day in Port Arthur, North Bay and Orillia. All three communities have may- oralty contests. North Bay is vot- ing on a proposal to replace its present rink with a larger arena that could be used hout the year as a community sports cen- tre. In Orillia, T. G. Beament, man- ager of Fahralloy Canada Limited, urged his employes not to vote for Mayor Wilbur M. Cramp who is seeking re-election. Mr. ramp is in a jhrée way nit with Hi Johnston and John Maclsaac. J Beament said he disagrees with the mayor's pplicy in a public utilities dispute. For the first time, St. Catar- For Candidate In Orillia Not To Vote ines voted Saturday on a date other than New Year's Day. Some 45 per cent of the eligible voters turned out, nearly twice as many as last year when there was no mayoralty contest, and they re- placed Mayor John Franklin, 39, seeking his third term, with Alder: man John Smith, 61, who has served on 11 councils. Owen Sound, which previously gave Percy England an acclama- tion as mayor, elected four city councillors an filled the four seats on board of education: New Toronto, an industrial sub- urb of Toronto Saturday elected Reeve John L. Strath, as its mayor for 1954. Mr. Strath has spent 20 years on the council, 12 as reeve. 2 Million NIAGARA FALLS, Ont. (CP)-- Where thousands of soldiers once fought for control of the Niagara frontier, millions of tourists now throng the biggest maintained park in Canada. Canadian and United States visit- ors--and many from abroad -- came in record numbers this year to explore the forts used in the wa of 1812, and 'to review the beauty spots of the Niagara parks commission's 35-mile stretch of parkland along the Niagara river. More than 10,000,000 persons visited the parks in 1953. Last year, visitors numbered 8,000,000. The commission's annual report said today that almost 2,000,000 ican, were counted in Queen Vic- toria park overlooking Niagara Falls e year. HISTORIC BATTLEGROUNDS Old Fort George at Niagara-on- the Lake, destroyed in the war of 1812 but since rebuilt, attracted 48,673 visitors. Old Fort Erie drew 37,000. Thousands of school chil- automobiles, Canadian and Amer-| Autos Visited Niagara dren saw the old battlegrounds and museums on conducted tours. At Queenston Heights, where Gen. Sir Isaac Brock was killed in battle, 57,750 persons climbed the long spiral staircase to the top of his 185-foot monument. A public 18-hole golf course on the scenic Niagara boulevard at- tracted 18,000 persons during the year. Commission chairman Charles Daley, also Ontario labor minister, said the most popular attractions of the parks system are the scenic |. tunnel and observation plaza at the Canadian, or horseshoe, falls, The tunnel winds 140 feet below the lip of the river gorge. During the year some 262,590 persons stood on the plaza to watch the masses of water rushing down from the falls. Mr. Daley said the commission will continue its policy of "preser- vation, restoration and beautifica- tion" of the 3,000 acres of park land. Estimated value of the park lands now is $7,000.000. 'If you sew binding to blankets by machine, use a long stitch and run two or three rows of stitching a quarter of an inch apart. William Caxton printed the first book in English -- his history of Ei - at Bruges, Belgium, in CENTRE YOU ARE SINCERELY The Nativity Service at ST: GEORGE'S CHURCH Friday, December 18 -- 8 p.m. The Bible Story in costume and carol -- A reverent preparation for Christmas. STREET INVITED TO ATTEND - font neha sou! n raver: the life-giving River Nile. iid Some 2,500,000 primitive tribes: men wander veld, forest, and trop- ical Swampland in the Shdan's uth, are choosing el Pm her Tanks SoD alettors tives in the Parliament. Arabs are scattered over the vast semidesert north. They vote direct. ly for candidates. Paper ballots are cast in the towns, colored tok- ens in the rural areas. In addi- tion, the few thousand Sudanese who hold the equivalent of a high school diploma may vote by mail before December 7 to fill five seats allotted exclusively to this educated class. Four major and several minor olitical parties have campaigned 0 objectives ranging from imme- diate full independence to imme- diate government by Egypt. But their activity touches little more than the one per cent of the people who have had some schooling. These are centered in the chief towns -- Khartoum, the capital, and neighboring Omdurman -- . at the junction of the Blue Nile and the White Nile. EGYPT SEEKS "UNITY" Precious Nile water is the rea- son Egypt presses for "unity of the Nile Valley," meanin Egrp tian control of the Sudan. The Nile Waters Agreement of 1929 between Britain and Egypt has worked sat- isfactorily, but Egypt wants "un- ity," not a mre agreement. Though uage, commerce, and religion bind the two areas, Sudan's Arabs are not Egyptians. of Egyptian misgovernment that began with conquest in 1820 and carted off gold, ivory, and slaves. The uprising was led by a self- styled Mahdi (Divine Guide) whose son leads a current political party. The famous General C. G. (Chin- ese) Gordon was killed when the Mahdi's forces took Khartoum in 1885. Thirteen years later Lord Kitchener won the historic battle of Omdurman against sword-wav- ing "Fuzzy-Wuzzies", immortalized by Rudyard Kipling. Sir Winston Churchill was a young officer in this Anglo - Egyptian reconquest the Sudan to end the lawless tyr- anny of the Mahdi's successor. Khartoum, largely rebuilt since 1885, is now an attractively land- .| scaped center of government, busi- ness, and finance in the Sudan. Omdurman is the center of na- tive cultural and religious life -- a mud-brick siiy of 125,000 with bazaars and a Great Mosque. A short ride southw: from these two cities the rich farming distict of El Gezira stretches be- tween the two Niles. There a gov- ernment-managed, million-acre ir- Lifated area produces some 40,- tons of the world's finest long- staple cotton annually. The gov- ernment profit on cotton provides about half the revenue of the en- tire Sudan. FARMERS' MARKETS PRODUCE: -- TORONTO (CP) -- Churning cream and Dn prices were unchanged ; The egg market was firm with offerings light and demand 'good. Quotations for graded eggs in fibre cases: A large 40; A medium 37; A small 34; grade B 37; grade C 32. Wholesale to retail: A large 45; A medium 42; A grade B 42; C 37. Butter solids unchanged. small 4 gypt have jointly ruled (thro Spel, but it has fewer than 9,000, the t | also the [to name their district representa In 1883-5 they threw off the yoke. BUSINESS SPOTLIGHT 5 By HAROLD MORRISON . Press Staff Writer Many of the world's people have a stake in Canada's Christmas table--even the rural folk of Ja- pan. The tradition bulging illustrates that trade can one-way street, Traffic must move in and out to make feast complete. The dollars board ha nn Canada earns ugh her exports furnish her with funds to buy goods from other countries. On Bony 8 Christmas board there will nuts from South America, olives and spices from editerranean area and beverages from B fruits from trop- There will be the mandarin or- ange, too, a traditional Christmas de cacy in western provinces. Can-, ada's purchases represent dollars' for Japan, the o dollars that country can get for the small, sweet orange. Japan could easily consume all the oranges she grows, but she s dollars to pay for im- Cc the C.i.. ... ap World Supplies Christmas Food ports, Her dollar market for the orange is in Canada, : Japan buys a lot of Canadian Prairie grain. The Prairies use a small portion of these earned dollars to pay for Japanese man- . darins. JAPAN'S DOLLAR MARKET The. Prairies, sh Columbia, d to a limi extent, Ontatio, tonstitute Japan dollar m says. These al- most all ble grades. ar Year by the Canadian mar- ket for thls fruit has expanded. Imports last year reached a peak of more than $1,000,000, doubled from $500,000 in 1949 and a six-fold increase in 15 years from $170,000 in 1937. This represents only about five Per cent of Canada's total or ports of some $20,000,000 annually. in Japan The mandarin, grown for the last dozen centuries, was THE WEATHER TORONTO (CP)--Official fore- casts i d by the Dominion pub- lic weather office in Toronto at :30 a. m.: Synopsis: A disturbance which developed over the Gulf of Mexico on Sunday intensified as it moved northeastward into the Carolinas Sunday night, and rain associated with it reached the lower lakes Monday morning, As this storm centre races northeastward through the Atlantic coast states today, rain and snow in southern Ontario will change to snowflurries by evening, and tonight all of the province will lie in a northwest- | erly flow of seasonably cold air. ! Regional forecasts valid until Tuesday midnight: Lake Erie, Lake Huron and Georgian bay regions; Windsor |and London: Intermittent rain or |wet snow changing to occasional snowflurries by noon today; cloudy with snowflurries Tuesday; colder tonight and Tuesday; winds north- east 20 today, northwest 20 Tues- day; low tonight and high Tues- day at Windsor, St. Thomas and London 25 and 32, Wingham and Muskoka 20 and 30. Summary for Tuesday: Colder with snowflurries. Lake Ontario, Niagara and Hali- burton regions; Toronto and Ham- ilton: Rain or wet snow changing to snowflurries this afternoon; cloudy with a few snowflurries Tuesday; colder tonight and Tues- day; winds east 20 today, north- west 20 Tuesday; low tonight and high Tuesday at Toronto, Trenton, Hamilton and St. Catharines 25 and 32, Killaloe 20 and 30. Sum- mary for Tuesday: Colder. TORONTO (CP)--Observed tem- peratures bulletin issued at the To- ronto public weather office at 9 a. m.: White River Kapuskasin Notts Ba . Montreal '.. Saint John ax... IF Loans quickly and easily arranged on a pay from income plan. Signature - Cor Furniture BELLVUE FINANCE G. H. WILSON, Mgr. - 29V4 Simcoe 8. Dial 5-1121 OSHAWA SR88BLBBRRB2 SES SHORT of GASH | And Christmas near, Let BELLVUE help Bring your problems here. TOWNSHIP WHO THANK YOU ELECTORS OF EAST WHITBY SUPPORTED ME! | extend to all those elected the very best for 1954 apd Season's Greetings: to You All! Elmer ---- You'll Find The Gifts They Really Want AT YOUR CCM DEALERS BOLANOOD'S SPORTSHAVEN 61 KING ST. E. DIAL 32711 OSHAWA OSHAWA CYCLE SALES (A. BOBAK) 16 BOND EK DIAL 3-4341 40 BOND Ww. 34 KING W. VICTOR'S SPORTS & CYCLE DIAL 3-3141 DIAL 3-7812 Harrison & Kinsman Hardware 337 SIMCOE S. OSHAWA DIAL 3-4425 A 4 SUDDARD 638 SIMCOE ST. S., OSHAWA DIAL 5-3979 T. THE ABOVE ARE AUTHORIZED DEALERS FOR C.C.M.

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