_ Biter The First Insertion Mrs. L. C. Was Able To Cancel This Ad J THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE, Monday, August 38, 1908 18 'Fast Action -- Just One Of The Many Desirable Features Of Times Ads I> & { TELAT 39--Articles For Sale 42--Female Help Wanted Ed Wilson' S AUGUST FURNITURE SALE Continues with more Stupendous Values. GIFT HEADQUARTERS Wonderful Selection of beautiful Lasting Gifts CHROME TRI-LIGHT LAMPS Sensational value, genuine chrome tri-light lamps, complete with shade. Very special. $14.95 COFFEE TABLES Lovely gift, genuine walnut or blond tables with a glass top, at a sacri- fice price. $18.97 KROEHLER ROCKERS Everybody will love it, it is a genuine Kroehler upholstered rocker, cugh- jonized construction, beautiful co- verings. Extraordinary value. $39.65 SALE! Terrific Value . . . CHROME KITCHEN SETS Extension table with arborite top. Four straight-leg shin, with plastic coverings. Exra specia AUGUST FURRTTURE SALE $59.50 SALE! Dramatic Savings . . . 10-PC. BEDROOM SUITE The "buy" of the year for the new home. Just imagine, 10 beautiful pieces of furniture for only . . . $119.00 SALE! Today's Buy Beautiful 2-pc. iy room 'suite with spring-filled construction throughout. A terrific value at only , $99.00 SALE! Super Saving . . . High-quality, spring-filled mattresses with heavy coverings. ® Greatly re- duced. i AUGUST PURNITURE SALE $22.95 SALE! Extra Special . . . Table lamps, complete with silk shades--a wonderful "buy" at this sacrifice price of only , . . $4.95 YOUR LINOLEUM CENTRE Everything in floorcovering and new congowall, in colorful patterns. Hun- dreds of grand furniture values on display at . . . WILSON FURNITURE CO. 20 CHURCH ST. Phone 3-3211 Mon., Wed. Fri. tf 39a--Fuel Wood FUEL WOOD BOWSER'S FUEL Oil Burners and Furnaces Coal, Wood and Oil Wood 4 cord in 1' lengths Soft Wood Slabs, $5. Hardwood Slabs, $6.50 Body Hardwood, $7.75 DIAL 5-2490. Sept.22 | WANTED -- bi tho; ly hbioy in both roug! Paton and Shorthand and have good od educuion. ment. Write Box Bio tor setts 1984 ER ion We onaling Cheer: | fom and. experience to Box $31, Times. azette. 195¢ EXPERIENCED WAITRESS WANTED, apply Genosha Hotel. 194c LADIES, N spare time. Pleas work, near vour own ho in Oshawa, znd vicinity. Towers, 1802 Bathurst Street, REQUIRED IMMEDIATELY TWO FEMALE TYPISTS TO JOIN CW.AC (RESERVE) AND SERVE A$ CLERKS AT OSHAWA ARMOURY Must be willing to serve a maximum of two nights per week from 7 to 10 p.m. Applicants may be married or single; 19 to 40 years of age; pay computed on regular army rates. APPLY ARMOURY ORDERLY ROOM Monday or Wednesday Evenings; 8 to 10 p.m. 195¢ 43--Male Help Wanted WANTED -- WOMAN FOR FULL-TIME For particulars, phone or write Mr. John Ballard, PO Box 263, phone 280, Port Perry. 195¢ EXPERIENCED PRESS. er for an Sleaning plant, to st: wo! Monday, Hugust 23. Steady work with top ides, hone 473 Ajax, or 3-3910, Oshaw 195b | LARG E CANADIAN DISTRIBUTOR ' with mew medium- in district Spening 'ware priced line of stainless would like to receive 'replies from ex | serienced cookware Salesian or any terested person. st man. supervisors and salesmen, pony enatita include bonus plan, th pay, health and sick plan. Ey dial 5-0380 Canadas Stainless Housewares Litd., 17 Simcoe N., Chamber of Commerce Biig. it For St. Oshawa, On MEN'S WEAR SALESMAN Require letter outlining qualifications, age, ex- perience, before inter- view arranged. HUDSON'S BAY COMPANY SARNIA, ONTARIO 44--Male or Female Help Wanted AGENTS, CLUBS, ETC., SELL CANA- da's finest line of Christmas cards and novelties. Our large assortment eludes Fren Personal Cards, Velvets, Books, Stationery, ete. Liberal commission. Greeting Co, K Pneatiton. Oot" 45--Agents Wanted AMAZING GUARANTEE GIVES YOU free Nylons or Sox if your hose runs, snags, tears, etc., regardless of cause. Men - Women make up 8 $i a a" taking orders spare or 0. 0 experience necessary. We ship and col- lect. Write for Setalla. Free sales oo fit. Lingerie, garments, gifts, Duro- Limited, London, Ontario. Aug.23.25 37 SHRISIMAS CO, CARD AGENTS ENTS CAN EAS AL line or aw ny +eard assort- ments, and novelties,' to friends, and rk. Over 80 og at wo! or bone from. Dozens assortments these in 23 Ge od. numerous no tems profit, Special plan for clubs and groups. Send no money, write today for samples on approval. "You run no risk By re resting Card, Co locall onar G os Bent 0.6. Hamilton, Ont. Sept.13 PART OR ALL OF YOUR TIME MAKE extra money. Sell to your friends and et our 250 others in oa Mighed dag commission 40--Articles For Rent CEMENT MIXERS 2 CU. FT. GAS or Electric. Dial §-2012. 63 Stevenson's Rd. N. Sept. ing Write for with culos FAMILEX. Delorimier, Dept. 3, Montreal or to Mr. Mcindless, Oshawa, 3-8830. 1%4c 46--Employment Wanted 41 --Articles Wanted MAN ULD LIKE FARM WORK, EX: Ta Write Johto Bosk ORGANS WANTED ~ MUST BE REA- sonable. Will pay cash, State ce and phone number, Box 520, mes-Gaz- ette. 1066 CEDARDALE SCRAP IRON AND METALS 100 Annis St. East of C.N.R. Station WE PAY: Highest prices for Iron, Metal, Rags, Paper, etc. Free Pick-up Open Saturday Dial 5-3432 Res. 5-4159 Sept.15 WANTED TO BUY ~~ RUBBER-TIRED used farm wagon and sawing machine. F. J. Clemens, Dial 5-1859. aug.23,27 SHAW RAG and METAL Highest prices paid for serap iron, metal, Fags, batteries, mattresses, ete, Factory accounts appreciated. 89 BLOOR ST. E Dial 5.2311 ~-- J, SHAW "Res: 3-911) M. Greenberg & Sons WE BUY: Scrap Iron Metal Rogs, Etc, Highest Prices Paid Phone 3-7833 -- 308 Bloer E. Sept.21 WANTED LIVE 'POULTRY, FEATH- ers, scrap' ven, inetal, mags and mat Dial I Turner, N tresses: 'Qshawa, 32043 collect. ) ett, R.R. 1, Here is part of a record crowd of 100,000 that jammed Soldiers' Field, Chicago, for the giant Festival of Faith of the World . Council of Churches' second as- sembly being held in Evanston, 100,000 AT WORLD CHURCH RALLY Ill. Delegates from 181 churches in 68 countries and representing more than 168,000,000 church- goers discussed problems of world Protestantism, Central Press Canadian. "LEATHERNECKS AT FT. HENRY U.S. marines landed on Canadian soil and took over historic Fort Henry at Kingston on the invita- tion of the Canadian and government officials. Back 'in 1812 -- under less friendly condi- tions -- a detachment of marines from the American war fleet in Lake Ontario made an unsuc- cessful assault on the British naval base at Point Henry -- site of Kingston's present fort. The present occasion is the anniver- id A " ihe he Ogdehsbul A go ch initiate: oy FR of North es ne Canada and the United States. Welcoming the "invad- ers' are members of the Fort He uard in uniforms of the old British infantry regiments of 1867. (CP Photo) BUSINESS SPOTLIGHT Canadian Steel Hits Bumpy Road By HAROLD MORRISON Canadian Press Staff Writer Steel, heart of Canada's heavy industry, has hit a ungy Foal road after a spectacular = pansion following the Korean War, With consumers spending less for automobiles, farm implements and other machinery and with the coun- try's arms machine slowing down ter a big build-up, steel produc- tion has taken a sharp drop--the While capacity of Canadian mills uce was at a new high, ac- roduction in the first half of 1964 ell by 516,000 ingot tons to 1, 550,000. If this rate continues, ou 1954 may total about tons, a' Frastic drop oh last year's peak 4,000,000 and the low- est since the 1949 output of 3,005, 000. LIFE-BLOOD OF INDUSTRY Steel has been described as the life-blood of industry. Demand for steel is a gauge of general busi- ness activity, and demand has been high for many years, But it was - | first in seven years. uu bn in|" the great needs of industry and defence following the outbreak of war in Korea that really strained production § facilities. of gr ahead to 3, tons from 2,846,000, an increase of 241,000. In the following five years output soared to a record 4,009,000 in 1953 from 3,095,000 in 1949--a jump of 914,000. And in line with that rising de- mand, the mills plowed back more money into business, Maing capacity to produce a poin Jhere 5 rated capacly Juhaces was a 4,670, - tons a Hori e need for pH) aj parently % " kept pate with the mills' ability to pi age AR og A tons, was a little higher than in the previous three months, but sharply Delow the 11,421 daily avérage in June last year. Federal of Canadian steel Indugtiy. is in need of markets, though, they add, the situation is not too ritical. ie > SALLY'S SALLIES ANTED: CARPENTER WORK OF hp tue work, floors, walls, cement oo by experienced man. Dial 3 20% 47--Legol Notices ON AND AFTER THIS DATE, AUG. 30, 1954, 1 will not be responsible for any debts contracted of} my name by » wife without my written order. Signed ous Moores; care of Eugene Montes T 48--Auction Sale STIRTEVANT'S AUCTION ROOM 33, HALL ST. MONDAY EVE. AUG. 23rd AT 7.30 DOORS OPEN AT 7.18 Rangette, drop - leaf table, single ¢ot and springs, full size bed, spring end mattress, cup- boards, kitchen cabinet, jacket heater, doors, trunk, hotplates, studio couch, Astrol electric refrigerator, oil space heater, hot water tank, erib, doll car- riage, high chair, spring and mattress, kitchen buffet, Quebec heater, linol- eum, kitchen chairs, electric washer, galvanized bath tub, mantel fireplace, complete stoves, and many other ar- ticles. Terms cash. Frank Stirtevant, euctioneer. Diol 3-5751. te 1000 in C fficials agree that the [ Jodoin Is Favored As TLC Head RESINS gi joush fight was shaping up or the pres- idency of the Trades and Labor Congress of Canada, top Canadian labor. As the TLC its annual convention in a Foe here, the leadership race appeared to be be- tween a Montreal ent worker- politician : 34 a ntario man who e started ladder. of labor politics a a milkman. Favored was burly Claude Jodoin of Montregl, a city councillor there and an orfjanizer for the Interna. tional Lai Garment Workers' Union, Jodoin, 41, would be the first French-Canadian head of the TLC in 45 years TORONTO CHALLENGER His closest competition dag ex- pected to come from A. Mac- Arthur, of Toronto RR of the TLC's Ontario Provincial Fed- eration of Labor, The dapper Mac- Arthur, former Canadian chief of the teamsters' union, was bounced from that organization about a year ago after an internal squabble. He now heads an offiec workers' group in Canada. While many delegates to this 69th convention were expected to be nominated for the presidency, the only one expected to provi e serious competition = Jodoin and MacArthur was R. K. (Roly). Ger- vin of Vancouver. Like Jodoin, Gervin is a TLC vice-president. He is secretary of the British Columbia Federation of Labor. His home town of Vancou- ver is also that of Percy R. Ben- gough, 71, retiring president. Supporters of Jodoin and Mac- Arthur have been staging heavy campaigning in advance of the vote, expected Thursday. . , BADGES, GLAD-HANDING Badges proclaiming "I Like Mac- 'Arthur' are being worn by back- ers of the Ontario labor leader. Jodoin glad-hands in the lobby of the Saskatchewan Hotel until the early-morning hours. The Montrealer has the quiet support of the leaders of a big gop do of AFL unions headed by rank H, Hall of Montreal, one of the country's most powerful labor chiefs, Hall, fresh from a multi. million-dollar wrestle with the rail- ways in Ottawa last week, arrived Sulaay alt. ssibility that the Jodon- Mac rthur-Gervin vote would be Hien arose Sunday when Leslie E. ismer, public relations man for the TLC, emerged as a possible fourth candidate. Wismer, former. CCF member of the Ontario legislature, would neither deny mor confirm a can- didacy. While he was given no chance of winning, he could pick uw enough votes to influence a Sloss contest between Jodoin and acArthur. 10 DISCUSS RAIDING Meanwhile, the convention was preparing to deal with the ques- tion of getting together with the rival Canadian Congress of Labor, which has 875,000 members, on a treaty barring mem membersilp tds. The treaty be en- dorsed by the Se» though it will not be binding on member unions, which would have to nego- tiate individual agreements with val unions to make its effects stic As endorsation of the TLC-CCL pact loomed, Juarters got an indication Sunday at it may be an academic matter for some unions. arrived Jimm, nny From Detroit Hoffa, eastern boss of the - teamsters' union, largest in the United States, who announced that the teamsters are going to throw big noney into an organized drive anada post in |in convention head- | with Nine Drownings In Weekend Deaths By eat o CANADIAN russ our persons eastern Ca. died violently duping, he week-end. There were way fatalities and nine drownings. |e A' Canadian Pess survey shows 11 violent deaths in Ontario, seven Quebec, four in Nova Scotia and one each in Prince Edward Island and New Brunswick. Five persons died in Ontario from highway mishaps, four were drowned and two died from other causes. In Quebec, two persons drowned, four died as the result of traffic accidents My one was fod dead in a tru motor- ing. Nova Scotia had three drownings and in Prince Edward Island and New Brunswick deaths resulted from highway accidents, Mrs. Margaret McCarthy, Mrs. Norman West, 25, Pickering, a few miles egst of Toronto, were drowned early Sat- urday when an automobile left the highway and plunged into Faran's Poilk canal, 12 mile® west of Corn- Driver Walter Comica, 21, Toronto, r a third Mary McCarthy of Pickering, ut the car sank out of sight in 20 feet of water when he returned to at- tempt rescue of the other two women, alolice blamed the death of Roy 21, of T! miles aia of Sault Ste. Marie, on gv soft 40, ad Ro) pout gy a Ts fy e a curve on highway and | ng piynged : into the soft shoulder yA 5 Doan, 88, of St. George, peat Brantford, was killed Saturday when his car crashed head-on into ano car a few lies Bardi. 26, father a id children, as_killed e a Guelph, hr he ¢ walked home from stag party, The car sped from the scene, "arte » at ¥ do ro ack Steed man, 45-year-old erant laborer, |. was electrocuted and two other men were injured when a metal ladder they were moving touched a high tel tension wire Milton Scott, 68, of Stratford, who was visiting "his son's farm near that city, was killed when he tried to stop a runaway tractor fron which he removed a drive elt. Two men were drowned in the Wahnapitae river near Sudbury, Sunday. The victims were Joseph Murray of Sudbury and Antonio Paterno, 23, a recent immigrant from Italy. Aircraftsman d'Arcy Cummings, 20, of Foymount, and Dean Gal- gher, 24, of Eganville, were downed atuday when a boat was swamped on Lake Clear, 30 miles south of Pembroke. Youth Hit By Police Bullet TORONTO (CP) -- One strick in the arm by a from a policeman's revolver, was charged with with assault a e Josult of an early-morning chase 'Sun Paul Jamieson, 19, was charged with theft after being released prom hospital a Hare he was or a 8 arm woun vid Newel, 21, was charged wiih > assau Police said they answered a call day! fom a home near a parking lot after the caller's suspicians were aroused by the actions of two men there, One of the officers was struck down by a blow to his face. I ordan Brawl Brings Charges, St. Catharines men have tharged with taking part in an af- fray at nearby Jordan which had its start in a squabble over who was to pay fo the drinks in a bev. erage room, police said Sunday. The five men, all formerly of Tatamagouche, N.S. are Gerald Murray, 21; his brother Arthur, 20, Wi liam "Patriquin, 21, his bro- ther Sidney, 37, aq a nephew, Truman Patriquin, Walter Laworski, yn of the Darf Village Hotel, told police he was beaten with a crank handle Blue Blood Bank Run By Duke For Poor Nobles PARIS, France -- The sordid subject of money brings up the fact that the French aristocracy can be quick when it comes to raking in a neat dollar. Take the case of the Duc De Brissac, head of one of France's noblest families. He doesn't need the money for himself--his family has stacks of it--but he's hard at work this summer raising funds for other blue bloods whose bank balances need an urgent transfu- sion, The duke's theory is simple. He cashes in on the snobbery latent in most of us by letting the hei- polli have a chance to dine and wine with Bim -- at a price. The price at a fete in his country chateau was $15 a head. More than 1,000 people Sheerfully up for the vilege of rub na shoulders with a real live duke. Profits, after paying Jor the food and champagne: $2, Most of the profits -- this is the third successful venture -- help to put impoverished sons of the entry through St. Cyr, France's est Point, or to get them a foot- ing in the diplomatic service, Roy's In Toronto, Kiddies Rejoice TORONTO BN Dale Evans, but not rived Sunday. Roy, the 41-year-old cowboy who needs no introduction to lovers of movie and television westerns, landed at nearby Malton ajrport his wife and stated makin, preparations for their grandstan show at the Canadian National Ex- hibition here. Trigger, with Holly%ood wit] a few days. and his troupe headline the stand show, which starts Rogers, ger, ar- s horse, leaves 10 palomino horses Jnext Friday and runs for 14 days. INFANT* WEIGHT An infant should " gain weight steadily during his first few months. His weight should in- crease by six to eight ounces a week. The well-baby clinic will keep check on his progress if he and a piece of rubber hose when he went outside to quiet a group of quarrelling men. He said two waiters were also assaulted. NEGRO SETTLEMENT Wilberforce, Jounded in 1000. w wai the name of a former sett! of freed Negroes in Midalsex is taken there for ogilar check- ups. county, Ontario, near village Lucan. TODAY'S CROSSWORD DOWN Winged . A musical instrument ACROSS 1. Incite 8. Tart 9. Famous mission 8. City (Tex.) (Pruss.) 10. Removed, as 4. Toward the center 8. One-spot 12. Chums cards 13. Girl'sname 6. Garden 14. Luzon flower native 7. Anger 18. Organ 8. Pre- determine 9. Armadilio 11. Lower parts of interior walle 8. Fues 10. Bird's 'beaks 40. City famous for its pottery 41. Not diffieun 42. Malt kiln PIRIAISIE] LIAISON] IDIAMILL LIA IAIDIARMPIONT BREIL 1S VIRIVIMIAIN] ICIOHIE IRIE { I} 143 AIRIOI SIE BRE IXIVID] IWIOINI 1} Fo 1SIPIRI | IN] Al ISENAIDIS] ICIAIMIE IO] AMIAIS] S| 86. Domi. SIT RIS] neer- ing 20. Institu. tions MANSERMVESER 30. British satirist 31. Civil wrong 40. Note 34. Imitative of of art the seafe ll ea tte "I'm using 8 new that is said to make washday no work and off ploy." House Wives Don't dispose of that old stove, cabinet, lamp, etc. by throwing them out, they're worth money to you. Call 3-3492 and ask for an ad-writer and in a jiffy your ad will be reach- ing thousands of prospec- tive customers.