Daily Times-Gazette, 20 Nov 1954, p. 14

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14 THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE, Saturday, November 20, 1954 *.anadian Institute Surveys umbing And Heating Needs --«ing more information about | tk> market for plumbing and heat- | th: materials in ian nstitute of H_-ling has had what it terms a| "limited" survey made in Halifax, | Montreal (French an¢ inglish| sections) Toronto, Winnipeg and | is new. 4. Electricity is used by 55 ities, tne Canad- | percent of the homes for heating | cities. | Plumbing and | water and again there are wide | differences between cities; 63 per- cent of the hot water units are under 10 years old. 5. Only 2 percent of the houses Cil Agent Can Supply quently in Halifax and Montreal Finest Fuel {than in T nd the western| . a0. Jn Torouto aud | No matter what your heating requirements are your oil agent can supply you with a fine quality fuel, specially designed for your particular needs. Stove oil is a clean burning fuel | especially developed to provide uni- 11. Half of those interviewed | think plumbers' charges are too | | high but three out of four think | their work is good. { 12. When new plumbing and COUNTRY CROPPINGS RAGLAN Butter Floor By LAURAL HAMER Again country conditions are le- velling out. Tractors are humming as the farmers get their ploughing | done. The sun is shining and the earth is slowly giving up its ex- cess moisture. Indian summer could be here. Whatever you care Benefit To Everyone Sadie Hawkins Dance Enjoyed MRS. H. THOMPON RAGLAN -- Several of the Port Perry High School pupils from here attended the Sadie Hawkins dance at the school on Friday night, Mr. and Mrs. Jack Manns and girls of Port Perry, were Sunday evening guests of Mr. and Mrs. Price Seen does your Federation of Agricul ture, that the push must come from the farmers themselves. HURRICANE HELP Mr. Gardiner told of federal help given to the apple growers in Nova Scotia when the hurricane took the crop from the trees and again of and chilling drafts. found in Crevices in the home may be areas where maso steps or porches meet wooden si Caulk Your Home Beiore Cold Weather Sets In Caulking compounds are one ald in keeping a house weather- tight. They are used to fill cracks and crannies that admit moisture paste, or you can of a ¢aulking gr compound can be inserted In a gun, hold the against the crevice to be pull the er and squegze th ip fll to call the weather it is wonder- ful; hazy and warm, smelling of fresh turned earth and giving the promise of peace and quietness. Weather is always interesting. If it is wicked like Hazel it can take all our thoughts. If it is persistant like the rain this summer and fall it is on our minds constantly for farmers. Not only does it trouble us with hampering our work. We are also hearing it bl d for the over-production of dairy products. The extra grass nouriened by the rains this year is held partly re- sponsible for the surplus of butter which has been troubling the dairy industry. I know some branches of the dairy industry, or rather in- dividual farmers in some branches of the industry, do not think that they need to be interested in the Norman Birkett and family. Mr. and Mrs. Grant Bright and family called on the former's aunt Miss Ethel Bright on Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. E. P, Collins, of Whitby, were Sunday night supper guests of Mr. and Mrs. oy Brown and family. Mrs. H. Thompson and Leona, visited on Monday evening with Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Thompson and family of Oshawa. Mrs. George Solomon, and boys, were Tuesday lunch guests with Mrs. Archie Davidson, of Prince Albert. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Manns, Mr. and Mrs. Stan Manns and Brian, were Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Elwood Manns and Douglas of Whitby. Wesley Wilson, of Toronto, spent the weekend with his brother George and Mrs. Wilson, Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. F. Pierson were, Misses Amy Sar- geant and Kathaleen Kellington, | Messrs Ronald Kellington and | John Randall of Oshawa. { Mr. and Mrs. Harold Corner, | Mrs. C. Jackson, of Oshawa; Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Steele, of Cedar Creek, Mr. and Mrs. C. Slute and girls, were Sunday evening callers with Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Corner and Evelyn. feport Souvedtor type Jad sors, { heating egiupment is juvolved, | . Only percent ol e homes | those who take the plumber's ad- | Ho report modern Kitchens. | ts and dion ri and buy | Space heaters. The rigidly tested 7. Original laundry equipment is|it themselves are about evenly an formity thie ol 2esures you | still used in 60 percent while 14| divided. With the latter group the| ©! a dependable, clean burning, Interviewed rted major al.| Percent have added some. | retail showrooms is the most fre. ; Smokeless fuel delivering the max- Serations and additions: 70 percent | 8. In 58 percent of the homes quent source of information. | (HUM Berly UIs Docu, pro of those so reporting have carried there is only one bathroom; 20| 13: Financial reasons were given phur and other impurities. them out within the past five | percent have two, 15 percent three | by 66 people for Jelaying making Furnace oil, developed especiall years. There were mentioned 160) and 9 percent have four or more. | changes, and by 104 for not plan- Or an oy inhi KI changes in the plumbing and heat- | There are wide variations between | ning any changes at all. Among With a Sloan Bot finer oy inz .icld, 214 in other fiolc, cities. | the former, 38 percent had made fd res pro ug . Oil is the fuel used by. 62] 9. Only 19 percent of the total | 00 recent purchases of durable Bn OS rapoundg, percent of the homes, but there | number of bathrooms in all houses | consumer goods and among the | * 5 OW A SPE feed lines, Con- were wide differences between cit-| are modern and-78 percent of the | latter 49 percent had not. formity and purity, furance oil is ic.. These differences also apnly | houses have no modern bathrooms| 14. Of those giving financial rea- your guarantee of economical, ef- to use of warm air or hot water at all. | sons of delaying changes, 67 per- |r io = nor operation with low maintenance costs. price of butter. But those who heating. | 10. Just over half call in the|cent had owned their houses for -. Unit Heaters | think the situation through know 3. In 22 percent of the homes, | plumber when minor repairs are less than 10 years. that butterfat price is the keynote Serve Rec. Room the original purnace is still in| involved. This is more frequent| 15. Of the owners not planning operation; in 43 percent it has| with those in the high income | any changes, 52 percent were over to the economic status of the whole industry. So it was with great satis- Improvements 'and new designs | faction that the cream producers in modern unit heaters have made | of Ontario listened while Mr. Gar- been converted; in 31 percent it' bracket and it occurs more fre-i50 years pf age. these highly compact products | diner, Minister of Agriculture for Daivill 2 Girl, 4-H Club Wi diVii. 2 will, &- il mnner : ueen's Gui ByM hin iven Cueen"s Guineas By Massey foe ia hin ce fr oe | Semi mil Tod rt tot a ung Be mic By BOB SMYLIE -- | Angus--John Farrow of RR 3,| Spain's Commandante Manuel | an area to be heated with a steady | insure an adequate supply of but-|ily which is living on skim milk Canadian Press Staff Writer | Chatsworth, champion; Andrew |Ordovas Gonzales won the event | stream of fan-circulated warm air. | ter for our people. The floor price [and manufactured spreads is TORONTO (CP)--A tall starry-| King, RR 3, Orton, reserve; Here- | after he defeated Arthur McCashin | Consisting of heating element | of 58 cents which protects the far- | spending more on doctors bills and ed blonde walked into the bril- | ford--James Laverty, Glen Cross, | of the United States team in a| (for steam, hot water, gas, or |mer in the summer when produc-|cold remedies than they save by Vancouver, Only houses occupied | by owners and built in or prior to | 1935 were studied. ere is the summary of find- | Nearly half the 460 home own- help for the farmers stricken by wheat rust in the west. He told us, too, that when the government saw fit to import butter supplies to help the consumers, then it was only right that the same govern- ment would step in and help the producers when butter was in sur- plus. It would appear that our Ca- nadian government is in the butter busi to protect the whole of Canada and no group will profit at the expense of another. It has been well established for a long time that we all need the vitamins which our dairy prod- ucts have for us, that for physical and mental alertness we need the food value found in butterfat. Any adult or child who does not get an adequate supply of dairy foods will not be capable of living to the full- est. This is a wonderful world to be living in and anything that ham- pers us from getting the most out of our being is regrettable. Cer- tainly any mother who does not see to it that her family gets the most food value in their meals is ing; where butt joints of siding meet corner boards; next to the flashing and fitting about the chimney and along some types of roof joints, areas next to windows and door frames and near outlets for electrical wiring, telephones, radio or TV antennas, plumbing installations or gas pipes. : The unfilled openings will allow the escape of heat and the en- trance of dampness. ' It's a simple procedure to plug up such openings with caulking compound. You can buy it in a tube and squeeze it out like tooth- ~ RED INVESTIGATOR DEAD] © NEW YORK (CP) -- Donald Clough Cameron, novelist and for- mer Detroit newspaper man, died form dependable heat in oil fired has month) wise to apply a coating of ex rior paint to its surface, accom ing to the National Pi V nish and Lacquer on. The compound can also be indoors around the door frame the household workshop to Pr vent dust and dirt from invadin the rest of the house One form of caulking mal come" coiled up like a slend rope® Mt is .pgessed into positid wih the fingejs. Wotnesilly at the age of 48. 1951 he Wrote a series of artic exposing Red activities in Canad for Canadian newspapers. Prepare for Winter NOW! Let ART BOUCKLEY INSTALL a fan, motor and cas- | Of the few families that I know iantly lit show ring at the Royal | champion; Murray Alexander, | jumpoff. Mexico's Gen. Humberto electricity), | tion is greatest and the consumer | buying these low food value items? gricultural Winter Fair Thursday pight, shook hands with Governor- zneral Massey and showed him the steer that she had groomed 1 fed for more than a year. " "hile 7,000 cheering spectators pcied on Katherine Merry, 17- year-old 4H Club member from Dakville, accepted the Queen's fifty rineas award from his excellency, khen turned and accepted the T.L. Kennedy Trophy from the donor. She won the prizes for exhibiting he grand champion baby beef at this year's Royal. Her fhorthorn steer, Calrossie Armada, "Louis" as she calls it, was | dged the best of 208 steers shown | by 4-H Club members. AMED CHAMP The guineas, worth about $150, re awarded annually to the ex-| hibitor of the champion baby beef | teer. The exhibitor must be a| hualified member of a 4H Calf 1b of Ontario. Katherine's steer was named | hampion of the shorthorn class. | lan Goetz of Mildmay won the serve. Other winners were: Aberdeen | Marlies also had a clean perfor- mance but his time was slower, giving him a third place. In the jumpoff, McCashin's mount struck the fifth of the 10 barriers and placed second while Ordovas went around with no faults to place first. In other horse show events, King's Counsel, a brown eight-| year-old gelding, won the grand | | championship award for heavy har- ness horses for its owner, Lance Pinkerton, reserve. Each of the class champions re- ceived $100 for their victories. James Laverty was also named reserve champion of the Queen's guineas competition. Earlier Thursday, Katherine | burst into tears and kissed her | steer and the judge when the an: | nouncement of her victory was made. NAME SENIOR WINNERS | oughly, dispels moisture, and dries ing, unit heaters are often installed | in the winter-time when normally in those parts of a house or build- | costs rise, appears to be a contin- ing which require only occasional | uing fact, and one which brought | heating. {a burst of applause from the] Laundry rooms and drying rooms | farmers who heard Mr. Gardiner which become particularly damp | 1? Toronto this week. 5 and uncomfortable during the cold | FARMERS MET MINISTERS | winter months "are ideal locations| It was an exceptionally fine for a unit heater. They provide a meeting in the Royal York this steady, widely-diffused circulation | Week, more farmers were out than | of heat which warms the air thor- | €ver before. They enjoyed the | speaker. It was nice to meet this man whose remarks have not al- Robert Bryant, and Mrs. Geo. Solomon spent Saturday afternoon with Mr. and Mrs. Frank Fox, at Richmond Hill. Mrs. Fox return- ing with them to spend a week wit her sister Mrs. R. Bryant. Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Luvis and Wendy of Maple Grove, were Sat- urday evening guests of Mr. and Mrs. John Bright, Penny and Mary. Mr. and Mrs. Clayton Miller and | which have forgotten that dairy products are natural foods this is the case. I often wish I had the courage to say that the addition of the natural fat in dairy prod- ucts could easily solve many prob- lems of health and well-being, es- pecially during a Canadian win- ter, VALUE OF MILK Anytime that anyone tells me that it isn't necessary to drink milk Senior winners in the three beef breeds also were decided. Louada Manor Farms won the grand championship for shorthorns and the Pioneer Shorthorn Breed- ers' Challenge Trophy. R. F. Mc- Kinlay and Sons of Morpeth, Ont., won the reserve. The Empire Challenge Cup for the championship in swine compe- titions was taken by W. A. John- ston of Hawkstone, Ont. He en- tered a Berkshire boar. International horse petitors ran into difficulties Thurs- day night in the fault-and-out com- petition. Only three riders could get around the course laid out for them. show com- | clothing after they are hung. Similarly, a unit heater « vide the occasional warmth 1 Rumball of Lawrum Farms, Dur- ham The event was the $1,500 Eaton harness stake open only to previ- ous winners at this year's Royal. | garages, and workshops which are Eigat horses competed. 1. pid | usually located 3 an out-of-the- onight the international riders | way section of a house. compete Ju ihe ternational leam | Where Je existing heating sys 3 ' ¥ diab y | tem is being overtaxed to heat horse will be divided among the | -- anv 2 winners, the first rider getting $250 Bev]y-fNishid rooms or any axtra ti "wi ine ; / g 2 rerte Other riders will be competing | SPace whic as heen conve A in the $1 500 McKee Veekis De | to living purposes. a unit heater stake and in the $1,500 Crang five | Will effectively eliminate drafts gaited saddle horse stake. Winner | and cold spots and offers an eco- of the latter will be grand cham. | nomical auxiliary heating plant. pion five-gaited saddle horse for! =~ : | this year. n pro- ad- ve Pension Fund Lethal Heart Defects Can Now Be Repaired By ALTON L. BLAKESLEE ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. (AP)--j 'ty human hearts are being re- ~d in such amazing new ways | . there is optimism that some most heart defects can be re-| rd, is was one opinion expressed | 0 "y as leading surgeons summed | ip new life- and health-saving | measures described in a week- ong clinical session of the Amer- | n College of Surgeons. | New techniques made it possible | o fix numerous lethal defects in| arts of babies and adults, said | Dr. Harris B. Schumacker of In-! ianapolis. One killer is sudden blowouts of | ries. Artery walls swell and purst like inner tubes. These are ing fixed more and more, even gh up in the big artery coming rom the heart. Pieces of arteries taken from ead persons are substituting for lhe diseased sections of living teries, tubes' made of rolled-up tions of nylon, dacron or other | heart-lung machines. fabrics, coated with plastic chem- icals. are taking the place of lengihs of bad arteries or veins, NONE PERFECTED Hearts of children born with heart defects are being opened up and laid bare--free of pulsing blood--so surgeons can see while they repair the troubles. Three methods are being used to do this, Schumacker said. One is by putting humans under 'deep freeze," to lower their tem- perature and reduce the need for oxygen-carrying blood flow to the brain for many precious minutes. | mechanical A third is hooking the child to the veins and Another is use of | arteries of a parent or other vol- unteer, so that his blood stream can put, the child's heart on a temporary holiday for half an hour or more while the trouble is rem- edied. There still are drawbacks or de- fects to each method--none is vet perfected, the surgeon said, but each offers some advantages ild Life eeps On ourse The age old puzzle of how ani- nals find their way "home" is BZHRE Solution, according to Dr. Hans Kalmus, biologist at the Uni- sity of London, in the Scientific | erican Bulietin, | "Although man has two general | ethods of navigation -- visible | numarks and the stars or a simi- | ar indicator--he has always been pystified as to how the lower ani-| nals ndvigate," said Dr. Kalmus. EARNING METHOD "Presumably they, too, or at eat some of them, use the same nethods, but this has not been asy to prove. Within recent years, pwever, a vast amount of experi- nent and observation has been ntred on the problem, and now ve are beginning to understand heir method, at least in its broad tline. "Thanks to the remarkably in- erious Austrian investigator, Karl on Frisch, we know that bees avigate by the sun. They not only scertain the direction and dis- Pe of the food site from the ive but communicate this inform- ton to their fellows by perform- mg a specific dance on the honey- 'omb. This means that they must wssess a built-in 'clock' as well 5s 'sextant'." The bees, according to Dr. Kal- nis, note the sun's angle relative | o the meridian and, upon return- | In" to the hive, dance up the hon- | ' omb at a matching angle from | vertical. Sometimes the dance ill continue for more than an DLL § SHIFTED During the interval, the axis of he dance is gradually shifted ~"slerclockwise at recise the ate of the sun's movement. Dur- ng an 84-minute period of observ- 4° n, when the sun mover 34 zrees, a bee inside the hive shift- d its dance 33 dagrees -- in the oper direction! Kramer in Germany," said Dr. atl v performed a series experiments with starlings 2" + nrove that they, like the 5, also 'home' on the sun. "In ome experiment Kramer d a covered hexagonal pavilion a each | for sides. When he attached a large | mirror to eacn window, so that| sunlight entering the case was de- flected by 90 degrees, the bird's predominant direction of flight (established previously by train- ing) also shifted 90 degrees in the same direction. "The most interesting recent work with marine creatures has been done by two Italian scien- tists, Pardi and Papi. They have been investigating the navigation- al sense of a shrimplike crusta- cean which lives by the millions along the sandy shores of Europe. "The creatures dwell in the in- tertidal zone, moving toward less moist ground when it becomes too wet, and toward the water when the terrain is dry. HEAD FOR COAST 'When they are taken inland they head straight for the coast from which they come. "Even when placed in a box, the creatures headed toward the proper side. Like the starlings, however, they could be foiled by mirrors. The shrimps could even read the correct direction from an overcast sky--from the angle at which the light is polarized. Pardi and Papi placed a sheet of polar- izing material over the hox and found that they could alter the course followed by the crustaceans by rotating the sheet. The direc- tion in which they moved always matched the sheet's position. "Most astonishing of all, how- ever, is the fact that these lowly organisms also navigate accurate- ly by moonlight, their built - in clocks accurately conipensating the moon's complex move- ment! "These creatures are the only example known, other than man, of an animal which can navigate by the moon." Think of January Make Changes Now It may take extra mental effort to concentrate on January cold in summer's sweltering heat, hut you can save yourself money and cold weather discomfort by check- ing the efficiency of your house heating system now before the early winter rush. When buying a new heating system or converting from one fuel to another, be sure to make certain the system has! sufficient capacity to. heat all rooms, that it's automatic and that it conforms to the specifica- heating ialists. six | tions of 'Skeleton Is Clue May Be Increased To Missing Woman | TORONTO (CP) -- The pension board of the Church of England SHERBROOKE, Que. (CP) A in Canada at the next general human skeleton, with the head synod meeting will propose an in- about 200 feet from the torso, was crease in. pensions for retired found Thursday night along with | clergymen, their widows and chil- « s and a brassiere | dren behind a dance hall off a highway | The which | a few miles west of here. | Provincial police said the grisly |on synod approval of a two-per- find was made by two brothers in|cent increase in contributions to a clump of bushes on the farm of [be paid by the salary source, their father, Joseph Pruneau, | Which in most cases is the parish. about 200 yards from the Montreal | The board, in a notice of motion highway | placed before the executive coun- A woman and her young child |cil today, proposed that the pen- have been missing from here for sion for clergymen contributing to over three months. | the plan now .or in the future, be olice roved off the area and |raised to $30 from $22.50 for each late Thursday night the remains | service year, the minimum to be had not been removed. It could | $1,200. ; not be determined whether the | The proposed increase for bish- bones were those of a man or a|ops now contributing is the same, woman. It was likely the skull had | with an additional $30 a service been moved by animals, police | Year while they are bishops said. : imum would be he discovery gave rise to spec- | imum $1,920. ; : ulation the remains may be those! Payment to widows would be in- of, Mrs. Adrien Tessie who dis- appeared from her nearby Sawyer- ville home last July with her three-year-old son in all-out search was organized last month after several persons reported seeing a woman young child walking on a highway near Sawyerville, The search was | fruitless. | increase, would be children $240 from $180 up to the age of 18 The, board proposed that existing pensioners and widows as of Jan 1, 1956, be paid a straight increase rate, with an increase of $5 a month for each orphaned child. F ind Corporal ONLY GAELIC COLLEGE America is located at St. N.S. ed for comfort in recreation rooms, | effective Jan. 1, 1956, is dependent | Min- | $1,600 and max- | | land and a heavy rainfall on Van-| creased to $720 from $540 and to | and of $7.50 a month over the present | ways made the farmers happy and |to hear him explain various in- teresting features which pertain to agriculture across Canada. They also had the advantage of meeting Fletcher Thomas, the Minister of Agriculture for Ontario who intro- duced Mr. Gardiner and all of these contacts are good. So many times when the men who repre- | sent the Canadian people in gov- ernment speak to us, they encour- age the farmers to carry on their devlopment in marketing do the Govern- ment can be counted on to co-op- erate. They always point out, as B.C. Like Ontario -Very Moist VANCOUVER (CP) Re 'nts of British Columbia coastal regions donned weather - proof garments again today and will probably keep | them on through the weekend | For the fifth straight day the weather office here forecast rain for the west coast, bt said they did not expect a repeat perfor- mance of the heavy downpour | which choked sewers, unset traffic | and power and sent small streams | bursting over their banks in the { 24-hour period ending Thursday | morning. A new storm moving in from the Pacific churned coastal wo' s | overnight with gale force winds | reaching 45 mile: an bour b | winds were expected to decrease throughout th day A sudden flood on Vancouver is- | couver's mountainous north shore wrought fresh havoe Thursday night On Vancouver island, where a flood claimed one life near Port Alberni Wednesday, a similar ava- lanche of water hurtled down the Sooke river near Victoria Thurs- | day smashing a 25 - foot power launch and scattering two log booms. Teams of men were busy today The only Gaelic college in North | rounding up 300,000 board feet scat | Ann's, | tered when two log booms broke |1666 was the first in the world to apart under the surging waters. prob- | lems, to work together and plan, | land when they girls were Sunday dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Norm»n Wilson and family of Prince Albert. Mr. and Mrs. George Bray, vis- ited Mrs. W. J. Ormiston, of En- field, recently. Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Mahaffy and boys visited, on Sunday even- ing, with Mr. and Mrs. M. Mahaf- fy of Port Perry. . Mr. and Mrs. G. Varnum, and Terry of Oshawa, were Sunday tea guests with Mr. and Mrs. Nor- man Hambly. Mr. and Mrs. Kier Lamb and boys, were Sunday guests with the former's mother, Mrs. L. Lamb, of Bowmanville, also called on Mr. and Mrs. W. Lycett. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Brown, of | Pickering, were Sunday evening | guests of Mr. and Mrs. Roy Brown | and family. | Mr. and Mrs. Norman Birkett, | and family spent Saturday evening | with Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Corner and Evelyn. | A number of ladies from here at- | tended the bazaar at Columbus on | Wednesday afternoon, sponsored by the Home and School Associa- | tion. Don't forget the hard time euch- | re and dance sponsored by Se Willing Workers Club in Myrtle hall on Saturday evening, Novem- ber 20 I am reminded of a man who had' at one time, two leg bones broken, an arm bone and a couple of ribs. | His doctor told him, after he had patched him up, "Now you are on your way, see to it that you drink plenty of milk", And as time went on the patient said it again and again. "I thought the doctor was crazy, but now I actually do not believe I would have been able to walk as good as new again if I had not consumed that milk." Every time I hear someone brag- ging about not drinking milk I think of this man and how neces- sary the calcium in milk was to him and is to all the rest of us. Curfew Put On Luciano NAPLES, Italy (AP)--A Naples "admonition board" today ordered the deported New York vice king, | Charles (Lucky) Luciano; fo stay | off the streets from dusk to dawn {for the next two years. The board also forbade the | former racketeer to associate with | ""questionable" companions or to visit places of amusement for the same period. It ordered him not to | travel farther than 12 miles from Naples at any time. The board's crackdown on the one-time New York racket boss | came in response to allegations | that he is a social menace, a threat to law enforcement, a threat to American forces in Naples and "a man capable of directing the nar- | cotics traffic from Italy to the United States." Luciano, who observed his 57th | birthday last week, stepped jaun- tily from police headquarters { where the hearing was held, but ROMANCE WINS + VICTORIA (CP) -- Saanich mu- nicipal council has decided it is no use trying to stop marriages. It reversed its policy of dismissing female employees when they mar- ry. Councillors said such action only provided private firms with municipally - trained workers. FIRST DICTIONARIES The first dictionaries were used DAY 5-1109 by. the Assyrians and Babylonians appeared jittery when reporters to explain signs, not words. | shouted questions at him. He raced | down the street, gathering a crowd Installed Complete with All Controls and 200-Gallon Tank OIL BURNER PACKED WITH 12 EXCLUSIVE FEATURES . 275.00 FESS --leading in oil burner popularity for over forty years--now offers more for your money than ever before--more economy, more efficiency and care-free, longer service. "It still costs less to heat with FESS THORNTON'S RD. S. NIGHT 3-8954 | of several hundred curious as he | ran. He leaped into a taxi, pushed away a pursuing reporter and sped off. The census in New France in be taken on modern lines. Guilty Of Fraud QUEBEC (CP) -- Corporal Paul | Auclair, 28, of Montreal south, | Thursday was sentenced to four months detention and stripped of his rank after he was convicted of | fraud and false statements in con- | | nection with a $18,000 furniture | moving racket. Auclair was one of 20 soldiers faring a disciplinary court martial in the racket. The army says the men arranged to get leaves and pay advances to move their house- hold goods to nearby Valcartier |.camp when none actually moved. | When your furnace becomes dirt, ; Clogged, sluggish, have it cleaned at once. We are like your launderer or dry cleaner, ready to give cleéan- ing service any time. And with our Vac-Clean process there is no fuss or muss. CALL US NOW FOR FREE INSPECTION \ ® OUR PRICE ALF HARRELL & SON 1072 SIMCOE N. DIAL 5-0438 SAVE 3: VIGOR OIL REDUCES FUEL OIL PRICES! 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