E == force of 22 315387] £1 8-L200.Ee82] BEE CIE 3[3% Bessborough, general The Earl of Canada's governor frond 1981 to 1985, arrives in - RETURN TO CANADA 1 | y By RANALD MacLURKIN | LONDON (Reuters) In the | t | dawn of the atomic age, Britain | finds one of her most ancient sources of wealth, coal, producing one of her biggest industrial head- aches. Once one of the world's major | exporters of this basic source of power, the country now needs to! import millions of tons each year keep up with the seemingly satiable demands of her indus- tries and homes. The story of the coal mines goes | back a long way. Before the Sec- {ond World War it was the mines, | employing the country's largest | labor force of more than 700,000 | Imen, that were hardest hit by | | economic slumps. The memory of | bitterness and suffering ~~ engen- dered then has died hard. It was hoped that when the | mines were nationalized in 1946 a | fresh start could be made. But in | spite of modernization, improved | amenities and the fact that" the miners' average earnings are higher than in any other industry, | coal production again has become an industrial headache. This year, more coal has been lost through disputes than in any other year since nationalization The obvious scapegoat was the national coal board, set up by the Quebec with his wife for a three- week tour. He will visit Mont- real, Ottawa and Toronto. (CP Photo | | By MARTIN TAYLOR Canadian Press Staff Writer MOOSONEE, Ont: (CP) -- More than 25Q years after the first settle- ment was established here by Hud- son's Bay Company traders, a new breed of adenturers are helping fences. dal port, where the Moose river widens into James Bay, a supply basedor North America's radar de- fencés. The original HBC post fell to a rench canoeists after 15 years, with musketry skirmishes continuing another 10 years. Never 1 since the Treaty of Utrecht in 1713 brought peace has Moosonee known such activity as now. The country- 33138. 20S FEAL RH CHNTI VR 5220 side echoes to the roar of bull-| New Adventurers In Old Wilderness | strengthen Canada's northern de- | They're making this historic to- | government to run the state-owned pits It has, however, become increasingly clear that a more likely culprit is' general economic | conditons As the board has repeatedly emphasized, the solu- tion to the problem lies in increased production, and that means greater efficiency from the | inside make their lonely ways into the North. Many of the men and much of the equipment they carry are bound for "the sites' the northern radar posts which keep vigil for trans - polar attack. Few know | where either are destined; no one in Moosonee asks. 2 | The men and materials reach | Moosonee on the twice-weekly | "Polar Bear' mixed train {rom |Cochrane, 186 miles south. The trip, with leisurely stops at lum- ber camps, takes eight to 10 hours. | A day later a few young men, | still wearing city suits, chat with | handful of weathermen, contrac- {tors and vacation visitors ubout | Moosonee's inconspicuous night life | and the settlement's sauterne col {ored tapwater. Next day they zre gone. Their NIAGARA FALLS, Ont. (CP A forecast of a labor demand for a four-day, 32-hour week as the long range answer to automation in in- dustry was made today by W Smith, president of the Canadian Brotherhood of Railway Employees (CCL Mr. Smith opening the triennial convention of Canada's largest transport union, said the guaran- teed annual wage sought by some unions is not a complete answer to automation, the use of automatic machines that take over manpow- er's work "The answer to the problem of UXK.Coal Shortage Pose Big Industrial Problem individual miner working miles underground at the coal-face. | Britain's industrial furnaces and power houses and even the modest household grate burned more coal last year than ever before. The | total home demand was 213,600, | 000 tons, and it is still rising. The pits could meet the demand --oputput last year was 224,000,000 tons--but because of export com- mitments, the coal board had to import 12,000,000 tons of foreign coal in 1954. Caught in the squeeze of economic policy, the board had | to pay high prices for the imported coal and re-sell it at home prices incurring a loss of British industry gets its coal cheaper than its competitors in Europe and the United States, as the board pointed out after in- creasing its prices by 16 per cent in July In 1954, the board showed a deficit of £23,250,000 and the ac- counts of the first quarter of 1955 look blacker still, with a deficit of £4,600,000. Pricked by a public outery, the government was forced to step in. Coal exports in 1956 are to be cut to about half of this year's total of 11,000,000 tons, even at the risk of upsetting tradi- tional trade patterns MINERS LEAVE PITS Denmark and Irelgnd will be the only two countries to receive appreciable amounts of British coal in 1956. Old customers like Sweden, Germany, Argentina, Spain, Italy and France will get little or none In spite of all-out efforts to improve the 'miners' lot, a sizable drift from the pits was developed Forecasts 4-Day, 32-Hour Week Demand By Railway Workers [new demand for the rail workers' vielded this ions un islation right to strike. They in the last set of negoti der a cabinet threat of le for compulsory arbitration, "Let this convention make clear in unmistakable he said "our undying opposition to the en forcement, or in the future, of any form of compulsory arbi- tration "It is important to let all Canada know that, as a responsible union and as citizens, we will never agree to ofrego our basic rights and freedoms, "We may be standing at the term now £27,000,000.% it A total of 3,700 fewer men now | are working in the pits itnan a year ago. While there are thou-| | sands more jobs in Britain than | men to fill them, this drain from | the mines probably will continue. | Even among the men who stay | {in the pits, unrest is rife. The | | board has closed one colliery and | is reviewing the future of four | others because it* believes that the | men there are deliberately keep- ng down production by absen- tecism and go-slow tactics. The advent of atomic power will eventually slightly alleviate the coal problem but will not solve At the aresent rate of nrcduce tion, there is enough coal in Brit- ain to last another 200 years. And according to present estimates, every ton of it will be needed, even though, by 1965, atomie plants will be producing power equivalent to that produced by five or six million tons of ¢oal--less than twice the present annual rate of increase, POWER NEEDS ZOOM Ten years later, the amount of atomic power, produced according | to present calculations, will equal | that produced by 40,000,000 tons of coal. The national electricity au- thority, however, has said that by then it will need 2%: times its present consumption. Economists have estimated that it is necessary for Britain to double her power every 50 vears to keep up with her foreign trade Whatever the long-term situation, however, the immediate problem remains how to produce mpre coal with a diminishing labor force. |Navy Men Subscribe To Remembrance Book TORONTO (CP)--Canada"s mer hant navy veterans of the Second |e | World War have launched a cam- paign to have the names of their | in the of Re- inscribed Book fallen comrades country's official membrance. A. J. Heise, national secretary of the Canadian Merchant Navy Veterans' Association said mer- chant seamen have been nied many veterans' benefits ac- corded members of the three serv- ices and their dead colleagues ap- parently will be omitted from the national tawa"s Peace Tower. "We can't understand why the name of a Canadian who died in a burning sanker under the Canadian f consumption | competitors. | I American Traitors Ridicule USAF Torture School As Childish $1,000,000 FIRE Flames mushroom into the sky during a fire which destroyed a warehouse and sawmill in Van- couver, estimated at more than $1,000, | (CP Photo) | 006. | | | By BERNARD DUFRESNE Canadian Press Staff Writer OTTAWA Canada stopped seating its Su- preme Court judges on a large! cushion called the Woolsack when | hiament. Today nobody--least of all the nine judges--seems anxious to re- | turn to the uncomfortable seat. For able. They were probably lost in! book, enshrined in Ot. one thing the Woolsack, built for |the fire that destroyed the Parlia- {seven persons, could hardly seat the nine judges. | For years the deep red circular cushion was taken out of storage Wool Sack Cushion 'Was Painful Seat side of the circular seat either had their backs to the governor-general CP--Five years ago|or had to sit--quite uncomfortably | -on one side and turned half-way towards the dais. Those who sat in that position de- they attended the opening of Par- tended to slip off the slightly-in- clined seat. Records of the first use of the Woolsack in Canada are not avail- ment Buildings in 1916. ANCIENT TRADITION In England, however, the tradi- going to be killed they're not even Property damage was | THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE, Tuesday, Seplember 20, 1055 14 SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -- Three American turncoats, who fiwt em- braced and then rejected the Chi- nese Reds, today ridiculed as "childish" the U. 8. Air Force's Nevada school against brainwash- ing. A William Cowart, Lewis Griggs and Otho Bell said in separate in- terviews the whole idea Is unreal- istic. They were captured by the Reds in the Korean War. then chose to go to China rather than return to their homeland after the armistice was signed. They came out of China last July and now are awaiting court martial on charges they betrayed their country and their countrymen, "The men going through that Nevada school know :'hey're not going to lose their cigaret ration," said Bell. "How can you call that a real test? It's just childish. . . . "The big thing is education. A man with an education can stand up to the Chinese or anybody else. CHICAGO TRAFFIC LIKE A BOMBING CHICAGO (AP)--A London traffic expert took the wheel on a Chicago taxi. Ran on red light; drove over a pedestrian safety island backed gently into a policeman on a motorcycle; frightened several hundred pedestrians, and came within inches of smashing into a truck. But no grief came to Alex- ander Samuels, a former cab driver and present chairman of London's traffic advisory committee. One of his passen- gers was Capt. Michael Ahern, | Chicago's traffic chief. Another was Col. Arthur Young, London police chief. | Samuels' comment on the 10- { minute drive in downtown Chi- cago: "'It's rather like a bomb- ing raid." RIVERA CHEERED Nd But you got to know what they'r§ talking about." Hi SILLIEST THING Cowart called the school * slliest thing I've heard of since I came back. It's not going to anyone immune to their A man had to know what munism is. That's the basic e "Ask any soldier--even after he goes through the school -- what communism, is. He won't know, He'll say he hates it--but he doesn't know what it is: Griggs said the air fares school was 'ridiculous, completely wrong." = "You'll never train a soldier by torture," he said. "And all those Chinese torfure stories aren't true either. A lot of guys came back from camps and told some pretty terri- ble tales--just to cover up | what they had done themselves," To Pay Past Due Bills To Consolidate Monthly Payments For Home Repairs For New Purchases i A N For Better Vacations Come In Today Try The Bellevue Way on & Poy from Income Plan Bellvue Finance MOSCOW (AP)--Mrs. Diego Ri- | vera said Friday Soviet doctors have told her husband, the Mexi- | can artist, that the cancer from which he is suffering is not so bad as they had been led to believe. | "This good news has cheered him up," she said. Rivera, 69, will re- | | main in hospital here at least a {tion of a Woolsack in the House of| month for treatment of cancer of CORP. | G. H. WILSON, Mgr. | 29%: SIMCOE S. Dial RA 5-1121 OSHAWA | | dozers, seaplanes and motorized | plane is a dot in the northern sky canoes. | heading out over Ontario's only URLD T salt water. » OE 23-year-old | The settlement they leave behind Ontario Northland Railway line is little impressed with the new age ends at the river bank a new dock they | have igh od to Ontario's i i } with ware- |northiand. e northerner is more Is being built, complete i t, [interested in a nearby survey for |gypsum deposits, and ore explora- ns on islands further up the bay And the silent Cree Indians show twin-engined planes no interest in what some of them s (consider the newest manifestations e 'of the white mans follies. Lords goes back to the reign of | the skin. Edward 111, between 1327 and 1377. - At_that time. the lord chancellor | in the House of Lords sat on a real wool sack to remind the peers of the importance of the wool trade to | England. | crossroads insofar as our economic well-being is concerned. The threat of compulsory arbitration still lives and only we, the organized work- ers, can prevent it from becoming a reality." CRITICAL OF OTTAWA My. Smih predicted '"'troubled times ahead" unless governments, railway management and others concerned work out long-range plans to cope with such situations as rail strike threats Mr. Smith was critical automation,"' he said in his presi- dential address, 'is to be found in a reduction in the hours which constitute a normal work week. "We must begin to consider seri- ously makin a demand for a four- day 32-hour week and organizing all the forces of labor, in and oul of the industry, for such a demand "Only by this method will we retain employment for ourselves and provide employment for the coming generations." STRONG DEMAND Dealing with the railway union's coming contracts with Canada's flag should not be inscribed in the |for each opening of Parliament and same way as that of a sailor on a [Placed on the floor of the ornate nearby destroyer who lost his life |Senate chamber in front of the in the same action," Mr. Heide |vice-regal dais. While the governor- said |general of the day read the speech The association also was seeking [from the throne, the judges vocational training, civil service |Squirmed on the Woolsack. \ ; ipreference and participation in {LAST USED IN 1949 Some 200 years later, during the Veierans' Land Act provisions for | The Woolsack was last used at| reign of Henry III, between 1509 | its 'members the opening of Parliament Jan. 26, | and 1547, VIII was enacted that the | - 1949, also the last year there were lord chancellor, the lord treasurer] REMOVE RESTRICTIONS seven members on the bench of and other officials should sit on] VIENNA (Reuters)--All Russian [the Supreme Court of Canada. The Woolsacks This was to signify that, of the military planes have left Austria. next year the number of judges technically, officials were outside] federal government on several | and flying restrictions over the |was raised to nine. They have sat the precincts of the House and if| points, including its handing to the | former Russian zone, which had lon comfortable arm-chairs since. any peer among them wished to| railroads--in which representatives | provinces of jurisdiction over inier- | been imposed by the Russian oc- Now, the circular seat is gather-|take part in the debate they had to of some 160,000 workers will be provincial highway trensport and |cupation authorities, have been re- ing dust in a storage room. take a seat elsewhere, asking for a wage increase and athe way it has dealt with seasonal moved, the Austrian ministry of | One reason the Woolsack is said | In effect, it confirmed that none welfare plan--Mr. Smith issued aunemployment. transport announced Friday. Ito have been unpopular is that the but peers could take part in de-| TT ES yy --" [judges sat around the cushion,| bates. {their backs against a low back| The judges, however, sat on |test in the middle. | chairs at' the openings of the Brit- Thus, the two judges on the far |ish Parliament. hE | and g Pp close to the old trading post a 60-8 bed hut encampment has just been | tio! completed. Single and . f and shalow-draft merchant s ¥ which link the "outside' with t Clean Church WA Project MRS. LAWRENCE GRAY { KINSALE -- h service will Wa be held at the regular hour of 10.30 | community am. next Sunday. There will be Mr. and Mrs. Alvin Hooker, no service here on Sep 2%, led bY Mrs. Joe ten X heme Mount Zion Anniversary | ng "ong Mrs. Howard Stell unday. . i Bruce, $ tt The Women's Association met at| Bruce, spent Sunday 2 eis planners in the western world the home of Mrs. L. Empringham. | "xp, and Mrs. George Curl spent "Operation Lifesaver," a long- Mrs 'B. Legg, presided. The de- a recent weekend visiting the lat- planned exercise which will moye votional was in charge of Mrs. J. oo" gistar "Mrs. J, Cheney and 40,000 persons--almost equal to the Sieh ipture lesson was read family at Morewood. i population of Oshawa, Ont from e SeTIpture Mr: and Mrs. Ben L nd fam- lone section of the city has been by My. J. Schioen. Mrs. Stell gave |; were Pi eR en wm Mr described by civil defence officials a reading. and Mrs. Ls in Toronto as the most important thing ever Roll call for the evening was| "yg =. a iss to happen in CD planning. fish pond articles for the fall ba: | puth Marshall of Toronto were "What is the answer to a weapon 288T. : : Sunday guests of All Mrs. [that could completely destroy Duting the business period Mrs. Eingay € an and M a ud Maj BY ug Schiven. offered to fix up the flow- | "ny "lng Meg Bill Mitchell of | Worthington of Ottawa, er beds at the church which) cyomont were Tuesday visit- |civil defence co-ordnator was gratefully accepted. The ladies |," 04 "the home of Mr. and Mrs. EVACUATION IMPERATIVE also decided to hold a bee and | G50 The only answer, he said, house-clean the church. . Alvin Gray left on Monday for get the people out Mrs. L. Gray gave a reading trip to Vancouver. "If an aggressor can't and Miss Barbara Empringham | ~ geveral from Kinsale attended [the people, he can't win favored with piano music. {the wrestling matches in Toronto Therefore, the purpose of "'Oper- School opened last week for the on Thursday- ation Lifesaver' is to check eva- HI-MILER RIB Truck Tire by GOODFYEAR at NEW LOW PRICES SIZE 6.00 x 16 ' Sorry to report Len Waltham is on the sick list. Mr. Joe Pegg and Ken Brooks of Greenwood paid him a friendly visit. Mr. and Mrs. G. S. Mathews and | Vicki, and Miss M. McEwen of : Toronto were Sunday visitors with Mr. and Mrs. L. W. Mathews. Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Gray mde nese tn Calgary's "Operation Lifesaver" eee wr wane [8 Biggest In Western World We welcome Mr. Weathe our new school teacher, to o | | | | ae 5A | --~ _-- CALGARY (CP)--This city of and | 160,000 persons lies in readiness for and [the largest actual evacuation at. cot- tempt undertaken by civil defence applied to the entire city--or any city--in case of actual attack. For the operation, scheduled some time between 10 a.m. and 6 p.m. Sept 21, evacuees will be moved from a mock atomic attack area to emergency centres up to 9 and 100 miles away. Emergency sections will be clared between Calgary and Deer, 100 miles north, and five main highways leading north, west and east from the city will be re served for transportation by motor vehicle of evacuees. Instructions will be given through radio, television and newspapers before and during the evacuaton and civil defence sirens will wail operation at the request of federal CD authorities- Their planning has bees com- plete. CD officials will watch the operation results from a special communications room at the RCAF station in north Calgary. Two RCAF planes will give con- ac- 'Seamen's Missions | Are 'Flying Angels" EDMONTON (CP)--The "Flying! Part of the mission's work con- | tinuous reports to the communi- | Angels" is the nickname given the sists of locating seamen for rela: | cations room and further reports Anglican Church's Mission to Sea- tives. The mission received one| will be received from outlying men, a group of ships and men otter from a man whose son had| points who do a unique job in ministering | ,n away to sea and in this in-| Special first-aid posts have been to seamen in far-flung ports. stance the boy was located in| placed along the evacuation rouies| The work of the mission was out- | Rotterdam, half-an-hour later i in case of accident during the ex-|lined to the general synod of the| A mission chaplain in Hong Kong ercise. RCMP will patrol the high-| Anglican Church of Canada, meet- received a letter from a woman | ways to keep the traffic moving ing here. Its headquarters are in | who could not find her son. The! and screen other traffic. Only es-|London, England. The idea of the | chaplain found the boy sleeping in sential outside traffic will be al-|missions began in 1836 when Dr./a Chinese tenement and, said the the signal for the operation start. lowed during the operation. {John Ashley, on holiday in Bristol | mission secretary, awakened him The actual time has not been set, Special CD personnel will also channel, rigged up his own mission with the words: 'Lad, here is a| PLANNING COMPLETED aid in supervison of the operation. hoat for Christian service. Others leiter from your mother" Civil defence forces from Cal. Everyone in the northeast section did the same thing and they were -- -- gary and the 20 municipalities that is to be moved. Every house is to finally united in 1856. | will handle evacuees planned the de Red EH HEHE] Bargains in other sizes too! federal Come in soon! is to destroy > " | Everybody loves MARTY, be emptied. ; The mission will hold a thanks- The CD co-ordinator will report | oiving service in Westminster Ab- lon the operation to a CD group iniiey next vear with a sermon by Boston Sept. 28 and later will fly the Archbishop of Canterbury i to Paris where he will address i is the North Atlantic Treaty President of the organization is the Organiza- | : | ton members on the results ang | Dike of Biinbiegh. findings of "Lifesaver." | Mayor Don Mackay of Calgary! The wide variety of the work said he knew when the exercise done by the seamen's mission was was first planned that first reac-|told here by Rev. Cyril Brown, | tions would bring ridicule, scorn general secretary of the Mission to | land comments of 'What game are Seamen. He said it does full-time {you playing now?' work in Halifax, Vancouver and | | "We weren't disappointed,' he /St. John's, Nfld. It is established | said. |as far afield as Singapore and | "Im praying that the people in Hong Kong. It makes no distinc- [Calgary will catch the vision that tions beteen color, race or creed. | this is not a lark but basic train-| Seamen coming into port are ing.' {met by the chaplain with news of 14 and killed four small school- | Officials said Canada, the United home, and invitations to attend girls, Friday night was found [States and the rest of the western concerts, dances or movies ar- guilty of criminal negligence. The world will be watching "Lifesaver" ranged for them on shore. If the charge carries a maximum sen- closely. They will benefit from the men are sick in port the chaplain tence of five years in jail and $1.- [blue print which will emerge, show- | visits them, and the men may at-| 000 fine, or both, He will be sen- ing the successes and failures of tend family prayer services suit- tenced Sept. 30 the operation. {able for any religious sect. | Lightning Deals Twin Tradgedy CHAPLEAU, Ont. (CP)---Lightn- CLIFF BARAGAR Telephone RA 5-5512 Maurice Bachon, Paul 'Gagnon, Henry Paul Cote, Emil Trudel, Harvey Demers, Charles Mercier, Paul Leclair, Guy Dachon, Leon Montagne, Julien Gravelle, Joseph Guertin, Orilien Gere and Gaston Lehouillier. All are from the French - Canadian village of La Sarre, Que., near Rouyn, He's coming to the Plaza Theatre, Thursday - Friday 162 KING ST. E. « Saturday. "EXPERT TIRE SERVICE" CAR KILLED FOUR | BUFFALO, N.Y. (AP)--Emil A | Degina, 35, driver of an automo- bile that jumped a curb last March fall term. Several little ones start- ati asur yhich could be ed out starry-eyed on the new ad- | jeuation measures WiC: venture of learning. It is to be | hoped motorists will remember BALSAM, MT. ZION these little tots, and cut down their speed when approaching the MRS. LORNE JONES school zone: Correspondent PERSONALS : | BALSAM MOUNT ZION -- Mr Recent visitors with Mr. andland Mrs. William Gates attended Mes 2 Legs. ere Me pind | the Locke-Roger wedding at Bow- Mrs c Lee an ne a TS. | manville last week. ing dealt death and injury Friday L. Knight of Brantford, Mr. and| Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Wilson, Carl ig an isolated lumber camp in Mrs. J. Janett and family-of Chat- | and Kenny, Mrs. George Wilson northern Ontario. pam aud Mr. and Mrs. F. Janett of | and Earle attended the Wilson A bolt. struck one. map killing} New Toronto .. | gathering at Balsam Lake last p SORE IE hin gh We spol, The siber man spent last week with relatives at Rev. and Mrs. E. Beech and horse Dy acted by the bolt fell Peterborough. Mrs. M. Patterson | hoys of Toronto visited on Labor on Him : : of Tocust Hill was also a Sunday | Day with Mr. and Mrs. Cecil The dead were identified as Jean J visitor i Jones. , Larochelle, 19, of St. Janvier de Mrs. M. Harlock of Manilla spent| Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Jones return- | cp. 00) Que. and Robert Lemi- Wednesday with Arch and Mrs. | od Home after spending a week at | J Toy' ("aia Sabine in Quebec's unker, Miner's Bay. ALE ORIOR. . Mr. and Mrs. Jack Hooker,| Ronald Jones, Lorne Disney, Gaspe Jepion. "---- Nancy and Roy were Sunday visi- | Annie Mink, Anna Wilson, Tom Ai : and "FIRE KING" OVENWARE With Every Purchase of 6 Gal. of Gas or More Paul Emil Cyr, tors with Orangeville relatives. | Burton and Mary Jean Jamieson Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Lee and are the grade niners who started son, Mr. Nelson McEwen, "and family spent Sunday with the |at the Pickering District High | Douglas of Winnipeg, who had latter's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Dav- | School. made a trip to England and Paris, idson of Raglan | John Mynard, uncle of Mrs. | France. They also visited his cous- -- Weekend visitors with Mr. and! Frank Disney, of St. Catharines, | ins, Earl and Cecil Disney L Mrs. L. Waltham included, Mr. jg visiting with her Mrs. Lorne Jones and Grant { and Mrs. O. Bays of Aldershot,| Allan Clark of Greenwood gave attended the Baker-Free wedding Mrs. Lindsay and Mr. and Mrs. | a very impressive talk in the Sun- | at Sunderland on Saturday and H. Minaker of Windsor. day School on Sunday on "Tem- | Nirs. Jones and Doreen spent the Mr} and Mrs. J. Ducasse have perance". weekend at a coltage at Coboconk, moved into their new home on Mrs. Morgan Pugh of Uxbridge The Mt. Zion Church anniversary o Audi¢y Road spent the weekend with her daugh- will be held on September 25 : Mr} 'and Mrs. George Rowntree ter Mrs. Elmer Wilson. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Empringham of Weston were Sunday guests of | Mrs. Frank Disney had the plea- left on Sunday on a motor trip to William and Mrs. Ormiston: sure of having her nephew and his | the east coast { | -- WHY PAY MORE? BEST QUALITY STOVE OIL! ® Prompt Delivery! ® Courteous Service! Dial RA 5-1109 VIGOR OIL CO. 78 BOND ST. w. "Th EXCELSIOR VIGOR GASOLINE STANDARD 38 ® GaL HIGH TEST 4 | Br GAL Co. VIGOR OIL = 1615 SIMCOE ST. S. PHONE RA 5-2843 ERNIE CAY INSULATION CROWN DIAMOND PAINT PHONE RAndo E / ) - iW lard? 7", PER GAL. LTD. HERES ro--~ 7 ni nh . WW Fv Ask