LONG EES with General Motors Canada Ltd. were honored re- cently by the company and fel- low employees on their retire- ment. After 34 years of services with GM, C. B. Fraser Smith, top left, retired. He is pictured Ice, Sleet Endanger Roads, Tow Trucks Have Busy Time N. Oshawa Ice Arena Is Popular Hundreds of skaters packed the {North Oshawa ice arena during} | the weekend. ! | Low temperatures and the out-| | door conditions prevailing at the |rink did not lessen its popularity {for local skaters and rink officials | were - kept busy all weekend. | Friday night was the most popu-| lar session and the rink was so packed with skaters that at times lit was difficult to move around. | The small refreshment booth in {the shelter shed at the rink re- |ported a big business. | | | | | - SERVICE EMPLOY-| as he receives a gift from fel of low employees in the parts pric- ing department, and the con- gratulations of Parts and Acces- sories Manager F. K. Gibsoh. Mr. Smith lives at 210 Kendal avenue. Edward T. H. Jacobs, | second from left in bottom pic- ture receives a gift of a wallet |RINK POPULAR | The popularity of the rink, and| [the favorable comments about it| | from people seeing the rink for the| first time, has heartened officials of the North Oshawa Neighborhood Association and the Oshawa Com- | munity Arena Association. | One official said today that the gate takings during the past two) | weeks had exceeded the whole take | for the period it operated last year | | This is more impressive when it| lis realized that admission costs are {lower this year, the official added. | The North Oshawa Neighborhood | Association is operating the rink | until settlement is reached between] {the Oshawa City Council and the |creditors of the OCAA. | A report on negotiations between {the council and the creditors is likely to be presented to council tonight. | and cash from Chief Jack Bark- | er and other fellow workers at GM on his retirement. Mr, | Jacobs, who lives at 613 Mary Meanwhile the NONA has ex- | street, has 36 years service with |, q55eq interest in running a mo-| the company. He retired recent. |'dern and well equipped refresh-| ly from GM's Canada plant pro- pent room at the ice arena. THE LIBRARY WORLD Library Has 3 New Books ann BIRTHDAYS --GM Pictures. Congratulations are extended to Rev. Eric Jones, 93 Grand- view Avenue, South. Instructor G. F. Craggs gives | Bernard Diottu of Oshawa a few | CRA WORKSHOP IN OPERATION hints about the operation of a | The workshop is fitted out with All By Canadian Humorists In Search of the Magnetic North.| enturous tale has an unhackney- placed on the day-to-day life of the planing machine at the work- | Road Conditions Seen Worst Of The Winter Road conditions in Oshawa today [ROADS BAD - are about the worst yet exper-| Gray Coach Lines' drivers his ienced thiswinter. morning said that conditions on Snow, followed by icy sleet and|roads between here and Toronto rain, coated city streets during the|are the worst for 12 months. night and caused traffic tangles as| go. .4 one driver: "The roads Are city residents set out for work this pretty grim. There is a lob of morning. : freezing rain and the roads are Police reported several Sceldents slippery." u which could be attributed to e|* * poor conditions and service sta-| The city sounel did sot send put tions with towing services were|SROW plows this morhing, e taxed by the demands from strand-|the snow was not thick enough ed motorists. for plow operation. However, sand. Buses were running well behind |ing equipment was in action early schedules and one passenger ar-|and busy all day. riving in Oshawa from Toronto this| Footpaths were heavily coated morning said the trip took more with snow during the weekend and than two hours. |this morning it was a heavy job "Traffic was sliding all over clearing driveways and shop front- Highway 401", he said. |ages. 'Government Order Irks Six Nations OHSWEKEN, Ont. (CP)--The Six|all states and nations extend upon Nations Indians are riled about red | his travels to our well-behaved and | tape. | reputable national chief Joseph Lo- { » Tah-da-da-O, of Caledonia, | They've been roused by an On-|8an, - O, g | tari ister | Grand River, Canada, aforesaid | tario government order to register Do sary icf of the Onondaga Nation all things of which he may | all reservation marriages $3ang i ia nghouses . Place In the Ceremonis Foo g10 Ne stand in need and offer him every tions Confederacy does not come Protcotion whatsoever." under provincial jurisdiction. | Chief Logan said it was the same | ' i single-sheel, sealed document | The confederacy's hereditary gpioh took him to London in 1930 | council of chiefs advanced ; =o pear before the House of Commons. | first to sovereignty - | some passports issued by the Six "cpjor Jogan said it is less than Nations and honored in several 14) years since Canada first tried European countries, to interfere with the affairs of the Several chiefs hold the passports, | Six Nations, by passing an Indian the last of which was issued in| Act in 1859. At general council in 1933. Chief Joseph Logan showed | 1870 the Six Nations and other In- | his to reporters in this village, dian bands rejected it. Despite the | nine miles southeast of Brantford.| rejection, the act has been en- Dated in May, 1930, it declares | forced and is the act under which that the Six Nations "'desires that Indians are governed. Former Consul IsFound Here | tui.'f bli loss WINNIPEG (CP) -- A former | writer and her husband. an arck i in Winni | acolq@ist, came here for a quiet | Polish consul in Winnipeg who two NE. Da AUTHOR SPEECHLESS TRIPOLI, -Liba (AP) -- Agatha Christie is suffering from laryn- | gitis and has temporarily lost her equipment and is one of the out- standing adult recreation and education facilities available at | the CRA. shop of the Community Recrea- | tion Association in Gibbs street. | the most modern woodworking | friends. Rev. Ford | years ago quit his post, sought] political asylum and then moved) to Yugoslavia, has been A soldier-surveyor's letters from ed charm. The terrors of winter people. Changing social conditions the North - West, 1843 - 1844, by/ old, of prairie fire, of hunger and| .nd. patterns of community living John Henry Lefroy. Edited by solitude are justly related to thelare recorded with warmth and George Stanely. .eautiful landscape and the family {sympathy In the winter of 1843-44 Captain unity which make them bearable Lefroy of the Royal Artillery made| nd worth while. a magnetic survey of the Cana-| Married the Klondike dian Northwest. His lefters writ-| 3y Laura Beatrice Berton fea on travels from Sloutreal 1 Thos author Sent fo Dawson oa Hope near mo ondike River when the Mackenzie River and back, the, city was already declining Wutors have dealt conscientiously again to Toronto are gay and in-| fter the gold rush of the 1890's|7ith topics ranging from folk- formal. Writing to friends and|and stayed through 25 brief sum-|-0ng to popular music irnest Macmillan At long last Canada has a book *oncerning the state of music within her borders. The 19 contri- northern Canada. These letters are below zero. Her unpretentious ac- much effort has been made to give ably edited by the Head of the|count of her experiences, first as/@ panoramic view of Canadian Department of Geography at Roy-la teacher and r as wife {| musical life as a whole ) al Military College, Kingston. mother is interesting for the vivid|ing8 glimpses of Canada's musical Gully Farm by Mary Hiemstra. |picture it gives of life in the far|Past are given in Helmut An autobiographical account of|north, with its rigid social conven-|man's chapter "Historical a pioneering expedition to Saskat- tions, its fantastic characters grounds ory was founded. Mrs. Hiemstra's dance hall girls, its fresh and delightful story may be|heroism and tragedy read with equal pleasure by young Saskatchewan, The History } and old. Her Yorkshire farmer| Province, By J. F. Wright. shortcomings in that parents were as ill equipped as| This popular account of the ge- fields. As a musical the other prospective settlers in| clogy, history and geography of 8uide the book is invaluable this strangely ill - organized ex- the middle prairie province point and of a With's on "Recordings" was pedition for their bold venture into!published to celebrate the Golden were so serious in tone or content- The au- Lex Schragg's "Mortgage Manor" |books, and "Cousin Other activities. But many do not of settle- Elva" along with the new and de-|find time for church and prayer." the present, and suggests the!titled "Shall We Joir the Ladies?" and District Evangelistic Crusade, added three new works to our coun- 's all too small stock of humor-| drawn from many local churches but their Jubilee of Saskatchewan native qualities of shrewdness, thor, a Western editor and journa- and Stuart humor, endurance and enterprise/list, traces the history saw them through. Told from the ment from the Indian migrations lightful volume by Eric Nicol point of view of the six-year-old to eidest daughter who accompanied political dev them and helped look after the untamed prairies, Trueman's opments and experi Will Support 'Royal Lottery' For Review Apple Growers -- Limited price LONDON (CP)--For the second support for Maritime-grown apples year in a row, Canada House will and potatoes was announced Fri- hold a "Royal Lottery" to deter- day by the federal government. mine what visiting Canadians will 3 : The subsidies will cost the federal advance, Miss McLoughlin says,|;.. : lL Jecera receive tickets to: Broa' troup- treasury about $700,000, Agriculture ing-the-color ceremony. but not before March. 1. Experience| yo: 50 ¥ "5 EE in ) has shown that persons who apply et atone je uimated 1 The "troopng" has become the before that date later change their | yoy Brunswick P 3 55 Vers ane greatest single magnet for Cana- minds, ward Island potato jo od Aan h 2 dian tourists. So many applied for| There is a nominal charge for|p.q girficult po procucers nave tickets last summer--about 100 s Seuity disposing of sarplus- bids for each available seat--that tickets, which entitle the holder to a seat in the stands. There is noth-| Canada House decided to leave it/ing to prevent visitors attending | to the luck of the draw. The same without a ticket--but they don't get method will be used this year. a seat and they should get there Moy! exceptions to the ballot will early. a few prominent persong aged Last summer, the trooping cere- i ' persons and disabled veterans. |mony was cancelled because of ort Vl, apply. only has 'The position is simply that the|the national rail strike. This year dessert varieties : demand has increased far beyond it will be held May 31, the Queen's HAS A SU 4 the limited number of seats allo-|official birthday. The colorful spec- Nova Sc RPLL S t cated to us by the Commonwealth tacle oh the Horse Guards parade it ova . cota estimated last month relations office," said Ellie Me- ground goes back some three cen-|,: 14% 2 SUBS oF some 2,000,000 Loughlin, social secretary at Can- turies to the time when soldiers will tote] apes. he Support Price ad: House. "Many more Canadians| were trooped past the flag so they Mr Co io Hope a8 $200,000, are coming abroad these days, would know where to rally in emer- For ro gry the govern miany of them take back color!gencies. ment said it will participate in a program to divert surplus stocks | into starch factories and thus pre vent a further decline in current low prices. | Growers will receive a minimum | return of $1 a barrel -- about 2% | bushels -- for Canada No. 1 grade | potatoes. The subsidy will cover films of the trooping, and the de- mand grows." Applications should be made in Support price on apples will pro- de a minimum average payment to producers of 45 cents a bushel for top quality 1955 fruit delivered to plants and warehouses. The sup- U.S. Loyalty Board Ruling Ignites Big Controversy By FRED S. HOFFMAN the international organization's about 2,000,000 bushels and be lim- WASHINGTON (AP)--A loyalty loyalty hoard, a Friday the ited to $500,000 from the federal etoiina . : panel had considered new evidence government, The starch diversion hoary ruling vindicating Canadian- and had found there is 'no rea- program will end May 1. orn illiam Henry Taylor has ig-| sonable doubt!' about Taylor's loy The government said it is pre- ite Sie oroversy over whether alty. This action reversed a board pared to extend ifs apple support of mong cas oy on testimony ruling against Tavlor last June. program to growers in other prov- Sov a0 A Genera Herbert Taylor earlier had announced inces if they are interested. How- and Elizabeth Bentley. !that he had been 'completely ever, L. F. Burrows, secretary of Byron N. Scott, counsel for the cleared," and was "just too happy the Canadian Horticultural Council International Monetary Fund offi- . . . to sav what it means for the said he doubts that any other prov cial, said it did. But Henry S.! future." Taylor has insisted all ince will be interested Waldman, chairman of the board along that he is loyal Er tat pug cared Taylor, stated later During the Truman administra- names never should have eon Sion Taylor served I the reasur) Of every, 1,000 pel linked with this case." {department's monetary research |i Ca $ case division. His boss was Harry Dex Taylor, native of ter White. a former assistant sec Revelstoke, F , i8 assistant di- retary of the treasury whom rector of the fund's Middle East, Brownell described in 1953 as a department. He became an Amer- Soviet spy. White died in 1948, a tee on un-American activities that fcan citizen 1940 few days after denying before the he had engaged in Communist ac T- Paul Fairbank, ¢ WORKING WV )MEN ns employed adian industry in 19.9%, there were » women, against 71 at the wartime peak in 1944 Musie in Canada, Edited by Sir/ | persons and a -| ver to attend an Oshawa religious | relatives in England, Lefroy gives| ners and long hard winters when| hough the regional bias seems to} service: a lively and interesting account of the temperature for weeks was 50 ean toward Ontario and Quebec, Tantalis- |p Kall- gt Back- Wilfred Pelletier"s factu- chewan in 1903 when the Barr Col-|prospectors, engineers, priests and|al account of Canadian orchestras hardships, | 15 of great reference value, while|liec address system, were also pack- other sections, such as John Beck-|ed with persons of all denomina- tot other | stock-taking Not all of 1955's Canadian books |God," | "esponded when asked to make de- Oshawa | Adelaide House 8 p.m. secretary of House of Representatives commit. tivities, | On Sunday crowd of more than 1,300 overflowed ' Simcoe St United Church yesterday to hear Rev. Leighton Ford criticize mor- al weakness of whodery magicnd, dynamic Toronto-born evan- a told the largest audience] By W. A. WECKER, OBE President, General Motors of Canada Some weeks ago it became ap- parent that the economic machin- "Man today by his rejection of| Christ is as responsible for the wrucifixion of Jesus as those who to the Cross." n auditorium of Simcoe United Church was filled 30 minutes before Mr. Ford was due to begin his sermon. Overilow rooms, wired by a pub- at a higher an during any previous 12 months in our history. With the single serious exception of declin- ing farm income, every sector of our economy, has contributed to the record level of activity, Em- ployment and income have risen sharply, industrial production, pri- mary production -- particularly of minerals construction, export trade, retail sales have all estab- lished new high marks. Within this general context of high - gear activity, the Canadian automobile industry pressed ahead to a new plateau in passenger car production and exzeeded previous records in a number of other areas- At the end of 1955 the indus- try will have produced, by the most accurate estimate, 380,000 passenger cars, about 20.000 more than in the previous high year (1953) and a remarkable advance of more than 000 units oyer 1954. year anxious to hear the young ate of Dr. Billy Graham. "Today we have plenty of time or ourselves, but little time for Mr. Ford charged. "We watch television, read papers -and participate in many ns, In the sixth day of the Oshawa a massed choir of 125 persons |was directed by Wes Aarum, choir- master of the 'Leighton Ford evan- gelistic team. Soloist was Homer James sung the sacred ministries. Mr. Ford reminded his large au- ) a p ras sink | ience that it was the sins of FLATTENED OUT | ungodly men which nailed Jesus | o the Cross. { Without detracting from this "Generally men agree that it is| singular achievement it should be all right to hear about Jesus in| observed, that Canadian industry church, or to read about Him in/in general, the automobile indus- the Bible," Mr. Ford pointed out. |try not excepted, flattened out for "But for Him to be the Lord of|a large part of 1954 while it took cne's lile--this is considered too!up the "slack left at that time extreme. Each time man rejects chiefly by curtailed defence spend- Christ for sinful pleasures and per-| ing. Perhaps 'the more significant sonal desires, he crucifies afresh of the two comparisons above the Son of God." (the advance over 1953, while the He added that man usually ad-| excess in 1955 over 1954 may in mires Christ, but is ashamed to large measure be regarded as a stand for His church. return to a more nearly normal "This type of person is indiffer- level of production and purchas- ent to the Cross," Mr. Ford claim- | ng. ed. 'Such people watch Jesus as Production of trucks and com- inconcerned as the mob which saw mercial vehicles during the year him crucified." : will reach about 71,000 units, Mr. Ford pictured Christ as com-| bringing the industry's total pro- assionate through all of man's re- duction in 1955 to about 451,000 ection. "No matter how indifferent you 1ay be, Christ still wants. you," he explained. | A large section of the audience who | ger cars, trucks and commercial vehicles in 1954 was 357,083 ve- h ile up of 2 isions for Christ at lr. Ford's sermon. The Oshawa and District Evange- lictic Crusade sponsored by the Oshawa Ministerial Association, be-| can Jan. 2, and will continue 15. | the end of hrough Jan, COMING EVENTS | SALE OF GOOD USED crothing |? Tuesday, January 10th at 1.30, King Street United Church basement, sponsor ed by Friendship Group, Canadian ' agriculture sumers benefit from government butter says storage ram, ] H. H Canadian program means a direct and cents benefit to coksumers. He told the annual meeting of!i the Ontario Cheese Producers' As- CANADIAN CLUB OF ONTARIO County, 6.15 p.m Jan. 11, Northmin-| ster Church, Oshawa. Speaker Alan! Jarvis, director National Gallery of Can ada. Topic, MEMBERSHIP MEETING OF T H E Women's Progressive Conserv ative Association, Tuesday, January 10. price went to 85 cents a pound |cents a pound. He said Canada~ has always will be a high 'cost area for milk production because of long winters and the high cost of stable BINGO - p.m. Polish egular games, MONDAY, JANUARY 9, Hall, 219 Olive Ave and 4-$40. jack-pots 6a 8. 20 LIVE Since 1900, longer life than male" LONGER females have expectancy at had al.adian industry had a birth! argument for tariff protection. Half Million Vehicles: 1956 Production Goal units. Total production of passen-? 191 pas- an estimated level of about 38,000 times narrowly: the production of Says Consumers Benefit | Most From Storage Plan TORONTO (CP) -- A leader inthe chief importer of butter. But con- before the Second World War she/ the federal took four-fifths of butter exorts; pro- now she takes only two-thrids. Hannam, president of the satellites are short of fats and oils Federation of Agricul-| and may provide a market for Can- 6a ture, said that the butter support nadian butter, although there is no dollars | assurance will become regular and important "Is Art Necessary?" Jan 7-9 sociation that a few years ago,|sell butter to when no butter was in storage, the| they need it.' while at present first grade butter 'old the meeting it is time Canada Jans, 9|is selling in Toronto for about 63 exploited her reputation as the best | cheddar been and| world | feeding. For this reason, the Can- / legitimate thi n ) before she entered the showroom. | The United Kingdom was still'She bad forgotten her skirt, wr E . Hving| quietly in a rooming house here Michael Krycum, 43, said in an " interview Friday night that he has! filed citizenship papers and wants to become a "patriotic citizen of this fine country." ! His wife and 16-year-old daughter people, 10,000 more than a year are still in Yugoslavia. Mr. Kry- ago and over 5,000 more than in|Cum said he is trying to get them the previous high year. The in-|to Canada but if he can't he would dustry's 'total payroll is estimated Prefer not to see them 'for the at $150,000,000 for the year, an rest of my life." |advance of $44,000,000 over 1954 Mr. Krycum left his consular and $19,000,000 above the record|post in the fall of 1953, demanded set in 1953. | political asylum and when this was | Exports of motor cars from Can- not granted on a permanent basis ada followed the upward trend of he and his wife went on a three- the industry, advancing slightly in|day hunger strike. both cars and trucks. Makes im-| He then left for Yugoslavia ported into Canada from Europe where he lived for 20 months. and the U.K. repeated the down- ------ -- - ward movement of recent years, reducing their share of the mar- ket by about 1.25 per cent. Sales and excise taxes collected Seek Thugs For by the industry for the Federal "Desecrating' Government rose during the year WINDSOR, Ont. (CP) -- Police to an alltime high. Dollar value of sales tax collected was at an estimated $80,000,000 and excise said Sunday they are seeking a taxes yielded the government gang of teen-age hoodlums be- about $90,000,000. tlieved responsible for desecration The combined tax return from/of a church. the industry in. 1955 was about| Rey. J. A. Walker, minister of $32,000,000 higher than the 1954) Sandwich United church said five _; figure and at least $7,500,000 above stained glass windows at his "|the 1953 total. It is interesting to|church were found smashed Satur- W. A. WECKER note that this record sum was re-| day. He said the damage appar- {turned in spite of a small reduc-|ently had been caused by rocks senger cars and 69,892 trucks and tion in excise tax made in the| hurled into the building. One hole tommercial curlers. a touek | spring of the Year This tends is 12 feet long, he said. SS cars, trucks st to confir; t pw that | . : and commercial vehicles during sini Te Ie bo hi Mr. Seller said she damage 1955 will reach fizute. clos ! 2 1! n al '| climaxed several weeks of teenage ; ch a figure close to] anq making cars available to more i i 2 production. Estimated sales of All i trouble during which persons at- I people will in the long run pro-| tend -outh t hav passenger cars are 375,000 and| duce an increase In the govern-| poe HE You group ee nas ave trucks and commercial _carriers|ment's total dollar revenue from, cen. terrorized by gangs of teen-, will account for 75,000 units. | these taxes. agers. By the end of the year this| We have given most careful con-| sales volume will have brought sideration to the factors that pro-| the total number of passenger duced this record market for au-| cars registered in the Dominion tomobiles in Canada in 1955. We|qye to about 2,900,000 and the com-|pelieve that they are enduring con- Ping Pong Rally mercial vehicle registration to!ditions in a growing economy. Fur-| 3 roughly 915,000. Compared direct-|thermore, the 1955 total of about] LONGUEUIL, Que. (CP)--Two ly with population, there will be 451,000 vehicles has been reached|YOUng men in Longueuil Saturday a motor vehicle for slightly under in the face of the complete stopp-| Ping-ponged just about as long as every four people in the country, age of production on September 19/2 Ping-pong ball can ping. and a passenger car for about in' my own company, which usually| Then the two, Normand Dozois, every 5.2 people, |builds between 47 and 50 per cent 20, and Jacques Hurtubise, 21, In establishing production peaks/of the industry's total production. | claimed a ping-pongathon record-- this year the industry has set what! On the basis of these considera-|14 hours and 19 minutes of keeping may be its most impressive new tions I should say that there is! the ball in motion. marks in. payrolls and employ-/the strongest possibility of the in-| This, they said, beat the so- ment. Monthly average employ-| dustry reaching in 1956 a goal that called world record set by Pierre ment during the year has been at has long eluded it, though some-| Hurtubise, brother of Jacques, and Claude Turgeon, another Pinger, who went 13 hours and 20 minutes in 1954. Buehler' Meat Specials On Sale Tues. & Wed. BREAKFAST ¢ hs. 9 mporters. SAUSAGE "TENDER SMALL iL BACON 2-79 STEAKS 155: these countries i TENDER : CLUB SPECIAL! - WEDNESDAY P.M. ONLY government official STEAKS SHANKLESS, PICNIC STYLE Smoked PORK SHOULDER HEAR LEIGHTON FORD Every Week | Night rr -- Et sm---- ATTEND OSHAWA'S EVANGELISTIC (1 rushoE at... SIMCOE STREET UNITED CHURCH SIMCOE AND BAGOT STREET 7:30 P.M. 2 Claim Longest half a million vehicles in a single year. 12 KING ST. E. Mr. Hannam said Russia and her " PORK HOCKS The |b, Curtain countries vi Piece Iron A federal cheese maker in the EYE-CATCHING MODEL EASTBOURNE, England (CP) A model at a fashion parade in Sussex town was stopped just | LB.