Daily Times-Gazette (Oshawa Edition), 11 Aug 1956, p. 4

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

ion Saturday, Angust 11, Seek To Keep Woolen Mill MAGRATH, Alta, (CP)-To a or WHITBY and DISTRICT Town Clock Utters Last [Leaves Whitby Tick: Future Uncertain [For Hong Kong | A Chinese, resident of Whitby for sxistence; thro its the economic 'life of SESSEE_ wm MII - WIN TOP HONORS IN JUNIOR GARDEN CLUB HERE Eversten, 14, leit, and his brother Everet, 11, were tops in the boys section. They are sons of Mr. and Mrs. Everet Eversten 1016 King St. Winning top prize for Winning top honors for having | the best garden in the Junior Garden Club this year were the above four youngsters. Peter | Whitby's post office clock, for 48 years a beacon for time- hungry pedestrians and motorists, has stopped. The final moments of the old timepiece at the interseciion of the town came at 8:43 pm. on Thursday. Clerks ~ |and others who were to be at Euclid St. It was the second time for Cheryl to come in the top three. Last year she won second prize. --Photos By Robertson, Whitby Hawes, 14, left of the two young ladies, and her sister, Cheryl, 11. They are children of Mr. | and Mrs. Elmer Hawes, 208 | the girls section were ing | {work at nine a.m. yesterday were a little surprised to find they had | arrived 15 minutes early, at least | by the town clock they were early. | A check with postal officials | here indicated that the future of the clock is pretty uncertain. ; |Since the building was vacated ing on Dundas St. E., there is no one in the old post office. In the .past weeks, the office caretaker has made certain that the clock was wound but now he no longer has this [he is employed by the post office. hina a A sight that rarely greets the | eyes of Whitby motorists was on view here yesterday at noon hour when an Oshawa trucking firm moved a house into town. | The building, 22-feet long, is | shown above as the truck backs | it into a driveway on Brock | St. N. The building, a gate "house at an industrial plant in Oshawa, was moved complete with plumbing but it will be used here for a garage. Moving the house is R. E. Cock- burn, of City Cartage, who said that the task was considered formerly | NEW HOUSE MOVES INTO WHITBY | way. Hold Shower For Bride-To-Be Mrs. Jean Taylor of Port Whit- by and Mrs. Mabel Thwaites, grandmother of the bride-to-be, were hostesses at a delightful mis- cellaneous shower held on Tues- day evening, August 7th, in hon- or of Miss Marie Harper of Green St., Whitby, who will become Mrs. Thomas Horn on August 31 at Whitby United Church. Mrs. Taylor, at whose home the shower was held, had set up a most artistic and beautiful rose arbour in her living room, in| which Miss Harper sat to open her| |many lovely gifts. Over her head | was a large white bell and balloons | filled with confetti. Dainty re- freshments included two large cakes with bride-and-groom motifs. | Photographs of the event were taken in colour by Miss Deanna|prother and his family in Van-|land's 12th province, almost all of|pen. Strowger. One picture of especial interest will be that of three gen- the three sisters will visit old|inland lake of the former Zuyder|the waters in the bride-to-be with friends in Toronto and make a Zee, soon will shed its mantle. | erations her great-grandmother, Mr s. | her { Thwaites, of Whitby. 2 | The following guests were pres- : ent: | Mrs. Emma Brooks, Mrs. Isabel | Brooks, Mrs. Jeanne Morton, Mrs. Wm. Fairbrother, Mrs. Alice Ash | Mrs. Alice Walters, Mrs. Eileen | MacIntosh, Mrs. Muriel Burtin- |sky, Miss Mary Burtinsky, Miss | Lois Burtinsky, Mrs. Betty Church, Mrs. Betty Lanthier, Miss Deanna Strowger, Mrs. Mary Noble, Mrs. Marguerite Connelly, Mrs. man George grandmother, Mrs, Young Gard'ners Are Named Here _ Winners have been 'announced Robertson, Whitby |i0 the Whitby Garden Club's, an- fairly easy although linemen building to slip into the drive- He noted that he is pres- ently working on the job of mov- ing a two-storey house in Brook- lin which will be hauled five miles Merchants Upset Brooklin - |nual contest for young gardeners. |The club has, as one 'of its projects, |a garden contest for the juniors. Ww. | ; In | summer and prizes awarded to | winners. | Winners were: 7-5 In Hard Fought Tussle | In OLA Intermediate competition] Gibson opened things at 3:37 and| down at the Whitby arena Thurs-|then not until 11:50 did the light| day night, the Whitby Merchants) blink when Doug Vipond scored pulled out a 7-5 victory over the|for the visitors at 11:50. Brooklin Meadowcrests in their| In the third, the locals concen- last meeting of the regular sched-|trated on maintaining their three- ule. This game again was an ex-| goal margin and although the citing affair, a worthy follow up| Brooklin club fought hard to get to the display put on by both teams|in there, the Merchants held them in their last encounter. The story of the game was that Carnegie got number five for the the locals got the jump early in|Meadowcrests and it looked as if the game and were able to hang they were going to whittle the on for the remainder. deficit even more. However, the Les Moore opened the scoring Merchants checked doggedly and| at 6:08 of the first and in the next the game ended 7-5. two minutes the Merchants pick- PENALTY PARADE ed up another pair for a 3-0 marg-| , The penalty parade was fairly in and at 9:60 Clubine put Brooklin|lengthy in this one, however, open | on the score-sheet with the vis- hostilities never broke out at any| itors' first goal. time and with the exception of a However Whitby regained their! 10-minute misconduct all penalties three-goal margin when Don Cragg were minors. made it 4-1 on an unassisted effort| Both goal-tenders, Fry and Brad- for his second of the night. |ley came up with good games, | scoreless till the 13:02 mark' when| -- AY-BY-DAY | Girls--1st, Cheryl and Gail MEMORIAL SERVICE |,,... "of Euclid street; 2nd, The annual Memorial Service at| si the St. Paul's Anglican Church, onl Yanne Wensing: 707 Dundas St the seventh concession of Whitby| Byron St. N Bgerson, 'ownship, will be held this Sun-| ° 1st: Ev BV; cay evening. The service is usual-| pay ost, Everell Eveitsen . ly held in the afternoon but this| ond Donald en, 151 C ng Bl: year Rev. Kenneth Scott, Rector,|3:q' Gerald N. he "5 adat Sti will conduct an evening service in ya Northam, Broek S., S, the churchyard. Honorable mention: Wilhemina . er | Collen, 108 Anne St.; Annie Visser, ' 1117 King St.; Carolyn Cochrane last home stand for the regular|868 Byron St. N.: Susan Mould. schedule for the locals, and they|Cochrane St.: Doris Green 1441 close out against Maitlands up in|Byron St. S.; Gary Maidlow, 302 Scarboro Tuesday. Playoff 'policy| Palace St.; Dennis Stevens, 114 has not yet been determined s0| Chestnut St. a i the Merchants are not sure of - where they go from here. DESTROYERS ARRIVE SCORING SUMMARY NEWPORT, R.I. (AP) -- The First Period Canadian destroyers Algonquin, | 1. Whitby -- Moore Haida and Huron with a com- (Branton) ¢:8/bined complement of 38 officers 2, Whitby -- Don Cragg Lik and 690 men, arrived here Friday unassisted 7:25/and will stay until Monday. and Nor- The old building is the property the Department of Public Works. W. P, Ashton, caretaker, wound the clock for the last time this week. | No more will Whitbyites be able to take a quick glance to check their watches. The clock, inci- dentally, was generally right too. | The only time signal now |the town, for the public service, |is the fire siren. Every day at [12 o'clock sharp, the siren begins lits short-lived wail, announcing that noon hour has arrived and, as some suspect, that the siren still | works. post| duty since| o A RETIRED TOWN CLOCK origi the public view. Apparently postal Kong. officials now feel that everyone leaves Sony fo Hong meet Lee has nob been in good health |in the British Crown colony he | remain. _, | Lee Chee has been a hard, indust- 7" rious worker and had contacted "many of the people of Whitby who | ERA 7 'laundry. Lee Tow carry on * |the business alone, now, as he has ~ |in Whitby for over 30 years. | Lee Chee went home to China | about seven years ago but returned {to the town where he has spent i ¢ : | most of his life. + Stokers Tony's To Play Here | WHITBY -- The softball game lly scheduled for tonight at The new postal building has not 29 years. Lee Chee a partner with! tha? been equipped with a clock for Lee Tow in the laundry business his wife. | for some months and when he Jandy oe . | patronize the old sstablished hand This ag 1,400 persons in out of sol is no excep . There is a fierce - tion to alive its major - and' downs, ups likely the mill will The mill was first opened in 1939. Several residents, headed by Mayor E. Pingree Tanner,| (formed a com under the name of Golden Fleece Woollen Mil 1h, od rapidly develop an exchange S, and blankets goods in return for used Woollens and raw wool, ls a working fee. |DEFENCE ORDERS | With the outbreak of war, the| {mill obtained - substantial orders for blankets from the "defence department, It appeared 'he fac- tory could look forward fo a long stretch of successful operation. During the later years however, After years it now seems {more plentiful. By 1947. with the whole Cana- are employed at dian textile industry feeling the more are expected southern Alberta's| Ltd indus-|accumulal the piv: Sow] part of the business only woollen mill broke down. Buyers were less don, Man. and Vancouver. Scosomy-minded as cash became Tanner is first vice-president. y-five Magrath residents the nd plant to pinch of changi conditions, millisoon. 16.30 pm. in Al d Park in should be able to carry his own Oshawa, between Whitby Stokers mepiece. | ', The future of the clock, and in.[2Pd the Dilawg Toy 3 ta Jee deed the old post office building, re-scheduled to be play! are unknown. |by Centennial Park at 8.30 tonight. PERSONALS _| | | The Misses E, and F. Foster, |206 Byron street, south have their |sister Mrs J. Rowland, of Bed-| |ford, England as their guest for| 110 weeks. At the moment. Miss |K. Foster. and Mrs. Rowland are| lon the West Coast, visiting a| | couver. On their return to Whitby | brief visit to other friends at Lake in Mid-September. | Mrs. Fredericta Simpson, of To- Dutch Province By EAROLYN WILLETT C Press Staff Writer OTTAWA (CP)--Recreation will Says Automation To Aid Ottawa ing Thousands of residents, young play an important part in the Oo © an ing age of automation, says|offered through the departmen Ottawa's assistant commissioner of public recreation. Mrs. Margaret shorter working hours at spetial- {ized jobs which are not "soul-ab- Soon a small island rose from sorbing" will increase the need for the middle of the creative activities. | IJssel Meer. Called Lelystad in| This tall, the engi- says allel to the southeast shore of the mainland from Hardewijk to Kam- Farr says By RONALD FRASER [ AMSTERDAM (Reuters) -- Hol which Ys still under water in the| The dike around the largest honor of Gornelis Lely, Zuyder Zee begin the Zuyder Zee reclamation '"'golden" hours. of leisure are not! has been known since it was work, the island will be the capi-|tarnis closed to the sea 20 years ago, will|tal of the new province. b; ativeness. {ronto and Miss Flora Si who |has just returned from a trip to | Mexico City and Tulsa, Oklahoma, |are the guests. of Mr. and Mrs.| | Wm. Simpson, of Henry street, for| a few days. Mrs. Mary Simpson, of Sudbury, | is visiting her son and daughter- 'in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Simp- |son, oi Anderson street. Fr. Ernest Lamoureux, of Sud- |tury, J. A. Lamoureux, JP, and Ison, Andy, of Montreal, Sgt. Maj. land Mrs. Hedges, and son, John, [of Toronto, were week end guests lof Mr. and Mrs. Frank Hedges, of Brooklin. Mrs. A. Gray et fed i Se 08 and dei or Apia, Samoa, a character in Tales of the Sou Pacific, Mrs. Aggie Gray arrived here on the liner Oronsay. During the war Aggie's Hotel was the rendezvous of. thousands| ishe was known throughout the {South Sea islands. | One who met the soft-spoken {Polynesian woman was ames |Michener, author of Tales of the {South Pacific, the basis of the {musical comedy South Pacific. | A notable character in the play |is a.woman hotel proprietress who |Michener calls Bloody Mary. | "I'm afrald he did not draw a {very flattering portrait," said Mrs. Gray, 'and, of course, the story is fiction. But it was me {he had In mind." i Plans For Canal lof United States servicemen and, Ay sometime during) gay pe COMPLETE Pumps will immediately go iat] However, the province will action when the dike is shut and|only about half complete Whe within eight months all th water|the East Polder (a polder is a will have been removed, revealing piece of land lying at or under pe LEADERS IN DEMAND This task, she says, will call for many professional recreation leaders, supported by a "veritable army of men and who tion and sports and 15 skating rinks, two pools, seven beaches 3 grounds. brown-eyed woman . i facilities and leadership| Emma Brooks, of Pickering and| Cameron and Peterborough before area of land yet to rise from the neer who induced the country t0imust be available to ensure that/™ Mabel | Mrs. Rowland returns to England|1Jssel Meer, as the HN) oe Sosvitiey Date For New o i: Church some of the land which is to form sea level and protected by a the new province. |dike) is finished. RICH SOIL Two more polders, the south and About 129,500 acres of land, the west, \have stl to Xise $iom most of it rich agricultural soil,|the water to form the ni prov- will be added to the country by| ince which will then total about this acquisition from what was|490,000 acres. once the sea. Thousands of people, The East Polder is the third to will find work in new towns and|be reclaimed from the Zuyder villages, giving relief to his over-|Zee since work first started there crowded country and adding in-|in 1925. The other two are the valuable agricuitural resources, |Wieringermeer in the north. which NS NarE Work began on reclaiming this/the Nazis flooded in the last days os oo of physical education new part of Holland, to be known of the war by bursting open the > ich has since become a faculty as the Oostelijk Flevoland, or East|dikes, and the northeast polder 0 the University of Toronto--she Polder, in 1950 with the construc-|which, with it- 115,000 acres, ise} as directed recreation programs tion of a 56-mile dike running par-/will be part of the 12th province. | for the YWCA in Canadian cities. care enough about their commu- nities to devote their time and talent to help con- structive programs for others." An ' attractive, vital young woman with short-cropped black hair, Mrs. Farr finds that even now there is a constant cry for recreation leaders. A native of Toronto and a grad- uate of Margaret Eaton College-- some of |p at the corner of Wilson road Hoskin avenue, The present chure building, a one-room fabricat structure, will up durk construction of the new ome. The Oshawa Matthew's a buil , spite the fact hat the buil She also worked for four years She came to Ottawa's civic department of public | i. R is a little less than the one acre. : a" 1, four years ago to work as assist- ant commissioner and director of the program division. MANY ACTIVITIES Her busy office is the hub of a program charged with providing Cultural, iiZtorieal, physical and activities for Ottawa's som: 2000 Tesidepts. . ctivities range from nursery groups to senior citizens, through JERUSALEM (AP) -- Israel isy MOUNTAINS RAISE PROBLEM again studying plans for building] The highest peak of the Negeb canal from the Mediterranean|chain 1s 3,000 feet. It is assumed to the Gulf of Aquaba, But the/that an Eilat canal would have to engineering problems make im-|be raised some 1,500 feet. This probable a start soon on a canal|would need a syfstem of 40 locks. which could ultimately compete|This compares with three double with Suez. |sets of locks for the 50-mile-long The authors of the various plans| Panama Canal which rises some are understood to agree that the|78 feet above sea level and the most feasible scheme would be a sea-level Suez which has no locks. water highway starting from he Another difficulty is that Jere Migdal-Ashkelon, about nine miles/is no natural water reservoir in vy of the northern tip of the| the Negeb as the Panama Canal and the Telalively Jong travel tinre Egyptian-held Gaza strip. It would has in Gatun Lake. This means Ioractival: ae hie Sonomie. run to Eliat, the new Israeli post/water would have to be pumped |; " decade. oro east for the opposite the Jordan - held and|up. { The Israeli government h British protected, town of Aquaba.| Four or five blueprints are un-| 0° on 1% SO a as Such a canal could not run in a|derstood to have been submitted vi area under re- 12 hours for the Suez Canal. he enormous financial invest. ment needed, maintenance costs ew. They include: Mrs. Gray said she introduced |straight line. With unavoidable de-|for a waterway allowing passage 1. The laying of an oil pipeline the hamburger in Samoa. When the Americans arrived they clam- ored for this specialty and an army major taught her hew to make them. tours caused by the high moun-|of ships at least of the same size tain chain crossing the Negeb|as those now using the Suez Canal. desert it would probably be 238!Sailing time through the Eilat miles long. The Suez is a little|canal with stops at locks would be over 100 miles. about 65 hours against the 10 to between Haifa and Eilat, which could be done in about a year. 2. Construction of an across-the- desert railway from central Israel to Eilat, yd il sed £ cabacity'y Mr. Sparks that church will be ry ai I and of brick construction. Total ed to meeting this week, granted $i FOR MISSED PAPERS IN WHITBY Phone MO. 8-3111 If you have mot received your wr re oe | "BELL TANI | . Whitby -- B. Gibson (D. Cragg) Cees . Brooklin -- Clubine (Alexander) ; . Whitby -- Don Cragg . Brooklin -- Sutherland (Mitchell) i . Whitby -- Elliot Brooklin fought back and at 15:25{each making several fine stops Keith Sunderland, on a pass from/and all of the goals were well- Bruce Mitchell, brought Brooklin earned efforts. : a little closer with a 4-2 count. | Up front Don Cragge and Brian| TAKE 6-3 LEAD |Gibson carried the mail for the] The Merchants answered a min-| locals and were ably supported by, ute later with a goal by Ron|Les Moore, . Jerry Burrows and Elliot at 16:23 and added insurance Ron Elliott, all of whom came 8:40 . 9:60 . 11:06 WHITBY CLASSIFIED FREE PACKAGE POPULAR BRAND CONCRETE GRAVEL, $1.5, cigarettes with every $3 purchase of|gravel, $1.30 per yd: fill supplied. For | gasoline. Ask for your Appreciation Day| elivery phone MO 8-2660 Eric Branton, Coupon. Harry Donald Limited, Chev- August rolet-Oldsmobile. 188¢ ALBERT RANDALL & SON PLUMBING HEATING OIL HEATERS SHEET METAL WORK Phone: MO 8.2991 102-A Byron St. 8. : EVENINGS: MO 8-4224 MO 8.4248 KEN , ALBERT . 15:25) 16:23 18:15 by young eouple,, ST. ANDREW'S PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH St. John and Byron Streets FAITH BAPTIST CHURCH 421 Brock St. North Pastor: Rev. E. Corbett 10 A.M.--Sunday School Hour 11 AM. and 7 P.M. At Both Services Mr. Jim Blackwood of Bowmanville Youth for Christ Director -- Visitors -Very Welcome-- 11 AM. Morning Worship The United Church Congregation . will worship in St. Andrew's. Class for small children during service, PLAYING day. MO 8-3061 MO 8-4001 h. Heated. per month. Abstainers. Phone MO 186a ------ RPh 86; . T CAR FOR SALE---'51 PONTIAC DELUXE pe o------------ 5 ¥ OWN or WHITBY Sedan. Spotless, inside and out. Can be FOR SALE -- SOD, FRESH CUT, 20¢! , i 3 financed. No reasonable offer refused. sq. yd. delivered. W. Ward, MO 8-2563, | Phone MO 8.3920 184c | Whitby. Sept.3| : THIRD INSTALMENT DUE WEDNESDAY, AUG. 15th, 1956 The first and second instalments MUST BE PAID before the third will be accepted. MO 8-3051 | If you have been looking for the better type, well-built older home, we feel we have it in this two-storey, brick house with hot water, oil heat, hardwood floors, large rooms and spacious reception hall. Well located on Athol Street on an 80' x 136' lot. Many extras which must be seen to be appreciated. Contact BOWMAN & GIBSON REAL ESTATE and INSURANCE WHITBY PHONE MO 8-3521 1860] at 18:15 with a goal by John Trann,| through with fine efforts. Jerry (D. Cragg, Burrows) .... . WORK WANTED -- SATURDAY WORK 18:43. The first period ended with The Brooklin attack was notice- 9 Brooklin -- McKinney the Merchants on top 6-3 after a ably affected by the absence of (Cook) 18:43|large lot. Fruit and flowers. Clear. Ex. '3bor. Phone Ajax 738J or write Box 230 tras for fair cash paymént. Barn. Terms. 'Jax. 183¢ As the checking by both teams| goals and played well with Slublng) (2, Mitchell, Archibald. A 00! tiniencd up, goal production fell|and Mitchell coming throug! Second Period or lee suis, 108 Ford Truck Panel. {no children. Write Gordon Gettins, Cae. bs TM s7a | 9873, Ontario. 185¢ FRES (McKinney) :30|livered anywhere, complete landscaping; |Apply 116 St. Peter Street, Whitby. 185¢ Penalties: Robson, Branton, Clu.|alse well rotted manure and black loam. n R (0) C HOME INSULATION, BLOWING | : tic tanks installed and cleaned. F' . Pl MO 8-2563. Phone 8-3618 | 12. Brooklin -- Catuegle outimates, Don. Ferris, 639 Brock North, ¥. Phone | Penalties: Mitchell, Burrows, 8. ELEVEN ROOMS, MODERN BUNGA. EVENING SHOWS AT 7:00 - 9:00 P.M. | Jeans. Sin» ho 3 ust, Ei ' floor; two apartments, one two room, Officials: Louis Vipond, Geo: Oe ey zea mall, and a four rom 16 basement Bupaiaie Burroughs. summer sale price $2.70. Mercantile on hoo i WR BB tile Apply 231 Palace Street, Whitby. 184d FOR RENT -- FURNISHED SLEEPING gasoline. Ask for your Appreciation Harry Donald Limited, m hou 100} HAIRDRESSING woman. Hall day. Wednesday or Fei |ja © YAP ME Beauty Clinic mr ecg oe ~---- | WEST. WANTED TO RENT IN WHITBY, Ap, LEGAL Phone MO 8.3851 after 5 p.m 184c Couples only. Greer. & Kelly 8.2284. Whitby MO 8.2888 MUSIC STUDIO INSURANCE A. J. Schotz MO 8.3337 and only 28 seconds later, John|Ravary and Eric Branton played 8 Whitby -- J. Trann HOUSE FOR SALE--ONLY $9,800. Six Wanted in Whitby or Oshawa. Man with fast and furious high-scoring open-| Harold Gwynn, but in spite of this| Peanliies: D. Vipond (10 min. |3 Victoria, Whitby, 1878 WANTED and the second saw only two|good defensive efforts |* 10. Whitby -- B. Gibson .... 3:%7| WORK RIENCED | bi tend |Phone MO 8-2587 Aug. 21 A | hine, Moore, D. Vipond, Ol L ug othod. Free estimates. 86) Phone MO 8-2961. Aug.27 (Robson) 18:02 low, with 3 apartments, five rooms, SATURDAY MATINEE AT 1:30 medium and large. Ideal for summer meters, etc. On good ci r good BUSINESS AND FREE PACKAGE POPULAR BRAND Hom FT od oaniny Day coupon. Chevrolet - Oldsmobile, 182 WANTED TO RENT -- FIVE OR SIX Phone MO 82071, Port Whithy. DENTIST house, bathroom and furnace, by Septem- CHIROPRACTIC LE -- Jo-Anne Strowger, MO 8-373) RA 5-8461. Ajox 1383 BUILDING i DISQUALIFIED BY TENDER YEARS NOVELTY PAYNOW ~~~ AVOID 6% INTEREST | Disqualified after winning the | had t» return the prize after ' | Lytham, England. seaside resort | judges who placed her in first ersonality prize was pretty | place discoverer n 1 14 ia Young. The 'young ladyl year-old and still at school. McKinney got Brooklin's third at|wel! on the rear-guard. (Archibald) rooms, bath. Clean. Conveniences. Extra. |clerical experience for clerical work or ing frame. the Meadowcrests managed five misconduct) D. Cragg, R. Cragg FOR SALE -- ONE COCA-COLA COOL |3e0 monthly. Required goals, One for each team. Brian! Thursday night's game was the Choma sna iises --- WANTED -- EXPE | 11. Brooklin -- D. Vipond 130 H CUT FERTILIZED SOD, DEL-|Dutch girl desires housework in Whitby. m WHITBY Third Period WELLS DUG AND DEEPENED. SEP-|cleaned the sanitary way. Walter Ward a sarees ' MEN'S COWBOY KING BLUE DENIM . > | Vipond, Gibson, Sutherland. 5 yr ce eS {three badwoms, 4 sonveniances, usin cottages, in the car or boat. Special(jocation in Whitby. 34, cigarettes with every $3 purchase of Continuous hot water. 821 Dundas West. PROFESSIONAL 5] FEMALE WELP WANTED--CLEANING | Aja i APS oir. enter Ages 185¢ 184c STORE FOR RENT DUNDAS STREET John B. Davies ber 1st, with option of buying later. Rooms and Roy M. Howe, D.C. REAL ESTATE, GENERAL CALL NOW MO 8-3731 F. N. McEWEN, Tex Collector.

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy