THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE, Friday, August 31, W358 § Lower Cost Housing i Big Need In Canada "Frankly," he continued, *on| A % | A plea for lower cost housing] . i | was yesterday made by the Sec-|/seeing this province again, it! i retary of the Board of Evangelism seemed that many of its fields| of the United Church of Canada. were weedy, its agricultural 'life Dr. J. R. Mutchmor, reporting to was poorly organized and its total 'the Ninth Conference on Evan- product was not nearly as large gelism at the Ontario Ladies' Col-| as it should be." ; lege, cited low-cost housing avail- PROGRESS IN HOUSING 3 able in Great Britain and said "We are not coming within miles that it is not fair to young couples of what they are doing in the Unit- in Canada that they should have ed Kingdom towards supplying to saddle themselves with highinew houses. I know men there mortgages to get a roof over their who rent a lovely seven-room heads. house for as little as $36 per He said he had been impressed month." : by the tremendous recovery made "But we can't go on selling farms by England following the last war, for a half-million dollars and build Food production, he said, had been cheap houses. People here cannot doubled and now nearly 60 percent pay the rents. It is not right that - of the country's requirements are young people should have to put | produced at home, a high mortgage around their "The United Kingdom," he said, necks to get a roof over their PURCHASE NEW AMBULANCE "presented a beautiful picture of heads." : 3 | green fields, ripening crops, large| The churches, he said, are not Y Since W. C. Town started the | a far cry from the 1928 Buick | UHROSt COMMA, Jeature of 'herds of cattle and many flocks keeping pace with the. housine. i vice i . hi i | 5 i jon was in| They do not have suc first ambulanee service in Whit ¢ wits Wich the fifin started The that when the siren, and blinker, |of Sheep os mpressio ing re- hi md programs as the Unitec : by, in 1928, many people have | firm has purchased an ambi- | gre in action, the tail lights, and | ceived on his return to Ontario." Church now has here. in owed their lives to the prompt, | lance which is the last word in | sich od direction lights, also blink on - efficient service rendered by | speed, efficiency, and comfort Ww id . Id ] Ki Of Whi b oodring ldeal King itby Forvewl TRTRESTEL RRL TTYL ER > R18 .2wmt and ofi, to give additional warn- himself, and by his sons, Jack, | for the patient, A Ford, equip- | ing to other road users. Town's # and Harry. Parked outside the | ped with a "Thunderbird" motor, bi maintain thers Sumer veh- a oh i i i y anc vilit- | icle, as a second ambulance. = - W. C. Town and Sons premises | their new ambulance has faci 1 . : . b vesterday, was a vehicle that is ies for carrying two patients, in --Robertson, Whitby S unior uernsey ampion u ; ¥ a ---- epi m---- emi m------ ------rm------------ | : TORONTO (CP)--Cattle cham-| Junior champion bull--Woodrin; A A ; | pionships decided at the Cana-/Ideal King, Ralph and Mina Par- (vy ad i er 1 10T O I | 108 ere dian National Exhibition Thurs- ker,-Whitby; reserve junior cham- Ax -0 : ( day: pion bull -- Fraserdale Jeweller, ~ w w Holsteins: Grand champion bull Jack Fraser, Concord, Ont. 3 --Trailynd Royal Prince, Fred Jerseys: Grand champion bull-- 1t rass an TO Schomocker, Copetown, Ont.; re- Brampton B. P. Servant, R. Sten| 3 | serve grand champion bull--Ro-|ger Son, Enniskillen, Ont.: reserve| € safe Sovereign Supreme, Sheffield grand champion bull -- Brampton By J. H. ORMISTON |comments would be made on the citizens of Whitby can be proud Farms, St. George Ont., and Hec-+Sir-- Radar, H. Butcher and Son, DOWTY PIPE BAND IS CREDIT TO COMMUNITY The Dowty Pipe Band has the = trained musical group, full of en- | Roy Tavenor. Bob Kitchener, | O'Neil, John Kellatt, Pipe Sergt. J N t me Fs ~ ol istincti i first band | thusiasm and entirely self sup- Tom Westerman. Second v John P tt Back v nother championship has been|work of the bands. of it. : tor I. Astengo, Brampton. - Princefon, Ont. : distinction of being the J i i I 3 o row, | J eattie ac row, added to the isi Bo which| A WONDERFUL RECORD It is recalled that the Whitby Junior champion bull--Walhill _Ayrshires: Grand chmpion bull of its kind in the town Formed porting, Uniforms, equipment ' from left: Bobby Tait, Don Johannes Vorvis, Harold David- in the past year or two have Of the band of 29, only three had Citizens' Band in 1931 won top Prince, A. S. C. Cheyne, Bruce --Selwood Cora's Burton, Stansell two years ago, BhdoF Je direc and Insrurments ey Yaed is Turner, Bill Skelton. Third row: = son, John .McNevin, Dave Me- brought high honor and valuable previously taken part in musical Place at the Canadian National Beer and Fradol Farms, Bramp- Brothers, Aylmer, Ont. Reserve tion of Pipe Major Bob Dunbar, | over $4,000. From left, front: | Pipe Major Bob Dunbar. Les Intyre, and Clifford Lunn. Exhibition music day competitions. ton. reserve junior champion bull grand champion bull -- Clearvale th: band has now become a well The bandmaster at that time was/--Beckshaven Ray Apple Souvenir Dusky George. D. Ramer and Son, ™ PRE ER publicity to the Town of Whitby. At the annual band competition dympetitions--truly a wonderful record for a band in existence not Cecil Turner, Dave Davidson, Carrigan, John Draine, Gerald --Photo by John Mills |children," said realtor Leslie Kel- {low, deadpan, "since it's located Musi ves t the . , Jack Broadbent, bandmaster of the Floyd Becher, Avr, Ont. | Richmond Hill, Ont. ! . vith a real estate firm "f oN ue Oy ery much nore than 2 ¥ ear. Ontario Regiment Band, and under Guernseys: Grand champion. Junior champion female--Dun- Oregon Finds }sale." state firm as or i sponsored by the Canadian Band- A FURTHER HONOR he whom Bandmaster Clarke played bull--Brooknill D. R. Defender, veen Snowdraft, A. Suheriand, "This would be an ideal house 2 ter's Association, Whitby| For a member of the band there 4", gjed, {Henry Borden, King. Ont.: reserve Paris, Ont.: reserve junior cham- i PM Ruy la masts Band under the baton of Was 2 further honor in store.|"myo hand' yesterday took along| grand champion bull--McDonald pion female--Dolly Dale Dusky Farmer Owns a Teunis Bax was awarded a gold Kingfield Penny, E. Bompas, Bell's Corners, medal for being the best euphon- 29 members, and two ultra smart Farms Fore Robin, [ont Bandmaster Eric Clarke, won first | 1 and very lovely majorettes, Shir-| Farms, King. prize in section 11 for all brass By GRACE MILLS boro, called on Mr. and Mrs. John | ; : Z " ile = {on the longest dead-end street on wie | ium player in his class, and it was } 3 Mr. and Mrs. Bob Kerton spent/Mills on Thursday. | of ! bands. In this class with Whitby an honor well merited, The medal Jey Cormack Zit and Helen |the weekend in" London. Nancy,| Mrs. Cliff Mills, Lois and pavid| 1ece 0a | the west coast diner W. C | were the brass bands of Midland was presented to him, incident- F urency, o Os awa. A who spent part of her vacation Beech street, who have spent the rE ate highway engineer . and Orillia, the Metropolitan Jun- bv Mavor Harry W. :Jermvn The Whitby Brass Band during there, returned with them. Boss past five weeks visiting in Alberta | MEDFORD, Ore. (AP)--A 16- Williams said he guesses the state i Band, of Toronto, and the ally, b; a Harry 7 its short existence has raised over 3 c oS] Bl é «Mille: | foot strip of highly strategic land Will have to go to court. ior Band, , at the reception tendered the band ¢¢ no0'wholly th I cro of and Shirley Kerton spent ten days arrived home today. Mrs Mills'|foot strip ghly strategic lan eve ha ors Perth-Waterloo 100 Regiment Band © © 0 oooh 0 3 wholly throug e efiorts o with an aunt in Verdun, Quebec. |sister, Miss Joan Chapman, of --Tight across busy U.S. Highway from Stratford All contestants played the test piece, the overture, its members, to purchase new in- J Two Ajax ladies suffered similar Bonnyville, Alberta, accompanied 99--Was offered for sale Thursday | Film Board Spokesman struments and other requirements i CAME AS SURPRISE accidents, within a few days of them back for an extended stay in|DY its owners, much to the dis- "Golden Star, by J. A. Greenwood,| While hopes were high before of the organization. This consti. each other. Mrs. N. Koch, Raose- Ajax. comfiture of the state highway de- Wants His Product Used a stirring composition, and, to say the band mounted the competition| tutes a very fine achievement and| velt Ave., was visiting her daugh-| Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Manktelow Partment, MONTREAL (CP) -- Pierre the least, not too easy to play. bandstand that Whitby would come should give impetus to local in- ter and son-in-law, Dr. and Mrs. spent thein vacation motoring in| Some 10 years ago the depart-| Juneau Lary Phe Noe HOW THE BANDS PLACED some place in the money, few if terest and the need for further Scott Russell, in Kenora, recently, the eastern 5tates, returning by ment had somehow forgotten to| Film Board Thursday called for * Whitby received 172 points; any were optimistic enough, even funds if the band is to be main- {when she broke an ankle in two way of New Brunswick, where | acquire the strip. Its memory was | greater collaboration 'between the Orillia 170; Midland 169%: Metro- the bandmaster himself, that' first tained, and the junior band, now places, and splintered a bone in they visited their son, Corporal|jogged rudely when the Stumbo | provinces and the board to help politan 157 and Perth-Waterloo place would be awarded by the a reality, become as efficient and her heel. This will mean an extend-| Gordon Manktelow, and family, family fenced it off and proposed !increase the use of Canadian doc- 154%. For many weeks the local Whitby band had been practising the composition, and if, as is said, practice makes perfect, the result was close to perfection. The Board of distinguished adjudica- tors, Captain W. T. Atkins, LRAM., Toronto; Flight Lieutenant C. O. Hunt, C.D., Toronto, and Mr. P. C. Allan, LCBA., Windsor announced that owing to the lateness of the hour and inclement weather no adjudicators. However, this writ- er heard many favorable comments after the band had been heard, and it is no secret that some mem- bers of other bands in other com- petitions, felt that Whitby had an excellent chance for top honors. Members of the four bands who lost to Whitby were quick to add famous as the seniors. The suggestion made by Mayor P* Harry Jermyn last night that the band should be provided with a ! bandstand, will, we feel receive ; popular support. The presenta- tion of a cheque for $50 by Presi dent William Davidson of Whitby Chamber of Commerce their congratulations It was a was a gesture which should give nice gesture, indeed. both the band and its supporters In a word it can be said that the encouragement. On Way To Hong Kong. Whiby Man Dies In Crash |. ce ma A Whitby businessman for 28 {staged in Canada. It was to be years, Lee Chee, 60, 1s reported to = part of the program for the CNE have been one of the passengers & #4 'Women's Day. ed visit of several weeks, until she stationed in Fredericton. |is able to make the journey homa| Sgt. W. O. Manktelow and fam- by train. Mrs. Russell will accom- ily, Kingston, were recent visitors pany her mother to Ajax. {with his parents, Mr. and Mrs.| Mrs. Gordon Adams, Windser| William Manktelow, and former Ave., walked across the room to{neighbors in Ajax. | the radio, and on returning to her| Miss Evelyn Henderson, Hali- chair, collapsed on the floor, suf- burton, is visiting her sister and fering a spiral fracture of the leg.|family, Mr. and Mrs. Ron Parish Mrs. Adams is in the Ajax Hos- Mary St. pital, where she will have to stav| Little Lorraine Cassan is making {for the next three weeks. The in- good progress following an eye fi | jured limb will have to be suppoit- operation in the Hospital for Sick led Dy a cast for the next four| Children, Toronto, recently. months. | Sincere condolences are extend- | Sorry to report too, that little | ed to the family of Mr. William J | PAPERS . loopy McLelland, Woodhouse| Pears, who passed away a woek | rescent, is in the Ajax Hospital ago. Mr. Pears had been stayin being treated for pneumonia. {at the home of his daughter, Mrs | IN AJAX | There was a good representation Jack MacKay, Windsor Ave. |from Ajax at the Ontario Munic-| Two enthusiastic boatmen of our , | levying tolls on passing cars. After much official scurrying around, the department conceded the Stumbos' ownership and opened negotiations. .On Wednes-| day the agency offered $100 plus| interest since 1946. That didn't appeal to the Stum- bos, and they listed their property FOR MISSED umentary films in schools. He told a Richelieu Club meeting ° that most of the films shown in Cana- dian schools come from the United States. Don't Forget To £ NOTIFY YOUR CARRIER 'Rain Postpones 'Big Fashion Show TORONTO (CP)--Rain Thurs- wo OME ipal Association Convention, held [town Lave returned from a cruise ne in Windsor this week Included up to the Georgian Bay. These 333 Before You Leave were the Mayor, Kenneth Smith, two, Alf Adams and Gordon Gil- Reeve John Mills, Deputy Reeve|christ, not only operate, but build GREEK SOLDIERS HAPPY TO BE | who died in the crash of an air- liner yesterday off the coast of Alaska. Also reported to have died in the crash was his 25-year- old son, Lee Vah, of Toronto. For § the past 28 years, Lee Chee was a partner with Lee Tow in a laundry business on Brock stree! south. Lee Tow yesterday said that Lee Chee had left Whitby on Sunday for Vancouver on the first leg of his journey back to his home in Hong Kong. Accompanying his father was Lee Vah. The two boarded the airliner at Vancouver. Fifteen. persons are reported to have died in the crash. Lee Chee came to Canada from his native China in 1915 and took his first job in Stratford. In the following years, he worked in other Ontario centres including Cobourg. ¥ He came to Whitby 28 years ago _ to join Lee Tow as a partner in the Lee Tow laundry Last autumn, Lee Chee became LEE CHEE | DEALER Pho AJAX | Twenty-six separate fashion Roger Conant, Clerk Treasurer! their own cabin cruisers. They also On Holiday shows were to have been com-| Held by Albania as prisoners war in 1948 and 1949, 246 officers |Bolton Falby and Councillors Mrs, belong : » | bined into an hour-long display ar- of war for more than eight years and men were repatriated (Mary Reid, R. D. Thomps: pi belong Be De Fresthmans Bay/ It you have not received your A i to cations ond ranged by women's activities man- these Greek soldiers are even following - talks between the |W, Laycock. The delegates were in the aquatic events at the CNE. | Times-Gazette by 7 P.M., Coll 'apers si anion. dea): ager Elsa Jenkins. kissing the soil of their home- Greek ambassador in Moscow accompanied by their wives, and Nal an are Aunts | . p Mrs. Jenkins said the shows are! land following their arrival at and Albanian representatives. (Mr. Jack Reid. Some six hundred AJAX TAXI m to avoid having your paper given daily in different sections of two buildings but 'we haven't a Piraeus, port of Athens. Taken prisoners during the Greek Civil Repatriation was arranged by ; | delegates and their wives were en- the International Red Cross tertained at a luncheon at the love- PICKERING All calls must be placed before in advance of your holiday dates. 7:30 P.M. I | left over by notifying them well hall large enough for the huge, - ly Rendezvous Restaurant, on combined show we had Jlansed - . mn 1) |Riverside Drive, on Tuesday. Fol- PERSONALS a The show now may be given {lowing the lunch, Greyhound buses ER Saturday. An audience of 5,000 Canadian National Ex | took the ladies across the Ambas. | women was expected. Times Refuses | €atures Big Water Show : Mrs. Cyril Morley Miss Joyce |sador Bridge to Detroit, and then| ike Y yoo out to Greenfield Village, Dear-| 20d, Miss Lynda Morley accom. | born, where Henry Ford was born, | Lanied Mr Morley on his Ii tof In the evening, the delegates and ihe oma Convention in Windsor | {their wives were guests of the City 5 Weer ATTENTION on the| Tuesday for part of the conven- tion. Mr. and Mrs. James Pal ner veather | and daughter, Kathy, accompanied " Ah : .,of Windsor. and surrounding], TOWnship Councillor Mrs. Jean 3 . TORONTO (CP)--A mined ang Te told a CNE directors' lunch municipalities, at a banquet esp McPherson flew to Windsor on| CLOVER LANE 3 L To Advertise exploding ship, frogmen, a naval eon: {famous Elmwood Casino, 3 review and other aquatic extrava- "No more should the dreadful|outskirts of the city. This was fol- ganzas are the features of Lake phrase 'Not bad for a Canadian' lowed by a floor-show and dancing. Fair Day at the Canadian Na- be applied to work by Canadian| For those who like their At 8:30 a.m. bus leaves corner at Harwood "Ave. and No. 2 Highway, goes north to 3rd Concession, along the 3rd and down For Suez Pilots | tional Exhibition today. artists." hia go to oriqe It was > aa Mrs. Charles Palmer | the Town Line, arrives at Almond's School at 8:50 o.m. Bus LONDON (Reuters)--The Lon-| ; i y He said: 0 95 degrees all four days of|0 hitby, have been spending ' : 4 East School 8:50 ii t i For the first time the CNE is the convention. their vacation at Paudash Lake leaves Almond's for Noi 4 East School at 8:30 .a.m., eriving of don Times has refused to publish presenting a 10-hour water show "The Stratford Shakespearean npr. ; 8:55. Bus leaves No. 4 East aot 8:55 a.m. arriving at Clover Lane at 9:10 a.m. an Egyptian government adver- ; - A and Mrs. W. Laycock left near Bancroft. tisement seeking pilots for the with events such as canoe races, Festival was an object lesson. Windsor following the convention i uSoneraiilations to Mr. and Mrs. obert Bernard Bird, nee June! Mr. and Mrs. Ron Daly, Scar- Bryant, on their recent marriage. in Stratford asked to be judged by for a further few days in Chicago. international critics from New under- york and Britain--all Canadian |water displays and, of course, arts ow are ready for such criti-| ill and a few weeks ago decided seven years ago and on that trip, Suez Canal, a spokesman for the log rolling, comedy diving, to return home to Hong Kong for his son, Lee Vah, had returned to DeWspaper said early today. The poarq and outboard races, his remaining days. Lee Tow pur- Canada with him. He took a job advertisement, similar to those chased his partner's share in the in Toronto but was accompanying Published in the United States and : ; * * | business his father back home because of, Europe, was sent to leading na-|water skiing. ois. { / Lee Chee had visited Hong Kong his poor health. tional newspapers Thursday by WILL PEEL OFF | "We should not tolerate any, : | ra---- -- --- it [the Egyptian Embassy. | The blazing-ship spectacle will More the excuse that we're a Ld | The Daily Telegraph said today: young country. Canada has shown be be part of the firework display that it can produce world-standard which will end the day-long activ- artistic achievements. From now on we should aim at nothing but the best." FOR MISSED PAPERS "No London newspaper has yet jaccepted it. The advertisement has not been offered to The Daily ities on the waterfront. Telegraph, which in any case Royal Canadian Navy frogmen would not accept it. will peel off from a launch at high In N orld Today - Dr. Berry The News Chronicle reported to- speed and the only square-rigged : day that The Times had rejected brigantine on the Great Lakes, Catholic Church. would the advertisement because it . 5 begin an evangelistic mission with does not consider the Egyptian HMCS Calaraqui ML take Part ip the aim of converting the nation Bovernment is in a position so to @ review of about 300 ships. as a nation. advertise." Today is also Press and Adver- Ditticult To Be Christian "DO IT YOURSELF!" | AT COTTAGE AT HOME "It is psychologically impossible Roman for people not to compromise with their religion in this world we live in," members of a conference on we live in,".he said, "it is almost 235, OF F terol ds." impossible to be a Christian. We Vertisement on legal grounds. have been sending the redeemed - into an unredeemed world.' . "Today," he said, "we ask Freezing Of Food To Reduce Prices | evangelism were told in Whitby The weakness in evangelism, he The Daily Mail said: "The tising Day at the "Ex". IN BOWMANVILLE } yesterday. in announcing a Nation- caid, was not in getting people to Egyptian Embassy chose its news- Attendances have been ad- TAGE OF THESE SPECIALS: al Evangelistic Mission to begin accept Jesus Christ but getting Papers carefully and excluded The versely affected by rain during Phone : this autumn, Dr. W. G. Berry, people fo follow through with their Daily Mail. Last night it appeared the last three gays. SHo¥ ers chairman, told the United Church beliefs. "With the kind of world they had been sent to only three-- Thursday discouraged visi MA 3-5561 . Conference of Evangelism in the one paper refused the ad-(tors, who totalled 183,500 for the . - - - 4 day--compared with 205,000 year. Total attendance so far has been 1%154,000 against 2,809,500 in 1955. Thursday was Women, Floral, Music and Arts Day. Alan Jarvis, director of the Na- tional Gallery of Canada, said' Ontario Ladies' College yesterday = that it is almost impossible to be a Christian in the world of today. _ He said that the United Church, in co-operation with other Protest- and churches and possibly the Mystery Blast If you have not received your Times - Gazette by 7 p.m., call KING TAXI All calls must be placed RUBBER MATS -- COCO-MATTING SPECIAL SHIPMENT people to be Christian and tomor- row we ask them to drop an atom bomb. One of the principle hor- rors of war is that man is asked BARRIE (CP)--The cheapness Canada is ready to take its place before 7:30 a J = Sah E 3 > its : .m by society fo do horrible things or frozen foods will make today's in the world of arts as a mature pm: CHROME BATHROOM FIXTURES i . and live after. Some ask how can Neae 4 1 it n country. : f 1 S Seaman you be a Christian lawyer, or a delicac les commonp'ace tems o a I LL Sey 'A' GAUGE LIN ¥ i worker in a smelter, or a Jumber tomorrow's tables, a horticulture . J . LONDON (APy--An unexplained camp worker?' professor from the. Ontario Agri- PLAS i a explosion killed one crew mem He said that the aim of this cultural College said Thursday. vo T C WALL TILES | : | ber and injured several others new mission was to begin on a Professor E. W. Franklin, speak- i ghoard ie 28 000 ton luxury liner national scale. with every minister ing to a service club on develop ! alaya as il entered the Med- in every church 'taking part snts in. food handl said th iterranean, the Peninsular + and start would be made in the politic- mens : oe ang ng. 3a) ' . Oriental offices here said today. Scepfregze Will he found In every arties gover ent K 3 None of the 1.000 passengers al parti a. Kichey aboard the liner were hurt. The Himalaya left England Monday on its regular run to Australia. A company spokesman said the explosion occurred near a store- room, but did not affect operation of the ship i KILLER CONTACTS Diphtheria. is an infectious and often fatal disease that may be - EFFECTIVE SEPTEMBER 4, 1956 Effecting Uxbridge Division ONLY -- Service reduced to FRIDAY'S ONLY -- Leaving Oshawa at 9 A.M. ar- riving in Uxbridge at 10:10 A.M. Leaving 'Uxbridge cHO FROM $2.00 PER SQUARE YARD jot 11 A.M. arriving in Oshawa at 12:10. Returning | from Oshawa at 5:15 P.M. arriving in Uxbridge at I g 6:25 P.M. Leaving Uxbridge 6:30 P.M. arriving in | ¥ : Port Perry 6:55 P.M. 1 Rate on R Fares Discontinued. Single " . Mini din on 15¢. Children 106. Nee nal lores Only Boi " n " (CE of IN @ AJAX HIGH SCHOOL ,SCHOOL OPENS WED., SEPT. 5th All Grade IX, X, XI students living in Ajax, Pickering Beach, ond Heron Park will attend Ajax High School. contracted through contact th Grade Xi, xi and Special Commercial Students will ettend patients who have fhe act i Pickering. High School. by onset Oth people who sre Pickering District High School Board rs of t rms. but who are er ne are | ps CLARINGBOLD, A. ROSS IRWIN, . se PHONE OPEN § tion is the test naling or Chairman. Business Administrator, Fred DeNure Bus Lines Limited 81 SIMCOE ST. N. FRIDAY tecting children agaiast the dis Sect. Treas. PORT PERRY PHONE 251 RA 3-7641 OSHAWA - J } Renn EVENINGS