OTT a CLASSIFIED ADS. MITER AE A Cy YT a Sx oY 28 TH LN BN A J a THE OSHAWA DAILY TIMES, MONDAY, JULY 22, 1940 AR HE Sw/ aww - PAGE SEVEM [2 SK 7: § SN Fh mK of Auditors DSCAR HUDSON AND COM- Chartered Accountants AT HUDSON AND COM- Liquidators Articles for Sale GENERAL PURPOSE TRAILER. Reasonable. Orville Rehme, Colum- bus, RR. 1. (142¢) FIFTY FEET GARDEN HOSE; lawn mower, sixteen inch, nearly new. --Half price. Apply 281 Simcoe south, evenings. (142¢) TTERIES CHARGED 75¢. WITH eA $100 Called for and de. livered. Stan Bligdun. 30 Mil St Phone 960 Dental DR 8. J. PHILLIPS OVER BAS- set's. Special attentiol to X-ray work. Gas extraction Nurse In attenciance. Phone 950 House 1312 DR. RE COX, DENTAL SUR- geah, 9 Simcoe N. Phone 333 Hours nine-twelve, one--five-thirty, evenings by appointment. (11Aug.c) DR. C. L. KELL, DENTIST, 26 Simcoe North, X-Ray. Phone 1316. Residence 1462W. (28Julye) Hardwood Floors B. W. HAYNES, BUILDER, Hardwood floors laid, sanded, finished by experts Latest equip- ment. Phone for prices. 199 Nas- sau street, @n Insurance PEACOCK'S INSURANCE SER- vice. Consult us for any of your Insuranee needs. Successors to G L. Nolan, 22% King Street East Phone 2686, residence 148 J. C. YOUNG, GENERAL INSUR- ance. Office phone 793, residence phone 2805. {% Prince Street. Legal A W. 8. GREER, BARRISTHR. SoMcitor, etc, 6 King Street East. 60. Residence 3514. Resi- rister, Solicitor, Notary. loan. 11 King 8. East. Phone 282. Residence 3071J. A 'J. PARKHILL, BARRISTER, etc. Mortgage losns 5% %, Nation- a) Housing Act, 5%. 32¢ Simcoe St. North. (1Aug.c) RIERSON, CREIGHTON AND oi Bank ot) Commerce Building. CONANT AND ANNIS, BARRIS- ters, 7% Simcoe St. 8, Oshawa Phone 4. Allin F. Annis, BA, LLB. Emest Marks, B.A. R. D. HUMPHREYS, BARRISTER, So.citor, etc, 24% Simcoe North. Phone office 814; residence 3297. Monéy to loan. JOSEPH P. MANGAN, KC. BAR- rister, Solicitor. Office 14% King St. East, Oshawa. Phone #45, Residence phone 837. W. E. N. SINCLAIR, BA. LLB, KC, and J. C. Anderson, K.C. Barristers, etc. Bank of Montreal Building, 20 Simcoe St. North Phone 99. . Undertaking MEAGHER'S FUNERAL HOME. Prompt day and night service. FP. J. Meagher, Manager, 8, J. Strow- ger, Funeral Director. 117 King St. E. Phone 907. (17Aug.c) M. FP. ARMBTRONG AND SON, proprietors Oshawa Burial Co. Funeral and Ambulance Service. Day and night. Phone 2700. 124 King East. LUKE BURIAL CO. 67 KING ST East. Ambulance. Residence 60 King St. E. Phone 210. Cartage MOVING AND DUMP IRUCKS. sand cinders, wood, coal, etc. 70 Colburne Street West. Phone 605 (13Aug.c)_ Mortgages MONEY TO LOAN ON OSHAWA or other property. Mortgages now in force purchased. H. C. Higgin- botham. 19 Ontario St. Phone 328 (28Julye) GOOD CLEANED USED BRICK. Apply Crowell's Service Station, Bond St. E. (140c) CASH OR CREDIT Oilstoves, lawn movers, ice boxes, dining and breakfast suites, ward- robes, kitchen cabinets, desks, dressers, porcelain tables, carpets, also summer cottage furniture and boat. BRADLEY'S FURNITURE STORE, 140 Simcoe South. (4Aug.c) USED JOHNSON OUTBOARD motors. Ontario Motor Sales, Phone 900. (22Aug.c) SAVE ON PAINT AND WALL- paper at Nelson's, 14 Bond St. West. Phone 841. Free estimates on house decorating. (26Julyc) VENETIAN BLINDS, AWNINGS. Estimates furnished without obliga- tion. George Reid. Phone 2104, 66 Bond West. (8Auge) LINOLEUM AND CONGOLEUM rugs. Select yours from over 300 patterns actually in stock. You are invited to view these at BRADLEY'S Furniture Store, 140 Simcoe South. (22Aug.c) GASOLINE STOVE AND LAMP, ice box, bathroom closet, basin and sink, lawn mower, verandah awn- ings, fireplace and screen, oil stove. 140 Simcoe South. (140c) Be wise and advertise. present to save on the bargains and values listed on this There is no time like the | | For Rent Financial 7 ROOM BRICK, HOT WATER heating, good furnace, hardwood floors downstairs, large double liv- ing room. Drew St, $35. Phone 120. (1420) BRADLEY'S BEDDING SHOP, special opening offer, everything in bedding, inner spring mattresses, studio couches, cribs, complete, dropside couches beds, tubular steel cots, dropback day couches, angle iron, high riser, and all blade bed sptings." Bradley's. 140 Simcoe South, (6Aug.c) Work Wanted PLASTERING, STUCCO AND General repairs. Phone 1412M. (16Aug.c) Roofing STORE IN WHITBY, NEAR FOUR corners, will alter to suit any busi- ness. Reasonable. Box 571 Whitby. (141c) OFFICE BPACE FOR RENT IN the Bradley Block, hot water heat- ing, hardwood floors, nicely decor- ated, well lighted. Bradley Bros. - (4Aug.c) ROOMS BY DAY OR WEEK; furnished or unfurnished light house-keeping rooms. 207 Simcoe South, betweén 5 and 7. (3Aug.c) BUCKINGHAM MANOR, 4 AND § room apartments, all modern con- veniences. Phone 1718. (®Julytf) ALL KINDS OF ROOFING AND repairing. Estimates free. J. Pigden, 54 William St. East. Phone 3148. (11Aug.c) | Shoe Repairing . LADIES' INVISIBLE HALF-SOLE- ing. All work guaranteed. Call and deliver. Phone 2673R. W. Allison, 9 Athol West. (28Julyc) A COMPLETE SHOE SERVICE, invisible half soling, cleaning, dye- ing, etc. Fast Service, Phone 362. We Call and Deliver. Modern Shoe Repair, Jack Read, 83 Simcoe Street North. (30Julye) Personal MADAM NEVADA, FALMIST. Psychologist, Phrenologist. Hours 11-9. 98 Albert St. (29Julyc) Accounts Collected CENTRAL ONTARIO CREDIT EXCHANGE---"The Home of Col- lections". 3 Simcoe St. South. Accounts collected; Credit reports. Phone 2330. (4Aug.c) SIMCOE MANOR, LOVELY apartment building, 1 4-roomed and 1 5-roomed, newly decorated, everything modern. See caretaker or phone 169. (5Julytf) I's ROOM HOME, KING ST. WEST. September. $40 per month. Apply Box 411 Times. (140¢) VACANT 4 ROOM UPSTAIR flat, 3 piece bath. 17 Lloyd St. $15. Murdoch, 27 Warren. (140c) 3 ROOM FLAT FOR RENT. PRI- vate. All conveniences. Apply 214 Mary St. (140c) 2 LARGE BRIGHT ROOMS, SUIT- able for adults, light housekeeping, use of washer. Apply 28 Bucking- ham. (140c) Real Estate Wanted WOULD LIKE TO BUY SMALL house, 5 or 6 rooms, must be rea- sonable price. Within city limits. Can put $100 down and $20 month- ly. Box 400 Times. (140c) Summer Resorts Room and Board ROOM AND BOARD FOR GEN- tlemen. Nice locality. Every con- venience. Central. Phone 1943W. (10Aug.c) BOARDERS WANTED, CENTRAL All conveniences. Phone 2055. (3Aug.c) Pets and Livestock PEDIGREED ENGLISH SPRING- er Spaniel Puppies. Best blood line available. Extellent hunting or companion dog. Show and field prospect. Apply K. Sands, 28 Buck- ingham Ave. Oshawa. (140c) SPEND YOUR VACATION AT Moore's Forest Hill Lodge, located among thé Pines on the sandy shores of Rice Lake, half mile east of Gore's Landing. Good fishing, boats and tennis, etc. Reasonable rates Drive out for fish, chicken or steak dinners. Address Cobourg, R.R. No. 1, Telephone Cold Springs Ex- change. (16Aug.c) Wanted To Buy HIGHEST PRICES PAI' FOR iron, metal, rags, mattresses. Phone 635, Cedardale Iron Metals, back C.N.R. Station. (16Aug.c) WE PAY HIGH PRICES FOR rags, scrap metal and iron. 202 Annis. Phone 2423M. (TAugce) Spraying 'PAINT -- WHITE WASH Oshawa Spraying Service. Phone 1855. (3Aug.c) HIGHEST CASH PRICES PAID for good used furniture, oil stoves and dishes, Oollis Trade-in Store, 56 King West. Phone 1030. (3Aug.c) Motor Cars For Sale Expert Watch Repairing F A VON GUNTEN, EXPERT Swiss watchmaker. repair shop at 46 King Street West. Your patron- age solicited. (tH Money To Loan MONEY TO LOAN ON FIRST mortgages on Real Estate. Prompt service. Oshawa Real Estate Co, fl Phone 25, Oshawa. (10Aug.c) Lawn Mowers Sharpened LAWN MOWERS, CALLED FOR and delivered by J. W Minard, 104 Celina Streét. Phone 1048). Work Quaranteed. (28Julye) Lawn Mowers LAWN MOWERS SHARPENED follow ground' for long service 75¢ Werk guaranteed. Parts and re- Pairs. Called for and delivered 35 BUICK, IN LOVELY CONDI- tion. 2609J. (142¢) SNAP BARGAIN! '3 PLYMOUTH sedan. Large tires, heater, mileage 16,000. On sale until Thursday only at $665 cash. G. L. Blodgett, Phone 157, Port Hope. (142¢) 1920 BUICK ROADSTER, RUM- ble seat. Bargain $65. A. F. Cox and Son, 168 King St. West. Phone 660. (140c) 1937 PONTIAC DELUXE SEDAN. Heater. Only gone 32,000 miles. $550. No trade-in. A. F. Cox and Bon, 168 King St. West. Phone 666. (140c) Business Course SHORTHAND, SECRETARIAL, accountancy, comptometer, dicta- phone. Classes commencing Tues- day, September 3. Oshawa Business College, 18 Simcoe North. Phone Office 1314W, residence 399. Blater Brothers, Oshawa. Phone 6l1w, " (2Aug.c) Real Estate For Sale $2160 SOMERVILLE AVE, 5 rooms; $2800, Burke St. 6 rooms; $2600 Warren Ave, 5 rooms; $3500 Frederick St., 7 rooms; $3200 Alice 8t., 6 rooms. Jones, Ten Prince St. (27Julye) $600 FOUR ROOM HOUSE, GIB- bons, one hundred cash, balance fifteen monthly. $1250, SIX ROOMS, BARRIE AVE. JONES, Ten Prince St. (25Julyc) Female Help Wanted A MAID FOR GENERAL HOUSE- work. Apply Mrs. H. A. Newman, Dunbarton. (142b) GIRL TO ASSIST IN CAFETERIA. Prévious experience preferred. Box 415 Times. (142a) Found SUM OF MONEY. OWNER MAY have same by proving property. Nature's. Produce, 54 Simcoe St. . (9Aug.c) North. (142h) WE PURCHASE MORTGAGES and agreements secured by suburb- an and rural property. Phone North Shore Realty Co., 80, Osh- awa. (6Aug.c) RECALL FOUNDING OF PORT IN. C. New Westminster Oldest Municipality in British Columbia New Westminster, B.C., July 22.-- The wheels of municipal govern- ment for this Fraser River port clicked smoothly on Thursday, its machinery, the oldest in British Columbia. Tuesday was the 80th anniver- sary of municipal government in New Westminster, marked without ostentation far different from that gala day when Governor James Douglas granted the ploneer citi zens their request for self govern- ment and the first municipal au- thority in the province was estab- lished, The request came just a year after the port was founded by the gallant band of Royal Engineers under Col. R. C. Moody who hewed a settlement out of the wooded wilderness. On that day, in 1860, British Columbia was six years away from becoming a province. It was not until 1886 that a royal proclamation was issued announcing the union of former colonies of Vancouver Island and British Columbia (for- merly New Caledonia) to be known as British Columbia. Five years later the new prov- ince entered Confederation. Pounded as the proposed capital of the mainland prior to union with Vancouver Island, New Westmin- ster was originally named Queens- borough in honor of Queen Vic- +oria, but she changed the name to New Westminster in 1860. That year saw the first news- paper printed and construction of Holy Trinity Church, first in the settlement. Two years . later the Royal Columbian Hospital was buiit from plans drawn up by the Roya! Engineers. The Legislative Couneil first met at nearby Sapperton Barracks and continued to hold its meetings there until Victoria was named the capi- tal in 1868. In 1898 fire wiped out the wharves, business section and many homes, but the wooden structures were replaced with new and per- Norse Flyers Cheat Death When 300 Gestapo Drowm As Batteries Sink Blucher This is Tale Told by Ad- vance Guard of Escaped Pilots -- will Train Here Toronto. July 22 -- Three hun- dred of the dread Nazi Gestapo-- the German secret police -- drowned in Oslo Fjord the morning that Germany moved in to Norway. That is the reason that hundreds of young Norwegians flying men, fight- ing men, and administrative offi- cers, were able to depart from Oelo. Had the Norwegian shore batteries not sunk the German cruiser Bluch- er as the great 10,000-ton vessel crept into Oslo, every last one of them would have been captured and probably shot. That is the tale told in Toronto by Flight Lieutenants Odd Bull and Olay Stene, of the Royal Norwegian Air Force, They are in Toronto as the advance pilots who will train on American-made aircraft at the Toronto Itland airport, then pro- ceed to England to take their plac- es with Britain's Royal Air Force. Delivering Now vies The Norwegian Government had contracted with United States air- craft manufacturers for $6,000,000 worth of fighting machines prior to Germany's invasion. The machines are just now being delivered, and there is no place in Norway where they can safely be sent. So they are to come to Toronto, and the Norwegian flyers, many of them only recent arrivals in England, will come to Canada to train on them. "We have 40 of the Curtiss P-36 type pursuit planes," said Flight Lieutenant Stene as he looked from his Royal York window over to the Island Airport, where soon the mighty roar of thousand horse- power engines will reverberate. "Then we have 40 of the Douglas single-engine attack bombers. And last, we have 40 of the Northrup seaplanes." "They were to have been used for coastal reconnaissance along the fjords of our country," interjected Flight Lieutenant Bull. "That may be thelr purpose, eventually, but right now we shall use them for training machines." . Drifted North Both Stene and Bull, 29 and 33 years of age, were in Oslo when the Germans came. They waited around for three days, hoping help would come and the Germans would be driven out. Then they saw that was unlikely, so, with hundreds of others, they silently packed their kits and drifted north. Followed over a month of dodging Nazi bomb. ers until eventually they reached the tiny port of Molde, miles south of Narvik, Here they persuaded a Norwegian fisherman to take them across to the Shetland Islands, where they contacted the Royal Air Force and eventually landed at London. They are the advance party of Norwegians. The remainder will arrive in Toronto within the next month, Building of sleeping quar- ters ie to start at the Island airport within two weeks, they said. Advice on Bombs You can tell the difference be- tween a 100-pound bomb and a 20- pound bomb by the noise they say. The former has a Ilower-toned whistle, and it gives you about five seconds to find a hole; the latter is higher pitched, but of course there's still the five =zeconds to find that hole. If you lie flat on the ground, even if there isn't a hole handy, the chances are you won't get hit, If you stand up, and the homb drops anywhere within 80 to 100 yards, you not only are a very fool- ish person, but you're likely to be a dead one very shortly. Bomb fragments -- splinters -- the Norwegians call them, travel at a height of about three feet off the ground. How do you know? Simple, say Lt. Bull and Lt, Stene, Under Trees "We took shelter on many occa- sions, among trees when we fled from Oslo. The Germans would come over and homb the woods. We would simply lie down somewhere till they had gone. Then we would proceed on our way." "But the bomb splinters. about them?" he was asked. "For a hundred yards in any diree tion from where the bomb landed, splinters would be buried in the trunks of the trees. They were hard. ly ever higher than about three feet, and hardly ever lower. So if you stood up, you were taking a very big chance. If you lay down, you were taking practically none." Month 'in Norway Both Flight Lieutenant Stene and Flight Lieutenant Bull spent nearly a month in Norway after the fall of Oslo. They were in the same area with King Haakon, but, "of course, no one except his staff actually knew where he was," they explained. Af. ter g month of dodging Nazi bomb- ers, they finally made their way to a northern port and persuaded a fisherman to take them across to the Shetland Isles, from which point they reached London. About 80 to 100 Norwegians are now in London, waiting to come to Canada to finish their training as fighting pilots, the spokesmen here sald. They will be along sometime late In August. After completing their training, they will return to England to fight alongside pilots of How the Royal Alr Force, " SHORTAGE OF FARM LABOR ACUTE IN PETERBORO AREA Peterboro, July 22 -- Shortage of farm labor in this district can only be described as acute, with scores of farmers unable to obtain help for haying, cultivation and other mid-July farm work, William Mellis, superintendent of the Peterboro branch of the Em- ployment Service of Canada, stated to-day that although he had sent more than 150 men to farms in the district since spring, farmers were still clamoring for men, whom he was unable to supply. This situation prevails despite the fact that the wages being offered are the highest for years. Many farmers are offering from $25 to $35 a month for single men, with no takers. A year ago, a wage of $15 or $20 a month was considered fairly good for this district. This year, according to Mr. Mellls men are waiting for work in fac- tories, while hay crops stand uncut in the fields. One man, he said, turned down an offer of $45 a month for July and August, with a guarantee of $30 a month until the end of November. "That is an almost unheard-of wage for farm work," the super- intendent sald, "but he said that he wanted to work in a factory." Fnlistments in the 4th Anti-Tank Battery, the Stormont, Dundas and Glengarry Highlanders 'and the Hastings and Prince Edward Regl- ment in recent months have also absorbed many of the unemployed, Mr. Mellis added. At the present time, he said, there were only about 300 men listed as unemployed im the district. WOUNDED GIVEN manent buildings of stone and brick masonry, many of which stand as landmarks today. Wooden Indian Is Valued at $1,000 Belleville, July 2.2--The wooden statue of an Indian squaw, which disappeared from its stand at a tourist camp near here, is believed by its owner, Harry Ketcheson, to have turned up st Comp Borden as mascot of soldiers of the Hastings and Prince Edward Regiment, who have just arrived there to undergo training. And Owner Ketcheson wants his statue back. He has placed its velue, actual and sentimental, at $1,000, and police said today that the return of the "squaw" would be negotiated as soon as possible. BIRDS DIVIDE DOUBLE BILL Jersey City, N.J., July 22.--Jersey City and Baltimore divided an Ine ternational League doubleheader Sunday, the Little Giants winning the opener, 6 to 4, and the Orioles the nightcap, 4 to 1. The split kept the Jerseys in the first division, BETTER CHANCE Many Important Changes in Surgery, Medicine, Since First Great War London, July. 32. -- Advances in medical science since the First Great War have assured the wounded a far better chance ot recovery. A quarter of a century has seen new discoveries helping doctors and nurses in their strug- gle against suffering and death. In the last war much more suf- fering was due to illnesses fallow- ing exposure of wounded men rather than to wounds themselves. Pneumonia took heavy toll of pa- tients whose wounds alone would not have proved fatal. Two years 'ago research workers evolved a synthetic chemical popularly known as M and B 603, which proved a powerful weapon against pneu- monia. The technique of blood trans- fusion has been revolutionized. Supplies of blood are available at dressing stations and casualty hos- pitals at and near the fighting zone, ing the First Great War meant weeks of hospital treatment. Dur- ing the Spanish Civil War a Bar- celona doctor, Dr. Tureta, evolved a new treatment. He closed the whole wound and limb in a plaster cast, leaving the body itself to heal the wound, instead of using antisep- tics. In this way recovery from serious wounds was more complete and faster. By 1918 the worst of the war dis- eases caused by dirt of trenches, such as typhus, had been con- quered. « Greater attention to the soldiers food means better general health, which proves its value in making for quicker recovery from wounds. Princess Alice Patroness Of Legion Poppy Fund Ottawa, July 22. -- Her Royal Highness the Princess Alice has ac- cepted the, office as patroness of the Canadian Legion National Pop- py campaign, it has been announc- ed by .J. R. Bowler, MBE, gen- eral secretary of the Legion. The Poppy campaign, which is held annually throughout Ontario, provides funds with which to carry cn the Legion's great humanitarian work among veterans and depend- ents of veterans of the First Great Infection in fractured limbs dur- War. Se OTTAWA HELPS 2 FRENCH ISLES ~ AFTER REQUEST External Affairs Office De- nies Charges Made on St. Pierre, Miquelon Ottawa, July 22.--Contrary to re- ports of a British blockade on the French islands of St. Plerre and Miquelon, the External Affairs De- partment said in a statement Fri day night that only when Canadian co-operation was requested by St. Plerre suthorities to enable them to overcome certain exchange prob- lems, this assistance "was readily accorded." The exchange problems, it was said, arose in connection with ship- ment of codfish cargo to Mariti- nique, where the French High Com- missioner at Fort de France was reported to have charged that Brit- ish authorities have stopped supplies to the French colony at St. Plerre et Miquelon after local authorities there refused to surrender the col- ony's fishing fleet. The Commissioner also was re- ported to have said the British Eco- nomic Mission was using heavy pressure to gain the fleet and also had demanded that the armed fish- ing patrol boat, Ville D'ys, be in- terned and its two cannon delivered to Canadian authorities. "The High Commissioner has evi- dently been misinformed," the Ex- ternal Affairs Department state- ment sald. "Statements attributed to him are completely untrue and the assertion tha. the British (which presumably means Cana- dian) authorities have stopped sup- plies from reaching the islands has no basis in fact. No prohibition o restriction has been placed on ship- ment of supplies to the islands." The department said further that no demand for surrender of the colony's fishing fleet had been made and consequently no refusal has been received. Assertion Seen Absurd "The assertion that the French colonists have now been reduced to the choice of eating fresh or salted codfish is equally absurd." Soon after the defeat of France, it was said, various financial and economic difficulties with which | the islanders were faced were brought to the attention of the Canadian Government. The Canadian Government sug- gested it might be advantageous to have a Canadian and a Newfound- land representetive meet with the administrator of 8t. Plerre to dis- cuss these and related problems. The reply of the administrator to this suggestion was: "Your desire to study the present situation in cordial collaboration conforms with mine as #lready ex- pressed. I shall receive the visit of the representatives of the friend- ly Governments of Canada and Newfoundland with pleasure on Wednesday the 17th of July." Two Consulted Officials As a result of this exchange one representative of Canada and one representative of Newfoundland have this week been in consultation with M. Bournat, the administrator of St. Pierre and Miquelon. "It has been a most friendly and helpful discussion," said the depart- ment, In the course of the talks at St. Pierre reference has natur- ally been made to the small patrol vessel, the Ville D'ys, which has been in the harbor at St. Plerre since the defeat of France. This however, has formed a very small item in the general discussion, and it is apparent that there will be no difficulty in finding a mutually satisfactory solution. "Neither the Canadian nor the Newfoundland Government has the slightest intention or desire to in- terfere with the existing adminis- tration or status of the islands." Complains of Blockade Fort de France, Martinique, July 19.--The French High Commissioner here tonight charged that British authorities have stopped supplies to the French colony at St. Pierre and Miquelon, islands off the Newfound- land coast, after local authorities refused to surrender the. colony's fishing fleet. The commissioner, who controls the fishing colony, said a British economic mission was using heavy pressure to gain the fleet and also had demanded that the armed fishing patrol boat Ville d'Ys be interned amd its two cannon be delivered to Canadian authorities. The French colonists now have the choice of eating fresh of salted dried codfish as a result of the blockade, he said. : CHARGE MILLARD OVER PAMPHLET C.1LO. Official Given Chance to Test By-Law TORONTO, July 22--Another test of suburban New Toronto's anti« pamphlet by-law was assured Thurs day with the serving of summonses on C. H. Millard, secretary for Can= ada of the Congress of Industrial Organizations, and Ald, Alfred Mus= tin, of Kitchener. They are schedule ed to appear in court on July 29, charged with illegal distribution of pamphlets within the town limits. Millard announced on Wednes. day he would test validity of the by-law under which two labor une ion members were then charged. These two, Harry Tunis and Wil liam Hendry, were acquitted by Magistrate W. E. McIlveen earlier on Thursday. Tunis and Hendry were charged with distributing pamphlets "deem= ed to cause unrest in the @8me munity." Magistrate McIlveen said he was unable to find anything in the leaflets, issued by the Soclale ist-Labor party, to justify a cone viction. In the case of Millard and Muse tin the charge makes no mention of "unrest." Millard himself had d earlier t! ae pamphlets cone tained recommendations of a federal order-in-council of June 19 that. in the interests of wartime production industrial employees "should be free to organize in trade unions, fres from any control by employers or their agents." . Chief Hedley Padgett, of the New Toronto Police, sald he served the summonses on Millard and Mustin * as they distributed leaflets outside the Anaconda Brass Company's No Service 8 JEWELLERS On Oshawa's Main Corner Charge, A Armstrong Fuels Coal - Coke - Wood PHONE 2712TW OFFICE: 59 CHURCH ST. ° We Treat You [] The Year O o WATCH REPAIRING Let us re our Watches, Clocks, Po ay etc. Work D. J. BROWN THE Ji 20 Simcoe St. S. Phone 189 Brantford Roo and Builders' Suppli McLAUGHLIN COAL & SUPPLIES, LIMITED PHONE 1246 Fine Watch Repairing Our Specialty FELT BROS. Established 1886 12 SIMCOE ST. SOUTH: Karn's Drug Store FOR PROMPT DELIVERY Phone 78-79 NEXT P, O. Attention! SITE MUST BE CLEARED 100,000 Hard Bricks At. $6.00 per M. LUMBER WILL BE SOLD AT CLEAN-UP PRICES Corner Simcoe and Athol Sts. SALESMAN ON THE JOB 3 |