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Daily Times-Gazette, 28 Jul 1948, p. 2

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2 , fi "eral PAGE TWO - THE DAILY TIM ES-GAZETTE In Memoriam ARMSTRONG--In loving memory of a dear son and brother, Jack, who passed away July 28, 1943. znd time apbeds on, d eo years have passe: Since death, its shadows cast, Within our home, where all seemed Dpgnt. And took from us the shining light, We miss that light and ever will His vacant place, no one can fil Down here we mourn but not in vain, For up in Heaven we'll meet again. --Always remember by mother, Prothers and sisters. 8 Policies Studied | For Cadet Camps Ipperwash Camp, Ont., July 27-- (CP)--Top army and education of- ficials from across Canada met at this Lake Huron army training cen- tre Tuesday and were expected to decide some of the future policies "of: army cadet training in schools -across the dominion, "Lt. Gen. Charles Foulkes, Chief D6f the 'General Staff, arrived from ' Ottawa to meet the educators from nine provincial governments, Fed- labor department officials .were also present to enter into the "discussion, of the future of trades . training. f -- "We of the army wish to find out about provincial education in technical schools and augment this with practical training in military vocations," Gen. Foulkes said. =: About 200 cadets from Ontario 5 centres are taking a special course ig :here. It was a big day fer Frank Heard of Peterborough who drew the assignment of driving the army ~delegation headed by Gen. Foulkes i and Brig. H. A, Sparling, Western Ontario Military Area Commander, ' FRENCH OUTLOGK GOOD Edmonton -- (CP) -- Indutrial sutlook in France is good and the sountry's rate almost equals the 1939 mark, says Jacques Humbert, Trench. Trade Commissioner to f , Zanada. France is keenly interested n developing a more equal trade »alance with Canada. CHANCE OF SIGHT Thousands of blind persons could lee again if they could obtain new * :orneal "windows" for their eyes. Australia Irked At U.S. Refusal To Share Secrets Sydney, Australia, July 28--(CP) --The Australian government is deeply embarrassed by disclosures that the United States dces not trust it with defence secrets. United States refuses to hapd over atomic data and top secret™infor- mation to Britain unless assur- ances are given it will not be pass- ed on to Australia. Defence Minister John J. Ded- man is understood to have inform- ed the council for scientific and in+ dustrial research that Australia is unlikely to get any more scientific defence information if the United States attitude persists. . Washington's alarm at the pos- sibility of secrets leaking out from Australian sources is believed to ne based on the reported opinion of Sir David Rivett, chairman of C.S.IR., that secrecy and integrity in science cannot flourish together. Sir David denies he has ever been asked to sign a pledge of secrecy about Australia's defence projects and claims the council is not en- gaged in any secret defence works, The question of purging the CS. LR. of a number of alleged Com- munists and "fellow travellers" has been brought up in the House of Representatives many times. The government's fallure to act in this direction is believed to have influenced the United States clamp down on all secret informa- tion which heretofore has been available to Australia, BAD BRAKES COST $10 Pleading guilty to the charge of having defective brakes, Frank Zarowny, 254 First Avenue, Oshawa, appeared before Magistrate Frank S. Ebbs in court today, and was fined $10 and costs or ten days in jail. P.C. Joseph Wright told the court that he had investigated a minoy accident' July 20, on First Avenue, and when he tested the brakes on Zarowny's car he found them to be in poor order. Today's Short Story YOU'LL LOOK WONDERFUL, JOE By Ruth K. Kent MANDA had no appetite for dinner. -She let Joe fill his : plate with stew; she even made herself wait until he tasted the first tempting mouthful before she asked, "How's the new book- keeper getting along?" She watched him intently while the chewed. She knew exactly iwhen his Adam's apple would ; Jump above his tieless shirt col- lar. That was the way after you {lived with a man twenty years. i You knew all about him. Or you 2 thought you did, Amanda remind- ied herself bitterly. ¢ Joe took another taste, then ishrugged his skinny shoulders, 4 z = bY b] "She's pretty good. Needs some eoaching, then she'll make out all right. She's pretty young." Amanda tried not to but she aid, "And pretty?" He didn't answer. "And smells good too. 'Uses z'some kind of French perfume, 7 idoesn't she?" I "Who?" ¢ "Why, Miss Ellsworth," Aman- "da said erossly. "Now Joe, eat = those carrots. They have seme "vitamins that are good for your * hair, or eyes or something." Joe blinked. "My eyes? What's the matter with my eyes?" "Nothing," Amanda said stiffly. No, nothing was the matter with Joe's eyes when they were look- ing at the new bookkeeper. Joe was the kind of man who always came home promptly for 'dinner. But three evenings last week he thad been so late that Amanda had to feed the chickens. He'd said he had to stay and help Miss [Ellsworth with the books. That was possible. But Amanda shud- ered now when she remembered 'that twice Joe stumbled as he 'came up the back steps. Joe avasn't a drinking man but 'Amanda had heard about the place next the office where some 'of the men stopped for cocktails. JOf course she never talked about jit. But those two nights when the stumbled up the steps she'd set 'out his dinner then slipped linto' the bedroom and made be- 'lievd she was asleep. She didn't want him to kiss her, to even 'touch hér. She tried to eat a little now so oe wouldn't notice. She must ikeep her eyes dry even though dthere were tears in her heart, 2She was so sure of things now. £1t all came so clear this morning Zwhen she did the washing and found that tiny handkerchief, tiled S, in the Jaundry bag perfume, too, It ¢ PAMVRIAT ALE RABMAEN wet and wadded . . . Miss Ells worth must have been crying. Joe looked up and grinned. "Any dessert?" he asked. "Apple pie," she said. "Good," he said. Amanda remembered someone saying that if you throw a wo- man at 'a man's head, he won't want her. She cleared her throat. "She looks very intelligent. She seems jolly too." She took a deep breath. Might as well throw hard. "And she's sort of sweet and . .. cuddly, isn't she?" Joe stopped with a bite half way to his mouth, "Who?" "My goodness, we're. talking about Miss Ellsworth, aren't we?" Joe reached for the sugar. "For pity sake, use the spoon," Amanda said crossly. Joe put down the bowl, an em- barrassed grin on his lean face. "I wanted the cream," he said. His seamy face looked a little weary, a little discouraged, and Amanda's heart twisted. She went to the sink and washed dishes, tears mingling with the water. Poor - Joe. This was bothering him a lot. And she wasn't making it easier. He'd feel better if he didn't sit there thinking about it. "Better feed the chickens," she said. "All right," Joe went to the shed for feed. She watched him turn back to the house. "Want my shotgun," he said, "I hear that danged hawk up there." "I see it," Amanda cried. "Hurry, Joe, It got another chick this morning." She watched anxiously. The hawk was circling low. Joe was fumbling with the gun. There . + . he could get it now. Joe fired. But the hawk flapped and flew away. "Oh, my goodness!" Amanda said. Joe. came in and stood the gun in a corner. . "For goodness sake," Amanda scolded, "a baby could have hit that. Are you blind?" Joe blinked. "Amanda, what will become of us? I tried to keep you from knowing. What good is a blind man to you?" Amanda ran to him. "Blind? Why didn't you tell me? You poor dear. Did the doctor say . . ." He put his head on her shoul- der. "I haven't the nerve to go to the doctor. But Amanda, I can't read any more. I stumble up steps. Remember that sales- man who went blind? I have just such headaches, and having to help that dumb bookkeeper makes them worse." "You poor dear." Amanda rock- ed back and forth. How glad she was that she hadn't mentioned the handkerchief. "Did you find her handkerchief in the wash?" Joe asked. "She wet it for me to put on my head the other night. Now she's hol- lering to get it back." "She'll get it back," Amanda said, "I washed it today." "Gee . . ." Joe sighed, "what did you think?" "Nothing," Amanda lied, "and stop worrying, Joe. I know what ails you. You need glasses." "Glasses?" he shouted, "are you sure?" "Positive," she said, "that salesman had other symptoms." "But I'll look like an old owl" Joe grinned. "You'll look wonderful, Joe" she sighed. Recent disclosures state that the, Remove Soviet Emblem From Gravestone 8 SSE Gerry Harbon, left, looks ® at the Hammer and Bickle emblems removed from tombstone in Mount Hope cemetery, Waterloo, Ont. The work, ordered by the Waterloo parks board, was the second time this month the Soviet emblem has been removed from memorial markers in the district. The emblem was ordered to be removed but the lettering is to remain as is. The other stone that had had the emblem marked on it was to | replaced by the letter S. Audrey Mileong, right, looks at it. .- Filibuster Looms Against Truman's Anti-Price Ideas By WILLIAM F. ARBOGAST Washington, July 28 -- (AP) -- The Republicans running the United States Congress today steer- | ed President Truman's special ses- | sion program toward a civil rights | Hiougiep almost certain to scuttle | it. | And as they laid plans for a! speedy adjournment, they announc- | ed complete willingness to let the | voters decide in November whether | they had done the right thing, | Democrats promptly shouted "sabotage," They accused the ma- jority party of setting out deliber- ately to wreck the President's pro- gram for anti-inflation and hous- ing legislation which he pleaded for | Tuesday to avert "another great | depression." > Privately some Republicans ques- tioned the wisdom of their leaders strategy, which Senator Edward Robertson (Rep.-Wycm'ng) said had been arrived at after consulta- tion with Governor Thomas E. Dewey of New York, the party's presidential nominee, Robertson emerged from a meet. ing of the Senate's Republican pol- icy committee late Tuesday and told reporters chairman Robert Taft of Ohio had relayed the advice from Dewey to "stay around a week or so and then go home." The Republican decision to give top priority to civil rights legisla« tion instead of to the anti-infla- tion es asked by Truman Storm Damage (Continued from Page 1) along favorably. Most fall wheat has been cut and stooked and hay- ing operations are practically fin- ished. In Oshawa, the portent of the storm to come was-a heavy fog which blanketed the city in the morning. Heavy rains in the after- noon and evening hit the city but there were no power breaks. One Death Reported Toronto, July 28--(CP)--An elec trical storm accompanied by hail and rain Tuesday night caused heavy damage in farming areas of Ontario north of the lower lakes and was blamed for one death. An automobile ran into the resr of a truck two miles west of Picton, in Prince Edward county during the storm. William Lovelace, 65, a passenger in the car, was killed and the driver, Jake Brewer, suffered severe injuries. Tobacco, grain, fruit and vege- table crops were hard-hit in south- western Ontario, A lightning bolt crashed through the roof of a three-storey building in Toronto's west end, wrecked the interior of a jeweler's store but left the occupants of several apartments above the store uninjured. Occu- pants said the building rocked un- der the impact. Lightning set ablaze four barns in North York Township near To- ronto, The storm tore down several hydro lines in and near the city. . Hallstones as big as 25-cent pleces battered a two-mile-wide swath across a farming area near St. Thomas. It damaged tobacco, cucumber, tomato and corn crops. The storm smashed five times at Wallaceburg in Kent County, hroke a telephone cable and damaged trees, Outside the town, crops were damaged and rural telephone lines put out of order. A prize bull was trapped in a barn and burned to death after lightning struck the William Proud- love farm near St. Mary's. Hail smashed windows at Strat- ford. One hardware store there planned to remain open all night to supply residents whose windows were broken. The storm raked the Midland area and hailstones up to three- quarters of an inch in diameter beat down farmers' crops. Some farmers in the London dis- trict reported wheatfields flattened by hail. Only last week a bumper wheat crop was predicted for that area. Hope For Revival Of Wheat Pact Held At Ottawa Ottawa, July 28--(CP)--Cabinet members Tuesday night hailed a possible revival of the International Wheat Agreement following Pres- ident Truman's plea Tuesday to the United States Senate to signify its approval of the pact. Trade Minister Howe said he felt certain that the United Kingdom-- which walked out of the 36 nation agreement July 8--could be persuad- ed to return once the United States put the finishing touches to the five-year, 500,000,000-bushel agree- ment, Agriculture Minister Gardiner hoped Mr, Truman would achieve success in his appeal but pointed to the need for haste since the cur- rent wheat crop in eastern American areas already is being harvested and | prepared for sale, Canada, the Agriculture: Minister added, was deeply interested in the agreement which provides a steady and almost non-fluctuable market for much of the Dominion's wheat industry. However, both Mr, Howe and Mr. Gardiner sald that in the event that Mr. Truman did not succeed in his current appeal the hardship on Canadian farmers would not be im- mediately great, All of this year's crop already has been promised to the United Kingdom and the pos- sibility of some of next year's crop going unsold was small, Without the agreement which provides a maximum price of $2 a 'bushel, Canada will supply its cur: rent crop to the United Kingdom at ah 3 bushel, slisckive Aug. 1, but Xt year's ce is yet to be ne- gotiated, i y Britain Passes New Law To Help Her Coal Miners By DR. GEORGE GRETTON UK. Information Office Speaking in the Commons re- cently on American Aid to Europe, Britain's Chancellor of the Ex- chequer, Sir Stafford Cripps, de- clared that Britain must continue her all-out efforts to produce all she can, It is almost a truism that Britain's great production drive de- pends on coal and, while Sir Staf- ford was making his call for in- creased effort, representatives of the United Kingdom's National Union of Mineworkers were meeting in annual conference to review the leading part they have to play in thelr country's current economy. Coal-mining is one of the most dangerous of callings. Not only is there the ever present danger of accident, in spite of the most strin- gent precautions, there is also the risk of occupational diseases such as silicosis (a lung disease caused by breathing in quartz dust). In the past few years great progress has been made in Britain to improve the miners' welfare and social sec urity. This year's Miners' Confer- ence has gone a step further by approving a new special benefit scheme for sickness and injuries. It is supplementary to the normal system of compensation laid down by law for all Britain's workers, as well as the social security benefits just brought into operation by the new health and insurance regula- tions. It is an additional scheme because of the special hazards in- volved in coal-mining. It is fin- anced from within the industry it- self, contributions being paid by both the miner and the National Coal Board--since the nationaliza- tion of mines, the controlling body of State-owned coal organization. The Coal Board, incidentally, con- tributes proportionately to the amount of coal raised while the miner's payment remains fixed. What it means is this: that from now on every collier injured or falling sick as a result of his work will receive an extra benefit of 20 shillings a week. This also applies to the widows of miners, except childless widows under 40. The total annual cost for this new piece of miners' * welfare is reckoned at about £4,000,000. Felt Neglected As recently as ten years ago Britain's miners felt themselves to be outside the general community and often neglected by it. Today they are Jooked upon as the van- guard of the country's workers and one of the most vital sections of her labour force. The reason for this change of view is the realiza- tion by the community as a whole --brought home in no uncertain manner during the war--that there is scarcely any activity in the or- dinary business of living which does not depend in its ultimate analysis on coal, All power derives from coal; all manufactured articles de- pend on it for their making; Bri- tain's farmer relies on a product of coal -- sulphate of ammonia -- for one of his most valuable fertilizers, He will receive about 87,000 tons of it this year. And coal, of course, is one of Britain's most paying forms of export. Therefore the people of Britain have' come to appreciate the in- dividual importance of the man who fetehes coal ou' of its under- ground seams. As ar 80 in pe: --in Britain's great postwar drive to prosperity--the miner is being maintained in his front rank posi- tion. Efforts are being made in every possible way to help him to go on increasing his production, Wages have been raised. Conditions in the pits are being improved. Machinery and automatic cutters are being installed as fast as they can be manufactured. Recruits are trained before starting work and administrators and officials are up to date in the latest methods of mining and the use of manpower. The risks of life and health which have in all countries attended the miner's calling are being reduced. The Mines Medical Service is being expanded, special measures for dirt suppression are being taken and re- search into the causes and treat- ment of occupational diseases is being intensified, And, as this cur- rent Miners' Conference is showing, great stress is laid on the individual miner's welfare. Dirty Job One of 'the factors which in the past made the miner feel separate from his fellow workers is that his employment in its very nature is so dirty. At one time pithead baths were confined to a few large col- lieries. The mass of colliers carried coal dust back to their homes and unwillingly doubled domestic bur- dens for their wives. Today a mine without a pithead bath is an ex- ception in Britain and soon all pits will be equipped with showers, bath, changing rooms and indivi- dual lockers for each man. The phychological importance of being able to go to and come from work in clean clothes, keeping dirty kit at the mine itself, cannot be over- emphasized, Other welfare develop- ments include the introduction of underground transport to take the miner right up to the coal-face (ten years ago many of them had to walk several miles underground before they could actually start work) and the abolition 6f 'such practices as making the collier pay for his lamp. Nowadays it is pro- vided free and at present there is a move on foot to enable the miner to obtain all his tools without pay- ment. Practically all pits have can- teens where the workers can get food most suited to their dietary needs as a supplement to the spe- cial rations they receive as heavy workers. Housing the miner and his fam- ily presents its problem. Miners are receiving their fair share of the Meet the Weird as it may seem, the Northrop aircraft XP-79 Flying Wing (above), military secret, was 3 destroying itself. As in the famous first flight of the Wright Brothers, from a prone position, The experimental Flyin, was announced in a joint statement by Senate and House leaders. After blasting the special session call as a "political manoeuvre" 'n the election campaign, the Republi- can chiefs promised "consideration" of the President's proposals and plans to wind up the session "as soon as possible." That means, members said, within a few weeks, They said they will take up In the Senate, perhaps today but prob- ably tomorrow, an anti-poll tax hill already passed by the House of Representatives and fiercely op- posed by southern Democrats as a violation of states rights, Truman, without naming it, ask- ed for such a bill Tuesday when he urged action on his civil rights 'ogram calling for anti-poll tax, enti-lynching and anti-discrimina- ticn 1-gislation, am'ng sév:ral other things. Southerners who bolted the Dem- ocratic national convention in op- position to the civil rights platform said they are all set to filibuster, although only one of them used that term. Chevrier Raps (Continued from Page 1) ing ships contrary to the Canada Shipping Act, . . "You speak of the operators boy- cotting other industries, I am in- terested in knowing you have sud- denly become interested in other industries. "My feeling all along has been that the only thing you and your associates are interested in is the formenting of trouble and discord in the industry." However, the conduct of the C, 8. L, was "equally reprehensible." The shooting of men could not be con- dened, The maintenance of law and order was in the hands of the provincial and local authorities, But if the company had broken its agreement with the union, the union had its remedy either in the courts or by striking and by peaceful picketing. "As long as the CS.U. under its present leadership persists in com- mitting acts of violence," said Mr. Chevrier, "it will receive no sup» port from the government. "The government will give sup- port to law-abiding unions to the full extent of its power." FIRST TROLLEYS New York was the first city in the United States to have tracked vehicles--hore-drawn trolley cars, 20,000 homes now being completed each month all over Britain under Mr. Aneurin Bevan's housing schemes. But apart from this nor- mal housing scheme a great new experiment in homes for miners is being launched. Plans have now been completed for the building in northern England of a new coal town upon ideal lines. It is to be named Peterlee after one of the most famous of Britain's past min- ing leaders. Coal in the past was one of Bri- tain's chief sources of wealth. To- day all her people are ensuring that it will continue to be so in the future. until recently a carefully guarded designed and built for the express purpose of slicing through enemy aircraft without the pilot of the XP-79 flies his plane g Wing Wing crashed and killed its pilet, Harry Crosby, in 1945, and development of the plane stopped because the war had ended. Now both the air force and the navy are renewing research in prone position for pilots. | oe cc Smashed Window With Beer Bottle, Fined Total of $20 Charged with having liquor and doing wilfull damage, Clifford Lucas, 132 Alice Street, Oshawa, appeared in court today, pleaded guilty to both charges and was fined $10 and costs or ten days, on each charge, by Magistrate F. S. Ebbs, Lucas was charged when a police constable saw him break a large plate glass window of the F. W. Woolworth store, King Street West, on July 24, The constable told the court that he followed the accused into a nearby lunch counter and | made the arrest. A bottle of beer which the accused is alleged to have wielded in breaking the win- dow, was found on his person, Fred Bartlett, manager of the Woolworth store, testified that the plate glass window cost $82, The court was told restitution had been made. Assaulted Doctor, Rouge Hills Club Manager Is Fined Andrew Dand, manager of the Rouge Hills Golf and Country Club, appeared in court today charged with the assault of Dr, Alexander Stewart, Toronto physician. ' Dand pleaded not guilty but Magistrate Frank S. Ebbs imposed a fine of $10 and costs or ten days. Dr. Stewart testified that Dand had assaulted him on July 7, fol- lowing an argument about the :mn- dition of the golf course, He told the court that he was a member of the men's committee which had made several formal protests over conditions, Dr, Stewart said the ac- cused offered to throw him off the grounds which led to a free-for-all, After the fight was broken up by other members, Dr. Stewart said Dand hit him with his open hand on the right side of the face and caused a partial perforation of his right ear. Dr. Stewart told the court that he had visited two ear specialists and both sald he was suffering a 75 per cent perforation which might or might not heal Dand told the court that he had asked Dr. Stewart not go into the ladies' locker room for a drink. He explained that several members were in the habit of using the women's locker room as a lounge and that they frequently had drinks there because of a lack of any oth- er facilities for mixed drinking, Dand testified that Stewart took off his coat and glasses and chal- argument became heated. Dand claimed that Stewart, who admitted having two drinks of gin, was in- toxicated. "To clear his mind from the al- cohol I slapped him," said Dand. Coast-to-Coast Cyclist May Cut U.S. Record Edmonton (CP). -- Cyclist Fred Anderson of Calgary plans to chop 12 days from the United States coast-to-coast cycle time of 2,800 miles in 27 days, 11 hours. He says the attempt will be next summer. Anderson contemplates the ven- ture with confidence acquired by being the only Canadian to cycle across the Dominion from coast to coast--done in 1046. He covered the 4,300-0odd miles from Vancouver to Sydney, N.S, in 25 days. With a 1,500-mile, 2%-day edge registered on just fair roads, An- derson is considered to have a rea- sonable chance to slash the. Ameri- can record, "I should average 200 miles a day," he enthused at an Edmonton meet. "In fact, as the Englishman would say, I should win it 'hands down.' " Anderson, a 43-year-old native of lenged hm to a fight when the | WEDNESDAY, JULY 28, 1948 | 4 Local Grain Local seeling prices for bran $56 ton; shorts, $58 ton; baled hay, $25 ton; straw, $22 ton; pastry flour, $3.95 a bag; bread flour, $4,75. Deal- ers are paying no set price. Wheat $2.00 a bushel; oats, 85 cents; bar= ley, $1.00; and buckwheat, $1,30. Fruit Toronto, July 28---(CP)--Whole« sale fruit and vegetable prices here | today are unchanged with the fole lowing exceptions: Vegetable marrow cents. Produce Toronto, July 28 -- (CP) -- Pro duce prices on the spot market here this morning were unchanged, Churning cream, No. 1 74 cents fob; 78 delivered. The egg market today continued firm and supplies are still unable to meet the demand, Prices have risen again, Country shippers quot- ed graded eggs, cases free: Grade A large 63-64; grade A medium 61- 62; grade A pullet 50-52; grade B 47-47; grade C 37. Wholesale to retail; Grade A large 67-68; grade A medium 64-65; grade A pulet 56-89; grade B 51-52; grade C 40. Butter solids are unchanged, first grade 58; second grade 56. o Livestock Toronto, July 28--(CP)--Today's livestock market here opened slow and by mid-morning sales were too few to establish prices. Receipts re= ported by the Dominion Marketing Service were; Cattle 185; calves 85; hogs 150; sheep and lambs 200, Left from Tuesday's trading were some 2,650 head. A few weighty steers sold from $20-322.50 and a few butcher steers sold from $18.50-821. Common to medium stockers brought $14-8$15. Good to choice calves were steady at $21-$23 with common to medi- um calves selling downward to $14. Hogs were steady, grade A $31.50; grade Bl $31.10; sows were $21 dressed. Hogs Toronto, July 28--(CP)--At Hull today hogs off truck were unquot- ed. Dressed, grade A delivered were unchanged at $32.26 with some sale made. At Stratford hog prices were unchanged. Grade A delivered, to farmers $31.35; to truckers $31.50. At Brantford hog pricess increased 25 cents and grade A sold at $31.35, 11 qte., 40 Timely Savings in Foods GLECOFF GROCMEATERIA 174 Ritson Rd. S. Phone 3235 Free City Wide Delivery Specials for Fri, and Sat. 39¢ MEAT SPECIALS Pork Sausages RE De ore Veal Patties Spare Ribs Meaty Pork Shoulders (hock off) 1b. ....%..... . Pork Boston Butts Fresh Wrapped Bread First Grade Butter Denmark, has been cycling since 1923. Pive feet six inches tall, he weighs 143 pounds. Apart from a gruelling 12 miles | over the Rockies on a broken frame | (mended only by a piece of wood and a wrench), Anderson says Northern Ontario provided the Canadian trip's most prolonged agony. Cycling uses vitamins, But "there were meatless Tuesdays and Fri- days in those days and all I could get was eggs and bread. A man needs a healthy steak with all the trimmings when on a trip like that." Freight Rate (Continued from Page 1) points in Western Canada are not affected by this application. The application used Canadian Pacific figures to show how costs of materials and supplies and wage rates d risen since the board granted a 2l-per cent freight-rate increase last March. The associ- ation |submitted that the needs of Canadian Pacific were typical of the needs of other associations, GERMAN-[TOTS IN BRITAIN German children from the Bii- tish zone of occupation are now at- tending schools in Britain. They have come under the scheme ar- ranged by the Education Inter- change Council and are spending the summer term with. children in public and grammar schools in dif ferent parts of the United King. dom. This is one of the schemes designed to remedy the isolation from the outside world to which the German children have been subjected since the coming to pow of Hitler. ' 156 GIBBON STREET ELECTRIC AND OXY-ACETYLENE WELDING "I JL Ne iz J Aad PHONE 4608R Clubhouse Jelly Powders Assorted, 3 pkgs. ...... Campbell's Tomato . 10¢ . 19¢ 39¢ 25¢ 25¢ 49¢ 19¢ 25¢ Fresh Large Cabbage BION iviviiivisnian Ontario's Finest Potatoes 10 1b, . Fresh Green Peas Fresh Beets 4 bunches Sunkist Oranges 2 doz, ........ Sweet Grapefrui Fresh Blueberries bE "£96 ures Cush ss von 188 re OT wees 108 15¢ Green Onions . Large Bunches, 2 for Christie Iced eis .... ede 33¢ 39¢ 43¢ 19¢ 59¢ Pure Lard 1 1b. pkg. Fresh Beef Bologna Choice Smoked Weiners Macaroni Cheese or Dutch Loaf Sliced, 1b. Fresh Head Cheese 34 -1b. Lean Round Steak Minced, 1b. ..... PE Breakfast Bacon Try us for your week-end Roast Choice Cuts in Pork, Lamb, Beef, Veal Free Delivery : Phone 32338 - ¥ oC ------------ ry '

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