Durham Region Newspapers banner

Daily Times-Gazette, 14 Sep 1948, p. 9

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

TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 948 THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE PAGE NINE Progress rien Party Convention Plans to Study 400 Resolutions Ottawa, Sept. 14 (CP)-- Selection of delegates to the national convention of the Progressive Conservative party 'here Sept. 30, Oct. 1-2 now spokesman said Monday. has been completed, a party The big task facing provincial associations is the draft- ing of resolutions which will be submitted at the convention called to choose a successor to John Bracken, 65, who is retiring because of age and ill-health. Present indications ar ethat the resolutions--about 400 have already been sent to headquarters here -- will call for a statement of party policy on all the major problems facing the country, including such controversial topics as freight rates and dominion-provincial relations. A total of 1,313 delegates will be entitled to vote, but age or ill-health may keep away a dozen of the Privy Councillors, Senators and others wi support the party and who are automatically given the vote under convention procedure. While all entitled to vote may not attend, it is expected that the con- vention will attract more 'han 3,000 persons, The federal ridings will send 765 official delegates and an equal number of alternates. In ad- dition there will be the ex-officio delegates and the delegates-at-large. A 193-man resolutions committee will meet Sept. 28-29 to deal with the resolutions now being sent in by provincial associations, Deadline for tI filing of resolations has been set for Sept. 15. The Pesoliitions committee will be broken down into sub-committees on external affairs, agriculture, labor, natural resources, social security, veterans and trade and taxation. Representation on the committee: e Edward Island, Five; Nova , nine; New Brunswick, eight; ec, 50; Ontario, 62; Manitoba, 14; Saskatchewan, 16; Alberta, 14; British Columbia, 14; and The Yu- kon, 1. It is not known how many resol- utions will be accepted by the reso- lutions ccmmittee and the conven- tion, Those - accepted will bécome new planks in the platform on which the new leader and the party will seek election at the next gen- eral election. ' First test of the new, platform may come Oct. 25 in federal by-elections in Rosthern, Saskatchewan, and in Ontario's Algoma East. Columbus-Man Much Impressed By Flower Shows Flower shows at Lethbridge, Win- nipeg and Vancouver received high praise from William D. Dyer, Co- lumbus gladioli grower, who re- cently returned from a flying tour of the three cities to visit their shows, Mr. Dyer was especially impress- ed by the Lethbridge show and an interview with him concerning the show was published in the Leth- bridze Herald. Mr. Dyer became associated with flower growing more than 20 years ago when a neighbor gave him a handful of bulbs. At that time he was not especially interested in the species but when they bloomed he decided he would grow better ones. Now he ships some 100,000 bulbs to his customers annually, COMPLETE ® Firestone V. McLELLAN'S HOME and AUTO SUPPLY Prince and' Bond Sts. PHONE 1096 Ontario County Boys and Girls Win C.N.E. Prizes The Ontario, County boys and girls who entered in the judging competitions at the C.N.E. did well this year, All four girls who took part in the judging competition finished in the first prize honour group. The four girls were: Nellie Betz, Stouff- ville; Lois and Doris Baker, Stouff- ville, and Geraldine Gregg, Ux- bridge. The Sandford Girls Home- making Group stood fifth with their skit. The team was composed of Dorothy Oliver, Ruth and. Doris Risebrough and Ona Meek. Mrs. Carruthers is the leader for this girls' group. A number of Ontario County boys took part in the various livestock judging competitions. Their stand- ing is as follows: Clarence H. Wil- son, Uxbridge, 7th in heavy horses; Ed. Ball, Uxbridge, 4th in swine, open competition; Bruce Boyington, Uxbridge, 4th in swine in the club competition; John Thomson, Brooklin, 5th in dairy cattle, club section. ° In the Beef Cattle Competition, Open Section, Lance Beath, Osh- awa, stood 1st; Jack Pearson, Ux- bridge, stood 2nd, and Francis Will- son, Locust Hill, stood 7th. In the Beef Cattle Judging, Club Section, Everson Norton, Locust Hill, stood 4th, and Arthur Richardson, Ash- burn, was 8th. In the Grain and Seed Judging Competition, Jack Pearson, Ux- bridge, was high man. BIRTHDAYS REMEMBERED Six members of the Oshawa Ro- tary Club were presented with roses at the club's luncheon meeting yes- terday in recognition of the cele- bration of their birthdays. Those honored were: Dr. Douglas Lang- maid, Ira Ivey, W. F. Lindsay, H. M. Brooks, R. B. Reddoch and A. W. Armstrong. ive Conservatives Have Selected Parley Delegates A 4 mechanical features. Mi owners have put on K- THE 1949 KAISER DELUXE sedan has more than 100 im or developments, many of them cars, include an . Joal ements--72 in styling and 30 in on the more than two billion miles which increase from 100 to 112 in | New Engine, Styling Features In '49 Kaiser ine and horsepower. A massive grille and 1 Anns. bumpers are features of the new ex ign. A new instr P tes the restyled interior. Old. Country | Jettor By ALAN HARVEY Canadian Press Staff Writer London, Sept. 14 --(CP)--Ever since King Alfred the Great let the cakes burn, British cooking has been something less than famous. Now, it appears, Britons don't care any more. They're getting used to dull food. Under subtle changes in eating habits enforced by rationing and shortages, urban workers are being forced out of the home to supple- ment their diets. Britain by and large is becoming a nation of res- taurant and snack-bar eaters. Volume rather than variety is the target today, particularly in urban and town areas. "People have got so used to dull food they hardly want to change from it," is the stock sentiment among restaurant proprietors, "all they want is volume." A survey on the feeding habits of young workers, prepared by the London Council of Social Service, showed that six meals a day were "almost universally accepted." Some even took a seventh medl, a mid-evening snack. "i Among 56 boys and girls working in a London engineering plant, the routine was an early breakfast, 10 am. snack, mid-day meal, 4 pm. tea, tea again at 5 or 6 pm, and supper between 9 and 10 p.m. Most extra "meals" are obtained at snack bars. These generally are drab, ill-lit stores lacking such taken-for-granted items as table- cloths, saucers and spoons. Cana- dians in Britain seldom have much appetite for the sticky rolls and margarined buns which form the snack bar's principal fare. For those who can afford to pay more, many restaurants provide bet- ter food in better surroundings. If he wants to pay up to 25 shillings, ($5), the rich man at some restaur- ants can obtain so rare an item as fillet of pork. But he has to know where to go, and to "wink" at the restaurant's evasion of the legal limit of five shillings for food. Another food sidelight which helps those with money to spend concerns "luxury" foods such as fruit juices, salmon and tinned milk. These are on points and the working-class housewife lets them pile up on the shelves because she can't pay for them. So, - almost every week in London, street sales are held in the East End to dispose of the surplus stock, usually to West End buyers, But no matter what the "dodge," food generally seldom is prepared to the Canadian taste. Dominion athletes in London for the Olympic Games voiced a general complaint --the food was too heavy, too starchy, rather unexciting. Three More Years For Nick Minnille 4 (CB) ~Nicho- las Nick)' ¢, Ottawa armed robber, was sentenced today to three years on a aping in August, 1947, ten- tiary. The three- " will be additional to a 17-y rmed rob- bery term he was serving at the time"of his escape: v7 oo GOTHAM VILLAGE In 1626 New York had 200 in- habitants. Miss Sidler Is Given Shower MRS. CHAS. WHITE Correspondent Thornton's Corners, Sept. 13 -- A shower was held Friday evening at the home of Mrs. Robert Sully for Miss Alice Sidler who is to be married on the 25th of this month. The room was gay with colored streamers, and the bride-to-be was seated under white bells and bal- loons. There were about 60 neigh- bors and friends present and Alice received some very lovely and use- ful gifts. During the evening an old tramp appeared, demanding admittance, but he turned out to be Mr. Gold- smith with a basket full of vege- tables, fruit and household gadgets for the bride-to-pe. She also re- ceived a quantity of tinned goods, minus their labels, which will no doubt give her many surprises dur- ing the canning year. Letters were written to the bride-to-be which she will open later when settled in her new home. A bounteous lunch climaxed the evening. Sunday School opened Sunday afternoon with 41 present, an in- crease of six over opening Sunday last year. A corn roast was planned for Wednesday evening of this week, to be held at Mr. and Mrs. Walter Langmaid's. Ladies, please bring cake or cookies. The annual Sunday school meet- ing is to be held Wednesday eve- ning, Sept. 22, in the Sunday school. |. Ww. and Mrs. Geo, AR 'Robinson spent last Friddy in To- ronto. Misses Alice and Marguaretie Sidler spent a day in Toronto last week, HANDS AT WORK... for ONTARIO'S products are desired atid purchased by people all over the world and the capacity to produce such goods large welfare of every man, woman and child within her oduced in Ontario brings valuable dollars into this Province, we all are of ob security . . . and we and our children can have more of the ife. But to produce such goods in sufficient every article more' ass better things in labour is vital. That is why every are constantly being Jrajaed to They receive ON. factories. This trainin, , provided throu Affairs, the A wi tion, starts the veteran on the road ud must learn to of separate parts. all s of erie creatin every effort of these newl which to live and phic electricit thousan single one of us should be the co-operation of the Department of Vet al Department of Labour and the Ontario i a form intricate work on THE BREWING INDUSTRY (ONTARIO) gly determines the economic ders. Because the sale of antities, skilled u glad that war veterans provide the skilled hands so needed by industry. JOB training under expert instructors in our Ontario : partment of Educa: , ; to skilled craftsmanship. In assembling business machines, for example, veterans must have a thorough knowledge of intric ision machines having Canadian-made business machines are sold in ng new, wealth for Canada and Ontario. Therefore killed veterans helps to make Ontario a finer place in utes to the welfare and happiness of all her citizens. ONTARIO Canadian N 10,000 design: MACHINE ASSEMBLY --------e. John N. West, 25, of Toronto, a Royal avy veteran, is shown here making an adjustment to one of the for a New Zealand firm. Various types of business machines are produced in Ontario fac. tories. Because of their in. tricate mechanisms it is es- sential that these machines be checked by expert craftsmen at every stage of their production. LEARNING MACHINE ASSEMBLY 80000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000, ° in a business machine » What to Do Ta-Night i RECREATION HEADQUARTERS 100 Gibbs Street This is a Community Chest Assisted Service . Adult Leathercraft -- Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday, 7-9. Demonstrations of the following aetivities at the Oshawa Fair, Alex- andra Park: Weaving, Leather- oan, Wood-working, and Children's PLEASE NOTE North Shore Radio Club meeting in Club Lounge Monday, September 13, at 8 p.m. Community Association Central Council meeting on Wednesday, September 15, at 8 pm. in the Lecture Room. Square Dance sponsored by Cedar Dale Neighborhood Association in the Auditorium, C.R.A. Building, on Saturday, September 18, at 8.30 p.m.--Music by Harold Godfrey's Orchestra. Waded On Brink Of Niagara Falls Niagara Falls, N. Y. Sept. 14-- (AP)--Donald Halpin, 32, who went wading in the Niagara River was sentenced Monday to 30 days in jail on a charge of disorderly conduct. The wading was okay, but park re- servation police were annoyed be- cause he picked the iip of the Amer- ican Falls at Prospect Point for his venture, Patrolman James MacKay, who arrested. Halpin after a chase through the park, said the wader was clad only in shorts and was en- gaged in retrieving coins which had been tossed into tl:e water by visit- crs, Nothing Blind Person Cannot Succeed In, Says Rotary Speaker "There is nothing a blind person cannot step into and make a suc- cess of. Any handicap can be over- come. if approached with courage and determination," declared Rob- ert W. Beath, director of research and recreation, and chief librarian of the Canadian National Institute for the Blind, in an address at the luncheon meeting of the Oshawa Rotary Club in Hotel Genosha yes- terday. : The speaker, himself blind since he was six years of age, brought the club a review of the activities of the Institute in its work among the blind of Canada. He was in- troduced by Rev. George Telford, chairman of the Oshawa Branch of the Institute, who said that 31 per- sons without sight.in Oshawa are given assistance by the Institute. The thanks of the club was voiced by Rotarian George Hart. Largest of Its Kind The largest organization of its kind in the world, the Canadian National Institute for the Blind was organized 30 years ago by Col. E. A. Baker, a 'casualty of World War I, who had 'received training at St. Dunstan's: in England. Prefacing his remarks, Mr, Beath recalled that his grandfather came from Scotland and built himself a log house in the bush, north of Oshawa, in 1810. A native of West- ern Canada, Mr. Beath is editor of the C.N.ILB. braille magazine which has a world-wide circulation. He commented that in primitive times it had been the practice to expose blind children and adults to the elements and it was not until the Christian era that this attitude changed and it was felt they should be protected. The first blind institute was started in France to aid those blinded during the Crusades. The Canadian Institute, started 30 years ago, operates factories in which brooms, aprons, baskets and other articles are made by the blind. Those who receive aid from it also operate restaurants and street stands, Its sales last year exceeded $7,000,000. Blind workers last year earned over $2,000,000. Such is the excellence of the methods used in Canada that its techniques are studied by other countries. Continuing Mr. Beath said that bowling, dancing, cribbage, domino, chess, crokinole and swimming clubs are organized and real en- joyment given the blind. Home Teacher Service A great work is being done among the blind; whose average age is 58 years, by home teachers who do a great deal to bring them hap- piness and teach them trades and activities which go far toward mak- ing them self supporting. Among the blind who have made a great contribution to world cul- ture and advancement were Sir Henry Fossett, a former postmaster general of Great Britain, Homer, Milton; Louis Braille, who develop- ed braille which enables the blind to read; the developer of the block buster bomb and Sir Charles Lind- say, Montreal millionaire piano re- tailer, who left $4,000,000 to charity. The speaker also told of a blind creamery operator and a blind phy- sician in Saskatchewan both of whom are leading normal lives and contributing to the advancement of the communities in which they live. Talks Deadlocked In McKinnon Issue Toronto, Sept. 14--(CP)--Negotia- tions are .deadlocked between com- puny officials of McKinnon Indus. tries, St. Catharines' largest indus- try, and officials of Local 199, Unit- ed Auto Workers (CIO), it was 2° ounced Monday by Ontario La- bor Minister Daley. Meetings with the Labor Depart- ment have been continuing for the last two weeks to reach agreement on the 61-day-old wage strike. The union has held out for a 26- cent-an-hour raise to bring workers "to more equitable pay rates with Oshawa and Windsor General Mo- tors Plants." The St. Catharines company is a General Motors subsi- diary. THe company's two offers were res fused by union officials. The book you T you, it tells the most interesting story in the world --especially if you are the saving kind. You can translate it into many purposes: holidays to come; education for your childrens things for the house; added security « ¢ ¢ But you never let even your intimate friends see the contents. The information in your passbook is strictly between you and your bank. Your bank keeps it that way, SPONSORED BY YOUR BANK

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy