2 THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE, Tuesday, March 17, 1958 BIRTHS TY---Myrtle and Russell Dough- DOU n En proud to announce the birth of their son, Kenneth Shawn, on Sun- day, March 15, 1953, at the Oshawa General Hospital. Mother and son fine. AR--Mr, and Mrs. James Pindar PIN Shirley Gibbs) are proud to an- nounce the birth ot their son, Todd Richard, on Sunday, March 15, 1953. A brother for Tasma Lee DEATHS dde in Oshawa on Sunday, BR eo. 106. Reta M. Vokes, beloved wife of Robert H. Brown, loving mother of Jean and Margaret and dear sister Hester (Mrs. Earl Woolcott) of Hamion and Edith (Mrs. Herbert Mitchell) of , Calif. Resting at Luke-McIntosh Funeral Home, Oshawa, until Wednesday, March 18, at 11 a.m., thence to King St. United Church, for service at 2 o'clock. Interment Union Cem- etery, Oshawa. The casket will remain closed. G--In Oshawa Hospital on Monday, hy 16, 1953, John William Flegg, be- Joved husband of Mary Ann Agnes Pat- field and father of Mrs. P. Densham (Agnes); Mrs. S. Sharples (Lillian) of Oshawa; Mrs. B. McCann (Grace) of Simcoe, and George J. of Oshawa, Syd- ney of Bedford, Quebec, Ernest F. of Toronto, in his 78th year. 'uneral Hos on Wednesday, March 18, to St. George's Church for service at 3:45 In- terment Union Cemetery. 1.0.0.F. service on Tuesday evening at 7 p.m. NON--Suddenly in the Oshawa Hos- GAGNC on Tuesday, March 17, 1953, Alphon Gagnon (145 Ritson Rd 8.), beloved hus- band of Anne Marie Cyr. Funeral arrangements later. For fur- ther information call Luke-McIntosh Fun- eral Home. TODOSEY--Entered into rest suddenly in Oshawa, Ont., on Sunday, March 15, 1953, Alexander Todosey, beloved son of Mr. and Mrs. William TodoSey, in his 30th year. Funeral from the Armstrong Funeral Home, Oshawa, Wednesday, March 18th. Service 3:30 p.m. Interment Mount Lawn Cemetery, Oshawa. IN MEMORIAM BOWYER--In loving memory of a dear mother, Gertrude Florence Bowyer, who passed away March 17, 1952. The world may change from year to year And friends from day to day, But never will the one I loved From memory pass away. --Sadly missed by son Henry, and children. Phyllis O0OK--In loving memory of a dear father, em T. Cook, who passed away, March 17, 1950. The little things he used to do, And things he used to say, Come crowding back to memory, As we think of him today. from Luke-Mcintosh Funeral | OSHAWA AND DISTRICT WRECKING HOUSES The job of wrecking the two {houses on Celina Street, at the rear of the new post office and |customs building site, was com- menced yesterday. NEW OFFICERS INTRODUCED The new officers and directors of the Oshawa Rotary Club were introduced at the club luncheon yesterday by President-elect Cyril | Echotield, FUND GROWING | It was announced at yesterday's | Rotary Club luncheon that 1,206 | donations totalling $3,311 had been | received in the club's Easter Seal | Campaign. WORK STARTS F. F. Welch has started work on that are located on the site of the library which Col. R. S. McLaugh- lin is donating to the city. Mr. Welch gave council $2,500 for the four homes on the Centre-Bagot- Queen street propepy; The library board wants the buildings removed by April 1. , A BANQUET? The local Chamber of Commerce held its annual meeting last night at the Hotel Genosha. Recently lab- or leaders charged that the city. in its grant to the Chamber, would be paying for the banquet that ac- companied the Chamber's annual meeting. Each member last night paid $1 at the door and the buffet meal consisted of coffee, sand- wiches and cheese and crackers. Pickles were also served. ERROR IN NOTICE Friends of the Robert H. Brown family are asked not to call at the Luke-McIntosh Funeral Home until 4 p.m. today. The funeral service for Mrs. Brown will be held in King Street United Church at 2 p.m. tomorrow. GOING OVERSEAS AW1 M. M. Ireland of Oshawa will be one of 133 RCAF ground technicians to sail from Halifax early in April for Germany and duty with No. 3 Fighter Wing in Germany, it was announced today by Air Force. headquarters. In- cluded in the group are 51 air- women also fo be stationed at Zweibrucken, Germany, with No. 3 Fighter Wing. --Ever r by daughter-in-law, Colla, and COOK--In loving memory of my dear father and grandfather, Lorne T. Cook, who passed away March 17, 1950. We often sit and think of him when we are alone. For memory is the only friend that grief can call its own, Like ivy on the withered oak, when all other things decay. Our love for him will still keep green and never fade away. ~--Sadly missed by daughter, Ruth; son- in-law, George, and grandchildren. SPEIRS--In loving memory of my dear husband, father and grandfather, Robert Speirs, who passed away March 17, 946 1 . We who loved you sadly miss you As it dawns another year. In our lonely hours of thinking Thoughts of you are ever near. . vungly remembered by his wife and amily. SPEIRS--In loving memory of my dear father, Robert Speirs, who passed sud- denly away on March 17, 1946, The rolling stream of life rolls on But still the vacant c Recalls the love, the voice, the smile our Dad who once sat there. --Lovingly remembered by son, Bob, and family. SPEIRS--In loving memory of a dear father and grandfather, Robert Speirs, who passed away March 17, 1946. Not just today but every day In silence we remember. ~Sadly missed by sons, Tom and David, and families. WILCOX--In loving memory of Thomas Simpson Wilcox, who passed away March 17, 1950. In life, loved and honored, In death, ever remembered. --Lovingly remembered by his familly. WILCOX--In loving memory of our dear brother, Thomas Simpson Wilcox, who passed away March 17, 1950, Time changes many things, But love and memory clings. --Ever remembered by brother sister-in-law, Harry and Clara, CARD OF THANKS The jamily of the late Robert Brown wish to ang the many friends and neighbors, Dr. Vollmer, Dr. mmerly, Rev. Moffatt, Tony Derjardins, A. Taylor, G.M.C. for loan of cars and the Arm- strong Funeral Home for their many acts of kindness and sympathy during their Tecent sad bereavement, --Mrs. Helena Brown and family. OBITUARIES ERNEST PRICE former resident of Oshawa, and A Erne noon at the home of his only son, George Price, 23 Clark Street, To- ronto, in his 83rd year. Mr. Price, who had lived in Osh- awa for nearly 60 years, moved to Toronto about 10 years ago. He is survived by his wife and one son, George Price of Toronto. The funeral service will be held from the Trull Funeral Home, 1111 Danforth Avenue, at 2 p.m. on Wed- nesday, March 18, ' ALEXANDER TODOSEY Tue Ral for Alexander Todo- sey, ary eet, who was in- stantly killed in an accident on Highway 401 on Sunday night, will be held from the Armstrong Fu- neral Home at 3.30 p.m. on Wed- nesday March 18, Rev. M. A. Bury m r of King Street United Church, which the deceased attend- ed, will conduct the service. Inter- men will be in Mount Lawn Ceme- ery. A son of Mr. and Mrs, William Todosey of Ethelbert, Manitoba, the deceased was born there on Ju. ly 15 1923. A resident of Oshawa for three years, he worked at Gen. eral Motors and prior to coming here worked in Sudbury. Besides his parents he leaves to mourn his passing a sister, Mrs. Walter Kozar of Ethelbert, Mani. toba and two brothers, Joseph of Toronto and Peter of Ukriania, Manitoba, JOHN WILLIAM FLEGG Following an {fllness of five weeks the death occurred in the Oshawa General Hospital on Monday morning of John William Flegg, husband of the former Mary. Ann Agnes Patfield, in his 78th year. - : A son of the late Robert and Agnes Flégg, the deceased was born at Plaistow, Sussex, England a was married in in A esident of fox 46 years, he lived for 28 years in the Province of Quebec and in Osh- awa for 17 years. A builder by trade, Mr. Flegg was a member of St. George's Anglican Church. He was a mem- ber of Prevost Lodge, AF and AM Denham, Quebec and of IOOF Lodge, No. 32, Cowansville, Que- bec Besides his wife he is survived by three daughters, Mrs. P. Den- shan (Agnes) and Mrs. S. Shar- ples (Lillian) of Oshawa and Mrs. B. McCann (Grace) of Simcoe and three sons, George J. Flegg of Oshawa, Sydney Flegg of Bedford, Quebec, and Ernest Flegg of To- ronto Also surviving are five sisters, Mrs. G, Ellis of California; Agnes and Rosa in Australia and Ethel and Lilllan in England; a brother, William Flegg in England and eight grandchildren. The remains will rest at the Luke-McIntosh Funeral Home un- tii Wednesday, March 18. The funeral service will be held in St. George's Anglican Church at 345 p.m. on Wednesday conducted by Rev. Canon David M. Rose. In- terment will be in the Oshawa Union Cemetery. A memorial service will be held at the funeral home at 7 pm. to- day by the members of the Inde- pendent Order of Odd Fellows. MRS. GEO. 8. BURT OWEN SOUND -- Mrs. Helen Holman Burt, widow of the late George S. Burt, died Saturday morning at the home of her friends, Mr. and Mrs. George Bell at 763 4th Ave. E. She was 82 years old, having celebrated her last birthday anniversary only last month, The late Mrs. Burt, whose resi- dence was at 130 10th St. W. had | {been in good health until a week | {ago when she was taken suddenly {111 with flu. Mrs. Bell then persuad- | ed her to come to her home during {her illness, ! | Born in Brooklin, Ontario, the { daughter of the late Joseph Holman the demolition of the four houses |g Council Asks Police Probe PICKERING -- An inquiry inte internal problems of the Pickering Township Police Department by the police commission has been re- quested by township council. In asking the commission, head- ed by Judge F. J. MacCrae of Whitby, to hold an inquiry, the council passed a motion expres sing lack of confidence in the five- man department's efficiency and devotion to duty, sald Reeve George Todd tonight. There is an alarming reduction in the public's confidence in the township police, a motion passed bv council on March 2 stated. "We want the commission to clean up whatever is the cause of the present internal trouble," said Reeve Todd. Although the police department has a maximum probation period for new officers of three months, members of the Pickering Police Association claim one officer has en on the probationary list five months and two others for 10 months. Salaries for the department and a personal dispute between Chief Constable Lockhart Trinnell and one or more of his officers, is be- lieved to form the internal trouble the council wants investigated, Council has asked that the com- mission complete a reorganization of the force on the basis of effi- ciency and impartiality. Chief Trinnell said the request of council was news to him. Charge Pickering Beach Resident LINDSAY -- A Pickering Beach resident has been charged with fail- ing to report an accident in which his car suffered $250 damage. The charge was laid by officers of the Lindsay Police Department at 2.40 a.m. Sunday. Chief Constable John Hunter re- ports that the accused's car left the Bobcaygeon road, atthe town's eastern limits travelled along the east ditch, climbed back on the roadway, crossed the highway and came to rest in the west ditch. Seek Auto Which Crashed Taxi Oshawa police today are looking for a light green Dodge auto, alleg- ed to be a hit-and-run vehicle that caused damage to the left side of a Mercury Cab, driven east on King Street West by Gordon MacDon- ald, 132 Alice Street. The collision took place near the Avalon dance hall. According to MacDonald, the green car side- swiped the taxicab, then turned north on Stevenson's Road North after passing the dance hall, yes- terday evening. The hunted car did not stop at any time after the col- lision, according to the cab driver. CHAMBER (Continued from Page $) future quarters adequate to the ber's need could be acquired. In his thanks to city and cham- ber officials, Mr. McConkey paid tribute to his assistant, Mrs. Kae Jackson, and her staff of Mrs. Simons, Mrs. Wilson, Mrs, Wilton and Mrs. Kutusky. Concluding his report, Mr. Me- Conkey said "It will be a pleasure to work with our new president and directors, I can assure you they will receive our undivided sup- port during their tenure of office and may we accomplish in the year ahead some of the worth- while projects which the president has outlined so that we as a cham- ber may better serve our citizens as a whole, thereby making a city a better place in which to work and worship." A resume of the aims and objec- Commerce was given to the meet- ing by Doug Storie, who is the second vice-president of the pro- vincial chamber. Introducing Mr, Storie, Hayden Macdonald said it was on the cards that, all going well, Mr. Storie would in a year or so be the prov- ince's president, That would be a great honor to Oshawa and Chamber. Mr. Storie's speech on the pro- tives of the Ontario Chamber of | FATAL ACCIDENT " Above shows the cab of a Charlton trailer truck mired on the boulevard strip between the | Mrs. Robert H. Brown was killed when the car driven by Wreckage of the car in which Mr. and Mrs. Brown and their daugher Jean were riding gives ON HIGHWAY CLAIMED TWO LIVES to the side of the trailer, which was stretched across the high- way, Wreckage of the Brown car can be seen under the trailer. lanes of Highway No. 401 west of the Cromwell Avenue clover- leaf when two cars plunged in- and was partly pinned under the trailer, where 1t can be seen in the above photograph. her husband crashed into the side of the automobile trailer, some idea of the force of the | trailer which was straddled impact with whi" it struck the | across Highway No. 401 in the Charlton 7Tranc..rt automobile | fog at the time of the accident. Photos by Douglas R. Turner. Local RCEME Unit Guests Of Toronto Mess Sergeants and their wives, of the 29th Technical Squadron of Osp- | awa, were entertained by the 4th Technical Squadron at their Toron- |to mess, on Saturday night. After arriving in Toronto at 9 {p.m., the hosts, who met the Osh- | awa squadron at the mess door, | | pinned shamrocks on each of the {guests and introduced them as a | | body. | The evening was spent in dancing | and Sophia Webster, Mrs. Burt at- | vincial Chamber covered its work {to a fine orchestra and later, lunch | | tended Moulton College and Nor- | mal Schoool in Toronto. She came | to Owen Sound in 1906, as kinder- | | garten teacher at Ryerson school, |and was married to the late Dr. | Burt the same year. He predeceas- | ed her six years ago, at their | home on 10th St. Ww, | The deceased was an ardent Bap- | tist, and had been for many years a very active member of South End Baptist Church, where she took an extraordinary interest and part in the activities of the Women's Mis- sionary Society. Surviving Mrs. Burt is a niece, Miss Helen Shannon of Toronto, and a nephew, Controller Louis Shan- non, also of Toronto, children of the late Mrs. L. W. Shannon, sister of Mis. Burt, who died some years st Price died on Sunday after- | B FUNERAL OF MRS. GEORGE M. THOMPSON The funeral service for Mrs. George M. Thompson, who died in the Oshawa General Hospital on Friday last, was held from the Luke-McIntosh Funeral Home at 2 Rn Yesterday. | e services were conducted b { Rev. 8. B. Coles, minister of Knox | Presbyterian Church. Interment was in Mout Lawn Cemetery, € services were very largel attended and the wealth of floral tributes indicated the high regard in which the deceased was held. The pallbearers were H, M. Bate- wion, Roy Ishii, H. man, C. H. Do Souter, T. Whitsitt and J. Logan. OSHAWA TRAFFIC TOLL Yesterday Accidents Injured Killed Ssssesesnsannsangen Year to Date Accidents JAnjured Bled .i.ecinse-aaaais Saas 3 PLEASE DRIVE CAREFULLY | since its inception.about 40 years ago when a group of businessmen went to Ottawa to fight for the | building of the Welland canal up| to its present representation of thousands of businessmen. {was served. Members of squadrons showed some of their | talents by entertaining with songs | and special dances. A sing - song | | terminated the evening .of enter- | | tainment. TORONTO (CP)--Toronto police today doubled their efforts in the search for Harry Duguid, one of Canada's 10 most wanted men, following an attempted robbery Monday night of a downtown branch of the Dominion Bank. Duguid, once a prominent Tor- onto plastics manufacturer, who slipped into a life of crime 10 years ago, has been sought since 1947 when he sawed his way out of the Welland county jail. Authorities here said Monday night's break-in '"'definitely resem- bled Duguid's work." They said the man worked alone, climbing a fire escape at the rear of the building with a ladder he had taken from a nearby construc- tion job. He then lowered the lad- Police Re-double Search For Wanted Bank Robber der through a trap door in the roof of the three-storey building and climbed down into a storeroom Cutting through the floor with an electric saw, he was only inches away from getting down into a wash room directly above the bank vault when police believe he was frightened away by the watchman making his rounds. Ten days ago, a similar break- in was discovered in a Dominion Bank branch in north Toronto. In that case also, police believe a watchman scared the man away before he could complete his work. The 38-year-old Duguid is wanted for the $14,500 armed robbery of a central Toronto Dominin Bank branch in 1942 and the $19,400 holdup of an Imperial Bank at Stamford in the Niagara district in 1947. He is also wanted for es- caping custody. walls, special samples and material $16.00. 616 KING E. WALLPAPER SALE Any room 12 x 14 feet and under, ceiling and R. A. THIBERT to choose from. Labor Phone after 5:30 p.m. DIAL 5-5757 Bequit Sobbing Mother In Babe's Mercy Killing SYDNEY, Australia (Reuters)-- and attention it needed. I couldn't A sobbing woman was acquitted |get anyone to take it." today of the "mercy killing" of her | TORONTO STOCKS: -- young sister's nine-day-old imbe- cile baby. : The jury reached its verdict in TORONTO (CP)--Western oils 10. minutes and Mrs. Grace Sav- continued Monday's gains in open- age, 35, went free, ling stock market: trading today Prosecutor C. V. Rooney said |while the rest of the market was Australian law does not recognize | mixed. mercy crimes--"but in this case,| Base metals turned lower, drop- if the expression mercy Killing | ping about half an index point. could be permissible, then Mrs. | Iindustrials showed a small gain Savage acted with the purest mo-|and golds a small loss. Volume tive to save her sister whom she for the first hour totalled 1,184,000 loves very much." | shares. : The prosecutor told the court| Uraniums weakened as leading that her sister, Mrs. Zara Stobbie, | issues slipped. New Brunswick base 19, gave 'birth in hospital to a | metals also slipped as New Larder mongoloid baby doomed to lifelong | U dropped more than 15 cents in imbecility. {active trading. The parents of the child had| Utilities were strong in indust- agreed to an offer by Mrs. Savage rials. Liquors and refining oils to arrange for its adoption. {also gained but foods weakened. Mrs, Savage testified that she| Senior golds drew little interest was waiting for a train on her way | and losses in juniors depressed the to seek an adoption home when | list. Among holding companies, the infant had a convulsion. | Frobisher slipped. She said she gave it the sleeping| Western oils rose on moderate tablets to quieten it but the con- gains in leading issues. vulsion returned and the child suf-| Leading base metals weakened focated. { with International Nickel and Lab- Sobbing bitterly, she said "I rador leading the losses. Eastern tried several places to put such a | Metals and United Asbestos traded child where it would get the care actively for good gains. Announcement This is to announce that out of respect for the late Mrs. Robert H. Brown, the office and plant of OSHAWA BOX AND LUMBER COMPANY LIMITED will be closed Wednesday, March 18 at 12 noon. BUSINESS SPOTLIGHT By FORBES RHUDE Canadian Press Business Editor More customers buying seen by Wood, Gundy and Co., review says in part: "With growth in population at |the rate of the past decade, dom- estic markets should readily ex- pand to more than twice their present size before the end of the century. 'Increasing volume of domestic business should be experienced by companies engaged in many lines, such 'as merchandizing, transport- ation and communication services, production of lumber, cement, steel and other building materials for houses, roads, schools and hos- pitals. 'Companies with progressive and firmly established in these indus- tries should be in a strong position to take advantage of opportunities in the enlarging domestic markets. "Forest industries have broad scope for further growth, particu- larly in developing cellulose and other products which utilize both wood and chemicals. Also, Cana- da"s pulp and paper industry is singularly well equipped to meet continued high demands for news- print and other paper products." Imperial Ol, Ltd., has started a system of handling credit-card Get-Toug WASHINGTON (AP) -- Senator Joan Sherman Cooper of Kentucky, a former United Nations delegate, said today that the sort of get- tough policy toward the 'Soviet Union urged by two of his fellow Republicans would sound the "death knell" to any hopes of peaceful settlement with the Rus- sians. Senator William Knowland (Rep. Churchill Rejects Barter LONDON (AP)--Prime Minister Churchill flatly rejected today a Communist proposal to barter a British business man in a Hun- garian prison for a Communist girl guerrilla held by the British in Malaya. Churchill told the House of Com- mons that members of his govern- ment, "after earnest consideration, had decided they could not enter- tain the proposal" advanced by Hungary's Red regime. The decision blasted the hope of Mrs. Winifred Sanders, whose hus- band Edgar Sanders now is serving @ 13-year charges. release Sanders if Britain would guerrilla held in Malaya. The offer was made while Lee Meng was under sentence of death for carrying a hand grenade. At the time, Churchill rejected the offer, saying it might be recon- sidered after the question of Lee Meng's death sentence had been settled. Since then, Lee Meng's sentence has been commuted to life impris- onment, Queen Mary Has Much Better Night LONDON (AP)--Queen Mary, who has been ill for three weeks with a stomach disorder, showed a "slight improvement" today, an announcement from Marlborough House said. The 85-year-old grandmother. of the Queen had a "considerably {better night," the announcement !added after having spent a less- | restful day Monday. Father, Daughter, 13 Die of Asphyxiation CHATHAM (CP)--A father and ; his young daughter died of asphyx- iation early today, Dr. F. W. Hall, coroner, reported. {| - Mrs. Fred Rumley, housekeeper for Thomas Nottage, 70, found her employer dead on the floor of his home when she arrived. His daugh- ter, Margaret, 13, lay unconscious beside him and died while being taken to hospital. more tim goods is the prospect for business to the current review of plates used by some | More People. More Things, More Business Is Prospect sales at service stations which, the company states, cuts purchase e in half. The system adapts service stations the charge- department Ltd. The stores and air lines. Before cou" try-wide introduction, the sy: was given a six-month test in Hamilton area. The annua! report of Trans Mountain Oil Pipe Line Company, which "is building a 718-mile $92, 000,000 pipeline from Edmonton to Vancouver, says: "A review of the probable re- quirements of the oil company shareholders and other prospective shippers through the Pipeline is under way to ascertain whether a fourth pumping station will be nee- essary to provide an initial capa- city of 150,000 barrels a day. "Present surveys indicate that by adding pumping stations, up to a total of perhaps 12 or 14, the pipeline can transport in the neigh- borhood of 300,000 barrels a day." Originally only two pumping sta- tions, with a capacity of 75,000 barrels a day, were planned. Last July a third station was authorized to bring initial capacity to 120,000 barrels. i Construction of the pipeline was started in February, 1952, and crude oil should reach Vancouver through it next October. h Policy Felt Peace Death Calif.) told the Senate Monday the United States should immediately seek to persuade the . United Nations to brand Russia as an ag- gressor in Korea, Knowland advocated the acti | as part of a program to bring ah" immediate cold war showdown with the Communists. A second point would be a request from the United States that all UN memf | bers withdraw recognition of Red | China; several have extended such recognition. A third was a come plete blockade of Red China. Senator Homer Ferguson (Rep. Mich.), appearing on a radio pro- gram Monday night, said the UN should take a firm stand toward what he termed '"'treason by Rus- sia to the United Nations " Ferguson said he disagreed with Cooper's contention that a get- tough policy might touch off a- world war, and he added: "I can't see that we can cause Russia to take any step she doesn't want to take when she wants to take it." THE WEATHER TORONTO (CP)--Official fore- casts issued by the Dominion pub- lic office in Toronto at 9:30 a. m.: Synopsis: Typical March weather prevailed over Ontario Monday. |Raw winds, snowflurries in the - prison term on espionage | north, and a few showers in south- ern regions accompanied cooler air The Communists had offered to|2S it spread across the province. Although skies cleared over night, free Lee Meng, a Chinese woman |in the north, considerable cloud with widely scattered showers or snowflurries will persist over South- ern Ontario today as a weak dis-' turbance moves eastward across the lower lakes. A return to south" erly winds will bring milder wea- ther again to all regions Wednes- ay. Regional forecasts valid until midnight Wednesday: Lake Erie, Southern Lake Huron, Western Lake Ontario, Niagara re gions; Windsor, London, Torontc Hamilton cities: Cloudy with a few" light showers or snowflurries this morning clearing this afternoon, clouding over again Wednesday af-- ternoon. Milder Wednesday. Winds light today. Southeast 15 Wednes- day. Low tonight and high Wed- nesday at Windsor 35 and 55, St. Thomas, Toronto, St. Catharines' and Hamilton 35 and 50, London 32 and 50. Summary for Wednes-. day: Increasing cloudiness and milder. TORONTO (CP)--Observed tem- {peratures bulletin issued at the { Toronto public weather office at 19 a. m.: ! Min. Max. {Dawson .. -- 28 Victoria Ais 47 Edmonton Regina | Winnipeg Port Arthur White River ... Kapuskasing .. Sault Ste. Marie . Muskoka airport | Windsor {London ...:..: Toronto .. Montreal | Saint John Halifax | SHY LRHE/RBRBLBY Police are investigating. ® FREE PICKUP & DELIVERY ® 5.YEAR GUARANTEE ® ALL WORK DONE LOCALLY ® 12 TO 18 MONTHS TO PAY 8 CHURCH ST. Don't Be Disappointed, Order Now for Spring LD FURNITURE 11 Re +..TO LOOK LIKE NEW AGAIN! You'll get added yeors of beauty and wear from your furniture after we reupholster it! Call 5.0311, v ® RECOVERING © REPAIRING ® RESTYLING MATTRESSES built and Recovered like new DIAL 5-0311 )