- 8 THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE, Tuesday, April 21, 1958 ) BIRTHS SRACEY--David and Donald are happy to announce the arrival of their 7 lb. 8 oz. sister at the Oshawa General Hospital, Monday, April 20, 1953. BUDKOWSKI--To Mr. and Mrs. Edward 1 ski, a son, on Monday, April 20, LAFFIN--Mr. and Mrs. Roy Laffin (nee Dorothy , at the Oshawa General Hospital. Chapman) are happy to an- nounce the Douglas Roy, 1953, at the A MNttle brother for Carolyn LINTON---Mr. and Mrs. Harold Linton (nee Margaret Tripp) are happy te an- pounce the birth of a daughter at Osh- Hospital, on Monday. , Mother and baby both on Saturday, April MILOSH Mr. and Mrs. Patriex Milos, (nee Joyce Simpson), are happy an- on oe birth of a daughter, Heather Lyon, on Friday, March 18, 1953, at the Oshawa General Hospital. OGLE--Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Ogle (nee Berneice Arnott) are happy to announce the birth of their son, on Sunday, 1} 19, 1953, at the Oshawa General Hos- pital. A little brother for Joan and Tom DEATHS SHLEY--At the home of her daughter, a W. J. Mowat, Whitby. on Monday, Aril 20, 1983, Alice Josephine Brown, beloved wife of Arthur William Ashley, dear mother of Christie (Toronto), Edith | . W. J. Mowat, Whitby). Hi at McKillop Funeral Home, Main St. North, Brampton, for service on Thursday, April 23. at 2 p.m. Interment Brampton Cemetery. golered into rest in the Osh a , on Monday, April beloved in Resting his 70th year. i ; Funeral from the Armstrong Funeral Home, Oshawa, Wednesday, April 28nd, with Requiem Mass in St. Gregory's Chureh 9 a.m. Interment St. Gregory's Cemetery. Oshawa General Hos- , 1953, Baby and Mrs. Inter- J. ment Oshawa Union Cemetery. IN MEMORIAM FICE--Ia loving memory of Edward Flee, whe passed away April 21, 1946. --From wife and family. safe arrival of their ah | > | Port Perry, parked near the corn-|to get them. But something might | forts during the year. He also point- sad bereavement in the loss dear wife and mother. Thanking also loaned their cars. Mrs. James McLaren of Unionville wish- this opportunity > his comforting words, 's many friends in 1 als Whitby. mbus OBITUARIES AM. MAYNARD for Herbert Nassau Mr. Hi and East {when an Oshawa Wholesale truck | Oshaws | driven by William G. Eilliott, RR | eral ducted the mass and interment was in St. Gregory's Cemetery. : The pallbearers were William Menaul, Gene Willson, George inson, Robert Graham, James Dwy er and Pat MacInally. City Sells Lot For Gas Station The one lot reserved for institu- tional purposes on the. Southmead sub-division has been sold by city council to John Ihnat and Mike Harmodi for $1,785. The two men recently purchased the commercial area of the sub- division and revealed that they planned a $200,000 shopping centre "OSHAWA AND DISTRICT WINS SCHOLARSHIP Miss Frances H. Putnam, Lon- |don, Ont., has been awarded the |R. Samuel McLaughlin resident fel- lowship of $900 by Queen's Uni- |versity. Miss Putnam, 'a fourth- year student in history at the Uni- versity of Western Ontario, will do post graduate work at Queen's. VISITORS AT ROTARY Visitors at the luncheon meeting of the Oshawa Rotary Club yester- day included Ken Coulter and D. T. Dickson of Oshawa and Fred Braun of Toronto; and Rotarians Rev. Thomas Buchanan of India, John Stevenson of Barrie, W. Liv- ingston of Brockville, Dr. Knott of North Bay, William Riddell and George W, James of Bowmanville, H. T. Johnson of Lacombe, Alberta and Sam Murdoch of Whitby. ACCIDENT CLARIFIED Oshawa, who was involved in an accident at Newcastle on Sunday, {has informed The Times-Gazette that his auto was struck broadside by another auto and that he was not responsible for the accident. LIVING WITH DAUGHTER Rev. 8. L. Toll, formerly min- inster of Whitby United Church who has been living In London since 'his retirement from the ministry of the United Church, is now mak- | ing his home with his daughter, | Mrs. Wilma Clarke, and her hus- band, Charles Clarke, on RR 2, Springfield. LIVING AT RONDEAU Jake Biddle, who regaled the Central Ontario Baseball League | with some great southpaw pitching as a member of the Oshawa club, is now 41 and conducting a busi- ness outside Rondeau Park with business fine during the tourist | season. | COMMITTEE MEMBERS Jack Broadbent and George Hood of the Oshawa Civic and Regimen- tal Band were named to the ex- ecutive committee of the Canadian Association of Bandmasters at its meeting in Waterloo during the weekend. TRUCK HITS AUTO A car belonging to Eric Scriver, er of Mary and Richmond Streets yesterday, received fender and grill damage when a driverless | city council last night, the entire] truck belonging to Oshawa Box and Lumber Company rolled south and hit the car. The absent truck driver was Ian McNab, 149 Agnes 4 Street. His vehicle was undamag- MINOR DAMAGE Minor damage was done to both vehicles when cars driven by {Thomas McMichael, 740 Oxford Street and John W. Murdoch, 72 | Brock Street West, collided at the {corner of Richmond and Church | Streets yesterday noon. | SLIGHT DAMAGE | Police reported a rush hour ac- cident, at the corner of MacMillan Drive and Bond Street, yesterday !3, Oshawa, and a car driven by | Larry Bradley of Pontypool were in collision. There was slight dam- both vehicles. SAYS GLASSES BROKEN Pleading not guilty to an assault charge yesterday, Edna Ringwood of Port Perry was convicted by | Magistrate F. 8, Ebbs and fined $5 and costs or five days and as- sessed damages. Complainant in the case was Margaret Nemis of ed said the other woman had called her a bad name. Tom Harris of Port Perry appeared for the de-| | fence. TV SET HOT Headquarters firemen were cal- led to the home of Joseph W. Hart, 72 Chadburn Street, yesterday noon {where a short-circuited TV set was smoking. There was no damage re- ported. Another call took them to a King Street East address where a woman was locked out of her {h The wind had blown the | door shut. 'Drunk' Drove Own Car to Police Station Hilliard Badour, Thornton's Road | Fast Reports Speed Pay In Accidents jured on the job who need quick compensation should let their em- ployers and the workmen's com- at once, E. E. Sparrow, chairman of the board, said Monday, In an address to the annual con- ference of the Industrial Accident Pievention Associations, he said a recent survey of 1,000 consecutive claims showed 460 injured work- |men got initial payments of com- | pensation more than two weeks after suffering injuries because they, or their employers, were slow in turning in accident reports. Of the 1,000 claims 137 were delayed by workmen and another [142 by employers. Referring to on-the-job- injuries resulting in fatalities, Mr, Sparrow said newspapers have been print- ing reports that such fatalities had 1951. Actually, he said, only seven | more such fatalities were reported |to the board in 1951 than in 1952 although 40,000 additional men had TORONTO (CP)--Workmen in-| pensation board of Ontario know: increased drastically in 1952 over | CANADIAN left, is the winner Alfred Bur- KINSMEN CAR WON'BY NEW | A German-Canadian boy who I | has lived in Canada only one | kert 119 Cadillac South, who | year, who didn't own a car and | boards with Mrs. Ann Wihlidal- has not yet learned to drive, won | centre, Alderman Joseph Victor, the snappy flame-red Kinsmen | car draw convener and left, | Chev. Bel-Air for which a draw | President Monty Cranfield. 'Water Rates 'Owners Must Pay Frontage | Whether they hook up to it or not, people who have water mains running past their homes have to pay frontage rates. That was the answer given by city council last night to a request from the Oshawa and District Lab- lor Council for an explanation of water main charges. e organiza- tion alleged that a householder was being charged frontage rates for a water main on Farewell Avenue that was only put in to serve one farmer. "The main had to go in on Fare- well to serve the new sewage dis- posal plant. It wasn't built to serve Mr. Gifford," declared City Solici- tor John Hare. It was linked to the Gifford farm as council cut off the farmer's water supply from the second marsh through expropria- tion action, The PUC put in the main under an agreement with the city which offered to pay frontage rates on both sides of the road less any amounts the PUC received from property owners. | "Some of the property owners | { hodked up and some didn't." went | BUSINESS SPOTLIGHT ~~ "CNR Has Sharp Contrasts To Tlustrate Cost of Cars By FORBES RHUDE | Canadian Press Basiness Vditor | ~ Canadian National Railways has | issued a booklet entitled 'Com. | pare, Compare" which with illus. trations points up the cost of run-| ning a railway. Typical compari-| sons: Picture of a day coach beside a Bicture of Toronto's Varsity | Stadium, with the text: If each] of the 27,000 spectators paid $2, | you'd have to fill the stadium | nearly 2% times to take in enough money ($130,000) to buy a single | coach. and: | Picture of a sleeping car beside a picture of a new residential de-| velopment, with the text: For| what it takes to purchase one such! air-conditioned sleeping car ($200, - 000) you could buy any 16 of these houses. The annual report of Atlas Steels, | Ltd., of Welland, Ont., commemor- ates the company's 25th anniver- sary with an outline of its quarter- century history, E, B. Eddy Company, pulp and per industry of Hull, Que., has ad 436 men and women, repre- senting more than 14,000 years of employment, qualify for member- sap in its Quarter Century Club, which was inaugurated a year ago. Average length of service of mem- bers is 33 years; but John F. Tay- lor, a vice-president who started as & messenger boy in 1881, is away out front with 72 years. Run. ner-up is William J. Mills, with 52 years. . Canadian Bechtel, Ltd.,, says that about 1,500 men now are working on the 718-mile trans- mountain pipeline from Edmonton to Vancouver, which is expected to be completed in August. LIQUOR PETITION (Continued from Page 1) come under the board's jurisdic- | (tion. The 1952 fatality figure was | 428, the 1951 figure, 421. The R. B. Morley Trophy for safety was- awarded to Northern Electrical Company of Belleville. The company has had 2,600,000 was held Saturday night, Shown | Oshawa Skating Club Photo by Dutton--Times Studio. | on Mr. Hare, The property owners could be done about that for it'1 "| had to pay the frontage rates if| was impossible to have all the | their land was not classed as adri- | people trooping down to city hall cultural property. A |to_ verify their signatures. However, anybody with a normal-| If a vote was to be taken the | sized lot could hook up and their Clerk would have to be returning accident-free man-hours. 'Plan Storm Sewer For Protection Of Reservoir If anything should go wrong with | the controls of the PUC's new three million gallon capacity reservoir in the north end of the city then water | would start rushing out at the rate | of seven cubic feet a second--and it wouldn't have anywhere to go. The PUC is asking the city to build a storm sewer on Hortop Ave- nue to take care of the waste water from the reservoir, The experts said nothing was likely to go wrong with the controls which were as | perfect as it was humanly possible | happen. In any said the PUC, to case, | reservoir would have to be drained | so that it could be cleaned at in- | tervals of from three to six years. | Acting City Engineer Fred e |said a construction report was being prepared. Laying of the sew- er was in this year's program. Aldermen didn't think it fair that householders should be asked to | {bear the brunt of the cost of the storm sewer. Mr. Crome said the portion the PUC would be asked to pay would be based on the designed flow of the sewer. "To Change Name 'Westmount Street | Grenfell Street is the new name | suggested for Alexander Boulevard {in the Westmount area. Confusion | often arises, particularly in emer- | gency fire calls, between Alexander | Boulevard and Alexandra Street. | Council didn't want te change the name of Alexandra as it is close to Alexandra Park. Planning | board suggested Grenfell as names of great Canadians are being used {for new street names in the West- mount area. Sir Wilfred Grenfell achieved fame for opening up medical mis- |sions in the wilds of Labrador. City council considered the name | of Grenfell last night but didn't {want to come to a decision until the residents of the area had a chance to comment. PLAN TO CLOSE "UNOPENED STREETS Dozens of streets in Oshawa are to be closed. Taxpayers needn't | worry, however, for -the streets have never been opened. They are laid out on the locally famous Gamble's plan which went slightly wrong in visualising the | growth of the city. Most of the streets wind mer- rily through farm land and wind {up in the creek. Others have only {known the sedate tread of cows or the year-by-year growth of rows there. The other lot they wanted to! KITCHENER (CP)--A charge of | of trees, buy is in the extreme north end of Southmead. being intoxicated while in charge of a car collapsed in court today In a blanket decision last night city council decided to shut off the Had Successful Year | The annual meeting of the mem-; a large extent responsible for the bers of the Oshawa Skating i a EE pe chair- : ..v | man noted that had it not been for was held last night in the Gray | the wonderful publicity help receiv- Room of the Genosha Hotel. The|eq from The Times-Gazette, the president, D. E. Steckley, called |show would not have been as suc- the meeting to order and stated | cessful. that it was indeed gratifying to see| The Canadian championship hon- | a large representation of the sen-!our brought to the club during the {ior members on hand. Reports of | year--junior dance championship, | the year's activities were present-| junior pairs championship, and the |ed by the secretary, Miss Millie | Earl Grey Trophy for the senior | Yakabosky, acting for Mrs. Royal | team winning the most points have | Lee, the treasurer, Mrs, W. A. Hol-| made the local club one of the chief | |land; the carnival chairman, Mr. contenders in Canadian competi- | Ivan Richards, and the tests and |tion, Mr. Dulmage stated. | championship chairman, Mr. Don-| The following slate | ald Dulmage. | was elected for the ensuing year: | The president commended Mrs. | President,' E. R. S, McLaughlin; | Holland in her activities as treas-| vice-president, D. E. Steckley; sec- | urer, and paid tribute to the other | retary, Mrs. R. Learmonth; treas- | directors for their outstanding ef-|urer, Mrs. W. A. Holland; direc- tors, Mrs. Alan Fulton, Mrs. E, R. | ed out that the co-operation of the | Smith, George Jackson, Ray Yoe | | Oshawa Arena management was to! and Harold Keeler. City Spends $28,750 For New Equipment Unable to repair its present ma-|seph Victor, chairman of the fi- {chine, Oshawa's board of works is nance committee. to buy a bulldozer at a cost of | 'Next year we hope to get the |$15,950. The machine is known as taxes down," revealed Mayor Jack a bull-clam and is used for smash- | Naylor. ing down and covering refuse in| Ald. Herb Robinson, who is in the city's big sanitary fill proj- |the auto supply business, said local ects. Fi Eauipment Operators had fo L¥ d i | they could efficiently repair their in use since 1947 and © only two | OWN machines ai about hall the years ago it was repaired at a [estimated cost given by experts. cost of $4,000. The estimate for| Council decided to allow the getting it back into running con-| : clam but the committee was or- | dition this Year was $3,500. . |dered to pay for it out of its 1953 "The thing works hard for six | pyudget. days a& week. If any machine ever | «yt is ridiculous that we can't earned its keep it is this one," have these pieces of equipment re- said Ald. Wes. Powers, chairman | pajred in our own yard' com- of the board of works, ata meet- ing of council last night. |his suggestion council asked the He said up to $5,000 could be board of works for a report and obtained as a trade-in allowance. estimate on how much it would A further $2,000 could come cost to buy the kit and tools to from the repair budget and the | carry out its own repairs. balance could be paid off next| After wrangling over the new year, bulldozer for nearly 30 minutes Aldermen wanted to know why council in less than one minute, the bull-clam could not be mend- | authorized the purchase of a new ed in the city yard. Ald. Powers front-end loader at a cost of around | said the mechanics didn't have the $12,800. That machine will be {tools or power equipment to carry charged to the capital construction {out the repairs. account, It will pay for itself, said of officers | __ | totally unwilling to accept the holi- board of works to buy the bull-|# | mented Ald. R. D. Humphreys, On | "I don't like this idea of carry- | ing a charge over into next year. | Du LONDON (Reuters)--The Duke | of carnations to the Queen today and raise a glass of champagne to toast her 27th birthday. It will be the last quiet family party of the Royal family before the Coronation June 2. It will also be the first time the Duke will propose a formal toast for the Queen's birthday. Last It is poor financing," said Ald. Jo-| have to pay private contractors. ke Toasts Queen OnHer27thBirthday of Edinburgh is to hand a bouquet | Plans were submitted to city When an officer testified the ac- council last night by Mr. Ihnat and cused had been allowed to drive Mr. Harmodi showing a streamlin- NS car to a police station. | ed gas station they intend to have Accused was George A. Auld. erected on the site. A lunch | Constable Alfred Herchenrader | counter and rest rooms will be in- told the court how he followed, | cluded in the building and the space then stopped a car driven by a | year, the Duke of Gloucester, the Queen's uncle, performed the func- tion as the 'first gentleman" in the kingdom. Philip received this title last winter. The party will be the first of two birthday celebrations for Elizabeth. streets. Chap Really Quits, For Time at Least at the rear will be reserved for an enclosed bus shelter and a small park. ' Registry Office Cost Increased Committed to pay half of the cost of a new registry office for Ontario County, Oshawa city coun- cil heard last night that the build- ing is going to cost more than orig- inally planned. : Ala. Joseph Victor said the ori inal estimate for the work of pro- viding an addition to the registry office was $125,000. 411 the tenders were for more than that amount. "I'm just preparing you for the shock. As we are bound to go 50-50. on the proposition there isn't anything we can do about it," h commented. s will be dere The tend at a meeting to be held tomorrow. § e Aa a OSHAWA TRAFFIC TOLL Yesterday Accidents Injured Killed Ceessasassnnsnns 857 % 4 Kitchener man on March 24. This | 1h man later pleaded guilty to driving while his ability was impaired. Auld was the owner of the car, and was a passenger, Herchen- rader said, adding that Auld was also impaired. Defence counsel P. J. Morris {learned, under questioning, that Auld had been allowed to drive the car to the police station, This | made Crown attorney Harold Dauf- man ask for dismissal of the charge, the assumption being that a man who was allowed to drive showed he was in a fit condition. The charge was dismissed. 'Plane Crashes 'Scant Minutes After 4 Leave | SAN FRANCISCO (AP) {huge airliner carrying 10 persons plunged into San Francisco Bay | ALDERSHOT, England (AP)-- | After deciding on his own that he | was finished with the army, Pte. | William Ernest Smith sent his uni- {form to his commanding officer by parcel post, a court martial was | told today. | He said he wouldn't be needing {the uniform any more. - Found guilty of desertion, Smith was sentenced to 84 days' detention, - Al with a roar and a flash shortly | before midnight PST last night scant minutes after having unload- | {ed 44 passengers at the city air- | The crew of five and five pas- | sengers on the Western Airlines |DC6B were on & short, low-level 10-mile hop from San Francisco | |to Oakland. The giant plane, one of the larg- est types of passenger aircraft, |crashed in 15 feet of water about four miles frome heve. 3 Two survived the crash, four ere killed and four are missing, | CONCERT ARTIST One of three Canadian artists to appear at an Oshawa Lions Club concert, April 24, i8 Steve Staryk, the youngest member of | the Toronto Philharmonic Orch- estra. The concert, which Is | sponsored by the service club to ralse funds for sight conserva- tion, will be held in Oshawa Col- legiate and Vocational Institute um. She was born in London April 21, 1926, when her late father, King | George VI, was Duke of York. | versaries. Ald. Powers, as it will be doing work for which the city would Like her father, she has selected June 11 for her "official'"' birthday in Britain. The weather is usually better then for parades and other public observances. (Canada will observe the Queen's birthday this year on Monday, May 18. It will be a legal holiday with banks and government offices closed.) No public celebrations are plan- ned for today. The Queen will prob- ably take advantage of the current spell of warm spring sunshine to go for a morning gallop through woods of Windsor Great Park. Besides carnations, the Queen' favorites, the Duke is expected to give his wife a s mall piece of jewelry but nothing as elaborate as | is normally given for public anni- City To Receive $200 In Rentals Two hundred dollars of the fines collected from delinquents will be coming back into Oshawa's cof- fers each month. The money will be {the rent the city will receive for | the magistrate's office, police court clerk's office, court room and lock- up in the new police station. Negotiations have been conclud- ed with the inspector of legal of- fices who point-blank refused to pay the rent the city was asking for the court room. He offered a rental of $175 a month for the offices and the city will get an extra $25 a month for rental from the division court, His offer was accepted by council last night. In parts of the Hawaiian Islands cattle swim miles to livestock mar- kets, herded by sea-going cowboys - | Edmonton | water charges would only be about | [the same as the frontage rates! | changed in any case. | "After all the water they want it," pointed out | Hare. is there if Mr. No Holiday If No Wages Oshawa labor unions do not share the view expressed by Mayor J. W. Naylor to the Coronation | Committee last week that many workers would be willing to take June 2 off work without pay, if no paid holiday is provided by their | employers. It is planned to work in most Oshawa factories on Cor- | onation Day. | "It is no holiday at all if we {have to lose money observing it, one worker said. : | The executive of another major | union has decided that it would be | day without pay and that the may- or's statement to the Coronation | committee represented his person- al views only. Loli bandidill: Chest Injured In Car Crash James Nichols, 44, of 247 King Street West, received minor chest injuries when the car in which he was riding, driven by Maxwell Mor- |rissey, R.R. 3, Bowmanville, was linvolved in a Saturday night ac- | cident at the corner of Simcoe | Street North and Howard Avenue. | At first it was thought he was | uninjured, but he was later remov- d to Oshawa General Hospital, [treated by Dr. K. Batanoff, who | taped his chest, and allowed to go home. He is an employee of Beat- |on's Dairy Products Limited. THE WEATHER TORONTO (CP)--Official fore- | casts issued by the Dominion pub- |lic weather office in Toronto at| 19:30 a. m. | Synopsis: Strong, northerly winds | continued to feed cool air across | Ontario Monday giving afternoon | temperatures near 40 in most reg-| ions and scattered light snowflur-| [ries to the eastern half of the | | province. In marked contrast to | Ontario's wintry weather the Prair- lies enjoyed a sunny, warm day | with the mercury reaching 60 at | Winnipeg and 70 at Medicine Hat. | Under the influence of an Atlantic | |storm which moved northward across the Maritimes into Quebec Monday, cool, mainly cloudy wea- ther will continue over most of Ontario today. By Wednesday, how- |ever, the warmer air from the | west will spread over the province to bring temperatures up to near normal. Regional forecasts valid until midnight Wednesday. Lake Ontario, Niagara regions; Toronto Hamilton cities: Cloudy with a few clear intervals, clearing late this afternoon. Sunny and {warmer Wednesday. Winds west- erly 20 today, light tonight and Wednesday. Low tonight and high Wednesday at Trenton 32 and 50, St. Catharines and Hamilton 35 and 55, Toronto 32 and 55. Summary for Wednesday: Warmer. TORONTO (CP)--Observed tem- peratures bulletin issued at the Fon public weather office at 19 a. m, {Dawson | Victoria .... Regina Winnipeg AA White River .......... Kapuskasing ......eue. North Bay Sudbury |S. 8. Marie .. | Muskoka Airport ...... Windsor: ...... cv ren | London .... Toronto . Ottawa . | Montreal Saint John , . Halifax SLERSBLRRLANLIAREN x R. F. AKER, C.L.U.,, Branch Manager 44 Alger Building, Oshawa | annexed area while liquor stores, | brewers' | present brewers' {liquor store was so bad that if officer and the city would have to pay for it. Legally the vote should be taken at the time of the annual municipal election but as that seemed to confuse the main issue the liquor control board usually al- lowed it to be taken on a separate date. That, pointed out Mr. Hare, meant the drawing up of another voters' list, THREE COURSES OPEN Mr. Hare sald there were three courses of action open to council. It could: (a) Decide to take the vote on its own initiative relying upon the | petition as it stood; (b) Could instruct the clerk to check the petition name by name as he found time to do so and to the extent that Mr. O'Donnell furn- ished the address for the signa- tues or the number of the sub- division in which the people lived. The Clerk could then report his findings; (That was the course] council took), | (e) Or it could instruct the clerk to take no further action on the grounds that it had not been shown that the persons signing the peti- tion lived in the annexed area. "If a vote is to be taken it should be taken in Cedardale as well as | the more recently annexed area,' | said Mr. Hare. That would avoid a second vote and the situation of having different jolts of the city having different liquor status. "And the vote should be on all the eight questions allowed under the liquor control act," declared Mr. Hare. Otherwise the absurd result might occur whereby bever- age rooms would be legal in the | warehouses and wine stores were illegal. TRAFFIC CONGESTION Traffic congestion around the warehouse and the city could have those outlets in the annexed area where traffic was light it might be wise to do so, added Mr. Hare. Ald. Orville Eagle asked if there was any recourse open to people who signed the petition and now wished to take their names off. Mr. Hare: "No." 'There is no chance in the world of them getting their names off | and even if it was originally mis- represented that is just too unfor- tunate," said Mayor Jack Naylor. '"'As no addresses appear is this petition valid?" asked Ald. voe Victor. i "It is impossible to certify this | as a sufficient petition as it stands 951 wished to take off their names "in oodles" when they found that to allow the Blue Swallow a U- cense they had to vote their whole area wet. If council didn't know the addresses how could it possibly consider the petition? ASKS INTERPRETATION . Mr. Hare asked how he was to interpret council's final decision. "When you get sufficient inform- ation to certify it then you let us know," replied Ald. R. D. Hum- phreys. "This year or next year?" inter. |jected Ald. Herb Robinson. "I don't have a brief for either side,' said Mayor Jack Naylor, 'but we don't want to delay this for months and months. This peti- tion may be quite valid for it has 100 names over and above the re- quired minimum. There should be RO Jnnecessary delay." Ihe mayor reported that Mr, O'Donnell had seen the liquor con- trol board and approached him to ask when the certificate of suffi- ciency required by the board would be forthcoming from council. He is trying to put on the pres- sure if he can," said Mr. Hare. There is no question of pres- sure as far as I am concerned," declared the mayor. BRUTALITY (Continued from Page 1) just as the truce talks were begin- ning. He recounted an incr: le tale of cold-blooded brutality. We passed two jeep-loads of Russian soldiers," he said. They lopped us on the road and tried our guards drunk would shoot us. 5 they RUSSIANS Mullins said the Russians were a and in uniform, He said he knew the Russians wanted the guards to shoot because "they made motions." Mitchell said about 20 serious hospital cases were left behind: 'Medical attention was no good at all. Very few guys fad His story was confirmed by Pte. Loujs Kerkstra of Byron Center, Mich., who contracted tuberculosis. "Some of the TB patients in my hospital were in worse condition than I was," he said. "The way I see it, they took me because I was in a little better shape and knew we would hit the press first." His statement tended to confirm a growing suspicion that the first Allied troops, at least, are only "showcase samples" of better Communist treatment. ENGINEER HONORED MONTREAL (CP) -- Randolphe Diamond of Trail, B.C., prominent Canadian mining and metallurgi- now," replied Mr. Hare. It would |cal engineer, Monday night was need an entirely new petition if the presented with the - Institute of document was returned to have the | Metals platinum medal. He is the addresses added. In a place like |first Canadian to win the award of Ajax where there were only four |the institute, a British organiza- {or five sub-divisions the checking |tion. Mr. Diamond, 62-year-old ex- |of a list was easy but Oshawa had | ecutive vice-president of the Con~ 85 sub-divisions. |solidated Mining and Smelting Ald. Norman Down said that Company's western region, is & people who signed the petition in 'native of Campbellford, Ont. JANITORS WANTED Janitors Wanled for the Osh Applicants must be p ond low-pressure boiler, Application forms mey be obtained from the office of the ARD OF EDUCATION -- 179 SIMCOE ST. S. W. GORDON BUNKER Business Administrator awa Sch a hl P P BO E. A. LOVELL, Chairmen, Board of Education MAKES THE DIFFERENCE TAKE 12 TO 18 MONTHS TO PAY Expert upholstery means the diffor- ence between faded, sagging furni- ture ond bright new-looking pieces. We rebuild from the frame out -- then. cover in the finest fabrics. Coll us! @ FREE PICK-UP & DELIVERY ® 5-YEAR GUARANTEE ® ALL WORK DONE LOCALLY MATTRESSES RE-BUILT -- RE-COVERED LIKE NEW OSHAWA UPHOLSTERING CO. 8 CHURCH ST. DIAL 5-0311