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Daily Times-Gazette, 10 Jul 1953, p. 19

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You Get The Biggest Value Possible When You Use Times Classified Ads. Mrs. D-Rented Her Room The First Night Her Ad Appe ared. j t THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE, Friday, July 10, 1953 19 = ROOM AND BOARD IN PRIVATE home for 1 gentleman to share. Single beds, Dial 5-0000, (153b) | 39--Asticles For Sale 39--Articles For Sale 42--Female Help Wanted | FRIGIDAIRE REFRIGERATOR, 9 CU. < ft., perfect condition, like new, Jory fea: 48 ' Buckingh MAN'S CCM BICYCLE, LIKE NEW. Apply 176 Mill St. yA (159¢) RELIABLE WOMAN TO CLEAN ONE day weekly. Phone Whitby 2387. (159a) sonable. Apply ve., (159¢) after 6 TWO 2-BURNER OUTBOARD MOTOW, 1.5 air-cooled, reliable, g condition, Phone Bowmanville 2767. (1 LAWSON $60. 59h) SALESGIRL -- EXPERIENCED ONLY. Apply Pennyworth's Dept. Store, 21 Bond West. (157¢) 2 RANGETTES, | plates, clothes closet and , Apply 26 Gladstone. Dial 5-1980, (156f) B. F. GOODRICH STORES, TIRES, batteries, Hotroint and Addison appli. an *elevision, Thrifty budget plan. Dial 5-4543. (June28) BATTERIES FOR ALL MAKES OF portable radios, fresh stock and fully | guaranteed. Meaghers, 5 King St. W. i (Aug. & CUT PLUMBING COSTS IN HALF. Modern and used four-piece bathroom sets. Pipe and fittings. Pipe threading. Phone 3-7088. (Jly19) AWNINGS MADE TO MEASURE. Lovely patterns, gay stripes, solid col- ors. Can accept a few more orders for early delivery. Free estimates Folding chairs, card and banquet tables for rent. Cleve Fox, Oshawa. Jy13) RUGS REWOVEN FROM YOUR OLD rugs and clothing. Reversible and seam- less broadcloth, any size to 13 feet wide without a seam, any length. Solids, tone-on-tones and patterns. For Informa- tion dial 35-1553, Continental Rug Co., Ltd. (July1s) 6PIECE BREAKFAST SUITE, ELEC- tric range, side oven. Both in good con- dition. Dial 13-9561. (158¢) ORDER YOUR SASH, DOORS, frames, also lumber from T. H. Dancey, Whitby Woodworking, 310 Chestnut East, Whitby. (Julyd) LARGE QUANTITY OF FILL AND clean black loam. Cheap; also sand, gravel and cinders. Phone 5-4274, - (Jy9) 2-PC. CHESTERFIELD SUITE, VACU- 'um cleaner, table top, G.E. stove, cedar chest and bedroom suite, 2 rugs, large crib, kitchen table and 4 chairs, drapes. Phone 3-3728. (157¢) DROP HEAD SINGER TREADLE SEW- ing machine. Apply 324 Nassau St. Dial 3-7585. (159b) SPACE HEATER, NORGE; 4 CHAIRS and table. Apply "131 Cromwell ave » (J § REFRIGERATOR COUNTER, ICE- cream freezer, 30-1b. computagram scale, Berkel slicer, sold, 143 Duke St., 3384. at bargain. Place Bowmanville. Phone (157¢) $30 OR 62 Albert (1592) LLOYD BABY CARRIAGE, best offer, dark blue. Apply St. front door. Dial 3-3066. OUTBOARD MOTOR, Evinrude, 7.5 h.p., used in new condition. Dial 3-9597, HOUSEHOLD FURNITURE. CAN BE seen at 134 Alexander Blvd. between 7 and 9. (157¢) '52 MODEL only 20 hours, (159¢) RAMODE Canada's most attractive all- aluminum awnings, canopies, patios. Let's the light in, keeps the sun out. For more information and free estimates DIAL 3-3553 SCRAP WOOD $5.00 per Truck Load DIAL 3-733% M. GREENBERG & SONS 308 Bloor St, East (July1sh OXFORD PAINT $1.00 quart ... «$3.49 gallon SUPREME PAINT $1.25 quart ... $4.49 gallon 29 Interior & Exterior Colors A & A STORE 86 SIMCOE N. DIAL 5-4462 (July20) (Jly2s . AWNINGS KOOLVENT VENTILATED "Aluminum Awnings and Can- opies, made in Oshawa. KOOLVENT SALES & SERVICE 94 BRUCE ST. PHONE 5-4632 : (Augl0) Attention Dump Truck Users TRAILMOBILE PILOT HOIST $352 up. Trailmobile Canada Ltd. now offers a full range of Pilot Hoists and dump bodies. All hoists feature exception- ally low mounting, permitting greater use of body space. Unusually light weight allows extra payload. Unique sealed gear pump ensures low main- tenance cost. Call Trailmobile direct or con- sult your truck dealer. Trailmobile Canada Ltd. Box 70, Station H, Toronto 13 (Head Office and Plant: Pharmacy Avenue, Scarborough, Ont, . Phones: (Call Collect) Day -- PLymouth 5-1151 Night -- PRincess 2579 Ajax 743 (Mr. Pryce or Whitby 835 (Mr. Fallaize) Jly23) SLIP COVER CENTRE Latest patterns, ten dollars up. EE Covers installed and car vacuumed. WILSON BATTERY, Cor. Church and Bond Streets DIAL 3-3512 (July19) YOU CAN GET -- $100.00 For your Ilce-box (no matter what condition) On a new refrigerator EASY TERMS BARONS' RADIO & ELECTRIC 426 SIMCOE. ST. 8. Jiy19) SUNSHINE RANGETTE, WHITE POR- celain, perfect condition, large oven space and storage drawer. White por- celain Frost King ice box, 75Ib. ice capacity. Apply 282 King East. (158¢c) Is your name on the voters' list? If not, telephone Liberal headquarters 3-2263 Oshawa (July20) 39a--Fuel Wood HARDWOOD FACTORY CUTTINGS, for furnace, range or jacket heater, $5 or $3 lots, delivered. Dial 3-7391, (Jure29) 41--Articles Wanted PIANOS, now. Wilson & Lee, 79 Simcoe -2822, CASH FOR YOUR PIANO N. Dial (Ny23) COND USED FURNITURE WANTED, dressers, stoves, heaters, kitchen sets. Crysler Furniture, 56 King West. Dial §-0132. (Jly23) WANTED, LIVE POULTRY, FEATH- ers, scrap iron, metal, rags and mat- tresses. Dial L Turner. North Oshawa, 3-2043 collect. Wly12) CEDARDALE SCRAP IRON and METALS Highest prices paid for Iron, Metals, Paper, Rags, etc. Local and out-of-town calls pick up free. 100 Annis St. east of CNR Station. Dial 5-3432, Residence dial 5-4159, (July1%) JUNIOR STENOGRAPHER WANTED, Apply in person to Royal Bank of Can- ada. (16e) SECRETARY-STENOGRAPHER Typing and dictation, new plant, best conditions, good salary. GLOBE-UNION CANADA LTD. AJAX PHONE 320 (15%¢) MANAGERESS Required by drapery and yard goods store in Toronto. Good wages and working condition. Write Box 512, Times-Gazette (157¢) Bookkeeper Wanted Full Time Apply with references to A. J. PARKHILL of Parkhill and Yanch 26 SIMCOE ST. NORTH « 43--Male Help Wanted 4TH CLASS STATIONARY ENGINEER. Apply Mr. Howard, Genosha Hotel. (1560) ) SHAW RAG and METAL Highest prices paid for scrap iron, metal, rags, batteries, mattresses, etc, Factory accounts appreciated. 89 BLOOR ST. E. Dial 5-2311 -- J. SHAW Res.: 3-9111 (Aug.6) 42--Female Help Wanted HELP REQUIRED, ASSISTING WITH sink work, in bakery. Full time .Ap- ply Home Dairy, 24 Simcoe South. (160b) WOMAN WANTED, GOOD COOK, 3 boys, age 19, 17, 15. Dail 3-7189. (160a) RELIABLE WOMAN TO CARE FOR i| elderly lady, live-in, immediately, Madi- son Apartments. Apply 170 Simeoe St, South. (160b) YOUNG GIRL, REQUIRED FOR OF- fice work, shorthand, typing, good pen- manship is necessary, good working conditions. Call 5-1009 between hours - 12. (160¢) EXPERIENCED WAITRESS, FOR MAIN dining room. Apply Mr. Finer, Genosha Hotel. (160¢) BILLING AND RECORD CLERK, EX- perienced, 5-day week. Salary com- mensurate with ability. Apply Ontario Shore Gas, 15 King St. East. (160c) EXPERIENCED STENOGRAPHER, RE- quired, 5-day week, salary commensur- ate with ability. Apply Ontario Shore Gas Co., 15 King St. East. €160c) SALES WOMEN -- DOOR TO DOOR, to work and live in Toronto. Commission basis with $40 weekly guarantee. Phone 54569 for interview Saturday morning. (160a) STENOGRAPHER FOR LAW OFFICE. Fiveday week. Good salary. All replies treated confidentially. Write Box 527, Times-Gazette. (160¢) MAID FOR UPSTAIRS WORK, MUST be honest and reliable and able to sup- ply references. Steady employment. Ap- ply Commercial Hotel. (159¢) MODEL FOR PHOTOGRAPHS, AGE 25 to 35 size 40, experience unnecessary, spare time work, good pay, Write box 513 Times-Gazette. (158¢) WAITRESS, EXPERIENCED, FOR DIN- ing room work. Must be rellable and able 'to supply good references. No late night work. Apply Commercial Hotel. (159¢) COUNTER GIRL FOR GRILL, FULL or part time, 3:45 to 12 p.m. Apply Elliott's Fine Foods, 4 Prince St. (158¢c) COOK - HOUSEKEEPER REQUIRED, meals supplied but live out. Salary ar- ranged. Apply 94 King W,, after 6. (1540) EXPERIENCED STENOGRAPHER FOR small office. Typing and shorthand necessary. State particulars. Write Box 517 Times-Gazette. (158¢) SALESLADIES FOR OUR TORONTO store, thoroughly experienced on coats, suits, dresses, good wages and com- mission. Apply in person between 2 and 4 to Suss-Mans Dept. Store, 42 King St. West. (158¢) EXPERIENCED FURNACE AND OIL burner en, im- mediately; or young men willing to learn. Apply 21 Church St. (158¢) Advertising Apprentice with schooling in layout and copy writing. Leading Furniture Manufacturer offers permanent position, Apply SKLAR FURNITURE MANUFACTURING CO., OSHAWA (158¢) DO YOU WANT TOP WAGES? Bigger and better opportuni- ties in many different fields. All easy for you to get steadier, better paid jobs, spare time cash, or your own business. Many paying $2.00 hourly and better, Easy to master on easy terms, too. Send coupon tonight for free information, STANDARD ENGINEERING INSTITUTE, Box 523, Oshawa Daily Times- Gazette. NAME ADDRESS CTY Peso essesnssone EE (odin add aad YOUNG CAREER MAN WANTED We have an excellent opening in our Office Supply Division for a young man with person- ality and ambition to train for a career in the commercial stationery and office furniture field. This is a permanent position offering every oppor- tunity for advancement. Apply to MR. -HIGHLEY, MGR. Office Supply Division, General Printers Limited, 64 CELINA ST, Between 11 - 12 daily (158¢) POSITIONS VACANT FOR GUARDS KINGSTON, PENITENTIARY QUALIFICATIONS: Minimum height, 5'8"; age limit 21 to 35 years; at least Grade 8 education; good physique. Preference to veterans with overseas service. DUTIES: Responsible ' under super- Vision jor Sustody, industry and treat t i ry RELIABLE WOMAN TO CLEAN 1 DAY weekly. Phone Whitby 2387 evenings after 8:30. (Julys,10) Do You Like Meeting People? Are you interested in working with a congen- ial staff to learn a fas- cinating and interesting job writing advertising copy? Complete training pro- gram while learning. High school education preferred. Some typing experience necessary. Write your letter of application now to MRS. R. GOW e/o TIMES-GAZETTE, OSHAWA (160t0) 39--Articles For Sale USED CAR DEALERS AUTO WRECKERS GARAGES Special Clearance Inventory Stock of Radiator Hose, Rubber Floor Mats, Thermostats, Spark Plugs, Battery Cables and Hold Downs, Auto Lamps Rdin Master Wiper Blades and Arms, Fan Belt Assort- ment, Metal Truck Valve Stems, Truck Rubber Flaps APPROXIMATELY $550 -- WHOLESALE VALUE TO CLEAR $130 CASH B. F. GOODRICH STORES 453 SIMCOE SOUTH SALARY: $2,424 - $2,784 per annum. BENEFITS: Superannuation bene- fits; holiday and sick leave; free uniform, duty meal and medical at- tendance, For application forms apply te: THE WARDEN, THE PENITENTIARY, KINGSTON, ONTARIO. (July$,10) 44--Male or Female Help Wanted : AGENTS NEEDED TO SELL VARIOUS housenola items, door-to-door, on small weekly payments, Excellent opportunity for ambitious person. Good commission. Box 433, Times-Gazette, * (July25) 45--Agents Wanted TEACHERS, STUDENTS, FILL YOUR summer months with a new income. Sell in a protected territory, full or part- time, our 250 guaranteed products in. cluding cosmetics, tonics, medicines, soaps, etc. Write for full particulars to the largest household necessities manu- facturer. FAMILEX, Dept. 1, 1600 Delorimier, Montreal. (160¢) 46--Employment Wanted ACCOUNTANT OFFICE MANAGER, 21 years' experience seeks change. All phases b dmi tration. Phone R. lect. an White, Ajax, 105, col- (15 159¢) YOUNG GIRL WILL DO HOUSEWORK for room and board. Phone 3-8178. (159) YOUNG WOMAN WILL DO HOUSE- work daily. Phone 5-2251. (159b) HANDYMAN WOULD LIKE GARDEN work, transplanting or grading, efc. Write Box 522, Times-Gazette. (159¢) 2 DUTCH GIRLS work, sleep in. Phone Bowmanville 2086 | after 7. (158¢) | RELIABLE WOMAN WILL TAKE CARE | of small baby or child up to 3 years! old, in own home for working mother. | Write Box 511, Times-Gazette. (1576) MAE'S CLOTHING REPAIRS, DARN- ing, patching, zippers, button holes, pant cuffs, shirt collars turned or remade. Free pick-up and delivery. Dial 3-4840. (Augl) SPRING -4006. (July®) CUSTOM BAILING DONE. tooth harrows for sale, Dial 5 The Alsatian, a large wolfhound, was so named because it was once used as a sheep-dog in Alsace, SALLY'S SALLIES A Copr. 1933, King Features Syndicate, Inc, World rights reserved. ¥ "My husband is awfully fond bookmaker 47--Legal Notices NOTICE TO CREDITORS : AND OTHERS In the Estate of MINNIE GAY, Widow, Deceased. All creditors and 'others having claims against the estate of Minnie Gay, late of the City of Detroit, in the County of Wayne, in the State of Michigan, Widow, deceased, whe died on or about the twenty-second day of May, 1952, are required on or before the twenty-eighth day of July, 11953, to furnish to the un- dersigned, Administrator of the as- sets in Ontario of the said Estate, their names, addresses and full par- ticulars of their claims in writing and the nature of the security, if any, held by them. AND TAKE NOTICE that after such last mentioned date the said Ad-| ministrator will proceed to distribute the assets of the said deceased in | Ontario among the parties entitled thereto, having regard only to the claims of which notice shall then have been received, and that the said Administrator will not be fiable for the said assets or any part thereof to any person or persons of whose claim notice shall not have | received at the time of such dis- tribution. Dated at Windsor, Ontario, this 23rd day of June, 1953. | | N. J. RIORDAN, 377 Rosedale Blvd., Windsor, Ontario, Administrator in Ontario. (J26,J1y3,10) | Is your name on the voters' list? | If not, telephone Liberal headquarters | 3-2263 Oshawa (July20) | REPLACES CRANDALL CINCINNATI (AP)--Clyde Mec- Cullough, veteran catcher for Chi- cago Cubs, was chosen Thursday to replace the injured Del Crand- all of Milwaukee on the National League all-star team which meets the American League club in Cin- cinnati next Tuesday. Charley Dressen, manager of Brooklyn Dodgers and pilot of the National League all-stars, said McCullough was chosen because he can handle knuckle ball pitchers. of literature. He drone in on a every day." Surprise Attack This Week MONTREAL (CP) -- The RCAF will test the effectiveness of its ground observer corps some time this week when "'Operation Tail- wind," a 'joint Canadian-American air exercise, gets under way. Exact dates of the operation, | Ments recorded in the semi-annual | ' | Associated Press survey of censor- | during which United States strate- gic air command bombers will at- tempt to break through Canada's jet fighter defences and "bomb" | Canadian cities, are still classified. {The attack is intended to Be as complete a surprise as a real one would be. Members of the observer corps, numbering about 20,000 persons in Quebec and Ontario, are volun- teers whose prime task is to fill in the holes in Canada's radar de- | tection chain. It will be the task of nearly 1,000 observation posts in Eastern Ca- nada to relay information on any | planes they see to seven filter cen- tres. The centres will issue defence | instruction. WON'T PLAY THIS YEAR SAN FRANCISCO (AP)--Marine Capt. Ted Williams returned to the United States Thursday from air combat service in Korea and firmly ruled out gny possibility that he would return to baseball this season. Upon arrival, the famed Boston Red Sox hitter said he might get back into the game next season, provided the Red Sox "want to fool around with old men." Will- iams Will be 35 next month. IMPS TO START PRACTICE SARNIA (CP)--Coach Red Doug- las of Sarnia Imperials of the Sen- ior Ontario Rugby Football Union said Thursday his team will begin practising next Monday for the 1953 season. Last year's ORFU champions; the Imperials are scheduled to open the season -Aug. 15 here against Toronto Balmy Beach. Douglas will again be assisted in his coaching chores by Trip Tre- panier. Organized Climbing Cuts Tragedy Tolls By DON HANRIGHT | Canadian Press Staff Writer JASPER, eAlta. (CP)--Masters of North American mountain climb- | ing will gather here July 20 for the | start of the annual national camp of the Alpine Club of Canada. But these polished alpinists will | accept none of the luxuries of this | mountain resort fown in the Cana- dian Rockies. They will journey to | the base of Scott glacier, near the | fabled Brown and Hooker peaks, | about 35 miles south of here. | The spot 'was chosen earlier this year by an experienced reconnais- sance team of Canadian and Am- | erican climbers. The Brown and | Hooker mountains, about 10,000 feet high, were made famous by] David Douglas, who gave his name to the Douglas fir. [ FROM ACROSS CANADA | The two-week camp will draw ACC members from Victorig, Van- couver, Calgary, Edmonton, Re- | gina, Winnipeg, Ottawa, Toronto and Montreal. Climbers are also | expected from Yale, Harvard and | Dartmouth universities in the] United States and perhaps from Cambridge in England. Most of the climbers are physic- | ians, ministers, physicists, geolo-| gists, botanists or military officers. | Among those who attended pre-| vious ACC camps was N. E. O'Dell, | exchange professor of geology now | in New Zealand, who went to the 27,000-foot mark on Mount Everest | in search of the body of George | ish expedition. Why do men climb a mountain? Most of the modern professional climbers like to recall the explana- tion "'because it's there," given by | Mallory in an address during a fund-raising tour of the United States prior to his 1924 assault on Everest. { Mountain. climbing to these men is never a "challenge"' except to | one's self. It is never termed a| "competitive sport" except in cases such as Everest where coun- tries are vying for international honors. | SPLENDID RECORD - | The ACC can share some credit for the fact that there have been no mountain-climbing deaths on Canada's western ranges in the last 10 years. Three American university students were killed a few years ago on a mountain top in southeastern British Columiba, but they were struck by lightning. Solo climbing is frowned upon in Canada. Amateurs are encour- aged to join qualified groups for the sake of safety. The ACC selects its members this way: Applicants are first ad- vised to attend winter lectures on techniques and climbing problems. Later, they get practical exper- ience at rock and snow schools. The graduation test, which must be completed within two years {after the first lecture, consists of a successful ascent of a 10,000-foot peak which is glacier-hung and more than 2,500 feet above the timberline. EQUIPMENT COST Mountain climbing within close range of one's home has no real financial barriers. The initial out- lay for equipment, as in golf, de- pends on quality selected. The best wooden-handled ice axe costs about $10. The finest boots-- the Bramani with rubber-cleated sole imported from Italy and the Swiss Tricouni studded with steel sidenails--cost about and $48 respectively. Crampons, steel sharp spikes DESIRE HOUSE. | Mallory, lost during the 1924 Brit. | strapped to boots for ice.or snow work, are available for varying prices. For about $2 each a black- smith can fashion a set of ice {and rock pitons, steel pegs driven into ice or rock to secure ropes, The good climber is willing to {pay a good price for a good rope, {the key instrument. It must be nylon, preferably in a 7-16-inch diameter with a 4,000-pound break- ing point, The climber's equipment is rounded out by sunglasses, sun jacket, ordinary running sMoes and, for work on wet slippery rock, a pair of rope-soled Kletter- shuhs, similar to shoeg worn by yachtsmen, " By BILL BOSS Canadian Press Staff Writer IN KOREA (CP)--For the first time in its history, it's believed here, the Royal Canadian Army Pay Corps is flying its own flag. The blue-and-yellow. ensign has long been provided for in Cana- dian Army orders. But it remained for the corps' detachment in the Far East to produce the proto- type. Maj. C. A. Pilley of . Ottawa, and Japan, noting Japanese skill in needlework, gave a firm the flag's specificiations and ordered one made. Three feet long by two wide, it is bisected diagonally from the up- | per left to the lower right, the upper portion being yellow, the lower blue. Superimposed in the centre, yellow against a blue back- ground, is a 12-inch Pay Corps crest. Men of the field cash office, under WO2. Ken White of Ottawa and London, Ont., landscaped the ground in front of their tented hamlet, dug a hole for a flag- pole, sanded its approaches and white-washed its border of stones. When the pole provided by the brigade ordnance officer, Capt. Stan Campbell of London, NEW YORK (AP)--Blows were dealt the free flow of world news in Argentina in the last six months. Readers of newspapers in Spain looked in vain for any mention | was ordered out of Tehran for | writing about. hot-headed Iranians attacking Americans. | These were some of the develop- |ship and' other conditions that | keep news from flowing freely. The Iron Curtain was drawn back a little. Moscow permitted a group of U.S. newspaper and radio executives to visit the Soviet capital for a week last March and report their impressions while there. Poland let in some Western cor- respondents to cover a sports |event and Hungary admitted sev- eral to report a Communist - led world peace council in Budapest. All this seemed linked with Rus- sia's peace gestures to the West since' Stalin's death. For more than a month Argen- tine newspapers did not print dis- patches of U.S. news agencies No Paybooks Fly On Corps 1st Flag Canadian field cashier for Korea! S. America Hot Of Censorship of British pre-Coronation activities. | An Associated Press correspondent | painted white the detachment was | ready for a ceremony. |FORMAL PRESENTATION Brig. Jean Allard, the brigade (commander, presented the flag {formally to the detachment and | presided at its first hoisting. {From their office tents and cara- vans throughout the brigade all the | Canadian paymasters, pay serg- eants and their clerks and drivérs assembled outside Pilley"s head- | | quarters. It was the first time they | had all been together in Korea. | The Patricias detailed four bug- {lers under L.Cpl. Donald Thomas | {of St. Catharines, Ont., to sound the general salute. | | Allard inspected the parade, | !drawn up under Capt. Vern Simp- | | son of Toronto, assistant field cash- | |ier, and then, after officially pre-| senting the flag to Pilley, lec the! salute as Sgt. Pierre Cyr of St. | Laurent, Man., ran it up to the | masthead. | To the men who twice a month {go out at dusk to the forward | positions and throughout the hours |of darkness conduct pay parades | | within a few hundred yards of the | enemy, Allard said: | | "This flag is the symbol of the | | silent and efficient service you are | | giving. I honor you for it, and it | | is with great pleasure that I have | | bed which had long supplied them with | | U.S. and world news. The agencies | | were accused by President Juan | D. Peron of engaging in a cam- | paign to defame him abroad. | In May the Peron regime sus- | pended for a week the right of the | agencies to receive news by wire- | |less. Late in June La Nation, | {Argentina's leading independent | newspaper, resumed publication of | dispatches from the Associated { Press. There was no direct censor- |ship of news leaving Argentina, |even at the height of the contro- | versy over news agencies. | The freedom of the press com- | mittee of the Inter-American Press | Association reported in March that [the situation in Argentina had not | improved. The report added Bol- ivia, Colombia, Venezuela, Para- | guay, El Salvador and the Domin- |ican Republic as other Latin Am- |erican countries where freedom of | the press was curtailed. | In Spain a few weeks before the Coronation Spanish newspaper | men were forbidden to write about |the coming event. No reason was |given. The order however, was finally withdrawn. | | | | The little Norfolk seaside resort of Hunstanton, Eng., had its own wedding-of-the-year recently with two Americans in the "starring Leming, U.S. air force corporal, who was hailed as hero of the flood which devastated the com- munity and many parts of Bri- tain last February. The bride was Mary Joan Ramsay, 21, Leming's childhood sweetheart, who came to England at the "WEDDING OF YEAR" IN NORFOLK role." The bridegroom was Reis | request" of community which | wanted to see them married. The young couple, greeted above | by townsfolk who turned out to | see them married in a small Catholic church at Hunstanton, will honeymoon at Ayr, Scotland, and will live in Hunstanton un- til they return to the U.S. next year. Cpl. Leming was given the George Medal for bravery be- | cause of his rescue work during the floods. 38 Years CHICAGO (AP) -- A deportation order. was issued Wednesday against Jacob Burck, - Pulitzer prize-winning editorial cartoonist for the Chicago Sun Times, on grounds he was a member of the Communist party when he last entered the United States in 1936. An appeal from the order by Jerome T. McGowan, immigration department hearing office, is being Plaused by Burck's lawyer William . King Jr. Burck, whose syndicated cartoons appear in some 35 U. S. daily newspapers, denied he ever was a member of the Communist party. | He first entered the United States 38 years ago, when he was 10 years old, from his native Poland. He May Be Deported in US. {last entered in 1936 after a trip to Moscow. Burck testified at hearings of his | case that on his trip to Russia in 1936 in an attempt to sell the Russian government a set of mur- | als he carried a party card to aid his selling efforts. | Marshall Field Jr., publisher of The Sun-Times, said he is confident Burck eventually will be proved innocent. Burck won the Pulitzer prize in 1941 for a cartoon published in the summer of 1940 during the bomb- bardment of Poland. The draw- ing showed the ruins of a house with a little girl kneeling before a | broken bed praying as three bomb- ers flew overhead. . 66 Years At Law TORONTO (CP) -- Mr. Justice Robert Grant Fisher, 87, who prac- tised law in London for 40 years and sat on the judge' bench for another 26, died here Wednesday night. He was a judge of the appellate division of the Ontario Supreme Court when he retired three years ago. Born in Hyde Park, Mr. Justice | Fisher was educated at Dufferin College, London, and Osgoode Hall. He was graduated in 1888 at the age of 18 and was articled to Sir William Meredith, who later be- came chief justice of Ontario. For 40 years he practised law in |London: with T. G. Meredith. He was made a KC in 1920 and was | appointed to the Supreme Court {in 1922 / / MESSENGER Walter L. Robertson, U.S. as- sistant secretary of state for Far Eastern affairs, waves his fed- ora on arrival by air 'in Tokyo from Washington. Accompanied by army chief of staff J. Lau- ton Collins, Robertson is carry- ing a secret "showdown" mes- | sage from President Eisenhower to Syngman Rhee in Seoul on the armistice the South Korean president jeopardized by the mass release of over 25,000 anti- Communist prisoners of war. Secret message may open new channels in tangled truce terms. --Central Press Canadian. Glassmakers : Weave Bright New Trade NEW YORK (AP)---The glass- makers have woven a bright new industry with shimmering strands of fibre glass. Today, 15 years after the first commercial production began, the men who make fibre glass say there are so many potential uses that they sometimes don't know what field to invade next. In various forms, fibre glass is oing into insulation. . curtains, oats, fishing rods, wellboard and thousands of other products. Re- search turns up new uses every ay. The spectacular growth of fibre glass has been based on a unique combination of advantages: It is exceptionaly strong for its weight, can't shrink or absorb moisture, can't rot, oxidize or corrode, and is non-combustible. Commercial production of fibre glass began in 1938, after years of research by Owens-Illinois glass company and the Corning glass works. Owens - Corning Fiberglas Corp. was formed in that year to make a handful of products, prin. cipally filters and insulating mat- erials, Owens - Corning sales soared from $3,878,701 in the first year to $101,730,483 in 1952 as the number of uses for fibre glass multiplied many times. Local Lodges To Parade At Cobourg COBOURG -- Nine thousand Or- angemen are expected here on Sat- urday for the district walk, with 80 lodges present from the counties of Haliburton, Victoria, Peterbor- ough, Ontario, Northumberland and Durham, Marshal of the parade will be Ed. Jenkins of Cobourg, and a big white horse is being groomed for the event. The parade will be kept clear of University Avenue in order that highway Srafrig can be detoured north of King Street, which norm- ally is Highway 2. The parad will form up at Vie- toria Park And proceed along Al- bert 'Street to Ontario, north on Ontario and eastward along King Street and will return to the park via Henry Street and along Queen Street. The parade judges will be in the town hall balcony and the winning lodges will be announced in the afternoon from the bandshell. The town has been decorated for the oc- casion with Union Jacks, and the line of march is overhung with strings of pennants. At the bandshell the speakers will be E. A. Reid, Peterborough, Past Grand Master; the Hon. John T. Foote, VC; the Hon. W. A. Goodfellow, and Dr. Fred G. Rob- ertson, MP. The parade will move off at 1.45 .m. All-Stars Play Ajax Saturday The CRA All Stars will play hosts to the Ajax Pee Wees Saturday at 2 p.m. at Storie Park. The Ajax crew will even up the score with the All Stars as the All Stars are now ahead two games to one. This will be another in a thrilling series be- tween the Oshawa and Ajax teams. Some of the players that will be seen in tomorrow's game are: Jackie Lyons, Danny Gray, Al Dick, John Piper, John Cole, Doug Taylor and a few others who will be out there to show Oshawa base- ball fans just what the Pee Wees can do. ! So remember 2 p.m. at Storie Park, Ajax Pee Wees vs. the CRA All Stars. be out to The 'town of Adelsberg, Yugo. slavia is famous for the huge caves in the neighborhood.

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