1. H. ORMISTON Editor and Manager PHONE 703 "WHITBY AND DISTRICT NEWS R. L. ROBERTSON News Editor PHONE 703 4 THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE, Wednesday, July 15, 1953 Liberal To Whitby Rotary Club Some of the policies of the Lib- eral party have been outlined to the Whitby Rotary Club in an ad- dress made by John Lay, Liberal candidate. Mr. Lay was the guest country most of its export trade. speaker at this week's luncheon meeting of the club in the Royal Hotel. Mr. Lay introduced his remarks by recalling' that wher he had come to this section of Ontario he had had no intention of becoming involved in federal politics. But, he recalled, at the time of the by- election last year, following the resignation of Walter Thomson, he had been pressed to become the Liberal candidate with the results, he said, of which his listeners were wel aware. "This, however' said Mr. Lay, "is an entirely dif- ferent matter. This is not a by- election, this is a general election and the past government is going to the people on the basis of their record of the past four years." "Charges have been made," said Mr. Lay, "that the Liberals have no platform." This statement, he said, he would deny and stated that those who had heard Mr. St. Laurent on his two radio addresses would realize that the program, if elected, would be "more of the same." "1 am asking," he said, "your - endorsation of a great party headed by a great Cana- dian." It was in a convention in 1948 that the Liberals had appoint- ed Louis St. Laurent leader their party and had at that time established a pledge of policies, policies developed over the pre- vious 14 or 15 years, that was to protect unity, security and free- dom for peoples in all walks of life. Mr. Lay stated that he, like all other candidates, was confident of victory, else he would not be running in the election. WORLD MARKETS Although 'here was, - said Mr. Lay, a whole catalogue of accomp- lishments ofg the Liberal Govern- ment, he would dwell on only two aspects of this record. First he dealt with Canada's part in the markets of the world. Mr. Lay stated that he had spent the major part of his career with the Massey- Harris Company and in his cap- acity had lived in Mexico for two years and had also been sales sup- ervisor in Latin America. Because of this experience, he said. he was in a position to know some of the Hay Field Catches Fire At Brooklin MRS. M. A. DYER Correspondent BROOKLIN -- The Brooklin Vol- unteer Fire Brigade was called out on Saturday afternoon to the farm of L. Kahn just west of the village when a fire started in the hay field at the south end of the farm. The prompt arrival of the Policy Outlined Plant Expansion Announced By William J. Anderson Co. problems which face firms i the | export trade. Thesopposition lead- ler, he said, had charged that the | Liberal Government had cost the Figures, he said, would .lightly contradict this statement as in 1952 Canada's exports had broken all previous records and had es- tablished a record that would prob- ably be broken again this year. Trade with Great Britain, he said, had surpassed any previous fi- gures. | It was true, he said, that Can- | ada had lost its market in the | United Kingdom for cheese and some other products but that was 'because the markets at home pay a higher price for thi. type of produce than Great Britain was An expansion program which will involve the erection of a large addition to take care of present business and the addition of new 000, Lies, hi announced by he Wilkiam rew had also claimed that the |J. Anderson Company, Limited, of Government had deliberately taken | Whitby. Work will start forthwith more money than it had been au-|on the new addition and it is ex- thorized to do. Mr. Lay stated that pected to be ready in the fall. Hansard, the official government Since the company was re-organ- minutes, would show that Mr. | ized in 1940, after five years of Drew on a number of occasions !activity in Toronto, the business had criticized the government for has been under the chairmanship not making its -budget large of Mr. W. J. Anderson, who is now enough. The rates of taxation, he chairman of the Board of Directors. said, are set by the parliament MAKE STEADY PROGRESS and if the country is less pros-| The first addition was built in perous than anticipated, there re- | 1947, comprising 7,400 square feet. sults a deficit. If on the other In 1949 another addition provided hand the country increases its an additional 2,500 feet, and in 1951 prosperity, there is a surplus. He there was added 1,700 feet of claimed that in the last fiscal year | storage space. This, in brief, is the the government's estimation of re- story of expansion, based on a venue had been wrong by only 1.9 steady increasing business to date. percent and its estimate of expen- | Present manufacturing facilities 000,000." He stated that Mr. storeys in height, and of the same type of constructions as the present buildings. The addition will be 77 x 45 and will be a continuation of 'the present building facing Euclid Street. Contractor is W. L. Hess, Whitby. This extra space will take care of the extra equip- ment being installed to take care of new lines being added by the company. The current employment roll is 56, including six travellers who sell the company's well-known lines from coast to coast. When the fall programme starts in the new and | enlarged facilities the number of | employees is expected to increase to 70, and the hope is, based on the success the company has ach- ieved in the past, that a further number will be added in a few months. 5 able to pay. Even, said he, the |diture had been out by only 16 United Kingdom High Commission- | percent, nu eftor of 3 per, cent er had congratulated the Govern- |which had resulted in a surplus ment for selling this produce at $24,000,000, not the $300,000,000 home where double the overseas claimed by Mr. Drew. : price could be realized. "If there | LUXURY TAX is a trade block, said Mr. Lay, | 'In conclusion, Mr. Lay produced it is a result of the United King-|a pamphlet which he is distribut- dom"s inability to supply sufficient ing in the riding. In the pamphlet, oods to buy all they want to from he said, are certain pledges that BO The more we cam buy he has taken upon himself. He from the sterling areas, the more | Stated that he would strive if elec- we can sell them in return but | ted, to eliminate the luxury tax on it would not be sound business to aut biles, since, he claimed the sell and receive sterling in value | automobile was no longer a luxury greatly in excess of our needs. but a necessity. He said 'that he "Trade," he said, 'must fluctuate too would strive for a national with the purchases from Great Bri- | health program and would try to tain and the sterling area. Latin [get improved markets for farm America, he said, fon seen ex. |produce. He said that he was ports from Canad. increase 1800 | shocked at the number of old men MORE who are farming the land in this er cent in the past 15 years. | area. He said that the high wages OCIAL SECURITY {being asked for labour were not Mr. Lay then turned to the so- | Within reach of the farmer because cial security and veteran's secur- he could not sell his products for ity program instigated by the Lib- enough to pay these wages. "What eral Government. He cited the Un- is going to happen when the pres- employment Insurance, the Family ent generation of farmers retire Allowance and the Old Age Pen- or die from overwork?' sions without the means test. These | He said that he would also plead programs, specially the last one for the expansion of -the national named, he said, cost a lot of money housing in the rural and suburban 'and the Government had found it areas and would try to get improv- necessary to levy special | since 'money just doesn't come off of the county. He mentioned also the presses." Such security, he Whitby's harbour, one of the best said, is doing what it was intend- jon the north side of Lake Ontario, ed to do, distribute Canada's in- and promised to try to get greater come to the largest group of the industrial expansion in southern population and putting additional Ontario. | purchasing power in those hands. 'I urge all of you to get your "We have heard a lot," said Mr. | neighbours out and vote on August | Lay, "about the reduction of taxes. | 10. It is your privilege." : The opposition leader claims he! Mr.Lay was thanked by Rotarian can reduce taxes immediately by Dave Cuddy, QC. load of hay would be lost. | FULL OF AIR CELLS | Mr. and Mrs. John McDuff and| There are as many as 750.000 | sons, John and Donald left on tiny air cells in an ordinary bottle Monday, July 13 to spead two cork, says the National Geographic weeks vacationing at their cottage Society, In addition to its lightness at Kilarney Bay, Lake St. Peter. and resilience, cork is almost im- The regular monthly meeting of | pervious to gases and liquids. the Afternoon Auxiliary of the Wo- | ------ re ee men's Missionary Society will be held on Wednesday afternoon at | {the home of Mrs. N. J. White. | Miss Patsey Conway returned 'home Saturday after spending two NEED FARM UNION CALGARY (CP)--President Jake Schultz of the Manitoba Farmers' Mion said Monday there is need He) : 3 for a national farmers' uni in weeks visiting with relatives in canada and also bg Ii Windsor. ho Union. Mr. Schultz addressed the Mr. and Mrs. Allan Keetch, Who | anna) "International Farm Union recently moved to Whitby were | onference, embracing the three weekend guests at the home of Mr. | prairie provinces. managément of Mr. George A. |are far from being adequate. | Anderson as president; Thomas R. ERECT NEW ADDITION The company will another addition to provide 76,000 | apd J. Gifford Beaton as | additional feet. It will be of two president in charge of sales. 'Fear Short-tailed 'Albatross Extinct | WASHINGTON -- The short-tail- | batross. Without an actual speci- ed albatross of the Pacific Ocean men to back it up, not even an | may have followed the dodo, the expert's sighting can be regarded vice- {reat auk and the Labrador duck | as sicientific evidence -- and no into extinction. | specimen has been taken since | The short-tailed or Steller's al-| 1933. | batross (Diomedea albatrus) was SEARCH FAILS 3 [the largest and handsomest of| A wildlife expert with the Am- the three Pacific albatrosses, says |erican occupation forces in Japan tages 'ed postal service in this section | | the National Geographic Society. Steller"s was not the wandering al- batross of the Southern ocean; | which likes to follow ships, but a shy bird going its wandswept way | from the South China coast to Kamchatka, from the Bering Sea to Lower California. NEST OFF JAPAN First described by an ornitholo- gist in 1780, it nested in numbers in the northern Bonin Islands, the southern Izus and southern Ryuk- vus -- all islands off the coast of Japan. Then came the world feath- er trade, starting about 1885, which {almost cost America its white egret. Hunters, mostly Japanese, start- ed a persecution of the big white | bird which ended at last in Jan- |uary, - 1933, with the ruthless slaughter of 3,000 Steller's alba- trosses on volcanic Tori Shima. | between the Bonins and the Japan- jese home islands. Wiped out in | anticipation of a Japanese law to |save them, these birds were the | last known definitely to exist. Several times since that infam- jous massacre, mariners have re- ported seeing lone Steller's alba- trosses at sea. The latest report | came in 1951 from scientists aboard the British oceanographic survey | made a determined search for Stel- |ler"s in its nesting islands, but found not a single bird or egg. '! Regretfully, science is ready to conclude that if anyone has seen | a Steller's at sea since 1933, the | bird was an elderly individual, too | its last | old to breed, living out {days in hopeless loneliness. There is a possibility that, as in new community, arena are asked to | The" business today is under the |- now erect | Scott, vice-president and treasurer | WHITBY DAY BY DAY Accounts of social events and news items of local interest and names of visitors are ap- Attending the annual convoca- tion of the Masonic Grand Lodge of Canada in the province of On- tario in Toronto today are Fred Ign, Ronald Agg, Maurice Slichter and Donald Gibson. Fred Watts, Alfred Reardon and Ron Brags have returned from a two weeks motor trip to Sauk Centre, Minnesota. En route and on the way home they visited in several places. Mr. and Mrs. Walter MacCarl left Synday on a motor trip, and will s some time at Lake Placid, N.Y., and other points in the United States. CARELESS DRIVING Paul Manninen, of Toronto, was fined $10 and costs by Magistrate F. S. Ebbs in the Whitby Police Court when he pleaded guilty to a careless driving count. Constable Peter White, of the Whitby Police Department, stated that on the morning of June 30th, a éar driven by the accused had driven through the main intersection in Whitby {and for no reason that could be {explained had sideswiped a car | parked in front of McIntyre's Hard- | | ware Store, it to the ! extent a $60. |= 4 New Arena 'Subscribers Meet Tonight For the tramsaction of import- | ant business, all subscribers to the damaging {the case of New Zeland's chicken- | attend a meeting in the Town Hall like takahe, the species may rise | this evening | again from the progency of a few pairs still nesting in some out-of- in a limited, well-explored area. | op the new {And this area swarms with Jap- | anese, Okinawan and Chinese fish- |ermen who will land and hunt {down for food any big bird they may see on islands they pass. Shy at sea, Steller's albatross was tame and stupid on the nest- ing grounds. A hunter could club several hundred a day on their nests, built on the ground. Eggs frequently. were left to spoil and chicks to starve. If the bird did try to fly away, hunters could easily catch it while making the long | run needed for its takeoff. | Steller's hatched only a single (chick at a time. Insect parasites and crows often killed the little | ones. Even grown birds occasion- at eight o'clock. | Called by the Whitby Commun- the-way place. The trouble with|ity Arena Board, the meeting will this hope is that Steller's bred only (be asked to ratify the contracts building and the tear- | ing down of the old one. They will | also be asked to name trustees to continue and complete the arena project, and transact other im- port business. All subscribers and | citizens interested are invited. | | | ship Challenger, which discovered | ally perished if they landed in a' the record 35,64-foot Challenger Depth Southwest of Guam. | But unfortunately Steller's re- sembles the other two Pacific al- batrosses. Adults look like the fair- | off' the Steller's albatross, as he | ly common Laysan albatross, the { valley or depression where there was no room for a takeoff run. Bul ornithology's record in.this tragic case is crystal clear. Man killed | has exterminated so many others | young resemble the black-footed al-'of the world's specialized birds. fire truck and volunteers prevented | interest please phone your local the spread of the blaze. It was | correspondent so we may all share and Mrs. G. C. Keetch. Whitby Classified estimated that approximately a same. Rotary Club To Harvest Fine Pea Crop By the end of this week, it is expected, some 40 acres of peas will be harvested and sold to the Stokely Van Camp Company. The crop is owned by the Whitby Rot- ary Club and is said to be an Have you had any visitors late- | ly? Or if you have any news of | NOTICE: Classified adver ts for this column must be in the Whitby office by 5 p.m. the day preced- ing publication. | several generous donations of fer- | tilizer have been secured through | | his: efforts. |. The proceeds of the crop will be used for crippled children and d other Rotary enterprises. ROCKWOOL INSULATION, FIR E- BREAK EXPECTED SASKATOON (CP)--A break is | expected soon in the strike of em- ployees of the Quaker Oats Com- | pany here, now in its 12th week. | Company ginployees at the Peter- borough, Ont., plant, voted Sunday | to accept a wage of $1.39% cents an hour, effective Jan. 1, as well! as a 40-hour week. The present wage at Peterborough is $1.18% Free estimates, Walter Ward, Insulation Contractor, 204 Chestnut West, phone A (Aug.21) DON'T SIMMER THIS SUMMER. IN- sulate now with PAL-O-PAK. Do it yourself or have us do it. Phone 2374. PAL-O-PAK MFG. CO., Ltd. (Aug.2) GRAVEL FOR SALE -- HUGH'S HAUL- age Ltd, Phone Pickering 97r12, Gibson Pitt, 3% miles north Pickering Village. proof. Cool in summer; warm in winter. | exceptionally fine one. Members of the Club have volunteered to pluck the. thistles which are very plentiful this year on account of the heavy rains, and there is still | cents an hour, one cent higher than Saskatoon rates. W. P. Noble, Sas- | katoon plant manager, said Mon- | day no meeting of company and | is s union negotiating committees has «some work to do along this line. been arranged. But it was under- William Forbes, local and district stood a meeting is imminent. manager of the Stokely Van Camp | -- - - -_ Company, has given real leader-! The walled city of Ravenna, | ship in this crop growing project Italy, was a Roman naval station | as he did last year when over | on the Adriatic in the tim of Aug- $2,000 was realized from corn.' ustus. BROCK 0: This Theatre is Air-Conditioned Now PLAYING EVENING SHOWS 7 P.M. LAST COMPLETE SHOW 8:20 LUCY AND DESI in « top id talent musical with 8 Rodgers i by & Hart songs. eg WF hin vo tn, LoROY + produced and directed by GEORGE ABBOTT Jiyl) Bank, Whitby. (Julyl?) WELLS DUG AND DEEPENED. SEP- tic tanks installed and cleaned. Phone 2961. Don Ferris, 639 Brock St. North, Whitby. (Aug12) WANTED TO RENT: 2 OR 3-ROOM furnished apartment by young couple, no children, in Whitby or district. Write Box 227, Times-Gazette, Whitby (162¢c) LOST--CHILD'S TOY YELLOW FUR cat, June 27, on Brock South, Trent or Centre South. Keepsake. Reward. Phone 2394. ' (162¢) FOR BALE-LARGE LOT NEAR NEW school, sewer, water. Write Box 541, Times-Gazette. (July2?) SWIMMING POOL MANAGER--APPLY by letter stating qualifications, age, etc., to Chairman, Swimming Pool Commit- tee, Box 912, Whitby. (163¢) LOT FOR SALE--60' x 4, NEAR NEW school, in Whitby, water and sewer. Phone 2577 after 5 p.m. (163¢) FOR SALE -- 3-PC. CHESTERFIELD, Duncan Phyfe table, like new. Phone Pickering 59. (163¢) LOOK! POCKET NOVEL READERS. We trade 2 for 1, sell for 8c each (used). We deliver. Phone Mobile Book Ex- change, 2818. (163¢) FOR RENT---ONE LARGE BED-SIT- ting room, unfurnished. Might suit lady or retired gentleman. 911 Centre Street North. (163¢) FOR BSALE---SPARTON REFRIGERA- tor. Good condition. Phone 2126 Whitby. (163b) WANTED--INFORMATION CONCERN- ing couple who allegedly stole car, '41 Pontiac, maroon, license No. 4379-W, parked near Heard's Garage, Whitby, last Friday, and who later were in- volved in accident near Claremont. Phone 2726 Whitby. (163¢) WANTED 5 OR 6-ROOM HOUSE UR- gently needed by couple with $1,200 HELP WANTED----WANTED JUNIOR | | clerk male or female. Apply Dominion Indian A} Movie Stars 'World's Highest Paid | movie stars in the world to be found in Hollywood, reports Rob- | jert Trumbull in The New York | | Times. They are in Bombay, Cal- | |cutta and Madras, where the sec- | {ond largest film industry in the] world grinds out of yearly footage | surpassed only by the California studios. Except for a few Indian | colonies abroad, the audience is| virtually confined to that country. | OLD SCHOOL | | The Indian stars belong to the old chest-heaving, eye-rolling, nos- tril-flaring school of acting, long considered passe in the West, and the scenarios, generally speaking, {are stamped out of a pattern that |goes back to David Wark Griffith. | But their hackneyed triangle plots and hoary cliff-hanger pull 600,- 000,000 paid admissions a year through Indian box offices, and the top stars among the dozen or so who dominate the industry make as much as $300,000 a year in rupees. The more they "chew the scenery," the more the millions love them. - Salary figures are even more im- pressive than they sound when it is explained that most of it is tax free. The Indian producer, who has long been convinced by the local public that he can't hope to make money with a picture whose cast doesn't include at least one or two big names, is willing to write a modest figure into the star's con- tract for tax purposes, and pay the rest -- which is the bulk of it-- '"'under the table." Naturally, no producer admits doing this, but everyone says that everyone else is, and the fact is noted in a gov- ernment report on the industry. DRAWING CARD A A great drawing card like Duylip Kumar, the Clark Gable of India, customarily works in three or four pictures at a time for different studios, rushing from location to location in his limousine or swanky sports car. One famous male star recently contracted with rival pro- ducers for 45 full "shooting shifts' on several pictures in one 'month, In other words, he did six weeks' work in four. Exhausted stars have been known to disappear in the' middle of shooting half a dozen opuses for a holiday on the continent. Opera- tions just have to stop until they No longer are the highest-paid | | which are in tents and since many millions of India's immense popu- lation have never seen a car or a train to this day, much less a movie, much of this audience is re- peat trade. The Indian audience is said to be the most exacting in the world, but its demands do not run to realism. Sets can be outrageously phoney. All pictures must have a dozen or so songs and since hardly any of | the stars can sing, the "playback singers' whose voices are dubbed in become as famous as the stars themselves and are advertised on | the billboards. The play-back sing- {ers having become big drawing |cards, attempts to preserve an illu- | sion, as Hollywood does, would be | unprofitable. TELL A LOT A cross-section of popular In- dian films tells a lot about Indian life and Philosophy. The songs, which to t e Western viewer often seem to be interpolated for no. rea- son and which make every Indian {icture as long as "Gone With the ind", are there because music and singing accompany every mile- stone in an Indian's life--his birth, his. baptism, his marriage, the births of his children, his funeral-- and a movie would seem unreal without them. The historical and mythological epics which constitute a large per- centage of Indian screen fare re- flect the Indian's pride in his coun- try's past and its ancient culture. The religious thread in many film plots confirms the strain of mysti- cism and spirituality for which the Indian national character is re- nowned. Insistence upon detail -- the teardrop, for example, must be shown as it emerges from the lach- rymal gland, forms in the eye, roll down the cheek and splashes upon the table--is also evident in Indian an an 3z0 in the national revul- io! ainst efficiency, which is Linked with the "materialistic" NO EPIDEMIC . WINNIPEG (CP)--Dr. M. R. El- liott, Manitoba deputy minister of | public health and welfare, said | Tuesday the poliomyelitis incidence {in the province is higher this year {than at the same time last seakon but is not at epidemic proportions. down payment, Dial 5-5905 Oshawa, (164a) FURNISHED ROOM FOR RENT, VERY central. Apply 214 John West. (164a) FOR SALE-CHERRIES AND RASP- berries at their best. Phone 2502 or call at 900 King Street. (164c) a : | |- Starrin A FOR SALE --HEAVY DUTY ELECTRIC stove, good condition. 127 Admiral Road, . ALEXIS Ajax. Phone 461J, Ajax. (164c) ws EDGAR BUCHANAN + VICTOR JORY Son ot cm ELEARETH WPLSEN hc WALLIN CASTLE pet ty LEBARD COLISTEN - vernon Php FOR SALE-BLACK AND RED rants. Phone 2930. ROOMS FOR RENT AND LIGHT housekeeping. 220 Brock North, Wigthy (1640) (164a) - {RELIGIOUS HOLD CUR- | {feel sufficiently: refreshed to come | {back to work. There are other haz-| Ihe department reported 25 new |ards, as exemplified in the plight | cases and one death to bring the lof a director whose star tragedi- | total of new cases for the season enne, working concurrently on an-|t0 133 and deaths to four. The in- other lot in a comedy, continually |cidence is twice as high as last burst out laughing in the middle year at this time. of a tear-jerking scene. She plead: | - ed that she simply couldn't get her mind off the humorous lines she had just soken in the other] | studio. EDEN LEAVES OTTAWA (CP) Government House announced Tuesday that Capt. Nicholas Eden has returned With all their faults, Indian to England after completing a tour Imovies hrve an almost religious as an aide-de-camp to Governor- {hold upo their vast audience. {General Vincent Massey. Capt. Since the country has only 2,400 | Eden is a son of Anthony Eden, screens, more than a third of British foreign secretary. 4 car. At that time, he said, the accused was unsteady on his feet. Later, he continued, he saw the accused driving north on Harwood Ave. and stopped him. The accus- ed, he said, denied at the time that he had been drinking and lat- er asked for and was given a blood test which showed 1.1 parts of al cohol per thousand. HAD FOUR DRINKS Two companions of Mr. Hart were called to the stand and both testified they saw nothing unusual in Mr. Hart's behaviour prior to his arrest. Mr. Hart took the stand and admitted that he had had twp drinks of whiskey before his sup- per that évening and two drinks after supper. He also denied that Blood Test Acquits Ajax Man The results.of a blood test, pro- duced in the Whitby Police Court on Tuesday, won an acquittal for an Ajax motorist charged with driving while intoxicated. Cecil E. Hart, of Ajax, charged with driv- ing an automobile while intoxicat- ed, was acquitted by Magistrate F. S. Ebbs when it was shown that he had staggered as he left the ball field. Crown Attorney Hall noted that the Court had in the past accepted 1.5 parts as being intoxicated but he pointed out that many persons could be intoxicated with less. He suggested that the charge might be reduced. His Worship stated that he did not feel that the accused was in- toxicated and dismissed the case. the alcoholic contest of his blood stream following his arrest was 1.1 | parts per thousand. R. D. Humph- |reys, QC, acted for the defense |and Alex. Hall, QC, acted for the | Crown in the case, | Constable Hedlun, of the Ajax PD, told the Court that on the jevening of July 9th he had seen the accused walking out of the ball {park at Ajax towards a parked | that he and Preswick had both Record Costs [ise rs nis oa | Preswick was found guilty and 'Toronto Man sentenced to three months after | Crown Attorney Alex. Hall, QC, | announced that Preswick had, in 11945, been sentenced to one year on charges of theft of a car, housebreaking, forgery and shop- One Toronto man has found that | breaking. | a record of misbehaviour has cost GE him three months In jail. Two men, [Rowell Hall McClary, a soldier, {and Edward Preswick were found | guilty of breaking and entering Mitchell's garages and Audley School in Pickering Township in a | case heard in Whitby Police Court. Stnce the only articles stolen, a| radio and a clock, were returened, | McClary, with no previous offences | against him was set free on sus-| pended sentence. Preswick, who has served one year on previous | charges, was sentenced to three | moths in jail, by Magistrate F. S. | Ss '3 Months MARRIAGE ANNOUNCEMENT | HONE-KEAN--July 3rd, 1953, at 7 p.m.., at Hamilton, Rev. Arthur Organ of | Ryerson United Church, officiated at | the marriage of Helen Adalyn Kean, daughter of Mrs. D. J. Kean and the late Mr. Kean of Whitby, fo Peter Ernest Hone of Hamilton, son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Walter Hone, COMING EVENTS GARDEN TEA AT THE HOME OF Mrs. George Stott, 210 Trent West, Thursday, July 16, 3 to 6. 35¢c. Aus- pices Miss Davey"s Group of St. An- drew's Women's Association. (1642) Evidence in the case was given in Whitby Police Court last week | and the two were remanded for | sentence until Tuesday of this week | At that time it was learned that | McClary was on one month's com- | passionate leave from the Army | and had spent 20 of those days in| jail, He was released on suspended sentence for a period of one year. | | HAS RECORD | Evidence was then taken against | { Preswick who. had pleaded not | guilty to entering the Mitchell Coal Company garages. McClary stated W. C. 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