Durham Region Newspapers banner

Canadian Statesman (Bowmanville, ON), 11 Nov 1937, p. 2

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

I PAGE TWO THE CANADIAk STATESMAN, BOWMANVILLE, ONTARIO 'I THURSDAY, NOVEMBER llTH, l93~ ~ d Established 1854 tA Weekiy Newspaper devoted te the iinerests of he town of Bowrnanvuile and surr oundtng country, Issued ai Ki ng Street, Bowniativie. every Thursday. by M. A. laties & Sons. owners and uubishers. The Caniaduan Satesman uis a rtuen:ber af the Canadian Weekiy Newspapers Association, atso the Ciass "A" Weeklies of Canada. SUBSCRIPTION RATES Anywhere un Canada, $200 a year; in Uitd States, $250 a year. payable un advance. Single copies. 5c. TIIIRSI) Y. NC\'FNlBER ltTH,l'),37 Considering the Band By-Law In l1 ii a ,il ittiitiXtiti f Bow.- 1liiîlivil le u'ilitiuil iiivote iii miitîiieV vl axvs w~il lubei akicl îi' iîquestion a theu ~Iý1t-xvîîîîmî ic!ipaýi e'-tuie *xîîî i avl ax î-pt-- iai a-t- ('ieît1iithe mîîuuul'ate' fio' bandtlpur' phoses I - - «u iîîu1uî lire tuat i aile tt lins'- aentîI iî1îbt'î'of z'tit-it'-. tisllinir witli tuii.5 tîue< ii.on, liii shiin z xvi t- xe iel ieet hiat thie riti/cli s.-houlîl vtoie tutasstur'ethe' liils- iuiliv b\thie I 92s coulcil tof the blaid 1) v 1a w. W5' tloubt if thiere is îîîîe pter elit. oif thie piopula t ion of the toi u viîdoIi iit xvaut a bîand. Takiiuîg faor Lraiiti lthlen thiat the' gt't îaolitv tof peotple taut aîi ttu explitiiii vhiv thiis Ilethtid is tue hesti iiethîod ho put--tue uin iîakîii. sure thiat tie i oxvi la.s a bandî. Ili Ieceîît tears thie band lias wtuiked îîîî- der' iifficuit auspices. chiief tuf wvliclî tva> si,- u'îi a permnîlient anîd iuaI haidînlaster. It Las 5aist, uîeîî îieessarY ta apliroauli the fow-îi cotîîcil anîuualiy for a grain. t. hla- beeîî iieeessarx- ex-cnt few îoutlîs to niaiù- soule alîpeai an blciaif tof tue band vieui uit- izeîs tir societits wxveasked ho suppuort tii- baud c. Uuideî' thie plai ctuitaiiied iii t hIli-,- laxx. wtvlc- vi!! hibc puihlislieul afien its fi st -andt seconid readiuîg. it is pi-oposect h>pulau-e a certain ienuiu, possibly $ý1*201) in thie esti- maates foi- band p)urposes. This $1200 re- presents appî'oxîiiat'iv fuîtlie aif iiionthie fax rate. This tvauld i ieanî anla liiuI)ditv assesseil at $3.000. thiat the taxpayer xvomti be askcdt o pay- $1.50 toîvard the uikeei) tf thie baudt. We di)mbt if anY taxpayei' vouid abject tii this sain. As eau-hi taxpayei' eau- friiiutedti lis sinail ainuflt.ai a euomîpar- able siiac-!orcii, to assessilseut. it xvtîld seelai a :salal fhîiîg. vet inî thie a _Ygu'eLYate it would îîeaîî that the hband w-oulti have the neees-sar fuuids to enîgagie a perirtaiîeut baudidmastei'. and tut purcliase thie iecessaî'v suipplie's cat-hi ear.- Thîis wvuold onîce agalîl gix-e thie tow-i thie opportuîîitv of gettiîîg back ivlîerc it w-as for' haîf a eîturY amourL the trixvus anîd cities uîoted for its fine bands. The liaiidiiasteî' w-aui!lic1w expccîed tti train i youlig îisiiaiis ta fil! places in tht' band anîd flie bcîcfits af music eta -ang people aî'e xmell kuîow-i. Parenits wvtuld ben- efit. ehitiî'eîî tvouid hiciefit. andtihîe towni xtomîid buieefit. Apant fî'om these coilstle-- atiouîs thie hauîd his gix-necelt'ie srx-iî-e withi little or lia rewaî'd - andi thaf is wliv we heiiex-e that the band bylaw- shiauld i, approx-ed. __________ Weil Named as "Stuffid Hiazard" Crii iii iiiahi v carcless cdrux îuîir is î-t-pxouisuit' for a great maay highivay a ccid eiits. huit cî'iiiial!v aîrauîged enussiuîgys andîuirits are iespiiiî-ible fior manmui ûreîîî. IliiCobulmrg iast xveck auother îuîaîî xas kilîcî at tu of the xvorsf erossiuîgs iii Ontario, ai tic xv"st- el-lt eutramîce to flic taxvîî xhere ouie i' crossing is hbut a fi'w- feet axvav friun thie ove'hîead fracks of ftie C ,R Cniiuîg ast onîe approaches fthc caugerous crossiuîg oui a hili. anîd despite xig-wa-gsiguials aceideîîîs have beeîî frequent oui the spot. The Cobourg Worid. ini referrnîg ho thîis part icular fataliiy likeis flic crossiuîg ta au 4£'ambush" and it suggesfs fhiat ex'en if if is a eostly hhiîîg fa replace flic dangeromis crossiuigs with bridgres or tununels h 1îanlf is worfh it. Thie Waî'ld refers ta the' C.P.R. bridge at hhe xwesterun imits tof Boxvinuville as a 'stupid hazard" which is jusf about as good a terni as wue have hîard alpplied ta this particuular spot. Thie thiuîg w-e cannumndrsfaîîd is whiv ini tue aîe of caîîîmouî senise did the IDe- part ment of Ili.-hiw'avs ever permulit thie eree- ftiait of suîhi oahbitdge as thîe'oaie iun Bîw'nîau- viile. ou' a cîossing h ke tht'o(euit-a('htir. Withi cxc iiîrcasiuîg t'a ffi-. au-fe iets arî'u b)oiuili toineulrease iii i ss sili iazand.(s a î'î reinoveul. (areiess drixiiig is it the 0111vy eamîsu'of a--îdeuits. ai-e hospitaizafian $114,216,814, gu'at i- it) beuiefiuariis $165,000,000; vacatiautal tiiiit iîîg $3,785,389. Thue writer also assînîs Iiti:îi "fle Cauiuiuiaîî rate of pensions is Ihiivhit.v~ fhiani Oit juid iun auy oflier countfry. "- Tk in- u iarî'iid-m uanuwithî three tciihdn.i.ti w'îeiis abiot thie axerage, thie inouitl lv penusionîs 1aid w'oîld work ouf as folloaws : i Caunada $137; LUited Kîngdorn $73.24; Ans- tralia $64.10; New Zealaîîc $190.04, SOîth Afria $9.9 ; nited States $105.. Canada'- rate for a familyvof tis ize, tiieretore. C $32 pvr naat h morte thla a the npxt h ighest ra te. that of te d !et i Sua!e .InaUstreat- fllet fl t viîiînv.,ton. (Canadia is lune irener- oui, t an any of t tlse elître.the îontll pea-.ttîlfizuîres forw iîlaws heiîa as fWIIws Canîada $60 ; Va iteul King-doni :21.09; \îî- tra lia $1P.77; New Zo-alandî a slidîing Nuale gnrt ed ap t1" $IL16: A MuîîPiAfriva $245..i Uîited Stacs W -20. Prnids were mat lutuh bythe zîîoa>ets of the governîiîeîit and eltlzeiisizeîîrall of the Dontiajon. tlîrig 1.eItlîtîii îlayv. tiat the famiuiies of tîltse w ho sîfferetl hi ut ta-eqîîeaee of timhir serx île c 'îseas wtflhîlit, prov\ided foir. A'îîîî tdlit tilt! a tenments of thle wî'itur quîoted arze eîtrrevt it is evideiît that iiieere efforts have heuit moade ta fîîlfil the rne. It is alNa tînttf -jztt ee'Ot a afair iîîîasîlre of ti i'taîtimnnî(mithe part of thte retîîrîid ien exists. On the atheî' hand there are tlîoet wvio -erveoIduiiîŽ Llong uwrio ds mwho r', lit t ablie tu seuwlîrepi oyzucnt antd arîe saf fering ini eaîîseueîîee. Many miieli are lic- inLur heipedl hy lýeiîaîî ralivlhes andi other turga nîzations. bat nt biut this tran aîîlvhe teînipîrary. Fat il tiie last desei'ving man is pi' viuleu for, it uonîatt hl-e hed that the full obhigat ion lias beeî d isdharged. Ward System a Backward Step The eit - of Oshawa lias beeii requested t hrcîagh a iargeiy signîtd petitioli ta ret tthe i ard steliî of I'elresenta tion 0mithe Uîî i tîîoiîcîi. That systein w-as abamidoled sîme five years agoa hi favour of the uity ivide systeni. suieli as weî have hii Bowmin- vil. TIise ilîo favaîir the iward systrni î5laîaith twliîe a particular waî'd is int direetly represented hy an alder'man, that mard gerts littie ai'nua ateîîn. Their strngest argumenît is tMat geagi'aphîieaily jtiiev ar'eresentet i ndtmesanie ilanner a, represselîtatives are eieeted tu the Provinîcial and l)aaîin iparîanients. On the otlîeî' laîd, it is argued tlîat the eitv 'wi'de vote are imore rei)reselitative of te he y as a unit. and tlîey are more inter- ested ini the eit v as a w-hale thaîî thev art' iii saine partictîlar part. It is aiso elainîed tlîat tîev- have a ider and broader outlaak otn ufunicil)aI affaire. hecamîse their eieetjoîî (lellalds erteest attention ta the citv as a whlole and liot to any section. Bowaiaîîviile unsd tA have the ivard sy- stemanîd if w-e renîcaîher righitly the Rate-i payers' Association sanie mnits ago suig- gested a return tii this systelu. W\e aunumi- tleroctand that attittde of thîone iho are vit- ally ii erested ini gettiîg soînetthing done inii tiîiî' owvn uarticular loeality. but wve hîcieve 1 tlîat the warti systeîîî is îlot the correct systei. Thîe Peterboro Examner puts the mater îîpihi anotiier i ght mvhen it savs:- "The' sys.telni îvwiulîîenîers are electerd is ziat 50 important as the tjuaiitv aîidi(!ai- il)re tof the luen tiemisclves. ' And thereiui lies the esseîîce of them.e ne. If aone partie- îîiar wvard did îlot liappen to have a mlan of th leriglît cal iblro e ucwoîîitble de(1 j ast fotr, va ni pîîrp(tses. Tiîeiîtoi) ward pl)iitie.s i-s another vax- tf ilividino- thei'tiil u ivarr'iîîg fau-tionis. Ouie *nili as to ams sanie orf the lc tititi lltr-twh it'ii tlîtvpî'e ftî'anîd thle grî-at znajority wîiil say thle i)1est'nt systcin. Weii a mlan sppks re-ciet-tion initer tOPceit w-uic- vote, lie laolst tell what hiielias dunie flot tue ntl -a!îV. iffethtitwartl .v muiîAlies exptetct t say iviiat lY lias dt>iî ftor itle mîîîi iipaliity. I idfeu thle xvard sv- stuni leie s expeett'd tii sayîviîat lielias donc fan tle warti. and(i if lîé' i nlart cîîauglî t put somîetlîiîg over foi' the wand his cloe- I tioni is again assîired. Coîîpctitioîî of tdis type tenîds t)inerilcrase extravaganît expend- c iture.d Hospital Deserves Your Supportf The year conîpleted an October lst, by a the Bowmanviiiî- Hospital Nvas one of the tý nîost eventful ini ýts quarter century of lus- s tory. It svas eveîîtful hecause so nîaîîv 11-0 pîîoveîîîents w-exe îîcade dîing tlhe ycar, aîîdm a îîex intercst .scnied tît have beeîî takea f: ihi its w-elfare. It is gratifying t<î sec titi zens take t bis iiiteî'est, anîd it is tuii hi'lipet1 tiat hdis îiterest w-i I li uiaiîitiid. 'flc t loperratiail tf a litspitai is il t!ift'ieîî!Ittask. rr If the hIosîuital î-haî'red etiiuîgl toiinltet tleî'- atiîig t-x;euses. i heu tht' ellai-gis %vaîilt1 i a liiilit'r t all the a ae i V-lit'!îIstt ýi <ilil payi. cý ji îlîarinîg thelit'îîiîii 111htht hîî-.jitai vo-îîa : (!s, tinie, nlaliex-, braiuîs, ta forai a servive soc or a civiî' "roup, ordinuary law.s ofiniatîe - th iîaties ar'e rpeaicd. Fotha.te î'esît is hit- bo ioni the sîimof eAî'lmans ciuutihii t be anîd effort. lielangiîug to and xvurk iuig ýviî h WÉ agroup eliauges tae-liat'tivî' iîdiviîlîîal, ti t î'-îgt}îen.S ls ordîîinv <'uuot ions, and lpro- ivel isliit fîrtlîer towaî'ti the- gîtai of the ada tt lanilie ('0111(1ever plîsîl lîîiiseif vit h- 01 t lit'heiiiraolt- iromlit hx* ttle inerfe 'atto id htî'Ilîigig.-I)aîîilld A. La ird. Mav 1 BOOKS THAT MATTER A Weekly Feature faurnished by the Association of Canadian Bookmen and the Canadian Weekly Newspapers Association (Continued from page 1) ers that the launching of Chia precise, accurate, ciîallenging and ýspecial Book Review in weekly written in an unusually cnisp, Eng- newspapens la an experiment that lish. His own pnivate libra 3 o-Iwill be tried aut for the next sisting of many tliousand volumesthe nitls If cotuae and cavening a wide range of sub- a! tex that time wUll depend very jects testifies Ca lis vital interes: 'largely upon the reception accord- in books. w-hile his experience as ed it and the commenta received general secretary of the Social froi our readers. Service Cauncil of Canada mak-cs *** ut necessary for hlm ho examine crifically a wide variety of soci.al LEST WE FORGET! prablens in the Dominion, and there came to lis desk many o! By Clans Edwin Silcax tîhe most notable boaks anti maga- Poison in the Air: By Heinz Liep- zines in the social fileldi publisheti marn: (Toronto: Lippinctts). in the English-speaking .varid, Price, $3.00. Mr. Silcox is ah liberty ta stateA his mmnd f reely cancerning the An Encyclopaedia of Paclfism: volumes lie rex'iews andi we trust Edihed by Aldous Huxley: (To- that readers of Chis paper may routa: Macillansu. Price. 15 flot onily profit by the reviews cents. 125 pages. which he may write. but xvill also Prelude to Peace: By Henry A. cammunicahe with either the re- Atkinson: (Toronto: Mussons). view-er or thîs paper any sugges- JPrice, $3.00. tions whereby this new service, may be improved froni Cime to 'England Expects Every Amenican finie, and thus iode ta meet mare. to Do His Diuty: By Q ui n c y IHawe: (Toronto: Mu ss o ns). Price. $2.25. Your Child Faces War: By Nelson Antnini Crawford: (Toronto: Longiansi. Price, $1.50. Nearly fwenhy years have pass- edsince that first Armistice Day whnthe "war ho end w'ar' camne abss The situations in Spain, Ethiopia and China are far frai 1 reassuring and seeni ho testif y ta the invincible stupidity of ian- k n . Poison in the Air Bu, if another warld-war oc- curs. what will it be like? WilU it leave anything behind worth sal- vaging? Heluz Leipmann, a Ger- Claris Edwin Sicox man naw ln exile, whose father completely the Canadian book- was killed lu the last, wax, be- Icver's need of counsel and advice. lieves not. Iu 'Poison in Che Air" While public libraries report he professes to give us the latest :lia.t there has been a great in_ and most coufidential informa- crease lu the circulation o! boaks Clou concerniug the recent devel- lealing with social probleis, re- opient in poison gas gleaned atively few sucli books are wrt-f rom persans whose naines he tn by Canadians or published does not diivuîge but who stand fst lu Canada. The reasons for high in the milîtary circles of lhis are fairly obvlous. Some of vaxious countries. He tells us the books axe somewhat teclinical. about gases which cause acute ir- and the number a! Canadians ritation of the lungs, tear-gases, trained in the social sciences is paralysing gases. blue cross gases, stiîl relahively siall. Then, agamn. yellow cross gases whlch blister >ur population is not large and and thenmite which causes au un- ihile an American book dealing quenchable flame. wth such probleis might easily According to, hlm, the argument fnd ten thousanti readers iîn a that counitries will not use poison ýuntry wliere 125.000,000 speak gas because if is so unianageable nglish, a publisher lu Canada and apt ta blow back on their oQ-n where 2817c0f aur total popula- troops no longer holds since now ti of 11.000.000 read for the huge quantities of gas can be nost part oaly Frendch.w-ill be drapped fri aeroplanes on cities aortunate if lie con dispose of far remaoved frai the scenes o! ,000 copies. Hence, the Canadian actual hrencli-fighting. Certain author of the more serious books 0f these gases will permeate any an not look farward ta any fin- gas-mask; gas-ceitars are rend- ancial reward. The typograpîe-s ered futile hY the densihy cf tle lcne set paîd for their labour. gas. and the proposais ho use the Beyond this, a large proportion o! Metra in Paris andi the Tube in un population is rural. and w-hile Paris as refuges will pr-ove abai- îany rural Canadians are hughly tive. 'There is" lie says. " no ade- rtelligent and enjoý- reading, it is quate defence against ga.s. Who- iffîcult, for local bookselters ta lev'er says there us, is a hian.' hock many o! the new books or He also informas us that Ger- fr local public tibraries ta mnake1 many w-hase normal cansuinptian tare thon a few unadest purchas- of arsenic is net-en more than 2000 s. And not miany Canadians are ta 3000 fons a year, baught re- ;0 affluent that tliey can affard cenhly frai Sweden the entire mare than a few o! the volumes quantity of 100,000 tons whidli hich tliey would be glad ta pos- had been stored by the Baliden ie&s if they had the means. Company, and contracthed ta take ,Altliough publishers know that an addltional 50,00)0 tans year by -rtain tif les which tliey may be year. 50,000 tans o! arsenical nparting are highly siguificant, ores, he says, suffice ta make hey also know that in aIl proba- 130,000 tons af adaisihe "which îýlitY the total number of sales could transfonni the whole of or sudh books in Canada will be Europe into a martuaxy where nail. therefore, tliey cannot welI neither man nor beast nar plant ýfford ta, distribute xeview copies la le! t alive." 'atuitously to a great vaniety of Thougli the Treaty o! Versailles ipers and magazines. If this decneed that Genmany shauld vere done, soie o! the books cease ail manufacture of poison aulti inevitably fall inta Che gas, a chemniaf namned Stoltzen- iands af revJewers unfamiliar beng. took out a patent as early ith the speciaiized subject mat- as 1924 andi nurnbered "D-R.P. er treateti, and perliaps inconi- 413352' whlcli was descnibeti as etent to Jutige either their sig- designed to destroy "with the aid ficance or their limitations. The of aircraf t and flame-thxowers, Lunadian Weekly Newspapeu's As- swartns a! no,dious creatures." The )ciation andtihte A.C.B. have, swanms a! noxiaus creatures, says ierefone, developed a plan wliere- Herr Uiepmann. were Ca be bipeds, Ytwo or tliree of the leading human beings. AUl Chls is flot :oks of the dlass mentioneti wiîî pleasant readlng. but there you reviewed w'eekly by one or more have if, including another bed- riters, especially famnituar with tume description o! microbial war- brature in f15s field, and fliese fane. When the next war breaks veiw-s will be pubîtstîed exclus- ouf, the micrabe-warriors will ly in the rural weeklies o! Con- probably seek ta infect us witli a. Froni Cime ta tume, ftle scope anthrax for' ueasons which aur this column will be extended author carefully enumerates. include iumportant new fiction,Th Ecclpeio!acfm ýtry, etc.Th nylpeiofPiis L Y we impress upon aur reati- According ta Aidous Huxley,. we Ult.c .OLUUY ofth~ie aeps whicn must be taken before peace and justice can be established together with- and perliaps ln consequence ot- collective security. He alsa deals with the role o! sanctions, access ta raw materials, education and religion in the battie for peace. This struggle can neyer be achiev- 5ed, he says. until national sover- eignty is, at least in part sur- rendered. England ExPects Every American to Do His Duty But when will the United States wake up and make collective se- curity a reality? Quincy Hqwe, head of the editorial department of Simon and Shuster. lnu Eng- land EXPects Ex-ery Anierican to Da His Duty", would harden the isolationist fibre against any next steps w-hich President Roosevelt may take, and especiafly warnis the people of the great Republic that alI this "Anglo-American un- derstanding" talk is iust a smoke- screen behinci whiclî perfidious should do nothing about it but submit. "The Encyclopaedia of 'SO0 L NG' - CORSET COUNV ER Pacîfism' cantains a large nm By Scribe t ber of articles, apaeial r By Scibe Granged. showing the futillty of war and the advisability of non- resistance. Some of theni are When we were a young gaffer little rooni the customners are Most challenging, but one deces not Timothy Eaton had just got his coaxed to have their figures con- like ta think of civilizatJon being store gaing. Our mother ued ta sidered: and commented upon . iped out without some strong. drag us thru it like a litti'e girl 'then f:tted accordingly. even violent effort ta save it. If dangles a dummy-doil. Later wel Later with the advient of glass we are going ta die froni poison taddled . . . Eventually we tro>d it showv cases and fancy dinguses of gas any way. perhaps we had bet- ourseif., one kind and another, the lîp-to<- ter take a shot at samnebody first. We were neyer less at home at date store keeper filis theni with Your Child Faces War thie corset Counter than in the Elastic Hug-me-tights . . . green harness department . . . Bath we garters . . . transparent breast Nelson Antrini Crawford, the knew well. A wvoman would sur- plates . . . and pink panties that editor of the Household Maga- vey the plaster-of-Paris busts and are so short you might as well zine, in "Your Child Faces War-, after concentrating on one of forget theni. advises parents how ta educate them for a while. she would per- This was an.ly the start. With their children for peace. ad suade herself that it w-as the im- the marvellous changes in store against war. He answers about age of lier own. . . . Thus she ar- decoration and modernization ...farty questions quite suggestivelyr rived at the length of corset ta hidden and subdued lights, etc. .. and even wistfully. But if w-e suit her. Ordering it was a cinch.* aIl the Iatest fan fîting regalia train our clIldxen against w-ar, The straight-jacket.. .with 7 adflmyfunaingret and then war cornes despite aur, or 8 miles 0f laces is ivrapped up' for sanie, are right out in the efforts, what is ta be the psycho- and away she goes. When she! open ta arrest and allure.. logical effect on the chîldren? gets home she un-cloes the parcel The floors that were pine are Will they simply accept the inevi- ...takes the steel girder out and 'now- covered with a cushiany car- table, or wvill it be necessary to re- holds it around lier sides. Brac- pet . . . the pile an inch and a educate theni for wai? Perhaps. ing herself ta the bedpost srhe gets half thick. A ian who enters one with alI such training for peace. heri sister-in-law' ta lace her in. of these department.s to-daY... it may be well ta remind theni Then she's aIl set. ina matter haw innocent the rea- tliat in the Christian teaching A few- years go by and Adver- !son for his being there . . . f eels physical death is less important tising begins to take the place of as if he were in a strange wom- than spiritual death. the 'Sankey and Moody" hymn an's bed-room. Prelude to Peace book. A waman reads about "the To parallel the trend indicatied f orni divinely fair" . .. her own in tliis article we will bring you Dr. Henry Atkinsan has warked fanr in f act. So off- cornes the the sequel next week entitle<î valiantly tlîraugh the churches plaster-of-Paris busts fromn the i'Good-bye Barber Shop.' We in- for peace since the inception of Corst Cuntr, nd ackint a ývit yo al toattnd.the World Alliance for Interna- Corst Cuntr. ad bck nto vie yu aI taattnd.tional Friendship. In his "Pre- I j lude to Peace" he gives us a real- FOR CEILINGS, ' WALLSI, STUCCO1 When yau make those improvements Co your haome, whether you add iusî anothier on or build a large addition -make the îlasîering job PERMAN- ETwith edl.ars Universal Metal Lath. Thius lath insulates, deadens sound, prevents cracks and is damnp- prof. I is the only nietai Iath wiîlu an Inslation Backing on the nmarket. Ask your plasrering conîractar. Montreai. Ortawa. Toronto. Winnipeg. Caigary. Vancouver. The. PEOLAR PEOPLE Limnit.d Eahabiishesd 1961 Head Offce - OSHAWA, ONT. L ~ To countless Canadian homes, money from Life Insurance means food, clothing, shelter and other necessities of life-f or the widow and fatherless- and for men and women whose eanig days are over. Every section of the Dominion-farm' village, town and city-share in these Life Insurance payments. Lilcewise, every class of people benefit-particularly the families in humble homes. Thrifty Life Insurance dollars help to make thousands independent of private charity or public relief-thus benefiting ail Canada. The above map idicates how these Life Insurance dollars were distributed to the people of the nine provinces in 1936.G GUARDIAN OF CANADIAN.. HOMMS England seeks t~o get the United tricky, and that those Anglo- States ta do its dirty work for it. Saxon traditions of f reedom which ivhile it prepares to capture Amer- - sane of us suspect - are stili ican trade, thus cashing in on the needed in this crazy world are so profits. Canadians ought ta read ýslight that collaborat.on seen-is to this book if only ta understand be impossible. However, it is weli one type of mentality stili con- for us ta knowv what sane of them mon in the United States. Mr. thinks about us, and we can only Boake Carter would probably ap- pray ta ur Viking gods that they plaud heartily. It is too bad that nay wake up sometime before the wve Britshers are so smart and end of end. DON'VT MISS THEJý ROYAL. 1l.37 WINTER FAIR The whole scope of Agriculture in finest display. Iàvestock, poultry, fowers, grain, seed, foxes and minks. Outstanding Special 9Attractions. Events with interest and aeal for ail Plan now ta attend. 8 gloriousa s packed with entertainment and instruction. "R"oil and impediI Y»r" NOV. 16 to 24 ROYAL COLISEUM e TORONTO SPECIAL CHEAP RAILWAY RATES The PlastererçSays. l THURSDAY, NO'VEMBER IITH, 1937 17 -11 a

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy