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Canadian Statesman (Bowmanville, ON), 26 Aug 1943, p. 7

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THURSDAY, AUGUST 26, 1943 THE CANADIAN STATESMAN, BOWMANVILLE, ONTARIO PAGE SEVEN ®RONO àU M~ Jack Wilson had his tonsils re- MisMadeline FecDedn ISocal a d !Prsonial basbeen appointed a teacher on 6 the staff of O.C.S.. Another tea- Phone 40rl0 cher is stili to bc hired. *rnnrmm~mmm-Ken Dean and famjly visited his Several citîzens have had ls parents. Mr. and Mrs. E. Dean. pa- Archie Watson was home on ter fall down in their homes re- leave. é e"and blame it on vibration The Wilsons wç!re in Toronto of tin"rucks which go through our Sunday, Jean who has been visit- village every day - Sunday in- ing there returning with them. cluded.Mr. and Mrs. Stan Bruton visit- cluded.ed his mother, Mrs. L. Bruton. Mrs. M. Smith bas returned _______________ -------___-- from a pleasant visit with ber sis- ter near Pontypool. Mrs. Wm. Armstrong and chil- Business Directorv dren were with the Girl Guides _______________________ Mr. and Mrs. F. B. Whyte, Mrs. Graham and Miss Beal visited in Legal Toronito. Kirby defeated Antioch bal M. G. V. GOULD, B.A. L.1.B. teami in Orono park Aug. 17 by 13 .t*'to 11. Why not put a notice on Barrister. Solicitor. Notary the bulletin board so more peo- Phone 351 ple will know about the games? Bank of Commerce Bldg. Mrs. W. S. Roy and Margaret Bowmanville visited in Toronto. Word has been received from W. R. STRIKE Ross Wood by his parents, that hie Barrister, Solicitor, Notary has arrived safely in England. Solicitor for Bank of Montreal Grace Hudson is visiting in Port 1M'oney to Loan - Phone 791 Hope. Bowmanville, Ontario Sandy Sommerville is visiting here. LAWRENCE C. MASON, B.A., R. A. Forrester is on holidays. Barrister, Solicitor, Notary Public. Orono is a busy place this week King Street W., Bowmanville aste new ration books are being Phone: Office 688 Residence 55 given out. Betty Beal, Oshawa, was guest W. F WAD, BA., of Mrs. Donald Graham. Mrs. W.F.WADB.., Graham returned home with Barrister, Solicitor, Notary Betty for a visît. Bleakley Block Mrs. Phasey, David and Diane, Bowmanville - Ontario spent a few days at the Knox cot- Phones: Office 825- House 409 tage, Newcastle. 32-3 Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Waddell and family visited relatives here. Dentist Mr. and Mrs. Sutton and Joyce, _________________________Mrs. Harness and Read visited in DR. J. C. DEVITT Toronto. John Delve, London, visited his Assistant: Dr. E. W. Sisson mother, Mrs. R. A. Delve, and Graduate of Royal Dental Col. aunt, Mrs. H. Curtis. lege, Toronto, Office: Jury Jubilee Mr. and Mrs. Sinclair (nee Hil- Bldg., Bowmanville. Office hours da Gamsby) visited relatives here. 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. daily, Gloria Richardson, R.C.A.F., W. except Sunday D., spent the week-end at C. J. Phone 790 - House phone 325 Hughson's. X-Ray Equipment in Office Mr. J. J. Mellor gave an inter- esting sermon on "My Philosophy Funerali Directors of Religion," Sunday morning, in _________________________which deeds (rather than words) received the credit for a person FUNERAL DIRECTORS being religious and words also Service. any hour, any day took second place to actions in F. F.Morri Co. making a person a true Chris- F. F.Morri Co. tian. This week Mr. Mellor hid Modemn Motor Equipment, Arn. bis text and asked the congrega- bulance and Invalid Car. Tele, tion to find it for themselves. phone 480 or 734, Assistant 573. Donald Staples favored with a vocal solo. Licensed Auctioneers Miss Rosaline Harness visited ________________________hem parents, Mr. and Mrs. D. Ham- CLIFFORD PETHICK ness. u t' ee Eniskllen Miss Olive Brown spent a 1~ci oer nnale pleasant holiday with Prof. and ion, owanville 2536 Mrs. Frank Knox at Kingston and Speci lizing in Famm, Livestock, Collins Bay. Impements and Fumnitume Sales. Misses Adele Morton and Ma- Cornsuit me for ternis and dates. rion Hicks, Toronto, spent the 504tf week-end wîth the fommer's pa- l rents, Mr. and Mrs. Albert Mor- Monuments ton. - Mrs. Fagan, Toronto, was guest The Rutter Granite Company of ber parents, Mr. and Mrs. F. Phone501 P.O Box622 0. Cooper. Phon 501- P.. Bo 622 Miss Gwen Phasey visited Mr. Port Hope, Ontario and Mrs. George Carruthers, New- Monuments, Gravemarkers, castle. Engraving, Goldleafing Cliff Cowan was home on leave. 28-tf Mac Smith, Toronto, holidayed bere. Miss Kathleen Staples visited in _________________________Toronto. for The beautiful gladioli which SUNSURN decorated Park St. Church Sun- IN.£C SIES day wr donated by Mrs. Fred POISON IVY lough and received many admir- ___ îng glances. Mm. and Mrs. Downing and Edaughter, Toronto, visited heme. vLYHPEII Ail ranks of the Canadian ~ Army, both overseas and in Can- Tu A TisETicLimiENT ada, are being re-examined under ithe new Pulhems medical classi- fication system. D.Chase's Nerve Food The Vitamin Bi Tonc Conlains VitamÎn D1 and Essenial Food Minerais Extensivelyusedfor headache, loss of sleep, nervous indigestion, irritability, anaemia, chromec fatigue, and exhaustion of the s M â%e- nervous systemn Sale I arn selling by private sale, the household et- fects of the late IDA D. GAMSBY, O ron o At her home on THURS., FR1., SAT., Aug. 2Gth, 27th, 2Sth From 2 to 9 p.m. Frances M. Hamm Executrix ORONO CONTINUATION SCHOOL UPPER SCHOOL RESULTS The following report has been received from the Department of Education and certificates have been mailed to the candidates: Dan Chmara - Alg. III, Trig. III. Robert Cooper - Eng. Comp. III, Geom. II, Alg. C, Chem. C. Roy Forrester - Eng. Lit. C, Lat. Au. C, Lat. Comp. C, Alg. Il, Chem. C. It is expected that Middle School results will be available in the near future. Ail candidates who are qualify- ing under the provisions of Cir- cular 27 (farm work or enlist- ment) are reminded that they must return their completed forms before application can be made to the Department for their certifi- cates. These forms should be mailed to R. C. Rosborough, 2502 Barker St., Niagara Falls, Ont, if filled in before Sept. lst. After this date they should be given to Mr. McGinnis, the new principal of Orono Continuation School. This applies to candidates in Mid- dle and Lower Sehool as well as in Upper School. ORONO WOMEN'S INSTITUTE Mrs. L. J. Goodman, Tyrone, was guest speaker at -the Orono Women's Institute meeting, held in the park, where about 30 la- dies were comfortably seated be- neath the trees. Mrs. Goodman's addmess was "Canadian Indus- tries" and she divided it into five parts - Agriculture, Lumbeming, Fishing, Mining, and Manufactur- ing. The most important - Agri- culture - she dealt with first, mentioning the trouble farmers were having with lack of help and shipping difficulties and stress- ing the importance of this indus- try. In lumbering she dealt chiefly with the way the trees have been kept going by reforesta- tion. Fishing also was dealt with as an industry. The government aided by stocking the creeks where fish are getting scarce. Under the subject of mining, the speaker emphasized the fact that much of the mineral wealth of Canada bad not been touched. She also quoted figures comparîng Canada's production of minerals with other countries. The last thought - manufacturing - concerned the canning industry, and manufacture of many things, including war production. Mrs. Rolph and Mms. Harold Allen moved a vote of thanks to the speaker.. Plans were completed for a "Travel Tea" with Mrs. Fred Tamblyn, Mrs. J. D. Brown and Mrs. F. Hall, the hostesses, and ail members of the executive being appointed a committee. Roll cal was "A Weed With Medical Value." Miss Margaret Roy gave a reading on weeds, and Mrs. Roy led in a brief sing-song. Mms. H. Allen conducted a contest on "Weed Identification." Mrs. J. Dickson and Mrs. O. W. Rolph named the most and won a lovely bouquet of gladioli. While the ladies sat at tables beautifully decorated with flowers, the corn- mittee served cookies, ice creamn and tea. DIM AND DISTANT HAPPENINGS FROM THE ORONO NEWS 0F AUGUS1T 23rQd, 10928 CECIL BRUTON MISSING Cecil Bruton, son of Mrs. L. Bruton, Orono, is reported miss- ing overseas, word being received by bis mother last week. Cecil makes the fourth man known to Oronoites to be reported missing -Gilbert Dent, wbo moved trum bere to Toronto, and Ed. Wither- idge, Bowmanville, who used to, run a store here, and George Ralpb, formerly of Orono. Orono- ites aIl join in hoping the four brave lads may yet be found alive and well for all four were popu- lar members of the younger group of Oronoites. Weddings GILMER-BURLEY A quiet but pretty wedding was solemnized lu the parsonage of Newtonville United Cburcb on Augiist 7, when Audrey Grace, second daughter o! Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Burley, became the wife of Mr. Clarence E. Gilmer, only son of Herbert Gilmer, of Sbilob. The pastor of botb the yuung peuple, Rev. John McLachlan, officiated. The bride was prettily attired lu pale blue street-lengtb guwn of chiffon witb white accessories and wore a corsage of piuk ruses. She was attended by Mrs. Harold Burley of Toronto, gowned ln pale pink and wearing a corsage o! pansies. The groom was sup- ported by Pte. Harold Burley, R.C.O.C., of Camp Borden, bro- ther of the bride. After the ceremony' the young couple left amid a sbower of con- fetti and good wisbes lu points north of Lindsay. LEWIS - TICKELL Miss Muriel Grace Tickell, daughter of Mm. and Mrs. A. H. Tickell, Port Hope, became the bride of Fligbt-Lieut. George James Lewis, son of Mm. and Mrs. W. E. Lewis, of Welcome, in Port Hope Baptist Cburch on Aug. 21. Femns, gladioli and delphinium formed the setting as Dr. N. S. McKechnie performed the cere- muny. Rev. S. L. Osborne played the wedding music, and Mrs. Ar- thur Read sang. Given lu marriage by hem fa- ther, the bride was gowned in white slipper satin witb f ull skirt, softly shirred basque, and sweetheamt neckiine. A curonet of white velvet violets caugbt hem tulle illusion veil and she carried a cascade of swainsona, pink ruses, pink bouvardia and blue delphinium. Mrs. L. A. Hales at- tended as matron of honor, with Miss Hezel Henderson as brides- maid. Botb weme gowned simil- arly in taffeta, pink and twiligbt blue, respectively. Ostrich lips and velvet streamers formed their headdress to match their frocks, while eacb carried a cascade of cerise and pink gladioli petals, blue delphinium, and pink roses. William Fuiford attended the groom as best man, whiie serving as ushers were Flying Officer D. Lamont, and Fiight-Lieut. A. Lawier. Afîerwards Mrs. Tickel received in gold crepe, accented witb brown and a corsage of curai roses and bouvardia. Witb hem was the bridegroom's muther, in black sheer trimmed wîth white, wilb n.rtching accessuries; bou- vardia pink roses and cerise, gla- dioli retals cumposed ber shoulder bouquet. Following the ecep- tion the couple ieft for easteru points, the bride travelling in a heaven blue gabardine suit, with matcbing accents. ABANDONED FARMS IN EASTERN CANADA In Eastern Canada are between 12,000 and 13,000 farms, coveriug about une and one-baif million acres, whicb have been abandon- ed and have been idle for some lime. This condition exists de- spile the fact that many thousands of acres of new wooded land have been cleared and settied lu some parts of Eastern Canada during the last ten yeams, states P. C. Slobbe, Central Experimental Farm, Ottawa. Should this abandoned land, which to a large extent bas ai- eady been cleared of its forest, be used for land setîlement pur- poses instead of clearing new land of its original forest cuver? In order to answer this question salisfactomily a very careful sur- vey of each individual piece o! abandoned poperty must be made and the easons why il was abandoned studied. Many famms were abanduned because the land was originally sub-marginal for agricullural purposes and no farmer couud be expected 10 make a satisfactory living on such land afler the for- SAVING HOT WATER SAVES COAL oeq> The 'fîve-inch tub" bas Royal a major cut lu cousumption, Can- precedent. Wben fuel consump- adiaus may face a coal famine tion had to be cut su drastically next winter. The young lady lu Britain, the King ordered that showu bere is folluwing the no more than five inches of water King's example and is using bol be placed lu the bath tubs of the water spariugly. She is belping Royal Housebold. Unless there is tu save war-vital fuel. "For A Higher National Income"I Here are some extracts frorn an address deiivered by R. J. Deachman, Cunsultiug Ecouornist, Ottawa, before the 241h annual meeting o! the Canadian Weekly News- papers Association held lu Toronto, which wili pruvide food for lhuugbt for rnany Statesman readers: The national incorne is a rather uew concept lu our ecunumy. Dis- cussion bas gruwn ouI o! the pres- eut conflict. We had, at the be- ginuiug o! the war, a clearer un- derstaudlng o! the economics of war and peace. We realize nuw that wars are fuught, nul wilb money, but with the productive capacity o! the nation. What is the national income? Il is the sum total o! the value ut the incarne received by ahl the peuple. It includes everytbing made or produced lu Canada; famm producîs, manufactured goods, the earings o! teachers and preachers, interest upun in- vestments, hair-cuts and shue shines and everylbing else for wbich peuple have been paid- that is the national income. The national incume makes clear certain tbings wbicb we can do and certain lblngs which we cannot do. The blghest level o! the best pre-war years was lu 1929. The total national income was then $4,719 millions. Iu that year total salaries and wages arnouuted lu $2,900 mil- lions. In 1933 the national incume had fallen bo $2,632 millions. Total salary and wage payrnents, lu that year, were $ 1,675 millions. Your incoruae may have fallen then. It was nut eut because "the boss" wanted 10 cul it,, but because he hadu't the money to pay the uld rate. Whiie wage rates declined lu '33, cosl of living deciined and, lu terms o! purchasing power, those employed had lu many cases as large and even a larger income, in 1933, than they bad lu 1929. Because the real wage rate me- mained up while form prices weme eut lu twu, we had unem- ploymeut, there was nu escape from il. Farmers lost their pur- cbasing power - factories were idle. There was not sufficient lu- corne lu the nation bu hire as rny men-at the wage rates ex- isting at the lime of the boom. And now I corne tu the real part o! rny subject: A Higher National Income and How to Oblain It. Iu my judgment there are two tbîngs whlcb are absululely es- sential for the accomplisbment o! our purpose: We mnust bave a funclional rate o! wages as weii as a funclionai rate o! profits. What do I mean by a functional rate o! wages? I mean a wage rate as hlgb, as possible, consis- tent wlth full empluyment. WiIi that be a high ate or a low une? That wiii depend largely upon the national income but na- tional income wlll neyer be low if there is full employment. If a high rate o! wages exists whiie the national incume is 10w, there wili nut be full employment, there will be mucb unemployment. O! this we may be quite sure. You cannot bave full empluyrntu unless you have a functional wage rate, a rate which functions lu harrnony with other parts o! the national economy. If youm beart is weak you cannot run a race or, at least win, if the competition is strong. Yuu may win if beart and lungs and mmnd are funclion- ing properiy, lu relation Ici other parts o! the body. Iu that regard the national ecouorny is like a human body. Then we need a '"functional rate o! profits.' ' Wbat do I mean by Ibese words: 1 mean a rate o! profits which wiil give the lu- vestor, the bigbest possible pro- fits, consistent wilb full employ- ment o! capital and just as I say that labor must not exact a wage rate for ils services which throws men ouI o! work-capilal must not exact a profit for ils services which will prevent the full de- veiopment o! our resources o! labor and raw materials. If it dues, total profits will be reduced just as bigh wage-rates, iuwer total wage payments. The highest national income possible, will be reached, in these circumstances and the lirniting factors outside o! Ibis will be peace and freedomn and the wisdum o! guveruments. Now how is al Ibis lu be broughl about? Time brings im- provemeut in methods o! produc- lion and distribution. Many will remember the lîltle dinky trains NBWS wbicb, at une time, rau on our railways. Tbey have been im- pruved out o! existence. A mud- ern englue wili baul vastly mure tous of freight than the first englue which crossed Canada. These changes were brought about witb the object of reducing cosîs o! operations. Iu the field of production the object o! irn- provement was the sarne. Iu sorne cases the objective was attaiued. Iu many il was not. As a usual thing wages and salaries xvent up, the saving, wbicb shouid have brought abqut a luwer price o! goods, had gone tu labor or tu capitai-not much of it lu capi- tal for here the power of cumpe- tition was strunger. Capital made an effort tu overcume the handi- caps o! a nun-functional wage rate-did it by investing mure money in labor saving devices. Despite these efforts prices went up and the purcbasiug power o! the peuple was reduced, not in- creased. The suggestion I have to make for the future is Ibis: That gains, lechuical and mechanical, which continue tu be made in melbuds o! production and distribution, should be re!lected not lu an in- crease in wages, nut lu an increase in profits per unit o! production, but lu a lower price of goods lu the consumer su that we would be able tu produce more and buy mure and seli more and su we would go furward to an ever ex- pandiug volume of business. There is little, rnighty llttle wrong with our ecuuurnlc sysîem. The changes I suggest may seem Irifling-lu reality they are. A few gallons o! gas may seem a srnall tbing but il makes our cars move. lu this world, the grealest good lu the greatest number must be our guiding principle. There is a murai point o! view and an economic point o! view but both cuver the same thiug. If a tbing is morally souud. it is economicai- ly sound, if it is econornically sound, it is rnurally suund. For Ibis, the guud o! ail, sbould be the commun goal. When we realize Ibis, the wurst o! our troubles will be f airly well settled-at least for a lime. Think Ibis over. Goveruments, nu matter wbu runs tbern, are nul going to solve Ibis problem-tbe solution wili cume from industry, labur and farmer. FIVE HOLSTEIN HEIFERS BRING $7,500 Five purebred Holstein heifers bave been sold by Milton J. Tamblyn, Orono, for the excep- tional price of $7,500. The pur- chaser is Rex Farms, Muskegon, Micb. The group includes four members of tbe Honorable Men- tion All-Canadian Get-of-Sire for 1942 and a sister, all daugbters o! the noted XX bull, Man-O-War Dictator. Cedar Dale Man-O-War Carol who was named Ail-Can- adian and Reserve AIi-American three-year-old heifer for 1942. is une of the members of this prize winning Get-of-Sire. In part the higb valuation plac- ed upon these heifers by Omar P. Stelle, Manager of Rex Farms, who did the actual buying, is at- tributable to the fact that they are aIl safely in cal! to the intýensely Rag Apple bred sire, Montv_ Hiemke Pietje Poscb, be a mater- nai brother of Montvic Renown.ý who soid last December for the Canadian Record Price of $14,100. Mr. Tamblyn was prepariug the entire group of beifers for the fal shows and their sale to the U.S.A. will prove a distinct loss lu the Canadian Showing. How- ever, at Rex Farrns, wbere une of the best Holstein herds on the continent is beiug assembled, tbey will have evcry opportunity for future development and their pro- gress will be watched with keen interest by Canadian breeders. CANAIANS BETTER OFF UNDER PRICE CONTROL (Peterboro Examiner) Far-away pastures may look green but wben it cornes tu a dis- cussion of the cost of living, few peuple, if any. are better off than Canadians. A case in point is Newfoundland where there is nu tcoutrol of prices. There you have to pay prices like these for food: beef, $1.05 a pound; eggs, $1.20 a dozen; butter, $1.25 a pound; milk, 22 cents a quart and grapefruit, 25 cents each. "in Wartime and after, my family needs Life Insurance protection! " "In our monthly family budget,, life insurance bas first place. Thanks to the representative of The Mutual Life of Canada, 1 have been able to plan it to meet every need, including continhling protection for my family and retirement income for myself!" In these uncertain times, YOTJR FAMILY NEEDS LIFE INSUR- ANCE PROTECTION! Only by hife insurance can the average man create at once sufficient additional security . .. there is no other way that you can add 50 mucb so quickly to your estate today! The Mutual Life of Canada pro. vides the utmost protection at minimum cost. For facts and figures caîl or Write your nearest Mutual Life office today. Established 1869 Head Office Waterloo, Ot Insurance in Force Over $63 8,000,000 Branch Office - 435 George Street Peterboro - - Ontario I - IsA'r Il TII, TRUTII~ ~ 71-doç muw -ý TIMETABLES RAILWAYS and BUSES CANADIAN PACIFIC East Bound.-12:33 Midnigbt. West Bound-6:02 ar. CANADIAN NATIONAL East Bound 10:30 a.m. daily 2:45 p.m. daily except Sunday 10:03 p.m. daily except Sunday 10:42 p.m. Sunday only West Bound »I 5:12 arn. daily 4:14 p.m. daily 7:42 p.m. daily except Sat. COLLACUTT COACH LINES East Bound West Bound 11:10 arn. 10:05 a.m. 3:15 p.m. 3:05 p.m. 8:15 p.m. 9:05 p.m. GARTON'S BUS SCHEDULE Botmanviiie-Oshawa-Whitby WEEK DAYS Leave Arrive Bowmanville Bowmanville 6.20 arn 7.15 am 6.35 arn 8.15 am 7.20 am 9.20 am 8.20 am 10.00 arn 10.40 arn 12.30 pmn 1.15 pm 2.30 pmn 2.35 pm 4.35 pmn 4.05 pmn 5.30 pmn 4.35 pmn 6.30 pmn 5.35 pmn 8.40 Pm 6.35 pmn 10.30 Pm 8.45 prn 12.30 am 10.35 pmn 1.20 am SUNDAYS & HOLIDAYS Leave Arrive Bowmanviiie Bowsnanville 6.35 arn 9.20 am 10.40 am 12.30 pm 2.35 pm 5.30 pm 6.35 pm 8.40 pm 10.35 pma 12.30 amn 1.20 am One of every 15 of the 10,000 members of the Veterans Guard of Canada on active service is the holder of a decoration for gallan- try, exceptional courage or de- votion tu duty. FOR ECONOMY Send your cleaning with your laundry I PHONE - 419 ý 1-- -i

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