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Canadian Statesman (Bowmanville, ON), 31 May 1956, p. 15

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'rHfURDAY._MATSlst,_1958 ___________TECNmNSAESABWAVLE NAI AEF~rE 1 arn most reluctant to give contemporary credit for being original. There seems ta be a historie precedent for almost ail our aspirations. Event the air- plane, which we like ta consi- der an invention of aur own age, was sketched by da Vinci more than 450 years ago. 0f course, wve concede that Sir Edmund Hillary was tliz first to climb Mount Everest and that Rager Bannister was the first ta break the four-min- ute mile. But even in this there s some reasonable doubt when we wonder if Mallory and Ir- vine might flot have reached the summit in 1924. and, in- deed, if some fleet-footed Mie- mace might not have run faster than Bannister along some his- toric path of Canada's back- * ods it this being as it mnay, I ca~T think of a precedent for the accomplishments of Fran- coise Sagan, a French girl who took up writing because shie flunked out of school. She has written two novels. "Bonjour Tristesse" in 1953 and now "A Certain Smile". Mlle. Sagan is only 19 years old. Her first noývl înighit have~ been a fluke. Aftc-i alI, it toakc ber only one month to %vrite it.j But it sold 1,000.000 copies i'1 The Canadian Statesman CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING RATES ARTICLES FOR SALE LIVESTOCK FOR SALE FOR REliT - HELP WANTED ;,e CARS FOR SALE LOST - FOUND- ETC. ~ Cash Rate- - 3c par word ~ with a minimum of 50c M4uit b. paid by date of insertion. il charged. an additional 25cC# wil be added. e A charge of 25c will be made for eb ail replies directed to this office. NOTICES - COMING EVENTS AND CARDS 0F THANICS 3c a Word with a minimum Wi $1.00 for 33 wordsor lesa. e BIRTHS . ENGAGEMENTS MARRIAGES - DEATHS $1.00 pet insertion IN MEMORIAMS 81.00 plus lOc ca lino for verso COMMERCIAL CLASSIFIEDS Includes ail advertisinq for persans oi firms selling services. ideas or goods of any description e -3c pet word; minimumi charge 75c cash with order. To regutar adveiisers - payable montly. Dspiay Classified at S1.50 p!et inch with a minimum of ane inch. Additional insertions al the same rotes, AU Classified Ads must be i tis office flot tater thon 12 o'clock naon. Wednesday. Send cash. stamps or nioney arder ond save money. ~p thif out for handy reference OFFICE 1ROUES Modatdrhrough Friday Saturday 8:30 a.m. to 12 noon Dia! MA 33303 for Classifled Ad. Service NOW! NEW UVINO S PACE AT NEW LOW COST! $8.894 oew tLMig Sgace! Yeou U* ev. n.arf8Sq. fest of 1 - vrhw Yom au a Closr-Dorin type door. A yctaief -no Specal enhI required. Hard- ware end! complet e Cf eom esd fui ftsti'nalty adver- tised Brand Vinyls in meutral clor. Com pi. ment any decorating t scheme. fleurCmonWele! No swintîng dusa. è Io 0oefatO-. f0mort .. - painting or verni;hing. *Fils door openinpg tp to 3r x W0 Oshawa Wood Products COURTICE a U.S. edition in a single mon .1? i and it remained for a long timne on the best-seller list o! The New York Times. Sa the cur- rent indications that A Certaini Smile may even autsell Bon- jour Tristesse satisfies me that Francoise Sagan is one by ber- self. She bas accomplished something no other woman of 8 bas ever done before. Neventheless, success came at an early age ta other writers in othen years, tbough convention aften impelled the women ta write anonymausly. Jane Aus- ten stantcd on ber "Pride and Prejudice" wben she was anly 21. Fanny Burney's finst navel, "Evelina", was publisbed ini 1778 wben she was 26. And the tbree Bronte sistens had made thein indelible mark in iterature and passed on befone they were 40. Winston Churchill wrote a novel called "Savrola" wbe-n bie was a soldier in bis eanly twenties. It was bis anly wank of fiction and it is now back in print. Stephen Crane was only 29 wben be died. His "Red Badge of Courage" wvas pub- lished in 1895. when he was 24. Lord1 Byroni, who inheritcd bis title at the age af 10, puio- lislicd Iis first poems when lie was 19. M'\arcel Proust was xvrit- ing lynics at 21, and Joyce Kil- mer wvho wrote 'Trees", xvas dead at 102. Disraeli, the British prime ministen, published his finst novel under a pseudonym at the age of 20. Richard Shieni- dan wrote "The Rivais" at age 24. Peter Roget, the Frenchman wha compiled a tamaus the- saurus, was a graduate physi- cian at 16. And George Bernard Shaw wrate five novels between the ages of 20 and 29. They vere aIl rejected. There is na rule ta be leann- ed from ail this. Tbaugh most o! these people completed their lite's work while they were still young, there are just as many literary names wbase best work was not donc until middle age, and others wba are stili cncating though past age 80. Thomas Costain is a gaod ex- ample of the group o! writens m-ho attained success late in lite His tirst novel was pub- lislied whcn lbe was 55, and subsequent books (i.e. "The Black Rose", "The Silven Chai.* !ce") have made this former Canadia-i newspaperman anc of the world's most outstanding hîstorical novelists. Look at some o! the athers, bowever. These are the writers wba stanted early and were stili at it wben they had reacbed 80- Somerset Maugham, Winston Churchill, w-ha at 81 bas ju.st published the first in a senies of four books dealing with bis- tory; Walter de la Mare, Lard Bertram Russell, Gearge Mere- dith and Hilaire Belloc, wha died at 82 in 1953 after writing 153 books. Thomas Hardy ("Re- turn o! the Native") died at 87, and Andre Gide, the most« illustniaus o! French writers, died in 1951 at 82. Hensry Wick- liam Steed died this year at 84, and George Santayana was 89 whcn be ended bis career. H. L. Mencken was still gaing strong wben, he died a short time aga at 75, and Sir Harold Nicolson is in bis prime at 70. Arnold Bennett ("How ta Live ors 24 Hauns a Day") died at an earlier age (64). but be neyer stagnated. Just befare he died he wrote in bis diary that dur-r îng that year he bad wnitten 353,250 words. 1While saine of us are %fihi looking forwand fa the seneen version o! Herman Melville's whale story "Maby Dick", we can stant anticipating Tolstays "Wan and Peace" in Vista Vi- sion. IV xil run tor hree and one- bah! baurs, just 15 minutes less than record-breaking "Gone With the Wind", and will be pnesented for the first tiîne on August 23. We tnay also be looking for a film a! similar hength about Mackinlay Kan- ton's 'Andersonville". If this is the movie-makers' ansver ta television, I hopc thcy put marc padding on the seais at the Bijou. The great composer Tchaik- ov.-ky was married in 1877, but the match lasted anly a !ev weeki. However, another womn- an-Frau Madejda von Meck- managed ta gef along very xv'ell \'ihthe teinperaincntah Rus- Their selationship %vas a masf unusual anc. For 14 years they d wr ole letters ta each other, and Ltd.thewealtby widow provided hiiwith a ibenal pension whichi permitted him ta con- tinue bis immortal work. Rob son Midgets Lead League, Take Cobourg The Bowmanville Robson Pontiac Midgets went inta a 3-0 first inning lead and held on ta Iwîn 3-1 over a strong Cobourg tearn in Cobourg Tuesday even- ing. Oddly enough the Pontiacs were limited ta ane bit by Co- bourg pitcher Fred Maybee who turned in a spectacular perfor- mance in stniking out 11. Bill Bates pitched bis -usual steady game for the Pontiacs as he gave up only six bits. Ca- boung's lone run came in the bat- tam of the third. The Bowvmanville Mîdgets will play at the Vincent Massey Park this Friday evening at 6:30 against the same Cobourg team. Mldget Standing WV L Bowmanville 2 0 Newcastle -----1 o Cobourg _ ----- 1t Ji B .T .S . ---- ---- --- ---- -- 2 21 SOLINA Mr. and Mns. J. W. Dyen and Elizabeth, Mn. and Mrs. A. Bce- van, Oshawa; Mn. and Mrs. Glen Glaspeli, and sons, Zion, wene tea guesf s at Ray Pascoc's. Mr'. Gardon Pascoe, Kingaston, Mn. and Mrs. C. Naylor, Stan- ley and Bnian Navior, Colum- bus; Mr. and Mrs. Hanland Trull, Hampton; Mrs. Stella Leask, Bowmanville, were guests at Mn. C. Pascoe's. Mn. and Mrs. Wm. Knox, Brougham, visited on May 24 at Mn. John Knox's. Mn. and Mrs. John Broome an d!amily, Tynone, wene with the Lloyd Broome's. Mn. and Mns. H. Frietag and Randy, Osbawa, were at Mn. E. Crydcrman's. Mn. and Mrs. J. Leger and Wayne, Mn. and Mns. Ken Me- Minn and Lynda, Oshawa, were Sunday tea guests at Ross Cry- derman 's. Messr-s. Wm. Walton Sr., and Wm. Walton. Jr., Toronto, vis- ited on Sunday at Mn. C. Ham- er s. Mr'. and Mrs. Frank West- lake Sr., visited at Mr'. Fred Is- liu's, Toronto. Mr.Ella Taylor and Sandra, Scarborougb, wcre at Mn. Stan Millson's. Mn. and Mns. Stan Milîson attended the Nurses Graduation1 Dinnen and Dance in the U.A.W. Hall in Oshawa, Fniday night. Miss Helen, Baker, Toronto; Mn. and Mrs. Kcitb Onmisto.i and tamily, Ebenezen; Mrs. Ethel Couch, Miss Marjanie Couch, Bowmal'xville: Mn. and Mrs. J. Smales -and ebjîdretn, Hampton, Mn. Maurice Baker, Georgetown, Mn. Chester Mit- chell, Pipestane, Minn., were at Messrs. J. and Tom Baker's Mn. and Mns. Joe Snowdeil wcre at Mn. Isaac Hardy's. Dr. George Werry, Carolyn and Donald, Mns. Evans, Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Wenry, Mns. La- rifle Dickinson, Mrs. Fnank Tbampson, Oshawa, Mn. J. A. Wenry, Grant and Clark XVen- ry, Enniskillen, were Sunday guests at the Werry's at Rose- landvale. Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Smith, Mns. D. McLaughlin, Mns. L. Goodman, Oshawa, Miss June Stocker, Bowmanville, were at Mn. Harold Pascoe's, Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Sam Dewell, Hampton, and Sharon obb, xvere tea guests at Mn. Walter Parrinder .s. Mrs. J. Kiveli w-ho bias, tor- several years, -been ili poor health, passed away at ber home, eanly Friday morning, May 25. To Mn. KivelI ansd those who mourn ber passing we extendi aur sincere sympathy. The fun- eral service wvas held at the Nontbcutt & Smith Funeral Pan-j loun in Bowmanville on Mon day attennoon and was attended by a large number o! tniends and relatives. Interment was in Drono Cemetery. 'Blind Report Good Resuits From Drive Final reports are noV yet fab- ulated for this yean's C.N.I.B. tund raising campaign, accord- ing ta Don Williams, campaign chairman, but indications are that the campaîgn xiii betten that o! hast yean. Returns tram Newcastle andl Courtice are Yct ta ibe account- cd and the cammittee urge that any returns sf111 outstandin"- please be nemiffed as soon as possible.- A special vote o! thanks was heartily endorsed by the coin- mnittee in recagnition o! the~ fine xvork donc by canv assersI and district leaders and ta th public at large forir con- tinued support in sa warthy a cause.1 Ir' s TIME FOR MINDING YOUR Ps and Q Remember. . PRICE and QUALITY are consistent with Good Building Materials Oshawa Wood Pro duc! s Ltd. MA 3-2130 Yard and Showroom - Courtice - HA 3-4661 Civil Defence in Rural Areas' ehol ter ba les of «ý Tenth i a senies o! 24 articles3 The airplane is blamed for binging war ta the civilian population of countiies. In th-2 ipast, the cities were considered the only areas in real danger. jThe hydrogen bamb, oer unîrnaginable the idea mnay be, bas extended this threat ta eveai the most nemote farm It is this vast, almost unbc- lievable new danger -that bas posed the two main pnoblems before Canada'S civil defence planners: how ta save the poi- ulation o! the cities and how ta save the rest o! the population. The only answer for cities i.ý evacutian. The main solution for rural people is ta provide adequate shelter. y 1The tr.rmen's chief dangor tram an H-Bomb attack arises from its radioactive fail-out, the dust o! pulvenized cities that settles aver lange areas follow- ing the blast. This danger ex- tends nat only ta the farmer and bis tamily but ta bis ive- stock and even bis crops ds wchl. Tbere are ways ta guard agaînst this tall-out danger. The first step is ta be warned in time that it is caming. This cani only be donc effectively tbrough a well-organizcd civil defence setup that takes in every fanm- er in the district. It is impossible ta prediet the size and location of a fail- out area until a bomb is drap- ped. It is important, therefor, ta know every protective mca- sure that can bc taken before such a disaster takes place. This is one case in which ignorance would be anything but bliss. That is why civil defence bias become as important ta the tarmer as ta any other citizen: civil defence training can pro- vide the tarmer with knowled.ge that is power ta proteet hlmi- self. Rladioactive fall-out can con- taminate animnals, crops and un- packagled toods. 1V can contam- mnate bhouses, cars, yards and fields. It can contaminate wr-- ter supplies sa that tbey should not be used until they are de. con tamin ated. The only safe tbing ta do if faîl-out accuns is ta take shel- ter. The actual strength of the. shelten is not important. The material and the thickness o! the walls and roof determine the degree a! protection. A farmer can provide bis stock protection by keeping, them in the barn. Since the danger tramn fail-out might last 48 haurs on mare, this means someone sbauld stay in the barn ah tbhis time ta avoid walking back and forth tramn the bouse fan fccding and wva- tering It is neccssary, tao, that ineai,, of determining the strength of radiation in the faîl-out b2ý available. Or that information on its danger be available trou radiation detection uînits in the nearest village or town sa that a tarin tamily will know whea it is saïe ta came out again. C;- vil defence planning before suc.- disaster cornes is the onl.y means o! assuning the farm-2r this will be available. The tarmer may be called on ta bclp bis city neighbours, fao, sa that bis place in civil de- tence is not just ta learnbow be may bclp bimsel! but also how ta help othens lcss fortun- ate in disaster. If large cities are wiped out, bis crops and livcstock, bis milk and eggs and butter wvould be- came a vital necessity 'to the life o! the whole country. His supplies would be needed ta belp !ced the refugees tram th'Ž cities. His bouse and even bis outbuildings may be nceded ta help shelter tbem. Even bis macbinery, bis tractons, trucks and even hanses, if be bas them, could be urgently useful. But they would be useless if be wqs caught unprepared and al w ai contaminated. And dead farmers themselvcs, are notaniously useless. Civil dlefence in Canada, ta achieve maximum resuits. must extcnd ta every community, no matten bom small, F. F. W6rtb- ingtan, Federal Civil Defenre Co-ondînator. bas said. It is be- ing organized, as a result, on i an area basis compnising al number o! toxvns and commun- ities. And, said the Co-ordinatar. "1V must also embrace means o! pneparing and warning farm- ers in isolated places." family, Scaî'baro, were Sunday Wou visitors at the home of his sis- ter, Mr. and Mrs. Jack Lyon. Mr. and Mrs. K. Shackleton and family. Salem. visited Mr. and Mrs. R. Shackleton. cÇfeerti Mr. and Mrs. Percy Clarke. Greenwood, were Suîiday vis- itors with Mr. and Mrs. Lewis &O wrt Cryderman. M a~r.a L. S.CaverlNIslitgton, Mr. and Mrs.dA. E. Bilfett. and Mrs. Ken Caverly. visited Mr. and Mrs. Keith Bil- lett, Bowmanville, on Sunday. Mr. C. Briggs, Toronto, spent a few days with Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Slemon. Mrs. Russell Ormiston, En- niskillen, Mr. and Mrs. Oliver Wel, eamiatin tme asHubbard, Oshawa, were at A. rolled around again and every- M.Pecots one will be studying, but ane ± rs. K. Caverly and Mr. nigbt wan't make any diff-rence Bruce Caverïy attended the There will be a dance tis Fni- Cole-Pinch wedding at Cleve- day at 8:30 p.m. and because of land, Ohio, on Satunday, May the rush of exams, it wvill be 19th and visited Mr. and Mr. bard time. H. M. Caverly, Stoney Creek, Last Saturdçiy, five mernbers enroute. They also visited Mr. of the executive attended ai and Mrs. H. Brown, Saginaw, Youth Conference in the C.R.A. Michigan, and M-. and Mrs. J. Building in Oshawa. They were R. Reynolds, London, Ont., dur- Ken Kelly, Rena Dilling,« Evelyn ing the weekend. Brown, Joe Markle and Alvin Miss N. Horn was a guest of Stacey. Teenagers wýere present Mr. and Mrs. Jackson Wray fromn Oshawa, Pickering, Lind- and girls, Oshawa, last week. say, Peterborough, Cobourg and Mrs. M. Goodn-an and Louise Bowmanville. are now at their home herc Discussi 'ons an the youth of after spending several xnanths to-day were conducted by lead- with Mn. and Mrs. Allan Park- ers fram throughout the zone. er, Toronto. Not toa many People realize how Mr. and Mrs. Sam Dewell en- how much teen-agers can ac- 1 joYed a trip to Ottaw.va and vis- complisli and how thev cani take! ited with thieir ni<ee. Mrs. 0ticz as much responsibility as these Pritchard, Mr. Pritchard, and 100 did in Oshawa. They are bovs, at 'Matiotick. often îtnderestimated anid mis- A À numbe'- romn here attend~ tinderstood. a few bad ones 'nal- 1 ed Eldad Anniversary services inig it hard for ail of the goodiatSudy one. iSymPathy is cxtended ta Mr.t IJ. KivelI, Solina, in the deathi of Mrs. Kiveil. HAMPTON The funeral of Mr. hrii jBurgess, af Bowmanville, toak Mr. and Mrs. S. Nash and place at the Hampton cemeteryt Miss Mavis Nash, Grosse Pointe, on Sunday afternoan. Michigan, were recent guests of Congratulations ta, Mr. afld Mr. and Mrs. W. Chapman. Mrs. Glen Williams an the gift, Mrs. C. E. Jef$rey is visiting af a baby girl at Memonial Hos- Mr. and Mrs. Wallace Jeffney, pital, Bowmanville, an Satur- Toronto. day, May 19th. Mrs. Hazel Ruttan spent th? Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Blanchard lioliday weekend at hor home and M rc. Laverne Clemens at. near Gravenhurst. tended the funeral of Mrs. Neal Mr. and Mrs. F. C. Virtu- <nee Molly Brown) Toronto, an Burlington, and MIr. Fred Eliý, Saturday. Lindsay, were aver night guests of Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Billett. Not At Church Rex-. and xsrs. iea î\erse.v ani j Stafford Bros. Monumental Works Phone Whitby Mohawk 8-3552 318 Dundas St. E., Whitby FINE QUALITY MONUMENTS AND MAIKERS Precise workrnanshlp and careful attention to detail are volur assurance wvhen vou choose tram the wide selection of îmported and durnietic Granites and Marbies in stock. Aui Aberdonian put a shillin- in :he plate bY nasistake ani sta-ved awa.v trans clunch for, tbree months - cJ/e JJop cV/ze/f (By Benjamin Beveridge) Rcv. T. A. Morgan conductel the tunes-al services at the Mor- lris Funeral Chapel, Suinday af- tennoon with the inteninent i the Hampton Cemetery. Pail- bearers were bis fellow i- ployecs o! the Roads and Streets Depantment: Coulso;i Pitt, Johin Gebeors. Albert Rui- ter, Percy Porter, Lloyd Quin- ton and Stanley Green. OBITUARY 1«lS. GEO. BAPTISTE Stricken with a cenebral hem- orrhage, Mns. George Baptistel o! Cobourg, until two months, aga a resident of Boxvmanvillc, died atter an illness of two days, on May 24. She was 57. Mn. Baptiste was Fneigbt Agent in Bowmanville for the Canadian National Railways fan the past few years and had just been moved ta Cobourg. Wbile in Bowmanville Mrs. Baptiste attentied St. Paul's United Chunch and w'as a inember of the Waman's. Association there. She was also a member of the Women's Canadian Club. The deceased w'as the former Ruth Townsend and was born in Shaw, Ill., the daughter o! Mn. and Mns. Thomas B. Towns- end. In 1918 she was married ta George Baptiste in St. John's, Que. During ber lifetime she lived in Aldershot, Woodstock, Strathroy, Caledonia and Bow- manville. rShe is survived by ber hus- band; a son Russiell' o! Hamil- tan: a daugbter, Lois (Mns. Sam Oakes) Stratbroy, and a daugh- ter Beatnice (Mns. Fred Rum- fond. Bronte. Mrs. Baptiste rested at the Bowes Funeral Home in Ca- bourg where service was con- ductcd by Rev. A. O. MacLean. Service was also beld at Den- ning Bros. Funeral Home, Strathroy, May 26, conducted by Dr. S. M. Scott. Burial wvas in the !amily plot in Stnathroy Cemetery. LONG SAULT OBIT ÀRYfor burial Tuesday marning. Gloria and Bob, Bowmanville, 'CHARLES BURGESS were Sunday callers with Mr. Charlie Burgess, the familiar and Mrs. F. G. Smith. street sweeper for the Roads Master Tommy Milisan New- and Streets Department for tonville, with his parents, Mn. the past 8 years passed away and Mrs. A. Millsan. suddenly in bis 77th year an Mrs. Harvey Curtis. Orono, May 24th. The deceased will be visited Mr. and Mrs. Fred Part- greatly missed by citizens who ner on Sunday. greeted bini as they passed Mr. and Mrs. H. DeMille and alang the street. He did a tho- boys. Bawmanville. wvere Sun- rough job wbich gave Bowmars- day supper guests of Mr. and, ville the reputatian of being Mrs. C. Penwarden.1 one of the cleanest towfls along Mrs. Editb Murphy with Mn.. tbe Lakeshore.1 and Mrs. Roy McLaugblin, i Mr. Burgess was the son o." Blackstock, Sunday.1 ane of the oldest pioneernng Mr. and Mrs. Rager Cronk, couples of Durham, William Wellington, werc Sunday vis: Burgess and bis wife, the former itons ith Mn. and Mns. Paul, Katherine "Cassie" Hooey of Vaneyk. Blackstack. His parents livedl Mr. and Mrs. F. E. Alexander, at the "toîl gate bouse" an the Bowmanvillc, with Mr. Robt. hill two and ane bal! miles Sim. nQrth of Bovananville on Scu- Mr. and Mrs. F. Partner were gag Road. Saturday evening guests of Mn.!I The deceased was the young- and Mrs. A. Millson. est of bis tbrce brothens, Wil- (Intcnded for last week) liam, Louis and Herbert. Along Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Ach- witb his brothers Mn. Burgess isan, Toronto, wcne wcekcnd' attcndcd thc sehool at Salem. guests af Mr. and Mrs. David! As a young man Mr. Burgess Craig. wen towor asa frm and Mrs. Gea. Yco and Lyn, feot ta rkas aBfrwnondheHampton, wene Monday supper, forSoure ams Bownon haguests o! Mr. and Mrs. Paul old Martin Burk arm on the Vaneyk. Base Lîne. He wvas employed at iarm wvork most of his life and - was still înterestcd in the raïs- ing of pigs on his place ;ît Westmount, north of the C.P. R. tracks. il Ottawa Expert Here Now for a short time FRANK HALPENNY Phone orders to >IA355 The Holiday Season is approaching Is Your Car in Sale Condition? Now is the Time to Let us SAFETY SERVICE your car Frank'.s Garage Scugog Street MA 3-3231 Big or Sînail -Wc Service Them Al LEAVES ROLLED IN Mean Livestock 'Profit J-Icre's w-h Mr. and Mrs. Har-old Muph n lyou.r fha and tamily with Mns. Sophie Kayacs and Gabriel. Mn. Stahley Fletcher, Toron-J ta, witb bis parents aven the i 91 weekend. Miss Grace Smith accon-1 No wonder panied Mr. and Mns. Eani Pres- you roll t] cott to Oshawa Sunday and vis- large-capaci ited Mn. and Mrs. Ace Abbott. full length Mn. Mac Martin bas returned tîsatch ofs home tram Arizona, and is visit- ing bis sister, Mns. May Johns When li and Mn. and Mns. G. Baker. Sorry ta, report Mns. Johns is on tinstaMo the sick list. nieMo Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Hal!yard saved with and baby, Lindsay, with Mn. and and get set Mns. Onme Miller. It was with deep regret ta evenyone when it was leaî-ned that the body o! the laVe Coin, Martin had been found Satur-j day a!ternoon in Mr. Victoî- Pcacock's woods (fonmerly Wm. Reynolds) atter a search whichi had been stanted by ,Mr. Peacock 1 and the police when it 'was Pa r found that Mr. Martins bad been mîssing tram b is cabin fon 5ev- a r eral weeks. The remains were taken ta Orono. then ta Arm- 20 King St. ]C. strong,'s Funeral Home. Oshawa, hat you'rc saving whcn 3-ou kccp lcavme 1/2 of welght; 2/3 of the feeding value; 3/4 of thle protein content; ?/10 of the carotene (Vitamnin A). ýyour hay is worth so much more when bhose leaves gently inside the bale with a ity ROTO-BALER. It handies the plants -and protecta leaves inside the roaf-like stems. livestock nuzzle into a round bale, yau rcan tly how they like the better quality hay :re leaves mýean extra Iivestock profits - -yaur own ROTO-BALER. See us today ýt for the season. ItOTO-bAtElt is on AtlltaChalmers trodemork. (LLUS@CHILMERS SAL ES AND SERVICe JS ier Motor Sales Bownianville Phone MA 3-5487 Low Summer Coal Prices NOW IN EFFECT! ON THE FAMOUS Reading Anthracite- the RED COAL Nut & Stove Cool $2Cs25. FUI up your bin now for uîext seasoît at these rock-bottom prices Lowest prices in effect during May and June only -OSBORNE FUEL CO. 26 KING ST. E. BOWMANVILLE YARDS - C.N.R. YARDS PHONE MA 3-5897 PHONE 31A 3-5410 G. Facts Over 3,000,000 horsepower is beihg produced in Canada by General Motors diesel engines. tver neglect ta close the win- dows or raise the convertible top on.your parked car and have a sudden shower soak your up- holstery? A new device de- veloped by Packard Electrie Division of General Motors Cor- poration and now being readied for production., vi1l salve this problem. A raindrop falling on an externally-mounted grid act- uates the mechanismn which automatically closes the windows and/or raises the convertible top in the driver's absence. - ------- --- 1 TUE CANADIAN STATESMAN, BOWMANVMLZ. ONTARIO PAGE Il PIANO TUNING

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