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Canadian Statesman (Bowmanville, ON), 20 Jun 1957, p. 6

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I T- r ý PAI TEM CANADIAN STATESMAN, BOWMANVMJLE. O2NTAIUO ~LÈL six Prof essor Emeritus -Ancient History Sissons of Victoria College (From The Varsity Graduate) Since Torontonensis first appeared in 1898, only one graduating class has gone out unrecorded by its pictured page. Perhaps it is significant that the members of that class called themselves the "naughty-anes". The omission, however, is regrettable, for 1901 was the gradua- tion year of Charles Bruce Sissons, and had Torontonensis then appeared, the wonld might have been warned that Victoria College had produced a fighting classicist with the courage of a mountain lion and the conscience of a Methodist. His graduation portrait rnay be jo! the finest scholans o! that (or seen in Victoria's Alumni Hall, any other) time: Bell in Latin wbere in a field o! bandie-bar and Robertson in Greek. It mustachios there appears a rug- wvas probably thein influence ged set o! masculine featunesithat detenmined bis choice o! a with no other hirsute adornment career. than a tbatch o! curly bain. If1 During summen vacations be one looks closeiy, one sees a worked for the next year's fees rpeck that looks like a chip on~ and keep. It was pnobably quite .is shoulden. fortuitous that one such sum- For biograpby one m ay go to nimer job took hlm in a surveyor's Acta Victoiana and read that jParty. ta the Rockies, but the in bis senior year C. B. Sissons expenience led to one o! the was President o! the Victoria most absorbing interests o! bis College "Lit". This distinction, life. bis love o! mountains. A!ter however, seems to bave impress- taking bis degree, be taugbt for ed the biographer less than the two years in the Chatbam Col- achievements o! bis subject in legiate Institute, Ontario, but as football, hockey and tennis. soon as an opportunitv occurred Football, o! course, in thelj e applîed for a post in British S i s s o n s lexicon is speiled1 Columbia, and was appointed s-o-c-c-e-r. Forty years after the first Principal o! the Revel- graduation he would stîll turn stoke Hîgh School. Several o! out to show a vounger generation bis Reveistoke students came on how ta dribble, and thene are ta Victoria College, including some wbo cdaimn that bis ability that G. L. Haggen who later ta kick fast, bard and stnaigbt became a Rhodes Sebolar for wvas neyer lost but meneîv trans- British Columbia and remained fered ta the Council o! the Fac- in England for a distinguished ulty of Arts. But that's an off- career in law. aide. Let's bave a fresh stant. In 1908, C. B. himself went ta Charles Bruce Sissons was Oxford ta read Ancient History, County: third generation Canad- born on a f arma in Simcoe ian on bis father's side and f iftb under contnact ta retunn ta on bis mother's. Between harv-I Victoria College. He joined the est and haytime he went ta staff in 1909, and was Promptly school in Crown Hill and Bar- caricatured in the "Bob"' as an rie. Hi. best friend was a boy Oxford don witb an exaggerat- from the next farmn bv the name ed accent. It wasn't true; Ox- o! Ernest Drury. After finish- ford eccenticities left very littie Ing high scbool, he taught for a impress upon bis rugged'Canad- ~ear ta get money for college. ianism. rwas a one-roomn scbool o! ail To bis classes in Greek His- grades framn toddiers ta teen- tory be often used ta quote a agers - bath sexes. Our teen- favorite Passage from a Words- age teacher found bis feet, kept worth sonnet: hi. head and got ta college. Two vaices are there; one is o! There he chose the honors course tbe sea, in ClaSsics and studied unden two One o! the mountains; each a I Raid Bug Killer 1.9Nw Tn ne une un ommenoa IKan Kil! Bomb 9 - 1.39 6-12 Repellent _____69e Tat Ant Trapu 35e Ban Deodorant 1.25 Mum Deodorant 53o - 75o Stopette 756 - 1.25 WIth New Applicator 2.29 Creamy Prom --__ 2.00 Tonette for child - 1.75 Summer Needs Tone Ray Sun Glasses Bathlng Caps I9e - D8e - 1.591 4.00 te 10.00 Sun Tan Oit -- 45o - 75e Sun Tan Lotion - 55a - 1.00 Polaroid Sun Glasses Noxzema - 65o - 98c - 1.25 1 1.98 - 2.98 Suave ---- O0. - 1.00 Tange! for Sunburn ---85c Nivea Cream --63o - 1.10 Arrid Deodorant 530 - 750 New Cameras Crest Home Permanent Brownle Holiday___ 3.90 Simply eomb bIt. hair Brownle Hawkeye - 9.25 79e Duaflex 19.75 New Wildroot Cream Oil Formula No. 2 Helps fight thinning hair Bottie. 73c, 98C Tube - 73c COWLING'S PHONE DRUG STORE WE FIT MA 3-5695 TRUSSES Royal Theatre BowmanvilkE TRIS FR1. and SAT. - JUNE 21 - 22 Malinee Salurday - 2 p.m. P IUNDOLPH SCOT u TrECHNICOL.OR' Tmi also "The Long Arm" (Scotland Yard at work, starring JACK HAWKINS) Last complete show, 8:25 NON. TO WED. - JUNE 24 - 26 Also Latest World News Last complete show, 9:15 To-nite only: "Lamp is Heavy" & <'Chasing the Suin" Professor C. B. Sissons who since his retirement seveï'al years ago from the staff of Victoria College, Toronto, purchased a farm on the Newcastle-Orono highway, where he and his wife live during the summer rnonths of the year. When they took up residence here we feit it an honor to adopt them into the charmed and distinguished circle of "Durham County Boys and Girls". We know many Statesman readers will therefore be interested in reading of the remarkable career of Prof. Sissons in the accompanyingr article written by his Eadmiring friend, Mr. H. Bennett. The article originally -appeared in the April issue of Varsity Graduate magazine. mighty Voice: Language and Literature and is RIn both from age to age thou now a highly-esteemed member didst rejoice, of the teaching staff. They were thy chosen music, In University of Toronto Liberty! Circles, Professor Sissons is best But it was always the voice of known for bis forty years of suc- the mounitains that called more cessful teaching and his forty- loudly to C. B. Sissons. He was four years of unceasing vigilance back in the Rockies at the in Council and Senate. (He earliest opportunlty, a charter served as a graduate represent- member of the Canadian Alpine ative on the Senate after his re- Club. It was there that he met tirement from the professorate.) his future wife. Her namne was But in the wider field of educat- Anna Normart and she came of ed Canada he is best known for a long-estahlished Pennsylvania bis published works of Canadian family of Quakers. One may biography and history. "Cham- conjecture that she was won by pion of causes not lost but ne- C. B.'s style of "friendly per- glected .. . be cannot rest until suasion", for a snapshot of the wrongs have been righted, period shows the lady with a victims vindicated, and the, rope around ber waist and her judgments of history revised in suitor standing above bier with the light of new evidence thor- an ice-axe in his band. ougbly examined and impartial- Another companion of those ly interpreted." So runs a Alpine summers was bis cousin, tribute on the dust-jacket of bis J. S. Woodsworth. the founder Hîstory o! Victoria University of the Canadian Commonwealth (1952). His first book, Bilingual Federation. One may surmise Scbools in Ontario (1917) was that the principles of the wel- acclaimed as a calm appraisal of fare state were given a good air- a controversial issue and a real- ing as they bivouacked together istic contribution to national un-1 under the clear, cold light of the ity. In recognition of it, the stars, on the siopes of a Selkirk University of Ottawa bonored peak. him in 1922 witb its LL.D. Eg- These influences undoubtedly erton Ryerson, His Life and Let- mellowed the mores of Sissons ers (Vol. 1, 1937, Vol. 11, 1947), but her isno vidncetha bewon for him election as a Fellow ev ertaed frnom the Metbodisth of the Royal Society of Canada fold r oted fror ayther ethan sand the TyrreU Medal, "granted the o LibelorPartyo ther laerfor outstanding work in Canad- the ibeal art. T th laterian History". My Dearest Sophie statement, bowever, there may (1955) is a collection of personal be one exception. In 1919, the letters from Egerton Ryerson to United Farmers o! Ontario went idagtrwhcfomade into politics and much to the ih dugbter. whic heorms ae-e surprise of tbemselves and lgtu eult h utr everybody else, won a provincial correspondence of the politician, election. Rumor said that the churchman and educationalist. new Prime Minister of Ontario, Now in bis seventy-eight year, the Honorable E. C. Drury, of- Sissons o! Victoria is stili a stu- fered a cabinet post to the dent, still a writer, still a Mount- friend o! bis boyhood days. The aineer, an athlete, and a farmer. offer, if made, was declined. He keps up the farm at Orono Such a refusai could hardly be which he bought soon after bis ascribed to an antîpathy for con- marriage and into wvhich for traversy or a reluctance to en- many years he poured his sav- gage in public service, for the ings and bis labor as insurance Sissons career abounds in botb. for bis family. His four sons He served on the Ontario Hous- are now ahl independent, alI ing Commission of 1918-19, and married and themselves fathers was Diectr ad Screanyof familles - thirteen grand- of the Toronto Milk Producers' Thelresno ongCaean nnat Association from 1925 to 1932. hr' olne n edt His Homeric "battle-geree" in keep the prize cattie which he parliamentary debate was a owned in the farm's best years feature of the University coun- _Mloee ievad cils for many years. A former of course, an "ox-eyed" Juno. profiessor of distinction, when He had a Dominion champion about to leave the Toronto camp- once, but sold ber for $1,200 - us for lusher pastures to the a big price in the depressed south, is said to have described thirties. He still bas his orchard, the University of Toronto as which be tends and prunes with "mildewed with discretion" To the Georgic care of a good Vir- such a blight Professor Sissons gilian. The reforestation on the made no contribution. He would west bank of the creek is getting as cbeerfully break a lance on to be a beautiful stand of timber. a President or a Dean as gîve He spends most of the sum- a pat on the shoulder to the mer on the farm, but in winter youngest tiro. drives to Arizona, where be and Few men knew the University Mrs. Sissons can stili enjoy a bit of Toronto Act as well as be, f muntaineering. Just a few and none was ever readier to y-0earsoago they went to Greecel invoke its statutes in defence o! and clîmbed Olympus wben it the constitutional rigahts of 1 %vas deep in snow. The natives faculty counicils, colleges, col- could hardly have been moreI leagues and students. One o! his astonisbed had Zeus and Hera I causes celebres occurred in 1942. suddenlv appeared in all their when the Board of GovernorsÉacient glory. refused to admit to the Univers-1 His tennis bas only recentlyl ity a group of German nationals, v ielded to golf - a late ad- who at the outbreak of war bad dition to bis sporting repertoire. been interned in England but His stance is terrible, bis swing later released when the Govern- is ail wrong, but bis drive goes ment felt sure of their ai- straight down the faîrway and legiance. By agreement with bis putt neyer overruns the cup. the Gov'ernment o! Canada it He trims bis sons Most of the was arranged that these young time - and the writer every men migbt resume their studies time. Perhaps it's due to a bere, provided that they could carryover o! coordination; per- f ind Canadian sponsors. Sissons haps it's the reward o! a well- stood sponsor for a Young Ger- spent life. He doesn't drink and man Qaker. whose familv ha d 1he doe sn't smoke; bis only left Germanv when Hitler camne obvious social vice is "scrabb-1 to power. His elicibiltv for ad-,Idling" wýith obvious Latin deriv- ;mission Io the Universitv oflatives. Toronto liad been estabiishedf He's working on another book, before the Governors issued their e a entaeln h edict, so Sissons entered bim iii:countryv a mari usque ad Mare, Victoria College and claimed the i investigating the interpretation BLACKSTOCK A good many ladiesspta pleasant trne with the B=n-. ies in the Comniunity Hall Monday evening. First the Brownies held thelr regulan meeting when the followingý girls received thein Golden Bar: Grace Feddema, Shirley De Jong, Linda Venning, Shirley McCay, Manlene Tomchisbin. Then each Brownle escorted her mother and friends to, view the display and make any pur- chases theY wisbed from the white elephant tables. A boun- tiful buffet luncheon was serv- ed with $52 realized fromn the sale and luncheon wvhich will be spent for something for the childrens' ward o! Port Perry IHospital. Clotbing and toys flot sold were taken to the Salva- Congratulations ta Mr. and Mrs. K eith Van Camp on the arrival of a daughter ln Ogh- awa Hospital, June 11. Mrs. Helen C. Mais, Assistant Matron o! Trinity Colege, Tc- ronto, will be the guest o! Canon and Mrs. Chaperlin et St. Job n's Rectory for the next two weeks. Twenty ladies and seven children attmnded W.M.S. at the home o! Mrs. Roy MeLau- ghlin, Wednesday. President Mrs. Ernest Larmer opened the meeting by reading a poemn. Mrs. Gordon Strong gave the devotional reading, a paper on "The Four Anchors" and of- fered prayer. After business Iwas deait with and thank-you notes read, Mrs. John Scott gave the chapter fromn the study book, "The Future is Now". Mrs. John Carnagban and Mns. J. A. Jahnston gave readings. Mrs. E. Larmndr conducted a couple o! interesting contests on men and women o! the Bi- ble. A dainty lunch was served by the group in charge with Mrs. Carl Wright convenen. Mrs. Ray McGill entertained 30 ladies o! the Bowling Club and ber neighbors on Wednes- day night in honor o! Miss Bert Freelen. An entertaining program, o! readings, contests and games was enjoyed. Mrs. Velva Bailey read an address and Miss Joyce Venning and Mns. McGill presented Miss Freelen with a steam iron, elec- trie clock, bracket can opener, and other miscellaneous glfts. A bo-antiful lunch was senved and an hour o! visiting bnought the evening ta a close. Mr. Dalton and Miss Hazel Enghish with Mr. and Mns. Roy- al Whitfield, Port Dalhousie. Mr. and Mrs. Jack Sander- son, Peterborough, spending a couple o! days with Mr. and Mrs. Russell Mountjoy. Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Elford, Little Current, Manitoulin Is- land, visited the Fred Dayes,ý Satunday, then ail met with oven a hundred o! the Elford relatives and had a family pic- nic et Cream o! Banley Park, Bowmanville. Mr. and Mrs. Mervin Mount- Joy,' Hampton, with Mr. and Mrs. Fred Dayes. Mr. and Mn.. Bird Elford, missionaries on funlough from Churchll, Man., visited the Fred Dayez Thursday. On Wed- nesday night they spoke and sbowed lildes o! their work, in the Baptist church, Port Penry, and on Thursday night in the Baptist Church, Bowmanville. Mr. and Mrs. Bob Hall, Good- wood, called on friends in the village Friday. Mr. and Mrs. Gea. Carter and John, Bowmanville, Mr. and Mrs. Harry McLaughli and Lawrence wîth Mr. and Mrs. Tom Hoidge. Mr. Jas. Avery accompanied Mr. and Mrs. Harold Larmer to Little Bnitain Sunday and visited his son, Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Avery and family. Mr. and Mrs. Lorme Brad- burn, Toronto, called on rela- tives Sunday and took bis mother, Mrs. Wesley Bradbun home with them. Miss Manjorie Allan, Jamai- ce, spent the weekend with Miss Miriam Swain. Mrs, Harold Hawkins, Port -Perry, visited ?Mn. and Mrs presented by Sauna young peo- ple. Rev. Philip Romenil preach- ed in Kendal Sunday morning, Kedrdn in the afternoon and Cadmus in the evening. Brenda Farder, Sylvia Law- rence and Marilyn Stinson took part in the Irene Harvey Dance recital in Port Penny Friday night. Mn. and Mrs. Howard Foncier and famlly: Mn. and Mrs. Carl Wright, Mr. and Mn.. Osmond Wright, Misses Joan Hoskin, Verna Kozub, Jane Passant and Bob Lawrence were the Cart- wrigbt guesta at the wedding of Miss Donna Farder and Mr. Donald Wright in Bowman- ville Saturday. n.and Mn.. Joe Rutiedge and Linda. Oakville, spent Sa>.- urday night and Mr. and Mre. Wallace Rutledge, Bancroft, Sunday night with the Howard Forders. Mr. and Mns. David Rutledge. Mn. and Mns. Wallace Rutledge, Bancroft, with Mn. and Mrs. Carl Wright. Forty-s.ix of the Rut]edge clan gatbered at Cream o' Barle,' Camp Sunday and hela their tamnily picnic. Mr. and Mr&. Geo. Stanland Anniversary Services at Kedron Weil Attended Kedron: A large congregation braved the heat o! Sunday after- noon ta fili Kedron Church on the occasion of the Sunday School Anniversany Service, and the fi!th annivensary o! the open- inR o! the present church. Rev. Philhp Romenil. Black- stock, had the rapt attention o! many girls and boys present, as he delivered an inspining mes- sage. Howard Farndale, present S. S. Superintendent, conducted the service, which opened with a processionai hymn, during which the members of the Sun- day Sehool took their places in the chancel, and across the front o! the Cburch.. Special music was provided by the Ladies' Trio, Misses Jean- ette Dobson, Jeanne Pearson, and Jeanine Werrv, who sang and girls, Toronto, visited his parent5, Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Staniland Sr. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Oke, Enniskîllen, Mr. and Mrs. Jno Oke, Sherry and Randy, Mr. Howard Oke and Garry, spent Sunday afternoon wlth the Bruce Ashtons, celebrating Fa- ther's Day and Mrs. Walter Oke's 7th birthday. Mrs. Herb Taylor spent a few days with Mr. and Mrs. Wilbert Malcolm, Yelverton. Miss Alice Stevenson and. mother, Mrs. T. Stevenson, Wil- lowdale, with Mr. and Mrs. Har- old Martyn and boys and at- tended decoration service at Hampton. Mrs. John Williams and Mrs. Edward Adler, Bow- manville, were also Sunday evening guests. Mr. Dougal McDougal, To- ronto, la visiting friends in the village. Mrs. E. J. Palk, Miss N. Palk and Mr. Fred Palk, Scarbor- ougb, Mr. and Mrs. Arcbie Muir and children, Courtice, were Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Art Palk celebrating the latter's birtbday. Mr. and Mrs. J. K. Strang (Beryl Larmer), Winnipeg, erel holidaying witb ber parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Larmer Mr. and Mrs. Carl Church and Mrs. Annie Wbeeler, Mldland, aealso guests of the Larmers. Te 107th Anniversary Ser- 'vice o! St. John's Anglican Cburch, Blackstock, will be celebrated on Sunday, June 30, with a Parish supper the next day. ]KEDRON Guests In the 'Walter Davis home included Rev. and Mrs. R. H. Rickard and Patsy, Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Powell, Gary, Diane and Judy, o! Columbus; Mr. and Mrs. Campbell Hamer, Doreen, Donald, David and Shir- ley. Solina. With Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Pascoe were Mr. and Mrs. Har- old Gay, Mr. and Mrs. Laurence Mountjoy, Mr. and Mrs. Grant Pascoe, Oshawa. With Mrs. Fletcher Werry and Wilnia were Mr. Arthur Werry, Ennisklhlen; Mr. and Mrs: S. E. Wery, Eldad; M.r. Frank Batty and Doris, Brooklin: Mr. and Mrs. Charles Werry and Mrs. Meredith Moffat, Mr. and Mrs. Howard Brown and Eric, Osha- wa. With Mr. and Mrs. R. E. Lee were Mr. and Mrs. Newton Edgar, Mrs. Allan Glover and Frank Lee, Oshawa: Mr. and Mrs. Tom Sobil. Zion; Mr. and Mrn. Allan Werry and Sandra, Enniskillen. Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Werry had as guests Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Jebson, Carolyn and Gordon, Beaverton, Robt. Werry, Camp Borden, and the Ray Scott family. Miss Olive Luke was a week- end visitor with ber sister, Mrs. W. L. Mountjoy. Sunday guests were Mr. and Mrs. Bert Luke, Toronto; Misses Marie and Helen Cole, Markham. Mr. and Mrs. Grant Ormiston, Wick, with the latter's parents, Mr. and Mrs. E. Love. With the Wm. Werry family were Mr. and Mrs. Hugh GiI- christ and Robert, Oshawa: Mr. and Mrs. Artbur Rowan, Eliza- beth and Lynda, Yelverton. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Johnson, Oshawa, were recent guests of Mr. and Mrs. Jack Francis. With Mr. and Mrs. F. Snowden were Mr. and Mrs. Ross Pearce, niI 80 KING ST. W. TIHURSDAV, JUNE 20th, 1937 when provincial winners were declared. The Brooklin Junior Farmers lost in their play-off game to Lincoln County. Kedron friends are happy te sav congratulations to John Luke, a frequent visitor at d- ron. winner of scholarslilps totalling S60(0 in his second ýVear in enginering at Toronà' Uni. versitv. LADIES: Read 'lis ~ Unwanted hair removed permn- anentlv tfroni face, arms, legs. with SANTEX. Harmless - leaves skin soft and smooth. SANTEX is Safe. Simple and Scientific. Sold on a monev-back guaran- tee. Price $3.00 or two supplie& for $5.00 postpaid. (C.O.D. - postage extra>. MRS. DOREEN HOPE & CO. Dept. .. 6024 Park Ave. MONTREAL, QUEBEC a 1 PETERBOROUGH MEMORIAL CENTRE Corner LOCK and LANSDOWNE STS ]Peterborough, Ont. presents SEEI -IN PERSONý .- WITH SILVER Mr. and Mn.. Brooks Pearce and baby. Ebenezer; Mr. and Mn.. Joe Snowden, Eldad: Mn. and Mrs. Tom Pleasance, Tyrone, and Mrs. H. Hutcbîngs. Mn. and Mrs. John Knox and family, Eldad, visited the Grant Glover family. Guests in the E. Mountjoy home were Mn. and Mn.. Nor- man Gimblett, Columbus; Mr. and Mrs. Percy Mountjoy, Gloria and Harold. Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Booth, Miss Norma Booth, Mn. James Haire, and Master Richard Booth were tea guests o! Mn, and Mrs. Douglas Love. With the Harold Werry famiiy were Misses Jeanette Dobson and Jeanne Pearson, Uxbridge; Mn. and Mn.. Stanley Webben, Grace and Carolyn, Columbus; Miss Jessie Webben. Brooklin; John Luke, Toronto, and Sidney MacDonald. Uxbridge. Miss Eleanor Mountjoy had an attack o! acute appendicitis on Friday, and is recovening in Oshawa Hospital foilowing an openation on Friday evening. Mrs. E. Sorenson is in Western Hospital, Toronto, for surgery. Kedron attendants at the Pascoe family picnic at Hampton Park on Saturday wene Mn. and Mrs. Harvey Pascoe. Mn. and Mn.. Murton W alt e rsaand Dorotby. Mr. and Mn,. Wm. Snowden and boys were Fatben's Day din- ner guests o! Mn. C. Knowles and Lorraine, Oshawa. Mr. and Mrs, Reg. Blackmone and daughtens, Buffalo, were weekend visitons at home with Mn. Howard Brown. They with Ras. and Earl Brown, Mr. and Mrs. Nelson Brown and !amily attended Memonial Service at Prince Albert Cemetery on Sunday a! tennoon. hW. and Mns. Alvin Spencer also attended tbecoration at Prince Albert Cemetery. Mrs. Alvin Spencer, Mrs. G. Spencer, Mrs. Jack Francis and Mns. E. Mountjoy enjoyed the bus trip frorn Brooklin to Bar- rie an Wednesday and plenic dinnen at the Odd Fellows Home. for the aged, Allandale. Ron Wenry was among Brook- lin Junior Farmers ball player. wha spent Satunday at Agri- cultural College, Guelph. Among the events o! the day were the softbail cbampionship games Giory Be ta God" by Bach, un- accompanied. The boys' classes necited Scripture passages, and the othen Junior classes sang. The Junior Choir sang a special arrangement o! "Ail the Happv Children". Mn.. Ross Lee, organ- ist. Baskets o! peonies and lupins, arranged by Mrs. Douglas Love, lent their beauty on this special occasion. An offening of $200 was received ta carry on the Sunday School work. Following the service, the cburch lawn wlis the scene o! considerable visiting, as friends met for a time before dividinoc ta visît in the variaus Kedron homes. Former residents of Kedron were among the many friends who attended. BIG ACTION SHOW Plus 2-bn. Western Varietir Show Tuesday, June 25 Matinee - 4:15 P.m. Evening - 8:15 p.m. Aduits: $1.00, $1.50, $2.00 Children: 50c, 75ec_>1.00 Mail and 'phone qirs akl ccepted AlSeats Reserved Phone RI 3-3561 FOR A LONGER PAINT JOB TRY GLIDDEN'S ENDURABLE ON E -COAT ULTRA WHITE HOUSE PAINT (Alkyd Fortified) Premium quality white exterior paint. Gives extra hiding and coverage with its buit-in second coat. Has depth and nichness of enaniel. Fontified with Alkyd to give extra durability. NOW AVAILABLE AT J. H. Abernethy Paint and Wallpaper Store 33 King St. W. Denhertog's Phone MA 3-5431 BOWANVLLELadies' & Children's Wear Dresses Reg -$561 95 Skirts Reg -$,5 Blouses (ieees PHONE MA 3-5041 m op M Now $4.69 en w o 4 m lm m Maternif y Suifs Maternity Tops 2-pi*ce Set wu Ob il $2.69 Et $1.98 y'$4.98 $2.98 Boys' and Girls' Shorts du on- $ 89C Boys' and Girls' Suifs -M-M Ml $18fi In sizes 2.-3 - 4 - 5 - 6.- 6x Boy's Swi*m Trunks 84c and $139 When the dress you like and buy doci flot quite fit, we fix them so tbey will fit - without any more cost. TO BUY THE BEST AT A LOW COST, YOU GO TO DENHERTOG'.S -Ladies'& Childrens Wearj 0-11M avw

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