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Canadian Statesman (Bowmanville, ON), 4 Sep 1958, p. 10

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PA~ TEl. I!AVAIWAW. flIPA DAW e~IA~.? V PWI'P A UV~ -- ~a**w*n*. *D~W* ....... wa 1~i!UZ~5DAY, UWT. <m, Nu 0Ç% Spciôi»iijss, LRecordings Create Opn Pani Cultural Revolution AdsA 1~ The a4vent of the long play. malt a record was a desper- Ing record, which this year ately important one. Few re- cçlebrqtes its tenth birthidày, is cords were made without the credited with creating hun- assurance of a big sale, so even dfreds of new record companies tewer were made for rninority c'atering to every possible taste, tastes. Making records requir- bringi ng scores of composers ed huge capital investment. so out of unwarranted oblivion, ainiost ail records were made and Pr6viding todays boom in by a half-dozen large comnpan- high fidelity reproduction, ies. A storY ini the August issue But, C-I-L Oval states, the of C-I-L OVal points out that LP, made of the tough resilient the tact that all this has been plastic called vinyl, changed al done in a single decade is. due that. It made the record busi- to the economy of the LP. By ness attractive to smal busi- comparison with old-fashioned nessn:.et. First, dozens and then records, LPs are inexpensive hundreds of smaii firms enter- to procluce, ship, store, and thus, ed the record business and td buy. their owners brought fresh The chemnical magazine says ideas and original points of that in the days of sheilac re- view to the industry. cords that revolved 78 times a The magazine, which outlines Ininute the business of record- the history af the LP production Ing and dlstributing muusic was techniques of LP production. Bocostly that any decision to cdaims that the advent of the TêêIf new-type record bas created bàscuendeu ho.. IiM ie a "cultural revolution". appear urger imude tdu. n se. the large windows.in the living ~~ rooçia, thedoor m dSheterrace ........ ...M dMrs E tand the raised living roona cei- somma ng alilcontribute ce ibis impres- manvilie, Mr. and Mrs. Melville SioInfl ifPte of the 0pcfl Sameils and baby Oshawa; the .planning the dining "~ce is littie McArthur brothers, Gre- segregated. enbank; Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth -ArchitectILK.IL D. Praer, of 4 Samelis: Miss Anna Samelis and Sr. Vital, Manitobe, has ensured friend; Miss Brown, Nestieton that the working. living and m . v. sited Mr. and Mrs. Mervin sleeping arcas are well separated. Mounjoy t CnwayGardns, The living roona with ius gardes Port Perry. cerrace sou, fae oth. Miss Louise Goodman ls vis- Thec foor area as 9W0 square kergToro. adMs le a- fee« and the exterior dimensions ker Toonto.are 40 feer by 24 feet. Working Mr. and Mrs. Walter Holiday, drawung for dais houa., known IIom.toow *MOj'6 Columbus, and Mrs. Eva Prout as esign 130, are available froua onywere.of Brooklmn, Mr. and Mrs. Per- Central Mortgage srd Housiug w ey Allun and Margo, Bowman- ville, were Sunday visitors with atw nw co. bley for fi" hem Mrs. Luther Allin and Mrs. Sarah Allun. m" iOybel Mrs. Frank Thompson, Mrs. Merwin Dickinson, Oshawa, grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. R. à eountry.wide network Mrs. Garf Trevail, Taunton, Shackleton. were Saturday visitors with Mr. and Mrs. R. Queilette of more than 200 dlaim of. Mr. and Mrs. Sam Dewell. and family, Oshawa, were Sat- 'ieu services the. car iflaur. Miss Lorraine Cook, Tyrone, urday evening visitora with Mr. iace we write. Even if yon visited wîth Miss Ami Balson. and Mrs. J. Gallant and Mr. have an accident far from Rev. and Mrs. Geo. Empev-, and Mrs. Arthur Sullivan and homne, you can count on Barbara, Janet and Peggy of daughters of Toronto were fast, efficient help .. the Lanark made a short visit with Sunday visitors. sameIdn were repred Mr. and Mrs. Will Wilbur, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Deweil, mare knd e'e pepaed called on other friends and were Thistieton, were visitors with to give you right bere! overnieght guests of Mr. and Mrs. Sam and Percy Deweil. Fred Paynes on Saturday night. Mr. and Mra. Don White, ~TUAE R. JMrS . and Mrs. Frank Wilbur, Oakville, spent the weekend1 daugnter Susie and son Brian, wîth his mother Mrs. W. White. who have spent several weeks Mr. and Mrs. R. Shackleton INSIJIANCE RBEAL ESTATE with her parents Mr. and Mrs. enjoyed a trip to the Niagara Off~. eene Palmer have returned to their district last week with Mr. and Ofic RedAde49 home in Oshawa. Mrs. K. Shackleton. MisesAarare5ad4Rth Mr.,and Mrs. Wilfred Smale Lima treelL BWWàD Missean E ri aid and Robert visited her brother and wife, Ki" tree IL 0wz"vU Sa rco, Daem, avRoerailMr. and Mrs. J. Wills Toronto, been recent visitors with their' rdyeeig IMr. and Mrs. J. Macnab and Keith Biilett at their cottage, Lake Scugog, on Sunday. Mrs. J alson has also been vis- iigwith Jean and Keith and aMiyss Linda Smale who spent two moutha with her uncle.. 4d1 * aunt, Mr. and Mrs. J. Wills, at their cottage, Duncburch, Muskoka. has returned home. Her brother Gardon spent a - week there also. Rev.' and Mrs. Ted Kersey and familyr Scarboro, spent the week-end with bis parents, Mr. Ltus prepare your car for many more and Mrs. S. Kersey. Miss Nina Hodgson left for of trouble-free driving Washington, D.C. again on Sun- day evening after a pleasant WHETL BALA CINGvisit with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. R. V. Hodgson and other relatives.E Mr. and Mrs. W. Chapman WHEEL ALICNMNiT and Mr. and Mrs. R. Sake tan visited Mr. and Mrs. Gardon Shackleton, Salem. Th, Kerseys and Mr. and Mrs. Jack Lyon and tamily, R c. ,sc n Vic> c~ svisited Mr. and Mrs.Ramn Robson M otorBurns at their cottage at Hial- stead's Beach, Rice Lake, onE Li itdSunday.c Limited 1Women's Institute meetingî 1will be held this Thursday inc 13MCK - PONTIAC- G.M.C. TRUCK DEALER the Park Bungalow. Meeting i la6 King St E. Bowmanvile MA 3-3321 in charge of the centre group.1 g..o both are buildinag UP banlE accoulnts Nowadays, practically everybody has a bank account. Lastycaralone, forward-lookingCanadians opened 450,000 new deposit accounts in the chartered banks-alniost as many as the increase in population. The owners cf today«s 11 million accounts know a bank is the saie, convenient, pleasant place te build up funds for évcry need and purpose. They know, too, that in a chartered bank yau deaI with skilied, fiendly people, ready te help with ail your banking. THE1 CHARTERED BANKS SERVING YOUR COMMUNITY PIay Host fCon ference )ept. 14 to 21 e The international conclave .will begin, with a C.B.C. Trans- iCanada "Religiaus Perîod" net- womk broadcast originating in Toronto, tram 2:30 ta 3 Taran- ta Daylight Saving Time. The 1bmoadcaster wiil be Rev. Thom- as Johnstone, recently ai North Vancouver, B.C. who in May was elected national secretamy of Educational and Home Mis- sions Department ai The Pente- costal Assemblies ai Canada. The network soloist wîil be Mm. Einar Ekberg, of Stockholm, Sweden, intemnationally known concert vocalist. Another inter- national broadcast will be aired that night at 10:30 p.m. over 350 stations oi the A.BC. net- work, when Rev. C. M. Ward, a former Canadian, wiil be the speaker. The international event will feature participation cf chairs in colorful national costumes ai many lands. The convention pmagmam includes as many as five services per day. Simul- taneous translations, United Na- tions style, willeiake it possible for as many as six language groups ta participate in the services. The last Sunday aitemnoon (September 21) the rally will be held in the Grandstand Stad- ium wben provision bas been made for attendance ai 30,000 persans. The speaker wiil be Rev. Wîllamd T. Cantelon, form- erly oi Winnipeg, Manitoba, and Nanaimo, B.C. Rev. Walter E. McAilister, genemal superintendent of the hast ta the Confemence, The Pentecostal Assemblies ai Cana- da, is chaimman ai the advisomy cauncil oi the Convention. The Pentecostal Assemblies ai Cana- da number 670 churches in Canada. Discuss Forest Fire Situations DORSET-Fast and severe disciplinamy action is being tak- en by Ontario woods industries against employees who endang- er operations through torest tires, it was indicated at the Forest Ranger Scbool bere. Woods opematars'and employees ai the Depatment ai Lands and Forests, who jaintly spansomed a four-day course in tire tighting, outlined some et the steps now being taken te prevent tarest tires. *Duncan Naysmith, Abitibi Power and Paper Company, told the meeting that bis company bas now started issuing written warnings for infractions oif fire regulations. The second warn- ing means a two-week lay-oif, the thîrd calis for dismîssal of the employee, he said. During the tire season, all campanies prohibit the use oi matches in the bush, insist that employees must not smoke tail- or-mnade cigarettes (the butts ai which burn longer when discard- cd), torbid lunch tires and en- force similar regulations. Other representatives ai industry said they had similar regulatians, but only Mr. Naysmith's com- pany, se far as was known, bas the "wmitten warning" system. Howevem, he agmeed there weme cases where "1criminal carelessness" led company af- ficials ta discard the three-warn- ing plan and "1just tell the man ta get bis pack and get aut of the area". This was the pro- cedure aIso iollowed by other companies. Extra measures were carried out ta detect tires an womking areas when they are in the in- cipient stage. *Camp patrols are arganized in each cutting ares and the men on patrol duty are paid extra time te caver ail werk trails atter the normal dysI work. Thon extraM ea»M are normaily confined te periods et mediumr or higher tire haz- ard. Equipment la dlstributed te each work patrol area as re- quired: cashes are put up along- side main access roads, a truck is kept in readiness loaded with power pumps, hase and hand equipment. Similarly, equip- ment is stored at the boat dock in the event that access is best made by water. A suitable type tire extinguisher is still being sought for p9wer saw aperatars,"I he said. OBITUARY WILLIAM POTTER Atter an lllness of several months, William Patter of Bow- manvîlle passed away on August 14, 1958, at Memorial Hospital, Bowmanville. He was in bis 82nd year. Mr. Patter was born at En- niskillen on November 18, 1876 and lived mast or bis 1fr in the Township of Darlington and Bowmanvile. except for a few years when he was in Oshawa and Brantford. After giving ap farming at Enniskillen. he mov- ed ta Bowmanville where he worked in the Goodyear Tire and Rubber Company plant for 24 years. He retired after his 75th birtbday Mr. Patter was the son af tbe late Mr. and Mrs. Luke Patter. He was interested in sports of ail kinds. He was always ready ta help others, and en- joyed having a friendly chat. He leaves four children, Alex af Hampton, Lamne, and Reta (Mrs. Ernie McKnight) af Bow- manville, and Kari af Toronto. Also lef t ta rnourn bis passing are 27 grandchildren and 34 great-grandchildren. His wife, Annie MacMillian Patter, pre- deceased hlm on Nov. 24, 1938. Funeral service was beld on Saturday, August 16, in the Morris Funeral Chapel, Bow- manville, conducted by Rev. A. C. Herbert. Amang the loy- ely floral tributes were those ai the executive Board, the Recreation Club, Foremen and Pressroam cf the Viceroy Rub- ber Company, Toronto; Dept. 205P, and Hase Room af Good- year Tire and Rubber Company, Bawmanville. Friends and rela- tives tram out-of-town were present tram Toronto, Oshawa' and Peterborough. Palibearers were the deceas- ed's six eldest grandsons, Har- old, William and Harry Patter, William McKnigbt, Jack Pat- ter and Jack Hill. Interment was in Bowmanville Cemetery. Muskrats X dOtaio.ord St~ili Going14yugi w lter Strongly Themusratt buBLa u g'usually on a srnal l sland cfde TWEED- 'As long as con- caymng vegetation and. muck ditions remain good, 75 per cent scaaped from the bottom eof, ai the muskrat population can swamp. or pond, The original be removed without damnaging bouse is about three fret ini breeding stock - Even if con- diameter at thebrand two ditions become unfavourable feet tal.The hoýjVW enlarg- for a short tirne the return of ed through the yen, with at good conditions brings about a least one additional room. Mf great ncrease in muskrats, even food is short during the wmnter, in the presence cf heavy trap- the animal chews the more pings.", edible portion ai the walls. This is the conclusion of ex- Sanitary note: The muskrat perts cf the Ontario Department builds a room used only as a of Lands and Forests wbo, for toilet, too. the past 16 years, have been Gestation period may be 22 carrying out experiments in the days or sometimes 34 and the study of muskrats and trappîng infants at birth weigh less than in the Conroy Marsh. an ounce. They are blind and The news is reassuring ta hairless. Many cf tbem are hundreds of Ontario tarm boys* caten by snapping turties, bÙit -and expert trappers many of the worst enemy af the muskrat them are - who for many a is the mink. Muskrats are sub- year have depended on the 'rat jected ta the cyclical periods af harvest ta provide tbem with about 10 years when nature kilîs pocket money. Even 50 years off the surplus and leaves but aga, the muskrat was in de- few ta survive. However, not mand altbough prices have even the most intensive trapping changed considerably fromn the has threatened then- with ex- aid days when the standard tinction. price was 10 cents a peit. In Women's coats are the Cliti- more recent years, tbey have mate destination aifrnost musk- brought as high as $2.50. rat peits and for many years The muskrat, frequently mis- "Rice Lake muskrat" bas been taken for a beaver, is a heavily classed as one of the world's furred animal with small eyes finest varieties. Handled by ex- and ears, short legs and a stocky pert furriers, the 'rat becomes body. It bas a long sparsely- "Hudson seal", "mink-dyed". haired tail flattened vertically; "marsb rabbit", "marsh hare" the bind feet are partly webbed. or a score ai other namnes. The The animal weighs fromn two ta meat, incidentally, is fine-grain. four pounds but looks much ed and tender and tastes like beavier. The beaver's tail, in-wild duck. PRE-CA&ST CONCRETE - Septic Tanks- - Sidewalk Slabs - Coloured Patio Slabs - - Unit S eps - Railings - -Barb-B-Q's- - Curbing- Biroolklin - Concret. Produet-S LIMITED PHONE BROOKLIN 155 M I Canada to Pen tecostai ln Toronto 5 The raie ai Canada as a bridge between nations will be re- enacted again in Toronto when delegates tram nearly 40 nations will attend the bistomy. making Fifth Womld Conierence ai Pentecostal Churches which will meet in the Coliseum Arena, Exhibition Park, Toronto, from September 14th ta 2lst, accord- ing te Rev. George E. Leno, pastor ai the Pentecostal Cbumch at 21 Ontario St., Bowmanvîlle. A&ccomding te Rev. Mm. Leno this confemence will have over- tones ai a small United Na- tions in its racial and political divemsity. Reservations bave been received. from nearly 40 nations, and 35 U.S. States and aUl. 3 Canadian Provinces. De- spite the agreemnent in matters of theology and Christian ex- perience and their spiritual brothemhood there is a large area Of diversity in political and social autlook. A large delegation cff colored folks tram the United States are stmang anti-segmegationalists. At the opposite extreme there will be a senator tramn South Africa wbo is a member af the South African Nationalîst gov- ernmene-party, wbo will also be accompanied by a colored South African who subscribes ta the nationalist apartheid doctrine. Between these two positions practically evemy political and social view wiil be tound tram left ta right. This is the tirst time that sueh a womld-wide confemence ai the 8,000,000 members ai the Pente- costal denomination will be held in North America. Previaus conventions were beld in Zur- ich, Switzerland, in 1947; Paris, France, in 1949; London, Eng- land, in 1952, and Stockholm, Sweden, in 19,55. BOWMANVILLE - Yeo's Marketeria MAPLE GROVE - Maple Grove Grn~ceteria KINGSWAY SUPER MARKET KING ST. - EAST 0F TOWN LINE < ORONO- Cornish Marketeria BLACKSTOCK -Btyth's Market I 0 "BEST BUY"- SAVE 4e Hein z Spaghetti tn2frLY9c "BEST BUY"- SAVE 5c Solo Brand Margarine - 3 Ibs. 7 7c "BEST BUY" - SAVE 4c Del Monte Up i-ex. fo35 Tomate Catsup bettie2 o35 "BEST BUY" - SAVE 22c Tqd;,y4 White o r WhteS . ilet isse Clue rails$1 Quality Meats 'Fresh Produce Switt's Fresh 1Ne. 1 Ontario - Heaping 6 qt. basket Pork ShoulderRBoaSt Lb. 37c TOMDIA T0E S l.~5,5'c No. 1 YeIIow - 5 l.poybag PorkfBlltfRoast ab49c ONIONS - - - 33c Pokb.lStas iId, Garden Sweet, il qt. basket Pok ul Seas 5cCUCUNDERS - 89C Swift's Hockless L)4 CSalmon Flesh S140KED PICNICS L.45CCANTALOUPES Ea. 25 c Swifts - 1-lb. pkg. eo. 1 Ontarie's Finest - 6 qt. basket PRENIUN FRANKS 45C DARTLETT PEARS 89C FEATURE - SAVE 4c Chase & Sanborn - 15c off - 6 ez. jar Appleford's K.V.P. - 100 ft. roll INSTANT COFFEE - 99c WAX PAPER - - 29c Success - Pint tin Red & White LQI LO A 5 Orange Pekoe - loc off - 60 bags LIUID FLO-OR6 WAX 55a TEA BAGS - m 0 59C SupEET - 16 oz. jar Lipton's Tomate Vegetable orSETRLS or 49C Chicken Needie Sunbeam - "Tea Time" - Orange Icing SOUP MIX 3 Pkgs. 35c WHITE LAYER CAKE 39c Libby's'Frozen Strawberries, 15 ex. pkg. ---35e F rozen Food S Libby's Lemonade, 6 oz. tin ___ 2 for 27c Birds Eye Cod Fish Sticks, 8 ex. pkg. - -__35c THERES A RED AND WHITE STORE NEAR YOU

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