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Port Perry Star (1907-), 15 Sep 1938, p. 5

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2X - +7 v rd ¥ ¥ 'y ' § 4 : "Hs y ® 4 £ » 7 Y BA --- ~ BROCK THEATRE WHITBY Telephone 618 All shows Daylight Saving Time. Thurs., Friday, Sat. Sept. 15-16-17, Two shows at 7.30 and 9.30 Saturday Matinee at 1.30, THE RITZ BROTHERS, in "Kentucky Moonshine" with Tony Martin, Marjorie Weaver. Mon., Tues, Wed., Sept. 19-20-21 First show at 7.30. Last complete show at 8.50, "Goodbye Broadway" with Alice Brady, Charles Winninger, Tom Brown, Tommy Riggs, and Frank Jenks. Se - also an Added Attraction. The Lone Wolf in Paris with Francis Lederer, Frances Drake | mSURED Feee AG NOTE--Every diamond is insured. Bentley's Jewelry Store. Port Perry. ctr FREE ESTIMATE ON YOUR ROOFING WRITE NOW Bendridge and rafter measure- paired. nouneil aap" meta Anent investment. Absolutely weather- tight. Greatly reduces fire hazard, SOLD ON A 25 YEAR GUARANTEE Prices this Fall are lower use of Sales I'ax exemption. Save money writing today. Manufacturers al alse of famous Pre ston Steel ment, Address: 308 Gluslph St. Brostym. Du. Pater Steel Products Limited 4/1047 MONTREAL £ TORONTO PRESTON ONT £407 Please send in the "News" This is YOUR paper. Use it. A 2820080808 da tenet es eect oiottessatassssseastosesosetss TELEPHONE CAWKER BROS. We deliver J PEE Rasa hn i000 00000005303 080000800ssssssssestst It's quicker and easier call to 29W will end your meat * order worry in a flash. 3 Port Perry Np lie Clie YOUR FAMILY BAKER No matter which -- Bread or 'Pastry -- we can the best baking, JEMISON'S THE HOME OF GOOD BREAD AND PASTRY PHONE 98, : IN supply you with on short notice. BAKERY - PORT PERRY : J M::GREGOR'S Insures prompt, personal service PHONE 72-R-2 [ER AARRRLFF IRR A ARRKRIRARAR AE AS KRESS ON The personal Way A CALL TO . MEAT MARKET JIUROPOPOROPOPORORECEOSOEORLEOR0S PORT PERRY THE WORLD'S will come to your home every day through "JE CHRISTIAN SCIENCE MONITOR An International Daily Newspaper records for you the world's clean, constructive doings. The Monitor oes not exploit crime or sensation; neither does it ignore them, but deals correctively with them. Features for busy men and all the family, including the Weekly Magazine Section. GOOD NEWS The Christian Science Publishin One, Norway Street, Boston, ar $12.00 6 months $6.00 Wedn assachusetts Please snuer my, subscription to The Christian Sclence Monitor for 3 months $3.00 nesday issue, including Magazine Section: 1 year $2.60, 6 issues 256 Boclety 1 month $1.00 Phone 41 PROTECT YOURSELF with Reliable Fire Insurance Place Your Insurance with HAROLD W. EMMERSON Port Perry Myrtle Station Next Stmday is Rally Day. The S. S. will be held at the usual hour with the usual courses of study. At 3 p.m. the Rally Day service will be conducted together with the church 'service. The program is being pre- pared and-primary, junior and inter- mediate scholars are being trained in singing and speaking. Let us remem- ber that Sunday School is for every- one, and not just for the children. The larger the classes, the better the teachers like it." So let us make next Sunday a real Rally Day, Mr. and Nrs. Morley Cook and fam- ily are moving to Colborne this week, where we understand, Mr. Cook will take charge of a butcher shop. We wish them every success. Doris and Eileen will be missed in Sunday School and choir,,Doris has made a very ef- -t ficient secretary in S. S. and took an active part in the Y.P.A, The last afternoon meeting of the | Women's Association was held at the { home of Mrs. Norman Hughson on Thursday last. As several members {| were out of town, only ten answered iroll call, Two new members were i added, The president, Mrs, Luery pre- { sided, using "Take time to be holy" as the opening. hymn. The devotional | service was chosen from Psalm 147 yand a part of St. John's Gospel, 6th i chapter. After the business was dis- ' pensed with, the program committee took charge: Two 'interesting guess- ing contests were given out, for which i Mrs, A, Parrinder and Mrs, A. Dow- j ney held the highest scores. After- noon tea was served and a pleasant hour was spent socially. { The Township Council of Whitby and Reach are having a.fine new con- jcrete culvert put in on the townline just west of the old G.T.R. railroad. This has been needed for a long time as the old one was dangerous, and a , menace after dark, The road has been closed to traffic for the past week and will likely be so for two weeks and a #8 half or three weeks more, before the new culvert wil be in a safe condition for traffic use. Jack Thompson visited last week in Oshawa with his uncle and aunt, Mr, and Mrs. L. D, Christie. Mr, and Mrs. John Kirkham were in *' the Niagara district on Labor Day. Mr. Harold Brown and Miss Lila Johnson of Greenbank, Mr. Millman, Sr., and Mr. and Mrs. Frank Millman of Epsom, were recent visitors at the home of Mr. and Mrs. D. Duchemin. Mr. and Mrs. E. Redman were in Kinsale last Friday calling on old 'neighbours, Mr. and Mrs. Elwood Masters were with relatives in Pontypool on Sunday. Miss Dorothy Hall and Mr. James Edgar, of Toronto, were visitors at the home of the former's grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Chisholm, over the week end. Mr. and Mrs. Victor Hudgins and little daughter of oTronto, were recent guests of Mrs. H, Hudgins. Rev. W. E. and Mrs. Honey spent a few days last week in Toronto. Miss Dorothy Rodd of Manilla, is $| visiting with her cousin, Miss Reva 3 | Cooper. School is in full swing once more, with the popular teacher, Miss Elsie Smith in charge. The sound of the old school bell, as it rang out its call of, "Come to school, come to school," on Tuesday morning last week, was, we believe, a very welcome one, for the boys and girls had grown weary of having nothing to do but do as they pleased. Some of the pupils have left the old public school, to start on the adventure into the entirely new and altogether different subjects of high school. Several little six-year-olds are just commencing and are big-eyed with wonder and interest as they learn about the mysteriously shaped letters and how it is with them properly placed that we finally understand how to read. Visitors to the Exhibition last week included Mr. and Mrs. Roy Thompson, Mr. W. J. Cook, Mr. Robt. Chisholm, Mr. and Mrs, Duchemin, Mr, and Mrs. Allan Downey, Mr, O. H, Downey, Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Holliday, Mr. and Mrs. I. Masters. They all report that it was the best exhibition ever seen. GREENBANK Mr, E. Watson has rented the Jam- ieson farm, and Mr. Milton "Howsam Geo. Mark's farm at Honeydale, Mr. John Holdershaw returned home on Monday after a month's trip to the West. * Miss Collridge, of Woodville, is visiting her sister Mrs, John Holder- shaw, Mrs. M. O'Neill in Oakwood on Sat- grandson, Mr, Elvin O'Neill, ! Sorry to hear of Mr, George Till urday attending the wedding of her having a cow killed in a car accident while crossing the road to pasture, by four men from Haliburton. The car was badly smashed and the cow a total loss. The funeral of the late Rev. J. Geo. Miller was held in the United Church on Wednesday afternoon, Interment was made at' Bethel cemetery. Rev. T. Wallace and Mr, J, Watson attended .the Presbytery meeting at Seagrave this week. PRINCE ALBERT Next Sunday, Sept. 18th, will be Rally Day. As usual there will be a combined service of the Church and Sunday School.- All are welcome, Mrs. Jackson, of Grenbank was with 'her mother Mrs. T. Dobson, on Sun- day. Mrs, Russell Butson has been \..u. relatives in Toronto tor awhile. " Mrs, Coburn, Toronto, 1s with he brother Mr. W, Wannamaker. Miss Madden has improved her home with a fine new front porch, and also some interior alterations. Mr, C. Clark was in Fort William several days supervising lodge duties. Mr. and Mrs. A. Harper and Misses K. and D, Murphy were among those who attended the C.N.E. last week. ay Depression on the Fishing Frent (continued from front page) What About Young People? The fishing shore has long been noted for its neat little villages, well- painted houses, flower and vegetable gardens, I am not much worried about the older folks, they have always been accustomed to pretty plain living and they will simply tighten their belts and carry on as best they can; but 1 greatly worried about the young folks. They are not exactly unemployed. They are doing a little fishing, a little road. work, when they get the chance, in fact, anything that comes to hand, but they are simply putting in the time and they know it. Do you know how these young people feel? Do you remember, when you were a child, that sometimes for various reasons you were left out of the crowd. Perhaps you were sick. Do you remember hearing the other children at play while you were left out, That is about the way these young folks feel. They see the young people employed in a nearby industry, with their nice homes and cars, while they are denied any chance of attaining any such thing. Yes, they are not wanted: left out of the scheme of things. The position of these young people seems to me the tragedy of the fishing shore today, but of course, it is only part of the whole problem of unemployment. The greatest gift that could be given to those young folks is a job. They desparately want to make their way and take their place in life, but the way seems closed. What can be done for them? Organization will help the men em- ployed in the industry to attain and maintain a better standard of living, but it will not help the unemployed. Co-operation is the latest fad in Nova Scotia and an excellent fad it is, but will all your credit unions and co- operative enterprises, the people are just about as poor as ever and it does not give the young folks their chance. In England, where they have forgot- ten more about co-operation than we know, they have around two million unemployed. Co-operation is splendid as far as it goes, apd we are all work- ing for it, but it really does not go very far, Two or three times lately I have been asked this question: "Mr. Neck, don't you really think we would be better off under a dictator?" Now, why should boys in a country like Can- ada even ask a question like that? A few evenings ago, as I, wag coming home I noticed a crowd of the boys sitting on the steps of the village store, so I stopped my car and joined them. I like these informal gather- ings. Sermons can be preached just as well on the steps of the village store or the edge of the wharf as in a pulpit. The conversation soon ran into the usual channel. Start a con- versation on any subject from "cab- bages to kings" and in five minutes you are discussing the economic con- ditions on the shore. We threshea the old straw again and went around in the usual circle, but as I left to get in my car, one young fellow fired a last shot. "You can talk as you like, Mr. Beck, but before this thing is finished, we'll all be fighting behind Tim Buck." No, he didn't mean that. He was just trying to take a rise out of the parson. Not one man in twenty-five on the shore has even heard of communism. Still, somebody had better find work for those boys, and that before too long. They are just about ready to follow anybody or anything that promises them a job. BER Ee UE a GENERAL PURPOSE HORSES At a recent meeting of the Directors of Port Perry Fair it was decided to add a class to the Prize List for Gen- eral Purpose Horses. The prizes will be: One Year Olds ......$4 $3 $2 Two Year Olds ...... 4 3 2 Pair in Harness ..... 8 6 4 This class will be known as "Class X" General Purpose. PE PG OTTAWA FIRM ON THE SEAWAY Claims legal Right to Proceed Regardless of Ontario's Attitude, "(Financial Post) Ottawa--The Dominion Government feels that it is entirely within its legal and constitutional rights to proceed with a treaty with the United States for the development of the St. Law- rence Seaway regardless of the atti- tude of the Province of Ontario as expressed by Premier M. F. Hepburn, This view was expressed by a high official of the Department of Justice. The_head of the Ontario Government may be told this fact in precise man- ner in the not distant future by Prime Minister W. L. M. King. The Canadian Government is in a more definite position with respect to waters and water powers than is the Government of the United States, it was pointed out. Reference to Supreme Court The question of water power juris- diction has never been dealt with by the Privy Council, it was pointed out at the Department of Justice. The Dominion Government banks its auth- ority on a reference in 1928 to the Supreme Court of Canada "as to the relative rights of the Dominion and Provinces in relation to the proprie- tary interest in and legislative control over waters with respect to navigation and water powers created or made available by or in connection with the government. Selecting Food Calgary, Sept. 13th.--Neither man nor animal selects health-giving foods by instinct, declared Dr. L. H., New- burg, Professor of Clinical Investi- gation at the University of Michigan, speaking here last night at Central United Church in connection with the current campaign of the Canadian Medical Association to increase public knowledge of proper diet. Dr. New- burgh, a leading United States author- ity, asserted that chemical research had proven that instinct and appetite alone could not be trusted to tell peo- ple what they should eat. The ill-health of mountaineers of the southern United States offers wholesale evidence of the effect of in- adequate diet, said Dr. Newburgh. "The habitual food of large groups of people contains far too little pro- tein" he stated. "Thus, in the south central portion of the U.S., especially in the mountainous districts, the food consists chiefly of corn, molasses, and salt pork. The natives are thin, pale, haggard, devoid of ambition and lack- ing in strength. It is characteristic that they accept their debility as a matter of course and evince no interest in overcoming it. Even though they are suffering from a protein defic- jency, instinct does not prompt them to seek out protein-rich foods." A child receives too little calcium for the proper development of bones and teeth unless it drinks four glasses of milk daily or takes the equivalent in the form of a pint of milk, four ounces of cream, an ounce of cheese, and a serving of some leafy vegetable, he contended. Since it would take 22 pounds of beef or eight pounds of bread to provide the calcium content of one quart of milk, Dr. Newburgh pointed out that it-would be impossible to eat enough meat, eggs and white bread to fill the calcium needs of a growing child. Our forebears were wiser than they knew when they cherished the cow, for she patiently and with never a com- plaint extracts the calcium from high quantities of grass and delivers it to us in so small a package that we im- bibe it with ease and pleasure", he commented, adding that physicians could prescribe calcium in medicinal form for the occasional child with whom milk does not agree. He emphasized, too, the need for vitamins, These; he said, were lack- ing in the diet of the average Amer- iency" disease. Thus, in addition to milk, eggs and meat, he recommended that daily diet include one pound of green leafy vegtables and fruit, raw or cooked, A AOA IER NER ET PRR ES Boys' Trousers-- Pleated, in Grey, Browns, Blues $2.75 Double seat, zipper pocket, $2.95 i SUIT or OVERCOAT i JOHNSTON Approved CLOTHES Made-to-Measure $22.50 $24.50 Girls' School Shoes, $2.35 Rexoleum Floor Coverings, 29c. sq. yd. Peaches are perfect this week. No. 1's 49c. Plums, 6 quarts 45c. Pastry Flour, 24's, 45c. Grapes, blue, 6 quarts 39c. F. W. BROCK & SON PHONE 43 PORT PERRY PAL SNS SNE SEAT MRI AISIA PITA SSIS IM SIRI PAP UD SIND 02 SF 54 3 -- - i a oo 2g pS nn a <r 5 8 : OUR NEW LOAF Bread is the staff of life, so we are always trying to furnish oun : customers with the latest and hest. Ask our driver ahout our bread and pastry. He will be pleased to show you tasty varieties. 2 4 [3 i SMILES N' CHUCKLES : J. , : 4] When you buy them from us are always fresh and attractively packed " Per package 253¢. and 50c. Gerrow Brothers poate oS aA [2] We PASSA AAAI AR SIR APA PTE AMA LF SRS RETR ALE At tA ST AT GES (ES | WED (CI CED WED GC --- NO HEATING WORRIES "YOU USE READING ANTHRACITE WASHED FREE FROM DIRT AND DUST The "Laundered' Coal Fresh ST. MARY'S CEMENT "also Lime, Plaster, and Tile PORT PERRY COAL YARD i PHONES 94 w, 94) CD SED | (GED GED) GED (GED (ED GD (CD GD (CD Always on Hand. Hardwood, | JE ED GE SE AEE WE MED GE GES GI GE EA Eh) |) |) |) Gr =) what i800a%% 0% obo . oA ENR ~~ A ~~ i -m a aon cm OT Net A ox, TI VAR SA ET 5 by . Pog Pw RA LA TE A (| DO (A (| (AW (|| {WD |G (|W G{ _ _(--- SUMMER IS ENDED Now is the time to make preparations for Winter. We can supply you with-- COAL COKE FIREWOOD WE MAKE A SPECIALTY OF ican big city dweller, causing 'defic-| [} ® Lake Scugog Lumber & Coal Co. PHONE 240 Limited STORM SASH, STORM DOORS I

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