PACE EIGHT School Buses Are Innovation At Brooklin BILL DYER Correspondent Brooklin, Ont., Sept. 14.--Brook- lin Continuation and Public Schools re-opened on Tuesday, September 7, with 137 pupils, one of the larg- est enrollments in recent years. Of this combined total, 45 were Con- tinuation and 92 were public school pupils. This large total is more sur- rising betause the Continuation school is taking only two forms this year instead of the four forms taught in previous years. Another new addition to the school services this year is the school bus which has been engaged to pick up pupils in the outlying districts and trans. port them to Brooklin and also transport the Jisper forms to hitby High School. hod only new member of the teaching staff is Miss Beulah Ham- {lton, of Brougham, who will teach Grades IV, V, VI in the public school. The complete teaching staff is: Continuation school: Principal J. W. Kaine, Miss D. Lawrence, Public school: Grades VII, VIII, Mrs. F. Rogers, Grades Iv, V. VI, Miss B. Hamilton, Grades I, II, III, Mrs, Gray. Class Meets oung Adult Class will meet hy Oraiston's (Porter's) flats at 8:15, Thurs., Sept. 16. The meet- ing will take the form of a weiner roast. The executive of the Brook- lin Y.P.U, meets at 8:00, on Wed- nesday evening in the church base- ment. The Brooklin United Church Sunday School teachers and of- ficers will meet at 8:30, on Wed- nesday evening in the church base- ment. Softball Game : The largest crowd to attend a softball game in Brooklin went home disappointed on Saturday after watching the Brooklin Lyn- brooks blow a 12 run lead to lose the first game of the Ontario Junior B Finals, Brooklin Lyn- brooks led 12-0 at the end of four innings but when the roof fell in and Thorold Holy Rosaries downed them easily 20-13. Next Saturday, Brooklin will invade Thorold in an attempt to tie up the series. This defeat is partially moder- ated by their win over Fittings, 5-4 on last Thursday which tied up the Town League Series. This series will be decided this week. U. C. Group Meets Members of the United Church W. A. Lend-a-Hand Group, met on Tuesday evening Sept. 7th at the home of Mrs. Harold Mowbray. There were ten members present. Leader, Mrs, Hamer presided for business period. Mrs. Ernie Pat- terson led the Devotional period. Theme "Prayer" 'All races have same method of prayer and even ten minutes spent in prayer each day will have a great influence over our lives. Secretary reported cards and flowers sent to sick and be- reaved. The- treasurer gave fi- nancial report. The sum of $70 was handed in to Mrs, Medlana re- cently. Mrs. Jack Patterson gave a very interesting talk on her experiences of camp at "Oak Lake", "Camp Pretoria" and "Beaverton Camp". Mrs. M. C. Fisher spoke briefly of their trip to P.EIL and points vis- ited. Ater the meeting closed the usual social hour and chat took place. Refreshments were served by Mrs. Harold Mowbray and Mrs. Hamer, The Faithful Workers' Group of the United Church W. A. met at the home of Mrs. Howard McKey, Wednesday, September 1. Mrs, Hannam, the group Leader opened the meeting. Mrs. Wm. Peel was in charge of the devotional exercises, Mrs. N. Alves assisted her, using as their theme the lovely story of Dorcas and being a Good Neighbour. Hymr 4856 brought the worship service to a close. Minutes of the last meeting were read and approved. Each one an- swered the roll-call by a descriptive and interesting account 6 of their childhood community. These com= munities were as close as Brook- lin and as far away as England. The Quilting committee reported # quilt finished and sold, money for same handed in by Mrs. H. Hunter. Members were reminded to have These MIRRORS @® Every home should have a full-len bathroom needs a handy cabinet wi their Christmas card and wrapping list ready for next meeting. A delicious luncheon' was served by the hostess. w When the W.M.S. hold a "meet- ing on Wednesday afternoon in the United Church basement a new study book will be introduced. A lunch will be served and all women of the community are invited to attend. Sunshine Group The Sunshine Group of the United Church W.A. met on Thurs- day evening, September 9th, at the home of Mrs. Weir. Mrs. W. D. Thompson, assisted by Mrs. F. Young cofucted the worship service. Mrs. L. Hall gave a comic reading "Grandma Stays out Late". Miss Joanne Welsh then played a beautiful piano solo. Mrs. Goodwin gave a reading "Life In. surance Man". Mrs. Jack Patterson gave a very interesting talk on the activities 'at the three camps "Oak Lake, Camp Petoria and Beaverton Camp" she attended this summer. The lunch- eon committee Mrs. Thompson, Mrs. Young, Mrs. Goodwin and Mrs. Welsh served a dainty lunch. Anglican W. A. The regular meeting of the Wo- men's Auxiliary of St. Thomas An- glican Church was held at the home of Mrs. H. Townsend. The open- ing prayer and Litany for Mis sions was led by the President. After the minutes, treasurer and Dorcas Secretary report, busi- ness discussion followed, mainly making plans for the bazaar and afternoon tea to be held the first Saturday in November.' The Oc- tober meeing will. be held at the home of Mrs. J. Moore. There was no service in St. Thomas' Anglican Church, Brook- lin, September 12 as Port Perry Anglican Church held their annual Thanksgiving Services. Next Sun- day there will be morning and evening services (Harvest Thanks. giving) in Brooklin. At the even- ing service Dr. G. H. Johnston, rector of St. Chad's church, To- ronto, will preach. Award Contracts For Gov't Works Ottawa, Sept. 14--(CP) -- The Public Works Department Monday announced award of contracts dur- ing August. They include: South Baymouth--dredging: Can- adian Dredge and Dock Co. Ltd., Toronto, $60,088 and $34,722. Cobourg--Dredging: McNamara Construction Co. Ltd, Toronto, $21,192. Cockburn Island--Reconstruction of harbor works: L. R. Brown and Co. Ltd. Sault Ste. Marie, Ont, $30,637. Belle River -- Reconstruction of retaining wall: Sterling Construc- tion Co. Ltd, Windsor, $29,592. Georgian Bay -- Dredging of in- side channel between Midland and Parry Sound, seven-mile narrows, two-mile narrows and vicinity of One Tree Island; Consolidated Dredging Ltd., Toronto, $152,271. COLD DRINKING WATER On Tap All The Time ® ® LJ Install this Cordley automatic electric water cooler in your office or plant. == Inquire today at ren Electric, COMPANY LIMITED 131 Simcoe Street, Toronto serve you well! mirror. Every mirror. Hobbs have a complete range in both items. Moderately priced . , . easily installed! 'See them today! Hobbs full. length mirror. In two colours: walnut or cream ivory, A must! Hobbs metal bathroom cabinet. Polished plate glass mirror. lass shelves. Airfoam finish. Interpreting The News By DEWITT MACKENZIE Associated Press News Analyst The great Indian sub-continent, struggling with the dangerous vicis- situdes of its new-found independ- ence, has been visited with two fur- ther fateful developments: 1. Mahomed Ali Jinnah, Gover- nor-General of the Dominion of Pakistan, has died, thus depriving the Moslem Yomniziion "of the man 0 crea and was fi smn ts moving 3 e Dominion of India, chi Hindu in complexion, has Hi the premier Princely State of Hy- derabad with armed forces and there has been fighting. The de- clared purpose of this move against the domain of the Nizam, most powerful of all the Indian rulers, is | THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE to maintain order. The Nizam is a Moslem while some four-fifths of his subjects are Hindus. Jinnah, brilliant, 71-year-old leader, was law unto the some 100,000,000 Moslems of the Indian peninsula, and they followed him blindly. There was a time in his younger days when he ed t between Moslems and Hogs oy in his later years he came out for Pakistan, that is, an absolutely in- dependent government for the Mos- lems. I discussed the matter with him at his home in Bombay in 1943, and he explained that he felt the Moslems couldn't get a fair deal in a federal government in which the Hindus would outnumber them three to one. Now with Jinnah - gode, there naturally is speculation whether this may ease the situation between the two hostile dominions--may even result' in union between, the two in a federal government. Sources in New Delhi, capital of India, are speculating along that e. We now come to another angle, and that revolves about the violent and often bloody differences be- tween the Moslems and the Hindus, growing out of religious bitterness. This has cropped up in connection with the invasion of Hyderabad. India had been pressing the Ni- zam to join his state to the domin- ion, Hyderabad being the only one of the hundreds of principalities which haven't joined either India or Pakistan. However, there obvi- ously is no real basis for war be- tween Pakistan and India, since Hyderabad lies wholly within India and 80 per cent of its people are Hindus. Moreover, India proposes to leave the question to a popular plebiscite. Were Jinnah still at the helm, it's safe to say there would be no war over this issue. Still, observers noted when the argument over Hyderabad first started that reli- glous strife could grow out of it and that communal fighting might spread throughout the dominions. No man can make a certain predic- tion about that now, for the people M. S. Beringer, vice-president in charge of manufacturing, is a man who has spent the better part of his life supervising the manufacture of pet- roleum products. Years spent in Rumania, in most of the United States and in Canada, provide him with a background which is unexcelled in the oil industry in this country. PEERLESS MOTOR OIL IS BETTER - 2% »#4ped'" quAllT" PEERLESS QUALITY rates above all others ... . because it is refined from better crudes . .. with the latest scientific know- ledge known to the oil industry +... and because PEERLESS, and PEERLESS PERFORMANCE proves engine performance. No matter how high the temperature PEERLESS won't "thin out" . .. will provide maximum compres- sion seal ot all times . . PERFORMANCE im- . result- only PEERLESS, IS ALLOYED. ing in greater powef and greatly improved oil milage. Business Spotlight By The Canadian Press Continued favorable business con- ditions are evidence by a number of key economic factors, says the monthly review by Wood, Gundy and Co. "Crop prospects in Canada are good with estimated grain yields larger than last year, while in the United States there is promise of the largest harvest on record. "Dollar volume of wholesale sales of the Indian peninsula are highly inflammable. Some day--maybe soon and may- be far away--Pakistan and India will unite under a federal governy ment, because they are interde- pendent economically and because it is horse sense. , \ TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 948 in Canada show increases, as.do de- [10 (7.5, the lowe © io, sauce Aug. partment store sales which were up |16. Toronto showed light gains in nine per cent in July over the same | small trading. Montreal had about month last year, while employment | the same picture. Grain markets and payrolls in major industries | were without feature. continue to record advances." The review continues: END OF PERFECT TRIP "Canada's total exports for the| St. Anne Des Chenes, Man. -- (CP) first seven months of 1948 were $1,- | --Returning home from a three-da 651,000,000 against $1,565,000,000 in hunting trip, Emile Huys and 1 the same period of 1947 with sales Harrison spotted a bear cross to the United States higher and |the road and felled it with a rifle sales to other countries lower." bullet. It weighed about 500 "Canada's population at June 1 Pounds, last reached 12,883,000, an increase| ot 301,000 over a Jear, earliet, Have ng in mind the growth of Canada's Ww k Ti d N eak, Tired, Nervous, Pepless Men, Women population in the past--8,787,000 in 1921--and the continued develop- Get New Vim, Vigor, Vitality Bay goodbye to these weak, always tired feell ti the dominion appears full of prom- ment of new industries and mineral ise." depression and nervousness due to weak, resources, the long-term outlook for blood. G Markets Monday set up feeling fresh, be peppy all day, ha New York Exchange continued blood Get weak yesterday while Canadian ex- | Bontiine mn vise" Sioning. Take Ost changes marked time. New York, as | ford blood building. body stren : > measured by the Associated Press we Cony Ike. Reyes \gestivi ip Powers, et acquainted" size average of 60 stocks, was down .5 | only 50c. Try Cablets for new, nore ay. At all drug sts, YOU CANT BUY A BETTER MOTOR DIL M. S. Beringer Vice-President, in charge of manufacturing, The British American Oil Company Limited Mr. Beringer says: "Science knows of no process that can produce a lubricating motor oil of finer quality than Peerless. No matter how much money: you spend, it's impossible to buy a finer motor oil." | cooNOM PEERLESS ECONOMY starts with better lubrication . . . follows through by keeping motor costs down and giving your motor longer and longer life. PEERLESS is the all-season, all-temperature, expense reducer because it re- duces the cause of many motor failures. ad To improve PEERLESS MOTOR OIL and give it the stamina¥to stand up longer under a wider range of tem- peratures, 2 "alloy" is added which forms a protective film arqund each molecule thus eliminating breakdowns. "It's alloyed". THE BRITISH AMERICAN bil COMPANY LIMITED