n the georgetown herald wednesday august 21 1946 js places jm labor day humanitys two years of grace by blodwih da vies there were many great newspaper aen tying in tjie war soot of whom summers last long weekfind ig fana 1200 noon 30th until 2 00 p 112110 1946 oood moaaawsapl return dealtaabon not utoi than nldnigu tuaadat sapt3rdls46 timaa ahown mn standard t build better with blocks -from- eds concrete products mill road and 9th line ask your builder vie knows their quality georgetown phone 423w its smart to be thrifty consider your roof a little leak you dont see can grow awful big and expensive little or big atop it now by having your present roof sealed and resurfaced with the old reliable american liquid roof cement mfd m canada a favorite for ratty years 10 year watertite durability guarantee by factory lar gest roof coating specialists in america hundreds of satisfied users toronto hamilton district haveus bott jj6ere usedjio el fraeestimate no obligation write or phone v h e mckeown specialized roof maintenance service waterdown 56w government standard ughtning rods installed why hve in constant fear and dread when it costs so little to be safe nuf sedl d ancing huttonville park every wednesday and saturday men nwryina m mw became powerful and celebrated com mentators or correspondents iceland bfcowe was one of them the man who wrote the great story or the invasion of norway but recently leland btowe wrote another story that may become famous a report not on the dangers of war but on the dangers of peace concisely and dramatically he said in the language of a newspaper man what all the great scientists phllos ophers and men of letters have been trying to say that this is the end or the old order and that if we do not awaken to the meaning of the new world of atomic energy that the white races of the world will commit mass suicide and do that very soon it will be mass suicide of the white races be cause it is only the white races who 1 are struggling among themselves for i the control of atomic power or more i properly the atomic bomb if we have ian atomic war it will break out be 1 tween twb great white nations and at least two hundred million people will i die in a matter of minutes in the last ten years fifty million people have died in our wars the vie tims of the pre atomic armaments of war but that was old fashioned war except for the people who died in the two japanese cities destroyed by atom lc bombs all the rest were victims of our ingenuity but all our inven tlveness prior to 1945 was child s play in comparison with our power of destruc on from this day on western civil izatlon which took 2000 years to build can be wiped out in ten minutes of planned precision bombing with at omlfc bombs our only enemy says stowe is war we shall abolish war or we shall abolish ourselves perhaps you will say that is just a i ewpaperman s story so let us see what dr leopold infeld of toronto has to say about the same situation in a ten cent book el lt jid b the canadian institute of intern itioi al affairs he write of atomic energy ind world government a vuj dis anguished scientist and man of letters dr infeld studied and worked at cra cow cambridge and princeton unlver si tie and is a friend and collaborator of alfred einstein first of all he tells the story of the growth of knowledge i on atomic energy the work of men of man tongues and races working in many countries ol the world the coming of atomic energy was inevi table some time or other scientists would have produced the means of us lng atomic power but that might have been fifty or a hundred years hence no one person or group or government would have provided two billion dollars for research but under pressure of that in order to produce the atomic bomb i six john mclennan the canadian scientist used to tell the story of cord rutherford s experiment which was planned to split an atom ruther ford told mclennan that it would re quire a hundred years of research be fore the atom was split no one was more surprised than rutherford to find that he himself accomplished that task in his own lifetime so also the research on the bomb pushed ahead the clock in the history of ato mic energy but the united states won only by a hairs breadth for ger many might have had the first atomic bomb if our flyers had not destroyed every research laboratory which they could locate but now we think of atomic energy in terms of bombs thi real significance is in terms of peace ful civilian use but to learn to think i constructively about the atomic age is a task as great as the winning of the war the indlfierence wilful lgnor ance and suicidal avoidance of the real issues are pushing us terribly close to disaster there is no defence against the atomic bomb it can be launched in a pllotless plane in tens or twenties hundred planes synchronized to drop on selectea sites by prevision bombing even twenty five planes with twenty five bombs dropped on twenty five citiea of the uniud suites would put an end to the rep blic in h georcjps fair n thech1 jrrhrojnrjs nfetown saturday august 24th afternoon and evening tennis tournament fish pond dulch auction shooting gallery rolling pinthrow home baking afternoon tea nail driving contest dancing pop and ice cream hot doga and hamburgers garden party in the evening this is going to be good don t miss it afternoon admission fee 25c nothing at all every wednesday orchestra every saturday johnny boyd and his 10piece orchestra minutes of time dr infeld writes that although millions of words have been written about the atomic age none of them is exaggeration for the revolutionary nature of atomic power cannot be over estimated some other nation is likely to have i atomic bombs within two years time therefore the sacred trust malntal lied over a growing reserve of atomic bombs is limited to about two years time if in that time the world has come to a fevei heat of fear and suspicion the nonamerican bombs w ill be dropped on north america long before the united stales has time to launch a plane in futile retaliation unless the united states becomes the a and wantonly drops her bombs on secretly selected targets in two years time then all the wealth rnd labour she is spending on atomic bombs will scne only to draw down destruc tloi upon her elf and mass 1 s liclde upon western civilization we liue two tars time to build up ome form of world government able maintain peace two yeare time in which to build up world confidence in the ability of man to live peacefully and construct ely in the uomic age two years in which to build the defer ices of humanl y in the minds of men all the problems of iran and trieste i md italy and similar ones are minor problems on which we are wasting time which should be spent building peace ful understanding between all the powers so that no atomic war can break out quarreling over a supply of oil or markets for mass production are no primary issues the real issue shall we live in peace or shall wi le by hundreds of millions in the cos intc tireqratotnt b t be no red cross work in the next war for the living will not be able to cope with the chaos of dead and dying there is no question at all but that we want to live and to live in peace not one person in a hundred thousand wants anything else why then do we fear war just because we have not exercised the will to peace became we have not expressed the goodwill that is within us we have lacked faith in man and in ourselves the living generation writes dr infeld must have faith that the advent of the at omic power will some day bring secur ity and happiness in the one world of tomorrow we must not lose this vis ion the problem of atomic energy i stands and will stand for years to come in the centre of our technical the social and international problems on the technical side we are faced with a evolution much greater than that brought about by the advent of electric power the future of the world does not depend upon prime ministers and presidents those who believe in dem otracy know that this future depends on its dr infield closes by quoting prime minister king we mus work with all our might for a world order under a rule of law this seems to be our only hope we must act in the belief that no nation i d no individual lives to himself lone and that il are members one of lother if you need anything fixed or made to j order phone the i f i x i t s h 0 p 442r 21 plumbing sheet metal eaves- troughs furnaces stoves repairs to all makes of sewing and washing machines bicycles or what have you woodworking of all sorts all work guaranteed we call for and deliver w g youn a glen williams dufferin junior farmers dance stanley park erin monday august 26th modern airesband dancing every weneaoay and friday patronize georgetowns best electrical shop ii strombergcarlson and deforest radios i hoover vacuum cleaners k universal milking machines sales and service refrigerators electric stoves and repairs radio repairing a fully qualified radio mechanic has been added to our staff to give you a complete radio repair service wardlaw electric formerly clarks electrical shop phone 305 main st georgetown we wash everything take advantage of our expert washing and ironing ser vice to give yout clothing that welllaundered look free pick up and delivery georgetown laundry phone 228j john street opposite arena georgetown when you think of 1 furnace work eavestroughs tinsm1thing sheet metal work dust collecting systems think of coming to canada professor bernard helnze noted enceon australia s musical life itr australian conductor who is coming many years he has shown particular to canada in december at the lnvita- interest in the musical education of uan of the cbc while here he wlu direct a series of symphonic broadcasts in vancouver toronto and montreal professor relnse has had great influ- youth and his young peoples con- joerts in melbourne bring orchestral music to over 19x100 children annually b f murfim rewofutowkmufag 138