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Canadian Statesman (Bowmanville, ON), 9 Nov 1933, p. 8

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- ~ .~. -- THE CANADIAN STATESMAN, BOWMANVILL, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 9th, 1933 Floral Service V/len You Need Flowers for any occasion Phone 72 Weekly Hint No. 1 Chrysanthemums - A littie of, the stem should be broken off (flot cut) and the water changed each day. Kingsway Flower Shop W. E. GROVES Box 163 - Bowmanville, Ont. Phone Day or Night 72 Cold! Weather Service for Your CAR CoId weather is on the way. You better lie prepared ! If you haven't put in Uighter oil in yeux crankcase, bail your car greased, your battery checked and an anti-f reeze solution put in your radiator you're taking chances. Get on the safe side today - drive in and have your car serviced and mlade ready for cold weather. O)Ur charges are smahl and we can save you a lot of trouble anmd expense later if you take heed now. Clenien-s' Garage phone 188 - Opp. A. & P._tr BOWMANVILLE Safe, Sensible, Simple Rules To End PIMPLES, BLOTCHES, Etc. Ugly. digfIguring biotches and piiopies are aimot certain signe that your elimîzatIve organeamar fot fun itioning f uly in their natural tenir of keeping the blond tream Pure. YOU rnay tink they are-but dont be mieîrd by appaent regularty in your daiiy habits. Re- ggLntdeceives thousanfde, because reguiarity in not aiaye compideeie. To e nure eom piete elmination of body esM'grt ,nnderately. £et ail the eieep your dysem randa. taice exerrisel and freah air- an "'c or týi,îe each ýeek drink a bubbling. bra,iPleasant-tast i ntglass Of Andres Lver Sait. What Andrewa doe.s Ior you in to timiiite the ayatemn to normal. eaithy action. Taken ai regular initerva&Ln-saY twice a week An- dree wi keep your ichole mystein pure and vîgorouà. ILben akin in prfections wîill tend tu dsappear aid yvu wil enioy a clear skn and a beathY. sIle bOdY. Foiiow these m,0e. sensible Andrcas braith ruina. Get Andre..a Lver Sat rom yOur drig- git, In tins at.15c ad WOrNew. large b,ttie, 75, Soie Agents: John A, huaton CO. Lîd Toront. Bladder Weakness Getting-Up -Nights Quickly Relieved!. Pleasant Home Treatment Works Fine; Used By Doctor For Many Years Wbat a wonclerfuh comfort it is te sleep ahi night and nat get up once fram Badder Weakness and Irrita- lion. The daily annoyance. restless nights of misery, backaches and nervous irritablity that resuit franc functianai Bladder Troubles are wnecking the ives o! thousanda whc migbt otberwise lie in the best ai heahth. To lie at your best, you muat bave peaceful, bealth-giving sieep and freedom !romn daihy iritation-that's wby Dr. Soutbwat's URATABS give such wondenfui satisfaction. Made f rom a special formula and used by the Docior fan many years - UjRATABS, naw obtainable f rom your druggisi for inexpensive home use, bave brought quick belp and comfort 10 many ibousands. No malter wbai your age may be or bow many medicines you have used without success, if yau want to forget you have a Bladder and en- joy the rest o! peaceful, unliroker sleep, Iry URATABS today. Your drugglat wlll refund the smail cas) if you are not well pieased. il Onrly cress Corn Salve la sold wltl rnoney-back guarantee. At Jury& Iioveil'a. ýWandering Statesman Reporter Riled 'When Conductor Cails Him '"Sonny Final Episode of Trip to the I knew a chap who studied at the W/est Coast Related by University of Toronto. We deter- Travelling Scribe - May- with this in mind, disembarked, took or and Legion Band Fail- station. ringath main street iM after fighting our way through the ed to Welic o me H lni u o m l hrswedope Home ta wait for the bus ta Macleod. With aur feet dangling in the gutter, we Instaliment Number 7 sat in patience for a few minutes.- This week's article ta the paid-up Then, seeing al aur train acquaint- subscribers is the last o! a seies af ances returning ta continue their seven articles which have in the journey, we looked at each other past !ew weeks attempted ta en- and as one man, rase and returned lîghten Statesman reaclers on the ta the train. happenings of two Bowmanville boys Lamne was ta leave thîs train at who noamed the great Western Moasejaw at 5.40 in the morning for Canada a short trne ago. The pur- his southern trip. Sa we parted andp pose o! the articles has not been ta continued aur separate trails. reveal the woncrous beauty af the On this trip we crossed the prair- scenery or ta give a detailed des- ies by night and having an upper, I cription o! the crop shortage that missed most of the dusl. The train was quite evident. but rather ta have1 arrived at Medicine Hat shartly a!- the readers go thraugh the same ter ten p. m. and I rushed over ta expeiences the travellens did, and see if Morley Cawker, a son a! Bow- a! ten a second hand fashion, enjoy manville, was stili at bis drug store. the thrill o! seeîng the country Unfortunately he had gane home. withaut being burdened with the French Scholarship Wmnnerj expense. Just how fan Ibis purpose has been f ulf illed is an open ques- Entertains tion, but we hope some few have' There were no other travellers derived reading matenial ai least to f nom Bawmanville, or district on this while away the boums a! an evening.1 train, but as before, many interest- We begin our last article with ing people. One dean old lady, with some regret, for there bas been jay lovely. silk like, gney hair, was re- in chronicling the accurences, in turning ta ber beloved England. She painting word pictures a! the varied was as happy as a lark ta be going scenery and in recalling the trip to back. Any o! you readers who think mind. We regret that this is not the Canada is the oniy place on earth f irst article and feel still more regret should have beard this lady speak that we are not just leaving the o! England. Her heart, seul andj Union Station on the westbound boots were tied up in ber beloved. train. But withal, there ta, deep home land and it was mighty inter- thanksgiving thal it was aur privil- esting ta talk with ber. I hope ta ege ta eruoy such an inspiring and be writing articles f nom there in a braadening expeience. Lake Louise few years while on a trip. Another is the one beauty spot we missed and interesting and entertaining train deeply regret not having visited it, acquaintance was a University o! but while at Ban!! we enquired o! a British Columbia graduate wbo was bus driver his rate and as it wa.s over on her way ta Paris to study French. $8.00, we decided not to go. ItI She was accampanied by her aunt, a would have been nice also ta have very Irish and jolly persan and a gone into the States with Lamne AI- persistent knitter, wbo wonked in- lin, wha f nom his description o! the cessantly on a bnillîant orange few weeks spent at North and South sweater that mnust by now lie com- Dakota, had a wonderful time and pleted and bal! worn oui. The expeienced same real thnills. On the graduate was atnactively garbed in ranch nexito where he was visiting, one o! her aunt's previaus sweater a cowboy had been missing f rom efforts. Af ter eating a couple o! the ranchbouse for eight or ten days barn sandwiches at a lunch counten when Lamne arrived. A short while with thema and sharing somne bis- afler he was discovered pinned down cuits I had punchased. 1 learnedà by his borse wbo bad f allen wbile fromn the justly proud aunt that Ibis attempting a difficult jump. And the mnere slip o! a girl, just out o! ber cowboy bad starved for days while teens, had won a scholarship each in terni!fic pain. He was stili alive year she had attended university and when they found hlm, with his horse in the last year had worked sa in a horrible state a! decamrposu.re. stnenuously and with such gaad ne- They attempted ta move hima ta a sults that her trip to Paris and a hospital, but he died before they year's tuition at the Sorbonne was arrived. Neediess ta say, the whole the prize. The Sorbonne. accord- countryside was shocked at the ing ta the encycloniedia, is the fam- ghastly death. ous French centre o! literature. Grocer Braves More Horses science and student activity o! al Lome aso amehom wih tlestypes. WhaI a glaiaus reward for o ndn as angeioe a thaese any person wha had sacriflced sa ranches whose spiited activities ate ny pesun aemetsTad made aur beloved and feared West- pate nbryune a-!Ta wnd at Banff seemn as a tame and is a story Ihat should be an inspir- docile plug. I am perfectly satisfied ation toail students. wth Westwind as fan as excitement Disg-usted Reporter Called "Sonny" is concerned. By the way, sevenal Th~e tnip as f an as Winnipeg was people have asked if the fada O! not tac, eventful. Once, the train that wild honseback ride at Banff stapped with quite a joit when it were based on truth, or were the was signalled by the trainman a! product o! an aven active imagina- another train thai had jumped the tion. Fan be it f nom me ta stnetcb track and had stopped two or three the veracity of an event o! that cali- hundred yards futher on. I tbought lire and it grieves me deeply ta real- there might be someone injured or ize that sorne Doubting Thomnases at least a littie news that would have not accepted the stony as an make reading and writing miaterial unadultera.ted trutb. However. f or for Ye Statesman. sa I proceeded ta- their benefit. I wil admit that it mnay wand the door, but when I asked the not have been quite as bad as it was îrainman, in a miîd and meek voice, painted, but it certainly was the what the trouble was, be bellowed rnost exciting ride I even had. and siormed ai me and finally end- Travellers Nearly Miss Train ed with 'Naw, sonny, you ought ta Afien ail this article is supposed know by ibis time that I arn not ta lie based on the happenings o! the allawed ta tell you 'what is going jounney home fnom Banff. We le! t an." Then. when I tried to disem- that haven of beauty and hapPiness bank ta see for mysel!, be le! i in- in the early a! tennoon. nearly miss- structions with anothen gent wha ing the train when Lonne le! t ta pay was not sa ofllcious. ta "keep me an the man for the hanses while I went the train." I don't knaw whether on ta the station and waited for he was afraid I was going to get lost him ta arrive. The train pulled in, on what. He must have had child- the hungry passengers disembarked ren ai home. I feel sorry for them. for a !ew minutes ta grali a quick In a few minutes we were on our, lunch and I laoked anxiously up the way and ail was well. long avenue baping ta neSl rny gaze At Winnipeg there was only lime upon the portly figure and the rail- ta procure a bite a! lunch bef are ing gait o! my genial travelling com- the train was again under way. 1 panion. After five minutes I could regret now that I didn't stop off a faintly see himr runding the corner. second day hene as Mr. Hl. V. Hut- nearly hal! a mile away. while the chinsan since wrote that be had train seemed ready ta pull out o! planned quite an extpnsive tour o! the station ai any minute. It was the business section o! the city from useless ta attempt ta burry the pace the Grain Exchange ta the Winni- of rny grocer pal. He was too fan peg Free Press. Thai will have ta away. Sa with about a minute ta came in the next trip (if any). go I comrnandeered a waiting taxi Mlsh.ap in the Dining Car and tare up the street ta find Lamne On we travelled. a bit weary o! loping along as lhaugh time had no the .grind and restiess te get home wings and trains waited for ahl men. ta the old iran bed. Lake Supeniai- As oun bags had been deposited on was circled. looking more beautiful, the train by a zealous poter, il was more pictunesque than bef are, a di!- essential that we arrive pior ta il-s f erent type a! beauty ta that in Brt- departune. And just as il was pull- ish Columbia. Nearing Sudbiury in ing eut of the station. we leaped the evening the train travelled oven from the taxi caught onto the strong quite a naugh road bed where it raIl- h andies o! a coach and pulied aur- ed consldenabiy and sometimes quite selves aboard. sat dow.n puffing and abruptly. I happened ta lie in tbe perspiring. once again lucky. dinLing car wben we struck ibis part Dr. Roscoe Graham's Son Aboard o! the trip and had ta bang ta the Onte- tain _e mt tw_ chaps coffee Pot. At limes it was raîher and most glorlous of ail, the rescuî forces of hlstorY starts on its ex. pedition." The Hlstorie Exodus What were sme of the obstacleà (outside the main task altogether)- plagues, polution of the Nile, d0ea flsh, invasion of the land by frogs i PAG FIG Tw feli. She seemed in intense pain so we rushed to aid her, and after she had been lifted to her chair she f ainted away. A doctor was called and had the train stopped to carry the woman to her berth easier. Af - ter an examination he seemed quite certain that it was a fractured hip. Poor woman, she was lying there quietly, her kind. loving face wrink- led in pain, with her daughter. tears dropplng froffi ler eyes. I talked with them after the excitement and discovered that they were f rom Moosejaw and were on their way to Boston to visit relatives. The un- fortunate lady was 79 years old and a fractured hip at that age doesn't help anybody. It la queer the way things happen. They came through to Toronto where med.ical attention was available. Not Welcomed Home That put a damper on any jollity that there had been and the re- mainder of the trip was quiet. Arriv- ing home in Bowm-ianville in the early evening I was greeted not with shouts of welcome, or bands playing, but with the quiet of evening, the darkness that denoted that the members of the family were nat home. So after whipping up a lit- tie food, reading the latest issues a! The Statesman. where I discovered that the "wandering reporter" was missing, 1 settled down at the radio until the famnily returned and then sat up half the night unloading the details a! the trip. And that is the "finis" o! a two weeks' vacation, business trip or whatever you have a mind to caîllit. It was a great trip, with British Col- umbia the most beautiful province I have seen to date. If ever there Is opportunity for you. dear reader, to go, don't miss it. Thanks for read- ing the articles. John M. James. The Rotary CIu6 (Contlnuati from. page 1) the part of people as a whole to- wards the development o! a great leader? And if sa, is this going to be for aur great good. We seem to have dispensed with hero worship and ta be satisfled that we can find our owfl way. Persanally. I should be content to trust the people; in the hope, of course, that they will reject false and incompetent choices in cases of minor leadership that is shallow,ý and theoretical position seekers. I have read several books on Russia and Communism and arn o! the opinion the people are stili ruled tyrannically and that we have very little ta learn frorn the Russian ex- cept what to avoid. We have been very fontunate in Canada as regards leadership, the speaker added. Let us hope we are as fortunate in the future. There is today a decided tendency on the part of the mass ta f ollow any leader who sticks his head above the crowd. This has always been true ta some extent. But in most of these leaders we seem ta discern streaks o! self interest - a com- modity an inspired leader like Moses was neyer supposed to have [n stock. Shorteomiflgs Revealed Many of our would be Canadian leaders make trifling but stigmatiz- ing mistakes, or they are careless enough ta reveal some shortcoming which unmistakably shows up their size. Such individuals have toc much of the parasite in them ta lx real leaders ever. Should same un- usual leader emerge he should be at least minus these marks of petty self interest. We ought to watch out for them. The Devil frequently creeps into the consciousfless of weak people and canvinces them t.hey are Saints. Around on street corners in the City. you can see an orator with a truck or a conveyance fitted Up ta speak f ram. He has a patiacea. He tells you haw you are to be saved or something - a lot Of those fellows don't go toalal that trouble for us and there's no use saying they do. Every iconaclast - agitatar, re- former and critie tells a little o! the truth. but exaggerates so, much that his remedy is worthless. Limping Back to Sanity I do nat cane haw many expeni- ments people try, if they try theni with comman sense and fainness and neject those that fail. The history of mankind is one long record ai giving revolution anather trial - and then limping back at last to sanity, safety, and work of somfe kind. We should keep this import- ant fact in mind. I've stopped paying too much at- tention ta what men say. It's whal they do that interests me. tra I am tnying to retain the tra of thought that Moses was the pro- ,duct of grim times. That the moral .and physical fibre had ta be tough - -and was. Onaro ALBERTA Otrohomes can now be supplied with this hard, clean, heat-producing coal at prices lower than is charged for the imported product. When you buy ALBERTA COAL, your money remains in Canada to keep Canadian minera employed. Send i a trial order. Teleplaone your local dealer, NO W! Aberta Trode Cemisaonors $ranch - 200 Bl ySret. Toronto rAuz flies and lice, death of cattie, hall, the forlorn situation of being trap- ped between the sea and an over- whelming approaching host. Some people say the Exadus was faked, but the account has been accepted as fact for thirty-five centuries. He was among other things, the world's greatest salesman. He sold the Israelites on the idea, among ather ideas, that they were God's chosen people. I heard a fearless preacher in this City say not long ago that the Israelites neyer were God's chosen people and aren't - anyway the idea was gooci and sure- ly it was expedient. Great things are being done taday by people who tell us that aur pants are pressed in the proper place, and that we are in great favor one way or another. Sa we can't blame the Israelites fori taking the dope. Mses kanew what it was to get awaY f rom the smelly depths. With1 his clinging nightdress and gaping sandals, long whiskers and other impedimenta shown in the picture boks, he scaled the heights clear above the clouds where the mists hover. On one a! these ascents, Moses made bis crawning contribution ta the wold. Moses was the author o! a gnoup o!f fndamental iaws, the keePing o! whicb (excepi fon occas- ianal lapses) bas been the achieve- ment o! cauntless Christians ever sînce. I for one have slipped a lit- île. These laws, ten in number, are concise, canvenient, cornprebensive and competent. Companed with the millions upon millions o! laws that have since been bamn imbo an inno- cent wanld, to the consternation o! mankind generaIly, ibis manda tory monument o! Moses la as a beacan light shining Ibmu utter and inter- minable darkness. Is Adversity Superior? I spent a couple o! bours lasi week in the company o! one o! the besi read men in Canada. The conver- sation lurned round ta the word "depression." He said ht had a way o! making us think a! a period that was "unnatural" and againsi aur besi interests. He suggests thai tbe word advensity would be more suit- able for two reasans. In the firs1 place it is tbe reverse o! prasperity, wbich many people tbink we bave bad too mucb of. And actuaily. ad- versity is just as goad, and in some respects a superior state ta prosper- îty. Ail o! these are but degrees o! stability - and she maintains it liy tbe use a! power, whicb is developed by strain. whicb, in turn, is created by inequality. Nature bas neyer per- mitted slability in any !orm o! life. Man will lie going dead againsi Nat- ure if he seeks siability in bis an affaira. h la istrain ibat makes life nai only worlhwbile, but aclually possible, because fram strain cames the only availabie power for mndi- vidual devehopment. Our Hardy Ancestors It makes an bonest man alxnost blush taday to think o! aur ovwn hardy ancestars wbo stepped oui in the morning and had ta buni ibeir breakfast, but wlio bave le! t us a lot a! nature lovera for grandsons, whoi toast marshmaliows on a stick. We'ne not hardy enough. If we're going ta tumn oui a Modern Moses weU b ave ta barden up. To get my ihought crystallized, I amn gaing ta say we have ta pay more attention to in- dividuai behaviourism. If every man and woman lived aceording ta the Golden Rule (as we know it) ibere wouldn'i lie any argument aven wha ta going ta rule. The Best Julges Our neighbbrs know us liciter than Bradstreets and tbey are us- uaily fair in iheir judgments. If we are relialile they say so - they may begrudge the praise but iheY Will admit it - if we are unreliable ibey say so and warn othens againat us. This cammon observation seerns ta justi!y the greatesi single law o!flie- baviaur ever stated in H-oly Writ "Do unto your neighbor as you would lie done by." u The bitter wisdam o! livinghm bles me, as I amn sure it daes others. I ihink it makes us kinden. And 1 tbink il sbould make everyane more wiiling b bubelepful rather than disturblng to the pon fellaw creat- unes with whom we associate. I bave no desire 10 be a Modemn Moses mysel!. My complex inclines me la the uine o! the listener and !ollower. I live in an aid section o! Toronto, on the edge o! a waoded ravine caîl- ed tbe Vale o! Avaca - whicb !ormns pari o! Mount pleasant Cemetery. I frequentiy walk thru those beautiful grounds and bave read many fine tbougbts graven in granite tambs. 1etc. The Most stiring words in thausand.s are cantained in a littie 1couplet-witb the quating o! whicb 1 1close: Two things stand as timeless atone, Klndness in anothers trouble- courage in yaur own. 1 Rotarian A. R. Virgin expressed the thanks a! the club ta the speak- er for bis timely addresS. Other featunes o! the meeting in- cluded the presentaition o! bouquets zta Rotanians Fred C. Hoar and Ge.. By Popular DIEMAND One More Day DUSTAN'S 13c SALE Saturday, Nov. lith In response to scores of requests from eager buy- ers, we are staging our Big 13c Sale again on Sat- urday. This will be positively the Iast 13c Sale for another year, so take advantage of this big event this week-end. We also wish to thank the hundreda of customers who patronized our sale last week-end. DUSTAN'S cash HARDWARE PHONE 74 WE DELIVER BOWNL LE ONE WEEK ONLY - NOVEMBER 13, 1933 BLANKETS WASHED, DRIED AND CARDED 40C EACH 2 FOR 60C Oshawa Laundry & Dry Cleaning W. J. Bagneli, Agent. - - Phone 152 W. James, both of whom recently The best time to steal a march on celebrated birthdays. Rotarians Earl competition is when it isn't looking. Cunningham and Dave Morrison. Persian Balm is afluringly Vjag- visitors to the World's Fair at Chi- rant. Adds a charming refinement cago, gave brief but very interest- to the most finished appearance. rng accounts of what they saw at Creates and preserves complexions the big exhibition. President Tom- of surpassing loveliness and texture. my Ross had charge of the meeting. Softens and Whitens the hands. The regular meeting is withclrawn Cools and dispels ail irritation Caus- next week as the Club wiUl attend an ed by weather conditions. Swiftly inter-city Rotary meeting at Port absorbed by the tissues leaving nev- Hope Thursday night. er a vestige of stickiness. A peerlesa Ir toilet requisite. Invaluable to ail 1An idea a day keeps the sheriff women who care for elegance and away. distinction. Don't S poil Your Contentment This Winter Cet Quality COAL ~ Here at Lowest Prices AND BE ASSURED 0F WARM COMFORT There's a difference in coal, just as there is a difference in everything else. Juat any old kind of coal won't do if You want conifort this winter. You've got to have a high quality selected coal - Lehigh Valley Anthracite - a coal that burna evenly, that leaves littie ash. Then and only then will you get full value for your heating dollars. If you want that kind of coal phone 153 today. J. A. Hol at e U So Ini Western Canada where winter means sub-zero weather-the househol der iives in comfort by using

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