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Canadian Statesman (Bowmanville, ON), 4 Dec 1941, p. 7

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~1WJ~SDAY, DECEMBER 4, 1941 - - --- . -**,ltl.,JUVMAVI JLLEf, O/NTÂlfARIO PAGE SEVEN I 1942 CHEVROLETJ Social and Personai Phono 4@M18 Ralph was home. 6 Hughes was home. Mr.Gordon has returiied from the south. Mr. and Mrs. R. E. Logan and Mr. and Mrs. C. Wood visited at Mr., L. Truil's, Hampton. The rata freezing on Monday evening made walking very pro- cailous and some juveniles even attenipted skating with fair suc- cous. Mr. D. N. Myles is home. Dr. and Mrs. W. McCullough have gone south for the winter. Young Womcn's Bible Class met Nov. 25th at Mrs. Fred Lycctt's. The study book "The Life of q Paul" was continuod by Mrs. H. Allen. Mrs. M. H. Staple favored wlth a piano solo. It was decidcd to cali the class the "Goodwill Bible Class." Mrs. H. Mercer, Mrs. W. W. Sherwin and Mrs. S. Moffatt were appointed a nomi- nating comniittee to bring inaa late of olficers. Each member is asked ta bring a toy to the next meeting for the Fred Victor Mis. sion. Lunch was served. Apicasant tinie was enjoyed at ICIrby Nov. 26tti, when a good program. was given following an excellent supper. Items on the program were: Chorus by the young people; reading by Ruth Ln;solo by Mr. Mackinnon; community singing; reading by Oscar Skelding; vocal duet by Ruby and Mildred Allen; recita- tion by Rosa Boyd; violin solo by« Ken Shackleton; monologue "Cur- rants and Raisins" by a man who knows how' to cook; reading by Betty Chapman; duet by Eleanor and Arlene Boyd. Every item was enJoycd by the goddly num- ber Who attended. IGuides learned the art of knot-1 tylng and enjoyed gaines and1 long..1 Several quilts were qullted on Nov. 26th in the Park St. S. S. rooni. Mr. Jini Gilfillan visited his parents. Miss Ida Stephens was guest ofr Mr. and Mrs. Wifl Moffatt. Mr. and Mrs. Win. Cooper have3 rnoved to J. F. Lorriman's. S Scouts collected salvage Satur- l 'day.S Frienda were interested ta hear- 'g jim Hunter announce Fridaya evening that Wrn. Eck, formerly S of Orono and some boys of whom he has charge werc in the studio givlng their sixtis donation to the Telegram War Victinis' Fund. a Not content with poisoning dog a Orono's animal hater is now shooting cats. Mrs. Frank Peate visited her ister in Port Hope. Mrs. Hfarry Lycett is sick. dMrs. C. Shaw and babe and Is.James Moffatt visîted Mr. Ud Mrs. George Keith, Toronto. nr ~I.and Mrs. Ira Dawson, Bail- T letbýro, visited Mr. and Mrs. Jas. E tleson. ec Mr. and Mrs. Jack Reid and his li mother, Mrs. Bert Reid, visited ýj Mrs. James Tamblyn Sr.. b, Mr&. O. W. Rolph will attenq pi the Fair Directors banquet alit Oshawa to-night. 4t The, formation of regulation :n hockey space in our rink is pro- th gressing favorably.W Soveral more citizens have te secured positions in Pickering. ta Miss Olga Sanderson visited Miss Mary Harris. \ fil Jumbled type disallowcd the pr meaning to be clear In a section of ofthe report of the W.C.T.U. Ti medal conteat in*last issue. What ry esent to be printed was "Gwen VI Chterton and Peter Chmara, Li ttrained by Mrs. Howard so ah, <prsident of the Orono b' .T.U.) were declared win- viî eretc." re Badaman H. C. Allen, who is ti oreon furlough, accompanied pli hi wife and daughter Ruth, W] slted his sisters and brother hi larence here. He and his wife as ere celebrating their wedding 0. ay Sunday. T] Mr. and Mrs. Rowland Smith nii nd Myrtle spent Sunday home. M, Lt. Col. J. C. Gamey, Niagara, Rt es home. of Thse open forum Sunday even- ou g brought forth many interest- no nq reasons why people came to wý hurch. wM CANADIAN MU9Iè DISCUSSED AT UNION MUETIN' Mrs. O. W. Rolpis was spcak at Union Monday evcning, pi senting the topic "Canadian M ,sic" in a niost intercsting manni Firat emphaslzing the fact th Lsince Canada was a young cou try end that conscquently we hi no background of mnusic, she nax cd poeta and poetesses Who works had- been set to muaic Chas. Roberts, Bias Carnian, el She also mentloned the worki Sir Ernest MacMillan. Cornir nearer home she mentioned tl work of Mrs. D)udley and M Lena Taylor of Bowrmanvii whase Victory song is receivir wide acclaim. She closed 1 stÏessing the necd of learning i enjoy good music, good books an god shows and by seeing ho man naioal anthema the men bers could pick out, given tl flmst lino. Tise prograrn, which was coi vened by Donald Staples, .also ii cluded: Reading by Margari Flintoff; Scripture by Marlo Ha: cock; two piano solos by Gle Tamblyn; vocal duet by Edi, Mylos and Muriel Tonnant, wit Carol Stapies at the piano. Business period was conducto by Vice President Kathleen Smit] W. M. S., ILECTS NEW OFFICERI Park St. W. M. S. elected tises officers at its Tucaday meetine President - Mrs. S. Littlewooc lst Vice-Mrs. M. H. Staples; 2n Vice-Mrs. C. McLaren; 3rd Vie -Miss M. Davy; Roc. Sec.-Mr C. Wood; Corr. Soc.-Mrs. L. Fra lick; Treasurer-Mrs. R. E. Logan Comrnunity Frlendship-Mrs. l'ý Cobbledlck, Mrs. J. J. Mellor, Mni DoIve; Supply Secretary-Mrs. 'W M.Sttt rs. Couch; Missionar MonSthly Secretary-Mrs. N.F Porter;y Citizenship Socretary- Mr. alsh; Press Secmetamy- Miss F. Cobbledick; Baby Band- Mrs. W. H. Rowe, M. Tamblyn Associate Helpers-Miss M. Davy Pianists-Mrs. J. J. Mellor anc assts.; Mission Band-Miss M.* Mc Dowell, Mrs. W. Arrnstrong. Mms. Logan gave the treasurer, report. Worship service was led b3 .'rs. Littlewood, who nead tht scripture. The Christmas thorne prevailed thmoughout. A pian( solo by-,Mrs. M. H. Staples ontitlec "To tise Rising Sun" was cnjoyod after which chaptor two of thi study book was taken Up, ir charge of Mis. Staples, assisted b3 iMrs. Littlewood who spoko or "Sun Yet Sun;" Mrs. Ed. Dear and Elsie Rowe gave readings also Mrs. R. E. Logan. EDITOR READS SCHOOL PAPER AT 'LIT.' MEETING Thse first O.C.S. Literary meet- ig for the season was held on Thursday and was well attended. Presidont Carol Staples presid- ed over thse first part of* the pro- ram which included tise roading f the scisool paper "Thse OaCiS" y Editor Donald Staples. The aper was excellent and parts o! Iwere really cieverly donc. Two tings wiih wore of particular îtorest wère the announcernont fiat former toacher Mr. Widdis Aras in England and a poema writ- ,n by the former popular came- :ker, Thpomas Lewi.* Lenora Wood, convenor of the rat group, nesponsible for tise )rogram, preaided over the rest ftise meeting wiih included: rwo choruses by the group, "Car- y- On,' O.C.S."' and "It's V for icetory",ý piano solos by Betty inton and Carol Staples; vocal ;o by Ruby Allen; vocal duet )y Edna Myles and Nollie Wright; iolin solo by James Lowery; -ading by Peter Cismara; recita- ion by Ross Boyd; and a radio Lay "The Marriage Proposal,"' hich was reafly well *dono ho- id a curtain, being announced i if coming from, radio station ).C.S . The characters wore: Mr. .hompson, taken by Alian Cor- ash; Mary Thompson, by Edna gyies; and Mr. Saunders, by Bill Ltherford. There were plcnty ,fmisunderstandinga and humor- 15s moments but, since space will ntpermit a detailed account, aUl c'l aay la that if ail proposais rere conducted like thia one, not iany marriage licenses would be equlred. Followlng The National Anth- m, dancing was enjoyed for a rhile, music being- provlded, via adic. la- TO THE MIDLAND tu- REGIMENT Lr. at m- (Offîcers-and men of the lst Midland Regiment were Ld go appreiative of tis poem. written in their honor, that in. ienthis town decided, after the unit returned to ýse Ontario, to submit it for publication.) Of By HELEN E. »MDLETON YOUar the men we neyer shail forget. les You may go far àway frorn us, and yet stes bg Shan linger with us whlè your brave heart beats. Lo SAINT JOHN! Where cobbled streets siope to the sea; nd Where 'ýartridge Island horn croaks dismally; M. Where Fort Howe rears its massive carven head M:. Above a city bufit -by those long dead; he A city used of ships, and sailing men; Where those who sojourn once corne back again ýn- To watch the fishing boats move down the bay in- And feel the fog and wind and sait sea spray; .et To watch the pigeons flying through the square, en And hear the hours chimed on quiet air; na To walk at peace in lovely Rockwood Park, h Or watch the ferry cut across the dark, Black satin harbour. Taste the tangy dulse ed And catch the beat of this great seaport's puise. th. ýVOU are the men who flght our country's war. Forever, up and down this eastern shore Our children shall rernember how 'you came S And tell their children's children of ybur naine! 'BRAVE Mdlanci Regimenti Straight, stalwart men! se If you shciuld go--an.j not corne back again '9. To this port city, know these words are truc: ,d: Saint John will evermore remember you! ce TIure's Got To s. 1A Santa Claus Br Chsanning Pollock in tho December Rotarlan Magazine When se was a very little gir], my daughter askcd, "What would you do if there wcren't any trocs? " "-Why," I answered, lightheart- edly,' "wýe'd have to tavent some. We couldn't get on without trocs.' There are quite a lot of tisings - food, ahelter, clothing - we couldn't get on wîthout, and a number of wisc mon have made rny suggeation-.-we'd have to in- vent tisem. What we must have even more than thcae are food for tise mind, shelter for tise spirit, that whicis clothes the nakcdness of more animal existence, and gives warmtis to isuman contacts. We celebrate Chisitmas as a neliglous festival, but a chisitmas was cclebrated isundreda of years before Christ. Tise ancient people of the Angli, in what is now Bni- tain, had in December a Mod- raneeht, or "mothers' night." l'homo had to be a day set aside for kindness, and generosity, and rcmembeming those we love, and tisose leas fortunate. Before and since Dickens wrote , i immortai "A Chirstmas Carol" there have been a few Scrooges who cried o! Christmas, "Bah, humbug!" I have hoard modemn Scrooges cail it a ahopkeepers' holiday, and a nuisance, but for tise ovemwhelrning majority o! us, as for Scrooge'a ncphcw, it las "a good tirne; a kind, forgiving, charitable, pleasant timo; tise only tirne I know o! in tise long calen- dar o! tise year wisen mon and Ewornen open their shut-up heants frcely . .. I aay God bleas it!" There is a certain rnagic in a *day when even atrangers bid us ho rnerry; when tise mail and tole- pisone and telegrapis and ail tise means o! communication com- monly devoted to business bring ciseery wishes for "'Merry Christ- mas!" Shopkeepers' h oli da y? Bah! Hurnbug! It îsn't anecktIe or a dollar billtisat we slip into tise hand o! tise janitar or tise postman;it's goodwill and thank you fora year o! service. It isn't a toy train that we put under tise troc for Junior, or a muffler that Iwe wmap in rcd tissue for Aunt Julia, but tise knowledge that ýJunior isas always wanted a train, and Aunt Julia has needcd a muf- fier, and tise ioving desire that, juat tisis one day, they shahl have what tisoy want and neeti, and that we shahl sec the pleasure in their cyca, and feel tise warmtis of their joyful kiases., Believe it or not, and arnilo if you like, but, at-well, say 60, rny wife and I stili hang Up our stockings. What a lot o! love and laugister and tendemnesa goos into tise tri! ling gifts we select for tisosc symbois. We trim our lit- tic tree with brigist stars and tin- sel, and for days aisead, in secret, wc write, messages, and wrap thinga in gay paper, and hide them frorn one another until the morning o! momninga. Shopkeepera' holiday! Was it oniy a shaving kit I could have Fauqn Forum H.Id At Lockhart's y Monday night a Farm Radio *Forum Group, arranged by E. F. R. Osborne, met at Austin Tur- -rier's, No. 9, Clarke. Those pro- -sont included some from No. 9, Lakte Shore and Newcastle dis- tricts. The boadcast o! the Radio Forum "Mon and Machines" was -listened ta moat attentively, fol- lowing which Mm. Osborne spoke sbriefly on the subjeot. Ho ex- plained isow tise Forum womks and Ydivided tise gnou p tato two dia- eckisalon gnoups w ho each consid- Sefed these questions: 1. Has the war caused a f arm Ilabor shortage in youl, communi- ty? Has tise farrn lahor shontage affected production? 2. How many farmena ta your Fneigisbonhood are using more machinemy? What kinda? 3. In what way can farmers act ta overcome tise labon sisort- age? Sisould tise government help? How? 4. Hlow many farmera' sons and hired mon have left your community during- the past two yeams? The opinion o! cacis group, e- corded by a group secretary, wene thon nead to tise reassembled group and tise concensus o! opin- ion was necorded ta ho sent to tise National Farm Radio Forum. .It was tise opinion o! tise meet- ing tisat these Forums can heofo definite assistance to tise farmer and tisat tisis group should con- tinue as a Forum, meeting each Monday night. Mm. Osborne was norninated as convenor, and-Mms. Howard Allun as secretary. Tise invitation o! 0. Parker to meet at his home next Monday night was accented and it ia hoD- cd to increase tise interest already shown. Botis mon and wornen o! ural communities are invitcd to narticipate tantisese discussions. Tise tonic for next week's bmoad- cast and discussion is to be "Homo and Expont Markets." Cowanville 1 Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Reid and I family have moved nean Portc Hope for tise wintenrnmontiss whenet Bihl will ho handy to ia work. Visitons:V Mm. Jack Bamnes at home. h Mm. Hector Millson, Miss AddieC Millson, little Harry, Mm. Kina- man and Mra. J. J. W. Stningere motoned to Hermon.c Mm. and Mms. W. C. Crossleyv and Jack at Mm. Wm. Henden- son's, Momisis.e Mm. and Mms. Clarence Bunley, ' Mr. and Mms. Wm. Layton, Mm. r and Mms. Wes. Stingen and Mn.P and Mns. Willis Farrow at Mn. and Mrs. Roy Bunley's, Pont Granby, r to celebnatc wîth them their 2th h wedding annlvomaary on Saturday I evening.A Mm. and Mms. Hanry Ruthenforda and Audrey, Toronto, at Mrs. B. e Mlllson's. 0 Mr. and Mms. M. Chatterton, Onville and Gwendolyn, Clarke Union, Mn. and Mrs. Andrew Ban- si dy, Mma. Milison and Mm. J. J. W. JK Stningen at Mm. Wes. Stringe's. h Mm. and Mns. Geo. Hendenson, % Cocil and Mary, at Mn. W. C. if Crossley's. Busiess Directoxy Legal .M. G. V. GOULD, B. A., L.L.B Barrister, Solicitor Notary Phone 351 Bank of Commerce Bldg. Bowxanville W. R. STRIKE Barrister, Solicitor Notary Solicitor for Bank oï Montreal Money to Loan - Phone 791 Bowmanville, Ontario L. C. MASON, B. A. Barrister - Solcitor Notary Publie - Etc. Law in ail its branches Office inrnediately east of Royal Theatre Phone Office 688 Home 553 starry package, or was it my daugister's heart tisat remember- e d tise time, ages ago, whenI said, "Damn tisat old razor! Sorne day I'm going to have one thal fits into my hand properly!"'? What about tise crate of oranges that cornes every Christmas fromn 1a colored elevaton boy in Florida? d I can buy botter oranges, but I Y can't buy what comcs with these. We dino evcry day, but there isl only one Cisristmas dinner. For years tisat was a family festival, witis ail our dear ones about tise stable. Most of them are gone now, and our Christmas gucats arc people who, whateven their means, havc no home o! tiseir own. Why? Weil, when I was 19, and away from my home for tise rfirat time at Christmas, a very lonely lad, tise mother of a chap 5employed in tise office with me asked me to hem home. I nover saw hem again; se ias been dead ncariy 40 yoars, but se and that dinner live in my memory. îLast Chsristmas my wi!e and I 1had hall a.dozen old actons, for- gotten now, and we taiked o! tise great days tantise theater, and lived tisem again until long after midnight. Irene Franklin, wiso had been the idol o! vaudeville, sang severai o!fohea et songs to us, and a very old Shakespearean actor repeated - and isow! - thse aoliioquy from Hamiet. It took Cisristmaa to restore their iseyday for, an hour or two, and that memory goos on our golden pile o! Christmases. During a radio broadcast not long ago, I met tise middle-aged woman who, as a cisild o! 8, wrote to tise New York Sun, "Please tell mie tise trutis, is thero a Santa Claus?" Every year tise Sun me- prints tise eply it made oditoriai- ly in 1897: "Yes, Virginia, tisere is a Santa Claus. He oxiats as certainly as love and gcnorosity and devotion exiat. . . . There îa a veil covering the unseen wonid which not tise atrongest man, nom even tise united strengtis of al tise strongest mon that ever lived, could tear apart. Only faitis, fan- cy, poetry, love, romance, can puas aside that curtata and view and picture tise supernal beauty and glory beyond. la it ail real? Ah. . . in ail this world there ia notising ciao real and abiding."' O! course there's a Santa! And if tiscre wcrcn't, ho would be tise very first o! tise thinga we'd have to invent. Life must have love and a littie childlike faitis to ho endurable; and tise year must L have at least one day when we are more conscious o! faitis and love than o! business and bomba and alI the realities nobody douhts -and nobody wants! NEWS .le Number 201 At tirnos o! epldemic on when any contagion is suspected ta your neighborhood avoid cmowds, movies, parties, picnics or any places o! contact with othen chUl- dren. Keep away from places where tisere la sicknes Do not koeelrsthe child cooped up, s00 that ho gots tise proper aiing il you must ço out and watch aven hlm. It la casier to watch over him at play tisan to ait up with sickness. Practise cleanlinos inevemy way about tise house. Do not lot unnecesary gambage or refuse romain about to draw flis. Flis are had germ-carriers and onemies of children--destmoy thcm. Prop or care and considema- tion, lots o! fresis air and sunshine and iealtis habits wil produce a juat noward. Many cases o! "cross eye"l stra- bismus, in fact in the majority o! cases aren't heneditary but are deveoped. Watch well, themefore, the early life o! tie child. These conditions and defecta.. are less noticahie ta the isalthy and strong and are more noticeable in tise puny, woak and under- nourished. No trouble, however, amai, will start without a warn- ing signal., (to bho continued) Il PAYS TO KEEP YOUR DRESSES, Smart Fresh-Iooklng ... ready for the unexpected -invitation 1 Oshawa Laundry & Dry Cleaning PHONE 419 The World's News Seen Through THE CHRISTIAN SCIENCE MONITOR An Internationul Daily Newspa>er îa Tr thful--Conaructdve-Unb 5-Fras itom Senatuoe- i-m - Editoriala Are Tissaiy end Instructive, mnd Là D&W1 Fmn,4Toge"w with te.W..d7y Magazine Secon Mal.e d.Ma tor au Idemi Newupp for e Home. * The Christian Science Publiahîng Socety Ont, Norway Street, Boston, Massachusetts - ric. $12.00 Y.arly, or $1.00 a Month. Siatrday Issue, includir.g Magezinae Section, $2.6o a Yer.' IntroductoryO8ffer. 6 Issue& Z5 Cenas. Addre ---- ------------- SAMPLE COPY ON REQLJEST zampzszsp ~U~tCêQ Zpp Z;;:.p:'0p Tyrone Mm. Wm. Hooey undenwent a aerious openation ta Toronto Gen- oral Hospital. Rev. A. F. Gardner spoke ti- preasively Sunday morning on "'Why I believe in tise churcis." At tise Sunday Scisool session we were pieased to, have Mm. Elgin Taylor, Sauina, Tempomance Supt. o! Darlington, speak. He strossed tise reed o! a great tempemance wonk in tise Sunday Scisool. Sun- day Scisool next Sunday at 2.30 p.m. Note change in time. Visitons: Mr. and Mms. A. Bolton, Toron- to, Mr. and Mrs. Stan Hodgson, Bowmanville, at Mn. E. A. Vir- tue's. Mrs. W. T. Womden isas netumn- ed fnom visiting hem daugister M4rs. Harny Spragg, Exeter, and sister Mms. McKnight, Drumbo. Mn. and Mms. E. R. Taylor and !amily, Solina, at Mn. Russell Wr!ght's. Mr. Gardner, Norwood, is visit- ine his son, Bey. A. F. Gardner. Mms. E. Wighst is visiting hem goL o yeftatwn nota Mr. Wm. Haliowell, also Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Hallowell. Mr. and Mrs. Jas. Stark and family, Newtonville, with Mrs. I. Stark. Art McKay and Lavern Farrow were in Peterboro. Mrs. A. Dobson and daughter were in Toronto. Art McKay visited Mr. and Mrs. Harold Barrowclough, Wesleyville Mrs. Silver and Mrs. Bert Trim arnd sons at Mr. Walter Simpson's, Quay's Crossing. Miss Marjory Farrow, Port Hope, at Mr. Victor Farrow's. A. Dobson and Mr. Parker in Lindsay. Miss Molly Hassard, Alberta, is visiting Miss Norma Hallowell. Miss Wray in Peterboro. Mr. and Mrs. E. Ruthven. Zion, at Mr. A. Dobson's. Miss Beulah Hallowell, Toronto, at home. Lavern Farrow and friend in Peterboro. Mothers k -- ïL This wIlI remlnd DrOasdsyou thut Syrup - Is just asde- ' ru pendable as * ver for the relief of Oomghs, OoIia, 35 a 75 ikeoliti,oie., Fred Victor Supt. e Preach.s at Orono "lThank Y.."l ServicE Rev. Hunnisett o! the Fred Viec tam Mission, Toronto, jrcached in Park St. Churcis Sunclay morntaE on the. occasion o! the spocia. W. A. "Thank You" service. $200 was raised ta lieu o! holding a fowl supper. Tise speaker oxprcssed his gra- tification at being able to be pro. sent and commcnted that since Tise Statesman had called hin, "unontisodox" ho was going to live up to it. Ho next outlined tise starting of tise Fred Victor Mission by tise late Mary T. Shseffield o! whom, ho aaid, it could ho truiy written "Sec how groat a fiame aspires, kindled by, a spark o! love." Ho told o! tise work o! sevemal mis- sionaries and nurses, emphasizing tise ýgct tisat altisougi> the news in papens seems discôuraging there la pienty o! kindnesa in tise worid tisat is nover publicized. Ho told o! tise wonk o! feed.lng, clothing and isousing tise rany down-and- outens. The doconating cornmittee is to be congratulated on the wonden- ful display o! flowers, fruit, vege- tables, sheaves o! grain, even- greens and bonnies which decorat- cd tise front o! tise churcis and ail tise windows, making a stik- ing picture. A specil anthcrn by a choir o! about 24 voicos and a beautifully rendemed solo "Hlow Beautiful Upon tise Mountains" by Mms. A. A. Drummond were also much enjoyed by tise large congrega- tion. DIM AND DISTANT HAPPENINGS From The Orono News cf Novembor 26, 1925 Oawaid Cowan retumned Setur- day witis his standard bred honses !nom tise Royal Winter Faim wherc ho was a successful exhibitor. No Onono News ncxt week. Our holiday tisis year la later than usuai owing ta tise fair, tise rush o! election wonk, etc.-Editon Cut- tell. Painting o! tise town hall is weli under way, Len Gamsby having tise contnact wltis Isaac Cobhledick assistîng him. Henny Junker, Orono Cmeam- ery, attonded the Canadian Cneameryrnen'a Association con- vention ta Toronto. Old frienda o! Neil McConna- chie, an old Orono boy' now at Walpole, Sask., will iearn with regret o! tise bas o!fisis wife who passed away Nov. Mt. Election held Nov. 28tis for a representative frorn West Dun- ham to the Fiftis Older Boys' Par- liament mesulted ta a vlctory for Alex. McGmegon, Bowmanvlle, by a majorlty o! 63 votes over i competltor, Norman Winter, Or- ono. Dr. W. F. McElroy isas aold his Veterinary practice, also bis me- sidence and office to Dm. E. G. Eer lake, Hamptn. r.McElroy s benpmciinghr-e for up- wands o! 30 yeas. T refml r moving ta Peterboro. Starkville A goodly number attended ser- vice at Shilois on Sunday. Shilois W. A. annuai meeting was held at Mns. Boss Hallowellh on Tuesday. Warnen Carson la drlving s new Plymouths car. Mms. Silver isad two qults quilted in hem home. D. Armstrong la making some improvoments on isis bouse. M. Shutka iss old some horsea. Visitons: Miss Edna Farrow, Pontypool, vM. Raymond Farrow, Witby, wene home. Mm. and Mms. Garnett Hallo- sell, Toronto, vlslted his father, i Presented in two Series - the advanced styling, and is replete with refinemnents are revealed in the new Master DeLuxe and Fleetline-the many important mechanical devel- models. Above la the Chevrolet 1942 Chevrolet sets a new trend ian opments, while many new interior 1 Fleetline Six-Passenger Aerosedan. w h 4vSfwag ar Iodem Fou MA. SoImS* ~uma 1DR. .J. C. DEVITT Ausitant: Dr. E. W. Blson Graduate of Royal Dental Col- tege, Tororjto. Office: Jury Jubilec Bldg.. Bow7manville. Office hours 9 a.m. to 6 pm. daily, except Sunday Phone 790 _ House phone 883 X-Ray Equlpment in Office Funeral Directors FTJNERAL DIRECTORS Service, any hour, any day F. F. Morris Co. Modern Motor Equipment, Am- bulance and Invalid Car. Tele- phone 480 or 734, Assistant 573. Licensed Auctioneèe ELMEIR WJLBUR Speciagilzing in Farm, Livestock, Iinplements and Furniture Sales TERMS MODERATE Phono for Ternis and Date to: Bownianvillc 2428 Veterlnary IR. B. MURRAY, V.S.; B.V.So. Veterinarlan . f Church St. - Bowmanville i Phone 843 29 t! ORONO WE HAVE A good -variety of Christmas folders, boxed and otherwle.' Toys, games, etc. A rt 1sati1a Christmsas wrapplngs and ties. BILL FOLDS PHOTO ALBUMS SCRA'P BOOKS ]FANCY DISHES DIARIES OUJITARS MOUTH ORGANS Yez A store full of seasonable merchanise - aiso - Subseriptions for Magasin«s at BOOK STORE PHONE 807 Try our Lendlnt Llbrary Latest Fiction Eyesight Education And Efficimncy 13Y C1I.Tuck Optometrist Eyesighkt Specialist Disney Bldt. Voice of The People Bowmanville, Nov. 17, 1941 To the Editor o! The Statesman: Dear Sir: What possible good can corne from the monoy made by the government out of the li'quor traffic? Show me any jus- tif ication in the waste of good grain convertcd to the beverage. We've had a fcw years under the Liquor Contrai Act-now what do you think of it? In forming bad habits f or the youth o! our pro- vince it has been a ieal success. Liquor has also been the cause of many motor accidents. When s0 much foodstuff la in demand in thse war-torn countries of Eur- ope, Asila and Africa our country shoudstop giving it to the brew- cries and distilleries. Yours trulymeane For Tmeac (Ed. Note-The gentleman who subtniltted this letter also put his case very weflta a poern but lack of space forbids publicatiori.) THE CANADLAN STATfflmAiq- innvimAmvTT.T.P. tW'rA'PTn

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