Clarington Digital Newspaper Collections

Canadian Statesman (Bowmanville, ON), 14 Mar 1946, p. 10

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

1~ 'THE CANADIAN STATESMAN. BOWMANVILLE, ONTARIO 'Li4Ji LLN L Tyrone Mission Band met in the school room on March 6th with twelve present. The meeting opened by singing a hymn followed by the Mission Band purpose, Scripture reading Matthew 5: 1-16. Mrs. Alldread gave a story on the Bea- titudes, also a missionary soy Muriel Jones gave a reading. When the bee stung mother, Mrs. Alldread also gave the abject lesson. Meetinig' closed with a hyennand the Mizpah benediction. W.M .S. was held in the Sunday sehool room on Fiday, March 8. Ini the absence o! the president, Mrs. S. T. Hoar took the chair. Seriptume was read responsively taken fromn the monthly on World Day of Prayer. Rev. A. E. Cress- well gave a very interesting talk on prayer. The meeting closed with prayer by Mr. Cresweil. Mr. and Mrs. Wes Hoskin, of Burketon, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Davis and Patsy, Solina, Mr. and Mrs. Glen Hoskmn and Darlene, and Mr. and Mrs. Elgin Glover, North Oshawa. Mr. and Mrs. Earl Innis and Judith, Manchester, with Mr. and Mrs. Lamne Hoskin. Miss K. Macdonald, Oshawa, visited hem mother, Mrs. Wm. Macdonald. Miss Lillian McRoberts, Tor- onto, with hem parents, Mr. and Mms. Fred McRoberts. Miss Ver- na McRoberts, Oshawa, with her elRESCRI PlIONS .Prescriptions filled i this store carry the guarantee of the finest quallty in thefr ingredients and the utmost care and skill i ompounding. We emphasize the lin-, portance of our Prescription ý Creams and Lotions Woodbury's Complete Beauty Cream ------- 25c-49c Trushay Lotion --------- 49c Italian Bahn--------- 35c-97c Pond's Creains: Cold, Vanishing, Cleansing 34c-59c Paequin's Hand Cream ------------ 57e Noxzema Skin Cream ---- 17c-39c-59c Hlnd's Honey and Almond Creain 25c-45c-89c Jergen's Lot! Nivea Creme Rlker's French Bain Prophylactic bristled 'v $2.95 ion 25c-47c-98c ----- 50c-$1.00 ---------30c-49c DHair Brushes ith Prolon - $3.95 Department. Miniature Negatives Kodaprints Up to 23/ X 3%4---------------- Kodaprints Up to 3 1/4 x 4 V2--------------- Do not let the loss or lack of a negative prevent you from havig enlargements or extra prints made. Negatives made up to size 3 x4 14--------------------- 50C 5 x 7 -----------------75e STUDIO FOLDER SPECIAL Vour favourite negatives en- Iarged to 4" x6" and mount- ed i attractive Studio Folders, complete 2 for 29e Jury & Lovel THE REXALL DRUG STORE Phone 778 C.N.R. Tickets WHEN WE TEST EVES IT IS DONE PROPERLY King st. W. Bowmanville Attention m Fertilizer Users New Gov't. Orderi Cease Manufacture of the folîowing: 4.8.10 - 2.2.10 ORDER AND TAKE DELIVERY 0F YOUR FERTILIZER REQUIREMENTS NOW Courtice D. J. COURTICE Phone Oshawa 289J2 W. H. Brown, Sub-Agent 91 King St. W. Bowmanville Âuthorized Agent for A A Brand Fertilizers for Eleventh Consecutive Year. Orders nlay be left at 91 King St. West, Bowmanville for your convenience. PROMPT DELIVERY ON AIL ORDERS WHEN PRODUOTS AVAILABLE AuctiOn Sale REGISTERED SHORTHORNS Property of Mrs. Bessie Walkçy, Lot 35, Con. 3, Hope Township 2 miles east o! Newtonvllle, on No. 2 Highîvay, 14 mile north Wednesday, 2Oth March at 1.30 p.m. TO SELL BY PUBLIC AUCTION 25 HEAD 0F SHORTHORNS ixicludixig: 10 Cows, due to freshen in April and May 6 open Heifers 4 Young Buils 5 Yearling Heifers This herd ls fuily accredlted and ioculated For further particulars sec catalogue There WiII Also be Offered For Sale 24 Breeding Ewes, due to lamb ini April - 11 Hogs - 1 Young Work Horse - Quantity of Ray FARM SOLD TERMS CASH Jack Reid, AUCTIONEER. parents, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas1 McRoberts.r Mrs. Lamne Hoskin visited hem mother, Mrs. Tennyson Pereman,1 Columbus.r Mr. Lorme Hoskin and Mr. Wess Hoskin at Guelph.i We welcome ta aur village Mrs. Jack Gibbs who arived from overseas on S.S. Letitia,c and amrived at Bowmanviile onE Wednesday. After having din-1 ner with Mm. and Mrs. Walterc Park they weme entertained at the home of his parents, Mm. and Mrs. Thomas Gibbs.t Howard Philp, R.C.A.F., who has been stationed at Dawson Creek, arrived home last Wed- nesday. At present he is at Ot- tawa getting his disoharge. Mm. and Mms. Jack Gibbs spent the weekend- with Mm. and Mrs. Bert Motlock, Ottawa. Glad ta see Neil YIellowlees home from the Western Hospital, Toronto, and that he is improv- ing every day. Don't miss seeing "Uncle Josh Pemkins" at the Community hall next Friday evening. Lions Club (Continued fmom Page 1) Coming ta Ontario he became a manager and supervisor o! chain grocery stores at Windsor and Kingston for 10 years, then joined the Carter Family, bakers for five generations,' in Bowmanville in 1936. He' joined the Lions Club the same year and earned the dis- tinction of Master Lion for the many projects successively and successfully directed. He is 'a bachelor. It was further stated that Mr. Carter was widely read, well in- fommed, with the faculty o! knowing his subject and knowing with facîlity how ta tell it. Speak- ing with clear assurance, the Dis- trict Governor said this was his l9th visit ta clubs in District 3-A, every moment of which was not arduous but an experience ta be valued. No club was superior to + thA Bown,,~y~ville Club. Ho sug-, gested that members join with him in viewing the world's peoples now standing at the crossroads o! history; to examine the road lead- ing thereto; the steps being taken ta determine which way we are going. Peace Through Unity He sketched the long, costly, bitter struggle, when the words and spirit of Churchill, offering only blood, sweat, toil' and tears, rallied the remnants ta stave off bleak defeat. He pointed out per- iods in the struggle that led to differences o! opinion, the warfare o! words. Today we shahl deter- mine what shaîl be the resuit o! those sacrifices. A beginning has come in creating the United Na- tions Organization, a charter drawn in the name o! united peo- ples ta remove the scourge o! war. UNO can survive only with the kind o! spirit and unity that is characteristic o! service clubs. People must unîte -for peace with the same resolution that brought common victory. If UNO fails who will pay the cost? Not the handful o! states- men of the sort who shaped the League but all the people in whose name the new Charter is written. The hope is too high to entrust wholly ta practised polit- icians but must be sustaîned by the united will,of those who paid the costs. Mr. Carter observed that, soon perhaps, a new moral instrument would be fashioned effectively ta back the UNO. He re!erred to the probable outcome o! the Nuremburg trials, where for the first time in the history of the world men were being tried as common criminals for instigating aggression. Future leaders will hesitate to follow their course, knowing they will be brought ta the bar of justice for crimes against humanity. Parliament of Man Continuing, the speaker insisted that the people must be told freely of the deliberations in world councils and be permitted freely ta praise or condemn, to denounce when wrong, to throw out and re- place the fixers and appeasers, and thus in time we may come ta the Parliament o! Man. But mere govemnment is not enough in which the party in power centres its first concern in remaining in power. Business Directory L EGA L W. R. STRIKE Barrister - Solicitor - Notary Solicitor for Bank of Montreal Money to Loan - Phone781 Bowmanville, Ontario LAWRENCE C. MASON. B.A. Barrister, Solicitor, Notary Public King Street W., Bowmanville Phone: Office 688 Residence 553 W. F. WARD, B.A. Barrister - Solicitor - Notary 91/ King Street E. Bowmanville - Ontario Phone: Office 825 House 409 MISS APHA 1. HODGINS Barrister, Solicitor, Notary Public Successor ta M. G. V. Gould Temiperance St. - Bowmanville Phone 351 DENTAL DR. J. C. DEVITT Assistant: Dr. E. W. Sisson Graduate of Royal Dental College, Toronto Office: Jury Jubilee Bldg. King Street, Bowmanviile Office Hours: 9 a.m. ta 6 p.m. daily 9 a.m. ta 12 noon Wednesday Closed Sunday Phone 790 - House phone 325 X-ray equipment in Office How calmly may we commit ourselves to the hands of himn who bears up the world.-Richter. We must see ta it that survival in power rests completely in acting in the interests of ail the people. The suggestion was given that the positive and negative virtues of self-government could be found in Tom Paine's treatise, Coiumon Sense. The speaker traced the arigin of the service clubs ta the ancient examples af groups formed in Egypt Greece and Rame, finding or seeking their highest expression within a community of interests. Ail through man's story one can trace the evolutian of the club idea uniting the virtues of man- kind, concemned fundamentally with a true appreciation o! the arts, music , painting and liter- ature. As a means to unity, there was a great field for service clubs in promoting these cultural values. The coming day was viewed one in which Lions Clubs, for instance, could establish a million dollar fund for scholarships ta promote these values. World Tomorrow It was pointed out that children today would see the dawn of the year 2,000. They would become the statesmen, the business and professional men of tomorrow. The challenge of the times, therefore, is ta adhere ta and extend for them the principles that are fun- damental in Lionism. Concluding on a note of high optimism, Mr. Carter viewed the future as dlean, bright and promising, too preciaus ta întrust to any force save that of aur own conscience. Thanks were expressed by In- ternational Counsellor J. J. Brown who proclaimed he had neyer heard a more inspiring address among ahl those he had heard from District Governors. He was also honored to present ta Mr. Carter as a gift from the club, a hand- some travelling case. Bath tri- butes were feelingly acknowledged by the recipient. Visitors- Visitors particularly welcomed were Ed. Hoaper and Don Wil- liams, war veterans, and the fol- lowing representatives o! the Goodyear Company, Mr. Oden- man, Sweden; Mr. Carey, India; Mm. Wylie, Akron, and Mr. Simp- son, South Africa. Welcomed back ta the club, Wilf Carruthers stood with Major Jim Cooper, Salvation Army, transferred from Stratford Lions Club as the follawing new mem- bers weme initiated: Fred Cale, Herb Goddard, O. Robson and Bill Allin. Shorthorn Sale (Continued from Page 1) Spring Grange Graceful Rose 1th, W. F. Rickard, Newcastle- Henry Borden, $115. Spring Grange Graceful Rose 6th, W. F. Rickard-Henry Bor- den, $135. Spring Grange Graceful Rose, W. F. Rickard-Fred Stephens, Ashbumn, $190. Blythesome Duke, male, *;F. Rickard:-'T. A. Orton, Coldwater, $170. Bannie Bedford, Ross Halla- well, Clarke-Henry Borden $125. Rosabella 4th, Ross Hallowell- Morley Gilroy, Enniskillen, $205. Mayflower Lass 7th, Orville Burton, Claremont-Russell Wyn- datt, Beaverton, $180. Mayflower Maid 8th, Orville Burton-Erie Sleep, Whîtby, $170. Lavender Lily 2nd, Orville Burton-Walter Lynd, $100. Back Shop (Continued from Page 1) gallantly grasping the lady about the waist and assisting hem down the ladder. Thon, too, Mr. Hancock's dog was bumned in the flames despite his master's efforts ta save him. Finally, a real home town touch entered the story when Harry Freeman, his wife and daugliter made sandwiches and coffee for the firemen. Ahl in ail, it was a terrible fire but we are not trying to be funny when we say it would have made a wonderful story in which every reader in the country would have been interested. The story skill will be o! interest to many people but had it been accompanied by on the spot pictures o! the flames pouring forth, the firemen in ac- tion, the Hawley family being req- cued, the coffee and sandwiches, it would h;ýve been much botter. But we missed it and can now only bang our heels agaînst the seat o! aur pants and try to improve aur infor- mation service so that next time when some thing happons we shahl be on the job ready to provide you with first hand details o! what is going on in our community. Other regular fire attenders were missing from this one and amazing as it may seem even sleepers within a !ew doors o! the blaze knew nothing about it until the next afternoon. The Kitson family living above the Figid Locker plant slept through it ail. Chie! o! Police Syd Venton heard the alarm but was not called ta assist because there was no traf- fic problem which could not be taken came o! by Night Constable Heighton. S. R. James, who had insurance on the building and contents heard about the fire just befare church. Fred Colo, living above Couch, Johnston & Cryd- erman 's knew nathing o! the ev- ent until Sunday afternoon. So, the only conclusion we could came ta was that the firemen with their far !rom silent truck and sirens must have tip-toed !rom the fime hall, shoving the-truck in front o! them and the siren must have been purring instead o! sceaming. Citizens, especially farmers getting ready for sping, wiil be pleased ta know that Mm. Hancock is going ta rebuild and in the meantime will be doing epair work in what's le!t o! his plant plus some space in Mike Osborne's gar- age acmass the street. Music Resuîts (Continued from Page 1) Grade ]IV History-Honoms, Pearl Bres- lin. Grade HM Harmony-Honoms, Loryne E. White. History-First Class Honors, Gwyneth Griffith; honaurs, Peg- gy Dippeil, Kay Lycett; pass, Glen Hodgson, June Alîchin. Grade Il First Class Honours, Madeline Osborne, Barbara Virgin, Janet Dale. Grade I Honours, Bona M. Griffith, Ralph Peters, Joyce M. Sutton, Helen Turner, Marie Scarrow; pass, Wanda Malley, Diana Web- ber. Durham Lodge 5 (Continued from, Page 1) 1 of remembrance was placed on the Altar. It was unique and im- pressive and won much acclaim. Hîstory The Lodge history traced the founding of the Lodge with the Warrant of Dispensation granted under the United Grand Lodge of England to the pioneers in New- castle District who united ta es- tablish Free Masonry as they pro- ceeded with frugal, pioneer spirit to clear land, build sehools and churches and uphold the Christian faith. The Lodge survived through wars and depressions, meeting many reverses sich as three fires that destroyed Lodge rooms and the changing economic factors that took members elsewhere with un- avoidable demits. It was a moving story of fortitude, resolution and faith. Rose Ceremony The beauty of the rose ceremony was brought out in the remem- brance of members who had fought through two great wars and of those who had gone before ta leave to younger hands the survîval of their work. It included a prayer of hope that the distress- fui days of conflict will soon give way ta days when millions now without food and shelter, verily without hope, may be accepted into a world brotherhood. The buoyant, concluding passage, as the doors to a new century of Durham Lodge opened was: "But these days will pass. Given the faith we have inherited, the faith that joins us here tonight, faith in Almighty God, let us strive on to assuage the grief of the des- olate, share our bread and strength ST. PATRICK'S D AY March l7th WE HAVE St. Patrick's Cards 5c - 10e - 15e Remember the day with a Greeting Card St. Patrlck's Table Sets <cloth and napkins) Seals and Decorations for your Bridge Parties Books of Gaines for different types of parties - a new idea A real help to the puzzled hostess See them for yourself Je Wu JEWELL '«BIG 20" PHONE 556 Farm Wagon Tires Rubber Footwear Repaired TIRES VULCANIZED Large Stock Of Willard Batteries C. F. Jantieson TIRE SHOP Phone 467 King St. Bowmanville sponsibility o! the individual in the world picture was given by the speaker in the story of the father who, to give an interest to his son in world affairs, cut up a world map in pieces ta form a puzzle. He was astounded when the youth quickly re-assembled the map. The boy had found on the back a picture o! a man and he used this reverse side in the solution. That, saîd the speaker, was revealing. Man was respon- sible for world unity. Toasts Other toasts included: To Dur- ham Lodge, proposed by R. W. Bro. J. G. McNab, responded to by W. Bro. Irwin Colwill and W. Bro. E. F. R. Osborne, W.M. "Ôur Visitors" was proposed by R. W. Bro. H. J. Toms, replied ta by Grand Lodge officers, and the general toast was proposed by W. Bro. Don. E. Gibson, which was prelude ta singing Auld Lang Syne. The Secretary o! the Grand Lodge o! Canada, Ewart E. Dixon, congratulated the executive o! the Home and School Club o! S.S. 9, for the very excellent dinner pro- vided and served under their auspices. The musical numbers included excellent solos by Bro. Owen Nicholas and entertainment by Harry Cooper, together with the brass quartette of the Tam- blyn famnily, Orono. Community singing and piano accompaniments came under direction o! V. W. Bro. W. E. C. Workman. Presentations Russell Osbomne, Newcastle Dis- trict apple grower and cattle breeder, the lOlst Master of Dur- ham Lodge, and toastmastem for the evening, thanked Grand Mas- ter Hamilton. Bro. Bill Rowland, one o! the junior offîcers o! the lodge presented the Grand Master with a china cabinet made by the J. Anderson-Smith Box Factory in Newcastle. Harry Cooper, playing the bag- pipes, then piped in a huge, three- decker, birthday cake, made to commemorate the lodge's lOth birthday. The bottom layer o! the cake was cut and, distributed among the members. The two top layers were presented ta the Grand Master ta take home ta, his wife. W. Bro. I. Colwill, who was the lOth Master o! Durham Lodge, serving in 1945, was presented with a bouquet of roses. Officers 1946 W.M., W. Bro. E. F. R. Osborne; I.P.M., Wor. Bro. I. Colwill; S.W., Bro. C. J. Allun; J.W., Bro. Wm. J. Rowland; Chaplain, Wor. Bro. T. F. Branton; Secretary, V. Wor. Wro. P. F. Hare; Treasurer, W. Bro. J. E. W. Philp; D. of C., W. Bro. G. A. Walton; S.D., Bro. A. Turner; J.D., Bro. G. Stephenson; I.G., Bro. H. S. Graham; S.S., Bro. G. B. Rickard; J.S., Bro. G. Crow- ther; Tyler, W. Bro. T. W. Jack- son. Past Masters - Durham Lodge 1846-1855, No Record; 1856, Levi Bigelow; 1857, J. P. Lovekin; 1858, 1A. McNaughton; 1859, J. Robson; 1860, S. Wilmot; 1861, A. Gairdner; 1862-1863, J. Brock; 1864, No Re- turn; 1865, H. S. Northrop; 1866, A. McNaughton; 1867-1868, R. T. Wil- kinson; 1869, J. Waddell; 1870, R. T. Wilkinson. 1871, J. Waddell; 1872, R. T. Wil- kinson; 1873-1874, W. T. Lockhart; 1875-6-7-8, D. McNaughton; 1879, J. Hames; 1880, A. Petric; 1881- 1882, T. Venner; 1883-4-5, D. Allin; 1886-1887, J. Parker; 1888-1889, D. Allin; 1890-1-2, J. H. Bellwood; 1893-1894, D. Allin; 1895. J. Coul- son. 1896-1897, Rev. J. Farncomb; 1898-1900, A. Farncomb, M.D.; 1901-1902, A. W. McLeod; 1903- 1904, J. K. Allun; 1905-6-7, A. W. McLeod; 1908-1909, W. H. Gibson, Sr.; 1910, W. G. Bryans; 1911, Oea. Joil; 1912, W. H. Gibson, Sr.; 1913, F.P W. Fligg; 1914-1915, Fred C. Committee, Bras. F. W. Bowen; Invitation and Tickets Committee, V. W. Bro. P. F. Hame; Lodge His- tory Committee, R.W. Bras. H. J. Toms; Receptian Committee, R.W. Bro. W. F. Rickard; Printing and Publicity Committee, W. Bras. G. A. Wglton; Accommodation Com- mittee, W. Bro. I. Colwill; Pre- sentation Cammittee, W .Bmos. Ha- Iward Gibson; Finance Committee, Bro. J. H. Smith. j THURSDAY, MARCH 14th, 1946 , le, - unto the dawning of everlasting peace. In the spirit of high hope and f irm resolve let us here place a rose ta meet the dawn. This sentiment found an echo in the words of the Grand Master in his response ta the main toast o! the evening. Grand Master The toast ta the Grand Master and Grand Lodge of Canada in the Province of Ontario was pro- posed by Rt. Wor. Bro. W. F. Rickard and in his respanse, the Grand Master, the Most Wor. Bro. Charles S. Hamilton abserved that ta realize aur brave, new world we must develop a type of people who realize they have moral obli- gations toward one another. We are aur brother's keepers and un- tii we recognize this we are neyer going to build a world warth living in. ati Edmondstone's bMarIet1 " When you want the best in higli quality meats and groceries shop at Edmondstone's Market. WE DELIVER We deliver before and after séhool on weekdays and all day Saturday. Phone your ordet1pi early for prompt delivery. Phone 375 MAKE SURE YOU- SOESARE ~' / Comfortable Waterproof Have them repaired at Bowmanville's only BO WMAN VILLE Shoeà Repair Shop Only on location at 3 Division Street In Holgate Building Best Grade Leather Work Guaranteed George EUiottA PROPHECY SPEAKS March l7th Hea r Mr. E. Wesley Brown "The iudgment Hour Special Music by COLLEGE STUDENT CHOIR March 24th Another lecture by Palmer D. Robson ',The Dramia of Sin!I Did a Good God Make a Bad World? Notice This Series is Soon ta Close Don 't Miss These Challenging Messages Sunday Evening - 8 p.m. SONS 0F ENGLAND HALL Seed Cleaning Have your Seed cleaned the proper way by the best equlpped CLEANING PLANT IN DURHAM COUNTY For lncreased yields and greater profits you cannot afford to Please contact us before brigng any large quantlty. No grain taken ln after 5 p.m. Seed Grain We seli only the best in ail leadlng varleties:- AJAX, ERBAN, and CARTIER OATS BARBOFF and GALORE BARLEY CORONATION WHEAT Reg. No. 1, Cert. No. 1 and Coin. No. 1 You buy wlth satisfaction when you buy froin u. GOOD SEED PAYS YOU BETTER Garnet Rilkard r. 'I J' j Fi 1 for Spring IDACIV rru"j Are you prepared for 'it? When will it be? 1 Each 45e PHONE 2813 BOWMANVIILLE

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy