Clarington Digital Newspaper Collections

Canadian Statesman (Bowmanville, ON), 23 May 1946, p. 13

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PAGE THIRTEKW THE CANADIAN STATESMAN, BOWMANVILLE, ONTARIO THURSDAY. MAY 23rd. 1946 Outmoded buses and trolleys wasp waist, which Paris says is are being snapped up as emergen- coming back, is that it's so hard to cy housing, and in fancy we hear achieve on a bumblebee figure.- the householder welcoming his Boston Herald. guest, "Step back a littie farther, The government is selling spe- Please, in the hbuse,"-Detroit cial war searchlights that cost News. $15,000 for $1,500 each. Might it As dear, plump Cousin Susie not be wise to keep them to sec sees it, the only trouble with the where we are going?-Grît. BOWMANVU LLE 'PARCEL DELIVERY $ e J.&S. Parcel Delivery is at your service We will deliver an order of groceries, a sack of potatoes or pick-up a phone order from your grocery store to your home for only 10c. For other larger articles prices available on request. We are ready to serve you at ail Urnes, and will appreciate a cali from you. F. Stannard Phone 664 and have our truck pick up your order at any store or. place and deliver it. We Deliver for: HARRY ALLIN'S, DOMINION STORES, McGREGOR'S HARDWARE, STEWART'S' SEEDS and ROY NEADS RADIO. r IMPORTANT Ail Members 2nd Midland Reg't. BATTALION ORDER Ail equipment and clothing in possession of Regiment Personnel wi11 be returned to Coy. Stores by June l5th, 1946, for inventory and re-issue. Those failing to comply with this order 'will 'be dealt with by the Provost Marshal* or the Civil Authority. BOWMANVILLE ARMOURY OPEN 7.30 - 9.30 EVERY WEDNFESDAY BVENING. There îs not thea slightest chance ti of a peaceable .p iettlement of the. ~~ t real issue in Pal- ~ estine unless and '.j lantil means a re.. devised wV h i c h vill enable the Tewih an Ara bei peoplesro- Palestine ta came ta an n nder - standing by de- mocratic proces- ses.( The cmux o f r the crisis over Palestine dates from the Balfour deciaration of November 2, 1917. This reads: -His Majesty's government view with favor the establishment in Palestine of a national home for the Jewish people, and will use their best endeavors ta facilitate the achievement of that abject, it1 being clearly understood that no- thing shall be done which may prejudice the civil and religions rights of existing non-Jewish communities in Palestine, or the rights and political status enjoyed by Jews in any other country." There is notbing whatever in the recommendation of thQ..Anglo- American committee which helps ta resolve the fundamental con- flict included in the above. The report of the Commission ignores the real reason for legitimate Ar- ab fears of mass Jewish immi- gration into Palestine. PALESTINE REPORT The report by the Anglo-Amer- ican Commission on Palestine will do little ta belp matters, and may make matters worsc. It recom- mnends: 1. Immediate admission into Palestine of 100,000 bomeless Jcws. 2. A permanent status of am- bîgnous colonialism-witb denial of independent national rights ta the people of Palestine-but witb insistence that "any attempt from cither side, by threats of violence, by terrorism, or by the organiza- tion or use of illegal armies will be resolutely suppressed." Presumably British (nat U.S.) armies would do thi s j ob. The mnost sensible and construc-- tive articles that have rccentiy, been written about Palestine are by 1. F. Stone, an American jour- nalist of' Jewish origin. He is what I cail a sane Zionist-wbo faces facts. On bis return from Palestine he wrotc, iný PM. for *December 24, 1945: L.W. DIPPELL, - "There are more than a million *Arabs in Palestine. Palestine is 0.0. H.Q. Co'y. m their home. They are human be- ings. Thcy lave their country .. -1" did- not find a single Arab #"&The next place 1 live in is going to have ..0." Many an over-expanded household bas endured the "bathroom prob- lem", but iack of ADEQUATE ELECTRIC WIRING is a more subtie irritation. Having to move the chesterfleld to piug in the vacuum cleaner, for instance, just because the only wali outiet is bock there ... with ail the lamps and the radio hooked up to it. And thon there is the new range os- water heater you wouid like to have if the main wiring wouid ao'niy stand the strain. That is where the reai rub comes ... when you can't use some new electriccl convenience until new wiring is installed for It.1 Mon>' homes are.not wired for modern demands. As more appli- onces become avoilable, the use of el.cfricity keeps right on climbing, and mokeshif t wiring adjustments lead to trouble.. That Is why it is sa necessary for you to lnsist on adequate wiring for your home, be it oid or new. Hydro rates have been reduced until they are now among the Iowest Jn the worid. Enloy full benefit of iow-cost electricai servants by having your home adequateiy wired. A good electricai contractor knçws how to wire adeiuately, and your local Hydro wili giadly give you inforafition. If you ore improving or building a home, ask your Hydro for th. bok- lot, «'Ad.quate Wiring for the Postwar EI.ctric Homes of Canada." Cieun up - Point up - Plant up - Beaulify your community e*U1[J@T! @~! I I1~e ]~UW~~ e I ~ By Capt. Elmore Philp.Cft did 1 dim favorE not b that. an ali z ti a F a d a b: 0 not find a single Jew wbo ed to know an Arab who red a Jewish state. It should bc too bard ta understand No one wants ta be ruled by ien people." * e*t * Hydro Rates Over 30 Years Show Progressive Decrease HIdro-lecofthi oeraCommissione Hof ntri mstPowrComasina ofsintaroetuteeuipmaen a matinafretthe emaintenano ita forem ndtheatngnceont ofits stm andwtrhe cts it isoun- ofits many new pb~rojil ean tis n- crease in powteraes, lbeacorin- ta a recent statement by Dr. T. H. Hogg, chairman of the H.E.P.C., ta the ýCanadian Manufacturei'5 Association at a recent meeting in London. The Commission did, bowever, anticipate a stabilization of existing rates, whicb were now at the lowest passible basis upan whicb Hydro conid be expcctcd ta meet cxisting conditions. For more tban tbirty years, Dr. Hogg pointed oUt, Ontario bad witnessed a progressive decrease in the price af power. Reduc- tions in rates bad been almost a yearly event in Hydro bistary. This had been made possible tbrough the Commission's ecano- mies and good planning. How- ever, the costs of capital con- struction ta the Commission ov- er the past ten years had increas- cd from 50 ta 100 per cent, and wcre still rising. While the cost of aimast every ather commodity had gone np, the cost of electric- ity had gone down. Rates for eiectricity bad now reached the point wbere tbcy must be main- tained if the Commission were ta give consumers the adequate ser- vices demanded. Since the war there had been no ict-up in the demand for power in Ontario. This province was now using four times the pow- cr per capita that was employed in Great Britain and twice the power per capita nsed in the Un- ited States. The continned pros- pcrity of the province was bound up in the use of electricity. How ta boid the advantages already gained for manufacturers and in- dnstry and ta provide for the in- creasing demands of power that secmed iikely ta arise, was, the speaker said, the problemn that confronted the Commission at the present time. Hydro, Dr. Hogg said, was plan- ning ta salve the problein by con- solidation and new construction wbich dnring the next few years would invoive expenditures mun- ning up ta $200,000,000. Water- power developmcnts now progres- sing wouid add 537.000 additianal borsepawcr ta Hydra resources, and there would be a great dcal of transmission and distribution uine building with ail the work and expense that that entaied. Fortnnatcly, the Commission was in a physical condition to und er- take large-scale dcvelopmcnts but the full benefits of their util- ization dcpcndcd upon the co- operatian of ail classes of con- sumers in the prc#vincc. The decisian on a change in freqncncy in Southern Ontario. Dr. Hogg intîmatcd, would be made quite soon, as it would af- fect the Commissian's plans for additional gencrating capacity. No nation has ever maintained bath an aggressive systcm of com- pulsory military training and a truc democracy.-W. Norwood Brigance. ciate. vote of thanks was movedt did and enjoyable eveniflg. The s. Ferguson for openingheI meeting closed with Taps. 1~ v j: f Obituaries ,RS. ADELINE MILES HOBBS À former resident of Oshawa, Adeline Miles Reynolds, bloved wife of the late John G. Flobbs; passcd away in Montreal, May 15, in her 79th ycar. She had been in failîng heaith for the past thrce years. The daugbter of the late Rich- rd and Christina Rcynolds, the dcased was born in Oshawa on ceptember 2, 1867, and was mar- ied there on March 8, 1894. Fol- owing ber marriage she lived at Enfield until il years ago wbcn he movcd ta Montreal ta live Nith ber daughter. She was a miember of the Unitcd Cbnrch. .Mrs. Hobbs is snrvivcd by two laughtcrs, Mrs. Myrtle D. Braid- wood of Montreal, and Mrs. Vera E. Strong of Cadmus, and one son, MerVyn J. Hiobbs, of Enniskillen. Interment was in Oshawa Un- ion cemetcry. The services wcrc condnctcd by Rev. J. A. Plant,' pastor of Enniskillen United Cburch. ROBERT MARTIN For over 25 'years he was sup-, erintendent of the Lake Shore Un- I ion Sunday Schooi. This project was very close ta his heart as it represented the chief Christian influence in the community. In 1910 he was appointed an eider in the Presbyterian Churcb in Newcastle and continued ta occupy that position in the Unit- ed Chnrch after the two congre- gations amalgamated in 1925. He was a member of Cowanviile L.O. L. No. 265. In 'politics be vas a life*-long Conservatîve. The funerai service xvas con- ducted by his pastor, Rcv. W. W. Patterson, who based bis address on the tcxt, "Moses is dead. Let us go forward." He pointed ont in a cballenging manner thc res- ponsibility that rests upon cach anc ta carry on the work that thc aider citizens arc forccd ta give up. The late Robert Martin w-as prcdeccascd by bis wife, Alice Lonisa Baskerville aver 26 years ago. He is snrvived by a daugh- tci Gertrude. Mrs. George Sta- pleton of Newtonville, two sons, Gardon at home -and Allan at Brighton, Ont., by eleven grand- chiidrcn and one great-grand- daughter. The paîl-bearers, were A v Mrs. "HOLD THAT DLONDE' r Thurs., Fr1. -May 23-24 SaturdayOnIY May 25th E 1~~OY'Stan Laurel Oliver Hardy out01 This i:« n 'Air Raid Wardens' In recent montbs more extreme 1 Zionists have made no secret of 1 their determinatian ta get, at any 1 and aIl costs, a Jewish state in Palestine. The Arabs are well aware of this determination. In-1 dced the reactionary mis-leaders and feudal explaiters of the Ara- bic people-inside Palestine and out of it-are using this plan for aJewisb state as an excuse ta solidify all Arabs into hastility 3gainst any Jewisb immigration. Even the Arabs who individu- aliy and, locally get on well with the Jewisb settlers fear and op- pase large-scale Jewisb immigra- tion. They fear tbat once the Jews achieve a majority of popu- lation, they will demand and get national independence, and there- after set up a Jewisb natiQnal so- vcrcignty in whicb the Arabs would find themselves a minarity. .It gocs witbout saying that wel- came admission inta Palestine-or any country-would be a boon ta those bundreds of thousands of Jewisb survivors in displaccd per- sans camps in Europe. Canada, and ail other humane countries, sbonld do wbatever can be donc ta open gates now ciased. But Canada, the United States, Australia and other sncb coun- tries could do far marc ta salve the immediate probiem by offer- ing ta take, right now, an agrecd quota of homelcss Jewisb refu-i gees rather than by encouragîng a policy wbicb is based on concep- tion of dubins maraiity and obv,,i- ons explosive force. s HowtoCombat RHEUMATIC AI Rleumatic "aiu May oten Le caused I>y exces unie acid lodipriyta sbould be extractedbà h iny.I kidneys fait, and exces5urc cd o in.i may cause severe discomfort and pain. Troat rheumatic pains by keeping your kidneys in good conditin Get and use Dodd's Kidney Pilla. Dodd's help your kidneys get nid cf trouhle-making poisons and exceas acids-belp you feel bolier. See what DoUds cun do for you. 137 ~Q~fl%ê4flO&! j',l WHENEVER a messy job looins, that's the time for l'Invisible Gloves". You don them by simply applying a protective film of "Protek" cream, one of the handiest Products of chemical research. The ladies like "Protek" too. They put it on before cleaning, painting, polishing: then rinse it and ail dirt off quickly with water, when the job is done. !'Protek" is just another instance of the way in which chemistry works seeming wonders, easing so many of our daily burdens with bright new products. S ER VIN 0 C AN ADI1A NS «R i H RO0U 6H C HEM 15T R' wiha new rat-kifer... piIson for poison ivy . .. suntan foi hens .. . and dynamite for ditches. I I i i *1~ I I I I I I I I I I 1, Y' Rats are smart They just won't eat anything that tastes as if it might be poi- son. Now man is going after them with a new chemical called ANTU, sa potent that a millionth of a pound can "It a rat, and the rats don't seem ta notice the taste. Now we're set ta give Poi- son Ivy and Poison' Oak, so long a scourge ta the un- wary, a dose of their own medicine! Tbey'll be pois- oned with AMMATE, a new and powerful chemicalp- tion that makes themn wither up and die. One or two lbs. of AMMATE wîll clear a patch 1 oo square feet in area. Remember CEL.O-GLASS-..; the flexible cellulose-acetate lass substitute which many farmers used before the war,. ta get egg.praducing ultra- violet rays into their lien,. bouses? Weil, Îes com.ang back soon ta civitiau life, complete with a 5-year per- formance guarante. CEL-O- GLASS nat only brings icp sun and keeps out cold. ht eliminates breakage costs Someane might welI coin the phrase, "a ditch in time saves nine merI's trne", 0fr words ta that effect, especi- ally since ditcbing with dyn- amite bas now become a science. Farmers, as well as explosives engifleers, are putting explosives to work in this way mare and mare. And in doing it ther save labour, time and expense. F,,rther inf/ormationl on any o) these products is obtainable by wvriting "Looking Abead", C-I-L, P.O. Box 10, lviont real, P. Q. t /W46-3 --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------...-.~~----- 2 j .dfiel 57 J.- 'OYAL THEATR' TOPS IN ENTERTAINMENT MATINEE FRIDAY, MAY 24th 1 . 1 'I 1' I. I t, I I. a i. i. mi 1* 1' i a, Il I. n p b n i s I I I i I I I I i I I I I I I I I I I a I I I a I I I I i I a s I I a I I I I I I 1' 1~ I. I. I I a I I I B' B, I. a. B. I t t t t t t I. I. n a, I I I i 14 ai I. I. I. i. i. i. a. r I. i.. a., 1' 'j Il ai I I I I I I B a i I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I On Saturday, May 11, 1946, Ro- Fr e d, Bo wenr , e x-M P-,MitoA - AND - bert Martin passed to his reward Elliott, Bert Reid, Howell Row- at his late residence, Lot 17, Con. land, Wallace Holmes and Will I,,iA I~ ee 1, Clarke Township. Burial took Stapleton. romii U ArkIIansas' place May 3th, in Bowmanville The place that has known him cemetery with a large number of so long shail knowv him n ore Featuring relatives and friends in attend- forever, but his memory will con- ance. tinue to stay green. He dcsircd ,pieiONC jUmmy WakelY The late Robert Martin was and sought to earn a gooci name 4A K.. . The Pied Pipers born at Lot 4, Con. 3, Township rather than great riches. # usieGrsMl wn of Manvers, on August lOth, 1862, eSu0shiM, GirlsMilo Twà son of the late James M artin and A oaon itr Elizabeth Ann Campbell of St.Paul's C-GIT. . . '.:.BG.ER.ha.i. RODE County Down, Ircland. W hen he PL S E TE ha a P'C I was six months of age bis fnimily Holds Final MeetingPLSETE thnaPC C moved to the Lake Shore section March of Time - Cartoonl in Clarke Township where he re- T he closing meeting of the St. Shorts - occupations Cartoon "Tree For Two" sided for the rest of bis life. Paul's C.G.I.T. year, 1945-46, drew ________________________________ He was a successful farmer who ta a close by a get-together meet- Mon.- Tues. - Wed. - May 27 - 29 loved his work. He stated many ing hcld at *Mrs. Dr. Fergusan 's. times that if he had his life to live The meeting opcned with the over again he would ýbe a f armer. C.G.I.T. Hymn, Choral Response He saw the farm on which he followed by the Lord's Prayer.. livcd become well-stocked and President Joan Rice and Shir- much more productive under bis ley Grant were in charge of the e management. Worship Service which was veflu He was a good neighbor as carricd on. many could testify. On numer- The business period openedA cUR ous occasions he and other citi- with the minutes of the previous Ap uR I! zens of the Lake Shore section or- meeting being read and a large Y d m'a RY LN ganized becs and collected sub- attendance answering the ralhilTe"9l O i osrd ila RAYveiMILLN scriptions or goods ta hclp some- caîl. Iroduced by Chares Bracketi .J N YMAN one who had great loss or to re- Miss Helen Williams was guest o recied by Bilb yWier member someone who was re- artist for the evening . She brought'àP ...S O T C R U B NCA O N moving from the neighborhood: a record player and records from FOX LATE NEWS SHR CRCSB D CRON At such functions he was fre- the show "Oklahoma." These quently the chairman, after the were much enjoyed by ail. late Joseph Coulson ceased to off i- Following these a delicious 1 ai MATINEE 1 1 : 1 SHORTS CARTOON MARCH OF TIME ............. i,

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