rRSDAY, OCT. 24th, 1946 TEE CANADIAN STATESMA.NBOWMANVILLE, ONTAR[O Mrs. Wm. Cully. Mrs. Donald McCoombes, Rose- berry Hill, has returned home a!- ter a week's vacation with Mn. and Mrs. Fred Lewis. .Mn. Ralph Calver has returnnd to Rochester, N.Y., a!ten spend- ing a week's vacation with his aunt, Mrs. Muriel Dunn. Mns. W. H. Rutherford, Mrs. H. Hutchinson and daughter Anne, Peterborough, were weekcnd guests o! Mrs. J. E. Flett. Mr. and Mrs. L. S. Dumas spent the weekend with his sister, Mrs. James Milligan, North Bay. Mrs. R. Dumas returned home with them. Mrs. Robent Stocker, Stouffville, is spending a short visit in town with hen son Bob Stocker, propri- eton, Red Indian Service Station, King St. John Wilson, Nestîcton, in ne- newing his subscription to The Statesman wites: We enjoy read- ing it very much and woulcl not like to be without it. Mn. Freeman Andrus, St. Cath- arines, Mrs. Ernest Andrus and granddaughten, Miss Sharnon Eas- lie, Hamilton, wene necent visitons with Mrs. Burton Andrus. Mrs. John McNabb, Clande- boye, Man., is guest of hen sisten, Mns. C. A. Janrett at The Balmor- ai Hotel. It is 21 yeans since Mrs. McNabb and Mns. Jarrett have seen each other. The Balmoral management are doing thein pant to provide danc- ing each Satunday evening right in town with good music and ideal appointments. Sec Coming Events for details. Mn. and Mrs. Russell G. Wil- liams, Mary Ruth and John, Ni- agara Falls, N.Y., attended the Kleinstiver- Williams wedding on Satunday and nemained to visit with relatives -and fniends. First ice o! the season was !ound on small pools of waten along side- walks early Fniday morning, Oc- toben 18. Bight sunshine fol- lowèd anothen necent nain. Fur- nace fines are becoming genenal. E. W. Crawford, manager of Engineering Depts., Goodyean Tire & Rubben Co., will address the Central Ontario Division of the Industnial Accident Preven- tion Association in the Masonic Temple, Oshawa, on Octoben 30. His subject is "Prevention Think- ing." O. J. Presson o! Goodyear is chairman o! this section. We again remind readers who send lettens to the editon for pub- lishing in the column "Voice o! the People"' must sign their let- tens, not necessarily for pu' lica- tion but for assurance that the letters are bona fide. Recently several letters received by the editor have not been signed which accounts for them not being pub- lished. Editor Geo. W~. James was in Montreal over the weekený and on Monday evening dclivered an address to the class taking the course on Journalism at Thomas D'Ancy McGill High School which is sponsored by the Catholic Adult Education Committee. His subi ect was "The Weekly Press- Its Unique Force in the History o! Jounnalism in Canada." W. H. Brown, local dealer for J. I. Case, accompanied by Ivi- son Munday, Wallace Munday, Lloyd Broome and Chanlie Johns attended the International Plow- ing Match at Goderich on Thurs- day. On 'Friday they werc guided through Beatty Bros. plant at Fergus and saw their big machine shop in action and various barn equipment such as stilîs, pumps, washing machines being made. Miss Ruth Hutchinson, former member o! the Royal Canadian Army Show, le! t Tuesday for New York City where she has enrolled on a two years' course at the Amenican Academy o! Dramatic Art. Ruth senved with the Anmy for two years, the last ycar spent in Belgium, Holland and Gen- many. Followrng her discharge early this year she was a valued member of The Statesman staff. Her many !iends and former as- to plant life and should not be uscd in vegetable and flower gar- dens or on trees and shnubs. DDT in any fonm should be kept away fnomn foodstuffs, a recom- mendation that applies to any in- secticide. In dry !orm, such as in powden formulations, DDT is safe to han- die, but pensons handling it should avoid inhaling on. swallowing the dust. Tying a handkerchief across nose and mouth is a good precaution. This information, to- gether with ail the latest facts known about DDT and in use in insect control, will be found in the supplement which has just been added to the Dominion De- pantment o! Agriculture' publica- tion 642, entitled '"Household In- sects and Thein Control." The publication is sold at 25 cents per copy by the King's Printer, Otta- wa, to whom communications should be addressed. Draw the cuntain o! night upon injuries; shut themn up in the tower o! oblivion and let themn be as though they neyer had been. -Francis Bacon. Courtice Mr. and Mrs. E1mer ]Rundie, To- ronto, with Mr. A. E. Rundle. Mrs. Glen Pickell was guest at Mns. Ted Rose's, Oshawa, Friday night, when Mrs. Rose entertain- ed in honor of the bride-elect, Miss Ruby Grainger. The farm stock sale o! Sydney Worden on Friday had quite a large attendance. 'Mrs. Blake Courtice with rela- tives in Bowmanville. Mn. and Mrs. Leslie Jackson, Bowmanville, with Mrs. Russel Gay. Mr. and Mi:s. R. Alldred and family, Mr. and Mrs. C. Alldred and family and Mrs. A. Hotson, Lake Shore, Clarke, with Keith and Mrs. Ormiston. Clarence and Donothy Higgins, Toronto, with Mr. and Mrs. Hig- gins. Arthur Osborne has disposed of his farm to Mr. Arnold, Oshawa. Mr. and Mrs. S. J. Courtice, Leamington, with her brother, Geo. Annis. Mrs. Frank Rundle feil from a step-ladder and broke a bone in her knee, she having to enter Bowmanville Hospital for treat- ment. Mr. and Mrs. Jack Gay and son Denny, with Mr. and Mrs. O. Mc- Quade. Mr. Maurice Bickle with Bill Hawkshaw, Providence. Mn. and Mrs. Mel. Terry, Osh- awa, with Will and Mrs. Bickle. Mr. Don Courtice, Peterboro, with his father, L. J. Courtice. Mr. and Mrs. John Brooks o! Oshawa, and Mr. and Mrs. John Balson, Hampton, were among those attending Remembrance Day Service. Rev. C. C. Oke and party, Wel- come, were guests on Sunday of his cousins, Chas. and Mrs. Os- borne. Two lovely showers were given to the bride-elect, Miss Doreen Phair, the girls fromn the office at General Motors giving a miscel- laneous shower at the home of Doreen on Wednesday evening, and Mrs. Ormie Robertson, Osh- awa, assisting hier mother, Mrs. Bert Wilkins in a miscellaneous shower at the Wilkins' home on Friday night. Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Adams have moved into their new home pur- chased from Mrs. Roy Fowler. Mrs. Fowler and son Alan have moved to Port Penny. Mn. and Mrs. Gordon Trevail accompanied Mr. and Mrs. Mal- colm McGregor, Maxwells, to Roseneath Fair. The Remembrance Day Service on Sunday at Ebenezer Chunch, unden auspices of Cemetery Board, was well attended. Rev. C. C. Oke of Welcome, was guest speak- er, and based his sermon on "Love." Mrs. A. Murdoch, To- ronto, contrîbu'ted two lovely vocal solos, accompanied by Miss Louise Osborne, Bowmanville. S. J. Courtice, Leamington, assisted in the service. Lovely bouquets. of mumis adorned the front of the church, some being placed there in memory of loved ones by their families. The Berean Class met Oct. l7th at Mrs. Herb Nichols', Providence, President Mrs. K. E. Courtice oc- cupied the chair. Devotional per- iod was in charge of Mrs. A. J. Gay, with Mrs. Will Bickle read- ing Psalm 107; prayer by Mrs. A. J. Oke. Business dealt with Sal- vage Drive, with articles to be left at the following homes: Mrs. Ross Peance's, Mrs. Cecil Wonden's and Mrs. A. J. Gay's. The present of- ficers will carry on for another yean. Nellie McClung and hier books were the topic, with an in- troduction given by, Mrs. K. E. Courtice, and readings fnom hier works by Mrs. Ross Pearce and Mns. Elton Werry. Mrs. Gay con- ducted a contest, and lovely ne- freshments were served. Obituary THOMAS ALFRED RICHARDS three daughters, Gertrude, Aima and Edith. Mn. Richards attended the Dis- ciples Church and was a member o! the Sons of England. Funenal services took place in the Morris Funeral Chapel, Oct. l7th, with Rev. J. E. Griffith of- ficiating, pnior to interment in Bowmanville Cemetery. Mns. J. A. Gunn played the funeral music. Among many floral tnibutes were wreaths from the Goodyear Recreation Club; the Wilcox Can- adian Co., Toronto and Local 189, Bowmanville. The bearers were C. Barnett, G. Young, W. Park- hurst and Reg Harding. DEATH COVERT-At "The Royal Pines," Bowmanville, on October 23nd, 1946, William Covent, aged 80 years. Resting at the Morris Fu- neral Chapel for service Friday at 1:30 p.m. Interment Wark- worth cemetery at 3:30 p.m. Ma- sonic funenal. The tnue test of civilization is, not the census, non the size of cities, non the cnops, but the kind o! man that the country turns out. -Emerson. For quiok first aid.. BANU "AID ADHESIVE BANDAGES Super D Cod Liver 011 - 90ç-$1.40 Horner's Infantol ----- 90c-$3.OO SERi IShi Country Boys Make Good in Big , ity A few years ago the editor o! The Statesman was called upon suddenly to give a short address to the members o! the Advertîs- îng and Sales Club, Toronto where he was received into membership which has continued ever since. As the editor o! a rural weekly, the finst thought that came to mid was: "What has been the most important product o! the farms o! Durham County?" Believing that the question was one revolving about boys and girls whÙ le! t farms to seek an education and a wider field o! service, this fonm- ed the subject o! an extempon- aneous talk. It was later published in booklet form and has had wide circulation. We present some of the person- alities told abotit in the address, ail o! whom came from Durham County. At that time W. D. Rob- bins was Mayon o! Toronto. The story stants with his early cancer. In a preface the speech extol- led the weekly paper as a med- ium which necorded births o! the district, aften which the record was continued telling o! the life o! the individual and finally, at the close an obituary which sum- arized the cancer and attainments o! the one, who even in the most humble capacity, left some mark in the community duning the span o! life. The point was made that a weekly paper wnites local hist- ony from week to weck. An auth- or can find no better source o! research than in the columns of a rural weekly. Mayor W. D. Robbins was de- scribed as the village cut-up around Ennisgîllen, befone going on to Toronto to become a street car conductor and finally the May- on. About the same time, back in C rtwight, a farm boy wanted to b'rome a docton. Yeans laten he was acclaimed one o! the great surgeons o! Amenica. In world war 1, he was a Col. in charge o! medical services abroad. Finally Hon. Herbent A. Bruce was ap- pointed Lieut. Governon o! On- tario and only lately has resigned his seat in the House o! Commons, Ottawa. Bornn on a farm at Tyrone an- other Durham County boy went along with his father who started making carniages and sleighs in Enniskillen and then moved on to Oshawa. Came the motor car and Young R. S. (Sam) McLaugh- lin went along with it to the Pnesidency, General Motors o! Canada and to become interna- tionally known as an industrialist and a breeder o! thonoughbred honses. Law captuned the imagination o! anothen Durham boy and W. Norman Tiiley, son o! a Durham school inspecton, rose to become the leading constitutional lawyer in Canada whose lîfe closed just a few yeans ago. Then journalism came into the picture. These wene realized in time by Joseph E. Atktnson, founder and chairman o! the Toronto Daily Star, one o! the great papens o! these times. START Mr. Atkinson continues aciive at his desk every day as this is told. President of the Canada Life Assurance, A. N. Mitchell is an- other Enniskillen boy whose fath- er was a widely known physician. Victor Smith, general manager, Confederation Lîfe, is a native of East Durham. and E. V. Lander of this district became president, Continental Life Insurance Co. In the realm of big business we also present J. S. McLean, pres- ident, Canada Packers, born on a farm near Kendal, Durham County and in the dairy world, Harold Gully of Bowmanville has recently retired as Vice President, Silverwood Dainies In the military sphere no more noted figures in world war 1, came to prominence than the late Sir Sam Hughes, former Minister of Defence. His father was a teacher at Solina school. Others of the family were General John Hughes, General W. S. Hughes and Qxeneral Garnet Hughes. Dur- ham is the home of the famous Mad Midland Regiment whose history goes back almost a cen- tury. Dr. James L. Hughes, bro- ther of Sir Sam was for forty years chief inspector Toronto schools. And it was at Newcastle that the Massey-Harnîs company started, with the late Chester D. Massey rjesiding in that village. Today Rt. Hon. Vincent Massey, recently retired as High Commis- sioner to Bnitain, lives on his farm and country estate at Carn- ton, Durham County. These are but a few of a much longer hist of figures who have gone out from the farms and ham- lets of Durham to achieve notable success in the outside world. AVERAGE FARM CASH INCOME DURING WAR Average cash income per farm in Canada duning the war years was $1,750, according to figures compiled by the Canadian Feder- ation of Agriculture from returns made by the Dominion Bureau of Stàtistics. The bureau's figures show that the total cash income of ail fa:rms in Canada, including subsidies, for the six yeans from 1940 to 1945 inclusive, was $7,- 702,000,000 or an average oven the six years of $1,283,767,000. Using the 1941 census total of farms in Canada at 732,700 the average total cash income per fanm, in- cluding subsidies, works out as follows for each of the six years: 1940 -----------------$ 1045.00 1941--------------------- 1245.00 1942--------------------- 1500.00 1943--------------------- 1900.00 1944------------------- 2500.00 1945 ------------2300.00 Average per farm, war years -------- $ 1750.00 He who shahl introduce into public affaîrs the principles of primitive Christianity will change the face o! the world. -Benjamin Franklin. Ail that is best in the civiliza- tion of to-day, is the fruit of Christ's appearance among men. -Daniel Webster. from TORONTO .will Photo graph AT THE BAL MORAL HO TEL from 12 noon to 9 p.m. Monday, Oct. 28th Introducing: MEVERS COLORTONE PROCESS SPECIAL OFFER ONE 8x10 COLORTONE OIL PORTRAIT IN BEAUTIFUL, DELUXE FOLDER ONLY $1399 *Clip out this Advertisement and present same with $1.99 at the Balmoral Hotel on above date. NO-W BUILDING RESISTANCE AGAINST WINTER DISEASES MINIMUM PRICES Bayer Aspirin ---18c-29c-79e Alka-Seltzer -- 29c-57c Vick's Vapo-Rub - 43c Frosst's 217's --- 35c-75c-$1.50 Beecham's Pills 23c-49c Anacin Tablets 25c-49-74-$1.19 Grove's Cold Tablets-------- 24c-44c Chase's Nerve Food -------60c-$1.50 Gin Pis ---39c-69c Kepler's Malt and Cod Liver 011 75c-$1.25 Scott's Emulsion ----59c-98c Vitadiet Capsules ---$1.15-$2.70 Norplex Vitamin B Complex Tabs. $1,-1.75 Vitavax ---$2.50-$7. Idaphos, 16-oz. ---$1. Idafer Tonie ---- $1.25 TIRED FEET PRtSCRIPTIONS A SPECIALTY ALEX 1URA SECORD CANDIES 1 C ombinaton< Sets Sensational Value 4 I68-PIECE DINNER SET4 IService for 8 and 11-PIECE GLASBAKE I OVENWARE SET 4 -SPECIAL - 4 $23.9S Complete i Dinnerware in "Spring Bouquet" Pattern4 a very attractive floral design IOvenware packed in gîf t box.4 ILimited Quantity. . . Act Promptly< Je W. nJEWELL PRO 'JE 556 d'BiG 201 BILLETTE TECH RAZO R c@mplefe vi/Pb 5 mtch/eis 6lette Vi-Mi Capsules ----- $1.85-$3.25 I.D.A. Cod LWe iVl---- 69c-$1.19 Mead's Viosterol ------- 65c-$3.25 Wyeth's Vitules--------------- $500 Mead's Oleum Percomorphum --------- 75c-$3.00 Vitamin produets fortify your body and increase your general well-being. Children especially need vitamins nowv for the building of healthy bones and teeth. We list many proven pnoducts below. Visit our store and select one without delay. Neo-Chemical Food - $1.154$2.454$4.45 Aiphamettes, Ayerst - $1.-$3.50-$15. Ayerst 10-D Cod Liver Oil - 67c-$1.69 Neo-Chemical Food Caps. 1.25-2.25-$S. IdaMait, Malt & C.L.O. - 59c-98c-$1.69 Abdol Caps., improved - $2.-$3.45-$7.59 Horner's Maltevol, 12-oz. - - - $2.00 Halibut Liver Oil Caps. - 69c-$1.19-$5. Mead's Cod Liver 011 - - - 50c-$1.OO McOREOOR DRUGS PHONE 792 - WE DELMSF CHURCHES ST. JOHN'S ANGLICAN CHURCH Rev. J. dePencier Wright, Rector 8 a.m.-Holy Communion 11 a.m.-Morning Prayer Subject: "Sincere Christianity." Nursery, 2 years and over. 2:30 p.m.-Sunday School and Bible Class. 7 p.m.--Service for the men of the Parish and' their friends. Ail welcome. EVANGELISTIC TABERNACLE Pastor: Il. W. O'Brien Sunday il a.m.-Believers' Meeting 7:30 p.m.-Evangelistic Meeting Wednesday 8 p.m.-Prayer MEYERS STUDIO PAGE SEVEN BEDUCED RAIL FARES Canadian railways are offering reduced rail fares for the Remem- brance Day hbliday period from Friday nmon, Nov. 8, until mid- night Tuesday, Nov. 12, it was an- nounced today by J. A. Brass, chairman of the Canadian Passen- ger Association. The special holiday fare will be based on one and one-quarter sin- gle fare for a round trip ticket. Tickets will be good for departure from nmon of Friday, Nov. 8, until 2 p.m. of Mondayr, Nov. 11, and will be honored for the return trip leaving destination not later than midnight of Tuesday, Nov. 12. ID innerwarej AD Ovenwarej