Clarington Digital Newspaper Collections

Canadian Statesman (Bowmanville, ON), 23 Mar 1950, p. 2

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q'T= (ANATWAN aTATI!SMAS. BOWlL,%ILL. ONTARIO f1I.AYMAC!2r,90 1PGE TWO iACJ6r7&al. T wittbwhich in incorporated The Sowaauvill. Ne.w,,The ?Newcastle Independant * and The Ozone INews "i95 Yats Continuous Service ta the Town ci Bow-aville and Du.rham County 0 ci'Authorimed cm Second Casi Mail Pott Office D.partment. Ottawa. AU INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER SUBSCRIPTON RATES $" 2.50 a Yecu, strictly in advcmce $3.00 a Y.ax in the UJnited States Pubilsbed by THE. JAMES PUDLISHING COMPANY Bowmanville, Ontario GEO. W. JAMES, EDrros IMPORTANT COMMUNITY SERVICE .~Bowmanville Rotary Club is again .1-11aunching its annual campaign of Easter ;Seals to carry on its cammendable crip- -pldchildren's work. Circular letters are being mailed out with the seals and you -.,a re asked ta send back a contribution .> 'which will be turned over ta help crippled b",3children in Durham County. Many of those who are sufferng thraugh being .crippled, have cornc~ their affliction elfrom being victims of polio. It does not 1matter how they became afflicted, the ,club is anxiaus ta help ail of them ta become useful and active citizens and not ý,7just plain shut-ins. Life was given ta us -ýto make the most of and enjoy, being 2ebrippled oftentimes is a handicap ta be- 411inglable ta take part in sports and other ,,,.p.ublic events. It can prevent even or- dinary attendance and travel ta places of ---.;lcal interest. Truly such persans are un- 'fortunate in comparison ta those who Ehave the full use of ail their limbs. They need more than just aur pity, they need a ur help. Thraugh contributions for the Z Easter.-Seàa1s, we can help these unfor- tunate victims, if not-ta recovery, then ta Senable them ta have treatment and artific- il limb;,. etc., so t hat they can at least get somne-enjoyment fram hf e. S Like Christmas Seals, Easter Seals can Sbe used for attaching ta letters sent out Sbefore Easter and ta cards sent at Easter tirne.1 They become- messages of the cam- :paign -'ta thase ta wham they are sent wand iay well be, the means of securing rý otq onatians The members of the I anvile- Rtary Club have taken on thE taok, of soliciting contributions for this! worthWhileý cause. They will nat be m nakinig a.personal canvass, but letters wil be sent tô.: everyarie in whiçh will be the IEaster Sea s and an envelope. You are asked ta place, your contribution in the envelape arid-mail it - just as simple as Sthat»' t 'Easter is aà Urne when we rejaice be-' cause ,Christ rose ,from the dead, he sac- Srificed: azid suffered before, but triumphed Iand'roseagain.- Let us show aur Easter spirit by helping ta raise the victims wha have been struck down by being crippled. Send in your cantributions by return mail adsend aut the, Easter Seals ta remind othei' people that danations are needed for a worthy cause. CANADIAN BANKS HAVE HIGH RATING Canadians may be justly proud of their chartered banks and banking system which is considered one of the best in the :world. Known as a yaung country and £sparsely populated it was somewhat of a revelation ta read in its annual list of r. banks with deposits of over $1,000,000,000, C the "American Banker" ranks three Can- Sadian institutions among the first 16 in Sthe world. The Rayai Bank of Canada, Cwitb deposits of $2,144,113,000 is in l3th Sposition. the Bank of Montreal next with t$1,948,296,000, and the Canadian Bank of ZCommerce in l6th place with depasits of S$1,481,378,000. It is interesting ta note Sthat branches of two of these banks are located in Bowmanville. Only seven Sbanks in the western hemisphere, ail U.S. :institutions, and f ive London banks rank Sahead of the Royal Bank. Bank of Amer- :ica of San Francisco places f irst with de- Zpasits of $5,775,110,000, with Barclays Bank (London) second and National City SBank of New York third. EDUCATION HURDLES LOWERED Iand rules, don't in fact have ta take up ehardly anything that might require somne "coeieetrated study. EUNNING TRUE TO FORM It has often been noted tbat many of our prominent and successful men -in public life holding high offices in poiitics, finance, education and religion came from the Maritime Provinces. It was therefore not surprising ta learn that Thomas D. MacDonald, K.C., recently appointed as Commissianer of the Combines Investi- gation Act ta succeed F. A. McGregor, is a "blue nase." Mr. MacDonald, 41, is a natived of Stel- larton, Nova Scotia, and a graduate of Dalhousie University in Arts and Law in 1931 and 1933 respectively. He served in the provincial Attorney General's Depart- ment from 1933 ta 1949 being appomnted Deputy Attorney General of Nova Scotia in 1940. He joined the R.C.A.F. in 1942 and served in Canada, Belgium and Ger- many as an administrative officer retiring in 1946 with the rank of squadran leader. Prior ta bis appointment as Combines Investigation Commissioner Mr. MacDon- aid was a member of the Department of Justice and had beld the position of Sup- erintendent of Bankruptcy since April, 1949. The editor of The Statesman bas more than a passing interest in Mr. MacDon- ald's appointment, for in 1937 when re- turning from the Canadian Weekly News- papers Association convention in Van- couver we happened ta make bis acquaint- ance on the train and formed a bigh opinion of him. Althougb somewhat be- lated we congratulate him and welcome him ta "Upper Canada" whicb the Mari- timner stili refers ta Ontario. A SENSIBLE MOVE Manitoba is preparing ta adopt per- manenlt license plates for automobiles. Car thieves will not like this, because it will make their work mare difficuit, but the average motorist will certainly cheer. No longer will it be necessary ta fray tempers and fingers in wrestling - ith rusted bolts, not ta mention Wasting time, says the Financial Post. No one, not even the bureaucrats who invented the plan, has ever been able ta advance one good reason for this annual renewal of plates. This business may provide a littie work for the provincial reformatories which, in many cases, turn out the sheets of metai but surely there are other things for these institutions ta do. The permanent plate sbould end a lot of muss, delay and confusion and the motorist will not have ta memorize a brand new number every 12 moniths. As it is now there must be a large percentage of car owners who are neyer able ta re- member their license, a weakness which causes embarrassment when they seek their vehicle fn crowded and darkened parking lots or when it is stolen, BOUNDLESS WORK TO BE DONE Work available ta Canadians is boundless. Pientiful employment of Canadian warkers, on farms, in development areas, in factories, stores, offices, in construction and transportation, is possible as soon as we remove the trade restrictions among ourselves and between ourselves and aur foreign custamers. There wiil be no need for any gavern- ment ta make work when workers fram beginners ta presidents are willing ta work bard enough and long enough, for wages and prices which are in line with the ability of customers ta pay, at home and abroad. Any effort ta maintain restrictions upon the adjustment of prices, wages, or hours of work below a healthy standard, wiil resuit in unemployment. People wbo might be employed at wages and prices that their customers can pay wili be idle if they and their governments attempt ta keep wages and prices higher than the demand for workers and gaods will per- mit. The need of the moment is ta find the facts regarding the true effect of re- strictions upon employment and trade and ta remove every restriction that is not necessitated by cansiderations of defence and. supply in the event that Canada should be attacked. Unfortunately, a wholly free economy is flot passible while danger of attack exists. Fartunately, the kinds of production and distribution in which a free economy is possible within Canada, and between Canada and foreign customers, are num- erous enaugh ta provide work for every Canadian who is willing ta work for what bis services are worth ta the people who buy the goods he produces. -John Atkins in the Scene of Shingauk -John Atkins in the Scene of Shingwauk Farm. EDITORIAL NOTES Ottawa continues ta consider the un- employment situation lightly, insisting there wiii be plenty of work this spring. Fact is that too many people naw work- less have been taught by government that they are entitled ta jobs of their own choice, with wages, holidays, etc., ta match. These people will not accept just any work, but will continue ta be a head- ache. What is free enterprise? Well, free enterprise is prices kept down by cam- petition; it is taxes pald by business as well as the wage earner; it is reviard for the "go getter" and not for the lazy; it is oppartunity for the little man ta run bis own business, unhampered by red tape and regulation; it is less expensive gov- ernment and more profitable business. It is aur Canada, built on the principle of "igive a good man a chance ta get ahead and b.'» go on from there." Hlghllghts of Premier Frost's budget speech on Thursday in the Ontario Legilature were: Budget surplus for the seventh consecutive year $1,004,000 after providingz a Sinking Fund o! $20,626,000. Estimated surplus for 1950-51, $166,000. Hospitals tax reduced from 20% ta 15 cl, complete exemption up ta admission price.o! 15c. Grants ta Public Haspitals and Sanatoria for capital construction and maintenance totalled $13,100,- 000 ln. the fiscal year 1949-50, an increase o! $4,600,000 over the previaus ycar. Estimated grants for the caming year will total $14,050,000, a furtber increase o! $950,000. Grants ta Elemcntary and Sec- ondary Schools werc $37,285,000 in 1949-50. Estimates for the ,coming year pravide grants o! $42,420,000, a further increase of $5,136,000. Enrolment in provincial schoobs bas increased 81,000 in the iast six years and now stands at aver 727,000. Grants ta Universities are $4,- 342,000-an increase of $810.000. Provide for capital construction on public buildings and public works including additional men- tal institutianal accommodation and conservation pragram tbe sum o! $15,000,000. Provision for new homes for the aged and their maintenance Sametimes I wondcr if I'm chamging inta the acccpted but ta me unacceptable prof c s s i o n a 1 politician. Here it is less than a year since the election and ai- ready there arc signs that some transition bas taken place. I've baugbt anc o! those dark blue bomburg bats; bave bought a new pair o! glasscs o! the dark horn- rimmed type and on several occa- sions have faund myscîf gaing around a roamn shaking hands with everyonc present. Wben I find myscîf besitating ta go down town in a pair o! aid pants plus a two day beard for fear it migbt bace a vote, lil know I've rcally qualified. Newspapcr 'editors bemoan the fact that thcy bave so much mat- criai ta rcad that their cyesight suffers, but members o! Parlia- ment cauld give thcmn a long bead start and catch up ta tbemn witbim a wcck. Every marning, a!ter- noon and evening aur Post Of- fice boxes in the House o! Com- mons produce an avalanche o! printed and mimcographed words such as you've neyer seen. There must b. -thousands o! organiza- tians who are intcrcsted in having the Government do something for them and each o! themn sends every member reams o! weil-pre- pared arguments ta substantiate the dlaim. In addition, there are the publications from ail depart- ments o! governffient plus the daily copies o! House af Commons proceedings ta be rcad. We cauld use at bcast thrcc secretaries and fivc sets o! eyes apiece ta sort out thc mnaterial and give it a reasan- able amount o! attention. One o! the most itcresting pieces o! propaganda received during the past weck was a beau- tiful booklet printed on the f inest coated paper with a suede caver. The name o! eacb member was primtcd in the corner in gold leaf. It was so well donc that it had ta be scamned and rctaimed. The waste paper basket was tao or- dlnary a rcpository for such a fine piece o! printing. You'll b. amazed ta find that the subject proposed Greyhound racing for Canada. Yau'li also be amazed ta know that the installation o! threc o! four tracks in Canada would, it said, bring so much American money inta the country and wouid produce so many millions in taxes that the prosperity a! the nation wouid be assurcd for years ta came and, in fact, the national debt would be liquidatcd withim a short time. This may be a slight cxaggeration o! the dlaims but wili give you some idea o! the proposais which your member o! parliament is supposed ta rcad, ponder and mentally digest. The invention o! paper and primting was certainly a boom ta humanity. Without tbem we couldn't con- duct a war, a gavcrmment or a business. Sometîmes, I think we'd be better off in many ways if they hadm't been borm. This week at Parliament Hill bas seen the conclusion o! the Repiy ta the Speech from the Tbronc. You may b. interestcd in bow this operates. A couple o! young members or! Parliament, one in English and anc in French, maove that the speech b. adapted. Fromn then until cvcryanc is cx- baUstcd it is a free for ail in that everyanc cam speak on amything they please so long as thcy use pariiamentary language. This bas been comtinuing for a montb with ncarly 100 o! the 262 mcm- bers inflicting their weird and womdcrful ideas upon the chamn- booka md It will flot b. safe for wi» amaunt ta $1,350,0'0 in the comlng fiscal year. Grants ta Conservation Author- ities arnounted to $9Q0,000 in 1949-50. 496,000 h.p. of the Hydro-Eiec- tric Power Commission çf Ontario is expected ta be brought into service during the year 1950. A record number of miles of rural po.wer lime was constructed in the past year. Net Debt increase March 31, 1943 ta March 31, 1950, $25,303,- 000 while there has been added ta the Capital Assets of the Province $168,150,000 and the per capita net débt bas, decreased from $127.56 to $115.72. Subsidies ta municipalities and school boards for Highways, Po- lice Forces, Fire Departments, Health and Welfare, etc., amount- ed ta $70,000,000. Last year over 98,000 additional motor vehicles were -registered, an increase of 30 per cent since 1939. Total registrations are now nearly a million. Provincial-Municipal public ini- vestment program in Ontario amounts ta $25 million monthly. Aid ta housing by Ontario Gov- erniment second mortgage loans. Federal-Provincial Agreement. Ontario's mineral production the greatest in hîstory. Dominion-Provincial Constitu- tional Conference. Federal-Provinciai a r r a n g e- ments with respect to income tax and loggingtax. Ontario Budget- Hi'hlights men. when they feel themselvez unjustly put upon, turn ta gov. ernmeflt to save them. They complain if government does flot doa so. It might be well if they corisidered that government, as parliament generally, is made up of members who sometimes fear to let their public attitudes cor. respond ta their private views. The Canadian National Rail. ways owns more than 100,000 treight cars valued at nearly $700,000,000. Membel Audit Bureau of Circultiton£ Canadian Weekly Newspap»e Association w 1 ber. The onby other opportunity when such freedomn is aliaedi when the budget is presentcd. I bas taken a montb ta dispose a! tbe Speech from the Tbrone, in- cluding three amendments made by the Conservativcs, the CCF and the Social Crediters. Eacb of these is actually a vote o! confi- dence in the government 50 gov- ernment supporters remain solid in backing their administration. The political trick for opposition parties is ta word their amend- ments in such a way that some Liberals will appear ta be back- ing down on pre-electian pledges by voting against the proposed changes. Happiiy, I don't remem- ber making amy election promises other than ta act the way I feit the majority o! the people o! Dur- ham County would like me ta represent them so it basm't been toa embarrasimg ta date. If there are amy complaints, please let me know. Many thanks ta Statesman cor- respondent Ed. Youngman o! Pontypool for bis kindly rcmarks concerning these articles and for bis suggestions on the course I sbould follow in Ottawa in con- nection with obd age pensions. His comments were mast beipful and I'm wondering how many people tbroughaut the riding are o! the same opinion that the goverfi- ment should go slowly in bring- ing in expandcd security legis- lation. Bath the Conservative op- position and the CCF are con- demning the governmcnt now far mat tbrowing out the means test and bringing in pensions at 65 immediately. I think the govern- ment is wise in not alawing it- self ta be stampedcd inta a huge bill o! expense ta the taxpayers until the course has been made much clearer. Ed. will also -be interestcd ta knaw that my wi!e is organizing an anti-Yaungman league and expects ta enrolbis wife as anc o! the charter mcm- bers as a result o! bis quip about busbands being eager - beavers when it cames ta an opportunity o! bcing away from home. We Liberal members have tak- cm quite a bit o! kidding fram the Opposition farces following a study graup held a couple o! wceks ago with officiais o! the Canadian Commercial Corpora- tion wbicb daes the purchasing for the Dept. o! National Defence. A Montreal reporter produced a story ta the cffect that this was a secret meeting o! 60 Liberals who were discussing ways and means of obtaining patronage for their own ridings. It made a good story exccpt that it completely avoidcd the truth. We've been holding study graups since the opening o! Parliament, as many as twa or three a weck, ta learn more about the gavernmcnt de- partmcnts, how they function and what they do. Patronage, dag- gome it, secms ta be samething which is almost a thlng o! the past in federal gavernmemt cir- dles. In fact, since this alleged expose faund its way inta print I'vc beard dozens o! members complaining that they have prac- tically no say in their own ridings other than recommendations for scattcred appolntments. Thcy cite incident upon incident where top- ramkimg Conservatives arc doing the wark for the gavcrnment wbile Liberal warkers have been on the outside unable ta obtain amy work from Crown Corpora- tions or departments. It secms ta be patronage in reverse at the moment. Don'c magnify your faulta 1 If you habftually emphasize your shortcomings rather chan your abi- licies you creace a lot ot needleua unhappiness for yourself. There is a deeprooced desire in ail of us ta feel adequate. And if we las. chia sense af adequacy we impair aur mental health. You feel the lack of educaclon Is holding you back. Many of che world's most succcssful men b.d litcle schoollng. Many others made up for chis Iack chrough wide read- ing and study. You don'c like che shape of your noie? Perhapa not - but possibly you have a weil-shaped head or fine eyus. And neat, care- tully selected cloches cas do won. ders far your appesranlC No matter how many short-.( comings you may bave, you can discover just as many or mare as. Smc wlchin yourself. Ail you have ta do is add thbcm up. Looking at thas total will give new confidence. Remember cochat many faulta cas be minimized or elizinated by oses own efforts. So cake hearti Once you change, your ides. about yoursclf tram netacive to positive you'll find youre harnessed ta, a power chat will cake you towards happiness and success 1 la their anual statements, lifeici. surance companies casphasize th. positive side oft heir business by pointing -out the tact chat ch. larger share of benefics la paid out Co living policyholders. 180 1 1 Shutting the Door On Freedom (by Joseph Lister Rutledge) A recent issue of the Wall Street Journal commented sadly on a triumphant palitical boast made by Food Minister John Strachey in addressing a graup of Scottish electars. Mr. Strachey said, proudfly, that only 250 Brîtons had incomes, after taxes, of more than $14,000 where before the war there were no less than 11,000 in that fortunate bracket. Said the Wall Street Journal: "Mr. Strachey boasts that the door is quietly shutting on the free econ- amy in the cradie of freedom." A business friend o! ours, com- menting on Mr. Strachey's state- ment, took the argument a step, f arther. He suggested that the Food Minister hadn't made a very complete case. For instance, he hadn't mentioned whether the go- vernment, in cutting dawn the number o! heavy taxpayers, hadn't by the saine token cut dowm its awn income. He admit- ted that no one but the govern- ment knaws just how the total income of the 11,000 bigh income earners of 1939 compares with the total income of the present 250 graup. But aur friend had dame a bit o! figuring. He ex- plained, "One thing is pretty sim- ple, if you multiply 11,000 by $14,000 you get $154,000,000. If you muitiply 250 by $14,000 you get $3,500,000, a difference in in- came o! $150,000,000." Assuming that the amount had gone ta ben- efit the public, which surely was what Mr. Stracbey was implying, each of the approximately f ifty million people of Britain got as his share $3. Our friend wandered what each of them would have done with their $3. Probably used it ta pay his awn higlier taxes, or ta help support the growing number o! gavernment emplayees. His won- der grew as be reflected. Was it passible that Mr. Strachey, when hie was mot making speech- es, or bis listeners, when'tbey had1 time ta reflect on bis wards, ever1 supced that this very minor' $3 eneitmigbt have resulted in a poorer Britain? Haw much har they lost wben a creative farce that had belped ta make them great was discouraged? The "nation a! shopkeepers,*" which the great Napolean could scarn, but not master, as he had mastered s0 much of his world. had learned something from their sbopkeeping. They had learned the potency of the incentives of progress and profit, and about these ideas bad buiit a vast em- pire. It migbt even be wortb con- siderîng whether Mr. Strachey had much reason for pride. In- ded it migbt be asked whether the destruction o! incentive badn't also quaiified the rugged virtues of independence and daring and initiative and concentration on a purpase; wbetber, indeed, the rcadiness ta trade achievement for security may not bear same of the blame for the sad uncer- tainty o! Britain taday. Views and News By Canadian Editors Canadiana: Appeal in the Wat- fard, Ont., Guide-A d v o c a t e, "Blessed are ail those wbo do flot expect tbe Editor ta know every- thing but wha shall cal Up and tell hlm whenever an interesting event occurs ta tbcm; for they shahl have a newsy paper in their town." .. . Robert Andison of Ed- monton, Alta., clerk of the legis- lative asscmbly, is this montb attending his 44th session o! the legisiature.. .Mrs. James Suth- erland celebrated hier 1O2nd birthday at Newmarket, Ont., had a tea at ber home ta celebrate... At Reveistoke, B.C., the works committece reported ta council havina thawed watcr pipes for 160 residents between Dec. 19 and Feb. 6 . .. At Fort Vermil- lion, Alta., word cames that tuberculosis is prevalent amang the buffala in Wood Buffalo park, the discovery being made wbcn rangers killed some an- imals for meat for tbe Indians Your Member Reports From Ottawa By John M. James, M.P. (Article No. 5) clerks in its 100-year history. Rcferrimg ta the mcrcy killing case in Massachusetts, the Argus IObserver says: But tbe law against kilimg will remain on the EVERYBODVS BUSINESS Yesterday is already a dream. To- morrbw is only a vision. Today well lived makes every yesterday a dream of bap- piness, every tomorrow a vision of hope. Look wehl, therefore, ta this day. The birable man bas came ta ife after a long absence out of rural circulation and work. Some Prince Edward County fax-mers are reporting Up ta 25 applications for fax-m jobs they advertised. A Front- enac fax-mer put an "ad" in the paper for a man and took home a bundie of 40 letters. Happy days are ber. again! WORDS THAT LIVE,-Upon the mon- ument, below which lies the late, great, Wendeli Wilkie, the following words are inscxibed. They are important words: "The world is awakening at last ta the knowledge that the rule of the people by other people is not freedom. Freedom is an indivisible word. We must be prepax-ed ta extend it ta everyone, whether they are rich or poor, whether they agx-ee with us or not, no matter what their race or colour. . . We must have faith that the welfare of one is the welfax-e of al Only the productive are strang. Only the strang are free." anyone else te take it into his ovin% hands. However, jurors will usei their heads and hearts if, as, orc vihen such cases corne b.! arec them, whlch fartunately is rarely.c And we can't think off-hand o! a1 better way ta deal justly and( mercifully with these tragic situ-1 ations when they do occur. 1 About the new tax formula of- fered municipalities by the fed- eral government, the Leamlngton, Ont., Post and Newis offers a ne-1 vel alternative, that the gavern- ment dispose of current publicly- owned buildings andi adopt the same procedure as is now found most efficient by large ousiness, nameiy the leasing o! property an long-term rentais ... '"thus pri- vately owned property wouid psy its proper tax load; the federal government would nlot have mil- lions of dollars tied up in proper- ty sometimes of dubious value, and the total cost of operatlng each government d e pa rtme n t would be known... Mr. Peter Drucker, in Harp- ers, draws attention ta the f allacy o! the present pension plans be- ing arranged in the U.S. and Can- ada, as a substitute for wage in- creases. He points out that non- contributory pension plans, not based on actuarially sound reserv- es, are simply as dependent as employment is on the prosperity of employers. It is quite easy ta foresee a situation in which even temporary boss o! business by a corporation may leave it in a pos- ition where it will have ta choose whether ta use its revenues and reserves ta pay pensions ta form- er workers or ta continue em- ployment for present workers. Says the Brooks, Alta., Bul- letin: Unless there is sound money, security is an illusion. Continued over-spending by a nation is ex- tremely dangerous. The usual endI is an irreparable impairment of integrity and complete lass of confidence in its money." Commentary: Some business 10 For Furnture and Woodwork WA ERSPAR E HAME Barry Allun The Corner Grocery feaiures Gold Medal Peanut Butter in handy refrigerator jar 16-oz. 350 Bye Washing Compound introductory offer 2 pkgs. 410 BIRDSEYE FRESH FROZENq FRUITS, VEGETABLES and FISH Free Delivery King St. E. Phone 367 Bowmanville THE - TORONTO MENDELSSOHN CHOIR Sir Ernest MacMillan, Conductor Presents BACH FESTIVAL April l9th, 20th, 2lst Eaton Auditorium - Toronto - Massey Hall Order Tickets at:- Alex McGregor, Drugs, Bowmanviile Stokley's Kernel Corn 15-oz. tin 170 Campbell's Cake M x pkg. 320 Fancy Blue Back Salmon Golden Eros' heaches 28-oz. tin 380 Aylmer Fancy Strawberries 15-oz. tin 330 Cream of Barley pkg. 25< Macaroni lb. 130 15 «ý t> TntMSDAY, MARCIR 23rd, 1950 Don'f store away those old chairs and fables. Dres hem in goy colorn wlfh Wat.<spar Enamel, und moite fhem useful additions fa your home. Onie coaf will cover old enam.Iled surfaces solidly, dry quickly ta long-lasting mur-resisfing beaufy. $2n35 QUART 1. H. Aberiiethy Paint & Wallpaper Store 85 King Street West BOWMANVILLE

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