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Canadian Statesman (Bowmanville, ON), 7 Sep 1950, p. 6

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? aXAAWE~'s'îA U~ A~~ -- .%r~ ~ T~ICM. KTZ.EZUT The day o! the long-halred, gtarvIng artiat workiiig his lonely ifevaway in an attic has gone with tho horse and buggy. Art bas becorne big business! For this reason it has becorne an en- joyable, lucrative field for those with ability and training. Be- cause o! thÏ wide opportunities available to young artists, there can be a very definito career for talented young men and women * l this field. Theso opportunities can be in hidustrial design, book or maga- zine illustration, advertising, fa- ahion design, interior decoration, and the fine arts. Newspapers, magazines, dopartment stores, in- dustrial organizations, and ahl publishing houses require art staffs, as do many thoatrical and merchandising organizations. As one single exampie, one rnay consider the influence of the art- Ist upon package design with its Aika-Seltzen -- ----29c-57e Bramo-Seltzer --29c-55c-98c Sai Hepatica ---- 39c-79c-$1.30 Hudnut's HOME PERMANENT $3.25 Rtefil ----------------- $1.'75 Hudnut's Egg Creme Shampoa - ----------$1.25 Hay Fever Relief Raz-mah Caps. -- 60c-1.25-$5 Allergitabs $1.00-$2.50 Estivin ----- - $1.19 Duke Fingard Treatment ----- - $7.95 Lantigen "E"'- $6.00 Privine------- ---75c emphasis upon consumer appeal, gained with brightly colored and attractively shaped boxes, car- tons and baga. The modern artist combines creative imagination with tech- nicai skill, ernploying his knowl-' edge of ine. proportion, texture, direction, shape, value, and colon as elements; harmony, graduation, repetition, and contrast-as prin- cipals-combined with the use o! depth and rhythmn o! values, de!initely assure the success of his work. Itlsl his skill that trans- forms the material necessities o! aur daily li! e into objects of pleas- uro and beauty and convenienco. Designing national advertising is, in itsel!, an outstanding pro- fessionai career. Thousands o! artists derive excellent incomes in this field. Advertising de- manda the services o! professional artists for the creation o! post- Andrew's Salts------ 39c-69c Kkovah Salts --- 29c-49c-79c Enos Saits --------- - 59c-98e Lysai---35c-75c-$l.50 Listerine -- 29c-59c-89c Dodd's Kidney Pis --- 49c Fruitatives 25c-48e Dolcin Tabs ----------- $2.39 Bayers Aspirin 18c-29c-79e Anacin ---25e-49e-74c-l.19 Bile Beans --------47e Kieenex Oint. 59e Mecca Oint -------------59e Freezone for corna --32c Toni HOME PERMANENT - $2.'79 Refil ---------------- $1.25-$1.59 INHKANDY 2 9Ç 49Ç ers, bookiets, car carda, magazine' advertisoments, billboards, . and direct mail advertlslng. The arisa must understand the visual laws that develop sonsory impressions into layouts and dis- play pioces, the inherited idioms of visual representation and their application to present-day use, no that the finished Idea will catch the eye and repeat to the public a message that will translate Itsel! into a desiro to have, the urge to buy.1 The artist working with tools as well as brush createa the new designs for automobiles, house- hold appliances, radios, telovision sets, glassware. and toys. This la industrial deslgn. A f ield that is neyer satisfled ln Its search for fresh ideas! Nationally known magazines have a constant demand for the work o! oxperiencod artists in illustration. This demand is fur- ther assurad by the dernands o! the book publishing field, where illustrations for jackets and for pages o! travel and childron's books are desired. Here also the artists application of technique and composition can make his future great.. For young women who like to draw fashions and sketch figures there is a good career possibility in fashion illustration. This re- quires training in line, wash, and the KroMolite reproduction rneth- od used in newspapers. Young women rnay also find a future in fashion design, with a career in fashion specialty shops and with dress manufacturers. If you are a young man or wo- man with artistic ability seeking a career as an artist, it would be advisable to study and develop technique in a reliable art school under capable instructors. Seek a school with a sound reputation backed by an able faculty active in successful art careers. Most reliable schools will require that you be a graduate of high school or a junior college, and will care- fully screen you tiefore admitting you for study. They wilI also view some of your previous work and consult with you about your career. Cost of art school training, less board and roorn, will be about four to five hundred dollars year- ly, covering nearly ail normal ex- penses with tuition included. Day courses caver a period of three to four years, although some schoois off er accelerated pro- grams. Schools in many of the larger cities off er excellent even- ing courses for those unable to teje the full term day courses.- Christian Science Monitor. A Statesman Want Ad will sel articles no longer needed, and possibly pay for a month's oul or a load of coal. VERY UNUSUALi Macpherson took his gramo- phone back to the shop. Said the assistant: "It la rnost unusual to have a machine re- turned after a year's use. What's ,wrong with it?" "The needle's broken," explain- ed Macpherson. LOOK AROUND the More Yom Sec of Tractors the More You'11 Sec ini a CASE ' 4 Power Groups 20 Great Models Iill the current war scare and possible shortage of f arm machinery, it would ho wise to check up on your immedi- ate needs naw. Lame tractors are now an display. The Newcastle Indendeui I 9 Mr. and Mns. Wally Boyle and 7Billy spent a few days a week aga with her parents, Mn. and Mns. Robt. Smith. Mrs. W. H. Gibson is homo again after an enjoyable holiday with friends ina Meaford and Hanover. Mr. Hanlan Parker is holiday- Ing with friends ln the U.S.A. Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Gaines wero weekend guests o! Mr. and Mrs. Bill Daily and Mr. Bort Harmer la Gananoque. We wene shocked by the tnagic and sudden death o! hittle Billy McManus last Thursday. [t seemn- ed even more tragie because the little lad was hit by hi. !ather's car in Bowrnanville. The little lad was only 20 months o! age. Sincerest syrnpathy lu extendod ta hîs parents, Mr. and Mrs. Wil- son McManus Jr., his sister Bett«y and brothers Leonard and David. Mrs. Roland Morrison and Bobby, Coîborno, were recont visitors with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Cotter. Mrs. Wil! Blaney and ber father, Mr. J. West,.Regina, Sask., spent a week with fniends In Owen Sound. Miss Grubbe, Weston, ia spend- ing a week with Mrs. P. F. Le Grosley. Weekend vîsitors with Mrs. F. Branton were Mrs. Coulis, Thed- fordý Mrs. George C. Fenning, New~ Hayen; Miss Mary and Mr. Percy Tuf!, Toronto. Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Osborne, Mr. and Mrs. Jirn Thornpson and Susanne, Bowrnanville, w e r e Sunday guests o! Mr. and Mrs. Gardon Laking and Marlene. School an Tuesday -Teachers at their respective schools: Mrs. Gardon Ash, aI Kirby; Mrs. Mur- ray Walton at Newtonville; Mrs. Lycett, Orono, here. Although the teachers seorn ta be glad ta be back at thoir job again, we judge by some of the long faces among the pupils that the feelings aren't mutual. Mrs. M. E. Nicholson (former- ly Mabel Clarke, daughter of Mathew Clarke) now o! Van- couver, B.C., la staying with Mrs. Herb Brown aften sixty years' absence frorn town. Sho is hav- ing a grand time visitlng the oid frionds and relatives stili re- maining. Mrs. Herb Brown's slalom, Mrs. George O'Connell and daughter, Betty, Toronto, visited her over the weekend. *Miss Gladys McLaughlin who has frequently visited her mother, Mrs. J. J. McLaughlin, who stays at Mrs. Brown's, has now ne- turned ta Arizona. We are very sonry to leain that Miss Annie Drummond la 111 at Mrs. E. C. Hoar's. Miss Muriel Lake and Mr. Bill Koyes, Toronto, spent the holiday weekend wîth hon moîher, Mrs. Frank Gibson. Mayor and Mrs. Tracey Manes, Leaside, spent the weekend wiîh his father, Mr. H. T. Manes, Miss Marjory Toms is now an employee o! the local Canadian Bank o! Commerce. Good luck ia yaum. new venture, Mamjory! Miss Barbara Bonathan and Mm.. Walter Feetzel, Hamilton, spent the weekend with Mr. and Mrs. H. C. Bonathan. Barbara, who has finished her training is now an R.N. and is planning ta enjoy a well-eamned holiday. Syrnpathy is oxtended ta Miss Mary Bell on the loss o! her father in Cayuga last Tuesday. Miss Bell has returned ta rosume her teaching duties at the local high school. The cattagers are graduafly dwindling down but then with tho cold weather we have had ately that is easily understood. The Willis-Chitty's, J. P. Looso- more's, Arthur Weinbemger's, H. G. WalIon-Ball's and Mrs. H. J. Hlamilton, Mrs. Ida Stinson and Frances have ahl retunned ta Toronto. Mr. and Mra. Fred Lake and famihy have moved ta, their new home la Ajax. We wish them ho best in thein new home. The babour Day weekend was narred by the number o! tragic accidents on the highway. Cane- lessness and slippery pavement Nurses" Reunion (Contlnued Fnom Page One) Mis. Smyth. This giftislato ho ready for the opening ceremonies aI tIhe hospital. Final decision on ils selection from suggestions made, was lot with the supervis- ons. It was unanlrnously decided ta make the no-union an annual oc- currence and Mrs. Squain and Mrs. Dumas wero officially ap- poinîed ta their positions o! Presi- dent and Secretamy-Treasurer. Community singing o! old lime favorites was enjoyed and then each guest was nequested ta give a brie! resume o! hem lite since she le! t the haspital staff. This was vemy intemesting and bnought !orth much liItle-known la!fon- mation cancerning marniage, farn- ihy and place a! residence. A few chose the single life and are stili fohhawing their vocation. The evoning closed wiîh al jaining bandsanad singing Auld Lyne Syne. Guesîs who came tram a dist- ance lncluded: Mrs. Edith Pinch Bray, Minico; Mrs. Winnie Mor- ris Young, Toronto; Miss Mary Young, Toronto; Mis. Doris Han- ker Cull, Newmraket; Mrs. Edna Fonder Dunn, Oshawa; Mis. Ethel Sanderson Hamlyn, Ottawa; Mrs. Olga Lamnb Bounsaîl, Milton; Mia. Dormis Hillier Sheppard, Queens- tan; Mrs. Annie Atkinson Orn, Rydal Bank, near Sault Ste. Ma- rie; Mrs. May Lamb Hoîz, Faim- view, Penn., U.S.A.; Mia. Anne Butîery Cale, Toronto; Misa Don- othy J. Cahoon, Mimico; Mrs. Mar. janie Forsyth MacDonald, Osh- awa: Miss Emma Henders, Jan- elville; Mis. Irono Stephens Wein- ont, Hamilton; Mms. Jessie Ho- garth Wilcox, Cobourg; Mis. Stel- la Couch Hills, Enniskillen, and sevemal from Newcastle and Hampton. wene the cause o! m&y.Hornh town John Mceegan mnd Frances <Bud) Stubb.rt were lucky ta escape with t*îeir lvea when their car was wrecked and flip- ped aven in th* centre of the four corners. There là a controversy over the colour o! the traffic llghts which seom ta b. at the base o! the trouble. Accurate information was not able to be gen because o1 the et! oct o! thepompous and Imprudent mn- ner a! the investigatîng officer on the nerves o! the victima o! the accident. Bud escaped with a bad. shaking Up sud a badly spnained ankîs whlle John was thnown out o! the car sud was bnuised and badly shaken up. Dr. and Mns. W. H. MacDonald, Toronto, wene Sunday guesta o! Mr. and Mns. H. S. Bitton sud Neil. AcrosaCanadc With the Wooklies * Canadiana: W. J. B. New- man o! Duncmn, B.C., grows such wonderful vegetableu that they corne frnm near end fan; even two cars reently from Califor- nia, who said if they could gnow tomatoos ike that in their state thoy could make a fortune... On the hotteat day o! the surn- mer, Surrey, B.C., couneil con- siclered the punchase o! a snow- plow . . . Mn.. A. Ashloy o! B3rampton, Ont.,,bas a lily in ber backyard whlch. bas 22 beautiful blooms on it . . . Infestation o! the English grain aphid bas reach- ed epidexnic proportions In oat fields for the second yeam lnaa row, the entomologist at the ex- perimental station, Agassiz, B.C., states . . . Near Cranbrook, B.C., a coroner's jury decided Oscar A. Nelson dled of naturai causes prior ta being rua aven b ya bull-dozen la the bush . . . Fred Williams o! the St. Croix Mill1 at Milîown, N.B., completod 60, years as a stitcher openaton, hadi his final shift recently ... Reeve Brooks Brooks at LangleY Prairie, B.C., declded to get tough, an- nounced: "Any man who cornes in here with a personal chip, log and a cord o! wood on his shoul- der and wants to ai «ue polies '0 gng to be orderea'1out"... The-SI.Stephen's, N.B., Business College, Miss M. T. Crabbe, prin- cipal, i. closing up after 54 years in the town . .. At Crystal Lake, Saok., 12-year-old Wilfred Home- niuk axnazed ail men golf ers when ho won the golf event with 101 for 27 holes . .. A Lady God- iva (wlthout the horse) at Prince George, B.C., was flned $10 ini court; she offered no explanation for her conduct, and disclaimed even belng a Doukhobor. * States, the Grenfeil, Sask., Sun* "There Io an argument in favor o! froe enterprise. If it were flot for people who are will- lng to risk loslng money In the hope o!fwiaking more, the oul un- der Saskatchewan, if there ia any, would be there until Kingdorn Corne." * The Idea of curing poverty by assistance to the poor, the Mdes. of uslng the power of the state to improve the condition o! the lie of the people - these are splendid . . . Mr. MacNarnara is only warning us that they may be carried too far. - Carleton Place Canadian. * The train whlstle Ia Canada's national anthem.-Granby, Que., Leader-Mail. * Junior Farmera Clubs and Institutes have becomo a strong feature o! the rural life of to- day. Years ago il was saîd the country boy and girl could ndt in- terest thornselves on the farm. To- day there are as interesting times and as delightful social gather- inga there as in the city. They are fewer, of course, a decidely desirable factor. - Learnington Post. * John W. North: "If we as a country do not continue to op- erato upon a profitable basis we cannot progress. If we do flot progrs wo shaîl inovitably stag- nate, since no economy can long romain static ln a dynamic world ...the fact that even in so highly a profitable year as 1947 no less than 25% o! the taxable business- es in Canada had no profits should be a real cause for con- E 1" cern. Why? Because the wages they had ta pay for Iabor and the prices thoy had to pay f or mater- iais and sorvicès, plus the amaunt of indirect taxes they had to psy 10 government at variaus levels (that is taxes before there was even the possibility o! any pro- fits) were so great." - * The Rural Sceno: The stark reality of the present dernands the highest and the best that de- mnocratlc people have in thom. What there is to win is worthy af all that good mon can give. The free world must be prepar- ed to give ail or givo up. * Ciipped: Nicolai Lenin, that master revolutionary, k ne w whereof ho spoke when ho de- clared that the liqullation o! the middle class through high taxes was the sure way o! ensuring the succoss o! cornrunism. Hlgh tax- os and inflation are twins--en- courage the growth o! one and inovitably encourage the growth of the other. 4» The Sprinighill, N.S., Record asks the question: "Women want peaco, but do wornen want peace enough to fight for it with these weapons always at hand - love, understanding, honesty and dis- cipline?" LOOK AHEAD AND PONDER The cold war, which, almost overnight, Iurned int a very hot war indeed in Korea, is now very much aur business. Canadian warships are oporaîing in the Pa- cific, under United Nations corn- mand. Canadian transport planes have been allocated ta the same theatre. These are mare Ihan gestures. They neprosent a pos- ition fnom which wo cannot ne- treal wiîh dignity or safety. They represent one more drarnatic stop toward that ail-out war, that we stili hope 10 escape, but for which we must now more oner- getically prepare; knowing that, shouid it came, we will no longer be an the fringes of tho conflict. WiIh these new responsibilities before them, rnany thought!ui Canadiîans are beginning ta ask thernselves whether in the iight of such passibilities, which were neyer very distant, we have nol naîher necklessly usod up aur me- WHEN YOU SHOULD STOP ADVERTISINO, Just a few suggestions to the man who feels his business and his name are so well known that lie needs no sales help J man becomes a creature of habit so thor- oughly he will certainly buy this year where he bought last year ... younger, fresher and spunkier concerns in your line cease starting up and taking ilyour customers" away through advertis- ing ... populat ion ceases to increase and no new folk want to live and work in your town ... you have thoroughly convinced'everyone who ever has or ever will be in your store that they will now and forever get better buys from you.. business principles reverse and the non- advertiser does more business than the suc- cessful advertising merchant ... mnen stop making tremendous strides in busi- ness through well-planned newspaper ad- vertising.. you can forgei the words of wise merchantà the world over who attribute their success ta wise use of newspaper advertising ... you would rather have your own way, even if you f ail, than follow advice and perhaps win success.. you want ta be rid of the troubles of waiting on customers and tired of making money. ADVERTISE IN The Canadian Statesman Wha-re it ls estimated your store message ls read by 12,000 prospective customers every week. sources. True, the wbl1aro mes- ures we have undertaken are id;- rnfrable in intent, but have they used up, for personal uecurlty, resources that were need.d for national aecurity. Consider a few basic figures and the implication&I nvolved. We are presently providlng, in part, for 4,233,199 - children through Family Allowances. W. are ldoking after 282,584 aged persona by way of pensions, and we are planning to extend these benefita in the near future to an additional 391,414 persona. Mr. M. J. Coldwell, a fow montha back, was dençuncing that a _ niggardly and urgihg wider bene..t fits. But let that go, and lot usw add only the benefits for 10,517 blind persons who, obviously, must be asetsted. That xneans a total of 4,917,638, or 36% of our estirnated population for 1948, who are partiaUly but directly subsidized. And that sa3ys noth- ing of price support for the faim, freight subsidies for large sec- tions, subsidies for certain classes of employed persona, aubsidies for houslng,. and variaus other forms of support. Behind these direct, and les direct, beneficiaries thore is a tot- ai work force of just under five million-a group of personalinl- corne tax payers o! less than haîf that number,-the main providers. What do they provide? Effort, of course, whlch represents in- corne that may be taxed. And what are the chie! returns? The ./ tax from the income of individu- ais, $611,500,000; from corpora- tions, $586,500,000; from the sales tax $415,000,000. Total them and you have $1,607 million, or a little botter than haîf o! the $2,- 400 million budget that Mr. Ab- bott warned was not likely to de- dline. It is easy to say that we will meet new outgo by added taxation. But how long can one quarter of the people pay such a large part o! such extraordinary expenditures? It must bo ap- parent that people who are so constantly demanding Increasing and enlarging subsidies must learn to bear a larger part o! the costs of that and our Increasing burdens. ---a.-. HOME REMEDIES Gilleite Rockel Razor, wiih 10 blades - $1.29 COWINGS DUG TOEFI P'..6CK9GSDU SOERS WHEN WHEN WHEN WHEN WHEN WHEN WHEN WHEN WHEN W. R. DROWN DEALER FOR DeLa'val M1Iers and Stparators Beatty Ds. Stable Equlpmemt W KiN*ST. W. PHONE m RECULAR LARGE. 296474 THE SPEC'IAL LIPOID . SO LjVENTjý- MAKES TEETH BAZZLINC WHITE ~V-.h- PAGE Mx ý m M eàk- e "M CMAMM OTATEMUN. nnwvàwvwxàL en"-àim -

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