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Canadian Statesman (Bowmanville, ON), 12 Oct 1950, p. 7

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-v-I THURSDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1950 THE CANADIAN STAYESMAN, BOWMANMttL, ONTARIO PA (1! ~VV~ 1, Mr. Bill Widdecombe spent a week's vacation in Montreal. Mr. and Mrs. H. Simpson an< family, Toronto, visited Mr. and Urs. W. I. Tait. *--Mivljs Joyce Bragg, Shaw's, waE weekend guest of Miss JOYCE -VanCanip, Base Line. Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Hooper, Sus- anne aind Edward, Jr., Napanee, visited Mr. and Mrs. Art Hooper, Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Faulkner, Brockvilie, were guests of Mrs, Gus. Bounsali over the weekend. Mrs. Geo. Pritchard is visiting her daughters, Mrs. Fred Hughes and Mrs. E. R. Hanna, Toronto. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Wynn and daughter, Francine, Brantford, visited Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Tait, Sr. Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Goddard spent the holiday weekend witl- Mr. and Mrs. Jack Herold, Water- loo. SMrs. J. S. Black, Peterborough, visited her sister, Mrs. Seward Dowson and her son, Mr. and Mrs. E. Black, Detroit. Editor Sam Wilson and Mrs. Wilson, Weston, were Sun day guests with Mr. and Mrs. Geo. W. James. Mr. and Mrs. John Shaw, San- dra and Lynn, Oshawa, were guests of Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Cud- dahee. *Mrs. C. J. Smale spent the holiday weekend with Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Smale and son Richard at Ottawa. Miss Eva Hellyar has return- ed home after an enjoyable visit with her niece, Mrs. (Dr.) R. Ives at Stayner. Magistrate Glen Strike and Mrs. Strike, Ottawa, were holiday guests with bis brother, Mr. and Mrs. W. R. Strike. Mrs. S. G. Chartran and daughters, Florence and Doris, '*nt the holiday weekend witlh Wli . nd Mrs. F. O. Mcllveen at ,i Mr. and Mrs. Meineke and ,daughter, Sharon, of Hamilton, *spent Thanksgiving weekend with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. L. H. -Bucknell. Mr. and Mrs. G. W. Colmer, ýýMiss Donald Calmer, Bracebridge, and Miss Diane Thompson, Taun- ton, spent Thanksgiving with Mrs. .Y. C. Colmer. 4Mr. and Mrs. John E. Wylie and son Brock, Mr. and Mrs. Don Cox, Cooksville, were weekend ,guests with their parents, Mr. and eMrs. K. E. Cox.8 The Public Speaking Contest for Darlington Township Public Schools will be held Wednesday. Oct. 25th, at 8 p.m. in Hampton Sunday School Room. iMrs. B. M. Warnica who bas "been living with her son, Roy, In Oshawa for some time is now back in town and with her former neighbour, Miss Eva Hellyar. Mrs. T. E. Flaxman and daugh- ter, Miss Betty Flaxman, Reg. N., 'have returned from a pleasant six weeks' visit with relatives and :friends in the British Isies. They travelled both ways by plane. After an extended visit with friends at Long Island, N.Y., Mr. *and Mrs. C. E. Brown, Maple Creek, Sask., have been the guests of Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Stevens, Hampton, and Mrs. Herbert Lay- ,ran, Bowmanville. r = a Her many frieuds will regret ta eas-n that Mrs. Ella Strike had tise mis! artune ta faîl in her d apartmeut sud broke lier as-m in d two places. She bas since heen secuperating at the home of lier sou, Mr. W. R. Strike. Messrs Alan Osborne sud Bab e Keut took in the World Series basobaîl game at New Yark City. -They only saw the one game on Satus-day and were disappaiuted the series didn't stretch out for ai least one mare game. Guests attendiug the Hasbrouck -Hoaper wedding at Deer Park United Churchin l Toranto on Saturday were Mr. aud Mrs. F. 9 A. Wosry, Mr. Percy Werry, Mrs. SE. J. Silver, Ms-. sud Mrs. A. J. Hoar sud Ms-. sud Mrs George White. Mrs. James A. Phillips sud daugiste-, 'Miss Mariou Pisillipa, New York City, asrived by plane Iyosterday at Malton sud are guests o! the fos-mes's sister--'n- law, Ms-s. N. S. B. James, wbile visiting their numeraus relatives in this district.1 In the 25 music studeuts fsr Icommunitios across Canada who have been awardod tuition sud maintenance acholarsisin uthe jRoyal Conses-vatory senior sciscol in Toronto for tise 1950-51 seasan we wes-e pleased ta see tisat Ray Dudlev bas again heen hououred bv being awarded the Promenade Music Centre scisolarship iu piano. Congratulations Ray! Mr. Albert Young, Winuipeg, Man., bas been reuewiug se- quaintances in bis native town while gueat o! bis niece, Mrs. Russell Candler. Ah. is son of tho hate Dr. Rabt. Young wha was a wel-known veterinary bere for a number af years, as-aund tise tus-Il o! the century. r According ta Roadsansd Streets Chairman, Deputy Reeve Frankl Jamieson, wos-k on tise bad bales in King Street sisould start at the end o! this week. 'Mr. Jamieson who bas heen contiuually pester- iug the couts-actors ta get busy on the job .was at hast awarded somo success but he still wa't 1be happy until be sees them here actually at was-k. Tise members of tise staff of The Statesman are ves-y grateful ta Ms-. sud Mrs. John Everett, new tenants in Tise Statesman Block, for coffee and cookie late Tuosday uigist. Mecisanical faau- us-elas-ced tise staff ta wos-k inta tise webous-s o! tise maming in os-der ta get tisis issue out, and the refs-esisments supplied by Ms- sud Ms-s. Everett reâlhy tauched the spat. The regulas- meeting of St. Paul's C.G.I.T. was held in tise Lecture Room on Wednesday, Oct. 4th, at 7:30 p.m. Tise meet- ing apeued with a siug-soug which was euiayéd by ahI. Tise officers were then ehected with Betty Cars-uthers as President; Janet McGregor as Secretary; Rutis Rombougis as Treasurer, sud Mar- ilyn Hall as Press Secretary. The leader, Miss Donnie Croasser, thon read a etter from Miss Battle from tise Oshawa Presby- tory explaiuiug that tise study book for this year is "A New Look at Japan." Tise collection was taken aud offertary hymu sung. A lew games were then enjoyed. Tisere wes-e quite s few uew members jained tis yeas-. Next week is tise initiatian ser- vice. Tise meeting chosed with Tapa. A very pleasant eveniug was oui oyed by aIl. ......... LSOCIAL AND PERSONAL Phone 663 Wm. L. Lycett, local agent for tise Dominiou Lîfe Assurance Company, bas qualified for tise National Quality Award for tise second straight yeas-. Tise awas-d is couferred jointly by the Can- adian Life Insurauce Offices-s As- saciation, tise Life Inaurauce Agency Management Association sud tise Life Insu rance Association of Canada, ta those agents who demonats-ate tise ability ta obtain a specified volume o! uew bus- iness while still maintaining dldd accounts. To add ta tise triumph af win- uiug an award o! this nature, Ms-. Lycett was secenthy informed by tise Life Uuderwrites-s Association o! Canada, tisat ho isad been suc- cesaful in tise second year CLU. examinations ho ws-ote hast May. Tise course la conducted tissough tise Depastment of University Extensions, University o! Tas-auto. Mr. Lycett reports that should ho success!ully pasa bis third yeas- examiisationa next spsiug, ho will ho a qualified Chartes-ed Life Uudes-wsiter. Tise second year C.L.U. course seceutly compheted by tise local insus-ance agent, appears quite formidable. Besides Life Undes-- wsiting sud Salesmanship, it in- cludes Psychology, Business Fin- àuce, Life Insus-suce Law and fundamental drillsansd practices. Tise tisird year instruction ache- dule includes Estate Administra- tion, Business Insus-suce sud mos-e Psychahogy, Life Uuderwsiting sud Salesmausisip.1 Democracy Includes Ail the People (by Jasepis Liste- Rutledge) Ia democs-acy ahl take and no give? It almoat seema so as one listons ta tise entisusiastic wos-ds a! some o! labar's union leaders. Ms-. George Bus-t, speaking ta tise United Automobile Workes-s in Windsor recently, described tise trade union movomeut as "tise beat bulwark o! our democracy today." Uufos-tunately Mr. Burt wasn't as pleased witi tise atti- tude o! employers as- o!tise Fed- es-ai gaves-umont wiso, appas-eut- ly, isad not laoked at democs-acy fs-r exactly Ms-. Bus-t'a point of vîew, wbicis is almoat exclusively directed towas-ds tise mos-e solfiash intes-esta o! tise automobile work- es-s sud tise C.I.O. Tises-e must ho a lot o! people beyond Ms-. Burt's viow. but it ia isard for him ta realize tisat tisese have any pas-ticula- stake in dem- ocracy or as-e devated ta ita main- tenance. Ms-. Bus-t'a democs-acy includes immediate increases of wages sud the maintenance sud increase o! tise emplayees' stan- dard o! living, tai seek campany- paid insus-ance sud healtis boue- fits "ta a point wisese neitses-a wos-ker nos- bis family will ove- have ta psy a doctor's bill os-a isospital bill again." Ms-. Burt ap- pas-ently doesu't feel tisat tise val- idity o! contracta, as- tise eason- ablenesa or ps-acticability o! de- mandsarase matters witis wiicis democracy uoed couceru itself. We wondes- baw long it will ibo beorse tise mos-e seasoued sud reasanable segment o! oves-y un- ion begins ta woudes- if such de- mandsarase not doing tise cause of orgauized labos- a cousides-able disses-vice. Labos-'s gaina in tise past century, sud especially in tise hast decade of tise contus-y have been so stamtliug tisat it la isard ta believe that sensible mou wauld stilh ho dissatisfied. Grant- ed tisat tises-e are fus-tiser ends ta gain, fus-tiser benefits ta which tise was-kes- is eutitled, they stili ueed not ahi ho assured by one elaborate gesture.%. Tise public realizes baw im- partant it ia that tise hast lette- o! tise warker's rigists sbould ho protected and it bas tended ta support demanda with wisich it .vas nat wisolly in sympathy, feel- ing that it la bettes- ta go a lsttle ;oo far tissu not ta go fas- enougis. But public is beginniug ta recog- riizo altisaugis stihi vos-y slowly, tisat it bas a vos-y de! mite sud persoual stake ini sîl tisese ar-gu- monts, sud tisat it caunot permit impossible demanda ta deny tise ssasgiu o! incentive that attracta capital sud emplayment. To do so is ta undermine tise vos-y foundation o! aur democratie system. HESSIAN FLY IN ONTARIO Infestations o! Hessian fly s-un- niug as isigis as 50 per cent bave been repos-ted i winter wiseat iu southwesteru Ontario, accas-ding toas survey made by tise Canada Department o! Agsicultus-e's Di- vision o! Eutomolagy at Chatham, Outario. h la is ougist that tise oas-lier seeding o! winter wheat sud tise practiceofo seeding claves- with wiutes- wbeat as a nus-se cs-op with tise consequeut csrryoves- of the stubble, may ho factors s-e- sponsible for tise suddeni increase 01 the pest ini this area. Kinsmen Club (Continued from Page one) Stalin will declare out and out war without provocatioli. They fear the Russian philosophy. Dr. Miller said, "If Russians become convinced that we Democratic countries are going to attack them, they will probably provoke an- other war." This is not an im- probable situation, according to the speaker, "Every now and then," he said, " a United States Senator is credited with saying, 'Now is the time to attack Rus- si'. Similarly, U. S. Airforce officers have been known to, state that within two weeks, they could eliminate at least six of Russia's most important bases. Statements of this nature reacb Russia rapidly, and "that is what will provoke war," Dr. Miller said. Sereen Photograplis The much-travelled Doctor who left last weekend to take up his duties in Washington with the Technical Assistance for the Ec- onomie Development of Under- developed Countries Department of the World Health Organization, offered Kinsmen a view of some of the sights he witnessed in bis travels. Using an F2 Lika cam- era and no light meter, he was able to capture some of the most picturesque of European and Asi- atic sights on Rodachrome film. Hitler's mountain home in Ba- varia was pictured on a sereen set up for the purpose, as was bis huge stadium at Nuremburg. The ruined homes of Himmler and Goering were also shown ta Kins- men. Through the mned'ium o! colour- ed pictures, Dr. Miller took club members on a trip through Ger- many, France, Italy, Spain, preece and India, and such memorable sights as the Leaning Tower of Pisa, the Pyramids and Sphinx, the Eiffel Tower and the holy city, Jerusalemi were viewed. Speaker Thanked Kin Tom Cowan thanked Dr. Miller for both bis address and picture presentation. Said Mr. Cowan, "The silence o! the club members showed the tremendous interest taken in your presenta- tion." Presîdent Jack Lander added bis thanks to that of Mr. Cowan's. Visitors at the Kinsmen meet- ing were: Kin Jack Cooke, Osha- wa, and Howard "Mac" Sturrock, Bowman ville. It would just serve the Rus- sians. right if we.sent themn back thefr Duhbw 1 Kendail Captures Titl In Durham Bail Loop Keudal, South Durham League winuers, took a 7 - 4 victory over Bethany, the North Durham champions, in Newcastle on Wed- nesday, Oct. 4, to capture the Durham baîl title for the season. This final playoff series had gone into the fourth round with each team wipning once aud a third game ini Bailieboro tied. Tbey settled it on the neutral New- castle diamond. Kendal took an early lead and added to it, with Bethany drivijpg late to make it close. There were plenty o! errors and arguments throughaut the tussie, miscues costing Bethany the fray. Corn- ish and Quantril shared the mound chore for the victors; Ken- ney catching, w.hile Edmunds hurled neat ball ý ah the way for the lasers, as Reynolds ith receiving. Teams: ihe had defiuitely ended wlth Karea. "But," ho added, "'froin now on, It appears likely that Russia wlll In- dulge i other Koreas iu an effort to drhiu aur resources whlle not committing lier own Wa action. The speaker felt that "we should prepare ourselves mentally for what is ta came.", He sald oxcep- tional leadership Is necessary; pa-- tience, discipline-and resolve are a must. Those qualîties, MIr. James said, which corne from a free pea- pIe who have declded ta pay thse price o! freedom and who are un- ited, as we are in, in that decîsion. Ho Intimated that the price may seem higli, but thought no sacri- fice Woo large if it wlll later prevent the payment o! "an lufinltely higis- or prico in tears and blood and des- truction." Urges TJnIty "What can we do Wa particîpate lu a program a! defeating Com- muuism?"' questioned Mr. James. Auswerlng his own question he Apple Blossoms Now Showing On1 Hazmpton Trees Because Easter Iàlies declcled to bloom elght months ahead o! sched- ule, and because dandelions, po- tatoes, tulips and other oddities of Nature have made thie front page of The Statesman fromn time Wo tlxne, a collection of! Hampton apple trees decided that they should bring recognition to their f asily. Mrs. Joe Crawford, of Hampton, reports that apple trees loaded 'with Deliclous aud Snow brand apples have taken it upon themselves to blossom in October. Mrs. Craw- ford said, "«There are a couple o! dozen or more bunches on each tree. I've even picked some and have ttsem in the house." 'Usually we associate apple blos- soins with Spriug, but If local trees are goiug ta blossom sund bear at the samne tinie, perhaps an apple blossomi festival in conjunction with a huge apple auction Is in order. It wauld certalnly a ttract curious customers. Wm. L. Lycett Receives High Insurance Award ed by an enemy which we shali cali Communlsm." In Mr. James' opinion, the Commuuist threat la stlmnulating business through miAli- tary preparations and will continue Wo do so "until the shootlng war breaks out and we flnd ourselves again lnvolved ln world wido ca- -tastrophe." The speaker told the Bawmanville Chamber o! Commerce about a del- egation o! communistia minded Young Canadians who vlslted the Federal Parliameut with cammon cause o! having the Atamla Bomb outlawed and United Nations troopa wlthdrawu from Korea. "They spoke," Mr. James sald, "as though they were readlng from a book, a book wrltteu to promote the Com- muuist cause." These people, the, speaker lnferred, lxad become cou- verts Wo a religion, and lie said, "I was almost sick We my stemach wheu I reallzed that these Young Canadians and samne aIder ones had become lufected by a hypnotic di- sease a! the mind."» IoaryClub (Coniitnued from Page One) Rotarlan had helped construct thse buildings at thse summer camp andi tliey wero proud o! their handi- work. "'Besides that," he said, "'tley had a great tisse building and they found f ellowshlp ln doiug It."1 Under our present way bif doing things. - aur presont Industrial era -we doa fot have enough feilowshlp training lu thse homo. He told the hbcal club o! a visit he made toaa lghthouse ou the Nova Scoti5ai coast several yoars aga. Wlien ho entered thse building ho found a mother teachlng lier chilciren "thse three R's," and lier 12-year-old son taok a keon Interest lu stiowing hlm "the higlit." Training o! thia klnd la not evi- dent today, accordlng to the speaker, children do nat participate lu that particular kind of home life. Mothers no longer teacis their youugÉsters their A:B.C.'s, schools tako care a! this duty, and unlike thse littie. boy iu the lghthouse, chiîdren cannot take part in Dad's work. "It's at thse !amlly level that !ellowship begins," Mr. Smith said. Business Means Competîtion People, particularly business peo- pIe, do not get ta kuow one another as well as they should, the speaker! toid the Rotary club. A youug lad grows up and enters thse busine-s world. He flnds it a competitive world and lie canat become well acquainted with merchants vielug for local trade. "Competitively speaking," Mr. Smith said,"' a man one 'one aide of the street sella dresses and gives cosmetics away free inorder ta entice customers into his establishsment. on the other side of the street, a muan who deals ini cosmetics offers free dresses ta people wha would patron- ize ha casmetia store." Similarly, in the field o! tise au- tomobile. Dealers lu one particular hune o! cars are apt to "talk up" the !aults ta ho found iu a car o! another make. This Is modemn business, lie iutimated, but "I ho- lieve we progress through the world with an urisatisfied yearning for fellawship," and lie inferred tisat, conductiug a business lu the nature of the above.examples was not par- ticularly beneficial to good fellow- sp Religion Is Basis Mr. Smith said, "Although 1 may ho cousidered bold to say it, I feel that man has made an aw!ul mess of his religious life." He said mostI people travel down one side o! the street ta "1their owu chus-ch" an Sunday morning aud they seldom 1: take time ta notice others. Seldom do they visit anather chus-ch. Yet, the c(iurch is the one true basis upon which !ellowshlp can be founded. "If It hadn't been for S2,000 years a! ChrLstlauity," Mr. Smith concluded, "Rotary could flotj have been." Speaker Thanked Potarian Las-ne Doreen lu thank- ing the speaker said, "Every'ting he mentioned was o! genulue 1lu- tes-est. We onjoyed havlng you with us, Ken, sud will eujay having yau in the'future." President Jack Bastaugli added wards o! thauka priar ta closlng the weekly dinner-meetîng. Ratarians Less McGee, and George W. James, wha have been ou the sick liat dus-ing the summer mautha were gs-eeted witli a was-m aud !rleudly welcome an1 their re- turn ta Rota-y actlvity at the Fmi- day lunciseon. Visitors to thse meeting lucluded Rotas-lana Doug Deams, Barrie, and Art Livingstone, Art Alloway an Nie Jenkins, Oshawa. 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Drug Store Drugs Phone 792 Kezidaas-vuantril, nornisu nKen- Quatlng External Affaira Minis-.mo 'iporantthig-, ver" d- 1 uey, Gilmare, West Armstrong, tes-, Lester B. Pear-son, John James 1 viduai Canadian - can do la make Cortoux, Thomupsoan d Burley. sald, "They cannot be de!eated byl certain that ho doos his part in Betisany- Edmuuds, Rey*nalds, milita-y action alane. Military eucouragiug solidarity aud Uuity Sisson,- Stewart. H. Ryhey, Ginu, strougth must be supplemented bY amaug aur Canadian citizens. The Smith, Lowes, Rer-, B. Ryhey. Imaginative eoaumic sud social hundreds o! New Canadians who Keudal ---------------- 402 010 0 -7 programs if tise mas-ch o! Cam- have adapted this countr-' ýhould Betisauy-------- 001 030 0 -4 munlsm la ta be balted before It be made ta feel at 'home.' if they Umpires-Borland sud Camer- s-esches a point at which a military feel they are nat wauted they wll au. attack will commeud ltsel! ta thse segregate themselves into thelr members o! tise palithura as llkely own little groupsand dispel auy ta succeed." attempt at solid union. "If we are Chamber Commeérce Test oi Democracy ta ho a united Canada," Mr. James Tise speaker said, "Our way o! said, 'we must learu ta appreciate (Continued Fram Page One) living la ou trial again," and lu- tise things which they have brought ferred that tise Demacracy Cana- ta Canada because once they have ta get out o! tise jam. 'Yau've gat dasfuh u idfrl p been allowed to corne iere the ta drive yoursel!," ho added. proaching its moat difficult test. " aea mcssigs uCaaaa Communismn A Threat looks as thougis we must emba-k we have." "Most o! you have passed through upahi a lang-term costly pragram He said tisat the ricisuessansd tise trials aud tribulations o! os- a! prepas-atian for was in tise hope vas-iety o! aur national life eau be tablisising yourselves in business," tisat aur prepareducas will doter attribt:ted ta tise xny cultures tise speaker said, "sud are now lu- Cammunista fram furtse- aggre- represented lu tise Dominion. Ne' terested lu Canada's future whicli sion." He said tisat most people Canadiaus hs-ought differu folk- appears, at tise moment, tismeaten- believod tise five year "cald war" ways, languages, customs rat Ann ivers ary Thank Offering Services AT TIINITY UNITED CHUECE WITH BEY. E. A. KENT, N.A., D.D.,FAES.A AS GUEST SPEAKER Services - Il a.m. and 7 p.m. Special Music by the Choir Sunday School - 12:15 p.m. IRev. S. R. Henderson, B.A., B.D., Mx.r.LG.* Harle, Minister. Dfrector of Music D R . 1 m and skiils to their adapted Èome-' land and added to Its culture. They should flot be referred to as for- elgners, lhe asserted. «"Before We brand anyone with this name," hG told the gathering, "We should re'- member that even the Americapi Indian la alleged to have immti. grated here from Asia. Subsequent- ly, we are ail foreigners Wc Canada," he said. Foreigners Responsible Taday, Canadians depend toa great extent upon common noces- sities %which originated ln the hamelands of sa-called foreigners. "If we but remnember," Mr. James concluded, «t.hat a Canadian's day begins wheu lie gets out of- bed -ln his pajamas, a garment af Euat Indian origin; looks at a dlock, first used by medieval Europeans;, used a toathbrush, first used in l8th century Europe, and soap made first lu Ancient Gaul. Ho drinks his coffee. grown on an Abyssinian plant first dlscovered by the Arabs, and places on his liead a hat, invented by the Nomacis o! Eastern Asia. He then sprints for his tràin, an English invention. "At the station he pauses Wo buy a newspaper with colij Invented mn Ancient Lydia. He reads the niews imprinted ini characters ln- vented by the Ancient Semitps by a process nvented lu Gerrnany upon a material invented ln Chin~a. He scans an editorial pointing oult the dangers of accepting forelgu ideas. He thcn thanks a H-ebrew God in an Indo-European lauguage that he is one hundred per cent 1 - Speaker Thaked Mr. James was thanked for de- livering his informative address by Keithi Jackson, President of the Bowmanville Chamber of Coini- merce, w-ho said the suggestion that a local speaker be used lnstead of importing one from the Canadian Chamber of Commerce, had proved exceptionai. 1 E 9 t r E t p si 1% ir tc B n ti p !l ir rr ci S3 PAGE SIEVM m

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