?RIJRSDAY APRIL l2th 1951 THE CANADIAN STATESMAN, BOWMANVILLE, ONTARIO PACR ~WVW?4 SOCIAL AND PERSONAL I Phone 663 Mrn. W. C. Hickling, Elmvale, Messrs. Geo. E. Moody, Dave uited her sister-in-law, Mrs. J. Higgon, O. F. Robson, Walter De- IrElliott last week. Geer. Forbes Heyland and Geo. Mr. Ray Dudley, Toronto, was W. James represented Bowman- home for the weekend with his ville Rotary Club at the Charter mother, Mrs. Reta Dudley. Night ceremonies of the new Mrs. R. M. Jamieson spent tw~o Aurora Rotary Club on Wednes- weêks with her daughter, Miss day night. Gladys Jamieson, Windsor. Mrs. Gerald Beynon and daugh- Mr.Jac Eatauh. upein-ter Sandra, Parry Sound; Miss Mr.denackfBosTangh, Superin-Ruth Newman and Mr. George tendenatio oy n shaTrain SholLawinger, Toronto, visited Mr. Assoiain i shw Mna and Mrs. James Newman, Silver even~ng.St. Mrs. Beynon is remaining lfBill Robinson, Royal Con- for a few weeks to help care for ser1 rY of Music, Toronto, her mother who is il]. speaf the weekend with his par- M ents, Mr. and Mrs. C. S . Robin- Mr. and Mrs. H. H. Casbourn son, plan on motoring to Sarnia with Editor H. E. Rice of The Hunts- their daughter Irene on Saturday ville Forester and Mrs. Rice gave to attend the christening of their the Statesman office a caîl on granddaughter, Janet Ann, daugh- Tuesay hil on hei wa toter of Mr. and Mrs. Harold Cas- Tuesay hil on hei wa tobourn. The christening will take Montreal and New York. place in St. John's Anglican S Mr. and Mrs. Elwood McCul- Church,, Sarnia, and Miss Irene loch left on Monday for their Casbourn will be godmother to bone in the West after spending the child. Mr. and Mrs. Sidney t.he winter with their parents. Casbourn, Toronto, also plan at- Mm. and Mrs. N. G. McCulloch.. tending the ceremony. Miý. and Mrs. Clame Garton On Saturday, April 7th rela- and Mms. T. A. Garton motored tives and friends gathemed at the th St. Thomas on Monday to at- home of Mr. and Mrs. Hubert tend the furnemal of the fommer's Murphy to surprise them on their $iandfather, Mr. Samuel Garton. 20th wedding annivemsary. They Bob Noble won the Bowman- were presented with a beautiful Ville Boating Association mantel floor lamp from their children radio draw Saturday night at The and an end table from relatives Itoyal Theatre. A person select- and friends. Mr. and Mrs. Mur- cd at andom from the audience phy thanked everyone for the ipade the draw. beautiful gifts. The evening was County Health Unit report o1 spent in dancing, after which a t9mmunicable diseases for week delicious lunch was served. ending April 7th shows a con- Mr. and Mrs. W. F. Quick and siderable increase of 229 cases Mm. and Mrs. Sam Brooks attend- With red measles scoring 105 and eda farewell party given by Dr. hiumps 78 cases. and Mrs. George Werry, Oshawa, Mr. Jim Williams left by on Saturday in honor of their ýlane Sunday evening for Los cousins, Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Angees, Caîif. to attend the fun- Parker, who leave this month eral of his brother-in-law, Mm. for Stockholm, Sweden, where Adolphe Koldofsky, who died Mr. Parker will Ïbe attached to the suddenly on April 8th. Canadian Embassy theme for the Mr. and Mrs. Carl Bradford, next three and a haif years. It Cery Bradford, Miss Orma West, will be recalled that Mr. Parker Worcester, Ohio; Mr. and Mrs. was on the B.T.S. staff heme sev- Alvin Caseley, Sharon and John, eal years ago. .ihmond Hill, were Sunday People going home from work ,fpests of Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Monday evening were quite amn- Pyre. azed to sec a large banner bqar- Mm. and Mrs Donald Lawson ing the womds Cornz 'A Poppinl' eind sons attended the christen- gayly floating in the breeze ing of little Anne Rosemary Hin- around Dr. Keith Slemon's home ton, daughter of Mr. and Mms. on Centre Street. Evidently the Peter Hinton, Orono, on Sunday Dr. and his family were away for Waternoon. Mrs. Lawson was a a fe houms and some of the godmother for the baby. members of the cast of that famous stage production decided to play a joke. The banner was z. Jhn':removed fromn above Lander Si. ohnsHardw4re Store and transferred to Dr. Slemon's house who was Angicn huch also director of the show.Th Anglian Curch sign didn't stay there very long.i Rev. Warren Turner,E B. A., B.D. While the Canadian Senate bas the theoretical power of veto, in practice its functions are lamgely 8 am those of criticismn and scupulous HOLY study of legislation passed by the COMMUNION Commons. No matter how handicapped1 il a.m. - we are, we can always give some-1 CHORAL thing, if it is only a bright smile,1 or a kind word, or a helpful act.-1 COMMUNION Helen Keller.t 7 p.m.- The fruit of the Spirit is love,i EVNSNGjoy, peace, longsuffering, gentie-i EVENSONGness, goodness, faith, meekness,t tempemance; against such there is no law.--Galatians. TRJNITY UNITED CHURCH 11:00 a.ni. - MORNING WORSHIP Rev. R. R. Nicholson wiil preach 12:15 p.m. - SUNDAY SCHOOL 7:00 pan. - EVENING WORSHIP Principal Dr. S. L. Osborne Ontario Ladies' College, will prcach SPECIAL MUSIC BY THE GIRLS' CHOIR *0F THE COLLEGE, Rev. S. R. Henderson, B.A., B.D., Minister. Mr. R. G. Harle, Director of Music ti t il n: s s r a e: h: nc A cc 1 hý fi se sh o: a: ti m ar COMING EVENTS 1 CARDS 0F'THANKS Dance at Tymone Community Hall, Friday, April 20th. Ruth Wilson's Variety Band. Auspices L.O.L. 15-2 Reserve June 13th and 14th for musical demonstration in the Memorial Amena by Bowmanville Public Schools. 15-1 Afternoon tea and home cook- ing sale Saturday, May l9th, at St. Paul's Church, auspices of St. Paul's Evening W.A. 15-1 The Guide Mo>hers' Auxiliary are holding earummage sale, home cooking and afternoon tea at the arena on Friday a.fternoon, April 20th. 15-2 Newcastle Y.P.U. will present "The Bathroom Door" and variety program Monday, April l6th, at 8:15 p.m., in United Church Sun- day School Room. 14-2 Three-act play, "Raggedy Nan" will be presented by Blackstock Y.P.U. on Friday, April 20th, 8:30 p.m., in Blackstock Hall. Everyone welcome. 15-2* Bowmanville Legion Carnival, Saturday, June 30th, 1951. Tickets on sale for 1951 Ford Sedan, Kel- vinator Electmic Refrîgemator and Electrie Washing Machine. 8-tf Attend the Foresters' Spming Frolic at Varcoe's Pavilion, Fmi- day, April l3th. Dancing from 9 to 1, to Ruth Wilson Band. Ad- mission: gentlemen 75c, ladies 50c. 14-2* Fmiday, April 13th, 8:15 p.m., at Tyrone Hall, Solina Y.P.U. will present "Abigail Goes Haywime", under auspices of Tyrone Y.P.U. Admission: aduits 50c, children 15C. 15-1* Bowmanville Women's Canad- !an Club open annual meeting, April l6th, »3:30 p.m., Parish Hall. Speaker: Professor N. H. Parker. Subject, Ole Black Joe's Grand- children. 15-1* Evemyone welcome! Motion pic-j tures of Canada's beautiful Jasper1 Park and Pacific Coast. to bej shown in St. John's Parish Halli on Wednesday, April 18, at 8 p.m.i Refreshments will be semved.1 Silver collection. 15-11 Monster Cashi Bingo - in the Newcastle Community Hall, on Thumsday evening, April l2th.i 50c admission price pays for 211 games and jackpot. Extra games,« Shame-the-Wealth and door prize.ç Jackpot now $50. 15-11 Tinity Y.P.U. to present theirt annual play in the Town Hall,f April 26th and 27th. This year it's to be a classîcal drama by Jane Austin, "Pride and Prejud-) ice." Tickets available at Stuart t James Insumance Office and frm r any Y.P.U. member. 15-1*f Can We Stop Waste? By R. J. Dcachman Recaîl a story I sent out Sept. 14, 1948. It was a review of the book "Road 10 Survival" written by William Vogt, a scientist who has devoted a life-time of effort ta the great task of tryiag to pre- vent the world fmomn sacrificing ils hope of the future by consum- ing aur natumal resources faster than they can be built up. In that book he quoted a stamt- Iing statement. I have often thought of il since, il came from Edmund Burl:e and was a, part of bis famous speech on Concili- ation with the Colonies delivered in the British House of Com- rnons la 1775: "For some lime past the Old World bas been fed from the new. The scarcity which. you hiave felt would have been a des- olate famine, if Ibis chiid of your 1ld age with a true filial piety, with a Roman charity, bad flot put the full breast of ils youthful exuberance 10 the mouth of its exhausted parent!" We can picture il, we can sec, in imagination the poverty of the ,vorid which would bave existed .oday but for the discovemy of Aimerica. Vet we go ahead over- cropping our land, using up and burainig our forest resources with oilly the scantiest effort at conservation and renewal. What shall we do in regard to the f u- ure? Are we to alter our sense of direction and pay some alle.1- ion at least t0 consemvation? We have bad our owa chance of sur- vival in a faimly prosperous womld but we owe il 10 the future to ee that those who follow after shall not be deprived, by our ecklessness, of the possibility of agreat future! William Vogt's book was pub- ished in 1948. It was widely dis- ussed at the time. It was a sad story, now he brings us a warm- r and more cheerful message. He has travelled over ten thousand siles thmough Denmark, Norway nd Swedea studying the varied aspects of their economy. Ifle finds that with limiled resources, Etough climate and difficult ge- :graphy they have achieved a~ igh living standamd and increas- _d their generai productivity. In arecent interview he said Ibis: 'Ilere is a faatastic contrast to xaI you find in almost ahl the .st of the womid. Unlike mosî eopie that we find in the world oday thev use the intelligence ,hich is their natural hemitage." He found community foresi -s Khichi were set up in Norway 800 :1.000 years ago and are stiil ,eavy producers of timber and .mrewood. They arc operated on iscientifie basis. The fammers ;are in the barvest. Il is a part )f their revenue. There is no ;ch thing as wantoa destruction ) forests tbrough ovcr-cuttiag. The priaciples; they bave de- ;elaped for forest management ire also employed in the main- meance of soul fertility with di- 7ersified farms and proper crop otation. Erosion bas been me- luced ta a minimum. There are io streams theme colorcd with the îch brown soil of the nation. rhe streams and lakes are clear. 1 the Scandinavian nations theýv e now producing thre limes aýi I wish to thank my friends and neighbours for cards, lettèrs, fruit and flowers sent me during my sickness, especially Dr. Ferguson, Miss Kersiake and Rev. Somer- ville for visits. Mrs. S. Tunnicliffe. 15-1* The Women's Aùxîliary Mem- orial Park wish to thank the fol- 1owý*ng for prizes donated: Mrs. C. Oke, Mms. C. Clapp, Mrs. F. Oke, Mrs. W. Oke, Mrs. E. Read- er, Mrs. Murphy, Mrs. Kîlpatrick, Mrs. Corden. 15-1 Wes. and May Hoskin feel very grateful to their friends and re- latives for their sympathy, visits and good wishes shown to Mr. Hoskin by cards, letters and flowers sent to him during his stay in hospital. 15-1* Phyllis and Bert Stapleton wish to thank their many friends for cards, flowers and gifts sent upon their arrivai of their new daugh- ter. A special tbanks to Dr. McKenzie; also nurses and staff of Bowmanville Hospital. 15-1* We wish to express heartfelt thanks to our friends and neigh- bours for flowems, camds and their many kind acts of sympathy dur- ing our sudden, sad bereavement. Gladys and Tom Westlake and family. 15-1 ,Mr. and Mrs. Hedley Oke wish to express their sincere thanks to Dr. Rundle and nurses at Bowmanville Hospital, and to his many fmiends and neîghbours for their great kindness shown in s0 many ways during bis recent illness. 15-1* 1 wish to thank fmiends, re- latives and neighbours for cards, flowers and acts of kindness while in hospital and since com- ing home; also to Drs. Rundie and McKenzie, Supt. and staff of Bow- manville Hospital. Mrs. Edward Rundle. 15-1* 1 wish to thank my many friends and neighbours who s0 kindly sent me cards, flowers an(! fruit while I was in Bowmanviile Hospital. I also wish to thank nurses, Miss Sauvey and Miss Dohemty for their vemy kind at- tention while in bospital. Bill Johnson. 15-1* Mrs. Thomas Bailey and fam- ily wish ta express sinceme thanks to their many fmiends, relatives and neighboums for their mes- sages of sympathy and kîndness, beautiful floral tributes and ail acts of helpfulness extended in the loss of a dear husband and father. 15-1 The family of Mms. Richard Avemy, Hampton, here expresses their deep appmeciation to the riumerous neighbours and fmîends fr many acts of practical kind- riess and messages of sympatby including the many lovely floral )fferings received during the ill- ness and death of their mother. 15-1* The family of the late Mrs. rohn Forder, Blackstock, wish to thank their fmîends and neigh- bours of Blackstock and North Oshawa for their many kindness- es and floral trîbutes duming the llness and death of their mother. SpeciaI thanks to Rev. G. H. Nicholson for his kindly visits and comfomting words. 15.1. jmuch wheaî, rye and barley per Lacre as is grown in the United States and at the same lime they have maintained soul fertility. In Denmark theme is a high level of fomest production now gmow- iag on land which was simpiy wastc a hundmed years ago. Ail Ibis bas helped to make the Scan- dinaviaa people efficient, beallhy, prosperous. In longevity, health, education, caiomy intake, quality of diet, stability of govemament, number of books ead per capita, lhey have one of the bighest standards of living in the world. Mm. Vogt was asked if they were the bappiest people in the worldl. His answcr was "Yes, but perhaps in a different way fmom some of the temperamenlally li g htIer bearled peoples of the womld. There's a serenity and quietness about them." He stated furtber: "They are just about the most civilized people I bave ever lived amon g." This shows pety clcaly some of the things we ought te do in Canada. We are almeady doing some of them. Theme is now morc effort 10 prolect the slopes of our mountains against the ravages of flood and fime. We are pmobabiy not now buraing our natural me- sources as rapidiy as we did at oae lime but theme is vcry littie effort made in bhc higber ubiliz- ation of the land. We do not sce bo it that evemy acre is employed by putting il 10 the most effective us possible ia the circumstances. As a nation we live for today. We strive desperately, of course, 10 lay something aside for the' use of our children, somethingc that will help them for the future but lhough we do that in a pers- onai way we neglect, in ils broad- cm sense, the expansion and de- velopmeat 0f our natural resour- ces. As il is today we give with one hand and take it away witb the other. There Are New and Meatier Chickens (By Lewis Milligan) Like cverything else in Soviet Russia, the motion pictume ini- duslry is nationaiized, and the plays produced must conform 10 the Party Line and dramatize communist ideology. A lttie ro- mance may be worked mbt the plot, but the beroine must not be glamorized to the extent of out- shining or detractiag fromn the giomy of the Soviet hero and the propaganda of the play. The vil- lain is always cither a masked "forgeiga agent" or a "reaction- arv" an'jd he i,- deservedly liqui- datecd or be abjectly confesses Alex. We Deliver that be was aL. wrong ini tbc last act. The Moscow paper, Izvestia, re- ports the appeamance of a newv feature film, "The Great Force," on the screens throughout the country. The theme of the play is, "the stmuggle of advanced Sov- iet science against rcactionamy bourgeois ideology, cosmopolitan- ism and the kowtowing befome what is fomeign." The audiences are said to be "moved by the fierce stmuggle between the bold irViovators, those who are blazing new trails for science, and the loyers of routine, the slaves of obsolete dogma. the antipatriots who pmeach cosmopolitanism, Amcrican-inspired dogma of 'one common, world science'." That is quite a mouthful, but it was no doubt quite impressive with Russian readers. 'he villain of the piece is a man named Milyagin-this may be a mispronunciation of my own name, but he is no relation. Mii- yagin is descibed as "The bead of a scientifîc research institute, but a limited man, prisoner of cosmopolitan ideas which are alien to us, who is blinded oy Bumopean and American 'au- thomities in the field of science,' who does not accept the teach- ings of Michurin and Lyscnko, and leads the institute along tLhe disastrous path of complete isola- tion from practîcal socialist agri- culture." The bero is a PrW.. Lavrov, " a scientist full of cre- ative daring, and a bold and un-j tamable 'shock trooper in the Michurinist army'." In the course of the play, Lav- rov "ruas imb difficulty." Thei text of the article is worth quot- ing: "He (Lavrov) bas set him- self the plain but daring and im-1 portant task of developing a new strain of meatier chickens. He1 tries to tackle the pmoblem byi I /7~,'Aniazing '$~J Mothproofing - Method 16-Or. 32-or. 64-or. 89r, » $1.39 - $1.98 16-oz. with atomjizer $1.49 Crop Improvement Grants Increased The County Crop Improve- ment Associations throughout On- tario have been doing some very worthwbile work and the grants now available to these organiz- ations will enable them to do an even better job. So stated Col. the Hon. T. L. Kennedy, Ontario Minister of Agriculture when he announced the grants available to these organizations had been in- creased substantially. Estimates recently passed in the Ontario iPound - 250 I.DA. Brand MOTE KILLER Kilîs flyiag moîbs, larvae and eggs. 1 Pound - 590 Legisiature provide for grants of $300-00 to each local association for project work, with an ad- ditional $100,00 grant if a secd faim is beld. The total amount of tbe grant was formerly $200.00. In making the announcement, Col. Kennedy pointed out that the increase in these grants was in keeping with the Report of the Select Committee on Conserva- tion in which il was recommcnd- cd that "Govemament grants to Couaty Crop Improvement As- sociations sbould be lncreascd so that they may undertake an ex- tended progmam of local demon- strations. means of controlled changes in the environment of the embryo. He knows that if he succecds in increasing tbe weight of every. cbickea by one kilogram, thous- ands of- tons of excellent meat will be pmoduced in the country, and the cra of abundance will. be bmought neamer." That is wbere the villain, Mil- y,àgin, cornes in and does bis dirty womk, and the plot tbickens with the chickeas. '"Milyagin, bbc ig- noramous in science and petit bourgeois in life, takes advant- age of bis position to thwart Lavmo's plans. He bans Lavro's theme from the institutc's pro- gram. Academician Rublyov tries to argue Lavmov out of bis ideas, and their meeting is one of the tensest episodes of the film, fmoma the emotional as well as the ideological point of view. Lavmov bravely combats Milyag- ia's base altempts and exposes Rublyov as an obscurantist. Fin- ally he triumpbs, thus reflecting the lasting triumph of the new and. progressive elements over obsolete vestiges of the past in the Soviet Union." The film is evidently a thmiller up to this point, but it ends rath- er pmosaically. Ia the final scene, we are told, the members of the institute assemble (pmesumably at a meatier-chicken dianer), wben a "mepresentative of the Central Committee, profoundly and clearly reveals the source of the great, life-giving force which inspires the Soviet people: the guiding and dimecting baad of the party of Lenia and Stalin." Refemming to the "feminine cie- ment in the film," Izvestia's me- viewer thought it was "not shown convinciagly." It appareatly de- tracted somewhat from the struggle of Lavmov to carry out bis original idea of "developing a new stmain of meatier chickens.'A 33 DIVISION STREET BOWMANVILLE h M ~,dendnt ~ ~ JCOMPETITIVE PRICES- PLUS PERSONAL SERVICE Alliace vSPECIAL VALUES AND REMINDERS FOR THURSDAY DiugistsFRIDAY AND SATURDAY Cold Cream Theatrical Type, 1-1b., Reg. 69o 51CI Cream of Tariar 2 - 4 oz., Reg. 20c, 35e 14c, 21c Jars Ao at' V Aromaiic Cascara 97 0~ 41.1a I I.H Ndy Tbe IRL Relieves HEADACH L~'1 Calms you NERVES 29Ç - '55Ç - 98Ç GIN PULLS fheumatic pain iwollenoching ons deroinged Sdneys. Reg. SuxeP L 490 _ 74o~ 7t 171. ý4 3 - 6 oz. 23c, 39c1 Borax 1 Pound- Reg. 25e 19C AMM-I-DENT Ammoniated TOOTH FASTE 33c - 59c - 89c r at For ASo T IC MakSHyOurplteGR ike bOn,pplicingirct dentures ... always remainsk sof t, acushion for your gums.% Not a powder or pagte. Onî> $2.25 SPECIAL LOW-PRICE OFFER!I" With 10 Gillette Blue Blades ln Dispenser KLEENEX I Soft, Safe, Neat! MODESS -------40c, 2 for 79c l48's -- $1.53 Box of 12- Box of Mercolized Wax Cream 83c Plate Powder 33c, 53c, 89c' Corega Senna Leaves 1 and 4 oz. Ilc, 27c or EYE ÇUPS 2 for 15c Medicine Glasses MeGregor, Your Local I.D.A. Drug Store Drugs Phone 792 FLGHT MOTUS FLY-TOX Lier-o-SOl Bornb ..13 FLY-TOX ~35e -59C -98C Spray --------- ----- G;REEN CROSS 34c 55C 90C Spray --- SAPHO35-59-$15 Spray ~----- 35-9c-15 woODS15-2c lVoth Blockettes - - - - -5 5 WHAT CAN WE SAY ABOUT THE BUDGET? But came in and save money on aur present stock 0f Diamoads, Wptches, Jewellery and Gifbs for ail occasions. HOOPER'S Jewellery and Gift Shop BOWMDANVLL PRESCRIPTIONS A SPECIALTY FOR THE GARDEN Highesi Grade Vegelable and Flower Seed FERTILIZERS, ETC. Sheep Manure (Wîzard Brand) 5, 10, 25 and 50 lb. sizes Bone Meal i - 5, 25, 50 and 100 lb. sizes Nitrate of Soda, (in bulk) Shur Gain Plant Food (4-12-8) 25, 50 and 100 lb. sizes Vigaro, (5-10-5) - 10, 25, 50 and 100 lb. sizes Peat Moss (Utility Bale size) ONIONS - Multipliers (Shallots) Yellow Dutch Sets (Ebenezer) White Dutch Sets (White Ebenezer) Yellow SW'eet Spanish Dutch Sets (Utah Strain) POTATOIM - Certif ied Seed We have a fulll une now of ail your requirements. Shop early and avoid the rush. STE WART'S SEEDS DRUG STO--RES m TRIMDAY APPJL 12th 1951 THE CANADIAN STATESMAN, BOWMANVILLE, ONTARIO PAGE SEVEN c