Clarington Digital Newspaper Collections

Canadian Statesman (Bowmanville, ON), 6 Aug 1953, p. 4

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-~ - ~-~-~----- ~ PA« wmqi TECAIADUN iSTATESIM, fOWMA1NVff.,LEONTAR!O "What do you mean hy the fiPuip i the name for wuod city's pulse?" fbre. "Oh, 1 suppose it has some- Puip and paper stands finit in thing ta do with the policeman's cmploymentan tol ae HAVE YOU FIGURED OUT THE EXTRA VALIIE THE WEDDING GUEST men, "Shucka. That wao noth- We have always maintaîned* * * that 111e in the city is hazardaus. Take such a simple thing as go- WRO'U RUNNING? ing to a wedding. One would ex- pect that thîs would invoîve no Hem. in a mont amazing para- more than donning one's best dox, as Gilbert and Sullivan clothes and behaviour while wauld say. How do you explain ignoring the aven 80 heat. this cny the girls are constantly But in Toronto reccntiy some putting up that there are no men decorous wedding guests leapt when every yeam thene seem for their lives as a car wantcd to b. more and more mas-nages, by the police whipped through and at younges- agft too? Yet red lights ta crash into twO cars this problem inscs vital that parked before the church. The magazine articles are written on diver, who it seemed had hcip- "How To Get Youm Man"~, even cd himsel! ta a few articles here one recently on how ta get hins and theme about the city, jumnP- on a two weeks' vacation. cd out of the car. and was In England it is just the same, promptly tripped by a cool only aven there they eall it the thinking wedding guest. imbalance o! the sexes. Typical- We trust the brave felo0w ly British, what? Anyway girls didnt miss the wcdding on ac- on vacation in England would eount o! this littie fracas. But like ta meet men just as much it ail goes to show ho%% hard on as aur girls, and their chances the nerves citv h!.' must be. The are about the same. Statistics simplest errand may end UP compilcd in England show that like a George Raft movie. Per- at resorts womnen outnumnben hapa. though. such training al- men about three to one. They lows city dweilers to take it ail also show that only hal! the to- in their siride. and sav modest- tal number of bachelors go away Iv like Hopalong Cas.sîdy after for thein vacation. Playing .it he poliches off a couple of bad safe! We get a bit tired o! this sub- * ~ ~ icet being screamed from every -< ~j ~ 1 magazine and newspapem. We dont know how fan out of bal- ance the sexes are in Engiand, the United States and Canada, though we understand women autnumber men in our cities and industnial aeas, but-we have a very old-fashioned theory that if the women wouldn't talk ~, so much about it the men wouldn't run sa hard. Most of thcm mas-ny in the end. They really bave no objection ta get- tg marricd. But with ail this aus made aven them as if they were the last of the species on earh, hatcan you expect? Natunally, they play hard ta get. That used ta be a feminine ehanacteristic, and was much A DUIRO PUMP miore engaging as such. Not s0 Means Beter Livig!! aI ter the girls, not away frorn thr.The girls gat off on the (UR DtTR O Wat s- wnong tack somewhere and up- t=es eh set the fundamental psychology water wher and where we o! it ail. Sa long as we arc givhng need it ... adds ta a uoe- out advice like Donothy Dix, venoe nd <a.Snlot ci daiy we'd say to the girls, relax. We. Also, two week vacation ro- mnances handly ever make mnar- 1)URO Pumpo are »di- ragea. What can you know ahlein ned izes Io nmeet in- about a persan in two wecks, dividual needa. Set YOoe away from thew own back- Pbunber or DURO drir ground? for fug inforation or Having finihed with Donothy for FREE slderm, R - U~ Dix, we Would observe that Watur, the FAiM Neesiiy. fsrn the numben o! weddings reported in cvery newspaper in the land w. think the hue and cry in basefess. Maybe, as in Musical Chairs, thene will ai- ways b. nmre left over because the numbers arcn't even, but Most of them prefen it that way. PUMPS & SOFTENERS LI1MITID Pr a LONDON CANADA JACK DROIJGH PLUMBING AND HEATING Division Street S. PHONE 615 BOWMANVELLE HEADQUARTERS for complete GOOD>fVEARý TIRE SALES AND SERVICE e * eN TUE LITTLE CORPORAL 8PEAKS Weil, this fellaw Dior ham gat eves-ybody in. a flap, i n4uding the other designers. Poon Mon- sieur Fath with hi, You Look being the New Look had noth- ing at ail but common sense. iNow, with ali the other collec- tions made up, Dior hias thrown a bomb sheli. Skirs-t 17 inches tramn the floor. While women gasp and gnaw their nails, the battie o! the hemlinc is an. This is the man who, single- handed, launced the long skimt a few years mgo. Will othen de- signers foliow iike shcep this time? Some o! them declame flot, and we hope they stick ta it. Fashion -s. getting ta be to much o! a racket aitagether, and when one man can be a dictaton, it'a time for revoit. The people who make fun o! women for following the vagar- ica o! fashion (usuaily men), .dan't secm ta realize that theme is littie women can do about it. If the designers ail decide that skints shall be a certain length, then the manufacturera make thcm up in that length. It is therefore quite impassible ta buy, eady-made, a dress o! a diffement skint iength. The only s-ceaune would be ta have a dressmaker make anc s clothes, or make them yourseif the way you want there. It would do littie harm ta raise skirts a couple of inches from wheme they have been, but women shuddem when they ne- cail the calves and knees that were exposed in the Roaring Twenties. Mr. Dior should me- member that aIl women are not modela. But o! course, why should he came? If he cannot bear the sight o! what he has exposed, he can lock himself in bis salon. Theme he wilI sec only the beauties he has chosen from ail af Paris. The fact that if h. wjns, the women o! the world will h ave ta buy a lot of new clothes couldn't have anything ta do with it. Or do designers ever get hard up? Maybc Mm. Dior has been losing at the races iately. Or rnaybe he juet cnjoys wielding a power as great as 'iis country's fam- ous Little Corporal, Napoleon. Enroule te traffle court ta an- swer a speeding ticket given hlm the day befane, a coliege professar n iiSyracuse, New Yor-k, wu. stopped and given another. Te only apportunity Ithe average maie bas for exprcasing his nd.vidualitv is ta dent bis hat in sorne other way. AM one littie electron saxd to another when they met in a new element: q Idont know you hýeuw BETHÀNY and 'qConfidenti*al By Elsie Carruthers Luinney il Our 1s~t succesu. 1 Mns. Howard Perkina <nef Olive McGill) is visiting Mr. and Mrs. Herman McGilI. Mrs. Walter Rowan and Miss Lauretta Rowan have returned from a trip to Mexico. 1 Mr. and Mrs. Manseli Wright were in Tara viulting her moth- er. Mns. T. McClelland. Miss Patricia McBean, Bains- ville, spent Monday with Mr. and Mrs. Rose Carr. Mr. Fred Sanderson, Toronto, is with Mr. and Mrs Harold San- derson for vacatioql. Mrs. Cecil Hughes and daugh- ter Wendy, Toronto, and Miss Patricia Fallis, Lindsay, with Mrs. Richard Fallis. Mr. Bert Monk, Windsor, with his parents, Mr. and Mns. A. H. Monk. Miss Judy Parr, Chalk River, is holidaying with her aunt and uncle, Mr. and Mrs. Reg. Ed- munds. Mrs. John Stubbins, who has spent the past month with her parents, M*r. and Mrs. Ernest Cavano, left Wednesday to join her husband in Iabrador for the nemainder of the summer. Mr. and Mns. Cecil. McGill, Toronto, with Mr. and Mrs. James MeKinnon. Be sure you vote on Monday for Johnny James.-Advt. Mr, and Mrs. J. T. Coburn, Sally and Peter, left Saturday for three weeks vacation at their cottage, Wasaga Beach. Mr. and Mrs. Norman Neals, Fevershamn, were weekend guests with Mr. and Ms-s. Ross Carr. Miss Gladys Bîgelow, Bow- manville, with hem parents, Mr. and Mmi. Hammy Bigelow. Bethany bail team was de- feated twice lait week by Port Pers-y. Presentation to Newlyweds Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Smith (nee Kathleen McCullough) were presented with-the gift of a chrome and plastic kitchen suite and smokem's stand in honor of their recent manriage at a social evening held in the Bethany Town Hall on Friday. Mrs. Ernest Youngman read the address; Cneighton Carr and En- nest Youngman pnesenting the gift on behaîf of the communi- tics of Ballyduff, Pontypool and Bethany. Mrs. Earl Argue gave two eadings "The Busy Body" and "Learning To Drive". Miss Gladys Bigelow accompanied by Canadians Taking More Pride 1'I Their NanyHisforic Sites Canadians are takîng pride in eighteenth century waru. their history in the establish- The oldeat of thest utnong ment of the National Sites andponswihs egprevd tMonuments Board o! Canada atponswihsbegpesvd -the last session of Parliament. for posterity in Port Royal in Nova Scotia, whîch is a restora- The board, which was first tion of a "habitation", the first -formed in 1919, has become a fort built by the explorer Cham- Ipermanent institution. The duty plain in 1605. of the board is to mark and pre.. serve historie spots, structures There are the sites and relies and relics, ta give "a local habi- o! Indian villages inhabitcd be- tation and a name" ta events of fore the coming of the first Eu- Canadian history. ropeans ta this continent, which 9 In addition ta the great na- comne within the juidiction of , tonl ad roincalpars ndSites and Monuments Board. tionld and proevnciaparesfa Most of these are in Ontario and wil lie pesevestha ar f- British, Columbia. There intihe vonîte visiting places for tour- traditional spot on the coat of ists, there are il historic panks Newfoundland where John Ca- in Canada. The most easterly of bot the first European-if we these is the park that holds the dseadteeteeydut fontress of Louisburg, which fdiaregard tth exteVykdongt chagedhads orethn ocetouched at Newfoundland on in the wans in the early and thein way to Vineland about 1middle ycars of the 18th century. 1,000 A.D. - landed on the soil It in on the coast of Cape Bre- of what in now Canada. That ton Island, the most northerly was in 1497. Then foilowed in section of Nova Scotia. 1534 and 1541 the -two voyages Most westenly o! these histomic o! Jacques Cartier up the St. parka is Fort Battieford in Sas- Lawrence River on his way to katchcwan, wheme the North- China. The journcyî, howeven, wcst Mounted Police, now the gave the name La Chine (Chi- Royal Canadian Mounted Police na) to the apids near Montreal. were stationed when they were Cartier was told by hIdians that pacifying the prairielands. he was in the kingdom of Can- The mast northenly is Fort ada (an Indian word for vil- Prince of Wales near Churchill lage). It has taken quite a littie on Hudson Bay which like while for the words of the In- Louisburg changed hands in dians to corne true. Fs-rn those days when explor- Mmi. Clama Nesbitt sang "River ation began and the fimit indus- of Golden Dreams" and "Seven try of the country stamted with Lonely Days". Mr. Stewart Basque and Breton fishermen Hoocy and Mrs. Nesbitt gave operatîng off the Grand Banks twa piano and violin instrumen- o! Newfoundland, thc vicissi- tais. Ceighton Canm and Miss tudes of Canadian histony are o! Marie Camn sang "That Good course recorded. It is for the Na- Old Mountain Dew", "A Mighty tional Sites and Monuments Pretty Waltz", "Our Honey- Board to select and preserve the moon" and "Too Old To Cut The concrete visible links o! the var- Mustamd". joui stages of the country's The remainder of the evening gowth. was spent in dancing, music sup- Theme arc, it is stated, 623 bis- plied by Mmi. Nesbitt and Mr. toric sites that ara considered of Hooey with Ernest Youngman national importance. 0f these calling the square, dances. 429 have been marked and ac- Lunch was semved and the quiredlb by the national parks bride and groom aiso served branch of the Department of Re- pieces of their wedding cake, sources and Development. Gordon, in a few weil chosen The Sites and Monumentsi words thanked evcryone for the Board is an advisory body and1 gift, especially the commlttee final responsibility for site sel- who had arnanged the evening's ection resta with the minister OfE entetainment and ail those who the Department of Resources had assisted. Ail joined in sing- and Development. The charac- ing "For They Are Jolly Good ter of the membership o! thet Fellows. board indicates the public confi-s dence placed in it. Týhe Dçmin- ion Archivist and the Chief Cur- atar of the National Museum are members with one member for each of the ten provinces. Of these ten, five are univemsity professors of departments of his- tony, two are judges of p rovin- cial courts, one i5 a leading churchman of Manitoba, ane newspaper editor of Newfound- land and ane the honorany sup- enintendent of the Battleford National Historic Park in Sas- katchewan. Very Fine Concert Given ai Burketon By Clever Talent A very fine concert was held in Bunketon shed on Thursday, JUlY 30 with a splendid audi- once. Billy Wade, aged five years opened the program with hia one-man-band arrangement, sc- companied by his mother at the piano. Suffice it to say that this boy is a very fine musician, bis tinse and rhythm la ta say the lest marvelous for ont no young. Vocal selections, ail of which were most appreciated were giv- en by: Miss Coulter, Miss Pres- ton and Mr. Preston of Ponty- pool, Mns. Smales of Hampton, Miss Canr and her brother Creighton of Bethany, Mr. Spensely, the cowboy singer from the same place, Joan and David Morienko of Raglan, and Mmi. Robinson of Nestîcton. Mrs. Robinson is a singer of out6tand- ing character. The Davey sisters of Tyrone pleased the audience with their tap dancing. Miss Audrey McNabb, and Mmi. Billet of Hampton, Mrs. Willis and Edgar Strutt gave several musical numbens on the piano and violin. Everyone thoroughly enjoyed the readings, monologues, etc., given by Mrs. E. Argue of Man- vers Station, Mmi. H. Larmer of Bus-keton and Mrs. Seymour of Enniskillen and Miss Niddery o! Hampton. A novelty number was given by the group from Pontypool. After the vote of thanks mov- cd by the minuster, who had act- ed as chairman, the National Anthem was sung and ail agreed that the evening was a huge Annuversary The Following Prices hnclnde a 30-1 3ChmlAneu ADMIRAL i*Yré Warranly m i i i 2 3 222DI151 (21"" Comsle) - 221DX15L1e (2l" Console) - 221DI161 (21" Console) - 121DI15LX (21" Consolette) - 321DI17LI (21" Console) - i21DX12&X (21" Table Nodel) m 17DX12 (17" Table Nodel) R.C.A. VICTOR N0-Day f1 - 21"" Consle Warrauly . 1 - 20'" Consle Used Telvision 90-Day - Ir7 AiddionComsle The ring SL Wb u4CI.UDING BEITER QUALITY BUGGER QUANTITY i If fi "w, L~I SaeW TO CELEDRATE OUR FIRST YEAR IN BUSINESS WE ARE OFFERIN'G THE FOLLOWING REDUCTIONS ON TV SETS Reg. 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