PAGE SIX THE CANADIAN STATESMAN, BOWMANVILLE, ONTARJO THURSDAY, NOV. l2th, 1959 .Interesting Panel Discussions Feature LOoDA. Conference in Peterborough The Industrial and Municipal Relations Conference of the Lake Ontario Development As- sociation, which convened re- cently in Peterborough, drew sharply divided opinions on the future of industry and its effect on the community from the var- Jous speakers present. Empha.'s was given to to-j day'sprofits being plowed backi into business rather than being taken by extra government tax- es, in a speech by W. H. Evans, President of the Canadian Mýrn- ufaturers Association. Mr. Evans said that profits were as necessary to the comm.unity as to the company itself.___ Plan Now.. to spend the winter in FLORIDA Rents by Month, Season or Year The Knight Apa rtments Corner of Union and Douglas Streets Phone 81-1023 Dunedin, Florida on the beautiful west coast, on the Gult of Mexico Alan and Helen Knlght, Props. Write for Brochure "Profits are no less vital o thc maintenance of big govern- ment. now seemingly a perman- ent backdrop o the stage o! Canadian life. WiVhout profits Vo tax-to thq tune o! 50 per cent in these expensive days-- goverrnents wQuld be in a na- ther difficult position, to say the least. And we would certainly bave many fewer goveinnient- inspired social welfare schenxes than wc bave." "I would noV want anyone here o think that I arn arguig that a measure o! taxation is unjustifiable," he went on. "I amn only arguing against those muddled thinkers who agitate foi an even bigger bite o! busi- ness profits." "The only secunity for thc maintenance and improvement o! tomorrow 's living leveis is the ploughing back o! today's profits into business. Profits can't be ploughed back if the ax on them is so high that IV cannot be construed as anything other than confiscatoîy." "This is the essence o! the profit story which the thought leaders in cvcry community in- tercsted in attracting industry should strive Vo ensure is as widely understood as possible." The theme that Mr. Evans Vtook for bis speech was "What Industry Expects o! a Coni- munity", and he began by speaking about the great indus- triai stnides that Canada had made since the start o! the sec- ond World War. "In the two decades since those hecti*c days Canada bas undergone somethîng in the na- ture of an industrial revolution, and nowlhere is this more evid- enV than in this prince o! On- tario." IlVasV arcas o! wbat prilono 1939 was agricultural or barren land are now the sites o! mod- ern factonies and the inevitabie dUEUEMUUUUMMUUUUiUMMMUU*UMMMMMMMUUUMMUUMMMUMMU~ One-A-Day MULTIPLE VITAMINS 1.49 - 2.75 - 4.49 - 8.75 Geritol - Liquld or Tablets 1.35 - 3.29 - 5.49 Lîsterlne Antiseptle 39c-73c-98e Clearasil for Pimplea 69e - 1.19 Gillette Raezors 1.09 -1.95 PHONE MIA 3-5695 98e Bnlsk Tooth Faste Plastic Flashlight Bath for 99c 2 tubes Cogates Paste 99a 2 tubes Ipana Faste - 99e Salts 79c - 1.19 Q-Tips Swabs 39c-59c-98c Tame Rinse 69e - 1.19 concomitants wbich foflow the establishment o! indus ry - housing sub-divisions, shopping centres, achools, bospitals, parks, playgrounds and the like. In 20 years our manufac- turing labor force bas more tan doubled. Villages bave grown into towns and owns have swelled into cities."t Canada, be continued, had been ransformed from a Prim- arily rural and agricultural country into a predominaatly urban and industrial one. To traverse the country in 1959 and see ia about every province the evidence o! this develop- ment was truly an exbilirating experience, he said. "Of course," he went on, "this phenominal industrial growth received much of its initial stimulus from the demands of waî, but the great thing is that, contrary Vo the expectations of the people, il bas not merely continued sinoe 1945 but lias actually been intensified."' "This massive expansion o! manufacturing industry is un- questionably quite the most im- portant single tbing that bas happened Vo Canada in this century. Secondary industry was.of some consequence Vo this nation before 1939, but the economic emphasis was always on our production of primary products and on our role as sup- Plier of them to the traditional- ly industrial nations o! the world." Major "Shift Mi. Evans weat on to say that the primary industries were stili higbly important-and al- ways wiouldi be-but the result o! the transformation o! which he had spoken was a major shift la the centre of Canada's economic gravity. Nobody seriously believed that they could rctura ta their onie tre role of "hewer o! wood and dîawer o! water". witbout econoxnic chaos and the complete collapse of Cana- dian living standards as they knew them today. "The fact is," he continued, "that the unparalleled increase inrrliving levels, our high wages; burgeoning Population, risiag birth -rate and declining death rate, ail derive. la great mca- sure from this revolution. In- evitably, too, it bas brought in its tramn orne probierps o! its own, Problems wbich. are not yet ail solved by any means."1 Industrial Obligations Mr.* Evans went on Vo say that relatively littie was heard these days about a comrnunity's obligations to industry. Industry was essentially a customer o! the com.munity. As in any other free market rela- tionship between customer and supplier, this did not work suc- cessfully for either party for very long unless It was a gen- uine two-way value received, somnething - for - sometbing ar- rangement that was mutually rewarding. Ia other words, bot.h industry and the community had got o give as well as -re- ceive. Reeve Budge Replies In reply Vo Mr. Evans, Reeve Read Budge o! Port Hope, Pointed out ta the conference that if a conununity ever lost interest in industry, it was practically finishcd. In bis speech, Reeve Budge took the opposite theme frorn Mr. Evans and asked "Wbat a coxnmunity expects from indus- try?yp Firstly, be said, thc commun- ity deserved the "considera- tion" o! industry. Industry must understand that the limitation o! residential growth in the coiunitY was iiot an attempt Vo confine industry, and was not any kiad cf legisîntion against iadustry. The personnel o! industry sbould also be prepared Vo find time Vo take part la municipal affairs. A community should be able o look to industry and ask for belp, he said. "Industry must also adjust it- self Vo the services o! the com- munity," he coatinued. "IV must remember that niany cities and towns were built in the 1840's. Govcnnment'-s ti-ght m--on-ey-pol. icy during the next fcw months. He maintained that the current bigb interest rates were -attract- ing investors away froni mort- gages and the stock market. "I do noV bold a brief for high interest rates," Mi. Gunn said, 'but I suggest that lookîng into' the future high interest rates wil noV; go down until there is less capital spending by the govenniment, and less fcroçious demiands by the people for so- cial services." ?&. Guna went on Vo say that every day new finance cern- panes wene being set up, andl the Canadian's use of instal- ment finance was a drain on mnoney, and therefore a drain on the national cconomy. During the lasV 18 montbs, he: said, investment rates had isen - - lybecauqM each imdivi- dual borrower was trying to et his requi.rements before his neighbor. Investinent dealers. he said, were the middle mien ln finan- cial transactions, tryîng to un- derstand the problem of the borrower end the lender, and at the saine timne trying to make the lender appreciate the bor- rower's point of view, so that he would appreciate the seller's view. Mr,. Gunn said investrnent dealers had often found that people demanded credit be- cause they bonestly believed they were entitled to it as a matter of course. He pointed out, however, that for people ta borrow money, some Canadians had to be sav- ing money. Most Canadians were savers to a certain degree, be said. On the other hand it could be, Mr. Guna continued, that Canadians in general were de- manding too much at the pres- ent time. Perhaps the country was demanding too much too quickly, and it mîght be a good idea if some applications to borrow money were postponed for a while, so that money could be borrowed fairly safely and freely in the future. Whenever a customer came to an investment dealer, and was told, that it might not be a good idea to, borrow money at the present time, the custom- er always answered, he said, Business Directory Âccouuiancy RAY 31. DILLING Certified Public Accountant 93 Church Street MArket 3-3861 WM. 3. H. COGGINS Chartered Accounrant Second Floor New Library Building Cor. King and Temperance Sts. Phone MArket 3-3612 YALE, FRIEDLANDER, HUNTER & CO. Accountants and Auditors Licensed Trustee in Bankruptcy 64 King St. E. RLA 5-1621 Oshawa, Ontario B. L. Yale, C.A. F. Frledlander, B. Com., C.P.A. MONTEITH - MONTEITH RIEHL & CO. Chartered Accountants 135 Simcoe St. N., Oshawa RA 5-3527 Bownianville - Cail ZEnith 45750 Partners: Hon. J. W. Monteith, F. C. A. A. B. Monteith, B. Coni., C.A. G. W. Riehi, C. A., R. .A. (Licensed Trustee) G. E. Trethewey, C.A& R. F. Lightfoot, C.A. C h ir op ra c i c G. EDWIN MANN, D.. Ofc: Chiropractor 15 Elgin St., cor. of Horsey St. *Phone MA 3-5509 Office Hours: By Appointment ,D e nial DR. W. M. RUDELL, D.D.S. Office: Jury Jubilee Bldg. 40 King St. W. Bowmanvifle Office Hours: 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. daily Closed Saturday and Sunday Office Phone - MA 3-5790 House Phone - Newcastle 3551 DR. E. W. SISSON, L.D.S., D.D.S. Office in bis home 100 Liberty St. N. - Bowmanvffle Office Hours:à 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. daily Phone MfA 3-5604 Closed Wednesdays and Sundays DR. C. F. CATTRAN, D.D.S. Office 23 ing St. E. - Bowmanville Office Hours: 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. dally Closed Saturday and Sunday Telephone: Office MA 3-5459 Legral IL R. Waddell, Q.C. Main Street, Oronb,, Ontario F'riday, 7 p.m. to 10 p.m. Saturday- 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Morigages 8ADIE HAMILTON - ORONO Phone 1 r 16 First Mortgage Funds Residences - Fanms Business Properties Opifo m e fry KFJH A. BELLETW, O.D. 3ptometrist 141 King St. E. - Bowmanville Office Hours: By appointm.zit Telephone MArket- 3-3253 Monday Vo Saturday 9 a.m. to 5 p.rn. Wednesdaysý 9 to 12 Thurscday evenn that the project concerndlas lmmediately necesqary, nd thc people wanted it anyway. Mn. Guna said there was con- tinuai pressure -for an increase In social service benefits, but it mlght shock people if the goverament urned around anc day and said they couldn't have this and thcy couldn't bave tha.t because the goverament and the country couldn't afford it. Nestieton Station Mir. and Mrs. Bruce Heaslip visited Sunday in Toronto with Mn. and Mrs. Ray Tiffany and called on Mi. and Mrs. Rup- crt Bycrs, Bowmaavillc. Mrs. Gordon MêLean and Miss Kennedy o! Uxbridgc werc weckend guests o! Miss Rose Mountjoy and all were Sunday dinner guests of Mn. and bM. T. Sarnelîs. MT. Oharles Bnigigs o! Toron- Vo speat last weekend with Mn. and Mis. Lorenzo Mountjoy. Sunday visitors with Davison and GisVs were Mr. and Mis. Fra=cis Gist, Mary, Kathryn and Aadrew of Lainig. It is a pleasure Vo report Mrs. Gist is much improved in health, and trust iV continues. Mis. John Beacock spent last week visiting relatives and friends in Detroit and western Ontiario points. Suniday visitors witb Mr. and Mrs.- Jas. Harris were: Mrs. E. Gar'ret, Mr. Wm. Jackman, Mn. Russel Jackman and Miss Dor- otb Harris all o! Toronto. Mis. Harris accon-panied hem Vo Toronito to visit Mis. Wm. Wil- lis in St. Micbael's Hospital. Mis. Granit Thompson diove Mis. W. H. Jobaston home Vo Pe!!erlaw on Wednesday and visited Mrs. Jas. Thompson at Mr. Russel Francis', Beaverton. Mr. and! Mis. Don Crozier, Greenbank, were Saturd.ay din- nec guests o! the Carl Eiliot's. Mis. Orlaad Robrer and Mai- le, Mi. and Mis. Louis Feltz and Elaine o! Mitchell spent the> weekend with the Norman, Oliver and Ivan Robrer famil- les. Congratulations te Mrs. Mal- colmn Emerson wbo was elected the niew Board Director for Subdivision 7 o! the Fedjera- ted Women's Institute o! On- aria at the Central Ontario 'Convention ab the Royal York Hotel this past week. Mrs. Em- erson and Mis. H. Vine attend- cd' aOlsessions o! thc Conven- tion. Sympathy Is cxtended Vo Mis. Jos. Forder and Mrs. John Watson in the djeatih o! their oldest brother in Maritoba hast week. 1 OBITUARY MRS. MAUDE BATLEY A resideat cf Blackstock, Ont., for most cf lber life, Mis. Maude Bailey passed away at ber home, Friday evening, Oct. 30, after an iUlness o! anc week. Mis. Baiiey was bora near Nestietan, Ont., on Aug. 21, 1873, a diaughter o! Uic laVe Williami anîd Hannah McLaugh- lin. On Jan. 1, 1895, rAie mai- ricd Frederick A. Builey o! Blackstock. Mis. Baiiey was a !aithful member of the Anglican Chu- x'oh aindio! its Womaa's Auxil- iary. She was aLgo an active mcm- ber o! the Women's Institute. Prcdeceased by bier husband and onc soný Howard, she lea- ves another son, Arthur o! Blackstock and two daugAters, Olive (Mis. Nasmytb Henry) R.R. 4, Liadisay and Laura (Mis. W. A. Dawson) o! Oshiawa. There are 10 grandchiildîcn and two great-gîaadchildrea. 'Me funcral service was beld at St. John's Anglican Church, Blackstock, at 2 p.m. Moaday, Nov. 2. Interment was la St. John's Cemetery. Palibearers were- Wesley Pearce, Marwood Dickey, Roy 'McLaughlin, Gilbert Marlow, Harry McLaughlin andi C1ar- ence Marlow. ELIZABETH VILLE On Wcdlnesday evcniag the hot turkcy supper drew an extra large crowd even tbougli it rained ail afternoon and, eveaing. Vcry littie turkcy was left for sale. Some pies and potatoes were le!t over. About $435 was taken la. During thce supper and afterwards pro- gram was provided by Mrs. Wright at the organ. John Crowhurst, Arthur Laws o n, Dennis Torieli and William Skitcb, all o! Port Hope Gie Club, sang. Mr. F. Gilmore and Miss Dorothy Muldtrew playcd violin and piano .Misses Doro- thy and Shirley Muldrew sang. Mr. R. Avory on the violin. Ev- eryonc enjoyed thc supper and pro'grarn. On Tbursday Mis. Quantrili, Mis. Robinson, Mis. McAllister and Mis. Thickson wcnt on the nstitute bus trip Vo Uteonvn tion at the Royal York lai on onto. The morning was elect- ion o! officers. In Uic after- noon the 4-H clubs did their exhibits andi demonstniations. At ncon the usual banquet at the Royal York w i th excellent speakers. In Uic cveaing Mis. Haggarty ,our presîdent o! Fcd-' eratesi Institutes, spoke.' Every- one bcd an excellent time. Mis. Fred Wbeeler is the district arca represeatative frein this area and bas spenit thc hree days there. On Friday eveaing the 4-H club helsi their third mneeting and made Prune Whîp andi creani of potata soup, with ,, croutons, whicb thc girls en-i joyesi. 'The meeting was at ILr. 1 RtOYAL THIS THURS. TO SAT.- NOV. 12 -14 Natinee Saturday ai 2 p.m. .4 oe "Sad Horse at 7 and 9:45 MON. TO WED. -MOI "Savage" at 8:30 1.16 - 18 et t b e'àec veOBITUARY ing the llth. Mr. and Mrs. V. Peecock vis- MRS. EMMA RAMSEY ited with ýIrs. M. Olan and Mr.j After a brief illness the death and Mrs. E. White on Sunday. occurred, of Mrs. Emma Ram- Mr. E. EUiott, Oshawa, at sey at ber laVe residence, 495 Quantrill's.j Mary Street, Oshawa, on Thurs- Mn. and Mis. W. Muldrew, cthy, October 29, 1959. Mrs. Oshawa, spent the weekend at Ramsey was in ber 94th year. Sunnyside. The laVe tis. Rarnsey was Mr. Alan Sheppard and Mr. bora in Toronto, the daughter E. Fowler lefV Sunday to bunt of the late Mr. and Mrs. Sadd. deer north o! Peterborough. Following ber marniage to the Several attended th.e Junior late Charles Ramsey, the de- Farmens' dance at Campbell- ceased lived in Colborne and croft on Friday evening. then Bowmanvile where she Sundiay scbool and church and ber four daughters resided was held as usual. for many ye-.-,s. About 20 years Mrs. Gea. Fowler, Oshawa, ago Mis. R .nsey, with three returned home on Fr1. as ber o! hen daugbters, took up resi- daughte-r, Mis. Stella Newsome dence in Oshawa. The deceased was admitted to hospital for an was a confirmed Anglican. operation lest week. . Left ta mu>urn her passing are the deceased's four dagtes' Qu.eenie, Maude and Mis.A H. Little (Jean), ail of Oshawa,, and Mrs. Harry Rice (Marguer-' ita), of Bowvmanvifle; two- grandcblldren, Mrs. Joan Bell," London, Ont., and John Rice o! Bowmanville. Rev. Cliaton Cross officiaj at the funeral service held h, the Mclntosh F'uneral Chapell Osh*awa, on Saturday, Octolber 31st. Interment was in Mount Lawn Cenietery, Oshawa. Palibearers were Messas. A., H. Little, W. E. Bell, J. P. Rice,* H. H. TonkIn, W. F. Quick and J. Roughley. IV will be a shock Vo men. when they realize that Voughts that were fast enougli for today' are noV fast eTlough for tomnr row.-Christopher Morley. 'w' BEST BUY - Libby's Deep Brown Beains BEST BUY - Libby's Fancy Tomato Juice FEATURE - Libby's Cream Style Corn FEATURE - Libby's Catchup - - FEATURE - Libby's Fancy Peas - "A Cold Weather Favori'" Libby's Cookced Spaghetti "Try Pineapple Upside Down Cake" witb Libby's Sliced Pineapple Libby's Fruit Cocktail"GvsEryonigaLt Libby's Pineapple Juice "Daily Fresh' Aunt Mary's Sliced Bread 20 oz. - tin 2 for 37c 48 oz. tin 3 for 79c 15 oz. *ir5 11 oz. - bottie2 for 5 15 oz. 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Tate MAPLE GROVE - Maple Grove Groceteria KINGSWAY SUPER MARKET KING ST. - EAST OF TOWN UNE ORONO - Commish Marketeria BLACKSTOCK Blyth's Market Take Extra Vitamins Wampole Extraet 1.50, 2.75 Tri-VI-Sol 1.65, 2.95, 4.25 Poly-Vi-Sol 2.10. 3.60, 5.25 Scott's Emulglon 1.00, 2.00 Haliborange 1.25, 2.10, 3.65 Halibut Oil Capsules 1.15, 2.29, 4.29 Mfulcin 1.00, 1.95, 3.25, 5.50 Paramettes 2.00, 3.50, 6.00 46U 07 -tin Christmas Cards in Boxes 79c - 98c - 1.00 - 1.50 65e Palmolive Shave Cream - Wildroot Cream Oil Bath for 65c COWLI NG'S DRUG STORE is z. - - tin 24 oz. - - loaf M RNIWONIENFILR*E*BMgTHIE 'OPESEkSOI" ON YOUNS ME 1 ME HARRJWN- KAY KENDALL <~ b CmqScfl d ànM -O .AN AVON PROCUCTiON «WfmM 2 Shows, 7 and 9:05. Adult - lin, . mie,, ý m TRURSDAY, NOV. 12th, 19.59 ", TIM CANADMN STATESUM. BOWMANVU..M ONTAIUO PAGE SIX a