Times & Guide (1909), 19 Sep 1946, p. 7

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4 ; © HTHURSDAY, SEPT. 19, 1046 Dr. Jones, who succeeds Rt. Rev. Pr. Jesse H. Arnup of Toronto, will thus be the head and spokesman for two years of the 2 million adherents of the United Church, Fiftyâ€"nine years old, and a popular speaker at Montreal‘s luncheon clubs, Dr. Jones is a vetâ€" eran of both Great Wars and ~ Rev, Thomas W. J pD, pastor of Calvary Uni%h of° Montreal, was W y, Sept. 11, elected Moderator of the United Church of Canada. _ _ noted iacfllg‘;tori his ‘sermons « subjects in news of the day. Dr. Jones was elected unaniâ€" mously on the nomination of Rev. David A. MacLellan of Toronto, who said he wished the church to honor "a faithful parish minister, an apostle of Christian hope and an 'eVlf‘\q'eliltic lover of our Blessâ€" ed Lord. University, were nominated, DU" were withdrawn at the request of the nominees, , Brewing Also Named _ _ Two other members of the counâ€" cil, Rev. F. R. Hendershot of Brantford, Ont., and Dr. Walter Brown, Viceâ€"Chancellor of Victoria University, were nominated, but Dr. W. E. Brewing of St. Geoze United Church, Toronto, was also progosed_by Rev. R. &. Huband of nlglxa\;;\ but his candidacy was ruled inadmissable by the retiring Moderator after the general secreâ€" Both pointed out nothing could be done about altering the rules at this time, but assyrance was given that the matter would be taken up at the present sessions. u%cm. Gordon A. Siscoe, quoted a ision of the judicial commitâ€" tee in 1936 that no _G):raon not a commissioner to the General Counâ€" cil was eligible for the post of Moderator. | _ Lg 3 Following the election the new Moderator was conducted by Rev. Mr. MacLellan and Dr. Gerald Cragg, pastor of Erskine American Church, where the General Council is sitting, to the vestry where he was robed and then led back to the church to be installed by Dr. Arnup, according to ritual, Native of England United Church Minister Is Made Moderator Born in Oxfordshire, England, Dr. Jones was a Congregationalist at the time of the union of the United Church of . Canada. He served on trnnsgort service with the military YMCA for four years during the first Great War and, following the war he became chapâ€" lain of the lith Hussars Cavalry Regiment with rank of honorary captain. From 1939 to 1941 hz served in England as senior YMC supervisor with the 1st Canadian Division. _ o He has been pastor of Calvary United Church since 1912 and folâ€" lowing his election spoke feelâ€" ingly of the kindness and generosâ€" ity of his congregation to him during that long period of serâ€" vice. While he appreciated the honor done to him by his election he said: "I am more concerned with the responsibilities than the honors of this important office." His Church Honored _ _ He was proud "as the pastor of an average United Church," he said, of the honor reflected on Calvary Church and congreiotion and knew they would willingly spare him from such of his duties as his new office made necessary in the same manner as they had done during two wars. Dr. Jones has filled many imâ€" gortant posts in the United hurch. He has been chairman of the Montreal Presbytery, president of the Montreal and Ottawa Conâ€" ference and chairman of the Board of Christian education.. On the recommendation of Dr. Niscoe, Rev. C. E. Dyer, of ‘Toronto, and Rev. J. E. Glover of Hastings, Ont., were appointed assistant _ secretaries for . the sessions of the General Council. On Tuesday night we resumed our activities for the new season. Until further notice we will be meeting on Tuesday r%;htl at St. John‘s parish hall. e hope to have outdoor meetings for the next few weeks, so come prepared. Brownies ~ â€" 54th Toronto Company _ Brown Owl will be calling the Pack together on Monday, Sept. 30. ing what is right that you press straight on to that and disregard what men are saying about you, there is the triumph of. monf courage.â€"Phillips Brooks. Reév. Thomas W. Jories Succeeds Rt. Rev. Dr. Jesse H. Ammup When you are so devoted to doâ€" flgg&on Music & Rgogig Girl Guides TOASTERS, IRONS, HOUSEHOLD APPLIANCES REPAIRED WASHER PARTS AND WRINGER ROLLS IN STOCK WASHER REPAIRS RADIO REPAIRS Achievement * popek "::u"uc on tig se % en Or Aacâ€" complishment, & m s. un» seroind oy hrhceider. aet hi success. _ â€"Punshon No wind makes for him that hath no intended port to sail into. A purpose underlies â€" character eultul?: rzodflon, attainment . of every so â€"Munger The devotion of thought to an honest achievement makes the If you wish success in life, make perseverance your bosom friend, experience your wise counsellor caution your elder brother, and hope your guardian genius. _ Continued from page 3â€"â€" cents. The Japs even began thlx- ping bicycles into the States. At one time you could buy a Jap bike in Seattle for $9.75 complete. > achievement possible. "What the Japs didn‘t do to the firm‘s ex&rt trade, the war did. Some C representatives were killed. . Others had their places blown up. We haven‘t heard from some of them to this day, Others {IJ"" drop in on us out of the blue." nreported Six Years Take George Boehm, for inâ€" stance. He was CCM‘s Belgium man who vanished when the Nazis overran his homeland. Last week he dropped in unannounced at the Weston plant. He‘d managed to reach New York where he became a diamond expert, later becoming United States representative for an India sporting goods firm. _ "That gives you some idea of what we have to contend with," Mr. Brafien said. "Duplicate that a dozen times and that‘s our posiâ€" tion today. We‘ve got to start all over again. We have scheduled a definite program of export ‘reâ€" habilitation‘ extending over the next two or three years. _ . "We‘ll appoint someone in Lonâ€" donâ€"Perhaps send someone from hereâ€"to make a complete survey of the European situation. It will probably take two years. Then someone from here will go over and make a check survey, accomâ€" panied by the London man, Then we‘ll know where we stand. _ _ Trade Commissioner "It isn‘t very hard to see how they were able to do it. On a later trip, I visited a Jap bicycle facâ€" tory. The employees nlefi.1 in the placeâ€"on straw mats. ey , got their food there tooâ€"rice made in great urns at ane end of the buildâ€" ing. That‘s the kind of competition This time there‘ll be more obâ€" stacles to free trade. The hurdles between dollar and sterling areas are higher and harder to surmount, but basically, insists Mr. Braden, the export business is no more complex than domestic trade. There are certain problems not encountered at all or not enâ€" countered on such scale in doâ€" mestic selling. Take price quotâ€" ing. Mr. Braden emphasized that it is essential that the importer know exactly whatan article will cost CIF port of entry. It doesn‘t do him a bit of good to know the price of a bicycle f.o.b. factory, which in this case is Toronte. Many importers in the Orient have never even heard of Toronto; have no idea whether freight costs would be $15 or $1,500. Ottawa Can Help ____ _ we were up a _ Again, said Mr. Braden, the Deâ€" partment of Trade and C'o_mme_tce can help establish the price, less duty, laid down at the importer‘s nearest port. Then he knows whether he‘ll be able to sell your product on a competitive basis. No matter where you plan exâ€" porting, first get in touch with the department, that‘s a cardinal rule," he said. . "Ahen, if you‘ve got the time, write the trade commissioner in the area. Tell him your obâ€" jectives when you expected to arâ€" rive. Then it‘s a case of straight selling. And don‘t think you can forget an importer afterâ€" making the first contact. You‘ve got to ke? on iOinf back." f & ince the formation of CCM in 1899 from the amalgamation of five small firms, its creed has alâ€" ways been: The customer‘s interâ€" :lt! u: our ilximngti;t the cusâ€" omer is usually ; , quality comes before price;nam dealer is entitled to a fair profit and his murfiin should be protected; & quick turnover is good business; goods are not sold until the cusâ€" tomer is satisfied; promises should be kept; good advertising keeps strictly within the truth. _ _ _ Apply those business principles to export trade too, and you won‘t go far wrong, believes Mr. Braden. PHONE 193 F. L. MERTENS, Phm.B. Guaranteed OPTOMETRIST _ OFFICE HOURS Except Wednesday, 9â€"12 a.m., 1.30â€"5.30 p.m. Wednesday, 9 a.m. to 12.30 noom. Evenings by Appointment 193 1 MAIN ST. NORTH, WESTON â€"â€"Mary Baker Eddy and Mantaigne â€"Addison national has clubs in 53 countries, has 280,000 members in 5800 Clubs. Rotary has no bars for race or treed, black, _ yellow or . white, Catholic or Protestant, Moslem, Hindoo, Jew, Buddhist or Christian Weston Rotary Represented At Dist. Convention An assembly of the » men of the Clubs who make up Rotary gmmthul District No. }‘Q was held on September fi’u'i‘x‘ at ‘ern Cotuuio. on Lake Couc! near: Oril The W«ton-l(ouh:a{ Dennis Club was represented by the President, Alfred A. Slater, the Secretary, James W. Amos, and the Viceâ€"president, Cecil E. Grossâ€" Short talks on the various phases of Rotary work was given uy the Presidents of severai Clubs, and di were entered into freely b{ &)ronnt. It was reported that the Cobourg Rotary Club had 8i dress on national LLRL 0A th A d id 9b in tnbis ce techa i tb‘ are_ all eufiine for membership if their vocal classification is open, and if they are desirous of serving their fellow men. Rotary Inter» national has a job to do in promotâ€" ing Peace and Goodwill throughout the world, and in fostering interâ€" national understanding. The place to start is right in your own homeâ€" town. Get to know what a fine Continued from page 1â€" people, the League of Nations, the Pan â€" American union and the United Nations Organization. All these mark the steps of mankind up from the jungle towards the fullfillment of some intelligent purâ€" pose." "We must .combat defeatism wherever we find it. We must slap down the shallow thinkers who say __Past District Governor William Hetherington, Mayor of Malartic, Quebec, made an outstanding adâ€" fellow your neighbour is. Think Peace "The great branches of the Christian"Church are faced with a mifhty chnllenge of which they are fully aware and are taking steps to meet it." It is doubtful if there is any medium quite so important for inâ€" ternational understanding as eduâ€" cation and in particular the preparâ€" ation of history books and the JONES AND HILL ZONE 4â€"362 0 LY. 3122 At Lastâ€" Reading Hard Coal Briquettes Suitable For FURNACE STOVE ® HEATER OPEN FIREPLACES $14.20 Ton lay you‘ve been waiting for. ‘mu the smooth floors in the cool gymnasium at Weston Colleâ€" fh“ and Vocational School to your avourite music, and in between times . eat those big hot dogs. Tha’u lush. ould you like a ‘Teen and Twenty Club? Well, we‘re having Fri ht is the of thow but not TH ie $A y o ge sgain To give you all the fus and teaching of history. Everything oo aninant sn arily obey old precept, ‘ the truth even if she eom):l clothed in rags.‘ The Honorable Dr. C. B. Hambto, Président and Past Presiâ€" dent of the Norwegian Parliament made a statement â€"some years 313 that challenged the thlnkinr wor andâ€"that challenge still holds. He said, "it is essential that nations should realize in time what they have not officially realized before, that wars are not automatic results of economic })roceuu but come as the result of a state of mind; are not started by soldiers and poliâ€" ticians but are prepared in historâ€" ies, in schools, and in universities.‘ I am not -u?utin‘ that the hisâ€" torian and the school teacher are one bit more intolerant than the rest of us, what I am urxjgntin{ is that in our individual and collective thinking there is a great deal of vicious nationalistic spirit ah“- is a contributory cause of war. "I look forward to the day when history books will be submitted to international committees; to the days when international universiâ€" ties will flourish, and to the time when the teachers of our children are raised in standard and salary to a parity with members of other professions. I am sometimes inclinâ€" ed to think that we place rrentor emphasis on our automobile proâ€" duction, perfecting our wheat, imâ€" proving our cattle breeds and hogs than we do on the teaching and raising of our children to be good world citizens." "All roads leading to war withâ€" in and without the nation must be abandoned; all paths leading to peace must be explored. Man in discovering the atomic bomb has seized a wildeat bÂ¥ the tail. He dare not let it go; if he does, it will Teenâ€"Age Highlites Coming §001" TIMES AND GUIDE, WESTON > WILLYS DEALERS OF TORONTO DIST RICT 1% Miles East of No. 10 Highway on the First Concession Road (1% Miles South of No. 7 Highway) x FOLLOW THE ARROWS x _ YOU WILL SEE A DOZEN OR MORE OF THESE MIGHTY JEEPS â€" ploughing . . . disk harrowing . .. cultivating . . . sawing wood . . . digging post holes . /. operating hammer mills . . . towing . . . and carrying out That‘s ri mhhm'? mu? We‘ll destroy him. He must it i ghHy, subdue and domestisate it to his semrice. To control the atomic bomb is to control the hearts of men. There is no other way." The aker was introduced by Dune. .énlnir. and the thanks of the club were capably expressed by Rev. Currie Creelman. Jack Irvin Chairman was in the chair. Without warning Chairman Jack called on various members to perform various tasks that were eloquently handled. Ernie Worden was called on to welcome the visitors, Alex. Cruickshank exâ€" tended the congratulations of the club to two fellow members who reâ€" cently celebrated '::othor birthday in the persons of Lorne Fraser and Bill Gardhouse; it looked for a moment as if Alex, was going to render a solo in ‘his leading of that wellâ€"known chorus "Happy Birthâ€" day To You." Doug. Webster very nbl‘}; offered the condolences of the club to Lorne Fraser and family in the recent death of Lorne‘s sister. Frank Lawrence gave a brief but interesting account of the Barrie Club Charter night which was atâ€" tended by twentyâ€"two of the local club members. "-'nm""';u' be loads of fun, ‘or everyone, y No matter who> In R‘ufiu o’r.?nw "Teens jm come along, by flm district Rotary convention in Orilâ€" lis, a f?rm:‘rnv'.m@sn!, J,-c‘x Irvin, Due to the absence of President Alf. Slater, who was attending the Tonight‘s speaker will be Jack Irvin who was club president in 1930â€"31, and a charter member of the Westonâ€"Mount Dennis Rotary. His subject will be of great interest to all club members and visitors alike as he has selected as his subâ€" ficb the "History of the Westonâ€" ount Dennis Rotary Club" since its inception in 1929. And Jack will likely produce the original president of the club in the person of Sam Totten. Friday, September 20â€"from 2 p.m. "Bud"" Earle‘s Farm emember it‘s Friday, September . 1048. $50 + o s in mt is Come â€" See â€" and Drive Comeâ€"See FARMERS! Â¥ ton Trucks ~Station Wagons 6 Said Mr. Fisher: "With a real consciousness of ourselves and of our wealth, we can build one of the greatest shows on earth." Plan To Visit USSR ie sp Cadene remyeamnied is papers represen e imtut force in tlug)omlnlon for ormulating public opinion, and he At the same time Major Walter Ashfield, president and publisher of the Grenfell, Sask., Sun, and a veteran of both wars, was elected president of the organization to succeed Mr. Templin, publisher of the Fergus Newsâ€"Record. Major ed days. $ 44 Beveral ln:hu. incl reâ€" tiring President Hugh ‘rom:fin of Fergus, Ont.; D. Leo Dolan of Otâ€" tawa, chief of the Canadian Travel m, u, and John Fisher, Canadian fh Caog. © commentator, called upon the editor dnl:g‘tu to impress théir readers with the "destiny of Canada." _ _ â€" At the final session Saturday delnf‘tel unanimously passed a resolution that a committee be formed to study the possibilities of sending a group of wee newsâ€" di f kliu paper editors on a tour of Russia. lems were the dominant notes struck at the 27th annual convenâ€" tion of the Canadian Weekly Newsâ€" '? can make the word unity not jUst a catchword but a reality. Our Provincial boundaries must be ?‘1'“ as friendly as the 49th paralâ€" el." ‘To Know Canada[. Better‘ Advice Of | C CWNA Delegates || * the "JEEPS" In Action Toâ€"know Canadeaâ€" better, and to ve increased attention to its probâ€" JU. 8329 Pianist at Club Top Hat With "Red Jackets" Orchestra POPULAR PIANO ERNIE FAULKNER Taught In 20 EASY LESSONS Sponsored by A Complete New Line of PLAYING many other operations necessary around the farm. If you are an aggressive farmer and want to make the most of the spiendidâ€"market that is surely coming, you can‘t afford to miss this monster demonstration. Ashfield was formerly viceâ€"presiâ€" dent of the CWNA. Named first vi«;a-geudent was Robert A. Giles, editor of the Laâ€" ch!{t., Que., Watchman, while C. J. Allbon, editor of the Springhill N.S., Record, was chosen second viceâ€"president. W. E. McCartney of Brampton, 65 MAIN ST. S. 1 LA WRENCE AVE. W. ALMATEX For FLOORS Cementâ€" â€" Wood â€" Lino This is especially good for cement floors. OWNED AND OPERATED BY STODDART BROS _ Brighten Up Your 2y a€) Home Now Painting and Decorating Estimates Cheerfully Given & CLEANERS & DYERS â€" Quality Cleaning a ‘““vw H. C. BROOKBANKS Fourâ€"Wheel Drive PHOMPT, COURTEOUS SERVICE The New Universal WILLYS Open Evenings By Appointment LÂ¥ndhurst 2168 ing director upon the retivemi :’ Cfanm Â¥. mrhu.'m of the finmmn Conservator, who %d h(elonfi. p;:t f:or 11% ym e servator, Frank Burns‘ Kmtvim.. Ad« vertiser, took top awards inâ€" the jobâ€"printing competition. 6 Ont., assumed the position of See The New 1946 | Samples ) WALLPAPERS | ; With PHONE TOâ€"DAY WESTON 845. ZLONE 4485

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