. Toronto Transportation Committee is to be . commended on the rapidity which they are @ mrlng for the trolley busses running Weston to the Junction. This will be a gt event for the citizens all along the f from Keele street to the limits of Wesâ€" + The wires are strung and everything be ready for operation in a short time. : is understood that Weston will be in a i( to give the definite markings for ~ the location of poles and arranging the wires. 53, will be a great day when the pavement in _ Weston is reconstructed and the busses run . New, brilliant lights have en installed asl Hlong the route and thie COMING INTO ITS OWN In this country, where the principles of democragy hold sway and the "other fellow" can say his piece without fear of reprisal, it is up to all of us to say our piece. Our system is superior, but we have to prove itâ€"and prove it beyond a shadow of a doubtâ€"to those people, particularly new Canadians, who might be beguiled by the gaudy promises of statism which, if it ever occurâ€" red, would strip our traditional economic liberties to the bone and leave us poor indeed. 1+ Some Canadians believe the Communists should be outlawed. Others agree with the existing policy of Parliament Hill. It is a Canadian‘s right to agree or not to agree with his government, but the important point in Mr. Gibson‘s statement is not the definiâ€" tion of policy but the suggestion contained in thg se‘c‘opd half _of his quoted paragraph. â€" Hon. C. W. G. Gibson, Secretary of State, explained the government policy with regard to these red propagandists in a Kitchener, Ont., address recently. "Some people suggest that the Communist g:rty should be outlawed and its papers nned," he said. "I do not believe this is the answer . . . if we have nothing better to offer than the Communists, then we have no excuse for opposing them ; but if, as we genâ€" erally believe, our system is superior, then our people of all groups and classes have a right to know in what ways they benefit by supporting our democratic system." Nineteen foreign language newspapers printed in Canada are preaching the doctrine of Communism. The reason they are getting away with it is because of the current Ottawa policy which is to keep these publications out in the sunlight, where they can be easily watched, and not to drive them underground where they would still continue their nefariâ€" ous practices, greatly strengthened by the moral assistance of that portion of the public which inveterately sympathizes with anyâ€" thi'qg resembling a martyr. RED PROPAGANDISTS "What would be the effect if each one of us put straight with our neighbour those everyday things which need to be put straight," he concluded, "and if each of us at home and in the factory became an island of influence for peace; of assistance and good will and of right thinking about the man next to us. That would mean the thrust and the breakâ€"through to a revolutionary change of heart. The Ruhr calls to Europe. So, too, we want to infuse this spirit as the decisive pioneering thrust along the good road." The Lord Mayor of Essen, Germany, Dr. Gustav Heinemann, speaking recently to 2,500 citizens and workers‘ representatives from all major towns of the Ruhr industrial area said: "However true it may be that everything has got to change, to be remade and renewed in economic national life, it is no less true that human nature is the bottleâ€" neck of every kind of reconstruction. We need a revolutionary change of heart and that is everyone‘s business. Notet ooo n ily ie bivanirtset e ds s d i1 Ad The people of Essen, which is battered and bombed as badly as any city in Germany, have seen enough of war. News comes that they aim to make it a pattern of peaceful European ‘recovery. On its productive caâ€" Eccity or its ruination rests the fate of urope as well as of Germany. Senator Vanâ€" denberg said in Washington that the timely inclusion of the Ruhr is synonymous with the success of the, Marshall Plan. The world‘s future deï¬ends lar§ely on the success or failure of the Marshall Plan. Howâ€" ever, it may well be that the only assurance that the Marshall Plan wi%work lies in the integrity and faith of the European peoples. If these are lacking, material help may be dissipated by greed and selfishness. Any news of the dawning of this new spirit is ehcouniging but it is doubly so when it comes from Essen, which is the heart of the Ruhr as the Ruhr is the heart of Europe. THE KEY TO RECOVERY SAM WILSON, Publisher DUNCAN M. SINCLAIR, JE m" Advt. Manager. THURSDAY, JUNE 24, 1948 NGAN M. SINCLAIR, JEAN PERKS, Ndu-* Advt. Manager. News Edit DOROTHY GREENWOOD, Assistant News Editor. one of the main arteries in the ic at present is heavy and will rvhcntbobummmnninï¬ re waited a long time for th ce, but it will be a reality in a & ©GUIDE Five centuries before Columbus, Norsemen on their epic trek from Hudson Bay into the State of Minnesota fished the waters of the Nipigon. Over three hundred years ago the early furâ€"traders visited this primeval land, erected a fort at the mouth of the river, and feasted on the succulent bounty in these dark waters. But as late as the present décade the Nipigon country has remained, to motorists, a land ufurt. accessible only at its southern tip and from which point one continued only by canoce. It was not until the last link in Canada‘s coastâ€"toâ€"coast hiflwny was built along the eastern shore of Lake N ipigon folâ€" lowing the route travelled by the Norsemen of long ago, that this hitherto. wellâ€"guarded sportsmen‘s pAradise has become accessible. Most anglers are forced to confine their activities to nearby lakes or streams and content themselves with the fish they find therein; a few, more fortunate, travel great distances to seek their trophies in the interâ€" nationally famed fishing grounds throughout ‘ the world. To fishermen of both these classiâ€" fications Ontario appeais. Seldom is found an area which provides the angler with such unlimited scope for so many species of freshâ€" water fish as does this province with its borâ€" dering Great Lakes and countless inland lakes and .rivers in which abound bass, trout, pickerel and muskies. Many of these fishing grounds are world famous â€" in the Nipigon country Ontario possesses the leading speckled trout fishing waters of the world, the locale of more fishing stories than any other spot on the continent. For here, in the rugged rocky forestland lying north of Lake Superior, in the waters of the great expanse of Lake Nipigon with a shoreline of some eight hundred miles rising in places in sheer cliffs to a height of a thousand feet, and in the mighty river of the same name and the lesser rivers rushing down to Lake Superior, is the home of the giant speckled trout. A land where only the fringe has been tapped by man, a land which, for sheer natural unâ€" spoiled beauty, has few equals in all Canada. Here the true angler who seeks his fish in the more inaccessible regions, in untar?:ed streams amid the great outdoors, will find trout never imagined in his wildest dreams. Fish are biting! At that call the schoolboy finds the best excuse to play hookey, the tycoon postpones a directors‘ meeting. It‘s a tocsin that brings out the Huckleberry Finn in every boy, every man. Be he a barefoot country lad with a fishing pole cut from a tree or a rich man with the finest array of tackle money can buy, there is a lure to fishâ€" ing that few members of the male sex can resist. You can‘t describe it as a sport, nor as a hobby ; it‘s just a part of the boy or man himself. In the best of cireumstances, a Totalitarian Government always sits on 4 powder keg. When it rules by terror, when it scorns the normal virtues and encourages deceit, when it deliberately misrepresents what is going on in the rest of the world, the anxieties and apprehensions are multiplied. So the Kremâ€" lin has to tg to maintain a white heat of fanaticism. How long this will last with radio communication that cannot be suppressed remains to be seen. But World War is the last thing the Lords of the Kremlin want to face. Their main hope, indeed their only hope, is to weaken and ultimately paralyse the Democracies by "boring from within" through their Communist agents. HOME OF GIANT SPECKLED TROUT The reason behind the angry shouting of Moscow today is not any real fear of aggresâ€" sion by the Western Powers. The Kremlin knows full well that neither the United States nor the British Commonwealth has any sinister or aggressive intent against Soviet Russia. The Kremlin knows too that the European Recovery Plan means simply what it says, an effort to get Europe on its feet after the exhaustion of war. What is the real reason for the ridiculous polemics of Moscow? Simply the haunting fear that the 190,000,000 people behind the Iron Curtain will learn that they have been grossly deâ€" ceived, will learn that their Marxist Socialist Utopia is a sham and a delusion when comâ€" pared with the marketâ€"economy countries. Those who have tried to apply Marxism literally as in Soviet Russia, have ignored the fundamental concern of Marx for human liberty. They have also forgotten that their prophet regarded the Totalitarian Governâ€" ments of Revolutions as necessary evils to be discarded without delay. What happens in practice is that the Totalitarian Governments of violent revolutions settle down to establish "gang rule." They represent no one but themselves and their coterie. The wageâ€" earners and the peasants simply do ngt count. Tyranny emerges, ruthless and uncomâ€" promising. The structure is supported by terror and animated by a curious mixture of cynicism and fanaticism. MARX AND MOSCOW The air vibrates with bird song, which is the great rhythm made palpable to the human ear. The oriole‘s rounded notes are as delightful to the ear as the tanager‘s bright scarlet is delightful to the eager eye. All the senses tingle, alive with the season as the world itself is alive. Nothing is imâ€" possible at such a time. High achievement is all around us, beating on every sense for recognition. ous workings of chlor:é)hyll. » The hills are rounded with their own green growth, the soft hills of a lush and friendly land. The valleys sing with brooks, laughing waters of spring and seep that have not yet felt the thirst of summer. Even the stone walls are alive with vine, the creeping tenâ€" drils of life that would root in granite and suck faint sustenance from sandstone. glow of Khuuu in being. This is the sensory season. Trees are in ll:ie.!k' even gxg cautious ?u%tgf' casual OM 18 & n W » .lw" fragrance. Walk tfr‘o.u‘h an orchard and you can smell as well as feel the s of grass underfoot, new grass tall toward the sun. Boughs naked only a little while ago, then bright and heady with bloom, now rustle with leaf and tingle with the strength of fruition. Listen, and you can almost hear the pulse of sap and the mysteriâ€" ous workings of chlorophyll. _ » ‘SWEETNESS OF JUNE . , ‘m'!tï¬ctiiumtnuollm'mazu oï¬: e w year sweetness is meant monmc rance or honey taste; this h::'fa esweetness of understanding and n, the glow of pleasure in being. C "Of course, once the planner gets the opportunity to put his scheme into action he quickly discovers his mistakes. He then begins to realise the difficulties _ of _ increasing wealth and to understand the exâ€" traordinary complexity of the sysâ€" tem he is tryving to handle. So that until he gets into power the planner complains that labour is sweated and the consumer underâ€" supplied; after he gets into power he engages in constant exhortation for harder work and calls for an almost oriental patience from the impoverished consumer. Unfortunâ€" Nevertheless I hold that these criticisms are valuable. They have brought forth the answering facts. Capitalism has its faults and its weaknesses. It has never been as strong on publicity as it should have been But that is being remâ€" edied now. If I were looking for a iob I would seek for a firm with a highly paid management. It means higher pay and better conditions for the workers. ‘ On Planning Sometimes the inference is that the larger part of the income of big corporations goes to the men at the top, when measured in volume of production, it is insigâ€" nificant. to top executives it would ha;&f; be erough to wet the whistle of the average man on the payroll. Now let‘s come to the big felâ€" lows. This time a giant American corporation. sales _ $1,902,000,000, payroll, $892,000,000, number of employees 289,000. Total remunerâ€" ation_of 12 top executives, $2,200,â€" 000. It works out at % of 1% of sales or 4 of 1% of payâ€"roll. In other words for every $40 of mavâ€" roll management got 10c. What‘s the, meaning of all this? It means that the big executives, those who direct large industries, are paid high salaries but in concerns of this size the number of workers is so large that if we eliminated these salaries and paid workers‘ wages Here are some other stories of executive salaries and their reâ€" lationship to total wages. A certain business firm employed forty perâ€" sons with annual sales of $200,000, the payroll was $80,000 and the manager‘s salary $4,000. No one would criticise that although it represents 2% of sales, 5% of payâ€" roll. Here‘s anothér: 300 emâ€" ployees, annual sales $1,500,000, pavyroll $550,000 manager‘s salary $10,000. which is less than 1% of sales or 2% of payroll. e e en ie t The salaries of the nine top exâ€" ecutives in these London factories amounted to $102,000. If in these nine plants executive salaries had been cut to the level of the best man in the shop and the amount taken off divided among the other employees the addition to each man‘s wages would have been about 1c on each dollar of wages, or on $35 of wages, 35¢c. Needless to say. on the price of goods it would be infinitesimal. i Early this year I sert out an article entitled "London Shows The Way". It gave the record of profits and the distribution of the sales dollar in nine different plants in the City of London, Ont. Now these business firms have followed this with another article. It was written in answer to criticism of the previous story. alt was pointed out at the time that $4,612,834 had been paid in salaries and wages. Quite naturally there followed this question: How much of the $4,612,â€" 834 went for executive salaries and how much did these salaries affect wages and the price of goods? JU. 9220 WESTON BUILDING PRODUCTS LIMITED Dear .Sirs: It was a T-ut fvlouuro and surâ€" rriu when I received your cheque or $25.00 as winner of the Wesâ€" ton Slogan: Contest. Wishing the Weston Business Men‘s Associaâ€" tion success in all of their activities and thanking you for your cheque far S80hN «ud ceCP e I C °T wlb Tabid AiGPâ€"Anbaatite ts had for $25.00 and also for selecting the King Slogan, I remain June 17, Weston Business Men‘s Ass‘n. Weston, Ontario. by Ken Saaimans, chairman of the Sfonn Contest Committee of the Weston Business Men‘s Associaâ€" tion and is self cxg:mwry. 55 gon Ave. Mt. Dennis, Ont. sCepaie e on Good Men Are Not Costly The following is a letter received LETTERS TO THE ANX EDITOR Cedar Fence Posts Clothes Line Poles By ‘R. J. Déeachman CITY AND SUBURBAN DELIVERY We Have A Large Stock On Hand To Suit Your Requirements ours truly, TIMES AND GUIDE, WESTON â€" N. C. King. ‘"Yes, I know, mother," said her daughter, "But he‘s always in mine." "My dear," said the fond mother earnestly, "I can‘t think why you can‘t get on with your husband. He‘s all right in his way." From "Ordeal By Planning" by John Jewkes. In the special Father‘s Day held at Elverston Park United Church, On Sunday, J,une 27, at 7 p.m., the service will be conducted by the Hardington Young People, assisted by the Howard Park orchestra. An all musical service. Elverston Park United In the special Father‘s Dav j Mr. Telford, the minister, related ately, owing to the exclusive nature of planning, only the very few in each generation can learn from experience in this way and those few will find it politically impossible, having once set dut on their nath, to retrace their steps in the light of their experience." At the Mother‘s Group meeting on Tuesday afternoon, June 15, Mrs. E. Mayo, public health nurse, addressed the mothers, speaking on "Nutrition and Behaviour Probâ€" lems." This group has now closed for the summer, meeting again in September. s sermon, speaking of "The Lord‘s Table," and conducting the comâ€" munion service. The Sacrament of the Lord‘s Supper was observed at Harding Avenue United on Sunday, June 20. Mr. Hincks, the minister, conâ€" ducted the ;fening exercises with Rev. C. A. cLaren preaching the Watch the announcement for help to the people of the Fraser Val‘!’ey and a special service on Sunday evening. Harding Avenue United _ This will mean that our church will be closed during July and the first two Sundays of August. _ 20 Don‘t forget the picnic at Funâ€" dale Park, Woodbridge, leaving King Crescent and Main St. at 4 p.m. this Friday. Have you a car to provide transportation? _ _ The coâ€"operative services for the summer months are as follows: Westminster United, July 4, 11 and 18. Central United, July 25, August 1 and 8. Weston Presbyterian Sunday being Father‘s Sunday, Mr. Telford, the minister, Save a very inspiring sermon on "David‘s Lament for Absalem." During the summer months church service will be at 10 a.m. with Sunday school at 11.15 a.m. Please note the change in time of Sunday school. The following is the program for the uniting churches for the sumâ€" mer months of Cross street Presbyâ€" terian, Central United and Westâ€" minster United. The services will be eonducted by Rev. R. C. Creelâ€" man in Westminster United church, July 4, 11 and 18. In Central United church by Rev. E. B. Eddy, July 25, Au%lst 1 and 8; and in Cross street Presbyterian bdv C. A. McLaren, August 15, 22 and 29. _ Riverside United | _ The subject of the evening sermon is “’Ehis is the day." _ The service of Holy Communion will ‘be conducted this Sunday morning and at the conclusion of the evening cgr?ver. We invite the whole chur amily to worship and to receive communion beforé holiday season. The subject of the gaorning address is "Some Paraâ€" loxes." Westminster United Presbyterian, August 15, 22 and Here is a short prayer, which if prayed withearnestness and faith should have an effect on the universe. Study it, analyze it, and with the fullest sincerity and faith, use it throughout the week: "Grant, 0 Lord, we beseech Thee, that the course of this world may be so peaceably ordered by Thy goverange, that Thy Church may joyâ€" fully serve Thee in all Godly quiétness; through Jesus Christ our Lord. to him. The reward, as pointbd out, is the blessings from God on high. In the Gosbel there is a strong ammunition for each individual to launch out into the deep and become real fishers of men. The church has There is a definite need today for putting into effect the teaching | of the “: Gospel. St, Peter in his writings emphasized the meed for & "uhmlhhwh,mulmriflce.‘ render good for evil, instead of the present idealâ€"evil for evil and good | for good. ‘This truth is essential to the world‘s peace today. If it could | be inculcated into every heart that each individual would do all in his power to render good on all occasions, even though evil has been done Fift;zgunday After Trinity | WESTON 1224 16 FOOT LENGTHS PICKETS Selections from Bible included the following from Psaims 104: 24: "O Lord, how manifold are thy works! in wisdom hast thou made 1948. The Golden Text was: ‘"Though there be that are called gods, whether in heaven or in earth, (as there be gods many. and lords many.) but to us there is but one God, the Father, of whom are all things, and we in him." (I Corinâ€" thians 8: 5. 6). My friend that is our prayer toâ€" g;i/. Will you accept Jesus Christ lay, and know that your sins are lor&lven 4 e extend a hearty invitation to all to attend our gospel services. __ In the twentyâ€"sixth chapter of The Acts, the Apostle Paul is showâ€" ing two Romans, Festus and Agripgn, the way of Salvation. In Acts 26: 28, King Agrippa says: "Almost thou gersuadest me to be a Christian." Paul makes reply in the twentyâ€"ninth verse, "I would to God, that not only thou, but also all that hear me this day, were bot!\ lln'woat, and altogether such Christian Science ‘"Is the Universe, Including Man. Evolved by Atomic Force?" was the subject of the Lesson Sermon which was read in all churches of Christ, Scientist, throughout the world. including Third Church of Christ, Scientist, 70 High Park Avenue. Toronto, at 11 a.m. and 7;3?. p.m. on Sunday, June 20th, Romans 5: 11: "And hot only so, but we also ja in God through our Lord Jesus rist, by whom we have now received the atonement." Romans 5: 8: "But God comâ€" mendeth His love toward us, in that, while we were yet sinners, Christ died for us." _ _ We do not have &nything to sell, but we do have somethin{ that is worthâ€" more than anything this world contains; it is life everlastâ€" ing, and it is free. Eternal life was purchased for you by Jesus Christ when He shed His blood on the cross of Calvary, almost two thousâ€" and years ago. All you have to do to inherit that eternal life is ackâ€" nowledge yourself as a sinner beâ€" fore God, and accept that shed blood as the atonement for your sins. Each time a salesman calls at your door, or each time you enter a store, it is the salésman‘s busiâ€" ness to persuade K:u that what he is selling is the best product on the market. He has many testiâ€" monies of satisfied customers, and also many facts to prove this proâ€" duct is the best. kh:lgdom of the heart of a child and the tr:fic tale of our time is that materialistic intérests still sways our lives and the griceleu Godâ€"given gifts to parenthood reâ€" ceive our second best. Weston Pentecostal lom, my son, my son!" There are many men, said Mr. Telford, who give to their children everything except the one thin.ï¬which matters most, the comradeship of an affecâ€" tion which understands the child and which the child can understand, There is no doubt that David loved his sons, but there is not much evidence that he took time to love them and counsel théem as he should. He was too busy building kingdoms to enter much into the "O my son Absalom! 7;1;;;0;.7 â€"my son, Absalom!" cried David, "Would God I had died for thee O Absiâ€" the tragic story of David and Abâ€" solom and took for his text, David‘s mournful lament, which poured forth from his Heart ‘when he heard of his son‘s untimely death. 28 MAIN ST. N. Weston Music & Radio WASHER REPAIRS TOASTERS, IRONS, HOUSEHOLD APPLIANCES REPAIRED WASHER PARTS AND WRINGER ROLLS IN sTOCK RADIO REPAIRS riches." lincluded the fol Correlative citations from the| 507: "Infinite â€" Christian Science textbook, "Sciâ€"| governs all. fron ence and Health with Key to the cule to infinity." them all: the earth is full of thy) Scriptures" by Mary Baker Eddyv workme wire camadiams ru EÂ¥VERY vou $ARM ; »4 J >~,~’; % 4 VX@,@%- wpr"" SAVE THEM Come and sing with the help of an orchestra, choir and song leader. Or come to our quiet helpful service of morning worship. Cl wa it REV. A. J. GREERâ€"Pastor 30 Sykes Ave., Weston 9.45 a.m.â€"Sunday School. 11.00 a.m.â€"Worship Service. 7.00 p.m.â€"Gospel Service. Do net be afraid of an empty church: it is nearer full than empty, and the fellowship is rich and warm. HARDING AVENUE UNITED CHURCH WESTON BAPTIST CHURCH 9.45 a.m.â€"Sunday School. 7.00 p.m.â€"‘"Fraser Valley Flood Appeal!" 11.00 a.m.â€"Comâ€" munion. Rev. R g inii:“é 1 ns ev. R. Curr reelman, WESTON M.B.E., M.A., B.D. rasssrm Banx or MontrEAL wWAR _ SAvING S CERTIFICATES 1153 GUARANTEED WESTOX PRESBYTERIA 7 1 JRSREANE i Amiindiinadns d iebicli Why not let those certificates continue to do a savings Yob for you? Instead of mailing them gposth by month to Ottaws as they mature, bring them to your nearest B of M branch. For a small service charge we‘ll handle their redemption and put the money in a Savings Account for you. There it will continue to carn interest and serve as a nestâ€" w Hl egg for your future. Lil e When you bought War Savings Certificates, you did so, not anly to bring Victory, but to put something aside for the future, dbocinnt 2 Wds 9e 15 Springmount Ave. SUNDAY, JUNE 27, 1948 11.00 a.m.â€""SOME PARADOXES." 7.00 p.m.â€""THIS IS THE DAY." Weatminster Hnited® Cfurch 8 a.m.â€"Holy Communic 10 a.m.â€"Sunday School. 11 a.m.â€"Matins and Ser VISITORS WHCOME Dedication of Memoria 7 p.m.â€"EV‘;l:n: and l--. and The Friendly Family Church Main Street 8. at Belivue Crescent Rev. C. A. McLarenâ€"Minister Jean L Harper,‘ A.T.C.M.â€"Director of Music %MM SUNDAY, JUNE 27, 1948 3 n.m.â€"Sunday School. 7 p.m.â€"Spring Musical Festival (an all musical service) conducted by Hardington Young People‘s ® Negro Spirituals sung by Young People‘s Chorus. ® Howard Park Orchestra. ® Short Selections from the Broadway N e@ r o _ religious â€" play, . "Green Pastures." ® Instrumental and Vocal Solos. included the following from page 507: ‘"Infinite Mind creates anc governs all. from the mental moleâ€" walk @f LiE si®egs tr1? »=a s Y PANK® SUNDAY, JUNE 27th 11 a.m.â€"The Sacraâ€" ment of the Lord‘s Supper. diction of God." Sacâ€" rament of the Lord‘s Supper. King and Maig Sts. Rev. E. B Rdidy 31 Queen‘s Drive | _ N ZONE 4â€"400 Minister: