* â€" Do realize that every act that is put _<£“Cg:‘ct is the result of some thinking. It _ is the thwg:: that has been instilled in the mind that becomes the act when the opporâ€" tunity arises. Therefore, you can see how _ ir mpor t it is that man learns to think â€" rightly. When individuals fill*their minds M trashy reading of criminology fiction, . brutal murders, when they revel in the quesâ€" ‘ tiongble tabloids that are issued and=aisoâ€" &" ‘with criminals they create an environâ€" . ment that fills their mind with thoughts that . become detrimental when put into action. . What we require today is a purifying of our $y ts. It is not a religious axiom alone E; "As a man thinketh in his heart, so is he." a8 :A g:l fact that should be realized by every i; in social life, in the business world â€" and in industrial production care should be & have the individual think right. It _ is when we think of our responsibilities to _ our fellow ~men, our communjity and our of our dependence upon a Supreme â€" Being, that we are stimulated to put into â€" practice those thoughts that are for the deâ€" _ velopment and the general advancement of â€" humanity. If a man would begin to think â€" rightly and only feed on those thoughts that _ are for his own development, the detrimental »i f and comic pictures will soon disâ€" he? ar and there will be an entirely different pa ude towards each other. i building of a local hospital to serve %fl and the surrounding community has | been justified. During the past week every bedâ€"in the hospital has been occupied. This _ ho is servix'ig not only the town of Wesâ€" fs but York Township, North York and | \â€" Et e. Those who have been in charge of | _ the affairs realize that there has been a great | fiï¬l& rendered to the whole community. _ The men and women who have undertaken _ the leadership, who have successfully put _ across the project are to be congratulated | _ upon their foresight, their persistency and | E> flnt accomplishment. They certainly will | _ be.remembered as benefactors by the citizens | of the whole community. It is indeed unâ€" | ‘ortunate that the citizens of York Township | eould not have seen their way clear to have "built a wing, known as the York Township , and thus increase the capacity of the se t famar Bs in of a large â€"I ospital would have _ beeh beneficial not to Weston, but to Etobiâ€" eoke, North York and York Township. Efâ€" to bring about such a solution certainly have serious consideration. â€" Bach year as it rolls around brings new ‘ nities to those who are alert. It is a new incentive to strive harder and faster to the essentials of life. It is the time 3 after due reflection over the past year, ; that have been made are realâ€" and plans laid to guard against a repetiâ€" ‘May all realize their opportunities in _â€" Now is the time to lay plans for control of traffic through Weston. At the present time with the increased traffic that is coming up and down the streets, the increased transporâ€" tation of industrial workers by bus and car; the increased use of the four corners, speâ€" *f‘“‘ ‘during rush hours, it becomes necesâ€" ~sar _that special consideration be given to handling of traffic. Congestion at the four Â¥ of late at the rush hours has been y serious. It is due largely to the parking on either side of the street, to the inâ€" con te individuals who stop their car forâ€"double parking, even if it is only for a minuteée traffic js held up. With the compleâ€" tion of the new highway to the north there is b to be a further increase of traffic thro the town. Plans should be laid to make cutâ€"offs for those going west and east nd for adequate parking regulations. There no doubt that the town fathers and the rr department are giving their attention to the matter; however, action should be HUMBER HOSPITAL FILLED THURSDAY, JANUARY 18, 1951 pm reports of those who know and f economics, ‘we in this favored land of r should enjoy a great prosperity. Sitâ€" ‘as we are through no effort of our there lies before us an opportunity to op and build successfully for world and commerce. Our success depends the Rnnnity and crug:: Kower tyof m depends ones with ':gn they do their varâ€" bes. It depends upon the united coâ€" it meponts upon the" Imdershis + upon p fike sitizens pomoraits io meaint the details. lzm-nhould al year for Canada, filled with opporâ€" as soon as possible to relieve the conâ€" i7 advertising rates on upplication. BAM WILSON, Publiser, SINCLAIR, JEAN PERKS, h‘ Editor. Social News Editor. ALFRED BIRD, News Editor. CONTROLS ITY KNOCKING l;‘fl:..r&h- (ocalhs Ste per u..L. or society notices of admission fee is io Shaige 0e se th 4. oting Bronle romacd s ver year in advance to United . Guide mail, Post Office No one is allowed to take charge of a railâ€" way locomotive without years of experience and training. e No one is permitted to pilot a passenger plane without a thorough and arduous series of examinations and hundreds of hours of flying experience. â€" Traffic on the highways is almost entirely controlled by individual car drivers. _ Yet a railway engineer and a pilot cannot clrl;}ll:l u;;d drive, but a car operator can. Y $ n â€" 0 EDITORIAL BRIEF Farm boys learn that it is easier to get up with the chickens than to keep up with them. Canadian automobile drivers, with nothâ€" ing to guide their course and no coâ€"drivers, are legally free to drink and drive. _ _ An automobile driver‘s licence can !: seâ€" cured in Canada following a most casugl exâ€" amination or, ip some provinces; by merely sending a dollar or two through the mail. Yet, while railway en(flneera and aeroplane Filots are forbidden to drink and drive, there s no similar restriction on a car driver. Traffic on the railways is regulated by perâ€" sons other than the locomotive engineers. Every tomorrow has its roots in yesterday . We must search our heritage to find our To escape this prospect and to check inflaâ€" tion now, Hutchison suggests the Canadian public support measures to: hold purchasing power to the level of production ; cut governâ€" ment spending on nonâ€"defence items; drasâ€" tically increase taxes; raise interest rates on loans to curb private spending; reduce conâ€" sumer credit. Remedies for inflation remind us of castor oil. The patient must open his mouth and participate in the treatment before the mediâ€" cine can cure the trouble. wHY? WHy:r wuy? rails. Aeroplane companies forbid pilots to fly within 24 hours of taking an alcoholic drink. Yet coâ€"pilots are available to take over the controls in case of emergency. 80 â€" Traffic on the a’frï¬fi'ï¬ regulated by perâ€" sons other than the pilots. Rule G of the North American railways makes it an offence for any employee to drink while on duty. Yet trains run on steel "Unless this slide is soon arrested, the American economy will be under wartime government controls within a year. Thus the greatest danger of all is that we shall repeal the free society of America for a temporary emergency when we face in fact perhaps decades of cold war; that, having established a totalitarian economy in the name of deâ€" mocracy, we shall be unable to liquidate it in ten or twenty years when everyone is geared to it." "We have robbed the saver, the pensioner and the widow while the irivestor, the specâ€" ulator and the organized wage earner (who in the main has kept wages abreast of living costs) have gone scot free." The Canadian government is determined to avoid total or partial price controls to curb inflation "but the U.S. is slithering into them day by day . . . and U.S. controls are politâ€" ically irresistible here. ‘"We have exempted from the capital levy the speculator who was smart enough to buy goods like real estate or the claim to goods in the form of common stocks. The value of these things in money has risen as the value of money has fallen. . P ‘"We have denounced the Socialists of Britain whenever they proposed a capital levy .. . but (with inflation) we have enâ€" forced a ferocious levy of our own. We have selected as our victim the man who has saved his money, bought Victory Bonds, prepared to keep himself in old age instead of living on the public. can become our Achilles‘ heel and Stalin‘s secret weapon." The sharp drop in buying power of the Canadian dollar in the past three years is reâ€" vealed in an accompanying articlet:i' Sidney Margolius: when controls were lifted in 1947 the dollar was worth 79 cents compared with its 1939 value; at the end of 1950 it had slumped to 58 cents. By inflation, Canada and other free counâ€" tries can wreck themselves, destroy their present economic systems and lose the fight against Communism, says Hutchison. "It Dollar? Further serious inflation will undermine Canada‘s morale and its entire defence proâ€" gram, Bruce Hutchison writes in Maclean‘s in an article, "Are We Heading for a 20â€"cent Inflation is a word much to the fore. Like war, it hovers grim and spectralâ€"hued at every man‘s shoulder. The dangers of inflaâ€" tion must be recognized by all sections of the people; it will demand the concerted effort and sacrifice of all to save the Canadian econâ€" omy from disaster. WHISTLE SOUNDS: WRECK AHEAD? Fm% ‘and his staff did ud this moited detnaint that the excclont this sho g that &: excellent work done by the polick has been a very efficient deterrent to careless drivers. May this persistent drive by the police force elimâ€" "inate all accidents and fatalities so we can look forward to a start in the new year with a definiuitsa of reduction of the number of fatalities accidents in 1951. If every inâ€" dividual will observe the laws laid down by the traffic department and if these are enâ€" forced strictly by the officers of the law, people will soon realize that they mean busiâ€" ness. Too often individuals have gotten away with a narrow shave from a serious accident ; too often police have been handicapped in their prosecution when the public know the sign means what it says; that the officers are going to prosecute to the full extent of the law, then greater care and precaution will be taken. Public support of the laws will assure the enforcement of the law. Police deâ€" partments in the suburban areas as well as the city are to be congratulated upon the :}flforta they are putting forth to clear everyâ€" ing. an m 16 € â€"Midland Free Press Herald |\ The schedule for our young ‘people‘s work is a follows: Pax ;Clun at 10:15 a.m., leader Mr. \Gordon Alcott; Jr. Sunday School 11 a.m., leader Mrs. W. C. Moffat; 8r. Sunday School 2 p.m. superâ€" ‘lnmdont Mr, R. C. Seagrave, St. Any Weston woman is invited to attend the Food Clinic at Canaâ€" da Packers at 2 o‘clock on Jan 31, and are asked to meet at the St. Clair St. West entrance at 1:55 if possible, _ The Kitk Session will meét on Thursday evening at 7.80 p.m. in the vestry. _ The regular meeting of the Woâ€" men‘s Association will be held. on Tuesday evening January 23rd at Mrs. W. Gordon Gunn‘s, 146 Church The annual Vestry meeting of St. David‘s, Hardington, will be held in the basement of the Comâ€" munity Hall, Thursday evening, January18th, at 8 p.m. Confirmaâ€" tion class next Sunday morning at 10 a.m. Morning service at 11 a.m. Sunday School at 3 p.m. The Church of the Good Shepâ€" herd will present "Choir Capades" in the very near future, at Hardâ€" ington in aid of the Building Fund of the Church of St. David‘s, Hardâ€" ington. Watch for the date, Central Church ‘"The Death of a Democracy" and its lessons for mankind as feaâ€" tured in the January 1st issue of Life will be a part of the emphasis at the morning hour of worship. You can‘t afford to miss this great help in our time of crisis as spiritâ€" ually ‘ interpreted. _lod moves in a mysterious way, His wonders to perform" is the text of the evening sermon. The main emphasis is that God moves, which hearterf® us when ev:“rything seems confused today. A meeting of the Parish Guild will be held at the home of Mrs. Brooks, 32 Chiswick Ave., on Monâ€" day evening, January 22nd, at 8 Central YPU met last Sunday to elect officers for 1951. The folâ€" lowing executive was appointed; President: Mr. Robt. McPhee; vice president, Mr. James Fitzpatrick; secretary, Miss Colleen Mollet; treasurer, Miss Bea Joy Charlton; executive members, Miss Betty Mark, Miss Audrey McKague, Miss Grace â€" Wilson, Frank Flavelle, Garry Rankin, William Thrush, Beverley Eddy, Ralph Draper. The Annual Meeting of the Church and Congregation is planâ€"| ned for January 24th. The women| of the church will suply dinner at| 6.15 p.m. and the reports of the year, and the electiqn of ofï¬cersi for 1951 will follow. We hope that every member and adberent will do | their best to be present for this | annual occasion. | St. David‘s, Hardington Next Sunday evening, at the usual church hour, the Minister will install the Executive in a draâ€" matic presentation. Weston Presbyterian M hi 1(0 0 o0 ie n en 2 o Wc e e smm se ie ce o o mot n ate se e ie I Not only has the town grown and come into its own; it is surâ€" rounded today by an increased population and development . Weston has supplied the necessary needs and utilities for this growing area. There should be a further consolidation of the whole area and this will no doubt be ironed out in the forthcoming conference on amalgamation. Those sections adjacent to our town are to all intent and purposes part of the town. They share in all our advantages and developments and should become a part of a great city in the north west part of the City of Toronto. As the old timers look back to the days of the little school on Main St. N., the old blacksmith shops, the wagon works, the grist mills, the hotels and hitching posts, they see the transformation of Weston. It compares in beauty, opportunities and development most favourably with any town in Southern Ontario. Cooperation in this day will help to realize a still greater growth throughout the whole community. Weston Growing Up This was the phrase used by his Worship Mayor Seagrave at the inaugural dinner of the council. It was very appropriate and drew ‘attention to the fact that Weston is fast coming into its own. Those who have read the history of Weston by Dr. Fred Cruickshank and the late Joseph Mason, will realize just what the Mayor meant. It is a long, long story of careful management and excellent leadership and foresight. Those men and women who have been and are responsible for the present town of Weston are to be congratulated. They haye laid foundations and built a municipality that has become the ideal location for industry and residents. As you read the pages of the history, as you recall those early voyagers who came down the Humber, those men who brought their grist to the mill, the.great work and foundation laid by St. Philip‘s Church, the mother church of the district, and today look upon not only the town itself with all its improvements, utilities and facilities, one can see Weston has grown up. Those who have been respfnlible for its growth can look upon it with pride. P dihcidiisnin s tinkbd uit hd A U C c VC Yes, the season is rolling on, as Easter is early this year. gesima Sunday, which is the Latin for seventy, approximately weeks before Easter, which comes this year the earliest it is This is the call of the Church to prepare for Christian living. 8St. Paul in his Epistle taken from 1st Corinthians 9 and 24, uses the illustration of the athlete who w, striving for the prize and victory. He ealls upon all s to so subject their physical beings that they will live in accordance with the will of God, thus obtaining the rewards of eternal life, In the Gospel for the day taken from St, Matthew 20 and 1, we have that wellâ€"known story by our Lord Jesus Christ of the laborers and their hire through the day. Those who bore the heat of the day were looking for a greater reward than those who came at the 11th hour. This story should be read carefully and understood. All are called upon to enter into the services of the Lord and work with diligence, not for reward, but for the services rendered to mankind and the preparation involved for the eternal life. Now is the {ï¬mo to so prepare our physical and mental beings that we may be an acceptable sacrifice in the eyes of Him who reigns supreme. Learning to live is one of the most important jobs of the day. Utilize this preâ€"Lenten season for that purpose. \ Stray Thoughts About > Matters of Public Concern By SAM WILSON ‘ Communion Service will be conâ€" \ducted at the close of the evening |service this Sunday Jan. 21 for | thoes unable to be present in the ‘momln[. a \ Elverside Churches ] The subject of the evening medâ€" |itation, more, about, "My Money." {This is the first of & series of subâ€" jects which are to follow, my time, my work, my marriage, my faith, my friends etc. Mrs. Thora Leonâ€" ‘ard, will be with us again to play the saxaphone, two pianists, are assisting Mrs. J. L. Harper, with {the music at the evening service. |Have you tried Westminster evenâ€" ing service at 7.30 if not we invite you. Dr. E. L. Meuser was special speaker at the Elverside Churches on Sunday, January 14th. Dr. Meuser has been on the staff of West China Union University, Chingtu, China, for forty years and has just returned to Canada. Durâ€" ing his very interesting talk, Dr. Meuser dwelt upon the Christian situation in Communist China. ‘"Theme are three types of Chinese Christians today," he said. "There Are those who have forsaken Christianity and embraced Comâ€" munism; their kind is found all over the worldâ€"there is only one word for them, unstable. Then there are those who adopt expeâ€" dient methods hoping to change the sltuation from within, . ." "Finalâ€" ly, there are those who are standâ€" At the Fireside this Sunday evening, at 8.35 Mr. John L. Seaâ€" born, manager, Bank of Commerce Weston, will sveak to the group, on "Canadian Banks, Their Origin and Development." Baptism _ Service on Sunday morning January 28, at 11.00 a.m. Please call the church office if inâ€" tending to have children Baptised. Last Sunday 29 new members were received into the fellowship of the Westminster Family. It is good to have them all in our midst and to become a full part of the Church life. Sunday evening worship at 7.30 p.m, What a fine evening congreâ€" gation last Sunday. How the conâ€" gregation has commenced to rally to be worshipping morning and evening. It is a day when the whole community should be engaged at some hour in the art of worship. Sunday school for children 2â€"9 years 11.00 and the Sunday school for all others 9 yrs. and up is at 2.00 p.m. Youth 14â€"16 in the Ichâ€" thus Club under the leadership of Mrs. J. Aitchison. Or for those 16 years and over the Amity Club under the leadership of °C. A. Mcâ€" Laren, The Sacrament of the Holy Comâ€" munion will be conducted at Westâ€" minster Church this Sunday mornâ€" ing at 11 a.m. This sacred service at the outset of the new year calls each one of us to self examination and self rededication in the Chrisâ€" tian Spirit. Westminster United a" Correlative citations from the Christian Science textbook, "Sciâ€" ence and Health with Key to the Scriptures" by Mary Baker Eddy, included the following from page 11: "We know that a desire for holiness is requisite in order to ain holiness; but if we desire holiâ€" ness above all else we shall sacâ€" rifice everything for it. The golden text was "The bread of God is he which cometh down from heaven, and giveth life unto the wBHd." (John 6: 33). Selections from the Bible includâ€" ed the following from Lamentaâ€" tions 8: 40: "Let us search and try our ways, and turn again to the Riverside is holding its annual congregational | meeting â€" tonight, Thursday, Jan. 18th at 8 p.m. We hope that the folk in the Riverside United church area are noticing the progress that is being made these days on the new church building. It is a big venture of faith and the members of the church are planning tho call upon you in a short while to ask you to help them in this great task. Christian Science "Sacrarhent" was the subject of the lesson serman which was read in all Churches of Christ, Scientist, throughout the world including Third Church of Christ, Scientist, 70 High Park Ave., Toronto, on Sunday, Jan. 14, 1951. ing firmly on the Rock of Ages." Life without Christ would be death for them. Death would simâ€" ply mean release to eternal life with Christ. They are the nucleus upon which the church will rebuild. He ended his discourse on a hopeâ€" ful note. "I believe that God rules and overrules. I believe that condiâ€" tions will be worse, it is true, but I believe that eventually they will again be better. In that day, if Christians continue their sympaâ€" thetic support, they will find that Chinese Christians will be ready to welcome the Christian Missionaries once again." \ The mayor‘s talk was followed by a talk by Mr. G. Sainsbury who gave a history of his life as a bandmaster having started as a bandmaster of a fife and drum band at the age of seventeen. Mr. Horace Sainsbury, the bandmaster, and Mr. W. Vineham, president, both spoke briefly to the meetings Following the election of officâ€" ers, the meeting was entertained by Jack Lombie and his guitar from Windsor, and moving pictures shown by Stan Powell. Continued from page 1â€" this summer would be attended by large numbers of townspeople. He also expressed the hope that in the near future the band would be equipped with new uniforms and also that is would not be too long before a band shell would be built in the town park. Weston Silver Band Thomas Costain visualizes and plans a packed future for himself. Travelling, sketching and always searching for a lasting theme for his next story, and when he obtains it, will doubtless write, edit, tear up, and write. Reluctantly leaving this compelâ€" ling personality who exudes perâ€" sonality, and cou}i well be used as & round character in one of his own novels, one is left with the feeling that Thomas Costain has still to give of his best to the literary field. Speaking on what trend future books must follow, Mr. Costain stated that there is a general feelâ€" ing at the moment that books must be almost Freudian. "There is a persistent school that believe in analytical writing, and the ‘Stream of Consciousness‘ style. But I do not believe that this is enough for the reader, or that it will hold his permanent interest, Good books, like Dickens, have survived and continue to do so because they supâ€" ply a need, telling a story to one who reads for entertainment and lasting interest." â€" Declaring that there are imâ€" mense possibilities for new writers, he said, "Editors strive earnestly to find talent, some even defending manuscripts that they believe have promise, with the higher powers of publishing houses." The novelist urges beginners to write every day, "Learn some techâ€" nique, but don‘t bother too much about that, for by writing steadily, skill and technique will follow quickly." As kind to new, struggling writers as when he was a talentâ€" scout for the "Post," Mr. Costain has this advice to give the embryo novelist: "Patience and humility are absolute essentials. Be methodâ€" icalâ€"and no temperament. . It‘s pleasant to believe in ‘temperaâ€" ment‘ and ‘waiting for inspiration,‘ but this method of de‘aying action is merely a symptom of mind laziâ€" ness." called. Mr, Costain admits that his years of editorial work now stands him in good stead. "Editing is an imâ€" portant part of successful writing," he said. "The work must be read as though it were someone else‘s, No author can afford to regard their writing as something sacred, for no matter how much the writing is ‘loved,‘ if it is irrelevant, it must be torn out, Every writer must be prepared to take the severest critâ€" iscism." or so he ruthlessly edits, cuts, edits and usually tears up about 30 or 40 thousand words and starts afresh. ‘ ""Some time ago 1 concluded aA book of about 90,000 words. Lookâ€" ing at it a few days later I found it was bad, didn‘t like it at all. I tore it up and worked on another for six or seven months," he reâ€" Continued from page 1 Passed away at his residence, 176 Rosemount Ave., Weston, Satâ€" urday, Jan. 13, 1951, Charles Edâ€" ward Calhoun, in his 81gt year, He was predeceased by his wife, Lillie Franks. Funeral service on Tuesâ€" day, Jan. 16, at Fiynn UndemT Funeral residence, Mt. Dennis, Inâ€" terment Riverside cemetery, Wesâ€" ton, He leaves two daughters, Ms. R. H. Young (Janet) of Goshen, Member of a family of Vaughan Township pioneers, Silas McDougâ€" all died Tuesday, Jan. 9, at his home on William St., Woodbridge. He was in his 93rd year and had resided in Woodbridge for the past 12 years. His mother, Mrs. William McDougall, died at the age of 100. Mr. McDougall was the youngest of 10 children, who, with the excepâ€" tion of one brother, lived to be over 80. For many years Mr. McDougall farmed in Vaughan Township. He was & Liberal and a member of Woodbridge United Church. The funeral service was held in Woodâ€" bridge United Church at 2.30 pm on Thursday, Jan, 11. Interment Maple Cemetery Calhoun, Charles Edward | OBITUARY McDougall, Silas Elverside United Churches Pastor: G, Legge, B.A., B.D NOTICE FOR SUNDAY, JAN. 21: St. Andrew‘s Presbyterian Church 11 a.m.â€""Democracy Our Privilege." 11.00 a.m.â€"Holy Communion. . Sunday School 2â€"9 Yrs. 2.00 p.m.â€"Sunday School 9 yrs. and up, 7.30 p.m.â€"More about My Money. 8.35 p.m.â€"Canadian Banks, Origin and Development. 7 °m Main Street North at Fern Avenue 9 Rectorâ€"Rev. George Roe, 38 King Street ' Septuagesima Sunday, Jn-ry 2lst 8.00 a.m.â€"Holy Communion. 11.00 a m.â€"CHORAL COMMUNION AND SERMON, 2 p.m.â€"Senior S.S. 1 p.m.â€""God Moves! Do You? \ _ Junior Congregation. 8.00 p.m.â€"Sunday School. 7.00 p.m.â€"Evensong and Sermon, St. John‘s Anglican ( wWESTOX PRESBYTERIAN CMMRC WESTON BAPTIST CHURCH Harding Avenueâ€"10.15 Riversideâ€"11.30 AM.; Elverston Parkâ€"7.00 P MEETING IN HUMBER HEIGHTS SCHOOL WESTMINSTER UNITED CHURCH 11.00 a.m.â€"The Pastor. 3.00 p.m.â€"Sunday School. 7.00 p.m.â€"REV. DOUGLAS C. PERCY. WELCOME! VIHTORS WRCOME SUNDAY, JAN. 21st, 1951 Sunday Schoolâ€"11.00 a.m,. SERVICE FOR ADULTSâ€"11 a.m. Minister in Chargeâ€"M. P. Wotherspoon Serm Speakers The Friendly Family Church Main Street S. at Belivue Crescent Rev. C. A. McLarenâ€"Minister Rev, A. J. Greer 0.15 A.M.; Sun. School, 8 P.M M.; Sun. School, 2 P.M. 0 P.M.; Sun. School, 2 P.M. opic: ELDER‘S SUNDAY. _ Perry, J. Washburn, A. Alway. [ Indiana, and Reta, of Weston, and a niece, Mrs. Ella Caven, Islingtons ‘Bl!tfl\, Ethel Sarah â€" Suddenly at the home of her daughter, 892 Windermere Ave, Toronto, on Jan. 11, 1951, Ethel Sarah Parrott, wife of the late Sydney Batten, passed away in her 68th year. Funeral at the chapel of the W. J. Ward Funeral Home Weston, on Monday, Jan. 15. Interâ€" ment Sanctuary Park cemetery. She leaves two daughters, Mrs. J. C. Reid (Hazel) and Mrs. A. Hogg (Kathleen) and two sons, Alan H. and Lloyd. SAFEâ€"GUARDING BEAUTY Canadians spend almost 40 mil« lion dollars a year on toilet prep» arations, excluding somp. . This includes baby powders, creams and oils. Both domestic and imported products of this huge industry now come under the watchful eye of the food and drug divisions of the Department of Nationat Health and Welfare and, as with food and drugs, the division‘s laboratorie® guard against any injurious tollet preparations‘ being sold in this country. When white coatings of lime beâ€" gin to form inside teakettles, boil them out with a solution of vineâ€" gar and water for a quarter of an 11 a.m.â€"Dr. J oh n Coburn. 6.50 p.m.â€"Orga n Recital. Installation of Officers of Young Peoâ€" ple‘s Union. Hnited Church January 21, 1951 King and Main Sts. REV. E. B. EDDY 31 Queen‘s Drive Minister.