Ontario Community Newspapers

Canadian Statesman (Bowmanville, ON), 9 Jun 1949, p. 8

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J ?AM MEURT The More You Look ai Tractors The B.ft. a CASE Looks Se. theo Model "DC" Il You'vo Boom Wazdumg more Power 0 Hcre's a 3-plow tractor that's nimble-footed i row.crop work. In plowing and disking it cioes as rnuch ini four days as a 2-plow size does ins a wcek. It costs Icas per acre for fuel and upkecp. Its fuel. saving fourth gear handles light work at lower engine speed. It bas Case ENDURANCE, for extra years of life. Core ne and asic about it now. 91 King Street West RevIon Beauty Aids Lip Fashion $1.50 Llpsticks. 65e - $1.00 Nail Poiish -----'5c Face Powder _____- 65e Fashion Plate - $1.25 Summer Needs Sun Goggles-- 25e te $3.25 Bathing Caps -- 45c-60c-95c Inseet Repeliants --- 49e-59c Noxzema Suntan 011 30c-60)c Tangel for burns - -65c Noxzema Cream 49c-69c-$1. FORN INNER Phone 497 m E NO'S "FRUIT SALT'? Anacin Bayer's Nyal Aika- Tablets Aspirin ASA. Tablets Seltzer 25c-49c-74e 18cg-29e-79c 25e - 49e 29e - 57e MACLEAN YOUR TEETH TO YOUTHFUL BRILLIANCE! Tii. speciol lIpold solv«mi moka teetli danli.g whitel li HY-PA-CIDS Relle'ves Stomach Distress $2.00 BRYLCREEM For weil groomed hair 29c - 49c FEENAMINT Chewing gum laxative 19C - 33C - 69C todoyTONI -.W 29Ç Home Permanent f cnmu lag ue47Ç 25 Refil Kit ----------- $1.25 Baby Scales For Rent 6 'CO WLING 'S DRUG STORETRSE The Newcastle Independeiii lMiss Margaret Ash1 Mr. and Mrs. R. A. Doak and ing put in shape for croquet and Dorothy Ann, Orillia, with Mr. lawn tennis. Already the lawn and Mrs. Archie Glenney and Ed- chairs are occupied with Sun Ba- ward. thers soaking up gobs of Vitamin Wednesday evening a large 'D'. Miss Margaret Mathews was crowd of ardent bail fans sa\v Sa absorbed in lier book and cho- Ne.wcastle win over Whitby in a colates she didn't even see us go. thrilling hardball game in the by. We caught a glimpse of Glad- Athletic Field. Many times the ys Long carrying on a sparkling iwin iooked as if it might be any- conversation with ber Budgie one's but Newcastle had a slight id hietyntornvehr edge when Irv McCullough dwelling. Farther down the line knocked a double to send in the Willis Chitty family were Lefty' Alquist to tie and 'Wink' busily working around the yard, Winters with the winning run. getting the grounds of 'Half-a- When time came ta find the score Hill' prepared for later summer amongst ail the shouting and functions. Around the corner at cheering we found it to be 6 ta 5à'The Glen' everything was desert- for Newcastle. Here's ta you fel- ed tnough we know very well they iows, keep up the good work! had loads of company on the Her many friends will be glad weekend. Since we were doing ta hear that Mrs. J. G. Jackson is our browsing in the morning may- home again with Mrs. Herb be it was too early for themn. Brown.. George Bull's imposing mansion, like summer home was quiet in Af ter motoring ta Montreal ta the dignity of its stately trees, attend the graduation of Miss but an down the way Tuckahoe Blanche Coultis, Mr. and Mrs. and Woodholme where the Fred Coultis, Thedford, and Miss Mary Wood's live, were busting with Tuff, Toronto, accompanied bY activity. The Carveth cottages are Miss Coultis called on Mrs. Frank getting a going over and in J. E. Branton on Wednesday. Boyd's cottage there was a tea- Tuesday evening sports ent4us- party. Hamilton and Walton iasts were treated ta an exhibition Bishv kydterhm o of softball such as we hope we the sumnjer and were busy as is neyer see again. Score of 28 ta il the fashion, yard-cleaning. We sounds more like basketball than were speaking ta one of the yaung softball. This sham contest was folk on Tuesday and they express- between Weyrich's and the Town. e hi ertbcueteei The latter were winners. enothigretaeda down there any Mr. Herb Cooke, Portland, more. Y o wouidothnk soethang Ont. is ith rs. . Coke. could be done about that-we see One of the pleasant social ev- hyaeee aigtegae ents of the week took the form ofteyaevetkigherae a surprise party for Mr, Stuart away from the beach naw. Milligan. This was more or less a Sorry ta hear Mrs. C. Powell goin-awy prty s Suar ishad the misfortune ta break her leaving the Bank of Commerce t o ake h sa oebtfns take up employment in the same terribly hard ta forge ahead. bank in Port of Spain, Trinidad. Mr. Howard IRowe, Hamilton, Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Porter were was home on the weekend. Mrs. hast and hostess ta the gathering. Rowe and Wayne accompanied Stuart xvas taken completely by hlm as far as Toronto where they surprise -but recovered composure will spend a few days before go- enough ta sincerely thank ail for ing to spend the rest of the week the lovely clipper bag presented in Hamilton. ta hlm. After relaxing over a few Mr. Bob Duck is getting to be games the guests were served a the gallivantingest man-last week dainty lunch. Present were Mi'sses he spent z4nother week in Toron- Agnes McNab, Mary Bell, Bey- to. erly Payne, Evelyn Aluin, Ruth Misses Betty Gray and Tilly Hancock, Verna Milligan, Mr. Eric Harris, Chesley, spent the week- Johnson, Mrs. E. Cooke and Mr. end in toxvn. On Saturday Buster and Mrs. Jack Wade. Miss Norma and Gwen Harris came down from Robinson and Mr. Bryce Ward of Chesley with Boyd and Gerry. Oshawa were out of town guests. Mr. and Mrs. Norman White Mrs. D. A. Wood who spent the and Norma were Sunday guests winter with Mrs. E. Cooke, has of Mr. and Mrs. Talbot Alldread. taken up summer residence on the Mr. and Mrs. Jack Wade and cool shores of the lake. Douglas spent Sunday with Mrs. Thursday evening the Junior's Mary Wade and family at New- taok the Town in their softball tonville. game 8 ta 6. Mr. and Mrs. Jack Wade and Miss Margaret Wright, Toronto, Douglas spent Wednesday after- was weekend guest of Mr. and noon with Mr. and Mrs. H. H. Mrs. J. A. Smith, Jacqueline and Holdaway and Mr. and Mrs. John Joey. Box, Port Hope. 1 Miss Dorothy Trenwith, Toron- Mrs. H-arold Carr, Port Credit, ta, spent the weekend with her visited ber mother Mrs. W. H. aunt Miss Louise Trenwith. Caake. We extend sympathy of the On June 1 the Merry Married caýmmunîty in the sudden passing Club met at Sunday School Room of Miss Adah Allun ta ber sister of United Church. Mr. AIf Perrin Elizabeth. Miss Allun had been presented a devational periad fol- in ili health for sorte time, but lowed by an amusing reading by ber sudden death shocked ail. Mrs. Stan Allin. Mr. Frank, Mc- Mr. Harold Hoar, Toronto, Mullen presented a series af mav- spent the weekend at home here. ing pictures. Refreshments were Several fromn here attended served by the committee in charge benefit softball game between of Mr. and Mrs. Art Randali, Mr. Sunday Morning Class and Dur- and Mrs. Alf Perrin, Mr. and Mrs. ham Ahl-Stars in Bowmanville. Frank McMiillen and Mr. and Upon browsing around the lake Mrs. Stan Aluin. President an- on Sunday we find ail the cottages nounced that the second coat of in a state of hum-drum. If they paint would bc applied this week aren't being repaired, a garden is with the members ta follow the being put in. The lawns were be- same schedule. He also annaunced FRIED CHICHEN Oui For A Drive ? Treat the Famiiy te Dinner Served Every Day- 9 a.m. te 1 a.m. STEAKS -CHOFS HOMýEMADE PASTRY HONEY HOLLOW RESTAURANT At the Subway NEWCASTLE ONTARIO DARLINGTON ABATTOIR "&-MPTON PHONE - BOWiMANVIILLE 2836 ONTARIO A Reminder That We Stili Do CUSTOM KILLING - PICKLING SMOKING - SAUSAGE MAKING RENDERING LARD $4000 Buts 39 Onitario 39 Street DO WMAN VILLE Semi-detached Brick Home Large Lot A. E. MURDOCHI Broker Oshawa MAKE FE HOG YOUR OWN BOWMANVILLE BROKER TO ME. that the comnittee, in careof July 6 meeting would b:e Mr.and Mrs. Howard Wilson, Mr. andý Mrs. George Waltan, Mr. and Mrs. Alf Graham and Mr. and Mrs. Rosa Aluin. Ail mem-bers are re- quested ta be present. Mr. and Mrs. Bob Drummond spent the weckend fishing at thc cottage 'Lonely Pine', Fenelx>n Falls. Misses Lida and Muriel Lake and friend and Mr. Bill Keyes, To- ronto, spent the weekend with Mrs. Frank Gibson. One wcek ago last Sunday Mr. Douglas Dewdney, Mr. Ed Bar- chard, Mrs. Vance Sutton, Mr. Gardon Garrod Jr., Miss Betty Gibson and Miss Nelda Edwards were welcomed into St. George's Anglican Church in an impres- sive service. We are glad ta hear Mrs. N. B. Schram is progressing favourably after being a patient in Bowman- ville Hospital. Mr. and Mrs. Orville Stinson, Chesley, and Miss Minnie Pearce, Toronto, were weekend guests of Mrs. H. R. Pearce. Little Bobbie Stapleton, son of Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Stapleton, Newtonville, bas been bolidaying with his grandrnother, Mrs. Max Stapleton. We are sorry ta learn that Stu- art Milligan is leaving Newcastle. Stuart expects ta fly to Port of Spain, Trinidad, on June 19 ta take up employment with the Ca- nadian Bank of Commerce there. We are sorry ta, lose Stu but wish him every success in this venture. Mr. and Mrs. Currey, Portland, Oregon, have been holidaying with her parents Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Cowan. Newcastle really won the base- bail honors in Oshawa, Saturday, when its smart bail club held the Oshawa City Hunters ta a 1-0 score in 9 innings of nip-and-tuck play. Hits were scarce and scatter- ed, witb Allquist on the xnound1 for Newcastle and Ding Gavis for Oshawa. We welcome Miss Jean WiMim ta our village, who arrived bere on Sunday from England and is liivng with ber aunt Mrs. Wm. Pinnegar, North Street. Saturday evening Newcastle Ladies won their first softball game when tbey defeated Newton- ville 9 to 8. Dan't forget ta attend the Pro- gressive Conservative meeting in Community Hall, Wednesday ev- ening, June 15. Sec advt. for par- ticulars. Mrs. Frank Rickard Gives Interesting Talk On Trip ta Florida W.M.S. meeting was held June 2, witb President Mrs. W. W. Pattersan presidîng. She op- ened the meeting with the theme of ber opening remarks "Keeping the Lord's Day" and gave quota- tians bearing on that subjet. She suggested the thougbt that Sun- day was sanctified because God .worked for six days then rested frÙm bis labours on the seventh day. We have become indifferent and careless in this regard but there must be some great power which 'wihl eventually make things right. The variaus reports were given in record time so that Mrs. Frank Rickard might not be hurried in ber talk on ber trip ta Flonida. Ordinarily these talks are about the scenery, climate, etc., but Mrs. Rickard gave us a real missionary message. Coincident with her visit, there was what was called "The Flarida Chain of Mission," sixteen Chris- tion Ambassadors representing fields af interest from eigbt caun- tries who were tauring Florida and speaking in ail the principal cities. Mrs. Rickard was privileged ta hear such speakers as Rev Mr Japp who had been General *Sec'y' of the Convention of Phillipine1 Baptists and also a Chaplain in tbe army and imprisoned by the Jap- anese several times. Dr. Sieberis, pastor of the Am- enican Community Church in Ber- lin and who was on the staff of they were touched. In Hiroshima to-day thev are praying that the rest -of the worlId may -be -spare-d the atanic bomb. Rev. lanimota says the missionaries arc the on]-, hope of the world and they need so many more in Japan. The Statesman Sold At Following Stores Dyer's Drug Store, Newcastle D. G. Walton's, Newcastle Wilson & Brown, Newtonville T. M. Sleman, Enniskillen F. L. Byam, Tyrone G. A. Barron, Hampton Wm. Hackwood, Pontypool H. T. Saywell, Blackstock C. B. Tyrrehl, Orono W. J. Bagneli, Jury & Lovel J. W. JeweI, W. J. Berry and The Statesmau Otce. TRUR~ÂY. JTTNI ~h. îsa The Barber's Pole by Lewis Milligan While having my hain cut thc ather day I got ta tbinking about the barber's Pale, and I asked Uic scissors-and-comb artist if he1 knew what it originally symbol-1 ized. He admitted bis ignorance, s0 I iearnedly informed hlm that the red spiral in the pale repre- sented blood, and that if he had been a barber a bundred or more years ago be would flot only have been releiving men of superfhuous bair, but alsa of superfluaus bhood. Barbers were the first surgeons, and their business must have beenI a pretty gary ane. They flot oniy practised bloadletting, they also Pulled teeth and performed sup- erficial operations. The business was so gary that at the end af the tirteenth century an act was passed by the British Parliament forbidding barber-surgeons from displaying bowhs af blood in their shop windows, "or in view aI folks, but let them have it carried privily into the Thames under pain of paying twa shillings into the use of the Sheriff s."I The onigin and theory of blood- letting is nather obscure. It seems to have been based ariginalhy on the barbaric superstition that a demon was causing pain or swell- ing, and an exit bad ta ibe provid- cd if the patient was ta be reliev- ed. A hale in the skuhh let the de- mon out of the bead, and a hol, in the flesb remnoved the demon from the arm or heg. Bheeding was emplayed as a hast resort in the Great Plague. It was practised in the great yehhow f ever epidàemie af 1793 in tbe United States, and Benjamin Rush, a famous physic- ian, wha attended George Wash- ington in the fever, was accused af hastening the death of the first President by "copiaus bleeding followed by a violent purge?' Blaadletting is no longer pnac- tised by physicians, except in minor degrees in the form of cup- pings for local relief. But the prac- tice is being more and mare ap- plied in these days ta the body politic. Copious bleeding and vio- lent purges are now negarded as a sure cure for ahi economic and social deseases. Oddiy, enougb. in Ibis occasion, I bave jusî re- ceived a copy of a New Zealand paper, in which a writer, Ken Ah- exander, humorously describes the pnacess of bieeding by taxation in that Sociaiist Utapia. He mixes bis metaphars samewhat, and this is bow he begins: "'It's a fartnigbt since New Zea- land dug deep inta the family sock for its Nasb-ional burden of taxation." (The pun refers to Fi- nance Minister Walter Nash) "Weil, the Ides of Marcb have gane with the wind and so bas a tremendous chunk of New Zea- land's earnings. The blood-drain- ed taxpayer, saddened 'by bis fi- nancial bereavemnent, now pro- ceeds ta "raise the wind" against next windy March when Walter will again set out witb bis merry men ta wring the hast fartbing out of the aid brown sock . . . that is. of course, unless New Zealand takes the only appartunity it will have for the next few years ta save ils soul, and its 'rail' from the savage onslaughts of Labor's taxation bhood-bank. ' Mr. Alexander goes on ta say that "everybody knaws it's a goad thing ta take a fair amnount of rev. enue from the peophe in a fair proportion; but anybody wbo tbinks that the blood Ibis Gov- erniment of our thinks it reason- able ta drain from the patient is fair would have ta believe that red carpuscles were as unnec- essary ta the healh of the body- public at 'red' legislation.", i bave always beieved there is SHELL SHELL FARM SERVICE TANKS AND ROTARY PUMPS AVAILABLE Don't Envy The Sheil User- Be One. Deliverles t- DARLINGTON and CARTWRIGHT and Western Haîf of MANVERS & CLARKE Il. E. Saunders OSHAWA PHONE 4386R For Information ln Bowmanvllle Area PHONE 497 something lns mental telepathy and the above quotations seem ta con-. firm it, for my cogitations on the barber's pale had led me along thec same lines of thought before Uic New Zcaland paper came ta hand. The coincidence at least goes ta prove that ahi great writers thihk ý,hikc! I arn obliged ta Mr. Alex-j ander for providing me with an example ai the effects of Socialist bloodhetting. There is no nced ta cite other recent examples. The1 idea that social welfare and nat-1 lanal prosperity can be improv4 by coplous bleedings of thse nations. ai incarne is just as fooish a"d fatal as that practised by thse aid barber-surgeons. Although Mary Munis, charrn- ing and distinguished Canaian pianist, bas played with famous American and European, "m- phonies, she neyer saw a piano key-board, having been bsce NO0W... give your haïr à perfect permanent THE NEW RADIO WAVE not a cold wave, not a heat wave This wave ls ideal for stubborn hafr- keeps good hair good and mukes poor hair better. Donc by expert operators Of the Collette Beauty Salon cf OshaWa (Mns.) Jeanne MeCabe, Miss Joan Woolley and thefr assistants are now operatlng at the ESTELLE DEAUTY SALON - Phone 453 for Appointment - Ail types of permanents given Inciuding MACHINE - MACHINELESS - COLD WAVE PUBLIC MEETING Ne wcastle Progressive Conservative Association ln the NEWCASTLE CGMMUNITY HALL ai 8:15 p.m. Wednesday, June'l5th, 1949 ELECTION 0F OFFICERS Speakers: CHARLES E. STEPHENSON, M.P. MAJOR JOHN FOOTE, M.L.A. Followed by social evening and entertainment which will Include the showing of the film of the National Conve tion at Ottawa. Ail citizens are cordially 11ited to attend this meeting' INSERTED BY THE NEWCASTLE PROGRESSIVE CONSERVATIVE ASSOCIATION 35 y0 0 0FARMERS Bought this amazing Milker ln preference to ail other makes NATIONALACTOM ILKER Completely Portable -No Installation Cout Thse oe sMilker that lo soady a 00 se-seasyou sief ~ NOTHING MORE e:z TO DUYI NATIONAL 1-COW ffKgk - Comlete Wltb stctlzo yaek, s milldnt Pai littai with ,obber boots, aad % h.p. 60 crel. cisc. moto,. $21 1.75 3 il........$2 16.75 (Giengins isice. .Sl19.ôo> NATIONAL 1-C0W ?MILKP'At -As Sow as...8147.96 MILK 15 TO 20 COWS AN HOUR lust plug into any convenient autiet, and thea National Milker is ready for Immediate us. Vot save ail the cost of expansive piping and Installa- tion. Clear glass pails [et yau see how «ach cow s milking . . . milks 2 cows at the same time (faster than you cari hand-milk ane caw). Fin- gertip vacuum control ta suit 'easy" or "hard" niilkers. Self-cleaning. Descriptive foider by mail or visit eut store ta arrange fer Iý A FREE DEMONSTRATIO?4 ON YOUR FARM STORE HOURS MON.. TUES., THURS. WEDNESDAY - FRIDAY AND SATURDAY 8:30 a.m. te f P.Mn 8:30 a.m. te I p.rn. 8:30 &.m. te 9 j.M. deau iu- 4Cxceptional Zua lit! Porcelain Enamelled Top Baked Enamel Sd.. Totally Enclosed Rubber Feet 3 HEAT SELECTOR SWUTCH THE RADIO SHOP 3S KI N GS T. E. PROINE 573 1 -.1 TRURMAT, iviq M. lm

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