PAGEEIGTEE THCAADINSTTESMN. OWMNVILE.ONTRTTHURSDAY. DECEMBER 8, 1949 rht the heading of a chapter M àvery interesting book en- tit±ed "Thus We Are Men," by Sir Walter Langdon-Brown. con- saling physician 10 St. Bartholo- mew's Hospital in London. Sur di$eases , but tbey are exaggerated [sitýve and complex nervous sys- tei. Some people are more high- ly4strung emotionally than others, anW if tbcv lose control of them- selves tbey 'become neurotics. T1Isý condition can be traced in r. otne instances to chiidhood in- hibitations and fears, but they arç also "ai) inheritance from the "ztüentality of the Savage, who walks al bis days hedged be- "HERE.. W UJEST ".154300 SobtineI of Safety, an eîclusice Westinghouse feature, prolects the motor aganst damage and provîdes à convenient swtch le start and MOI the nais,. Appliance & Furniture .PHIONE 811 BOIVMAN VILLE tween totem and taboo." Fear itself is not necessarily neurotic, for, as Sir Walter points out, "Fear is a defensive mechanism, of obvious survival value; unreasoning fear is a per- version of Ibis defensive mechan- ism, usually arising fromn some internai conflict or the persis- lence of some early painful im- pression." He quotes Jane Harri- son'? remark: "Man has got to be afraid of something. He's no long- er afraid of hell, so he bas 10 be afraid of germs, of cancer or what you will." And Sir Walter adds: "We are certainly justifiea in stating that the state of con- inued fear, whether recognized or not as such by the sufferer, is capable of producing the symp- Mon'"--WITH EXCLUSIVE CUSHIONED ACTION Back again is the washer bearing the name that means s0 much - Westinghouse - the only washer with Cushioned Action, your guarafitee of a brighter, cleaner, faster wash, protection for your clothes, a long life of trouble-free servicel OnIy Westinghouse hàs the Cushioned Action gyrator, the last word in washing-machine progress. Another great Westinighouse féature is the streanilined Loveil wringer with feather-touch release and adjustable pressure. Sce this fine washer to-day. Their quality is stifl imited but their quality is worth waiting for. RING ST. W.1 toms of which they so generally complain." He believes that the great ma>ority of such s-ymptoms are of that order. While fear is a primitive in- stinct or i.nherited memory, it can also be due to the memory of some 1 actual experience in childhood or later years, as in the case of a shell-shocked soldier who is startled by any noise that reminds him of the sound of a sheil com- ing over. This also applies to plea- sant memories which may be re- called by -sounds or even smells. Sir Walter says that he was one day walking through Pump Court in the Temple in London, when suddenly he feit extraordinarily happy. Then he recognized that the feeling of happiness was as- sociated with the noise of a can being filled at a standpipe. "Then I knew," says Sir Walter, "that it recalled the noise my college ser- vant made filling the water can for the 'bath that awakened me when I was an undergraduate at Cambridge, when to awaken was to anticipâte another delightful day."j Whether memories be pleasant or painful they cannot be entire- ly obliterated. They may be re- pressed, but the painful ones es- pecially have a habit of cropping up and annoying us. Sir Walter cite3 the case of a lady who had undergone a painful experience in York, and who had flot only refused týo go to York again, but was agitatcd at the sight of a train whose destination was lab- eled York. Later she displayed an aversion to Yorkshire pudding and Yorkshire relish. The attempt to obliterate painful memories spread to everything connected with the name of York, "This," adds Sir Walter,. "shows how an attack of 'nerves' may be excited by something that seems curiouslv~ remote from the original cause." Dealing with the "psychoneur- otic reactions between parent and child," Sir Walter says, "There is no more disastrous fallacy in conventional 'thought than that the relationship between parent and child is. naturally easy and simple." He says il is far better to realize that difficulties will arise which eall for consideration and couràge on both sides. "Par- ental love is instinctive and pos- sessive, and the child, as he or she grows up, may find one or two difficulties - - - either aý tenaency 10 excessive dependence as in the days of infancy, or a re- sistance on the parent's part to the children's establishing their own individuality." In this con- nection he quotes the* following from Henry Ward Beecher: "A child righty brought Up will be like a wvillow branch which, bro- ken off andtouching the ground, nt once takes root. Bring Up your children so that they will root easily in their own soil, and not for ever be grafted mbt your old trunk and boughs." There is good political economy as wvell as par- ental wisdom in that advice. BROWN'S Sex-eral from here attended the Commen3cemýent in Newcastle on Friday evening. Busy Bees met at the home of Miss Jean Perrini with el even members present. Next meeting Jan. 4 at the home of Mrs. Cyril Avery. A delicious lunch was served by the hostess. Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Honey are visiting Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Sims in Fenelon Falls. Sympathy is extended 10 Mr. and Mrs. Freeman Eddy upon the loss of ber mother. Mrs. Geo. Stephenson was in Toronto visiting Mrs. G. Brandt. The sympathy of Brown's is sxtended to Mr. and Mrs. Nicholas Tkatch and family, formerly of Ibis district, upon the untimely deatb of ber parents Mr. and Mrs. Katoyrencb in Oshawa. Mrs. Howard Bellamy visited ber mother Mrs. Geo. Law. 4' r1T. ' O LD'(H UM The Tobacco of Quality ---'b of oui- favourite melodies.- Mrs. Sandercock essayed the difficult cbore of accompanying Carl on the piano, yet had neyer practised with hlm. But, that is the spirit ,bat pervades the community, to do their best with the material at -îand. The same spirit that ani- mated oui- forefathers, to make bhis tbe best land on earth. l Skinny men, womer gain 5, 10, 15 Ibs. Cet New Pop, Vim, Vigor Wbat à thrill Bon 1b I u;ul olw di11 up;% neel no loer ncrwy oy a at erv. lckly ' bean-pole"10.Tosuau girl,. wconeU,m. e, ho neyr ud gain betore. areanow proud of ehapely . beatby-ookijng bodies. Thetau h pca 4lo-sid,.0-h.bulding toniea . .r, s I . SiUlan. I.igrajrb bon.vitain B. clium. enrch blondImrtue apels. ad digUsaon '=od ive yo1,u mre .trt nd nouralmet;put Ou 'Zon"bereu.. tis 81015orZ.0 l.. pou need for normal celiht. C.-U I..Nec g l qnted" line onld8, Tri famou4 Oire. Tonic Tablet. for nec1. or and adde ou 7, bs e>dai. à% ailu wlst. PONI YPOOL Peter Norwick was buried in Pontypool'Cemetery on Nov. 25. Mr-. Norwlck moved int and farmed a 100 acre farm in Man- ivers Township, between the two EGreat Wars. His wife predeceased him about ten years ago, after which Mr. Norwick moved to Whîtby, thence 10 Toronto, where he died. The late Iflerb Byers was a life long resident of Manvers Town- ship. And, until a year or two ago, Lfarmed in the Drumn district,.i-He iwas a bachelor. Ninety-two days iago Mr. Byers entered hospitai, twas operated on and after a per- .iod of danger had passed, appear- ied to be progressing nicely. The iend came Nov. 27. lie was buried Lin Pontypool Cemetery. We regret 10 have to record the death of Mrs. Robt. Payne. It doesn't seem so long since we wrote of Mrs. Payne's 841h birth- day, how well she was and how we wished ber many happy re- turns of the day. But after a fairly shoyt illness, our old friend passed away Nov. 27. Mrs. Payne is sur- vived by her husband, son Jack, and dauglîters Esther, Evelyn, and Ida. Jack is a bachelor. The three girls are married. Mrs. Payne was buried in Pontypool Cemetery., To ail of the sorrowing relatives of the above three deceased peo- ple, we extend ous and the com- munity's heartfeit sympathy. Mrs. Ed Cain is stili staying with her daughter in Toronto, where she is undergoing treat- inents. Haven't heard lately, how she is doing. Mr. and Mrs. Charlie MeNeil, Janetville, are agaîn wintering in the Bobins Cottage. The way Cbarley explains il, ail you need is to be vulgarly rich, then you can have town as well as country residences. The George Hamilton family had a close shave with death two weeks ago, when another car rammed int theirs on the grade between 1 Friend's and Hooper 's farms, north of Tyrone. Mrs. Hamilton suffered some bruises, but the rest of the family missed injury. The left front of the car, încluding grill, bumper, wheeL, fender, frame, etc., took a duece of à beating. Estimated damage A D.P. named Steve, borrowed a horse and cutter on Nov. 27. After turning east fromn McCrea's Cburch, he found he had lost his mitts. So, leaving the spirited horse and cutter standing in the middle of the road, the D.P. back- tracked on foot 10 seek the miss- ing mitts. When he came back the horse was gone, had bolted along the ditch. Everything was O.K. until Mr. Horse decided 10 dodge between a telephone pole and a fence. Steve picked the cutter up in firewood form. The irony of the thing was that Steve had spent most of Sunday fixing the cutter up. Crime does not pay and neither does doing unnecessary work on Sunday. And, neither does it pay 10 leave a lively gee gee unattended in the middle of a country road. Snow storms sometimes spoil the reception on our telephone line. Ib is annoying to be unable to hear the person at the other end, but that isn't all. It also means we can't listen in on our neighbour's gossip-and that, we tbink, is a real tragedy., Bert Ricbardson and Harry Car- ter have returned from. their an- nuai deer hunt. The party aver- agecd haîf a deer per person. Har- ry looks and feels O.K., but Bert bas a lame back. An odd feature of their particular bunting camp is that in 1948, when tbey were preparing 10 break camp, one ol the party ascended an oid ladder to cut the hope holding a deer, up in a tree. The ladder broke, the chap feil and broke a leg.* This year (1949) a day or two frorn the end of the camp period, a man stepped on a fiat stone, while wearing a pair of smoothly worn rubber boots, fell and broke a leg. On Saturday at 7 a.m., Dec. 3rd, 1949, Waliy Crouler, on C.F.R.B., Hope, to Instili In,. Canadians Mature Pride li Country "Most of the 400,000 immigrants who have corne to Canada since the end of the war will become legal Canadian citizens at the end of their five-year residence per- iod. Whether il takes them a long- er time to become real Canadians in the full sense.of the term de- pends largely on the rest of us," H. L. Garner of Peterboro de- clared. He is Regional Chairman for the Canadian Citizenship Council's current drive for sup- port for a greater awareness of the rights and obligations of citi- zenship. Working under the joint chair- manship of General H. D. G. Crer- ar and Andre Taschereau, the Council is seeking to instill in ail Canadians a mature pride in their ciwn country and a better under- standing of the privileges and re- sponsibilities that go with being a good Canadian. The campaign, first of its kind in Canada, is being carried on in 26 high-populations areas from St. Johrn's, Nfld., bo Vancouver Island. Guiding Hand Of "néw Canadians," the Re- gional Chairman said: "It is flot enough to greet them with a glad hand. We must turn the glad hand into a hclping or guiding hand. "The Canadian Citizenship Council recognizes that these 400,000 newcomners 10 Canada have special problcrns. If they are t0 become true citizens, proud and happy in their new lie, these problems which are peculiar to them must be solved.1 For example, among those who have corne to Ibis country to work in various categories of labor arei WINTER SALE ARE 3S CAR Life is neyer unreal te thoob who obey an alarm clock. It is a great satisfaction to know that Canada can overcome ev.ry economic difficulty if Canadien will do enough healthful work. highly capable and well-trained Rats Destroy Food men and women. Canadians must find fays of ustng the tkul14 of Menace Health- these people not only for the sake of the immigrants themselves, but Any season is an open one on for the enrichment of Canadian rats. The common brown or Nor- life." way rat is a prolific breeder, and Message from Mackenzie King as an aduit. eats about an ounce The aims and objects' of the of food a day. Council have been crystallized by Rats eat much that is unfit for the man who holds Canadian Citi- human food, but unfortunately zenship Certificate No. 1-Rt. they don't stop there. They eat Hon. W. L. Mackenzie King. Ili practically anything used as food a message to Regional Chairmen, for humans and livestock-except the former Prime Ministet re- hay. Worse, they contammnate food cailed that Canada has been de- and miake it unfit for human con- scribed as "A supreme act of sumption with consequent loss lu faith . . . The vision and courage prodlucers. of men and womnen who have Besides enormous destruction transformed Our country. almost to food, the brown rat is a serioub within living memnory, from smaîî menace to public health. Il is a beginnings to one of the great i- carrier of oubonic plague, one of dutilnations of the world." the most devastating of human dutal asntohod r igdiseases. 'Iyphus lever is har- anaasainod, Mr. King boured by rats, and they can also sadwa -fo based on the su- be carriers of trichinosis.' periority of a single race or lang- The extermination of rats is (nage. "Into our equal partnership complicated because most suitable oEnih-speaking and French- Poison baits used in the destruc- speaking Canadians, we have ad- tion are also extremely dangerous mitted thousands who were borntooeraiisndobu ns of other racial stocks, and wlîo tWithereasonllableade, however speak other longues . . . Without poison asnbeca e, use wit the ideal of equality among men, poion resits.cnb sdwt without the vision of human A good methodi and a more brotherhood, the Canadian nation permanent one is 10 make build- couid neyer have come mbt be- ings rat-proof. Old wooden build- ing," hie said. ings with ill-fitting doors and This ideai expressed by Mr- windows are an invitation 10 rats. King is the ideal which those Concrete is one of ihe best rat- 400,000 new Canadians were proof materials for foundations secking, the Regional Chairman andi around spaces whiere drain added. "'We can only help them and other pipes lead out of a to achieve it by first acbîeving it building. Doors should be bound ourselves Iliroiigh a new under- with shcet metal and ventilators standing of our rigbts and obli- and basement windows should bc gations as Canadian citizens." covered with wire netting. Kecp- ing rats out is casier than driving BOY: "But officer, you cant a r- them out. rest me, 1 corne from one Of the ___________ best famnilies in Toronto." Cop: "Tbat's ail right, buddy. Some parts of the Northwest I'rn arresti ng you for speeding, Tcrritorics (on Baffin Island) not for breeding purposes. . re EAST of Halifax. Jewels Worth? NOT THAT we really walit to knlow out merely té make you realize what you would lose If a burKlar took them. What Protection have yola agaitist such lois? Adequate Burglary Insurance wil I n. demnify you If they aré stolen. StuartilR. James INSURANCE - REAL ESTAT19 Phone: Office King Street 68L Res& 493 Bawmanvilte :4 *1 - . - j MARKET DBARGAINS ON GENERAL MOTORS PRODUCTS" $2750.00 - Buick '47 Roadmaster Sedanelle - Built-in radio and underseat heater, back- up Iights, chrome wheel rims. Spotless iniside, with a smart inetallie blue finish. A real buy. $295.00 - Chev. '33 Standard Sedan- (iood running order, smart appearance, good tires. $1595.00 - Pontiac '48 Sedan - Heater, defroster, slip covers, chrome wheel rims, Iovely black original paint, low mileage.. Drn't miss this outstandlnt bargain. $350.00 - Buick '"34 Sedan- Original black finish, good tires, runu good, clean inside, carefully driven. "D1 ARGAINS ON CHRYSLER PRODUCTS " $995.00 - Dodge '41 Coach - Grey, sipotless inside, 'smart appearance, good tires, a beauty. $895.00 - Dodge '40 Sedan - Dark green, heater, defrosters, good tires, runs gond. $895.00 $995.00 - Dodge '41 Sedan - MetalIic blue, heater, dlean car. Had the bestof rre.$795.00 $695.00 - Plymouth '38 Coupe - aî 85O New metallie green finish, heateran $850 defrosters, good tires, new slip covers, sporty car. -Plymouth '40 Coupe - Smart black finish, heater, good tires, mechanically good. Don't pass this buy. -Plymouth '39 Sedan - .Ncw metallie green finish, heater, r.- conditloned motor. good tires. - Dodge '40 Sedan - Black, heater, defrosters, spoles. Inside anîd out, gond tires, niechanlcally A-i. ,"DARGAINS. ON OTHER MAKES"ý $895.00 - Nash '40 Sedan - Smart black finish, air condition heater, spotless inside, good tires, runs like new. A. beauty. $395.00 - Hudson '36 Coach- Good appearance, runs good. $360.00 - Ford '34 Coach - Mýarooni, new motor job, good tires. A real buy. Any of you grown-ups ihat don'1 helieve in Santa Claus, visil Art's Car Market and let us convince you! Every Car is Thoroughly Winterized MOST HAVE PRESTONE IN THE RADS. Ail cars are checked and tested for your convenience, for thousands of happy miles of motoring. s> g $360.00 - Ford '*34 Coach - Black, dlean car, good tires, smart ap- -pearance. $ 150.00 - Studebaker '30 Coupe- Good tires, runs good, smart appearance. $145 .00 - WiIIys '30 Sedan - No iratties, an old car well looked after, good tires. Open Evenings Unfil 9:30 FOR YOUR LISTENING PLEASURE Tunîe ini on CKDO, Oshawa, 7:30 to 8:00 o'clock Saturday night for some good old time mugie. - PHONE 2148 k sLX MURPHY'S 0F! USED CARS AT 1 119 PAGE EIGHTEEN THE CAMADIAN STATESM4N. BOWMANVILLE. ONTARIO --- -.-0 -- - Whai are Your 4 e,