- ?~ CANAfl!MI M~A'I'WMVAW UP~WMAP.NTW .v.~ ~ a -- - I -- - -- - - ---------., -- v. ~ W ~ ~ 4S~J~.D e ¶~~A'Y, ?. sos, - IRecord Net Income Reported by Bell ln Annual Report Record net incarne o! $38,- 89.3,289 for the yýear endIed Dec- ember 3i, a steadily increasingl r.umber of telephones and share- holcers, and a "notable increas2 iii prcductivity" are revealed i the 79th annual report o! The Ee:i Telephone Company of Can- ac'a irsuzd this week. The report states that net in- ccme was $2,862,120 highar than i 1957. Earanings per share amounted to $2.15 the same as in the previcus year, as th2re vwere more shares outstanding. The regular dividend of $2 a share was paid and surplus was inecased by $2.718.860. The inicr2ase of 185,465 tele- phones brought the total in ser- vice at the end o! the year ta 3,140,«j49. Some 75,000 colored telephones were installed dur- ing the year. The expansion was reflectedl in Bowmanville by the addition, of 176 telephones, J. W. Lowry, Bell manager for this region said, bringing the total in ser- vice here as of December 31 to 3635. Construction expenditures o! $1831-900,000 were made in 1958 go 1~«lirife NATIONAL 5EWER PIPE ce,.. 7r5c*LIMITED 5P.sOfficeta OAKVILLE, ONT. Top Winners. in Central Ontario. Badminton Tourney ta improve service and to serve new customers. "We have made steady progress in our efforts ta extend service in country dis- tricts and ta improv2 it," the report states. "By the end a! the year, some 14,000 more tele- phones were in service in rural territory and an additional 7.- 200 customers formerly served on a ru-al line basis had beeri providcd with urban service." Referring ta the increase In productivity, the report notes that more service vas pravided for more customners than ever before and that this progress wvas achieved by fewer employ- ees-39,321 mnen and women- than were required in aither of the two previaus years. Wa- ges and salaries paid during the year amounted ta $154,611,767. At December 31, sharehold- ers numbered 157,î24. Ninety-, eight per cent were residen tin Canada and they owncd 92 per cent of the stock. He had his tonsils taken out and traded in several worn-out glands. Oshawa Flying Club took ahnost ail of the top years. Winners from left to right: Ken Smith, George honors at the Central Ontario Badminton Club tourna- Long, Doreen Reddoch and Lii Beamish of Oshawa Flying ment here last weekend. Reports indicate that it was one club and Ralph Charlton and Grant Henry of Peter- of the -best and most hotly contested tourney in recent, borough. Kinettes Hear Details of New CIL Products The annual mothers and guests night o! the Kinette Club was an enjoyable avent on Wednesday evening, Feb. 18. The dinner meeting was held at the Flying Dutchman with 20 Kinnettes present and 28 1guests. Each guest received a per-. fume favour. Cauntad as a guest this time was Kay Cain, who will 1ýe installed as a member at the next meeting. President Lillian Hooper welcomned every- anc and conducted the business period when minutes were read by Secretary Ulva Lathangue and the treasurar's report by Treasurer Jean Williams. Com- mittee heads also gave their reports and plans were made ta cater ta the Teen Town Prom in April. Miss Joyce Hutchinson, sales promotion representative in the Textile Fibres Division o! the C.I.L. in Toronto. told of the latest developments in mian made fibres, and especialiy Terylene. The speaker showed samples o! this fibre fromn the early stages through to the thread stage whein it is sold xo the manufacturer. She display- cd several garmentî made o! Terylene and Terylene mixei3 with other fibres. A question and answer periad brought out sanie interesting points. Miss Hutchinson who graduated frorn the University of Mgnitoba with a B.S.. degres la Hrne Economics, majaring in Tex- tiles, was introduced by Betty Parkas and thanked by Helen Dunn. Lucky draws were won by Mrs. Jack Roughley and Mss. Charles Johns. Mrs. Ethel Em- erson, mother o! Kinetta Em Stutt, expressed the thanks o! the guests ta club members for the anjoyabla evening. Club at- tendance was 95.2 percent. B & P Membersi Join Oshawa For Meeting Members o! the Bowrnanvilla Business and professional Womf- en's Club, were guests o! the Oshawa B. & P. Club at the In- ternational Night dinner meet- ing held at the Genosha atel iast weck. A vivid description o! the ra- pid amancipation o! the warn- en o! Japan rince World War II was given by Mrs. Margaret Ashdown, representative o! the Business and Professional Wo- Changes in Church Life Topic Presbyterial W.M.S. The President, Mrs. M. C. Fisher of Newcastle, opened the 31st meeting of Oshawa Presby- terial W.M.S. in St. Andrew'.- United Church, Oshawa, with a hymn and prayer. Mrs. J. L. Pegg welcomed the representa- tive o! some 30 Auxiliaries on behaîf o! St. Andrew's Auxil- iaries. The recording secretary, Mss. T. F. Lean, presented "The Story o! the Year"'. To the cour- tesy committee, appointees were Mars. A. A. Drummond o! Or- ona, Mrs. W. F. Rickard o! New- castle, and Mrs. Chas. Pilkey of Brooklin; ta the resolution committee were Miss M. Luke o! Oshawa and Mrs. P. Rorneril o! Blackstock. Representative ta the Schooi for Leaders at Whitby from the eastern section is Mss. Stuart Dorreil o! Biack- stock and the western section representative wiil be nýamed later. Invitation for 1960 meet- ing came frorn Simcoe Street Church, Oshawa ta meet on Feb. 24, 1960. Mrs. C. Dolley, Presbyterial treasurer, reported that the al- location o! $22,340 had been met and an additionai $1,600 remitted ta the Branch treasur- as as gift for building advance for Cold Lake Hospital, Alta., and Ewha University in Korea. Bequests totalled $3,400. The Christian Stewardship secretary, Mss. D. W. Armistead o! Bowmanville referred ta the display o! posters. She pointed out that while each one receiv- ed 24 hours in each day and at least anc talent, we are respon- sible for the way we use them and aur res.ponse is the measure o! aur gratitude for God's good- ness ta us. Since W.M.S. policy is ta raise the maney first and spend it the following year, failure to meet allocation means curtailment o! work. Objectives o! Gift for Building Advance for 1959 include work among Indians, and wosk in Northern Rhodesia, Afriva, the only new field ta be opened since chusch union. Literature Secretary, Mrs. M. Buttars af Pickering, said that W.M.S. members as a whole are readers. An average reader cauld read 20 books in a year by reading 15 minutes per day. She showed new books, small books easily carried for pick-up reading or for the sick or be- reaved as weii as books on stew- ardship and Lent. The literature table was a popular spot and the display o! C.G.I.T. posters xiuch admired. The variaus secretaries were ntroduced and the morning session closed with a buzz ses- sion at which pertinent ques- tions were discussed by small i men's Clubs Fedaration on an East-West cultural mission. She explained that 39 womcn in Ja- pan have been alected ta the gavernment, they ara in ail the professions, and 115',000 are un- ivarsity students. Less than haîf of ana per cent of the people o! Japan are Christians, Mrs. Ashdown sta- ted. Sha pointed out that many Japanese practîce bath Shinto and Buddhism. The first con- cerns nature, ancestos and haro warship, whilc the second gives theni hope o! Nirvana in a fu- ture life. Mss. Ashdown spoka o! the 250 colleges in Japan, the street o! 500, boakshops, the modern factories. nawspaper plants and deprtmnt tors.Shp ramark- ed the nunerous cultuiral pro- grams on bath telavision and radio, and also told o! the aid theatres and acting schools. "ýThe Japanese is a valuable ctizen of the world with a her- itage rich in culture. His near- est neighbour is Red China. Canada bas no quota for Japan- esc. Hera is something worthy o! your consideration," the sptbaker rarnarked in closing. Miss Madlvn Wilcox, presi- dent o! the Bowmanville Busi- ness and Professianal Woman 's Club, moved a vote o! thanks ta Mrs. Ashdown, for ber an- lightaning address. A highligbt 1 of the evaning was the singing o! the B. and P. Woman's Creedj bv Mss. Jan Drygala. It hari been set ta music for tht, occa- sion by Mii. George lrynan. groups. Luncheon was served by A!- ternoan and Evening Auxiliar- ies of St. Andrew's W.M.S. Greetings were brought by Dr. Gea. S. Telford o! St. Andrew's, by Rev. M. Bury,. chairman cf Oshawa Presbytery, and by Mss. E. D. Cornish, President Oshawa Presbytery W.A. The a!ternoon session opened with an In Memoriam service presented for Maple Grave Af- ternoon Auxiliary by Mrs. Iv.- son Munday and Mss. S., os ton for the 33 who passed away during 1958. Thsee new Mission Circles and three new Mission Bands were weicomed. A vocal duet "'Love Divine" by Stainer was beautifully sung by Mrs. A. A. Drummond and Mrs. Geo. Carson accompanied at the piano by Mrs. M. K. Sta- pies, ail of Orono. Mrs. Kenneth Werry intro- duced the guest speaker, Miss Vera Boyd, R.N., who has spent four terms in India, inciudingc the last five years in a small hospital at Hat Piplia. Mss Boyd based her address on "No other hands but ours". Giving p2rsonai experiences of rescued orphans who became leaders and of wonderfui re- sponses to, loving service. She spoke of what may be accom- piished by hands upraised in prayer, by hands that help, by kiands beld up to vote for the comimon good and by united voices upraised in His name. Mrs. L. Kemp of Whitby pre- sented the slate of officers for 1959 to be instailed by Mrs. J. H. McKinney,' President Bay of Quinte Conference. who ciosed the afternoon session. A supper hour raiiy for C.G. I.T. girls and Explorers was very successful as Miss Boyd spoke to the girls and their leaders and showed sides of her work. At the evening session, 37 robed choristers represented i1 of the 15 Evening Auxiliaries and added greatiy to the ser- vice. They sang "Open My Eyes" in three part harmony with the church organist, Mr. E. K. James, at the organ. A cjuartet from. Trinity Afternoon Auxiiiary, Bowmanville, com- prising Mrs. L. W. Van Driel, Mrs. S. R. James, Mrs. O. Rich- mond and Mrs. D. R. Aiidread sang two inspiring numbers. The worship service by the Loretta Meilow Evening Auxil- iary of Northrninster Church was presented by Mrs. Thos. MToorcroft and Miss Eileen Gor- iii on this year's theme, "Stren- gthen your stakes and lengthen your cords", Isaiah 54 :2. A very heipfui playette "The Associate Member's Secretary on the Job" was gi-ven by Brook- lin Evening Auxiiiary with a display of books, leaflets and other heips as weli as a demon- stration of procedure and atti- tudes. Mrs. J. Patterson intro- duced those taking part-Mrs. Ai. Coates, Mrs. G. Hunter, Mrs. N~. Kennedy, Mrs. N. Aives and M4rs. M. Agar. M.rs. W. I. Carroll of Whitby Introduced the guest speaker for the everiing, Mrs. C. Max- well Loveys who retires in June after 24 years as executive Home Missions Secretary. Mrs. Loveys: spoke on "Concerns and Co-op- eration" and referred ta some of the great changes in both :hurch and civil life. In Ger- nany in 1956, she had seen farn- lies moving into apartments rom the refugee camps and planning chapels and churches. Here, slum clearance plans in- clude new churches. Our church extension work is assisted by V.M.S. in new sub-divisioris, nining areas, among New Can- adians and Eskimos. There is a 'reat need in the&-- newer pla- es and a thrili for young peo- ple in the seope of aur endea- 'or. Canada's population has 'rown by 15 per cent in the last ten years. 1400 new churches' have beer. bujit, proving that :eople are church-minded and hrist-centred. The new hospital nt Coid 'ake, Alta., is a product of faîth ind of co-operation with t.v1. h1berta fovernment who asked' that the United Church continue ta run the hospital promising that by a new systema financing. the capital wouid be returned in 20 years. The Federai depart- ment of Indian affairs is paying larger salaries but asks for Un- ited Chu rch trained teachers. The Indians are a group ta be reckoned with. They are turn- ing ta the church and the gov- erniment is asking for trained leaders. Mrs. Loveys pointed out other ways in which we ca-operate with the state ard with variaus Boards o! the Church. In Ja- maica, the church has made a beginnincs and bas put up schools whieh are eligibie for goverriment grants. Oldi age is a new phenomenon which ve2 must studv and assist. "To bc, really con cesned, we milst make the whole mission effective," Mrs. Loveys concluded. "Bless- ed jr the nation whose God is the Lord". Miss Isia Barker thanked ail who had taken part and Mrs. Fisher closed a very successfUl meeting with a .apanese hymnn written for the Christian Worid Convention in Tokyo, 1958. 'Tis alwavs niorning some- where in the world.-Richard Ho-ne. God sends meat and the de- vil rends cooks.-Thomas De- lony. Lands and Forests Weekly Report ' By D. IL Wilson, District Forester y The. Utilistion of Low Grade Hardwooda-J. Waddeil Timber Division staff of thLs District had the opportunity re- centiy to visit the mii of the Hinde & Dauch Paper Company at Trenton. This mili produces the grooved inner layer which is used in the making of corru- gated paper. Large rolis of pa- per about five feet in diameter are shipped from this miii ta other Hinde & Dauch plants where they are made up Into boxes and containers. Prior to 1956 this inner lay- er was produced maînly fromn straw. However with the increas- ing use of combines for har- vesting, the available supply of straw was dwindling each year. Consideration was therefore given to obtaining some other source o! suitable material. With an adequate supply of wo.od available in the surround- ing counties and the knowiedge that a better product couid be made because of the higher quality of wood libre, a con- versio n to wood was made. To assure the company a continuous and adequate supply o! wood, the Department of Lands and Forests grants them cutting rights on specified Crown lands in the Tweed and Lind- say Districts, with the proviso that fifty percent o! the com- pany's annual wood require- ments is ta be obtained frorn Crown lands. This volume cornes from other companies eutting pulpwood on their own licensed lîmits and from individuals eut- ting on Crown lands under the authority of a District cutting permit. The remaining fifty percent o! the mili requirements is bought from private lands, especially from farmers having woodlots. This year about 2,000 cords will have been cut from Crown lands in this District and con- siderably more in the Tweed District. This is in addition to the very considerabie volume cut on private lands. Whiie their wood require- ments have not been stabilized as yet, the companxr hopes ta uise as high as 50,000 cords a year in the near future. Although no softwoods can bp used in the miii due ta the amnounti of gum, ail species of1 hardwoods încluding the gen-i erally underirable baîni of gil- i ead, aie acceptable. Trees arei cut into four foot lengths or 1 butts in the bush and then1 loaded either bv hand or by an endless chain type of conveyori onto trucks carrying fram 4-8 cords and delivered to the miii. 1 At presnt wood is being truck- 1 ed ta Trenton frorn noints as 1 far distant as 120 miles. 1 This development of a use z for low grade hardwoods 15 of c great significance ta this parti1 o! Ontario. It means that low t value species and trees such as c noplar and white birch, former- ]y bypassed in bush lots ard . cutting operations. have sud- 1a denly acquired a value, a value y'ear.-Peterborough Examrn~. r. i k whlch cari be converted Int. dollars and cents, thus provid. lng many a fariner wlth extra income tram. hia woadiat, I means that thousands of acres of supposedly useless acrub bushiand in the Lindsay "i. trict cari provide a soure, o1 incomne and jobs for localfeo- pie. It means that tops o! trees large branches, rough iogs, an other low grade materl pre- viousiy îeft lin the bush, on log. ging operations, can now be put ta good use. It ricana a forward step towards botter and more complete utilization, af aur lor. est wealth. D. R. Wilson, District Forester. ý,,ý Whai Others sa THE EDITOR A lst o! the qualities ta b. found ir a good editor raturai. y attracted aur eye and smno." sorte of themn are of general in.. terest we will pass them Dn. Our motive for doing so is rot ~ ta sound a biast on the trurn- pet, as those who read this g will learn: 'He must refrain frori ex. ,' pressing his personal opinions, if ha does not want ta be accus. ' ed of foisting off silly opinionis best kept to himself. Yet h. must not be a parrot. 'He must hold the interest of bis readers, most o! whom re- lish nothing but bad news about those in authority. 'He must bie as thick-skinned as a rhinocerous ta withstand the barbs o! outspoken cri *cq and yet be acutely sensitive ý' every vagrant breeze that miglit develop into a tornado of gen-o eral disapprovai. 'He must write forcefully, pulling no punçhes and yet not incurring the displeasure of those punched. Ha must be tac*- fui without deceit; deceitful without being caught, and he must paint a vivid picture witii grev paint. 'He must have some educa- tion and also sanie histrionie ability ta conceal his knowledge lest hie be termed an egghead by his writers and bis readers. 'He miust have an honest oo- inion on rejected copy wvithout offending the contributor. HLIý, must be fearless in bis opinions,,'. but hae must agree with his crt- f lcs, without jeopardizing the in- tegrity of the publication by being two-faced. 'A good editor neyer makes a mistake.' This list is rendered douhly nterestinx because it is actual- ly a list o! qualifications, not for the ordinary editor - thougb readers will have their ofd~. about that-hut for the ocV- of a penitentiary newspaper.) have quoted it, in fact, fr'O.:t, th K. P. Talescopa, the Journal of Kingston Penitentiary- publication, incidentalli whir!.i~ has an outside circulation on, application at a cost of $1 a RESTAURANTJ BOWMANVILLE Situated at Highway 401 Cut-off if ,Wee'ncI Oin ner Fresh Lobster Cocktail llenu Jumbo Shrlmp Cocktail Relish Tray Soup du Jour or Chorce of Juice Tomato Pineapple Grapefruit or V-8 Flying Dutchman's Salad of the Day Assorted Dressings Roast I-faif Spring Chicken, Crabapple JeIly Baked Virginia Ham, Pineapple Sauce Broiled N.Y. Cut Sirloin Steak, Fried Mushrooms Roast Prime Ribs of Red Brand Beef, Yorkshire Pudding Deep Fried Sea Scallops, Tartar Sauce Broiled Loin Cut Pork Chops, Green Applesauce Roast Leg of Spring Lamb, Mint Sauce Breaded Milk-fed Veal Cutiet, Mushroom Sauce Sliced Cold Roast Turkey Plate, Cranberry Sauce Assorted Cold Sea Food Salad Plate, Celery Heart Choice of Two Fresh Vegetables Muffins Rolis Assorted Fruit Pie Mint Parfait Butter Fresh Fruit Jello, Whipped Cream Cheese Tray French Pastry Coff ee Tea Mllk A LA CARTE FROM OUR BROILER Porterhouse, T-Bone, Filet Mignon, Steaks, served wlth Mushroom Caps and French Fried Onions Ne exfiltrotlu, Reot-proof forever Buy Canadien bocause ts boit SHEPPARD & GILL LUMBER CO. LTD. 96 King Street E. Bowmanviile, Ontario You Neyer Saw Your HOME TOWN PAPER Thrown into the gutter or waste basket before it was read, did you? Eut %vaste baskets and gutters are constantly being filled with unopened expcnsive direct advertising, sales ammnunition shot into the air. A newspaper always conmnands an audience with prospective custonrers. If is nev'er thrown aside without first being read froni cover to caver. Tben it is borrowed by the neigbbors. That's wvhy intelligent, attractive newspaper advertising is accepted as the most effective form of advertising your business. An adv'ertisement i this paper will reacb over 90 per cent of the buyers inl the local trade territory. The cost is very small and besides we do the 11i.aiing an.d pay the postage. Durhamn County's Great Farnily Journal PAGE SiXTEE- pètes '.All the nice girls love a salor... Edi "Sailing, sailing, over the bounding main..." Sheila:t "Cet togeiher boys, p-i-e-a-s-e! Try it ie uny Plain End Vitnifled Clay Pipe goes togeher-just like thaf!" USE PLAIN END VITRIFIED CLAY PIPE FITTINGS & COUPLINGS Plain Endi Pipe front 4" ta 24» !,- - - --«- W W - - , ,-.puv 1 TM CANADLALN ftATESBUM. BOWMAMVTEIAP,- n",&Wtn m Oven Brown . Boiled . or Whipped Potatoes