Ontario Community Newspapers

Grimsby Independent, 27 Oct 1949, p. 5

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Grimsby Brick & Tile Co ENJOY Phone 144 FOTO NITE Every THURSDAY BIG PRINTING JOBS ARE OUR SPECIALTY Your family is due for a real taste treat when you order Beamsville milk. Each step in the processing of Beamsville milk is closely supervised, from farm to your home. Enjoy‘thhptotoeudq\!llity FRIDAY s WikEck or THE HESPERUS "ARTHUR TAKES OVER" now. Have Beamsville milk delivered to your home byumunumsvilleluorspaktothom who calls on your neighbours. sATURDAY TECHNICOLOR John Payn® o e mMonpAy & TVESDAY â€". a ue ; /0 nc nnr mME â€" Fred Astaire ® SHORT sUBJECTS WEDNESDAY & THURSDAY _â€" NOV. WALK A CROOKED MILE COR _ Sak â€" Dfnls (Keefe BEAMSVILLE DAIRY lâ€"(;;â€"D-;Y&TUESDA! * o ts _ os EARKKLAYS OF BROADWAY Sewer Pipe and Fiu Lining American Brickâ€"Rug, Pressed and Range Protected 2uality MILK Weeping Tile â€" 4", 6", 8", 19" Concrete and Cinder Block, All Size: Concrete and Cinder Backâ€"Up Tile Concrete Brick, Plain Red and Buff NORSHOWmu w‘T- -fiBUNTED POLICE You Can Actually Taste The Difference Louls We ts( W SHowING ON THURSDAY T T020 m# V Th Hay ward THIS WEEK‘S OFFER $110.00 ht t : " _ se PARA -OUNT NEWS "EL PASO® gHORT ! (Technicolor) sUBJECT® Gail Russe!) 31, NOV. 1 NOV. 23 say with truth that the erection of this magnificent little structure iuhdhth\vfiun;u.m' chapter in county solidarity and public service. We all feel a keen sense of gratitude to those unselâ€" fish, publicâ€"spirited men and woâ€" made this achievement possible. It is highly fitting that this dediâ€" cation ceremony should be of a reâ€" ‘ligious nature. The difference beâ€" CONTINU A TIONS tween medicine and religion \ll about as wide as the edge of a scalpel. One of the most basic reâ€" ligious problems of man is the proâ€" blem of evil, and nothing can bring a man closer to this problem than sickness in himself or his loved ones. The occupation of medicine is to lead a man from that which is evil to that which is good. What could be closer to the fundamental task of religion? As far as Chrisâ€" tianity is concerned, it asserts that human personality is sacred, that everything eroding that personaliâ€" ty is evil and must be restrained, and that everything possible must be done to glorify it and ensure its wellâ€"being in body and mind and DEDICATION ADprEss So the motivation of medical practice is fundamentally religious and specifically Christian. The docâ€" tor on his rounds each day is a man with faith in the goodness of life. He has made up his mind to an ethicoâ€"religious decision â€" that goodness is worth working for, that evil is to be worked against. ‘The fact that this moral concern motivates the art of healing has tice of it from the earliest days lame; St. Luke was a physician. Across the years it has been the Church that has healed the sick and cultivated the skills of medical mnmmmtmu-‘ struction in medicine which joined an ancient art to the scientific me» thod was centred in Churchâ€"inspirâ€" ed universities. The profession of nursing was unknown to the non« wwuuummnm::- Eiess oCC OeB n 20. aries came; it too owes its origin to the Church The advance of medicine around the world is a fruit of the Christian tree. It was the Church of Europe and America mzmwmuncm wm-nd\hood-ntndlll been responsible in h large part fof its development. It is worth noting that the heights of medical scienee have been reached id Christian civilizations, the least medical pro> gress made in lands farthest from Christian influence. From this we draw two int# capable implications, First, that only as we build and support ho# can we perpetuate Christ!â€" p“!h‘Amu.o.lhmM“‘m capaoie 227"" 077 2a ai L only as we build and support ho# "u].“n "P‘P‘tu. i mny.flemuculumm“hnl without works is dead." Our® it 2 Christian country, at least nomb fally_so. Our laws, our form Of government our institutions, C o. 0t 9 "00+ of nineteen mE d c‘.mmll’“‘"""“"w centuries of Christian influe u"mlflm“"'n'" WOV *T bone mink K we WOUC "" Srofess must find can-thn'"""'“,,.um.‘l"' ghlolm-llurmumm e‘ / _ sadav. Only 88 CR C * 000 bimar today. Only ®" C S en aufffort novpitale ent e "Mw ‘Christianity. The converse is %'?l": fi anntinue to w...f.;-- SAols we continue 5P * omristian C wuwledfi besion, but it stands in danEer of mfl"“"wmd roots a civilization torn ca whose ultimate end can only be mmlm“‘ / hak TWS C C uee which 18# symbol of * ©*9 70 _/ â€"q God, tts roots in God, Discard ,-u““ the Way of Life must surely OME /fl U.4. TOMATOES ‘The recent Canadian o ies * **""" tricted quotas Howing ubreses®"""0" us 'w"'um fruit and VOO"""'I w ported from the Unite s red S *"" Cunadian tomatoâ€" FE c W L Can@ase C000 fected the ent the way growing fraternity, all Cotumbis from Quebec to and _ green And both field erops A"4 Pyll, T atom ~ W "Last yeat I"V couldn‘t brink them o4 before Nov. 1." M IWIM Tent c.-’: "but this year it i# adian growers C®" gupply the Can; *"*** * % un to Dec. ) ‘M‘" Can ECFT O Adjan market right UP te C 4 there shouldn‘t b* ".’,.:", ports alowed unt American W.” Stressing that toes which had to 9 'N"“’"nm..a distances, were picked Bonham 27 C abnved. Mr. toes whith MA0 *0, yeq green and distances, were picked "'..”m“‘ Aot property matured, MF bald" there was nO comparison in quality with M' -'.“ are matoe® W“.". hok ow showing they had not had full uwmnnout,w“'c""‘”‘"w Mmflf-m"m. cndudnflmm S contnfl“’""'w Jn onl ____MW'“M' Contrary many Can® ada are PC the pickin# mclll"'1 A T HE of nineteen â€" influence. |M Jong ‘m‘ .‘ {r, Bonham nparison in natoe® are es are GRIMSBY INDEPENDEN T taken 187| to ripening cellars to ready them for shipping. The growers are still busy harvesting this year‘s big crop and with the late frost a bumâ€" per crop is still going to market. "But it is getting tougher and tougher to market them," Mr. Bonâ€" ham deglared. "Not all the wholeâ€" salers are bringing in United States tomatoes. White and Co. of Toronto, where I have been dealing for years, won‘t touch them until after the Canadian crop is finished, but a lot of others do. They make a killing by buying them cheap, packaging them in Canada and then selling them to the exclusion "I am not denying the Canâ€" adian people the right to buy as cheaply as they can, but if inferior tomatoes are the only ones wholeâ€" salers will push, while choice quaâ€" lity Canadian tomatoes go begging at lower prices because the wholeâ€" of salers won‘t push them, the Canâ€" adian farmer may as well quit growing them." With 25 acres in tomatocs, makâ€" ing him one of the biggest growâ€" t 0090 ers in Oniario, urmm‘ cause for worry. It is always the last of the crop which means the difference between a profit or a loss on the year‘s activities. Anxious to give the best in value, Mr. Bonham and other growâ€" ers grade their tmoatoes, often having to handle them 10 times in will be the proper maturity for shipping as well as being the right size without blemishes. They ship the fancy quality tomatoes either frost, in cellophane packages weighing about a pound, or in cartons, each tomato individually wrapped. It is an expensive operation, but apâ€" pearance and quality are top grade. import duty on tomatoes was set at a percentage of their price in the United States, Mr. Bonham l-fl.mtlhvununulm tection, it did not prevent importâ€" From Page One ers from bringing them over at a very cheap price when they could mnmmum‘ make the duty payable on weight, as it is done with peaches. But, he continued, "there shouldn‘t be any allowed into the country until the Canadian crop is marketed." With the new import regulations put into force recently, Canadian lhr-'rl growing fruit and vegeâ€" tables would be faced with a real seiâ€" Groceries, Phone Orders Delivered PHONE 380 CARNATION MILK 4 for 25¢ CANDY KISSES HALLOWE WE ARE PLEASED TO ANNOUNCE THAT WE HAVE PURCHASED DOWLING‘S GROCERY ON DEPOT ST. AND WILL BE PLEASED TO SERVE YOU WITH YOUR FOOD WANTS WITH THE VERY HIGHEST QUALITY IN GROCERIES, MEATS, FRESH VEGETABLES AND FRUITS AND GIVE A DAILY DELIVERY SERVICE. A FEW SPECIALS FOR OUR FIRST WEEK, THURSDAY, FRIDAY AND SATURDAY, OCTOBER 27â€"28â€"29. "CE N \ problem next year, Mr. Bonham declared. The regulations went into effect too late this year to cause really serious upsets in atl but the tomato market, be said, but that wouldn‘t be the case in 1950. PRESENTATIONS MADE Reld, of Beamsville on behaif of the elected members of the of Directors, To Mr. A. R. Globe Preaident, West Lincoln Memordl Hospital, Grimsby, Ontario. Abraham Lincolnonce stated "I like to see a man proud of the ‘pnmmnuuumw'““: that the place wil be proud Your elected associates on the Board of our Hospital are sure Mmflw(lm fAit in every respét your relationâ€" ship to us persally, as well as every department of the whole orâ€" ganization you hay built to run m'-“u-uumum just dediâ€" cated. Not only have ye been prom" "~, be your Neutenmants in this project, but share with the whole communâ€" ity the benefits of your telling efâ€" mmwmmmm you have planned and worked to make this part of the Niagara Disâ€" trict a better place in which to live. _ It was teamwork with your leadâ€" ership that created the first hosâ€" pital and made it such a success. ‘The destruction of that little gem only strengthened your purpose and now toâ€"day you have presented to this community of West Lincoln a building and staff beyond the dreams of earlier days. It was you who watched with careful eye every phase of the work. No other person had the exâ€" perience, patience and dogged detâ€" ermination to get the Job done at a price we could afford to paÂ¥. You have delivered toâ€"day a working unit equal to anything of lutmlnmmvtnfl.maltl price fully $2000.00 per bed below current costs. We, your close associates, have watched with growing concern the lavish expenditure of your time and strength as the building alowâ€" ly became perfected, and are deâ€" voutly thankful that your health has stood up under the strain. ’ We should like to wish for you and Mrs. Globe many years of good »s, Meats, Fresh Fruits and Vegetables HEWITT‘S TOMATO SOUP 10c tin APPLE JELLY 0 or. jar 29¢ CAMPBELL‘8 \G8TAFFE been proud to â€" SNOW WHITE CAULIFLOWER â€" CGO0D FOODS SWEET POTATOES health, high spirits and growing satisfaction as you watch the child of your dreams function on that MMMM‘I"HVM BROCKLERANK | At the corner of King and Chestâ€" nut Streets, only a block from the club, Constable Frank Book, spotâ€" ted Brocklebank with his pistol in the ribs of his human shield. Drawâ€" ing his own revolver, Constable Book advanced on . Brocklebank, calling to him to surrender, He gave up without a struggle. The weapon found on Brockleâ€" hank was a flashy, toy cap pistol, with a pear!l handle. It would not fire the toy caps with which it was loaded nd affection. ‘The Waveriey Club is a social club on the second storey of the building oposite the Fire Hall. About 18 members and . friends were present when Brocklebank entered "';fi;iw hung around for a few minutes," said George Kalagian, of 225 Ontario Street, "and we didn‘t pay any attention to mn{ ‘Then he said, ‘All right, this is a stickup.‘ He had his hand in his pocket, and was pointing some» thing at us. He herded us all toâ€" gether at one end of the room, and the called over Sammy Chicagian." "He stuck his gun in Sammy‘s back, and said, " Get all your stuff on the table, and if anyone makes a move this guy‘ll get it. And I‘m a deadshot." He made us put our money, rings and watches on the pool table. Then he gave a dollar back to some of us and he gave a tenâ€"dollar bill back to one of the others and said it could be used for taxi fare for us. He gave us back the rings and watches. He was only after the bigger stuff." One man is reported to have had more than $300 in his posseasion ut the time, but he only threw $1 on the table. About fifty yards from the scene of the robbery, Brocklebank is ‘I-‘ leged to have taken Chicagian down Chestnut street, and ordered him to count the loot. It amounted to $21. "Is that all there is? "I thought there‘d be a lot more," said _ Brocklebank, according to Chicagian. Police had been called by this‘ time and with members of the club SHREDDED WHEAT 2 for 25¢ SLICED SIDE BACON / Ib, 33¢ Bruce H. Reld Berry H. Scott Barry Garnham Jimmie MacMillan F. B. Sutherland DUFF*8 « POTATOES in the cruiser to spot the fugitive, Constables Earl Fare and Frank Book cruised the neighbourhood. Pedstrians told the constables that the man had gone up Chestnut Street. Constable Fare got out at Chestâ€" nut and 8t. Paul and began to walk toward King, while Constable between them. On the corner of Chestnut and King, he saw Brockle« bank, still threatening Chicagian with his pistol. waln IOwWre milk, mEnn? MARCTCCT Book went around to King Street, intending to walk towards Fare so that the fugitive would be caught Drawing his revolver, he capâ€" tured Brocklebank and took him wunpuumuon.‘l'hlomul charge against him Tuesday mornâ€" "mmtumum Nick Tseanof, (one of the club members), by using an offensive weapon, namely, a revolver. Counsel for the accused asked that Brockilebank be released on bail until he came up for trial on November 1. Crown Attorney E. H. Lancaster asked that no bail be granted because of the cireumâ€" stances of the offense. Brockle« bank will remain in custody. The sadâ€"faced accused stodd in court on Tuesday, in a green tweed jacket and white shirt, and said |mum\¢. No plea will be taken until November 1. try, burlesque shows had become so bawdy that their casts were freâ€" quently arrested and fined, and the theatres lost . numerous . patrons who no longer dared be seen enterâ€" ing them. To remedy these two annoyances, . many . a . burlesque house built secret entrances and exite in the alley and installed a signal system with which the look= out who was posted in the door« way of a nearâ€"by store could warmn the manager when he saw a group of policemen coming down the street, Phone Orders Delivered PHONE 380 During the 1890‘s in this counâ€" Te PV NE ATIISLE: o and Ornamentals for C. THE GOOD OLD DAYS CLARK‘s 20 OZ. TINS Phone 701â€"R, Evenings GRIMsBY NURSERY STOCK RICH OLD CHEESE 49¢ lb. PORK & BEANS 2 for 25¢ orders for Fall

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