Whitchurch-Stouffville Newspaper Index

Stouffville Tribune (Stouffville, ON), January 31, 1957, p. 2

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p5 2 the stouffville tribune ikruhy jiaatry 31 1957 the stouffville tribune miaffj oftheweelu a v established ims nolan son publishers member of the canadian weekly newspapers association and the ontarioquebec newspapers association- member of the audit bureau of circulations authorized as econdcuii nail postoffic oept- otuwa printed and issued every thursday at stouffville ont in canada s350 elsewhere 450 c h nolan publisher lu thosiaj asioaate edrtof chokecherry syrup an oldtimer who has great faith in the curative value of chokecherry syrup says its a lifesaver a sure cure for rheumatism boils pimples falling hair and arches skeptics are entitled of course to discount the effectiveness of the remedy as heavily as they wish but if it has only half the curative properties the old- timer claims for it and the news gets around then chokecherry trees growing near the roadside will be stripped of their fruit soon after they ripen this coming summer canadian medical association endorses national health week playing asit does a leading role in canadas year- round crusade for health the canadian medical association is pleased to join with the health league of canada in commending to all canadians the spirit of national health week national health- week brings into clear focus the importance of good health and spotlights the need for greater effort by each of us to secure and ensure in dividual and community health what do we mean by health health is a state of complete physical mental and social wellbeing and not merely the absence of disease in the achievement of this state we should seek for ourselves and our fellow canadians adequate nutrition good housing and healthful environmental conditions generally and fa cilities for education exercise and leisure if we would help ourselves to the gift of good health we must accept responsibility for the wise and sensible conduct of our daytoday lives learning and applying to all our activities the sound rules of nutri tion immunization accident prevention and physical and mental hygiene j6elyirsr whitchurch offer just no municipality wishes to give away its assess ment were the words expressed by the whitchurch township reeve in discussing the proposed annexation of township land by stouffville the township in out- opinion has made a reasonable offer as the price for support of the annexation to stouffville stouffville is badly in need of industrial and com mercial assessment and with the exception of a few small areas which have been available for years there are too few good industrial sites the sewerage system now being installed should provide a real drawing card to get industry to locate here whitchurch in giving up the assessment along our north boundary has asked that should any develop ment take place west of the proposed area of annexa tion that this development be given the opportunity to purchase the much needed services of water and sewers from the town they have also asked that that portion of the 9th con be kept up to the new boundaries of the town this later request is negligible and should receive no argument from the town council it is in stouffvilles interest to have wellkept approach roads into town from all directions and the small section involved should receive no quibble from town at the same time as the whitchurch annexation is being formulated an eye should be given lo the corner of markham township bordered by the 9th con and the highway so that the stouffville municipal boundaries could be straightenedin this direction the suggestion that markham township be approached regarding annexation of this corner area was recom mended by the metro planning board a year ago whether or not both annexations could be handled by the municipal board at one time at a saving in cost we do not know but it should definitely be inves tigated a majority of the property owners in this markham corner are anxious to have the area annexed we have been given to understand in our mail box juvenile delinquency several years aco a lady asked me to visit her 19yearold boy who was in jail awaiting sentence on a charge of car theft she said he was lonely and discouraged you will find him shy and not easy to get acquainted with i found him much as she had said he seemed frightened and resentful and as his mother had said not too bright in many ways i gave him some chocolate bars and gradually he thawed out and was grateful and somewhat less resentful he made no excuse for his conduct and i gathered he had often been in trouble soon after he was given a stiff sentence of several years as he and his companions had guns and society had to be protected his was not a new story but i found myself perplexed and bewildered the one hopeful thing is that many of the best minds in the country are deeply concerned over juvenile delinquency and practical ways of help rare being tried on my last visit to england i spoke to a group of 600 children in a school in the east end of london it was at that time a sordid district and the pastor of the church who had been 27 years there told me that the record showed that every fourth child got into trouble with the police it is the record of this area said the pastor for over a century i once read a book by the psychologist dr addington bruce too lengthy even to summarize here but i laid ft down feeling grateful that so many wise and good people are sympathetic especially where as the lady said about her boy some are not too bright one may read the newspaper accounts of young peoples conduct but they are not wholly to blame environment and careless home training and other factors are to be taken into consideration one writer says that solomon would have taken little notice of a child whereas today we are all disposed to do what jesus did when he put a little child in the midst of them probably the church has made no discovery in modern years greater than the tremendous significance of little children pure milk for babies supervised playgrounds better schools and a larger place in church life all indicate anxiety on the part of adults to safeguard the citizen of tomorrow a century ago there were no state schools and juvenile delinquencywas much more pronounced than today children were sent to work at a very early age and were often brutally treated here is a verse i have often repeated sweeter shall the roses grow in those far off those other years and children weep when we lie low far fewer tears far softer tears our quotation for today was a criticism of thomas arnold all his geese were swans editor the tribune dear sir that gordon report is very in teresting not for what it says toronto ifrom 41 hours to 34 hours what jan 14 1957 about the farmers 70 or 80 hour week what about that the proposal of higher taxes on houses cars and gasoline together with the proposal that manufacturers should be allow for parents only obstinate child by nancy leaver that which is called firmness i likes to know what to expect bur for what it does not say fastr writeoffs on factory it is very clearly a glass docu ment university people on it advocating world topper univer sity standards- so increases or else doubled salaries for university teachers with an in crease of pay differential be tween skilled and unskilled workers buildings and equipment for tax purposcsishrfws jolly well where this commissions sym pathies lie irrigation projects should be restricted to guard against farm i surpluses well im blowed how are we all going to get two- i birds richer that way i was in a king is called obstinacy in a donkey lord erskine once pointed out the stubborn child may as he grows stop his bat tles with individuals he may re direct his energy into struggling with real problems some of our greatest reformers some of the most brilliant research scien tists were likely dubbed obstin ate in their childhood but they learned by wise guidance and a lack of order and system makes him uncertain and some times obstinate a sensible sche dule should be followed as a rule with some flexibility to al low for unforeseen happenings once parents have revised the childs schedule so that tuere are a certain number of mini mum requirements they should also decide how they are going to get more cooperation from heir own experience not to be mr child the impersonal sug- easily discouraged they man- gestion the clock says almost aged to persevere in the face twelve oclock lets start get- thats nice for some people always taught that agriculture this inhuman proposal should forests mines and fisheries condemn the whole shebang constituted our basic wealth laborers pay just as much for stocks and bonds are not real bread meat potatoes milk j wealth the world has a billion shirts and sheets tobacco or people who go to bed insufli- gasoline as skilled workers ciently fed do or even university profes- 1 how are you going to subsi- sors hze the railways subsidize the how do you go about getting maritimes build the best uni- foreign investors to invest more versities in the world double money in canada while taking university teachers salaries away control of what they have and make everybody happy by already invested it hardly controlling production makes sense perhaps the daily j they didnt talk like that when papers have misquoted from the he war was on the commis- report islon blithely assumes that the the proposed population looks j status quo will be maintained reasonable but any schoolboy docs any serious minded think- could take the increase of thoi man really believe that the last few years and by arithmetli capital system as we know it cal progression could do the rest j wil ia for 25 years more or canadas population has nearly docs any sincere earnest chris- tripled since i came to canada an man or woman want it to why shouldnt we increase sci j v in the next 25 years but what good will it do the health and frederick j acher happiness of the individual is of more consequence then the how far can russia be trust- number of them if the urban ed ask a columnist about of obstacles until they reached their goal nevertheless parents often are baffled by a child who is intractable if they let their child always have his own way hap py home living is out of the question if they continually try to correct and punish him he meets force with force or re tires into a sullen sulking mood how are they to train their ob stinate offspring the underlying cause of a childs stubborn streak should be sought why does he behave in this way underneath his bold front is he really quite unsure of himself is he batt ling to assert himself and win his place amongst older broth- ting ready for dinner is much to be preferred to you must come to your dinner at once in a tone which implies just dare resist me and you will soon find out what will happen to you the friendly approach often works wonders with a stubborn child it need mot lack firmness but a child needs to know that no matter how difficult he is his parents love him they believe he is really trying to do his best hut they dont expect perfection cither the stubborn child does not forfeit his mothers affection by his contrariness perhaps he is making a bid for a little more demonstration of her love his mother may be very busy and this is his way of getting her bad cheque toll has hit two million dollars a welldressed middleaged man walks briskly to a counter lake erie in winter and orders some of the finest j cigars til have to give you this he tells the clerk handing him an o lonely lake with lovely endorsed cheque for perhaps summer gone hey didnt get my identifies i summer long the great outdoors are at thu in th mn m ca be heard borne out in the fact that ap- duces fbuints card atdv iaush proximately 30 million ameri- clerk hesitates the man will sav i summer there the grass i cans are huners and fishermen please hurry im already late always green told additional num wild flowers bv the woods can are blrd watchers butter- too be seen chasers and just plain nature m k1 again a ow waves and winds are rising lo presenting the expensivelooking suit and in distress lzl f t perhaps spies a good car parked and all around is snow and population and according to out side reassured he hands loneliness i f j e seg- j i ment of the population to do over the cigars and some 30 in j 0 the douds are leaden busness with or a re lh u i in the skv icent year showed hunting and victim to ctnadas 4nnoon0a a he cold and wintry fishing alone to be a six billion uuim to t ananas s000000-a- nigh j dollar business which made this scene so calm in gentle it soci greater than the annual summer hours i sales of all drug stores and 136 is bleak and drear with greater than the sales of house- withered grass and flowers hold appliances radio and tv book to ik b e the world outdoors mourn in that land born in 1s93 m1l r hillsboro west va she spent vif a t i her childhood in china as a mis- novelists and short story wnt- f daughter returning to f he hrit y sates lo s j fv randolphmacon college for ords the great outdoors w -i- ii w uvchnburg virginia of the broad wc f r later she returned sshi f a china which is the second book that devotes a chapter or i two to a camping trip in the lgcst country n area m the i world next to the soviet un ion and largest in the world in population the 1952 census estimated the population at 475000000 and taught english for an important sales confer ence year plague the phonyrcheque racket the rcmp says the profes sional swindler is usually a most preseutable person with a plaus ible story about 85 percent of the bad cheques passed in canada are cashed by stores and pother busi ness establishments banks are harder to victimize to warn the public the rcmp has issued a free booklet be ware of bad cheques the new booklet second in the rcmp series crime in your commun ity blames the swindlers suc cess on the publics carelessness and failure to insist on proper identification the professional swindler will usually have some identification which may be either forged or stolen the rcmp warns that oil company credit cards and drivers licences are easily come by and hence are not positive identification before a cheque is cashed the merchant should insist on see ing it endorsed if the cheque already has been signed he should demand that it be re- endorsed the rcmp also offers the fol lowing tips 1 do not cash cheques that show alterations a large- por tion of the yearly loss is from raised cheques and money ord ers 2 do not leave company cheques where they can be stolen 3 do not accept a certified cheque without the usual identi fication some swindlers make their own rubber acceptance stamps post office stamps can also be forged and stolen post office money orders often are cashed in the same way 4 telephone verification of a bank account balance is not tan tamount to certification 5 there are gangs of cheque passers who spend a weekend doing a town watch lor them 6 check your own bank bal ance regularly to make sure no one has cashed a forged cheque on your account a little churchyard close heside the lake where gulls all summer long weird noises make sets combined at the above rate the aver age fisherman spent s310 and the average hunter 306 and ac cording to the us fish and wildlife service figures for the in winter s cold no longer do same ycar this meant that the they cry the moaning of the waves is ever nigh on colder days waves muted by the ice all bright and glittering reflect the skies till comes a storm then wind and waves rise high in all these scenes the master still is nigh he still commands the winds and tossing waves they hear his voice as in the olden days so when we sorrow let us bear in mind if winter comes can spring be far behind mrs a weber shaws alphabet appears doomed one of eccentric playwright george bernard shaws most cherished brainstorms drastic revision of the english alpha bet appears doomed to failure as literary enthusiasts through out the world prepare to com memorate the 100th anniversary of his birth shaw the man who deliber ately made himself the great ec centric wanted the alphabet re vised to include 40 instead of 26 letters more than 100000 280000 the bulk of the amount left in his estate after death duties was put aside to explore possibilities of having the changes made his new alphabet featured an entirely new form of halflong hand halfshorthand writing shaw who died in 1951 ordained that if the scheme failed the money should be given in equal shares to the british museum the national gallery of ireland and londons royal academy of its strange how often the dramatic art things that arl included in a but the british public trustee big sale are the ones you dont in whose hands shaws estate need and request for the new alpha- average angler spent 4 for his trout while joe nimrod spent 135 for his rabbit and as high as 300 for a moose would you pay so much if these items sold at the corner store you wouldnt spend half the amount but neither would the true sportsman he wouldnt spend onethird the amount not at the corner store he buys the thrill of the chase and the chal lenge of pitting his wits against the wily ways of his quarry he pays for the privilege iof getting outside pearl sydenstrickcr bucks ability to sympathetically por tray china and its people is partly due to her own long so- bet were left has announced that shaws will will be placed before a court for a decision a spokesman for the trustee says we hope this court ses sionwill be held before christ mas if it is decided the plan is not good we shall distribute the money in the way mr shaw directed shaw was born in dublin ireland july 26 1856 on thurs day exactly 100 years from that date members of shavian so cieties on both sides of the at lantic and in democratic and communist countries will hold meetings and banquets to honor his memory literature at various nanking universities she married and her great sadness in life was her only child a little girl who was incurably retarded she wrote a book called the child who never grew telling the story of this part of her life her first book east wind west wind was published in 1930 and her second book the good earth won the pulitzer prize in 1933 she was awarded the xobel prize for literature she has since written many books sev eral of which have been mada into movies the chinese revolu tion finally forced her to leava china and she is now remarried and living in the eastern states she and her husband are strong supporters of an international adoption centre youtl enjoy going anywhere by sits no driving worries no parking troubles fares are low leave stduffvilla to toronto 00 am n 850 pm b 025 iiin b 820 pm a except sun hoi b sun ai hoi standard time round trip fares between toronto and buffalo new york chicago montreal ottawa 630 2425 2415 1640 1290 foreign countries increased their sales in the canadian mar ket by 26 percent in the first eight months of 1956 compared to the same period of 1955 tickets and information at mr r snowball barber shop phone 270j2 c january 29 1925 ilough claremont as scouts 3rd margaret linton and myrtle mr ambrose stover our enter- wi of claremont in high- prising baker has installed an ani la and best fancy uptodate steam boiler designed skater a ward claremont to heat the bake shop and his residence adjoining in addition one of the prime objects for in stalling the new system is to radiate steam in the coke oven where the bread is baked tuesday morning was the coldest this winter in stouffville the thermometers were all in accord in telling the fact that it was extremely cold but just how many degrees below zero it was made a varied story a large thermometer in the east end registered 30 degrees below in butterfly at agincourt on jan tst two rinks of stouffville curlers won out in group no 13 in the on tario tankard final game this grouping consists of claumont locust hill unionville mark ham searhoro agincourt hea thers and stouffville ontario is divided into sixteen groups and the winners of each group meet in toronto on tuesday feb 3rd to play tankard finals which is the premier curling event in canada players in the stouff- psp helped us saye now gives us extra benefits the bank of novascoha with psp you set yourown savings goal you save by convenient instalments and your bank of nova scotias psp contract now guarantees your estate will receive the entire amount of your savings goal in case of death plus all instalments paid plus a cash bonus take a minute to visit your nearest bns branch- pick up a copy of the free personal security program folder giving all the details oj this new surer way to sava the bank of nova scotia your partner la helping canada grow while others showed 25 andville rinks were h bringcr down town in the business w r sanders w armstrong blocks several registered from s armstrong w j mather c 14 to 19 armstrong j s dougherty and the first carnival of the sea- h w sanders son in the maple leaf rink the eclipse of the sun last was held on wednesday of last i saturday morning was awaited week it was a fancy dress affair i by people in stouffville with a in which keen competition by i good deal of interest unfortun- outside contestants was evident ately the morning broke very for the prize money a notice- hazy with heavy dark clouds able fact was that not a single this condition continued until prize came to stouffville the the eclipse was past so that skating was good and was made nothing of it could be seen here the more enjoyable by good about nine oclock the daylight band music the prize winners began to fade and it was ncccs- were 1st ken duncan and wal- sary to use artificial lights in ler snith of almira represent- the homes and the business ing indians 2nd merle ste- places at 907 the darkness was j phenson and lyman mccul- at its worst the sky overhead remaining like a thunder cloud i right after the time of the parents struggling with an eclipse each moment brought 5aturday excursions to toronto by chr too many musts and not and adults in authority more enough freeoom in his day is sleep is good medicine for many xnrv uwk i lo ho rerfrrt hif f here a lack of a definie pattern minor childish problems in be- yrork wek is to m reduced half as far as from here to hcreol happenings a small child havlout ers and sisters or companions i attention the stubborn child is not at t ia part 0 the dav is peace with himself his obstin- ihe u mothers and chil- acy is a form of anger he is lren kct lmo fne kreat num- j obstinate child should receive back the light so that in a short i waging war against his environ- ber of tangles likely mother is some comfort from the knowl- period wc were enjoying the m fatigued but the child is pro- i edge that most children pass real daylight again because of j puzzled mothers and fathers bably tired too occasionally j through a longer or shorter per- the dark clouds the grandeur of i of a stubborn youngster should observing a longer rest period iod of resistance to adult author- the eclipse was hidden from our examine their own handling of after the noon meal or an ear- ity especially in preschool and view and this is the more un- j his small world what about her bedtime will reduce the num- j adolescent years boys and girls fortunate as there will not be i the childs routine are there ber of clashes between the child who are highspirited may really another opportunity to see aj amount to something plutarch total eclipse in our town until commented that the wildest the year 1994 and only the most colts make the best horses icopynght ambitious of our citizens hope to be here then 10w fares every saturday to and incl april 13 tickets good going and returning same saturday only excursion fares from amaxdaie 21x aurora 120 kxitltik 2jso niatkwatklt j3200 iiimiifori jtl00 hoiiamf iandixo 5130 coirepondlng trrci from intcrmrdate points lixdsav 270 newmarket 133 peterroro 100 stouffville 110 sonderlaxjri 20 uxrridgh 103 fuh information from acehts

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