the tribune stouffville ont thursday april 22nd- 1943 established 1888 member of the canadian weekly newspaper association and ontario quebec newspapers association issued every thursday at stouffville- ontario eight to twelve pages average paid circulation 1850 subscription rates per year in advance in canada 200 in usa 250 a v nolan son publishers notes and comments one bank towns may protest if the business men of stouffville were well organized they in cooperation with farm groups might be able to do something to bring a more free exchange of bank cheques as between towns and villages in very close proximity to each other with banks of different denominations the sit uation has been doubly impressed bn stouffville business men and others since the bank of nova scotia folded up its tent and silently moved from stouffville while a similar act was going on at markham by the bank of commerce had the business people known what was taking place a vigorous protest would likely have been set up it was all over before mr john public knew anything about it now the full import of the onebank town is coming home to the people one of the results is that you have to pay 25e to cash a chequeon the bankat markham village only eight miles away markham people have to do likewise with cheques on stouffville a great deal of business passes between these communities so closely situated and the 25c charge being imposed on a one or two dollar cheque is pretty high dis count while we are on the subject it might be well to point out that it was apparent to business people before the mer ger that if one did not take place there was not a bank build- ing in stouffville adequate to handle the business that would accrue to one institution this is even more appar ent now that we have seen it in actual operation people lined up at the tellers cage impatiently waiting to transact business is an almost daily occurrence right now in what may be termed the quiet season however this editorial was intended to say something about exchange charges why couldnt the banks give special rates where communities are within a radius of say ten miles its about that distance between the farthest branches in toronto and free exchange is accorded this privilege shouldbe accorded to the smaller communities so closely located to each other a vigorious move by business organizations and farm groups bringing sufficient pressure to bear could we feel sure obtain some concession for the rural businessman and farmer along this line home town paper excuses premier in defending premier conant for running about the country in police cars on what is termed the business of the government the oshawa timesgazette makes the rather lamentable excuse that the premier could hardly be expected to bear the expense of wear and tear to his own automobile when he was travelling about on public business the people will read that with a smile they know mr conant is paid 10000 per year as a cabinet minister 2000 more sessional indemnity and a good deal more comes his way complimentary because he is premier most people would be glad to pay their own car expenses out of the liberal salary of the premier and on that score the timesgazette will not be able to change their minds we wouldnt go so far as to say the premier is not en titled to the use of a car but his family has no right to one too the premier should have been very careful about this matter since the experience of hon george henry was be fore him as a guide that daylight saving problem now with a full winter of daylight saving behind us the farmers are united in the knowledge that it is a poor thing for them a hardship and a nuisance writers in farm journals are praying that before another winter comes around something will be done about it daylight saving in winter is really hydro wasting and while in the summer it is no help to the farmer few urban dwellers would want standard time again however even urban dwellers get no advantage from daylight saving in winter here is how one writer in the farmers advocate in telligently sums up the situation what is erroneously called daylight saving is a waster of daylight one may say the largest waster there is since october it puts the breakfast hour of farmers and a great majority of city dwellellers as well as the beginning of the days work for many people an hour further into morn ing darkness throughout the territory mentioned will the reader review his experience if he does he will see that when the sun was rising at 730 standard time he and more particularly his wife were up working in the dark ness more than an hour wasting hydro power in homes lighted by electricity and in factories operated on an 8hour day ruled by the dock set an hour and twentyfive minutes ahead of the sun as it was and is yet in middlesex county complaints were published that many rural children were starting to school in the darkness on cloudy mornings and their lives endangered by motor traffic also that in the absence of electric lighting on some mornings school open ing had to be delayed in britain clocks will be advanced another hour the only reason given is for better adjustment of labor in three shifts per 24 hours it most certainly does not save daylight or promote effective output to work in darkness when the sunday school lesson april 25 easter sunday the risen lord golden text he is rlsen mark 166 the lesson as a whole is there in all history a more thrilling incident recorded than that of the amazed followers of jesus christ when they found the tomb empty where only a few days be fore they had reverently and sorrow fully laid away the body of their lord the imperial seal and the roman guard guaranteed no human interference no possibility of rifling that sepulcher yet in spite of every precaution the great stone that covered the entrance was rolled back and the crypt was found to be vacant no wonder the disciples themselves who had forgotten or failed to understand the promise of the lord jesus that he would rise again the third day were in a quandary as to what had taken place until the evidence of his resurrection ibecame so overwhelming that they could no longer doubt they ate and drank with him after he rose from the dead acts 1041 and had absolute proof that he was indeed the very same jesus they had known during the years of his min istry among them john 2027 with them it was not merely faith accepting the testimony of others even of god himself or his holy word it was actual sight verifying what the scriptuies divinely inspir ed had predicted the visit of peter and john to the empty tomb gave to them visual testi mony as they beheld the condition of the cloths that had enwrapped the dead body of their lord which they could not gainsay i believe it is a mistake to suppose that those cere ments had been unwound ifrom the body and folded up toy the risen lord to suppose so is to miss the point altogether in my judgment what they really heheld were the linen cloths remaining in exactly the position they had been in when enclosing the body of the loid he had come out of them in resurrection as a butterfly emerges from a chry salis shell leaving the wrappings un changed and unbroken no power but resurrection could have accom plished this therefore they saw and believed vs believed what that the lord whom theyjoved and whose seemingly untimely death had for the moment shattered their fond est hopes had proved himself victor over death and had risen in triumph from the grave this is the rock up on which christianity rests if christ has not been raised we have no gospel to preach but because he has died for our sins according to the scriptures and has risen again also according to the scriptures our salvation is settled and our hope assured verse by verse john 201 cometh mary mag dalene early when it was yet dark and eeeth the stone taken away from the sepulchre in the twilight of that early hour mary could lust discern the fact that the tomb was open and she naturally concluded that it had been rifled and the body of its sacred occupant removed by some unfriendly hands verse 2 they have taken away the lord and we know not where they have laid him mary evidently had no other thought than that the body of jesus had been con veyed to some other place to say that the resurrection story was the result of her heated imagination is folly yet unbelievers have affirmed this she had no thought of resurrec tion she wanted to find it that she might do the last kind offices that a jen ish burial demanded verse 3 peter therefore went forth and that other disciple and came to the sepulchre impelled by wonder love and grief the two went out and hastened to the garden tomb to verify or disprove the words of mary one can imagine the em otions that stirred peters soul as he hurred along the way and the memories of the night when he had denied his lord crowded upon him verse 4 the other disciple did outrun peter john was much younger than peter and readily out distanced the older man as he sped on wings of love to see what had leally transpired veise 5 he stooping down saw the linen clothes lying as he looked into the tomb through the low entrance door he could evidently discern the bodycoverings lying on the bed of spices apparently as when the body of jesus was in them he probably supposed mary had been mistaken so she reverently lemained outside veise 6 simon peter went into the sepulchie and seeth the lin en clothes lie when peter reach ed the giave he did not want to in spect it from without but hastened inside and there saw what proved conclusively that christ had risen the empty giaveclothes bore silent testimony to the fact that the lord jesus christ had come out of them in lesurrection life veise 7 the napkin that was about his head not lying with the linen clothes that is the head cov ering or turiban had fallen back leaving an exposed plae where the face of jesus had ibeen it lay theie wound together as when about his worker can have daylight the standard timemeridian for ontario and quebec the 75th passes through papineauville 35 miles east of ottawa and 65 miles west of montreal and for the maritimes the 60th which passes through sydney ns to save- daylight which means saving hydro and promoting better production clocks could be moved a half hour back instead of an hour forward in the meridional belt from ottawa to windsor and a half hour forward from montreal to st andrewsnb also a halfhour back from standrews nb to the sea coast from pacific to atlantic more than half the population and of the factory industry are west of their respective time lines regulating time by halfbelts should be agreable to farmers everywhere and to a large majority of the rest of the people f we all cut out only one nonessential call a day haifa mllu pa w wantfp war calls must come first which means that we should reduce our non essential use of the telephone to the minimum present facilities cannot be increased your co operation is needed if war calls are to go through promptly g please remember that the wasteful use cf telephone time can hold up war business and that every second you save counts sewtc puiitcp mftff 2 you can take your fat drip pings scrap fat and bones to your meat dealer he will pay you the established price for the dripping and tile scrap fat if you wish you can turn this money over to your local voluntary salvage committee or registered local war charity or you can donate your fat drip- ping scrap fat and bones to your local voluntary salvage committee if they collect them in your community or i you can continue to place out i your fats and bones for ool- lection by your street clean ing department where such a system is in effect 6p demhmn of hmiomat wm sihvicej head in a place by itself all of this told plainly what had transpired for no human power could have re moved the body and left those gar ments as they were verse 8 then went in also that other disciple and he saw and believed that which he beheld made it impossible to question the continued on page six r g clendening funeral director ambulance service phone markham 9000 a s farmer licenced austioneer 20 years experience 20 20 years experience york county uxbridge and picker ing townships farm stock and furniture sales a specialty telephone stouffville 7309 address gormley po clarke prentice phone aglncourt 52 av3 milliken licensed auctioneer for the counties of york and on tario successor for corpl ken prentlceof casf and of the late j h prentice former prentice prentice farm and farm stock sales a specialty at fair and reason able rates stouffville floral roses wedding bouquets funeral designs cut flowers milt smith prop telephone 7001 7002 business directory dental e s barker lds djos honor graduate of royal college of dental surgeons and of tks university of toronto offick in grubinn block phone 274 markham every tuesday office in wear block medical dr s s ball physician and surgeoi xray office cor obrien and lists phone 196 coroner for york county dr arthur l hore physician and surgeon general medicine and obstetrics- also eye ear nose and throat eyes tested glasses fitted and repaired markham ont phone st insurance thomas birkett general insurance agency stouffville ontario established 1908 insurance in reliable companies st reasonable rates promt service phone 25902 stoaffvule- h o klinck phone 3307 stouffrtue- fire auto burglary sickness ana accident fidelity bonds the standard life assurance on the pioneer of canadian life insurance a mutual company with 117 yesxs experience strength and service unexcelled a c burkholder insurance canada life assurance co -also- automobile and fire barristers office phone residence phase 3160 3514 arthur w s greer barrister soucitor notary psoitis 6 king street east oshawa ontario resident partner branch oses wcpolalrdkc port perry uxbridge ontario phone 1c office phone elgin 7021 residence phone mo cssft samuel d borlns barrister solicitor eta 503 temple bldg 62 richmond street west toronto l e oneill stotjffviltje funeral dmector and embalmer continuous telephone serrfes day and night a c kennedy chiropractor church street stbnffritto monday wednesday fridays 9 to 12 am stouffville marble granite works orders promptly executed p tarr proprietor phone 4303 brierbush hospital government licensed member of the allied private hospital association main street east stonfrvffle maternity medical and surgical ambulance service day and night service mrs e r good phone 191