Grimsby Independent, 20 Oct 1949, p. 3

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\* y %® TODAY:â€" Red Skeltca in "NEPTUNE‘S DAUGHTER" ORDER YOUR PERSONAL CHRISTMAS CARDS NOW ! | MATINEE SAT. at 2 P.M. PHONE 36 $ FENRRREECECCCOC CC ..............‘........l..‘...................'......““ eetses hss t His BEST iN A DAZZLING, ? FRIDAY & SATURDAY â€" OCTOBER 21â€" (Sat. Eve. Continuous From 6.30 P.M.) MON.â€".TUES.â€"WEDP. _ _â€"â€" P Ne & 6 du se C lAjJGH FOR LAUGHâ€"ROAR FOR ROAR aÂ¥he! onl [fi * v on r es pM ( ol ce ~"~ * c!' [ J(:I?,"f{OpE yeul 9/ LE Bayy / t . / SO‘T'»,-\' p ‘-/ Orreie t e ‘/bLLC // d Bob‘s at i tgamas o ol mast ho â€" Produced by ROBERT L. WELCH =S ff greedwoy tele? vequees 5J U THURS.â€"FRLâ€"SAT. «â€"â€" SEE OUR SAMPLE BOOKS THE INDEPENDENT "Lincoln‘s Leading Weekly" 73"\.,; Christmas _2 ~C€arbs â€"â€"â€" â€"â€" QCT. 242426 GRIMSBY CONTINUATIONS CHILDREXN‘s Aip mmnu.m-udm ly. Several proposals for obtainâ€" Nmrumdhemn the board dllu\onla«un.,.m ummmmm accomodation will be provided in the near future. Thumbâ€"nail sketches of case work done in the St. Catharines society during September were give nto the meeting by the superâ€" intendent. He cited the case of a fiveâ€"yearâ€"old child who attends school in the afternoon, but is left lmhmmwmklmpr- mmwrkln‘.llnnlne-mr- “mhhfimmnh mhlonhem off to school. A family of eight, burned out of their home in Northern Ontario, were referred to the soâ€" clety for housing accommodation after they came to friends in St. Catharines, There was also the case of a husband and wife who were separated, where a tenâ€"yearâ€" old child lives with the husband in a trailer, and the wife supports the four other children in one FORMER GRIMsSBY Boy the Canadian Fusiliers in 1924 and became commander of the unit. In 1937 he relinquished his command. In 1941 he enlisted for active serâ€" vice and was company commander at No. 11 Basic Training Centre, Woodstock, From Woodstock he was transâ€" ferred to company commander at becoming secondâ€"inâ€"command. Col. Bingle was born in Grimsby in 1886 and was educated there. His first military unit was the 7th Regiment, London, which he joined in 1901. Col. Bing‘s was a Fellow of the Chartered Institute of Secretaries, He was a member of St. John the Evangelist Anglican Church. | He was the son of the late Wilâ€" Ham Hamilton Bingle and Alice Bingle. Surviving are his wife, Marjorie Blandford Bingle; one son; William Hamilton Bingle, at the family home, 320 St. George Street; one daughter, Mrs. Charles (Joyce) Gibbons, Montreal; and four brothers, Roy A., of London, Thomas, of Brantford, Alfred, of Grimsby, and W. Burton, of ‘Toronto. dition, to obviate the necessity of having government sneaks running through my dwellingâ€"place, is enâ€" closed radio. I had imagined when I got a radio and paid for it with hardâ€"carned cash it was for my own private use and amusement, and not as a means of having strangers rampaging through my house inspecting it. T wxmnoemnrdnunpubue] umtywllclmldneodurvldn‘ mwammpnyln-1 stalling it. Instead, the governâ€" ment has seen fit to use it as an instrument to enable them to turn loose their inspectors to annoy private citizens in their castle, as the Englisaman terms it, Eempentes in 22 k uuuwmmy’emb think what this could mean to democracy if the government used these tactics in other fields . withâ€" out any comeback on the part of the private citizen. "The whole setâ€"up and enforceâ€" ment of the radio act, in my opinâ€" jon has created an odium among honest taxpayers and should have ;u.mapmtolbnuultmmply their just debts und taxes and coercion of this sort only serves to turn them into crooks. | ul“whmmmn‘vm hose name your communication wnnl,wouldcmdomml“ mmnthdhekmwnllflm' roads it would make on the life of a private citizen and subject whose name was sent, W enactment h roads it wo‘ of a privat of his." the «[ ‘..l this : realize what is Craise sald. "It ’mflimmdwt en * "J feel this committee . showd realize what is happening," Mr. Craise sald. "It is a very serious problem und we cannot allow the loss of land to £9 on indefinitley. A lot of men are losing their liveli« hood and the government is losing taxes. We all uppreciate the owner cu'tantnllunnll. Any govern« ment asslstance would be helpful." J. K Van Haariem told of efforts made to save the shoreline at Vineâ€" land Experimental Station, "First we planted willow trees on the bank slope." he said. "They all washed out. Then we built & se wall and it was undermined. Next we put in two piers and three extra groyn®s. They‘re gone too, Lately, we -pnm.ooo on big ston® that we dumped over the bank and that does seem o hold the bank but there is no beach, LArk® boulders look UKe the most efective way 1 To â€" onatan.* & FORMER BEAMSVILLE of lark® «d over bout, Jt would | MARY ACRES LOST mm i T HE e PE IRCC undermined. Next rs and three exlrm gone too, Lately, on big stone that From Page One GRIMSEY INDEENDENT "I feel that it‘s a dn'nupu thing to start arguing a " was the attitude of Councilior Grosâ€" smith, who, like Deputyâ€"Reeve Constable, could see no reason in holding up the passing of the byâ€" m N to Scarboro. It was the feeling of some memâ€" h!nolmulhtn.lno(m bylaw should be given to each member for careful study. law any longer. Reeve Price thought that it should be held over for another month, and Councilior Brown who thought that the byâ€" law was long enough for book form, also was hesitant about imâ€" mediate passing, and when the vote was called for by the Mayor, Brown and Lothian were the only dissenting voices on the motion. Mayor Lewis relt certain that the bylaw would never have been forwarded to council if it were not correct in every respect. He intiâ€" mated also that it might not be long before a council would have little to say about such a bylaw, and would pass it whether they liked it or not. This theme was taken up by Councilior Scott, who said that over three quarters of the bylaw makes direct applicaâ€" tion to the Criminal Code, which council has absolutely no control over. Eventually police bylaw No, 1140 was accepted by Counct and passed with two members voting against the action. ‘The second after Mayor Lewis officially declared the motion passâ€" ed, Mr, Sam Bonham was on his feet from the nearly empty gallery, and told council that the bylaw had not been read,a first or second ‘This was the second time exâ€" councilior Bonham had been on his feet, the first time was at the conclusion of the reading of the minutes of the last regular meetâ€" ln.deoundllnd;laoolmll’" clal meeting, which was held to air the complaint of Mr. Bonham re the handling of the human bones case by police officials. When the Mayor asked if there were any errors or omissions in the reading of the minutes, Bonham asked if his remarks applied to the audience \n\nllneounctl. _"I know what you‘re going to ask," sad the Mayor. EVOC MBE P t PR time, but he failed to carry the issue any further. "I don‘t think you do," replied Bonham. "At any rate, |'m.u.fl“k-’. it ap« plies c Mayor "Very well," said Bonham, fall« ing back to his seat. Council put through some routine business before again hearing from Mr. Bonham. Motions passed Inâ€" cluded the setting of a date for Court of Revision, which will be held at 7.30 on the night of October 28th. Building permits were grantâ€" ed to the following: C. Sweet, garage. $150 L,, Farrow, dwelling, $6,000. Lincoln Electric, alterations, $50.00 H. R. Dickson, dwelling, $7,500. Dr. Christie, patients‘ office, $2500. M. A, Johnson, alterations, $300. W. H. Saunders, dwelling, $8,000. Orin Cosby, garage, $300. The appointment of â€" Constable MacKenzle to the Grimaby Police Force was ratified; accounts of the Joint Fire Committee amounting to $142.04 were ordered paid sub= jeet to the approval of the Come« mittee; Relief accounts for Septâ€" ember, _ amounting to _ $103.08 were read and ordered pald; genâ€" eral accounts wf Â¥ w? eral accounts . totalling $1847.31 were heard and ordered paid, counâ€" cil also passed a motion granting theullln'ollwulouuluko- Iview Gardens to Miss Lillian | Potter, was 104 %#» Wanham. EPCRECT + Council then heard Mr. who addressed council w to a recent accident in counes 2907 9 i ClÂ¥ who addressed council with regard to a recent accident in which a vehicle owned by him was involved. This item had been heard by coun» cil previously, and the claim for damages amounting to one hundred dollars had been turned over to the town insurance company. Bince that time, both Mr. Bonham and the council have been _ informed by the insurance company that the claim canot be recognized, as & new clause in the act alegediy alleviates the company of payment when an acident does not happen on the actual pavement of town streots, O ) .. _y.aute anntention _ 1t was Mr that the pay uarily consti that the pavement .ru’wwllluu unnolm""d 4 w.wmc" Mwl"" that they take m investigate any ch/ surance policy, WHAT‘S A BRITISH . any rate, I‘m afraid it apâ€" only to council" replied the hok CC * CC ca use in the act ‘m"“’ s the company of pay® A ; acident does not happen actual pavement of town ¢, Bonham‘s m““mw yement does not neees« tute the travelled porâ€" road in many cases in here curbs do not exist, n llll"m to 4 ike immediate step» any changes in their I The Mayor and rest of Council appeared vitally interested in Mr. Bonham‘s statement, and Mayor Lewis told Bonham that he and councilor Lothian would immediâ€" ately check into the matter with the company. The matter was then dropped, temporarily, at loast. © Concluding the regular seasion "1 council, considerable time was :nlmthmmm- i the town, and although no kthnwuuken,umu-ppur 7| thathis will be a matter that will 'nmmonm agenda . of ture meetings for some time. SALVAGE COLLECTION SAT., OCT. 29 Protect Buying Future WEST LINCOLN BRANCH, CANADIAN LEGION Now PLEASE MAVE ALL SALVAGE ON ROADSIDE BY 9 A.M. â€" His PAPERS â€" BOTTLES â€" METALS BATTERIES â€" RAGS â€" SCRAPIRON (NO TINS OR SHOES) by But the baby is more than just "cute." He‘s also symâ€" bolic. For one thing, he looks just about the way most of us feel when we have made the last payment on a Canada Savâ€" ings Bond through the Payroll Savings Plan. For another, this is only the fourth year that Canada Savings BRonds have been available to Canadians, but like the healthy, happy child with his winning smile, they have capâ€" tured the fancy of men and women in every walk of life, More than $,000,000 Canada Suvln‘f- Ronds have been bought in the past three years by people like us and total holdings of them now amount to more than a billtion dollars, This apace contributed in the service of the Community by Not long ago, a poll made in this country to determine the reâ€" lative popularity of Christian hymns revealed that only four con, stituted the first cholce of 20,384 of the 30,000 churchgoers quesâ€" tioned. For every 100 persons who named as their favorite Abide with Me, the hymn that led, 75 preferâ€" red Nearer My God to Thee, 57 preferred Lead, Kindly Light and 47 proferred Rock of Ages. FOUR POPULAR HYMNS Phone 768 MASON‘S 24 HOUR SERVICE TAXT

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