Daily Times-Gazette, 27 Aug 1946, p. 16

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Ea A, THE TIMES.-GAZETTE OSHAWA WHITBY /THE OSHAWA TIMES (Established 1871) i 'THE WHITBY GAZETTE AND CHRONICLE ie (Established 1863) An independent newspaper published every Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday by The Times Publishing Company of Oshaws, Limited, Arthur R, Alloway, President and Managing Director, SUBSCRIPTION RATES Delivered by carrier in Oshawa, Whitby, Brooklin, Port Perry, Ajax r Plokering, 240, for two weeks, $6.24 per year if paid in advance, Ny mail outside carrier delivery ares anywhere in Canada and Eng- and $400 per year, United States subscriptions $5.00 per year. dorised ss Second Class Mail, Post Office Department, Ottawa, ~ Net Paid Circulation Aveo JoLy™ 9 768 TUESDAY, AUGUST 27, 1046 51 Years Service Entirely without fanfare the Maple Leaf Farmers' Mutual Fire Insurance any on August 19 last marked another milestone in its lok and creditable history, The company commenced business on August 19, 1895 while the last meeting of the Board of Directors was held on August 19, 1946, which was exactly 51 years, It can readily be realized that the company started in a very small way, During the intervening half century it has made steady progress and is now in a sound financial posi- tion, writing over three-quarters of a million dollars in business each month, The company has expanded with changing conditions and is giving the rugal people a very broad coverage beyond that rendered by most fire insurance companies, The company employs full-time inspectors who advise policyholders where fire hazards can and must be The "Maple Leaf" has, down through the years, been privileged in having been guided by men of sound business principles, whose honesty, high ideals and broad vision have built up the company to its present enviable position. Through even the most depressed times it has never failed to meet its obligations with the result that it today enjoys the confidence of thousands of policyholders, Immunization Week National Immunization Week will be observed this year from September 20 to October b, it is announced by the Health League of Canada. An annual event, sponsored by the Health Lefigue in co-operation with health departments, unization Week is designed to intensify the public health workers to promote immuni- Jtlon 'against smallpox, diphtheria, whooping cough, scar- lot fever and tetanus. ~~ Qver a period of years the local Board of Health with the co-operation of the medical profession has maintained a immunization program, The parents of pre- age children are urged to bring their children to the weekly clinics held at Rotary Hall and at the Ukrainian Hall on Bloor Street East, This service is given free of charge with the result that contagious diseases of a serious nature have been reduced almost to the vanishing point. The holding of Immunization Week provides another opportunity to bring to the attention of parents the desira- bility of protecting their children 'against the diseases which might affect their entire future, There is nothing to lose by immunization, while there is much to be gained--the lives of thousands of Canadian children. Gb ab lb I SAI Ib Nl lh Cb How 81 People Secured $14,000 in 30 Minutes Time During a recent month 81 new customers came to one of our Household Finance offices and received the money they desired in 30 minutes time. We feel this is a certain indication of the fact that at Household Finance you get the money you need when you need it. Perhaps this is one of the reasons why Household is Canada's largest and oldest Small Loans Company. Your loan of from $20 to $1000 can be arranged simply and promptly at any one of our convenient offices. Tell us how much you need and how you want to repay. It's helpful to bring some identification with you. There's little else to do. Most times you can even arrange your loan by phone if you prefer. And remember, your loan at Household Finance costs you less than at any other Small Loans Company in Canada. We'll be pleased to help you at any time. Come in, HOUSEHOLD FINANCE BACKED BY 4 YEARS OF DOPERIONCE Canede's lergest and eldest Small Loans Company with ¢1 offees in 34 cities D. C. Moore; Manager 15 Simcoe St. South (Over Kresge's) OSHAWA, ONT. Phone Oshawa 3601 Nours #10 3 or by appointment = Loans made to farmers and residents of nearby lowes & 4 ce A 1 A 1 ve RRA A ~ a 47 £7 £7 Fr Sg Jr Sr fe dr Sr da dr RAAT ARAR TARA tz ta Putting It Up To Us ARE , DOING Asout'IT? REP ~Oarmack in the Christin Science Monitor, eo Other Editors ® A Bible Thought NOT INTERESTED (Hamilton Spectator) An eccentric fellow is trundling a wheelbarrow around the wdbld, Those fallen arches of Greece are likely to leave him cold, COMPLEX "Bantam Peanut," ns aren't the only ones & hummingbird coms START EARLY (Guelph Mercury) | The electric chair has somethin to do with deterring criminals, bu the proper place to start is in the high chair, INACTIVE CONSCIENCES (Windsor Star) Customs inspectors report that a cheque from an Illinols woman was the first "conscience money" they had received in some time, The "still small voice," it appears, is having its own trouble with short ages, NO ROCKET RUSH (Hamilton Spectator) American missile experts say they expect to shoot a rocket to the moon within 18 months, and that inter-planetary travel is probable within 30 years. We should ima- gine it would be some time before these rocket ships would suffer from over.crowding, SILENT ON STEEL (Toronto Cilobe and Mall) There is something naively funny about the Prairie arm of the Fed- eral Government press, atonily silent on the steel strike, advising the United States on its need of a renovated labor policy, But maybe they can do without steel in Winni« pos while there are so many straws 0 cluteh at, ONE OF OLDEST HOUSES (Collier's Magazine) One of the oldest houses in the world still in possession of the ore iginal owning family is the ances. tral seat of the Oglanders in the village of Nunwell on tthe Isle of Wight, a few miles off the south coast of England, The house has been occupied successively by 37 generations of this family since it was built by Roger Oglander soon after he came over from Normandy with Willlam the Conqueror in 1086, Kindly Deeds (Family Herald and Weekly Star) Let every dawn of morning be to you as the beginning of life, and overy setting sun be to you as Its close; then let every one of these short lives leave its sure record of some kindly thing done for others --jome goodly strength or knowl edge gained for yourselves; so from day to day, and strength to strength you shall build up, indeed, by art, . thought, and by just will an Eo- clesia of England, of which it shall not be sald, "See what manner of stones are here, but "See what manner of men" ROADSIDE TABLES (Windsor Dally Star) Driving through Ontario these days, one is struck by a new feature, This is the location of roadside tables here and there along the Riguvay. They are, in most cases, delightfully placed in shady spots, ittlo oases where the traveler may stop, eat lunch in the out-of.door an} Rayo pret rest, © partment of Hi (] thus carries out a splendid Lig the comfort of both the tourist and the resident traveler, There are not enough of the tables yet, but It 1s to be expected that more of them will be provided as time goes on, ® 15 Years Ago George ©. Allchin wand Ernest Cay, both of Oshawa, were chosen to represent the Oshawa Chamber of Commerce at the annual conven tion to be held in Regina, The Canadian Legion Convention was held in Oshawa, Good wishes were expresesd by the Oshawa Branch of the Legion, and by many Blades of busines, The Chamber ree acted as hosts to the Legion officers. a Suh Was outfitted with new un and the personal McLaughlin aur the lebrations, He way & life membership ny The world is still echoing Philip's request, "Show us the Father" (John 14:8) Are we Christians showing Him in our lives? AN -- % Ah Fo Wy ' a oe o- REBUILD LONDON CITY IN 30 YEARS Many Quaint Corners In Fmancial District to Be Sacrificed By Richard Tompkins London, Aug, 28--(OP)~--8t, Paul's cathedral as the centre of a great trafic circle is now part of a 30- year plan for reconstruction of the old Olty of London district devas- tated by the "blitz." Bacrificing many of the quaint corners of the "City," oldest of greater London's boroughs, may grieve sentimentalists but practical idealists forsee relief for traffic con- gestion in the new plan. This district, only a mile square, was founded by the Romans and its streets to some extent still follow the lines of the old Roman walls, It is the market place of the Em- pire, Within its gates are the Bank of England, Lloyd's and the stock exchange, the Fleet Street home of the great news agencies, and, rising above all, old Bt, Paul's, It will be the first of the London "i, 4 0 oul TH ARS BI os ed Bids a. uta wh iy Sorougis to be reclaimed from war's devastation, and city planners, en visaging a new metropolitan area, say the more the city is modernized the more it will remain as a world architec The view the tural ang, Paul's as the cen~ tre of a new square which would provide a site for a national mem- tances of the devastation" centre of commerce and finance. Prom a trafic viewpoint, the "City" is referred to as a heart or lung into which and out of which are pumped each day some 500,000 workers and about 50,000 vehicles, It is Plaiing to divide the program of relief into two stages, 1946-1966 and 1065-1975, The road system is planned for double the amount of trafic, Two new routes will run from Falcon Square to London Wall and from check-up the Guildhall to a new junction at Cannon and Queen Victoria Sts, A special route of two arms, 80 feet wide, will start at Holborn Olrcus and Aldgate and meet at Liverpool Street, A circuit of inner distribution roads, 64 feet wide, will be provided for mixed trafic, Old 'through routes will be widened, / The St. Paul's precinct--feature of the program--will be opened out to Carter Lane and Paternoster Row, the choir school re-built at th east end, with the top of Ludgate school re-bullt at the east end, with the top of Lugate Hill becoming mainly a processional drive to the west front of the cathedral, DIRECT PRIVATE TN BIGGAR & CRAWFORD Momben Toronto Stock Exchange 40 KING ST. EAST, TORONTO v OSHAWA BRANCH s 37 KING ST. BAST -- PHONE 2600 ERIC R. HENRY, Resident Partner WIRE TO TORONTO invite oh Have you reviewed your estate plans in the last few years? Not only changes in your family, business or assets, but the important and continuing developments in the field of taxation may have affected your present arrangements, rendering them less suitable and less practical. To make sure that you have a workable and effective Will, we you and your solicitor to check your current plan against our broad administra. tive experience over the past several decades. ~TORONTO GENERAL TRUSTS CORPORATION HEAD OFFICE: 253 BAY 87%. Worth his weight in gold! Actually the Province of Ontario, in pre- war years, profited to almost the same extent from tourist business as it did from the gold mining industry. It is up to each of ua individually to see that this business goes on growing, LET wake Tom xa 1 ame Heak/" PLANNING A HOLIDAY? TUNE IN "ONTARIO HOLIDAY", CERB, 10:30 P.M,, THURSDAY, FRIDAY AND SATURDAY, ot wa Ta We all share! Everyone benefits from the income Ontario's tourist business represents. This diagram, based on figures sup. plied by the Hotel Association, shows this, Aside from hospitals ity, it's good business to make our visitors feel at home, an Ontario hotelman, famous for his 1, There's lots to attract visitors 4. everywhere in the Province. Find out what your neighbourhood has to offer and become a booster! 2. When you. write your friends in the Statcs tell them about the places they would enjoy visiting. 3, Try to make any visitor glad he came to Canada ...and be really 6. \ friendly when you meet. It works both ways! They treat us royally when we visit them , . . we can't do less than return the com- /'pliment. Remember that it costs money to take a holiday ...s0 let's see they get a good return for every penny they spend. Our lakes this summer are going to attract thousands of friendly visitors from the States. We want them to enjoy themselves . . . it's in our own interest to see they get the very finest of everything we can give them. WHAT CAN | DO? Each of us can pitch in and help and, in our own interest, we should. Here are a few practical suggestions from "Golden Rule." e N\ hospitality: If they ask for information or directions, take time to answer them fully and graciously. Inany businessdealings you have with them, remember Canada's reputation for courtesy and fairness depends on you. To sum it all up, follow the J Ne A REGATTA ON TORONTO BAY + «one of many held cvery season on Ontario's Lakes, 0 \ PUBLISHED IN THE PUBLIC INTEREST BY JONN LABATT LIMITED VERA EEL ANE R. DR

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