Daily Times-Gazette, 2 Oct 1946, p. 9

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4 ~-- ' WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 2, 1946 THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE PAGE NINE Good Luck In The Daily Field Boys James R. MacBrien ANNIVERSARY OBSERVED AT PRINCE ALBERT Rev. J. V. McNeely Is Guest Speaker--Special Music (Mrs. F. E. Smith, Corres.) Prince Albert, Sept. 30--Another anniversary had come and gone for the Prince Albert United Church, Though a cold wind and rain was uninviting during most of Sunday, both afternoon and evening services were fairly well attended. The messages given by Rev. J. V. McNeely of Oshawa were fitting and interesting, A word of thanks was extended to the committee in charge of decorating which was very beautiful. Two solos given by Mrs. John Munroe of Prince Albert in the Your editorial in Saturday's paper | afternoon and two numbers render- "That All Might Be One" caught my eye, as it is my belief that unless + such union as you speak of develops rapidly amongst the Churches, | mass collectivism in other fields is going to leave man's moral and in- | dividual spirit so far behind that , we will gradually slip into mass { self destruction on a hitherto un- | precedented scale, ! I want to take this opportunity | also of wishing you and all your staff all good luck in the daily field. Manager, National ¢ pany L2 Congratulations to the Oshawa | Dally Times-Gazette in keeping | step with the times and the needs ed unaccompanied by the Wilkin- son sisters of Utica, in the evening were very much appreciated, It is very gratifying to see the interest taken by so many of our neighbouring town's people, one of which we must mention as did Rev. Mr, Smith in his few remarks--Mr, and Mrs. Sam Jeffrey. A lunch was served following the evening service to those taking part in the services and their friends. Miss Viola McCrea of Toronto, Miss Hazel McCrea of Whitby, and Mr. and Mrs. Norman McCrea and son of Stirling at the home of their parents, Mr. and Mrs, Edwin Mc- Crea for the week-end. 'We were pleased to see Misses Margaret Doupe and Irene Bonnell of Oshawa take part in the Sun- day afternoon choir. , Mr, and Mrs, R. D. Woon of Port Perry were guests of Mr. and Mrs. William Martyn on Sunday. Master Ted Willams of Whitby spent the week-end with Mr, and Mrs. Sager after attending the High School Field Day at Uxbridge. Miss 8. Laird of Oshawa and Mrs, | | Ed. Lyle of Port Perry were with y of a wing city in their issue of a datly 3 paper commencing October first. 5 unless they have the plant, realize the magnitude of labour involved in '| this tremendous task, and the large is constantly contributing the welfare of the city as a whole. | I am sure the citizens of Oshawa all your fairness to all ques of public interest in the and wish you every success, E. Marks, Oshawa and District Softball Association: 'The Oshawa and District Softball Association have asked me to ex- tend to you our congratulations on the anniversary of your paper and on the fact that it now returns to the status of a daily. The success of our association is due in no small measure to the generous support that you have given to our activities and your sports department has al» ways given us the most complete coverage, The executive and the membership of our association ex- tend sincere congratulations to you on this important occasion and we know that your paper will continue | to lead the way in good sportsman- | ship in this community. J. A. Morphy, President, Oshawa | General Hospital Board: i We have your letter of September 19th in regard to your resumption of a daily publication from October 1, 1946, and are pleased to give you the following comments from the Oshawa General Hospital Board: ! 'The Board of the Oshawa Gen- eral Hospital wish to congratulate | The Times-Gazette on producing a daily publication. Your paper has rendered a fine service to this community in the past and we wish you every success for the future. Miss Elizabeth Pitt, General Sec- retary, Young Women's Christian Association: : The staff and residents of Adel- aide House of the Young Women's Christian Association wish to extend heir sincere good wishes to The es-Gazette on its 75th Anniver sary, and the inauguration of a daily publication. Its co-operation at all times has been a great contribution to the es- tablishment of the Y.W.C.A. in Oshawa. INDIAN MEDICAL SCHOOLS Madras--(CP)--The government of Madras has decided to start two new medical colleges, affording ed- ucation for more than 100 students. Cne is to be tstablished at Guntur and the other at Madura, Mrs. Leyle's sister Mrs. Raymer, on Sunday. J Miss Lorraine Smith is spending a few days with her friend, M#: Celia Hope in Toronto. Miss Merle Hope accompanied her to spend Sunday with her mother and sister. Take Applications For Jap Labor Applications for Japanese labor for domestic, farm or industrial service will be received at the local Employment Service office, officials here said today. Several thousand Japanese re- moved during the war from the British Columbia coastal areas are available for employment in KEast- ern Canada and the Employment Service is co-operating with the Dominion Department of Labor in relocating these persons, To speed up the relocation pro- cess a series of hostels has been set up--Summerville, London and Fin- gal being centres in Ontario where Suh establishments are in opera- on, These persons are available, as family units or individuals, for var- and sawmill work while there are also individuals, both male and fe- male, with skills in various trades and professions, British 7 4 A powerful British task force is pictured in Athens as it dropped anchor in Nauplion Bay on visit in Grecian A British foreign office spokesman, speaking in London, told a press conference that British troops in Greece will help the Greek army in its efforts to quell the so-called rebellious forces in northern Greece if the Greek government requests their aid "in the last resort." waters, Naval Might on Display In Grecian Waters Bourdji, a relic of Venetian rule of this region, In the foreground is the ancient castle of < Student Aids Underground In Nazi Occupied Holland By BRUCE HOWARD When the Germans swept into Holland in 1940 Beerend Bangma was 15. Between that Dutch spring and this Canadian autumn he has experienced more than most of us expect to in a life time, Here to ar- range a student exchange between Canada and the Netherlands, he smiles wryly when asked to tell of his life in the underground. "It was not heroic," he says. "Many did far more than'I, besides at first I was not old enough to be trusted by the underground." However he kept his eyes open and one day when reading the un- derground newspaper he saw the sentence "When you read your Dutch dictionary " He re- membered that a few days pre viously his older brother had ask- ed him for his dictionary. From that hint and by following his brother's activities he soon learned his brother and a few friends were publishing an under- ground paper called "Je Maintien- dral", a phrase taken from The Netherlands coat of arms. From that time on he gradually drifted into the underground work. The real activity and excitement began in September, 1042, when the first person in hiding came to their house, After that more and more peoplp came for protection «...8t first Just resistence men and Jews, then all kinds of people who had offended the Germans in one way or another, During most of that time, at least one Nasl officer was station- ed in their home, Yet, despite this, refugees were hidden and un- derground meetings held. To give the refugees more room and to conceal their activities from the Gestapo, the Bangma family built a secret room in their house. One of the bedrooms had a false wall and with the ald of this they were able to construct a secret room un- der the eyes of the Germans. This room not only saved the lives of many refugees, but enabled Beer- end himself to escape from the Nazis. The incident happened in De- cember, 1943. He had been in the underground for eleven months, during which he had spent most of his time on a farm in Eastern Hol- land. With Christmas coming on he decided to spend the holiday at home and with his bicycle and forged papers he made the long journey to his home. A few nights after he arrived he was sleeping in the secret room when suddenly one of the other occupants of the room awakened him and told him that the Nazis were coming. His mother, who had been lying half asleep, had heard someone 'in front of the house. At once a pre- pared plan was put into action. His mother stalled with the unbarring of the door ag long as she could while his father was was leading a Jewish girl from the bedroom in which she slept to the secret room. Then the entrance through a clothes closet was quickly disguised with some loose clothing, and the Ger- mans were in the house. They were very thorough, search- ing every room and eventually com ing to the room where the Jewish girl had slept. The ruffled sheets had been removed from the bed, but the family had not thought of . The officer laid his hand on the bed. It was still warm, For a moment they thought it was all over, They had long been sus- pected of underground activity and it seemed that now they were caught at last, But the thoroughness of the officer asserted itself again and he felt the radiator beside the bed. It too was warm and the Nazi ap- peared satisfied. The search moved on. Finally they came to the room with the false wall. To the little hunted group in the secret room it was a moment of terrific suspense, The German jerked open the door of the closet and probed with the beam of hig flashlight. The beam even TRUCK Ti RES x 20 25 50 ONTARIO x 20 X X 20 20 10 PLY 10 PLY 10 PLY 10 PLY MOTOR SALES LIMITED 86 KING ST. E. Oshawa PHONE 900 shone through the spaces between the planks into the room behind, but the Nazi noticed nothing and passed on. . This was just one of many of Bangma's brushes with the enemy. Yet he insists that the really im- portant thing he wants to talk about now is not his" story of the underground but the necessity of getting Canadian students interest- ed in exchange with the Netherland Hof experienced circulation auditors Universities. TIMES-GAZETTE IS MEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU GROUP Reports Are Valued By Advertisers and Adver- tising Agencies "The Times-Gazette is a member of the Audit Bureau of Circulation which was organized by newspapers of United States and Canada some 32 years ago to provide a yard stick for the accurate and trustworthy measurement of circulation values. The Audit Bureau, better known as AB.C., maintains a large staff 'who examine and audit the circu- lation records of all publisher mem=- bers at regular intervals. The re- sults of these audits are issued in ABC. reports which are available to advertisers and publishers for use in the buying and selling of ad- vertising space, These reports tell how much net paid circulation a publication has, how it was obtain- ed, the price or prices at which it was sold, how and where distribu ted and many other facts essential to the sound investment of adver- tising money, Thus, with the aid of AB.C. reports, advertisers can select the media best adapted to their needs, invest thelr money on the basis of facts and know just what they get for their advertising dollars, This is a far cry from the conditions that existed prior to 1914, the year AB.C. was established, when advertisers had no uniform standards for the comparfon and evaluation of media and when pub- lishers were unable to get full cred- it for their circulation claims, Today ninety-four per cent of the total circulation of all daily news- papers in the United States and ninety-eight per cent in Canada is audited by A B.C. Many wekkly newspapers have joined the Bureau in recent years and the movement of verified circulation in the week- ly field is growing rapidly, In addi. tion to newspapers the Bureau's publisher membership includes most of the leading magazines, business papers and farm publica~- tions in the United States and Ca- nada. Through the use of A.B.C. reports advertisers can select media on the basis of facts obtained through ac- tual audits. It is probable that without the protection for adver- tising made possible by the use of ABC. reports, advertisers would not have appropriated the large sums for advertising which now characterize American economy. The Audit Bureau therefore by its participation in the development of advertising and the welfare of the press is an integral part in the pub- | Dams lic service performed by the news- papers of America. SEEK DRUG SUPPLY , British Guiana -- (CP)--The Secondary and Minor Industries Board is Investigating the possibility of obtaining supplies of curare (formerly used as an Aar- row poison, but now extensively us- ed in abdominal surgery) from the interior of the colony. Curare solu- tions have been used for years as a curative agent in cases of muscu- lar rigidity, and as a cure for te- tanus. FAMOUS SQUATTER Kettering, Bupisng - op) --- Am the "squatters" in orger prises Red Cross club here'is . former RAF. Fit. Lt Leonard J. Sumpter. Three years ago he achieved fame by participating in the blasting of the Mohne and WET WEATHER AHEAD! 0s Don't Take Chances On Old Smoothies DUNLO "THE WOELD'S FINEST" EXPERT VULCANIZING AT... IRWIN AUTO PARTS "Oshawa's Largest Yire Doctors' 25 ALEXANDER BLVD. PHONE 1094 WITH UTILITY COVER Does double duty -- cover is a regular pyrex pieplate. 48-0s, 64-02, 96¢ 1.10 140 CASSEROLES With knob covar, ideal for stor- ing cooked foods and left overs. 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Large handle and pouring lip. 16-oz. 74 Each FLAVOUR SAVER PIE PLATE Designed to save the tasty juices so necessary in fruit ples. Has scalloped rim and carrying handles. 67: Each CUSTARDS Individual dishes for hot or cold We have & complete stock of covers for all the above dishes which may be used on any standard cooking utensil with safety. REPLACEMENTS Replacement of sorts for percolators, double boilers, saucepans, tea sets and tea kettles and flameware parts in stock at all times. PHONE CHRISTIANS PHONE | |

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