Daily Times-Gazette, 25 Jun 1948, p. 17

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FRIDAY, JUNE 25, 1948 THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE PAGE SEVENTEEN Regulations for Entering Canada Made Simple i Canada welcomes the tourist with the minimum of border regulations and delay. The necessary formalities at the border ordinarily take but a few minutes. Bona fide tourists will experience no trouble and will re- ceive every courtesy from the var- ious officials, They simply report to the Canadian Immigration and Cus- toms officers at the port of entry (normally they will be approached and interviewed by these officers), answer the necessary questions, and obtain the requisite permit for ad- mission of car and outfit. A tourist may leave Canada either by port of entry or by any other port. . Permanent residents of the Uni- ted States entering Canada as tour- ists do not require passports, De- cision . regarding personal entry rests with the Examining Immigra- tion Officer and as a general rule there is no difficulty or delay at the border. It is suggested, however that the possession of identification papers will facilitate entry into Canada in case the examining offi- cer should require documentary evidence to satisfy himself as to the bona fide of the tourist. Watch Out For Children Traffic accidents killed 132 chil- dren under i5 years of age and in- jured 2,107 last year in Ontario alone. Figures from other provinces are not yet on hand. This Ontario child injury toll is lower than in 1946 but more of the injuries proved fatal than ever be- fore. Some progress: was made: in the last three months of the year, school-age traffic casualties were 26% lower than in the last quarter of 1946. The youngsters were back at school then and teachers were making renewed efforts to teach safe habits. They point oui though that there are limits to the amount 2 child can be taught about the] Jangers of traffic. Avoiding child accidents therefore is a responsibility that rests largely on motorists. Watch Out For Chil- dren! * ® Carburetor and Ignition Service ® Motor Checkup and Tuneup ® Brake Relining Moderate Prices! Work Guaranteed! Business Guarantees Let... HUGH M. ALLIN We Are Experts at... | rrousE spots Ng Over 25 Years Experience in the Garage NEXT TIME fry.... HUGH M. ALLIN ++ ALL B-A PRODUCTS IN STOCK DRIVING WE CHECK AND DOUBLE CHECK , YOUR CAR FOR * EVERY § POSSIBLE Ae You "the Best Job!" PHONE 5372W 1 KING ST. WEST Get Inquiries From Many DistantLands People do write from the oddest places, says the Ontario Depart- ment of Travel and Publicity Bul- letin, "In fact we are getting so used to our fan mail thai we have begun to take it in our stride--Not that we don't appreciate it; we do, and wel- come mail from strange lands. The higher the pile on opr desk, the bet- ter we like it. "For quite some time we have had a couple of regular correspondents in South Africa and on the Gold Coast, and recently Hawaii has added its warm touch to the mail bag. This latter, no doubt, a result of an ad we ran In Nationa] Geo- apuic last year.--Some time ago to a Dutch publisher and this has yielded results too. Qur Nigerian and Gold Coast fans are no doubt the same mission pupils who have been our true admirers for years, and who nearly every Christmas have sent us a handsome greeting. "Italy, Malaya, and New Zealand are fairly new on the list, and we have a sneaking hunch that the credit for this :tiouwid go to some enterprising soldier who left behind scme devotee of Canada (or Cana- dians). As for the Argentine and thereabouts, we have no doubt that some Canadian bovine breeder stock sold an enthusiastic ranchero on Canadian products. "It all goes wo prove that it pays to advertise, whether it is mere ads, or folders, maps, Winter Fairs, or the fact that we try to give per- sonal attention to every odd request we receive; in Sther words, our con- stant attempts at good Public Rela. tions, "Of course, the vast bulk of our maj] originates in the States, which is only natural. New York leads as a rule, with Ohio, Michigan, and Illinois following. And believe it or next! Could be that the good Cali- | fornians are anxious fo get out of the rain for a change, "Perhaps the most interesting fact we dig out of our Facts and Figures File is that, individually, native Canadians lead the list of persons seeking information about Ontario. Quebec is second only to New York when taken by area-- Bonne En- tente on the upswing-- "Other far-off places from whence we receive enquiries are Iraq, Rus- sia, Sweden, Germany, British Gui- ana, and countless smaller countries both in the Americas and else- where in many odd climes." The Egyptian king, Rameses IT, was the first to excavate a canal between the Nile delta and the Red Sea. Petersfield, Hampshire, England --(CP)--A hen, subject of a lar- ceny charge, laid an egg in the courtroom here. The first nickel-bearing coin is- sued by the United States was the small cent authorized by act of Congress in 1857, WIN THE SAFETY \ FIGHT AGAINST ACCIDENTS CHECK YOUR wh " SUMME CAR FOR DRIVIN THE LIFE YOU SAVE MAY BE YOUR OWN !! WE ARE TO GIVE " @ Expert examination of your en- tire car's moving parts. © Battery check. EQUIPPED ® Your tires given careful ~~ inspection. ©® There are a dozen and one rea- e sent' a lot of pictures and data' not, California, of al] places, comes |; calves, bred in southern Ontario, garden in Rome and the Milan turnew over to individual breeders. Canadian Cattle For Italy Pav ¢ D Two of the four prize Holstein Friesian bull calves, first Canadian-bred cattle ever flown to Europe, mount the which took off from New York's La Guardia Airport for Rome. will be shown in the Canadian embassy cattle breeders' show before they are ramp of the DC-4 Airtrader The | Remedies. Begin At Home The growth of juvenile delin- quency has put another handy weapon into the hands of the un- thinking. It is so easy and plaus- ible to assume that the upurge of Juvenile crime is the direct result of the adverse economic conditions under which the young potential criminal has lived. Such a solution enables the earnest and quite sin- cere do-gooder to find an answer that does not unpleasantly include himself. He has not made large this wickedness. It is an argument profits. Hence he has no hand in just tailored tosuit the parlor pink. i "If you could just see the condi- tions under which these young folks live" he urges with unction. Yes indeed, if you could, you might very well think differently. Of course economic circumstances do play some part in the development of | juvenile 'delinquency, but not so much as the uneconomic demand to secure something for which there has been no return in work. The evidence proves beyond any question, that juvenile crime is not a product of neighborhoods. If economic lacks induce it, so does economic over-abundance and over- indulgence. But also an equal por- tion of crimes great toll springs from the middle class; even from the level to which our socialist friends would reduce--orelevate-- us all. Granted such a levelling process, you would still not effect any material change. The most recent serious study is by Dr. David Abrahamson of Col- that made over the past four years umbia's department: of psychology. In studying hundreds of young criminals he has found them not only sick but frightened. They were sick, both physically and mental- ly, because they were frightened. | And the frightening factor was not economic but social, In the exam- ination of the family histories of evidence of emotional tension that resulted in anxiety or cruelty or lack of affection. Dr. Abraham- son's findings are definite. "Fam- ily tension, even of a subtle nature, breeds criminals," he says. "Where there is bickering and nagging at home children tighten up with re- sentment and hostility, rebel against authority, and respond to the will of the gang. Always the hostility is turned against someone." of course it is easier and more pleas- ant to hold up hands in horror. But here is the definite testimony that the worst enemies of the young may be those of his own household. 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