THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE PAGE TWENTY-ONE @ATURDAY, FEB®OARY 17, 1951 St. | &F { | continuing city, but we seek one | to come." Hebrews 13:14. Like Abra. | ham she 'looked for a city whie hath foundations, whose builder | and maker is God." Hebrews 11:10. John's Cadet Corner Zion W.A. Gives Court Upsets Londoners Envy Zoo Lion's Meat Rations My Mother-in-Law Parsonage Fund Donation of $200 MRS. R. STAINTON Correspondent .. Zion, February 16--2Zion K.A. met in the Sunday School with 18 mem- bers present. Mrs. Charles Naylor gave the devotional topic. Roll call was answered by "My favorite ra- dio program". Scripture lesson was 'read by Mrs, Ray Cameron. " 1t was decided to give a donation of $200 to the new parsonage fund. "The February lost heir party at the school was cancelled, owing to the many cases of measles. A good program was given. Miss Janet Naylor gave a violin solo accom= panied by Mrs. Charles Naylor on the piano. Mrs. Alex McMaster gave a reading "Love". A piano duet was played by Janeen Camer- on and Mrs. Ray Cameron and a piano solo by Janeen Cameron, Delicious refreshments were serv- ed by the group, Mrs. Chas. Naylor, Mrs. Ray Cameron and Mrs. Reford Cameron. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Mitchell, Russell, Allan and Tey. Toronto, were recent guests at 'Russell Per- kins. rs Mr. and Mrs. Robert Killen visit- ed at Dave Hutcheon's, North Osh- awa, recently. Mr. and Mrs, Henry Dart, Bob | and Kenneth visited at william Dart's senior, Scarboro. Mr. and Mrs. Phillip Morrow, Oshawa, were Sunday evening vis- ftors at Boyd Ayre's. Mr. H. Hutterly, Oshawa, visited at Hans Geissbergers on Sunday. Mrs. Alex McMaster was a dinner guest of Miss Eileen Stainton, Osh- awa, on Saturday. ; © Mr. and Mrs. Frank Prouse, Pick- ering, were recent visitors at Mrs. Fred Robbins. Mr. and Mrs. Jack Cruickshanks, Mr. and Mrs. Alex McMaster, Mrs. P. B. Glaspel, Mrs. Hans Gelssber- er, Mr, Nathan Hircock attended the 8. 8. Convention at St. Paul's United Church, Bowmanville. Mr. and Mrs. Leo Moffatt and Paul, Oshawa, visited at Percy Da- | vidson's on Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Killen and Marie, were Sunday visitors at Joe McCammond's, Oshawa, The W.A. had a quilting at the Sunday School on Wednesday. Mrs. F. B. Glaspel spent the week-end with Mr. and Mrs. Ray Scott, Oshawa. : Miss Isobel Robbins is recovering from a severe dose of bronchitis and measles. Mrs. F. B. Glaspel attended a birthday party at Mr. Ross Lee's, Kedron, for Mrs. A. T. Stainton, Peterboro, Mrs. Ray Scott and Miss Cora Cruse, Oshawa and Mrs. Fos- ter Snowden, Kedron. They all .celebrate their birthdays on Febru- ary 12. ; Miss Inez Cameron, Oshawa, Vis- ited at Ray Cameron's for a couple of days. Mr. and Mrs. A. Lynch and fam- ily, Whitby, were Sunday visitors at Ray Cameron's. Mr. W. Preston, Mrs. Reta Bur- gess, Jifimie and Ralph, Miss Joyce Cameron, Oshawa, were supper guests at Wes Cameron's on Sun- | day. Miss Muriel Moore, Oshawa, visit- ed at Russell. Stainton's on Sunday. Mr. Jim Stainton was Sunday supper guest at L. Shaw's Oshawa, News Budget Of Haydon District MRS. HILDA CROSSMAN Haydon, Feb. 16--The Bible Class social meeting will be L:ld on Fri- day evening at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Don Cameron's at 8 pm. . The Jadies are having a quilting at tné home of Mrs, Arthur Read on Thursday. Miss Vivian Cowling is working in Breslin's store, Bowmanville. Mr. and Mrs. Roland Thompson visited Mr. Earl Thompson, Bow- manville recently. Miss Anderson and pupils of the public school held a Valentine party on Wednesday afternoon, when the smaller children were invited &nd their mothers, all had a nice after- noon together. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Brigett and family, Bowmanville, Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Thompson and Lyn, Bow- manville, at Mr, Roland Thomp- son's. Mr. and Mrs. Murray Tabb, Ty- rone, were visitors of Mr. and Mrs. W. B. Blackburn and Mrs, T. Cowl- ing, Mrs. J. A. Walker who has been in poor health for some time was taken to Bowmanville Hospital on Wednesday. Sorry to hear that George Ber- trim who works in Oshawa has the measles, Mrs. J. Kennedy, Bowmanville, with relatives in the village. Mr. and Mrs. Bert Ashton and family, Toronto, were Sunday visit- , ors at Mr, Henry Ashton's. Mr. and Mrs. Donald - Mountjoy and family, Toronto, visited Mr. and Mrs. Frank Denby. Roads are very icy in this district. Mr, Frank Denby who has been working at Fort William for several weeks returned home on Thursday. Must Move 38 Cottages At Kingston Kingston, Feh. 17--(CP)--Own- ers of 38 cottages on the outskirts of Kingston have been notified they will have to move dwellings, it was disclosed Friday. They are located on Crown-own- | . ed land on the northern shore of Deadman's Bay, behind Fort Hen- ry. Cottagers "built or bought there on the understanding the land would have to bé vacated if need- eC for military purposes. Notice of quittal states further that the cottages if nat i will be demolished and the land re- * turned to its original control at the expense of the present licensees. | SIMCOE HALL DIVISION NO. 228 By mavad | LIEUT. GEO. VALENTINE {| Gayety reigned last night as) | Oshawa's St. John Ambulance First | | Aid and Nursing Cadets held their | Valentine Party at St. George's | Hall. Above the rhythmic shuffle | of dancing feet you could hear Sgt. Gray in the back corner. Then you may have heard "Scotty Mc- Bell" tuning up his pipes down- stairs in preparation to come up on the stage and fling us a little ditty; and that he did. Although handicapped by an incompetent drummer he, nevertheless, brought |a shining tear to many a lassy's eyes. But, midst all this pomp and joy, a sad note struck my thoughts. I had forgotten to put out the gare bage last Wednesday morning! A new list of promotions were released at a meeting of the Hol- man Division last Wednesday eve- ning. The staff of N.CO.'s and officers now included in the three platoons are as follows: No. 1 Platoon--Lieut. Sgt. G. Gray Cpl. R. Heard, and Cpl. M. Fielder. No. 2 Platoon--Lieut. M. Pank- hurst, Sgt. R. Craggs, Cpl. O. Pidwerbecki, and Cpl. W. Gooding. No. 3 Platoon--Lieut. W. How=- | ard, Sgt. W. Jarvis, Cpl. P. King, land Cpl. C. Strickland, At a general business meeting last Friday evening the Quarter- master reported that a stock of new fatigue shirts and ties were on hand, and that they would be issued for dress or drill nights only. White shirts are the order | for public duties and inspections. Nelson's Heirs Well Rewarded | An ironic coincidence of history | has caused the payment of public | money to the heirs of Nelson to |end just as the nation is grimly | contemplating a bill for defence, that would have seemed a fantas- | tically ~ impossible nightmore to | those alive in the year of Trafal- | gar or even of Jutland. The cost of victorious command- | ers is the only saving from the eco- nomic consequences of resistance {to aggression that democracy can | claim in comparison with its ances- tors. i Ended in 1919 Grants to those who had led the | armed forces on sea or land or in | the air stopped with the 1914-18 | war, It is significant of how cir- cumstances have changed that, in | the long list of awards made in | 1919, only one name from the Royal Air Force appears--and that mod- estly low down the scale. After | Beatty and Haig with £100,000 each, | there are three grants of £50,000, | four of £30,000, and one of £25,000, | before the nine £10,000's which in- clude an air officer. | Financial honors would no doubt | have been distributed differently in | 19046 had not the conclusion been | reached that to single out a small | number of individuals was not in | accord with the spirit of the times or with the character of a war that had. taxed the efforts of the whole community, Wellington Aided Recognition of Nelson's services | was carried out, both in extent and | | in manner, so controversially fed | | opinion has ever since been divided | as to its justice. His contemporary, | | Wellington, was voted an additional | grant of £200,000 five days after | | Waterloo, he received from the King | of The Netherlands an estate which | | made him one of the largest land- owners in Belgium, and the parlia- mentary commissioners bought | Stratfield Saye for him for £263! | 000. He lived to enjoy these and | | other awards almost long enough | to hear of the Crimean War. Nel- i son, dying in the hour of victory, | | left his countrymen in a dilemma | | which not all their descendants {have agreed that they resolved | gracefully. When Mr. Dalton, as chancellor | of the exchequer, announced that | this chapter of history was to close, | as it has now done, he said that | since 1808, £700,000 had been paid. The debt of honor to the most fam- ous sailor of all time is thus dis- charged, at least so far as such | services as his are to be assessed In | terms of cash. Relics Preserved { His relics, preserved at Trafalgar | House, Salisbury, have been ac- | quired by the trustees of the Na- | tional Maritime Museum. = The | amount paid for them would have | been far higher had they been of- fered for public auction, and for this generosity the nation is in- debted to the late earl. { Fittingly, the same museum was { given, some years ago, a collection | | of relics by the grandsons of Hor- | atia, the daughter of Nelson and | | Lady Hamilton. Horatia married the Rev. Philip Ward and had eight children and her posterity, follow- ing the tradition that has so closely linked church and navy down the ages, won distinction in both pro- fessions. The plague at Greenwich proudly ! recorded that the relics were given to England by the Rev. Nelson- Ward and Admiral Philip Nelson- Ward. The two streams of zemem- { brance that have thus joined in | National Maritime Museum may be | taken 'as the Lethe of Nelsonian controversies. VETCH POINSONOUS TO STOCK {ar. in progress at t' Canadarbfoh Making up as 'much as 15-20 per cent of the vegetation near the timber line, a low-growing, purple- flowered poisonous veteh of the as- | tragalus species, is causing concern | to stockmen in the Interior area of British Columbia. Experiments are In progress at the Canada De- | | partment of Agriculture's Kam- | loops Range Experiment Station, to (determine if possible Low stock may | be protected from this poisons is | plant, as. well as somethin: of t | nature of the toxic principle involve. | G. Bell, |. Trust Fund 0f $700,000 Toronto, Feb. 17--(CP)--Ontario Court of Appeal Friday declared in- valid a $700,000 trust fund set up under the wills of the late Mr. and Mrs. Herbert C. Cox of Oakville for more than 3,000 Canada Life Assurance Company employees and their dependents. Mr. Cox was a former president of the company. The court directed that the money is to go to other beneficiaries of the couple. It upheld a contention by J. D. Arnup, counsel for Margaret Jane Ardagh, a beneficiary under the will of Mr, Cox, that the trust fund was invalid because it went against a rule of law prohibiting perpetual trusts except those for such purposes as advancement of education, reli- gion and community welfare. Enniskillen Choir Presents Play at Enfield MRS. NORMAN STINSON Correspondent Enfield, Feb. 18 -- On Wednes~ day evening the members of the Enniskillen choir presented their popular play, *"Bean-town Choir," in Enfield church to an apprecia- tive audience. All members of the cast played their parts well and this humorous musical comedy was thoroughly enjoyed by everyone present. The icy condition of the roads prevented several from com- ing but the proceeds of this enter- tainment were gratifying and will be used to ald in church expenses. Congratulations to Mr. and Mrs. Fred Griffin on the birth of a fine baby boy in Bowmanville Hospital on Feb. 13 -- a brother for Donald | and Allyn. The February meeting of the W.A. was held at the home of Mrs. Lorne Simpson on Tuesday after- noon with a smaller attendance than usual due to sickness and icy road conditions, but those attend- ing enjoyed this profitable gather- ing. During the program, Mrs. G. Bowman favored with a piano solo. Mrs. G. Irwin gave an interesting reading. Mrs. A. Prescott gave the devotional message in an interest- ing manner, New Diesel Railway Car Makes Test Run Montreal, Feb, 17--(CP)--A new lightweight, self-propelled rail Die- | sel car made its Canadian debut here Friday in the first of a series of tests to prove the performance | of this new type of railway equip- | ment operating under Canadian conditions. It made a round trip} over Canadian National Railways lines between Montreal and Otta- | wa. | The car can be driven from | either end and operated as a single | unit or in multiples to make up a | train to meet the traffic require- ments of any operation other than deluxe sleeper service. Want to buy, sell or trade? -- A| classified ad and the deal is made, | | -------- re eee | | | PRESCRIPTIONS Quickly and Accurately Filled MITCHELL'S . DRUG STORE 9 Simcoe N. Phone 48 JAMIESON DRUGS PROMPT DELIVERY! 241 KING ST. EAST PHONE 1351 Stafford Bros. MONUMENTAL WORKS 318 Dundas St. E., Whitby Phone Whitby 552 MONUMENTS AND FINE QUA MARKE Precise workmanship and careful attention to detail are vour assur- ance when you choose from the wide selection of imported and Sonestic Granites and Marbles in stock, GAVE WINE TO BABY fhe latest cut in Britain's meat ration does not affect "Rota," the lion owned by Winston Churchill and housed in the London zoo. The big fellow, left, chews away at his daily ten pounds of meat while a score of visitors look on enviously and mentally compare his ration with their own, a few ounces a week, However, "Rota" is eating horse-meat declared to be -infit for human consumption. --Central Press Canadian. father who gave his 19-month-old | drink was bound over in a local Cardigan, Wales -- (CP) -- Alson a half-pint of port wine to | court. By R. BARCLAY WARREN | Many are tne quips and Jokes | associated with the word "mother- | in-law." So frequently are those | 'smart' remarks made that "mother- | in-law" pictures in the minds of | many, a fussy, interfering woman, welcomed for only a short time in | the home of the son or daughter. Of course there. are some women who inadvisedly 'inject themselves into the administration of the home of their son or daughter, But it is also true that sometimes a home is marred because a young person fails to recognize the inherent right and duty of the companion to love and cherish his or her parents. My Mother-in-law recently pass- ed away after an illness of ten months. The first time I visited her home I was impressed by her earn- est desire to live after the pattern of New Testament Christianity. Her prayers around the family altar (a thrice-daily feature of the home), included her family, neighbours, friends, the sick, the heathen and | all in need. She was of the com- | pany who say, "Here we have no | The morning after Christmas I bade her my last farewell. I com~ mented on the bright sunshine flooding through the window on her bed. "Yes," she said, "but best of all, Barclay, the Sun of Right- eousness is shining in my heary." The words describing the virtuous woman were aptly quoted at her funeral service: "Her children arise up and call her blessed; her hus band also, gnd he praiseth her." Proverbs 31:28, I do not appreciate the foolish jesting about mother-in-law. My Mother-in-law was a Christian. Her presence in our home (all too sel dom for our pleasure) was a bene- diction. She knew Jesus Christ and He made her life radiant. WIPERS NEEDED Brandon, Man, -- (CP) -- Chief Constable Harry Collister warned motorists that on frosty days they must be able to see out of not only the windshield but all car windows, or they will be liable to prosecution. The Event You've Waited for IS... KENT SHO » S ARE SMASHING PRICES TO SMITHEREENS IN A SENSATIONAL | AND DRAMATIC SHOE SALE! ONTARIO HARDWOOD FLOOR SANDERS . FLOORS SANDED WALL AND HE Foor TILE SUPPLIED AND LAID pone 4128 wi3 CONCRETE WELL CRIBBING CULVERT TILE All Sizes Weepers 3", 4", 6" AUSTIN 'SKINNER Thornton's Corners % MILE N. PHONE 202W1 SACRIFICE CLEAROUT 2500 PAIRS LADIES' What Savings! These mony styles as shown at left as well as a great variety of slippers, sandals etc, sizes Hurry for these. Regular up to 10.00 value. OUT THEY GO! 331 PAIRS include and colors. 1273 Don't Miss MEN'S SHOES sD «sf ET Be Here Early Monday Morning for the Greatest Shoe Bargains of the Year at... Men! '6 If you need a new pair of shoes don't miss this big event. There sizes ond styles in the lot. Regular up to $12.00 values. t Greatest Sacrifice Ever!