———— — wipe ihiniat n se 7 =) 8 ABBOTSFORD, SUMAS & MATSQUI NEWS Nov. 15, 1944 Abbotsford THEATRE 7: . 223 SAVE 10° — BUY YOUR CHRISTMAS GIFT TICKETS AT THE THEATRE BOX OFFICE NOW. “GOOD AT ANY ODEON THEATRE IN CANADA” Mail Orders Promptly Attended To ! FRIDAY & SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 17 & 18 A SHOW EVERYONE WILL APPRECIATE 4 f Ee | The Big Swing Show A air et Is HergTo Stay! ROY ROGERS ‘NG OE. TE CONBATS: TRIGGER SUATEST MORSE THE MOVES GM: at sory cenmst MURPHY som’ SIMMS and A Great Cast! — PLUS — “GAMBLER’S CHOICE” with Chester Morris Latest News World Events WEDNESDAY & THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 22 & 23 wit JAMES CRAIG FAY BAINTER HENRY O!NEHL ADDED HIT ... KAY KYSER IN “SWING FEVER” ALSO “CARRIBEAN ROMANCE” in Technicolor Come and Hear REV. PETER JEPSON SEATTLE, WASHINGTON ® NOTED BIBLE EXPOSITOR-EVANGELIST Pentecostal Tabernacle, Abbotsford CONCLUDING THIS WEEK Topic Sunday Evening, Nov. 19: “The Mark of God or the Mark of the Beast and what I saw of Father Divine.” MacLeod Forecasts Jap Bloc In Valley Under King Plan aking the earliest opportunity, ot said, to make his stand clear on the Japanese question, the in- vitation to participate in the re- cent CCF Panel Discussion being of too short notice for him to accept, Air Commodore Earl MacLeod, making his introduc- tory address here Friday night as Fraser Valley Progressive Con- servative Candidate, declared I feel that there has been a cer- tain amount of hypocrisy in dis- cussing this matter, “I lived as a boy at Port Haney”, he told the audience, “and remember when Japanese bought their first parcel of land there. In twenty-five years Japanese represented seventy-five percent of the school population.” The people of that district, as of this, know the danger, he said, of the thin edge of the wedge with this unassimalable and, sincé Pearl Harbor, treacherous race. The Japanese coming here, he said, were in effect small war parties infiltrating with a long range plan of world domination and belligerance. Most who be- came citizens did so for trade reasons, retaining their fealty to Japan. He classed as impractical the proposal to include British Col- umbia in spreading the Japanese over Canada. How it is to be determined that more than our share, he asked, do not come a- cross our boundaries or gain ilicit entry. It could be only a quest- ion of time, he forecast, before we would have the unassimilable bloc in our midst again. “The Progressive Conservatives say that Japanese nationals must not be allowed to settle in B.C. Unless we face this problem squarely now we will bequeath to our children and grandchild- ren an even greater problem than now confronts us. We must win success now.” Born and raised on a Fraser Valley farm and owning a farm, Air Commodore MacLeod dealt extensively with the party agri- cultural program as another of the five parts of his address. Conscription of manpower, equal- |& ity of the sexes and “the grave problem of social security” were also dealt with by the candidate. The party agricultural program Air Commodore Earl MacLeod Life Insurance Dollars Perform Multiple Service Companies Invest - Billion Dollars In Victory Bonds Life insurance companies in Canada have passed the billion- dollar mark in their investments in Canadian war loan and Vic- tory loan campaigns since the war began, it was announced by MC ee Smith, president of the Canadian Life Insurance Offic- ers Association. In the Seventh Victory Loan campaign just completed, said Mr. Smith, the life insurance companies subscribed close to 170 million dollars. That figure put the companies’ total investment a the campaigns since the be- inning of the war at $1,120,000,000. “That total,” said Mr. Smith, means that through his or her insurance company, each of the + . 4,000,000 life insurance policy- be said will assure farmers a pro- |,’ ? - _ portionate share of Canadian in-}°lders in Canada has invested come. He classed the Liberal|®" average of $280. in the Dom- Act as impracticable and a sly pes war-time bonds, apart expedient. from private purchases. “That substantial average of In referring to the manpower situation MacLeod said that the government has allowed political expediency rather than efficiency to determine its course with the result that the heart and soul of Canada had been strained and the whole war effort affected to a degree we will probably never know. Referring to disproportionately small compulsory recruiting in Quebec versus other provinces he said, “I consider it the great- est iniquity in Canadian history.” Pro Conservative policy is clear cut, the speaker said, compulsory national selective service wher- ever required and equality of sacrifice. He expressed confi- dence that the men _ overseas would express their dissatisfac- tion in thir ballot. Dealing with equality of the sexes, MacLeod said reform was long overdue, the party will not render lipservice only, equality of opportunity must be afforded to women in Canada. subscriptions was made possible by the policyholders themselves. It is true that in the past féw years the companies” investments in Victory bonds have exceeded the premium income, and it is true also that the companies have been able to invest in these bonds some of the income or capital from other investments. But the great volume of the life insurance companies’ subscrip- tions has come from policyhold- ers’ premium payments. We know that by investing in Vic- tory bonds, we have invested in victory as our policyholders de- sire.” Mr. Smith added that the life insurance dollars invested in Vic- tory bonds are performing mul- tiple service: “They are backing Canadian men wherever our forces or our supplies are in action,’ he said, “they are so invested as to fight inflation which would be a men- (Continued on Page Nine) ‘Contributi must be i Nov. 27, } To the LIONS’ CLUB, 309—7th Avenue West in Calgary, Alta. I enclose $ vide homes for our Old Folks. NAMB HURRY! before 12 p.m. NOW or NEVER ions in 944 IT’S WINS THIS NEW $9,500 LIONS’ CLUB HOME, Dec. 4th, ‘44 BEAUTIFULLY FURNISHED! 5) fae ee contributions to your fund to pro- ADDRESS Please acknowledge receipt to:— FOR.... Building Paper : PHONE 10 Tar Paper “LEAVES NO BRUSH MARKS” Abbotsford Lumber Cari Limited Rolled Roofing ABBOTSFORD LUMBER G. Ltd Alex. Donaldson, yard mgr. Modern.... — The Atangard is considered the most modern hotel in the Fraser Valley ! e FIRST CLASS RESTAURANT ¢ LICENSED PREMISES The Hotel Atan mitard ORLAND and MRS. McMASTER, P Phone 100 tors” Abbotsford Mrs. T. J. Rolston, MLA Van- couver-Point Grey, a supporting speaker, deplored failure to hold the Dominion-Provincial Confer- ence in which,. she said, plans re- garding the wherewithall for the rehabilitation and reconstruction program should have been decid- Missionary and Sunday School cet CONFERENCE Mrs, Rolston voiced concern “that at a time when we are trying to further raise our standards, even to a thirty hour week, Jap- anese industry, utilizing man, wife and children from sunup to sundown, would be a grave dan- ger.” Leon Ladner KC, warmly con- gratulated Candidate MacLeod on his initial, hour-long address de- livered without reference to notes. Of the cabinet crisis, Mr. Ladner asked: “what do other problems matter if our men stand in the front line facing the en- emy with no one behind them?”, quoting letters from servicemen who were foregoing their leaves, “because we are dreadfully short of men here” and “for our re- inforcements in the front line we must wait until our wounded come out of hospitals.” He forecast a union govern- Abbotsford THE SUNDAY SCHOOL IS THE GREATEST EVANGELISTIC OPPORTUNITY OF THE CHURCH Guest Speakers REV. P. S. JONES Of Victoria — District Superintendent REV. L. HONDERICK Director of Better School Dept. MONDAY and TUESDAY NOVEMBER 20 & 21 MONDAY: 2:30 p.m. and 7:30 p.m. TUESDAY: 10 a.m., 2:30 p.m., 7:30 p.m. ment would result with John Braken as prime minister as he did not see how men of the in- tegrity of Ilsley and McDonald CONFERENCE SUBJECTS could continue to ally themselves with Mackenzie King. Harry J, Barber, former Fraser Valley member, spoke briefly mentioning a home coming cele- bration planned Nov. 24 at Atche- litz for Air Commodore MacLeod. E. Stuart Davidson, also of Chilliwack, said that from Lyt- ton down through the Valley 4 there was increasingly favorable reaction to MacLeod’s candida- 5. 6 oN = ture. W. G. Gamble of Mission was chairman and Mrs, G. M. Han- sen provided the musical inter- +B lude, A question and answer period . SPIRITUAL VALUES IN SUNDAY SCHOOL WORK. . ‘TRAINING FOR EFFICIENT SERVICE. . ENLISTING CO-OPERATION — HOME, SUNDAY SCHOOL AND CHURCH TO WIN OUR YOUTH FOR CHRIST. . ABSENTEE AND PROSPECT FOLLOW-UP PLANS. REACHING OTHERS — GOING WITH THE GOSPEL. . SUNDAY SCHOOL MANAGEMENT. MISSIONARY VISION. ; CHILDREN BROUGHT UP IN SUNDAY SCHOOL ARE SELDOM BROUGHT UP IN COURT Pentecostal Tabernacle | followed the addresses.