Should cars Involve'?d in accidents bu moved off the roAd immediately? Or must the vehlicles bb left where they ti~ untfi the police arrive? Few drivers kow theit rights and reuPonibilities ithis regard. The Ontario., Saiety League gays that the flrst dut y Of persons involved in an accident is to make the hlghway es sale as Possible for others. In other wPrds, get the cars off the hlghway and tcQ the Bide of the road AS SOON AS POSSIBLE. Obviously, thougli, no car ëmslold b. fnoved hurriedly if to do se nfiht further injure someone hurt in the collision, Failure. to rnove slightly damaged c4ro delays -and endangers other traffie. Dlivers tani be - and are - charged for- W'ilfully, blocking traffic with their dâmàged cars. Further, drivers may be hed lhable in. damages if other persons suifer loss or damage because of the additionial hazard created by stopped výehicles. - A lawyer says, "A driver is to re- rnÉIn at tii. scene of the accident, must In an Intelligent and search speech ta the Western Catliolic Coni enoe this week, the Minister of liea Alan MacEachen, gave a graphic cription of some of the problems of, affluent society. '«A society bcmes fluent,' lie said, 'when the avrge n prefers ho work less rather than ta ei more, when ho is pratected against1 main economic risks of ile, wh.n his easy access ta education, and devotes a declining portion of his came ta basic necessities.' Canada, séld, was now reaching thîs status wi à real income per capita that lias dou led in the« hast 25 years, a work we that lias declined 35 per cent and social security systeni of which tht la major gap is about ho be closed1 medicare. Yet, as Mr. MacEachen was quick point out, affluence - or the gener i=pression of it - stihh leaves us wil formidable problems - grave air an water pollution, hopeiessly unplanne cftles, large pockets of pon and undei equippd people. Tht psay ch oh1o gic ptoblçms of adjusting ho a new age, a a&e o! perpetual ucientific revolutioi as Mr. MacEachen puts it, are no lem great. :The difficulty la thai it Is extra oré1inarily difficuit. for society as wliole to grasp In a coherent fashion- "~d- actiori- the lcnowledge of 1h - thi coýnuences -of the environnient th I-,fn itoue in,, let. alone prepane fai '~.->s 'heiad.ý A quotatio4i frn JWUlMcLuhan, which was repro d.tcedoe this page last week illustratem tl#s problemi. 'You have ta penceive the consequences of the new environmni on the aid environnient before you kiiow what the aid environnient is. You ce Mot ',ýtell wliat it is- until you have sOen lb do things ta the aid ont. The need, however, ho understand the pro- cesses and changes brouglit about by new technology gets stranger as the te"hniJogy docs.' MeLuhan, of course, is cancerned p*#marily with the impact o! new com- Munications tedhnology. But what lie says -it-Iequally truc o! othens. The im- plication of automation and cybernation ar ,e beginning ta be grappled with, but they oniy begin ta become dlean in ternisaf their effect on present patterns of life. The automobile lias been with UÉ a long time but only now that it is clearhy transforming aur cities are we apprcciating its full impact. The atornie boinb has, wrought changes in inter- national mlitary and paliticai relation- ships; aur understanding o! the position it places us in is a precarious under- standing at best - as the Cuban missile crisIÈ &Amd even the present Vietnam war denionstrate. The eiectronic, nuclear, technologi- cal, affluent (and what have you) age produces problems o! great complexity for governments. For one thing it is becoming impossible ta cape with mas- sive soçial dislocations as they arrive, or. cven after they arrive - as is now the pràctice. They must be planned for and c9nsidered in terms of the future and f6itunately Mr. MacEachen is onc oft hose that neaizes this. Moreover, theyv will nat lie so susceptible ta broad aaqq sweeping ideological pinciples such render ahl possible assistance and may be required to supply' informnation res- Pecting hils naine and address, as well as that of the owner. But there is ne legiuiation to prevent a car being moved alter an accident; ini fact, no vehiche is réquired to await the arrivai of the police. #The law requires that the police be notified. It ahso sets out the duty of the parties involved to provide identifica- tion, and evidence -of vehicle registra- tion, ho one another. Ail reports made about an accident, whether made by individuals or by the police, are without prejudice and are for the information of the Registrar of Motor Vehicles. No statement in the report will be deemcd part of the rec- ord in any action in damiages.". The basic rules of the road still p revail after an accident, the Ontario Safety League empliasizes; the first res- ponsibility of everyone concerned is to make sure that the first collision does not lead to another. as social justice - they fan toa intricate and complex forthat. Tht social scien- ces wiii have ho lie developed ta a mucli greater extent than now; anc cause for hope ia that as marc people are neieased fram traditional activities such as manufacturing, mare human resouroes wilh become available for social ne- search,. and contemplation, but it is a potentiahity whicli is not yet being used. Saul Alinsky, the U.S. social econ- omist, once said that lie visualized tht condition o! man as that of climbing up a mauntain, each step up representing lis victory over-another human prob- lem. When he got ta tht top lie would have ta lace tht biggest probleni o! al - wliy fie was litre. Ciearly we stili have a good way ta go up Alinsky's mountain and, in a sense, the going gets steeper ail thet hue. -Peterborough Examiner The New Written 1875 Author :unknown In Darlington was my abode F ull scventy years ago And when gaod meat wc wished ta cat *We killed tht buck or dae; *For fish we used the liook orn une And poundtd corn te make it fine On Johnny Cake we uscd ta dine, In the, New Country. Our roads were winding blirougli the Woods, Where a!tt he sawage trod; They, were nat wide, non scarce a guide, But ail the ones we had. Our houses, boa, were iogs of waad, Roiicd Up in squares, and conked with rmud; If tht bark was tiglit, the roof was gond, For a New C9untry. Our occupation was ta make The iofty farest baw; With axes goad, we chopped tht waod For weli we ail kniew haw. We cleared the land for ryt and For strangers and ourselves ta tat; Promn maple trees we gathered sweet, In the New Country. We lived in social harmony, And dnank tht purling streani; No Lawyer, Priest, non Doctor there, Was scarcely ho be seen. Our health it needed not repair - No piaus man fongat lis prayer - And who could fet a iawyer there In a New, Country? O! deenskin we made moccasins,, To Wear upon aur feet; Tht checkened shirt was thought no hurt, Good campany ta keep. And when a visit was ta pay, On a winher's niglit, or winhen's day Tht oxen drew tht ladies' sîcigl, In tht New Country. r' -Prom Dunhani Countv Club Ru11~tla ~Eamîbîan ~t~te~m~ug Editor'g note: The foilow- Ing article appeared recently ln the Tampa, Florida dally newspaper. Il was clipped and sent ta Mrs. Forrest Dling, flowmanvilie, and i. re-printed here. because of i*s gen r~l Interp at. By LOUIS CASSELS Whatever became of tht "«Death of God" movement? A year ago, it was getting reamns of publicity. TIME DW ea caver story an it. Tht New Yorker ran a three-part stries. Television networks put together docu- In the Dim and Distant Past From the Statesman Files into print with scores of books. At theological seminaries, Rudolph Bultmann and Paul Tillich suddenly became passe. Ta be in, a seminarian had ta quote Thomas Altizer TREKE WRIE. tY~be suÉe, a number of old.fashianed types who clung to the nation that Gad would survive hi. undertakers. But among the really re- levant, it was fervently be- Iieved that "Christian ath- tismIn was the wave af the future. 25 YEARS AGO Mr. Melville S. Dale, mnerchant prince and popu- an vocalist, is nursing bis arm lin a siing these days, having dislocated bis shoulder while skating ah Rotany Club rink. Ex-Reeve W. H. Carnuhh- ers have been confined ta bis home for tht past couple Of weeks, having sushained seriaus injuries as a resuit o!f a faîl from an apple tret Whîle pruning. Mn. James -Thonipson o! tht B.T.S. staff bas been ransferred ho tht Prison P'arm staff at Guelph. .Mr. J, Earl Cunningham, Wbo bas been physical di- rector at tht Boys' Training Scbool since it was estab- Iisbed bere 16 years ago, bas been appainhed physical instructor in the Air Force and bas alneady reported for duhy ah Manning Pool, Toronto. Mn,, B. Swtnson, Barrie, is visiting ber parents, Mn. and Mn., Walter Pingle. Gunner Arthun Etcher, Anti-Aircraft R.C.A.. Toron- to, visited hi. panents, Mr. and Mn.. F. L. Etchen. Mencury plurnmeted ho 12 below with a wesh wind Mon- day night. Winten' s spasm lashed two days. Now 1'. mild again.1 Miss Aune Buhhery, R.N., nurse in charge of a Dept. ah D.IL., Pickerng, visited friends here. Miss Chissit Freemnan 1 visited with Mn.. Wilfred t Bennett, Oshawa, on Sun-1 day. j Mr. Rhys D. Fairbarin, ' Toronto, was guest o! his f sisher, Miss B. H. Fainhairn, t] on T'iday.f Miss Dorathy Bradt, of! Toronto, spent tht wýeek- i end with hon mothen, Mn.. E. ti P. Bradt.T Ptes. !'Dick" Little and P: "Heck" Gould have been al home on leave !rom tht lot 01 Midlands. t Mr. John Maynand, staff o! the WestOn Hospital, and D Pte. K-enneth MaYnard, et Coew~wur~g~istawath the bindy.a 49 YEARS AGO (Feb. 17, 1918) Mr. and Mrs. Fred Fligg's new frame bouse, east of Newcastle, was destroyed by fine Tuesday, Jan. 29. Mrs. Wm. Thompson and son Gnr. S. Tbompson, Toronto, spent tht weekend wihhber sîster, Mrs. W. B. Tapson. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Philp of Kilarney, Man., and Mn. and Mrs. Silas Williams, Sauina, recently visited at their brotbers, Mr. John Lant, Fair View Farm, east of town. Mr. A. N. McMillan, man- ager of the Standard Bank, bas been appointed Secre- hary of tht Soldiers' Aid Commission for Bowman- ville and will be pleased ta ste any rehunned men who need advice or assistance. Thethown fire brigade has lahely had hwa fires. Fni- day morning at 7 o'clock Mr. James Harris' bouse on Hunt St. was burned. Ht had ganetot Oshawa the nighh before with a load of eroduce for Satunday's nmar- e.Everytbing but what he had on his back was burned. Tuesday manning tht alarm again sounded ah 2:30 a.m., wben it was found that the property known as Rice's Terrace, Brown Street, owned by Wm. Tardif!, Enniskillen, was on fire. Tuesday morn- ing was one of tht coldest this winter, tht thermome- ter registering 25 degrees belaw zero. Some firemen frost bitten. Tht Terrace ' A'as badly damaged. Twof families were driven into the cold ah short notiee. Mn. Pred Todghamn and famil ' ad Mrs. EIlgott and fam- a ily. Tht firemen wish ta aA thank Mr. and Mrs. W. H. b. Thlckson for tht hot caffee pravded by them and Mr. nd Mrs. Wm. Challis for pening théir home ta them T i get warm. n Misses Lepha and Jean J 3e nat r spet tht week- ùi X& . T. W eY Cawker -1 Vmnt Buaday in Toronto. lu c 0 ti ri b plain, andinary iayman. l'Il bet you cari hardiy wait for next wcek's thrilhing Aimost equaily ha biame are tht future like 80 many waves of tht past, has apparently washed aver the short and netreated into the sea whence it camne, wihout greatly ai- tering the tography. THERE ARE TODAy, as there always have been, a great mnnY Peojile wbodon'h believe in Gad. There are a great miny athers who do believe in God. If the pro- clamnatian of Gad's deahh has resulhed in any increase ini the former graup, or any decrease in the latter, it has flot been Perceptible ta close observers of the religiaus scene, nar has it been re- flected in statistical measure- ments af cburch niember- ship, attendance and contri- butions. CHRISTIAN ATHEISM did pravide a lively hopic af conversation for a while. It neyer seemed ho catch an as a way of lite. 1h evidently was too Christian for ahheists and o tesfoChi- îans.to atisfo Chs- Lately, Deahh - 0f - God theology bas been fading out even as a subi ect for debate. It has been weeks since any of the ayante-garde religious journal, bas published an ar- ticle, or even a lether ta tht editor, ta fan its waning tires. [T DID GET A brief men- tion in a recent Common- wealth the magazine inter- view with Reinbold Niebuhr. The interviewer asked the famnous Protestant theologian j w'hat be thought of Christian atheism. .Dr. Niebuhr's analysis was ( succinct. It was, he said, a ( 'stupid" idea, SINCE AMIERICANS seemr to be addicted to fads in theology, as in other areas o! fe, it is reasonably certain bat 1967 will bring a new wnsation. What it will be is anyone's tuess. But one possibilihy is i iat up-to-the-minute think- a rs wbo spent last yean as- r ;erting God's death may à pend nexh year denying ýsus' deahh. ti THERE [S A NEWV book a1 in tht market which seeks t: nrevive the ancient "swoon teory' that most acholans i aought had been tharoughly iscredited in !ta previnus si 'earances. If it should be- f rne a best-seller, as its ublishers hope and believe, Or is lîkely ha be widely pc îulahed. THE SW00N THEORY, In se You've neyer encoun- red 1h, holds that Jesus dn'h neally dit on the cross: just went into a deep faint 'oma, and later came ta in e cool of tht tomnb, leading sdisciples ta think he had ;n from. the dead. There Th e several variations, the DM )st popular being htte S nt was induced thtpowSr 1drugs. If ou want ta get a head Thi ir an this fad, it may in- 'est Yeu ho know that there T four other books, already h ely available, which are wd on eyewltness hestimo- Thi No NHET ARE CALLED Mat- t ýw, Mark, Luke and John. ey are unanimaus In ne- n ting that Jeaus did die on To cross, in great agony, ocafer 5aylg Ofthose Or o cked in sufforng : ,1 ther, for ie thew4 they M not wnat ttey do. MAN'S PEDIGREE hmec monkeys Bat on a cocoanut tnee iscussing thingu, as hhey'ne said ho lie aid anc ho the othens - "Now listen you two, here's a certain rumour that can't lie truc, ah man descended frani aur noble race - ie vtny idea is sure a disgrace, :monkey even deserted lis wife, inved lier babies and ruined lier hife; d yau've neyer known anather monsk leave lien babies with athers 'ta bunk, pass theni on froni onc ho another t tley liardly know which oes h their mother.1 And anothen thing you will never sec - A mnonk build. a fence araund a coant tret And let tht cocoanuts go ta waste, Forbidding ail other mnonks a tiste.1 Why, il I put a fence- arcundr tus free Starvation would force you ho uteal And hert's" something tIse a- monk won't do Co out ah niglit and get an a "lstew,l Or use agun or a club or kniie To hake some other poor monkey's .tUe. . Yes, man. deméended - th.- ormey cusa But, brother, lie didn'h desceed. fin* us!" Contvlbutsd by 8 . uuidtutau SugaI Report. from- Queen's Park ~DITORIAL CommeNT Shold h.yBe Moved Immediatev GOD HAS SURVIVED HIS UNDERTAKERS What -Became of "Death'of God"? THE SPEECH FEOM TUE TRONIC On Dec. 28, 1867, the f irst session of the Firut Legishature af Ontario con- vened under the premiership of the Bon. John Sandfichd MacDonald. Tht Speech fromn the Throne on that day, read by Ontaria's- firut Lieut. Governor, Major General Henry Wil- liam Stisted, containcd this signuficant statement. "You fanm the niait prominent and populous portion of a new-born Dom- inion. Your own position in this new Confederacy, weighty and influential as it now is, will hereafter become rela- tively of increasing magnitude, accord- ing to the degree of prudence, sagacity and forethouglit you may evince in the management of the important interesti. entrusted to your care.1 One liundred years later on Jan. 27th, 1967, the Speech From the Throne read by the Hon. Earl Rowe,1 the present Lieut. Governor, was o! a simihar tane and marked the opening of the fifth session o! Ontario's 27th parliament. igThis speech in addition to outlin- igthe Government's farecast o! legis- lative measures, aiso cantained several significant statements relative to our position in confederation. 'Tram the beginning," tht Lieut. Governor stated, "this province accept;-1 ed and lias borne to the full its respan- sibilities in the life growth and rising prosperity of Canada. Ontario, lic said, lias given leadership to lier own people E< and to the nation, and as we gather for this fifth session a! the 27th As- sernbiy, it is timeiy that we reflect on the accomplishments of aur people. "It 11 is also a time ta rededicate ourselves to the principies o! Confederation." The "Prograni for People" as out- 12 lined in the 1967 Speech contained sanie 44 statements af palicy with emphasis on hausing, health, investment protec- tion, labor relations, construction safety and air and water- pollution. As the legislation devehops I will ineasures in more -detail but for the pregelit Will smpflylY 'st a numnber of thoue whcih may b. of particular in- terest to the peope of Durharn. 1. AdquteHousing for People at priesthy can afford through a program to be known as 4.ome OwnerahipMade Easy." 2. Consideration of the problemn of the umalI home owner who faces Joua of his home through expropriation. 3. Expaztdecd pragrani of capital grants tçP farmers ho include wells, farm drainage and construction, of certain types of farmn buildings. 4.Assistance to students in Veterin- arian medicine through annual bur- saries designed to increase- the numnber of veterinarians practising in farni areas. 5. Extension of Governme nt activities in medical and health research through a new concept of local health services. 6. A completely new mental health act. 7. Establishment of eight regional diagnostic assessment and treat- nment centres for children with mental and emotional disorders. 8. An enlarged program ta fight water pollution. 9. E-quàlization of educational and cultural opportunities between less urbanized sections of Ontario and the metropolitan areas. J. A new labor standards code and a a dloser liaison between labor, management and government in the field of industrial relations. 1.Legisiation to assure the savings of our people are adequately safe- guarded. LConfederation of tomarrow con- ference to which the leaders of al provinces and the Federal Govern- ment will be invited. The confer- ence is designed to bring the il governments into dloser commun- 1 And the crazy part o! it is that we keep urging tht kids ta stay in schoois which haven't enough room for the new crop arriving. "Droip-out" lias become almost synonymous with "dehinquent." It doesn't matter whether they're doing any work, or learning anything, or are just beîng bored silly. They're toid ho stay in school unhil, through sheer aid age and thethidal wave pushing from, behind, hhey get a magic piece o! paper that will open a golden doar ho success. Chiefly ho blame are parents. They have my sympathy. Many of them re- niember the great depression. Many others honestly behieve material secur- ity means happiness. But far, far too many o! them, delude themselves. They insist that Jack, who wants notbing more than to get out of school and be- come useful and happy as a salesman or a policeman, has tht makings of a grent surgeon, because he has always got more than 60 marki in science. Or thah Jili, a born wife and mother, who wants nothing more than to get mar- ried, should struggle tbrough a course in psychology, because she's always teen a firsh-class baby-sitter. Report fro Tht return o! Walter Gardon to, the Cabinet lias been an occasion for many calumnists and edihoriai writers ho underline the diffenences behween Mn. Gardon and lis successor Finance Min- ister Mitchell Sharp in their approaches ta foreign învestment in Canada. Dis- sension and con! lict are newswonthy. Definition o! tht areas a! agreement between tht two men is more èonstruc- tive, but dots not provide tht factors o! intrigue and conflict within tht Oven tht years I have had a very good opportunity ho observe tht ap- proadhes taken by tht two Minishens ho the question o! !aneign awnership. Canadians cannot close their eyts ho tht problems which now exist and wiil continue wihh us as long as we are reliant on large infusions of mmported capital necessary ho deveiop aur coun- try ta its full pohential. In this respect Walter Gardon couid be called a Cana- dian conscience. Ht keeps this probleni before Parliament and tht Canadian public. If Canada is ho maintain its politi- cal and economic independence it is essentiai that tht, increasing flow of foreign investment (essenhially Ameni- can) be slowed and ulimateiy, probab- ly sometime within the nexh 40 or 50 vears, be halted. Foreign interests now contraI 46 per cent o! Canada's manufachuning ndushries, over 60 per cent o! petroleuni and naturai gas and 90 per cent o! rubbtr. Waiter Gardon and Mitchell Sharp agnee that Canadians must at- tain greater contraI and awnership o! un economy. Thene is no difference on this point. Tht oniy area o! diffenence ýin tht means ta be employed. Aiso, bath men recognize the neces-i ity for a continuation o! tht flow o! . reign investinent for many yeans in ( )rder ta develop and expand the c Dtentiallo we possen aaaeefCndinidstypatuahyfr Spice. RY Bill Smiley big industries and institutions, liron*0 companies ha banks. Tliey are too lazy, ; or boodheap, or bath, ta interview you.pg peaple and lire theni an what they are. It s mucli casier, and a lot cheaper, juat ho say, "We don't want anybady unlesus. lie lias ah least a Grade 12 certificate,"l even if ail they wanh hua ta do is stick square pega in round hales. Anothen hhing vastly wr6ng with education is tht way-1h is financed. Let'». take a couple of examples. litre', an elderly couple on a small, fi.xed incarne. Afher yeans o! stnuggling they own their own house. Tley pay $400 a year ili municipal taxes. About hli!oa that iu - fan education, even thougli they've. paid 1JUST A STARTER In recent years, there has been a great deal of criticism o! education in this country, frani bath outside and in- side tht systeni. It doesn't take a Ph.D. ta realize that a whaie o! a lot af it is justified. And I speak as a parent, tax- payer, and teacher. Only by frantic efforts and vast in- fusions o! money have we managed ta keep aur system a mere couple of decades behind the times. I know it's easy ta indulge in hind- sight. But holy aid jumpin' Jupiter, surely there could have been a little faresight somewhere along thet une. Look what we have: shortage of build- ings, shortage of teachers, shortage of .lust about everything except pupils. And a vast surplus of them. This didn't happen avernight. They weren't ail barn last summer. It was all there 20 years aga, perfectly abvious ta anyane who couid add and multipiy. The anly peo- And speaking of inequalities, Isn't there something quit. ridiculous in a country of 20 million having 10 sep&r- att and distinct educational systenis? Much larger countries have one mystens, and yet have far more diversity and opportunity withjn that one than w. have with our 10 rigid and beparate ones. It i. provincialism, literally and figuratively.1 Rigidihy is another thing that sticks in my craw. We have rigid curriculumis, rigid time-tables, nigid divisions of the sdhooi ycar, and anything tise rigid that avoids dif!iculty and keeps the vast, Victonian vehicle shambling along samehow. You know wliat? I'm gttîng a littie worked up about this. But you can't keep a good beich down, and I've been developing indigestion aven tht whoie business for some finie. Sa rather than galioping off in al directions, let's say this is tht first of a senisa! articles an education by a Pm> Ottawa.,i Honey, M.P.I Mn. Gardon lavons'a goal of reduc- ing loreign contraio! f Canadian assets by ont-hall within the next 25 on 30 years. To adhieve this lie would prob-' ably like ta see legishation ta make It more difficuit fon foreignens ta take aven Canadian industny, and ta assumie Canadian contrai o! new industries. Mn. Sharp approadhes the same goal by means o! giving encouragement ta incneased Canadian ownership by tax incentives and other legis ative means. Mn. Sharp approadhes tht sanie goal by means o! giving encouragement to increased Canadian awnership by tax incenhives and other legishative means. 1h seems ho me that we sliould de- fine a long range policy whidh will continue the flow o! investmenh funds we need, but ah tht sanie tume encour- age gneatr ownership o! aur nesaurces and industry by Canadians. TIent should be no delay in the governmenh sehhing out a dlean, reason- able and long range polîcy. Amenican and othen investars wiil appreciate knowîng exactly whene they stand. Ohher countnies have dont it. France, Sweden, Mexico and Japan are countries whene !oreign inveshment las been negulated ho ensure tIat their own Legisiation in these countries lias not hindened theflow o! Amenican investmtnt capital. Indeed thc opposite lias been tht case. In the past two years the U.S. investment in Europe lias out- paced that in Canada ... a revense frons tht normal flow. Tht finît step in this prograni was taken by Prime Minisher Pearson this week when le set up a peiai com- mnittee o! minishérs unden Mn. Gordon's EChairmanship ta examine the structe This systemn makes a mockery af tlic concept that every child has the saine educational apportunities. Don't try ta tell me that the kid in a poor bush tawn in the north lias the saine facilities, options and quality of teach. Man and His Mou ntain- Durham County'a Grami Fcmily Iomncul Eaftabihod 113 yeSuzeoola 1854 Alto Jncrporailnq The Eowmanvill. News The Newcath Indepondent Autboisad cm Secondd l.., MOUi hi'th@ Peut 05 eDpt.. OttWvm. amd fer cymentetOSotge la CaWSh XOH M. JAMES GEO. W. GRAHAM GEO. P. MORRIS SvITB.PuLis ~AMMI .Max,=E NsumMGr. ~ popeta en.biu ath à.. hproof.Permlmion te etut «#em' wbeh., =or in th, fsloj,«lay .. ý t ,ns SUUelploNRATES 85.00 a Yomob lctly ta adwcs 8U-50 Ca Y«lu lSe Uted Stota Pb aCcePta dvortWm oaY advztommgt br tbe dvwn bft Mcd jM " MWR co l aasm 0k... a Il * I 'j I Country -From Durham County Club Bulletin Il la by Alex camthe, M p P. 8