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Canadian Statesman (Bowmanville, ON), 28 Aug 1941, p. 7

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THESDMAY, AUGUST 28,1941 THE CANADIAN STATESMAN, BOWMANVILLE, ONTARIO ORONO Social and Personal Phone 40r16 Scouts collected Saturday. 4Ms. Pearson is on the sick list. - r.S. Payne is on thc sick list. Mr. Clifford Jones visited here. Mrs. Brimacombe is home from thc hospital. Alb West la improved, but is still quite sick. Roy Berry la assisting in Anm- strong's store. A number from this district took in Uic Warden's Excursion. Ron Patterson was home on leave. Elmer Middleton waa home on leave. Mrs. John Cowan was hostes at a quilting Tucsday. Mrs. J. Leslie visited her par- ents, Mr. and Mra. W. J. Riddell. W. J. Riddell attended the fine chiefs meeting at Peterboro. Mrs. James Moffatt is viating Mr. and Mrs. G. Keith, Toronto. Mra. Eagleson is visiting fienda in Toronto and attending the Ex. Miss Viola Noden was taken to the hospital Saturday. Sorry to hear of the ilîneas of Mrs. George Keith. Mrs. J. Wesley Roc, London, was gucat of Mrs. J. E. Richards. Dick Pearson visited his mo- ther, Mrs. F. Pearson. Sorry to hear of the iflneaa of Mrs. Paiïi Snodgrass. Misa Pat Farrow had her tonsils out. Mrs. Robb'a pupils arc singing over the radio next Tuesday. Misa Beverley Payne visited in Tononto. 10W RAIL FARES To TORONTO EXHIBITION i Coaches Only GOVERNMENT TAX 10% EXTRA Special 10w fare good for travel i parlor cars or i uicepera quoted on requcut. Gou goln Aug. 21 t. Sept. 6 Final Retura Limit - Sept 10 Canadian Paclflc Mn. S. Seymour and famiby, Toronto, visitcd here. Allison Cowan, Toronto, visited bere. Here's bad news for same: School opens for Uic aew fermn next Tucsday. Mrs. Jas. Tamblyn Sr. is on the sick 1isf. Mrs. Charles Tamblyn was caibed home ta wit on hier. Miss Rosaline Harnesa, nurse in training 0f Bawmanville Hospital, bas refunned ta work. LeRoy Mybes ia now at Halifax. Mrs. Jim Wanaan bas neturned from the hospital. A. J. Knox, S. Cutteli and O. A. Gamýsby tteadcd the funenai o! David Morrison. Mn. and Mrs. A. A. Drummond and Alec lc!t Thursday on their vacation. At the meeting o! L.O.L., Henry Graham, Kingst on, District Or- ganizer, was o wclcome guest. On Friday, Auguat 22, Thomas Henry, a former teacher af Bow- maville, died in Toronto. Mrs. Chas. Wood attended the wedding o! Miss Jean Johns at Lakc!ield. Mn. and Mrs. Wickcs and Miss Jean Logeer, Taronto, visifed the latten's parents. Mn. and Mns. J. Mowat and Mns. Keat visited af Mn. Arthur Blewett 's. Some boys anound here have been helping themselves ta other people's fruit. Mn. J. J. Melion and the Scouts arc disappointcd that flhc camping trip did not materialize. No lesa thon five Oronoitea were scheduled ta bave their tan- alla ouf yestcrday (Wednesday). Mrs. Waterman, who bas been iii for §ix weeks af Mrs.' Cccil Powens', la much impnoved. Mn. and Mrs. Webb and Mn. and Mns. Austin were visitons with Mn. and Mna. Howard Walsh. O. A. Gamaby caught a nice bnown frout Friday about 12% or 13 inches la lengtb which hie gave ta bis friend, J. J. Gilfillan. Mn. and Mrs. W. S. Haw, Ta- ronto, former resident's a! Orono, spent Uic weckend with fiends hene. Mra. A. Blewett spent the wcek- end with Mn. and, Mrs. James Mowat af their cottage af Boss Lake.- Mn.. H. Swancatt was bitten by Stan Bawen's dog at weck, ne- auiting kn an open wound on the ankle. A wedding party went through Orono Safurday. War time deca- rations -red, whitec and biue - were uscd on the car. Mns. Ai!. Chapman recently had quite a fcw branches a! a plum tree maliciously braken off by FOREWARNED IS. FOREARMED Be prepared for thc School Days Juif ahead by havlng Oshawa Laundry & Dry Cleaning tompany, Llmited take cane of your Laundry and Cleanlng requirements now. PHONE 419 andi our driver willIeaUl. An Important Message To Every Householder: We- sinccreiy advlae you ta 'make arrangements now ta get yaur next winter's fuel supply. There la plenfy of coal available at Uic present time and prices anc dcfinifely at their low. No anc can pre- dict what the situation will be next fali, but wc are certain prices cannat be lower than Uiey are now and thc possibilify la they mnight be considerably higher. You have nothing ta bace and everything ta gain, by ordenlng at this tinie. You'Ill ave money: you'll have your coal in your bin and yau'll be safe in an emengency. It la also a dccided advantage taonder "blue coaL," be-. cause this trademnarkcd anthracite assures you cf gcttlng what you asked fan-thc world's fineat anthracite. These days, with sa many fuel problema, substitution or mlixing may o! necesslty be more prevalent than befone and this means inferior heat and mare cot ta you. But wlit "blue coal," Uic blue colaur that you cari sec at a glance, guarantees the quality-and guarantees delivery af the coal you ordcned. Why nat get in fauch with us by phone to-day-and we are sure yau will Uiank us next fail for the suggestion wc are maklng ta you naw, because we sinceneiy be- lieve that what we say is truc: you'll be betten off kn miany ways by gettlng "blue coal" and ordening it iglif >P 0W. Shoppard & Gui toumber Co. Limited Phone 715 Bowmaivlle I. * , o a e B4 ' some persan or persans unknown. Weil, this time o! year ît's 1"heigh, ho, came ta the fair!" for a goodly number o! Oronoifes are 0f tending the C.N.E. L George, Patricia, Harry -and Mns. Grady, Hamilton, and Helen Wilson, Ottawa, visited Mrs. C. G. Armstrong. Dr. RassaLng and.party fram Chicogo, inciuding the Mausoleumn arcbitect, are visifing thc former's siafen, Mrs. J. Noden. Wc understand Messrs. Tennant, Graham, Wbeeler, Cowan and Tennant bave been accepted for the Air Farce and leave for the wesf next Wednesday. The achool choir practised Sot- urday evcning for their broadcast next Tucsday. Anather practice la acheduled for this (Thursday) affernoon. Harny Clarke hdU the honon of guarding the Duke o! Kent along with other fronfienamen. Other Oronoites saw him in Toronto and in Oshawa. Members o! the Calvary Bap- tist Churcb, Oshawa, brougbt a message o! salvafion by story and sang on Main Street Satunday evcning. Writeups o! the decoratian ser- vices at Cobourg appear in the. Toronto papers. W. J. Riddell, P.D.D.G.M., Orano, was gucat speaker. Salem la now piaying Newcas- tle for the girls' softball leogue cup. The winner o!f two ouf af thnee gamea gets thia prîze. The firat gome was scheduied for at night (Wednesday, 27th). Isn't there a speed Uimit in Orono? To some if appears as if the 10w govcnning Uic speed o! cars is nori-existent. At any rate fhcy pay lit tic attention ta if. Orono girls, naw training ln Witby, leave nexf Tuesday for Torntno. Alter a ycar thene they will return ta Whitby for gradua- tion. Mns. T. Cowan was taken ta Oshawa hoapital on the noad home !rom ber trip wbicb she took with ber siters. Mn. Cowan was cal- cd there Thurday. She la now hame. Rcv. A. E. Harding dlosed his ministrations kn Park St. Churcb Sunday marning, giving another excellent sermon. Mns. R. Smith favorcd witb a vocal solo. Rev. Liftlewaad will be in charge ncxt Sunday. The McKenna chîldren have donaf cd a large box o! grocenies, on which fickets anc being sold. If will be given away at Orono Foin. The proceeda will go taoic Telcgram British Wan Victima' Fund. Mn. Frank Manning, Edîtor a! the Reston Recorder, paid a short visit ta H. R. Rowe while on bis way hock from the newspopen- convention. He was accompanîcd by Mn. Henry Moyse, Oshawa. Mrs. J. E. Richards is in Toron- to this week taking in the trip ta the Ex. os a gucat a! the Royal York and the tour o! thc Islands, which she won fan ber salesman- ship. She was joined at the Royal York by a part y !nom Quebec. A number from bere, wbo have receivcd invitations, will repre- sent Onano ot the C.N.E. next Tuesdoy when the chair singa. Watch the Toronto papers for time and station and don't miss hearing the bnoadcast. Mrs. T. Cowan, Mns. R. Ste- wart, Misses, NelUie and Kate Coi- ville and Misa Mary Waddell were in an accident wbiic on their Eas- fera trip. The former waa the anly anc hurt, but ail mighf have been badly injured. A team o! homses. owned by Stan Bowen, noted fan the !acf that they non away twice thia summer, werc atruck by .Ugtning duning the thunder stajrm Mon- day morning, wbile afthe Fares- try. One wos killed outright, and the other knjurcd but will likcly recover. As fan as could be ascer- taincd no other damage was donc in the neon vicinify o! Orono. The Onono Red Cross Inspection Committec met Tuesday o! ast week and packed the foliowing gooda for shipmcnt: 4 acarves 14" hy 72", 2 turtie neck sweaters, 4 ribbed helmets, 2 pr. seomcn's long socks, 30 pr. aocka, 10. pr. two-way mitta, 12 alternative caps, 10 suifs pyjamas, 4 pr. extra trousers, 30 bcd pan covers, 3 kait- ted hbouldcr throwa, 10 qullts. ORONO TO MONTANA Just ta prove that Orono has devcboped some bosebail talent, even unto the second genenatian, Llghtnlng Strikes At Fatimr And Son Doca lightning strike fwicc? Some say if doca, some say it doesn't. Be that as if may, Law- rence Lunn's bouse was struck last week, withthe sole damage being Uic burning o! a dresser scarf on a dresser in an uptairs bedroom. It will be rcmembercd that a few weeks aga his father, Mr. Robt. Lunn, was struck and badiy burned, unlike Stan Bowen, who, when his hanse was killed, was knocked down but not hurt. HYDIRO MEETING The Onono Hydro Commission met Monday night at Neil F. Par- f er'a office wîfh all present. A bank balance a! $4,244.55 was re- ported. Rebates were allowcd on three-range service ta Messrs. John Armstrong and Fred Dun- con. Bills were ordered paid as follows: O.H.E. Inteneat -----------$l03 B. P. U ------ ----------------- -147.12 H. E.P.C --------------- . -- 251.00 J. Armstrong --------------24.60 F. Duncan ------------------ ----25.00 O. M . A------------- 2.00 Total $560.05 POLICE FIND TANNERY STATE DANGEROUSI Police Trustees met Monday .night at Neil F. Portcr's, with al present. Attention was again dnawn ta the dangerous condition o! the tannery and the aecetary wos instructcd ta write ta the Highway department in Toronto, which he did Tuesday. The fol- iowing bis werc ordered paid: M. Canleton, repaining fire- men'a coats - ------- ----$ 1.00 L. Martincil, cantnact pnice o! water tank-,-------- 425.00 V. Hancock, labor ---------- 17.10 C. Tennant, labar .- .. 15.60 H. Cantreli, labor ------ - 1.50 Art Allen, trucking 36.80 Total $497.00 Lockhart's'School The Wark Wark Committee bas held two quiltinga recentiy, anc at Mrs. Pedwell's and the second at Mrs. S. Mof!at's. So many la- dies attended that besîdes twa quilta bcing quilted, blocks wenc pieced for others. The schoolhouse is being dcc- arated inside and out, Alden Gib- son and son Jack anc doing the work. Dennis \ Gibson underwent an operotion for tonsil and adenaid trouble and already la showing marked impravement in health. He is at present holidaying with his sister, Mrs. Clair Wickett, at Harmony. Mn. and Mrs. Harold Colville and daughter Marion and Mn. and Mrs. Tam Côlville visited old school mates in No. 9, also their former teacher Mrs. Fred Bowen. We regret ta hear o! the passing o! that grand old man, Mr. David Mornison. No. 9 was glad ta count him among ifs honored sons. Miss Mary Bowen is apending a few days with ber aunt, Mrs. Stockdale, in the city. Mrs. Austin Turner attcndcd the trousseau tea at Mr. Thos. Clemence's for Miss Phyllis on Saturday last. Messrs. George Richards and James Eagleson spent Thuraday and Fiday at Rice Lake, retunn- ing with a gaod catch o! pickenel and basa. SORE FEET THIS WAY Rub la Minard'a Liniment generouily, and feei the relief steal aven the acbing muscles and joints. For ail muscle and joint pains, aches and etiffncs aprained ankies, twisted limbe_-Minard'a ha@ beea famous for over 60 yeara. Good for dandruli and skia disorders, o Clet a battis today; keep if handy. P WlILSONS$ REALLY KILL dayfo2 or 3 wccs 3 pada ucd pakct. No spraylng. na stlckines,, no bad odor. Ask our Drugglst, Gracery or Clouerai Store. 10 CENTS PER, PACKET WHY PAY MORE? NHE WILSON F tY PAD CO., Haullihe, Oi NEWS wiIl nof hé adequate ta carry existing stock through the whole wintcr. Plana are alrcady unden way for gaverniment aetion a! sanie sort ta take cane o! the situa- tion. Toronta's A. R. P. organization calla for the use o! Scout bicycle and foot messengers at each o! the city's 2,602 Wanden Posta. I mm-mm-mu 1 Starkville A number from here jaurneyed fa Kendal an Sunday ta witness the sham baffle. .. Holidays arc aven and aur bouse of learning wil open on Tucsday ncxt, with Misa Wray in charge. We understand Mna. H. L. Tnira and !amily expect ta move fa Oshawa in the near future ta take up their nesidence there. Mn. Warren Carson had fhe mnis! ortune ta base a fine borse and a cal! which were atruck by lightning anc evening last weck during a heavy stanm. Visitors: Mrs. K. Stephenson, Pont Hope, spent the weekend wlfh Mn. and Mrs. Victor Farrow. ..Mn. M. Shutka, Oshawa, was home aven the weekend. . . Mrs. ApeHenry, Newmarket, witb ?&s.J. avis, orotoandMrs. William Rutherferd, Newfonville, wlfb Mn. and Mrs. Jacob Halao- wchl. . . Mrs. H. L. Trim was in Oshawa on Friday. .. Mrs. S. G. Hallowell and Miss Norma Hallo- well mot ored fa Pet erboro last week... Mn. Jacobi Halowell was in Ncwtonville leat Friday. .. Miss Bculah Hallowell viaited Mn. Winl ,Henry, Newcastle. . . Mn. Wilfrcd Walker has rcturned ta Toronto alter holidaying with Mr. S. G. Hailowell. Newtonville Visitons: Mn. and Mrs. Mit Kim ail and Lena and Mn. and1 Mrs. Jack Kimbail with Miss Doris Darling, Kingston. . . Mr. and Mrs. Launie Cale with Mn. and Mrs. Douglas Cale, Betheada <Darlington). . . Mrs. Thos. Sta-i pleton, Mn. George Stapleton and Donothy wîth Mr. L. D. Bell's, Kendal. . . Mn. and Mrs. Cecii Stapleton and !amily at Mn. Robt. Gardon's, Elizabethville. . . Messrsa Milt. Morton, Keith Bunley and1 Leland Milîson, Peterboro, af ý home.. . Mn. and Mrs. Gardoni Thomas, Mn. and Mns. Jack Re- cord, Mn. and Mrs. Russel Lowej and David, Part Hope, at Mn.1 Robt. Motan's. . . Mr. and Mns.1 D. Jones, Oshawa, Mn. M. Thamp-j son, Blackstock, at Mn. J. A. Bar-i rie's. . . Mrs. Jim Burgess, Miss! Lizzie Burgess, Orano, and Mns.i Roht. Morgan, Sixth Line, at Mn.j George McCullough's. . . . Mna., George Beare, Greenbank, Missesi Ethel Wade, Mcdo Hallowell and1 Muriel Shaw, Mrs. David Shaw and Mrs. Wmn. Brunt, Newcastle,i at Mn. George Kimball's. . . Mns.i J. Wade and Jack with Miss Jean Wade, Lindsay. . . Mr. and Mra. Max St aplet on and Evelyn and1 Thelma with Mr. Jack Stapleton'a,i Oron. . . Mn. and Mns. Wm. Hen- derson and Truman, Morrish, Mn. and Mns. Bert Crossley, Cowan- ville, Mn. and Mms. Jim Snell and1 Mrs. Joyce, Port Britain, at Mn. George Henderson's. Mn. and Mrs. Launie Cale of- tended the Shenwin-Black picnic at Cobourg Soturdoy. An aeroplanc fnom Oshawa was considerably damnaged Thuraday wbltn..jt made a pon landing kn Ed.-S'amis' field and turned up- ide down. The pilaf was not in- jured. They took the plane ta Oshawa by tnuck. Quite a num ber o! people from bere wcpt bock north o! Kendal Sunday and viewed the testing o! the varia»s wan vehicles, in rough country.f The W. I. met Auguat 2th at the home o! Mrs. George Hender- son. The meeting was opened with the Institute ode followed by the Lord's Prayen. $2.50 was votcd ta Miss Jean Holmes for printing donc and $2.00 fa Bow- manville Hospital. Mrs. Hender- son, convenen of cammunity ac- tivities and relie!, presented the pnogrom: Chorus, There'a a Long Long Trail; neading, Mns. Red- knap; chorus, Smilc Awhile; ral coul, One way ta improve aur cornmunify; humarous reading Mary Hendenson. A canteat was then put on hy Mary Hendersan, and Mna. Henderson and hier gnoup scrved lunch. Next meet- ing at Mns. F. B. Lovekin's, New- castle, Sept. 24. 'uc The W. M. S. o! United Chuc met in the chuncb basement on Tuesday, August 12th. Secrctary announced that Mn. C. J. Mitchell had fonwarded a cheque ta the society in memary o! his mother. It was decîded to entent ain the mothers and babies o! the con- gregatian at the Septemben meet- ing and a telephone committee was appointed ta notify Uic ladies o! the congregation. Lunch will be servcd. Mns. C. Marris gave the scripturc reading. Mns. Sid Lancaster gave an interesting paper on "Miss Archibald, a Mis- sio-aryin Trinidad.i" Mns. C. FLYING OVER ONTARIO WIT AUSTRALIAN STUDENT OBSERVERS This ls the nlnth of a serles of Air Force stonies written for the weekly newapapers of Ontario. By Huth Templin I sat in the secretary's office at the No. 1 Air Observer School at Malton and wondered what would happen next. Things al1w ay s seemced to turn out that way when arrangements had been made for me to fly in an R.C.A.F. plane. If there wasn't a thunder storm, there was something else. The day's thunder storm had already passed and the sky was clear, but orders had become mixed Up. On the other side of his desk, J. A. Munroe, secrctary-trcasurer of the school, was keeping the telephone busy and now and then someone came hurrying in with a correspondence file or other in- formation. It was obvious enough what had happened. A phone cail from the Training Command at Toronto had informed me that ail arrange- ments were made. Meanwhile, a sudden cali had taken the mana- ger of the Malton School to Mon- treal and no one cisc kncw any- thing about the arrangements. As we waited for word from Toronto, the big Avro Ansons out on the runway roared away. It was two o'clock, and time for themn to go out on their afternoon ".exercises" Flying Officer McLeod tried to be consoling. It was a rough day, he .said, and I wouldn't enjoy it. He remembered one newspaper man who wcnt up in a plane on just such a day. He wasn't up five minutes tilI he was sick, and his trip was a total loss-and so was bis lunch. Besides, the exercise for that day wasn't the most in- teresting kind. The student ob- servers would be trying to make out a course as though they were flying blind, above the clouds. Another day would be more in- teresting and would provide bet- ter flying conditions. There seemed to be nothing else to be done. It was a quarter after two now and I hadn't heard a plane go for five minutes. The night flight wouldn't leave till fine o'clock and might not return tili two in the monning and I would have 60 miles to drive home after that. I had work to do the ncxt morning and two mem- bers of the family waiting for me in the city. There seemed to be nothing lef t to do but to corne back again. The Delayed Fllght Suddenly t1bings began to hap- pen. Flying Officer McLeod had gone out but he came hunrying back. "Everything's O.K. We'll have. to hurry, though." We trotted across the road to- ward the hangar. On the way he explained that one plane was de- layed by engine trouble. Spark plugs. I might get to it in time. A quick trip to the pilot's room, wherc I was fitted with parachute harness - two straps over my shouldens and one anound each leg, all locked together in front of my stomach. The day was hot, Sa 1 le! t my coat behind and went in my shirt sleeves. Anothen dash across the run- way to the place where the twin engines o! Avro Anson No. 6037 were tunning over smoothly and noisily now. The pilot was al- ready in his seat. Hasty introduc- tions to the two student observ- era, K. AllUn and R. Evritt, bath o! Melbourne, Australia.. That was intercsting. Two fine young fellows. I ahook handa with themn. "I1t's hot!" I said juat by way of making conversation. It was a stupid thing to say beoause s0 obvioua. The thermometer said 95 degrees. "lWe like it," one of thern re- plied, rather surprisingly. They were in shirt-sleeves, too, with the same kind of parachute bar- nesa. Later, Pilot Joselin said: "The Australians juat eat Up this kind of weather." A littlc door was open up on the ide of the plane, and I climb- ed up. One of the Australians fastened my safety strap, a quick- release type that was new to me. Allin took his seat beside the pilot and Evritt in the seat behind the pilot. 1 was in the back seat, opposite the door. The plane began to move at once, down the broad runway. Wc passed a ailvery Trans-Canada plane, juat coming in and turned into the wind and in a few seconds were off the ground, heading westward into a 25-mile wind. ATTEND r AIR Ltral Agricultural )NESDAY 17~ best Agricultural .m County bua live stock. Corne ng.4 LIST iecretary, 4 ELR. 1, Newoaatle. - ~-w,-w-w-.~- - - - -, real aid ta fitaes. Get Post's Bran Flakes at your grac- 5231 er's today. TEE BRiTIE ci Air Trahi One of a serles of articles wrlti papers by Huth Templin, Edul 1 IW% k - - -- - -- - -- - -- L-- flat, but thc road by Uic river was plain enough. »!KMONWEF&LTE By that time, I had the road map out of my brief case and from then on, was neyer loat. We ilà *I uooe passed south of Camp Borden, Men specilfly for Weekly Ncws- over Uic great Holland marsh and the tip of Lake Sinicoe, and down tor of thc Fergm 9ew-Recor 1. ,beside Yonge street to King,.then àin a bec-Uine for Malton. There, the students changed places and circles, with an arrow marking we went around anoUier circle, the compass variations-not much slightly farther east, but in sight help that to a visitor !rom the of Brampton, Caledon Lake, Or- other aide of the world. On the angeville, Aurôra, and down ta table lay his simple instruments, the shore o! Lake Ontario near a triangular ruler, a few pencils, Malvern. A turn to the west a circular card with rowa of fig- brought us over the eastern sub- ures and the narne. Somebôdy's urba of Toronto. Rapid Calculator. Beside him was The flight over Taranto was in- a compasa and up in front twO tenesting. Out to Uic left was the dials, one indicating the engmne Woodbine race rack, then the har- speed and the other the altitude bor wih a freight boat steamlng above sea level. across the Bay. The skyscrapers I sat in the rear seat, directly lookcd like tali toy buildings. To behind the atudent with the exer- the north, thc reservoir shone as cisc, but with my view to the ail the other pondsq had donc. We front partly cut off by the wire- parallelled Dundas street out t. lesa instruments, wanked by ne- West Toronto. I saw, a mile be- mate contrai fromn the pilot'a seat. low me, the schoolyard whcrc I Occasionally, I saw the dials turn once tnied to teach a girl to skate. and the wavelength indicators Ahl large buildings were easily change, but o! the messages which seen. It t.ok about six minutes ta, passed through themn I knew no- cross Toronto, from the eastern thing. In front of me was a table, auburbs ta the Humber river at on which I was able ta write in Weston. my notebook. We circled the great Malton Som Tons asyTo denlfy airport slowly, watching other Som Tons asv T Ile,,ify planes coming in and fmnally, with The Avro Anson ia noted for its a clear runway, came down to visibility. There are windows ail earth without a bump. around. It has even been likencd From the delightful coolneas o! ta a flying greenhouse. The rear the upper air, we stepped out in- seat was opposite the huge wing, ta the heat again. The studenta but it was easy ta sec the land- checked their maps with Pilot scape below and behind. Jocelin, and I submitted mine. It *The sky held many clouda and was juat two raugh pendi marks the shadows mottled the land- on a road map but he secmed sur- scape bciow. The air was hazy- prised that I had been sa close t. and ten miles was about the limit the real route. Most peaple, he of visibility. After we climbcd ta said, got complctely loat in thc air 4500 feet, we wcrc up in the low- unles they had some training. er layer o! clouda. Occasionally There was time for conversa- anc would drift past alinoat close tion now. The Australians had enough, ta touch. The heavier been six wceks at Malton. An- clouda, holding a hint of thunder, other six and they wauld go ta wcne higher. Two or thnee tinies Jarvis ta learn bombing and gun- we ran into ramn but I couldn't neny with practice bomba and sec it out on the wing. Only the real machine guns. If wouldn't odd singing o! the propellons and be long tili they wene flying over the draps on the front widows Germany. showed me Uic diffenence. (Nexf Week-Final Article.> I hadn't any ldea whether I would know where we wcre fram nearly a mile up in the air. I Clarke Union couldn't sec the compasa, but the ____ sun ahane most o! the time, giving a rough idea o! the directions. While Mr. Hector Bowen waa There wasn't any doubt about the working in the Farestry on Mon- firat town. Acres of greenhouses day anc o! his horses was in- ahane in the light, as wc circlcd stantly killed by lightning; the over Brampton, gaining height. second horse was also struck but I imagine it would make a won- probably will recover. Mr. Stan- derful tanget, day or night. If I ley Bowen waa driving Uic tcamn had been able ta lay handa on a and also rcccived a shock. atone, I couid hardly have nesiat- Miss Eilcen Souch is visiting cd the temptation ta drap if over- frienda in Bowrmanvile. board on these glass roofs. Misa Agnes Ferguson o! Ro- We headcd weat after that, and chester who has been vlaiting her the Credit river, dirty even from sister Mrs. Alex Watson, has ne- that height, was the next land- turned home. Mr. and Mrs. Wat- mark. Then a little village that son accompanied her as far as worrîcd me until I decidcd its mil Cobourg. ponds wenc like those at Alton. Miss Dorathy Swinford, Toron- Then came Orangeville. I was to, has been holidaying at S. D. nearer home now and kncw moat Souch's. o! the landmarks. Tbe provincial Misses Laura and Allie Fielding, highway ta Arthur, stnaight as a Toronto, visited their aunt, Mrs. ruler, gleamed in the sun for miles John Rickaby, reccntiy. till if crosscd thc Grand river. Mr. and Mrs. Carl Billinga and The lavcly Hockley Valley lay Audrey and Miss Muriel Tennant ahead. The huIs booked almoat visif cd at H. J. Souch's. PLAN NOW TO J ORONO I Under auspices of Durham Cen Society TUESDAY AND WEI sept.16 This is recogmized as one of the1 Pairs in Central Ontario. Durha reputation for its fine pure bred and sec them in the competitive ri WRITE FOR PRIZE M. H. STAPLES, Si PAGE SEVEN

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