Was it Kipling who wrote this? "It's not the 'oppin over the 'edges that 'urts the 'orses' 'oofs, but the 'ammer, 'ammer, 'ammer on the 'ard 'ighway." It sounds like Kipling and it is a swell opening for a story of the return of the horse to his rghtful place in society. Year by year and step by step, his mai esty the horse has been pushed off the highways of the (allegedly) most eni i g h t e n e d countries of the globe, by "gas buggies" by what we have called "automobiles"' with ail their frilîs and comtorts and speed and the luxuries of getting fromn here ta there to enjoy what? Well, just what? The answer is to enjoy what man and his spouse have neyer been entitled to . . . and that is, generally speaking, the valuptuous and unearned incre- ment of abstract pleasure. Race Horses For years now. in this 'enlight- ened" age, the mast -we have seen of horses, outside of farms, has been on the race tracks where farmers are seldom seen and where railbirds wouldn't know a horse if they saw one. Race harses are not, 'horses" anymore than guinea-pigs are pigs. Race horses are a special breed called "Thor- oughbreds" and they could no more pull a plow than Rockefeller could roast a frankfurter. So far as agricultural economics are con- cerned they are, utterly. a wash- out. We have it on authority of Elbert Hubbard of the gay nine- ties that guinea pigs aren't pigs and they don't corne tram Cuinea. By the same token, Thorough- breds are not native to this coun- try and they couldn't earn their saît at downright work. They are the pets of plutocrats and the despair of the proletariat seeking quick riches on a chiselling two- dollar ticket. Coming Back But ta get back ta where we started, we should say that we have evidence that horses in this district are again comning into their own. The gas and tire ra- tioning. just commencing as it is, was long anticipated by two of Bowmanville's outstanding horse- men. Take, for instance. Wes. Cawker, who having twa or three motor cars, neyer gave up bis horses. Wes is a butcher of the 4th generation but he thinks mare of horse flesh than of prime ribs of beef and he is one of the verv few. here or elsewhere, who bas 1kept a stable of smart horses. bath saddle and drivers, ahl thro' the depressian and ail through othe xvar. The other hbrse fancier. and he is a man of discriminating taste in equine proportions. is Dr. R. G. Cowie, local veterinarian a f the Dominion Livestock Brancb. Their stables are cam- bined at the Cawker farm on the Manvers Road. and already peo- ple tram Whitby and Oshawa are caming bere weekends ta vie with Bowmanville people in taking les- sans in riding and driving. Fine Hackaey Dr. Cowie's hiorse is a 3-year old Hackney of Sir Raleigh strin whicb lie purchased in western Ontario, and flot since the days of the famous Beith Stables. wben Hackneys such as Robin Adair, Saxon and Jessica swept the boards at Madison Square Gar- dens. New York, time and again, have we seen a classy Hackney. Dr. Cowie's Hackney bas ahl the characteristics of ani s tao c r a c y: alert ears, broad and fiat head. eyes. smali mauth, fine muzzle, graceful action with proper bal-1 ance in stepping proudly out, fore f eet carried bigh, bocks sharply flexed, and hind feet carried weil under the body. Horse Society The appearance of this horse, hitched ta a sulky, on the streets of Bowmanville causes a mild sensation and is the reason for this story of the return of the horse. From now on we shahi see barses as a current sight for many's the cart and buggy being repaired and much harness is being assembled. Wes Cawker has always bad ggod harses but automobiles have kept thern confined largely ta bis farm. Naw Wes is coming back into his own and lots of people are f inding a path to his doar* ta get in on the social swing *of harsy" people who were so 'up- pity" in the gay nineties. He bas a stable of five and they are al broken to harness and saddle. His aid pony that carried his boys ta scbool has been superannuated but stili travels a clip witb the fastest in the stable, and Wes hitches 'em up ta the buggy and does 8 or 10 miles Sundays just for the pure lave of horse flesh. He also has a Hackney abaut 15 hands weigbing 1000 lbs., as a colt and it is a favorite for the saddle crowd. Tben there is bis big bay -standing 16.2 and weighing 1300, another dandy saddle horse. New Age Fourth on bis list is a grey, hait Standard and hall Thorough- bred, standing 15.2 and tipping the scales at 1200, which steps oui under English or Western saddle, superbly broken. But prime fav- orite of youngsters and beginners and really mast in demand is a cob they cali aid roly-poly, stand- ing about 14.2 and ambling aloni at a neat 900 lbs. It and the oic pony are favorites, but for those wbo want action and bave ambi- tion ta became borsemen or horse- women in this New Age can try the jumps witb the big bay. It can clear burdles in effortless style and a smart scbaol is de- veloping around tbe tarm in ail branches of horsemansbip. 1 Man's Best Friend It is thaught that this stary of two horse fanciers and their horses might ta some extent pave the way for others who are be- ginning ta think of getting on the bandwagon as those wlio wisl ýocial distinction by becorning owners of "man's best triend.' Already sales of leather gaods in Canada are showing an upswing. In 1939 total sales were aroun< 81,2 million dollars. In the cur- rent fiscal year. the estimate is over eleven million dollars. Man- ufacture of caddies had fallen off to a veiy 10w figure but now they will came back with the return of the horse. Althaugh there are no "pegged" prices on horse fies] costs are not exorbitant at the moment, but when reai demand sets in an advance will no doubt take place. MY DAILY ROBIN - -. - PAGE POUR Local Evidences Show Herses Again Coming Into Their Own SMO W-DROP COOL DRESSES 3e95 -22.50 What could be cooler for tbrough the summer? Fresh polka dots i spun rayon jacket. skirt, calot too! Washable. DARK HATS nt ggeatly roduced prices Get Yeura now while selec- tions are their best couch, johnston & Cryderman, Ltd. BowMAN VILLE The Canadian fishing picture is fishing picture acquires fresh glamar, further enhanced by ideal rail and particularly around Banff and Lake hatel services of the Canadian Pacifie Louise, Alta., where the scrappiest Railway, whase lines take the angler species of Rocky Mauntain trout are direct ta such renownedfishing centres f ound. as French River, Lake of the Woods, A pictorial story of Canadian fish- and Western Ontario's rugged Lake ing begins (upper left) in the Rockies Superior country, where muskies top where a fair angler nets a frisky the 60-pound mark. Guides, bait, and "eut-thraat" trout near Banff Springs tackle are available at larger resarts. Hotel, while. at right a fisherman Other favored fishing zones include proudly displays a hefty tpiekerel Quebe's Laurentians. Gatineau dis- taken f rom an Ontario lake. A tense trict, Eastern Townships, Lake Tem- moment (lower left) hs a Quebec iskaming and Muskoka Lakes, while angler lands a stubbornly-resisting splendid salmon and trout catches are trout from a Laurentian stream,an chakedup nnullyin herivers and (n ht) a youthful enthusiast surves lake- o aNva Sloi h and Newý1 a West Coast Tyee as big as himseÏÎf Brunswick. West of the prairie A 1942 prototype of Tom Sawyer provinces, whose northern areas pay 1<eft centre) gets good resuits witbout rich dividends ta the angler, the; the benefit of 1942 equipment. 628 Crawford St., Toronto. THE CANADIAN STATESMAN, BOWMANVILLE, ONTARIO Sport Fishing from Coast to Coast iliv stock alane, approximately 1 4.000vý animais were moved t ram 37Sates and tram same of the prov1inces of Canada, ta the Expo- asitian and Shaw, which attracted MM a rcord attendance of 400,000 persans. NATIONAL INCOME THE GOOD EARTH tional Exhibition, Toronto, whicb _______ also been cancelled for the The national incarne of Canada "Ail reai and whoiesome en- duration, might take exception ta is detined as the net value of joyments passible ta man havej the statement above "Gneatest on itoods produced and services rend- benjs spsil abmsneth North American continent, ered during a given period. A n js spsil ehm i alternative definitian is tbe sumn first be was made of the eartb as 000", and point to the million or jof the positive or negative savings they ee naw; and they are pas-i more wbo annually came ta To- ~-ef enterprises- and the income sible ta himn chiefly in peace. ie~ ronto. payments ta individuals resident watch corn grow, and the blos- in Canada, including salaries and soins set, ta draw bard breath FA Iwages, workmen's compensation, over the ploughsbare or spade; tae FARM IMPLEMENT SALES pensions, dividends, interest, ren- read, ta think, ta love, ta hope, tais, and withdrawals 9f working ta pray-these are the things that Dortestic sales of new tarm im- proprietars. mnake man happy. Now and then plements and equipment in Can- t a wearied king, or a tammented ada in 1941, mainly at whalesale CORD 0F FUEL-WOOD slave, found out where the true prices ta dealers and exclusive of kingdams of the world were, and the sale of parts, binder twine, or s It is estimated that ten million possessed himseif, in a furrow or mnotor trucks, are reported at $50,- a standard cords of fuel-wood are two of garden graund, of a truly 147,586, an increase of à per cent - cut each year in Canada. It is an intinite dominin."-John Ruskin. on the sales of 1940, and aven 47 9 important product of the average __________ per cent on those of 1939: 1 tamm waodlot. The Weights and This increase of nearly 50 per e Measures Act (Statutes of Cana- da,195Chp4)deie a CANCEL CHICAGO SHOW cent aven 1939 retlects several 195,Chp.48___iesatbîngs; fîrst, the upswing in war- -standard cord as a stack cantain- iepoutn;scdheed Y ing 128 cubic feet-a pile 8 by 4 As a nesult of every availabletiepouin;scdteee ýt by 4 feet. A "short" cord, or unit of transportation being e- for farm machinery of ail kinds in ;s "stave" or "face" cord contamns quired for urgent wam needs the the absence of farm help that bas -less waad than a standard cord. International Live Stock Exposit- been absorbed in industry and the Il It is not a card, but a tier of woocd ion Grain and Hay Show held armed services; third, the tact that 8 feet wide and 4 feet high made yearly at Chicago bas been can- mare ready money bas been made up of woad that is less than 4 celled for 1942. For 42 years the available, and fourth, that farmers feet, usually 12 ta 16 inches long. Live Stock Exposition, combined bave nallied patriotically to the td__________ with the Grain and Hay Show for cail, as usual, without "cast plus" rx IE AT OGRA the past 23 years, bas been the demands such as characterized in- TRSLW LNER ATEE greatest agricultural exposition onE dustry. Taday it is almost .im- t e LO_______E the North American continent. possible to get up-to-the-min- e yaeaiga a rtuka Apant altogether tramn the resolve uite modemn machinery in many By 25mlsperboum insortadcof 7 of the people to prosecute the war eines because factories have turn- h 2 miles per hur twear on 7thet its utmost limit, the pmablem of 'ed tp wamtime munitions. t ires cnper utihewai t.heathe transportation of the buge __________ ottre nly 40utilpeAboumnumber of exhibits, exhibitors and speed o ny4 ie e or visitors in this year of war wauld' MORE WOOL URGENTLY tire wear is 25 ta 35 per cent more have been impossible. Last year, NEE NCND dthan at 25 miles per boum. NEE NCND 7- Nat only daes a lower speed -Cnd ed apouemr ýs reduce the surface wear an tires, Cnd ed epouemr -but At also reduces tire breakage, ~ n. wool. Witb war developments Saccidents, gasahine consumptian E lesiIL EuULiLUI now threatening the supplies EY, and wear on ather parts of the Eyf ram abroad, Canada faces a seri- n machine. By diving at a modem- And ous situation. Compulcory reduc- 'e ately law speed, one is net sOeficec tien in the amount of wool for Slikely ta ruin a tire which goes . civilian purposes is necessary. In ,e fiat or blows out when the car is By addition, many more sheep are d in operation.. Side wali ruptures W C .Tc negded an Canadian farms and >caused by stones, broken pave- C.B.Tc ranges in order ta augment the ment, curbs, or railway tracks Optemetrist wool suppiy. can be eliminated bay lower speeds Eyeiught One million mare sheep are and caretul driving. SpecwJsist required by 1943. Sheep and The heavy use of brakes, quick Disney BIdg. lambs on famms in June, 1941, acceleration and the tact tumning<i > numbered slightly over 31/2 mii- of corners, which is assaciated op O- lion head, rather evenly divided with high speed driving, wastes ~ OshawVa- between Eastern and Western gasoline or rubber. Phone 1516 Canada. The minimum number of sheep and lambs aimed at for SHORTAGE 0F BACON Number 218 ail Canada in 1943 is 4 % million IFEARED an overali increase of roughiy _____I wouid consider that beredity 30 per cent. During 31 weeks ended May is one of the greatest influences Good ewes and ewe lambs 9th a total of 382,000,000 lb. of against improvernent, but by the chould be kept for breeding pur- bacon has been purchased under use of intelligence tests it is pas- poses. If Canada is to have one the present contract leaving 218,- ible ta a very great extent. ta million more sheep by 1943, every 000,000 lb. ta be purchased dur- ditterentiate between the heredi- usetul ewe and every good ewe ing the remaining 21 weeks, tary and acquired conditions. By îamb, particuiarly the early anes, wbich is a periad of ight hog se grading it is alu the more pas- shouid be saved fan the owner's marketings. If the contract is ta ible ta work with came degree flock or sold ta someane wba be filled within the 12 month of success rather than the work wishes ta increase hic holding or period and the full allowance for in vain, ta start a new tîock. domestic consumption used, an -Influence of parentage on vc h ttsa a enugn increase in hog marketings of tional fitnecs is realizeci hn anThe atesman bas ben urgin approximately 35 per cent wiuu be cyears According to local bheeed- required in the next 21 weeks as mature child, and by tracing back yes. ther ino brlanc lve compareci with the came perîod it would be considered essentiai esc that pas nobtr.nhofl îast year. eeyepctto fta give proper educationai train-stc h pybeer There seeyepcaino ing ta the expectant mother, ta a gooci increace in Western Can- realize the value of periodic at- ada, and altbough hog marketings tention at this time, and by se SIX DEALERS FINED in Eastern Canada have been doing bring the full period thoce running Aower than last year, cases that would otherwice be For vialating the Dairy Indus- higher marketings are expected premature. If for example the try Act regulatians, wbich re- in early mid-summer. In the 31 parents are in straightened cie- quires that ail retumnable ice weeks of the present contract cumistances and the young me- cream cans deliveredl ta etailers periaci Western bog marketings ther bas net the proper nourish. be neturned promptiy ta the own- were 17 per cent abave last year ment and necessities of lite it mnust er and be useci anly for ice cream while Eastern Canada was 12 per be expected the chilci will suffer and sherbet, six praprietors of cent below last year, giving a net aiso. premises were recently fined at increase of 3.7 per cent. (ta be continued) Montreal. In eacb case, return- able ice cream cans were held on -the premises and bad alsa been -used for holding other than dairy apraducts. Due ta the shortage of stin, it is imperative that ail cans -1be retumned promptly. The char- 1ges were laid by offîcers of the fDairy Praducts Division, Market- Sing Service, Dominion Depart- .ment of Agriculture, Ottawa. THE WORK 0F THE BOMBERS By R. J. Deaehman British bombing of German objectives is net a hit and miss attair. It is the resuit of caretul and detailed study made with detinite knowledge of the facts, planned ta do the greatest pas- sible good or harm, depending on the point of view. Planes go out on sea patrol each morning looking for Axis ships. They have net been asleep on this job. Over 6,000,000 tons of Axis shipping has been sunk since the opening of the war. In the Medi- terranean, they helped ta cripple Rommel's effort in North Atrica- at least, made it as expensive as possible. Assume that one ship is lest out of three sent, then more men must be employed in Italy in shipbuilding. When they are doing this, they are net producing armaments, food, or other essen- tials of Italian lite. Net anly are the ships lest but also the cargoes and trained crews. In other words, the air force reduces the efficiency ot Italian effort ta a lower and lower level. Needless ta say, the sinkings are net the product of air force effort alone - the navy is on the job. The air farce is mighty beiptul, hawever, espe- cially in reconnaissance. Italy is now feeling the pinch due, in part at least, ta this joint effort. Along the Atlantic caast, from Spain ta Trondheim, the same process gaes on. Axis coastal ships are sunk. They are driven off the ocean. Docks are attacked, sup- plies destroyed, submarine nests smashed. The harbor refuges of the under-sea boats became un- safe. In the circumstances, more pressure is placed on German raîlways, and shipping by rail becomes more costly- that is, it requires more men ta accomplish a given task. It helps ta reduce the labor supply and labor is scarce in Germany. The R.A.F. starts on the rail- ways. Focal shipping points, warehouses, marshalling yards, bridges, and everything connect- ed with the movement of goods, now receives attention. Germany has great railways. Wherever there are large railway systems there will be great railway yards, junction points where lines con- verge or cross and cars are trans- ferred trra one uine ta another. The R.A.F. attacks - cars are smashed, rails are broken and twisted, great holes are tomn in the tracks, freight sheds are de- stroyed. Men mnust stop work wbile the raid is on. Traffic is delayed. Same of it will be shifted ta other uines. Mare train miles may be needed ta reach a given point. The R.A.F. bas compelled the use of more men ta make repairs, ta run trains. German transportation has been disorgan- ized in this 'way. Complaints ot length of time required ta secure raw materials and ta mnove finish- ed praducts are cammon in Ger- many. The accident rate has in- creased. Always wben German workmen repair the damage, Bri- tish flyers tear it up again. It is for Germany a sisyphean task. The destruction of Baltic ports is especially important - it ties up German shipments ta thie army fighting Russia. German armament works ne- ceive attention. Factaries are smashed, schedules are deranged, equipment destroyed, time lest. In this work a widely varied pat- tern is followed. Tonight it may be a plant close ta Paris, tomor- row on.the shores of the Baltic, or again, in distant Czecho- Slovakia. Consider, for a moment, the problem presented ta Germany in these conditions. Night tighting tplanes mnust be distributed ta me- sist the bombing attacks. Anti- aircratt guns must be ready.' The factories are widely scattered. They may be prepared ta defend places wbich are net attacked. They may bold equipment for a time, then move it ta detend same other place which seems in great- er danger, only to tind that the place they have just lefthas been reduced ta ashes. Protection for every town strips the German front in Russia of tighting planes and anti-aircraft guns. Germany mnay try ta arrest the process by attacks on England, but the trou- ble is that Germany has 2,000 miles of front in Russia and ithousands of planes must be ready ta detend that front. It cannat be lett unpratected, even for a >day. Every plane over England is ione less an the Russian frant. Theà situation has changzed I a J £ I -i ITS TOO LATE THEN! WHILE. your home burns, you may wish you had carried more fire insurance. Before you have a loss, check up your policies with this agency. It 's not too late NOW. Je Je MASON & SON INSURANCE AGENTS Phone 681 Bowmanville DRYCLEANING IS - THRIFTY! MEN'S -SUITS 0 a . hold their amart tallored li es and wear longer ... when cleaned and pressed regularly Oshawa Laundry & Dry Cleanîng Company, Lmlted PHIONE 419 il ATOPSY-TUTRVY world seems right side up again when viewed by an angier tram the bank of a fast-fiowing Canadian stream or fram the prow of a canme on a tranquil Canadian lake. Nor does any form of recreation pay richer dividends in health at a timýe when physical fit- ness plays so vital a ole in war work. ('anadians are particularly for- t unate in the variety of fishing waters at their disposai and wide choice of species they contain. These range f ram giant Atlantic tuna and the west coast's figlting Tyee salmon ta tlhe scrappy 'muscalunge, piekerel, pike, bass, salmon, trout and othe f resh water favorites inhabiting Can ada's many inland lakes and streams. THURSDAY, JUNE 11, 1942 Preshyterial W.MS. of Peterboro District Held in Brighton Church Annual meeting ot the ee- those serving the Empire" were borough Presbyterial fWM.S. of given by Mrs. D. Ewart and Mrs. Presbyterian Church in Canada James 'Dutton. Worship service was held in Brighton May 26th. was taken by Y.W.A., Brighton, President Mrs. A. Glenn Thomp- led by Miss Hazel Atkinson, pre-, son presided. Devotions were tak- sident. Mrs. J. W. Foote, Sec. for en by Rev. H-. Kaye, Brighton, Y.W.A., Port Hope, reviewed and Mrs. Ian McLeod, President work for 1941 and gave a chal- of Brighton W.M.S., welcomed the lenge for 1942 service. An in- visiting Auxiliaries. spirational address was given by Minutes of îast annual meeting Miss Pelton. and January executive were read On motion of Mrs. Purvis and- by Miss F. M. Galbraith, Rec. Miss Harvey, thanks was ez kend-* Sec'y., and correspondence by ed ta church managemenManfd Mrs. John Storie, Corresponding ladies of St. Andrew's, BrigEton, Sec'y. and toalal who contributed in any Three resolutions brought in by way ta make the meeting a suc- executive were adopted: (1) No cess. Autumn rallies or Sectional meet- Closing message was given by ing; (2) On account of war con- re-elected president and the meet- ditions restricting transportation, ing closed with the National An- hold only one meeting next year 'themn. and that at Peterboro in January; -isF .Glrih (3) No guest speakers for meet- -isF .Glrih ings. Presbyterial Press Secretary. Varlous Presbyterial and Aux- iliary Secretaries presented their reports and highlights were dis- cussed. Mrs. H. Morgan intro- duced the speaker, Miss Laura Pelton, Provincial Promotion Sec- retary, who brought recommen- dation from Council stressing co- ordination of ail church groups, improvement of quality of meet- ings, increased membership. Mrs. C. E. Blewett read report of nominating committee and Miss Pelton installed these offi- cer for 1942-43: Hon. Presidents-Mrs. C. Head, Colborne, Mrs. David Ewart, Co- bourg; President-Mrs. A. Glenn ______________ Thompson. Campbellford; Vice- -______________ Presidents-Mrs. L. T. McLaugh- lin, Bowmanville, Mrs. C. Meikie- john, Warkworth, Mrs. Jas. Dut- ton, Peterboro, Mrs. Harry Mor- gan, Peterboro, Miss Gertrude Harvey, Cobourg; Recording Sec- retary-Miss Flora G a l b r a i t h, Bowmanville; Corresponding Sec. -Mrs. John Storie, Campbellford; Treasurer - Mrs. F. H. Rowan, Peterboro. Mission Band Sec-Miss Eliza- beth Walker, Peterboro; Girls Or- ganizations Sec.-Mrs. D. Ruther- ford, Bailieboro; Young Women's. Sec.-Mrs. J. W. Foote, Port Hope; Home Helpers Sec.-Mrs. J. M. Simpson, Lakefield; Students and Exchange Sec.-Mrs. T. W. Chap-* lin, Lakefield; Library Sec.-Mrs. Thos. T. Tough, Cobourg; Litera- " ture Sec.-Miss E. Feir, Cobourg; Welcome & Weltare Sec.-Mrs. H'làrold Tate, Millbroak; Supply Sec.-Mrs. Wmn. Purv is, Port Hope; Assistant Supply Sec.- Mrs. John Brown, Port Hope; Life Membership Sec.-Miss Nina Da- vidson, Peterboro; Glad Tidings Sec.-Mrs. C. J. Carlaw, Wark- worth; Press Sec.-Mrs. E. H. Howson, Peterboro. Historian-Miss F. M. Galbraith, Bowmanville; Finance Comm- Mrs. A. Mclntyre, Peterboro, Mrs. C. Meikiejoho, Warkworth, Mrs. L. T. McLaughlin, Bowmanville; Members without Porttolio-Mrs.g- C. E. Blewett, Peterboro, Mrs. J. W. Steinkrauss, Peterboro, Mrs. J. W. Rork, Norwood, Mrs. J. W. Smart, Peterboro. At the evening session prayers for "Peace" and "Prayers for