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Canadian Statesman (Bowmanville, ON), 14 Sep 1950, p. 10

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4. - t p Rura * f te reearh bing carried on Ru a Nimisier Cives arnpressions atba'th Coleges. This covered .U.N. £o Aid idima aI Korean Conflilet everything from hlgher produc- I * Ii tion and better quality ini plants ours in griultu e a O»à,Ce and livestock ta the everlastn- ourse iu thecuumurevaiO.ABC of rachinery, raders wifl recail we gave Agriculture. and the solution of the iarmer's p yin these columns several Somebody may say: "<The_ ecanomic problem!. ago to a special course needed it," and somebody elseé Tribute must be paid ta the ïstudy of agriculture ta be may say: "Why don't they stick St f isac the O.A.C. h 't the Ontario Agricultural te their job of saving souls?" nteirtpaeheShl The ttiudeof t lastonewauld obviously have been mi- C ,Guelph, for rural min- Teattd fa es n ai hspoic. sw r iitr a obnto o siblewithout the camplete -ths povice.As e ae mniser as cobintio ofca-aperation of the College pro- s n -Mre that any ri'fnisters in these. He felt that many, in fact fessars who, after ail, had ta do~ D County saw1l fit ta at- most, rural clergymen knew next the lecturing and demonstrating. 1 t . Wunique course we areî to nothing about the problems ofi And in the second place, how 1 ' 10l pass on ta aur readers farming -\~ the problems faced by welte ddterjo'TeX sng article in the Mid- their people every day of their were faced with a task that was 1 e res wrtte by ev.livs. nd et h alo flt hatenaugh to make the ordinary man KReynalstionta if e a ore in Agt riclture wt !tremble - that of making agri.. 2 ,,elaion o svera Re- hadlvwhat 'vas needed.cutrlsviebh nrsig fÉmiwies in Darlington In spite of this,, however, he and profitable ta clergymen. But hiV) on his comments and went ta the Summer School for they succeeded remarkably well. f tins of this course, which Rural Clergy at Ontario Agricul:- Right at the beginning Pro- *'~e first of its kind ta be tural Callege and he is mighty fessar Ruhnke got aur attention. IVithout an exception. the conservation was a matter of summer, rural ministers other 75 priests ani ministers stewardship. That xvas right Up ests fram aill over Ontario who attended the School felt aur alley. sa ta speak. For ste- '0.schaol ta learn about the saine way. They were wardship means, in plain English, Wite thse arMed farces acting on behalf of the United Natio9w là aniazed that lectures on thse responsibility ta Gad. Rracniu hi fot o esals ecUN a lo ae Science and Art of Agricul- Sa Proafessor Ruhnke told recotnetireftsa.esablspaeU.laslstae turecoud besa nteestig u tha wehumn bengsare measures ta relleve the suffering of millions of civillans left homeles. and sa profitable ta men who rEesponsible ta God far the as a resuit af the conflilt. Here, Dr. Kamil Idil, representative of NATURE UNSPOILED had na Intention of farming. way we use the resources of Turkey ta the U.N. Commission an Korea (leit> vis a refuges And don't think they just had a nature, the most Important of center at Pusan, accompanied by Dr. M. Lee (riglit), Korean inter- holiday! whîch is the sai. He brought preter of the Commission and a policeman of thse Repubio of Korea. Some of them had looked for- thse matter right home ta us _______________________________ -ward ta the week as a sort of in aur own language - and * i,,restfui time in ver-y pleasant with na effort! surroundings, and with excellent But the Professors didn't ga au t*Il '4 meals - it obviausly wasn't Lent! of their way ta point maraIs o r Cla ke Council Sets Hourly Raies But any wha thought of taking give a religious turu ta, their sub -kg n ~~; - thirgs easy were in for a sur- jects just because they wereU L b r om UCt ac -. From 2 p.m. on Monday after- wisely ]et their subjccts speak for ______ noon tintil naan on Saturayth sev.Thyetotimy Clarke Township Cauncil met gineer an the work ai the Sixth th ose clergymen (unless they ta show us facts, important, fund- Sept. 5th with Jas. T. Brawn be- Line, the manies formally appra- ~,.skipped classes - and that was amental facts. But if the myster- ing the only absentee. priated for the Hale-Stapleton vervj rare) listcned to lectures, or ieIneprietlpat-re-jl discussing the road and dam -~watched demonstrations and mav- ing or "the balance in nature" led1 washaut last spring at the Ca- ra adbe:set ig pictures, or toured buildings, ta the thought of the Creator, a perative. it xvas learned that the! Raad Voucher for the manth 1felds, pastures and experimental they weren't af raid ta follaw that1 water-rights had been sold by'thei totalled $5,689.38, and up ta date plats, maorning, afternaan and ev- far. Ca aperative ta the Dept. af '$49,000 of the $51,000 road ap- YOR T ROET ening. Sametimes flie lecturers startled ILands and Farests. The Reeve propriatian had been spent. YOURSTO PR TECT Thev heard nearlv thirtv lec- us with their statements. as when jcanltacted C. Allin and learned! Twa bylaws were passed, one turcs, ranging over such subjects Professar Knox said that they that the Co-operative is now us- ta forni the Orono Volunteer Fire -%e MARSH MAWK is common as "The Soils We Inherit." -Econ- cauld milk cows in the dairy ing elec tricitx' and would have Brigade and the other asking the Je 1. nIeadows, marshes and omic Problenis of Agriculture," barn one morning and have them no use for a dam for water power. Dept. of Highwas ta canstruct ad.With a long "Livestock Production," "T he in South America in time faor Mr. Ali n asked that an.' decision "NO Parking From Here ta an ogwns he shows Place of Bee-Keeping in Agricul- ri mlking before breakfast the next!b e withhied until a meeting could Corner" signs, 50 feet fram the ý'OP OsWites, ur." They toured 'the laborator- mrning! behl fteC-perative Ex- inteZsectin of Main and Miii tdcosiuu ht up ies of the variaus departments of Sametimes they amazed us ecutive. streets. tc she glides Iow over bath the Agricultural College and with such figures as Prafessor Aoud$,70sstîainta rnoPlcTutesrue- t1 bgs H etsmieras the Veterinary Callege. Downing gave us regàrding the the Township by the Gardon cd the township cauncil tai make ,end snakes, and shauld be They saw thse three opera- vast changes in methods af -pro- Young Construction Ca. for the a more definite decision cancern- fully protected. Ing rooms for animais and duction. He pointed out that in overhead shavel. Road superia- ing construction af the Milîson witnessed a major oneration 1830 it required 55.7 man-hours tendent met Mr. Young and he bridgç so that a water supply on a Dalmatian female. They ta produce an acre of wheat, and hoped ta have this matter cleared tank èould be constructed for fire YOU S 0eNJO saw a Boston terrier female îwtS 1950 it requires 1.5 man- up shortly. The machine is li prevention on the hili west af the eoming out of tise anaesthetie hours. eygo dto. new bridge location. Townsh .ip lf (qsafter another major operatian Sometimes we were amus- vr odcniin ceaserean section, no less!). ed, as when Prafessor Ross Clerk claimed the assessor is has authorized the purchase af M-aShe cried most tearfully Cavers was handîing a meeting with same trouble in steel neccssary in the construction THE CARLING BREWERIES LIMITED white a nurse held her paw sqiiawkingglien, painting out taxing dogs. Iu about five per af the bridge. --WATERLOO, ONTARIO and stroked iser head. that this one was a cuit, and cent af the owners claiming dogs. The hourly rates for township t 0 »43CARLINrle DI IOC They were given lessons on added: "Cuits always com- it is feît that mare dogs are own- work was set at 70c for labour; how ta cull hens and judge live- plain - and that goes for ed than are bcing registered. 75c for operators and 85c for stok 1vosrvdteeta other species than poultry!" This trouble is being experienced aoperator mechanics. ___________________________________________________ One thing mare about the staff l thaertonshipstitud samu e el An estimate on the cost of the members w-ha lectured ta uis. ta tre tiuesol ecnstruction at Janes' crossing at iWithaut an exception tîiey were 'taken by the council. 'Lots Il ta 14 and 15 an the Brok-i 1 Christian gentlemen wha were During August onlv fiv.e sheep en Front has been set at $1,874.50. unusuall.v friendly and sympath- 'vere killeci w'h;ch ishiow-,s a Con- The couincil is recon-mending that1 fetie in their point of view. And siderable reduction aver other this work lie campleted in 1951. they seemed ta enjov the mweek mnh.Toco~ eeso as much as we did. WVe felt that.which wcre- believed ta be mo- the O.A.C. is a mightv good place'lesting sheon an M. al i-as much because of 1Iheh hecchar o av ~~~ ~~~ ~acter of the Staff as because <of met wt u oni ahv r » ~~~ v their brains, and they've gat lots wokdn o hi oad so tlîat of them. it could ho snowplouglîed thîis ,zIIt i, passible that saie nen will coming winter. This road had ANOTHER say: "This was aIl very fine, but been greatly improved by grad-4 what good did that week ai ing, this suraimer and the con- School do the rural clergy?" cession north was left untauched. That is a difficuit question ta The entire couancil agreed that the X E I answer - about as difficult as approaches should be completed, the general question of the value esîîeciallv' since the remainder of lqA]lflf BO LER ERGof education. But right off it the road is in excellent condition. can be said that those mninisters The road superintendent stated Here's a really stylisi are flot going ta start advising that a bulldozer w'ould be needed that adds ta >ear-'rou opvavmetist farmers how ta farm. for this xvork and that the cost enioyment. Let yoi EYESEXA INE - LASES ITTD ,The Summer School gave min- of fixing both ends of the road Ford-Monarcb D EYSEA INDGASE ITD isters an understanding af the would likcly amouat ta $1,000.00. Mercury-Lincoln-Meti OFFICE HOTJRS prohlems of the people they Deputy Reeve Lawery thought it. demionstrate how ti Monay o Sturay 10a.m ta6 pm.serve, and enabled them ta sec foolish ta have a good road which Visor protect your >' Mnda toSatrda - 1 a.. t 6 .m.how science has been put ta work was blockcd off at either end. It Closed Wednesday Ail Day ta hclp thcm. It enabled them was indefinite whethcr the coun- alsa ta sec the relative importance cil could do the job and receive EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT ; of v'arious agricultural activities. the 50%, subsidv. l-o\wever, the Fac example. it was pointed out council dccided to finish the con- à2-.'ivision St. Phone 2024 that while the haney produced st'uction on this road and at the in Cnad ha a vlueai nlysame time eut expeases in other ____________________________________________________________ $2.000,000, the v'alue of bee-kecp- w~s5 htasbiycudh ing in the production of claver received. This picce of work had seed alone would be many times been pramised three \'ears aego, that figure. but due ta an under estimation Ather factors, too, were gîven by the Dept. of Highw' 's en- their place in relation ta the farmer's job - such things as marketing, disease-control, plant breeding, hame ecanamnics, and Y U C N D M ark -fi e S e ilID a 1 yen the impravement and beau- Don'-t be upset ... Call for SANITONE Dry Cleaningl1 0 Stubborn Spots and Stains Out Like Magic 0 More Dirt Removed, Even Irigrained Soil 0 Returns Original Shape and D>rape to Suits Ob No Odor-Perspiration, Cleaning Odor Gone Ob Cous No More Than Ordinary Dry Cleaning Cleaners & Dyers - Laundries PHONE: OSHAWA ZENITH 13000 Loeal Agent:- HOOPER' S LADIES' WEAR The iollawing itemn frarn The Brampton Canservator will in- terest many ai aur readers as Bruce Beer is a well knawn Dur- ham Caunty boy, corning from Bethaay district, and was anc oif Ed. Summers' star Junior Fai-mers back in the early days ai Ed's s.tewardship as Agricultural Represeatative. The ar t iclie reads: Peel County Junior Farmers gathcred at the Junior Farmers' building for a presentatian party ia honour af Mc. and Mrs. Bruce Beer and family. Mr. Beer is re- tiring as Agricultui'al Represen- tative ai Peel Counat about the middle oif next moath. and the Juniors taok this opportunity ta pay tribute ta the man wha has given them snch valuable assist- ance and inspiration durîng the Past seven and a hait years. On behali af the Juniors, Keith Shaw,. past president ai the COLnaty arganization, read the presentation address and the pres;idents ai the lacal clubs pre- senté,d Mr. Beer with a desk, swvlchair and an engravcd writing set. Mrs. Beer was pre- sented with a bouquet af red ros- es by Helen Nesbitt, County Junior Institute President. Bath exprcssed their thanks and ap- preciatian and pramised the Juniors continucd support in their activities, although, Mr. Beer saîd, it w'ould flot be in the ca- pacity Of agricuitural representa- tive. REPORT RIGHT AWAY TO Room 2019, "C" Building, Lisger St., OTTkWA, Ort. No. 5 Personnel Depot, Art ilery Park, Saot St., KINGSTON, OnW. No. 6 Personnel Depot, Chorley Park, Douglas Drive, TORONTO, Ont. No. 7 Personnel Depot, Wolseley Barracks, Elizabeth Street, LONDON, Ont. Depots open 8 A.M. te 10 P.M. doilly. A2038-0 Brins cetficales of osead odumoele.with yew Rural Correspondent correspondent has ta andie theni ]Relaztes Experiences permîssible ta describe the wed-ý ding gown. for fear ai offending, .neporting the News uniess it is the conventional Iong oiei, wîth vieil, and then this musut Here's an Item clipped fram a not be omitted. Some couples doý We stern Ontario weekly news- not want ta divulge whcrc they paPer In which. a country carres- are spending the hancymoon, for pondent (Gqd bless thcm!) gave what yaung girl bas nat dreamed sorne of! ber experiences as an af spending it in Hawaii, only ta imnportant member ai the editari- end up with a short trip ta the ai st!aiober local newspaper. nearest city? And when it cornes, No daubt same of aur Statesman to telling where the bride and correspondents could relate sim- groom will make their home, of- ilar experiences and maybe a ten that is struck off, for thereby few of!,aur readers have like might be another' cause for em- views ta thase described in the barrassment. Many readers may article. It is aur experience, of think that these are imaginary over 40 ycars as an editor, that problems, but just ask any rural veryv few people abject ta hav- corespondent about trying ta get ing their names in prînt, provid- news af wcddings! Some people ing the item is favarable. The go so far as ta abiecting ta hav- article foliows: îng anything pertaining ta the mInt>almstevery small com- event published, especially the either a local paper, or sameane Sa much for those wha are who sends in the news ai the dist- leery about having their names rict ta a larger centre wherc it befare the public! is publishcd. Because these am- ateur reporters are aten the A Statesman Want Ad will selI brunt af unkind criticisrn from articles no langer nceded, and citizens who da nat want their passibly pay for a month's ail or affaîrs publîcized, thîs article is a îoad ai coal. written in hopes that it will make the lot of the rural correspond- cnt a wee bit casier. Any man or warnan who under- takes ta keep his or her home town "in the ncws" is merely do- ing it as a public service and cer- tainly not for the maney involv-~1 cd. Par m6st small weekly bnews- papiers give only a free subscrip- tion ta their paper for this - ser -_________________ vice with perhaps a box ai choc- olates or other srnall giit at Christmas Urne. One af the f irst difficulties that confronts a rural news correspon- A dent is the ascertaining ai the P R U narnes ai people who do have a O P R U genuine aversion ta seeing their names in print. This is very dif- A' ficqlt ta do. for aiten people do nat know what they want. them- selves. Take the case of anc family; the members ai which W ar Sur their names appeared in the news. and thev did nat ncglect to tel' F c o y C e me about it. However, when anc ai their number died, they pest- 24 Division St. ered the lufe out ai me until I wrote up a proper obituary. One wvriting did not satisiy, and I had ta rc-write it five times before it AiM nsPa s- was ta their Iiking. Then, they AlM nsPns-S wcre sa pleased, that they got me ta order a dozen copies ai the pa- Eisenhower Jac Per in. which it appearcd 50 that they could send them ta relatives and many other articles1 Anather party took exception ta my rcporting the whereabouts at reducc ai the members ai his family. Ap- parently. they did not want- BUY AN people ta knaw how much they travelled. This was durîng relie' years, and no doubt they thaugh' it wouid affect their cheques!]A1 But whcn ane of them got mac- Ail Ci ried. thev insisted that I try to get big hcadlines in the 'el$2 5oalo evnwpac when rcporting the. exnt! f idnga ua Speaking ai weddings. a rural g i '~ -i k - ~ FORD ACCESSORY OR VISOR~o<~ shaccessory oud driving ur nearby Dealer or tor > Dealer bis Exterior r yca tram WAICH ,ÏrAAI 9 it r s !ITY WEEH AT - rp1us and .arançe Store Bowman ville bis - Socks - Jackets ckets - Raincoais tua numerous ta mention ced prices. ND SAVE NTS Colours 85c quart sun glare .. ; helps keep snaw, sicet and "bug splatter" off the windshicld. It's a Genuize Ford Accessory . ; it's guaranteed .. ; it's quality-built, Iow-priced, and available ini your choice of colors. FORD- MONARCH DEALERS - DLURSFRON. SCOASIT O COAST4 tAERCURY. LINCOLN-METEOR O EA IERS1 Meo Mr %J K5'Bu, r M KE1UD M 1-4 U t D DMV K 1 t D 0 MORE THAN TALK ABOUT >V CANADA NEEDS MEN TO TRAIN AS FIELD OUNNERS IN THE ROYAL CANADIAN ARTILLERY Defensively andi offensively, artillery forms a soiid backing inth operations of the modern army. Keeping pace with the speed * and flexihility of the Canadian Armv, it includes airborne and air transportable artiiicry and many other of tihe nev dev elop- ments of modern warfare. There's important work for young men in the Royal Canadian Artillery. It cails for yaung men who are quick-thinking and physically fit. YOU ARE ELIGIBLE IF YOU ARE- 1. A Canodian citizen or British sublscf. 2. 17 to 29 years of oge. 3. Single. 4. Ables b meet Army test requltements. 5. Willing to volunteer for service unywhero. 00 ACTIVE - SERVE YOUR COUNTRY by strengf honing Canada's Arm.d forces todaoy to baUld up the defonc.s againat aggression ev.rywhem 1 Il' i' ) Join the CANADIAN ARMY ACTIVE FORCE Now! TMM., SEPTEMBER ý 14, 1930 -1 r , TIM CAMADLAN STATESMM BoVnJANV=Z. ONTAim Finest guaranteed work dans lby experts. Prompt service. Free inspection. Bring in yaur watck. DUraPower Mainsprlng* for ELGIN OWNERS AvoUable for relaomew n a lMade cf " Iv"mt&L. Ptent .dag' Jewellery 43 King St. W. Phone 463 BOWMANVILLE i KiF Fnun. Pà PT ç . & Pin Arrr çcnc> ir. c op, - »q2"T"ey ý çà 1 ftKA

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