Clarington Digital Newspaper Collections

Canadian Statesman (Bowmanville, ON), 1 Aug 1957, p. 4

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

PAGE FOUTR TH CA A" QpA o.L A" f ftI.« - - LMIW TAMUN, BOWMANVMLL, ONTARIO flic_________________? IDAY, AtMG78C1 EDII OR)ALS Summer TV Programs Terrible Let Down *Much has -been written and said about «le influence - pro and con - of televis- ion on the hurnan race. There are those Who contend that TV has turned evervone into such avid w-,atchers that books- are no longer read and the art of conversation hias completely dîed out. Anyone who cornes up against sum- mer TV might well disclaim these ac- cusations on the rightful theory that the programns on TV are so desultory and un- interesting they are forced to turn the set off. They even take on following other pursuits, such as reading some of the many fine books laid away on the bookshelves during the winter when TV programs were Worth watching. Or they go off to the beach and the mountains for summer vacations and relaxation. This is not surDnising when yau con- sider the suimmer TV programs. Most of them seem to be old films or "Premieres" of 1944 movies, or films of programs we saw during the winter and didn*t like then - or westerns, hilîbillies, murder mystenies and vaudeville acts that should have been discarded in the planning stage. But watching some of these programs we xvonden if the programs were planned at aIl. Maybe the planners themselves have taken the summer off and are relax- ing comfortably under the assumption that everyone else has too. They must have forgotten that with air conditioned living rooms it is often more pleasant and com- fortable to stav at home these hot nights. With summer TV, however, it looks as if bridge and a fexv other old-fashioned pas- times might make return engagements and let the TV set enjoy a restful and quiet summer. We hope the program planners will benefit by their rest this summer and wilI have extraordinany good entertainment ready for us next winter. Hurrah! Britain to Export Devonshire Cream Since the Second World War our local farmers have pnactically gone out of mak- ing that delectable delicacy of Devonshire Cream which has been s0 popular with many of our cîtizens through the years. However, if we can believe what a United Kingdom trade paper says on this subject we will still be able to buy this shipped direct from "dear old Devon," due to a new process of freezing the cream for export brade. Don't take our word for this welcome statement. Here is what the English paper says, copied in the On- tario Milk Producer journal: Devonshire cream, long a favourite dish, especially with 'fruit, throughout Britain, may soon become a world-known delicacy, even in the hottest climate. A firm in Newton Abbot, in the south- western English county of Devon ibseif, have developed a method of quick-freez- ing Devonshire clotted cream sa that ib can be exported in a frozen state. The first consiguments are ready for dispatch to British Columbia, Singapore and Kuwait and further trial consignments are to be sent to other parts af the world, ooa. The Newton Abbot firm dlaim to 1bg the first in-Britain to quick-freeze Devon. shire clotted cream, which they scald anc dlot to a consistency of more than 60 pei cent butterfat content. The frozen cream is fed into attractivE plastic five and t-w,ç ounce containere which are packed into corrugated boxe5 for home or overseas sale. Provided the containers remain in sub-zero refnigeration Up to the point ol sale, the cream will keep indefinitely and can be made ready for consumption by defrosting for thnee to four hours. Langer packs, containing one or two pounds of cneam will be produced far expont to hotels and restaurants. e Ld re 'S d and y. Distant Past 0 PrOM Te Statesman Files 25 YEARS AGO <1932> 49 YEARS AGO (1908) Rev. Gordon S. Jury, pro- It was Reeve Tole's "spirited fessor at the University of Rail- bay mare" which Chief Jarvis goon, Burma, son of Mýr. J. H. rode in the torchlight proces- Hl. Jury, addressed the local sion for Sgt. Frank H. Morri*s Rotary Club an Burma. and other Bisley winners. F. t Chautauqua season gat un- C. Pethick,-chairman of the de- der way in the big brown tent coration committee was given t on the Public School graunicis great credit. In the midst of r with a play called "Newv festivities the fire bell rang. Brooms". Dr. A. S. Tilley's stables and The Second Canadian Batta- driving bouse were on fire and lion, commanded by Col. L. T. the crowd dispersed, bringing McLaughlin, took part in the an abrupt end to the program. consecration of new colours The Statesman bought The of the Governor General's Foot Bawmanville News on the open Guards at Ottawa. The Foot market. The News was to be Guards with the Peterborough continued as a separate publi- Rangers perpetuated the Sec- cation with Geo. W. Jameg as ond Battalion. The aid colours ed1tor and publisher. of the Second were tern- Mr. W. L. Nicholis was accu- porarily removed from St. pying bis new store in the Bea- Paul' s Church for the occa- ver Block. Mr. Nicholîs started sion. in a sinali, way a littie over a Largest entry lists in the bis- decade previous, :and by 1908 tory of the Lawn Bowling had buiît up quite a large de-t Club, 24 rinks took part in a partment store.1 tournament here on Civic holi-,ý Bowling for Bowmanville in( day. a game against Oshawa werer W. Street was chairman of W. B. McMurtry, J. S. Moor- ' the Athletic Committee at the craft, F. J. Homne, John Lylet big Beach Field Day on Cîvie Harry Rice, J. J. Mason, J. H. I Holiday. Ed. Witheridge and McMurtry, Jas. Deyman.a Samn Glanville were winners inl Rice & Knight, Manufactur-t the horse shoe pitching contest. Jng Co. Ltd., Toronto, illumin-s Cox Motor Sales discontinu- ated A. L. Nicholîs new store i ed business here, confinng with acetylene gas "as bright their efforts to the Oshawa ga- as day". This was the tenth rage and service station, store in town illuminateci by The corner store of the for- this firm. f mer Star Building incarporat- News froin the Beach-Mrs.'I eci in the Jury Jubiiee Build- Geo. W. Grant received a ca- f ing was leased ta Miss Therese blegram telling of the safe Murphy andi Mrs. Frank Oke arrivai of ber h'usband in Scûjt- s who opened the "Evelyn La- land. The beach ensign was t dies' Specialty Shop" there. hoisted. Probably many remern- P This is now Ted Woadyard's ber this ensign. a shop, corner of King and Sil- ________ _ ir ver. g At the Royal Theatre-Glor'a A country cannot subsist Swanson andi Ben Lyon in "In- well without liberty. nor liber- tu discreet .t wiho tyvihu itu e.Rou sseau ro Inferior Medical Care j cc in Canada's farrn workers have performing his prodigiaus part 11 been denied equal share with under circumnstances of sociolog- city dwellers in medical andi icai privation, hie said. social acivantages of the 20th Rural housing often is worseF century, a doctor lias told in many respects than the urban Canadian agriculturalists. slums "for wvhicli we hearF "We don't exactly state that constant demands for correction we regard the agricultural work.. andi same farm workers live in j er asa second-class citizen, we quarters hardly warranting the just hint it, Dr. Lawrence E. distinction of being calied sub- Ranta, assistant medical dîrector standard, Dr. Ranta said. of Vancouver General Hospital, The unsatisfactory living con- told delegates ta the annual con- ditions "must be reilected in the for vention of the A.gricultural health standard of rural popula- ti< Union of Canada. . tion. 1 roc He said rural dwellers often Dr. fianta said the delegates sei live in inferior accommodation must accept 'collective and %v andi have inferior medical and personal responsibility as pro- la: social care although "the founda- fessional agriculturalists for fail- fri tion of modern urban living ure ta bring attention ta the spr rests on the shoulders of the social and medical needs Of chl farmer. farmers and their familles and i "The farmer bas drifted into living conditions in rural areas. Trio Tt would be hard to imagine a more strîking example of the disruptive con- sequences of outmoded economic theories enshrined in anti-combines legisiation thati the recent U.S. Supreme Court decision in the Dupant case. In essence, the maj or- ity decision of the Supreme Court has rulcd that Dupont's holdings of General Matons stock constitute a violation of U.S. anti-trust laws, and thus tend to create a ruonopoly. Little wonder that in their dissenting opinions, Mr. Justice Burton and Mn. Jus- tice Frankfurter deplore the fact that the m'ajority decision ignores the only real and valid tests of whether a monopoly in fact exists, and whether as a result there- of there has been detniment ta the public interest. Both justices, in thein dissentîng opinion, point out that stock ownenship is nio test of whether or not Dupont en- joyed a preferential position lu comparison with othen suppliens, sa fan as General Motors was cancerned; that evidence show that the public had suffened detriment The Statesman received a press release this week to publicize the fact that the Niagara Gnape Festival Committee is in search of a new Grape King for the 2,500 grape growers of the Niagara Peninsula. This famous, but at present unknown pe'nsonality, will be invested with "The Badge of thie Kuights of the Vine" at the Grape Festival at St. Catharines on Sept. 28th. What attracted aur attention iu this news release, more than the above par- ticulars, was the fact that a former well known Bowmanville boy (uow a full grown handsome man), Oliver L. Bradt., You have no doubt noted that editors in writing editorials, use the pronoun "4we" referring to their singular selves. The C.W.N.A. bulletin gives the reason: "An editor is one xvho reacis news- papers, selects iniscellany, writes articles on ail subjects, sets type, reads proof, folds papers and somleti*mes carrnes them, prints joli work, runs on errancis (cuts wood, xvorks in the garden, talks to al his patrons xvho call, patiently receives blamne for a thousand things that neyer were and neyer can be doue. gets little znoney, 'las scarce timne and materials to riatisfy his hunger, or to enjoy the quiet Establisned 1854 with gçhich is incorporated rhe Bowmanville News, The Newcastle Independent and rhe Orono News IO3rd Veaz of Continuous Service to the Town af Bowmanviile and Durham Couriiy AN INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER SLJBSCRIPTION RATES $4.00 a Yeuz, strictly in advance $5.00 a Yeai in the Unted States Authorizeu as lsecond Clixs a IU Post Oifice tDopartment. Ottawa Publishod by THE JAMES PUBLISHING COMPANY Bowmanvilje, Ontario GEO. W. JAMES. EDITOR because of Dupont's holdings of GM stock~ is lacking, and that competition, produci by produiie, and market by market, is flot necessarily adversely affected by merger or by stock holdings. The case is of importance for Canad- ians mainly because ib undenscores the futility of applving out-moded nineteenth century economic theories of perfect com- petition to the complex of modern in- dustny. The outcome can only be bo de- prive the public of the economies of ef- ficiency and of lange scale production, and to do a monstrous injustice to industry. To penalize industry and bo punish industrial leaders and investons for ac- tions which, fan from working against the publie interest, serve ta provide consumers \vith better products at lowen cost, makes no economie sense. The U.S. Supreme Court decision will undoubtedlv evoke a clamor for revision of the anti-combines legisiation - a nevision no less needed lu Canada than lu the United States. son of Mr. and Mrs. E. P. Bradt, now ol Guelph, is to be one of the distinguished judges at this gay festival. Funthermore Oliven's nomenclature is listed as "Vinti- culturist." If that name has auything ta do with the testing or sampling of cham- pagne, for which Niagara vineyards have become famous, we will expeet the com- mittee to send the editor a generous sample of this sparkling beverage in ne- turn for this free publiclty "burp" about the festival. Aiyxvay, Oliver. here's ta your health with a glass of good Old Durham County apple eider! Of natuire's s\veet restorer, sleep and es- teems himself peculiariy happy if lie is not assaulted aud battened by some un- prncipted deniagogue who loves puppet shows aud hires the nabble with a treat of brandy eider ta vote hlm into sorne petty office. "A man wl-o does ail this and mare, riot het'e reconded. vou will know must be a rather busy animal; and as he per- forms bhe wonk of so many different pensons he mnay justly be supposed their represeutative, and to have an undisput- able right, when speaking of hirnself, ta use ail plural number. and ta say 'we' on ail occasion and ilu ah places." Anyway, that's a fairly good reason for the 'edîtor usiug "we" when wniting his thoughts from bis funrowed brow. Indispensable Sometime, wheu \'ou're feeling important, Sometime, wheu your ego's in bloom, Sometime, \vheu you take it foi' granted You're the best qualified man lu the roorn, Sometime, when x'ou feel that your going Wouild leave an unfillabie hale, Just follow this simple instruction, And see ho\v it humbles your soul. Take a bueket and f111 it with waten. Put vaux' baud lu it up ta the wrist. Puill it out; and thie hale that's remaining Ta measure of how -'ou'll be missed. You ma '-vsplash ail you please when you flt C' i eo au stir up ail the waters galone. 13f tr and you'1l find in a minute, That it iooks quite the same as before. T'l mor-al iu this quaint example ,r,: D utihie best vou eau; lAc or j> Io 'uslbut remember- Tbere's nio indispensable man. -Anonymous. Test Bridge Vibrations With Special Machine Van stone's ates High Vanstone's Bridge has been limit that can safely t: ih Included as one of the specimens on a bridge. At the mornen~~ in a province-wide study ta load limit is determined by the determine why bridges vibrate appearance of the bridge. under heavy loads. This study Since certain classifications I is being mnade by students of bridges have a definite vibrai Queen's and University of Tor- frequency it will be an onto in ca-operation with the matter ta determine the classi i.. Department of Highways. cation of a bridge by the vibra.. Last Thursday, two engineers- tions. to-be fram Queen's. R. W. Cale- Vibrations, the twa students fieldi andi V. K. Handa, set up painted out, are nat nece»âarîly a vibrograph machine ta dis- a sign of weakness in the bridge. caver the vibratory re-action of Cracked pavement would be a- the Bawmanville structure. mong the first signs, they ex. In their tests ta date, the two plained. students have campleted 21 The students are also able to bridges and of these Vanstone's measure the dip af deflectian a has stood second for the least bridge takes wben a heavy number of vibrations. vehicle passes aver. Thus by Not taa much is knawn of measuring the dip it is easy ta vibrations but the resuits of the detemmine the wèight of! the study in Ontaria will be carre- truck. I4ted with those in the United Next summer the twa civil States ta obtain a clearer undar- engineering students have a sim- standing a! the subject. iliar interesting projeet in mind One definite use of the vibra-~ as thev are planning ta load un~ tion test is ta ascertain the load a bridge until it fals. More Working in '57, More Money Earned Notwithstanding an expected "Further investigation sham rise ia the number of unemploy- that, in the same four month ed in Canada during 1957, there will probably be mare people at comparison, two-thirds o! th work and earning considerably female entrants were more the more maney this year than lasï, 45 years o! age wbile the r( says the Bank o! Mantreal Bus- mrainder were in the 25-44 ag * mess Review for June, just group; there was actually a n( issued. decline in those under 25 yea: Enttle "Pape a Wok"of age." states the B of M, ad( .e this month's review states that' ig at thecreaswas thenly ae while the increase in Canada's smlencrease te numer [s labor farce appears ta be out-wmn b wr snle ES stipping the demand for wark: indication tht there is a tend .d ers, it does not necessarily foi- encv for wives ta re-enter tih l ow that there wiil be any sub- labor force wben their childrej *stantial surplus o! labar in reach maturity. aCanada this year. Deeline in ýn "The seasnal dip in employ- Agriultural EmPloyment nment that takes place duming the "In ail but one of the postwal winter manths in Canada ap- years, there bas been a dedlint le pears ta have been somewbat ia agricultural employment,' nmore pranaunced this year than the revîew observes, paintinj lakst and iIndications are that the out that last year's average o, -early sping pick-up was same- 773,000 persans working or -what less vigaraus,"' the B o! M farms was 45,000 less than ir Ck observes, adding that, between the previous Yean and mre.thar s mid-October andi mid-February, 400,000 fewer than in 1946. -the number of Persans with jobs While it is likely that there fell by 312,000 compareci with a wili be a further significant ex. Ydecline af 261,000 in the cor- pansion in the labar force, the responding period a year earlier. 'review states, "the trends in em. In the following two months ta Ployment during the early mid-April, the number grew by mnontbs of this year and tbe s anly 80,000 campareci with fragmentarv information an bus. 110.000 in the samne period oo!imess activity during the *s 1956.- few weeks indicate that the.)Qe. Painting out that this year's mand for labor may flot grow trendi of employmeat bas belen ta the saine extent as it did, in~ in marked contrast ta the ex- 1956. pansion o! early 1956, the review "It does nat necessarily W says, "This tmend, in conj1unction from this that tbere wiil be apny with a continued growth in the substantial surplus o! labor, in total labar force, bas resuiteci in Canada," says the B o!f >1 a rise in unemployment" ing 'that, while there The B o! M observes that, more people in search of ern- during the past two yea rs, there ployment, their number will bave been unusually large ad- probably be smaller than in ditions ta the labor farce, which, 1955 and certainly smalier than during the first four montbs of in 1954. 1957, had growa ta an average "But the acute shartage of a! 5,711,000 persans, an increase labor that was characteristic of a! 171,000 aver the like period many parts o! the Canadian of 1956. economy a year ago,"' the re- Theme seems ta have been a view cancludes, "bas undaubted.. number of changes underway in y become less prevalent and the Canadian working farce, tbe may show a futher easing as review states, possibly the most the year progresses." notable o! which bas occurred in __________ the female sector. Comprising less than one quartep of the The colichan, a small smelt. total labar force, the increase of like fish takeai in British Col- 73,000 women over a year earlier umbia rivers in the spring, is In the first four months' com- rich in nutritjous ail and ini pamison was nearly as large as former days Indians pulleci a that wbich occured inl the xick through its body andi bumu- number o! men. ed it like a candle. H in tsfor Next Heat Wave By the time this is Printed we rnay be picking metaphorical icicles from, aur wbiskers, if we bave whiskers, but ail the same our research into the question o! meeting and beating a heat wave shoulci nat be lost ta aur reaci- ers - andi there will be other heat waves. There are many schools o! thought in this connectior.. It is indeed an amea af sharpiy- civideci opinion. We bave, for example, the rugged fellow wbo just refuses ta admit that a bumici 90 is bot. "Why". he says, "when I was in Malaya" - or Sumatra or paddiing up the Amazon - 'we laoked upon 110 in the shade as a cool dav". Sa be dans vest and coat, coilar and tie, goes jauntiiy out inta the noonday sun. la sbarpest coatrast is the chap stripped practicaliy ta the essentials, who mops bis brow and mummurs (men have beeni shat for less) «"Well is this botj enough for yau?" He endures1 the beat dumbly - like war and 'the H-bomb he feels there isi niothing he can do 4bout jt. 1 And lhere are many levelsi ad expedients withln these two extremes. One man keeps h 1windows closeci tightly on the theory that be can keep the heat out' another opens themn wide ta let in any vagrant breeze. One floods bis interior with so!> drinks and ice cream; another puts bis reliance on a tail glass filleci witb ice and a toucb af something from another sort af bottie. One gaes ia heavily for showers; another says tbey're no good, that the effort o! dressing inakes one warmerthan ever. That is the way it goes, and nobody wins an argument on these maters. One persan likes ta sit in the breeze o! a fan while another says that's a sure way o! getting a stif! neck. One goes on a diet o! salads and boil- ed eggs andi that sort of thing, wbile another sticks stoutly ta bis soup and steak. The fact is we find only ane respect in wbich there is pretty general agreement: that wamen bave the better o! it because thev can take off almost everyvtbin ,g without encauraging the dis- favor of their ueighbors or the attention of the Police-Ottawa Journal.11 Farmi ngToo Must Change Sol Sinclair, professor a! agr. cultural economics at the Uni versity o! Manitoba, says: "Thi farm problem is largely one o. uneconomic operations in tern' of size of business and typeý o! product produced. If rapié adjustments can be made ir these conditions aur agricul- ture may properly expecta better response froin !oreign buyers with impravement in income."l These heretical remarks come flot from Bay Street but fron the prairies: not from a tycoon but froin an expert who can- not be reproached with ignor- ance o! farm conditions or lack o! sympathy for the farmer's piight. The remarks are hereti- cal because tbey suggest tha Canadian farmers must pay attention ta world conditions. Tbey rua counter ta the firin. ly beld conviction of maay fam spokesmea tbat "everybody is out of step but us." Professor Sinclair suggests some immediate changes in agricultural policy ta help deal with' the problein o! wheat, wbich, as be points out, affects the profitability o! aill ther farin operations everywhere in Canada. He proposes (1) an ag- pressive wvheat sales program, with acceptance andi support of the idea o! a world clearing bouse and food bank; (2) relax- ation of some o! the regula- tions now gavernjng wheat sales ta pravide more flexibil- ity in the sales differentiais now prevailing and more la- ceative to traders ta seli wheat; (3) creation o! a stock-pile of forage in the west ta pratect western cattie herds against a failure o! forage supply. This shouici be done, Profes- sor Sinclair .*suggests, tbraugh the use of "j udiciaus incentive payments and intelligent guid- ance" ta induce farmers ta shift into forage craps acres naw growing low-quality wbeat. la short, Canadian agricul- ure bas toa accept the idea o! rapid change with which every other kind o! business bas long been painfully familiar. No n-istead, faàrmers must be en- Annauncement last week of the resignation of ouiraged ta make the cha'ags John W. Foote, V.C., as Minister of Reforrns Institutions tat are the price of survival ln the Ontario Cabinet was received by North Simcoe 'I this fast-moving warld-Fi- citizens with mixed feelings -regret at its occurec lancal p st.and sorne misgivings aven the future of conservation farm n projeets lu this anea. BlitzedA little over a year ago, supported by the advice :lie Blizedof his deputy minister, G. Hedley Basher, and necorn- mendations from Depantrnent of Lands and Forests pr n Pem broke sonnel and far-sighted municipal officials, Mn. Foote established the conservation fanm, east of Hiilsdale, in (Pembroke Observer) Medonte. After waitîng for sevemal days Its two-foîd purpose was ta rehabilitate men who rw favourable weathem candi- ins Pemibroke's fiy population had been incancenated in refonm institutions for offences, ceivcd its first !og blitz o! the of a minor nature and ta rehabilitate lands that had be- ason Wednesday night last corne wayward through Jack of conservation. reck, whcn downtown alleys, Sa successful was this pilot pnoject, it was ex- ins behind stores bandling ýut and the water front were panded and contînued again this yean. No smail part :rayed witb a twa per cent of this success was due ta Mn. Foote's zeal and support. lo ro d a n e m ix tu re . T e f r e e o m i i t r h s p o e r d m n A survey of the situation this n Thfeld nform eo s dmintrbs pieneredof ofany io r n in g sh o w e d th a t g o o d re - n e fi d s i n e r m et o s d i n b s t e u e a o f c . lts had been obtaineci and it In some, their worth bas been attested ta by the fact expected that the fly popula- our Amrneican neighbors ta the south have adopted them, n will be cansiderably reduc- in their own refonms prograrns. ans rsiso hefgoe But perhaps lu noue was bis foresight more ex- Norton G. Wbitaken, sanitary ernplified than lu the program af nehabilitation of men ýpector, under whose direction and land, sa effectively illustrated this year and last in ie blitz was carried out, said North Sirncoe. se result w ill be cum ulative, as h t il h a t h u d f r e i m o t r in e h s residual spray w as used. T hisT h t I I ea h s o u d f r e i m a te in t bi )s not kili ail the fies at once,,POst in the cabinet, is ta be regnetted. No doubt the years it it is ef'fective for nine days, he spent iu a German prisaner of war camp following that flies wbicb may hiave the ill-fated Dieppe raid lu World War 11, during which aped ]ast night w ill be k lled h o h o m n e l h s h g e t a a d f r v l r a th ey c am e a ro u n d th e p laces b e a n t e C r m n e t 's h g st w r d f r a o , b d hicb were sprayed witbin a a telling effect on bis physical well-being. ýek or sa. Choice of Scottish-born Dr. Matthew B. Dyrnond of t is considem ed m ore practical Po rtn r y a r o t ' u ce s r a p a s t a e b e put out a minimum spray s a gt PoennyPasm. Foo ster ucessonaeat nt have beeî t th e flie s w i Il n o t b e a b le a g o n . P i e M n s e e l e F o t i o e o î biMild up an immunity against acurnen lu selecting the night man for the right potý einsecticide and the dose will And the neforrns institutions portfolio is an important repeated later in the season.* one. It is also plannecP. e said, ta t the mesidential areas of the The new minister probablv plans ta luttoduce n'ý w These sections, he ex- policies. North Simcoeans, howeven, will hope any chan, 1,W Üied, are not s0 much in need contemplated will flot include the abolition af the con- -1 rogging but the v wilI receive e v t o fa r pl n ýntion when conditions war- srainfr ln cancernlu this respect, for Premnier Fn-o-stbhas ýsince. stated that "Our whoie emphasis will be on reformation and betterment of the individual." What bebter way then than to have themi but- tressing nature's haudiwork in thbc dean fresh air of North Sirncoe's wide open spaces? - MidilQ-4 Pl-e1 rmv£ 1Meraid, tic ed tic 1 m th( th( a 1 doi bu sa esc if Wh' we ta tha ta the be 1 visi tom pla of! att( The popular phrase applied ta the R.C.M.P., "Tbey always get their man," was apparentiy cained by a visiting Amnerican newspaperman sbortiv after the Moîînted Police farce came into tx1àtence. Combines, Justice and Economics ýrg Ils' the re- let irs Id. ry ' n 1- ar 1.e of )n n M 7e C- I Seeking New Grape King The Editorial "We" , 1

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy