Clarington Digital Newspaper Collections

Canadian Statesman (Bowmanville, ON), 18 Jun 1959, p. 4

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

PAGE 70T311 T CANADIAN STAT~MAN, UOXANVflLE OWTARIO THrTRsDAY, JV!IE IStb, 1958 EDITORIALS Some Election Afterthoughts I1ow the election is over, it miglit be a good time to discuss with you smre of the aspects of present-day politics which have bothered us for sorne tizne. One of them is trivial, the fondness Premier Frost lias for selectmng Thursday, our publication day, for his provincial elec- tions. As weekly newspaper people we feel somewhat fructrated when we cannot bring our readers the full, local election returns until a week after the ballots have been counted.. Surely, Monday would be a better day. But, that item has little to do with the main points under discussion. Our feeling in this election and in the federal ones immediately preceding it was that ail parties seemed to be in a heap in their basic thinking. A few years ago, the CCF stood for nationalized industry and pure socialism of the far left variety. The Liberals were mild reformers in the middle of the road and the Conservatives were the right wingers, the orthodox or stand pat group. Today, each lias shifted. The CCF lias loct its radicalism, the Liberals and the Conservatives have moved to the left, with the Conservatives dloser to the CCF than the Liberals. Each of thern is trying to outdo the others on a spending pro- grain. AU appear to have thrown their fundamental political philosophy to the wtnds. As one of our friends suggested, we can no longer vote for a party because of its basic thinking. We now vote only on particular issues or on the appeal o! the local candidate. This is a situation which must create considerable confusion among new voters or New Canadians try- ing to analyze our political formations. Another alarming fact about this elec- tion was that there were so few workers active for any party. This points up a situation which is developing ail too rapidly. There are literally millions o! electors who today in this country are gagged dfrectly or indirectly. There is a vast army of civil servants and their dependents. There are those who are liv- ing partially or wholly on handouts of one kind and another from governments. There are business men who fear they wiil lose trade if they open their rnouths politically; contractors and industrialists whose plants subsist on government con- tracts a.nd armed forces who politically are neutralized. Total them and the numbers must be in the millions through- out Canada and hundreds of thousands in Ontario - and growîng fast.' Under these conditions how can we expect to carry on' our political parties? Young people, in the main, are taking no interest and there is no encouragement for them to become active. Good political candidates are becorning increasingly difficult to find. Why should any able, successful person subj ect himself to the ordeal of trying to organize support among a disinterested, disinclined, scoff- ing electorate to become a member of the provincial legislature at a physical and financial sacrifice? Do you realize that political candidates are expected to beg for support by knocking on as many doors as possible in the constituency for 10 to 15 hours a day, week after week, during an ehection? What ridiculous nonsense! What kind o! men will do this repeatedly? Men of the calibre the job merits? We doubt it! We forsee the day when there will be a change in our thinking and our actions politicaily. How far in the future we don't know. but sooner or Inter, de! mite party philosophies must be revived. We believe that within ten years, a party will ernerge at the insistence o! an aroused electorate - a party well over to the right; one that will put its emphasis on less government spending, lower taxes and a cut back in services. By that tirne, it should have a tremendous following be- cause taxes will have reached a point that wil be too oppressive for even the average citizen to bear. Possibly by then the electors - even the rnuzzled ones - will have reached the conclusion that individual responsibility and !reedom of thought and action is worth preserving; that a governrgent can't give them anything without first taking something precious away. and Distant Past I ~ Prom The Stateamau Filet 25 VEARS AGO 49 YEARS AGO lune 21, 1934 lune 23, 1910 The Libera1 candidate, Mr. The officers of the Durhain W. J. Bragg, was returned to Old Boys' Association for 1910 the legisiature with an increas- are as follows: Honorary Presi- ed znajority in one of the heav- dents, Dr. John Hoskin, C. D. iest votes polled in Durham Massey, H. O'Hara, Dr. Gilmour, County. It was a Liberal land- Thos. Paterson and M. A. slide throughout the province. James, Bowmanville, and Co.> Congratulations to Miss El- Sam Hughes, Lindsay; Pres., sie Allin who won the gold me- J. L. Hughes;, lst Vice, Dr. E. dal for highest standing in A. F. Bowie; 2nd, W. Craig; 3rd, T.C.M. piano solo performers Dr. Goggin; Sec'y, T. Yellow- at Ontario Ladies' College, lees; Assistant Sec'y, W. F. Whitby, and to Miss Marion Maas; Treas., J. D. Keachie. SIemon who won the special Prizes offered by Principal prize for greatest progress in Baker for the three best pupils piano during the year. in general proficiency in the Congratulations also to Miss Entrance class during the whole Ada Annis, daughter of Mr. and term were won by Roy Warni- Mrs. Geo. F. Annis, Courtice, ca, Hazel Wilcox and Kathleen in passing the Intermediate Kni.ght. Piano Examinations of the To- Miss Nellie Min geaud, Hiram ronto Conservatory Of Music. College, Hiram, Ohio, is home Ada is a pupil of Mrs. J . Albert or summer vacation. Cole, A.T.C,M. Mrs. Fred Roblin, Hamilton, Miss Marjorie Cole, daughter has been visiting her parents, of Mr. and Mrs. J. E. L. Cole. Mr. and Mrs. M. Mayer. who has taught public school for several years near St. Cath- Miss Etta Tait, Edmonton, arines has been appointed on aýlta., formerly of Bowmianville Bowmanville Publie School is guest of Miss Phoebe Peake, staff. Landsdowne Villa, Niagara-on- Mrs. 1. Tabb and granddaugh- the-lake. ter, Mss Frances Rowe, are Miss Nellie Pattinson of the visiting relatives in Rochester, Lillian Massey School teachîng N.Y. staff, Toronto, is home for va- Mr. Joseph Grigg, Winnipeg, cation. Man., is visiting his sister, Mrs. Prof. R. O. Jelliffe, B.A., C. G. Curtis. Wesley College, Winnipeg, was 1r. and Mrs. T. H. Lockhart here last week on a two days' and Miss Dorothy Lockhart, R. visit at the home of his parents, N., left Tuesday afternoon on Rev. and Mrs. T. W. Jolliffe. a six weeks' trip to the P.acific The engagement is announc- coast visiting old friends en- ed of Miss Christina E. R. route. Lamb, only daughter of the Blackstock-Just before clos- late Mr. and Mrs. William ing time today two robbers Lamnb, to Mr. Neil S. McDonald, held up and robbed the Can- B.A. adian Bank of Commerce, es- Dr. J. R. Hancock, Coiborne, caping with $4,000 in cash. The son of Mr. George Hancock, men entered the bank and lev- Clarke, received the degree of elling revolvers at Manager L. Bachelor of Veterinary Science H. Corner and his assistant, Mr. -awarded to him by the Univer- Harry Major, tied themn up and sity of Toronto, for successfully then ransacked the office. passing ahl exais this spning. Orono-Mrs. William Firing Dr. Hancock is one of the first of Oslo, Norway, is visiting three year graduates to receive Mr. and Mrs. A. A. Drummond. this degree. Mrs. Isaac Chapman was Tyrone-Mr. and Mrs. A. E. taken by ambulance to Bow- Clemens, Miss Florence and Mr. nianville Hospital early Monday Percy Clemens were at Oshawva morning. An X-ray examina- Saturday attending the Trull- tion showed a fracture of the Bongard wedding. hip bone, the resuit o! a fali she Hampton-F. R. Brown and received when a mat skidded wife, Okotoks, Alta., visited at on the floor, throwing her his brother's, I. L. Brown. heavily. Newcastle - Frank Hemings Solina-Miss Ada and Mr. conracted diphtheria whlle Frank Pascoe are visiting their working on the G.T.R. east of brother, George, i Saskatoon, Brighton. His wife and three Sask., and other friends in the children have also. been suffer- west. ing with the same disease. A couple o! weeks ago, Butch a.nd I were discussiug people whom we had known, but lad lost contact with, such as tue Edwards faniiy, of Toronto, who visited us, on tue f ari, about thirty-!ive yearc ago, and whom we had neither ceeu unr heard o! sinoe. The very next day, while Buteli was away, getting lier hair "frizzed", and I was absent from tue head- quarters, a note was left on our kitchen door, saying that Aima Edwards, and others. lad call- cd. Iow's that for coiucidence? Three days haler, a swanky car, bearing a Californ.ia li- cense drove i, and out hopped Alma Edwards, lier daugliter, Heathe]r, of Toronto, bMrs. P.uby Mlles o! Burbank, California, Plus an old sweetueart o! mine, Thelma Hughes, o! Burbank, Californua, whom I courted, wlien we were both young and giddy, awaY back ini 1914-15. Afler w. had gel rid o! our informai "how de dos", Thelma opied thet, I bad clianged since we bad lad met. At that lime, I was single, black haired, had a good set o! -teelli, weighed 145 pounds, with a trim, athlelle figrelua neat, lihaki uni- tom, gcd wenty years, briglit ejesd busliy tailed. Now, l'in clxty-four; grey haired, sport taise choppers; wear bi- iocal, my boues saap, creckl and pop when I move; and that pear shaped figure advertizes tle two hundred pounds I now lug around. On the way home, cie probably said to the other ladies, "Gee, F'm glad I'm not niarried W that jek. Winnie eau have hlm." Thé last turne I saw Theluxa was when she kissed rue good- bye on the station plat!orm at Phelpston, and waved 10 me as the train pulled out for To- ronto, where I was "in bar- racks" with the f amous Nine- teentli Battallon. That was lu Mardi, 1915. A few days later, 1 was crossiug the storrny At- lantic Ocean, with a big boat- load o!fliorses, bound for Bligli- ty. A year later, when I was in the front Une area, lin Bclgium, chie was kind enougli W send a heller, tellng o!flier marniage, and tuat she expected to live in Alberta. Forty-toui year s la along trne, se you eau bet we lad a lot o! catclhig up Wo do in th. "do you remember wheu", de- partmnent. M.y wife had neyer met Thel- rua, nor had cituer o! us met Mmer. Milie, or Heather, but by th. time we had finished sup- Per, and had spent three hours shamnelessly braggiug about our respective of!springs sud grand- chuîdrent, wc werc ohd buddies. Thehma mut bave been la a Religion for Today >vI Power of Ideals A Weekly Talk By Rev. IL R. Nicholson From our youth we have been enjoined very frecjuently by our parents and teachers to have high ideals. This, indeed, is an injunction of great impor- tance, for it is our ideals that bit of a rut-her brother's name ls Eddie; she was courted by Eddie Youngman; she married Eddie Hughes, and probably has a son or grandson named Eddie. No one lias ever accused me of being a lady killer, but I miust have something on the bail, when an old flame drives ahl the way from California just Wo hold my hand, and tell me 1 ain't a bit like I used to be. The truth is, the four ladies were driving along Highway No. 115, on their way to visit Alfred Edwards, at Cloyne, On- tario, when they noticed the Pontypool sign, and remember- ed that the Youngrnan family once lived near there, so decid- ed to see if we were stili stick- ing around. We were tickled to see them, and hope they will corne and see us again, real soon. Thelma suggested that Butch and I visit lier and Mrs. Miles, in California and that we f ly down. She doesn't know that, if we fly, we won't have any mioney left Wo spend, so it wil have to be the old -lAustin" or nothing. If we had a look-see at fabulous Hollywood, I would have to watch out that the pic- ture folks didn't use my homely face in a horror filin. mould our characters. '«As a man thinketh in hic heart, £0 las h.e." (Prov. 23:7). The thouglit that is cherished coustautly in the secret recesses o! our heart, transforma us and chapes our oliaracter from day to day. Ideals are "Ithe conceptions, tue thoughtc, tue, anticipations o! what one may attain Wo or may achieve", and are poteut factors in the lil! of eve2ry in- dividuai. It la the vision o! something higlier, nobler, bet- ter, which raakes us dissatis- fied with ourselves and which arouses us to greater effort. The ideal which shines as a star be- fore us, la ever beckoning un onward, and as we !olow we make progress and our life as enriched and eunobled. The ideals whlch a man fol- lows, may in due time corne to control him, so as te hlift him up or drag hum down, ln spite of alI other influences leading in another direction. Therefore, it is very important that a man'c ideals cliould be worthy, up- lifting hlm ini his aspirations and endeavours. Ail great men have become great by reason o! tue ideas tliey have chenished in their hearts. They may have been great Iu action, but the brilliant deeds were born out o! noble thouglits, ambitions and hopes. When tue jealous brothers o! Josephi saw him approaching, they said iu scorn, "Behold, this dreamer cometli." (Gen. 37:19). joseph dreamed dreanis. Hie en- Another among the many special days of the year cornes on Sunday, June 2lst, when Father's Day is marked. While special days and weeks grow in numbers each year some attention will soon have to be given to consolidation and the tinie might corne soon that there will be a need for consolidation of our special days. No one wouhd be so daring as to sug- gest what day or days should be eliminat- ed. No father wouhd hear of eliminating Mother's Day and no mother, of course, would , elitertai, the idea o! eradicating Father'sl Day. 0f course, the family would neyer listen to stroking off either of these days. Perhaps a move to consolidate might be to add another special day and make a "Family Day" when members of the family might have a second Christmnas Day in miniature each year when they could honour each other with gifts and tributes, cards, flowers, etc. 0f course, i order to be crowded in the calendar such a day must needs fal i niid-year - just a!lter recovery frorn last Christmas and with a lapse of time before preparation for next Christmas. Maybe we should neyer have put this sug- gestion in print. Instead of consolidation, it right lead to addition o! another special Sunday. But we do beieve mothers and dads would give approval to the sug- gestion and we cannot sec why family members shouhd not agree. %ýOne might think that the fariner, above ail men, would be immune to the ravages of inflation, and that, regardless of what happens to the value of the dollar, his, produets would be worth as much as ever ini the goods and services he buys. But things don't always work out that way. In tirnes of inflation when money is losing its value, the prices of all things rise, but flot ail at the came time or at the same rate. The prices of f arm pro- ducts are frequently the last to rise; and in turnes of deflation, when prices are returning to normal, farm prices are frequently the f irst to faîl. Thus it happens that the fariner is sometimes the hast to share in the illusory profits of inflation, and the first to suf fer from the deflation that always follows. The wise farmer will flot allow hum- self to be carried away by the unfounded optimism that inflation always engenders. He will take every precaution not to be £tablinhed 1954 wtb whieh in lacorport.d fâ. owmaffll, News, The Nwcastl Iad.p.adent and The Orono News 1051h Year of Confinuous Service to the Town of Bowmanvile arnd Durham County % SUBSCRIPTON RATES 84.00 a Yom., trctly in cdvao $5.00 a Y.ar In the United States AuthoiZ.d cm Second Clm ousMi Pet Office Departuent. Otlw PubU.h" by TUE JMES PUBLSHIG COOVMY LBME Sowmauvl Ontarlo JOHN M.JAIM EmmO But according to present day customn, next Sunday is Father's Day and whether il is ernbarrassing or not, Dad has the pedestal this year again in mid-June. We read the !ollowing entitled "What Is a Father?" and consider it worth re- printing appropos to Father's Day: A Father is a thing that is forced to endure childbirth without an anaesthetic. A Father is a thing that growls when he feels good, and laughs loud when scar- ed hall to death. A Father neyer feels worthy o! the worship in a chld's eyes.i --Hc's neyer quite the hero his daughter thinks; neyer quite the rnan his son believes hlm to be, and this worries him . . . sometimes. So he works too hard to try and srnooth the rough places in the road for those o! his own who will follow hirn. A Father is a thing that gets very angry when the school grades aren't as good as he thinks they should be ... so he scolds his son, though he knows it's the teacher's fault. A iFather is what gives daughters away to other men who aren't nearly good enough - so they can have grandchildren, who are srnarter than anybody. A Father is a guy who makes bets with insurance companies about who'll live the longest. One day they lose .- and the bets pay off to the part he leaves behinéct caught, when the bubble bursts, with quantities o! inflated money or o! securi- ties defined in terins o! money. He will convert the money he receives mbt things lie knows he wlll need, and into things o! real intrinsic value. When the farmers are prosperous their prosperity is always re!lected in the value o! their land, for profitable land wih always sell at higli prices. Whcn rnoney la losing 'ils value, shrewd men turn te the land as a saf e invcstrnent that will not lose ils value through inflation. A well-kept !arm is the best security a rnan can have against inflation. At the end of World Wa~r 1, a world- wide scarcity o! food caused abnormalhy high prices for farin products. Those prices made Canadian farmers prosperous, and their prosperity was reflected i high prices for farin land. In some parts o! the country land values rose te several times their prc-war levels. Many farmers were templed to seli their farms at the high prices; and many others were tempted to buy their neighbors out. But, as soon as the world shortage o! food was ended, food prices returned to normal and the abnorrnal land values disappeared. When that happened the farmers who had sold their land and those who had bought it on credit were both in trouble. No longer able te meet their payments, the buyers lost ail they had paid; and those who had sold had to take their land back, sornetimes in a run-down condition and encumbered with overdue mortgages and unpaid taxes. But the farmers who kept their hcads also kcpt their land, and if they bought more land they did not go into debt to do 80. Unless something is donc to check the growing inflation of the Canadian dollar, we will have another boom in land values, and many farmers will be tempted to, part with their land at boom prices. Those who do so will be making a midstake, for they wiil be exchanging a property of permanent value for moncy that is losing ils value at a steadily increasing rate.- T'he Country Sce. tertalned visions, and the ideule that he ever kept before hlm were the ideas of truth, honor, purity and nighteouàsness. Though he was sold into slav- Msorely tempted. unjustly znlprisoned, he remained true ta his pninciples and at last from, obscurity and hardship lie rose Wa the highest pinnacle of honor, power and faine, becoi- ing the ruler of Egypt. Some one has said: «'It is not bnilllancy that wins îith worlM, but the. man with the ideal. Shakespeare, Tennyson and Browning reign and shall continue Wa reign in England long atter mere politicians have passed away, for they were builders or spiritual temples, preachers of grand Ideas ana higli ideals."1 Under good Ideals ordinary men become great, powerful and commanding. It is the passionate quest of a glor- Îous ideal that lifts men Up to higlier heiglits. Lowell express- es this thouglit in his poem,01n "Longing". "'Stili thro' our paltry stir ansiJ stnife, Glows down the wished Ideal, And longing nioulds in elay what Lite Carves iu the marbie Real; To let the new 11f. in, we know Desire must ope the porta.- Perhaps the longing to be s0 Helps make the soul immnor- tai." And now we see the neces- sity o! cherishing the highest ideais. They mnust not b. left ta chance or caprice, but they must be chosen deliberately and with careful consideration, because of their tremendous power in moulding and trans- forming our lives. Tu-e highest ideal that we can possibly entertain i;, W be like Jesus Christ. He is the Perfect Man. No flaw has ever been found in Him. lis enemies watched Him closely and tested Hlm in many ways, but they could not find in HM any weak- ness or fault, whatever. In Je- sus Christ we find every quai. ity that we consider essential or admirable in the oharacter of good men and women. Hie is the incarnation, of our thoughts and highest aspirations, He is the one Persan of aIl hic tory worthy of our adoration and imitation. We must make Christ our constant Companion. We must think much about HMm, and meditate on Ris words and try ta be like HMmr. "A man's lite la the incarnation of his thoughts and ideals. What was only a dream yesterday becomes a re. solve today and an act tomor- row." The poet, Richard Watson Gilder, has written a pen which expresses the tho-uht o r1n a heathen, aojourning ln Gali- lee, A.D. 32. This man had come, after mucli perplexity and doubt, Wo a definite deci- sion regarding Jesus Christ, and this, also should b. our deci- sion, in this Year of Grace, 1959. The Song o! a Beatheu If Jesus Christ is a mian,- And only a man,-I say, 'E That o! ail mankind I cleave t. Anid tWHim will I1 ieave alway. If Jesus Christ is a God,-- And the only God,-I swear, I wli follow liai, through Hea- yen and heil, The earth, the sea, and the air' T-he number of tarins ln Can- ada is shrinking. In the peniod 1951-56 the total fei l amost 8 per cent Wa 575,015 fannis. - :'SUGAR and SPICE:I Father's Day la but a pal- lid imitation of that greal commercial orgy known as Motlier's Day, but apparent- ly it la with us to stay. Each year father recelves gîft that îhe neither uceds nor wants, and before the wrappings have been put away, lie real- izes the family has Put hirm in hock for tue price o! said gifts. 1 don't know what fthe resf of yeu birds want for Fathcr's Day, but 1 know whst would pîcase me moaf. The most thoughtful guif the tsmiy could produce fer me would b. if they packeti a lunch, get lu the car, andti dssppeared for the day. *0 *4 1 find tue whole business of Father's Day revolting. The mere existence el sucli a day is an indication o! the new low to which the father has cunk in the family unit. Just a few decades ago, every day was father's day, and there was no fooling about il. Whcn I was a kid, fliere was noueetoftitis dam' fool- lshness of father helplng arounti the lieuse. Nowadays fathers scrub the kitelien fleor ou their day off, anti help with the dishes af fer dinner. ]anflic gooti old dtiYs, father didn't have a day off la flic first place, anti mother weuldn't have let hlm lielp wlfh flie dishes, lunflic second, because shc kncw lier Place, anti bis. *Perhaps it's tue increase in his leisure lime that haî turu- cd tue head cf tue house into a substilute baby-sitter, a domestlc menial, a handy waiiing-wall, and in general, a pale reflection o! hic digni- lied, respected male fore- bears. Until a couple etfticcades &go, father worked a six-day, slxfy-bour week, but lie diU'f get ulcers. Anti do you know wliy? Because h. didn't es sas muçit et lis. amlly as flic poor, erlpplc-tutted crealure who bringa home fte baoeu Iodal. Dispensed by Bil Smiley Nowadays, father gets a hall-day off. Does lie ptter in the garden? Does he go fishing? Does lie get away for a game of golf? Wouldit were so. H. la kicked m t te street with the children, while mother does whatever mod- ern women do around home, with $800 worth o! labour- savîng xnachinery. There In nothlng more Pi- lable than the slght ot a fa- ther, on liii day off, wander- lng forlornly about a super- market, tralleti by two or turc. littie monsters ef ehiti- ren, as he does the wcckend shopping. When he gets home. lie Io allowed te put the gre- ceries away, sud spend an hour mowing tie lswn, before dinner. After he hian Put the kida lte bcd, he la supposedti t emerge from hlm chryssis, as a fulI-fledged social butter- fIy, andi go off aud get al Juied up at somebody's Sat- urday niglit party. No wonder nerves are rub- bed raw today. In tue old days, fathers weren't parti- cularly concerued with "get- ting Wo know the children". They didn't worry about their children liking theni. They took it for granted aud everybody was a lot liappier. Wlien my Dad get home frem werk, lie dldn't have te set thec table, run arounti look- lng for thec kids, tiien junip in thec car andi go andi get a quart ef milk. Nor dld lie have te, "pick up a fcw things on the way home", because mother looketi after lier own shopping. No, sir, when my Dad got home fromn work, lie was greeted affeotlonately, but Po- litely, and left alone. He re- tired Wo HIS chair, with HIS paper, until he was called for aupper. During the nical, he was not forced W hlen to a 20-minute harangue about the. terrible day mother had had. Nor dld he have to break up quarrels amnong thie chbîdren. Nor did lie have to lump up and niake the tea becauise moUler was called te tas phone andi was stili there, tallcing about the balte sale, 20 minutes later. '0*00 Andi on the wcckend, my Dati wasn't cxpected te tura luto a party boy. Ho was tireti Saturday nlght anti went te bcd. If hlic t f 1k. golng te churcli he dld. If lie dlin't, he dldn't. But he waan't pes- tereti ail day Sunday by kide wanting te go fer a swim, or' a wite wanting te go for a drive. He matie thc declulons. If lie mat wantcd te ait on tbe verandali aud receup for thei comlng week's struggle, lio Usually, w. went for a pic- nlic. But tuere wasn't any nonsense about Dad doiug tue cooking on an outdoor grill. Mother muade the lunch, aud -Dad would sit ou a stump, iun his Sunday best, gazing with dignity and a certain amount o! distaste, at nature. Af ter lunch, lie would recline on a blauket, in tue chiade. He was relaxed, that man. 0 * * Anether reason for his un- tuestiomaed lesti-ef -fli-lieus statua waa fliat wc dldn't ar- gue with hlm. The ment 1 would tiare was an"«Air, Da. . . .11 But teday the olti- tashioneti clip on the ear for llppy kida lbas become a sym- bol et psychoieglcal disturli. su'ces or something. Now yos have te diseuse eaverythint wllh flie brats. iTotiy's father eau getlnjte a 20-minute argu- ment wlth any kidi over thei age of 5, st the drop ot s ale gestion. Andi corneeut whlni- perlng. 'Twas ever thus. 'Me worli la going te heUlu a hot-rod, which is considerably faster than the proverbial wheer- barrow. And I can hear my kids telling tueirs, 30 years&N-, from now: "You ch1idren shoulti show a lîttle respect for your father. Why, when. we were kids, we wouhdn't dare disagrec wlth our Déd4 Ne was the. boss and no tiro ways about il. You kids get away with murder tise Father's Day Last to Share and First ta Suffer TM CMADM STATMSUM,-Ww 9ANVILIAt OWAMO PACM roc TEC MAT, JIM IM, . 1959

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy