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Canadian Statesman (Bowmanville, ON), 2 Oct 1963, p. 4

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0OTTAWA-No orne was unduly startlec when the new Governm-ent of Lester Pearson pledged itsel.f in the Speech~ from the Throne to "seek out new paths". The phrase, when it was noticed ai ail, was skipped over as one of those inevitable exercises in bombast whicl, are the delight of Governments, par- ticularly when they are writing Throne Speeches It is now becoming clear however, that the Pearson Government may have meant what it said. In the days singe it came ta office, and in the Speech from the Thrare read at the opening of Parliament, there is a blueprint wvhich could produce structural and deeply significant chang- es in Canadiant life. These changes, if they corne, and if the minoritv Gavcrnment success- fuily initiates its program, will delight some Canadians and horrify others. They involve, in the economic f ield, a greater degre of Government direc- tion and intervention that has ever been knaovn iu Canada. They involve, in the social field, a determined effort ta give a new direc- tion to relations between English speaking and French speaking Canada, between the Federal Government and the provinces - nothing less than a re- making, of the historic Confederation which in 1967 wiil celebrate its cen- tenary. The intentions of the Liberals in these two fields were explored during the election campaign. There may have been same listeners who wrote a lot cf it off ta electioneering, and others who f alled ta catch the full import of Iwhat was meant. That full import is now being feit In Ottawa th'rough questioning in the 1-Iouse of Commons, and thraugh pre- liminary explanations of the legisiation which is beiug presented. Economic legisiation, for example, Is based on the premise that unemploy- mnent iîs the most seriaus domestie prob- lemn. Nothing much new about that sentiment. Many a politician has said It. What is new is the Liberal economic gospel behind this statement. In other words the provision of jobs for Can- adians has become the most important objective in more than name only - more important than outworn free en- terprising concepts, more impartant than supply and demaud lu the market, mare important than balanced budgets. The sharpness of this turu - a left turn it must be said - towards a pianned ecanomy, is apparent in the f irst four economic measures intraduced by the new Governmeut. Perhaps most important is the Canada Development Corporation to direct Canadian saviugs iuta lnvestment in Canadian industry. This is also aim- ed at diluting the effect of the massive fcreign ownership of Canadian industry and is a mast determined effort in that direction. This will be achieved by the sale, of stocks and bonds in the corporation ta the public at favourable interest rates. The proceeds will be invested in Canada. A Municipal Development and Loan Board, with a bankroll of $400,- 000,000 of Government funds will make capital available ta municipalities for public works. Again an imaginative scheme involving a large degree of in- tervention by a federal agency into the type and amaunt of money ta be pro- vided in a selective manner ta bodies wihich are the creatures of the Prov- inces. Another planning body is envisaged in an Economic Councîl of Canada which wili assist the Goverument, In- dustry and Labour ta ensure the high- est possible levels of employment, of efficient production, and sustained ecanomie grawth. And the faurth measure caîls for strengthening of the Atlantic Deveiop- ment Board, increasing its members, and gîving it a capital fund of $100,000,- 000 f or promotion of basic prOjects iu the Atlantic region. This pragram, which has already been attacked by opposition leader Diefenbaker as a move toxvardg «bureaucratie autocracy", accurateby refiects the attitudes of the new Gov- e rnie nt. 1~~.~~~. It is a left wing progrram, but in rnew sense. The Liberai forward thin .iers, and Mr. Pearson himself is amoi v them, have been influenced by Eur peau economic developments. I tpreviaus Goverument, with exporti surance, smali business loans, ar 1planning agencies, leaued slîghtiy this direction. But the new Government's a] proach is more of a leap. It leaves b hind encrusted Canadian econon practices and assumptians. The same leap into' the futui >characterizes Mr. Pearson's plans f( giving a new direction ta the Canadia Confederation. The dissatisfaction in Qubec wit the present form of Confederation isa too apparent. What Mr. Pearson cal "4a truly equal partnership" of Frenc speaking and Engiish speaking Car adians requires a truly great effor This the new Liebral GovernmentJ apparently ready ta give. It will estabiish a Royal Commii sion of Biculturalism whose objectiv will be nothing less than a studyc how every Canadian can be given th opportunity ta be bilingual. There is alsa evidence Mr. Pearsci retiring from certain areas of jurisdic tion and providing the provinces wil] the taxing authorities required for then ta serve those jurisdictions. The new Confederation would en phasize diversity withiu unity. Fora Mr. Pearson says, "Quebec ta be Que bec must be in Canada." The who:i concept is part of the search forj national Canadian identity. There is no questiouing the serious ness or the sincerity, of the new Gov ernment's voyage along these nev paths. If it is given a few years t( establish its programme, the chance, are it wvi1l begin ta succeed in thesE difficuit areas. If this happens, thE Canada of 1967 may be vastly differeni flot only from the Canada of 1867 bul also from the Canada of 1963. Whether the Pearson Goverumeni is given this time may depend a good deal less on what the opposition partixz in Ottawa do than on how Premier Jean LeSage contrais the present strang demands of the revolutionary Quebec for a new deal. His task is ta achieve from his dealings with the new Pearson Gaverument the essential ingredients ta enable his Goverument ta satisfy the strong current of nationalistic feeling in Quebec in a constructive way and without asserting demands in his rela- tions with Ottawa which go beyouc what can be accepted by the rest of Canada. Just as a major task for Pearson is flot simpiy ta assert Canada's demands ta the world but ta persuade Canada in its turu ta do justice ta the wor1d's demands, so the supreme leadership test for LeSage is flot onby ta asseri effectively ta the rest of Canada the special dlaims of French Canada, but also ta persuade French Canadians af the proper dlaims of Canada as a whale, If he cani do this, Canada may then truly be embarked on an exciting destiny - and the mantle of its leader- ship could then well fail upon Jean LeSage. English As She Is Spoken A writer lu the New York Herald Tribune "put a piece" iu the paper the other day under the heading "English is for Madmen." He pointed out the difficulties of a foreigner mastering the complexities of the Euglish language when sa many similar arrangements of letters can be expressed differently. This moved another correspondent, Arthur Sherrili, ta write a letter ta the editor as fallows: I'd like ta live my whole life through And have my troubles be but fough. I'd like ta have a lot of dough And neyer have ta lift a hough. I'd like ta sit beneath a bough And be as lazy as a cough. But rough and tough, I've had enough! I'd like ta write mare simple stough. V've got a cold, I've got a cough, I'd better take a few days ough. Through, bough, dough, tough, cough ought ta rhyme, Perhaps they will same other thyme! English may be for madmen, but it is enaugh ta drive men mad anyway.- Uxbridge Times-Journal. 4The Canadian Stateeman, Bowmanvfle, Oct. 2, 1963 EDITORIAL COMMENT j udayforNew York Cityj Miss Giadys Westaway a"' States were being tneated. Af- garN, on of the late Mn. ad TeGvrmn fOtnahsapitda nur iwhere she planned ta meetMaster Neil McDougall, Os-trhaig Ms-adl, r. ihe at n ae wih ber daugbter (Marion) Mn.j awa, spent Sunday at ber fa- !Canada looks pretty good. ta Canada in 1924. A faro Roy Slemnon andI daughter who , then's, Mn. J. Westaway. ________ bv trade, leebac] heen a resi- 1. Having regard to the maintenance of the physîcal and ýwere enraute from England Mn Levi Haifyard who dn ofteWlovleds aeilwlbigofheppeofOaradte on the Queen Mary. They ex- preached In the Methodistitdent for the Wiison2ileadis- socialeoII-adbeîgofth e peft ople aia d tho 1eta oarrive in Bawmanville Church Sunday was guest af NESTLETON tnitfor the pasngt 24Wilsn-ileooianhatbnfttoecivdhog today. Mn.F.C. Vanstone, Cedar, Pvilrtae coming t ad Weison Mn nIMs itnMnrCi! Jvle h oesdbdrsdd the establishment and operation of a feasible medical Mh. bave been Miivongin Ca, MIissGaeicnfneFa.e (Intended for last week)1 at Leaský, Sask. services insurLSice programme, shal... borgfoave raenlivins haveCo-,Messalh e suîonfndtcomîng Mn. Bruce Heasiip is in hos- rvMr. Fait was a member of Examine and enquire into, hold meetings for the study and 'borg or evralyeas, avýhoe a th rsul ofcomngpitl for observation and St Basil's Churcb, Branttord. dsuioof ecvrpeenaosinoncinwthat retunned ta Bowmanville andiin contact with an autamnobilei cbeck-up. Mrs. Heaslip is ne-ý Surviving besicles bis widowdicsonfrcivrpentlnjcnnînih.t. are again living in thein bouse' backing out of the garage. miigi aot bi eaefv agtrMs n ters related to, and consonant with, the basic principles, pur6. i on Centre St. Mn. Minore wba Their many Bowmanviile is hospitalized tbere. drexv Suteb (.Mary), Mrs. poses and objectives of Bill 163 of te 1962-63 session ot the Iwas C.P.R. agent here has friends were sarry ta learn Friends attended tbe f uneral G e o r g e Va nDani (Bessie), Legisiative Assembly ofthei Province of Ontario respecting been pensioned after 40 years' that Mr. R. T. Stephens, Miss a! late Mrs. James Williamson, Mrs. Jaîcob VanDani (Annie), Medical Services Insurance. faithfui service. Carnie Stephens of this tawn, formnerly of Nestieton, wbo ail of Pantvnool, Mrs. David Mrs. J. A. Wylie, Toronto, witb Mn. andI Mrs. Jas. Ste- passed away in Toronto. In- H]nr 1Il Mr.Fak 1.At desuyndcsirtot m er bhas purchased the laIe Mns.I ens, Baicarres, Sask., werePY. Monr ce , ns ph rnk1 Aftr du stuyUaniconideetnen-to)ak n, Maria Hobbs residence on injured in an automobile ac- tery mn a nUio ee Dostal (.Magdaiene), bath of, mendations and report upon matters enquired into un Concession St., andI after ha-cîdent there recentby, eyonMna. rntod nI w onJs havi ~~~~Work is progressing favoun- ebo eak ok, nIJms the terms set out henein as the commissioners se fit to ing the bouse con-sidenably Mn. andI Mrs. Chas. Wib- abby on 7A Highway. Paving of Pontvpool. Prime Minister and Executive Council of Ontario. ýmodernized, is now occupying llams spent Sunday witb ne- began last week aI 'Highway 35 li witb ber son Jack antI sis-!liatives in Oshawa. and Ihree or more miles are' Eigbteen grandcbildnen and: Ntfctoso netotI iebif hudb umt lters, Misses Lena antI Winni- Wbiie McLeod, Alta., was completed. Drainage tbraughi two. great-grandchildren alsol oiiain fitnint iebif hudb umte fred Bennett. Mrs. Wylie antIexperiencing a heavy fal aftbe village is finished s0 a' ur,,, on or before October il th and actual briefs (25 copies) ne tbe Misses Bennett are sisters snow o! 2 ft. in tIeptb Mon- paved higbway soon will be ai Mn. Fait rested at Thorpel later than November iSth to the Secretary. 'o! Mrs. F. J. Manning, Church day, Bowmanville was havingIrealiîy. Brothers Funcral Home, 961 st. ýsummer Weatben. Mn. andI Mns. Oscar Mîissel-i West Street, Brantford. The ' Mrs. Frank Taylor, HamI-ý Hampton: Mr. and Mrs. man andI Harvey, Mrs. Hask-'funcral was conducted oni Di. 1. GrRALD HAorY T. C. CLARU. SeCrefar7 4 ton, spent the weekend with Frank Ruse bave moved to the ing, Ma rie andI Evenett Clarke,î Monday morning, September~ Chairtwi0 Room 418, 67 ddillg, St. h er brother, Mn. Rager Bird. 1 north o! the village. aio!WlotavsteMn30h at93)aS.Bal'Tooti Maple Grave: .Miss Mildred Sauina: Misses Minnie and'and Mrs. Clarke Williams. .Cbunch wbere requiem mass, Teophone 363-4024 Snowden had ber tonsils n-'Vers Baker gave a panty Sat-I Mr. and Mrs. Ronald was celebrated at 10 a'clock, 'maved in Bowmanville Hos- urday In honor of Miss Hilda Williams and farnily, Oshawa,, witb interment in St. Joseph'ïs pitaL i Luke. Oahawa. were Suday yisitors with theî Cemetery, Brantford, Ont, «- P A MacDuff Ottawa Report AFork In the Road -Starting Sun.,OC'*t 6th Religion for Today il by Rev. R. Fred Swann W I ER LOC L ALLNGMAKING THINGS GO man who carried a littie cn t ubrlcaeIllfeand :ak by RevLO CFredALwann he went, and if he passed a, There is R fine chýance to> by Rev FredSwann door that squeaked, he poured this in the home. There isa The other day a peddler a littleecol on the hinges. If fine chance to do it in busi. drove by crying his wares,~ he came to a gate and it open- ness and in industry or ai Fo O rand each time the wheels of' ed bard, h: oiled it. Anthus school. There is a fine chance ng-i creak that grated hrlyand hard places, and makingpositions in the business woid ro IIIn1gK on the cars that had to listenilit easier for those who came ,vho fit in the machine wel] . [ro-III N I to it. It was a symbol of manyj after him. He filled his can who do not make friction. I 'he E E H N U T MR lives that creak, being rusty; daily, and carried it with him is said of Jesus that "He went about the gearings a n d' to lubricate - when and wher- about doing good." There is ind ;squeakingly move with diffi-'ever needed. Blessed is the'rmuch good to be done in our nd **~ BW A L !culty for want of lubrication. man or the woman, the boy world - so let's be Up and 'p. Arnold Williams family. * H R IL EN ON IT N E H R E Nestieton U.C.W. held ls be- HEREWILLBE N LON DISANCECHAR ES September metn in the niC ON AIL CALIS FROM BOWMANVILLE TO NEWCASTLE ýchurch on Thursday afternoon U A with 13 members and 1 child re AS WELL AS TO OSHAWA AND HAMPTON. ýpresent. or The President opened thean an meeting with a poem follow- ànThis nicans that on October 6th, Bowvmanville customners ed by prayer and the Lord's wiIl be able to cail friends in Newcastle as well as Oshawa Praycr in unison. Hymn 434 ith and Hamîpton without long distance charges. lwas thon sung. P C il The Devotional period was Ils our new telephone directory, which you wilI receive taken by Mrs. Jackson from S i 'hshortiy, wiIl show the Newcastle numbers lister with the mJhsgv edn yJn hwhlm By Billîily tn- prefix "987". For exanuple, the Newcastle number shown Scott. A chapter from theý Bought a new car this week.l time I applied for a Joan. 1 rt. as 1234 will beconue 987-1234. Study Book entitled, "TheiNever had one before. And: felt exactlv as I tised to feel Wewudlk oreidyut il h ul7fgr Bible and tie Word of God"1 about 10 years fromn tonight,' We wouldlik to emid yo to ialthe ull7-fiurewas taken hy) Mrs. Lawrence i it's probable that I'11 neyer1 in the air force, Mien I'd gone numbers onail caîls o tîxese cmmunities.Malcolm. Thie rnembers werehave had one since. oe efnefra n n u m b e r s n all c a l s t o t h s e c o m m u iti e s . th on d iv id e d in to g ro u p s w ith o e r t e B o tf o n n ofhpiosnoy wdrlclclln evc n questions distributed and i oh the dealer I bought It authonized weekend leave. Up ve e hpe ou njo ths wde loal allng ervce ndvery interesting discussionfo-rm and 1 were disappointed,! in front of the CO Monday ofuse it of ten! ]o\ved. Mrs. Malcolm closed I. think. I expected him to'mornfng. Not a leg to stand he this part of the meeting with' give me a chance to "dicker," ion, aiid about to get it in the a Bible quiz. soething you're always sup- neck. Dn ~~~~~~The minutes of the last posed ta do when you buy ai Tebn aae sdt meeting were read and thel car. And he expected me to C-Treasurer's report given. Sev. 1try to beat him down on hi - scowi as you sidled In the th doo ' "iddn" I'd smari, V e~ral of the members plan toi price, somnethIng you're &l-dor ow, e mi !attend the Oshawa Presby-1 ways supposed to expect'scribblin~g furiously on docu- w henyu el ar ents obviously deslgned te Manager. i teria I U.C.W. Regional Meet-jve osI acr send YOU up the river f0rýç&~'-- '1- ~inginPrince Albert on OctL Nothing happened. He of- 'years. n-2lst. fered nie more than 1 had ex-: as T E BEL TEEPHO E CO PANYOF CNADAThe rall cali showed 10 house pleeted for my old car, and l' You blurted your carefully THE BEL TELEPONE COMANY CFCANADAand hospital cails. Hymn No. . tO iberate, it planned story: ûiat you abso- [e *o, 116 was sung and the meeting ýsaid ".."leaving hlm flab.îîutely hadda have $200 ta put ci osed with the Mizpah Bene- bergasted. The entire trans-1 a new roof on the house, be- a _________diction.________________________________ action took 19 minutes. it;catîse your smallest child had A vcry dainty lunch xvas "l have been in nine min- lalmost rsowndduig h s-l served by the unit in charge utes. The remaining 10 waslaetritrm WI Mrs. George Heaslip moved a lng for the other fellow to do ing his head gravely. Of Lasty oungm an 's -olum ni vote of thanks to aîl for the some dickering. course you dîdnt have. Peo- Csenjoyable afternoon. My wife et me down ratheri i!h edsalbn week I w s s dde ed' was roun , w th su eri - iy to the gliter o! he en- M rs. K enneth Sam els kisnd- badly. She w as there, and ilnever have security. You tod ie ta read of the death of W. R.! posed triangle; at each corner tinel's editorial chair, under'Iy offered her home for the her tkng- ou dowmrs- 0f hi oer grshpannerao Pewman, of Toronto, at the!of the triangle was an "m"- the distinguished patronage oft October meeting. ing heil about the color, price, leave you $300 if you neyer at ge of 83. TE) most people, he muscle, mi, morals. his father-in-law Mayor of poseymfag.Ituht iposey ~leg.Itogt married, or stopped drinking, t will be remembered becausel eas fhsln on1 ooto h' ooe h a iha or same such. of his having been an editorialition with the Star, it may noti H e was also a city alderman o rie A a magnifying glass, as she used' * * * il It writer for the Toronto Star, be nrally known that he 'from 1916 to 1922, and wasi u1~ to do when we'd buy one of;i The intervie wended with for hlai a century, but I will' egn reebe i a. mno was once Editor of the O range1 bemng seriously considered forC o t\ those $495 specials. I fullyl you on your knecs, thanking what heerehma achd.o enelrn y hi aenIfUll f otol ih hlSc u others anticipated that she'd find a the bank manager, and prom- law, the late H. c.ctiediful backing af the pawerful bubble in the paint, or a1sing ta chersh him forever, ýr wh heprmcet M. l ncfialyoarSefaToroAttatdeTrnqt omswe mnth nheon udge on the floormat, and1becauseheadoaeyu M ayo fToronAttoadToron t o ewhnthsud- PlanflLUncrise an.Sedidn't say a!$200 out of what seemed hig c~~~~~~~~~~~ eryi193we Isroedtm (11)begEdtr fer, when I asked him what word. She didn't even want own pocket and some wild* le into Bathurst Street Methodist the Sentinel was not ta beihad happened, he told me that The 18th Scout Mother's a different color.cpieoneeaiyi i .~Church, at the corner of Bath- sneezed at, but Mr. Plewman he had accepted the offer of Auxillary beld its regular* * *eil * nature. urst and Lennox Streets, and chucked it, and went back ta, a pawerful group anxiaus to monthly meeting in the Sun- Maybe we're bath gettingl Nowadays, you walk Inte S was directed t the roam the Star because he said that, assure his election ta thei day sehool roomn at Courtîce oid. E ven 1, who have neyer' the managers office, and lhe le where yaung fellows of my ta accept certain advertise- Board of Contrai, but had United Church. Vice-Presl- cared any more about a car!treats you just as though you g age group met in a Sunday ments would be a violation af chucked the whale deal when dent Mrs. Garnet Goyne pre- than I have about a lawniwere a huinan being. "What Sehool class known as Mr. the very principles which he he discovered that, if elected,isided and the meeting was mower, used ta have a bit of't can we do for you?" And "Oh. Plewman's Class. Shortly af- was endeavoring ta instill in they wou]d expect him ta fur-lopened with aIl repeatîng the aId horse-trading spirit. I I think ive can manage that."0 -ter jaining it, we changed the the minds of the yaung men Ither their financial interestsIScout Mother's Promise. 1 used to kick the tires. I used And "Just sign here. If there's Iname ta Tri-Mu which, as yau in his Sunday Sehool class; l by using his vote, in theiri Secretary gave report on ta look under the hood, though'ý anything else you need - a Eail know, is Greek for three rather than sacrifice bis hon' favour, at Baard of ContraI, annual pot luck lunch held!I hadn't a dlue as ta what flew stove or refrigerator- ms. Our small lapel button our, he preferred semni-obscur-1 meetings. Once mare, he pre- in May at Courtice Church should be there. I used to you know wbere to come."1 ferred obscurity ta violation. when past presidents, leaders' slamn the doors a couple of Anyway, w.e*~~vr. of f sose. icpe hc e hecrSna.Eeyo hspnnieswihhwives and members had a times, and look in the trunk. thMa udy Evrbdy s epoued.We, who knew him< verv enjo.vable time and a This time, I just leaned onran out and circied it. he hiI* m then, have always, and wihisplendid attendance. th counter, across from tbeikids were overwhelmed. In rt e D M lay t vr the moral sta- Scout Magazine aagî dealer, oho sebr - i Hmp. Knda srall. No rdio? >.IIS tauarev hsee . was agaîn , bath 0f usjembarras umiraoft hs usdtosl rnw o another year. Rol Rd, waiting for some actian.lThese six-yidrob dn' miratd lreu e of ta a aswered with 12 In common decency, I drove! have mucb pickup, do tbey? hs oalled rts.he oe . p-tsent and collection re- the thing for three mniles,!Ol, wcll, at least we have the so-aled gr at ess H 's go e.ceived . when he insisted . . . I didn't first '64 in town." Piper and D is tant l~ast Butemany Canadian are theAna fl ucho ab feel a thing. No ecstasy. AlUl'payboy were no mare im- dDistnedthePclaw thîs way, chief among them,!beld ti olhwsdscusse.fadn narnwwiealtr, Frm heSatsmn ies th yuhsofhs riMuCmmtte nchrg f orea We ner. lnornwwiealtre theyouhs rfhisTriýMiComitýe inchageof ea e linched the deal, with!And you can imagine what FrmTeSaemnFls Class. Iroomn Mrs. Thornas Gladman hlm tbinking that a lot of tbe,'Playhbov did ta tbem. 25 YEAS AGO 9 TEAS AGO ewspe dtr ae Stafbe ofgrtuiisr r.CrdnBoer rfun had gane eut of sellingi In the aid days men loved Th Eitr ndStffofthSCar~ma n Thompson and Mr.3. cars, andI me thinking that it their horses because they were 1ated for breaking with trad,- llimVic.Pto ed was' going ta be a pretty awk- alive and couldn't talk back (Ocobe 6,198) (ctoer , 114) tio anI phlihin an ebe rs ta contact ail mothers for ward session witb the bankîto theni Today a ma "uys Miss Winnie Lancaster of! Messrs. Frank Christie and tion-evening edition. W ellv olnton. rs. CbiffohrgRen anaer.the equivalent; his kid§ rfrck is oliBet Bunailhae rtu ne ouncre1 bei1cageo Do vou know something9 bhis miseniiness; bis wife drives The Statesman office i oilBr onalhv eund candy andI bake table, andI Those banks have got aid andI it; and tbere's a note at the daying at her home near New- froni the West. ha re One o! the candidates in a several ladies also volunteer- lazy in the last 10 banetht neest hre0ya1 tovle.Ms An clalT eronto riding xvas beaten in:cd ta take care of tea tables. * * *t ner: The years Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Dudley, turned from a thrce monthspie ftho ig an outdooi'fAl annual reports are ta be*at$6am th"Isul have retuirnned from a ii ih e nprn, _ -;e pop--, a3atvwic ndch yrd îe tnx etn, lo ~ -____ _______ Durham County'x Great Family journal "q Established 109 years ego ln 1854 . AIBo Incorporating The Bowmanville News The. Newcarstle Independent The Orono News IL h "Authersed cm Second Clain Mail by the Pott Office DePt., Ottczwo, and for paymient os postage ln cash- Produced every Wednesday by THE JAMES PtJBLISHING COMPANY LIMITED P.O. Box 190 62-66 King St. W., Bownianville, Ontario JOHN M. JAMES GEO. W. GRAHAM GEO. P. MORRIS EDTO-PULISMU ADVTG. MANAGES Buisnoeus Mai.L SUBSCRIPTION RATES $4.00Oet Year. strictly ln advance $5.50 a Year ln fthe United States Altkhaugh every precaution will be taken te avoid error. The Canadien tattaman accepta advertis. 12in itsli columna on the understandinQ that it wiII fnot be !iob. for uny errar ir any advertitement puIbllad hereundor unies& a prool of euch advertisemen: iis ?equesed in wligby the advexuis.r end returmed go The CanadienEStitaman business office duly signed by th. eriser and with auch errer or correction plainly noied in writing theraon. end in that cae il any errer no noted in flot corr.cted by The Canadien Stateanian itss iîbilitY sha lo t exceed such a portion of the entirs cout ol .ouch atvressaient as the apace occupied hi' lhe noted error boa te th. whol. space occupied hi' euch advertiaeuent.

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