14 Thé CaîadlmnStat*oaE, Uowmoanel, JAm* 8, 1*0 ÉDITORIAL COMMENT Fewer Farmers Are Keeping June is being observed as Dairy Konth throughout Canada, and while gle Canadian population continues ta expand, and the demand for dairy pro- duets continues to increase, a matter ter the concern o! all Canadians is "Where wiil the milk corne frorn in tuture"? Cow numbers are the lowest they have been in 45 years and the tiumber o! farmers keeping cows han decllned ta the lowest level since World War Il. I the intervening years pro- duction per eaw and per f armer ha. in- irased ut a rate which generally ex- ceeded consumer demand but for the past f ive years there has been no ap- preciable increase in national produc- tion, and indeed, in 1965 production actually feIl below 1964 levels. The recent moves taken by the govern ment ta establish higher pricen ta farmers for milk may or may not have the desired effect; namely to stim- ulate production and farrn incarne. The Pollution Causes Ottawa's Mines Minister Jean-Lue Pepin bas outiined a plan ta attack water pollution on the Great Lakes. The mninister is said ta have been stung by opposition criticism that he i. dragging his feet in the war on water pollution. Activity said ta be planned this sum mer: Concentration onf physical studies of the lakes. A 136-foot stern trawler has been chartered and fitted out as a survey and research ship. The national department o! health and welfare wili be measuring the dis- charge o! pollutants in the eastern por- tion of Lake Ontario and the inter- national section o! the St. Lawrence River. The Ontario Water resources Com- mission will concentrate on measuring the discharge o! pollutants from tribu- tartes -and the pollution distribution in Lake Ontario and a large part o! Lake Erie. The fisheries research board wilI atudy the problern o! enrichment o! the Waters. Cows farmer, however, is a victim of another situation which is only indirectly re- lated to the economicu o! dairy farming. As the farmer is called upon to become more and more efficient, and this gen- erally implies that he should become bigger, the need for help'in the opera- tion of hi. farm becomes more acute. Consistent with this need is a grow- ing disenchantment on the part of ex- periénced dairy farrn labor with the demanding nature o! a dairy farrn. Good men are departtng this field ta seek em- ployment where they can enjoy a five day, forty hour week, with weekends free. Many o! the best dairy farmers have prematurely retired because of the faîlure ta obtain satis!actory help. If no solution ta the problems o! dairy production is found it is possible that Canada will be put in the ludicrous position o! importing dairy produets into a country which is one o! the last agricultural reservoirs in the world. Cati for Action The Great Lakes Institute wiIl, un- der contract f romn the federal govern- ment, be making related studies in bath lakes. How much o! this will be treading aid straw? One would have supposed from the voluminous reports on water pollution in the Great Lakes the only thing le! t ta do i. ta introduce the con- trai measures, says The Sudbury Star. Is the Ottawa governmnent, in fact ' just trying ta put on a good face? The causes of pollution are known. Among the well-informed men on water pollu- tion in this country is Dr. G. B. Lang- ford, director of the Great Lakes In- stitute at the University of Toranto. He says "present waste treatment pro- cesses were developed for the pollution of 40 years ugo and are praving inade- quate for today's wastes." This might indicate that millions of dollars may yet be spent on sewage treatment plants that cannot possibly prevent pollution. Our knowledge may be up-to-date but aur methods obsoles- cent. They Found Riches In The Rocks (Twelfth Of A Serte.) By WALT McDAYTER Jacques Cartier could accu- rately be called Canada's first prospector. When he and bis French ex- plorers sailed into the St. Law- rence in 1534, their eyes glowed at the sight of Indians bedecked ln copper jeweiry. Eagerly, they soûght the source of this valuable nietal, but search though they did, they neyer Iound the fabled Indian mines. However, ln 1541 Cartier dld flnd a vela of glittering gold metal, and a source of sparkling diamond-Ilke gems. Excitedly, he loaded barrels and barrels of tliese nuggets and jewels onto is shlp, and salled them acros the Atlantic ta) France. To Car- t Ie r's embarrassment, In France he was told that his bar- Reform - But for Whom? It is understandable that the On- bio Minister o! Reform Institutions, Allan Grossman should be concerned about present day morality. He is, after ail, required ta deal with the f ailures of it in the inadequate institutions for which he i. responsible. But whether lie is justifîed in saylng that 'we are standing by and watching the moral basis o! aur society go down the drain' in another question altogether. -. The point o! attack agginst the finagined decline in mnorals in Ontario appears always ta be directed at liquor, sex and drug addiction. These preoccu- U ations, comments The Peterborough xarniner, are incidental ta the reai business o! morality and ta supporting a desirable standard of behavior; they tan be regarded as minor syrnptorns o! mueh greater social !aults. The visible changes which are tak- ing place in urban life on this continent should, by now, have pointed aur pro- fessional guardians o! marais ta where the dangers are. It is no exaggeration te say thaRt a declining sense o! com- mnunity, slums, crowded housing, abys- mal negleet of ordînary physical amen i- tics in large urban centres, has more to do with Mr. Grossman's warries than any publicity given to contraception, sexual f reedom, and lysergic acid. In North America, we have the examples o! Las Angeles, Chicago, Cleveland, New York, Philadelphia, Washington, and Detroit ta show us the ingredients o! large scale juvenile de- linquency and moral decline - if in- deed, this is what it is. The most easily identified cause then emerges ta be political and municipal indifference in past years ta the accumulating probiems of accommodation, recreation, empioy- ment and education. If we couple these with a !urther jhistorical indifference ta human life, whether it is war, an the highways, in Vietnam, through the testing of nlue- leur bombs, or the rape, exploitation and pollutLion of natuiral resouirces, a very different explunation emerges from IvIr. Grossman's. Some o! these mratters have been the responsibility o! the generation now approaching its dotage and criticism o! juveniles, and the 'advanced thinkers' that Mr. Gross- man complains of, is obtuse and gro- tesque. There is good cause for impatience with this simple-minded baiting of the yrung for their attitudes to sex, liquor and drugs. It neither presents the prob- lem at ail nor does it suggest any pro- cess for adjustment. What is more, when this kind of criticisma issues from a politician, it suggests that the prob- lemns willJ not be tackled politically in the f'oreseeabl1tfute.ie, hecause 'no one has taken the time to examine the f acts sensibly. It is easy to talk of pseudo-experts and ta sneer at people who genuinely present points of view so that the dis- cussions of social problems can be~ sensibly broadened. But this is the ap. proach that i. most often taken by people who have failed to make se ose of *hat confronts them. They project their own inadequacies indiscrîminateiy and the problems' meanwhile prolifer- ate. Keep WeII Back! An Ontario Safety League official recentiy had a sharp reminder o! the need ta keep well back f rom the car ahead. He was travelling west on 401 in the early morning. Traffic was iight and he was following a sedan, about 200 feet ahead, at a steady 60 m.p.h. Sud- denly he realised that the 200 feet gap was shrinking rapidly, and he had to brake fiercely. For no apparent reason the driver ahead had braked hard; either his brake lights were flot work- ing, or else they did not show in the bright sunlight. Then the reason for the incident became obvious. A squir- rel was running across the highway, and the sedan driver had slammed on his brakes to avoid it. The squirrel made it safely - but in~ thicker traf! le the result might have been a line of rear end collisions. 'llie OSL says that many f reeway driver-s - not just a few, but a great many - follow other tratfic so closely that it is humanly impossible to avoid an accident if a car ahead brakes suddenly. In the iudersea coal mines o! Cape Breton, N.S., coul trains are often equipped with two-way radio phones to assure constant communications with the sur- face. 25 YEARS AGO (June 12, 1941) Miss Phyllis R. Challis, A.T.C.M., was in Lindsay for a week preceding the marriage ai her cousin Borea Murdoif, formerly of Bow- manville. At the ceremony she presided at the organ console ta play the wedding musiîc. Archie Mvuir and Sons, Eldersle Farms, Courtice, won distinction with their Holstein caîf donatcd.ta the War Effort Cati Sale at Brampton. It was purchas- ed by Eaton Hall Farms, King, Ont. At the annual ineeting of Central Ontario Division of the Industrial Accident Pre- vention Association held in Port Hope on June 3rd, A. M. Hardy, Supt. of Goodyear Factory, Was elected a mem- ber of the Executive. Mrs. H. Curran who lived with the late Mrs. Wm. Sewell for the past nine years until lier death, ia visiting in Toronto and will later make her home with her daughter, Mrs. Ray Reid, R.R. 1, Napanee. Mr. and Mrs. W. Len Elliott were ini Toronto Fni- day ttending the Coin- nlenelietll Ex(cises ai 'joroito UniversitY where theil da~ cAudre.v r- (u'i\'d lier B.A. dcgree, gi-ad- uatiîg xithion111S. Mrs. C. IL. Carter and Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Oke at- tended the Roaa Air Force military wedding af Miss Gladys Howitt and Mr. Frank Sheldrick, R.A.F., ut Kingston, Saturday. Miss Caroline Hamilton, R.N., New York City, came by *plane ta Toronto Sun- day morningZ and is naw spending a month's vacation with her mother, Mrs. T. Hamilton. Duning the past few weeks W. F. Riekurd, M.P., visited somne of the camps through- out Canada. Gerald Bird, son ai Mr. and Mrs. Rager Bird, has enlîsted in the Air Force and is stationed ut St. Huberts, Que. Mr. and Mrs. W. Pingle, Mr. and Mrs. F. Blackburn and Grace, and Miss Ethyl Kemp motored ta Quebec over the weekend. Miss Marjorie Graham, Oshawa, is supplying ut the local Bell Telephone office while Miss Mabel Jewell is on holidays. Mr. J. J. Flett attended the Retail Coul Dealers' con- vention in Toronto. Dr. Doris Fostr. Moutilairi Sanifaritîm, Hamilton, visit- ed ber mother, Mrs. F. A. roster. rts etalaed nelthez' golM e diamoiîds, but wortàlemm bau- bics. The gold was la Canada,- al right, but the exploreraJust hadn't Iooked lu the right places. ln 188, Smrnepro.pec- tors probing the mountains of British Columba were more lucky. On the sandbars o! the Fraser river, there for the tak- ing was . - . gold! The cry echoed &cross the continent, and one o! the blggest gold rushes ln history wus the result. Iun189 George Carmack's discoverY o1 giant nuggets on the Klondike sparked a sirnilar rush, ln the Yukon. Almost as precious as'gold is "1black gold" - oi, In the smre year that gold was found ou the Fraser, the flrst oit well ln North America was drilied, ut Lambton County, ln Ontarlo.. It was ut Turner Valley, Aberta that petroleumn gushered in 1914, but the discovery that made Al- berta the oil capital of Canada occurred at Leduc in 1947, bringing unparalleied prosperity to the province. The Canadian Shield, a Pre- cambrian rock formation caver- ing almost 2 million square miles and stretching from La- brador to the prairies, is rich in almost every metal known to man. But the first major devel- apment in this area came about by accident. in 1883 labarers digging for the CPR at present Sudbury, in northern Ontario, chanced upon nickel and copper are. The rush was on! Prospectors flooded Into the north. A large silver Iode was discovered at Cobalt, followed by many other mninerai finds, ut Poreuplue, Kirkland Lake, and extendlng Into Quebee, to Rouyn. M e n becamne millianaires overnight, such as shopkeepers Noah and Henry Timmins. They gave up their little store at Mat- tawa, Ont., and before they were through these brothers would control the La Rose and the Holinger mine, the second largest gold mine in the worlcl! Gilbert LaBine found his wealth la uranium. Ne devel-. 49 YEARS AGO (June 14, 1917) 'The postpaned sparts that couid not be given on Vit- toria Day owing ta rain was given before a fairly gond crowd of spectators Satur- day afternoon. Mr. Monta- gue J. Smith was ably ag- sisted in the direction of events by Mr. Ait. Shrubb and Mr. F. C. Pethick. Win- ners are: 200 yd. race, open, 1 Percival Muîrhead, 2 Wre- ford Souch, 3 Milton Avery. Boys' 100 yds., Percivul Muirhead, Milton Avery, J. Carruthers. Girls' .100 yds., Helen Lunney, Doris Kelly, Florence Hennings. F a t Men's Race, H. G. Posey, E. Hanlon, F. C. McGlinchy. Married Men's Race, W. Wil- son, Rev. C. P. Muirhead, R. Carruthers. Ladies' Race, Helen Lunney, Flarence Hen- nings, Ella Lee, Patato Race, Chus. Osborne, Laurence Goddard, Ted Goddard, 500 yds. open, Percival Muirhead, J. Curruthers, E. J. Franklin. Boys' Bicycle Race, Milton Avery, P. McMurtry, Stuart James. Motrcycle, 2 miles, C. Dickinson, P. Williams. ]/ Mile, open, Chas. Rowe, E. J. Franklin, Wreford Souch. Bicycle race, open, Milton Avery, J. Carruthers, D. A. Meaiwî'. Motorcycle, 5 mile race, C. Dick inson, P. Williatmis. Illp, step and jtnip, Il. Il iggi nbothaini, Chiarles Rowe. Mr. Glenn Strike, younger son ai Rev. and Mrs. A. J. H. Strike of Granby, Que., and grandson of Mrs. Anna Elford. Bowmativille, has eniisted with the Cobourg Heavy Battery. Mr. Lerlie C. Cox, who recently received the degree of Doctor af Philosophy from the Johns-Hopkins Uni- versity, has been appointed Assistant Professor ai Latin in Hamnline University, St. Paul, Minn. Mr. W. S. Bragg, D.D.G. M., visited Durham Lodge I.O.O.F. ut Part Hope, Tues- day evening, accompanied by the Degree Team o! Flor- ence Nightingale Lodge, No. 66. Congratulations to Miss M. Ruth Squair on passîng her exams ut the Faculty of Education for First Cluss Teacher's Certificate and assistant High School teach- er. Mrs. G. C. Welsman and ehildren returned Monduy frorn a very pleasant visit with her parents in Prince Edward County, near Picton. Miss Netta McDonald and Mise, Annlu Ashcra!t, Tarnn- ta, have been guests ni Miss- es Ethel and Edna Osborne, "CediOies" Tam Jacques Carier.. be found enly fool's gold. oped Canada's ftrst uranium mine at Great Bear Lake, 1930, and built the Iargest radium re- finery in the world at Port Hope, Ont. Ever since Confederation, Canada has depended greatiy on its exports of minerais. She holds a virtual monopoly on nickel in the world market, and is the ieading supplier of ashes- tos and platinum. She's also one of the world's top producers of gold, zinc, copper, lead and alu- minum. Today, across Canada, many a man earns bis living lnaa mine shaft. In Newfoundland or- Labrador he may dig for Iron ore, lu Nova Scotia or Alberta lt could be coal, while in Quebec It might be asbestos he is seeking. Saskatchewanians have great hopes that potash will boister their provinve's econoiny, ivhile In northern Ontario, uranium, llfeblood of the atomnie age, may be the key t. future prosperity. In Canada's second century,. mining will continue to play a major role in economic growth. The far, northlands are stili to be fully opened - the Yukon, the Northwest Territories, and Labrador - and it is there t.hat Canadians will go, seekcing rich- es In the rocks. Tere.T.legram News Service - CLIP AND SAVE - Dear Mr. James: The Kinette Club would like very much ta thank you for the excellent coveruge we received in the States- man this past ycar. You and your staff have aided considerably in mak- ing aur projects the succesg they are, and your thought- fulness is deeply appreciated. Once again, thank you. Yours truly, Connie Wiseman, Secre ta ry, Bowmanville Kinette Club. Dear .John: We herewith enclose the subscription for another year. Althnugh miuch de- layed due Io surface mail wve still enjoy your paper tremendously. It is always gond ta hear or read about the 'recent" happenings from Bowman. ville and vicinity. Yours truly, P. Feddema, Christian Reformed Korean Mission, Seoul, Karea. Mospori Holds Stock Car Race A new race for late model stock cars, the Kawartha 250, was announeed Tuesday by officiais of the Mosport car racIng track and the United States Auto Club. The 250-mlle race, to be mun in two litats, wilI take place Saturday, July 30, at the 2.5-mlile circuit. Durham M. P. P. Add resses Toronto Rotary A sumnmary ai the purpose and wark of the Ontario Select Committee an Aging was giv- en ta a lunchenn meeting of tse Toranto Rotary Club by Alex Curruthers, M.P.P. for Durham, the committee chair- man. The speaker said the terms of reference of his committee were studies ta pramote de- velopment and creatian a! opportunities for self help to the satisfaction of the aging and ta help persans prepare for retirement, leisure and the benefit of educationul appor- tunities in later lufe. "Every anc o! us has the desire ta live long and yet not he oId," Mr. Carruthers said. But he pointed out aging is insepurable from lufe and the problemns of aging people are o! puramount importance ta Society. A number of problerns which face aging persons were dis- eusscd by Mr. Carruthers and he vet farth samne of the stu- lies which have besn made by his committee ta mept these difficulties witki acceptable solutions, CANADA'S CENTU RYZ A newsf background -speclal on the Centennial of Confederation Sugar Corne to think of it, mention has not been'rnade in tht. space of my money makîng activities since the te melted in the local arena, and lef t me without a job. Havlng contrlbuted a considerable amnount to the National Unemployment Fund, and neyer having drawn any benefits therefrom, your scribe decided to find out how the thing worked. Two of us toddled over to Oshawa, where we received every courtesy, and to cut a long story short, received after the necessary period of waiting, a cheque, or as the U.I.C. folks caîl it, a Benefit Warrant. This was one more experience in a life time full of them. Just when 1 was well prepared to make a modest killing out of the Un- employment Insurance Fund, the man- ager of the Southview Golf Course mentioned that, my presence was need- ed there, so that's where I amn, sweep- ing greens, mending barbed wire fen- ces, mowing grass and doing those many unspectacular chores that are so necessary to keep a golf course perk- ing. Some people have enquired why 1 xvent back to Southview instead of trying something different. Guess it's a matter of loyalty. You see, when we moved to Bowmanville last year, the president of Southview was the first person in this town who enquired if I wanted a paying job to augment our sagging economy, and', through his in- fluence, your scribe obtained a job at Sou thview which kept a few choice victuals on our table most of 1965. So, when he, and the manager indicated that they would appreciate a bit of help in 1966, 1 felt that I was repaying a litile of their 1965 interest in our welfare. Just how long we'll be able to put up wi;th each other i. anybody's guess. It has been nice, this past three weeks, bo be greeted by many of last year's clientele who either wave or stroli over, shake hands, ask how we fared during the past winter, and men- tion their pleasure at seeing me back at the old job of pretending to do some work every time the president or mani- ager glances my way. Some of them predict that 1,11 be nabbed yet., and get the hob-nailed boot. Some folks, who don't play golf, have been critical of the "greens" hav- ing a brownish appearance. Don't and Spice By Bill Smiiey ONE WEEK 0F SACRIFICE We were sitting around bickering a! 1er church the other day. My daugh- ter had a bad cold, and was generally owly. She didn't think much o! God. "How can Gad let s0 many people in the world be starving?" she wanted ta know. Well, it's a fair question. Her mother and I tried ta explain that it was not God's doing, but man's. We said it was man's greed, insecurity and fear that made us live like kings (far better than medieval kings, in fact), while hundreds o! millions of people in the world, aur brathers, starved and died of illness unnecessarily. She wasn't buying any. "It all sou nds pretty foggy ta me", she grunip- ed. "I don't think much of God, if that's the way He runs things." I usked ber what sbe'd do about the situation. Like ail kids, she didn't know, except to repent that it was al wrong. Weli, you can't have a 15.year-old sitting around running down God; sa, like all fathers since the cave-days, I tried ta came up wlth an answer. First, I explained that the govern- nient did a great deal ta help less fartu- nate countries, with aur taxes. When she cornered me on details, I had ta admit that it was a drap in the bucket with a lot o! strings attached (try that metaphor on for size). I further admit- ted th)at goveroment could not do much more without creating a hue and cry among the taxpayers. In desperation, I looked around for somneone else ' a blame. "The church- es should take the lead, ;and start a iiation-wide campaign ta help feed the hungry,." My wife reminded me that we gî ve a buck a week ta missions. "Yes, and all these piddling church missions udd up ta a spit in the ocean," says I. "Sn what would you do, Mr. Smart Alex?" says she. "Sa I cao probably think o! some- thing, Mrs. Wise Guy," says I. And I did. The resuit is National Tighten- Your-Belt Week. lIt's very simple. For one week a year, every Canadian !amiiy willing ta help will live on a bure subsistence ailowance. The difference between that and the normal cost o! living goes into the pot. Every cent o! this pot gaes ta buy food, clothing, contraceptive pis and other necessities for the vast, poor, down-tr<>dden masses o! the world. It's hard to believe that this world- shaking concept took seed and blossom- cd right there in our living-room. But it did. Swiftly we did some figuring. lIt was rough, but close enough. The average !amily spends from $20 to $30 a wcek an food, One week a year we exist on $5 per family. it cou id be done, yau know. Lots o! rice, macaroni, porridge, breed,, home.made soup. Water instead of coffee, tea, ql beer. The same week we walke . where and save $3 on gas. We turn off the furnace and learn what it's like to be cold. We clean aur teeth witli sait. We avoid shaving and hair spray and deodorants and drugs and cigar. etttes. We wear nylons with runs. We turn off the hydro, except for cooking, and use eandles. _ The average family could kick about $30 into the kitty. Take a town of 10,000 population. Let's say a mnini. mumn of 1,000 families. That's $30,000, That will pay for a lot of wheat, peni, cillin, and birth-control pilîs. Multipli this modest token by ail the familied ini Canada, and you could jack up India in about two years. I know, 1 know. You've already picked 84 holes in the plan. Ail the supermarkets would go broke if they lost a week's business. Well, there 's na reason they couldn't tighten their beltà too, for a week. All the fruit and vegetables and meat would rot. Not if the prodlucers knew such a week was coming, anid plan ned for it. The provincial governnient would collapse, if it lnst a week's taxes On booze and beer. 1 doubt it. A few miles of highway might flot be buit. So what? Seriously, I think it would be fun. Many people would take part hecause il is something cancrete, rather than a vague thing like foreign aid or mis- sions. And there'd be beneticial side cf- fects. Slimmer waistlines. A new siant on aur ý,ood life. And I can guarantee that, after three days of macaroni. the squirrels in aur attie would neyer be a problem again. They'd be stew. A Corner fo r Pootr A HOMEMAKERS PRAYER Thank you, God, for ciothes ta wuish And dishes, too - a littie cashý For floors that daily wait my mop, For fairy tales, 'Grimm's and Aeçop;4 For someane ta listen as 1i sing j For June - For whatever fate m bring; o For happiness and the odd tear î l'or taxes, terrns, - another year, * For children iaughing as theY nlay V For one less calorie in my drink For words ta read ta make me ihink; For a fallen cake - -a Birthday And 'Thank You God' for every day» Showing me my path - Your Way; Now, another day donc - I'm tir Sa M'I quit -- (I won't b. fired) But when turni Anothpr niorning' sod. l'I be fit again - I love my job. insC/m blame me - blame the frosty nights, and cool days of the past couple of months. Why? Because the greens are planted with "creeping bent", which belongs ta the weed family, and wé ah, know how weeds are affected by réal cold weather. Maybe those greert wil - respond ta warm rain, and war ~ghts, and if they dont, this is the lV* tîme I intend ta stick rny neek out on a' subject of which I'm totally ignorant. Sarcastie commentq have bêen made about aur prol! le crop of dande. lions. We have been anxious ta spray those yellow pests, but in order to spray, certain weather, ground. and time elements have ta be considered, or the spray mixture could lost a lot o! ils potency. Well! What's your guess? 1-Last week, I was raking a green scum from the sur-face of the big pond, when the rake disturbed some rotting tree leaves near the edge, which, in, turn, caused a rather noisome smell ta' pervade the air. A passing golfer, with a broad English accent said "Blimey, that don't 'arf 'um, don't it?" That reminded me of the time that- our Danny horse was kiiied by light- ining during a hot spell. We. phoned' the company that removes sueh dead stock, but, because of a holiday, the truck was an extra day arriving. When it did, the driver had brought Rlong a relative, newly arrived from England,' who, not being aware of how a dead animal can smell in hot weather, stood on the leeward side, while I moved to the windward side, and tork aur child- ren with me. We put the cable around poor nid 1)anny's neck, and as the winch moved hlm toward the tail end o! the truck, and started ta raise him from the ground that newly arrived immigrant got a man sized whif f. We were convulsed wtth laughter at his pained look of shock, and his comment, delivered with a strang Cockney accent "'e is a bit 'igh, ain't 'e." Our children, now aduits, have neyer forgotten the incident, and, when confronted with an unusual odor, will repeat the Cockney's phrase. Local golfers, with damaged clubs, discard them, or send them miles away ta be repaired because they are un- aware that local fellow golfer, George Park, is quite expert in this type of work; he is conscientiauis, and will say if the clu'b i. worth fixing. In the Dim Distant Past - Frorn the Statesman Files Lt~ Wbt %anabîau Durhcim Couatys Great Family journial flt Etablshod 112 yeursa qo ln 1854 0 à Also Incorporatinq q The Bowmnanvill. News W The Newcastle Independent e ~The Orono News 'ghoftsed a Soecond acles Hallhy the.Post Office Dept.. Ottawa. and fer paynient el postage la cash Producad every W.dnesday by THE JAMES PUBLISHING COMPANY LIMITED P.O. Box 190 62«66 iraq St. W., Bowmanvill., Ontano 1011N M. 1AMES GEO. W. GRAHAM GEO. P. MORRIS EMToaPUBLI mArtz. MÂwvion Summums MGR. 'Copyrght ond/ot properiy rlghts uhalet ln the imoge appearlnq on this prool. Permilssion ta Mpmrduae in wkole or ia Part and la cm forai whatmoever. porticulaîly by pI4togxarphie or offset -eosl a c publicatoa, munt he obtariaed tram the publilher and the printer. Amy wiauthorfzed ,IeeuctL« vil! bu sublect ta recoures inla 1e." SUBSCRIPTION RATES 85.W0 a Y*=r. sttttly 1la adyoc. *68.50 a YeS rLa th. United Statu atoo* every pmelest, wvIho taken ta avold errai Tho Catadian Satosama accepte advertis. = ju W osv» m m *ào m IrtadIa thal à wil mot bhe fiab, for ay rror fi% amy overtfsement 44 b«umd* unlné aproof eai mbachavertisement is requeted la writtnq hy the advertiser b.iuedit emml Sttaguan huass» office dul sigued hv the advertiser and wt such M un oe r.etio.t lsirmoted la writhnq thoewt. MWrtedit case If ny Cr701 se. itdlmt ii1eý d hs b.Cam.dls** Utmmtusanlilobility shall etoi emaed beia eportion ei thé catir.cmet -4 ejeusui- m pa M ce cuped bv the aoted err »beers tethe wkeIee pace o.cupied ybi *ýrt«