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Canadian Statesman (Bowmanville, ON), 20 Jul 1966, p. 4

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4 The Canadian Stateamnan, Bownanvile, July 20, 190 EDITORIAL COMMENT Bowmanville Could Try This From The Oshawa Times Oshawa, for many years, bas been known the Iength and breadth of e C»mda as the "Motor City." Tc the people of Canada (those who haven't visited Oshawa) Oshawa is justly iamnous in their eyes ai the major auto- 4mobile producing centre in Canada. However, to many tourists and flu~ny upset citizens fo Oshawa, the eu is rapidiy becoming famous; or aMmous; as one very large and noisy r~tace track. Day and night the squeal of tires 'is heard as cars are accelerated Wo ex- I1%renie speeds around coriers; or the - staccato belch of "Hollywood style" *, mufflers is heard; or two or three cars ~abreast go raaring down aur main *treets at excessive speeds. We are ahl $ becoming increasingly aware of the tîirresponsible and outright flagrant ,iflaunting of the city's bylaws on noise and speed an-d ather evidence af dis- ;regard for city traffic bylaws. Surely Oshawa can naw be con- sidered, ta be a grawn-up city, and, *surely the citizens should expect that sý.he police force is adequate and suffi- ,ciently interested ta police aur streets 4 properly and ta assure citizens of at least a modicum af observance af the traffic laws on the part of ail motor- ists. Wht a te eShort or1 )Wiair gottedo with of a astudent's hairgotto o wth is achievement? .When school principals send boys home ~to get their long hair cut, parents « . hould reply by sending the lad back with a picture af Albert Einstein. S There seems to be an unfortunate :failure in reasoning which relates long ;'hair ta low grades! The lad is a failure *in school. The lad bas low grades. Sa, Zcut his hair and bis grades will go up? Is that the way reasoning processes work! Ta make hum cut bis bair will no Smare strengthen bis mental abîlity than . -it will strengtben a chîn lune ta shave a beard. The one thing it wil do, bow- .~ever, is ta emphaeize false values. The Steacher may be irnplying that it is all Report frc ~~~~; ~B meP~:f:rcse Russell C, Pariamnt ecesedfor the suin- mer astevening, July l4th. I amn to lokngforward naw ta having an :eopprtuitytospend saine turne in fl"'urbain and hope ta, use the next few weeks ta visit eacb part af the Riding. This will be my last Report until Par- ~liament reconvenes in October. * During the parliamentary recess, my office in Ottawa will be open and I will spend about two days a week m: here and the rest af the time in the SCounty. This us a reversai ai my sched- Suie when Parliament is sitting because 1- then spend the week in Ottawa and ,q, get back ta Durhamn only on the week- i ends. Also, the Haney farnily is hoping 4ta get away for a couple ai weeks bhl- ~day in August. Yesterday Health and Wehi are f<Minister Allan MacEachen announced ~a pragrain ai supplemental payments ta recipients of aid age pensions. This prograin will be introduced inta Par- Sliament this fali. It wil ollow the ~guaranteed minimum wage principle set out in the Crahi Repart. Under the new prograin each pen- sioner will be entitied ta an incarne ai $105. per month froin aIl sources in- i!cluding the pension. In other words, for those pensioners who naw receive only the aid age pension they wiil be entitle4 ta an extra~ $30. each. Details ai the plan were not an- nounced but it wili probabiy operate on a systeiw where each persan apply- Sing wil i li out a orin shawing his or h er income. If the income shown per ~.manth falîs below $105. a month the *governinent will pay an amount each month to bring the manthly incarne up * ta that figure. When one bas the responsibiiity af governinent it is neyer easy ta make decisions sucb as the policy annaunced ~ by Mr. MacEachen yesterday. On the Durhamn Couniy Eatcblihed112 The bowic W The Newcoe The Ch £ilet4 s ouo O.ps lia tby tka OM OMt01 Proda"d er a TUSE JAM PUILISI P.O. i 62na Ming St. W., JOHN M. IAMES GKO. W E»rroa-PUILIUM ADVTG * "~CO"yÊqht audjor prperty riglite àonlisi SUISMR $5.00 a Yom, esbictiy in advcmec ~odd b ie OnaicaSae tca a - yder a# iasIe pr It is bigh time that a concerted effort b. made by the police depart- ment traffic division of the city of Oshawa to crack down on these ir- responsible dragsters and would-be Indianapolisites and it is certainly high timne that the traffic laws of the city of Oshawa be enforced. There can certainiy be no excuse for the ail too apparent disregard of the speed limit. And it is time for saine positive and meaningfui steps to be taken to put an end tao the growing speed virus with .whcih an increasing- ly large numbey of Oshawa motorists seem to be afflicted. The ever-growip~g number af acci- dents and fatalities on our streets and highways are not always related ta the safety features buiît into an automno- bile. They are mare often directly re- lated ta the rank recklessness af the driver himself. If an ali-out war. has ta be waged on this type of inconceivable irrespon- sibility then for heaven sakes let's get on with it. It is taa late ta, bemoan the fact that something ýwasn't done about it if it is your son or yaur daughter in the funeral cartege as it makes its way ta the local cemetery. Editor's Note: One of aur readers com- ments: "Bowmanville should try this!" Long Hair? right to f ail as long as your hair is short; you must conform to outward rules and regulations no matter how you feel inside. Is this helpful to the educational system? Would it not be better for educators to look at the boy who may be covering up his personality problems by growing long hair and seek to help the underlying cause? So many wild generalities are being tossed around in the f ield of education that one begins to wish that the old story of the unwashed lad being sent home by a teacher "because he has an offensive ador" might be revived. The boy returned to school with a note from his mother: "Jahnnie ain't no rose. Teach him. Don't smell him." )m Ottawa *Honey, M .P. one hand there is the concern that pen- sioners will have.a decent and adequate pension. It is easy ta advocate an across the board increase that will be paid ta ail pensioners whether they be wholly dependent on the pension, or be a millionaire. Such an increase would have raised taxes substantially. We mnust not ignore the rights of the producing sector of aur society. If we tax those who are working to the point where we kill initiative, then of course we will not have the tax base ta support any sort of a pension pay- ment. All in ail, considering the require- ments of some of aur aider folks and also havîng concern for the tax burden being carried by Canadians who are working it seems ta me that the policy announced yesterday is pretty reason- able and respansible. The Graduate 'What's a graduate, Mom?' he askcd His eyes so seriously intent Upon a photo. Somehow, I gasped - Thaugh well.1 knew what he meant. I stalled for time - what ta say - Is a graduate one who holds a diploma? Is a graduate one wha's learned the way? To agraduate one who's adopted a dogma? A graduate! I closed my eyes ta pray 'Did you hear me? What's a graduate? A graduate has learned ta deliberate (I hope) To face only one day - Have L a dream - Ta know things aren't always as they seem - 1Oh, son, when you graduate in turn Please know, youve but begun ta, 1 > LEARN! -Marion Ford 1 Edsall Ave. Town, July l7th, 1966 IDear Editor, I have just witnessed the most unisportsman-like be- haviour since bccorning a resident of this town. Rival coaches of Bow- manvi]le aad Oshaw a E.O. B.A. teanis (Bantam) ac- This action plus other re marks throughout the game made me wonder just what react ion this was having an the players themselves. It is my understanding tihat coaohes not oniy teaeh, but also inelude good sports- maniship as a must for al youag athietes. *cused. eac1hatter oft teling Il f whatI eaw and nearci their pitchers to brush off was the general attitude of or bean opçosing hitters. these coaches, I think they In the Dim and Distant Past From, tii. Statesman Files 25 VEARS AGO (Juiy 24, i941) Miss Leola Miller was weekeadiag in Ottawo. Miss Louise Wilson, wbo bas recently secured a position with the Linton Lumber Ca., Toronto, spent the weekend at home. Mn. M. A. Nea] left Fri- day for a week's vacation at Arnolds Park, Iowa, where his wife and son Junior have been holidaying. They will return home with hlm. Misses Margaret and Marlon Allia and Amben Morton have returned !romi a delightful motor trip ta Quebec and the Maritimes with Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Brown. Mr. Donald Purdy. late of the Public Schooi teaching staff. la taking a sumImen course at Western Uni- versity, Lonidon. We congratula te M i s s Violet Barrett on obtaining first class honors la Grade I Theory ot the recent Toronto Conservatany o! Music exams. Miss Barbara Rehder la holidayiag wlth Miss Mar- garet Staney at Lake Nipis- siag. Leonard Summenscales, of Toronto, wvas home aven the weekend. Miss Audrey Elliott visit- ed fricnds la Ottawa. A poqt-ixuplial dinner and gift party was arranged for newlywed Mrs. Jack Allia by Miss Doxothy Nichols at the home oflier- mothen. t was also Mrs. Allin's birth- da. . Miss Margaret McGregon, wbo bas been teaching school for the past two yeans at Cartagena, Ca- lombia, South America, la spending three montbs with ber mother Mrs. D. S. Mc- Gregor, ,and, expecta ta ne- turn ta her duties ia Octob- er. Miss Ruth CrYderman is ln Bowmanville Hospital where she ia makiag satis- fctory progres rom an appendix operation. Hen litile sisten Barbara also bad ber toasils removed recent- y.Miss Dorotby Lockhart, assistant supenîntendent at Bowmanville Hospital, bas netunned fnom boiidaying at Ferndale, Muakoka, an Lake Rosseau. Sergt. L. P. Dolan, lst Midlands, New Brunswick, la visiting fiends ln tawn. Mr. and Mrs. Victor Je!- feny and Marie are visiting !iends at Goderîcb. Misg Jaey Caverly la holi- doying ln Western Ontario and at Detroit. Pte. George Carter, Gov- ernor-General's Hanse Guards, visited the Carter family. .Miss Frances Rowe is nww on the Post Office st!ff. Miss Dorothea Jef!ery is bhoiidaying at Bala, Muekoka. 49 YEARS AGO (Juiy Z6, 1917) Miss Greta Densem bas returned from a pleasant visit with Mrs. Cousins, Toronto. 't Mrs. John McGill, Toron- ta, has returned home from visiting ber mother, Mrs. R. Windatt. Mrs. A. Tait, Presideat o! the Waman's Patriotic League; Miss Ethel M. Mor- ris, President o! Girls' Club, Miss E. E. Haycnaft, Presi- dent o! West Durham Wo- men's Institute, attended the Food Conservation Con- vention in Toronto, Monday and Tuesday at wbicb over 500 women from ail parts o! the province were preseat. Mrs. T. G. Maon, Masters Lawreace and Ted in comn- pany with ber brother, Mrs. S. J. Countice, B.A., and famiiy, Oshawa, motored ta Lindsay and Lokefield lost week and visited relatives there. Durham Old Boys figure prominently on the Council o! the Speakers' Patriotie Leggue o! Toronto o! wbich His Honour Sir John S. Hendrie, K.C.M.G., C.V.O., is president. They include Dr. James L. Hughes, Col. C. R. McCullougb, Prof. John Squair, S. F. Washington, K.C.. J. E. Atkinsan, Esq. Mr. W. J. Clemence la advertising bis very excel- lent farm for sale. This is a splendid chance ta get a first ciass farm in one of the best communities in Canada. Mr. and Mns. Wellington Somerville and daughter Vera, Mr. Jas. Somerville, Manchester; Miss May Lawrie, Toronto, were re- cent guests o! Mr. W. W. Henderson. Mr. ad Mrs. J. C. Dudley are enjaying a two months' trip ta Regina, Sask., where they wîll visit their daugh- ter, Mrs. W. J. Bradd.- Miss Florence Bellman, Winnipeg, Man., is holiday- ing at ber mother's, Mrs. E. Belîmran. Miss E t b e 1 Sonderson, nurse-in- training at Bow- manville Hospital, bas re- turned !rom holidaying in Toronto. Masters Pbilp and Rasa Tilley are holidaying at Rev. T. A. Nînd'a, "The jlectory", Bobcaygeon, Mr. and Mrs. Ga. P. Freeland, Toronto, are ail- doying with ber !ather, Chie! R. Jarvîs. Miss Edra E. Grigg is visiting hen cousin, Mrs. J. H. Eariy, Saskatoon, Sask. Mr. N. E. Gould reoently visited bis brother-in-law, Mr. G. L. Stevens, Peter- borough. Miss Carnie I. Painton ls visiting at ber uncle's, Mr. Albert Sînte, Toronto. Miss Jessie Edgar, Toron- to, is visiting. Miss Ifazel Darçh, Towa Lme. should take a good look at themselves and ask, is this type of action necessary. Sports of ail kinds are good for ail young people and support hy everyone encourages better sports- marnship for player an.d fan alike. Colin Coake. R.R. 1, Port Hope, Dear Sir:"» I have been reading ini your paper about aid coins that have been faund in the Bowmanville area, sa thaught this wauld be of same interest in the Hope Township area. On May 29 a! this year, aur nine-year-old daughter Cheryl found an 1816 Brit- ish coin with King George III an it. She found it in front of the aid brick horse stable which stili stands and originally belonged ta a hotel that once was on this praperty, just east of the Marrish Church. Tharoughly enjay your weekly paper. Yaurs truly, Mrs. Rudy Eyman. Saving Scheme Announced by, Bk. of Commerce The Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce today announc- ed its Growth Savings Cer- tificates and Incarne Savings Certificates. Tagether they make up a unique savings package offered by no other Canadian bank. Each is de- signed ta do the special job indicated by its name. Growth Savings Certificates present a convenient plan for growth of savings and feature a special redemption benefit. These certificates are availabie in denominations of $10, $50, $100, $500 and $1,000. They are issued for a six-day term, and are sald at a discount of 25 per cent. In other words, a cus- tomer pays $7.50 for a cer- tifîcate worth $10 at matur- ity. Growth Savings Certificates yield 5.55 per cent if held ta maturîty and represent 331/ per cent growth in six years. A special redemption feature is available only from the Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce. It becamnes effect- ive six months after the date of purchase for ail registered owners who are under 61 years of.age at the date of purchase. This is how it will work. Should an owner of a $1,000 certificate die 30 months after the certificate was purchased for $750, payment wouid 'oe made o! the full maturity value of $1.000 instead a! the $818 which wauld be the re- demption value at that time. If a purchaser holds a Growth Savings Certificate for at least three years, he need nat pay tax an bis incarne in the ordinary way, that la, at his top rate for the year o! encashment. Instead, under Section 35 af the Incomne Tax Act, he may usea speciai rate Income Savinga Certifica tes are available in any amount. with a minimum a! $1,00 with interest at 5 per cent per annum payable semi-annually an April 30 and October 31. Memorial Hospital Weekly Report Week o! July 11-17 inclusive Admissions -- ---------78 Births-5 male, 3 femnale 8 Discharges.........------ 92 Major operations----- 20 Minor operations ----29 Emergency treatments .- - 51 Visitng houri. 3-8 p.m. daiy Sugcir ALL AGONY, NO ECSTASY My wife keeps asking me why my hands shake. It would flot be polite ta respond, "Baby, living with yau would make anyane's hands shake." Sa 1 blame it an the war. Some fellows have burned faces, aluminum legs, sieeves pinned up, glass eye. Some have great shrapnel wounds on abdo- men or buttocks, which they will hap- puly show you at the Saturday night party. My hands shake. She doesn't believe the war bit anymare, s0 1 blame it an booze, the tension of teaching, or the pis 1 Lake for bursitis. But the reai reason is that living with her would make anybody's hands shake. What brings this to mind is ihat I've just gone through about 48 hours of domestie purgatory. Cowardiy bus- bands go quietly off ta mental institii- tions, or have heart attacks. My hands shake. The occasion was the reception of aur son's marks at t he end of first year university and about $1,700. Plus tax. When the paper arrived with the fiést-year results, 1 threw it on the table, ran ta the bathroom, locked my- self in, and started flushing the toilet at twelve-second intervals. As I suspected, it was futile. The alternative sobs af grief and shrieks af rage penetrated my refuge. I had ta corne out and be a father. 1 know you won't believe it, but that kid's naine was not at the bead of the first-class honors list. Nor the sec- ond-class honors ist. Nor the third. (He had told me, just before leaving for the west coast job,, ta start looking for his naine from the bottoin of the page up.) At Ieast it was there. I tried ta console the Old Lady with stuff like, "Rame wasn't buiît in a day, you know," and "You can't grow *roses without thorns, you know," and "What the hell, we'll ail be dead in *fifty years, you know," and similar bits of homespun comfort. It was as useless as trying ta hum Flow Gentiy, Sweet and Spice j By Bill Smiley Afton «with a Beatles record, going f ui bore. Kim was a big he]p, though. She sat there to>ssing, "What a lazy buin! Why weren't yau tougher with hum? Haw couid he be sa stupid?", and other bits of ail on the lire. Frankly, I was relieved that he'd passed. My wife was infuriated atUps- tive]y with the Lord. wha hadn't flsc a miracle ta pass, bis prafessors, who haci barely allowed the kid to pass, and the kid, who had allowed a year ta pass as though he'd been an ano ther planet. But she couidn't just keep an soh- bing and uttering maledictions. W. had arranged ta go on a picnic with anather family and their four litti. kids. So we went. And the results prov- ed to me once again that stupid old platitude that "Ife goes on." Ijtwsaa wonderful combination: sun and sand; their baby eating algae and ants; thieir littie boys burning theinsçlves es they roasted marshmallows; and g niost peculiarly potent potion of Gordon's lemonadc l'd mixed. Under this prescription, my aid girl was so reiaxed that she burst inta tears ai shame and rage oniy four turnes during the picnic. Next day she was definitely on the mend. She cried until noon, brooded on her bed until fouir p.m.. but got up and I put the chicken legs in the aven for some people we'd invîted for dinner. By great good luck, their kid had failed bis year autright and dismally. That cheered things up a bit. Later in the evening, an aid friend>, a prafessor of Englisb, dropped in.wit)i- his wufe. They were on holidays. Their daughter, an extremely brilliant stu- dent in high school, had aiso just.com- pieted first-year university. They hadn.'t yet seen her results. We had the extreme pleasure af teliing themn that she, like Hugh, had bareiy staggered through. They left, looking sick. We went ta bed, the boss alrnost buoyant. And she wonders why my hands shake. A MacDuff Ottawa Report Commonwealth OTTAWA - It may be a was no consc little high-flown ta caîl it or colour. the Commonwealth of the nity and pt Americas. the West But in Ottawa early this blended rei month, a meeting took place with the mi which launched a new and ads of theC warm relationship between There wil the Commonwealth countries these confei and territories ln and one will be around the American contin- year in son ents. location. The Commonwealth Car- In the meî ibbean-Canada conference - ing machine the first o! its kknci - met up in thef here for three days and committee. made soiid achievements in made ofa trade aid, communications, trade area ir and co-operation in inter- and the Car national affairs. sible industr In terms o! populations, bank for th wealth, military power, or cantemplatec world influence, this region- More spec al Commonwealth does nat has agreed carry a lot o! weight. tariff on s Canada is the largest and West Indies, wealtbiest by any measure, tunities and and only three others - wili be giver Jamaica, Trinidad and To- o! Caribbear bago, and Guyana - have as products. yet gained independencee. Canadah The others, such as An- ta, a substar tigua, Bahamas, Barbados, its develop. Dominica, Grenada, are in West Indies varying stages of constitu- wiil be i tional evolution from Bni- $ 10,000,000 tain. and will be The names of the 12 West minimum ra Inclian countries at the con- five years. ference read like a taurist In otherm brochure of the regians of West Indies, sun, sand and ocean that grants anîd Canadians dreamn of in the be ai least long winter. the next f But this was no vacation- probabiy qu minded group that met in In additio Ottawa. Wben three d4ys also pravidE of bard work were over, Indian univ sound decisions had been services ther made. casting ser But mare important, as also study Prime Minister Pearson said, thene bad been a beginning of a new relationship, a new Cons mood of co-openation and- collaboration in the Ameri- cas. e The West Iodles are tak- ing on a new political shape. A j As they maove towards in- Wvtr dependence from Britain, they seek new aliiments. Con sumers' Most of the West Indian on Tuesdaye countries are under-deveiop- held a get-ac ed and oven-populated. Thev in the Onono need a stnong friend. They were about need aid. They need the present alani cnoperatian o! a disinter- sentatives of1 ested ally. Mn. C. H.) Neither Britain, the old rai District1 colonial power, non the sumners' Ga: United States, with its huge gnouth of nat responsibilities as leader ai da stating fi the West, is fugy acceptable. was now th( Bath these qountries, of the country. course, continuo ta provide naturai gas a great deal ot, heip in the sulent andi Caribbean. with other so Canada, h:, ev er, does enengy pnodi seern ta be ac4ptable. It Warid pointE can offer help 4thout over- sumners had powering the re<ipients. And reductionsi it's rather surpr ing ta note natunai gas how often the inking af years in spitE Canada and thé Carlbbean ing costs. countries - on *hadeaia for It was sta example - coinci es. ing that the The Ottawa * conference faltb in the plainly showed tbis afflnity, and that ti and the genulne spirit of Ca. stay as at operation. î "We are soti Trinidad's Pri 1 ~Mi'nister, help Orono', Erie Williams, sjd it lwas ln this he i "the mast succes ul confer- ers' Indusi ence ever attended by the would be Conibbean countriksoi. assist with t There was no strain, or dustry in 0 very little, o! the baves not the indui against the have 4ots. There la oui- auncei of the Americas, sciausaess o! ra 'ce The quiet dig- purisL-fulness of Indian leaders smarkably well anners and meth- Canadians. ill be more of ýrences. The next >e held within a )me West Indian santime, continu- Lry bas been set form of a trade Studies will be a passible free anvolving Canada ribbean. A pas- nrial development ,e area is being d. cifically, Canada 1ta remave the sugan from the sand new oppor- A encouragement en for the import an rum oand food has olso ogreed ntial increase in )ment aid ta the s. This year it increased from ta $13,000,000, :e kept at thot ate for the next words. aid ta the s, in the form of Ssoft boans, witl L$65,000,000 over five years, and jite a lot more. ion, Canada will de aid ta West ivensities, ta air ere, and ta broad- crvices. It will jrestorotian o Sumer$ Acquci i Orong shipping services between8 Canada and the Caribbean. The aid may not be as generous as some would like. But it shotild help the Caribbean ta develop and prasper along nes whil wilI continue ta favour al ta increase Canadian sa1 and iavestments in the Wei Indies. At the Ottowa conference, the delegates fram widely. scattered units in th* Carib- bean took a regional ap. proach ta nearly every question. Same observera cansidered this a hopeful ulga that these tiny islands, wîth their smnail individual populations, might band tagethen ta form a ledenation of the West Inclies. A single West Indian na- tion of 3,000,000 people would carry more weigbt, and get more attention, than the present dispersed units do. Canada's willingness to help, in trode, aid, and con,- munications, actually inkê it necessary for the lWst Indies ta take a regionai approach. Guyana's Farbes Burnaam devoutly hopes this negional approach will lead ta a new West I n d i a n federation. Jamaica's Donald Sangster remains conviîlced that there is no possibility of federa- flan, even thougb the ad- vantages of a regionai ap- proach are obviaus. The Ottawa conference fostered that regianai ap- pnaach. 1# may in turn lead ta federation and a new nation in the Conibbean. Gus Holds iinted Meet o Citizens SGos Company 'that we become a pont af evening, July 12th your commuaity. Our future acquainted meeting is connected with your suc- DTown Hall. There ccss". S25 local citizen& Mn. Wonld also stoted 'that ng witb 12 repre- Consumera' Gos Company 4had the Gas Company. o well-trained staff and that Wonld, East Cent- they wene sure they were selI- Manager of Con- ing the best pnoduct along with ta outlined trie the best, service. tunal gas in Cana- Follawing the addness by that this iadusiry Mn. Wonld o film was showri he fiftb largest in autlining the procedure and li e said that methad o! installing tain suse was safe, transmission lines. The aulual Most competitive film sbown was the layîng of surces o! beat and gas mains to, the City of [ucing fuels. Mn. Oshawo. ted out that Con- The staff o! Consumers was instituted 15 raote introducçd along witb local la tbe coat of contractons la heating and sover the past piumbing. te o! rising operat- The meeting was also In- formed of the field of fice sted at the meet- whicb bas been set up isA Gas Company bad Orono, o trailer panked be- efuture o! Orano tween the Town Hall and the hey were here ta Municipal Building. toxpaying utility. Gas appliances wene aImao oi isfied that we can display ot tbe meeting w»t4 said Mn. Worid, cansidenable interestt Wn~ said that Consum- shown la thera. triai Commission Tt la expected that work oq. endeavouring to the Installation o! gas mialno the piacing of la- In the Village o! Orona ,wll )rono whether or be rtarted~ eitber the latter istry uaed gas. "Tt part of this week or the eatly re desire", he aaid, part of next week. Enjoying Kiwanis Park Facilities Jetters &To Klie 9&Ltor v 1 Great Farnily journa .80» tyears ago in 1854 . corporatinq Manvill. News W* Dpt. C#m, d Wpayawn cf postagie Incash *y Wediisdey by UNG COMPANY LIWTW Mmx 190 V. GRAHAM GEO. P. MORRIS rMANAG BUSINM sMGR. in tbe imaqe appearinq en tht, proot Permission ta s V49tsceVer particulariT by photoqraphic or offset mm >h uUkra~ .pbtr loy unauthoriz.d PflONRATES $6 50 a Yom in the United States «MO~ noe rbo CumedaStatssp Pe psadvOYtlS 00f b e ibl. fa env errer in amy .dvertisement Ws~~Lis souw in wwrWny the adv.rtis.r sias y the a nd ~ with sncb wue. ceci tIrt Er.If amy errer no noted je ot lbl'dM flot .zas.d sncb e t . 01l eth e si W the coled sereba:, ta pas pied 9"1 1Olt#= 1 M

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