Yesterday, public and high schoolu throughout the nation opened their drato an incoming crop of students,- Mmre ager, smre reluctant and others ettending only because the 1mw says they will g o to ichool until they are 18. It would be interesting to record the inward comments of teachers as thsy sec their charges take theLr seats mddo a quick assessment of their capabilities and attitudes. In this area, there have been sev- oral changes since schools closed in June. Vocational classes that formeri y were congregated in Port Hope High Sehool will now be ocentred in Courtice HIgh where new facilities are almost but not quite ready. In Darlington, the construction of the new senior public échool at Hampton has brought many changes for grade seven and eight stu- dents, ail of whom wilI be taught in the new M. J. Hobbs School. Quite a few of the one roomn schools have also been closed and it will take sonie time 1before pupils and parents become ad- juuted to new bus routes and new school surroundings. -Few students wilI appreciate the additional administrative work that bas been piled on principals, teachers, of- fice staffs and school boards due to the ilterations that 'have taken place; but The Low There will be a lot of sympathy for the cri de coeur vented in the Flouse of Conmeons by Grace MacInnis. Food prices are high and lhey are certainly gôing to gel higher. And food is, as she noted, the "rockbottorn" item in every- rnan's budget. But are they too high for what we gel? Mrs. Maclnnis took a potshot at the, producers. But the producers in ternis of constant dollars are worse off eiwith today's so-called high prices than they were 15 years ago: a grade A hog brings his producer 30 per cent less, a gond steer 45 per cent, a broiler 55 per cent. - Se it is with dairy products and Vegetables. If net the preducer, then Who? Perhaps the wholesaler or retailer. But 4'these two groups have been investi- gated endlessly. At boltomn it is flot one, l'ut a seies of seemningly unrelated in- ý.fluenees, among them the housewife's :own demands, which determîne the 'final bill. Mrs. Macinnis may flot like econ- emïc Jargon, but ec-onics are very ,'niuch part of the picture. Canadians are eating twice as much beef as they i4ate 15 years ago despite the "eout eageousj% prices they are asked te pay. ý-r, te are 'new, egch -oneý of ux, putting 150 poundg of, red meat a year. Waro cers are getting less fer the same J. Somelhing is wrong with the argu- ;1nent somewhere, says The Mon treal ~tar. Prices may be high to the bouse- ife, but clearly she is meeting them. vThey are certainly flot high te the Queen's Student at Woirk. it must have been extensive and, prob- ably some confusion will be in evidience for a few weeks until construction is cornpleted and complete equipment has been installed. We extend a cordial and warrn welcome to the new teachers who have corne from other communities to schools in this district and hope they will en- joy the experience of workirig with and iniparting knowledge to the young people of the area. We aiso hope they will find pleasure and recreation to their liking in the wide range of social, athletic and cultural activities that will be taking place here during the fail, winter and spring. There are a host of active organizations who will welcçne newcomers to their ranks. . . and, for those interested, there is loads of work to be dene and always a real shortage of members willing and eager to play their part. So, let's get on with the fail term, the football games, the cheer leaders and the many extra curricular funce- tiens that help te build school spirit, flot forgetting of course that the main reason for attending schools of al categeries is to gain knowledge, develop intelligence and prepare students for taking4their place in this busy, complex and quite mîxed up world. Cost of Eating WeII producer%, and those in hetween dolit appear te be growing fat on their eut. We have two choices, it seems. We can encourage production by ietting prices run their normal course, which can be painful te the consumer on occasion, or we can absorb part cf the shock by subsidies, which means taxes. Any ether 'system, as the various countries of Eastern Europe show us constantly, is a poor ri.% A Bureau e! Statisties survey in the late 50's showed food expenditures by the average urban family running at a round $365 a head, or in income per- centages about 23.6. But lhese are aver- age families, flot the poor. For those at Ieast on the borderline of poverty, such expenditures are eut of hand, and for these, in the short run, special pro- vision must be made. But they are net surely in terms of the average. We can, if we wish, cut elsewhere. Food is alter al, as Mrs. MacInnis described it, "rock- bottem", and by any standard of value received, relative-ly cheap. Farmers earn today less for their produce than 20 years ago. To try and cut prices would be, in agricultural terms, dîsastrous. We could perhaps shave the frilîs, but these frilîs - the dlean, trimmed vegetable, the packaged mneat, the enorrocus assortment - are what we ask for, even if itis, given the hypodermie'cf advertising. A -prtial an- swer is te adjust our values, te shop hetter and more efficiently, but certain- ]y in practical terms it would be mad- ness te try and isolate one section of the economy. Farm production is the great success story cf North America and one of the miracles cf modern limes. 1 Report from Ottawa j By Russel C. Honey, M.P. (Septernber 2, wih9h6 fort , tailway dispute referred te Parliament in Canada's history. . Panliamentary in - tervenlion in any legal process is an extraordinary precedure and can enly be b. jUtified on the grounds o! public interest. Railway ernployees cerne uinder the provisions cf the Industrial Rela- tions Act as are ail other employeca under federal juris§diction. This Acf establishes the procedure fer the settle- ment of disputes. The Industnial Relations Art pro- -rides for a process o! negetiation and tif this dees net brîng a setliement then **provision is made for a conciliation p rocedure. When the procedure out- fid by the Statute is exhausted the lmw stipulates that a legal stnike niay be held. This procedure was fully cern- plied with by the Railway Unions. The criticism thIat Panluament did net in- tervene soon .entiugh is net valid. To do towould have mneant that Parliament was Interfering impreperly ini the col- lective bargaining process and thereby denying labeur'oe eof its basic ights. If Parliament had inlervened be- fore the lawful bargaining procedure had been ccmpieted it would have cneated a ternifying precedent. If Par- liament ceuld thereby depnive one group of ifs rights today, how could we then be restraincd f rom depriving an- ether group ef its right tomemrow? Having said this, however, il is ap- parent to me that Parliament sheuld take some steps now te set up a speciai procedure bo deal with labeur disputes in areas where a disruption cf service is fatal te the public interest. The sperial legislatîen must provide for setîlement cf labeur disputes in vital sectors cf our eenomy without gevemfi- ment intervention, but. respecting as inuch as possible the basic rîghts o! the workems. A great deal of thought is being given in Ottawa loday te the question of the best way te implenient special legislation te solve the very serieus probleni cf strikes in the vital public secters o! tbe national economy. Wbt %anabîan,~ae Norman B. Vanstone, son cf Mr. and Mrs. Byron Vanstone, of Bowmanville, is among 550 students working this summer for imperial Oil. An honors chemn- istry student at Queen's University, Mr. Vanstone is working at the company's Sarnia research laboratories on the low temperature properties of motor oul. ---Imperial.0il Photo Use Wînd Tunnel Io Plan Tree Planting on Farms >1 Sugar ai and By Bill Smiley NOT AS BAD AS COLOR SLIDFJS Don't ask me what l'm dding in a hotel reom in Calgary, writing this on a rented typewriter. The best-laid plans of men with stubborn wives gang afit agley. We should be at home right now, but get my wife and daughter in a posh hotel and the only way you can get themn out is to cali the management and tell them you have no money. Travel is supposed te be broaden- ing. And it is. In the first place, you're sitting around on your taau most of the time - in planes, trains, buses and hotel roorna. Secondly, besides the lack of exercise, you eat too much and to often. Between the twe, travel is defin- itely broadenirig. Travel is also exhilarating, expen. sive and exhausting. The best part is starting out on the trip. There's the excitenient of anticipation: new scenes, new faces, new experiences. You're feeling first-rate. Ail your clothes are dlean and fresh and pressed. You have every cent of available cash on your hip. The worst part is the tai] end of it. The anticipation has turned to satia- lion. You're feeling awful, whether it's constipation or piles or dire rear or jusi. the fact that you're utterly bushed. Every rag you own is soiled and crump- led. And you are flot only flat broke but you have signed a couple of cheques that are guaranteed pure India rubber. We've seen a fair chunk of the sec- ond largrest country in the world, in the last" femr days. Jet liner to Van- couver. Back by train through the rock- ies to Edmonton. Day-liner (ugh!) le Calgary. Tomorrow off to Banff ail day; back to catch the jet and into Toronto airport in the dawn's early light, after a 22-hour day and a couple of thousand miles. Yes, even the bourgeois are get- ting around these days. Now, I know there's nothing quite so dull as hearing about~ somebody e ~ ip~ç be. Nice cloud, though. The prairies are v'erywie1s long. But don't expect a sea of wav, wheat, like in the novels. From XZ feet, it's the same old patchwork qWit as elsewhere. Furthermore, those of u*-4 who don't live there have been getting a bumn steer for years. There isn't sup- posed to be any water out there, but when yeu look down, they're crawling with lakes. The Rockies? Very rocky. Also high. Lots of high rocks there. No, what made me gasp was t he thought of the early birds. First, the explorers like McKenzie and Thonip- son, who -fought and starved Iheir way through that massive, menacing wall 200 years ago, with a sack of pemmi- can, a few Indians and a canoe. How their lips must curi, Ihose early birds, as they look down and see us rolling through in 10 hours, and hear us complaîning about the lack of space in our compartment, the lack of variety in our meals, and the slow service in the bar. West coast? Very coast-like. Gond deal of shore-line. And water. Chief attraction, of course, incluid- ing magnificent rocuntains, gergeous gardens and salubrious sea-air, was harassed Hugh, son and heir. Met his boat, with great excite,^- ment. As ILuck would have it, in fact, as luck always has it, we couldn't have met him on a worse day. Normally, he has 10 heurs off. But this week, he was changing froni day shift to night, and had to work a double shift, so he had three hours off. His mother's face fell a foot. Working 16 hours a day, he had a twitch like an old fighter pilot. But it hadn't impaired his appetite, I noticcd, when I was paying the bill for dinner. He left with a big grin and one of my best shirts. Well, here we arýe, running eut of space. and 1 haven't even begun to tell 'Uhere s an accuirate Àray te lege*s wind tunnel and water snow) flow. A model tarm else's noliîay trip. So 1 won't bore you yeu about bow Kimi feul in- love wit h plan ahead for the solution te flume, used te determine the buit to scale is placed in the w'ith a resumne of ours. Except in the the lifeguard in Edmonton, tir hew my windi and snowdrift problems best location ef new buildings current and sand piles up next two or three columns. Just a few wife feil asleep on ail the sightseeing around Your farm, according or trees te serve as wind- where snow would possihly general impressions. tours or hew 1 felu inte the lap -of a te Professer H. K. Malinowski, breaks on farms where wind aecumulate, such as at the I'mi net sure Lake Superior is still nun when the train was swaying in School cf Agricultural Engin- and driftedt snow are prob- entrance te a pole barn. By eering, Ontario Agricultural lems. maneuvering. models of trees, there, as we, were above cloud when the Reckies. Oh, well, Rt least 1 haven't College, University cf Guelph. The water flurne is a chan- fences and buildings, O.A.C. we flew over w1here it wax supposed te made yeu look at co]ored sldes. Professer Malinowski prcv- nel through whlch a current agricultural engineers c a n ___________________________________________ ed the accuracy cf the Col- ef water and sand (used as plan a farmstead that'ç rela- tively free cf snowdrift and A a~'~ <~Iw widpreb]ems. Because the IA___________Ottawa__Report D ~farm model can be rotated 360 _ __ InMh degrees, every wind direction In t e D ja etae noaccount. f pu1 I The wind tunnel ia a tube C E MML m M aybe t ruh vich air blows. It .r, is' patitu;arly vÏluable in studying air currents since OTTAWA-If Canada's 200,000 t1he first design haiç been cern- in the United States in develope ' Px t moke blowing around th e kilowatt -nuclean power sta- pleted as well as feasibility ment ef nuclear power Il D ist nt asIfar model in this tube is tien at Douglas Point on Lake studies for a reacter using pushing the dlock ferward ln visible. However, sand would Huron la completed by the end ordînary light water in place setting the time when demand Frorn the Statesman Files fly around as dust in this of the year - the expectation cf heavy water as a coodant. for uranium will overtake _______________________________________apparatus se the water flume of the moment - it will be The CANDU - BLW eliminates supply. In the liant two monthe 25 VEAS AGO 9 VEAR AG reblema. Ma ny o ar ift Just a year and a hail behind the beat exchange unit wbere Amnerican programs have been 25 EAR AG 49YEASf rmeres. hasd Ontapioe schedule. It bad been planned pressurized heavy water was started for developnient of (Sptmbr lt, 94) Setebe lth 117 faeime nt fre uee boh carge have it in operation by the used te produce steamn from 5,800 megawatts. Westing. (/Lets m Brown and91) Rep. G. C and M. 1W17s-oteupla n trfarms-ocareMiddle f 1965. light water. In addition te bouse and General Electrie 2/Liuts Wm Brwn nd Rv. . C an Mr. Wls- e pan hei lams.Atomic Energy of Canada this the CANDU-BLW wiil have contracts representing a Wally B r ade n, Officers' man accompanied by Lois But hew could the wind Ltd., partner with the Ontario need far lesof the costly total investment close te $3 Training Centre, Brockville, and Olive left on 'Tuesday tunnel's air currents and the Hydre Electric Commission in beavy water. It uses it only billion. By 1973 the United were in town for the week- for Everton where Mr. water flume's sand pile-up be the DouglasPoint venture, is as a moderater. Quebec States will prnbably again be end. Welsman held a pastorate cempared with the anow- anxious te tind eut why ini agreement te go into partner- a net importer witb a total Wes Cawker has heen fer over five vears. Mr. drifts and wind sweepng detail and has asked for a re- ship with AECL in the build- demand for 16,000 toncrs for about the busiest man in Welsman is te efficiate at over. an actual farm? A form-potfm spwe project ing o 5,0 ioatneerpwrpoet.O town the past couple of a wedding in the Church et er aircraft engineer, Professerdipo To n t owte br e- et a 25000 klowha attnclea powr projg ets. wront erected andeinstorin Chrtof. C. T. PalPr Ma inwski, thate uthsually sented te a nuclear power P. n delayed by the change Rie Algom, Eldorado, Denisen , front fr.cfed nd instaling Prf. C. T Paul, Pesi-symposiumsthon arctoberlysymposdm nn governm14ntdbut gshouldntbet andlStanradckta ono y o Rie Aolgono a nodrn ur'k celig dnte!theCeleg o M s.een at airports. These socks 1.fcrthcoming seen. and Eldorado are doing any a moernEtirkacooing dentof he.Cnlegeof is-we.rP placed at appnoximateiy systemn in his butcher shop. siens, Indianapolis, Ind., is 20 feet apart arotind buildings This is net an attempt te îay 2. Reduction in the time or exploration work In prepara. Two hundred and sevenîy- visiting his mether, Mrs. o Mr. Bill Hewitt's and Mn. blame at anyene's door but construction. This la why de- tien for this day. Aniericans, five joined Warden Alex re.laby n te Cedrie Harrop's Guelph farms, rather te make sure that ne tailed study cf tbe causese oeeaeloigwt n Edimendstne on his excuir- relatives here. cnvering Rn area cf 260 of)()lesson te be learned falîs by delay. at Douglas Point can terest at the field. Kerr Me. sien. The sali on the lake Mr, Thos. Tremeer and square feet at each farrn. The the wayside where it will bear prove invaluable. The addition- Gee Ltd. bas recently purchas. forfou hers nd ancng issGrae Temer, ind sae ws dne e sal oe fruit for the future, al year and a balf occupied in ed dlaims in the Blind River were highly enjoyed. The aay. are visiting the formeras the modela placed ln the water .F'ears have been expresedcosrtinaDugsPitara - S. S. Onitarin had the priv- daughter, Mrs. F. A. Fos- flume and wind tunnel, and, to in some inforrned quartera bas pusbed cests only about ilege of carrying the first ter, "Norwood Place". be as accurate as possible. even that Canada is in danger et $3 million above tbe original om e excursion eut cf Cobourg Miss Shaw will resump grouind conformations and tree losing the competitive position $81.5 million estimate. This this surromer. her clasa iin piano instruc- shapes were net ignored in for the beavy water natural original estimaie bowever, Cwom e l l Miss Greta Pollard is holu- tien on Mofiday, Septem- eonstructing the modela, uranium type reactor (CANDU bad already allowed generousw o ~ ~a dlaying with her parents, ber l7th at hem studio on "We checked the wind seck --PHW). These fears May be ly for ail contingencies. If Mr. and Mrs. Blake Pollard. CnesoStBwavle dieins ytaigpt-eaggerted. The enîy ser'ieus the reactor bad been finisbed NU K euflIofla Miss Pollard, a dietitian, Miss Lîîlu Baird of Chi- graphs frn a n aîrcraft nt cuitomier in the market at onha edle t$5milcon teou7 who bas been rn tfhe lecture rage is viqiting ber aunit, different times whenever the the moment, Finland, which inaebn$ million es hntesimte $7 IbM tUa Valleyi staff cf the Ontario Agriciil- Mms Robt. Downs. She will wind d i r êtc 1t i o n changed", Planning a 300.000 kilowattmiloleatnthesmte*uew e w. y tural College at Guelph for rpturn home seme time Professer Malinowski relates station, ha r narrewed ilts In general terms the major a inumber or yrear, 00iW his about Nov. ist. "The firsi winter we cheekeri choire te three ceuintrien. the causes of delay are known. The Sixth Annual Coom-bes the interesting task cnf teach- both farms, but we limited it United States, Canada and Ten much tue was spent in Pic.nie was held on Sunday, ing airmien te he chefs. Eight Mrs. Fred Msplh tnt th(,. Hewitt place the sec- West Germany whicb is manu- the eariy stages et desigu and Aug. 21, 1966, et Thistia Val- wepks from the hamburger and daughter Blanche, Ak- end year. The expeniment bad facturing 1.10de r American Planning. Tf the Peak had ley Park, Bowmanville. Horse. stand Ie cooking in train- ron, Ohio, are visiting ber te be carried eut ini winter for licence. Both the United been moved forward later shees were enjoyed by ment ing camps, is the schedule. aunt, Mrs. W. C. Cole. two resens: (1) the snew pro- Kingdlom and France are out stages could have been speed- before the 40 present sat down Mr. Fred Neal who lias Melville Sandford Bab- vided enough centrast te pho- Ot the picture. ed quite considerably. This is te a picoin dinner at 1:30 p.m. cock bas been swcrn in as a tograph the wind socks and It iS difficult te make corn- sometbing quite common te During the atternoon, a liv- becii takiing a surumer police officer for the Town (2) because calves liked toe et panisons, particulaly a i n c e development in this age cf ely prograni et sports was course at the Iowa State cf Oshawa.tewn ack in mr. Canada's main competitor, very sophisticated cquipment. conducted by the sports coom- College, Ames, Iowa, is visit-th idsc nsumr ing bis parents, Mt. and Mn. and Mns. N. N. Cole, Then, after we had teken the United States, using costly It was panticularîy truc in mnttee, Reg, Rue, Carol and Mr7. M. A. Neal. Mr. John Winnipeg, Man., were recant photographs et the ferma, we enricbed uranium fuel, bas Canadien development of the Danois Combes, witb prizes Neal, Buf~falo, N.Y., spent gucats of Mn. L. A. Tole. created the wind directions stil te prove its estimetes of destroyer escont and pusbed awarded in the follôwing: the weekend with his par- Mn. Thos. Morris bas been we found on the actueil arma power cost. It isa xpected costs te an astronomical level.Races for cbildren .5 end un- ents. vîsiting bis daughter, Mrs. in the wind tunnel-and weter that the Qyster Creek preject The designer and researcb: der, won by Laure Thatch; 6- Briait Flahirty .vs a Herbant Wyatt, Toronto. flume. We also photcgnaphed will come througli witli power er are continueîîy eoming up 8, Gary Combes; 9-11, Dennie guet cf Cborg otay Mr an Mr. . Mnn e.this". et 3,7 mile per kilowatt heur with new ide.--! and impreve- Conmbes; men's race, Rallie Club's rdCobweurhgaveta r n. ed l r IMnnn- ohiq resulta, Professer and tbat the two 1.100 mea- menta. Ne abuelute eut-off Coombes: Jim Coombea was Cglb Fnridwhnhgve a roty viied br iteMaliinowski found cunrents in watt stations planned by fthc date in fix d et which accept-wnnreme' shoe kick, Mis F E Bdwl , Cl q"t", ewith Lind ut n tkig h highly ontetiîgdme- Msb.X.Bde orne. the wiod tunnel te be the same Tennessee Valley Authority ance of imprevements, how- wt id utntkn h taon f sleight-of-band Mr. And'rew Pollard, Ilich. as those in the wster Ilunie. will do bet ten than that. ever gond, wiirceas.Wthpzfrlde s ale kick. Mri.k and vDnleim od4m. avstn iDfferences In resuits between The Douglas; Point plant is otb AECL and Hydre haav- WayneCe ba; ec rc, M n r. Leo Ram- sista1f, MMs A, P. Ditch- the modelsanmd the actuel cxpccted Ie produca 3.9 null ily staffed wlth terlinical ~RnyCoombes; lucky sapet, meil, areinahay I twerip bheurn kt.te et sfRrmawere se atiglit that the power. Capital cent ef the parts the partnershi p myGe emaadfi al Sho, ae n ahelda tn Th tek o tc estiSwind tunnel and water flunie Canadien reactor is higher; have been perticuler ly yul- cnth wa wo teMnra.just as haavy this year as wene proved practical for use operating cent lower. AECL nerable te delay frem this onhreaking cnetwswr Cpi. Dave Preston visited last year. in'iledpanng scniettatteCNUqatr by Bruce and John Coomnbes bis mother, Mrs. S. Preston, iMiss Arn L. panning._onfbalance cten sand u anter nesprbe e A raffle for a carton of cafil Cburcb St. Seven cars cf whe liuben ln Osaka, egainst competlng types, Its overcoma e the lack cf expert- nC obes. uwo hen bCr relatives and fniends .motor- Japan, worklng unden the aisea report stetes the Cor- erîce on the part nf contractera cf pmae. uts n athe wnmby Pd te Osawa station te bld Board cf the Congregation- R ntw'ct ainelito ha nfrcmoret nwl a fPuat l awn him farewcll. al Church' and lias been an ar coviehctin at r-inaor comptenta as elle aCnmesCeembas eand Jim Miss Helen B. Pritchard, home for e year on f"r-erawihanaep -iailt te pvde enCem s was the wlnner ni is pedin br acaio in legl, vsiin be mthe aes 6~ ~ 1 ctera wtb capacity for 500,009 specifications, This tee la guessIng the number et amar- is pedig hr actio i lugh vsiinghe mthe R te to6129 o kilo watts or more and remote something that dogged the ties A short business Pe 1id WesernOntrio icluing andnthr elaive, lftfrom undevelopcd h yd ro stiéps et the Navy in canlier followcd wlth the minu of e Hamilton, St. Thomas and Wednesday on hanrarturn Central Ontario Trust & sources nuclear power is the days but has langeiy diaap, hast vear being reed andiap- Windsor. trip. She will viait ber Sevînga Corporation anneunic- ment economical. Tha langer pearad. -in se cases pre- pnoed. Mn. and, Mrs. Clara Allun sister-in-law in Kansas and cd today thet intereat rates con the capacity, ot course, the limlnary work by manutactur- The electiot, of next aaras and son Robent and Mns. procaad tram thare on lier ts Guarenteed Investment Car- lowen wuhl be the unit cens. crs bas liad te be scrappad afficera are as followu: ;res!- * Truman Power spent tlie journey in company wîth tificates bava bean uncreascd The tinst of tour 500,000 kilo- and started agib from scratch. dent - RellUe and Wllmu wackcnd eit Eldorado and Mns. Hilton Pediey and oth- te 611/z% on five te tan year watt units la in pnaliminary It is probable thet study et Ceembas, Sec.-T4eae-. Mr- Stilnng, eassln the mission field ini G.I.C.'s (tormenly 6%) and to stages ef construction ferrflic the probiem will prouc idas. rtan C s Sot Miss Leole Miller beavas the Flowery Klngdom. 6¼ý% on oe te four yesr Ontario Hydre in Pickering provements e oth DOLO .In Committee- 17E Mutton, on Sept. 22nd for a two Rav. and Mrs. F. Wood- G.1.C.'s <fonmarly 6%).hb er oote n aatliawllcr b rce o vdc'llCo - waeks' tour et Qucbec and ger, Centre St., lait Tuasday These cartiticetea are guer- In addition te oineraasing axp.rience. Ini the latter stag- bas.Z the Maritimes. teo visit friands at Oakwood, antaed as te both principal reacter size, the lwenbng cl ou thora bas bean sOe un- Horsesboasi and awlmming Mrs. M. J. Enodie, Mld- Lindsay and Woodvl&. and interest and are isaued in nuclear power consain Canada justifiable finie Iag on the were enjoya&vaoàfo h and, la vist)ng her ulster, Mrs. Robt. Barrie... Wittîi- denornijnetions ni trom $100. he will depend for the mont part part et manufacturera. As thie nestcfthe à >te}non. Idrq. F. M. Tamblyn. peg, bas bean vbmtin*. 'with $îoo,on. on two devalopmentz: dendline for the entira project Alter e njoylng a lovely stop- Mise Moira Dbnnlwell hall lir nephew, Mt. Wfn.' ar- These rate increases reflent 1. New break-througlia ln waa pushed bock there bas per. the nain wlch bcd boen ~com anu.re-n-raaig ie fithlenae ratas being offered developig variations and Im- been a tandenry te siacken on threetenlng for a cou le td it tàiday Uoaltai. P-ev, and Pdns. Isaac Snall, theUi financial cosnmunity provenients ln fthe CANDU re- individugl jobs. heurs, j et aigo hea4ol Oo. rno Mi 0t m, es atig.hv be iiieg foyr longer terni fundsanaid aneacter. The tirat ma.ler varia- SS home. Î;qel1 à very *nio~i wswm, ~ ~ ~ ~ r Mpatti emd brboh r . -M1sn .flchigliacitn nlwi many -tien uu in lb. huinugotage IC r04AIsili Capsoule day, looking 1Iorwtrdf, bwA* lo 3iy si4%> yeurs, e nd b1u cth" P4OU b&hDý udis .yx ,. 11 EDITORIAL COMMENT Back to the Salt Mines Students v 1- Durham Couaty's Great FamIly lournal Esteabli ahed Il 2lyeara uqe ln 1854 Aise Inorporcanq The Bowmnv±ll. News TeNowcasf le lndep.îadant The. Orono News I àutkta.d acmSe0=3d Clesu a Milby thé Pont Office Dépt. Ottawa, and jet paymsaî et potaige la cash Pro4lucad ovary Wedaday by THE JAMES PUELISRIG COMPANY LIMITED P.. 3m190 62-66 Khnq St W., lewmStville, Onterrio JOHN M. JAMES GEO. W. GRAHAM GEO. P. MORRIS tput Mid J& amy wbmjSsr âoà" t apuntme *Uwt b.».b.isdken Md palmier. Amyuuthît l.eidîgseame, tasm W. ~. I vur pomutbe u ~ib. e ek"le. ow4«M *Wa" ,t wu* et à M enve