4~~eCnda St atesilan. rowmnanville, September 5,197:1 rç,-cent pi you have hýivin"g paç wprry abc ~ twas 1969 that1 iecame nMperatio es as il tq»ards rE ý' Indeed 1968, the1 ra4te -- thi banks foil six and a h a balf, and wâs referr t was bé remenm ter Pierr celebrated *-rëa' alot( who are b the govern Ichg bec. frghtecned nent go u] pêople thir nërve now w'a avalanche béfore beii ~The sE pioymnent Cent at the SYou're driving home when suddenly it hiappens. The car ahead sêems to lose control. Tires scream. It, leaves the road and hits a tree, S1.lence. -What do you do when you are the first on the scene?' There are no r1oles, because every crash is different. Th-e Ontario Safet.y League offers the followving facts to FUide you:- 1. Sto-p immediately. Park far enough away from the crash scene tü,,rpotect it. Turn off ignition of da,-iaged car immediately. Flag down the first approaching cars an-d ask the drivers to assist, in warning other traffic f rom both directions. 2. H1elp the victims. Administer first aid if qualified. Do not move seriously injured people unless .bsolutely necessary. Rescue ex- perts erstimate that 80 per cent of the people injured in cars are pulled out by frantic rescuers --- and mnany are i -ade worse, or ev7en killed. If they âre lying on the road, leave themn there and take steps 10 guard them from traffic. ~,3. Hail passing cars and send t»em in opposite directions to find telephonies 'and caîl the police. IRemernber, police say that if only 4ne car is sent, its driver may go tu1iles, find no phone and give Up. S4. 0f ten accident victims appear to be trapped w1hen they are merely 4eld by a foot twisted under a seat. Crawl inu and gently release the foot. ,If the driver is trapped between the 4teering wheel and is seat, pres- sure can often be eased by releasing the seat catch and gently inching the sçat back. 5. Don't attempt 10 lift a car. T'ousands of people gel hurt ail over againi because motorists try to lift clrs, fînd they can't and le( the car fait1 back. 6. if you are not skilled at first aid,. you can render the followîing assistance while waitfing fori-he amîbulance : 1Cover the injured to keep themn wvarm, Loosen collars, ties, beits, withiout tugging, to help lhem breathe easier. Keep [the victim's head to one side if hie is lyiýng on his back. Slow heavy bleedîng by pressing a folded pad of the cleanest cloth available firmi-ly over the wounds. Don't press on a head wound. . , the skull mayv be fractured. Talk to the injured. -Neyer tell them anyone else has been killed or is badly huirt; say hielp is on, the way. Rescue offîcers say thIley even hold their hands. "A firm handgryi1p seerns to give them courage." Send somieone to fimd boards on wh1ich trained first-aiders can carry viu- tims flat should the amnblance o arrive, and locale a truck oni which the victimis can be carried fiat if transportation is needed. About one car in seven catc1hes fire in a crash. If fire doesn't start rhtaway, il will rarel'y starL afterward. if' you notice smoldering under the hooýd or dashiboard, don't panic. Disconneet the baltery (be careful not bo let the hot wvire h1IL m-etal and cause sparks), locate the fire and attack il with1 a fî re extinguisher, dirt or a blanket. Whien you telephonie the police 10 report a traffic accident they wl usua1lly, ask the following basic questions:. Location, are there aniy injuries; is an ambulance requîred; your namne and address. The Ontario Saf'ety Leaigue suggests that,. if you are drivwng past an accident. try to maintain speed: don't promote accidents b'y slowvingf down to gawk. (?ornr 1 /oets SUMMAER REVERIE Tb~Je slim sh)adowv silhouettes the 'l shore Of Scugog; the canoe paddles on, And I am filled with thoughts of Syore, Ôfbattles lost and battles won. Thbe heron dips his head over there iýd i alittle etude, simply played, 'rIlJàt runs thie scale from " 'CI, 1 Like a hairpsichor-d thait is no(t frayed-. There is one thing I Must do, to-day, I mrust kneel o-n the sand b ray For' on the wind and from the trees fIhear this message on the breeze - -Look! Over by the fishing rodf. A memrory of c*atfish. And Qf odV' -by Marion Talor Ford Dujrham Counity's Great Fam-ily Journal Ei D Estabiished 119 years ago in 1854 0 Aiso lncorporaiting CCNA ~The Bowmranvill1e Nevs r The Newcasfle Independient " Thie Orono News L ., Phone Second class mail registration numrber 16 phreProduced e-very Wednresdlay by oe -5623- 3303 THE JAMES PUBLISHING COMPANY LIMiTïEU' 6m23 3oý 62-66 Kingi St. W., Bowmanivilie, Onitario L ïC 3119 JOHN.M. jAMES G EO P. MOPPRI1S PATRI1C KGOU LD DONALD BSO Ec.iior-Pulishe.r Business Mgr Salesý Man-ager Pilnt Mg]r Coùpyright and or proprty ,ýr[ihts uss nth ae pp rngo fl pO( P' r z eutrduceîwoloîaiadn m any torwase~.prwlryb htgdh roi rr a pujbIýca,îon, musýt b,oJtaîniecifrom the pebliher ând thprnter n nuhrdrp dco .1 subject to reco)urse ni)law v.. 700a year - 6 months $4.00 strictly in Avance $9.0 yeaerînthe U-S.A. Alhuheer y precaulin1wjAlb an t0 avoid erorPe C"a&mC Satsia dOm wU00 c i ilsclumns on the u&nestanding it tMilrot b c be fropanyero m dotsrin i o e hen der unlss a proobom wh d ertsm e=eo ect>d wî tiî, byWcadort a d rtne , S ThL Cadrýtlin Statesman ur ,s ofc uysigned b the P, t",'! "i o r ic iclo pini y notïed in w>v, ag threp nanW mn t , seifany erou" oedsy t-rer ,b nc0a dii Stalsman ils labiityental ot exerd wsa aportionof li-enenu oto ocn avot ,nta ui. i~occtied b> the noted error bearu be Ohewho>e sace cc i bà uaadert u w nn The road is terribly faniliar .m-ersedi in aceounts of the rapidity until it reachied thcwz og0ress of interest rates, peak of 6.9 per cent in Septemtber., Sthe haunting feeling ofT1hree months laiter, thePrm îssed this way before, don't Mîinister announced that the fiht ýut iL. You have. against inflation hiad been %von, and afe1n aî retired fromnt he field (on his shield). ailonIySo much forhitr perhaps, the Bank of Canada was even, given the nature of it, too Since the autumn ... when mnuch. clear t1hat the anticipated Ujnfortunately, as everyvone has ân of inflationary pressur- hiad ample opportunity to see, not occurring, mnonetary7 inflation w7as not defeated;. in fact. il as again beeni directed was only momientarily arrested 'estraint." îargely because of a- pricewr di. Beginning in Decemberý, between the food chains -- before it bank had raîsed its own icked uip'again, as luisty as bhefore. e standard the chartered Nor wajs the ujnemfplomntta 0W frm sx er enttowas created in that broadsidje half, to seven, to seven and assault upon iL in 1969 ever ll d, finally, in July, to wha.t erased. ,red to as the historie high What is pariculariyworyngas er cent. wve see the cýentral bankagi Slater in that year, it may applying the classie mea-sures of îbered, that Prime Minis- restr .aint - the bank rate has justý re Trudeau raised his býeen raised for the fourth timi-e in as d cry of defiance: "There many mnonths, to 6.715 per cent -- is of people in this country' that we start from a igher Ilevel of )argaining that, oh, well, unemnployment than on the earlier nment can't hang tough too occasion. 'ause it wjil onily get In Jaýnuary, 11969, il was 4_5 Per'l 1 wheni it sees unemploy- cent, seasonally adjujsted; in Jan- ip six Per cent . . . But if uary, 1973, iL was 5.2 per, cent, and it nk we are goingc to lose our had't been lower. And that, of , they should think again. course, is 'the national figure; ;In part s of the country -- in Newfound- S faîntly like inviting the land, for example -- even at thle best t to do its worst ...just of times between the bouts of ng inundated. restraint, one per-son ini eight who ;easonally adjusted unem- was ready to work had n)ot wrkto rate, wichl was 4.8 per do. ýe time the Prime Minister It ail makes very liîtt]e senise, Lou)k-nted with astonishing does it?, First Oun the Scene CliamrniiofComre Postmasiter CrlB.Kent hais hen cheduiled to receive the "FaitfldLong Servýice ade which car- ies the citation, "In cecog- Suaar THEY'RE RBBNIN E FOR01 LO(USY5C(OF'FEE BUT 1ILOVE TEPLACE Travelling is tiring. It's eleven o'clock in the mningiiii, a perfect day with temperatÈure ýIn the 8O's, and any self-respecting . tourist should be out stoin)i-g around looking at a càstlje orsontig But my wAife is on the bed hiavi*ng a snooze, and I myself Lam almost relieved that I have bL write a column and don't have 10 get, out there and tr'omp. About tromping. If you're going to do Britain, bring along your oldest, mnost comf[ortable pair of shoes. That noise you hear in the background is thie barking of thousands of torits ogs as the furriners wearjIy climb yet, another flighit of stone steps. We're in the mniddle of a heat wave here In Chester. Back homne it wýould be just plasntbach weather, but the Brîts, w.ho suffer stoically through thlle normal rigors of theIr vwIindy, rainy îisle, can't take the heat. This morning's newspaper re- ports that millions are f>leeing i;to the beaches, that resort1 hotels are Jafnmed. tha-t the sale of' deodorants is bomnand that itis ýexýpected there will be ten million cars on the roads this weekend, 1Thank goodness we're not touring by car. Highways aàre completely in- adequate for the volumre of traffic., The cars are piled up ini hundreds, abot twevnty feet apart, and when somiething happens, there are uul ly four or five c-ars involved. An Engf!slishman on'the train 11l mie that "The trouble with England is that we neyer dIo Panylhin until our 'backs are tb the wal(,Hewas cormmenting on11those samie igh1- ways, whichi were buijl for the traffic of, twenty yasao îhno thoughl of the 11fýuure. WýejLthat's the way th ey'vý,e gone into every wa, wenty years behind the limes, but they've manaýged t10 muddle trugso far. 1 Speaking of wars, il is driveni hlome bth le touristth1r o ug innumerable plaq3,(ues Iin casîles and cathedIrals and other public places, what a Iremrendous toîl of Britishl blood w",as taken ntr gra as One plaque in the Castie of Edinburgh reveals thIat one Scottish, regimient lost nearly 700 officers and almnosf 8.00other1-c ranks in World War I. EdinurghCastle is a fascinaI- ing plae.M friend Dick WVhitig ton, a,, historyc,, buff,wod go right out of his mmd nd would haýve 10 be dragged aayb\ the constabulary when he saiw the magnificentl displayvs of ancient and hionorable uiformis, coats of ar'ms, weapons ndsuch. E>ut I thInýk he Inmiht turn purple wjtli ~ ý had he wSieenusetn nition of splendid public serice" according to in- formation recleived f rom the Ontario Brancbi, Canad- ia*n P'ostniaster's Associa- tion tbis week. Mr. Kent andSpce B'y Blil Smîley - Chinese food up there on the great brooding Ca stie Rock. Even I had an uneasy feeling that William Wallace and Robert the' Bruce would be roffing in Iheir graves as I chomrped miy chow mein on the massive rock where hierole deeds were dlone and the course of history changed. Chiniese restaurants are com- mron here, but I don't thinik their food, is as good aýs that in Canîada, on the whole. I detest, the stuff, but m-y wife loves il, 50 I wind up hacking at an egg roll when I'd rather be getting mbt somne Dover sole. Food prices here are a fitIle lower than at home, but not much. There are thousands of tatty 11111e ~restaurants, somnething like our -greasy spoons". Poor food badly cooked, litter everywhere, and sloppy service. At the other end of thie stick are the classy joints: excellent food beautifully cooked, elegant sur- roundings andc four wvaiters hover- ing. But you'd bettler be well fixed wilh bravellers' cheques if you wander ib onre of them. There's not too miuch in between, though m-ost hotels, even smiall ones, serv.e a decent dinner for about four dollars. Bars have sandwiches, and bhe good pubs have hot and cold lunches. Somiething that irritates me no end is the coffee racket. You are ýserved an eno.rmous thiree-courseý dinner, so lavish you can eat only haîf of il. Then the robbers want eleven or twelvýe pence for a cup of coffee, E ven lhough I'm dying for coffee, and thie rmeal itself was reasonabhle in price, that bit of ScotIlýt*,ih blood in me makes me reueto pay, about thirty cents for a cuip of the w,ýorst coffee in the world. That's about the onfly thing that anniioysnme, and it's chldish on my part. Generally, the English and Scotswev comie in] contact with are the soul of courlesy and frienidliness. W'enot had a single unpleasant incdetthough I must admit that the natives have a penchant for doing m iost things backwards. E xamle. In London,I1booked a r0om in an Edinburgh hotel. I paid t he agent the full price for- tw~o nighits in thie holel. Th'le hotel turned out to be thie worst one north of the Tweed. but that's another stor-y. O.K. Checingout cof the Edinburgh hotel, I asked for a receipt. They would-n't give m-fe one.ý "But I've paid f'or the roomi", 1 expostlated. "Na, na, sorr, we canna gie ye a rrreceipt because ye haveria' gien us any mionny. We hae only, the voucher." I protested vehmenlybut camne up agaînst thatinoibe Scottish spirit that ha, hield dhe thin red line 50 many Liean-d had to retreat in diýsarrayi.\. Up the Scots' Meanwhv ille, 1ifs timne f or a haîIf of bitrand a crack aI. Chester's Rmnwal Hav-en't walked il for bas comiypletedi 65 years of conltinutous, service, joining' tUe Newcastle Post Office as a mnere youfh in 1983 as Junior Cler'k. Redeicatin Service was beld in St. aul's Chijrch, Town, on Sunday mnorning with Rev. G. Camecron Quigleyý in il"e pulpit. A large congrega- ton aftended. The Ainnual Track and FieldDga oUth BT.S. Bywilbe held this yeac on WNednesday nexf. Those in charge are PHI Bagneli, Wally BradOeY'Îand Reg. 'Rackham. Tse Edmonton Bulletin pubishes the interesting acc ounf of the appointmenf ofM.Walter F. Black- br.son of MNr. and Mrs. Mlark B3lackburn, Hamp- ton), f anl important execu- fivec position In) welfalre wxork in Alberta. Mc. and Mlrs. How-ard A\bbott and famnily, Burke- t~on have moved f0Enis illen. Rleverend Elliot t, Will- imsPoint, will pceacb in Nestleton Uni ted Ch urcb on) Su nday. Mi'. K. E. Couriela don.ated land' Soutb of Courtic in memocy of bis fate fathier, W. E. Courtît f0o be used as; a ball pa and for- other recreation 49 Years Ago Ulturs, S!e p t.18,14 Mr. paul Couch Trel cock, one of the towI oletbusinessmnen, pass away on Tuesday mojrnujý, in bis 7(6tb year. John Hienry Devitt. lE M.P.P. has been named the Iiely returning offil for the riding of WE Durbam. Officiai confiri ation 15 exp(eec this weE Hlarvest Festival Seri ces of St. John's Chur, will be held on Sund; Sept. 21. Rev. Scott Hiowa Newcývastle wilî preach the morning service. Dr. îAu S. Tîlley presenti the diplomnas to t h e grac at ing nu rses onf B'owmýii ville Ho0spital on Fridý evening in the Opej House Te-rdufe1 Misses. Gladys Mlay Lowt Leta' Alfhea Pearl Ha coc1k, Frances Amnan< Cryderman, and Eliza M dred Coolidge. They b, successfully completed t ree years ini the trainir -chool for nurses'at Boi iimnifie Ilos-pital. The 0 era House was gaily deco ated witb an abun dance LegfnM. souch, so(n of iMr. an rs. W. 1D. Souch, Towný , hs beennme Presden ofthe Ohw 4~~~~ J60P/L, 4FcF 2cr/ciE4z-9Ars)44ie;et /O1/. BES'E (v)E.WKI//VG/,6/W4/ 71vEAn/LFv; Dim and Distant Past - - - - - - - - - - - - - purpie and yelloxow es Mr. Samnuel Black, ar worth, one of the be'st"-> known citizens celebrated bis 9lst. birthday and waàs honored by about 60 mnem- bers of the family andic iriends who gathered to congratulate him. Mrsý. O. M. Alger Oshawa, is a daughteri. The Statesnmnisben published a ay i' 'eairly this week to enable the sitf to attend Bowrnanville Fair, For a whole week Nov. 2 Nov. 9, Newcastle wl celebrate by appropriate, services in th)e Comn)itiy hall, the loothanvear of the etbihetol £e t teta t/e (S ci i*tor- LOOKING F OR AD)VIC'E Dear Mr, ams As you probably know, the hydro plans anotlher nuclear plant in Darlingt,-fon Township, and it will be fully orerational by'year 82. As a taxpayer, 111y far.n4Jv and I face tbe ioossKIbity of ex,,propria t4n1 What I would like to know is how do they g about this-law and what wev, can do about it w-henit i arises. They fell us they are going to close the ,road off in the Spring so that m eans we will have to leavebe, but to find another place equal f0 whaf we have foer Iwhat tbey want to give us is' Jusf impossible. Anyon with any advice .rk th at could help us would be Is appreciated I know it's thegorn ment we are fighting in this )il- caise andi they uslually get tf s their own way in the end- ed My father always told me, g, you neyer own anything in this world as they can sfep in a nd taiike it anytime fhey as please, er Canada used t o. be a good .rnt and freeconr but since m-. this bas ha.ppenedi to us, 1 vi- have second thoujighfts. ch Looking forward for somne lay 'kind of hielp or advice f.o rd ease ones mm-nid. at Yours truly,> Ma ïbel Trimble led Api Memoria>l Hospital lyWeekly Report ýra e, For the week of Aug. n- 27-Sept. 2 inclusive. da Admissions .... . ... 70 fil- Births, 2male,5 female.. . 7 ad Discharges-......... 79 h- Major Operafions ...... ý2 11g Minor Operations . ..... 29 w- EmiergencyTraens r- Visiting hours 3-8 p.m. daily. of - - - 4imp --