ORONO WEEKLY T IMEST.USA>OCOE ,,15 Bowmanville Turns Down1 Liquor Vote On Wednesday Votes wnt e te pois a Bw- in licenced dinîing roomns or served inanville on] Wednesday for the ilkallugs second time ln a year on whether Those supporting the questions they f avor having lijuor served, needed a 60 per cent m-ajority of with meals in licesw.d dining roooms the, vote te have thequestion car- and whether they were in favor of ried. Ccktain louaiges for te town. - The vote on the question of iserv- Both questions reeeived a nega- ftg tIýqv-or ini dining-reoms was: tive answer from the voters and? j"yes"' 1836 and "ne'" 1287, 1718 vot-1 thus neither liquor niay be eervea?, ed "yes" for cocktail louaiges and, here for the first Urne anywhere- elegance with economyl 196 BOWMANVI LLE vision, Canada Department cif Ag- riculture. Production of pedig-reed cereali seed in the Atlitic provinces is clown from last yeéar. an average or lower seed p)roduction of jpedigreed cereal seed is expected. An average or below averiage al- faif a seed crop is expected. Last year's alfalf a crop was only slightly moetban he1f the 1949-58 tro- In¶ naiwhepin at and barley _ pro-Àý"" Prospects for, adequate supplies of and 2w " pr n oatand bar1e uctinravrage registered and certif led seed of djuction is lower. Prospects for good 'h rset orase rpo wheat, oats, barley, rye and flax crops of soybeans, white beans and double-eut red clover are about- av-ý and corn of recognized and recoin- corn are good iin Ontario. erage. The prospect for an average imended varieties are goed this vear, Ii leAlniePoicsý is Manitoba seed crop prospcsaecrpflh Alni roicsI according te the plant Pro".ducts'D l- poor. Last year's crop was slightly ________________________Variable. J-Iwevr, rospects for Iless thian the 10-year average. 1406 no".expandecý registered and certified' Lat4 ea's6oe"ano". iaro- cepeal seed crops -are - gôôd. Pedi- The prospect for a seed crop of Las yer'svoe Ws ýjjC ra]TW-gre-ed wheat acreag1e in Manitoba is single eut red dlover is about aiv*r- ly debated la1 Noverriber as it was expecte(l to be lncreased over last age. Last year's crop 0f ovpr seven yesterdlay. ýyear. In Saskatchewff and? Albêrta million pounds was double the 10- Elegcrnt lmpala 4-Dopr ,Sport Sëdcn SuPERLATUV C~~ EVO If ever a Sar stood out fromn the rest of the crop, ît's this '60 Chevy, From its clean-thrusting grille to its dapper rear deck, its styling is as fresh as a new-minted coi. You'll be just as wide-eyed over what's inside - the re-' laxing roominess, tasteful trixn, hushed elegance, ail Heýre's new gem-bright beauty, room to sprawI in andi sit tlu in. New Iean-muscled engine economy, new space and silence in the goin9. For fineness of features, for precise crciftsmctnship - for ail the things that make a car good fa own - the '60 Chevroiet stands alone in its price field. comfortably cradled by Full Coil springs at ail four wheels. And yet, you'll find new economy of operatioi, new dependability, new longer life. Iere, truly, is the nearest to perfection a low-priced çarver came. Take to the road in the sparklixig new sixty Chevrolet ------------------------------------------------ ---- --- ---- -- -- --- -- - -- - ! M ltT E REVOLIJT nowCban MMOMBY GIIEVROLET Heye's the car created te onquer a whole new fieMA General Motors revolutionary compact Corvair. flore is a totaly new way of going. Prom its trunk-in-the-front to the radically new Turbo-Air rear engine, Corvair is ail new. And it's a newness that's designed to bring you the riding comfort and six-passenger luxury standards that Canadians look for, together with true compact-car handlinig and economiy. See, drive and delight ini the reveIutionary new Corvair at your Chevrolet dealer,». COURTIOE Regisçtcrcd Seed la Adequate Supp'y Two School s understanding that others would ai!- so follow. The p Opl fNeatl, he stated, are quite ha-ppy with the high standard of education thebr chlildren eiv in BowmanIville and that they wiIl continue to go tce Bowmanville as long as they have. ne school of their own in Newcastle. Mr. Stewart of the Departmient of Education supported MAr. Paterson'çs dlaim that the area system was tù establishi larger schools. A school of 3M0 is tee small, he sa-id, ln the eýy(essof the Department. However, he sala?, a school of 400 works very well. A composite school of 1000 pupils allowýs for _both academic ana? vocational ýraining. Mr. Stewart claimred that the De- partment Was oppesea? te the 15Ù pupil school1 in Millbrook and? tthotght il was a bacjçward sýtep. IThere was on fthe other hajýna? a J prOblem of transportation ini ahi Millbý-roe(,k-Cavan area. Reeve Higgons of Bowmanville Stated that Bowmanville was op- posed te the smaller - schools . We feel there is the oppertunity ci Darliagton. Mr.Stwreprse te didn't like heamrng that they might'j go back Iýinte small dsritbut also, stated that thne Department wr net aritar i teir position. Millbrook wVantýs te go tea'O al school then il is tc eNo n their children. He1-1o t~a te be started on a sehoin DaiF gto righ away, Ne stated a? atit --slis opinlin that the area eceuldbe sýpllt, in two feri the presýent area , he fe was toc large. Reeve R. I3udge cf Port Np said it would seem desiraýble to have twe motions,, one for the school ia Darlingtoni and One for the school in Millbrook. Deputy- reeve Brough, Bowmaniville, statea? t1hat if motion was split in two th-ey7 would be righi baclç where they Wer'e. He feit the area would be Split ana? that MWillbrojok would a saddledwith their problem. A recess Of tel, Minutes was (le clared after which the vote was taken On the motion With approval fromn Port Hope, Bowmianville, New- cast le, Cavan, Millbrook and Dar- liiigton. MaYOr Carruthers thanked the' councîls for their attenda.nce and Iri- terest. **WITII TH1E ENGINE IN TUIE REAR WHERE IT SELONOS UN A COMPACT CARI1 MOTORS VALUE ROY W. ICHOLS - ~ ~-~- -, .- ~, ..'~ , - _______________ yeax' average production. It is expe -14d the alsike seed crop will be cor>Iýýderably smaller than last year. Thec swet love seed crop ini Saskatchewý,an is expected îo be Iower than last year; about the- same in Mlanitoba; average in Al- berta but consideirably Jater in Inat- urinýg. Last year's crop was bel)w the 10-year average, Western Ontario imnot-y Seed, production 'is Cexçected te be in- creased over last year, but eajstern Ontario. and iQuebee tiniothy wili likely be 'Iower thàin 1ast year'. in the Maritimes, produc.tion ýls lx- pected te bc Iower than last year. Prelinfinary estimates îindicatc that Climax tilinothy acreage will be,- incoreased over last year. Potale Acreage Lcss< A reduction !n'theage plant- ed te o tatoe this year fias beeni accompanied by higher prices for mnost Caniadian prýoducers,. potato plallltillgs hanve been esti- mated by thefri and vegetable division ocf thle Canada Departmnent of Agricýulture at 295,400 arsfv per cent smaller thiax last year's acreage and. il per cent less than the 10-ear average of 331,000 acres- Although there was some slack- enig off as supplies' increased In volume, prices in eastern Canada te the middle of Augusi werý running about double those of 1958., Ail provinces outside the prairies,ý reported ,acreage decreases fromr last year. Prince Edward Island acreage was reduced by 10 per cent;, New Brunswick by three per cent; Nova Scotia by eîght per cent; Qu- bec by nine per cent; and both On-. tario and British Columbia-by sbi per cent. Incereases in the prairies rangea? from 13 per cent in Saskatchewar and eight per cent jin Manitoba tc one 'oer cent'in Aiberta.