CASTOR REVIEW 'What do you think," I asked Mr. Chatterjee, '"'of Lanark County's wolf bounty?" The Babu, seated in a corner of the cabin near the stove (it was a chill April day) looked out over the ice-choked and rushing Castor. "It would seem to me,"' he said thoughtfully, 'that the $25 re- presents in effect, permission to Lanark County residents to shoot one another's dogs."' Major Whiffle, better known in Afridi circles as Punjab Dick, silhouetted his lean length against the window, knocking his pipe against the stove. "T don't like this landscape," he said in a bored tone. "Too flat by far. Can't get along without my beloved Himalayas." "Think I'll go down to the river. Punjab Dick went out, slamming the door and knocking several cups from a shelf. They were the only cups on the shelf and it was the only shelf in the cabin. Mr. Chatterjee started ner- vously. "Do you think he will be all right? I mean, he would not go out on the ice floes, would he?" "T doublt it. First of all, there isn't a floe out there that would support his bulk. Secondly, Punjab Dick's days of leaping are over. But to get back. You don't feel that the wolf bounty is a good thing?"' "Let me explain, my dear Beaver Bob." Mr. Chatterjee's eyes shone like new pennies. "Wolves are God's creatures. Like beavers. Like you and me."' eaver Bob Beavers on the Nile? "It only stands to reason."' he began ticking off points on his fingers. "Unless the people of Lanark County are more honest than people anywhere else and unless officialdom is wiser than anywhere else, the wolf bouty is simply an invitation for a general massacre of farmers' dogs. When you consider that wolves, particularly brush wolves come in as many shapes and sizes almost as dogs (I understand they are not expect- ing to shoot timber wolves) then you can see the problem. The pelt of a dead dog is not so different from that of a dead brush wolf." "Does it matter? After all, if dogs are out killing sheep, they must be treated the same way as wolves."' 'What if they don't wait for the dogs to kill, but simply seek them out and shoot them for the sake of the bounty."' "Dog was shot just the other day. Not far from here, either," Punjab Dick re-entered, taking up the conversation as though he had never left, a trick he learned while sitting around camp fires in the Khyber. 'What do you think of the river?'"' I asked. "Interesting. Chock full of big chunks of ice. Current moving at quite respectable pace. Water up to banks at both sides. Filling entire river bed as it used to do a hundred years ago, when they used it for delivering logs to the Ottawa." "Why do they not raise the dam, or build a new one?"' Mr. Chatterjee suggested. "Then much of the water could be kept here all summer, providing quite a respectable river, in- stead of the insignificant trickle to which we are all accustom- ed."' "Excellent suggestion."' Punjab Dick lit his pipe. "You are becoming quite irrepres- sible, my Parsee friend. What do you think of that, Bob?" "Let the beavers do it,' I replied. "Bring the little chaps back to their native stream. Let nature's engineers go to work."' "If Wolseley hadn't learned the use of rafts and the abilities of Canadian boatmen on the Red River Expedition when he trounced Riel, he never would have succeeded in getting up the Nile to the relief of Khartoum and perhaps no one ever would have heard of Winston Churchill, who won a name as a cor- respondent in the field," Punjab Dick gestured positively with his pipe. "What is the connection, my dear chap?" Mr. Chatterjee feared that he might be missing something. "With what?" "With beavers, of course." 'There is none. Why do you ask?" "Do they have beavers on the Nile?"' '"'Of course not." Punjab Dick appeared irritated at Mr. Chatterjee's persistence. "They have otters," Beaver Bob said. "How curious.'"' Mr. Chatter- jee's round, moon face wore a expression of bewilderment. Friday, May 5, 1978 Page 9 GLASSIFIED FOR SALE -- Franklin Fire- place, 34" wide, 36" high, firepot 21', grate and screen included, in excellent condition. $90.00. Phone 733-2510. SPECIAL THANKS to Mr. and Mrs. Renald Masse, Mr. and Mrs. Maynard Cherry and all those whose generosity made the loss of our home due to fire easier to endure. Gratefully yours, Don and Gail Born. FOR SALE -- Purebred Irish Setter puppies, not registered, vaccinated, a good home wanted, please call after 6 p.m. at 445-5216 - Judy Straby. FOR SALE -- 2 summer tires 560-13 - $10.00 pair, Antique wood ice box - $75.00, Antique walking wheel - $125.00. Call 445-5706. Card of Thanks I would like to express my sincere appreciation to everyone who remembered me while I was a patient at the Ottawa Civic Hospital. Special thanks to the Russell Public School pupils for all the cheery get well messages and pictures. Norman Walsh SPRING FLASH Sponsored by Russell Centennial Pool SATURDAY, MAY 27 Russell Rec. Centre Featuring Mike Shea in Irish Country in Russell Showtime: 9-1 $2.50 each For tickets contact Gail 445-5304 Norma, 445-2876 Roger-Carole, 445-5409 RUSSELL SLAUGHTER HOUSE Under Gov't. Inspection CUSTOM SLAUGHTERING We sell quality meat at our plant Cutting -- Wrapping Quick Freezing Prop. Marcel Gareau 445-2005 Phone 445-2157 RUSSELL LOCKER PLANT Groceries -- Free Delivery Service e Locker Rentals ® Specializing in Custom Cutting ¢ Wholesale Meat Sales -- "We Can Cut 'er" -- George Eastman: Proprietor Cochrane's Dairy Ltd. LOCALLY OWNED AND OPERATED BY CANADIANS 821-3887 445-2959 scotiabank; THE BANK OF NOVASCOTIA RUSSELL 445-2880 'Grow With Us' Scotia Bank 2 : Bus.: 821-1488 MARIA DIRESSMAKING Ladies Clothes Men's & Ladies Alterations At Mike's Beauty -- Metcalfe Res.: 821-1497 Erik Therkelsen & Son NEW HOLLAND MACHINERY Sales and Service Bus. 445-2818 Res. 445-2899 Griffith Cartage Ltd. CARTAGE Lloyd 445-2820 TRUCKING LOADER RENTAL Crushed Stone ® Fill © Gravel ® Sand Top Soil & Snow Removal RUSSELL Charlie 445-5344 iyo +s Res.: 821-1497 <<} Mike's Beauty Salon Ladies & Men's Hairstyling 20% OFF FOR SR. CITIZENS Specializes in Perms, Tints, Bleach APPOINTMENTS MON. TO SAT. -- 8 a.m. to6 p.m. AVAILABLE AFTER 6 p.m. METCALFE Bus.: 821-1488