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Waterloo Chronicle (Waterloo, On1868), 10 Aug 1951, p. 2

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Winters has g}n;Ven’"fiorh’ s Minisâ€" en dor a 1300000 grani Jor mhe a $1, proposed Mm Conestogo FERGUS. â€" William Philip, of Galt, chairman of the w: Riâ€" Ducks, geese (other tnan Brant) eoots, rails and gallinules: _ _ Ontario Government to Donate $1,500,000 to Conestogo Dam When Tom said, "William Henry told the joke so many times that he ran it into the ground," he was thinking of the connection between hunting and William Henry‘s fondness for reciving the same joke. The hunter‘s dog, hot on the scent of a fox, chased him so hard that he ran down into his den and got safely away from his pursuers, The hunt died out in a failure like the joke at last. TORONTO.â€"Open seasons for migratory birds in Ontario were announced Tuesday by the Deâ€" partment of â€"Lands and Forests after consultation with federal authorities. September 17 to November 12â€" North of a line following the Caâ€" nadian National Railways track from aPrry Sound through Scotia, Barrys Bay, Golden Lake, Renâ€" frew and Arnprior to the north boundary of Carleton County, thence to the Quebec boundary in the Ottawa River. October 6 to December 1â€" South of this line (except geese in Essex County). Geese (except Brant). November 5 to December 31â€" In Essex County alone. Brant: Set Open Season Dates For Migratoryâ€" Birds No roundup of barnyard animails would be complete without the pigs. In pioneer times a pig was forced to hunt for much of his fodder in the woods; if he couldn‘t feed himself by rooting with his snout, he starved. So the statement, "little pig, big pig, root, hog or die" expressed the certainty that similarly a man‘s life depended upon his personal exertions. "Common as pigâ€"tracks" is another saying of porcine origin. "Like pigs in clover" expresses the essence of contentment. The various seasons are as folâ€" lows: ‘There are several sections of Waterloo where isolated building is being carried on. Here the builders, particularly those from out of town, seem to revel in the amount of noise they can make. Requests by residents to make a little less noise have gone unheaded. Some of these residents are now mad enough to "do something about the racket", and the probabilities are that the Board of Health will be approached. They in turn will have to contact the builder and inform him he is creating a publi c nuisance and that it will have to stop. How much simpler it would be if a phone call could be made to the police and then leave it up to them to stop the disturbance. Frankly it would appear that a bylaw covering this occurtrence would be in order. The local police are charged with keeping law and order and definitely the creating of too much noise either early or late in the day, is a disturbance of the peace and should be brought under the jurisdiction of the police. Without a bylaw covering such a disturbance, the police even if they are called in, can do no more than warn those responsible. The only protection the average householder will have is to complain to the Board of Health. This body in turn can if they feel the complaint is legitimate take action against those responsible for the noise and charge them with "creating a nuisance". This is good news not only for the consumer but also for the producer. Some of the cheaper and more abundant raw material is now on the market and a lowering of milk, butter and cheese costs should follow . . . unless of course the Government makes an issue of keeping the prices on some of these commodities up. This also could happen. Most people living in a residential district feel they have a right to sleep at least until 8 am. without having their rest disturbed by some idiot pounding with a hammer, yelling at the top of his lungs, or digging out an excavation for a house. % _ Checking with the City Hall, we find that at least so far as Waterloo is concerned, there is no beylaw which prohibits the makâ€" ing of excess noise through construction either early in the morning or late at night. There are now some signs that Canadian housewives both in the city and on the farm, may soon get a break so far as food prices are concerned. For the first time in ten years, feed grains, the raw material for meat, dairy and poultry products, are showing subâ€" stantial price declines. A tremendous crop of these grains is promised right across the country and if nothing happens to this crop, then a general food price lowering seems inevitable. No one appreciates possible adverse effects of excess: dairy and meat prices better than the farmer. They know that eggs at T5 cents per dozen, or steak at a price only a few can afford, is bound toâ€"stir up resentment between city and country. Eventually those in the cities start doing without some of these commodities and the farmers suffer more than they would if they could have sold all his produce at a lower price. A question mounting in importance not only in Waterloo but i every community where a large amount of construction is going on, is the matter of noise. _ . Philip, speaking at a meetâ€" Editorial Comment ~@ Subscriptions Payable in Advance n.wmyminm;fl.upmmw. Single copies 5 cents.. + Authorized as second class mail, Post Ofiee Department, Ran The Joke Into The Ground Maybe Lower Food Prices Old Folk Sayings ation (Reprinted from The London Free Press) Too Much Noise Root Hog or Die g:in. °°““§, :::ut' r‘r}“fiifi ing of the commission, said the Ontario Government will donate $1,500,000 when the Federal grant is made. Wilson‘s snipe: October 1 to October 31â€" Throughout Ontario. Woodcock: October 1 to November 7â€" Throughout Ontario. Bag limits: Geeseâ€"Five a day, 10 in possesâ€" sion at any time, and not more than 25 in the entire open season. October 2 to November 1â€" North of the zone line described above. October 16 to November 15â€" South of the zone line. Woodcock and Wilson‘s snipeâ€" Eight a day, and 16 in possession at any time. _ _ â€" s Ducksâ€"Seven a day and 14 in possession at any time, not more than one wood duck in a day or two in possession. _ _ â€" Coots, gallinules and railsâ€"25 in a day. E. F. Roberts, of Brantford, Ontario Region the dtnlormmt of community recre ational and cultural facilities. & Clinton, Ont., News Record: The present low real value of our dollar is; proof that Canadians have failed to do enough work to give it full value in goods and services. In addition to producing the economic waste of preparedâ€" ness, we must produce enough civilian goods to maintain an honâ€" est dollar or cut down on the supâ€" ply and spending of dollars. & About housing problems the | Yorkton _ Enterprise editorially} comments: Many of those seeking homes today have invested their money in automobiles and other luxuries and have thus failed to| provide the money necessary to‘ make a down payment on a new home. They have failed to recogâ€" nize the first responsibility of young married couplesâ€"the esâ€"| tablishment of a home. Now they | expect someone else to provide these homes for them. [ * Gambling joints and bookâ€" makers exist because the people want to gamble, couldn‘t exist without them claims the Prince George, B.C., Citizen and calls for relaxation on raffies and drawings where the proceeds are to be deâ€" voted tq approved charities and ® The budget has caused a lot of beltâ€"tighening muses the Pemâ€" broke, Ont., Standardâ€"Observer, but ‘"That operation is one that should not be confined to the pubâ€" lic. Canadians have a right to exâ€" pect the government to exercise in all departments an equal meaâ€" sure of economy. : 8: d 7 L000 _.0[ECEICT. MJ SRDMUCNE SUUCD SUTCRCTS ?:-::fiimfh l:xehothecrh day when she) into the plant, Dodder absorbs the NeX & ainabu:l;i t"é}mas caclt-‘l;s' food meant for its host, and in a lugk mi] 3 t“ o Dloom. .. LAâ€" time will kill it. Another differâ€" dzys Tor Heli s (V;']‘::k"(‘] tai):?:\:z ence rlx)%lgg by Mr. MacRae is that visiting her father of Crystal, the ;’:&Z its h:,;rl gfif:'-'f:flf,f?- Z?SSQO"& Smiths Falls News Record reports. Dodder has no further con:in‘ One day she won a‘trilight lamp} with the soil. The thick clusla:s at bingo, next held a perfect cribâ€"| of whi v i i bage, bang 1 h of ite flowers in turn become service at Huras Lake on Sum | s6e0 bods containing many hard, day was cancelled due to the mosâ€"| %r:éeorarze .;)i“lf'ilcsult ':xWI:e s:::tsé quitoes, according to Renfrew |from legume seeds when thg are Mercury. They grow pretty big i f Â¥ in that away. . . On the Bar U being cea.ned. ranch out of High River, Alta.,| _ Prevention is the best means of they dehorned 375 calves, earâ€" CONtro!. Mr. MacRae states that marked, branded, altered and ON!Y seed that has been tested and vaccinated in 3% hours for the E"Aded by one of the Dominion first crop of J. Alken Baker, S¢ed laboratories should be used. young new owner of the ranch. . . He goes on to say that, at the The !‘ort Erie, Ont., council passedj present moment, there is no maâ€" a bylaw prohibiting setting off of| Chinery that will give 100% separâ€" firecrackers without permission of 3tion of dodder _ from legume the chief constable. . . Mr. and S€°4s. Under the Dominion Seed Mrs. J. L. Richards were proud Act it is an offence to transport parents of identical triplet daughâ€"| aDY legume seed containing even :‘ers\ at bKamloops Hospital, but\a trace of Dodder. aving been living in a trailer Howe they are now seeking enlarged the firs:I e;i,g:eotsulg)gog;t:r t?:‘tl?; permanent accommodation. heron it «hanld he maurad and wâ€"a * It is stated legally the husâ€" band is the head of the house, and the pedestrian has the rightâ€"ofâ€" way. Editor Dobbie of Smiths Falls remarks: "Maybe so. Both husband and pedestrian may be fairly safe until they try to exerâ€" cise their rights." _ _ â€" © A slant on What‘s Sauce for the Goose. . . : "Management and organized labor alike have come in for a fair amount of criticism by official Ottawa for failing to coâ€"operate in curbing inflation. Management is castigated for upâ€" ping prices and for speculative profiteering." Labor is rapped over the knuckies for demanding wage increases. The truth of the matter is that management and organized labor alike are both viâ€" tally interested in curbing inflaâ€" tion and in trying to hold the line on prices. Both find it disâ€" heartening that whatever efforts they are disposed to make are quickly offset b{ official Ottawa‘s utter disrefiard or inflationarr efâ€" fect to public spending. To blame organized labor for seeking inâ€" creased wages while Ottawa in the same breath demands inâ€" creased taxes, is like the pot callâ€" ing the kettle black. To rap maâ€" nufacturers over the knuckles beâ€" cause both taxes and wage inâ€" creases cause prices to rise just doesn‘t make sense . What‘s sauce for the goose is sauce for the gander. As long as the official goose fattens on taxes and public spending, so long will wages and prpi kegp on rising." â€" Mrs. A. E. Wilkins, grown (rom} a seed ten years ago. . . C. Young| of Bristol, Ont., has so many ribâ€"| bons won at horse shows he plans| to have a quilt made of them. . .| Mrs. William Kaufman of near Chesley, Ont., had an unusual exâ€" # Canadiana: Tom Swift, BC Power Commission employee at Shuswap Falls, amateur photograâ€" pher and sportsman, reported the end of a search of several years for the nest of a humming bird. It was discovered cleverly hidden in vine on the Swift home porch, with two white eggs about the size of a lead pencil eraser in the nest. The area was roped off, and pictures taken in color. . . At Resâ€" ton, Sask., Frank Brady‘s hardâ€" ware store window presented a curious sight when it contained an orange tree, with three ripe oranges on it, the property of Assembly, Yugosiavia has been repatriating to Greece a number of Gmmumm.mm-ad:wamm...m guerrills struggle in that part of the worid. Above, one of the ENo PP en e nooedt l U u 5 T touching scenes which took place near the Greck frontier station of Idhomeni upon the reunion of a mother with her twe children. In compliance with Country Editor By Jim Greenblat Yugoslavia Repatriates treek Children tions of the United Nations General _ The most important part of the . control of Dodder is to prevent it |from forming seed. Summer falâ€" )lowing for one year followed by | a hoed crop guch as corn will kill most of the seed in the soil. Howâ€" ever, Mr. MacRae declares that |the seed may lie dormant in the soil for a number of years and one should always be on the lookout for further outbreaks, In any roâ€" tation of crops following an outâ€" ; break of Dodder, care should be |taken not to incorporate clovers, buckwheat or flax in the rotation | for a few years, declares Mr. Macâ€" Rae. \_ However, he suggests that at the first sign of Dodder in the |crop, it should be mowed and reâ€" | moved before the Dodder matures ! seed. Another recommendation he puts forth is to burn the crop particularly if the seed has alâ€" ready formed. This can be accomâ€" plished by either covering the patch with about three feet of |straw or sprinkling kerosene or | crude oil over the area. |. _ Dodder, gne of the worst weeds in Ontario, is a parasite and not a plant in the true sense of the term,. It lives on a host plant and in time strangles it. For this reaâ€" }son. Dodder is sometimes called Strangle Weed or Devil‘s Gut. J. W. MacRae, Fieldman for the Crops Branch of the Ontario Deâ€" partment of Agriculture, states that it is a very dangerous weed affecting legume cro%s not only in Ontario but throughout Canada |and United States. As Dodder is very difficult to separate from leâ€" | gume seed, every attention should | be given to this weed, particularâ€" | ly if we are to build up an export | market for our legume seed. For this reason, he feels that every precaution should be taken to preâ€" vent its introduction to farms | which are presently free from it. Indian corn, squash, sunflowers, g:lpes plums, raspberties, straw rries, wild tfl)les and walnuts were found in Huronia by Chamâ€" plain in 1615. He contends that Dodder knows no bounds. Although it thrives in warm winter climates, it appears to be gradually acclimatizing itâ€" self, as it has been found in the colder parts of the Province. It does not attack cereal grains or timothy, ut favours clovers, buckwheat and flax. Mr. MacRae believes that too much emphasis cannot be placed on this weed and that all farmers should take every precaution to prevent its further spread. 16 Bmitish Armg Cadets accomâ€" panied by Brifl M. Davenport and Capt. P. H. Godfrey are on their way to Canada to compete against Canadian cadets at the Quebec Rifle meeting at Mount Bruno, and at the Connaught Ranges at Ottawa. The cadets will also visit Niagara Falls and army installations at Toronto, Montreal and Quebec. 1. What provinces entered Conâ€" federation in 1867? 2. In 1950 were total wages, salâ€" aries and other labor earnings of Canadians $4 billion, $6.2 billion or $8.1 billion? 3. Under the BN.A. Act the proâ€" vinces may not use what form of taxation? 4. Of the 2,689,930 Canadians who paid income taxes in 1948, how many had incomes of more than $5,000 a year? 5. When was the most recent visit of the King and Queen to Canâ€" ada? ANSWERS: 5. May 17 to June 15, 1939; 3. Indirect taxation is prohibited; 1. NS., NB., Que., Ont.; 4. 126,190; 2. $8.1 billion. Dodder is easily recognized, as it has no leaves. The yellow stems are threadlike and twine around Clover, Alfalfa or Flax plants. By sending short suckers into the plant, Dodder absorbs the food meant for its host, and in time will kill it. Another differâ€" ence noted by Mr. MacRae is that once Dodder germinates and conâ€" tacts its host, the "root" dies and Dodder has no further contact with the soil. The thick clusters of white flowers in turn become seed pods comaim'ni many hard, grey or yellowish brown seeds. These are difficult to separate from Iefume seeds when they are being cleaned. U.K. CADET TEAM COMPETES IN CANADA ~ ‘lll w;rnkgo M giggl'ghg WEED OF THE QUICK CANADIAN FACTS WEEKâ€"DODDER The results obtained from the first seven steers to be tested unâ€" der the Ontario Advanced Regisâ€" try Policy for Beef Cattle, shows very clearly why some beef proâ€" ducers make a . lot more money than others. This is the comment of W. P. ‘Watson, Livestock Comâ€" missioner for Ontario, who points out that the figures on feed cost of producing a pound of gain on these steers ranged from a low of .22¢ to a high of .28%c a pound. Mr. Watson adds that while the show ring has done much to imâ€" prove our beef cattle, it still gave no measure of the ability of the different bloodlines to produce A.R. FOR BEEF CATTLE GIVES INTERESTING DATA All seven of the carcasses qualiâ€" fied for Red Brand Beef, though some were better than others. However, the important thing from the standpoint of the proâ€" ducer is the inherited ability of these animalsâ€"to make their gains economically and still give these high quality carcasses. Under the policy, the steers were placed in the test barn withâ€" in two weeks of the time when they were six months of age. After a preliminary feeding periâ€" od of three to four weeks, to get them accustomed to their new surroundings, they were placed on a standard feeding ration and fed for a period of approximately 196 days, at which time they were marketed and graded on the rail Records of the feed they ate and the gains obtained‘ certainly showed marked differences. The calf with the best record for proâ€" ducing beef economically was a good feeder, though not the heaâ€" viest eater of the seven. He ate on average, 11 pounds of grain and 8.4 pounds of hay per hay and from this produced an average of 2.33 pounds of gain per day. Against this, the calf with the highest costs ate both more hay and grain (11.3 pounds of grain and 9 pounds of hay). Even with this additional feed he gained only 1.87 pounds per day, which meant that over a feeding period of approximately 200 days, his production of beef for his owner was some 90 pounds less than the steer with the best record. Taking the actual cost of feed and the gains in the two cases, it is easy to see which owner had the more profitable animal. The is easy to see which owner had the more profitable animal. The steer with the lowest cost of proâ€" duction gained 465 pounds in 199 days of feeding at a total cost of 102.61. The steer with the highest cost of production gave his owner a gain of only 377 pounds in 201 days at a slightly highest cost of $107.40 . With present beef prices this difference is very marked, and could well spell the difference between a substantial profit and a loss in feeding the cattle. It is extremely true that the guns are needed. But this is only another urgent reason why the Government, as it must engage in rearmament, must also curtail with a vengeance in other ways, and must postpone all other spending schemes. But this is hard, and selfâ€"denying, and unpopular. Better, it seems, for the Government to give up its own lean cyclical diet and to let its figures go, and to makes the public do the cutting down. â€" It is a strange thing that the very people who used to speak with the greatest s¢orn about the "boom and bust economy", are now the most active in whooping up the Government‘s inflationary spiral. But if Government spendingâ€"the most highly inflationary of all spendingâ€"goes on booming, it is the public that will bust. If this were just an effort at practising the cyclical budgeting in another form, it might not be quite so bad. But the economic fact is that spending by the Government is far more inflationary than spending by business and industry can ever be. Investment by busiâ€" ness tends to be productive. If it is not, loss or failure act as autoâ€" matic correctives. But when the Government spends, it does not produce. Only when it runs an industry, like Polymer, does it add anything to production. On the whole, Government spending is directly and immediately inflationary. It is spending without producâ€" ing. Even the money spent in making armaments is highly inflationâ€" ary. Canadians cannot eat guns. s All this would be strange enough. But the fact is that the Govâ€" ernment still believes in cyclical budgeting, even though it has no longer the will or the courage to practice it on itself. This has led to a disquieting new development. There are now signs that the Government has decided to practise cyclical budgeting upon the public. While not rgtraining its own spending, it will compel other people to follow the lean digt. This new form of the cyclical theory appears in the high taxes to make people less willing or able to buy, even if it forces Canadians to diminish their savings. It appears also in the efforts to restrict business and industry from spending, by restricting credit from the banks. It matters very little that the Government goes through the moâ€" tions of economy. The $35,000,000 saved by the Government last year on nonâ€"defence spending is but an infinitesimal drop in the compreâ€" hensive ocean of its expenditure. It was only about half the sum paid out to the Western wheat growers, for not getting quite as much as they expected. And when the old age pensions are put into operaâ€" tion, the new millions will carry away the slight evidences of saving, like a flood tide. But the Government‘s planners suffered not only from infirmity of judgment in forecasting the cycles. The Government failed in courage or discipline. When the Great Inflation set in, the classic economic program was to cut down on Government spending as rigorously as possible. But a severe diet is always hard to impose, especially when one‘s propensities are for the lavish table. So it was that the Government insisted upon spending more.nnd more, and disâ€" graced its theories by its actions. But two troubles arose. In the first place the Government found it hard to judge just what lay ahead. The Government‘s planners were convinced (and they succeeded, with little apparent difficulty, in convincing the Government) that the Second World War would be followed by a serious economic decline. To boost spending they recommended (among other things) famâ€" ily allowances. These would boost buying power. But the trouble was that the decline did not arrive. Instead the country went ahead so fast as to strain at the seams. And family allowances (whatever their merit on social grounds) proved a cyclical blunder. The plan was certainly appealing, in its suggestions of poise and balance. It would smooth out the irregularities, the jolts and jars, of economic life. The old picture of "boom and bust" would be changed. The economy would, in the future, follow the even tenor of its way. The Canadian Government emerged from the Second World War with a Keynesian plan in its hand. Accerding to this plan, governâ€" ments ought to budget in cyclical fashion. When they judged times to be too good, they should tax heavily and spend lightly. But when they judged times to be too bad, they were to tax lightly and spend heavily. THE PUBLIC BR BUST! (The Gazette, Montreal) The older generation, which lived three or four years ago, might recall how Government circles in Ottawa used to talk in cycles. Those were the days of cyclical budgeting. But time has a way of fiher Editors Say INCOME TAX OFFICES BUSY good beef economically. The Adâ€" vanced Registry Policy provides for the testing of the ability of beef bulls to sire calves which do this job, and for the commercial breeder, the ability to produce the most beef for the least feed is by far the most important characterâ€" istic his sire can transmit. OTTAWA.â€"District income tax offices across Canada are at the peak of their work in collecting the remainder of delinquent 1950 taxes, a Reâ€" venue Department spokesman reported. _ Most delinquent taxpayers, receiving warni.r;gs to Â¥ay up or face a garnishee of their salary, hastened to arrange settlements. On Wednesday, August 1st, flags were flying and bands playing in Kingston, Ontario, when the Rt. Hon. C. D. Howe, minister of trade and commerce and minister of defence proâ€" duction, officially sponsored and dedicated the first Canadianâ€" made Consolidation road diesel locomotive to be built at the Canadian Locomotive Company. In the picture above, Mr. Howe is shown christening the new locomotive with the tradiâ€" tional bottle of champagne. Standing on the platfom with him is Robert H. Morse Jr., president of the Canatlian Locoâ€" motive Company. "A Rough Shoot" by Geoffrey Household. While hunting, Roger Taine, exâ€"colonel of the British army, accidentally killed a tresâ€" passer, and hid the body because he did not expect the police to beâ€" lieve his story. In the next few days several people showed an unprecedented interest in Taine, but the police did not, so he conâ€" cluded that something very odd was afoot. General Sandorski exâ€" plained what that was; a native movement headed by an importâ€" ant government figure. With a little help from Taine‘s wife, he "The Hayvens of Demaret" by Katherine Bellamann. A gracious old fashioned novel of Mississippi before the Civil War, where high courtesy and noble motives preâ€" dominated, with the evil side of slavery and the impendihg war werely a whisper in the backâ€" ground. Noel Hayven becomes romantically but discreetly inâ€" volved with Laure, the wife of his twin brother Jeffrey, their sisâ€" ter Linnet marries a romantic Irish adventurer who is discovâ€" ered to be a perfect gentleman with the proper background. Nuâ€" merous family members drift in and out. A duel, a flood, the soâ€" lution of the triangle and the reâ€" conciliation of the brothers bring all the conflicts to a neat conciuâ€" sion. You know those "Slow Down" signs we see everywhere on the highways. They usually warn against a bad curve or other danâ€" w in the road. But there‘s r reason for slowing down â€"one that isp‘t always marked with a sign. . . We should rememâ€" ber to slow down, too, when some of our wild neighbors are trying to cross the highway. Deer, squirâ€" rels, partridge, porcupines, rabâ€" bits, skunks and many other creatures fall victim to automoâ€" biles in countless hundreds every fien. . . It‘s a rough think to say, ut it often strikes us that a lot of drivers go out of their way to see if they can run down some helgbu, confused creature on the hig w:z. Many of the mammals and birds so destroyed are fi::ents of broods which will also ome casualties as a result. This can have a heavy effect on our wildâ€" life in one year, you can be sure of that. After all, wildlife has DIESEL LOCOMOTIVE LAUNCHED AT KINGSTON Weekly Book Review As supplied Ey the Waterloo Public Library By MAUREEN WILLIAMS, Librarian ARLING CONSERVYVATION CLVB= NSERV A TION 7 by the ROVING SECRETARY of the PRACTICE MOOERATION TODAY eeveess oprestenmntmiten $ .2 In Huronia the Indians proâ€" gressed from stone age to machâ€" ine a%e in 30 years with the comâ€" ing of French artisans. Ontario‘s Huron Indians called themselves OQuendats and their homeland Ouendake (Wenâ€"dawâ€" kee}, meaning "One Land Apart." AYR CATILEMAN HONKS HORN â€" COWS COME HOME and Sandorski intercepted a mesâ€" senger from the continent, and got him to London where the plot could be exposed, in as spirited a chase as any reader could want Some day, somebody‘s going to wake up to the value of Lake Kaâ€" shawigamog\ as a fAshing spot. If guides and boats were supplied there, wonderful opportunities for bass and lake trout would be proâ€" vided for the keen angler. . . For some reason which we fail to unâ€" derstand, this\is one of the Haliâ€" burton Lakes which can provide some real smashers, but it‘s byâ€" passed, it seems, by the touring angler The _ local _ residents, though, don‘t underestimate this spot. And we‘ve personally taken some beautiful bass in that lakeâ€" in sufficient numbers and in enough variety of spots to really indicate it‘s value to the sportsâ€" man. .. enous: hazards of its ovw out added artificial tion caused by speeding autos. L* So, slow down and enjoy natureâ€" don‘t destroy it. The new horn, received from a Winnipeg cattle assoâ€" ciation, makes a sound like a calf bawling in distress. He simply drives up to the fence and honks the horn on his car and the cattle come running. AYRâ€"An Ayr cattle droâ€" ver, J. W. Maus, no longer has to tramp across fields to inâ€" spect herds. _

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