Ontario Community Newspapers

Orono Weekly Times, 22 Mar 1962, p. 2

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ORONO WEEKLY MIMES THURtSDAY, MAURCHI 22ynd, 192_______ ORONO WEEKLY TIMES Authorized as Second Class mail, Post Office Department, Ottawi Establishied in 1938 by R.. A. Forrester rtoy C. Forrester - Editor and Manager Subscription payable in advance LuCanaâ- 4 êL -ý uî:ý & Pablished every Thu!ruda> A Mh office of publicatisi P.arki*ng A Necessit,'y The autmb lathoug i beinig a fa,ýctor which cotributes ,nucli to our econiomyi by its production and througli the services it needs sucli as oil, g-as and good roads, does present problerms. Large citios have growiing hoadaclies over the movemrent of autos fron i he owner's home te hie or lier place of emiploymeat. Parking is also an- other problem mounting each year as the vehricles increase. Oi-ono, is no exception in the problemn of parking and there is certainly a needfor off-street acýcomm-odation la the business area. It s to be noted that in the town of Bowmanville a request is now before tercouncil to pux'chase a pote4tial parking lot for a price o $55000. This potential lot is within the business area and would, if I)talined, be a real asset for thoseshopingiad for those, condchitIng business. Lookng dloser t,-, homiie t can be seen that parking facilities witha the business area e often overcrowded and sucli a condition does not encourage aecw shoppiers and customers for thc Village en- terprises. Ense of parkiýng is one factor in creating a better business area. If thec presenf bushiness area is to expand thon there mnust also be an expansion of seý1r:cos foýr better parking. The Village street in the business area is aarrow and this cro- ates problems in itself whien uised for parking and througb traffic. The solution, we know, is not ani easy one, but more parking facilities- is a factor to be considered anid co whicli slould bo foliowed, espec- ially if tlie business area is to advance. Farmers Prove Subr Agriculture was again the chef topie 0f the secret emergeacy seýssion of the cenitral commnittoe of tlie Communist Party heldin Mos' cow a coupl e of wecks ago. The trutli of the mnatter is somethiag Communist leaders Wont acknowbý,edgo - w\on't even dare to consider. Marxismi doesn't fit thc farmor. Nine years ago Premrier Mlalenkov was for cod to admit that after 25-yenrs of cojllecýtivization - i- cost the lives of at least five million farmers -- tre lussîan peasant wns woirse off than lie had been under the ast Tsar. In 1916, after the -wnr had been going nearly three yenrs, Russïa had 28.8 million cows. Thirty-seven years inter, tLhough Russia bad an- niexed nenrly 300,000 square miles of new territory, there were 4.5 Mil- Ilion fewer cows, the VnovrSun points out. And ast mntafter -Mr. Kýhrushchov lhad been strivingfor 10 years to improve the record, P1ravda liad this to say:" -- the rosuits achevd n grcutu~eare fjýltstsfcoyand tepresent day pro- ductin 0f gricltural produects caninot quite cove;r the ever-growing dîemande of tlie population."l While Soviet panr demiand a 9.6 per cent annual increaso ta- the current decahsyarlrvst and me,-at production foul below those of 1958. Maraa ciy-hrd borgeos, kew itle about poasants and tarmi 1 finp ' hPl nanu, :) -abestuordfudrof teodorder adsndtha-,t lresae tt-ietdagriculture 1ouidhve odsryhm quLein knw h to. The' enantliesaîdl, if left alone, would gravitato to fre trade ndod-ahRedepthim otook bis eue from rglMrxs"haoator, who frswthat the penýsants cou1ld only be won to socialismi by fahse promises that the land woi biis. Eventu"ally lie muist be madle into a lanless worker. Lenin was-faced by famine and rebelhion ia 1921 and m-lved bris problertiby1 giving the p)ensante their bond. Livestock of ail kinde in- crensed fromi 58,400,000 in 1916 to) 66,800,000 in 1928. Encournged by this, Stahlia fOrceýd cletviainon- the pensants and trnnsferred biil- lions of thoen to industrY. The recuits are stili boing feit today. !Mr. Khrusb,_qchcv triod to selve the problcm aaew by openiag up millions of acres of virg-*inin-nds, and by offering tho pensant iacent- ives sucli ns larger- privato llotmieats, higlior prices anid bonuses for hiiglier production. Todayq the Commnuniet chijef are faced vwitli a choice of off ering tne farmer more personi incontivos or destroying those e hlas, and, like Stalin in 1928ï. forcing colleýctivization at an even harelier paco. JUDGE SAYS OlIder Yecirs Can Be Best " Wlien you reacli old age and your clildren grow up and leave you, don't start feeling sorry for yourself devote your energy to worthwhule thing--s-and- make your ohder years the bappiest, years of your if e," said Judge C. L Austen of Guelph.1 Judgo Austen was spoaking- at the baquet 0f thc 56tli annual convention of the Ontario Horticultural Associa tion being heid at the Hotel Sheratoni- Brock in Niagara Falls. Tho speau1ker titled hie talk "Act Your Age"'. He said before theo meet- ing that lie tliouglit this would be ap- * ropriate since lie was speakýing t g, oup of People many 0f womwerel approacin iddle agce. Ho quotod Sir George Bernard Sa wvho said "Youth is ai wonderful tbing,, it is aà pity to waste is on the yoIung". and wenit on to give figures proving tha,)t a larger percentage of the popu- lation than ever beforo was over 67 years of age. Judge Austen listed five ing-redients to alhappy oid age. First was to goet the spirit of ambition anid youth, mnel lowedl by time. Secondlly, hie advisedl, get the Spirit of hope and faîth and then gýet the ,ýpirit of receptivity. "Peopielu k the mistake of as- suming that the time for iearning jIs over when they leave school. ThereD is no terminal pofint in learning, it is a lifelonig process." Thie fouirth ligeden,h said, was to have self-control and be of good cheer. for, everytlingi, you do and don't say yoûr children don't appreciate you! after al you bave done for tliem if, they want to, go their separatewy. Finally lie advised sl-ogtuns and service, statîng that people who- were wrapped Up Inheislvsmade a pretty small package. "eflipeople die young and it's a good thbig tliey do because tliey arec net miucli good to anybody," lie added. The speaker výas introduced by the secretary, R. F. Gomme, of Toronto, andthanked by the presidenit, Rev. J. W. Siebert (if Elmira. HOM uADENN«COURSE The EtninEuainDep-art-ý mnt 0f heOnaro1grcutualCol- lege is ffering a crepnec cou[rse ýfor, hoime gardeners. This course provides an ideal opportunity for the people who want to broaden their knowledge of 'gardený,ing, and learn some of the whys, an-d wliere- f ores. The course begins on April lst and runs for 11 months. For those who mniss this course, a similar one begins on October lst. Subjeets studied include indoor and outdoor- floriculture, vegetables, home landscaping, tree fruits anid small fruits, plant propagation, sliowing and judging, and other subjeets r-elated to horticulture. The course is supervised'by profes- stnlhorticulturists, and assign- Wht ACristian b)Y Rev. Basil E. Loýng f aIse is tliat we are Crsin be- follow the ten commandm1ients per- Just recently, I1radabouýt a littleie aue we accept certain creeds and fec(t1y, even to the extenit of tlie nearly bo.,y wlio asked is father thie queýst- ïorm,ýs 0f belief. Assenting to creedsperfect? NTo one wlio lias a proper ioýn, -%wbtat is a Clristian?" 17he and doctrines can be, atnd often is, a undeflrstanding of wliat is inivolved in father, knowing lis Bible better than:mtto f the lips failing to be reveal- keeping the ten comma-ti(nmenits would! ,lie average m nan dooes, described to ed in daily life. In tlieý epîstie of Jamnes be likecly to say that tliey are kept is soniwliat being a Christian really (2: 19) the wrýiter>, jingvg instruc-acetby The expressejin, 'mr do- is according- to lie New, Testamient. tion about belief savs, "hnbelievestý ing th- best I can"' is equally as He explained the rnatter so thorougli- that thiere is one God; thooucdoest Well; ridiculous whien -we hnsl aeu 7-y that when liewastlrough, the it- B no stretcli of the imaýgination can to wliat our, best cudbe-. He who te feliomw, looking a bit puzzled, said, the devils also believe, and tremble." says lie is1 doing ilie best hie cns ~'Daddy, bave I ever sceea a Clirist- wve say thait tlie devils are Godly (God bold Jndeed. ianr?" Needless to say, tlie tather bad, rm)because theyv believe in God. a few liard mnoments assessing his"li cail ye Me LordiLord," said Crsint ist owt e own f e as lie raie that there w" as, 'Jesus, '-and do not the things whicli spiritual birthand witli a if e time of appretl, oograt a differencebe-I say?" (Luke 6: 416). Belief in creeds growth. Physical growtli is best real- twveen is description 0f' what a Christ-, and dctrhinesoes not necessarily ized as we exercise our bodies - so it Ian is, and that wicli lie demnonstrat- -1mply tt wo are Christian. Our ac- is witli theý spirit. Christianity i o cd day by0da tlirougi bis owa ifo. tUon, reveal wbethier our bolief 15 of ing the will. of Christ- "not every Thoere is the cpmmnon annd easy fle hommd onhy, , o fItle henrt ni1so. one'that 3nith unto'me Lord, Lord, lief thait one is a hitinwiola shaîl enter into the Kingdom 0of Heaven but lie thatdotth ilf bee boug1tUpin a dChristian coni-o rn.unity. But standing among .Chrisý tý Tliere is the false viow ji t at per-_ my Fathor which is in Heaven )ans doos not make one a Crsinonis a Clrist 'ian becýause lie is striv,- (Mýt. 21: 31). Suroly we sec in ail this Lnymnoro tlian standing ia tlie woods i ng aresLut live a good ife. This 1that there is no place for cosy senti- muake one a trec. Uafortun-ately you is often expressea in the statement, mnas u epnet hit car. ive your wliole ife in a. so-cailecd "I try to go by the golden rule, 1 tr and that a Cliristian is a porson wlio,_ cli.ristani land, and dlie ,vitliout ever'to dlo k)o-thrs wliat I would have raiigtitlei inradtee beiccomlng a Christian. There la the thcmr do to mue." Sucli an expression fore not riglit with God, trusts Jesus fact hoeve, tat ivin- i a hrit-'Christ as his Saviour and, united to fac, hwevr, hatlivng a aChrst causes one tô wonder if anyone everChitbfatdvtsisofoa jani comimunity doos bring -an aflu-t -eally doos try effectively W do un t o crice to bear which is uplifting and others as we would have them do toih flvn behc oGd ennoblrg, but this doca flot coisti- us. Another casual expression i isI tute ChristianIty. guess if I f 011w the ten command-,1 From a sermon preached on Mardi Arithr elef hih s or net.q 'Ilhp nl liyt l Rif %hnAne , 1Q mente are mnarked and returned with. constructive criticisms. The fee in- cludes basic text books, bulletins, andý some plant mnaterial for experim1entalý assigniments. For furtlier information, write to the Office of Horticultural Corresponi- clence Course, Ontario Agricultura] lCollege, Guelphi, Ontario. If you are interested, contact tliem PRUNING ROSES Roses of the hybrid tea type shouldi be pruned each spring before the bushes leaf out, say Liorticulturists with the Ontario Department of Agri- culture. Start by cutting back ahl the riglit away, as the course bas proved very popular in previ'ous years, and enroliment is limited. dead wood. Then remnove the twiggy growtlis that are u found near the base of the bush. i ally, cut out ail crossing growth-. This sliould leave 5 or 6 stroenj growths which may be shortene(< cý give a balanced bushi of the deS fle: height. When cutting-, back t~~ growths, be sure that ail the cuts r (continued on page 3) Build your bank balance.. Build your peace of mind CANADIAN IMPERIAL IBANK 0F COMMERCE Ovei !260O branches to serve yjotb euwuier ue4mi wnicri is commun ana 1 menis rii De ait rignt.- jsut wno cioes,, ',4, 1962. 1 1. 1

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