Ry J. LINCOLN DEW AR Probably the first most tang thle evidence of the new dairy policy is beginning to show - iy the mail with cheqiies being re- ceived for manufacturing, m 1 lk snid. in April It, can be expect- ed that regular monthly. pay- ments will now ‘he coming ‘ For thé cream shippers the first. payment months of ‘April, May. and.June and if the machine in Ottawa does not break down, these che- ques should be making their appearance towards the part of July. In the case of sur- plus fluid milk some crosscheck- will cover the latter Evidence Of Dairy Policy. ‘Snowing In Gov't Cheques ithe third dav Directora of t-he Dairy Farmers of Canada gath- er for their midyear meeting and consideration of dairy in dustry. matters PASTURE MATTERS This year’s excellent pasture growth has produced a situation which indicates some action. In many cases there is far more growth on the field than the live- stock can handle. in some res- pects many of them resemble a | hay field and a hay crop is, not pasture The course’'bf action which should. be considered is running the mower ovér_ the fields, the bar should be set :up “, The largest consolidation pro- | “Dinder the plan ‘ farms wi! be at @. ter ine! rence! emrlowment hevon& comm ytin g = = TOE tenons ~ the Guardian, Charlottetown, Thurs., July 7, 1966. c * NA ons hen af ‘ : ¢ purchased bv AR whe a ‘ite ‘ee th ; gram so far approved under the Rete’ aes ok the dich ce Tos ont, ‘ e ¢ an wishes © distance of their present home ' ' + ural ‘ : ne reement a 1) der set . fedéral-Provincial Rura oes and only if they are located w He a nde Fecie ceeds from the sale of his aiiticgnvermment and antr-Amert j nt g ment was anpower Toah:l ant « ‘ ait acob fie rn 7 eee a cone . line ard hy if operating distance of a sr a ' es rere *Insuiliciest “te p € can hunger strike The 44-year- nounce jorntly oan Jur y A will ny t ! family mavine. ¢ t Y sith a annual ‘4 am ces ais Federal Min\s farm unit that requires this ad. Some * oF a IRE ‘a. n ny ne e ald wanuk “as douie Wélail aul aurice auve ° : ditional land to make an - an provide a re-estahlichmont $1.20. snerial accistance will he ' é iter of Forestry and William Sté& ° ' : ! erent “en ido waxinuen af 64. erevided th exake cn. te weakenin nade 4 qd wart, Ontario Minister of Agri — - ees wae a ene oy WO per family. acrarding tn the encre between his Aa and the r, @ vas no ° n a osed plan, if the case of the! aso . . er mminent deat his ine. eulture Under the program. 'P « » number. af de deont« minimon araet af @t ; « Y un ie fa ts in Onta- farmer requiring extra land. is ependents " e " e ami vr meconomic farm un to lease ii to him-nn @ lenz.ter 4 farmer hetween the azee np 'S & ears of ace Re rio will be acquired by the Agri : ee + a ee ech i te mated: that thd on cultural Rehabilitation and De hasis with the first option to pur p , , EXPECT FLEA FOR WHEAT oe ° chase the, land Farms wil! no either take retraining ar move zram w east $1. 990-000 in the . : a | t Administration fAR- ’ . A ances . : ; ; KARACHI] | Reuters Pak- veinpmen mini 1a another “4 wht ¢ : rfent ¢ °° n . ax DA the on the mar- De acquired by RDA by expro. : Manpower Pp > OD, WIN At beable . seal, year and $2.00 P dent Moham A’ y co $ oo : Pr - this ¢ th ith nd food q ket jaakahe tak a he consoli-. .Priation proceedings Feder ernment , 10 sell his property to ARDA un. 0 for. each of the succeeding Avuh Khan expected to ts together ww goe ood anc ‘ = Y tess the Rrural Deve! aia £6 rae Ceare ) js exe ¢ unit! The program. will he restr pe f j press ‘nr more United Stat? good accommodation will en. {lated with another farm = ur S 4s lam ‘shekind toca thc 41h Who sn fa des ficer.is satisfied that he will have . ‘ _— her@ there is an operator who © a q les m ® an. te ea © v shipments when. t Ss. mance ‘the she nee-s reputation sede the additional land to im- per acre, with development ensts 1m per cent of the a * visposa!l h es ¢ Q STL STARVING Ac ture Secretary Orvile : ‘ % ronert. ai , AS a Vacatiofirispot where visi: prove “his income position. The not exceeding $50.00 per ‘arre- ’ aioe sf prope iA SAIGON -Reuter< Thich Freeman arrives here Sunday . ciImUm «A w t o e other han eP Te . - ter . Liat fae ¢ due ent tors are important” as Visitors estintated cost: of the program The owner of the farm o a tN ner thiaiow te this aa T 9 ane bitte est Ruddhis ’ un ave of eénsultations. and not merely because they to 1970 is $7.200.000 . shared eq- for sale will he allowed ta con Farmers who te able to. k . —— - im opponent of South Viet Nam's Monsoon flnads have caused \ ' . wor a8 etern ‘ silifar. st , « sd.a — have\ dollars to spend uallv bv the two governments tinue to reside at the farmhoute and wich tn move tn ronfirmed a ned. hy military rr ers Werinesday eam- widespres amace ta Fast Pak as tert ee een dee based Spat ee a ‘ examination.. an-d pleted. the fourth week af an istan's wheat rop ; — cee a ‘ e } . Mg: ae ‘ —_ - “ \ ay ing is involved on shipments to as high as possible’ A number fferent. plants by ndividual of effects will flow from the op- friars For this dairy year ‘*t eration _ ts expected that pay ments in the A> Future growth will be order of ninety million dollars |stimulated and improved~ will be-made, an increase of forty’. B. Weeds will be checked million over last year The a- | - © Cattle will eat the ma- mount received bv. the indivi; terial after it has been cut even dual dairyman will vary from ‘though they pass tt. up when quite small indeed to very sub- jenna mh ‘ stantial in some cases ro In some cases: a consid- Pr amount of hay of very TORONTO MEETINGS Next week in Toronto. three good quality can be saved | dairy meetings will be taking | One of our important ‘ indus- place First the Dairy Foods tries Is now entering its period Service Bureau made up of re- of top production During the province | presentatives from all provinces next two months ‘the ‘will be visited by great numbers wil! get together for the mid- @#vear meeting Considered will of people who present an impor- he this vear’s operation -both tant home market’ for. Island financial. and advertising. a 1- a products. It. may not al- ready. on the drawing hoard are be apparent to farmers | plans for 1987 and these will be chet “the tourist industry is an as- reviewed Closely examined set fo them but the ae will be management perform of a home market of this kind ance as related to the budget hardly need to be: explained. ~ The following day the Execu-| If this may sound like a mer- | tive of the Bureau will meet to !cenary approach to our visitors, | take action, on matters arising we would like to emphasize the out of the Bureau meeting On importance of a sincere welcome | ACROSS THE JSLAND Ts Ghostly Site Is Gone | 1 As New Road Is Built: BY NEIL A. M*ATHESON Previnciai-Farm Editor 1 was om the way back from Borden earlier this week when 1 travelled across country #fom Crapaud to Rose valley I wanted to see what the highway department people are doing with the roadsthrough the old settlement -where I spent my boyhood days. I expected changes, but’ I saw much more than I had bargained for . To start with.-the ald Rose Valicy- hall is gone. It stood there, not far frorn the church, for as long as.1 can remember. Mur- _ockMae- -—t——am—toid—e-intended to make 97 harn out of it But the building collapsed when it was close to its 2 was being hauled by a bull dorer.So the old hall has chsappeared completely ) For older readers, Rose Valley natives who may, be far away, MacKinnon is; a son of the man we knew as “Donald Jim" v cKinnon, and/a grandson of the man | knew in my youth as k Harvey—his “right name was Murdock MacKenzie — ‘Visiting with! somes¢igsé relatives in the Valley—I just had to | talk to somebody about oe ‘changes—they told me they had heard; a_neighbor recali when Gaelic services were held in the hall, t } é and the English services were in the church. ‘‘And both build- ings were filled to capacity”’ 3 ~snnnuePhat'e-a-tar-ery from today when the people who attend Rose |? Valley, and many other rural churches, are eer few wy eom- parison. New Read . Really Something THE ROAD they're building in Rose Valley is what oa took my eye The Todd hill, for. example: must be 200 feet: in width—if yon consider the removal of mow traps, the road is Prer wider The old church yard js senitiesity extinct Returning visitors will blink their eves in amazement. It's progress. and the young people go along with it: But the older Rose Valley folk are not favorably impressed ' Remember the horse shed they built at the church in our fathers’ time” William Kennedy houcht .it some time ago, hauled ¥ to Stanchel in two pieces, set them well apart from each other, built a° much higher section in the middle, and he has what appears to be a large and useful barn = Remember the ghost story T wrote several years ago about the man whose wagon was being followed by a pig? When he est out of the wagon and struck the pig. & girl's Voice from the animal asked “why did vou hit me, John?” Ghost Story Locale Is Gone THE SPOT was on a shaded road, just before you reach Rose Valley from Stanchel. Well the shady spot is gone. They're | widening the road. and straightening it. so you'd never know it The new Foad cuts straight across the hollow of the farm we knew as Captain Buchanan's when 1 was a boy. It goes across the.Dixon Road. well behind the house’ we knew as Alex Nicholson's, and later as Jimmie Nicholson's. And the. road passes in front of Wesley MacNevin's house. Then it comes out on the old road almost in front of Stanchel school | I've used the older names of the Nicholsons and Wesley | MacNevin,- because I do not know the people who live there | now. ‘Wesley and Gracie MacNevin live in Hunter River, and | Jimmie Nicholson is in the Toronto area, so far as I know | The old Todd hill—it's about one-half cae long—creeps up | toward the church I use the word “creep” advisedly, because | we did almost creep when we negotiated it by horse-drawn | carriage, or sleigh. Now we sip over it at @0 miles per hour, and | we scarcely know there's a hill there Incidentally the people along that read are going te see more traffic than they ever did hefore, once the new road is completed. That's the best route from Charlottetown te Sum- merside. by a Jong way. so.far as I'm concerned You cap roll along at a fast pace. with scarcely a curve on the entire ‘road ,Once vou turn at Molvneaiix's corner in North River, you don't ~ hit anything like a curve nntil you've hit Bedeque, if my memory serves me correctly Police Patrol Road To Ferry AND THAT reminds me that a: New Brunswick lady im one of our cottages told me this week she was fined $19 Sunday for speeding on the road th Tormentine and the car ferry. I pass this on hecause it's the first time | ever heard of the police checking speed on that stretch of road I thought that the police had been told to keep away from that stretch of road. It's the enly piece of Toad on which T travel that T consistently drive well above—the_speéd_limit... That. of -course~is-hecause ome never Enows whether he's going to make the next ferry or not. Next fme. though. I'll be more careful, after hearing the police do actually check on speeding Talking of the car ferry reminds me that there were lineups | of waiting cars at Borden last Sunday afternoon that stretched for two miles from the ferry, according to my information. A | Aming lady in-the restaurant. Rerden-inn. -told- me Sunday the? - cars had heen lined back as far as Marie's canteen |] measured | the distance from the boat and made it two’ miles, almost exartly ; Blue Lobsters At Gaspereaux. THIS STORY comes to me from Grant Graham and Mrs Graham, Gaspereaiix through our mutual friend-Wendell Mutch. a former Southport neighbour, who lives new in Charlottetown The Grahams showed him two lohsters that were complete ue, a pale blue Wendell said He also saw another lobster th was completely blue om one side, while the other : ' s the nD ~—al lobster color ; Wendel! tells me that the Grahams told him they had wre | @eer the tke hefore and the Graham family have been buying ee ee mer grade is specially blended. hy is Nhite Rose Ultra} -gasol ine sucha ae g { 4 es AN ie aoe ge PARR hein, he spa Ege Be * Ne ee Simple. Itisn’tjust one gasoline, It’s different gasolines. Ultra is one thing for summer, another for spring, another for winter, and so on. That’s one reason it’s great. / For another, Ultra contains phosphorus ‘to proton¢ the tifé of your spark plugs. The sum- vapour lock. Ultra also has ad- ditives to keep your fuel system clean. And to eliminate icing White Rose Ultra: The great gasoline — “even a touch more). It gives” (Very comforting in eee nena there’s mileage. Ultraryhas good =. .. - mileage built right in. (Ifyour — e car isin good shape, maybé °° better mileage than you’re getting right now). After all that, we have only one suggestion. Buy ay it. tsa great ~~ a a gasoline! stalls in cold, wet weather. There’s moré to prove that White Rose Ultra is a great gasoline. Among other things, it’s designed to do everything your car demands of it (sometimes easy starts in any wea- ther. Quick warm-up. winter.) And fast, smooth acceleration. On top of all that,