FARM FEDERATION NEWSLETTER 8 The Guardian, Charlottetown, Fri. Feb. 14. 1964! r:'§:y ac Farming Pattern Changeslllllltlle EBSI l‘lElll0llS May Boost Organizationsseek More Profitsl of the ORGANIZATION FUTURE likely be aggravated rather than , appear to gain as well. This can 1 No one will deny that Agri- improved and that even in s ‘ti-.‘ traced t an increasing i culture is going through a per- of farm policies designed to on the part of the commoddtyl help. lpeople that their interests can What are the implications in and must be furthered by work. . all this so far as farm organiz- . mg with other groups. In ad- the number of farmers decline ations are concerned. We have . clition, if farmers are going to] the size of the operation carriedl referred p iiou v the be generally larger operators. . on by the remainder will in- great number and wide variety y their attitude to organization crease and before long it won't of such groups. The commodity will be more demanding and be uncommon to find numerous groups relate to rather special perhaps tend to favour a busi. farmers with investments in interests and special prod<uc- . BESS like 8DPI‘0-3031 rather than the neighbourhood of $100.000.00. tion and they are getting stron- “the way of life" approach These men won't be consid- ger. One time it did appear that This, of course. doesn't mean ercd little business men they the commodity groups and thelthat there will be less emphasis will be big business men and general organizations such as the l by Organizations and members they will be in a sense capita- Federations we-re competitive on the farmer's role as a oitri. lists. Their outlook on life andibut this no longer appears to Ten. In fad. amp ' may hi- their attitude to agriculture will 1 be the case. As the commod- , Grease on this factor. understandably be different ity groups increase in stzrengtihl The fare i all seems to from that of the much smaller the general farm organizational add up to the need of lam: or- ganizations keeping pace with the farmer and his family As ACROSS THE ISLAND ‘”..::‘:: ifnmnnss frequently are asked why *P!'lIlc6 Edward Island fairrnsrs ' BF?!‘ 110* Producing more. more mil '. Island Ghost Yarns, ‘forerunners’ lold Bv NEIL A. MATHESON more pork. more beef, . more this more that. The same questions of course. is generally asked with respect to Mari- time agmicultune. but it dom ap. pear to ‘be much more pertinent in l‘Plaf.l0II to this province with its finer resources and available . . There would appear to Provincial-Farm Editor l {,":'S0‘ff,,‘d . . . grounds for maimtam- IDl\"T see the particular Gazette program. but Bill Led 1"?» that flndinlg 9119 HTISWEI‘ to well tells me that Lloyd Maclnniis interviewed recently a fornierl this flllestlon is of ' ‘ate Cumberland County. N.S.. woman who has seen several things and impoffant concern. before they had happened. The old Scots used to call them “fore. The lJI‘0D0sal made bv the runners". and have heard many of these tales. I've used sev- Federation of AgI'iCultu:he for er em in this column already. but Richard (Dick) Dougan. extended research early in 1963 Charlottetown told me recently of an unusual forerunner he saw had this problem in mi (1 d in Georgetown when he was still a young boy. 9 problem is Sun “gm 8:! ’.’3:.'»::.:n.” ::.ii“;:2 .12::.**:.';“r:n';.%1":e:.::"‘l..‘:..s::**’:%;:::i and mm» - l . ' v I.’ . 0 ' , l n I ' _ widowed Il‘I:rl12y£”T, Mrs. Sherry, was then living with her daught- eg1efol31§tmpr0d:°C1:efi:;l:}:smb':_ ’ ' e next election. Long term Planning and long term ‘ thinking in the development of '_‘ Wnflrams which may not show When they reached the house they sa\v to their surprise that: all of the doors were open . nobody appeared ro be home But they saw when they looked through the rooms. a Slight rhavn about six feet. two inches tall. and e boys ha I _ mediately recognized that he was a complete stranger to them. "5" t‘ W‘ ml‘ fm9e“- 01‘ THE BOYS left and they met Mrs. Donovan on their way, Went‘-" years 39993’ *0 b9 l"‘ home. “Your doors are all open. Mrs. Donovan", Dick told thel d’°3“"d< . woman who retorted." That cannot be right, I lockca them when‘ Education is One of the areas I left." And sure enough the doors were all locked when they. U13? Peflulhes Special attention. arrived back at the house. ‘ capital requirnements. famm It was then that Dick told the lady about seeingthe tall manj management, mechanization and with the dark suit, a aclk bow tie and old fashioned on hot; far up on the totem poll mar- shippers. Immediately Mrs. Donovan replied "that s‘ my fatueru kering too. The latter rm sure he is the man you are describing, but he died 24 yearsl ago." is a t0U<‘h.V l0'PiC because this is a _ Stamping group which has The boys went. to their homes that night and it was only na-‘ uaditimlayw begonged 00 the tural if their sleep was disturbed by dreams. after the unusual» business communm, and one experience. in which f ‘ But early next morni'ng_ about (our o'clock. the Doiigarfsl ganiza,vionsanne:;e§::?dthe1:, were awakened by sharp knocking on their door. It was K_atel something km than enmu . ‘ Sherry who as ed “will some one please go for the‘ priest !‘1Ehl:on the pan busm 5135?‘ away. mother is very sick." and governments ‘'55 99°99 The old lady died some 15 minutes after the priest ariived.. POLITICAL A,n,'".UDEs and this unusual forerunner tale erndis rather dramatically witlif our democratic mm } the revelation that the place where the boys saw the ‘ghost of: based on th th 55" .. 5 Mr. Sherry that nigh "was the exact spot" where his widowl Mt. 9 ,°°"Y M Pfilmcal dropped to the floor as she was suddenly stricken with her fatal’ $'ia'n‘:fe< °(F;€l‘1'::13l13 and ‘. governments. Until (I useful sub- ‘ for the party system : is found there is not much point ‘in quarreling with it. However, there is much to be said for a :more enlightened attitude in i th “f This Comes From Caledonia CHESTER MARTIN, Caledonia told me recently that he had seen a forerunner when he was a yotmg boy back in the days of the First Great War. His father was overseas at the ' T was . in February 1917 ‘ my memory serves me correctli_v——-and lf pmvmce 0" the.‘?°°r° Chester. his mother and her other children were upstairs at_l’a”~V adherence‘ P°1m°33 D311- night when suddenly they became aware of a light of unearthly‘! ‘es 5?” ‘{"P°1'taTlt 13 brightness coming through the floor register,—«the_v were used inl not infallible and to no énany homes to allow the heat from the kitchen to reach ue up-lf1"l(¢)l:f-"T06 (10 they differ grreat. airs area. y ay in their principles or Tlrat‘.< almost 50 years ago but Chester recalls VlV'ICllly that‘ even in their policies. Blind ad- they could see the kitchen ablaze with the white 113111. When they hcrence to party leads to 1; peered dOVll'l through the narrow openings from above. There was‘ state of mind producing me also crackling, as though heavy paper was be1ng_ha11dled- belief that the party and me The grandfather slept in a room off the _k1LChe'fl and Vlllef‘-l Members ol gi we the young boy went downstairs and asked him if he had seen '.h.lS.‘ wspnnsjbk, rm, the salmon of unusual light. the old man said "Don’.t you worry about that an 019 Votms problems True '. r me." Grandfather M.:;-tsmh app(2;re!it‘3'_dn<:1<_‘0$Z“-‘ed the ' ~ ' . ie 1 re some . u-Selclfhlataesr.aTll);mcil'ggl:lIi1r(:;f (‘IflS\\lI“:£lPl:l: Daggr was heard_ again: 3l‘)'l0<.‘rrtn1t:etr5 of the Legislature im- as the paper covering was being stripped from the coffin. my. friend told me. yer go 9;-y ' - tresponsibilities in rel Hortsville Ghost Story Is Colorful ldoing his .,,.,, .h,n,ma§;,°*;e,;f tion to e ' '. rir-is COLORFUL yarn tans into the category of ghost‘ smms. ‘linvelgfggfm ’t‘(‘,‘“"°““3' stltlrtries‘ and it wasf told by my cousin Neil Nicholson. Hartsville'e‘ducati0n and in relation no the W Itdlcedinceruls 3 Ileaxtsss’/‘iglzlll-aSri:Iagn(1)‘who mas driving along the road gexglxprent of ram‘ Wu”- one evening and found that he was being pursued closely by a pig. W. ND BPEF . . The man had a fast driving horse but he couldn't go fast enough ’““’“t h‘“""55 m‘f°l‘m‘8ll10fl to shake the pig. an animal not normally associated with speed °t_“°" than T919353 by the press cg moVe.mem_ with respect to the turning own Losing his patience. the man stopped the horse. got out of at the stockvard proposal by the wagon and struck the pig on the head with his cane. Imagine “if? ARDA People. we may be his complete amazement when the pig suddenly changed into a urming some danger in com. woman before his very eyes. The surprise was even greater when mentimg. ‘he found she was a woman whom he recogmzed. That was on a The three reasons given (1, Friday night and the man saw the woman in the church at I-Iarts- N0,» in 8 devekmmem area‘ (2) ville on the following Sabbath moi-rung. Andqclearly evident on Competition with private mm; her forehead. was the mark of the blow iufucted by his cane est (3) Lead to many mun” in the roadside rendezvous. _ requests appear rather to fall MR. NICHOLSON never told who the people were but he said in the category of excuses_ "you could see the smoke from the chimney of_ the house where Frmn 8 legal standpoint num_ gale wlorgtan if you stood on the high hill on which the‘ hm. one may be an that“ neces_ “"3 an ' sa to w" ' I told this story to a dinner me_eting1o;1th§ 1Vl'rrltin1e Angus ry me mposmon , ’ ' Hailuf x a ovember. a a . . Psllfililerus/onaxsz:-ioc \|v?'l1tcl>(:; hadme wag in that general area ‘told ’;:’_1‘::iel:ne:f Mrs. Mavtheson "next time I goto Hartsville I am going to look ' 9 P9099 a nd and see what house chimn are visible from the no makes» and “'9 MP9 "19? did. 1! olollhat M p ".‘;)’:T.t.°‘3“‘."”‘ 5‘“dY 0‘ “'19 P08- Though I knew Mr. Nicholson well during one later years 0'. ” "“’°‘V.°" 3"“ ‘W’ °°'“' his me_ 1 he he died, so I had ‘no 901 People chance to discuss it with him. I don‘t know. of course. bu‘ I 311“ “"3 5'59 3" ‘?“'’P‘-’°l'5 °‘ “he Pm- to think that he would have trusted me enough to tell me the D0-°I’d_ 0P8'!‘8!1’n0n and as a result names, even though I would have been unable to reveal them Of WIS} Study Fflached cerltaln goncluiions a real service would Are hzdesa-i<‘lel‘hems.t:ctl((:rdandIsfv\lr‘llll1Db’t‘! I HAVE many other similar yarns that 1 picker‘ up aroundj ‘“.d the province. but they'll come in later columns. I would apprecl-l }-h had .d "*‘°°"""" “V i‘ ate hearing about any good ghost or forerunner stories. though; 93’ -"_3’_' 0? “Famed that I have enough in my files for possibly we or four more col-i "'9 P79905190" [5 "01 feasible urnns. but generally speaking this type of story is the most dif-‘ and given ‘Considered reasons flcult to get. ‘for that vnvw-point hhen the There are enough general stories in my files to keep me go-l beef producers would be wiser ling for at least six months. though tahere is a ageat deal of at and would know what course at term. but I aw. mmd .‘ . ¢'}Cl,l(‘lfl to mice, to many of the peop all good st stories in the in 51,0,-g_ g - down past. have died—I am told that in many commuuities—and I am! the prong“: h:,:m:gw_.hMc:1 anxious to get as many of the old tales as ssibe ‘ l l at to like this type o! story and I regard; mum of 3 Many new none can them as a valuable part of the lslamfs rich folk lure that shtuldl mngfimm in the bed i be preserved L m Century Farms Competition A ‘N '°9T°"- T00 BOSTTN (AP) - A Mann. IIEPLYING TO ueries from readers, the cloann date for - the Century Farm. ‘liornpetltlun entries tl March 1? and 4:! $:;f,‘,“ zillzngg Courlmjagi entry should he sat to the Century Farms Committee. P0.‘ fir" uelmh Box 546. The form must be in active operation. have been‘ "my ' ‘MW mm" ‘d in me In some name for at least roo years. farms in the name fi""°dl 5"” “"d°' "'9 ml“- - mm! 1 emo rs of a Woman of Plans- of the present owner-operator, the .u"' J.“"8° Hudmn "*1 3 h“" ,ppm_ Q 0809 on which 0,, mg will be held March 11 II 0f 13,. “may, 0,, 100350,, 0; which publishers. dtstrlbuttm ing army”, :5. gm of gum Md typg and other sellers may offer at- Ol Flfflinl operation carried on. and: as mixed farming. potato deuce why the book should‘?! I--In -I-Iv-M -v be banned in Muuclluset ‘ By DAVE LANCASHIRE BETRUT, Lebanon paints a mixed picture in the share tAP l——0il profits. desert. a child playing in a new ;an hope to pump more .thetr delegates met in Saudi oil than ever before— Arabia‘ and passed a series of about six per cent above last resolutions. year—but for terms with a l toug i individual deals. rged that ol schoolyard on the Persian Gulf, jcent over 1962 and almost half ‘ever. tend palaces. let airliners wit strange Arab markings. Oil pays for all of them, and this year the countries that pro- duce lt are determined to get more of the same. with a fatter that their tankers united oil-producing governments. andj such bargaining wo Id be?“ her than making the‘ usual 3 b Some Arab newspapers I he s d u lweapon against Israel, by eyer.jncrea5ihg ‘ting off shipments to the West if Europe and the United States The Middle East last year should support Israel in the sud. Middle East: Steel rigs in the -‘produced 343,900,000 ' ‘ increase of United States. as empty propaganda. More important. they believe. i to the extra cost of "expensing" is e united front. consislinglsome royalties if the organiza‘ _ Owned C0n1Da- of eight nations - Iran. Iraq, mm will drop its demand foriterprises in these areas Include: Arabia, Kuwait. Qatar. it-aising crude oil's posted ’ —a theoretical figure on w profits are calculated. al panies usually have to sell w it. first time l the they may have to argue their “filed by "19 3°" og,then used as a bit _ gaining with the international front ompanles. as a cut- 1 1 u e 0 longer “expensing“ belo Plans call for these to be nmenta 3 r e . . . . ° Oil authorities in Beirut say. I b arefoot sheik peering lthe total produced in the West, llssue and regard the editorials lthe companies have quietly told l -through the venetian blinds oflexcluding the ‘ his chauffeur-driven limousine, The oil companies and countries modern hospitals and neon-lit‘split the profits 50-50. ‘ ' The Western - ' control the wealth. Saudi and Pipelines lLibya, Venezuela and Indonesia bulging from last year's record ‘—banded together in the organ- production. are going into 1964iization of petroleum exporting com ' lcountries. Just after Christmas int fo bar- . OTTAWA the 50_per_c§ingt“r::_ogtss pail lies from companies about the 0105 ‘part of the cost of production.‘ could cost special tax l buildings. Firms , and llnterestecl lln 35 Areas The resolutions are aimed at! ' price for ' t ’t 4960- . have lI:erIl'l:le ihgretlaasclrlig Ioglasltigie and iMmm°r ’ ~ .. 1 ‘l"°"pe“3"‘g them‘ so mm they -‘received more than 100 are (CP) - C. M. D Thursday the government has The 35 areas were chosen or; , . ' ' ' th b l fhaving a history 0 ‘the organization they Wm agree ‘high iysezr-(i'ount_l unemployment. i'l‘he tax incentives for new en-It price a three-year holiday from hich eral corporate Income though ‘and faster depreciation ‘ances for new equipment an ; ma Drury and that as a 1'0. lsult of the government‘; dec1_ sion to include a section of New lllichmond. Que. in the desig. nated area of Causapscal. tn, burst Power and paper Company has decided "to bu a large new kraft linerboam m. there. The mill will employ Indufilfyfabout 300 men, and will draw rury sa1d‘on Quebec timber reserves em, ploying up to 700. The minister said the Rey", Extrusion Sales Company enquir- possibility of establishing new -also has announced t . manufacturing falcilitiestln they of 3 “"5 "‘°“°fl ton; of Ou_ quarrel over the Jordan River lth companies up to $300,000,000 }35 _Chl'0mC'Ufl9mP °Ym°“ 3'93‘ ldesignated area of La Mal about 10 per waters. The oil companies, how-lacy at designated last Sepltiember hrug off th « 9 - new plant in th. abie. IO!‘ l Que.’ of the on the north shore St. Lawrence. ROYAL SECURITIES Corporation Limited Stocks and Bonds ALEX M. WILSON Manager 137 Grafton St. Dial Charlottetown fed- l taxes. allow; 4.3533 envoy with cautious optimism. GENERAL MOTORS rnmonucr-:s . At last, power IIIIF3 II_’IIlfIl'l.$‘.’ Epic is a totally new budget car, built and backed by General Motors. It's the small car that gives you the roominess, com- ' fort, power, manoeuvrability, luggage space, good looks, economy and value that you've always wanted in a car of this size. 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