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Village Squire, 1974-12, Page 11was a giant stone and cement arches over these. One could look down hundreds of feet to the water and to the railway below. I was back there lately. The embankment has shrunk strangely; the railway no longer runs along it. The C.P.R. is still down there but not nearly so far down, and the creek is much smaller. There is still the deep swimming hole, where a boy drowned years ago. It was said he was playing hookey, and this was a judgement on him. We went to the planing mill nearby and watched the saws whirling and whining These were the days of all sorts of ginger -bread woodwork used for ornamenting the eaves of houses, the verandahs, or any place that could be decorated. There were all sorts of discarded pieces with interesting designs, that one could take home. In the evening we went to the station, the old Grand Trunk, or the Butter and Eggs, as it was known in London. Here we got the evening daily paper. There were two London papers, the Free Press and the 'Tiser'. The 'Tiser' was Grit and the Free Press was Tory There was no nonsense of compromise about this. Either you were right or you were wrong. Grandfather was a good Grit of the old George Brown school and took the Tiser, so I also became a Grit and have remained one up to now. I must confess there have been times when I have been shaken by doubts, but I have rallied, and have remained firm in the faith. After all, Grandpa couldn't have been wrong. And so in this best of all systems were governments chosen according to the number of little Grits or little Tories who got old enough to vote. In the Tiser there was 'Mutt and Jeff'. The Free Press had 'Bringing Up Father', rather a foolish strip and not to be compared to 'Mutt and Jeff" as closely as he should have but I overlooked this. He was a big wheel in the community, I could see that. He knew the planing -mill owner quite well, and also the man who ran the grain elevator. He was a close friend of the station agent, and even called the conductors by their first names. The station is still there. It is an oda shaped building, the main part circular, with a high conical roof. It may have been copied from a Swiss chalet, and looks alien in the village surroundings. It has shrunk too, and seems quite small now. In my boyhood it hummed with activity. There were crowds at traintimes...sometimes twelve or fifteen people. The bus would rattle down the long street from the main part of the village and pull up with a flourish at the platform. The dray piled with express would follow with a somewhat inferior style, but still with an air of importance. One could put an ear to the track and hear the rumble of the train, far away. Then a distant whistle, and the air became tense with anticipation. The whistles came closer and louder and finally the train burst into view. The earth shook, the heaven all but opened, and the huge monster slid screaming with tortured brakes to a stop. There it stood panting like some giant animal. I clutched Grandpa's hand but he didn't seem at all alarmed. Perhaps one should explain that at this time when small churches were scattered throughout the country, making it un- c FROM 6tctie6 LUCKNOW, ONT. Phone 528-2126 Ladies', Gents' and Boys' Wear Yard Goods, Woollens and Children's Wear Jim and Syke Sutherland ASHTON'S LADIES' & MEN'S WEAR VILLAGE SQUIRE/NOVEMBER 1974, 9