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The Goderich Signal-Star, 1940-04-11, Page 2
0 (6tibrnt NO TEM (s Dl' ii+ 43101'014 A,:;1) TUE il014..X14,10 Published 14 $iguai Sta,ar PiieSst Tibaitedt West Street. Gedearir-h, (intaacte art wilt • 'too a iCf that' (u.s. T= . `1 n ae- . the iii+i�� Qa , ,.,tis ,'° 'oa uaeautS on this stupid ltona�ts � :a;.�am: na , ac T l�i'o � • � , e so' iolist rite that ,, e' f r t;he. l •aa>iC Jt utteran have ne • g tut khI IiSt.eatidadl � 's �, A.t'b scars Last have p,`assed i 'Pre deuey. Thi wrl % h . • . ail t ry > , S'St itko through red to purple. Not only was fi rth ; u>tl, believe. 11 a { it,•uuh rote ire its plea for hell), belt,. ereiS � fr *e ��11' ` positions it • . � •; • � iYaAn� front a man in, o. texal , t°Q it will he°seizetl upon by eeeryI!nitod oat States advocate 'Of the' keep-ussout-oft' the -war policy .to support'"its `e uten- tiion that Creat' Britain .is awing .her: wiles to get his eeuntry , embroiled in o � ,k "other people's,' wars, If the States` * With `.'L+ePa a Fat 'Canadian heading a an artiste a, paper its the i1esP of i" -'iii a .hundre i ra ltulili�t+ed wlt� q idea t blew we bad eanailials so near tis. e - _: tia`t.eclipse of the sun on Sun. 'Th 'WAS itself eclipsed by Sun- day :aftoaruuont �v , P see to it stun • fl y ' nett The T ai e of tat dna of l an aiinulaic eclipse • continent® the astronomers say, wilinbe .I994.' Perhaps we'll have bebter -Epae'k then*,' *..' The count oat the Alberta Frovineial dd nclu e co e t been -at las has tions _ . alae ' `irnment 3fi and g%. t1 Aberho,rt dove . seats of a total of 57.: The others are i one Labor and nineteen • ope Lilieran , Xudepeudeaats = (the Independents being tires sof the fusion of Liber- als, als, Conservatives, C.ie.F'.:ers and others opposed to the Aberhart regime). ** have, It he repprtecl, , Chemist's*, . R more 0 Le q lits Sn Con tit.. 'Wish. to coir~ lute the (fight along with Great Britain and l6°>4aut e, • their co operation: will be gladly, and gratefully ., 1 {tett ;.s�'1.cc�med,,,,-_3.t* xhe3�sai�. �+�`t.�,��:� _..par that is their own affair. In the mean - thee, Canadians sire gratl�fied to discern so many indicattgns, of Understanding ani. ympathyin ithe republic, and they are quite well aware that they are getting even more than sy,mpat`hy' and h r . h ir•n i b .. • * in t e e os understand g fromg ostnam EC'$ S» Of all. the Letters received hero- at,,:, 9, stied a dangerous Meadows frown. readers, the most �rusoe sand unmasked Intrigue. it seems that expurgated and e©u► sion question is, "Ilowv do you land niaocuous version.S of this subversive bout?" They go on book leave for some time becu in el r- subjeets to write u rents have tended .'the - eaf't understand .why culatioaa in Germany, , to spat • that y ..,....gown and to Put :then simpler•minded Nazis off their arts But a ,r E GQDERiCIi SIGNAL-ST� Current Views on the War CRE$UE 1>h1Ai1 and even uncooked., .Ti1at was. haw The dt partnlent of Nast research re' Friday came n into Robinson's posses- sponsible for etripping . the sheep'a cion and, having so recently been told elothing from the British "Robinsonolf has what an unheard-of act Qf piracy it t turned its attention -ti) is to release other ,people's T iso of war, we can appreciate the indigna- tion of the Panzigcr Vorposten, After this episode the megelonaani€a of. Robinson K rusoe gets quite out' of hand.- With his head (turned by Fri- d "s ` adulation, he interferes ,abetween ay.. other war ,bands 'and thein prey, and. "i�'ts as a liberator of e•rary Conceivable kind of person In tele end .he sets sup as n get'ernor of the island and r� �_„ _ e : , learned writer In g lacksof something stop altogether front lac the Danaher Vorposteu has referred to describe. ' • the original text, : and ; has been horri-' to C din tlAere what � • Miss MacPhail. • who for several years was the only wpnaaa member of the Lipase of Commons, has a •large fol- lowln throughout the, country, and g � now - that her former constituents .have chosen to send a man to Ottawa in her place .there are requests from various influential quarters that she be given This tv,orld• is atilted� with subjects to lied by w a figure neighboring tribe that pattern of writeo many worth- Ile has discovered the sinister gu a the neigh ori g , habout. t.•With S who followed thea pure; uub oiled race, has been sWind- •build tales' ,of: gone Utiniel Defoey 'n p while things to expla and . orale profession of a journalist led 'out of its •Lebensraum for ever, around, I've often wgnder;�d why so deplorable i not a� diseipliaYed Nadi Writer who waits :! The Whole story is an object -lesson many writers hraave to tell : hear storms ions ta'b delivered to kiln for his opinions o about the side of life that would be post from' the Brown told.' They declare by registered poin in a better n never.house, but a. law fello% wvork g that.nn deserves. to be told about the .,.,p r mere ',were not• yet' s "Y ne .country . "where e t " any side, but rye yet to ld. Ili xyo an laws binding "editors --.lot that It improve . est because' you 'told iia lass y. ever Will be any such a p 3• is likely -,, .there' er,htl shJoggingnout - l laws • for. \the British glitter' press.. in out of the ,village on.a load Such hurrying into Pint Jogging g a .-ereatere, hu y ng 'P around i these thoughts kept ' mill g with Uncontrolled ideas of his own, was round, in my mind, Tape the case of n° make incarnate an, _ "Der aJust the:ma to le � t thelt and lave ntil whoWilliams s A . . ie o i i1 all h .in Miller:Robinson"nt , Ins •ob p R swh- a tioutslittle e=� tien..t livaes., . i lie foatbres vof Brit sli .Imperial little nsion but in place abo on a tidy li• t pe... ; ism, Robinson had no , sooner landed of Sitting` around iu. thea Afternoon A on his desert islan sthan he feels hini- lif ewhiwtng away the time until even -self lts`•ruler, .;the Isola round„ which, its int; draws •on, •he believes • in making whole life must turn, Such ideas above himself useful, There are two churches his, station. (could the. name he abase e in the village,'and Miller has been tend- ru tion of Jewsoe?) at once betray his. ing their lawns for five years now. nes ink bordiiaate"charucter,•' The fact -that ales est sm buthe ibefore f s of Pay or tJ Years saw takes ►.ari eta ve eywfi e never Pn y t �' it was he's glad of the chance for and says something to do. Ile never thinks of thechurches, as being different' from each other . . to Miller they're both places of worship. If theres a grown- up side in the village and it's summer- time, ummer tune he's'always on hand with -a lion •Lelnsi'aum_ of the nearest superior quet''of flowers ... and in the • winter» 'race"— timelaeill bring one of his potted plaids, And so, at the end of the twenty-five If it's a 'child, he'll always manage aturnedout t b The super tti o, some cheerful' little 'object 'con- con- structed with his own hands. Cheerful and happy, he'll wave: to you or, pass a bright time of day with you when- ;, going awe If ou it oa . , Y t, b you ee y ever m he'lltchore for you obligingly and ac s cePit a sealer of pickles or preserves s pa:vmenit. - . r, 4 to . on w ich la the consutnnaate perfidy- h British Empire has beep buiitt •up. Thai editor of the ,Danziiger Vorposten is to gr tut ted on the unmasking -of be coni, a � this seventeenth -century a ►Scalp :, Re has only overlooked• one small point,_ contained ,in the `first.' paragraph of •I)e'foe's book, The mariners .real name was Robinson' Kreutznaer, his father having been "a foreigneru of Bremen, N � he came Ilul r �o �t .firsts h attic du wos da assatenperier race, ,after :a11' and:aha right to wear the swastika efld take any territory pnd' rule over any 'people red that grass. 'the h .covered -sea•t ��a�.n. tlae •S�nate. This -raises the e th n all other plants, ve-g �Ltamii� . �• . � � �yyuestion of whether some system might tt ha se ro theypo andp • •u a f x d r tis, tables an. fornn or another it'.be , made an one i di So-perba' s he- aartic'le-�f �itxmaxx• , on we shall be lining up beside _ �pr� l g "the donkeys for our three -a -day, 'or will be sent out with the �'oharatay w . ower to bring in the material *L i per's baking be adopted of electing to Parliament a few; say 'half -.a.. -doyen, "represent- atives 'p persons, a,•tives •atiaacgt -- •There 'are' pe nsa like the Prime Muster,' the leader'of the 0 position,and others sueh as Miss •p <,. Mracphall with countrywide follotfviugs, :who, might And 't •:difficult or l aconven- ' footprint on the sand is so much As a tips phrase.• The other day he,, found one no excuse for lawlessness; even-- a ship- more enlightening than an wrecked mariner.-ahoiuld have at least that was enlightening , on Allied picture in his pocket before -hour's complicated Spee a dictator's P Which ' o ractise saluting. An empty war aims. There are,"he saaiid, island t p must be—the _`thoughtless, dilletante or pu b island , may be—nay, d worldlin wlio• sometimes ask }pus: `What is it that Britain and F -ance are' fighting for?' To this.'I make the o e. answer : 'If we left off lighting, you years, it j well soon find -out.' " for race turned, up one day to hold the e orm :Suppose we , carry . Mr,` Ohuaechill's celebrations 'that they had Pei,, , � „ • „ her•.. lditler's Germans T tit littlesfurt 7 lu n — iia u ries a n e nnti=nt. ox c. f islandof i the is s possession. 9S s o in -the e iIl .riht comparable to that` of doing p 'would be. scour Po P able goose-step p reets of ( conquests and free for further aggreS-; the g e. The through the .sion. What thew . Does anyone along Prague.. The Dan�iger Vorposten does 'Germany's borders imagune that the not describe th . emony . in... detail, gi as a .'geed t . h oshows that - eich would settle down but reference to the book• b in Europe? • The german {' L u know Fhrl, hb said one dayµ it was �to take, the -form of Boasting and neighbor which led from the village i ve g, sof non -Aryans; And _campaign tor abuse` and terror to me, riding out , eating a. 'couple it but of .the na udenee 'to Munich cath less than. six•, months lawn heave ~i#zought � much about , Robinson .a Jrusoe lied 3 p better than this loose, off :fire- after Marshal (Ioer had given his al for heaven is so the blatant audacity, to th� they y it.Is it' must car- t •t -h b,anquet with the areSurlt "word of honor," bia'behalf .of littler, r.'' feasters had to that Czecho Slo lieut. to obtain a seat for' the:ordinary at m y be a humduage -that the inoffensive :• Rounding the bend, I canine.upon_ the ab none their second •conTse infested, fear,: The. German in�s�SiQn and the - n L n�tite c•�v, tint Who represent a is he lilted. :The Times (London). IF T ALIAES STOPPED Winston Churchill can always. bd v'd ix d ce he v ''to r o u t Sa ed upon p cou t p extinctiOike hQ Slovakia from the map at Europe came �oaly a it months after Hitler lied. taoleulnly promised Mantels fie reepeet tbe' eh frontiears. The invasion of Poland six months thereafter followed the familiar time, table, and was preceded , by 'the same technique. The ,fillies are convinced that if they °left off ifighting" now Budapest and Bucharest, and also Amsterdam., and; Stockholmn, would soon:.1eeonie eoneen- tratioli :camps like -Vienna ,and Prague and WarsaW._�c ith the same savage dem tiara crushiantg every standard of '1►0 . decenier and every spark of freedor:. They believe that insecurity and •feat' ., uestions !" would grip every free nation in I Trope, ask q T111101DA.Y, AVM lUb, 1 4O that= Britain and' ',ranee would b_. fatally - threatened' berore very leee i _. and that distant s ectatarS like Bury selves (would ewe 'be confronted with a world of totalitarian economics and angle law. For the: reasons, the j believe they are fights Allies genuinely ing the' neutrals' `battle as 'well as their own. .The New York Timms. bus: °'Is smoking perp Passenger In . �„ Patted, eo thictor " Conductor "No."all these • Passenger "Well, where did cigarette ends come Troia: t who didn't Conductor: From .people ear as i; e-�; have no .: velda . need � s . . - adia Alb , cAmoter and Cha a white cable , le shat T+ an retires;` f �raiii ��ia > y with A .. t D Lilieral w barge body of -opinion ins- the country. If each , elector were given, an . extra r!ballot, rte hes marked .for _one_a _then+ representatives at target -interest would be added to our elections and such ac- cidents might he avoided as the defeat of the leader of 'the Oppositien,or of one so outstanding among the mein- bership of Parliament`- ss'3iiss .Mac Mac - phial' was.. We •don't know of any country that has just - such a system— but there '' is the • idea, anyway. t The new Rouse` will not he `without a Woman member, despite.Miss Mac phai1's defeat. In ,..North Battleford, /Sask., Mrs. D: W; Neilsen; Unity, can- didate, has• been elected{, defeating a former; Liberal¢ member, m - standing 'in :the centre '`loomed up to. bring•a thought ome son' buried th e ' ,Striders with- the dread, tuberettla,r- infection in her lungs, -Veronica was never able to enjoy life as other child- ren hild ren did. • At fifteen she- was -confined gty. f:he seat o ay► h Ve uca Smith straight h mtN Jowly of:, • raising the �..i.. the new HouSO to 1713; is R �lberfal. count in..: Another vneaney in„ the, membership tstitis dna Witted by thei death of »r. • member-eleet for Caarle'ton •Ontario, and; it is • proposed tit Dr.. • M,anion, be of Bred: •the 'seat, Should this be done, It is iatnIIl.elq that 'any ' opposition would. be 'offered. • sdarle ton is a safe. aonservatire seat, anyway G!vinm leetare tat ithe Orkney Tors in' Old St. ,.emdrew '$ church,' Tor-• Onto, naAfew nigks,.P�t�o, Bev. J.;.•R relater .described the . islands ya `very, Veen. and fertile, noted for prize -wins': ning stock but whose chief. exports are eollege profeSsors." Surely a. he said itoutethieg too about the ;fine seamen produced° in the Or1p eys,. Groderich knows ':something a,: the fine'fivalities'' --of Orkneymen, for this town has. num tiered among its substantial, citizens several 'wh& firsts breathed: the air of those famous islands - The Inted,States.nate,has.agreed to a three-year extension .of the trade agreements;' effected by the present Ad= ministration, and ns the House of Re- presentatives ht +ii already given its, ups •praval the trade extension policy of Mr: Cordell Hal•, . Stary of :State, will, be eontinued. In connection with; Otis endorsation of Mr• 33ul1 Program. there is a suggestion that Mr. Roose- velt if he cannot get or doesn't want a renomination for himself, may favor t Mr.' Half. fer_'hiq sucq essor. Iii weight and .experience the Secaretary of state hal no rival • among the .aspirants' to -the-high:post Jle IA say qn et man= -las most thinkers are -sand does not. appear to :be making 'any t claim to nomination by ,his party ,lmt if he has Mrsbiose velt'isu k` ng he may be the Man with. whom ' the iRepublieans will have tis "' reckon lathis year's tampaigii -is s .There are reports' thatin. ' some hi stances 'Can, dims (BA in this, Part Of the ootentry) have:' refused to gitre visitors front the •l nited-States-the full value of 4 their money when received. for purchases or foe servit :s rend.ete-L The low dtstmetly rekeires that ICae.- arlivs ae ptlni "lanite .,States tar- renes shall pay the- established. pre- Miura. reMuiura. Ilut in :addition to rttnniag"foul +.4f the law Canadians who so treat united States visitors. •are pursuing ,,a , ,. •ei: et. TROOPS (Ma.nelester Guardian) A -London-Canadian writes :— "Mr.- ,,Aittlimiy Eden is , very pepular with:the soldiers of the Canadian army. When he • visited the men's mess of one of thetregiments in training dur- ing the luncheon hoar he received one of the greatest ovations ever given tO im *ofacia.1 visitor to the Canadian forces. 'It Was gleetrifYing. Mr. Eden had not intended tiostitilike a speech, but he could nottdisregard the cheer- ing. When le skid he understood they were tmPatient to get into action, the elieering twast louder • than ever, and When he reminded them that "ailthings ccime to these. who wait" the `men let knew they were ready ter' any- "Aecording officerS in the party accompanying' the Dominions Sepretary, .he was greatly impressed hy the physic- arfitness and goad spirits Of the Can- adians,. At one poiet inSPectioll Of training sitivitie.s Mr.' Eden. Join$ 'the privates far a eup. of tea • served with tvro liveigallon pots a.iid one eight - gallon pot.' (simeoe Reformer) Attorneyoenerai 'Conant has shovrn the thousands Of slot machines'and pin 01116s. now operating threughoixtsfte Provinee In direct contravention. of the amendment to 'the Code introduced at Ottawa by _the Oen. Ernest Lapointe, Minister .of Sustice, a 'year -age -tat tSeptentbersietels this cm 'indication that rederal-Provhicial,friction in other 'spheres is to govern .the attitude of Provincial law enforcement facials in dealing With offendefi against .the Criminal ir,,ode? One thing is certaite namely, that it is toa inueh to expect 4.. municipal-..nutliorities to Intervene in.ery.e.v, that the recent 4eleetion cam- paign, cost. Miss • Maelthail $2,500 In personal expenses, apa that is quite a bit' of money to Jose, withont hope of getting' any of it baek again. It would .be nice, indeed—for M.:Witt:4-qt 'Canada to a sleeping porch,of the Smith home. With the father struggling to keep a large family,' there were never .many luxuries, for -Veronica, and there She• would .sit' on an . old - couch watching the train, sifting by on the main: line. A :train broke down one day anda sympathetic conductor and . fireman, While: }vatting for a relief train, heard her story. Next time they tame up the line they, tooted the• whistle twice as a salute -for Veronica. She was so happy she Cried herself to • sleep^ -that night, and wrote -them, a big (letter: next ayTo thank therefor remembering her. Soon thet' story spread and' every engineer on , the run would salute Veronica.' . A bundle of papers would• be slung off every day for her; antra sectionman, on his own 'time, erected one of those areis like they `have at deg ,stations for catching the mail, sthat' a bundle of anything that would :break could be hung there for. one of her `brothers to get for her A curve in the track made. it necessary, for the train toslow down,. so that.the :task .of . placing the bundle was easy. • . Divisional ;headquarters overlooked a, great many teehniealities. A: list of subscriptions was made up and a tent with a wooden Iloor.yas purchased by a tram man.- ° Verontca, `whose sleeping hours were few, had a signal light ori the ridge pole and she used to signal the passing eagiueers ... ;lint one night the lightdidn't flash, a Poor .Veronica's lingering death had overtaken her.' A I never will 'forget that funeral as long as I live;s with six thusity railroad men shouldering the White'easket . . Sowers and wreaths in profusion .. mid` everyrailroad man 'who could' be' spared from ditty present at the fun- 'eras,.'• They' arranged. everything , :. . and --nothing was. forgotten, even.. to the white marble shaft that -marks her Past resting place. Aslong as there are men like these in the world - .. there will be worthy subJects to Write about ... would that my pen were able enough to tel their stories and tell' them well. - • Why Housew�rk? Worry a. f. e� ,o �, ��� latest �o�• e of the i • • electricity coo it by u$" one I�et e�, y , el"s Vacuum Oleanem ;• peer pQ;�her electricAn coffee rcolator toaster, iron, or e. iaaxR►ays# acceptable. . b(, , work finished y te furnished on wiring and all Estimates� :,, r•� �•,yagreed up one time p MeARTIIIJit V • FRANK. v street SAA eari i1,1 R THE T'OYOUS .SP ]'G: of cold days .and plles,ef The winter is now 4a fadaulg memory warmth and sunshine, e0 paint your snow. Sprlllt;(�, Means � $ _with our ready -tip 118. tare or ' oua>• fence, � - home, your furn>t tyom. M . _ ro est well .pauited. • paints,-..-.:Tt pays to • deep your pP � •q INS A A. right into the is-.o�.e of the best -on the`.�market.. sinks.Itg �/J, s. wood and its, cheap. All .col Blackstofle Stoves Mattresses- Tobaccos Ice Cream b Ice Phone 240, Furniture Confectionery, We Deliver • 0 sits— MISS ItIACPRAIL the other day,- Miss Agnes MacPhaii, former woman meMher of Parliament, when asked if she would' seek re-elec- tion Is quoted as saying: ",f never will otikits own .needs' to finance its., own elections." It seems, according to the ARS -ago; &Wawa' in our larger " cietes; telephone 'wires almOSt shut' out the sky. A.network vf wires on or more of cross -arms, became- an in- creasing problem- and hazar4 year .by From the Telep4one Labciratories came, -Tabrfiallesve. dcibeo-nor „iviiblothersw.,ci?ilaleachaild19tatall;;timanrejearwaghtlYeyd12,sul: liteselogsedel-d81 lilee wires bene" ail the pavelnellts flows the tide of downtown telephone traffic: This development of telephone .cable is ape of the great uiumphs of telephone research. Congested bilSineSS areas in "cities could be served in, no Other:way. TOday in larvr centre's, up*arAls of 80 per cent of telephone- wire is under!.. 'Science has had ' may with the tele- phone --- with iihases of it Day by day the service grows more fart reaching, more huinan, more helpful. the operation of illegar 'gambling ma- chines when the Ontario Attorney -Gen- eral will lift no finger to stop the of war natealaiii in the Vniteit Staves' into Parliament him tit await thM and the One greatest- factor in imbue- COLRORNE TOWNSIIIP, itiiirli '9.— happy event she Will not be ranning ing the account is the tottrist trade. The Gth eowssion is open to cavil, the again for quite somelime. *the line 'the nearer ro shall get to lbalaneing the trade lietween the two eotattries• and the', better the Proslieet of maintaining the Canadian dollar eten 4, its presetit valuation in bitter- . nationiil transactions. Our 'Chita States friends are assured that Caw, wiry, in getting the fall value of their money, and in very few Instances, we believe, will any attenapt be made- to withhold It beans" la a speech hit Week in Whleh he to purehese tuned Statew he war bjr sgreeloi to the witotway scheme, *110W. 8 stew *mesa to 41.oulksk Petted tor hills havin been, slug mit. Congeatub.tions are 'extended to Mr. —i --- and Mrs. Wilbur Thom on the birth of a little self , Mr. and Mrs. Will Treble' and Sirs., JohnsTreble Speet Sunday afternoon with the latter's sister, Mts. John Me- Wh Loney, who is still eonfined to her bed witli a sore knee at the home of her daughter, Mrs. Alex. Bogie. Mrs. rred Quaid. of Gotlerich also le helping to eare for her mother. Mrs. MeWhitt- ne9 in her eightSssecond year. We vvish her a speedy recovery. 'Sir. and Mrs... 'toward reagan celei brated' their tenth wedding anniversary one day last week. The Cedar Valley Dramatic Club of fete Nas A, Siolliorne township will pre- sent the play c•iiiafety, First" in hinge. bridge. liall eh Monday, April 15t1i. Tide play of three sets is very humor- ous and is well worth leeing, Phe; "I'd like ko-isk you * question.' "11-111 fatt he 14 re't Site: "Ain the only %girl whose "110 INIKT1110 Oa i looney you ever loved?"' Ilagging,Dragging Pains In the Back dany women nate to do their_tial housework,. tn. d the et11114::lult fag over, ,lifting, risking beds, *weeping, ironblg, ,sewing, so noes. sexy , to perform their household duties puts s. heavy. strain on- thw bsek and kidneys, and if there wets se Melee). weslaiess the beck would be strong eed. welt DessAs ititleeir Pills aro put la a* obloeg box with our k 441fsple Leer" se sue *ea get 411)1410k"