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The Goderich Signal-Star, 1940-06-06, Page 21114811 TVU THE GODER CH SIGNAL -STAR \ (10111BINI SIGNAL Aist, Tux Gotwttiort, $TAN rnblishe'd hyeSignal,StarTheS Linded. Street. Getierieli, Ontselo PhillUlterstlEY Nadas Hy "H.UNIAN 4.)1111.1416 West.1 .Oirsnt Vie an or THE SOUL Or DEMOCRAtY. ful inetruntent tO Wearer UniforMitY In en editorial entitled wimply inikerque" The New Yetie'izne Said on Saterday laSt: 'So long as the retglish tOugue -sur. vivee, the' woed Dtirtieerque will be spoken • with reverence. For in that harbor, in suet a, hell as never !blazed on earth before, at the end or a lost battle, the rags and blemishee that have hidden the soul, of democracy fell away. There, beaten. but unconquered, ,eillitemshyl.nine: splendor, sh, faced the *The y sent taway the wounded first. Men died so that others eould .,Xt was not eo simple a thing as Cour- age; which* the Naeis had. in plenty. It was not So siMide a• thing as dis- eipline, whieh. can be hantmered inte men by -drill sergeant: ° It was net the result of -careful plenning, for there could have been little. . "It.,was the common man ,Qt the free e.Olentries, risingein, all ills giory out or ,oftleee factory, miue, f arm and ship, appleing to • war the lessene learned when -he Went down the shaft to bring out trapPeel ceeiraees, wheie lee binged the lifeboat thronele theesurt, when 'he endured poverty, and .bard -Weirk,for his children's Sake. • thioge In the. souls Of free men littler CaunoreInifilliTdre" attain, or conquer. He has 'ertislied •it; where he conld, from German hearts. "It is he great tradition of, demo - racy It It is the future. ' It is victory:b' THE MORAI4 ISSVES OF THE WAR (be' the Dean Of St. Paul'sepr. W. It. Mattheees) - The rise of t1NT he ais toliower re- sembles one of-thejess plausible "thril. "le, rs;" ejt, wae aeCompaiiied by gang -Warfare, , intricate intrigues, con. spiracies like th'e Reichstag !fire, shoot- ings like the MasSatre-ef Rohm and his° fellevvs. has ell the elements ofoi gangster , . The first and most important thing to note is thae Nazism is tr. revolutionary movement. It eloee net claim to be a cleVeloPment, but a riemeideie• a new beginning. • There is no essential diffnee erebetween"' the Unesian and, the German repolutions. ei There Is, n the hist'resort, only 'one revolution-ethe.t against Christian civiliefition and ,its orderly develop- laitTiRSDAT,-JUNL1 6TII, 190 Itanve YOu eVer thought of the strange _ --------------- . , ,,, 1 quirks °that we ilooe human beings have? Look yourself over and you'll CANADA AND THE' WAR, Preieet might welt:bireetisPendedebeel . , • ithad a great many, but look the neigh. eaese of the war. Alt. ' Iianson ob. , bows over' and, a touree, you'll find a served, "The seheme has no friende in i great many move that you would na- tho 1J 4• ,Peovinces and I doubt t t Just tate, for instance, thee city might ba.vel added that opposition to After one Or two beetle sittings at OttaVa,- in the -eourse whieli the Iiiberal inemberS shoWed coneltiSively ing any .other leadership than that of tario as the .people more thoroughly for their health tell all their has tooled and normal -progrees •es , e • e 0 urally overlook. perSOnal examin- if it has many in Quebee." • And he attolle ' ! tame -who. move out to country estates. that they had no intention., of feeeePt- 1 the Proieet arowing In Western On They reeve ever beine e 0 e tile fresh air, anti the sun and Aeon start wearing' picture; elothee to int ; triends about the. glory of getting out Ur, Kinge the, temPee of' Parliament unaerstand \vhat it, means'. 1 Klee' Leepold's downeall is the niore garrIleu In: • ' 42 - - : " being made with the eonntry's besinees. 'Alberte in the war of 1334-1e.„'' The . to work every Monday and cornes hetet , ,- * * * er It cannot be sa.id' that 'the Oti.$ Pre-. net:lelelliet;: 1. '''''i;fte °VI tJtantes°vestatoen lett deplorable because of the seilentlid 1 e the premiership was a strong one eeneeet view ',that eten he eaten at 41,5 4 on Thursday evening. Ilis wife' Is a Vlie argitment that because there has eetra el f h• ' , I good-heatt.ed soal who feels th4t slie'e auiesSis tii() t ea -33e'lti-sh And Pr- mina. really countrilled mid so she's taken to „been, a Clialege in tlie Britieht Goyern. a, he was not 'qeite r.esponsel weariug a big floPPy hat, a printed „ , meat there "should be one in the Can- ible for his action blouse, strange -looking oeeralls -. and Governitelet, ignored the facts , , *" . ' i glove. ileile. r--. ,, * * * , --..-- ording---to----a--4newspape_r.„...relia'rttgeey, and, she 'was teiling me all - , I elePPed there today on the Way to - tweete tile cireneastances in whit% Mr. - • of ; tether. the late Kin pieleed up by 0. city.- mau, Who drives if fated by the .OppOsition for a ellange rec°Pti More than fifty Germans were among! about . the Vand'efeelitteeitegiveeseller King helde°offtee,„*.ith an Overwhelming ee 'get .out a� work with Mother passengers arrivirig reeently, ilt teeexen. Minority in. Pa.rilareent . and those duebee fro Somehow, there doesn't seem Which We Charaberiala for many ' - ,, ... M overseas, fto it was in -1 to be any feeling to Mother Earth when monthsehad-heaed bis -polities rotindly, diguautly ,askede =why these" people you :wear glotee .',. , nothing 'akin to Shedd be --allowed to -land- at -a , Cane the_ planting and growneg of a garden. `,.. 'Ondenmed by prominent Members of aclian port. 'Investigation revealed that uneeie yon yvear an -old -pair -of over- . ,hie, own pilety.-- Mr.- Chamberlain, it is tills .... . no hat, and ,gruh with yoUr ineteade of Afty Germans there were lingers in the clay. - , three, and they were refugees who had ie 'Another quirk 'Of '-human.,,enature to be nOted, , Was not eleetedilo '.the 'Igender043 by Pelletier vote, ,he simply e crested the ocean. with the permission ! Weems to be that of trying to hang your took' over. t114 ...reins /rem Mr. Stanley of the British Government, two ofethera 1 v-iashing out ahead of anyone else. Baldwin When the latter retired° from Monday mor,ning 'seems to briug nio e , . togo on to the United States and the! Alarm elecks ticking their peal mit was endorsed Inca general election on 9 the Orient. It Is just as 1./i',ell not to hiedeto proceed by, way of -Canada to ea.t: unearthlY times than.any other day lin the Week. " And in the oft, gee' diel. vitiate ...life: Mre King"seGovernment t. , of a "Nation41" Government was placed get exated over such reperts, Lor the °ff .tle),"eh' 1.!1°r'ling' is fingers to get their elothes out, women .Work with a fes weeks. ago, when the proposal are. ahent one hundred to' one ahead of their neighbors. ' befere the eleeterate-by the OpPosition °618. I have no idea. Xt recalls to mind an taie Way to a Member, of: his. own Talk is not "always cheap. The Ott- epitaph that I heal(' neatly glirent some Part)" Wil0 had for rare -been w,arning -tawa, correspondent of The Globe re- time ago. Aueaunt of mine; 4 spinster, . . ,4par.ty end was. ,deelsively rejeoted. that, they are not- corteet. Wehoever started that Menday morn. inerace for clothes-hartging-out honors • 'When Mr. :Chamberlain resigned he oatiookesthe eeeret police with the 4.011. veutration camp. The erueltiee of these wholly illegal and teranuitai inititu- tions have 'been expoeed by 4vvitnessee whose Credibility eannot be doubted. To wileet upon the souls Of the men who knit. the repressive iretehtiner for Hitler- is to See IStetatee invisible world eevealed," • • The ° Nazis had ilo„ intention 'of per- secuting the Christian Ch.urelt. Thev .begart by . spetileing respectfully of re- ligion and deelaring'thilt the Reich was founded on "positive Christianity." It is all the more sigetificent that the logic of its .owri .nature haS eorapelted.it to , do what it did -not Want tit do, That logic is really clear- enough.' The Nazi State and the Nazi doctrine elaire the Whole of heelen- "'Vie .leader is alwaye right"; he demands the 'com- plete loyalty of every Member of tlie Reich; - he .beeomeS, ”mortal god." The only kind .ot Christian Church which etiuld live haPP119. Within such a state Iwould, be one Which gave eVery- ,tbing to Caesar and ;nothing to God, The fatt that, .a,gainst their will, the N azi State 'and' the Cleureh hove peen, compelled to be he oPPOSition to one another is one, mope piece Of eieeclenee that the Neel -revolution isain assault. on Christian civilization, • "lretreetiVilleutioireitessnever-beene, hristian, if by that we Mean a toler- able approxinaatione to the ideals of. Christ, but •it has always been de'eply affected by the three great social values" —Taw, aed truth. Probably the Moot distinctive feature a Western culture le its eegard for :.herartii per- sonalityeaS -such, Tot on this elle pos- sibility of human freedmit depends. .This 'respect again depends on .the in- iluenee of the 'Christian view of life, for which every human:being is ereated. in the ineage God an& fs one Of those for whom. :the Son a. God died. This Phiestian 'civilize:thee.. real ,though grievously linperfect, 15 confronted' by an opeesing will which 'denies all the Oheistiatt Values, one which destroys both piiblic and _private ;' which forbids: the impartial, search for • truth and repudiates the natural-Tighte of humaet personality. This is the erui,- ..of the ibusiness. The war is to decide -which ltit"'e the human tette sh.all follow In the future. If 'we believe -that the ,Christian civilization which' we haye inherited -eontaine the. true values for life. and is eapable of being developed into -ea, feebler society thee we have seen as yet, our duty is clear. We muiteneet the organized,. will :for destrtietioneande evil. with a more determined will for constraptioneeed, good. ' , died in the village and we attended the the tonntry of the danger of .e. weak Ports' that thirty Million. United Stites .wake. . The little front rbota was P011e9 indealing with Hitler, and In dollars is the estimated cost to Canada 'crowded with sorrewing relativesand forMing , hie 4 q ovornitte4t the new of the cries of well citizens others patiently "bieling„a decent time, several former • that -every tourisit this summer be sib- I after the potir soul -had:been buried rehee en:aster ineludecl te . • get reading the wine leinidtere of the same ,Party whe had jeetedthefeenilitary examinationeatthe reSitting in the corner Were two found theinselees unable to agkee with border: The -German eiroPaganda rea- 'friends and one reraarked to the Other ' Mr. Chelieberlain's methods. -There is , in a. quite frank waye "Tabithe was 'a . . , ._ . —Mee Ohlirchill. in. *Canada, leo Anithony Eden, ne °Duff Cooper. , °, • .... When Union Governnient Was fOrmed iiiQ4nada,;-111 the third year after the beginning of the last war—there Was a. • serious disegreerrient on a matter ef ' Polley' that cut eicrosee peed:es'', and Mr. ' Borden, the Conservative Prime Min- ister, found le -necessary to call, In several men high in theeLiberalepaety e., tee form a GetverntaenIt that could carry his pelie-Yinto effect. There is no such tiveunietanee at the present time, and °. it tOe he, -htyped there' will net be during the'present wirefor up, one who •'*em:e.tpers the troubled. times of I9iet .would *Wish , a -repetition of. the bitter Velitleal Strife of-thg Yeere-e, e Anothei,Peenliar. quirle-in the attack • fork the ,Ottawa IGeiern.ment:should° be mentioned. When in defence of . the Oevernment it. was stated. that it was acting in, al. -operation with. the British ;War (N,hee, the retort from Opposition speaker, wae. that .this was a queer for' a. party to take that had 4tressed Canadian independence. But We fail tee See enything queer about it. Canada went to War of her own voli- tion; but that is noereasoei -Why she should not seek the advice of he, allies as to the wag' in which.. she could best tentribute, to the eommon effert. As ....sseeeeleeinhee' of the Beitisli Common- ' wealth. she naterally teeked to -Great. Britain for leadership; te-do othereeise seenfel, have been egregious folly. and Would rightly :have 'been condemned -:by,- those who now seem Oeurge that Canada -euld , wage war without Te- - fereneeio Britain's ady'ice;and wishes; ' Britain, etidentiY. asked for•Inechanieal equipmeet; would it ,have been any- thing but the height, of ,folly send over inSfea.d tiraliei an untrained •"'. armY Without Mo'dern equipment') We all inow that for several yearS since .1936 Canada'S, estahligh- meat_ was , neglected. During the, de- pression Tereare-ftie leelitielt.etteVerhe went', by cowmen eonsen4, -kept the chine at - once inade use of these. de- mands and spread. report* that have turne'd many tourists frail" anacii: Our friends across the border may rest assured that they. will not Pe subjected te any in.dignity or unnecessary ex- anlinatym upon entrance • to this country., .es good. soul. Why, she never messed -a -efonday moruing 'in -thirty having her clothes out first on the line." - But women are not alone with their quirks.' Men who have acres and aeres of land going to waste will argue them- selves blaek In the face over the placing .of._ a line fence.- They let 0.rooked ' , "God's Nour May Be Near" I3y The'Observer in . , . • Canada Iseny, native land, but long, befoee I learned to love Canada asshe deSerVed to be loVed 1 rov.ed. England and was enthuSiastically proud of her. This pride was -never ,an -unintelligent -stilt,e'ven4houg11-4,begarge _more discriminating- and -critical it survived, , and never did I feel sueli a deep pride in -her (or rather in Britain) as 1 do in this perhaps .her datkest hour.. And if I may say.. it without presumption, never, I believe, 'did. God look upon Britain with as much approval as at this help. NoW; as it seems to Me, for, the first time in her long and, illustrious history, does Great Beetain, in a,t least • tvvo transcendent respects, deserve to - be called a Christian nation. ° British, %trench, 'Russian and American soldiers eand seamen - Who foughtIn the Great War were not mis- taken, however' idealletically they con- ceived tiie struggle. It was a ,,warthat had- to be twaged:- Had they been de. feirteCkworld ecivilizatione_woulde jaaye gone in.to. sneiipse. Their vietory brought great liberations and the launetting of the sublimest, idea that the !Spirit ef. God. 'had..ever breathed, Into the human soul—a League of the Natione.to establish peat*: Unhappily the lofty scheme proved too high for ,the nations -that had plan- ned it. elost of theesmell,eremembere of the League 'believed In it and were faithful to it. Of the greet ,powers only one was eteatifaetlyefaithful telt through the first teveuty years of Its difficult life, and she rightly or wrongly. end, -wrongly, had made her. self strange and suspect to .the rest, and filially showed herself 'A flagrant offender against the I.feagUe. The United States; '• WheSe iipport might have enSUreet thesurvival of the League during the precarioue years . of its -Jittlitial.PePartgienir-apgropriations at minimum, and although, after 19-435 the apProprlatieus Were ,ea creased the lost ground could not. be recovered immediately. Some of, the ' severest present critics of. the Oovern- ment Should remember, too, that -It is only • a love' months since they. were condemning. In no 'Measured terms, -those who were critical of the policy; orappeasement t'hat wan to give us, in Mr. Chainberlain's 'Words, "peace in our time." It/takes more than twelve or eighteen menthe to pri)duce att ormY with the' training and the mechanical .,equipraent that are needed in inedern' warfare,, , Canada must do ifs ntmost to WITS subdue the beast that . is ravaging Europe; birtilat can best be done by weli ealettiatha measures worked out on the lines laid down by competent men* rather than by listenhig hysterical and. uninformed clamor. Tho,lrorMito Star; $14.,W,t0 irOX VNIIKILTS1 The Canadian Goverwoeut is, spend, ewe 00,000 on the parehase of some nine 'MOTO- vettirla;, "ft.5-Vg) three thousand' otlitese haVia been tie livered overeeae, and the seven thous- and veldelee require(' by the Fleet and ond Invisions will alrbe delivered ov rsees by July. Toleration is good Ter all or it i3 JOIVM NIL ume SOLDIERS TIIOROITOIIIX EXAMINED All soldiers of the First CAL4F,„ glivu a second mediettl eNautination - before ki4Viog tor over, seas, besides tiae ex.atnination made upon enlistment. All membera of the 0.A.13.14 are given an X-ray ,exandu.' ation of the chests Slow wind also bying'S the Wilp to good for nono.--Burke, barbor.-eSwedislt Proverb. ment. • In it early menifesta.tions. It had tvvo elements, both of thent respectable etiongh. in •themselves : 'mei both na- tional and socialiSti, - 'The Nazi party promised to restore the greatfiese of 'Germany; and. it promised to solve- the' •problem-oteeneinployment. In bOth re- spects, it can !clainispectiteular sticcesse If by. national "greeteess" is meant the ability to inspire fear, there can be no doubt, that .the Third Iteieh has it in full measure.: The Spectre of ham- ploymentehas beenlaid, if we mean: by .that eieoply adeenditione of things in which- everyone -has- work -without gard to eonditiees and. reward. This echievement has been the tesult of .te, complete- rejection of - democracY .and' personal -liberty. - •-• . - r-- . - Sterne of 'the means employed- to obe .tain these results' are so atroeious that the:plain. Englishuitte dude it hard to helieveethat the stories about them ean be true. . The fact is thatne -Wing Aire- paganda -could emulate the horror of the timple trutlr. N4i conception required that the dictatorship of the party leader Must' extend -to the mind. Thus. _ehe„ wholeedf _the Intellectual life of Germany° has -been diStorte&hird • maimed., The great traditiort of Tet tonic philosophy and scholarship has been betiken. Poets may sing only in tune with the Nazi' theme,' with the consequelice that, 'as, one patriotic Ger- man remarked, "We 'heve no are now." .Tite Universities %have .been '`fpurkee." The law has been -made subservient to the needs of the Nazi party, and thus one great. eafeguard liberty...--ean, in- dependent judicatureeeehas. .been de- stroyed. • ‘' _ Perhaps the meet horrible of all, the "manifestetions of Nazi tyranny Is the continued and largely successfol at- tempt to force the minds ehildren into the totalitarian mould.' From the earliest years the German boy Or, girl, is fed with,prepeganda,. and nallitarisni, .1E4 imbibed' almost with the raother'e rest of their live§ to utter withont shame Sie Nevile Henderson's de- ealled atcount of the negotiations abortft . • it eonfirms.my own feeling that a- sur- render that cenceiVably may have been inevitable, was accepted by both Chain- berlain.and -himself ; withoet ' a paifg. , ,Some bittek, reaping there: enlist -be - after the sowing of the Years from 1931 to 1939. Btit.' nowhere in hietery, it seems to mee hasethere been shown by a nation so thorough a repentance.. Mr. Chamberlain hiniself „ passed judgment on his Own policies. in "the splendid daring witii whiCh he chal- lenged in the -case of Poland the ag- gression to wiairele( he had consented iti the 'case of pain and Czechoslovakia. Britain's offer' of aid to Poland and Rumania seems to the !first instance ofe'a netion, its .own., interests net threatened and bound by no treaty or ties •of race, made the causgeof an at- tacked nation its own. ara quite con- tent to leave the final judgineet on Mr. Chamberlain to. Iiisteey, but whatever -we-nittylitheisof his treatment of "Spain C chi:isle-ea la, •Zte. Chamberlain 1 THE ,EWn icrAmint:u";Alltive9 rot' IDIAMOND TREAD '‘46 Mice' ef‘lA Adversity reminds- men of religion.. 7LIVY* Falowiwarrimigragrawaserwritarsifgarmatm. ' Tire -wise motorists get More for their Money veh.en they buy this. great new Coodyear. Marathon. All 'the -sturdy, ,Iong-wearing qualities that,have Made ;,,GOodyears Canada's; Most popular tires. It. Pias file famous nonskid diamond tread at the lowest price -evert Drive,iri, tor flew Goodyear tires, today ... . our.low prices sae you money. . • . • if THE TUBE Is. THE HEART OF ANY TIRE, When you. buy new tires equip them with new low, -cost Goodyear /tubes . . they help you get top mileage, save you 3 r believe, in declaring a state a vvar *with milk. ' .This assault .0n tire child mind- . , 'Gerifaally, the 3rd eof last tSeptemTber' has been carried to ludicrous extremes. turned a new page. in the history of We hear tlf..:nur§eq rhYMes designed to -Britain, '.,e, Page' bright:Witie more pro -4 inoetilate a reverence for 'War, • and raise, for Britain and/the _world than some one hie prodneed .--a' "Military any page in her great history..hitherto. Mother Goose." We ,may wellebelieve Britain has suffered for the mh3taiten Dr. ley, the bead of the labor organ-, and unworthy policy of the lest tragic ization, :when he tells us, "We begin decade,' there may still be suffering to with: the child when. he is three years be endured,: but the glorious, fact is old. As soon as he begins -to think he that a new Britain has arisen. The re- volution of May 10 in Britain was no gets a littl"ag Put iPtc'. his. halide hen follows the 'sehool, the Ilitler mere Opposition victory; It was- a, new celieerea„ youth, the -8.A., and military training. birth of Britain,in which We don't let hinrgo. And When adolese tives, even more than Liberals or , , cenee is past, then comes the '4Work- Labor, had the glory.° ers' Front' Which takes him again'and It was' right that Mr.: Chamberlain. does not let him go until he dies, should be 'treated with greet •eonsider. whether.he likes It or pot."' The Nazis atiOn. _ Ile had hiniself already re- ,:voiksr-to tue.. ..eannots.prevente _children,: from erap ning-te think', 'but they Inlet devieed _ways to provent.thein• thinklaff,-,104. el,n9 liees -fitiVIPOSe laid-"ToWleyeethe Pointer. To some of ..us„,this eeeln the gravest of all the iridietnienteeof the Nazi systerh. -It is the most deter- mined and most successful attack on the -spirit of man. except*, perhaps_ the very similar one Itussia. • , But there is another arid'insore dread- . -infangyi: abandoned -its .own.'plii.11L...Pr` beitre,ihut,r his resignation. 'was imper- many naturally had no lOve for- it:. atiVe,'" for it deep-distrifirofhiiheenteee Prance's. sufferings heelentade ber deepI long been one Of -the greatest cheeks to 1 - sceptical of au& an, ,,idealistie Atnerican sympathy. :with- 'Great Eri- ' ^ It is i new Britain that has emerged and of 'which the new British eatinet is the expression:It is a Britain in -which .the lloare•:Simon attitude ti sehenie Italy from the first was con- . temptuous of At. Great Britain, whose vehole-hearted land, 'energetic support ,was, of2.Value net second eveh ,,that Of' the American republic, son: ehotvve'd ;herself half " -hearted, and when her tional affairS,WiLl never again prevail, Government in 19.31. passed eomptetelY I The -old refusal to accept reSponsibility under th,e.eontrol of a combination of for Fho vvealif ekeeigeg has (been re_ ZPITOkIAI"4 ItCyTES /and owners, Ifinanciers and big Indus- trialigts, the. doom of the League' was Sealed, - , ,„ , The Britain' 'represented ,hy -the so- called National GovernMent. of Britain had little or no :entblisiasin for, the League. ThatBritain was confident she Ina not need- it for security and felt I the totalitarian wreeltage of the old. no sense of obligation to protect the I, For now,, as It eenis to me, we ;can be little lemintrie,g, So long as Britain's assured that Naziism and Fascism call- ow!' interests were not Imperilled.-- So not 'win. 'Never in buman hietetry -have Mr, Stinison's _proposal .to Sir John good and -evil faced each other in Stich Simon in 10314# indicate the joint op- nmilluted form. . But perhaps never :position of the 'United States and Great until this hour have the Allies been in ' Britain to iSapan's raid on IManchtiria the mind in which God could help.thent met with a resPonse that was seareely as Ile desires. "'1Ve may think we can even coUrteous. When Italy, encour-I discern, indications that the whole pie - aged by the.success of Japan'spiratieal I tore is about to change, tor it maY be adventure, felt tree to folloW suit in that Divine intervention will reveal It - Abyssinia, Britain soon wearied of the self in, some fashion unpleased by the .haltilearted effort to cheek het That shrewdest Student of history, bit it most un-CrOraweillan Britaill, So tar zeems to me that the time ig near4lien from earrying out the obligations of the Allies Will say (like Isra.el of Old)-: the League in tile 'ease of Spain, even "It it had'riotibeeti the 'Lord who was arranged a; shani non-intervention poet , on our side, then the-watera had over *y which a goverumenteager to imitate 1 wheluted us, then the' proud waters Dritain and tkat might easily Wore had 'gone over our maul. . . . Our help been matte the eternal ally of Greatis in= the name of the tOrti; wilt* ttitole 1 Antal% was slowly starved into abject heaven,and earth." '(Ps. ICXXIV). , defeat, ' Any kind •of ending that found As in 'ter.echoslovakia is a *era dtlatt Mod any other spirit might net be 00, Pod iiritishers will not be able for ,ithe for tis or for the -world. " , i $till waiting forMussolini, to fali off be ferret -And break his neeic, In. it referettee in the itouse of Com mons to the Otte Lakes Seakwity 'pro, Conservative Intder Ihtnaon sops/0ot that negaiations totween Ottninlit and the United Motes oit the pndiated. frhe seif,sfaintiency of (?ereat Britain, the prowled* of ail Western pec•Ples (-ad Chinaof all 'Eastern),'has been shattered, as It needed to be. It Will be .a humbler, more brotherly that will still -play her great part in the new world that arise out of , rail fence straggle along for years . . but comes .the time to install a new straight Wire one'. . and they im- 'mgdiately become 'convinced that seine' one is trying to steal theit land. iDvent- tinily, they go to eourt . and en- glneerS and lawyers and itidges take their, share and they'reboth out of pocket and, perhaps, bad friends for years, over epraptically wortialess strip of land that is allowed to grow 'weeds even after ownership has been estab- lished, ' ' Another quirk of men Is to coMplain about women talking. *Perhaps it's the clatter of Shrill feminine 4volees that leads them on to being blanked, for in- cessant Jalking., 'Men who cbmplain of it never stein to think of the fact that they are the wor,st offenders them- selves. Wateb them around it store.. or the chopping mill. There they sit for hours waiting for their order of groceries or the chop while' the attendant Stantb5 bored, vomiting to get paid. The truth of the matter is that they Just keep on talking and liteve,r notice -that they tould have been awaY home hours before they deckle to go. 81111mise' it's htintan nature.. • but every matt or woman /64,0013 *titv balre a full share of human quirks. , -.Youthink of the .tlephOne and electric light as 'public services; dispensable to modein life.. You may well think of the Dank of ° Montreal as a public service institu- tion, organized for 'usefulness 'to alt Canadians. its seryice is measured only by the needs,otthe individual, or busi- ness, orindustry for banking facilities. -- One customer wants only a smilt ' ras1-JaiP oetyneyfoor tsdaverin;:gasn; oathbuser:ehneesedsohtloy , botiow to keep goods molting; a great industry needs financing. All are wel- cOme here; alt flit& vsefig.assistance; eadtpays forth* serviCe 4taitled; • K 0 r ,MONTREA zfizastistizz) 1817 Gotlerich Praiich: A. A. NICOL, Manager tt