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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Goderich Signal-Star, 1940-06-27, Page 2.; IWO DIMICH SIGNAL AND TAX O4NCI41011 hTS.1 Milled by Silletal-Star Priem, Liinited, Street, Goderieh, Ontario TI DAY NFA. tb, 1 'MING TOR TIM WAR Pht ittiposta announeed by Flu - owe Miniater Ralston. in, hie budget apeeeb,,at ,elit-lawa on go/1day are the IteaVieat.the taxpaYers ufCia,nada batte aver been celled Upon ta pay f but in view of the lutliaeriae Sibligationa as- unte4'14 the Goverinnent in its war •Voladitures they 'wete not unexpected and -taro?' are being received with a Minimum of grainblinet • ittir the great Part a‘the tr30,f)00,00f) 4 year eXpected groin the nevi nape*, Kr. Balaton rellea upon increaseS the,excese jarolits fax and the Meanie tax, along with a ten per eent, addition to the tax on import-$, exeept in the ra,ee tar imPo'rts from EMPire CountrieS. In addition to these are -exeise" taxeS atacaraibilitS, 'raeliett --Phonographte- eaMeras, cigerettes- .and tobacee, matehee and tiome other articles: n; The •Ilthalater has sought to'phteetthe taxes where they will be•Ieast burden's some. The sales tax -remains at, the ,present rap, eight r:per cent, andis re',deral' gasoline tax as was ex- ttected, lil some qoarterS. The new taxation will not by. any • Aieana-- raitietthe ful.I.1.-atnount o th Government' s .war expenditure; and • borrowing will be necessary to bring the ,:additional funds to the treasury. gr. Ra.Iston 'evidently- has ,sought to 14iise, as .large t, sum as posiible by taxation without creating teagreat a: disturbance in the;A oirces - 'fro which -revenue is derived. • 'As. if is, People will* more ,aware than ever before , of the, demands , which ,war will make upon their standards of living-. . "If the taXation previsions are the e ISIOSt draatie that have. ever been im- , rased upon this country they are Cer‘ iainly no mere drastie'llien the present 'IldUr• and the Present' need: demand," Said tthe .ititinistlatut "Thestatnte' may : Well, demand • still mote.' He asked those Whe'alight be inelined to 'oni- pinin to 'Censidei Of theirtProPerty or their ThieoMe if s.041,x14:Ut 4.0 1:ta1y,:s40014.,Octiciiier the Ptitialt-ptatilret Thet''r_intinee 414 -later - and the Si14*neMalt We believe, 'rely with irfonfidenee„uPon.the patriotism of the peopici,oLeanadit in meeting ' these new dein:Inds. ' 4 r • exaMple sof the unrellabilltrof *Govern- Hitler and ItItisolini; lie meanabnI ilea% 0-0 The Men eira News -Tribune is not taken with the idea of having the Goverturierit 'Assume an relief costs. Zit -says: "We wOuld be in favorof hoe- ing, the mUnielpalities assume the total cost of relief. munieipal govern! :milts- would :then see to It that ;hose who received it were honestly deserve ing." If iteve*, left to the •Governs meat te pay ,the4hole slot, relief exe pendituree would probably .dtiubte, and the, Money twould emote 'out „of. the pockets a the taXpayers—Uot out of the 'air as some peepte seem to Imagine when Governments., spend money. e•.- • The Xast cleat, of nurse$ 'has been graduated frem the, Brute 'County hest tatre nurnt having 'written flute (to use the Werds The,' Walkerton Hereld- Timea) ttio a aursea' training ,sehool that has operated 'With marked auccess gin the Past thietSteeVen Yeara aid ha UrnetrtttattTebreS ted qualified "nursei 1111 ilirovsrit Pieteiter 'Wiley- has quite 4 reputa- am as a man of level Waking. lie Once ‘91Kolik of there being few honest men, and I zanier laughed at the Idea. After thinking it over, however, with a certain amount of natural evidence, I've had some intereating thought.e. Mrs. Phil was Shoelmd beyond words last night when her commereial travel- ling eouelattpoppedAn. o' the lie p,resented her with a 1i:tit, of bath towel% and ShetWae pleesed until she foundtthe name of on hotel on them.' However, int just laughed and said, "Oh, thettto 'just souvertirt, You Pat' Lor them in, your hotel bill This souvenir -hunting busiuesa may tierfecatt legitiatate, but somehow it &men% seem, honest,Ir makes mo think of the Unit we raised six fine eollie pups from, infancy to a -point where they could be sold, 'Conaing tett of TIM. Murpliy's stare, the eeund, of a pup yapping in tourist's car attracted iny attentioo to where an overgrown boy- of fourteen or fifteen was holding on to a pup. It was cer- the„seollite teem PasY geadotii;: 6147 the; totirlit wbo was having the car tiled. with gasoline argued that it was a, sofivenir they had picked up in a farraertS laneway. After several -Minutes' hard argument ...lie landed back the senvellir • t _Banks seldom- make mistakes. In tiae v1llare braiich bank yesterday a •• Man erated loudly on the. svvindling that *have net °4117-1)e°1 'ereditt° tile tactics of the bank and 'cited the eate profession, but who have brought die- loud enough for everybody, to hear Unction and honor to their sad alma how he had J00, been Cheated. The materten-the-oletieet-eapteatet .tatencet teller checked up and paid, ,hini out -forth the you women of ;the Walker- hfcianartle:atc.ellTtsee°t.mattiamistvtaask,rqi7itheierhiglet in demanding hist full amount, .but it seems strange to reeall how just a few Weeks •previously he -cashed; a cheque and received an extra two dollar bill. He didn't take it tback, beetinse,- as he expressed it, vThe, banks make it out of us anywaY. • They'll Make a mistake some, day in theirown ' favor and I won't notice it!" 'Something for nothing t That's the rule of the day with a great many people. Of course, -there's always an argument to make It seem'honest. Take a day off in - the fall and cone back in the middle of the 'afternoon. The . chances are, you'll find ecenebOdY filling the back' of hi$ Car with apples. Gen- erally it's '011ie folks from the city . sorne distant relations who say, "We knew you teinglitet inind, because, you've got ,so leech of this ktnd, of stuff, anyway." • :• Another very, honest -kind of man is the One borrows your tools. He's generally' in a -hurry' . . . and he's broken Something . . or he's going to town in the afternoon to buy, one and could he .borrow such and such. Yes, he'll bring it back at such and such a time. Re's always eattfill to tell the exact timewhenit will be returned. Days go by, and 'weeks' , and years . „land When You try to profess ignorance of ever batting borrowed a Certain ,hatniner or saw. He claims to have the bill ih the house showing Where he pi:Ahmed, it. Perhaps he forgets t , -• • How many men 'elector up a 'peavey horse and then afterpropping him up in at, corners_ say _without _flinching, "Sound as a ,dollar," It's all in the spirit of good clean fun known as horse -trading. There's no harm in do- ing it, .of course, because the fellow you're dealigkith would da it to you. How ma unds of clay and sand have been sold as potatoes? We won't discusrthe men. who All up the centre of the bags with a, stove -pipe .and stones. That's dishonest. But it's per- fectly all right to sift four or live poends of clay or sand into a bag of potatoes and sell :it all by weight. Perhaps! • The church is another institution in which -there's fun to be had. Soirie men takethe Most delight in _pawning: cif slaggfat•VDiugged nickels , ontire church. I guess they must think that clergymen have the right to use that kind of currency without danger of being elassed as dishonest. _My, oh my, but the human race has strange codes Of scruple. A man who would take you to the •Supreme Court: .if you mentioned his being dishonest will do the strangest things Jost be- cause he feels nobody knows the dif- ference. E GODERICI SIGN4 ilarrolf IROINS op tk. Wu tattfl WOWING-Ititetite Antottg the vital lutereste a the -eat. mot people faet .4ges, woridas condi- tions, and livinentinulards. To begin with, North Americans must Under - *tend that the iteinians have never known the standard of liviug. commonly accepted as' a inhaimum in our North. Some German ecouonti$bt assured me that the standard of living of the plain working class in'Oermeny had Made 40 advanee whatsoeVer in'the fifty Yeats from 18.88 tO 1.938, in terras Of feed, clothing, or tieing Oriatteres To u,$ of thettNew tWorbar-the-German tworiterS seem. the most &elle in any modern "e0Outtat and cousidering their marked skill at their trades and their long working hours, one wonders if their Patient .aeceptance #f such a low stand- ard of living can he entirely' due to flattery in the form of inflated national pride or thetassitrance ef militaty'eue- cess. 'Although it is a fact that more perSons are employecipoW than in 1933, and that . the total sum paid out in ' wages is greater,. the* can be *denial` that the quality of Odd and clothing Purchasable ;c,vitli the equivalent income Iia s deteriorated lathe last seven yeare. Theteinflation has Owein such a way that it is Milken to detect it: Like unt ,erepleyntent,ht 1ias:bee1l.l11_2art.,eon4 Cealed. Price Control: has permitted only a slight rise in the general price level,.but the aubStitution ef inferior materials in cOentless dally peeesaties and the curtailing of services are direct- ly lallattonary measures. Practleally without exception; every- one in Germany is ,glad that unemploye raerit has disappeared. There is more than enough work for everyone (except Jews), , People, all over the ,world would rejoice if Hitler had found' a solution for the ,unemployment prob- lem; but there Is, even inside Germany, an uneasy .conselousness that the pro- blem has been,. -in part, temporarily con Cealed rather than permanently solved (eousider, for instanee, the three years that every youth must give to work- canip and militaryservice) and: that a great part of the employe:tent, is . un- productive, as in manufacture of muni- tions and in the 'Secret Police; and wages are low- , . . . ' " • . No one may he given employment Who doesnot present the ofticial_Work Book, and, a liminesssof .any size nniet require all eployees to hetet* to the U'orle Front; the par»yorganizationthat has nominelly rept ed the labor ime ions: It, unemployed,- Work:Men are directed to jobsoby the Work Front; and are not free to leave' thel:f" einployment, voluntarily. On the -other , hand, they may be transferred to another business Or. another kind of work .iri any part og the country at the pleasure of the Work Front. ., They may not ;decide whether or not they wish to work over- time. If engaged in work "Of national iMportance," they lobar under the fear of Spoiling material. and being reported to the Secret Pollee for sabotage. Thus they are kept in :fear of their ,bosses, Whose good will Is paramount: . There is a good deal of grumbling on payday, but few dare to ask ftir an increase in wages. ., . • I. . 'ton -district who wish tee becoine•nurses wtU have to go,to' some city hospital more or less distant te receiv,e their t.raining. The result will be that many of these young women_ Will give up the illea.of entering the profeesion—yvhiele of course, is just what those vvho are manipulating aftairs want. It is .a. flagrant inetance of the poltey. of Cent, iraliza.tiot whieh, will • help to wreck the present. Government at Toronlo. — au emissary of the Depart - merit of•Edneation. wonders Irtirr *sc4pol `lainirds do not take advenage' of 'Govt. eroment grantfel.; this; that and the other thing, he underesamates- the in- telligence tof the ,people who are re- ehensible for the eonduet ot localSchool affairs. These peeple now Govern- ment• grantet do not grow,ten bushes; theytknow that the money comes from imposte Mt themselves, directly -or In- directly, and they decline to be bribed with their ovvn money to do sethething which they feet they cannot Afford to Io: The Poeta of Goderichthas had an rroRtAx...trovs • a. 4 • way tit *Ate -clime, your teeth' ind tang , Won't -aotaebotly 'sing, '"Let a tittle inins`hine , Vreedota is :for those who are Pre- . to,Pared to light for its • " * 0 * 4onor Is, still left to France, says Petain. But not emelt else. • Petain came out, of ,the at war. a • 'hero, eonduct at the *present tincture;will ,stanip h'im for all time itietanything .buts * • • Jai) insiirartee, sr,' called, will. not ensure a- job to anybody except a neiv TM f eivli seryants. -who will. have adininistration ef -the act. Harbor Park promises to be more popular thanever as.a picnic resort this" year.. Any menet", spent in tm proving the faeilitie Or:visitors 'in. the 'ark or at the beach will bc---a good iniestment. • op • " Our friends' across the border are asked to,:rentera' ber th, at; although Can- adians *must have passports to enter. the 1Stateciheri IS no suell require- ment for entry. to Canada. They are • as' 'free to come as,* -past_years, and • 'more welcontetthan O'er, if that were poSeible. „,t it is autherttativell' denied that the ' Princesses Elliabetli - and - Margaret Rose are In ..Canada as has 'been trimottel. or 'many weeks, saye a despateh..from London, the daughters Of thelting Arid Queen have been stay:. 'Mg at iCountry ,place, 'well protected ...against .iair raids or other dangers. Itepublicaus are Meeting at Phila- . dolphia this'week to name a candidate for the" presidential election in Novem-, tier. In the meantime; Mr. Roosevelt' has thrown a tborisb into .their ranks by ltappointine; two Well-lenetvit ItepUblicane fo his Cabloet—HenryL Stimson as litcretary of Vratand Col. prank Xnox is Secretary of the Navy. Ills option - „eats have to get Ilft -Oarly In the Mori: fog to get anYthitig oit Pranklia D. - * A Wisconsin farm lad wanted to 1,0111 tho ItitYal Canadian .Air 1'4)1w°. TO hitchhiked front his home, a eirmilred ahliee- the other esitie of chieitgo, 10 Toreatto mid applied for .seltaleelon. - Ile woe told he must sup- ply certificatea ste to birth, education and hstrstetAr. Did he glee lift? No.; Ito hitehhiked bock to Wisconsin, coi. tatted tha 'paper* retinittd,, nnia, niede •arey spin to Toronto. That bok should * given 11111,4011. if! /bomb ment greats, and this year must collee a large addithanal aniountt:sfiont its taxpayers' Itecause of the failure of the Goveromeht to Make good On -its preittiseS; If the Department of pdn-,, cation wants to introduce new fangles In its school' syetent it will hese to use somet tother -method than that . of dangling;Goverrunint grants before the people. HIGHWAYS, OR if•ASTURES? (Seaforth Expositor) Huron, Connty 'Council may not have a monopoly of waking itseia. ridiculous tit the eyes of the rest of the world by the resolution rash Which. breaks out every Once, in a while in that august body, but we doubt there are many other- countlee that can beet- its record. These reaoletione, o ,motions, bear onanany things, but usually' upon some- thing entirely outside the jurisdietion of the eourtty, and they travel far and advertise,As Viriaely. In fact, ,there is one of them_ that *Ili altrays be looked upon as al-are•gens, as long as there is a Parliament at Ottawa. ' • And they are still doing it. past Week et Is reported that one of -the -liveliest debates et the Huron County Connell developed -over -the following resolution: That we petit:too the Ontario' Gtov,- eminent to have ti‘e, Traffic Act amended $0 that any motorist who strikes any livestock, where he has a clear view of the road for at least ten roast sholi be held responsible' Or any injury done to -said •animals, and that a resolution to this effect be, sent to. the varionS county eattncils and the Ontario County .;Council Association." Carried.. • : - What, one might be excused for ask- rigtt, lot/the intended Purpose of, our country roads and highways? Are .,they traiiic lanes? Or they pasture lanes..? .,PrOin_ the publie,_safety_stalid, point, Wei -cannot be both. ' /f roads and highways are designed as raffle lanes, then no lefo.se livettock .of any kind 'eliotild be allowedsto roam Open . them. riniumerable, • eostly and even tttat idents have demonstrated that fact, , " • • - On the other hand, if roads and high - Watts are designed for , pasture lanes, thett no motor vehicles of any 'kind ehmild.lte alloWiti upon' them: Injured and dead livestock and smashed ears have demonstrated that fact toot And, aside from the, fact that not onelnotorist in a hundred eottid tell you, offhanded, what a distance of ten rods represented, what is ten rods to ebw anyway? The average cow does not ask, for ten rods of .elear 'vigor( when it decides to cross•the road. The trouble la it seldom asks for ten" feet. That is twity so many of themnever reach the other side. Then ,there are the possibilities audit a change in the Trafile Act would open up for seine enterprising person Or persons. Any person could pick out a Wee etkaight piece of road ..,eku witieh there was eOftsiderable trifle and pas- ture a. btirich of canners at one old of it. Then when he Sawa ear -ap- proaching, he could drive his bunch out on to 'the road, and be abilost certain of losing one or two, That might be one way to inerease the farm profits, . hut it would bear tither heavily on the motorists, be, mom no matter what * coves ancestry /es when it hi on lits feet, It Is alwaye thoroughbred when it lies, dead on gie road. Any rallvvay company will tell you that. . Rackets, and very successful rackets too; have been organized -and operated en -1111A0.11 siffnMer Prospects. But for- tunately we do -not breve that the Mixon. Comity resolution wIll get very far with . the Highways Department, `nor 'Yet very far with other eoutities in the Province. _Butit does help to keep Huron. tin, the niap. • ,TO CANADIANS , John Ilasefierd, poet lauteate” of Bri- tain, has paid tribute in the following lines to Canada's aid to Britoil:On the • . present crisis; • • , Theysay thttt your memorial has Weil • broken. It was but, marble; your memorial' stands, • , *ore 'lastingly than any ma.dp with bode. Wherever fellowship of men is sweet, Wherever.fivdom makea heart to beat, Wherever in :the world our tongue is spoken, It will be saidof you that without " spur, rrOJII fellowship alone and -eensetOf Out of our freedom, you. took side with her - Who Is our mother, asking nothing mere Than hideoite death upon' a foreign shore That friendship among_ nations, might begin. t Mr, Masefield gave to the poem the "To-Conadiatte Our Friendsln Need." hunger, ileteitt, the nervoua strain of wicertaiutY, iuid intermit strife. Tbe country, abandoned by its former rul- em. Was not ready for the form of government which followed. Then came the inflation which impoverished a large section of the population. But the Germans are usei to working hard; and the industrial life of the country put up a gallant struggle until the 1029 depression in the United States struck it a xnortal blow. Again there Was hopelessness, uncertainty, and only the National Socialists claimed to have the answer. But since the first days of National -Socialism, the nervous strain has increased steadily through longer hours of work, eompulsory attendance at numerous party meetings and cele- brations, poorer food, conStent fear of the Secret Volice, abolishment of the labor unions„ loss' of liberties,- religilus persecution. One gall* the impres$ ori that it is the intention of the party to . keep the populace in a abet() ,oTf physical fatigue to increase .further the natural do011ity Of the Germans. Of these cattse$ of fatigue, the most aeadly is the ever-present fear of the Secret Pollee. Tension is evident, in ethe faces of all Germans, high and low. In train and tram there is little conver- sation, and that little in ,a low tvoice. In restaurantate-whielieUeedstot-bettes noisy, each group sits huddled together over the table, and no one can hear what is said ot the next table. 'Denun- ciations, however,. are not nearly $o numerous now as in the first year of the reghne; after seven „years the de- nouncers have given themselves away. One of the • Most important bits of in- forthation for any German to possess 1,s the answer to ,the question: Who in My neighlierhood and at my place of employment are the ardent Nazis, and ,whieh of them might feel it- a duty to denounce me, for a reward? Over a period of seven years, by a gradual.pro- -west- of exchange of confidences -and- talsa-been given systematic dtM in the observations of•the little daily reactions use of gastnta._,Tambe *ow. yo- rk Tinies of each of his associates, a man is • The nice -old lady smiled atthe little „girt who had been left in charge of the cake' shop. tt, . "Don't YOu sometimes feel teMpted toeatone of the •cream buns, iny dear?" she asked'. , The little 'girl was quite. shocked: "Of course not That would be Steal, The 40aiti ot the workers is not as good as that of British and Anierican. workers `The- tuberculosis rate' for example, is higher, and rising lit these years of longer hours one poorer food. Suel conditIone are ag- gravatedby a lack of gealified physig- tatie;"7-since.„-the Manysphyalcianstavith Jewish blood have. ibeen, forbidden to practice. Heath Insurance IS :obligat- ory/but the physielanaProvidee: by the insurance companiesare so rushed that Patients frequently receive inadequate attention. , • • . It must be realized -that everybody -in .Germany is -tire& No truer remark about the European situation in the last teir years, has beenanade than that everyone in 'Germany Ought to he put to bell for arestlure. As we all knove, the entire population has undergone an unusual degree of suffering since 1914. First tame the gradual exhaustion of, all the material and moral resources of the country in the eftintto win the war att any. Cost. In every family there was the burden of sorrow .for re- latives lost. in the war; then came AN INNEivrit' (tXeter Tinies-Adveeate) Vomit him an enemy of the common- wealth who attempts to feather I& nest or to play partisan polities the fateful times. rellWay empleyese Mk/a mport aut. To4e lioloot" ((ew 1100). BRITISH CHILDREN Ma -TRAINED Pleat Britain has taken every pre- caution to protect her school --children from air -raids. (Should the Pennons gart bombing the country, air-raid shelters ; have been built for exert group of Jilfty sehool-childien, and the children liave been ,so trained that they ean be safely marched to their re- sPective shelters within two xninutes: 'The shelters have been built in sehoel playgrounds and are distinct from the public shelters. Children as young as five year's have 'been +drilled so they know Just 'where they are to go in,the event of a raid. The demeanor of the children is a thing of which we have reason .to be extremely, proud. , They have been told of the dangers of air raids ,and of the seed of precaution, and they have entered Into the Spirit of the thing thoroughly. 'Children who live within dive minute4. of their achool will lie taken home rather .than to the school shelter.. Those who live a long way froni echoed are tUlly inforMed of the whereabouts of al/ the shelters along their route.: ' • , .• :In order to protect the.childrew, Vag.' land has been divided into throe dif- ferent 'types of "areas. • The areas of special diniget have been declared "..exaguable! and- as:far aLpossible. tire *Children-haVe`lieett taken aNia-Y-freilf them. 'The-countyy areas have been declared "reception." verittee and Child- ren ham; been taken 'there. Other' areas are tailed "neutral." ° They neither evacuate' nor receive ,children. Wolverhampton; a city cif 1150,600 la - habitants, in 'England's "Black-. Country," is in a neutral area, Enormous sums have been spent to build shelters for children. It 'watt deetded not to ibuild'shelters for group$ of more - than ,fifty, ..beeause larger groups: ',could not be;theld and con- trolled 'by. adults. The 'children 44.Y.9 sure how •each stands on this ';',1ital question. • Nothing is more illuminating in the question of thlaalereetts tension than a trip from Germany to Holland, Dem -nark, ,or Switzerland.- When one goes into these neighhering countries, it sie at first startling to meet ready ,smileS, to hear rippling laughter, to see people walking along the street in the asstiranee of owning_ their own souls. • • I noticed unmistakable signii,of in- creasing fatigue and despondency ,araeng Peet, office and railway em- ployees during 19381 they Made an ap- palling number Of taistekest , unusual, with' German oflicialsSin giving inform- ation, in filling orders, and making change, often in my favor. I ean:easlly understand the rePertsttof the large nuniber of wrecks on the German- rail- ways since thewar' began. Our news- papers have Stressed the poor. condition, of .the raiiWtiy equipment, but 1 feel: that thequestionof the Morale of the- , e•seerse.eesee*testattoteset, - JIINX Sith, 1.041. DON'T NEGLECT NATURE'S AVARN1118$ Headaches, Acid Indigestion, , Rheumatic Publa In the rush mid bustle and, strain these days, are you going to neglect yourself till nature shouts her prp. test—headaches, sour Stornach,pama of rheunsatisni, lumbago, neuritis? Don't dolt! Don't lose a single day's work Or a minute of fun that you can avoid losing. - ?Keep it with ICruschen Salts. Millipns of people throughout the Empire lake the "litacilet-I,Y dose" of Ktusclien every morning of their , r lives. • Icruschen 15 Aritish., The finality of every one of its Many e Ingredients re the bighest obtainable anywhere in the world. , Together these' niineral salts, in minute crystal (almost powder) form plalcf$ a maw attack on the common came of these miserable ailments. They help keep your body clear of clogt gbigWaste, poisons/blood impuritiec Whether you oreon active evice in the Idtchete the efficektt a lathe, or in any branch of the "service"— keep fit 'the easy, inexpensive F.n.ischen way, •, Get a bottle from your druggist. Take t'uSt whatyou calit,P0 o a •`tsdImeett'eachsenorninge----itto..tbiaatte — afterMath. No violent itotative. effect. Just a grand remedy that • hiparts that million dollar feeling of abounding health and vigour. Bottles_ 250,. 45c 'Mc. ; „ Barber (to cUstomer) : "urn retA0 a meleture in the hair today, sir.' Customer (putting his hand ant nut head) ; "1 hadn't noticed it." Barber: ".011, no, sir; Imeant the heir of the hatmosphere." „ -"rotentemeneeeeeseeseeenetteett........" -- -1 .,VIUWIIIUI5Nht For quick relief from itching of etsms. Pis114% letis foot,eoelei,itsbieit, /sees se4,0thstss -cued skin trowel, use wortd•tateous, ooafet, sop*, lioreiC D. D. D.PreseriPtion. stainleie. Soothes irritetiee se,O, 411441)' Itching. 36o Wel bottle wove' It, or motor your dtuggisi today for I). D. D. piitscpurn • onlyliele them." _ . eteetet VIIMIMMINMION001111•11•1111.111001111 *.Vre pre- leribe insur. ' 'ailee by ann.- what you 'need and by sell.° ing you ant). what ')rou need OFTEN ° WARNING t. V" Backaelkw 'milli !AO ^the rirst ilin of Ka* ` trettble. When your imiik Eh* 14t. - our.kigeont e ,pon' heOd this ' . ,,,..,..a is tie important. Taki*Ornit Wien --.=, beign-c"ctsfillaBagdAlied7tinter-auffdarteliti causeel***Icth*'DOMfirlit.1- - ' Kidney PiUs---for over 'half a century 'the., .fallwite rem* fo,l!'Kidnei afloat- 107 . ei... odds Kidney Pills . . atieinkulmointimmer•e•eii NELSON ,HILIi'GODERICII 0.• e..TAELEAVEN; DDISTGANNON CRAXGIE, „ VVE„REk*Est$T PILOT INSURANCE COMPANY Writing selitood ritkO Ant.ontobile, Fire, Plate Glaagh, Burgistrt, Public Li'ability, int other general inattrance. Head Office,' Toronto. • Vett, titt,tt. trtt'S at money saving prices • Make surethiscoming holi- dair is freefroni botliemorne tie- troubie! Let ,us replace your Worti-Ot, unsafe tires with bk4rid new Poodyear&to.day. .We have a 14ige .stock, of fully guaranteed Goodyears at difi- eretit prices. Remember! Lowest price or highest ''price .matter what • you 'Paat . you can't buy better tires, or get better value than Goodyears. Drive hi for prompt, rioney;esav- log poodi4ars r at the price you want to par., today! ‘; „ , 11, The Tube Is the heart, of Any Tire For top service from new tires be sure to equip than with new, low-cost