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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Goderich Signal-Star, 1940-07-25, Page 2WE CM= N l4GODSRItlit$IONkISNI Publiebed byeallraaiMtaa�yr W 14tree "k l7derieh. Onto A ROOMIVXIM ACCEPTS Mr +aeveir naine wad the only tae rif:031Y considered. at • the Denao4 eratie eo iventiion at Chicago last week. and the President has consented to make a record-breaking eoutest in the films of the 1,01writteta Tule against a third term. ICS running mate, eau- didate for the vice presidency, Uenry A Wallace,, who has bei:-,.-ecretary of , Agriculture ly h M r. Roo. elt's. °'Onnly the people :themselves," said the Preshient in, iii: §peech of accept - *nee, "eau draft a Iresident. If such, & .draft -S iotlld -.7i tad :. ext , 1 ley to sou, in the l tniOst sumliclt3rr 1 will, with God's bel"is, continue t€r ieerve 'With. the best or my abilityand frith ,the fullnesa of my ,strength," The election will beheld en the 5th, Ni ember, eavbi ir1 ttle'more''t#an • three niainths for what.wiil undoubtedlaa am a aeneorym.aking ea'lnpaign, who are much' wiser .today than the; weir two year, ago --but they should a,' Oid drawing attentio to .the rfact. - Loa Beaverbrook, a toner Can- adian, whew some weeks :ago Fay ap- pointed by 'Prmine Minister Churchill to take ehar:ge of the production of airplanes for the I ritasia force, hast chosen as his assistants three ,othr Canadians Et. ton. ' it B. Bennett, former .Prime Minister at Ottawa , ! l.?►everley Baxter,. a Canadian -born member ,0 the X3ritish o'use of Ce - pions, and . 'P. • Bnekell, • millionaire txiininig nnagnate of Toronto. They are spoken of as "the fours 8's," and no doubt in their very important task they are as "busy as bees.!, , EDITORIAL' NOTES Put your money on Canada. If the Nazis could just be given a Mast oj` 'this heat -•.: ,- •• •, . • It is reported. that farmers, are un - .able to "get: reterers--witkh:..the: _aecent en -the rworkers s • An MX, at Ottawa callsfor a higher, ' tax on,• t`pu).j„ But ]Poi) thinkslie is wed .'quite heavily enortgh already. * s 0. Nixon State that of ell jobs offered employable men on relief in, Toronto in a recent nine -day period. : es: i .1 . . vvexe „fl ti :..e-.Bn.£__-; .r 1a 5 they weren't "desirable"' jobs.. • Civil servants at Ottawa, it is' re-, M vrie ,waves agreed t0 wort until w6- .O'clock la the :afternoon, .instead of %qUitting at .4, Care' should be taken that the poor chaps ,do not work them- macs: t0 death. 41.11:17. AtITL'403 'tot weather in July. There'a noth- ing ean oth-ingca>n compare with., a g'Tori0U13 !laying day , .. when the same beams dawn salaaareiy cru . you back « .. and the horses toss their heads in a lathery sort - ' of Way to escape,the, lilies clustering; VP * ' Great Belleau has yielded, to,. the Japane -demi '.the. gliMi ofw:the,. road' through Burma,a over which •China,, receives much of , :her -war ' supplies,, This is a disappointnnent to the friends of • China, but Britain, awaiting a Nazi invasion, doubtless feels thatone-war on her hands at a time is enough. There is some talk .of a peace settle Ment in Asha, but it is hardly possible that Japan would agree tis Cerins that would be acceptable toChiang SL Shek. The Chinese leader no doubt believes- that in a year or two he will have ansarmYsthat °will 'e*able -him 'to; set his 'own terms. • a *. • . arounid their wire esln muzzles, lima i tho 'haying season! The w,ainiug„elatter of the . ower conies first as tne: ig-zaggiri knives: snip the,. fresh, gen., hay of.` wast above the ground, and ° leave it neatly flattened on the stubble. Now and again a rabbit hippety-hops out a a .clump o '* Mite two -tela: rule if applied in Canada would have cut short the terms of Sir d'ohn A. 3facdo'ua1d,; Sir Wrid Laurier -and,' ;Mackenzie 'ting, Of the seventy; tree year sineg Cen ederation 'the terms of these :three las' Prime: 'l jnigter Cover tW,`o-thuds. *. • Our `fried: steress. the line can; .do good work by making known.. to their aequaintanies the attraetiiiiiof Can as a :1 olidaf resort ands the fact that ,CAnada - has no. passport rrestric- tions. They: can, also .Point out that thy. _:XL&.. lars4stsiCittt$1.1-01"-seitta,4-as- s d . • Municipal' councils are reminded that the council elected" at the end of this •• year will sit, fOr,twe.yeari. unless they pass. a bylavir giVing the electors, an op-. portunitY to vote on. the questien at the mit election. The Town. Council ,of • despatoh from Ottawa, published 'member fot sNorth Huron: as L. E. cardiff (11,1b., Anton 'Nort14. Those Grits at. Ottawa ate a prettY wiry let, but We ,did not thinksthey cOuld ePatiee '41sten qrilte So early in his parliament; about the tr.& Presidential election, ea 'the' ground that it might be reseaied in the United States. xt, PUblished,the alleeeli just the 'seine, ;and. 'thereby .became a partner in the Fergusen folly. There Was no obligation upon 1, the' paper to 'give apace fo the ,Speech, and it might Well liaVe' been- allowed .to share the ohlivian into which the forraef Ontario Premier lias retired, A Chicago friend sends us a news- paper article which hialeates that the seffortiS of' the Canadian Govereinent topfeset propaganda unfavorableto the Canadian tourist busineis.are becoming effective in'the United States. '`‘Mote - moats ofspeople across the international lioundary aro settling' down to no:tinali!i Canadians. ap'proaching the border are armed with visas and tidied States offieials are busy sopplying Canadian residerds of the United 8tates, with ideittifieation cards tOrpermit theta On- ' interrupted reentry? • Arrangements for the bringing of children from the United Kingdom to Canada have received a setback.. Prime Minister Churchill told the British House of Oommons that the wholesale exodus of .children to Canada and the United States was not warranted by gseircumataneesealideaves4hatai eally impossible. d'art Of the difficulty, it is believed, Ties in the 'problem` ' of providing protection of, armed vessein for the ships 'bringing the children across the oceans The latest word .On the matter 'seems to be `that, although the scheme is . temporarily abandoned, it may be ires'ived later on. • at:, • w -rredern-l:.'bye-elections are to - be .held on August 119th to fill; four vacancies in the House of commons. The 'seats to be fined are Carleton;: North =.Waterlop, -and' Kingston, in Ontario; 'fait) Aaska toon, an Saskatchewan. ` The Waterloo vacancy was • created by. ;the appoint.= meat of Hon.'W. Denleesto the Senate after many years in the . Clommons. Kingston is vacant by the death of on Ngrrnuiii,Iiogers, Minister of Defence;•ii. an.airrplane crash.: It is understood that'Hon. •:&Agus Macdonald of °.Nova ':Scotia, the new . Minister for Naval brae. ennet eS -.into the : rys seeeoe vnting=-;x nr the Lague - Hazr-ding^:gt Affairs, will be the, Government can- • uratic ..hay as _ you burrow in . a, little mixed them usociety of nations; and dilate for this seat. Tile Carleton and. Torr' a better, seat .. and you sway the leading Republicans . of the dad^ -- Saskatoon vacancies .result from the along , .knowing your direction among them ;Root; ,Iughes,• hoover-- deb.th of the members elected in, March only from the landmarks that come gave their indorsement to. the Harding last. ,It has been suggested that, .as along from the blind wall of the* load Wetting to the plan, to give men: nisi to the age of forty:4Ive a measure of- military training 'oder the home' • defence 'Scheme, The Winnipeg Mime obseries that Ole suggests that "the Government, in this region of 'policy At least, has -rottehed the. politt *Melt foresight would have indicated about 1008 --the year of Munich," Xt would be interesting ;to know what The Winnipeg Tribune was doing in 103W,— 'If it •Wasn't praising Chattiberlain for 'Meat with, littler that *mulled f!pertee people, newspaper editors and others, eiover'and from the safety of the grassy fence ':bottom: watches has Playland being destroyed. A .mneadowiark or a ground bird, gees ':flailing along from his nest which he soy carefully plaeKed' what be, or she thought would be a safe .place. Thein come; the rake: !tolling and teetering ... slender angers -AA steel gathering up ,the flattened rows and clustering it . , "Una then trip,... up And down again to eomianence gathering it up aga4in. There's a rolling, rocking VrrhythreSalmasts.As•bat deck iu choppy "weather . .. when you ride- on a bayrake. The wheels for some, strange reason :always seem to shimmysin and out . •. pairing each trip from fence to fence a somewhat •zig-zagging ' one., Then comes the manual labor ' The first luxuriant, gree smell of . new mown hay has vanished for a somewhat more tangy one as you plunge the shin- ing hin-inf -tines' into the bundles. , Then with an .expert twist of experience it must be piled into miniatureAtacks. Tlhere's • a trick to it'as well. It must be coiled so that the weather can cure it but so thatinclement weather cannot -spoil it. From ro-w=to aw r:.-:.,buncdle to bundle . t . fenee-,t-o- fend--- --- —yoa work ou` your fork Moving rhythmically and the flattened bundles becoming little piles of hay already turning dark with the effect of the wind and the sun. , . ' • The horses trot a little on that first trip to -the field ... and the . empty ruck jounces and bounces es you jog along the not too smooth laneway. • Little puffs ' of dust come up • quickly from the horses' hoofs.' .....'Buchan; els theseelliela and forth from fence to. fence' ... al- ways •on the alert for any groundhog. who might be anearly riser -... while still' suffering the' effects •of asleep. The ;bars are down and the horses swing into the hay. field and' over to the- righthand corner". Then it's -down-frdm the wagon rack, hard boots erushing . the brittle hay stubble, . and the', early morning . sun glistening on the polished fork tines. How simple it ia, those first few fork- fuls, and then, gradually. It . demands. perfect .asonn ngs into a- wsses ole sys more exertion:as,. the level ofr hayy on tem of ,peace. The origins of'this war ws op War There 1,3 a great deal of talk these daYfi. Par-tietilarly among young people,. about shaving no intention of dying for the•eontribution Made to givilization the older -enerl.tiiii The devotion and loyalty of ,,l,"'oung people to the world handed on to them lias been weakened by two' tremendous factors. One of these is the Virorld War and its, The Weirld War shOulel have been the last great war and it If the generation that fought it eohidu't learn the lessim of that war, it was far tion and resPect. 1.11e very first op- portamity to organize peace that ever ,presented itself to a, modern, almost in- tegtated „world came as the resUlt 0A• the World War. My generation botehea' 'the ,joh, It was* not an. exPerieneed eear, had aleteated it, had suffered defitliss desoaatioa, poverty, and. they believed that to restate, not to ,agat auother war would be enough. • It is, the fashion today to decry the Treaty , of VeeSaillea and. find in, it the' root of sthe present War: But that is superficial thinking. A trea'ty does not erotic. world in wist01 ‘1`-)eace is main- tained with the same ecrupulous op- position to lawlessness and the same devotion to justice as in the domestie life of a demoeratte.nation. • Peace is maintenanee 19 a function of 0, modern society. One eannot enjoy the- fruits of freedom in a world made Safe for azation to dispense.Justiee and to curb lawlessness. The failure after the World War Was nOt the !Treaty ,Of Versailles bar the luadequacy of the organization of peace. That inacle- -qua-ey- 'was in the Ileague -of Nations -,4 bership. Befote the- League could work—and it was metes first experi- ment with on organized peace—old natique, with long memories of wars, hail Ito be, certain *of their security. Lloyd George and Wilson midertook to gararantee France's security, as. the precondition to the launching of the lApague.. But Wilson's 'pledge Atte re- pudiated by the United ,States Senate, aud this country was kept from Mem- ittits-thelseaglies14-Se'ns-tnor Y-0 the Senate.. So the French eaterea the League. determiaed to make it not u new etperiment. in organized peace, but an instrument ot, seeurity. Through the League the French nation of-fert, • &ingle, non and oda oltit4esetay the • Allies win, peace and freedom. wi'il be on 'the defensive in tilit3 litation for as long as the mind. can foresee. There can be only two kintIS of peace—the one 'iniposed by concentrated pOwer, tlie Waco of tYrannYs anal the other the peaee a free society where power Li vested in fro- individuals, and where justice and the observance of Taw are organized as a social function in 'whiCh all bear their' responsibility. Only if the younger generation 'has learned that, and will set out tailind the peace that alone cart be tolerable peaee a flaw world ----can it scorn' the older generation for failing •to find it, • TPIrrasjilsie-bV0ADoksElltSu li.anSilE;Gel"rns°Ean' have been issued by the 'German army' to their troops in antielpetion of .their entry 'into 9reat Britain. The, books Contain Questions which German troope would be likely tesPUt to _Vangliele eitieens if they 'succeeded In tteltieving their desire to overrun' the country: the haud$ of the 'Britlea military nus thorities, and if the sittiation wete not SO tiagic .the Contents would make its warang that 'it—you fail to fell - their soldiers the truth yeti will be shOt. Some of tlie questions in the phrase - book are apparently designed for use in cress -examining eivle leaders. The question, "Are you th,e mayore is fa, - leaved by the demand ".Open rill, cup - The handbook then "instructs" the Nazi soldier how, to aelr the mayor; to Write doivn. the amount whieh 111 'the safe and try te find Out if ther4_1..s_ a_ny Should he succeed in ebtalaing in - :formation the eiremy "linguist" would then -nee the phrase "I confiscate all leanclbotik, he would tell the mayor' that If he lies he willsbe shot. • • A. whole ,sectioifsis devoted to ques- tions which are intended to enable the Gernian troeps to and 'their way about the country. this. case citizens will he assured. that "If- yoa, tell the truth you have nOthing to fear." The authors -,of the handbook de not apeear to have overlooked ani con - The 'ilevadeee. • are instructed hoar, te aemand from the people,' ufion Whom NATIONAL REGISTRATION PLANS ANNOTJNCED AT OTTAWA Ahead. of Schedule—non, E, Lapointe's. Illness. Opiuses 00nOorn. the. regulations; and the queStiOnnaire)'tO he' treed • in connection erith nationai registrutioa, to tepainente about Angus 12, And of the Unemployineat Insurenee Act featured the past week In ParliaS Minister of Nationai „War- Rerricea james„Gardiner has breught his well; known organizatien arid driving curiae city into play in arrangementa for regis- tration through which the Government* sechre'lbtfirmatiVirset, to how all wast to kePt as strong eta. sairts, one Pair...of' pants, aryl three the , German :nation, 'of %sixty-five ma-, packet Iranclkerchtefs, There are, in" Hong. If the United States 'had joined fact. Instructions ..about everything— the League, even With the reservations from medicine to horSee and carts. Worked „out in tae Senate, Vance Drivers are warned that if they*hiten- wes, aid „ lave been secure; aiid the tionally take the wrong turning they League might *have grown from its ims, will be shot s The boOklet is similar to those ellich Germany bas produced *in. the 'Czech, Polish, and :Russian, langtl,agc,Se ' ---ealanchester 'Guardian. the rack,grews higher end higher. NOV and , again A, frog with long,legged atrides hope from the shaae of a coil as snake Wriggles along for the protection grows :higher highet: By this time is enough to guide old veterans of drawing in . "Barmy and :Sess."- 'Tbe load is completed,. aad tossing the fork up you. fiep on the convenient tail boardeetiekin out. of the back of the load and head for tile 'bairn.- • Your %elude the failure of the United States to underetand that. you can't have a democratic world unless you alive or- ganized a Peeee. in which every free nation assumes ite share of the re - I think the people of this...country were ready lo ..jelti the Leagee. It is "a myth.that theiwerenft. It four men. in the Senate had changed' their %tee, we should have entered, for those four men would have completed ,the two- thirds majority -needed.' . I don't think the peeple Ulla' country realized in the election- of 1920 thAt they Were a pledge. Only' after the eleetion was bin Great Britain, electoral eouteets ° Tha'Y' ' wtoan was the - public told that the Lela gue had, been' repudiated. sa'And they 1)1111 and traces yang been told SO, it didn't ,ste t to be filled by the nominee of. the party buek:raenng. mwhich held the seat OpPoeition. Leader Assuring yell from the team t . beunee up and over that burnps,eart ;?17: and with it organized Berta i4 - 4''' ' Somehow, membership in,- the ,to'detse. ,anson, howevee, does not -see it that war, and the bye -elections will afford hay ' .- e. ' ' . an opportunity for the testing Of public • • , These lines written by Wordsworth lf306, When Napoleon had almost the whole of : urope at hitit feet, -are pecaliarly appliCable at the present Another yekr 1—another deadly And we are left, or shallsbe left, The last that dare to struggle with the foe. ''Tis well! from this day forward we shall know. That in:ourselves our .safety must That' by, our own 'right hands it must be wrought ; 'That we must sta.nd unproPPed, or ' 0 dastard 'whom such foretaste We • shall exult, if they, who rule ' the land Be men who ,hold Its Many bless; ings. dear, Wise, upright, valiant; not. a ser- vile band, „ Who are to ludge of danger which And Itonbr whielt they do not understand. ' SIGNS Y013.164 SEE BAND CONCIERTS Editor The Signal -Stan' e Sir,—I agree with the letter in. Your paper last weeks which- asked that raething-besOnesabout having. band concerts during the summer. Coming through one eirening recentlee I was amazed by the numbersof cars lining the streets of theldiiii; dis- covered that -the attraetien was a band concert. Most of the sitoreS seethed to the. wide-awake merehants were hot band an opportunity to do ,eoine' busi- ness. If iGoderierT-s too indifferent about providing entertalifinent for its Visitors, theY , will naturally else- there Is no organization of peaCe tOday, where.' s; no democratic world, no sYstem of so - The jereakdown of peace didn't 'Pegin at once, not till 1931; when JillYnn in- vaded. Manchuria. If we had the Magee, this hardly would been dared. If Jetpan'had not etrated' that peace,' could be down in safety, Mussolini well .daredile theft Of witoptrnit, ler .would not have dared the ,Militar- ization of the Rhineland, the' disarne: ament cortferenees would not have col- lapsed because of the growing sense of national insecurity. And th,e, world 'would still be enjoying the bl saings enera- either fug in in hare mon- rokeft d not of peace. I say that the'older tion fought the war and lost the • And the new generation „neugt fight the" warshoWs-sittritstiss4 EurOpe, or stand to fight it 'late Wayside signS de not mean melt, perhaps, but once in a W#11e they afford days ig a aign,iMelided to warn people. against Injury while some repair worl4 is being done en. the roof. .Our Toien oftleittls are nothing if not eeotiomical, and they have resurrected a sign evIdently_made for use in winter time. so:that, with the merenry hitting the high spots, the passerby reads: , DANGER /CE NOT RAZE Rut this is not ag good as the board advertisement *Web t110,S6 Per- sistent Advertisers,. the Shell gasoline r#eoPle, are divinying just noir. While howl* are bursting in, FairOPe fold **Se *re fleeing to places of safety, wit read' -- CANADA INVItriiiS YOT3 Y013 OAS 11E, SITRE Sfilrefot, • ow Can, 1 Holp _Win the War? 'best,. to a'ssIst Canada* in its War effdrt; neVertheless there are nines when the question is asked, "What more can do?" An easY and - effective way to solve'this problem has been suggested by D. Leo.Dalari, lines td frienale a ad .relatiyes in the United States inviting them to spend their vacations in Canada. . • Never before in Canada's history have American thweliers been, more welcome hi the Dorainion. Just let them know they can fainble about and enjoy our sports, our national parks, the romance ofyisur ' :andsthe fresh beady of oar countryside ae freely and full aS itt- the days of peace. Advise them of the benefits whieh ate theirs, through a eituatIon Whieh enhances 'the value of , United iStiates currency. Imprees upon them the fact that the war has created' no new restrictions regarding entry and deParture from. Canada. Retifind them that,' as in the past, thei•e; is the, oPpertimity to,Spend haPPY, carefree days; in this lo'vely land where neighborly., hands uVi- al%SaYs ready with the handclasp of friendly welcoMe. thig` Strange war that is upon, us,it'-is.curious that .the toatist troale„ a peaceful, happy businesS.which is associated with the brightekt side of life, should beeenne an important cog in the. wheels of strife. Canada the.Proseeution of its efforts to bring' Peaee and jistice again to 'the world tequires, vital nutchines and equipment which niust I* inirchased acrofis the Warden %these must be paid tor in V.'S.: curreney and to obtain these dollars We must sell them* -something worth their money, an& what MOrC VV,,orthvilitio is there than a vexation in 'Canada? The Amerietin tourist spent Canada returns to the United States' for the pureliase tiatorinaq. and equipment, 12 creates more jobs for more people, Many of these people doubt, then be able to enjoY Our Catiadiati.hOSPitality. The Vrinie MiniSter and other prominent officials ba.ie issued - cordial invitations to residents of the United, States to visit mit cotintry, The Canadia* Travel purean has condueted art intensive and, effective advertising .ettutpaign designed to attraet tourists to the.,Donainion, Fast-raovitw 'events, however, have created a situation, ,in which many prospective tourlitg are undecided whether to carry ont or abandon their vacation plans tor this, year. Your personal note of stsguranee th*t all, Is well in (Canada, that fhe highways are smooth„ the golf courses green, ond thefigh biting', may be the deeiding faefor itt drawing visitors to Canada, It reqttires butsmall effort to write, 1:4) YOTIR THE'VPIPOSFITON LEADER • s. Moisaoft Free Pres) There Is general agreement that Hon: le„ Hanson, the Conservative House leader, is ,doing a good. job under dif- pasition, leader in a demosiaey in war time is -not an easy oae. )3anson is handicapped by the face he haa but A handful of followerearrysof is leader, is 10(1 per cent. behind every wat effort, of Canada. For that reason Mr. Hanson meet be prepared to give wholehearted support to every plan to speed up Catiede's part in the struggle. This Mr. Hanson has done. On the other hand it is his duty to make con- struotive criticism where netessary, and to stir up the Governineat when it is lagging.. This also he has :done. Ile is also big enough to acknowledge mistakes if he makes them. • ..letter the eenstitutioaal functionsaf Opprisition leader and is doing it ably. Under iris leadership the Conservative party is gaining prestige at Ottawa. It' is a pity that Mr. 'Hansen' is not ten years 1/Olinger or in better health. Hon:. De. Manion as the permanent headt•of the party. , FROM "TELEPHONE. NEwitr needs o*f several coinmunities in this district have been met by improVed telephone systems installed 'in recent would rate as married mall and e r Rome 2,100,000 wage-earners in the Dominion wilt ealled upon tia eon. tribute to the uneMploYMent iusuranee fend to' be set up in the act hitrodueed No one .earniug more than ,p,000 'per , Annum Corhes under the bill, The in. tome for the fund in 1941 is esitimated at $67,209;000. This will inciude 000,000 In eontributions by emploYera; gulled to register, with few 4eeptions, .aniount contributed bY.. the Canada's eltizeas ca.n. best be lased for the interestS of the Dominion at . war. tall over 'siXteen years of age are re:, military age, froin twenty-one to forty-five years,swill be ,tsegregateci, and handed over to the Defence DepArtpaent men. (twenty-one to. fortysfive years) are required for military training, not for Military service," Mr. Oardiner \stated. remit as to the operation of the Na- 'tional Resources Mobilization categorieS for calling Up men for mili- tary training, ete., 'are expected to'be, annoanced at an early date. The- first call for mensmay be of a group of 50,000 Within six weeks. • TheSe 'men, and others tO be called Up later, Progressive - 1Y, will,not be "enlisted" lu the,arrnY an Rather,' they Will be attaehed to the fictive • Militia, for. tiaaning purposes,. in' each ease. They will be Paid $140 eler day, while training, and leo anees will: be paid depeadents 'during such period. Defence Minister Ralston loid the Commons that the -GovernMent is getting, eampa and hilts tor ;winter housing ready ns rapidly . as „pOssible and . that, by ,the fall; hut and other taeceinemodation swill be provided to out the Dominion. judges_WillelassifY, those- of inilitgry age fist immediate dr postponed traiaing. All men who mar- ried after 'July 15 will seensidered as "single" in so far as being ealled out for militaty training isconeerned. Of coarse, should any- of these men workers themselves; an $11,200',000 contribution by the ,Government ; eand *5,250,000 peeks, tbe Government for administration costs. A three-m:111'0am- ataielon will:operate the act, assisted 'by A five -to seven -member advisory com- mittee. ' The commisSion will organize alacanirilon empjoyment service to be Operated by the individual Provinces. 'rite Bank ofeCaneda will be the fiscal* agent for the fund .ereated. Workers will become eligible for benefits under the act after thirty weeklysor• 180 daily eentributions within a two-year 'period, such ,benefits to be paid after dile days of unemployment. The ecale graded contributions and of benefits is .(Continued on page 6) Another Bad Rig ould ed le R , , . . . , , ,ifo'the-thonotinds iho tool• siSAlt • witatteroonieriaght,gleiumn. sleepter williess bus:: onto?taka ,ti I ' way, but whose rest' hi broken. by, ' baltodie' araistitoise-ailwdhonigwaketitmigeesup. hl -the i' arming tie tired as, ongoing to ilisl,, 1 Waiid—°"catradl'ills_th- 'II ureelarvedesiant144brin;"thth°001 1 .:wbaeo_koff:toer ain :brf wmtneo'StiriedOition,th vat)* 1. len= ihisatecepialeasdonniegtlihte:ecitulato billit.140., . ., , . - _.,„,.-,,,,. iutAxip,,,Bargain4are,-._ . ..___ „ ,, To OVA. Stittione in the Marritiene Provinces, Province of Qu(lbee, New Brunswick, Wince, Eirliveard Island, Nova Seotia. . 9 45 $10 75 MONTREAL AUG. 2-3 To OTTAWA. 41.4 ' 4 .„ • , . • . $12 95 . • QUEBEC CITY '$14.75 - AMAX NATIONAL • Gederich wag changed" over from magneto to` the efficient common. battery system in .3Anuary, 1937. Clinton. fol. lowed suit in .Tuly, 1030, followed by Seaforth two months -later. The most recent converaion took pia:co, at St, 'Marys, where on May 2fitis last a, new Sveltelibeard and service ' wits intro- (.110.1ifnx Herald) ,n1.1 her liours of trial and-sacritice, France 110:Always found a patriot - leader. Who the Garabetta of these tragic times willsbe 'remains for these times to reveal. But another patriot - leader will ,arise tq- overthrow the the influences ef treachery from within. And Until that hour strikes ,let us. go on fervently oupporting th,e cause of Vrance and 'understanding syliPath- etIcally the bitter lot of her people. ItEBEEMIS AT CLINTON The annual Meeting a Rtratford dist. , triet No. 3, Rebekahs, was held Wed- nesday evening, July ffrd, in the I.O.O. 11, lodge rooms, 'Clinton. Past Distriet forths Presided toe the opening exer- cises, There were five repreSentatives present, alao thirteen others of past noble grand ,rank.'- Mabel Jenkins of president for the ensuing term- and Mary 'Nediger of Clinton was eleeted district secretary -treasurer. Commit- tees- were forMed for carrying on the svork tor the term And the newlY ins stalled president presented $ister Smith with a past district deputY Jewel.' $110 also Was presented with a sheaf of carnations by Amite 4ervis ion behalf atives were present front Goderich, Se water IAA fic10.1 i01% ffiltit ItO ptry tor tiro, come to„to tire. .neins'ire s, Vitestono eat la every pike dass to milt eveti purse. 1st eadltion to the. total -lona deo Virestona chstrephot ttre, *re Itor three otlter'inwei primed 'firestone thres OW 8444 st rotict, ., .yett cot ova. Put este, rtot tires on your ear ttoriL,- . ttit0.,litaoltiVAN, Victoria St., Phone /34 H. JAN*, Colborne St., Phone 444