HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Goderich Signal-Star, 1940-11-07, Page 2+lb
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t
GODERICH SIGNAL -STAB
obtritil ect° nut r
SIGNA f, AND TUE s3T,N,B
Published by Signal -Star PresS, Linfitcd,
We'st 3treet, f;loderiela. Oniarlo
3,111.11DAY, NOVEMBER Till, 1010
ROOSXSTEXAT RE-BLEOTED vtoosovot, three r great figeres may,
...-- • - . . ' i aaartth together in. the neSt four years
,
„Although returns ;...l. Wi, ,1•Vrite are I, for the rtsSmeration of the °world.
l'alconsplete, sufficient la.knowit'se make 1 c'hUrehili, Ilritein's ' nStr. .kf deStiny,
Cerhiln, the reseleelitin of l'resident (Wang; ICaIsSbek, liberatc t, of China.
Roosevelt 'by a. decisive majority. The Rot)eevelt, heati a tive., great': ..‘inerican
. result- is pleas tte ..tas 4z :. na. , n g ai ss. Itellablic.
_the 1.'resident anal. lila " „These three %nen', exPonents
PririelPal• 1}141011ellt escpres`sed strong,li taut (not. military) democracy, ars at 1,W,h1lyil,11g,htile•
the desire and will to •give 'what 0,1(1 , the 'head of over oue-lialf of the' worlors • w`4`8.
11
\• By Os J. Boyle 1 JAPAN ,SHOOTS II1ER BOXIi- -7:iii-7-;) Ja'pan by fear of' Japanese re-
rowATous feel ' metelt niare apprehension since naw Ja tanehas Well night shot lwr bolt.
Pot;stoc are' .1) 4. t14.013 " then tarin clitI,3.11;taiiiiiieloirh:.11: IntiGteetr. 11,1111;1147teent teli,,e.i.r., If Amerlea now ' iniPoses a complete
embarg0- on e%ports to japan (a. fir,tea..*
tillVb. Wp iart the caSe Witt% Grand- In the lirst.place, whatever Japan does '.
• , Under the 'alliance, she would have, sans , sal,lr:h6vtr•ht i.h that • Set= tO 7 11•6 tOt 01 for' granted.
Current Views on the War
Phil Oslfer of lazy Meadows
e .
\
ji NO one Win) knoWs the Far East will' t;Aliatiotis Of precipitating 'further
japanasie atteMpts at cornitiest.'lut
without an alliance,
In and under the'
atlwr waS alive. the: liright, atm
hein up. Sittiag on the.uPiurned nail. alliance she will do nOtbing that she ,,tive eueeL seriously wealesiing the
tuiehine of the. early sPring we ci t . ,
eels ;At the door to the root itote.se Imes; country and depriving it of striklag
ing in,,the'suttlight.and dt`.ftlysilleing the.
Potatoes.eo as to liase an eye 111 each.
pieces Grandflititer was hie hapPiest.
With, lingers • grimy and etained,
lit
would• pause, to illtistrate hie Yarn DY
'iirn k11ii.e with
Grandfather„‘Vas one man who apprec
they' 811Ort 0'1! -A'ar) Mitainis lloPulatiOn :with probably more than 4 A
.ttt.p,,.. potatoes airy/ on. that plantiug
tlitee-fourthe. of the world's wealth he managed to telt everybotlY on
vaidpoteni,ial armed: S'treikgth. Devoted .ftwu abullt them, favo4tel7staPy
Oght, witli Ilitierism, but while Mr.
Roosevelt gad 'already' 'latched. W:OPL1.6 flhl
lOtb, WillideWaS an unknown
to peaeethey, .wi-tek together' t whejl lie iit$t 80tU(d (t th
- bush here ' and spent one winter .01
cornmeal eakes and bolled-POtatoes, witl
salts but no butters . • ,
-You take a potate anal eut it tit
aad plant it in the tuoiSt earth,':
hi
would, Say, ttS he helped himself a
dinner -time to another plateful, an
,you get your seeti bask 'tenfold and th
'Mese, food that it's possible to hav
come to your table,"
Just ate; dinner Grandfather won'
h
he.swoul .
sWith smoke eddYing-Upsfrerushis pi
he would hoe and carefully ter]: th
tender yaungsplants:whieh were In
spriugingsup through the etitr 111's erns
-• the weeds became mo
d t Cif its present Chaos
and •e'stablish a neW era' of order and
%vere, agesreesivelY la'olai:lonist in their internatienal
quantitn and Seine 0£ the prom.inent bring the worl ou
'fiFures fiehind the Itesniblican catadidette .
II • '
attitude. Vorsthe next toAWyear'S there
willAie in, tiles White Ileuse gr'eat, EDITO*141% 'NOTES
•
'
,
• 1' strong. Man ,Ontspokenly, friendly . to -4-- ,
• . Canada and Great Britain, keetili• de- I-:acie Sam to Lewis-"Itere's
1 eirous of the 'defeat of international your hat. .1•Vhat's your 'hurry'?"
• briiinagelilid-tWIYIesoes- _sesese-_,
-raeS•ss-and. determined to go to great 'The Italians 'have' a go0•1•176-M-
1engths eeatributiug to that triumph. their failure -to _overrun -Greece. _. lite_
wittout-casting,Any dOubt On the stn..: •wouldn't let them,
.-cerity .of, Mr. Willkie's deciaratiOns of 1 * -
'tip to the time of going to press
littler -and Mtissolini had. mot cabled
congratulations to Uncle Sam on the
result, of Tuesday's election.
s • .
Canada exported .10,000,000 dozen
eggs in the past. year,, compared w'th
1,0(10,000 alozen in an average' Year,
Even poor biddy cannot eseape the war
excitement.. ,
11, s
ventury-old tradition was buried
ILL.:Uncle Sam's country; Tues-
- PerhaPs another - traditio.n. will
a
s PiPe and pitsking up the oe
itirITIM0-0trisrthesessrdee
1 • )11 out 'to the potato patch..
st
t.
re.
intentien, if elected, to give more
. _
and more all to"Britain in her struggle
with ,the Powers of darkness, we eau
.e)413rdss the conviction that lElitler and
Mussolini would have been definitely
• pleasetiebk the' defeat of Mr. Rooseselt.
Another cireuinstanCe, almost lost'
sight of in the coneern, over the relation
.of tile election to the war, is. that Mr.
• Cordell Hulk's policlea of• reciprocal,
• trade will be continued under Mr.
' Roosevelt. The Republican candidate A
• for Viceliresident ha& deZhife-41
da5•.
•
' pcpsition to these policies, and had 111.
take its place : That ao man 1)e nomin-
4 Winkle beene eleeted strolls pressur
would 'have 'been brought to, bear' t
cannel the Hull reciprocal trade teentie
. and bring baelethe era of :trade. rAtri
wae not disposed to tiCk u ttilY t'aSe.111
he second place , the allince i
as not IR"irer el's'ewber°) th'e '3"P
I4.. e "().f
tion A
wholly to Armerica. dotriinent. 111. as been limitea.ss . is Gaulle's France," is eulogistie to exe4,ss,
some respects it may be to America's now free to impose Such eeehOulle pen* but one or two of the statements of faet
For all f
-GtecAo:rtaatins tlirow an,instructive light ee
adva.ntage. JaPan is only followins at' aid" npn• ,k11)4n, as it wis.hes.
course projected from as, far IsteCas Practi("al PUrPasea Japan hae already
•• ---t unless she ehooses war: critical .days of June ite stirged
deGaulle's personfility. In the
r'.
TIWRSPAY, NOVEMBCR site 1510
that war, having been preeipitat0, by dollarS and fifteen cvals in elituiass
11*
he Etiropetus eontliet, would. be ciettled conversation with a., gentleman from
:its Chat k'Ontlikt WaS *Ailed. It NesAtY,I, t01". us that xvimfigy
=101: t3 "Provided, since' t he lie niotored from 1110 f%tizada
LItInanese bay° (11t4 14. a 'lluroperin, t;11111:tit tlir,tiats.TtInT(4146huiroeutr",,laolt:tortia,.!io'r.toDfnte antoin
,NeW Republic (.'s:ew- York). ' Bav and 'hack bY, the district
11000 Peterltaro. The, trip occupied
over a wee% and wa6 made at an ex-
,
penditurp of $12 Lor himself and wife,
reekon.4.41; of course, it 'fruited Statet3
In this case, hoWever, he Jiaa
purtthas'ed Canadian eurreney at home
at discount of twenty per (Tilt.
GENERAL tie, GAITIlli,1
linowit and adiniDed ao General,
de (.4aiiiie 14 it, his eaPaeitY as Wader
and' ins,pirer of Pree Frenelunen, the
average Englishman laiow eompara-
tivoly little of his inherent qualities.
'Ur ;James Marlow's little book, "41e
'She Ls eapitall4ing the immunity,
from Occidenta.1 interfe•rence giVer,• by
the European eonfliet, •
If there is anything ,new"till Zallan'K
•
The new alliattee bring's existing perils 10evititud, if he must move the GoNerii.
litto relief ratlier :than creates , new fluent .irrance,. moire . it, not tO
onee:: .• , • Ilortleatix, bnt to•Britt'any, Where With
adherenee to thts 'fascist 'Week jt •With, regard to the 11. ae naericas llessu POlt• Of the BritIsh.and reneh
' i) • '- °
tWo faCtOrti, one illt:ernal 1101 1.114. ePnrie IS UONS" %Clear, i$rfroe bridgehead %Might, be ifeld
111 other external, gale internal being: Prob- ' Pose, econOutie penaities-on Japan and, fforormsirti•rWd1,1t•ch the war.,inight, he Carried
ably the moi•ts"iraportant. The alliance slauld do so. All • raW materials, , An:* against (31;ermany again In due
pee6glietsioste,m,aoieouti,..rbalist 0,,,s,calipaarawlaillshtseore:itie ishea and tienal,,iinisned 1>rodu(itS and tinie-; it is,11:1S,,t such a bridgehead as we
gu ,W011111teditieS 'of •direct and Indirect Use. shall have *sonwhOw to secure, )& 01(
1)0110Y. - •It -reflects -the- forum' attees, for •,•ejiliti.iry ,parptises should ' he shut unY 011.4 11 iS,* passible. Reynaud
seiloicinu'etoilt:i;rarotsotfh(%)e•inxiteret,,Titte •tifiirtly; i Off from Japan by ' k4),,mal .erabargo., nvit agNed; +lien - deelared ...for, BorS
deaux. The Other asoliatbrolight` out Is
extremists have for some tnne favored . 1716 ig 4 1.1111)14.1 '41:attr' a Int:3Urtinee.
• 1 s'd . es• win • it Is better that [0 It ,Gterteral de Granite Was. alinosethe
tiounnoiltiadnoItrwiiiita Geeonrivniactilsoil'u,:nat.0%"40 Thu.4 74apan be 8,0 weak ti•s, possible and With., • onlY Preneli couunander eonsiste,nt1P.
ues Out the illeans Of• replenishing herself. successful Iti the ifield, in the lighting
Ttitheeyy .,1,,lreVree,i,),ar).,0710aellilsallr..liin, .tPhre0•10:11Palvall1; I sillees laPan Will liAye 'Meagre ,sOurces. of \1 41 of this year, a”fact. (11(1)11 ("1/4(1.
, of salpplY- outicie the •United iStates1
despite the Anglo-jaPanese alliance" rinitli the EuroPealf (1 It over - and 41.;trtale'rl3rrolfltilili:(g) it:',far4y1:11t); !)deindel:°alli'Vtiricylglialiltlf:Ii:
and they are pro-terernsan nowsnot only '; 1101111 (1 economic ,proceesee.s , operate fpoon after,:,'. the • latter became corn;
ctuse`the-argis'-wit;'siirstsotgasilzedslaseLeasitin seas' emb ask° now is esi)ecially of mander-in-ehief. The Most Important
men trained. in Geemany' but because 1 •fectiie. ' - - -----------s----------otsOolieraLtieels.„tralsssate:strategy
-Germany ime-dwaso hem -as -military 1. Eurthermoi_fiOw that Britain ha -s is soon to 1)e published in EngliSli..-
state after their •oeli. heart. LI•ntilseoes 1 reoPeeed ' the •Burmae -Road, prebablY '-.1-The Spectator (lestilonS.
of the obs.truetIOU of the army muter. eassotee Anie_eseau crialts to '<lhina, •to 110AV X.(1=HANGE ii/ORI'iS OUT
they have not lad their way„ .beeaujie i• with American. advice, there should. be
et s, the navy the entourage of th be used 'for a ilow or supplies" taslai -ss tecillingwoods-Enterprise-BailletialS_
iamper)al court,' the Foreisn (•)ince an st It:le:ported' to Itanseon. Thus IllaintiN -- Iere."s how sthe exehauge works out
. ,,-. e .;. . •
the atcli and, hY• tile -hug" SeltS°11, 1 inifluential group,s, in ,buor...Taes,s awl' lin. '.resk'stancebe • maintained , and 'to .t1W adyautage of residents .of °Lae
trdriblesome, he. would spend more thne
. .
'•- stl•till further drained. l'elted • 'Ktfttes temporarily abiding In
LU once. But having. come to power be- , al) 11 - - o,
he was"downright bus5•. But the potato.l. .
patch Was grandfather's kingdom . and hind. the facade of the so-called, Kouoye ;,As a matter of. fact, Japan Is 11() nearer
WOO betide anyone who strayed in there!. eff
without his Permissiou- . ' - government the they have put their i.vistieS • tis ,conquering China DOW than She was.
The second factor ie .a• desire for a ,.
I last Year or the, year before; and, with
Grandfather Was, 1)rouder
of ' the'l The
of reinsurance. - Ideally, sources' of .sttpply -restored, China is in
mueh extended by her I
Japan would have preferred, a I
like! ,au even better,: position than before,
potato -blossoms than any' florist could 1 nusoia,
be over a..ra.re flower. Ile was an. ex- .
protracted war 'which exhausted all ‘. isit'(Zs;rtatil.)dill'i'V:t.11iore•51,
pert on the color of bloesoms and he
1 the combatants, preferably _with Am- in the sohth. ,..• • ,
'Would predict the 'crop from' the size,
erica included. But her 'military le•iiil- i',. Beyond the.se. measures. Arne:61m can.
and color. • - ,.
; ers came to the conclusion a few months ii in the Atlantic. For -the f 111.1114. of tile
It meet tbe danger from. the Pacific
H we delislited to tease him ins
VC4' 'shazaelrsand-2that -therefore Ailey -444.414 -14)
Far
British; Isles and not hi tile China -Sea.
s• t . • ed 111 the
sng e-w7putattres: Thessfiretstisue ,
' t este menitiee ' can be laid ante-
' I • It' Will 'almost lay • itself.
I ago that • [Germany's *victory. was at• 'Os 1 (- t", 00
early summer about the neighbors' hay -
Over make haste to appro,priate what .they If Great ,BrIta in cO• mes- th
did fool him, and, he went right
wanted in ,the Far ,Fatst 'before Ger- . apan , . ,
to -Neighbor Iligsitra' place end de- , . .
earsenen eould have new i)otatoes before
la: cani‘-to pareelling out the Iiritisli probability the Mere threat. of
vi-ould 'be.nine•points oflaw when. 'ill all
him wzis unthinkable. The neighbors.
dad •French empire's in. the East. '..Theet fleets,'
the combined British and. 'American
would be enough. If -the tlir4itt
looked:7 sUrprised,• and, iGrantlfather,. _
Japanese .arnly is still confident enough Were emPliaSfzed.
tanued us that teig,ht ... . not hard, bee. L
ed air his f G • ricto to cOmmit the na- boycott on all ,Japtinese trade, -it 'would
by the ImpOsition of a
• attd for the Presidency who has. not nta tided to 'See potatOes, That mane's 'hands were free-sposseseion matesal
s Previously served as Senator, Congress-
man, Governor or in s•ome OtIler public
n •
• dons which accomp u e pu
administration• in the past Restfi&
tionism dies 'hard in the United States,
assin 2canada; tbereis 'a certa.in type
sof mind which refuses to believe that
• by depressing your neighbor's prosper -1
yeti are not, heig,14ening your own.
• Four more years ofliberal trade•poliCies
s should, do much to kill restrictianai
ideas.
DEMOCRACY IN ACTION
A few years ago the British:people,
dissatisded with their 'monarch, deposed
hims and •put in his places one' they
, lifted better. This •"tradition -ridden"
'Great pritain Set aside the practiee of
Venturies in •the monarchical. euecession.
• This week the people of' the United -
§tares set aside a time-honored tradi-
tion .and with ,their franehise exercised
•freely at the Polls elected a Mall tO the
presidency •for a third term -fors the _
sponsibility-one of the two or three
first time in the -history of the Re- most infportant positions in the world-;--.
public.
This as democracy in action, refusing
:-to be tied to pe customs* of the past
When new condition4 arise for whieh
old usages are not adequate or ap- States held the same. view, and shat:
propriate
. tered a century -old traditioh in Order
• Why, indeed, sluctild the - people of -tO haVev-:at •thelk head a man with a
lifetime of training in the direction
and adininietration of public agars. -
capacity.
Neter since 1890, Wifeli the elole
conntry was debating the suerit'S of.
JenningS Bryan's "sixteen 'to
:one" proposal, Was there sueli general
interest in 'Canada-. in a Presidential,
eleetion. Probably ninety per. cent.,
perhaps more, of ICanadians hoped or
the reelection of Mr. Roosevelt.
• Itsconsreasonabiy-besterguedethateth
no4hird-terra' tradition Was killed 'in
last sumraer's Republican convention.
Had that eonvention named for the
presidency a man- with some experience'
of stateeraft, Mr. ,Robsevelt -might not
have asked fOr a third. term, or, If he
bad, Might have been defeated at the
Polls. But, in the 'present crisis of
world affairS Mr. Roosevelt no doubt
Sincerely !believed that, it would 'he , a
mistake, perhaps ,o tragie mistake; to
place in a position of such: vast -re-
.
Canada. ,Aefew days ago a visitor pur-
chased a 'chicken in, one, of our best-
known meat 'stores ahd tendered a too -
dollar 4.7,8.. bill' 01 payment. He. re-
ceived hot ouly the chleken hat ten
EISLIVERE13 IN
r. eilete',1 NetOt Puff
Ptoedmion lot You
just
tein
Ilo
wti rd
•
when
dish
wusi
and
prop
with
speci
crow
511._11
toda
Gr
• enotigh, to work .ste ge . erman ry.•
-Of ecairse he Wa'S S•Ol`3,f after- don' to Vrernurn fcirtunes, 'but •‘'not. so t produce results in a Short tiMe. J'apan
s and We'• got nickels for (mad:v. . certain that 'it does not avant to Make.
W _proud he, NvilS . al E./! t . II i'' day. sure by helping. ,Germatry to the extent
'he -came in withthe old granite of frightening America . so that it will
filled with new potatoes. • He , not give too much 'help to Great Britain.
_Pet There is a too441inpleiaSsumption in this
jtnliset the. ecaintry that Japan has been tak& in .
boiled itmthetimilahltetfhewmithin
er • amount of Salts. .He. beamed bY the +Germans.; She has not: The ernavaters from Hawaii and •Sliagapore. '
happiness that day and made a
al trip in to the Village to tell the
d at Ylurphy's general store .. . .
_yeti ca-enal way of Course . .
7.,r • , .,. . ,.' . - t West for years. , The .:'Japanese .must
'had a nice meal of. new potat
anclfatter •anxiously scanned the have a German- vietory, Butthis 'IS far
BEAUTY MITRE
would have ',tio •choiese butsto aecep a •
negotiated settlenient:•edt 'Far East- .
ern territory, Chine. included. If, Japan'
dealt. With summarily by- the British
instead ohould run athek, she could. be
and American. fleets converging on E,ast-
safety is jeopardised' if England sur- war' it cam d • 't n. • that
From the beginning of the China -Japan
Japanese hate gone so far thee thelr
vives and, Ariteriea'slarrnada copies into,
being. .If on the other hand *Germany
vvins, Amerrea--ISsinitiobilized In the
a novice in publicaffairs, who, wth the
best intentions, might involve his
Country in diSaster. Evidently.- the
Majority of the people of the United_
the United State's in this year 1940,
after an experienee of More than a
eentery an.d a. half in democratic gov-
ernment, feel bound to abide_ by a
theory promulgated after only a feW
• decades of experience .in democracy,
, -and never at any time given the, anther-
' ity of a vote. of the ,pe-ople? Ihe
'. people of the United States reserve to
,
themselves the right to panend their bombin.4vothe civilian population of
•constitutimi when they so desirhy
e; w .
skie
befo
wha
ers,'
crop
0
pate
han
pOta
ehea
was
The
bin
. .
fore
of
0011and
use
W EL
tha
we
wo
8 for rain in 'those last few weeks
re the stalks wilted. He dreaded
t he. called the "plague on the tat-
' hutI can never'remember his,
having it. , .
n piektng day he allowed tis in the
0.. But he 'always'took the play
dies for •the Plowing out of the
toes.- 1141 hated to see •potatoes;
;led y aplow, because •to.him th-at
a 'Waste of time and effort.
randfather stared' the • potatoes.
re.had_ to -be just so 'many lis'each
. . . and he put So many in the it
carefully protected by straw •be-
the..earth was thrown in on top'
them.. ,As spring approached he•
Id befound "snagging" the potatoee,
picking them over. . . and as he
d to say, "just sort of enjoying
yself."
The potato crop at Lazy. Meadows
s Poor Ihis year. Somehosv I think
t if Grandfather had been here . .
ather notwithstanding s
. , . .there
Uhl have been a good crop.
IS H
TE BOMBING OF LOND,ON
INDISCRIMINATE? •
On -September 41.0 Iliiler dectare'd
that the Royal Air „Force was bombing
German,towns 31(1(1 villages unsyetem-
laically and without 'discrimination. He
told this falsehood to have an excuse
4ondo,n. e shall _reply," • he said,
'should they not feel equally • free to 1 ,. a.mid -prolonged applause, "night after
amend or discard
h. ,p' rsessittsd that' ,might ,-.. . and- if they announce th,at
.
was never written into tb.e constitutiont they., wilLattack us' on a big scale, we
sihia.ell teradicate their 'towns." This last
, The. no -third -term tradition . ineant l't m .Tiollnedfroforth ianether roar of
that a citizen Who. had in,tvtro elections ; aciel:. a .n1 the bestial mob that
his Reichstag, a mob „th t
, helped to choose a President:and vvas 1 makes ull
I cringes before him IlOW but will renad
quite satisfied . with. Ititn' ' should for '
I him some da‘
.nio 'r.eastin at • ail: feel hinise' If debarred!' Y.
this Mean. the election of another' man. declare that be would bomb I...ondon in-
discriminately";, he eald he would retail -
of inferior qualification and of Inferior 1 a)(teti;sitr what he ealled Indiscriminate
ability,. It meant. thrOVving aside the i 1 g. And, itided, be 11318 not re-
value. of' egperienee and training hi. tallated. indiseriminately-therlionabing
i
. public affairfia. It, meant the adoption *af litaldoli has been sYstematic.- Mill-
, ,ie.. tile realm of public affairs,. of s tary objeetives have been bombed aiso,
4 i for foul ereatare though he is; IIItlei
practice that would slever be folloWed ' 14 not a of
: a ng •Irptlitt not forgo any
t
in any -Well-contlipted Private enter- eiltIllee o itunring in a niilitary ,sense
prise -of repine/in; &man of •npefieneerho most forintanme foe be has ever
, 113141111 not, his-, oratien. 01111Irw-a-s •
• "frOin "Toting for him. again, even A•hould one of the raostti•'uenlent he over made,
With one laeking sueli experienee, 11" f() fle41 with. The bGinh"4" `of
merely to. confOrm to old -established errorsm is rarely indiscriminate. The
ili
,,ondoninn.; 'been, above all; terroristic.
custoln.'. , • (4ermfIllS, and IIit:ler above all, employ,
There 18 something vastly impressive! it 'W4elllaticallY 111(1 with caletdated • The first. sign 'of insanity iswhen
,,
, in the march to the polls of fifty mil- Pwirt)('-4 It wodfd have been rossibto one thinks everyinfily .arounds him 14
, for Hitler's, bombers to fly over London igerazy."
liOn,s of citlzeno to select their own 1 at art leamensse height in relative 5afety
, rnlers by majority vote, and' in the I and swatter their bombs Whitt would
0.CCePtonce 'by the taincoritY of the de- I fall in Parks 'and open' spaeee as well
from saying that on Germany's suns -
mons .they..mill go to war against Am-
erica- If 'and 'when Germany des-
perately in need of kelp they will use
all their .resourees to. consolidate them-
selves their own region. But the
last thing that the most heedless
SaPaneSe general wants is a war
America, '
This -is the prime fact for America to
trade on. . . America now. has_ more
ot a free hand in the Pacific than it had
before the :alliance was contracted.
Until then It was retrained frem talc-
-big 'certain economic measures to pen -
• •
• For common -
ordinarysCom
khroat.1
' $151(16/3
be•en. in• keeping witli .his bine policy.
Ile has alsvays been,, and-still:is, first
and last • terrorist. He pursues his
foe with insatiable ferocity. •Incapable
Of any chivalrous ,action or any gener-
ous feeling, '.he ,is resolved en the ex-
terMination •,of all who stand in his
way or who hai,'e, ever :stood in his
way, • Ile .will always Prefer the cruel-
ler method to the more mereiful•even if
the elle Is no more effiettelOUR than the
other. • To those WhO have, elven him
the slightest offence he is Merciless
when they are at hie mercy. The hor-
rible torments he eatieed to be inflicted
on Dr. -Liften, who WAS coungel for
the prosecution When Hitler was tried
for high treasons. a fe but *Oile eXample•
among many Dr. Liam -Ailed a 'Ong,
lingering deatth as a result of his in-
juries. Hitler's •malignance. is alto-
gether frightful. Bur it is always' sys-
tensatic, It is out of maiignanee that -
be has ordered the non-military bomb-
ing of London -and this bombing is no
less eystematie than 'the torture and.
murder of• the 1)risoners in „ eon-
eentration •eatrops,
There is nothing to be done With the
genius of destruction except to destroy
it; There is no passibilitasof any eom-
promise that would not he a defeat and
a betrayal. ," • .
-The Nineteenth Century Month/O.).
. as in the residential distriette: But they
, cislon so reached.' the majority may ;" ''
r ! hate not town aS high :19 till.; tiothlyave
Make mistahos, but the penalty 'of their., systematically 00181)0(1 i( si
" * - .
dential di8,-
.
mistakea is on their own heads, and t Mots again and again. It Is no Tic-
• , by, ctvind thew mutait,e,s, they' avoid ' cident that so many hospitalo have been
i handled, some of thorn repeatedly. It
. Others, and learn' .wimictm. , can hardly ue an aeeident that a bomb
The greatea 11113114108 02 al; would of 050001.14110 8150 fell near St. Paul's
1
.be to allow anybody, dead or, alive, to cathedral. 'rho bombing OL' 1,neltum-
impor,,-;,e hio will oil shem_ciniest their ham I'alaee was !certainly deliberate , into tWeiitrfour hours feverish BB.
• , '-'1 • and thei'e can be 'no cloul)t at all that I ' s
"1 blif'4° a" e°11°6e1"°. ' ' , ' tivity ihe demand for seusationai
bated royaltY, for it. repreeents a literature .are tat cOndueive to
lurc, A4 value in trtlaition, in ,i,tleh,r in% rs,e.„1014•0,1in.:iiii.y..tiKiito,xtieiarinianiawt,i,,3,,m,4
I)rinelple inoro e:gaitOti than a ny tie c• niagerglir:;:t:te°11Wea: ..ana tour
4.011141 under,,tand and it call. Airtli i If you are tired, natless, nervous,
1311 allegianee far deeper than'his terror- and wor,riedcWhy not•give Milbutn's
lannible and r.-;onlethInfl that roconenc; istie rule could' ever Iloilo to command. liealtb, 0.1Ia Ntrvo rills 0, chance to
• •
'lorry „Sot
.The Nervous System
WOrry over business or houseli'oid
duties, oudden the insane
guest for pleasure, the foiilish at-
tempt to put a *week of 'normal life,
tut.;tom.5 handed down from eentury to
eeninry; but ..uch custotho, (-mai tradi-
tion, must be Pounded upon. something
1U:el2 with flip knowledNo and Iteliefe ------------------------ fted help put you. on your feet again.
of the prec;ent.
A GRZAT TRIO
With the rt -610etion of kiran%1
1'nat 10 - • 'OM 14'4 hontilorg: that L-4 wily lie tried They are .0. body, buildin* g, nerve.,
to eapture Q,neen and etrengt eontaing
_ •
(11 [ray her IT.111flifer'r and ",:ranabliiid- t( essential elements lor tile nervous
reit: that why 13; 14 tryimi; ft; kill the!. iiiefern.
Xiiir and Q,I1P•Plt Of Ellolgi:1 1141;
Ili foreign picy always ow T0l0140. thit“
The Worldie-mostAlourisiliing (and
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Pleasant Work =Good Pay
Permanent Employment
. Be an expert Beautician and you -should
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For many years, Beauty Culture has offered
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,
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. • •
MARVEL 'BEAUTY. SCHOOLS
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The Gretttest flardressing School, System a its Kind in America"'
Address All Enquiries to
44 KintigAm8ItLrie:Nt West'
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or
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a .1
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