HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Goderich Signal-Star, 1941-05-15, Page 41M 'Mc)
THE GODERICII SIONAL-STAlt
51AN 15th, 1941.
a it* Onbrtiril titgrati tar
ii vasu GOIDERICH SIGNAL -ANA) `VIEW l'5e4603
pul;lished by Sigma -Star Press, Litraitixit,
West Street, Goderiela, ()mote): ••,--
IIIIVIEtIADAYF *MAY f5th,
- THAT MAN VMS§
eThe work1-44the war -conscious
Dart 'et it, anyway—is engaged in a
huge !guessing:Contest` since the news
.tralleeired *tithe Right (rf Rutielf Hess
fi'om Germany to liritaine Hess .has
bigen. intitaate, of Hitler since •Ihe
beginning of the Nazi movement aud
, has been: designated as third man
in
thelgazi organizatim—Hitler 1, Go -orbit;
ilees Important a man -does
not taire an airplane and IlY -unaccom-
tparded te an enemy eountry without
efgae, 'Compelling motive. Commentators
. Make various guesses as td what ie
',the amaziig 'get.; The •incest
Ireasonalle Se:einS'fou, tthtt
4.• gess was .in fear for his life. Hitler
hies 'murdered, or. his had murdered,
'other men, who were close to him, and
„It IS possible" that some tiisagreement,
some failure en the pale of Hess to
acquiesee,in Llitl•er'e plans, has aroused
the„ Iruelirer's anger. Or dt may be
that somebody else ill the Nazi organ-
,:
ization has, been gtharalag fer Hess.
At•Any rate, Hess•IS in 'Britain, ender
strict guard and -possibly the eorrect
• story: will leak out some day. In the
Meantime It Would be just as well to
discount isea,vily the *tortes sent over
. by enterPrieing journalists a what
Hess has been saying ince he lauded
in SCotland. not very likely to
talk seriously to an but a peraon .of
bie,h-authority, and such 'a person Ls
not • likely to pUblish, at' tis stage,
what be, has •learned. That, the in-
cident means a breakdewbein Ger.mait
Mende we do eot belieie. Germany
is net likely to crash -until her 'armies
'haire suffered a decisiive defeat—and
that time is not yet. , • •
,NEWS FROVil.OTTAWA
•
preaeher, teacher
Pbil Osifer of Lazy Meadows
By lillintry I Boyle
e
OAR:DEMING
, man can Wilk in liguees suCh as...
"fifteen aims in wheat ...twenty aeres
in in oats" ..„. and so on, but juSt- mention
planting ,a row a beets and see what
happens.
qt 'How loise .the eeed eatalogues,l They
Sir litalward Beatty, the C.P.R. head, come in the mail at that in-between
sma, no advantage to tee gained by lime w411`31}3.1 are 6ort of "Tett of Wok-
ugstt the mail order catalogues' and the
Canada. froin the olee'per waterway inement folders haven',t started tome.
project. • "The great veltime of• traffic on lug. A profusion a {...oirs blooms, in
the Great Lakes Is North American in the eatalogues, and usually there' a
both origin and destination," he polute emitest te• name something . or a
puezle of some Idea --te solve, .. that
out, adding that it is but wishful •
passee away the tune.
thinking to assume that any important Then come the bright spring day&
new traffic of this class can be created :,‘Irs. Phil begins to start mentionhig
by Merely enlargi4 th.e 'Ste lleawrence the tact that the garden gate is broken,
canals. 'Should the canals be enlar reel and the , g'arcleb. fence needs fixhig.
or editor anywhere
Three iterasoof iMportant news Came
,from ,Ottawa on Tuesday.
* One
was .that the Canadian Wheat
Board had sold to Greet Britain
120,000,000 bushels of wheat fdr .de-•
. livery in the* 'eoming Year -laid to be
the largest single wheat. transaction in
*, hiStorye „ , - s •
Second, a nqimum whole.sale price
of, •butter for Ontario' has been set at,
'-.291/2 'cents fol: May—in fnIfillMent of
the promise .the Minester of A.gricul-
'tire when a meximeln price was set for
,winter see. • .
,194,rd, the Minister et Finance an-
• tnouneed A war loan, a.•
$600,000,4)0.
Subscriptioli books will be opened June
2nd and bonde 'be ayailable In
denoMieations - of 4$50, 8100,- $500 and.
$1,001), and may be purchased outright
or upon easy terms of payment -•
• • . •
, E.DITORIAMAVOTES•
, Bv dint of shaming me Into it,, When
to tile extent contemplated, in the plan,
it is probable- th,et traffic would be
dieseeteclefeem existing. railway systems.
„ _es ,
The'net effect of this diversion wetil
be to impose an additional berden
this country, which is already beset
with •serious problems arising from.
Current Views on, the War
A. DI fl RICAN IKEACTION TO Show also that a great -and growhig
IIITI,EIVS BALKAN VIEW014X majority are willing tO riSk 'war. If
• the consequence et' that Tisk is our par -
'The AraeriCans ate a mercurial people,. „titivation, it will still' have 1.1.Wen. the
For the Mei ‘veek or two they have inajority' aud not tic* man -
been 'sunk in_ gitiont over what has oeuvring of a conspirative minority,
happened in 'Yugoslavia, Greece and. as the 41.sindberghs and qirheelerS pre -
North Africa. It iS true that the tend.
Glerma,n advanee has offered a tragic pontirming GatIne fignees, the
pietur,e of heroie defenders lighting respdhse Of the country, to the' barn -
against ovetwhelming odds and' in storming of key isa•lationists has not
many vases dying in their tracks to let •been Impressive. crowd a 10,000
their comrades get out a the' trap, If whieh Lindbergh 'drew New York'
Ji 111(0 yields.,..to the presstire and, lets iusigUitleant in a city a SelVell
Even Communist iParty mass-lopeetings
•Gmllhon
thiebra.Geltarr,a"thereer°17 lilestPlytwaeto.c,tov.benngtetsatteilial $11,0e5aNtivn Je0,0i$00.paeasde! forur 1•%;e1Wipliuennd ltsithai;
more bad news. Yet,
perspective of ewe 31. few weeks, the MeWilliams gang, and other organizped
,eituatieu does not seem to justify the Fascist bodies that were inetrueted to
doWneast hearts. it has induced. • atteed the agair en =lose, the Lb:01•,-
00y a couple of moliths ago, was bergh. rally is reduced to extremely
expected that Hitler would get Yugo- uninipressliee propartione. The eame.
slavia by a diplomatic triumph. DverY- "thing has been true in the Middle West.
one knew Greece eoeld not hold oat la Chicago, capital of the isolation belt,
the Colonel 'recently drew a erowil of
I believe that Britain is at 'leaet the
equal of 'Germany in 'tbe first; MO
Dritain and the netted States are in-
eomparahly Superior to‘(ernaanY 'in the
seeond; and that experience will SbOW
that diseipline taught at the end of a
'whip is no substitute .for th'e loyalty
and patriotism of a free people.
tain ean wh MIS war, and Britain will
win this war, if we turn loose the' full
power of ,our war industries and take!"
whatever action maybe needed to bring
our productive equipment into contact
with the battle -lines..
—The New York Times.
'she dons an old sleock, and a pair , of against Germany and It was not eertam
gloves awl attemptS to 'fix the feilee ' weuld eVen, make ,the 'effort. 141
_Nitivat,Ilie time that seeding begv,u.s,,
and, gate, the ',repairs are finAlly made,.
Mrs. Phil is positivReratiger-over•.-the- beeeef.eigereet leesetetteeeeteeeneiseet,
filet that tile garden hasn't,been worked. a German 'one, Waveirs astenishing
up. *0This ultimatum is ha•nded out over advane6 westward aeross the desert
the breakfast table. ''.121'nf-Ns$'"Y-f-)u"ewc'1, was expected by no one. ,
Hitler's vietory over Yugoslavia And
his advaeee in 'Greece have -cost him thi)-
livei a many thOusauds of his finest
ereops. The euPply of 'materials froth
Yugoslavia • has been all but stopped
for some time, and the 'vitally important
movement .of materials up -the Danube
•wa s not :halted entirely by
the ships sunk at the iron Gate. When
Yugoellevia and 'Greece _finally 'give .up,
'Germany seilleheve two more countries
to add to the list of those she insist
polite, two nier'e countries whoseie.-
'habitants hate. , the Nazis and their
-
philosophy and will •only bide • their
time to be -free -agate. The Balkan
.campaige.'hasseerelealitle postponed the
invasion of England, aud, 'io, view' of
-kilter incie as i ig oinen t u ne per-
haps fora long tine. Engl could
tern will conie to face alone A world -
lose the Meteiterranean• and t e whole
dominating 'Germany.
Near East, a d ett,Ilenot lose the war, as. •
Wag- as ' he morale--iind our own— .
--dOe„ n•ot crack. It reinaine true that
defeatism is' 'the worsrieteme. • -
,
—The • steev -Republie (New „York).
Let the men, and wensee of, London
and ylymouth bow -down and "adinit feetors „create the. illusion of 'German
defeat ; 1061.enel Lindbergh • has had
liallivekilipe.6ibrsilipet3C'Cti-sb*:.ti-T°12helY•fl-if-sot'ris:t'slahoesesi;wpebr°-
enough.. -Let the IBritish 'seedier* who
iority, of .1Iitler's Inechanieede War
endured the agony of Thermopylae go
houle• and raise tile white 'flag over maehinel the second, the extent of .his
eletories, ifut the superiority of Hitler's
meelianized weapons is exclustvely the
reselt of • the •head -start he had while
other na'tions were 'Indifferent—a teni-
porary and, fleeting, advantage, which,,
can, be offset by our own •superier „tape -
city for proclititelon. , for the 'area
over which the swastika ne'vO •fiies,' fully
three-quarters • of all, the land that
Hitler •rules today lay inside the
German iiiilitary Bees hi -11,918, and
still this did enbe 'sPele .victory for
Gerinan amis. _ ' ,•• •
• The pattern ok vietere. Is a• eaMbin-
a tion of milbrary competence; indestrial
.genkus, :and moral etaying-power. • We
duplication and excess transportation that' garden up today, I'm 'not, going -to
facilities." da any preserVing this -year." Needless
to' say, the, garden is worked up. -
* * * -You know 'what • a garden looks like
• An appea by .the horticultural as- when it hasebeen Worked 14). There's
still the process •of drilline it up into.
. .
,
.sociations •o Canada. ter the preserva- e04. Mee. Phil geuerally .'ila-s another
tion of the reMaining". -Wild- frOwers 'battle -0U her -hands- to get the garden
should not go unheeded. Sonie of drilled into rows. .
teinada's most beautiful wild flowers Somehow seen folks never seem to'
inna, plantine early potatoes', One,
have disappeared ' forever, and ethers part of the garden • is set aside fee. this
may follow if care is not taken. It is• -purpase teA the cut polatees droirped
even said that t„he white trillium,' into the holes. Perlaaps it'e lbecause
adapted as • the, emblematic 'flewer . of we're looking ahead to thae first- day
• when "new 'potatoes)" are ie. ..
Ontario, ii -in danger of. extinetion, Why does a men hate to plant a
and to prevent this, it 'is urged 'that garde el Give him a package of beet
the flowers be left :Ilene in their native seeds-au:a tell him. to` stale planting and
eee-• whet happens. He starts off brave-
beau'tf.'It'Oither epecies of wild 'flowers • • 1 , -h• le be
, ' . -1y, drepping the eeeds as. t ses -t-, Du •
like violets :zed hepatie.as, whose flower„,The sure. Warms up and elle "perspira-
.._
Steins. frs-V-1.11reefly from -the roots, May tion •starts dropping... and' -the chances
be picked ii,e Will, pravideel• -the bOdy are the 'majority , of, t he 14.e.leage of,
'of the plant I's left undisturbed.. ' Telir- •,7,e0e:s is dumped le a neat heel) iri a-
' * •
10,000, while 75,000 ,flocked ,to Soldier
,Field to hear,(General Sileareke, premier
of the Polish Government in exileepleed
-for -aid- ta—Britain. - -Ande-Senator
,Wheeler's largest atidiencein his SUIlIcr
ardligh the West was the 4,000 thal
turned out to hear him at Denver.
The attitude of the people of this.
try toward -the regime of Adolf
1IitIr and toward the war has been
sleiv in maturing. It is earepounded
• of the horror with which- they watched
the successive defeats of all those
countries that hoped sto let another
t ion, ' -fight ..their battles white they
-remained "neutral"; of appreciation for'
Hitler's surpassine ability to difide
his 'enemies and lfandle them in turn,
each in bis'own good). ; 'of the sure
knowledge that, if England goes down,
net enly will its Quisling's and 'Levels
he our enemies but also the plain people
of Britain, wbo will rightly feel them-
selves• betraYed by an America that
Was „ready to fight to the last Engliehe
mau ; and of the even surer knowledge
that 'unless ,we help Britain now our.
,
, "What mede you.'ebecosee a', nleht
Watehniatir John asked his un.cle. ••
, "Well," said.nnc14, "with a wkle and
eight kids I server could get near, the.
at hem° :"
Kidn.ey Acids,
Rob Your Rest
Many people never seem to set a good
eight's reste_They tern and toss—lie Awake
and count sheep. Often -they blame it on
"nerves" when it O'ney be -their kidneys.
---ae Healthy kidneys filter liaison* frew
tb
blood. 111 they are faulty and Fail poisonsstay in the systeM and sleepiessnessellead-
sche, bsclische often follow. If you don't
sleep well, try Dodd'* Kidney Pfirs—for
lislf a century the favorite reinedY. 103-
Dodd's Kidney Pills
READ THE CLASSIFIED
1011110111*.
et,aferN
ing up.h plant,by the roots to gain a That's wha't peezles Mrs. Phil. She
-
bloom, is Wanton destruction and should .can -never- imagine „how it is thet the
be condemned by; all sensible peoplebeets, seem to grow quite -regularly to
a Certain point,and then there Will be
* a' whole plantation of them. '
' The 'mills•.of the gods grind slowly. - One of the most exasperating joles
It, has taken five years frelirtV brutalef all- in regard to "the garden In my.
assault by Italy upon. Ethiopia to 'bring
Haile Selassie bads.. •to his. throne in
trhimph. • Among -the first words of
the restolred =March wee the injunc-
tion to 'is people to...show moderation
in • their, etreatment ef the defeated
Italians still left- in the, country—an
example of 'Ohristiae •mercy e- ,w11eh
should -note lost upon the barbarous
Faselsts. It may take dee yediseper-
alenger, perhaps a shorter time—
for the wheel to make its nevolution
the cases �f •^Ozechoslavakia, Potence,
Norway, Denmark, H011end, Belgium,
,France, Yugoslavia, Greeee--all, the
•gouh, tries that have been ground be-
n.eath the -oppress. er's heel—but the
:time is surely coming when freedom
will again raise its head -in these lands.
Dvery .effort to aid Britein and her
allies in 'their campaign will 'help to
speed the seay of emancipation.
- Is Rudeli Hese the 'first rat to desert'
the sinkiirg ship?
• °
'
In 'view of existing .werld condi-
, * • • tions," saysthe -Royal Bank's letter for
l
Ihe editor is unable to say if the May, "price advances in Canada have
on the whole beet' moeceratee While
mysterieue Radelf IS any 'relation to
the Hessian flymuch tan be, done ta controleand re-
. . 4
strain undue edvancee in commodity
-prices, certain .conditions present only,
While -everyone is guessing, the Salt -
In wartime exert a tremendoussuPward
ford Sage says his guess is as -good us'
influence on pricets in general. The
anyone's. Remembering something 'he
P
read .months ago to the effect that the widespread destruction of roperty, et-
- Nazi higher-ups were being supplied
tempts to accumulate edequate sepplies
withbutter by private ag,encies of strategic materials increases. in the
'-
COS of transport end insurances the
Britain', sUggests that:I:litter's friend
enforced abandonments of the normal
Hese liew.over to get a 'supply se that
chamile of, tommercial intercourse, an
buttered toast might still be on the
his
meet uch an,eventuality
intlinatesinereasine,
.menn in the camp of tfite ehrei, and
to meet ' g costs of living all
. — „ ,
combihe-t6 raise the general price level
The TinyTree Club of Chatham, .
Under win- conditions, therefore, ad -
Ontario . f Which , Victor Lauristonvences in jil.ices• Must be expected; that
- ,' on;,
y , .,
* well-known in 1Goderieh, is the moving thehave nottodatebeen even m6re
pirIt hi Published a little book
pronounced is dire in large measure to
,
r „"
"Postscript to h thiet," ,described, in the
the good effect of the immedieteaction
'
title page as ",(Jff the recordittiles about QoVernment to
taken by the Dominion s."
Arthtir String -ere -including `Aline 'the
• •
• censor should have siippressed.r. The• * * ,* ,
priee is only 25 cents a 001y,and those Japan dee-pairs of ever beating„down
'
who arr literarily ,w1117 find 4:4-hrifese
resistance lied would like to
'
eiducl).;. tot interest* in Its forty-eight negotiate a pehcee---prebably on the
pages. basis of 'beeping all the territoressebe
• has already ievaded. The Chinese,
• "Though -0anedeeieeince. sehmeeLeeeelehtsweyereareseeee palmy to agreeeto any
clerk in prosecuting her war effort, -'
thing of that sort and General Chiang
it
In to be borne In mind that all ti K;fri-Shek tan be- depended -upon to
-s-The Natiou (New York)..
-
111
:There eomes a time in every w'ar
when defeatism thrive e williagly ell
bad 'news. In •the present ease two
onions. You are faced by a very large Wraised estminstere Oaptain ., Paterson has
et over The New York • Daily
'01)iiiion Le that of planting Detch .et
bag aik these -very small ilionsond ex- News. Let the gitrOtretitiese )rague,
peoted to pla,ut them. • • Witirsew, and Paris ; of Oslo, open-
. 'Mrs.-PbiISaPerViSeSVhe ,j0)). at .iirst. 'lumen,' • and 'BrusseLs ; acted.
Every four or five Weirs an onion iS Vienna, and Snesterdant; of lindaPesl,
to be gently'peessed down in the ground. Belgrade, ,ends . them • all
and then just -barely coveredwith. saii. resign themselves fo slavery and -de-
Vown the row you go ..,. restation .Senator, Wheeler ie weary
planting.. -planting. YOU' -begin • 'to and has ,abandoned hope. Let all Am -
wonder how many 'onionee-you • 'have. ericaussw.ho. think they call resist the
'already 'planted, and how mane bushel's Wave oe the 'Future 'come - to their
Of :onions lieve in time. 'Onfoes senses; let them. llow hellto break
Xou ' begin to loose if it elidoees. One cae alwaes
-tumble them hi upside -down and sides make deals- with the devil.O 4 -
wiser. and. whatever. , way is the So fades the morale ef the American
easieet: . You begin to pray .serneStly people, if we are. to judge by thote who,
that a fertilizer agent or a ,treanrsepare in the. Week *of Greeee's tragedy; Pre-
ator man will drive in. But they never sumed te speak in their name; is
Come when they're wanted. Soon. you're" DOW_ ObiViOUS;1' Said Colonel Lindbergh,
planting bye eisd three and: toilr•onlons" that -England is, losing , the AY'. . .
in the one places ...and finally end hp and I have been forced,to the =elusion
by bureing about half the bag in a hole that we cannot win this war for Eng -
et the end of. the row. Miss.. Phil can't land, regardless a how much assist -
imagine - why the onions didn't plant ance we send." • Four:fifths' of eie
more ground. - people, the '(3olonet ,eniouneed, share
•
•
•
I'm dimly convinced that women his belief, but they have been eried
Would' be further ahead to plant the down by -a minerrity-that controls -the
garden themselves. • press, the newsreels,, and the radio
(over which the Volonel spoke). The
burden and -higher wage4
THE GOOD.OLD HURON TRAIN Newyork Daily • News, which he forgot
The 'eraine-f`"Landen, Huron andlirdce," abouti though it has the largest eircue
An iibu moneter—loek ! . - lation in the country, piiblislied,...a..nelet-
A. roar bursts from Its,fiery lips; • • Galt"- to 'Britons and &mei-leans—to
: At every road, and brook. , Ines() Peace , with Adolf flitter now,
eflurrabe" the settler shouts, "Hurrah; when they conceivably ceuld get terms
• For . it we've waited many ia- clay." that would "qearve 'Hitler first power in
- - -,..., . • Europe, Stalin. end Japan sharing- eon -
The" morning trainsawokethe town, '-trel of most'ef gsla, the United States
And on It went supreme, - - supreme in the sWestere Hemisphere,'
With mail and. goods and busy, folk, and Great .BP.itarn holding most or all
The Student 15 his dream.- ' of .its present empire." A.nd the Wall
It was indeed a reel event; .- -Street Journal, likewise taking up the
Life settled then content, ceneent.' midgets for 0Olonel. Lindbergh's ueder-
. • - privileged' ,. majerity, - threw open ' its,
..
At dear old Olieton it would come collunes tb "a "realLstic" • Plea by Dr.
•
- : And wander round the to3,inh;.• . .Felix Morley', president of. Ilaverfard'
Londesboro 'too it viewed afar College, that we -acct "'the faet of
And gave to Blyth renown; • Peran ,Supreinacy on the •Ciontinent
Belgraye. aWay .beYond. the hill ' • -of-Europe". and work for a negotiated
.0ould--nover miss itsdaily thrill_ peace. t'.• * . ,, ' ,,
. . - It is only natural that eery setback.
• . . .
-'Midst ,siieh,, enjoyment men grew old for the English- .should -bring the de-
. .
esid"yeuth made plane so 'high. .featists .out in full ry„ but anti -inter -
It had its righte)f-way just as ventioteets who.. are not at the same
.' The sua blazed through the .eky. time- pro -Nazi 'have (muse to be dis-
The station,. ticket*, strangers too, .nsayed; -because every reverse that
Witter World there stood in view, England setters brings this country
nearer to the 'bank of. War. o Lindbergh.
What!' What's the new to'day? is coiej'eetely, wronge in assuming that
Our Iran- -friend; farewell? ' thre lees Of the lialkeU1. canePaign. has
The rusty rails.: to be .a path bred a' nieed :of surrender in. this
O Fr ghosts their shrouds to swell? eduntry ; and he Was patently dishoheat
.The line ta train con- never be, • when be eaid that "if we are forted into
And through bhe daVwe'll sigh or thee, a war, against the wishes of an over-
whelming majority of our people,. we
' • .) —Austin Is. Budge, Hamilton.
will heed proved densoeiticy such a full-
- . As a Matter of Fact ' ' lure et home that there W-111 be little use.
,
fighting for it ebroad.".. ilis etatisties•
The Seldierwe's expleiningehb theory'
fraction of the debt is payable to Can-
, radians and when the war is over this
will be. etilt a wealthy .emultry,, in
proportion to population one...of the
Wealthiest countries in the wOrld.„ An-
thing,to lie- remembered is that
Ate bondeeissued by the Canadian Gov-
e• rnment thi.4 war are not tax-free
newer° those of the last war period.
I1. will not be postsihre for wealthy .in -
O dividuals or corporations to •buy np,
- large UMOUlltR of lborals and thus eseape
Incoute taXation.
,
f axe tieeltrate
which did in, fact show -that 83 per
• "You See, we have to ceIcultee, the
eounti would at this
*
'distance of the object we want to hit, "'n't- • a 1.1*
moment vete .against 'a declaration of
war. But whet be failed to state and
what giVes the' lie to his study pre-
tension of wanting. only. to "claritY the
iseues" Le the result of another su.rvey
by 4ie same. Dr. Gallup. The question
was: "Which of these two things do
you think. le the more important for the
n Red 'States to -dee—to keep ..eut. of
war imrsolves, OT to help England win,
even at the risk, of getting into the
war?" l'he results .were 437 per cent. in
faver of taking the triske ,which, Linde
beret eonsiders eerfain Involve us,
Za-por cent:la-favor of imwitrjout at
alt costs. Thee's. figa4e4 Indy reveal
confusion in the public tnifil,ebut they
•
flatien
e.
This is a fight to the finish. No room fof half
measures. No room for delay. This is urgent 4,
vital.. ,00, pre.s,sing. This is WAR. •
More men, well equipped, well clothed, *ell
' fed, mean more dollars.
- Canada' looks to' you to stspply those dollars
; and to keep9on supplying them tift this war
• is won.•.
Start saving NOW: Buy war savings certifi-
cates regularly. Build up your savings account.
' Be ready to enlist your dollars in this fight for
human freedom and, decerthy.
Be glad you ican help so simply and so
effectively.
a., Sve for Victory.
•
THE ROYAL BANK OF CANADA
GODERIell BRANCH - E. HO"CKLEY, Manager
•
'
lwep up the fight for Chinese indepand then' allow for the power of at-
end- I
0 ' traction of the earth,"
,
' ,
.
"But euppose you are shooting over
Watt -r?" 0.
.'"011, that's more than eonwoUld
uneeestante—hosides, I'm not in the.
4
navy." .
enee and territorial' rights until' the
‚Nipponese are in an entirely more
ea -thimble frame of mind than they
are so fir. China now 15 eirtnally an
'Alp of Biftelnelor if she should yield,
to Japaliese blandishirents. and' come to
tering with the enemy Japan would ,be
free to pureue her. designs on Brittele
and Dutch, possibly 'United States, Deis-
s'essions in the Far East. It is greatly
to be hoped that Britain and the United
Statea willgiVe all aid in their power
to (lhina, not only for their oi-n
advantage, but to teach the Japanese a
inneleneeded lesson and to let aggres-
. •
sore know that refribution awaits them.
An Sir Norman Angell has said, "If we
had applied ten year :a ago, resolutely,
the policy of aiding the victim of ag.
`greSsion' to 41efond hinvelf, We "'aid
,*
,
• A list of ittteten highest salaries paid
- lit,flie 1tate...4 in 1,0•40 is headed by
a motion picture executive,..touts 13.
„MaYer, :Who Ivas paid the neat 6uni of
$6.97418. Three *there'll) the lint are
!vonneeted wfelt the xootiott picture
induary. The•, Vresident of a 41teel-
' manufacturing conliparty 15 8ccond, and
'othem. Ail the li.qt are three' tobacco
executive:1, and two conneeted wall; the )04,0 the heti of a %outlaw 4.,,,,ohlier
automobile indaltry. Inc:cent ;4 derived " who.le bead tvaq 474watlied with cotton
and linen, l'Are you wounded in the
head,niy blwr Mut asite(le "Nolte"
replied a faint, voice, "1 wae ehet Iii
the foot `and the bandage Wog
at the top or therealroats, Not up!,
nOt SOW bpat evaratt-,a11;"
The inquisitive old Iady WaS bending
from inver,anient;,, are ,not included lit'
or such 111e11 as John 1).
Itorkefeller and Ircnry 'Ford would be
1, Child Wheezing
ens Bronchitis
The principal eymPtrom of brew
Attie isi dr', harsh, hacking eonth
steomparded .rdth * rapid *Ifeesing
and feeling of tightneeri *Cross the
sheet. .
• note 1 s lishv ot phlegm, eepe.4,
daily in the mdrning. r.LWphlegra
Ia at,lirst of IL light oolor,' but se
,• the MIMI* progrusseI beeomes 4.74)1f.
I lowishoor , and is emotions
• streaked with 4#
' Von will And in 111,„ Wood!" lfie.
irty Pine Syrup * remedy to stin*.
late the 'weakened bronehtel organs,
• subdue the inflammation,soothe the
irritated parte, loosen the phlega
aid mutts, an& help ludas to
dislodge -AU morbid toonactilatioad
1 e 114 VD& 014 I.44.0
Quirk A211(2,_ lot
CUTS, BURNS,
STIFF, ACHING MUSCLES
SORE, TIRED FEET
••••••
—
,...
So.AlubriOes,instianOton4 con-
11:14:bordt, :Visotcgt:evtaviSsi.4111:::::t.P11741?1-Iti';
. .
,
-----* 1, $ I . loot :eXponsion.
...a. 0 d finely - tirtochined •
. $4009.:_obotillos "toll:6" rnot.ov it!). psoaftet-s
•
9olithegfrAt °it% -*ills:
adds of coriOus •
$o. leoAs° Ole plifott.ts:otitio
seyve tiowei ct
consumption.
1ou gni, 0 -Cour lin every
0
isoaioa bottie a Golden OA
Rotor ,iterOlunt quality
at leithan '910410 price.
:••
"mo