HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Goderich Signal-Star, 1941-05-22, Page 2- ,
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t •
THE GODERIOH SiGNAL-STAR
obriir Sfigtt41,41tAr
TH.P, GO1MERI0/1 SION:Art AND =Et
t• „ •
• Ptibilehed bS Ba Star PreaS, limited,
• .
Wet Street, Goderiebe Ontirie
TflVRSDAX MAX WOW 11%I..
PE..40EF WITH Winn °I
' Seine .seltedeluded 'people in ithe
Ilu4e4 ,gtatets are trying to uSe the
Otiwit•isteldent te elackett American aitl,
to Biltain- TbeY Prefess to believe
that the Gettatati. people Want,Stactle'and
thattliceSebrOught 9-Smess5.ge te II*
effect. • „,
,Of eelarse i'Gerraany . wants peace.
Hitler and -his gang aever wanted. year
• botied and 'expected to get, what
they, w.anted by deeeit and thret, by
lng aiut treachery, by deluding peOple
Who wereWilling 'tu believe that ,
promise by Oltler wae-tit be 'taken at
its face valtie. They wanted war no
, ;Sere:than the baeltstatra burglar Wants
'.& Struggle withth 1ue The'Pellee
'iilia•nottnegetiate WIthethelturglaret.ttW,,
strietatehlm and lock him up e and if he
attenattts to Use foreeteth'e poljoe use
greater loree to overpower, him.
There can be no peace with Hitler
and his gang of Marelerera and robbere.
*Wage eau be feunded only on under-
tatantlin%ieltgreeMe.lat:'.attttl„.."„,.. tilegree
-"O't '''Confideice;"-andrtheitet-meiff'b
etanfidenee in men Who make praxises
only te •gain an advantage, without
an' idea :of keeping their 'promises.
Any peace :at this, time would leave
the 'Nazis in control of Europe'and
give taem al:tether 'breathing spell and
ettPOrtnnity to rebuild andeenlarge their
war toaeltine until they *should feel
tbentseliees. strong enough to engage in
further a.ggressiens. only . thing
to.elo with Hitlerism is to Crush it et
Crash it so eompletely, that for
thousand year to eonte the lesson Will
be -remembered, ando the ixt.O. P,.7t, og,
-earth Will be able- te go about
'their lawful business without fear of
;inch tliftigOtas have been inflicted upon
the • woild ;under the 'taiga, of -.the
swastika.
ilders; but SOT the youngsters it
total loot as t,1, holiday, '0.1110,1110 as it
4-0ea on .Saturday .when 'there la' no
sehool, Next year it will Come on
Sunday and will 'ne doubt be observed
ou Monday; so cheer up kids
tit
. 'Never before 'Ilea the skilled. Werks
anauebeen s appreciated.as li� 1.4 today."
YOung fellows should Mite this to
heart. Instead of getting doW4 to
work, learning a trade or fitting them -
Selves for a serious *heti:pat/on. Of some
sort, too many of theia. have been will-
ing to drift along wiihout looking to
the future Titne. and effort spent in
training are not thrown away, as SO
many eeeni to
• it
• •
-Ieeland 12 dissolVing its uniii wit
Denmark and will become a republic.
This IS only otie of •a number of changes
that may be expected as a result of
'the, war -Italy vilthoat its African
empire;. France deprited of 'her pose
sessions inthis hemisphere and perhaps
liettentireteMpireetiniesssitebehases.
herself ; and IGermany cut up into a
number of independent counties. There
should be more home rule after the
war,. and less Imperialism of the ag-
gressive, domineering- type.
•
QtrEritt. irrORIES ABOUT
• . ,CANADA
According to Detroit papers, some
.strange stories are told on the other
side of the line about conditions iii
Canada. "Camerae are taken away'
from tourists at the -Canadian border't-
'gasoline costs a .dollar a gallon. in
Caossia"-"tdurists can't get breachand
butter. over there" -such remarks as
• IbetTeeare made, usUally, no elouht; in
.--------•ignooance,..sbut..-aMetitatest_Twitlso the
l• atentleh Oan.adiate tourist
business. ,
•
NEWSPAPER 014110,E
. have always been faScinatedtbY
newspaper office. •
Walk in the doer and step and look.
around any newspaper office, aud nnless
it heeeno of those glaring, moderntstie,
affairs yon can smell old newspapers.
There's. a heavy; ; . almost musky
smell of dampaess and inkand if you
look. %Closely • you'll ,See dust Inthe
eorners. • '
Sonia people are afraid be neWepapert
Men and wonlen in not' I like' to
watch a Man with a green shade over
his eyes leefliag through otOries that
come from the far cornere of the world.
lie does it calmly, paualog in the middle
� f an assassination, in some MMote
country to light his phae or pielt uP the
telephone and 'tell bis wife that he'll
be late for dinner,
I like •to vratelt that speeding up prtP
teas that eonies toward edition time.
Reporters begin trek11ngifi and taking
their places, and as they do the clatter-
ing increases. ,Voices begin to accomt
MOdfite themselvee to the Mereaeing
noiSe " growl's, ever lender The
man -with., the greeia yesiotalts.legiM
giviug orders, ami his ,penell starts
working faster and faster. Copy boys
begin daShing around! Aman with
worried , trown searches diligently
through well-worn reference volumes,
finds twthet he wants and then gets
back to work .again.
A swinging door opens and closes,
-41EingtedimP*-Pfeette:-..Pltteg 5Y.Aert3.'•
attiey, hanimeringt clattering iron mon•-•
sters .take words and transform: them
into printed pages. The noise is deaf-
ening, and somehow exciting is the
pages of white paper keep pouring
down from upstairs to these men who
work magic •with them.
Stand and watch! Finally the Whir-
ring pages; of newsprint come out neat-
ly folded and smelling of fresh ink,
and you see the work of thousandS in-
corporated in the daily paper.
Valkbank upstairs and see the calm
that prevails once again in the editorial
:office. The man with the greeneeyet
shadeieans back•in his chair and looks
over the paper. . New and again he nods
his head. An anontenolis slap on. the
Iettektefraise-fortatgoodepittee ofeworko
stored in niernoryts tiles for future use..
The men are chatting and talking.
The tyPewriters are -silent- It's
again,tand you smell that sinne'familiae
Hon. Malcolm MacDonald, British
High leoinnxissioner °abaft, eying a'
glimpse into., the inner doings of the
War, i reveals that . Minister
Ohurchill of Great Britain and Prime
Minister KILT of 'Canada are in daily
communication with each other, athe
British leader making' a practice of in -
'for -Ming -the '046'ierniii4ilfa
'and the other dominions as to impoit-
anti dearelOpments araLeseeking their
vieivs. In this way the Etniiire acts as
one, but With the diveiteity of outlook
which serves, to create sound judgments
and eve them effect wherever the
British 'flag files.
Detroit hotelmen and tolitist agenetee,,
it is said, are trYing tee spike such
Tumors, as they realize that "wh.t.
affects the tourist business- in Ontario
affe.cts it in Michigan, that what keeps
tourists away from Windsor keeps them
away from Detretit." One maze said
that tourist officials' in the United
States bad c.anectt.d wild rumors about
Canada with enemy agents. "It's one
if ttie easiest ways pOs.eible for anyone
over -here to harm Caliadaeif doeso't
like- the country," this ntaa observed.
He felt, hoWever; that Most of suCh
stories had .been sq&-lehed, thoukh, they
were likely to crop up from time to
time.
One seneible ticonau .at a Detroit
newsstaied who was interviewed by a
reporter regarding rumors that it was.
difficult to enter Canada pointed out
that S'Cituadians ..need. yoar 'money, eS)
I don't think they'll '1).e Tiers strict."
eA, piece of true ietormation that is
* * •
.„
Lady' Astor 'attacking the British
Government reminds us of some of the
critics in this country. She was one
of those who blinded 4hemselveSeto the.
Ctermain menace for years -years in
which Hitler _extended his power until
lite Was well-nigh invincible. And in
this eodntry some of the loudest critics
of the •Ottawa Government „are persons
or purnals which bitterly resented any
atta.ck • upon the' policy of. appease-
ment." Theis judgment havint proved
.to be profoundly wrong in the one case,
they should,* .hesitant ahout, eritieiz-
ing anybodY noWt- Or do they have.' to
make a big noise to make people forget
how utterly wrong they ere in the
Pre-war year's?
TIIIIRSIUX, MA 4loot
Corral Views on the
THE FAILURE, OF • -sentiment of losalts telsin, it is
1
r ' FASCIST EDUCATION tmponsible ,tea believe that a people In-
. Italian edueatlea for nearly twenty . heritins Oueb e. tradition woOld ellow
Yeaththas been nut On tines laid down
by itS 1ictetorst4p, at seltools and unit
verSities throug,hout the kingdont, hav-
lug to colefOrin to those lines. The
Seems people ef Italy have been
trained, .aincer, raaelsm Came. into
portver, in a *Ira of aggressive patriot-
iseneeevhat ve hbuld • describe. as
jingoism. They have been taught to
lot* forward. to an empire „won by,
conquest; laolght ,also to be blindly
loyal to.Faseism. end to hold its leader
In a reverence that isnear to idolatry.
:•And the stemteaalaing In the
sehoots has .been thorough; as- aids
to: aggresSive patriotismItalian
sehoolboolte take lot Of beating'.
Front .their pages the yotingeters of
Italy, learn •to lople upon theraielves
as a nation of .Warrinr9,.;a• eonquering
.raee," and ,as rightful inheritors Of the
might and anajeoty of BOrae, They
learn also, when, they read of the last
GreatoWar; Of the marvellous achieve,
metits,of their altItY, their navy, ;and
their aie foreeleit Wyeetlianks in the
main to Italian valor that' 5tietti7
fell to the Allies; , so the yotithfid.
ascist j Instructed. Ile as bidden to
prove himself .worthy of the heroes
of yesterday, and encouraged, almost
from babyhood, to think of himself
as a future soldier of his country:
. The whole aira Of training in
„these,,,,j4ackshi#,, „the.
fostering of military ardor,' the
strengthening of belief in Fascism and
the glorious destiny of Italy,.
being handed out to doubtful --Ones:-Is
that , Existed States money is • at a
preratuiroof ten per. cent. in Cadada.;
in other words, a visitor who brings
$10 to Canada can buy $11, worth' of
-anything With it. .
tDITQltIAL•NOTES
MeSS may have looked like a bomb
What,About That
It is not for lack of training in
fiery patriotigm and belief in their they complain, show a "complete lack
Duce, that; the soldiers of Italy have Of understanding," , The reorganisation
failed to hold their African empire.
If the. young men of Italy had Nen
what their teachers tried'. to male
them our soldiers in Africa would be
itself to sink into a mental 'enbJection
while% wOrild Mean the •pctssing et lit-
erature Tana art and the Stifling of
Intelleeeaal effort.. Only atuonSet
primitive end ',Wel:ward races tem
thoughta and 'ideas be forced Intl) ,,a
grtioSe and kept there; Ala OW Wilt
Ian is; far too intelligent "and civilized
to resign ills braille. into the keeping
Of his governmertt and think 'list
what he is told to think.
ylte Listener
IS SWEDEN'S TURN COMING?
The tNaZi. press is hurt and any
because Swedish ,Miuisters °have been
ina.king opeeelees which display a "eona-
plete leek, of unclerStanding."The
Prime Minister of Sweden- described
the 'policy of his country as "ift policy
of neutrality," and went on to SAY that.
neutrality was a' guarantee to others
that the 'territory 'and resources of
Sweden would not be used against
them. The -Defence Minister ,said,that
Sweden could siot be tenipted to:•par-
,ticipate in aogreat wartbr promises Of
treWaret. 'ss Theelfinistierstof 3ust1ee
'pointed to the, calling up of soldiers as a
proof that iSvieden was prepared t� go
to extremes to defend Sweden's inde-
Pendenee. These speeches confir.mt the
impression, given by the toneeof the
Swedish press; that Sweden is •becotning
bolder,
The success of the Nazis in 'over-
running Diirdpeslia4"hadhlitf effeetteii
the temper of Sweden TIME the Nazis
had not expected. They do" not con-
ceal their chagrin. These speeehes,
of Europe will be carried. out, and
Sweden is warned J'hat. "the fruits of
the new order can be enjoyed only by
those 'recognising ,the purposes of the
battle and yielding the necessary con -
xtra:Specials on Sale,
Stair. Or flail V
Carttet; 27 itl, 'Wide. 410.$25 yrd.:tee
AXITIMER, RUGS ROW less than. RAU repeat pyiceo.;
6 ft.
ft. x 10 ft. 6"
9 ft. icx 12 ft.
WABASSO H.S. SHEETS— a
914 x 86 Per pair
WABASSO_PILLOV SLIPS -
40 ineh, made of very best Wabasso .eircular
pillow cotton. �n, sale at, per pair .. . .
$22.00
05.00
$37.00
$2.95
OONGOLEUXE RUGS—
New patterns. Borderless Gold Seal.
21/g x 3 yds.
3 x' 3 yds. .
.3 x --31/2. ids.
3 x 4 yds:
.4. 0 4 • ‘• • $ 5.50
3 5 yds.
1.50
8.50
•NEW LINOLEU1Y1S—In 3 yds. and 4 yds'. vvide.
Acheson fg Son
,
those frsits. France is in this respect Where thou didst take thine ease, he
lighting an army ao formidable as that
tributions." France has earned tho -, -
press, •every form of propagatida, has is enjoying so agreeable that other na-
t , saaa:rifilteeer whteliz theohuarewasotf.sutioilen,l and
e
Fitehrer knows sio respite, and will
of old Ratite. It is eighteen years since right by her 'contributions to eniov
Fascism toot, over, the ^ruling of Jtialv, .
and during those yeais the school, the
in a•State of grace: Are the •fruits she
been used, to crea•te and fbeter the de- know none. . . . When his name is
Sweden may have her doubts. - Sounded, history is swallowed up, for
sired mentality th the Yettii-g-the was-
eateromentatliltve eVelplintel find _gal -
lent, and inspired bv Gine. -Of'
hero-yvoitship, And yet. at the. end of
eie,hteen Yearittef stintala teal
Nan, eighteen rears of IMeqsolini-wor-
odor tirat seems to come from stored shlp, ethe disasters of Albania and
dnejte.piapette wad tobacco smoke arid
• f
Libratf Faeciet education has failed
to leliver the
On my way home front. dvisiting a The most obvious 'reason for, its
newspaper I can never quite briugmy- failure is ehat i0o, was working on tlte
self to the familiar plettsureof watch- wrong 'material. Fortunately for 11S--
ing nature. Printed pagestand the mai and also for them-ehe Italian people
in the green eyeshade seem; to'come up are not what they have triedto im-
before me. Even the budding trees of agine themselvesa nation 'of warriors,
.springl seem to lose th'eir fascination, a nation hunsefrints for conquest -19. Let
against that place where news is taken ns not forget that they have known
and placed on,,pages for readers. liow to fight, and fight well; in their
"Somehow, I can't hell) thinking that ONV11 defence. They ,cati look baek with
if I had not been a farmer I would
have tried to be a newspaperman.
They say that a man whe once works
in an office of thitt nature can never
forget' it. 'Perhaps Jos.,; the fa -away
ettemaetieepteces that hold, a fascination
for a- Man. t-st : --
Somehow • I like to think that the
same as that of farming. -When a man regimes of warfare.
nt its energy against the hard
fascination of newspaper work is the gee
.
writes a story, he likes to pick up the ,
ellen mayt Wileit110; ......
'thoughts anti ideas transformed sci. that .gqnfla bufsines was not -a bit ovtodone.
Paper and read it, and see his ow,m.
everone_earr_exami.o., them. teiTiiiieiltih:nrot: tolineretheweotto" rin6est aftoroastneitnrh.
the spring, he waits to"see his handl=:;
When a farmer plates his fields int too meeh eeldiering in boyhoodtoo
ti Qtirrino;.un of voeng enthosia sm.
peoriatettidn. pronaiminfla, thronah yeir
9ftter ;veer. altIV 1111.11w ended by pro-
inlifference or even reaction.
Advertisement- rroeds to be used /with
disew.firyn ; it is poible lo lay it on
ton tiliek.
, T h1iv. ilowover, that the (thief°
voqq.on for the f9ilore of TP9:sois4 eau-
ontion i thiQ: thoTfnJian neenle aro
to in,-,01“ront to ho morilcled by it. as
'boned to in41:14 tliem. They
n ,urn,1rwifhn lieritate,
down throrieli the eouturiNz.
ioarmall'
o-
inir and 1;iOrntiire anli art. The irreat
fi-r^ T,arnom Mat ,helont.r.
tn. fill 11,0 wor1(1.lTowever tromr the
pride on their, „Far freedom in :the
days Of Cavo ire and ,Garibeldi. But taken upon himselfthy share of duty;
they have never, like the Germans,
felt the 'urge tosubingete and trample:
never. like _tiff. 4'Ternteee. -wortatitioed
force for itaelf. The Easclat cult of
vierOridtts-,w-ar-',Nra-s---not--110143.1Pa-443.
them if Wag an,artifidal stimulus thaf-
tions wobld desire to share them e1
.44 -1,,sogftncilWe.;-,Q1;t4a1:4-41,-R.A'
• HITIMO WORSHIP .
W,p,en he speaks to us Germans, he
takes eaeli one of us by the hand, and,
thread by thread, he disentangles our
confusion till no obsciiitities• remain. .
Sb ft is that; when the Fueltrer has
woken, etteh one of. you thinks that it
is to you that he has epoken. . . If
thou knoweStene thing of a surety, it is
thige thou canst tell everything. totthe
Fuehrer, and ,be will always ondert
stand. But there is a eecoad" thing of
Which thou shouldst b as certain; thou
canst not ln anything deceive ltm, for
he can. see into thy heart. . . Where
thou wast neglectful? the Fuehier has
Big Hydro Surplus?
HOW WINNIPEG HYDRO HELPS
THE MUNICIPALITY • •
-(Waterloo bhrohiele)
*Municipal treasurers 12 Ontarie may
find cause for envy 'if they read the
1940 nancial statement -of the City
Hydro of Winnipeg. Expenditures
totalled $3,307,172. .This left an earned
Surplus o.f $4871576,' and ...from this
surplus the Oity • Hydro contributed
$317,000 to • the general' fund • of the
city ---in addition to payment of eegular
taxes.
Jn the past three years 'Winnipeg's
financial burden has been lightened by
$8g4,000 froth similar contributions
made fioni the City Hydro's earnings.
• Ontario eitie.s and towns served by,
local Hydro commissions linked twitll
the Provincia1'. system have no record
of any comparable relief .for the tax -
Under the terms Of the Pro,
work come up green and fresh.
place of •clattering iron monsters, sup.
as the newspaper men have to trans-
form their ideas, the farmer has nature
to spread out fields of grain and crop
. . .• thet somehow seem like green
pages.'
—4.-
HAVE HEARD DUTY'S CALL o
.(Etalifax , Herald)
The Canadians who are in the ,fight-
ing lines, on land,. at sea and in the
air, are there of their own free will..
They have been neitherscoerced nor
conscripted. 'They have anteiered the
call of Duty -and they • are carrying
on with the finest of courage and devo-
tion. •Theirpay Is email; a compare-
• tive pit tence. Let. na keep these . facts
conetantle in will
our minds. They Wi
help. us more fullv and eagerly to per-
foraur own duty. Soldiers, sailors
and airmen do not go on strike; neither
are theyt"loeked out" of their jobs
Sorely,. we dare do no less at home 1-
SurelO, •ConadianS on the heinelront,
on the industrial front, 'niust eee their
own duty clearly and 'constantly, be
Atetezement Act Ilydrit proper -
they employers or . employees'.
vmneiai i •
a
,
. ties are taxable on the baCAMPBELL--WURMsis of land 1
An interesting nuptial event took
its.sesanent alope; the eliterpriSeet are I
exempt fiem bilsiness tax and taxes on 'Place at the United chureh manse,
improvements. Earned sutpluses are nensall* on 'Saturday, May 10th, when
nsed for the benefit of Hydro customers Edith Doreen, daughter of Mrand
alone. Property-bwners and* private Mts. Arvin Wurm, Heneall, became the
buainege have to pay higher taxes he- bride of Roy JGortion Campbell of St.
CAMS( Y . • ,.
U. S. Senator Pepper says L1li war The' •Ontario Municipal Assoc iation
publicly-0,mm! utilities shOuld ee taxed rook. The youna couple will reside
the first 'seven yearts will be the worst-
int vv. eelt, but he "seenaS to have_ petered
Out into a squib.
• " ti • natharinese son of Mr. and Mrs. Earl
namphell. 'Hay township. The cere-
has - hem urging fin• .isorne ' time ahat mony WSIF+ performed by Rev. R. A.
May last ton years or more. Perhaps
-
sfellmoSISISMOITLW.1,001.=,...,,r,arvroammaymmisaairsrair!
the ret just a "mopping:up" time. private V0a1/11eTelal undertakings. w,in.
13
at St.
• on the some basia as if they were Catharines
_.e., * _ .e+, e.....e..„_ .......4....onipegit
'oexample.tilittetratesethe erenn0 ...... . _tee, e....,_ ,. .e,....„_____
w
Glengarry reports 'a shortage of bagt uess a their argument,
piprand a rginoIlIp-layes, emetfgh- 'OAKVILLE COMMISSION TURNS IN •
est -ern Canatlk
twezes.*
•
tandem, it is field, hag been combing $6,000 TO THE ziCOVVI'd TREASURY', Specia,113argamt
Was a call Made at Loeltalsh? dation to etelueing the" ate o
see°n3;1.-r-Ill 1EXCUR§IONS
* *
, 6
'Eastern Canada to fin out its ;band. •0-WVIIILIily- Ora., May. I
• electricity • for •definestic use -from four -, „
, ,
. • ,
GOING DATES
coropletely Under British control. And $Niou irad been. turned over to the DAILY, MAY 17 TO 28; 1041 °
,
it.'should 'not be .given..back to' Italy town to apply on the genelnl taxes. • itETURN' LIMIT 45 DAYS
i -“. i : i 1 Mussolini ; stated 'the ;lievised rates coin- ,TICITTS, GOOD TO TRAVEL
. J. 1.41y ts ruied by oaor any oit..Plt4.4")1h
to three cents per k.w.b., the Ilydro •
.itallen • Mit Africa is° now almost
(t01111111SISSon, recent I*. aaTIOuneed that
after the war -at anY rate, SO long as it..Mordaunt, chairnaan Of the eonte
bis kind. . -
•
pare favorably with these charged for • ' ' irSt' COACHES
domestic service in similarly situated
, • town' in 'cVfstern Ontario. • - eursion tickete good ill Tourist, Parl-
The elerk-trefthuyeri /if Wentworthde Standard sleeping ears also
The $6,000 turned over to Goi rmenor 'fl
(I
• County is reported as•naving declined r.oupnrieitirri,nulti; a4ntreirt of the piri,oesly ace Ityltiaahh., on paynwnt
o repairs aty sliPeping ear aceotriodation
• Allan Stewart-whieh takes the point t depreettitioh. • ROT'TES- .---Tiekitte • good going, via Port
M' those jobee .8cottiah love of the
plus. The remainder is o' geese fgree. obas twice of parlor or
aa,: Increase of salary. name 15 being irk:lined r vor ret • 1 -*4- • - .
eti o All.t11111`., Ont.. ftlileago, Ill., 'or Senn
WIRY TAXES. ARE utuvit
ba.wbf,46. sto,. Nrarie. returning Via gaille route
4, • l
irbrial_se Herald)
The faitat are plain. the, ast war routings.
° and tithe fatty. Genorolis (tilt ional
° I (Let
111 The making pi kleoeee for Britain ig we failed to tan otirgelveo auythina wroroVIMS--will i ,l10V(d at any
tiiil1in ucft a demand on, Canadian like the amount required to pay the point in cotarm on the going or ea.
' erdillt etippties that produetion Of lee coet. • We kerit taxo3 low And borrotteal
. croal'ar miy! be reetrictedt 'rifle would beaviitt. We are not va4iiir..; tide 111,1A.
, .„„f„ itil,,yr, any /c.,,51. enpopui„e, iteke thIA Mire. We arS'tasintelleavily,,
''''''' and boirowina• ly what we feel we
' """_"'" 'A'''"A with ,,,, .. .
than he b -uanacia..3 Young cannot riiiee by a liteavy impot;e while
11^Ppefuls. . the. war is in proeoete, We are MUCh
* * elger to the right Poure mos thait we
vippP in tile i(;reat War.
[2,041 old 1Uiof ay will got
tisual hearty welcome from tht
HELL' TIM BCH CROS,
turn VII), or both, ithin final limit,
o,f 'ticket, on 0)1111(1in/in to the Von.
dnotor: aff:o cat r Wario. IIL quit
Mnrie. Mich., and the we'st, in neeor,
flews, with taelitle 'of ITnited ntAto4
linos. •
„lnt1 tartieulars fr any agent.
CanadlaW Pacific
•0-R.fin
. .
"MOW
SCOURING
0 need for hardrubbing and
scrubbing when you use a.
solution of Gillett's Pure Flake
Lyetjt cuts right,througrease,
clears clogged drains,Iceeps 'ont-
houses sanitary and odorless,:
scours pots and' pans, takes the
hard workout of heavy cleaning.
Keep a tin always hanay.
FREE 'BOOKLET The Gillett'ii Lye •
Booklet tells how this powerful cleanser
clears Clecced (traitor.. keet)s
hcsices clean and odorless by destroyint
the contents of the closet . . haw it
-
performs doiens Of tanks, Send for a
free eopy to Standard Brandt Ltd.,
Fraser Ave. and Liberty Street,
Toronto, Ont.
he has gathered all German histor
Iiiinself. He is the soul of Germany
anadeeflesheete_ ote,
-Voelkiseher Beanchter (Gerntany).
Judge-4sThe . sentence IS twenty
years'. penal servitude." Prisoner -
"But, mytliticf, I won't live that long."
Judge-oNev•er mind, just do the best
you can." -•se •
•
Athint Feet
• 'A. _warro bath, anoint with Dr. Chase's
Ointment and the 'stinging, irritation
appears. Strongly antiseptic' and median
Soothea and hmls.
Dr. Cliaieli.Oiritirterit
e•
Night
oughs
,6'
Terribly wearing op. the syitem 12
tlij,„_gmgh.* thattepomee on at _night
and prevents sleep. '
Sometirces it is the constant coegh,
cinigh that will hot be quieted.
• Sometimes it is a choked -up, stuffed
up feeltng that makes breathing
difficult. . • •
Dr. Wood's Nerway Pine Syrup is
.• the remedy -yoii need to give yon
relief, for the reasoa that this prep-
aration contains the healing virtues
of the Norway pine tree with which
is eembined wild Cherry bark, and
the seething, healing and eipeetorint
properties of other excellent balsams,
barks and herbs. "
Th. T. Milburn Co., Ltd.; imolai). On
*Never olistolte ty tit' hot siNetet. Than
oetiont of the lye itself holt* *hit 01,406
ogvery„dutr, wen and horits!b• cloigfilise.ranonvionEirmibiuNiiiostrtElitoovriccurNm)."
HIGH LI 6 HTS111191-11 R LIFE LINE'
Whenever something unusual happens in your life almost
autoniatically. you reach for your telephone to telf friends
ahout it. Graduations, engagements, weddings, piornoffons,..
birthdays, anniversaries — at all such happy times your
telephone helps spread.the good news!
You find people turning to the telephone With confidence,
because year after year it has, ,beemne more unfailing,
more dependable. Cables ,have replaced open wires! Re-
peater stations have,' supplanted earlier devices, enabling
•,
one to hear as distinctly across the ./eave te/Wie-e'
continent as across the street That ai g
is why in War tirne the telepho. ne'
plays stso vita a' part in the national
ei
W. 1101)6E4
Itionagor.
0449.'
t -
itlE est,
t„. CA 140)