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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Goderich Signal-Star, 1941-07-10, Page 2• • II TWO, itr 6libistir *ign4-tar TM) 4MWRUll AND THE Cal'aDKRICII STAR THE GODERICH SIGNAL -STAR Published bY WPM -Star Press, Isitulted, West Street, • GOderieh. Ontario 1PURSIDAY,.,11.114.Y Wth, '1( Shan never hellteVe that the Young •rami of Vana.da will not resPend 18 the Irumbets needed fer aory,r5ervice dero4nded of' theta bytheir eteantry, onte.4',.the'natiere of the service is pliaked before., them in the true light, Those who COUId aere, and " who do not answeethe call will bear througlulife' tile stamp bk that failatre. No vvealker excuse for faityre to make •the chokes no feebler reason , for neglecting to answer the call to anus has ever been given, than the excuse some give that they are ,prepared to serve only when others are compelled to serve."—Rt. Hon. Mackenzie King at Prim.* Albert, .4e7ask. a .1 .• OUR VISITORS The great strearn of Vnited States visitors that reached this town and district last week'was in pleasant eon- traet, with the Slight trickle of a year ago. Our friends .across the borde'r have learned that warthne conditions l'anada„ offer no obstacle to their having, a good thne. ambugst uS---os„ the eonteuey, may . add. a little' g'14,•ee W -their visit. At any rate, (GoderIch •is glad to see them and hopes they will continue to *come all threetigh the motoring season. • Bow .much the influx is due to the Homecoming Week insitations issued a few .weeks ago- -cannot be known de- finitely, but some 'credit should be given to that effort', and We believe it • would be advisable to repeat it next year and ,in succeeding years. People y are.invited,and a repetition of the invitation is evidence that the visit is appreciated andwill strengthen. the .desire to return for another visit.- ..It.enight7beemiat. tai47.1t. the civic authorities or the Board, of Trade go to the trouble ofar-. ranging some extra, attraction in hpnor of the,visitors. 'Canadians are sorry that on account. of eonditione imposed by the war they are unable ta visit their coneins across the border; but when, the War .cloud.s lift they will not he slew t� show their appreciation of the friendly-- interest that has been manifested by "returning the eall" and seeing whatthe roads of Miehigan air& eihio and .other neigh- boring States look like after an absence of some years. r, THE P4.,RKING PROBLEM !. • Vroileria I§ not the only Place •where the Saturday .night crowd 'presents a problem: .An Iowa 'paper publishes the 'following bit of homely p4etry, writteu by a farmer'. wife. which •hits off the situation rather neatly: • - "Um just one of those country- hieks who come frain way out in the stieks to voice my woe and. Make a plea for all the other boobs like me.. ',We W'ork like heck six dliyA a week, and when we're done we like to sneak to our home town . , to buy Our eats and meet our neigh- bors on the streets. We ca'n't t:tke off no workin' day. for if *We d(i, there's heck to pay. You folks in towndon't do that way, you do your buying every day, and,•thar.s why I don't :think"' it's right to "'Wog" the streets on farniers' night • You've got your cars parkecleon the ,street before we "hicks' set down, to eat.' Then, we must slop the hogs and feed the sow, eoax all the juice '-frOm bossy cows,. piek up the' coop up tlie -ileit? shave off the whis1-...r, (if we're men 4, dress up in overaltsand calico: since bogs have gone :0 low, (Tani:- up the fliver, give her juice, then • start --for town . . but what's the use? The streitts are. lined' far up and (1(4w11 with 'care of folks who ,live • in town, Who, seem to think (4uite a treat 4) See tbe ,.rubes' stagger Mk the Street With 101,1ter jars •and eggs and cream. But saT., 'it takes a lot Of steam,to lug Unit stuff six blocks or more: you walk until your feet a De sore, your shoulders ache. you're 4.04' 10' red. you wish that yen sere home in And- then yon' spy that yellow paint, that's put- just where tlie - autos ain't. There's two ears where the,re should'be three,,they've straddled that there mark you M.e. It' S our town, too, so please he fair. • we Want to spend our niekels there. Yott've watched us long enough to see, We 101441 a parkin"- plam, by. EDITORIAL—N6iES 11 Phil Osiferof Lazy Meadows ittY BATY J, Boyle 44GASEESS SUNDAYS" P Uncle Ned is more „or less assured, lure. that the \sax ; whistles were sounded tb indieate that better. He approves 4,)f recent' plans to help win the war, and when yon coli- tis.' war loan, quota kad been, reached, shier that he fought the 410er War out . • eb timing for the stiouner eveident from. tke' 114tntesr and the Groat War as well ., powers that lw iTnele ';'.!;ed itsLe'd ',What the noian se' was about, d' words ..',. it nati6i be a ;relief for the when told, he was so thrilled he went over to the bank and bought a thonSande dtillar. hand. "Why, didn't tbeY keen on a • • * • Great care should be taken not to leave broken,. glass where it eau, do harm. The Other day a little girl at 1'proof.° had her heel half cut off by stepping On eome glass while, bathing. Breakihg 'bottles may be great pin, but those Who think so should retlect.upon the pessible consequences if, the pieces art) left lying about., * s . Although some improvement has been. made in the oondition-of.theBluerWater highway, tourists still 'complain of it and many.* theineshun it as much as possible. Zither the Provincial De- partMenf of Highways is igeorant.-of the reseatmeut felt in this district, over the negleet of the highway, or `its epidermis is abnormally tough. • * It looks as if 'Hitler's Russian ganible may turn out to be his fatal mistake. The Soviet armies are putting up a 1... or else ..." fine 3iou re, look- , ern- them; many editors are obviousty great tight, and unless the Nazis can get. mg, Mrs. Millie ley .. iid yo`U caring for 'Filch strapping big twins." • Ned '• in complete ignoranee of them. ..more steam into theiVattaoks they may .kinw everyone that went to church and ' A' few weeks- Slav, ly* played the seal of approval on their tivtions. The point .whieli 'Virile Ned approves Is that..of*"gasless Sundays." tille Says that will Make people sit up an.d realize therV'tewItr on., In leis way of thinking, them's nothing so foolish, as getting the car out on a.sSupday morns ing, piling the family into it aud then Ineezing off around the country wast- ing gasoline— with nowhere to go *and Algitge* tO do. Siiinehow or other I cant help think, lug that Uncle Ned approves of gasless .Stindays for purely selfish reasons., ity is looking_ forvietrit and hoping for a return of the Sundays when hecould it on the froat verandah of his home in the village' and' thoroughly. enjoy * *, Current Views on the War WOO' U.S, ISOLATIONISTS DON'T West; have Ikea hearing a great Awl , TELL '2 r coneerning opprecesion and ex- pleitation of the 'deb, the 13o Lt the The deelsion of =sees Of busy' Vat; — , Volonials; the Indians. But ;such fAett3 is 'to wiNflwr aus e"n"Y" as that for over twenty Penni India any vitel intereet in belPing to do- has 'made her own tariff and usea:it feud the British Ermpire° will depend .ollten to the, great disadwattage of Britidla trade, thar in thus surrender - very largely upon their geueral view lug tariff -malting Powers Britain has es to the (diameter of that eaPire. ell)ttlikera, and has evbote took the view---whith some, have thus carrretli!, ea re o'hylouta that if AluerleaM4 as a eun.:(rmritertodietbred the charaeteristie instru- forvvard expresse0----Vhat ;German imperialism a'teD Promaaa ode-linanePrialrzalth°nIti;1 NA:ad 'not Do.i$1.1)1Y 'be 'a lia"P Melltte7 nuipire---.-sUelf faCt .: are • whielt ilea gone' on- oier most Of the ing ,or dangerouS inflatence in the variably' uhkUOW11 0 those* wil10 Make 11.1MOSt in - world than Britioh inneetialiem, no' No easily, the indictmeht of "Britlah adMinisteation maid . not obtain, for infperialiSm." IlS policye the rapidity of aetien end And_Whege the. facts are known, ais the prolonged•saerifives nevessiarY °for -among (Tetra's students oh polities, succes%s, and that - victory would rest theY are not ,so inueli ehallenged or c.'X- with the isolatiooiets. Nazi Pr0M- ,.plabied away, as disregarded.; The 'gelidly is .far' too astute to attempt old generalizations about British im- downright juetification of the German perialism are still made, as though cane -et' It concentrates upon the. ere- the 'trend of things 4whieli has. brought ation of doubt about tZe position of independence to a Cauasla, • an Aus- Grea Britain. . 'Sueli app,eals find re- trella, a New Zealand„.la • South Afri- sPouse in- Old educational influencee ea (undoing the defeat of the Boers), and animositieS that .go deep in every , to an lIreland, to an ,,Egypt (after country. (The 'wales of Preneh vi 1- eonqueet), and tentatively,. also. after htges are plastered now ' with, posters emiquest, ,to err Irak, was sentething" 'showing' the buroing of Joan of Are; having' no hietorteal. eignificanee, It alai ,the Irish in America are reminded' . ;A a eameiviale tragic fact that if there had been 'wars of .independence for "these- m-iw 'nations the , world would halve rung with the story. Because there was no war,. the world knows little of the faets. . --INorman Nigel' rein The New Re - piddle ' (New York). \-v IMPARTIALITY ISN'T. ENOUGH ...,...,. ....,, ., ,.... ., It .was always pleasant -visiting .Uncle of wrongs suffered at the hand.e of Ned on 0 Sunday. ...Seated 41 Dile of i "Britain" seven Inindred years ago. those old-fashioned rocking. chitils' and 1 I although, 'then there,. was neither a with ,his , feet' Melted in among the i Brit:till nor an England in the modern fOliag,e of the. Dutchman's -Pipet that4 meaning Of ' those '‘vvords.) While the elaniberedup aver the verandalfrailing , eighteenth.ventury pieture of Britain in order that nobody could see him in i, sue seems his stockings; - to bold the mind of this Ile Would puff away 1 generation in Arnerica, all the later atolidly on his. pipe."' The church, down i developrOhltts .;cidninating in the ISta- the-street' had services •in the mOrnins leeme ..oeswie§rie•rie4-6eeeteetesise here fey - - and he was at his. best as they walked. no real 'impress at all. ,The events' by on their way ti) worship. . "Goad morning, James.; I. and a fine day this ,have not been recorded by the press; mosr nee/simper readers are umwa re have to aeknowledge, for the first time, a defeat for their land forme:. If Britain can strike heavily 00 the' western front, the war may be termin- ated sooner than 'anyone a few months he had a word of greeting for rhera 'in o p i ' ea s 's eolumn, "Iii tie all. While church was on he would don News," contained some paragraphs to the effect that Britain had never been his glasses and 'peer near-sightedly through the pages of news. 'just. as ' knoWn to...give up anythingin tereem- scion as the ehurch doors opened, the ' Ore. k"never any Teiluable terrifory. glasses would • eoine ofr and the news- i never -any strategic harbor," and 'tha:t ago conhi reasonablyhave expected. paper- would. he .• thrown aside and he ' 00 one. eOtthi possibly Imagine het. f,riVing .ttheeegrea,,t_gold lands ,of • * * • again. Sitting beside him, one he could tRand." Now . it is matter .of A new pest', the elm leaf beetle, is.at- learn a great deal. He knew Where; ,gimpic 'statutory . feot, duly reeorded tacking elms in the New Englitud I Big Jim CitseS bought his sorrel' mare' in official do'Cuments, that Britain States a-nd kNew..,i!a;k7S•tati.:: - Tale- ... and Whely tark--flawkins' traded Fp:aye-up -'!oter ethirtreyears 'ago not I his Kok •dr.iver . and .bew Xoe, Ofil.r-aTr"i'atvnersIlip"' '01"- 'the- Rand should-. be, rake.n., 1,st at spread into . Ontario*. The elm is one of tbe g:reatest tGinni had It put oVer hum When he /miles, (Which. in, feet, of course,' the raded hors', with a ha let Of ,geTtles I British ',Government never had, shop and much more news and gossip of the ownership was vested in the miniee ornaments of inir country:41de and its" , destruction wonld he a sad- ealamity. district. — - eompapies wbose shares were held hy people Of every country of the world: Down in ei-ou.therti Witari* * o the sweet • e file church (icross rhe street had its, bought on every stattl: exchange of 'were services during the (thermion. Uncle the world) hut gave 111) all authority ehestnut trees_ whieb- formerly abundant hai e d isa ppe a red. t he re s.0 I t Ned (k rii ed the s a me enj oy me n f rpm ,0Ver 1114 tarritory in Which the mmes watching those folks' goieg to' church.. are gituated : all •eont rot of .the govere- of some mysteriims blight ; so it shOuld tell the truth, it ,WaS a pleasure to !neat of that territerY.- func-- not -be taken for granted that our trees; the fine horses and carriages pull Hon of government has been trans - are indestructible and require 130 pro- tip... and the .Winen ;folks -get out ferretl to.the Government of tb e 01, I: tect a t ten t • and the men drive the rigs on to the Afriean linion: the transfer, being *So . - stable Tillery the horsewould be put emnplete that it is a mere statement An' Eastern Ontario „iewepaper away. "•As a 1)03-I always enjoyed of feet 10 say that the British Par- ' slipping away'elown • to the big ehurch liament van no more tee:islet P. eoneern- thinks it :finds inthe dis-agreement of s.hed where, the men nsed to talk about ing the the iland 'thaneit elm Iwo juries in the Newell. trial at Tor- horses lied, crops and admire each; for those of California or" N. evadde If onto an .argument- =dust the jury other 'S buggies and whips.. Finally. the . today the Smith . African Uninn is ... -chervil lwl I would he sotinded, and they ; osingeits reseurees in .the fight ageline4 systob. Did it never hear of a bench would all 'go into chnreli. ' Vieille Ned.:-Vat'zidOm. it is- as the result of a de - of indgesdieeigreeing in their opinions? would'. • drew -se. Off to s•leete. in the chair. ,•eision of fire' ,South Afriean ..e4e4ye.e are not infallible, and if n imiumitigbird' would" dart in and Therft,i'which 11 1i rhe eonstitutional eleVer lawyer, is the aid of polive--trrtraflil the blue delphiniums :led holls- right to devidP for iiientrality (and and deteetive frces, cannot convince hoeks that baaked one .side of the ver- would have done Se if the iNkalliti- (, it 1.1(10 11 ... bine flies would drone by ,Ilertzog cpmbd•be on n liltlo guiltY,--- twemis lve men that a an • -aimlessly... and everything would be limn-, pewerfeee reaece.,..,emite --Afetio in The slime company -as the - Trish Free_ State. at present . neutral, I'M' the greater eernivenienee of the Tftwaffe in its e benibardment of ,;•-gttilty 1,ey01al 011 suspicion—Why (>114'. 11141 11 , learned lintel. ch. witted to ,g-ive a verdict • of guiii— lap,inte;e4("Iiitterse leseir en-'• 14-1e11 upon its fifth year, and all that needs' to be said is thai: the ehrtlese aye feeling better about re than the ,fa pe are. * * While 14'4. aro thirsting for rain up this way, some parts of the Proviti€ e have - lava we -11 andihe Niagara dist riet reports sevent Wainago from NeeesSive rain. Is this 'atiothee of the intawe alevernmenre failinae. or 'is the weather a Proyalielal affair? • • .• The fina 1 .round-iip in East Afriea. 1=1,121:gi:ten completed, it will now he in ordee 10 put the figures in the adding maehine and aecertairriust how many. tiroasands of Italian eoldiere have been captured by the 1Britieh fikeee einee 'Musee,olini made the big diatalte of lazoeking the chip oir Jolzu utfirs ‘1201.11(Ter., Down at %1nuier,tbrg when tli aol , witilethe--linelel,f-a---St-day short 111 aiiy .nt)00. Th4 (,(•casional 114,1.se :11141: bUi4gy 114? Iitr won't' eliek-clttek i>y 1411(1 the 01(1 limn's; which evidently Ls whAt the newspaper to see who it was' and the-ehair would• ports ,,,. mid' in itg (104.41Ileti.011 of ATTIPri- Writer wanted? ', -rook Vh)iently for '1,4.P01111 111111:11.0 ,t :111(1 can materia, I , eS,,Me, a 'ft- ,n eper' A. * *• * t 1.0 11,,j, 0 V‘ „,«>tt n o 4,1 le inovi. in4 n . . e .4 3eet14.4.11 of the position °wended by • . * * * head would stop nodding on his chest And he would come awake. low; enough 41 Brit -kb wro,i_f•onp.,,f Recruiting 1.4 Made difficult 43 t faet that 'Canadians who have been in the ft`rtnY for nearly twO 3ears :have seen no lighting yet. They ha Ve 'been On duty; to guard against a Nazi in- vasion of ihe British Isles and no doubt etre reeeiving, useful training for offensive operations. later 4,11. and it -is hardly fair to say that they have been !,itting around in England" all this Wilell the British cionmanders S4.1. .414 19 lint them in the field against 1 Nazis, we believe , there- Will N. plenty of young Canadians who %;iI1 want to go over and join them. In Ihe meantime the recruiting officers will 11:114' 1(4 explain that they are. looking forward to the futitre a•nd are tryingto get men 1100 training so that they, Will prepared fir the biz tight when it * : Here :1.1141 there over` NW Province sthall rural scheols are being closed and ,selmol..seetio1n4 aro being amaigam- ated. T111:4 •=low *Rd grafitial process, I meeting circumstances 414 they arise. is much 101441 preferred to the township .school system ,whicitea previous Pro- VI/vial Government attempted to bring 1,•• into effect over the - whole Province. ()inside of pr11ct1e111 ,problems of ; transportation and of financing the ert4reion of new and larger the township plan had the supreme tliadvautage of running contrary to the MOWS Of 141054e 10041 4•0114'ented, Uit peOPle 4),f the Svh001 sertiOns. If the enlargement of school areas is a good thing it ',via come about• in due time without the alienatifot of tiu. sympathy t,11 the people. froin the tothlie sehool system. * * BleetricS I ;News and Enpeineering"1 le a 'magazinethat believes eanadiena 'need have no inferiority eomplex .in . the matter of engiaeoring aehlevements, particularly in OKI field of wee equip- ment.' [Referring:11Y reeent etatexnent', by IbOtI. C, • Itieveeit noints out that& 'there efa in Canada the largest factory' in the world producing Machine reins.). There iki also' the largest plant in the Englisheepeakiug eottatriee producing field artillery, and this is the only plant manufaciuring field artillery from eerap iron to the finiehed' prednet. Further, oue of eanadee government areenale has the highest output of small In the evening .there wit -w always a murmur of voices up and down the street. Nos' and again a match Would hare up and a high-pitched valve Would sound mit a laugh down the Street. The ;voting men and the girls would go .. satintel-ing in• the way that tells the ligele,S's,,,,Stary (.ff love. Those thins have 'been- {-hanged. nude Ned finds that motoe ears zip 1!,V and he can't tind the same ejithusiasm, . he did when horses were in style. Dust rolls up on the' back street ... people bed more pleasure in golf than they, do in. elmreh ... and they .think he's a 10(1 (111011 old fool if he ealls out a t them'. The front velit n dahs 00 he St reef 0 re empty . . the morning filled .with the sound i,f roaring motor ears as people pile into their :111 to: to make off for the daS perha9s Just to drive some place or .;•,) and visit relatives that ten chanees to one a re a y them sel N'{•4 roa 11111)11 around. Uncle Ned 1,4 (441114' certain that. all this will 44, changed when "gasloss 'Sunda Vs.' 0001e Intl) erevt :11141111. • arited ,and tnunitione In the ,English - sneaking countries. mueitione prodee- Hon. of 'course.. is fully a portion of what this eountryis doingein providing equipment -for the fighting forces of Canada end the F.mpire. the 1ri-11 Free t4 141,11' 1'ein14014 one thot eMr. '1I(sgtee: Olio with his news on the Irisli on the Smith .kfrican situation. Despite :Mr, 'Hearst's pate- -xbrie n-zsnranee tbat -Britain never I abandoned 0 e.trategie harbor, elle Irish were altalltlohed. APd ethey Posse(s. as .knieriertn naval nue') who were stationedtherein' tbe last w•af 11:IV(' very. good reason to know. m (-nee. st t('Lrie im !Torte 1100' fusal to permit their use' bv Britain makes 11 very natiolireasier for the • •N•17.1 pf (we▪ t. •to defeat the American, poiicY of' aid for, Britain, to frit.tra , • efforts in, sending Plamcg, monition,: and wn'r quaterial. Not ,. •t -1001v1•414z4. 01/4110 facts' can be denendefl 11 1(1)11 always .10 inflhene.o at- titudes; .M,•;!-Iiietrst could 'hardly 4141 r. iTh10111 lit of the nbout I the. 1).1414, 11,1.1110ra,, [tut ilis ulettirP nf JiAln T11111 as tlIP lamiowner ,N* :1 v.1 1,u141: W11411 he 11:10,. 111 a 0 goo ti trial) 1qh firmiv 'o4 111 his ;tins titer Tlit '11:1 r 'II 1 Piet of the ex terun enn .„affert Pint mental oiettece Peril:me it eels ettite- remes 01,0111 the position 'if ° Britain ,ermanted aemenatre tore. in ("hi - en ‘,0 „,11,,i( other day to earre baiee.-S 1 with (lee 4Tti.eiee: ''tot • Brir1111 prop , t st.,p, of Irpiond... nna osiwe see. leers -wish this. elovice. "Tel iii•ita 10 r! t 1 '41:1„• rt 4')"), 1,4 elsowhere of late in the Middle • *Wasn't it Lincoln who fold the gtory about the "impartial" wife? As we re- member it, on returning home one clay and finding her troublesome hus- band "wraslin a b'ar," She divided ritg that Ourpeee' the Ituesian front ,te worth more- than the one Britain and Amellea hoped t� eetablish in -Yugeelavia 30! Gree,e0; It may be too mueb to ;Ay that Nazi sueeess ID the Vlitralate Would 'weaken the eauee of freedom, but plainly it Woirld41,rolon°e and render ;Ore diffie cult even the.Battle of the sktrantie in whfelt-t'Aulerica (dearly reeognizee a vital interest. And, shOuld 'Hitler gain controi if Russia, Americana' who *never knew it Was only thirty miles aero'ss. the Bering Strait will be wow! tiering abotit• Nazi planes over ,Alaska. ilgyeu those who -hope eve 0410 despotism destroy the other *Must hope for the weaker to stand up long i!nough to do important' damage. Thee might risk a, mild: "Go it, bear." For impartiality is not enough today. Men and natiOne ..cafinot safely let lesser dangers or 'dislikes turn them aside frOra tile 'Main issue. —Ohristitin 'Science Monitor (Boston), SHEPPARDTON `AD 1;14 UM, Ma Year Next Illat to ETORONTOw.AvERLE, ty Located, on Wide; tipadina Ave. vyelinPtja•Cenk: nitelifje8 tiFiaueth; wl I tah;as - . - "0, SIM nil R202 0.0bk" MU to Sus 'w" Four to Room to Kw Close to the University, Parliament Boilable*, staple iseefeaartlens. Th e it rem. Hospitals, Wholesale lionsIll• and the Fashionable Roue „ ShaPPitlil Olitriot• Ai Ma eowiaa, POWSIOENT sawasaamimaaam,. SilltERPARDTON, Jaly 8.—Mr, and Mrs. Lloyd ,Brindles and daughter, of Galtettisifed recently with the former's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Jack 'Brindles. Mies. Polloek and Sons visited on San - day with 'Mr. and 1.11rs. Clifford Kn- . patriek of alafelting. Mr. and Mrs; Fie& Truitt and fam- ily and, Mr, Harold 'Nixdorf of Detroit spent the, week -end with Mr. and Mre, Geo. Ilaggitt. 'Mr. and Mts. Norval Andersou and ;Terry, of Goderich, are spending e few days with 'Sire. A. Foster. . Mr. Wm. G. lIawkins celebrated his eightieth birthday on 'Sunday,.'July hth. with. a family gathering in ...MS 'cottage at Bogie's Beach, all being present 'with the exception of his daugh- ter Marie, Mrs. Whitely Dougherty of Dafoe, Sask. There were also ten grandchildren and five great -grand- , children present. her ,encouragement quite evenly -"Go , it, hqsband-eGo j bear -70o it, hits- •ban41e-1d4 it, bedr," 'Hoye lik'e many Americans' feeling toward, the Ger- tuan-Russian war 1 They applaud' a_ , blow delivered 'against either • of ' the totalitarians, and rather hope that -the two may, destroy on.e"senother. an-autderstandatile AO it odif., it a wise one? One combatant, $Wiiile disliked, appears far less likely to at- tack the VnitesieStates. 'sided... Ruse -Sin. has beeTi relativEly noneaggressiJve; the Soviet's attack me Finland and its occupation of the Baltic' States,'Bes- sarabia and part ofePoland,. 'were efflarts to prOvide. a buffer against juStstieh a' drive as that the Nazis launChed on Jitue 22. Mo Ow wkinitl. doubtless Cot:agate th er fmoves With Ameriean -seizure Of es -in Green- ' land. , - ' MuCh as we dislike Communism, it is necessary to recognize that Russia has 111 twenty .eyeet n'S shown neither the disposition -nor •the ability to as- sail • the2 free people:. Every blow etrnek b the SOviet today 'counts • in the main' struggle against ,Naziism 11t; much as a blow strirek by Britain. THE FARMER HAS A HEART . Many farmers have .gladly ,adopted art inexpensive,practical device on their mowing machines that saves uncounted pirds and their nests. A bat is so attaehed -that it flusheS the birds • whiCh. hset:e their nests on the ground. The i peratoreseelivehirdeflysup , he -raises the eutter •bat for a few feet: This 0111151110100141410111.. moveinent for coaseevation of wild -lite resoitrces, and the appreciation. of the farmer for his friends.. Sez •slneeeleo you have everything ready fOr your fishing! trip?” • ,Sez hee--"Not by ajugful!" Tojhose these 'Islands of ha.k." 1 d ad • iddle by a small area of grass: 4f son a e- as m. leaves the nest unharmed and proteceed _ ineadaws.4, it is proof_ of the • growing The- Marek Saence When men and woniea get past raiddle age their energy and activity, in- many instancit• hewn deeline, and their general vitality iipon Abe *ane. Litt1eiclmesses and ailment,s seem harder to shake off than formerly, and, here and there, evidences of a . breakdown begin to appear. Now ift the time when these who wish, „to maintain their' health and vigor,'" and retain their energy un- impaired should take a 'course of Milburnea Health and' Nerve Pills.. They brace up and invigorate t,ho eysteni, and help stall off the decrept- tude of advancing • The T. Manta Ole, lid. Toronto* 031,4 REALLY KILL One pad kill; flies all day and every day for 2 or 3 weeks. 3 pads in each packet. No sprayht, no stickiness, ° leo bad odor. Ask -riur Druggist, Urocery or General Store. f 10 CENTS PER PACICET WHY PAY MORE? ME WILSON FLY PAD Cd. Hamilton Ont,. Pimples Kill any a Ilomance Tha lives of many young ,neople are =Vie miserable by the breakinThe out of pimples on the face. The trouble is mit so mne,h physi- cal pain, but it is the mental -suffer- ing caused by the embarrassing dis- ligarement of the face which very often makes tte Sufferer ashamed to go out izL eonipany. The qttickest way to get, rid of pimplea is to improve the general herdth by a thorough eleansing of the blood a ito impurities. Burdock Blood Ditterp cleausee and purifies the blood --Get rid of year pimPlet by taking B.B. ( 11011mita U&, Tomato, Ont. BRITISII DRENCES :TOUREI? BY: PROFESSIONAL* bRITICS _ , A, party 'or -Canadian' offieare 144 touring. Brit defence areae and odomitting their pereonal reporte and gameetions upon What they have see ee Damn from alt units of the Canadhut fota-ce they travel im 411014)14 (14'1 mid .1.0001- at the end o f the daiefor (limn:AtmITt t111r pieture a ;Canadian officer exPrafne an idea lte gained on t; it. tour. 4, •A•tarlea...44av a•-• Venel, TELEPHONE RESEARCH. IIVIPROVES RECORD&C. The stlft notes •of a distant flute; the roar of the crowd, the rumble of thunder, rand terrific, crescendoes unequalled by any orchestra -e- alr'coming from • a stage unpeopled by any players whatgoevet -- were presented re- cently by tell Telephone Labora- • tories in a demonstration of its latest development in sound re - r cording — stereophbnie reproduc- tion of "enhanced" music, 1337ythis - new technique, sound can be produced with a elarity, *alga, and spatial sense hitherto un- knFoworn'exa'mple, the usual motion picture sound track cannot record the full range of a large orches- tra. In the stereophonic process -a special sound track is provided to "make a note" of the overtones -lost and reintroduce them when the record is played back. The listener hears every sound he could have heard when the or- chestra itself was playing. - c" Secondly, the sounds are picked up by three microphones placed near each section of the orchestra, and thus each group of "nstrn- Inclit,i is record de on a sound track of its own, In ieenroduction, londspeakeh are located on the stage in. the places oecupied by the original sections of the eta eheetra. The listeher hears —let no say—the drums from the left, and the flutes from the '• right, ,and the other insframeente in be- tween. The -whole Width breadth, and depth of'the orcheetra ie re- • P•rl."`ittliallyi*, before tieing played to an audience4, the cterree!ioele )'41- ord is heard:I:rale orehestra con, ductor, Seated at a control heard, he varied the 1/0sitt31e or tone of the nfueic 81; he deeires, Tii vel- * unto, can be increasedby as much ao ten times over that of the loude-t oreheetra. Piantseirni, 011 the other hand, aro tiftF merest' huele 'The recording is actually better than the original periorm- duce. liOw does' it happen that' tele- phone engineers should make im- provements in recording? As a matter of fact, the association be- itween the telephone and, the 'phonograph dates hack to ahe„ earliest days of the latter. Thomas Alva Edison invented the phone- geaph, but, it was Alexander Graham Bell, inventor of the tele- phone, who first .perfected the :talking machine for commercial purposes. . , Moreover, telephone research discovered the otthophoniceprin- ciple, whicIrreVived- the record industry from the' great slump of 1924. In the old days, the power of the voice or music alone drove the stylus by which a sound track , was engraved on the master rec- ord. %vett the tremendous voice of a Caruso, however, could not make a satisfactory reeording by this method. Then, Bell Telefirfone Laboratbriea, studying speech All its aspects with a view to ,im- proving telephone transmission, 031110 forward with the ortho- phonic,principle. By this method, no,nniz: to he recorded are first , picked up by microphones and rewerful ele •teic currents 'from. these mierrshones drive the re- cording st, 'nee, which is thus able to catch ad the delicate overtones formetly missed. Recently, the telephone en- gineers came through with AM arietliKi improvement — 'hill„ and •tlele" recording.. On the old type of phonograph record,the peedle humped from side to side he, the remove, Producing blurred and eeneeine mueicel eotee On the new tene of hill and dal, recoial, the needle slides up 'and down in from side to siiite-TIkr e,TOOVe to the gr00110 1118 te act ea weaa4ling much narrower than formerly, so that mere re'reoves can be mede on a eteedaalle.ze ; 11 Further" 1010, ell blurred oeid dragging nrenVe 'car ov:rlitit'nni:Ithqt'l(vlifelainecian titre .recerdeal is stilt further increased: e 044; V of a toids prolatrett y 11, G. Ouvih Lof ghee 'll411 Tekpbono Coloaoy.of Caa 14