HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Goderich Signal-Star, 1941-09-04, Page 2Limits vivo
THE GoDszticri SIGNADSTAR
(finto1ir4 #totuti.*tar
0034BINING rirnG'ODERICII SIGNAL AND MW GODKRIOU !CiA1,14
PnbliShed by Signal -Stop Press, Limited,
West, Street, Goderich, Ontario
TIIIIRSDP1 SEPTIRMI.,33 4th, MM.
SU,PPIOIQNS UNFOUNDED
The-Stratigoy AgesDispateit euspects
that "some ,persen or mewls was
,able to exert +considerable influenee"
to have three air school's established
In this district. "The land May have
" beep ideal," it saYs, "but surely 'no
thought. was given: to winter' weather
conditions. Tile 'R.C.A.F. elementary
teedning school, clOse to iGoderich,eand
the B.A.V. station at,port Albert are
Sittla.ted in one of the worst now
belts in the Province."
The Age -Dispatch doesn't Ituskw much
ahont winter weather condition§ in the
lake Shore distrist. As a rule the lake
shore area -in which both the Sky
'Tarbes. and Port Albert segobls are
situated -has much less snow than in-
land Points, and While we 141:fow noth-
ing specifically about the •Strathroy
district in this respect we should be
surprised to learn that it has any
"advantage, over the lake shore belt.
We do know that London„ net -far from.
Strathroy, has lower winter tempera-
tures consistently than 'those of ,Gode-
a-,rich. One drawback to the Port Albert
field .'has been tilt, condition of the
Blue Water highway between Goderigh
and -Port „Albert,but this is being
remedied.
As for the question of "influence,"
we can assure the.Strathifoy paper that
there has been nothing of. the sort it
seems to suspect. The Sky Harbor
airport was established „Were the war
largely through the efforts of J. M.
••Roberts, therCounty .Clerk of Huron,
and now, as in the last war, -connected
owithesthe anaslians-asir -force-When
• •
,
war broke out te'CountyofHuron
° offered the field to the Government_
and the offer *as accepted.• It was
through flying to -and-.1romfeSky Harbor
•that air' force officers became ac-
quainted with this lake shore district,
which for reaions known s to them-
selves -one of them -no doubt the high
and level areas available -was con-
• .
sidered eminently suitable for air field
"sites.. • As the Federal, member for
• North Huron is not a supporter of the
- 'Government it is difficult to see hliw
any :undesirable "influence"can be
suspected by anyone who knows „The
facts .we havestatedS The school near
Clinton is in another riding, but The
Age-Dispateh, admits. thats "weather
• conditions -will not -interfere to slish
extent with respect to • this schaol. as
it is not 14 flyirig.school, but a wireless
•
c'Sehool:"
. It is the Strathroy. people who ap-
• parently are trsaing to use "influence",
'to 'secure the establishing ,of a fixing
• • 4
sehool in their district. So far as bas
,been evide,nt here,' the location of the
air fields is strictly in the hoods of
'Th. A' h a m 1 ' 11
-
'
a matter of political pull. ' The Strath-
• roY people sOou 1(1 ')t -Co r leave it that
wap
EDITORIAL 'NOTES
•
1 Phil Osifer ollazy Meadows
By laarrY ttp Boyle
CORN
tr,he Person who introduced the word
to refer to something which
is not SO good,. most certainly never
lived Ou a farm.; Anyone who -knows
Federal -invasion of the Provincial tax farming has a respea for corn. It is
fielsi," and Calling. f*og resistance to'this the cone erop OA- the film that you can
"tYrannical treatment" -froin, `grotip satqY 11513 the word -to des'
becauee no other crop ap.
of ' -narrow .intlividuals at Ottawa." pears so stately in its greenness and
Atrange that it is 'from •Ine131.4Or9 ••01:' so venerable in its frost -tipped harvest
:the Government of Ontario, whleh likes day$.'
Iitaxe you ever watched aecrop, of
eto thillis of itself as Canada's most
corn greSving'.!, Waving, green tresses
-loyal" Province, that objeetion ,eomes ,,speine Up in even rows out of the
to the measures taken. at .Ottawa to gro.ual. Soon, they grow 'taller and'
provide funds necessary for the branch oat as they do. That fresh,
earthy greenness Survives the blister -
prosecution of 'the war. This sort of
Ing hist days of late July and early
thing might have been left to Aberhart August when other (Tops begin to ripen,
of Aaherta. and turn ,yellow and Walden In color.
* * By late ,August triaiing tosiels and
cobs,with, dark whiskers etreamiag'out
The unexpected announcement that
of theni have taken theirPlaces on the
Itev. A. 0. Calder is to remove shortly slender shafts with the sisreacling, fiat
to Owen Sound is reeeived with regret leaves. Have you ever taSted a delicaey
by ,rnany outside the membership o•f
St. George's ehurch.. Mr. Calder has
•taken a friendly Interest in persons
and things not directly connected with
current Views on the War I I
GETTING VII. TO BRITAIN . world's total to only elightly ovee a
A. P. Luscoralse Whyte in Strand quarter. Norway has been the salva-
e, (r,Dadon) don. Tiqd,ay some 000 to 1,000 ships
No words, Kept tee Judge, could, do and tens of' thousands of Norwegian
Dilnriae4ti:. eto ,their loravery. It ranked
with that of Vrohisher, !Hawkins and,
•
The scene is the ..h.dmiraltp00urt in
Loudon,. The time is the preeent. The
equLv itten t or nearly ,$00,000, has j the t
been awarded to the creAs* of thes•San
Demetrios The veurt hue been told
how theyrettirned. to the-scpue of the
Jervis Baybattle how they boarded
'their blazing tanker. how they risked.
,their lives again, and again to bring
the million -dollar ship and its .$250,000
11°11$ " telusithaoTut
et been
n st;orerldd.at gIT'ehalet
eargo.of oil through storm-toSsed, subs base thren,g
marine-infested waters safely to, port, ganredatitierdes,esreir baaseyhteMbeeedinferpriaanyeianug
And the Jndge ends his address with
a vital part in the war. '
htirplie"s'ot r,wdS0'1:.k"ilVng111:sd.1111.4s ebeeeL9nielereth? Behind these reservoirs standihund.
Crews like Shot' of thesSan Demetrio rterls,corfdIflleer(Lf siitaandteeriPiPeWIrhaigeroseha'oatrrsy
are the men who are winning the war 4eu
b,rning deserts, :tioross mountains arid
.for Britain and the freedom loving
gtiorges and swamps to the refineries
peoples .of the world, On them de-
Peads the vie -illy 'important job , of AanbaatiqunnaeYhuso
s stIlneare
transporting the 20,000,00 tons of ,011
'places the. pipe Is hurted in a 'six -feet
trench, dug in the dessert 'by a giant
inechanical excavator at the rate of a
mile a day. But tor long stretcheS it
lies on the surface. The same applies
to the Iran pipe and the pipe •t� the
Abadan refinery. Even if Hitler were
to take these intact -a seeming im-
Po.ssibility- the transport of oil, either
to Germany or to the nearest ,Italian
port, would present a 'very difficult
problem. •
meanwhile Britain's ehips,Issuks end
airplanesecad still rely on ample sup-
plies frontremany other parts of the
world. Whereas, even were the R.A.F.
to Imo th Ge '
sailors are in. the serviee of the Allies.
The Dutah fleet, which before the war
comprised 500,000 •tone, Is 'also being
used, and some of the fruited ,States'
2,800,000 tons has been made availaMe.
'Chief of , oil -the-
Royal .Navy. Nven in econoniicat days.
of 1934 it* supplies cost .$25,000,000.
A few yeara later they had, trebled.
Today no one'may say what the figure
is. -
Not all has been used. Mil -
better than corn on, the col?, Have .per year that the empire needs as
'you ever sen • a dish that' looked mere aninbutun to carry 'on the struggle.
aPPetiaing one a- table , than the one Which Means that hundreds of tankers
piled high Withosteathing, eken-toothed ilinst be kept at sea,, that every day,
ears of Corn? Haire you ever watelied, 'seven ,clayS a• week, at least ‘eight must'
his parochial disties• that has won him t he melting butter slide and spread safely unload 'at some British or.over..
,ttii pre,ienee wiii, ,e_•
_see....„. „se_ the `Salt and pepper along ,with it . . . . seas port.
But the -story of the heroism, of the
ss down the rows of kernels, and wash
general esteem, and hie kindly voice
Lit.' .t.ut"e". j."-, and then as YoUranolith watekd at•the Salt Demetrio crew is• not the only
Calder, teo, has , made_ her impress appetizisig sight, have you had *that .oPisede in ' the annals of the world's
upon' ,the community • as one devoted supreme pleasure -of letting Your teeth 1,000' oil tankers, totalling some 12.,
to things woith, while and during the cruneli into the milky goodness. of the 000,000 tons, of which nearly half are
corn? now sailing for Britain, and the ,Allies.
eomparatively short period of her resi- Have you ever walked thrlongh Many of them have not as yet been
a,
deuce in Godereiseli she has done 'as"gretit , corn patch in mid-August when a written. ma" never 'be known, as Ger
deal of good ‘Aork in various assoeia- Paralyzing sun made everything bake many wages relentless war on them.
tiens. •The cordial good :wishes, of the ...19 h. . . are always Even in peace time -• the -world's
Nazi: war machine' would stilt need
e_target, ,, e
' t Its heat', There
whispers of breeze in a corn patch even 40,000 tankermee lead a dangerous, `
'people of Goderich will follow -Mr. and oa a hot day. Rustling leaves Seem monotonous, life, 'plying from ,dismal millions of tons- more eVery year than
l.
Mrs. ,Oalder and their interesting, fam- to rasp lightly as they touch, 'Above oil settlements, far from the .brigbt it has been able to obtain
ily through he ,years to come.
yOU the tassels patch the faiptest trace. lights, end feeiaining anly a day or - • .
. ,
't
of a breeze. The spreading cornstalks two in port every fortnight or three THE SHEATHED DAGGER AT
'
protect Mother Earth from the sun and weeks. •. AMERICAS HEART
. ,,,.,
Auother iustitution that may come •
ss.... in return shm
e sees to give out a m
s The danger frofire, especially dee- lar. 0. Oliveg, in New York Times
into more general aPpreciation it stored, cool moisture that she had been ing -loading ad nunloading, I% always Magazine (condensed)
maitoring is restricted by a -scarcity saving.f
of gasoline i the public'library. Some sun-powe
lyz
old-fashioned paed in
eopfe have never gatopt A cor
of the way of reading for recreation; place to
but fa the • up-arad-confing generdlio. n to be d
we are afraid that books are 'becoming used to
more and more unfamiliar, We read'
somewhere not,long ago of a group et
people who foetid, to their surprise,.
that a- great:sltlr-Of pleasure emild be,
derived froth the reading of • DR:kens'
works; .and 'there are -other authors
with whose volumes maoy pleasant
hours ean be spent. How would •ttdo
-
for the Public Library Board to Put on
iL drive to get more people reading,* would 1.
thus staying at horhe, thus saving vagrant
gasoline, thushelping to win the war -2-
hot, blue sky 'and dream of the -days tingiiishers as well, anti .asbestos stilts
when we. would* be doing great things so that mezubers of the 'crew can walk
habit? -
to say- nothing of cultii;ating good losing
e in far-off strange
•
Tratip30Air, ..Cii1V1141413113R '41ra1941
is far from the best, but it can earry
Vight tank*. wilthout difficulty. It
crOmeS the desert, elm1 the desert of
Mauritania is euppoeed to be one of the
hottest iu the world;sirml one of the
kiriest, lit is a dangerous 'rdad where
one naight easily lose the way or be
attacked, by natives. Tiie town is vul-
nerable also in point ef supply, since
Dakar's feofistuffs come largely by sea,
-bananas from :Guinea, potatoe.9 and-
vanned peas from Morocco, meat_from
South .41neriea•
- 'With thes-Nazis haetalled the're,thcy
are in a position to raid two of 13ri,
tain's main supply \lines -the route to
Isontion from Buenos Aires. and the
one from. Cape Town. !Stukise IsaWed
ie could could attack 'convoys as they do
In the Mediterranean from Sieily. The
Gerillane'esprincipal.,problera would be
to Maintain a eupply of fuel.
Por the British, posseseion of Dakar
would Provide a good, harbor, the only
one 'between 'Gibraltar, and Bathurst
Ln British, Gambia. And Britain reeds
Dakar for defense even more than Ger-
many needs it for attack.
WHY SLICED BREAD CANNOT BE
SOLD
- The order which ended the sale of
sliced' bread in Canada on A.usatst llth
applied to bread in any form inducting
bread, rolls and any ether •rolls made
from unsweetened dough, according to
a statement issued by the Wartime
Prices and Trade Board. 'Cessation of
the sale of sliced bread Was ordered as
a means. of conserving labor and
electrical power and of aveiding the
additional cost of double wrapping of
sliced loaves. Ilse purchase of ltcin
machinery is not only a -faetor in
determining the 'retail p•rice of bread,
but, as a considerable' portion Of this
slieing equipment is manufactured in
the United 'States, replacement mould
niean the eXpenditure of 'foreign ex-
change now needed for . the •purchase
of munitions of war.
• HOW 'SABOTAGE . REGAN .
• • Walt Reporter):
A long time • now have many „of us
sbeen speculating about the derivation
, - ,
or just such a time when the Present, and builders ,have equipped The. two things , alway-e remof that over-worked word of today
embered .. triTtehhe tottriftSovis'er ic....is ,simi!ly
rs hold the. rain -powers par- ships With ' eVery pOissitale fire-lightials by -anv •"one who has been • to Dakar ';1811ibt°Itttig'1::'D' sins a moukes
the skies. - sa 'device. The steampipe srelein els are the vultures and the lizards.- The . s , ,
wreirell !lite the machinery. Not
n .patch is such. li cenvenient leiltillirto a special steamTaiiser and a-,
„y„' c, ,
hide in when theee',. work blsteam en of steaeau be directed on a vultures- are -forever wheeling over-
literallOf Oursebut producipg the - e- -s -. .
one., fin-ve often as novs ,,, _blaze insany*part-ef. the .stilp. Ww
ater head, aking' tor oalTion, epd t mresultHere's the storyA
slip out frobehind the .barn would:not extinguis_h an oil fire, mere- endless thousands of little lizardworker an a- Dutch .windmill is ones, red, '
when we
was ozi
Dodging
its ehoke
stone-pll
the .corn
ebject b
the kite
sons no
wa ving
south 'e
down in
knew 'that hoeing' the turnipS•1 ly ,,,,spread it. • But steam will- do •the yellow and blue, overrun the town',
• climbhig walls * and trees, , darting
„the list of afternoon -Worki` trick. _•
day supposedete have beceme peeved
at something his boss did -lie did not
through the streets. " • do. 'The hot-headed. Hollander ranked
along the old rail fence IN'itb.. '' Hea--cY, !flame -smothering '' 'carbon-
dioide gas is stored in pressure -tanks off one of hisswootlen shoes and tossed
sherry bit -ghee-, eround the big Tialso, little, colenial ,outpest ° on the
e in the meadoar and then into from which pipes lead- to every oil, ivestwarci-jiitting hump of Africa is it 'espitOpully ' into: the . works. And
. patch, always keeping, soine tenk, to pump rbems, •eng,ine room, today a major strategic objective. It everyone knows that a wooden shoe
paint and oil :locitivS-,--storeroorns and is the control point for reight.territories
etween' tit and: the view from is,, a sabot, !Hence todsey's favorite-,
the forepeak. Tide pis cap be flooded of • the l`rencli*,•Weat African • Eiupire, sahatage. :Doubtless the • Nazi over -
hen. svindoesr Crouching low '
Corn stalks, we niade,for the and, used in. thne, will quench even a 1,500,000 square lords wil1, have reason, tO remeusber
t to leave a tell-tale trail of into -any edinpartment where, fire starts. an area of nearly
gasoline blaze'..by robbing it of air. Re- 111)iles. It is a seaPort base from 'which- that their subject FIollanders invented
nd of the patch.. 'Cushioned an occupying force coilld seriously en- the bueiness. •
danger South, Atla.ntie'shiPping routes, . .
the dust between the rowa we niote. controls enable „offieers to gas a , _
ie and watch the occasional tire within seconds of its outbreak. I Particularly the main British, convoy , It Does Happen
cloud go slithering eeross.,se., * Some ships carry "foam" are .exs. routes, from .Cape Town and Buenos The visitor paid his green fee,. fixed
Aires. • Amid, since. it is only 1,802 miles pp a match, .aild Went out to the first
less than ten hours' flying time-=. gee. Taking his Stance, he gave a wild
t t
- A writer in Toronto Saturday NighL
discussing the , selection of a _leader
for the Conservative party,. says that
"neither Britain or 'Canada has ever
prOduZ'tsti a greatpolitiea.1 leader who
was not "alje) a brilliant speaker" -with
the "greet" in Reties. wonder if
he forgot i'0.11Ter Mowat. Mr. ( after-
wards Sir 'Oliver) Mowat was "great"
enough to be Premier of Pile Provint
of Ontario continuously for twenty-
four year.s. Ile eertainly ‘'-vas net a
piaVeS
turnips.
•He -w a
and She
teen in
pig -tails
her shim
when • t
.
would. li
1111 early
trace of
right into a blase and blirnket it with
. . . where they •didn't grow , • •,
,
• . • •1 Those. deViCes are efficient, •as the
5 a gangling.lod of seventeen.Letery of the U.S. tanker KeskOakee' will
was a ''whiSonee las.i-i of six -I Prove.
a g,ingtham ,dress with trailing With 14.600.berrels of , oil *aboard,
of hair streaming down over the Kekoskee was fuelling. a navy shiis 111g Was unanimous. But anti-British
lders at that fileat corn, roast in Seatale harbor when an explosion feeling . beeitine bitter when itlie ri- 1- Staetiog 'fires With care - ia • a fine
he knowledge. came that he on the dock showered her decks with Lish neva- bombarded the Fr'ere6'h •fleet theoro- but in JAW a few montleerou'l 1
ke 'to take her home. - It . was burning oil. The ship's forward decks4 at' Sinn), and this feellug wes aecentse find• out yon -need coal.
fall es -ening. and there was a were stein blazing mast nigh. Istelated by the torpedoing of the Prepeh
battleship Richelieu and.b.s. the attempt
chilliness in the air. He saw catose of _her; proximitv to a nearby Koine husbands ;utter, in .silen0e and
--
from ...Natal, Brazil, it welsh!! be the
logical take -off for any attack on. South
Atnerrea,
On the day of Fr nee's surrender, the, game 'this course is at 'least two
every one in -Dakar wanted to go .on inches slower than the one ukuillY
fighting Germany; the pro -British feels 'play sorble-Great Northern Goat.
swing, and missed Sone•pletely. .
"By .J.over he said to his opponent.
a• gm* thing- I found but early in
her sill%
him to w
her his
home an
one goo
the •in 0
liner and other big vt,ssels her Crew , of •De •Gairlle's Free ! litenen forces • others for the lack. of Jt.
1 to take the eity. •
-er and it tostok ,an hour fen. s.
•ork up enough courage to offer could not abandon her.
As.a town, Dakar, ss 11.• population
(1
Wanted to •run, WIlle great courage they •ran the] *
11. exchange the' sepoek for heel- Kekoskee-eanit of harbor 19 -to- Pnget
neither beautiful nor roman
1.
4'4,000, IS just another tropical
11 coat . . . . buts she slipped ,Sound,' trailing flame end smoke, fear- 1 °utlx)st,
ck around- her shouldc,rs and 1 ing ,that her-shull swould_bizisos -aels„! t•le; it• is important only as a venter
e if it hild been a stalk, wrap. nio/pent end loose a. (1S,luge of fuel for of adminikration and tritde.
'flick are °nisi. t wa seasons In'„Dakar,
.•rs Were ,la ughle g and titlking the flanies. But the steam. 41pparattig;
S. mintier and Winter. Smaller lastS-
king at the fire. ureter the had gone irfto aetiongorrils 1141;rashofit 610A:111101gs
Iran Junt, to Octohei-, and the heat.ii;
nil prodding the ,corn with and carbon7dioxide
smiled 11
brilliant speaker, if " means :The
•!1fluent's of "eloquen• Mowat Wa,a 0, ana
he.sitant• speaker; but. when he got 111.A kettle .11
forks to ,See if it W4..re (10110.lIt
_wanted to slip around an (r it lies Ple'i
through .ber Pl1ws. The Kekoskee ,ana .steurpriimficts.rT'lltindrettielse edst,;(1,11;ymiia(sIts7
most of her cargo -was savt;(1..
ou.l. ,q11,e,y 'were. well formed; !
his Speeches read well: NS'e her .• . .-but the tongues of 111 tlii-.
youths ! some Kinds of heavy oil are fa iris climate where malaria 110
that many people- perhaps the more i".are • barbeil for boys Who lirSt S1.1 With ; a match thrown into a •full tank ' to intensify the beat. •
intelligent •ones. - mistrust (fluency. girls.. He, saw the crowd pairing. off.' -of certain oils Will go mit. But cleaii- I Sometiines tornad4s occur,.
. Hi, ho! 'IV to schmil they, go'._ ,
* * . • . I ! sea turns from dark blue to alinost
- *Some people, 'like. to be earried. along ! and finally eshee the eorn seas finished ing. Mit. •the 40 -foot -deep tank,- that ."-- . , - - - . ., - . .
, A 1
. 'Ir tlfAtil 'said . the Ruesians .wouldn't on, a' 'flood of wordsa others like the i And the.....stories_ told :end the (•rowd 1 has b( 411 carrying gaseline
In a Y. be " 1 .11).;1'.‘1-41,11.1y(1:111:esicrell'ini.isd ;01 rstsrli%1114O,Nrvilf.Hil•on171st(hsel •
, starting breakiag up . . . he saw her! datigerens as -playing' trieks Witb a one -1
. ,titlet?.. ' • • ' '' • • "Fpeaker who sometinies-liesitates for a- ',,gitritig ---T • 1. • sies I ksk-tssu -1 Le 0 ' -ST- cl *. .1- • .. 1 V li
. - s a one an( pit •111g.,1 le ,Sniiii,.
. o i •... Ki ii • , .. 04 • an .eis • 01 0 0011 1 higli Wlird and- drenehing 1alit.7When s-
e , ._ sishois,e of. -words•-if .tesems to ltuircate i eloseraround her shoulders as the fire' bloW11 altnost in two beeall;:a' a z.-himey ; the- _storm is over, hundreds of young ;
....,.......... ..,..;,*) *
•. *
. , -• I - 1. (bronze NI nal hes, most of thenecompletely naked, -.
that he e!eans .what,_ he eses It is a , died down to' 'glowing- -embers. ' Ile, 'silo' dropped a steel toot
' swarm into, the flooded s.treets, laugh -
'The Vit goyernment is rein•ganiz-'• ,,••-•
! slipped iiround in the fringe of Oark- 1 us<41 to prevent sparks). into an kenoty I.-
..•___ .
tine thing,•sto be able to talk fltsently
'-•
ing. •and singing. to bathe in the pools. s •
,Ing the 'French Meteheni fleet, -- 13ut
: and. eloquently; but there is the ex- ! se„
I neSS 011tSide the .",liglit .from the tire, 1. tank or because if cleaner wore nob;
, 1 and .streanis that! Win he gone .in
..• Where van it •go? . stamniered and .stuttered, but she ; nulled hoots. •
4piother.hour....,
. ,. .* • * . ample of the sOVerefgn of whom the 1' got -up "and \rallied: itsva3. With 111111-. !
•
1P;ingerous too is the Job 41f 'loading! •
P`TIFIED'r
ALL THE TIME
She felt utikeirahlo-
dratir-jow vit4lity
-lower spts. She
hadn't thought of her
kidneys, until a friend
suggested Dodd's DI.
ney Pills; At once she
took .Dedd's. The
°washed one' feeling
was soon replaced by
dear headed energy r
Headaches, backache, lassitude and (ghee
signs. of faulty kidneys disappeared. ifiz
Dc.iild's Kidney Pills
• •
ilinuos .
When you're gliding down the high-
way
In your. math or limousine,
And you see by road and byway,
Standing straight and strong, and
A fellow dressed in khaki, or in the
air force blue,
Just remember that he's wearing
'that uniform for y,ois.
Don't argue 'bout the danger,
If you Stop and give a lift,s•
He will pay for that ride, sir,
With his !blood and youth -a gift
That you, friend driver, might lig-
preeiate some day„ ,
If these boys weren't here in train-
_ ing-aad tlie Nazis had their way.
Oh, the uniform he's; -wearing
Is the proof that he's no shirker. -
'Put your brake on, ons Mr._ Driver, and
opesteithnips f3elonuo;vdkon.00r• .w you're worn.
SAndo,fiblottihaegr, f °tit.) n ."Start Swearing -
He's ,no• ordinary thumb-jerker!
•
• „Rebuke
Photogrepher: -,LWatch and see the
birdie." •
• Modere child: "Pay attention to your
exposure or you'll ruin the -plate."-
'Atlanta Two •Bells. ;
From an airplane one would see
, The popular song with the Nazi army ii"gl" 'ran' -I The 'rest .os the erowd laughed 'and , but it is done with ilAtonishing i!
f •Niiii things . . . . that Were unheard.' six!'e(1: I)akar as a sprawling town of low
The la rgest til nka.rs • with .1
-Here lies our sovereign 'lord. the King,' '
is .11(it : .
Whose- word no man Folios on---
• , 11e tried for years to remeniber what effpileity of 1 5,000 tons or sa, ean be t_limsses creeping back fro/n the harbor
lo the .
higher. hied and fraying
"I 1:s a long. way to Moscow, He never said a foolish Ailing ,
nwon ...mippeti, ik.hind ,a-.!!shsece whites:slits/ars at tile fate of 1.0110 toils ;in hour, , 155 a .Y
he said as they WiiiIced along and the, filled by pumps at 11 modern port in 15 i 011'
at the efig0 Of the bush into a
we'll never_ get there _ :* - And neve.r did a wise one." '' ' ' • I 11011(14 .(111)t colle(•tion 4)f native huts..
c ail ! . . bat all fliat lte reinVinl>ered , • -Gasoline is 10)1(1441 at half tx10(1)tti
31ost 01' the whites live on the plateau
12 the :gasoline restrictions become ' isbetuenee, , of rourse, ls more -thitn 1 sv'as„finit she sque07/041 his land as lieI speed,' fond requires givat
coaar.,(isine. at ! where tieqe are broad. straight. streets
more ' Imperative . sl)nte people who 1
• s mere glibness; but even eloquence must took °lila sznoek ao 14 1'4 lter at 1114..1 se long. 11go a tanker was
! gte aliii(l',:.;111(1. " 1 hope you'll be t tilta-1' CuracaoN
. ,S-ukul
a, mon were tatio
sned ,
i with (01112,)) 111(14. housetro
s, pi(l'al
...,,he ,;iii)ortlimite; to , 1( 1(11) • in the,
haven't Wen 011 a rallway train • nem ,
,,,.. I dance in .1 lie school -house next We(1-1 at the taliks,..eonstantly taking samplLsy 1:, ig)::1'11.:11ilisi.viti1141,(:11,g.w!liii.17 11e147.171.1.)0rWiltki.is i('(-}iad '
"years.,will be riding` behind a Io (1)110 ! .Ji
Alittlginetit i4 a -110111-‹..eapitlyilit les ' . 1
k,
• 1A,s(lay,"
(c•
Dakar, where side "hy N i de ' Al lui 11 cheiiii'
1 of the-4nel to eta' that it came up 1.
live. And perhapes-red NI•iohlii.I1 Will , 110.50 y,011 4e-er wiilked through corn ' I4(111(111111, filld 011001:U1g the 14. 5( 111 '
i ,, .,..... 1. _ DON'T BE "GYPPED • , ,
4 -
(pi, a earnebaelc. .
, . . -,. .• .
oti the shocks. of eorn, amr the pump -
•t ublile "'when fri-t y moonlight ,glearns,,, each tallti. Someone slipped up a nd 1 ,4vv.:',10111)((11.;:ns- 1111:11,sis:(;shaotf sIt:t1)1r:vt(i,g1n.ii.e;•;)4:th.sriy(ilieiti:Itint3.di
allowed. one tank to overflow. A stream
* • * , , I
In the vowing year( Canada .i): asked The sale of Vietory bonds, ;ieroso the kins are wiiiting to la, taken in? Dogs" of gasoline ran ever the deck into the sg104.(:,:insio,1,11 pv44:1r110(.1..,1 1,7111valr)V11:::;41.si),:1:11(4.::,;(;11,:ttirst::
hay 11erOSS 'tile 111.1(1 dial efirtleeloudse z:img,iguisdfi..as:71.- motorboat wa 8 Pulling,
1 sspark from the motor-, sion Offices% shopas tiiiiibleoloWn homes, 1.
. ( Fa riper's Ad voca te 1 1
to supply Great Britain with -000,000,-.1 counlry.side is "'reminiscent of What 1
of mist lie like frozeiLipools'iirmind the,
swamps and the 'lowland. The stub- hoe t fired Ups floating. gasolinlis • dii , a erill mingled along the iiarrow alleys.'
-000_pounds of_leicon, 30,ott0,000 dozen i happ-ened (luring the- first world war, 1 ble erturehes as ! y'Otir boots brush' flash the flames ("limbed The ship's. French and ,Seandifraviati exporteps,
(14 11 here in oil seeds, palm 1111ts"4111141
eggs, 1'25019,000 1)01111(15 tif -t,faseseeleasuf -refill-101,z 914(02 SY1114.0(!eurred after ii,git hist' it . a nd the ' mist • feels cool ! side. raced over the deck toward the t
!Ilea, too is the big market,
f1111,(%).1.(risifie(1)1,111:11,id 14;1(11'4', 11 Is)s44:11(1,1r141,1s.1.0.) lives from outlying itt rills
4.l1 ((114) 11 4.1 or eanned milk, besides, 1,4,,are svag-,esranlighed,and the enii1-inehir 4-rgitnist Pokr--ehneks.m/141 niii3;es,vour-_114itell of a 113,1,111,11.ihninta_1:111.
overalls 's•tiff".'an(f.; (lampA li
. alreltreTe're41--tons------
of Moonlight 'pours i tlowo :Ind! whelO ehip vsuilid- - liaise ----sesise-Tvg -het-smile. _to. sql1 a t in the (lust and offer ,-
tinyTleinons, inaifiroP's-,:-papayitsi•-tropical-i-
• 11111)14. '1 had not a deekliand ranin1(171: tltifite; fruits. s
fights twinkle across the fields.
A 11111and vegetables of all .kinds.,11ost.'
cowbell clanks soberly ie.( a herd . rnovei4 1 "P on 111(1(' 011011 sight -hole
of' The Vendors are womens ileeesed in '
impatiently iathen the, dogs
Men's volees emne, iier0SS.-thehight ini,
get 4.ips...,er. ;'110 tell. ,
The tatte..r Charlie Watson, beidings bright. (..."1"8'
. ,
who . shout 41-11(1 argue 1
(122 in tee (11.1111(4, , , and you know 51414 110i :40 lucky. 'Withent' warning, ar°
snatches -.and a lantern 111(•kers away Iligh-test gae:01,Inti tit San F‘rancieeo,
creWmen from ships ,anehored 1111.
with their elastomers, many of whom!
that- a comr'has been 11ee(1. .A .'s•hot: sbo ' 4101(101'lly exploded, killing
injuring twelve men aboard. A • second
„na. tile harbor,
1,ife for Europeans is uniformly 111111,1
f
rings out. sharp anti clear in the swamp;
inuri
aerog4 st i e'Sploslon hulled, - fifty
i • .•
myaid_bt; with no stage plays and only the,
as ft party of hunters stumble .
dregs of 111011011 picturee. The'ias is !
isi lifde . . . 'Or .S0111e (A 11.0r wild creature , resetuTA haeli, 011t0 OM:DIRT and. turned
have had ,theio doge. teneing, i tile ship into a !miss of roaring flame. 1)114-' 4'0" 11'14t1uraut'' the "Marie'
- fact that that other nreh-tr„aitor.! thus rellueed by milljons of. dollars,r
, •
disappointment should la, os.er the ii„,,. ' 1
°--1 on the priiiii164, of fabulous profits and;
t le savings 4)f rural people woks •,', de
1 that they
Meer on the erystat f I
oe etieket• symplions; h4 strident atoll aft":!`rliteb4.:illies were earried to So 1015 gm
.:1.1 Air , . . es.; is i oir a sPa of oil." sSo id Lord 'Curzon' '44'.'"'4'
firet Weild War, Even more 1,;(1111:ri7,1"liszl,s,•,1)1141iore•an8r ilm.)11111111111(1).:,Inftr.len7N1v18ypnalpeatrs,
W011111 11 ' rooks; excellent food,'
orcheS,tra had been r4)hearsing!
the Pa ris Dakar, Along. the eoest
- Dorian, WaS 1101, there and t hat the ! •
t a te1 hard, bui i'n too many
Earnings! for rani! pi,ople, coine slow 1,1111e
(,,,1g -e.,4 thavi throughout' the i..1.110111er for their fall; trite will 1111-1 in the pre.sen 1 war
there is good fishing chiefly for' "Altus- 1
Him', il th4,10 are still living to betray' .
their country. , naVe gsme with the strolee of •a I
.. It has lia10,0011 to eity people also --I
-x.n. finale eoneert. A rabbit "let)perdty.l, 1-Vith boMbeis drinkfrig oil at it• -gallon
lopps" across the field a 11< '141 of you to tee map am/ tanks a t ma ny g.aliees„ solints." whiels dir reputed to 14 '.4
vvheat and fialit and 110114'y and ;other 1 ght busy. The 11 111,., .,4 114
time! ation should he told that story in all
toOdstuffs, 11 looks like a• inisy
; its trassie details. fer 011e 0011 100 Very
for V;111:1(11.1":4 farmers,
W4 -J1 from the ex.ja•rlence of ()tilers':1
•• * • • ! and if youth will take Ned they maY 1
Assassination ts not tile British assay 15. and disappointments
of getting., rid of traitors; lint there W.P1(` 1114! 14)1 of rural- 1'e°11le 111
years when ,,overnment bond svere
wimld have been no grief am-ongi, •smneehing. neo.".,, • • " I
Britons if Laval_ and neat had elle- Youitg people should Fe told how!
eumbed to the shots fired 1)S "Pr i,(41(.11 gold -brit -lc artists eXchangell 510 11)14
paper for these gilt-edged i•se;111:itiOS'.
" 1 11 1' • It. t1
, Itritain's tanker losses lia Ye not 11;;;./%1
tioesoe,s, lawyers, ministeee teachere i and then stops suddenly to• look back 1
0 e
It is -.11)11 110(1 that the eonntrics college Drgfes,mrs and stri.et eleaner.41' and 4 -"Pe if You kire' a mg 4' to Mg; 1 ti10-halanee is Afili .heavily Of Dakar's. 42,000 sehebiesets, only
the-Iffiliaen 14illie:ta,ittiorn. Is what,: nit, 1.1
'Mt that 41430,4 110t 111'11"‹. ' fr4"1()111'
it `ITIN legi; The whispers of nissit. in her favor. lifer sourees of nimut
enga'sed ill the' present war" 'Contain ° * • •••• • •
e , i tragie nor does it 0X4.11:44. the • illral i 4 tho esen sseetie , , , her thig tilde, .1:iiited States alone she eould get. 'f
breezreethist stir up Make- the leaves are atinosf illitnital)1V, From tile nittinthil. ar4" hativo's.
natives aro the Jolofs, •tall, dark anti in -
The. original
eighty per eent.eof tile 1-44,111144 4451. f 114 for the loss' ineurred 11T the vai• n.
or that „ , ( soldiers, „Vi ith them
its dietitesnishing 1 Ttite, the opportonities for legalized '
, and the eorn hes been (41 as. ,
is) a little difficulty'
4 1 robbery aro not 'as groat a.--; ,f hey :were,
betvieen the! last war, -commonly dear-
pr.mont ono!, ,xt vv:..ts notlores,a,..ii., arto 1.us;n1liyllen most lie.ilation there . e -Milidland Free Press) • •
0
A 1 „
• Yearev War, leaving' the title World, and, maw or 'no law,: rural peopfe in4q a towi. feiiiilif6 (116? the tottiSits WilIp"buZ ttiheidi7;111,0es 1-orovide nritaiii: with
War for the pre struggle.
Itali9 that there would be another 'eau eireintavenet:ui A million 41ollara and • effissently operated thgei that Syria4 has eapitulaitede iltvi;e11(1.111!) .t 4rove'rito'r Veneral who has oxtensiVe
cOnfliet. It *V Wen sirggestied that!
the 1591 war 1Adeserthed, as; the l'our 1.9 most. alluring to the financial shariolerage room.
that time comes it Would he well to oil; 1, Midland has been ono of the lousiest:"
exPea to receive tempting Offers. 3E-V,tion" pasq 1( 1)57 euplodeil the fat that{
farm, /Ind v111ago or a single eohfityi'ioutsiikess without the lie1p of a beV-,,
worth of Victotw bondo lopatecr on inutial4(" to (1.0.; Pr nfi t bic° (e°101 n1r1•0eirlierelL. 1 8,(4011(141)ADilet)e t!".11,siodirelel,
. that I.! Meyer mind'
(12
, with a metallie rasp . , . for it's etill 1s7a.eze. 1.ciearn einixtil;leuein?ee:wf. Tho.! 4.3,11-1.11s.e11.11.(1%,,*1701::scp',0fOrtim: 1114:11;
1.41(11and a dry town and its hi
The ohl eheetnut that ifi eotintry' prOdnees 1 70,000,(100) tons a „•tiovy itre mingled file smaller, liandsom-
DZ((ill.liugasttonI:ilak:9...‘enanr.
Last Wilde. under Britisl eontr'(il , PakIr
1111111y 111 111f011S 111010, and itassia has
worry. 'Only problem Is hall port
:%1114?Oo'cif.vi,?(1.);ii
ruled by I knell law', With
adiie lottoorestisilona 1
lotion. It is a real evorld War. There!, elitint to get.rieli rplitec.
'Hon. P. It M---f--(411Pittml 10,6 ":1 110,- its seisms el' womi(3inf7 caterpri.vg but year. The
, ''f,e oider People who invested tonrk;t eviitrog in the Provinee this. iwtviwn 1914 and 1939 Britisit. .1,11: Dakar, and .L11 told, they rule .over
number, a seeifes9. tankor tonitasso had olumped. front au 13,000,000 pe'mon5.
ot hsrnioni Pratf4ting againgt whoFe ship lia,; neS'4:1' k'onie Ma. " sPeadily ou the inereaw. emirlence of artY Per cent. of the - 1111 r()a" fv°91 St• T'auis
tiwi There is legislation • designed to iireveni • 1 3IIi.)1LAND'S 10414511..IP •
a9 the. World War, and •
powers but receives his instrueOotei
from the Keeretary of 11tate for Col-
onies. Vichy keeps in tom+ with!
Dakar -;e-able antl 'The sub-!
sidiary governors of outlying torPitories,
take oiders.,,from the,Governor •GetieraI1
"RoVNAR *SAVING'S
fr(Itt---• CERTIFICATES
Machinery
• Repaired'
On short notice. Every job
receives my porsonal
, attention.. .
Geo. W. Stokes
Maphinist
East St. Phone 206J
SPECIAL'BARGAIN -
* EXCUR8IONS
TO ALL,STATIONS
Western CanAda
11 GOING DATES
DALIN SEPTEMBER 12 io 26, fft41.
RETURN LIMIT: 15 days.
TICKETS GOOD TO .TRAVEL
IN COACIIES
Excursion tickets good in Tourist,
Parlor • 'and Standard • sleepihg 'cars
also:available on' paynient of slightly
higher passage fares; . plus price of
parlor or sleeping car..ar:commodation:
itorTEs --Tirkets g•00(1 ,going'viil, Port
A.rthur, Ont., ,Chicago, 111., dr Sit•ult
Ste. Ma rie, _retuffiing, sami, route
and line , only. Generous optional
' routings. '
ST(iPOVEILS will he allowed. at
1111,y li01111. (A)/milli-__ou_thp_pill •
1'1't11 1)4 trip, or' 1144111, within fi
limit ticlipt, on • applic.ation
emolin.tor ; also 111 Chieugo. „ Ili.,
:••"41.1111 Ste. AI11 110, Mi( -11.. :11111 West;
.sin::,40o1r1(1111(1.11.00 With 111riffi3 of United
3SrL'S
1..'n.,.11;tsii;,,,,:,rlieititirs from nny Agent'''. •
1-
.bibi
Wtitiii.sta. o. Taloglo feo.to
"DoTo
tbis v;ceatest•otoll.VtiouGt
6 VciatoteeGiii,
$eoCatttacil • tole
otion. See SiltoZ 1°
13e.'oact testea. ma& INeolono a
be„,,,,,z .0,00. see A-003.-
0301.1.ta. oveda .
.10..ope
Get 1.0o at the re
or earn. wit)
00 see ever/ton-
et gill° 'Ili
r°34 0
itt4111111111111 000 0 401
I F FLW0100 A HUGHES ',1,0111AL IMAP.11/.0,