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The Goderich Signal-Star, 1941-09-25, Page 2PM* TWO. Qiji 'r*ic1 i&nat-$'taz' 0.,„„. Tay Goommen SlIgNAIA,AND Wilf3 (WODERIOH 15144.0 ,THE GOD PubliShe4 1)1' Si .gall -Stir Pres so '141nite4, West SMeet, Goderich, Ontii6t, `101IITRS11)1 SEPT15fAIMIL intb, 1641- TIELP WOUND There is fla, group of wouten la our Who'•eVer since-the'7,Deginning. ,or ‘-• the war htive 'rteen-sacritieing their tinie, their pleasur, and the opportun- ities of life generally, In Red Crws .work. The Y libor weRls. •after week, month after month, for nothing but the 'consciousness of duty done, of pateiotic service' readered, a help edvete to • ;suffering men, women and ebildren. • This grOne) month after month Ls compozed of praCtically the same women -not that there is4ranY' "elcase, ,etorpora.tion'44 about in, but becauee their Itee.rtS are in the work and the demand wealth Air Training, Plan had reached maturitY- • . hired .1,man to whisth., in a waytbat . , - . - . - -,...• dustrtal, although, still wealtilY 's after- na its shirts, brightly embroidered round -the t te ac s ooD 'west e(1.torlhe -colored narrow . The women ltave° PftdOserot Lazy Meadows BY HAM 41,110,00 WIIISWUNG seetrld. to come hy de- grees. While still in our tender years we need to Marvel at theeabilitY a a, 1 SIGNALSrAit tr•,5 * TWIT a traffic policewn tarrying a ,6word Current Views op Ike11, ar . =DA' a revoZver. 1)14, a man at't•Tal ari . . araltall to,direct the traille and enable 15tYrWEEN THE DNIEPER AND etaae"htizatterwalloend-ahloucsoo..q.wsti4ek apakratsilti_on, i tin,II:adskt;');t:ret7,3'6.11h4e4 ''':,tt--"por'I.I'mftluaidta THE.DON'' ItondOn who do that work with a wave Very roughly, and itt its own meancl-.' its nelgbibe'rs- In Ole td's'FnQ eiepie we,er workadav elothe'3 usual! °E the hail(/' 1[41!e 414 I- dr431111 witerin- wny the 34ivep IC:defier marks' I should one &lay see a 'policeman with the' frontler between the third of thell ne•aoftase:(„lir itahethale:Quattl•itdryitiethrgss:rilrl 4wigtlithh /tilirtmaro3se(gag.elIcettintheertelia*thinsvasitt, ' lUktaine that Ls 'mainly agricultur?1 'wear •the Untrainian dreas, mainly more like a soldier' titan a Policeman, 3m1 the tvrotlairds that is mainly lia-' wbite.'n' The 'men' have the RusSian a soldier who is p4rpetually alert for r wabeyond words. On StmAay adtlres given. othedea,4, • t anee'ne ne,w0"ett`ni : e t - cornfields and' its beetlields. To the neck 'and down the frOnt, with allY tlte tI Son, deptitty Chief of thai e r staff, fh ore- block' a cedar. whIttIe and The Russians have lost Krivoi Rogi: red or, white Iterelaief$ rettnd their Otttiaa hy‘.3:ir Viee-5iiarShal-Or0:-4o1.01-1( ktet, 1lib a knife and,' east - a the rivis the havarnr er-and--s1-te -re s. the sickle; entwaned1-1.: sashibt*lider'ed; whistle b the hour 'Grandmother the Iron -ore ,field wialch wee- important I tha one e '-eta a -polieeman to trenthie. There was a tin hat on his head, and Ile *Ore a strict and e.evere uniform. not .the 'loosely:worn- 'uniform our policemen eeneralTy wear ; and his lean, serious Wee had a tenser casts general ex.pansio of the plan 3 • „ o xpt aid a large inepease in the ntrilirtevr t-'0 be. sItting ru the rocker juet in- eeen ha Tsarist times. 'They ha've lost,J; • It• Is against this region-seebeal in a training schools in Canada and in t d Istria). strength only to the kitehen door . . . awl it seems manganese osits all the shipbu Id." titat cow possess. Our bobbies, who will, I 'hype, forgive, me for using that friendly, ()We'''. yesterday when we •recall how ing yards at 'fCheT n and Nikolaiev.1 regtoh-that the GermanS are driving affectionate • name are ease-geing) -We are approaehing the Point spectacles from her •andlay tem But the 'Germans' chief n'aln sO far bast railway lines from Moseow and from renowned all over the world. Honeet , h itrIllnerS are genI hairh the output of existing F,-.L'hoo.ts. she would unhook her blaCii•arleamed The alle•sSa fachfe es are imperilled at the moment. Fortunately the'direct of all-out production of pilots, oh- down la her la.p with the knitting. beam Ti thi. black earth helt, ATipped the Ural indUstrial base •have been in.- .-,--.ervers and gunners Asset forth in Then with hands folded,. . eyes1 of its harvest or.burned by the retreat - war supplies ought to arrive by thes Peveor:le aren't' afraid of our police, but bone people in other countries are ereased in Weent years and additional the original agmement, (said Mr. Closed, iintl ,her head sort of tilted back nun Russians, yet still ode of, the most ' for exaofvorapidie. of th.-eirs: The Gestapo)! i•means. The DnlePer is wide enough - Johnson). You eata count on the she would ,r4acte-aud rock and hum' bountiful territorlea in the world. • The story 140407;4a few moments l• ago, of the poncematrwho Jost his life bee'Canse he went out unarined to catch Intrglaes„ is proof of something in- finitely- important; of a respeet: for , law that is slippcseed to be felt here, even by those who break the law., The I Policeman probably thought, if he thought of his trnucheon .at all, thet It was uttnece.ssary siace our burglars would be sure to have sufficient rever- training operations in Canada, the that he whistle at a family gathering, of the coat,. three-quarters of the alum- profoundly unportant, and will go so enee for the law to submit to it when fingers of one hand .the sehools softly in time with the ,whistling. New; when.they4etand upon the high, to mike e terman pauee, u Is Grandfather , never Was nfiich to l clayey western bank. and when they likely to be only a pause, not more, which that plan provided for and which rentain to be opened. e whistle. With his lips puekered. up, look, across the river -100 to 200 yards 0 -The Times '(Londota). -Yet today are very nearly ., over, toothless gums, his' whistling was wide and elow-movingeethe Germans: --- THE POLICEMAN'S TRUNplEON .as busy on cenerruetlan Of nen° igenerally limited to rustling' of the: gaze at greater riches, industrial prize/ airfields atul new sehools as we 'Maggy ends of hie rablistache.-- His, which they desire more than grain, If We haVe all seen strange and dis- a!) DAY), Si lcot Machinery Repaired • 0 aliOrt nOtiCe. EVOVy job reeeiVes persOnal, •`", • . atten,tion. • Geo. W. -Stokes Iffachiniat East .st, Pitone 2063 wore won, w.e swung 4.intti, peak performance was also hainpered by a they could net the reSt Of the Ukraine, turbing sights lately, many of theta „ ter their serviees neyer ceases They, . constructiou. under the ' original lack of (knowledge of tunes . . . al:e, they would.get the faetotieS and the!, terrible. and it may be, therefore, that wielt otheri wrmid.come to their assist - plan, 4.,, • ' - • , . though., he vonsIdered thetehis rendition mines which last year prqueed :pliree- I the sight I am about to describe will Largely beeauee of .the Mother e of , the -,..ylowers a Edinifurgh" • was, fifths of all thenSoyiet pig iron, three seem to you trivial end not worth anen-not that they ha.ve any Idea of , ?e , slacketaing in their efforts, but (because' land's eomplete satisfaction with' tratY masterlY. If semedile suggested' fifths of all the iron ore, three-Ofthg talking about. ' Yet I believe it to be the need is becoming greater and more bands are required to turn out the ti called for by reen. articles that are u y P. those who are in direet touoli Neith the suffering and in many cases home - from the present oties will the less and helpless people overseas. training plan soon be vastly en- . - The-Tted Cross .ro,oms....are .in., the lanced. We have:fon/id 6an in - library building, mi Montreal Thus it was truly en experi-1 and B ereaSe our student population at h. nut. hi. tl . •Il• • g b' d their own efforts) have been develop-, own eouattY, Ireland, but never la and Great Britain, I said, is that enterprise is being very largely ex- grandmother would. always warn him nearly half the rolled metal. efar as to say that fundamentally it is they were- caught at their crime. At tended. All across vanada sehools not to, but he would push her aside, They would have --they swell their , the subject of ,the war. This is the the bottom of our social life there Ls a it t to s r o 1 PO will arise on still unbroken ground. w a P aFf - e P . I lc es are,a y a e oug ter g • pro un *e n taw, ee sop - '3Not only in the matter of new and proee-ed with a , great deal of: own America. at their own' backdoor. i eently, in the West Country, I saw.- an found that, althoug•h, the pqlieeman schools, but in that of production' gusto 'to perform . . . much to the I No one. can have travelled in reeeet 1 armelcl 6oliceman. He had a reyoIver amusement of the guests. years to this land without -Marvelling' straPraed to his side. The point is and vast multitudes of us •have never hes a truncheon, he seldom shows it Uncle Josiah tused to work at our at its riches -or without being struck that, although 1 have lived in. England seeen it. , Let me repeat to you what I once place in the summer months: --11e," by the determination with which the, for ov-er fatty years, I had never even neyer whistled 'except when he was Russian's (finst with American. German an armed policeman in thee country said to an A.mirican friend iti Chicago. ,, . , , rit sh help, and -more lately by; before. I have often seen one in.m.V ,One of the differences between America street; and- new workers would -be the) service flying trainiug schools angry. where pilots reeetve thetradvanced4 gladly end cordially welcomed iato the, fine sisterhOocl of the Red Cross. classes or diminishing the excel- hated. I still remember hearing laim i itself is the/ainons power station said' I •know, of course, that all Police- eleiels and liftle • respeef for law, lenee of the training. • whistling . . . dai•kly and lierCelY • • . to be the most powerful electric sta-, men possess truncheons (or batone), whereas Britons have enormous re-' LONG Llyz RUSSIA ! We are steadily increitsing the and then the hammer would slip Arid ' tion in the world, which for V•ears cap- and that they sometimes have to u.se spect for law,' and no respect for of - instruction without overcrewdine er-slats and canvas was one job he in g and•exploiting it. On the Dnieper;;;Great Britain. IAmericans have great respect for of - he would inject words that• certainly 1 tured the Russian imagination its the, them, but although I have travelled up did not belong to any musical score. symbol of their drive for-industrieliz-. and down the length of this island They were words . . . both forceful: ation. When the dam was o,pened there many times. r have uever s•een a and novel. At least, hen as a boy Ie were condert$ and' firework:s • in -all- policeman's - truncheon, in _Eneland, ted -them at sehool my teacher Parts, of the--Vnion.--- . etland-or--Wales. 11-avou--? If -references na theureare=offeeenve.---We, decided to apply censorship' With 'a I This inmediate Dnieper region was you haVe, now Often have ,you :seen one? call them by opprobrious twines, 'and ' series of hard, ad resounding whacks I planning mainly for/the future. More Not very often, 'I fane3n A Year or ; accuse them of inefficiency !add -idle -I 't ,. . b I . . 1 for many years. ....S.I ndred miles far- manila the district, where I live lost i 'to civil servants, but I'm not sure that . pe se. es. 1 es• a . t 41, ' L.., . Alin t Millie had a soft, shrill whistle • ther eaet there be %the far, ;treater .hreetife ,A hale trying to enrest twb 1 -,the reaeon why we are, comparatitely h terrible exben.e. bur what. ef .the 4 , AetlearWaS ve17-apt at nines to get -out of' and • far older -established -industrial burglars. He had left his trun'cheon at , speaking, free from corruption in our We -have not been, a•mblig those to - - Alternative -a Hitler ridden werld? control. She would start out while area, based tenon the D0/11311E:coalfields! home; and had no ,WeaPen of anY I Public affairs is -that we habitually • The heroic resistance of Russian with a present objeetiVe-of twenty- . a ,gooti_nrans_p„e:ca.:tve . . he orieinal hedule." • student population of thee schools arnaies to the Nazie ievaelon is causing five'Pec cent. above the total set The additions to the number of -opinions of Sovietism. ..ae someime 'has schools in this district are (tins seen tliit said in'effect, there mast be some - part of a Dominion -wide plan. thing -in the Rtiiati system to beget ' A • such devotiou. c a s. ere es no man in this cotititry so poor that he will do rever- ence to a civil servant. We. are in- clined to be unjust to Our. on the palm§ of my, hand With a leather Power was at hand han could. be, used OA° before the w.ar rone out, a„p.9.,iletee neee. ne are unjust in our attitude .etrap: whom everything f Russian was anathema. . We dti not, like communism (either with or without a capital ; •but if Russia wanted to experiment With it it was their.butziness, not Purs. As - between Ruia and Germany there coadbe but one choice. Russia was not eseekieg to extend' the reign terror over Europe and beyond; Germany was and is. It is alwayes to be reMembered that the Russian people Were for centteries, Young men .have weie,hed the issue Peeling Potatoes' in the morning . . . ' which etill provide well over half of all kind, not even a Stiek, eyith which to. treat our officials roughly, 8afe ere net t °• adhere to the ke for e little while I ... .'' Russia's coal. One Of the towns in, defend himself, and in .the struggle oppreesively governed because we re -4 and are pffering their lives.' 1'4 a" ,and then allowyit t4; go away off at , ales, area, Kramatorsk,,i,s entirely new, which followed his meeting with the, sPect the law Inc& than we re.speet 4 consideration of . money worthy to he t . -4 random. Grandmotherwho was with several thousand inhabitants and burglar- ' he was unirdered. -I eoulil , the'. e who, Waved beside that fact'? „, musWal by nature,. would put up with; with.whan is Claimed to 1* the largest draw' a national moral ft•om that I But as I looked at that Armed -police --:1 . Idminister it W , I it for so long and then say, •-Millie, metallurgical eeeipment in he worl& etory, but I think I'll leave you to : man I felt myeelf Perturbed. Is het EDITORIAL -NOTES for heaven's sake stop that infernal: But industry ha .s bende-ritW it,,--for_yeterselves-. S'on.ltlitetet.6-7.--feernain; there --on4y for: the ---du rd 11011 riteket." would Pout for an veloped in..the older towns, swollen in . myeeff With' saying that it is unwise ' of the. war, or is „he a pernaanent filen • hour •or two . . ,but by the end. of size. to try to arrestarmed and, desperateure• e • e H •te f . . . e ere or eNer et 'f ii•t1 • The Sanford Sage has been reading the dae J Slie---Welalfl start up again: ' I • Kharkov, for some years the capital, Men when you yourself are .unarmed, has his way. -' You see now why I t wspaper dispetole.stating that , People • enea- to he conceited over eof the Ukraine, has now oyer 800,004) and even yonr truneheon i•l• hanging; think this is iniportant to ye, all. I f , SOLDIERS thWir ; Whistling. It was considered a ' • .„ .. decters have at last isolated ,the in. 1, family inhabitants; it looks 'like an,v other 1 on a nail at home. You. shouldh peepeire i e . I (Teta to the • to have a good great industrial eentre, res and drab, Yourself adequately. more t, an ate- we are •fiohtinr, for Anythina-, st • • • • ! RUB OUT TIRED ACHIS e ate t fighting to have the revolve&removed fluenza germ. -Well, if they've whistler in, it. They were in constant I and ft produees large.inimbers of loco- inately, for encounters wit! wickea . . om aolicen's; e7 -It has : • time 'because we don't desiie restrie- dons in peace time: II,PW appalled We should feet if We. wecete, told „that for the re'st of our Itves1Ve should have to tarry identity cards; that as long as-, we lived 'We should have to put up with censorship of our letters; that all our $mooldveiemr:uotrs tliveouploteebe; riehsattrl‘cvteedeobuidtint ithuag.te.rngo°;"0'hnleYreWaeu)r bfauntcyotteor°kehusildreu,, , /hut mast have a permit to 'visit elsewhere; aud their children, would know whale , awopuoilrepturoahtl'gistriumnoclaweohrtowsaaitaileilitte; tatahadt every man, woman and child among - us would fon ever have to lead a life that was interfered with, morning, noon :did night, by some 'official. There are times, indeed, when we are tempted to believe that that will be our fate anyhow; -but it will be oar fate beyond a shadow of .a deubt if we lose the -war.- Government by interference or government by consent: ehose are the alternetives. That's what The fact thanyon and I have seldom or never beenli,e1•, the. war is -about. Remeinber this. ' not so much' a. tribute. to the charecter of our kindiy th'o'ngth' tfillevc areeon ' , as et is a tribute to oneselves. If we were not the law -respecting. people we are. the poll& would have to use their' truncheens, and perhaps their re- velvers as well. In* the, :torte. • run, a nation is governed in the -way it is fit to be governed. A servile people wut 4e p, ; _free , will t• . If we calla& -live wiTlrourtliat arittedee-'-n- live at all: not what free,men call Eve, polieemen, we shall, pot be ante Co • . -St. Jelin Erylpe in The "Listener 'I Letidon . • HEY! SANSE WW1'S YOUR' MINAWS •Czar'•• the victims of a cruele Cornered• the .peske thine," h,.% on•t demand at garden -parties and Various,' motives -ands,•tractors.. together with „men- • Ly oppressive government.not 1 taken us --------------------------------- - long timo ea under the , s, , to be e;cpecte'd 'than,- halving at *long lest got the upper hand. they would -forget the leseone of brutality . and eruelty they had learned from- their masters, and would at onee ieatigurate they step on it • and fn end to itnesocial tunetiens. The hardest imisfore, heavy industrial and electric equip-, But let me get baek to the point cier3. In which e man ean move ahout tune that a whistler would 4ve-would /tient of all kinds. Vorckslillovgrad Is that. 'although I have lived in. Great the country anniolested and unhindei,, the,„•Sttee wants to , know; • . . ••• be to he Plaeed on an "unsheltered plat -4! another grea.04locomotive•builThing e'en- Britain for niore than forts :years, I ered. We submit to restrietions in war I . . dee._ • - - _ term . at a garden -Party on a 'Windy ( tre, and Kiev, also of 800,000 inhabit- haVe never eeen a polleema n s . . . ottawii annonnees that 1,5-16 bugs of night... ,Phe notes wolald cOnee out diire, ants,„has itsfaCtories fir machine -tools trunclieon. I don't knaw anyone 'win) t'anadian mail which left the Domie- torted . . -. and the lieteneps would' ion for the, Old •Country in the ltLt. -11,ear it :ha' raueh the Saine Way as, fhey :' •heavy.equipment.r KamenskOYe has,ifs•, ,profoundly significant and iinportanC• (Russian; mOSI, urgent need), and other has. And that. I suggeet to you. -is' a , o 11,ntran.'llthilitle lir0.adeast now en' wagon-Intildina- works. Tokmak it S $ociiiit ticel fact, How -inziny PPOPie were lost -thne.i2rb ' an era et freedom. justice and is-, week Or -Aug -list tt pi d ..• for reception. 1 , plants for turbines and other electric are the -re in the continent of 'Europe; -time- So it von- letters :lull • F. • . . . ee• . ... ' ence. The in an enem.Y at - ,• . - . • , ather .„Eas a Vtl:qstItT of no mean: eqnipment. Gorlov'ka it-.- machine -tool, whiyerin say that they h;ave lived al- - child brought up paroels niiiild that ,wet -k 4181 not reach ability. He prided 'hinmeelt on twine.; faetory. Just outside the Ukrainian most the whole of their lives in- one. atimtsplaere Of. eruelty is not likely I to•becoine an exeinplar of -gentleness' the persons fin. whom they were in- !,alibl:' iit,t timesto(;•(,louble-whistle- . . . frontier are Rostov. with its loeomotive country without :Aping arearmed pollee- ; and kindness. If there .s; t you will know they are at, the --:Alt. tit; r the- ' f' f''' me 1, eould never ' wetks and 'its 'great aericultural ma- man?, _1 doubt if there are any. That ' he airier- r teniteil• , tt, out when 1.1 was. when the, chifiery -factork; .and Staling -rad. with WhY I Say that the sight of the.traffic:' • enee of fenturies between Ittissia. and. - farth• ms 1-.- eeing well 'and eveTy tiling its tractor and automobile works. 4 e011.„ ;Itinding at an English country ,,,, ; itiletttit of the 440ean., • I • I seemed 'i. -lit wi h 1 W ',4„ , r s t tl e orld ,he -would The towns seem erowded together on Crossroads with a gun at his slate. siir- say. Britain, it' iS-. to le!, borne in mind i . ' "al - • whistle by the flour , ., . . •, a .Pleasante a small map., but the traV:et-tller-ean go t,Prtiseii and eV(ill Si" Wked me• that the 'pectple • of Britain love for i- tfeneral eleetiitos• have leen called • ein t -e t .. n ea sort of IN histle. He eentiiries ' • 1.1.•:°nown selfe.royetaimenr. lo two of the Provinces -,British Col-. ..ve-• ..-, eehl • . ' • ! for the greater part ef -.each day. even didn't go vet.X • well is **the slitilig /tan, a nei, ,elr with a v ("TY in eastern 'Ukraine. without ",i.•ecite, ane flowers that were bbtoming so clueless- ` Ma and •S•• va **44•44tia III ontari) " while the Russiae people •,,are taking: , • powerful whis•tle. The only drawback of. them. Ile finds him --elf in eonntry - Is and casually in the hedges. Ile- • , tim . . _ o . t .. , , 1 •• . rhe • first a Nee were step, in the ad. 5'11.Iille'r 1Ieliinitil •ziY,• ilivre will' he no wa•;,,,that he had to. have something to, yery, • elm n ar to the sw4istern ve ea in ; • seemed out of place in that landscape. : ministration of a vast „area 1.vith an:, elet•tien . this yea r. • -unless s„ine -.wet- his; whistle before he eould really , 21 frit plain with rich earth and witlii, °•••,",- 1 1°4'hed. 1 ret•a114•4 1133; N"rIri*"•' j 1st: - tr his time. A.fter four or emergem•y, develops,- If this ,means " • pleasant villages. spacious and green some years age, when. in' Vienna. 1 saW 'imrnense hut seattered 'Peptila t ion made r 1 • five drinks of powerful -apple eider • ,• , - - •-•, of race,: with a! there 'Will he another session fortified -by a secret pr4).,egs which he - up 4tf a ;.rreat variety 4 sni' pet'eentage .,f WP1e111eatk1Preeent'L:egi-latoretis -4 sould.gint/led tdosely he Wonla go to tewn'• . • 7 , be held to till' the 5".1(::Nteles, of which' in earnest. IIis only trouble 11 i- that ; . pe..qt.4.-. . • . • . ,/. 1,,,,, appareki ,,,,,„. nee. nie ,..yit,e.t,,ni ' there are quite la number. In par-•,. he .qh1.1ft kn''Vv-when:' to '•••":•44P 'taking, „ t -1.51e eider, with the result tltat liis• L'.; wire , t ietila r r. he. ., non - represt*•ii i a t ion oi •wini -i•teiten they made ...Cries , „ . , IN histling beeaine, very wavery. Fin - t fermany in_iii:18. even what was looked ; II,litoliltillee Ls the enbils("t er (Titiei'lla ally it eame telly in snatehes :Is he tried .. . , • • • . • • upon as A rallotts and utterly •tinjiistifi- ,.. a•• i Ar ele ee•-ngt. +1 )v • 4 4) i n " in vainto plit.ker up intile proper way , , ,. ,t • • . . s 44 ' tit (?.Pt it going -smo)thly , ., . but his*: e at=1.a...k upon Fin awl were p:irts 4 _ , ,d_,...1,41,,,,,,,,ply.,1,101 pla ti for 1.,e defence 4,f 1 It is :tern-kr:1-.11 that Mr. I)rew, it 111 Ps :".4111(1 shape. never go . int45 the right ‘ : .• 4 4111 trio t':onservative i)arty, ,„ .. • Vire were always rattier sler...:1 1/011 1 ti t.hPir 44110 15 against IIitler. „whelp i '''''t 1 la' ) nee , 'twice-44444nel -better 1 han 'many; a'Plife, to the Federal leadership 4if Whistling. Mainly. it was done en the' ilrittr.,„Idlit. <,, ...__ .0 _,1,, _____ 1 he Pa r1.3,... III:* puttlio :14141ress4•s 41eal ' W'VC- r" 'e110441 • "MY Wild Irish Rose" .4feeenee to _he the (qtl. tune . , . and ,r,,,,,.„.„ art1, , ,„ntrint.„, int ;11:x.idi„,/ /1,,.4.ht„ I usually with, Ferleral. rather than . . , we had •treirlde keepiez it'from-4J-ettinz and they i4 111141 -have lrhe4,-..1110itti* - tP-rovin4.th 1.„' 11111t"C iil 141-eL he 11-:1-••' mixerlitip wIf th-An4other tithe'that ather ' , ., ,.. '4 And._ tile "...prayers or fret-dttm-loving;` never' ''en'all''d '141 1 44' iv li.41114" .in tbe , nsed., to whistle. Day -dreaming in -, *' !- ' • ' tit • '''"11'.4. *Le ' 1,e;tislatore. _..It 1,z WP '1 1114 414..n.t 'W4 141:1 1 ' (11(401 one day t.g.4. were , trying to' ..„,„„-••.'..--t•••••--- • '' ,,.. Mfrs(' our lips. to. get the full item -tit of pee_pl,•• el,,,,rywn'ert! a: . 4- .•,. - 4 1 MT -11•1 11 ,4>11 i, 14Y •reat-fe- from tea- - • , is-etile .)f . cA'illy'n 11.4'311.4 ,,, 111`1"a ' ; " : ' " ' :' ; the rininber. when by sortie stranoe mist ! -'1171111:11ik;li 41 , , . ' ° , pr41,4'11 1 PIP41 1.1011 'N'114.11 .a eonventien is ehance ,a shrill 'Mast • Was emitted. '. ..,• caned to name the party ehief. and Teneher if 401(4.11 Up in; . '11' to the front of the .41141411 -to: surprise and 111.4; ... • i•a • • PRACTICAL getCONODTICS!' t•I'('r+' •w:11 be a stro'ng anoVertent to vited its put on a eenvert for the pupils. ; -.. -...,,,...... ' .11;1111e :Mr. I )re ss " a s • t he 044use rv a ; i ve, For dais afterwards WO han.to fight % 1 .... 16 I ..: Tle• wie•ker serene, aJte hIfiter pay, 1 leader .or , naea. e . , i 11.a --.r? 1,4...!0..r.: who persi.sted,in sav.ing..' f (41 i at every recess .41n11 roton-bour to beat • itit.r.kiSeS .fily ........t ..f ....birts or what- a ' • . 4t• 0 P."74.1 ti it ir. r-it.P ' ..1". '''''' ,rk 111,474 "II : the 4 Ileyerle,y q 11,4.1X rPr, '''" 1'.1 11 :1 (1 414 1•Pt•-" -• e ,. 1 matiofact:nror PTV's 11p the pi7,41, 144! an nhler. "f' the* Bi•it'kli 11'4'1'4' Of v.131. '. „ • ,,,.. ... . A 1,TOTED E,DTICATIONIST it .11V4..L 1 ha' 111;"1"4":1 .4" ;n walv,L., i vv.i.ilzer.,.- in 4 rivol,...:, iut,: been iu,"forouto, and a . ' Tho. '1 14414 tit ettit r for. • , ......„ ,ehea inqnue t r :4..4 dem .1 1:f1 . ,,ar al ce• :Ai. o 14.11Wilni rY P11141.e.±4 . . ,,,,,, _ ; .1,, , . . ,,, , . . (fro, John Elliott, rf.,,.., tom)on. Ont.) ,r,,.,....... r. rnahai! • .51p for 1.14 1111,41,0i,r, 4,,,,„„4 payin, so a. ,4 44,. (01tie.414 PM to h;na ,e, ir.N. 0 . „. " k.71 " IV o 0 An OW 14.: t4.r t hilt 1 14441 VPI1 89n14.1 tof ..h2rt4e,., fite e44$;,,,4_ of. nving ,,,-4:41,,,s up Tb+' Tek'igx‘.3"14• r'q',14-1. . • 1 ' veilt...i. af.ro..wliu.n uvtiv4. in the•teaelting red 11 1,4 ,.. U4 t'h ,nc. Icrlioronto to rile fAri'141 of 114. irlv a • ,. , ' nil round, 'and, tf,,te '.iiirt-tivakov hits to, . .. - • , - . ,. protes411-41.. has. historic interest. ite•' kiui 41411 181 and a half' '.* ' ", - eause of its writer. and 11(4 1(14 it!, ,t,ritte 41'..:i'ver it in gPl! t1 11111..11,Pr :raer4.a.-4, lin 55 L4 . t Si ON ta rid 84) 4 MI. • . ; 111140Ia 1 i : stV4.11 41+ 55 7.1/3 VP L'''.1;-,.:1 it," e :Ts;', 1,0 Aiii,A.;„- the („414.4.111 1 q ,ot,hieh 1114' Inn tr..; f' .1./0, farmer teriee, a 10., per eent.1 to Fs hag t hll i a4pper ain tite"Ie colleens; • , • tirne prinopai of the (141(14 10 1'4:III eto. sett, ee„eie ar,‘,,, eir, ' SehOol. -and • Collegiate Instittite. the! 1124'1.4.2 `,4' 1 11 1 1LP priett of everything lie! 31141 -W4* fa 11'1Y . • s..n..: :i•t41.114 ' 74P ',4.13,;,111 11. 1'h4, Pt, /1S1,111114`r ' P'a v er 'IS "Melt 'i" '''' 3'; Iti'Y 44,.;4- ' latP : .. I . , „ t eiltWqttoPiTtWiettder,r4 of: h.& day, • 4,' -Z zn "114' eity eititPr • eN I'ai 1a'.,e,,,,•., and: ., N" ''' ..`" 1 "4' '5 "IS , w"rta• 1 11144' Year"' .1. 6P, W:,,'4. i it'd ;41 n.,,, 144. 13., r.rt..i;,s..! .:4„,,-,,,,,, 6/4„1/4a1141 ml,61 inin,2,;. 41,-4,5511 the? ag... 1:axt4.1 11C:1.: :1 11 a ptttt.4.„ 4d ilpfle:leee ' was during- his long life ehief as-,„ pi, i,.4, 41. fromi,,,tuff, iii 1110 ctlii 14,144. ca"..; 81p.111 ;mil is t-.. rie••,neefee ,,,,,..eee ere.e.., so(inte 41 tel , :1P111111.• of I)r.' F.gerteit ;1 „ 414,1i:11241,4 141.114 *4 pay whieti i(-1,1„4,,.. , ,), t):1`,', :ir 1,4.^.11/:1* .it 1i).- r44f n.,4411 to new ' 11':rcrsun• 4 114. full"'" "1 i'll+.; 4 ).11."1 114 . ee s , avetem of 4-41 neatilln. atol nt .Ins laterei , 4 • 41 545 11 't,rilti ' NA' r •11"P Vir I'lletlj 1 ' • . , tlIP eivit .41 tqW:ttlitil;rri the 1' J11114 11:1,1 1 " " l'-' ' • • - Ill r" "Thi- . yeztr.,a he Was ref:A/n.(1;14-111 the otrieli' . I .1 I Ilv. °1,4. wa 3, .- rule rrf the art:ries he W111411 he 114 144 in his 1414*.t., ' • 't tat r'412V , ') ' . . . . , ; ,, • . 44, lits-^er-pecsracri t tre fte in Dr II al • N.1.1t TM./ 1 114;i't farnwr nee tl•rirre*-4-artter i...,i''`,4Ti`t*- rm, a caliaiNal, pliEla,atyol, at ;• . -1. .r " )4" -i-"--- if Ir '' ° 4..' • .4 atn•• 5* t( off Than be wtr:s befer... I thit time 41 (1 make. great reading' g,..441':' n'3": ---,'1"1, 11"Wa -11 1111Y :1- 114%Y' 4 hr -.t year. Aim sixtysevetitte ot tat!, . 'File :/..4---,:-.1on? 'Yon ean't heat the; :-° I'Ve hav° 11" "i1ht 1:4' Is 1(4)w Erlttettir on 1)41..a.rtraviit." .' 1, - 414' 5 11" 44 .:1 TN, 41",:o 11 :NUT of 11 1'. . ' 1 410 1111t 1116,51 W114.; 14Pr 1 1/10 V44111111. , , Nobody 1' 115 any :4.114141ton hai rf"11':Ii;g1:- It arenes a aotedderahle 111°1 he It ((1 in 11•41)Ivittion 15 1'. PnIn f ....u„,,,,115„. irt,,wath,,,,:z: ,,,, 4 hi,. thlita, r,,,,,i .,,,,,,,mi..„,,1 ,,,/, ci, ri.f., ..,41; :1;f4„, 111:;,,,,,,!,,r.„ part 4411.414o or not, 1.14 teeter' follnws. It ':' - :aid 55 1'-. 5511114 41 in his own hand • 4 „ • • tio• in thiq gruii-a<41.mt-e4141 wepeal. tte-4..1-1.7'Ir' 114' `41"11 id 4', 41130 os 4.4r hero 44: ,. • . i 05 • ., • 4.0,, 441 tee eeem. f+ 11(15', end :44, 4,.,..t .1411,1410.11, 151 at /t/ 1141. 11e priG:F-1, • , fill • Penihrolit• st... .Tor,m,70. tit4,,,!„. 41,442.4t get' tipii-- far plalad Id you. fl!,`•,1Y; '-11,4°,t -,,i, la, 1.44,,,,,,,t4, ,.1,11,6,,,,, . . .,- 'May. iliitl. , ,0 and r.'irdl theM What 114' 401.4414 will 'th4sy.i Ifs Inana sir. - I am Writiale' a i.oluttte ' '14itOltt• AND MGGNI1 AIR, wt,I31,1 like • to heap: aff.1 we 1111.04.1 - On t 1.10 1/14/11P.Pr and early 1414 1:4 of . . , p , , 4' 11141,-IraVi114P.:4111(11 1 :Mr 4.stronv4.1% atm- ., . 801100LE , ‘;',,r'' "` lutlic'. "'I' t ° LI.° i.` )1'114 '14 4 '1"ci 1011i1 to. obtliiti a :4,:4,tell Of !o tooted It . 44,,•.itgriE4,,.., '4' . 1 ---,- .r. • teaeher as •Mr, fr. I. tetratta, for melee ,Tiv,,,•,4,gmtenouila rAe tew air fields - ' ' " tion in that' vohnne. Would yon. (14.).11a0 allii Ito', OTIli'11.1 ttf 114W z -,;( °7A91,1-.4 for the °T.19' Time to Hesitate *4 ' ,. the fat or to get :41;12144;11e to wrik, rue- traitihir,.,)e „'aii,-, ,fit.,,:pt„er,,j 4:1/(1 on aujit to N')Wr ("aid , the hypiloti.,..4t, '-1 sltalt, a eleech emy• Mi. -5J141114 14481 greatly. ,„, ,,...,,,,,, ,,,,,,,,,,, , ,,t, ,,,,r,,,,,,,,,,,. m!st4:_4... •.b!, Mat: fe*Ineet. everythirtee" 4Idine me. Vil'ry eetiir•I'r4IY S'14Z.V., .L 4 , ('' : 1:,c, ' 1: ,:.: L'c 4"; ': v:.'z 7 ';" - Ti `e'r:(--el"conrcuai''' •I•fY.`, ,, .!'11..6•1,Z Off." ,•,.i'elPedi avmau in tile bael:iikorge.,Diaggins4 Iii:lz'orlograplwe t,f erzei on toc,,, "he owe. .tup ,fiv4','doIlari.;.", . Elittc.aticou 1.)cloa,Firap.uT„-, Pr-. if: 1. •Sfrang.;,;.wifs held by the I game." • • AM. PROTECT PRICELESS OLD FAMILY RECIPES WITH MAGIC MADE IN CANADA 4Itr IT'S ALWAYS DEPENDA 14! ..4:4:...,..0e••-•••••••:••••••,,,tr,/,"•••• • . • •• "Every tipty, fuld ,honestly- done, is a contribution to victory." THE PIIIME'VIVISTEit OF GAI,TARA,.. TELEPHONE .DRVERS. SAVE 'GASOLINE The Bell Telephone mechanized ariny diiveS its fleet of some 950 vehicles more than seven million miles...a year. That is why we know something about safety and economical operating practices. For instance, a saying of one thile per gallim in each vehicle, means' an annual saving of 35,000 gallons of gasoline. -Experience ahOWS SiX .simple ways to save.gasolipe, all tried4tosted and practi6ed. by Bell Telephone drivers: - I. Start your automobile properly (never rale the ongiae). 2. Change into second gear at 10, into Sigh at 15 milea per hour. 3:Never drive faster titan 40 miles an hour. 4. Drive at an even speed in open country. .5. Never leave motor -idling. . 6. Check motor every 5,000' Alt,by miles. 0 0 74 a at 1 Bell Telephone • drivers ' have established. one of the best irecords4n wis Canada, for safe, effi- akfrls dent pperation of 'their ' 1.1EPts044. cars and trucks. 4. HODGE Manager, t 44.1