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THE GODERICHa SIGNAL ANI) THE GODERIOLf STAttaa
frITE GODERICII SIGNAL -SUR
Current View; on the War
•Publialled beeEllelaaleSter Prees,!mated,
• Weet Staeet, GorierWit. Onteete
(kYrOlfiCif, 2nd, 1941
FULL SWAIV1 .4,11X&D,"
question may he itelead. HoW
enforee 4. law against war -
'time etrileis? It Weadd ,imposSibie
to force men to work if they Were
• determined not. to do se; and it
not do muelf goed to round up hundrtele
eirethousapde of strikers 'Aar put them
behind bars.
The attewer s suggested. by reepet
eV -el* in Canada. The Ottawa- Gov-
ernment has isentel an order forbidding
Strikes 'unless 4 iba1,16t la theworkers
affected shows .a majority in fever of a
walkout. This, one would fancy, would
commend: Itself eeeu to Wotila-
triketh as fair and reasonehle ;abut in
'official Labor •cireleS it is hotly re-
.sented. Why? Beeause it would take
• 'eontrol out of • thee- hands of the
agitators and piece it in the hands of
the, , „Workmen, themselves.. These
•'agitaterS wish to retain their pow es
tteion_efficiels,to call workers eut when-
ever it suits their ,cenveelence or theit
deeigns, and they* can .alWays trump
up some grievance, reel or imaginary,
vas attempted lualiticatioe for ',their
ection. Labor tyranny is just asob-
jectionabI as eapitefieticetyranny, auci
• tile order which forbide strikes Without
- a favorable vote from the workees
af-
feeed should! *be enforced in • peace
eine as %%ell as id war time., To
eaforce it it would uot be neceesitry to
take action, against the workers; the
-Arrest and indietinet of the agitaters
responsible for the strike 'would be
• sdfficient.
Eepeelelly thie ante, when •prO-
itiaction of • war Materials -le a .--s=ital
ne/easity.. strikes should be sternly.
suppressed. There are other wit ye in
"which NN'orkers may make 'their griev-
ances known, aud maehinery is pro-
vided by law for the "bearing ,cif such
• The • law, --too, should be enfofeed as
• strictly against- recalcitrant euipleyeree
as against those' fomenting strikes;
., ,
In eneployer whoknew that his fectary
eould, 'be taken out , of his ands if
. . .
he refused - to -remedy 'grievances ea.,
ficially .calleti• to his attention. would
tot be tardy in introducing the needed
reinedies. • ' °
• General'McNaughton, comitentilug
the Canadian ' forces- overseas, was,
.asked a • few 'clays ago what:ell' this
opinion, wouidlehe "the- greatest con -
Li itetrtione Canada ---eould-eina-ke t� -the
prosecution of ,the war. It was not
• gonsceiption (though. .doubtless some
advocates of such it measure • were
" thereby disappointed). It was not
even the raising of larger fighting
forces (the ,General said that . so far
• there was no 'shortage of manpower).
Oaneda's greatest contribUtion, he said,,
• Wbuid 'be to send war production- -full
steam. ahead." ' -
Cefnadian 'factories • must providea
ammunition and mechanizef equipment !
• not only for her own' forces but 1.1,-ir
those of" ,British and allied forces on ,
many 'fields of the farthing c:oitilictel
To fail in 'this; because of strikes ore'
•esitelowns" would be a -disgrace - to
•tlanada—aot only, to the Government
• of Canada but to the workers who •
, should refuse te deyete their skill
and their energies to 'thesetitsk.
1
three Provinee.s are Ilitu•eii old
S. Roberton, native of leoderieh,
Chief` Jitstiee of (het:Arlo; eialeolin A.
Macdonald, natipe of AsAlield, Chief
•Justice of British Columbia, band W.
S1. Martin, formerly Of °Exeter, Claief,
Justice Of ikatehewau. 1Ir, Justice
Martha, was not born in this county,.
but he .came When quite youug to
.Exeter and spent ids !boyhood there,
his father being minister of Cav'ett
Presbyterian‘ church there for a long
intod.
•
•
„the, ("hes-ley Enterprise quotesThe
SigneleStar'e recent comments Upon the
need of toleieteee in Our attitude' to-
wards people whw. have come •from.
Continental Eprepe to live in. Venetia,
and sums up the tea t te obsere
vitt,ion; "Be tolerant to the litet gen-
eration of Ifairopette-,Oanadians; the
second generation Will . take eare of
itself." In the seine issue of The
Piterpriee is reported ..the death of
a Chesley boy killed in aetion overseas.
The young man was !Pilot Officer .Ken -
neat Liebeek, eld a .brother is.in train-
ing- with the air force. The name
would suggest a Enropean origin. 'foe
these patriotic youeg Men; and there
are hundreds of men in' Canada's fight -
nig free s whose forbears came , from.
Germany, the. Netherlands, Poland,
Ruseia, lerame, Greece, er some other
European. country, but who are geed.
enough Canadians to risk their lives in
_
fighting eanadae: enemies.
. • • r
31r. Hepburn outdid, even his own
pa:values peeformaecee in, his address
-Tirafeif4,10ii-NreiF-1."Ork".. 'get 'content-
1EXIL iiii*FS
• ,
The aiety. . of the rail fence steatite
downed; 'Wine fgra
ences.' are dnally
. , .
taking..-itse place. ,.• . ' turd now:111es
even have.au electrielenee from whiell
. .
a cavorting animal in a °ptalakieli tuom
-gets e Conch` Of" electricity that send
It SecaupOing away cenverted fronenteY,
ideasit emay lati3e bed. Thee, yoe
blee, modere eilieleney, wire the world of
another eolOeful and pieturesque Item
the rail fent. • - V .
Think a w..patt ow toss of -the rail
fent* meane .to country people. ,Grend-
pa will certainly not find an attentive
audienee when lie lecteres on being
one . of the dateet rail-splittera the
empty tver had. A younger genera-
tion, growiug'up in the seatatY shade of
wire fences, eau hardly be expeeted to
uuderstaud . what attribettes were.
needed for •a mun te gain tame- lo a
connanitiey as 'a rail -Splitter. .,
. daoir,Will eehool boys be able topay
hookey without a rail fence?' ' II w.
well I, can reatember the days we. -Spent
in ,0 secluded corne'r or the old Jones
place ,witere the rail fences net, By
moving a few rails, over the tOP end
tekilig• advantage iif the protection Of
a cluster of dense burdocks,- we had, a
hideout •that was perfect. • raying ola
our. backs on .a -cushion of green grass,
-
with heads cus•hioned in our hands, we
enjoyed to ',the fullest extent those
stolen hours of pleasure.
Where isthe kindling woad to tome
from eow *that. the rails are 'gone?
At Lazy lleadee's we alweys seemed to
have. plenty a rails to !make kledIing
out of:re Grandfather would takeea rail
off the gaideu fence, day it crosswise
in "the saw -horse ,addeben. proceed with
the buck -saw to "buck",entatigh kindling
to fast -for a month or so. The fem.*
never eeemed tb suffer !badly, , because
in the spring' thee weule bang a load
of rails up and pile them -oh the fence
until it whs restoredato its proper level
to keep the maraud*, cows from mak- ,
ing an excutsionento our gardeOpatch.
. ,,, .
-r2.1tail fenees spra'wled alt over our
-township at one ,time. ,,Standing On the
Tiiii' of eflierBirrliTiliiirealir We -far -
anti away past theriver and watch the
NV it ILs•arryilig on his ,warfeeewith-the . - • , - ae
, , . zuezag patus_ en_ lee_ •fences as._ they
'King Governinent by declaring that trailed , off iste the • distance. They
Canada was -gettingenowhere" - in, its were quite handy, because all you hada-
War effert, he predicted that ultimately to-do to change cattle from one field to
there would be ne-h•eutelar/ line be- another wes to, let down a few _rails-
• and make a gap.
11 Phil Osifer of lazy Meadows
.113nary J 1tjj'
muns,EKT,,
Rievola IND MURDER
rrotn..11erge'n to :Bordeaux, 2ro
'Atttene to Atteeterdam, veslAtface to
the 'Nazi conquerors. is. boiling -ever
More furiouely. 'There are reports
daily of riots and lliaSS arrOtS, sabo-
tage and heaty collective lines, 05545-
sitratione ' and exeeutions.. Joseph
Harseb,• the distinguished rorrespoad-
ent of the Christian ISeleace ,Monitor,
states in his;lecent book, -Pattern of
ConquesV •that lit the sunnuet: ef
104.0•Hit1er had a Nal opportunity to
oaPture the leadership of Europe. The
conquered peoples Were hot a mood
for eltangee They were disiausioued
about the structure oT their societies,
disgusted with the goyernmeiats which
had. led thein to defeat. - They were
ready to accept a .New Order which
offered peace; bread, and ecoponee
equality. The edrreet 'behavior and
even the studied friendliness ot the
• German armies of eceupetion, seemed tie
offer a. hope. Butdisillusion set in
rapidly at; the vultures pit the Reich
Econeinic '11/1nistry and the ,Gestapo
Swarmed in behind', the' soldiers. Quick.,
ly they went to work bleeding •eaeh
CO111147 •white by their methods_ of
scientific looting, and it was, not long.
before the conquered peoples • were
made to realize that sthe benefit of
"t•he New Order • were °stalely for the
'Waster Race." 'For the rest of
Europe • there was -no prospect save a
future of polttical and economic slav-
ery-. As this 'realization sank in, the
spirit of re.aietance• .grew and Kilind
organized' .forms. Today -the Nazi forces
throughout Europe must more and
more bend ' their energies to hew off
the heads of Popular revolt. They
will find that for each " head thilf
falls irdoeen well Spring to life. •
—The Natioti (New York).
One of the hostages shot by the
Germans.- in Paris last week leas a
youth of nineteen. Another *as a
man of 72. So far at least twenty -
eve hosteges have been slaughtered in
Paris, .Non of them ,was ,gttilty- of
ane crinie. None. was 'aecused af
crime. None was " tried .by an pro-
cess of law, not even by a court-mar-
tial. None had a chance- .to defend
himself. All were lined up and shot.
talienembers Ina lottery.
• This vengeance on the en.uoceet is
U1 e, fieelenteehaniea tem, of humonitY:
divorced of passion and
reducee„to 'in ir&t1n.ietkq1 formul'i
It Is a practice so eoldly brutal and
barbaric that the civilized languages
o-ename--fer it. -1-1—€1:
reflect, the sudden anger of some frese;
rated general. It is calculated and
methodical. It has sent e. shudder
round the earth. 'Only a nation .car-
rupted ITy- a .dark' Nazi mediaevalism
could rondlin-so shameful 11 process
or !accept it as an instrument of
government. That it is•revealed as the
ofily toundation of Hitler's NeW 'Order
is the tragedy of 'Gentian tempest. The
conquerors • have nothing to •offer but
the, barrenalterna fives of abjeet sub-
mission or decimation by, lot.
The fiThrder of hostages by !German
firing squad e has now spread. all 'over
Europe. It Ls like- a modern Black
„DeA•ithea It...began,- in _Poland. -It- -is-
going o -n France, Beegium, IHollapd,•
Norway, Yugoslavia and [Greece. • Of
all the people in"the World the Genmans
alone fail to see that it Will not work.
It preduces precisely the results it is
designed to prevent. The weapons. of
sabotage, and . as_asassinatione are flet,
dulled hut sharpened. By German
logie these shootings Will increase and
-extend eeoppesition rises: But it Ls
impossible, to shoot the entire popula-
tions ,Of Europe, or even every. tenth
man, yoman and child. No eonceivable
eacrifice of hostages will • halt -lhe
revolt of 'peoplee againet syetematie
oppression. Sowing a contipent with
the graves of Marty:re only plants the
seed of avenging armies.
:.Neav 'York Times.
•
THE- GERMAN ARMY
(This estimate of the efficiency, Of
the German Army is made by 'a form-
er -staff 'officer in •the Imperial ,Germen
Army.). .,•=- • .
Tt they be asserted Without exagger-
ationethat the- cOuree of the first weeks !
of the Russo -German 'War tete brought
considerable surprise not only to pub-
lic' opinion but to military circles in
this eounfry. A trinch more impreseive
and far-reaching success: on Germany's
part bite been 'expected. Nov that
each- a selecess has failed to material-
ise. in spite of the fact that Hitler
had prepared his offensive with his
accustomed,thoretikhnees and had been
able: to choose the Moment for .his sine
prise ,attack, in spite of hiethrowing in
'net masses.of hise,t shock troops .
both 00, the gretind and in the air..
the vital tineetiod presents • itself
whether the Russien Military power,
has been underrated or the Germane
overrated. The flree hypotheais Aquares '
better w:th all natural preconceptions,
but • there is More lieherent probability
in the hitter.
• It .le a profoutul mistake to regard.
this army, without reservatidhsa as Hike"
equalsucces.eir to hat' of 1914-1918
anti to -attribute, to et the .-qu,alities
whieh the"Iirmy of ImPerial-GernnellY. '
demonstrated Ivy its proved effieleney.
In filet, only the Intelleetual standard
of the general staff of the German
Army is reproducedunlowered on the
army of today. .More than that. itknay,'
he net:unmet that the average,,qiellity of
the rank and file in the purely teehnieal
sphere earresponds similarly with that
of the:iaet World War. On the- other
hand. the morale of the troopsIswith-
out question far inferior; to that.of the
nrmy • of twenty-five 3;ea re ago, and
ImIleineeei..laweueemeeeeeeeeie.'
ee•
a a? vc
andmure iinniceliaterf, that .lieles.hij 'woke and acorneke afforded by a. rail
would be defeated bY;tGermenY. That feaee. A etraggling growth of choke -
:Stich statements should be 'made Out-. cherry bashes coned also be counted
(t)()1 ruont.
Inde of 1ft°settiiir
Canacie by any representative 1•PFC,111•11dc%me tPlong rajaidly
'Celt:Wien woufd be unthinkable, if fond of liaulieg .stones .otiss!.tasy itto( the
,Canadiane were not already peinfully beck of the --farm, the rail rfeece.s'pr
aware of Mr. etepbuen'S irresponsibil-
ity of ateze eh. If his design were to
assist Lindberghand other „United
(Settee isolationists in their campaign
he could . (hardly have done , better.
dee nail ia n newepa pen: of all shades of
politics have been, ° repudiating hie
Leteteelentsi.withavieer ;JeIj. f he_
will be .circulated, ,where the repudia-
tions will never" reaeli. ,
, • « • •
The death of Sir William Hearst,
ontetime Premier of Ontario, recalls
the fact 'that he introduced prohibition
•EDITORIAL NOTES
-
Tale Government oil controller, dis-
eussing the coniplaints againet retiope
ing• 'of gasoline, observes that -every-
Netted excellent .dumping 'grounds fo •
lead after load of the stoftee. In fact,
there was always .a fringe of -stope
piled along:practically all of the Tail
fences. It was so much' easierr, to heave
a stone over to.the fence than it .was to
road it up on, the wagon box.
Tije animals. seemed to like the
i
privacy afforded' by a rail fence. 'Rest:
• theateametroneeplowingracane. -would •
see se saucy, •bright-eyed ',red squirrel'
suddenly- pop up. !Curling his tail be- -
hincl himself, until he. looked - like a,'
weird • .0hinese symbol,. the, ,squirref
would eve one tor some time and then'
scamper on.down the avenue of rails, *
looking for, more food to steel his
winter larder.. Now wird --again • One
in Ontario during. the last war. The found a skunk travelline 'beside the
etet thal, his Government was defeated fence , '. and whett • the chicken coope
in the getieral election :which- followed were raided the.teli-tale evidence ofea
a few Years later iMs requently been
l;weasel's itsit More often than enough
• fa
•---, .led to a stone pile he -side one of: the'
cited as evicieuce Of ingratittide. on the raildt,n,c„es. ...,' ,. . . •
part of the temperance people. It Rail fence e Were handy. 4' Tlie .1rails
was the farmers' .movement which served le make a_ tearary fenee at
beg -an about that time, however, that .411Y "tinw' Whether_ °It was an en-
closure for celves ora a guard fence
defeated the Hearst -Go.vernment,' -
al' around ,a caved -in well, . . the rails
'though it is not to be denied that werethere e. . waiting and reedy . . .
many pileliqubr ' voles evere alienated and it waS al 'i so nueeh easier to
from the Culver -reeve' party for a erect a rail fence than •go eo all the
• time. Mr. Drury succeeded Mr. Ilearst,, lweltrhea;r.et ‘settileg. neete und stretching
and it was ept until 1023, when 'Howard They say that rail .fences take up too
Ferguson came to the front, that the° much -room. I teilweya; makes Inc ,smile '
to See a farmer .with, a evitete fifteen
or. twenty, aeres''grbwine up in wild,
bushes and weeds, •vt-he gets busy erect-
for tito twat r1i,3 of the olilvers
corp.s in every;dePartment we Must
as:Anne a 'far lower 'average <my:Jetty.
• Timheads of the '(k.rman .giohl/sWetw
estimated at the beginning Of,;the re-
• arnaameilt campaign that at least a
ton ,years' term was 'necessary to pro -
dove, in ',the officers of the new arm,
.representing something • like a tenfold
expansion, the noral . and technical
qualities of the Imperial Officers' (*rPs.
This was unattahmble without a bong
and eystentatie trebling ecniree. The
• Officers' Corpe in the Lustwaffe and
the 'Panzer detachments, v1del1 had
to base 4heir training not on praetteal
experienee on a large scale but almost
wholly.on paper plans, required 0 still
longer period of thoriYugh-going train -
lug to bring them to efileieney.. Hitler
refused to.allow his iarnly this period.
ThLs army, must necessarily therefore
bev distinguished ofrom the puperial
Army ite ite detriment by! loWer stand-
ar4 af technical efilelencY, as the best
of ,the infantry officers are the fleet to
reVegnize. In the War,„.0ffice in Berlin
there were no Illusions about the week-
neMe$ forced on it by Hitler's Polley,
and recourse was had to rarious'eom,
•pensations. 'Ohlef aurong these wae
the substitution of quantitr,for quality
*and' the development of tievie methods
of warfare Which might prove deeLsite
,through a.° systematic insistence on
• mass operations,
This clearly involved 'recourse to the
basic' prineiplee of Russian strategy,
which meant a qualitative failing -away
from the standard set for the German
-
army by 'Moltke and Schlieffen, The
close co-operation between , Russian-,
and, German military ciretes in the
era, of ,Gerinany'e..secret rearmament,
before the days Of Hitler, had, as is
clearly, seen 'today, resulted ina cer-
tain aPproximationfrom both dirce-
tions, 11 workedfot the Ruesians in a
positive, for the 'Germanise in, 'a nega-
tive, sense. This fact of the de,gener-
&tent of 'German military craft was in
110 wily concealed from the IGerman
1Var Ministry. But the kdowleclge that
the western pOwere, partieularly
Fra me. %vete igwring the .ma in tena nae
of ,t hei r arma men as to an afe (Testi hie ,
ealegreeee "III -erefe 'Creation . of
• Ili tier's:1-1111i t a ry dicta tot -ship, justified
some hope in a resounding success for
the feet -man mass tactic's. •
• The events of the peer year have
fully justified these expectations -1n the
field of strategy. Inthe matter
quality the 'Geantan arniya has- been
(i.kerniar4 ,and littWiansi were in a post,.
tiorl tp do that. ' e
zr IIS eoneerns tits air, lite Nazi
WsUraPtlor.& iig0rd1ug intnei formations
were eomplet.iny falsified. • In t1a9
ele-
inent quality still remains 41,17N:51.1.0; and
tIiebeelmioal quality of 'material Is
110 less BlaPortant Oat* the morale and
training Of alit ClieWti. ill the Battle
of Illeiti.ap tut sunnuer tfie• to I
apPearancee decided the issue of
the' war already. Their spectiteular
victory over Opering's blots trained
ena never very highly-teMperedilill,SSO,
Ulnae an invasion Of Great Bi 11 no
PaMible for. 'Hitler at the only ,thoel
when.* definite chance of victory
Pre-
$eI*1eU itself. •
_
When It. repetition of the attempt
at invesion in the last few months
seemed still lessepropitious, and the tat7,
titude of tbe -United .States. „promised.
to rectify lite material inequitlity to
Great 'Britain% advantage, Hitler had
to :change from e blitzkrieg to a long;
drawn-out. War Of 'extreustion. That
meant that he inuet usenee himself
at aeyeprice of an mtlimited proeision
He hesitatedfor a long .tinie
between, an attaek on Iraq, and an
attack, on the el'aucatue• Ills generele
• deelitreil fth.' the former, for they were
familiar with the "Red, Army and knew
that 'they could not, oVereolne It with
maae iiseaulte alone. • aiut Hitler's
thne-table wits thrown out by the un-
exPected resistance of • Yugoslavia.
General Rommel's 'offensive In Libya
and! Rasehid rebelliop.'10 Iraq
'fizzled out before 'Hitler 'could oeeupy
Greece and bring Turkey to- subjec-
thee There was nothing left, there-
fore, but tile attack' on Russia, since
the minhnuni concessions _essential. to
Hitler were. not to be extorted from
Moscow', by peeoeful moan. , But now
the ,German mass formation's came tip
against the still greater Russian. mess
formations. The !German. army Jost
its chief source of strength, -like Sam-
son when . his hair as cut *off. It
• could manifestly not command a de-*
cesive • superiority in 'quality, which
alone `'.eould 'secure victory over tho
Russians. Thus Hitler's • army
threatened with destruetion in the ma-
terial field, i.e. petrol, before the dowel
falL.Of Stalin and, the enthronement of
Russian quislings "can be aocomplished
through sufficiently decisive Gerntita
tura1lS, it LS net ineqtable—t hat Hi t-
ier's Military power may* c011aPee thie
autumn.
—The Spectator -(Leticifej
' "You must be keen On the moviies,
0141150y, to go fivic•e a week." "It's not
that exaetly. You see, if I don't go
aclurieFy.
Repapred
'On, short notice. EMT job,
receives ray personal,
attention.
Geo. W. Stokes
Ilachmigt
East $t Phone *AT,
PORTER'S' Mix
livtiliti'llti(')rintt'erril'sitilst;t8ileiri:r:FLdsLiii'llYisdjar'edP(*ort:nh:eaePrills:ja.,0a::::11:weW).1=11111n1liaoltuotrwIt!1irli.
It:Itii(fill(.1-(10.tt, uSaglalhiliv,.r.3sirtist.ite.
'
4 g o 0
Wilbert Hall, a nephew, at Wingham.
HeexpeelyitoetielgF
ileaereain,• oamp
se:n forEugloanrt
,
en,
has been transferred to 'Peterborough
and was home over the week -end at
i11,1:11.1(r10e1..11:1wNly'liihitlelliel(iritti3e)vit:.°chIaoitst.7.GibeDvrairnic:illte, tig'Irstii,e.wargvcililih,litledailt .9°ett.:31retel .
1,tihrsm. oRreniittligToonrdraenveeen.ihnags.
Iter. '11.
lini.u• ttlrilo?, awbsheoncyyell'olfreothneolitemtstpoiit.,
niversary services at TaYilor's Corner
for a soeial afternoon on Wednesday,
ladie,s of the Red !Cross, to her whtholeumr; .
Oetober 8. The ladies are asked ,to
abistgnict)elts ti • atenlir1 ktniiiiinttibniegs,oeasse
will be quilting to do. Lunch will be •
served. •••
. SLEEP AND-- 'ro
AWAKE REFRESHED
If you don't sleep well
-if nights are inter-
1rupted restlessness
--look to your kidneys.
—1.tee.orekic!oe.reare.450
of order ana
cleanse the ••bloOd of
poisons and waste
matter -your rest is .
Kely suffering, too, At the first sign of
kidney trouble turn confidently to Dodd's
Kidiip• Pills -for oyer half a century the
favorite kidney remedy. Euy to take. 114
. I
•
-
•itarticularly in • Poland. The- masses
.whicle _Germany .could throw info the
conflict none. the lees. worked in the
end. like a steana-eoller and - wen • the
decision. The mites attack by •tanks iii.
particular, which - throughout mani-
fested no.abnertnel lechnicall.efficiency,
broke the etrat•egy. of the enemy In Po-
land and Flendere. The unfamiliar [
nutes a t reek .by eitekas had in the first
Instance a decisive effete on the mot. -
ale -of the..:enent3-, and, coneiderably.1
facilitated theeadvanee of tlae Panzet!
• forcee. Finally it entiefbe added that
the----offieere of the'.Poliele, Frencli and I
British arincies opposed' more or less!
eutemoded- -- warfare to- t
These modern methods 'of attack In '
aeartieular ...they elting -pathetically to
the • theory that after et deep •• break-
through' by epemy forces. an im,metliate
and genererretirentent was essential,
instead of trying to closeup the front •
behindthe tanks tlrat had broken
through and isolating them. Their
own troops, agaip, as soon- as Hey
were surrounded. In most •casesre-
garded .a continua nee of the struggle
llKslegS. 'The -Ruesiait methods of
today demenstra te t hp t these prin-
ciples,- • vvere -mistaken. 4 break-
through by •tanks alone is not so* com-
pletely decisive -he it* break -through by
.strong infantry forces in •t he lest
war was. But it stands to•reaSon that
only tree 'army whieh' Operate .
these 10110.4 "Panzer forces7:in man-
oeuvres in peace- time-eould 'acq-uire the
.neeeseary -familiarity with this . 11('W
factor end' lite the toutidetionfor
newer :taetical methods. ,Only thel'
tamservatire party regained its fennel-
etrength. ° Mr. Itepburn is') 'following,
the Ferguson, • lead - in rallying , the ing wire 'fences because he needs the
<,
liquor „vote to .his aid, awl until the lapd.However . . ., Wire fences are
anti liquor vote shows the
here te etay and, notch lis we regret it.
same
.(:',j3,4,,il. 1.
. the. oleer . anti mine temporary rail
. femee seem do
ormee.
• one wants to win the war as long aS his pro -liquor forces the latter will retain
ox isn't gored." A ;:,7reitt truth in a ,control. in this Province. , - . BELFAST
- .
• . •
h
few words. . •
t:1 I 49. •
And Herr Ikea,, • of flee n ight
lame, is 00 'a hunger strike -L• in "Etig-
land Well, we :-.ee no troOd. reason
1v11 • he. slionld ot allowed•
starve if that is his wish. His refusal
to eat Will Fea ju .41 1 ha 1 much more
• fpod for someone who ac,erves it more
than the Nazi tunas murderer.
• • •
Indians t1 on Hudson -Bay have.
put in a formal reque.st_ that they he
fillOwe4 calli" Hitler when he is
But shouldn't he first lo com-
pelled to hang paper in .1111 -1 he tionses
that will he meter eonstruetion or
THE, VACANT SEATS
Woods001 S0fl t inel-RevieW )
I laving definitely hoLsted • the On-
tario -contest for the present, Mr. Hep -
'Writ -might with all the -more reason
consider .holdinga few by-elections.
It is. not merely a ease of filling, vacant
eeats in the Legiseature for the re -
11(1 a Ming session ; a epristitueney expects
year -around service from its -member,
and two of the six memberless •ridirege
have leen iinrepreseLited formore. titan
a year awl' a. half. , In Lincoln a
Liberal 'member rerently TeSignefi Over
.matter of eirinciple. and it • will be
no credit to •the !Government if it with-
holds the desired opportunity to :test
publie opipion.
TIME FOR COOL HEADS
repair 'in England end Sect -Tian (-1, when I .
. the war is over and the Nazi twing( Lon
ing. donI'ree 'Press
' )
,
veaees? When that job is tinished, 1.4 -?e *We inar,or may not be doing, all we
, . eau • we. may have to eome to chnecrip-
the Indians have him, say we. • tion : the Government may need
* • e i«,,, st rengthening ih-cele alit quarters '.• pit
In response to ii roll van at tel, frOm .014" size of Our forces and the
,
.. 1.(ain)unr,
of money we are spendingon
WOMPUS 0Pting ie:w-,,,.„„„,r„
i out nar effort it Ls a gigantie undereillage, m -whieh those present were : taking for a vowel* •the siz'e of the
' asked to say what they • missed most ; Dominion. It Is a record of which, by
as a result ef wartime .rest rietions, , and large, We have reason to I* prou(i.
sugar w•ae meat frequently mentiened, I Let 11'q 11()) hO carried away by de-
efollowed 14o el by frutt. ,Next., ‘111-ti 1 111 1,o,,1( appeals that belittle our war
e i effort. Deeds, not epigrams, will Win
a long way behind, ('1100 ('11(054, eheese and 1 this war. It is 4 time for eool bombe
butter ; and then a "starlokling ' of I
,...i.
..r. siirpriAngly. r WINGING IT HOME ,
!.runw.. i- hinge. ftatlit
the report says tfiiit moat wee 'not! (410wen 11011(113 Sunelrimes 1
I If you're asking unIziollelY,. •e'Wha't,
0100 10(1(41 at all. •IciTivea Of tw o!
ti are we doing ,to %vitt the war?" V4 11)
evacuated businese ewn said what tneY not entingo the *form of elle queetion :
most 1Ilis:;ed wa6; a bath1700th. 6 * '"What am, I doing. ta,win the war?"
i
• 40, 4 4 .
i
Annotna,Wtout I., made that Nre.1 ,i,be Habitual
. bainwas, being displayed to
JustiW
ce, W. M, *ilt, Who tlas 'heal admiring ealiera.
t
eBELFAST, Sept, ,
of Haek:etes -circuit met at the home
,ef Mrs. 'Adam 4Johnstone on Tuesday
afternoon, with fifteen.,lialiee, present.
The president, 'Mee: 'Erving Zinn, had
eharge of the meeting. Mrs. Will Al-
ton reed the Striptere reading. Mrs.
Howse and- Mrs.. Adam Johnstone led
in prase?. Mise Bernadine Affina gave
a reading. Mrs. Albert Alton took the
study book and Mrs, Zinn closed the
meeting with prayer. A aquilt was
:quilted that afternoon.
Mr. and Mee: George Lane, soli Clif-
ford, Mr. and Mrs. RoyAlton and
• sons Olayton and Alvin attended the
seventy-fifth anniversary of Port Albert
, I ted church. on. Sunday.
Ilackett'S United church anniversary
. will be observed next Sunday, "()eater
afternoop at 2.30; eyening•at 7.30.
Rev. Mr. Stewart, LneknoW, will be
the guest speaker.
Crwennie MacKay, of Ripley.,
•Ing with her aunt, Mrs. Wilfred
ett,' While,Ixer mother Is in Kin-
ardine hospital for an appendix open.
'Mon. 'We are pie:reed to hear 3,1rS.
Macicay is getting along wonderfully.
Medded.—At noon on Saturday,
September 27, 131Lss Jean Cameron, only
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. T. A. Cinn-
front, was united in marriage to Mr.
Mason Robinson of West Wawanosh,
Rev, G. Howse Officiating. Immediate
.relatives of bride and groom were pre.
sent. The happy eouPle 'toff 'by motor
• in the afternoon tia their wedding trip.
Shower for Bride -elect. ---on Uednes.
, day • afternoon, at the hon,le of Mrs.
Ralph Cameron, a shower Was held Inc
the bride-ta-he, Mies Jean Cameron.
led hit the Ilvltmg'roonie
eiVen I parasol to Open lip aer her
head. when lainfetti geattorod, over her
and,ribbons tied inside to the wires had
writing paper tied to them 0w1i1eh told
• her where to ,flivil the presents Many
useful and beautifttl artielea wore given
' to her; She -thanked, the donors and
• invited them ,alt to call' and 8.eth her in
, her new holm.: :Lunch was served 00
the 'awn, and pictures.) wore taken by
Elmira Alton antt Ira, •Vantivon.
acting ,I5s rentals administrator for i„ .-riDear Ater exclaimed, one visitor,
the Wartime Prices ,and Trade Board I who, t;eelned to find it -difficult toknow
at, Ottawa, has been aplioi, 11t4,11 ewer what to' 03,.. . "flow like` hia father.",
, 1 "Oh, that's only the wet weather,'
imtice of Oukatehewan. °It is- re -1 reo 1 . th r r 1 =. k
rep L t ic young MO 0 , c o!-',.; y. . s
markable that .the elder Juqtieey 0 i a' rude bet/ quite't•keepful,loolting."
,
LOOK- OUT FOR'
Ruck it lip tight now ,
, and 'feel like ii' rnill—IG'1`71 i
Yaw Irrer is the largest organ in your body
• and most important to your health. lt pour s out
fale to digest food, gels rid of waste, supplies
P.-ewenergy,allows proper nourishment to reach
blood.yeur When your hver gots out of order
Jsod decomposes in your intatinett. You he.
cone tentliPstedi stomach and kidney* can't
***properly" You fet4 "rotten". headathy,
Sockachy, diuy, dragged out all the time.
For aver 3.5 years thousand* have won pricing
yariel Iron the.* miseries -Ali& Fruit.a.tivel:
, So tan you ttoso. Try Frtut.a.hves-you'll be
simply denghteif, liew quickly you'll feel lite a
' sew person, happy and well again. trie; 50e.
I
FRUIMiTIVEStreg2P4'4"
.tivrt Tablets
n 111.1 emelt -w a ancaye
grandchildren are se
ayine"
•
dr -In
o • s ney s
1
ROUND TRIP. RAIL " BARGAINS
FrOm GODERICH OCT. 3-4
OTTAWA
$11.30 7—
MONTREAL QU.EBEC, CITY
$13.90 $18.80
Trois Riviers $16 45•
• Ste. Anne. de Beaupre $i9 40-
GOVERNMENT:TAX 141 % EXTRA
RETURN LIMI-T,-OCTORER, 6
Not good on 3 p.m. trains from Ottawa and •Mentreal•
TO THE MARITIMES—OCTOBER 2
All Canadian .Pacific Stations in New' Brunswick
All Dominion Atlantic. Ry. Stations in Noia Scotia
For limits, detailed service, etc.
Consult Agents — Proure Handbill
• e
Not Good Return On 3 P.M. Train From Montreal
19-
• G. E. SMITH, Uptown Agent,
CANADIAN PACIFIC
• Amsoinsimeismon
•••
YOU* ASIAIRS ARE KEPT
Alva&
• When y become a customer of the Bank, a privateielationship is at -
• once establtshed and you can be perfealy sure that your business with
the Bank will be, held in strictest confidence. •
Your bank balance may ,be snill or large, but no one will know•what
it is—unless you telt.
You may borrow at the Bank an4. no orie.will be the wiser—unlesS you
reveal it.
.You may place securities with the Bank for safekeeping and n� one else •
will know—unless you tell them.
. .140 one is privileged to intrude upon this con1denua1 relationship of
the.Bank arid'its customers relationship which 'compares with that
between doctor and patient.
'BANlCOFHMONTREAL
EgTABLISHEb. 1811
3'A DANK WHERE EMMA ACCOU1T0 ,knE WELCOME"
ASSETS IN EXCESS OP own tilAtioN DOLLARS
reaereeekeeereeere-
'God rich Branch: A. A. NKOL, Manager
0