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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Goderich Signal-Star, 1941-10-09, Page 2obtritif 03/NINO I'L1 GODMI011 SIGNS ANIS 'AKE ,f•4 Il, ill TA i PnbiishoaI •, by Sigalal•Stalx l ess, J lalaite€l, .:'' WPst Street, QIoderL' ; ntario yI11 uitS.$DAY, :(1 01 illi, 9th, 1941 WART• M. a°•.RE►GULATION The war ia. totaling eloeer and closer. This Week, it is announced that after' :Oeeemtber "1st all persons or 'firms' arahnufaeturing or dealing in f4od, Seeds, livestok, poultry, 'yarn (loth, Iro xi�t1election. The Iiber 1s have wtts tsuessfui ; a's to the other there is utnc'4,'rtaainty, hent Govern:neat flick, Opposition elaiaui,ng a majority. Both• • ridings were fornlierly represented'' by' csuPporters of the Government. Women voted for `the (first time he a Quebec 1THE SIGNAL,STAR PhilOsifer011izyMeadows By Bar J. Boyle 64%ALOWIN6" , .. farmer.h s littie'timeekor patut n -music or good,'boolis, and too often he neglects to paint the faraaa'•buildings,, he finds hinself oft ;the wrong Side of the, books At the -bank and 'then. he bas to "fate the music," 'However, there is one thing: which a farmer takes pride in . • one achievement which is. =almost a, heritage with him . , ,tend that els the plowing 'cin leis, farm, C.rreutVIews on the far t# _ otezi1J E OI'' il[[nvol ION .til eivi11ze petpple .ought 'to have poured the, dust of. penitence, upon their heads. , But only one nation re- membered last week that ten years. av;o began the downfall of the Int war' world, the illness .eIvil ration t 'nidi has t,t ri('1.eu ::Chu whole of •h;ur- olpe and still spree ds, ` The ..elle people 'who 'c is net .for oet .Wilt the 'euinese, wh) live on the op- elptJhlug or, .footwear •must obtain. ag a large majority in the Legislature; Grandfather ryas=> =n�"ass a stel'n '•ltite tilde of the ,earth from Western War -time k3'riees° and so the result of this week's polling has ''al h oeate, of good pTo\v ng: He main- cit i4iz�ttIopn and celebrate lwpside-down YiE from the no significance except as an indication tallied that it was ha41, enough ,for holidays. Called ' tttional i4l9umiliation, Wade Board. All warehouses and. cold storage plants a us. of the trend, of politics in the sister Province, , There is criticism ofd the'Governutent in Brbtaba because ..itg,has , not• placed an army on the Continent• to make aHitler digit on.two fronts and thus lessen the pressure on 'Itussta. The military lead- ers fray be trusted to know theirbust, tress, however; and if.they consider. it 'inadvisable to launch an offensive "}just -yet oil the 'west front impatience with the 'Government's seeming slowness will have •to,be restrained: Even those unskilled• in military matters can real- ize that •it would be folly to send forth ail arms without adequate protection of planes and tanks, and IV is well known' that Britain, is now sending all she can spare of her output of mechan- ized equipment -chard -pressed Russia. British flyers are with the ;Soviet army, and the occupation of Iran also is a 'mall to beat ,his wife, starve' his stock or let weeds grow on his farm 'but. there was nc1 eceuse or poor plowing. From the time 'rte-.$eueh olrt a land until ;he finishede).ip the bead lands .hews very,} careful , . , precise is eyety fur ow 1 When he (finished it was' a' o n -itselfo',look ate e. Straight furrpvcs..lookin as if (they had °been' shaped by hand,. stretched e'ndleesly • up over; the hills and, down through the 'valleys o p tizst Meadows. After supper you would see him 'stand out on the west side ofe look- ing over . the fields . . . !figuring how long it would take to finish the plow- ing the cSic�he>cin ; dare of ,the .match lightigg '.hisface up witha ruddy glow ' as he lit is pipe. 'city people have often remarked a plowing must be a boring :lob. They} watch as a plowman andis Bain go slowly across e. e . : up a where they are silhouetted briefly against the sky . • . only to disappear and then come back into silhouette a'- in and wend their way own into 11 valley. " Ow level land you'll see a na .t Luys, Fel' ten' years their Meat itlllxartant Nsn'tionial 'Humiliation Day licensed, * has been Ohiu 1 Pa (pronounced Ju rietions," it is stated, "tire �lEa Ila;. )translated ..Nine-I':ight, "These rest not designed to curtail business opera coons in any way, butq'4y plating every and weauinl 'ept(imt)aer • 13). On September lt, 1031,' a stmip of Jap- Person rvned ituLway Q north of 11iuk- person 'robe, in .any way handles the e joy i " t the � R ld den was•iilow'n�r>up �Uy :< pen;soni or fir- pmmodities named ,under license' • the s n • 'pgoal'41" n have the machinery rwith au , ti kItown. The J,iipl"incse army vt*n used the, incideut As an. excuse to re .\iu'ncl urea . ii>� de 'huee of the which to trait speedy checks on avail- able vail , seize able stooks and to pollee more effecrtive- g d Jal)a.aese ,Issupire's treaty`, obligations. ppe This crime being c;oaidoned by; the 1Y any pi•iee-Bing . order which may �h ,house 1 k states belonging be °instituted "' S o u 'to -the League of . gsatins, .the ellanChurian incident was i further stated that ,an in- < followed by other acts of international' It dividual' farmer, gardener,. poultryman', brigandage neat` the entire code of inte'ruattioeal nn a ants disintegrated. ' or fisherman is not req ,iced to obtain i h' i The decade whieh began teeptenibhr :a license unless he buys for resale. pep 1 d th t 18, 1931, echoed. with hollow words of The Finance a1inister points out p t; peace. • It knew no peace worth the that Canada has reached a stage in 1 °cfi ld 1 t hill name. Down throlfgh the 'decade which further• regulation of production, cable the rattle of muslte'try- in the Shanghai incident, .(1932), the spit of 4preseution• and prices is necessary to rifle -dire in the Chaco (1932-35), the µprevent inflation and ensure �a .fair ga d t bursting) of bombs i.ri Ethiopian distribution of what is left after war valleys 11935-36), the Volley's of firing " ,_plowman go up send clown steadily, for squads'pn Spanish bull rings (1936-n), needy, are filled. The Goveru•meet indirectly an assistance to 'Russia' in •h�ours'at a time stopping at inter the screams 'og, Chinese civilians finds that a shortage of labor•is loom- checking Nazi plana. It is unthinkatble 1 3�?), the tramp of Nazi boots ing up, and to ensur4> sufficient bran- vials to rest because the exactness "of l that -'Britain should withhold any • plowing dower for wartime industries the.pro' possible assistance to her all , as more d ih duction of"such things as automobiles, p , y re tors, washing And more it looks as if the decisive radios,- _ frigQr battles' of the war' ma - lie-'- on l t" on" S- machines, etc,, is 'already limited. Russian soil. If 'Hitler fails„ie Russia Al.or gswith these restrictions must be he fails everywhere; If he >a -success- some .control. of prices, in . order that ful there, the final issue of the war>will °the °cost-o--ll-ahngemay ' kept within d the people mai have a not he reacThed• s veral" tyears:, ' , the Provincial t the(Government for maintenance ‘,1411.413.viAN 00110013 Otii; to rites , R rr • hounds an + . + portion of their eafnings left for lend-.." A former memt�rr of U1 o ' , !Government of Alberta is addressing of the nay effort• The situation calls for some degree farmers' meetings . on the subject of "municipal doctoring."' The proposal of self-sacrifice on the part of the that doctors should 'be put .on the people and for intelligent c0.operation 'with the 'Government in its efforts' to municipal- payroll and, instead of •en-, deavoring to cure sick people, should secure the' greatest -,possible •prod'uetiim u 1, 1 war,' industries without preelpitating to a scramble for other . goods and thus causing an undesirable in'flatipn of - .pyrices. - One man's prices cannot be• increased Without affecting the prices of, other men's goods. The law of' suply- and demand, which . should -• govern in 'ordinary aeries, would work h times as this tfnaliowed havoc in such full scope. - . EDITORIAL NOTES • Thanksgiving Day, -1941,` should be considerably more cheerful, • in eels country:, than wast Thanksgiving Day ,f 1940. YM + • 'Calnadians are -living on top o€- the world. Down under; in Australia., :tate, anti wheth r, we like socialism or, dark brown earth cracks •a.. it"}ilotvs week cel(abratecl Jo Ee Bal in the fa- drieers of private motor cars are re- stricte(1 to one thousand miles a year: is tiresome. • What does a plowman think about? He thinks first of all of his. work, but throulgh Austria „•(1938) ,and (nec�ho- slovakia (1939) , and - at a e mounting crescendo of World War -_like _still gogd� workmen he becomes 'Al. through- e•• perience' so i.-ecus.toi:lied� tq ' few ititesme i;notably -L' +g•ec- -retary of -State Samson,. met the crisis: (of September 18, 1931, with- courage itnd a sense of international ethics. A tpli' - newspapers, notably The - New York o lca:Tel€ cmc, trete it with prescience and responsibility. .Lust week • Tye, World :Telegram reprinted its edit i'al- of - September 18, 1931. "Unless the Washington Govern - of summer lonetie with Jack Pres t went arias soon to restore the . integ- . the 'whirring of a silo -filling- ma- •rltve of its trea•ties•. ill the Manchurian ;chine .•�. . the cteadc pamspamming of (•rials, the pellet nntirhinery built up a t9lreshinr Machine ome�vhere over after the 'travail of the World 'War the river,,, Birds wheeling -in clustered will be worthless. junk ' . .. Settle- formattons -. • 'and'now',and again the mein of Jslpati's t11ar ofd atggrewsiun direct their eorfs, to -eeitiing 1►eop e •'familiar sounds of ducks- and geese in good 'health. This latter idea -is root- heading for; as southern climate. Cer- ilga�lust China is in itself' a serious tainly a man should be 'able to think„Enough Problem. ;But it is iirsi,nlifl- altogethcr new, audit is quite possible, os hern as fall -he ded cant compared with the larger issue in such an atm p , 'p withoutie unit oaf •organization;, for Perhaps he thinks of` a tousle headed of rescuing, tllc ',world s peace mal - people w o : are not ill to• engage tot 'sitting at t -he breakfast table and shiners • goodi that soon - he will be "Japan has violated the .AintePower medical; aServlte : to keep them in aissurin ,4 him' Pacific treaty and the Kellogg Pact-- ,, Its a' nnightvt- good time to� ^ p 11 � 1 m In not to mention her b hie task that he -has •plenty of time --to think - of other things: '•'On a warm, hazy day of autumn there are plenty of eeperience,e to be had in plowing a field. _ Think of 'the fragrant air of autumn . 'fi'lled with the smoky- incense of burning leave:s . the trees that seen blood -spattered from the death struggle condition. •' iMunicb al doctoring, how1 r League of ‘Nations hook Beek and see the year. passin,., ever, would' ensure timely medicaX tr viewsince that lad was a ,scbilatvling Obligation. •'I'h�e only way to keep supervision to people of small means infant "'.thot, treaties 'alive is for one or.more YOU low it's a time •oto of :the signistorlee Who guai•antc who otherwise would not be able • to : When • ou p good-� 1' action under be sin important factor in the defence afford it. It should he -realized that k 1I d 1 > tl t 'those treaties • to to e of Indra against an overland attack t�tister Stair or ail � Carpet Blaukets- 27 in. wide, Regular $3.00 yard .. , e 2.25 11. Linen TeaCloths' Borders of Rose, slue,, Green—note 1 5 .9 the full size, , 60x$0, ire -war [nice.. , Tea CIoths Size 52x52, made of. rayon ' and cotton and will launder perfectly% ' Neat check patterns, all. dainty eolerings •and, good weight. Limited 5t' C quantity. Each . s J Towels Special Turkish . with rainbow stripes.. Size. about 20x40. Our old special only this"' 78e week,;, at per pair - v Batting Our big snow-white 11b. batt for quilt Buy 3 olr., 4 today. Pre-war price, each .:.... . 39c 15c aid special, yard .. . White Broadcloth, fully 36 in. wide. _� Satin . bound finest all wool Mosslleld. Size. 60x80 full, in 'told, MV ave, Dubonnet, $5 (� - ril ..aA.,, (xreeru, Wine. SpeCiitkr eadr . c • Ibek Blankets 121 -4 --maize, •7Ox$4.-- Wldte--or--grey Wal t=pick or blue borders;- der pair .... Pillows $2.59 Sterilized feather pillow covered with - good quality ticking, ' Size 17x25. Pair ... . $1.75, Fine`. goose feather pillows, cord edgq bound. Our best ,pillow, 21x27. Pair ...:X6.50 Rainbow Border , Blankets. - Our finest All Wool 'Blankets, "�1V[ossfleld= Finished singly. Sjze 72x84. On $12.(5q sale, pair ... - .. r u Broadcloth Prints 36 -in. • Very best"qualit ,tip, pieces en sale.- Large choice of dainty patterns for dresses, 99 aprons, quilts, ete. Special, per yard . . vim, are cldse to theirs." • But •cis. the situ- have set�ved the !purpose of secttr•it) } anon changedduring later years' in better than Al.closed cttraits. the, -nineteenth century owing to de- - .After the -tate war the situation was' velopments in the;Balkans and the reviewed in the light of,_.the exper- ?; ilsstail,nilvance into Central Asia, so iences of „1,9,14-48. 'Turkey rad been slid, the (; utlook. T•n 1885, - when the defeated:, And it Was' possible to Lm- Pencljeh incident° brought Russia and pose new conditions. Those appre- Great Britain within measurable clic- hensions which had been entertained tanee' of•` -war, it was-r'ecogr)ized that .by earlier generations concerning' the. the cow,Iuand of: the Black•Sea would presence ''oof- al Russian fleet in the. ° Mediterranean were felt 'to be valid - think over tfou) s and pro) . la �, c•1: env longer., The -closing of. the ,Straits crowd in on every -clay 'living. -tax •'those treaties,. . intra .i .,r • •• • recedent has heti set but as long as Turkey )rblot1ld remain had operated with grave disadvantages we--a�e��riftin�--m-did- Ino time i�--'fr4`Iinrin �as- sem' �`I-s-plejtt ln� _ul;---i)tlierw ise� P socialistic overnm nt and1° fall• 'Will the loatd of hogs, coming• 'by which any nation in -the world can, neutral and possessed beth ,the right to Great Britain, and her of g emunicipal] the l • ig taxes violate those treaties Without fear "of hid the po}ger to prevent the entry of 'thus, it had been impossible tofollow Medical, service would take us still close to market welr,ltt, par the tapes i e fall needs? ternational intervention to preserve Illsreof-wear, this •step in Imperial de- the' Goeben and, her .consort.' into the e r ,, have government relief, old age' or feed them this w ultel . The after ca 5 y, case, a • Derdaflelles • teen for the pals- fluence . which they were able to exert pensions, mothers' allowatn(:es, unem- -sage of .British shi'j)s. -� v ployment insurance, and manse other -at ' p • a_— e el things. which Belong to the socialistic farther in that direction. Already. .we d lease troll h for a nee � In brise four steers no pollee. Any aggressor nation here- I fence was denied to -ups. In that \Iarmora and destroy them , the in should we sell those w 1 ° . , :. v . > n .say, arM justly, that . the are well finished . ..s but the buyers powers acl eptedl Japan's action as 'floe T r ' not axing enough. Plowing ,i_z a violating 'these' treaties. . That is not time for• such, eonsideriltlon. As tlte• an imaginary danger . .` furrows turn over and the,.rieh,; (teen, The I(1hinese in occupied China dist• rf -roar .w•on111 SN' 1S the means 'of bringing Turkey in not we have muf'h of it and are getting. into Place . • . it's surprising 11'hw shion the decade had set, A blond► More as one service after,another is clearly the troubles that *kept ept . you ui•eie.ed the Japanese -operated raldio tttken o"ver It)y eover ni'sent Federal testing on your pilldw at night s4'E'nl, 10 staltion at s'hahghai. Two Japanese ' ( a-r•"range themselves,a The food situation in - Italy has !Provincial or municipfi. Every new, logical apsweice - bec'ome so des per ato that" 'even spaghetti i being rationed. Heavens with •natill•at, merchants 1 , national Settlement there, A bomb let ;'oin Nanking's • ('entra1. Ra 11 way were ailiot, in the Inter-- :w;eialistic project should be cloy •erutinised, however, and 'it should, not different. The earth IA moist . • • and Station. kinin„ eight Iic'ol)lE. Four Cly I'ltit;inri in the spring ie. soInehow 11,you halve ha(1 open -webthet it is tiler may i►e saying in -Italy that ix' adopted' unless its 111011ts are beyond bombs emu mem orated the day in • warm and steamy. 111�('I'e i ric^h ClantoIl:. The right -tilde -lip nations on Canadians are *living on windfallen question. fertility .'in • es breath. . . A tense of the other fide. of the earth, c,hn ,+) a I)1?iE"s. -geo•w•in.a;t sits" seems to .till the ahli'. A . _ loved WI" e 111 19:11, .. flu► longer re -,d QUEEN' lal%'y winter-sleep-'cl1ug,.ecl snake 'crawls 1 � sluggishly out Of reach Of the hoi'st's 111('I111►Pr citl'1ei'.To I':P Iial -or 1)t�l(`e• Credit inust `t)e•rrite•n Attorney-iGen- 1 ] 1 I f 1 all w11E'el 1]] lilxl In ✓. • * * • ti ilii , . rr • rr f , --Time 1 itlle 1 ('11nit'r'o 1 . tell 1, 1?tt fora reform 1 1 1 has 'Ithi, smiling, queen' of ours, .ars a ru 1, tip tirtlel ' '^ � • 'TIM BLACK SEA! . • ..lett ("�(lllrt snits. Fait iii 1l'- :Y' 1'itt;a1l1t: With pc'atrls•,1(ld lace and flowers. ,} air is tilled with. this noise ofa •► ' I "^ 111 r ,11 she -wears I )) 8111 1)1111, hooves. en � , ` t, i which 1 ie s ` r ) s > r s )onnee on the f eas ' - institute11 with re' fI)' i I' 11 1 1 wears l pretty' -own. t 1 l 1' th(>plow The soft s1)101 •',1 14 CLOSING OF, l ' world; *delight <t. they 1 tl feast 11 „ar(1 to' 4'(:s in Divi- nl °g nil she that 54'4'1115 suddenly to have ('((11)0 t0 In the great new stl•11ggle that' has did not know wb ,getting I° • • • Int hmight ' l life. A noisy neii.11lior complains in a been >ihlitiated by Hitler in Itlls,sial, s into in' the way of costs. - Now a system has, been establi h$.fl• whici )i sets out delrtlite'ly what fees ate., to he paid. s. +" i 1ltlfltsinen should not have to go ao, far northhis year to find their game. pirate Bence' county comer -.tile report that six hear. «'re killed on the Peninsula in one week. Bear hunting, 4(f course. has the disadvantage that it slight 'turn into a case of the bear' hunting* the main. which would lie• awkward for the man. • Ini ,e;e1, the deesn't- sob and w4101) (.)r '1uolt sahib and forlorn: - ° ,trident voice.; al)out the laziiwss oftli� il.-. ns r1i'c l fol • l andrandI'.l•itain to -Put k4e n's ilei ..Bible (-(,o►1 bless ht r„,1 itis. team! • . (_,hib1 c n yell in 11s4i+i)1ates p" • -•t tenller i'vi+rr• possible aid to our new .1,s radial tthe 1 l r 1 u tilt' corner Th(> ally. thoughts -tarn naturally to the face) • .• - 11, they t phis. , :it rec4ps-tint(, 111 1114 Il as 14_ morn. school vdrr( Ei lit the' Ilack•'i i. If Germany should :4)1 lllr 1nl'when the 1)01114('1,01(1.,fucking-•wth(o►rtght,,oftlisepy &od h1 4v rn,sut'. „lily, which i 1;(►t11111a1nd of that sea, •:rn(1 'rut 4)11 1)11(1 1 film, 1i0 in wt(Ire for it l ne quire to h 1 ovvu use the resources 'Haar v4rry room `ii' Tess; , ,+t g t of sun -them' 1ttik'+311 end. .the: (a_twasus, - � Lsi=e• fa1I pIoavin,; on t drizzling, She went ,11) church as large as life, 1•line dts fs not the ino:,t pleasant task: the' advantages she would derive are, . And wore her gayest dress." ., however, it has it compensations. .15 only ' too plain. l'nfortunatel;y no the fall dusk creeps. 111) darkly on y;c)u; direct cid by mean, of owl sea power .dud in til air raid shelter once and the misty rain which has (soaked; is. as- yet..poSsi1)le. -seT - I)eep down below the ,round, through your,. clothes begins to .Chilli An (►1a alnd difficult pri')blenl of Pri-. •: the stayed 'and had a cup of te'a,° ° you, the k lin 'go oil steadily • l . until till policy is brought once more into While bene. eve dropping 'round, the time does....filia11y cense ;then you view. Whether or not' Great Britain - •°� unhitch and "go to else •sta•ble in tile; c•an• makl' use of ht her'seappesser in the No truer queen e'er graced a throne 'deepening desk. - Theme is 11111rky j Black Naedepetlil. jll'i188rily 11p0 11 tile. 111'11 101.11 , light ' }n the stable. which right, of ' passage of the Tlttrdnnell'es. steams, up as the horses iy ttgie'Iir. The: For many geueratflins it was the stot^k has ben :fed and you take (If►w•ii settled polies of British statesmen the lantern and heard far The house," I that it was mork.l.conSistent with Bri- Golden-yellow'light from atl,-oil lamp; tisk -sec•ifrity that the Passage of the St -reales oi1C _'cvirtr !110 warmth ;1: TO 1.ilort)tttelt., should' 1... (•losecl "t(1 all If. anybody can realise what '1 milli!'.n' really means, some ide;i of the ., -glume of 'f'ann(lal's munition. output -.may he gafne(b from the announc'E'ment Vert sin(ei flue outbreak of the ear • tee Million '(•artrid..t cases have be4'n turned oaf,-bv,,t`anadian pthnt:a. .T1i so - are for anti=alrrraft. anti-tank,'-'1ieli4 and Havel guns. • s. * Australia has had as change of gov- ernnient, J'olln Curtin, leader of the '`tabor party, having taken' over ' the • : reins. There is no rhafi ;e, hove per; in Australia's determination to remain Than this great Queen of ours, Who faces` death day after any With pearls, and lace•and,flowers. I'ldna Jaques, in Toronto Slar. -AND FR N CH ((Midland Free Press) open' the kitehefl (14)or ,and etelrinside. �'av(tr,11i1)4, t• 1so tllart IitisSiatn f1f'11(.1.114should p)Eratt, in fhr ee,ditee. },:i,ri], a a,.a= clothes are •..•• .--- - Ile 1111a11,17, ,N and as you t'at the tiredness seems10 1 1•a1T19811 Ilnd 1111'eaten Egypt °:tlld the has frill le an eatrtl(cst appeal to his leave your body. noon the fall plow- route •to theI:1st, tlian that Brinell fellow I'"ren•hL"atn'1di blip' to learn the 1 finished 1 th 1 1 1 t' g l Premier {indI){81t • pf Quebee 1'I•ovinee 1n' will ►e an( e ) at1 :e 111 fleets 811081(1 be able 10- enter slid English languIig('. Il'reinier 'Hepl)(iru •now w i11 come dote n to cover up the [► ) merle well follow ?brit and eel: the 'oven".furrowaa. The work is hard(„1. ].�1.►, MUM the Duke of •W4'lliut;ri)n was a4ki d— by the I''rt•neh: ambassador which of the alternatives. the eleslllg. or the opening 11. the Straits .to men: 1. he replied 'vl,th- r r a r : vele s) the were where Akin er were ()uta moment's hE l.tio11 .'Tap (•lore nia•j'or 11(01 ((1 (.1118(141 '4111111 111111 they inn . "p . Hives the (leepest .nliool children of Ontario- to make a but at the d'lo ' of day . . . a clay real effort to learn not only to read stu•h as this fa11 one . , yob sleep. but to speak I''renc•lt• There is noth- t'ontentedis, your tired body glorying fn„t that will lead to ;eloser frienilslhip- -i the comfort of deep sleep. Vowing and. 1l11(1(1et'Tndin l►etweETT the two somehow to he the h'i 1:t of farm- of -war, Ilel"arivocat era to in the - Bra (k 144':l. Thus ,111 1 ;,..in the war to the end. `TTnroettlnately -should learn catch other's lana„ltoges. . there is .(to -, •nearly ecen : a balance • !between ;prtien *In the Australian I. t STUPID TA:�CATIO�t Parliament that 'a `"wartillle election (ilc•in.ton L..... •I're=:�a► may be nee0ssary, • • •1litler's itlhportanee is 11iminishing, even in his own ORtinlaton. In May, 1949, lie twzh-1 the weir would decide rho them: in these av'a ters 'we are Miff R-® _ satisfaction.� way from otlr, reeourees, the Itussians �' KNOW THYSELF rs NG- fa •�, f a 101 di Mercury) MLI( STOCKING NOT .I O . '1'lie chances in 1:'44 or of , tub v(ng a Why not tai rite 181111 wile lets his 1°."life are” p;retitly ilmprc)r('tl `lis property!go, to evret�1 rather than the nlalang a :8yst(181tie .study, of foods, man who keeps his property ,,in good af1(1 constant attention to their effect ('otl(1•iti'011? 4 A:1 it f aft O1 ';tela, the on the body, as shown by the condition tris» who employs the painter and the. of the digestive and excretory organs. cal1)onter t() make his plaice more at Long. life is very desirable froth" the ato of the Derma t �� for a t tractive n(1 who 1118a improves h flit' erlewpoillt of the person who aitit at ► 1" dation a aearattce Of the whole neigbi)orilood 'making himself as useful as possible in rthou iannd>e:nrq. +La,t vagi. he (le- Is pt n.11•1z(( 1)aS' t1� n xa c,1, ' 1.by i. g' t ,tit whfl(' his day to his generaxtion. - The norm - dared : ''1he decision now W]Oiir, fought *the marl wllo all(►wrs his •; property to ,ably "equipped person shoitId ho more out .is' for Ha next one hundred years become aft eye=.ori ,' and thus decrease,' t1.F;4'ftil at eighty than 110 was at forty, (t'erhap in 'October, 1042,110 will be tine vsallle ,of his neighbor's property, . ,bec'ause he has twice the expei'ienee : j r is encouraged'' i11 hie neglt.et.. ' 1)17 re- hut this presupposes that h41 '11a18 left +,pr('g) r4 (l toadyiiit .that"'t6t•o yr,.i s ( dueta(1 taxation, Ti- is Jtog]ecl sonxe,daly 1 to him' a1phyisfea1 habitation (capable tt,0txLl.ltt victories 41(111.,t 1110.11. (t thing. .the people will wake up arta demand l, of enabling hitt! to live 001fortably' • • • ', h 1 • radical (hang(° in tit( as 4 ' t with comparatively unimpaired 111(11. `iYi17(t� Provincial by-ek-€tY(i13.3 re law. 1 tants. Too 11t114t ssttciltlort is give1t to t►el(I itt Quebec this week, 111!1, v4 e s ._... ,.,. _- thcs:e matters in the odue 1ti(i11 .,of keenly contested. In one ti.4 (�.t tte F'be):yr ttime,u, taxes; taI.4► a lamp they ' if the •GodbDout 'Govermiient land on, the wrouner's Keely. IIELP THE ftEll) . (ROSS (Broekvnlle 'Iiehoi:c1, 1 )t:1td Times) Memory is shorty and most women :thin:e forgotten that not until •,11)1•; . didI they's/with), to"wear sill. stcu'kinlgs 1 gen- erally, when the slit -and hobbled sk t to tiered ill a new (brevity for skirts. The National (Ieo(;rn.plti(• Society *h(ls pointed (1>1t that at the ,beginning of the twentieth (`etltuty only 1)110 '.;o Iran, ftt • 24)00 wore 51111 'stocking,. So That's That ' "These doughfltlta,►" said' the young married roan,' "are not like fry mother Used to +nzalie ), "I know it,"'. replied the recent. bride • sweetly. "Your •mother• (1111Iec1 up' just the other d1;c•• aand asked Per my recipe." 'Aiming Uwe a - new 'leaf too ofteta may make you , lose your., place com- pletely. on the side of the Central Powers. In the subsequent stages of the •war the isolation of Russia. owing to the clo's- ing of the door through the Straits, -. contributed largely to her collapse; the costly .D.alrclanellee expedition was an at.tenhpt to break • thut blockade. - Henf e the Treaty , of (Sevres (1919) forbade the fortification of the Dar- danelles and threw the Straits open - to the ';shi )s of all nations., so far as Turkish interests • alnd security • were -(•oneernet1, these, It was • assumed, -would 1)E' guarded by the -collective ne- tion visualized under the tiegis, of the Leas elle of ,Nations.. When Mussolini's Abyssinian adven- ture iu 1931Hirt' tf red to bring about (Continued on page 7) r - `letter- was censored" .. •-Things are happening where Jim is in the navy = . things Jim is not allowed • to write about. If Jim about 'the war. Jim says "everythin'g's O.K.!" and that's What we expect from • O.K. ,or Jim would be back home at his regular job. We've got to do our part, too. One thing We ,can do .is We've.got te, „see to it that the mentin the services getthe ships and guns and • tanks andp lanes they their need to do t heir ,. • lob.. War Savings .Certificates help to SUPPORY THE .WAR WEAPONS • more War Savings Certificates. • Thq help of every Canadian is. needed" for Victory. In these days. of war the fltoughtleis; selfish spender is a traitor to' our war effort. A reduction in personal spending .is now d vital necessity to relieve the pressure for .goods, enalple more and more.labour and materials to - be diverted to winning. the war. The ail-ciut effort, which Canada must. make, demands this self-denial of 'ecich of us. DRIVE IN YOUR COMMUNIT Aablithed by the War Sat4agt eimunittee. Ottawa' SNIM LESS te 90$0