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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Goderich Signal-Star, 1941-10-23, Page 2Nom ,rwo THE GODERICH SIGNAL -STAR Mit (0040f$1011ttilawtlast: 4 ' OOMBINiNG, TUIP aoubiauti sumo, awl) GODV10,00 WRAB Published hi Signal -Star Paeaa; • West Street, Goderlelifie •Untario .111-11THSIM,Y, 9CrfOREId. 3r 1941 THE PRIOE-VijaNO ORDER. In its, efforts to •prevent infiatiOn the Federal Government has ea:wan:tsar the adoption Ofa drastie polieY of stabilizS • in; prices and wagee.. Prices. of goods Cadskrarlees -whieltreweee, An -effect for • sale 'tour weeks Preceding Octiiber llth are taltea , as the basis. of the scheme; and, 'with rOpeet to the rates and Oriees mentioned ” ill the order, no blgher rate or Price naybe (charged after the new policy comes into.effect •on November 7.th.• EmPlaYera may Mit increaee present wage rates vvith- . „ . OUt pernatesion but a.' cost -of -living ••bonus must -be paid as ordered. 'Generally *peaking, the new poliey --rather, the'exteneion of the Govern- ment's anti-inflatien „with approval, though sonae revision may be necessary here and there, and objeetions are heard from gpedal inter- ests which would like to "make some- thing" out ofe the li'ar.----zPheeeditorial eomnaent of The Toronto Star is prac- tical and, sensible mi.:a-we reproduce it, as followe.: Proposals' 'as radical :as those enShed.ied the Canadian Govern- ment's price -and -wage Control pro; grani yvere-bound, to meet 'With criticism in many.- quarters. lin- - porters are aeking how they eau be expected te goods from abroad! at a fixed. price when. the scont of these- goods to .them will . 'be • beyond control. Businessmen point to seaspnal., eb.angee in the value of part of their stock and • lament the rigidity of a- price ----structure ibased on four week.s" of . ' _,September and October.--Laborse • points out ,that • sOme -industrial • wages have lbeen caansiStently too " low and do not constitute a fele, basis - for calcination& .President Tom Moore - of the Trades and Labor iCongressethinks the GOvern- ment has taken "a step towards • totalitarianism," and it is of course true that. only a war against tetalitarian enemieg justifies the regimentation which is 'involved. But that war has to be fought .• Every man views the new regu- lations 111 the light of their effect upon himself or his business., llic , sees •practiCal difficulties, Be sees the possibility of 'in'justice. But the fact is that no one has pre- tended that the' application of the' - Government's pelicy is going to be otherwise than tremendously dif- ficult and Complex. And if. it is .carried through without injustice to •soine, it Will indeed, be unique •' among economic pr.ograms. Tile Wartime Prices and Trade Board and, the • National Labor' Board have a task ahead- of them 'which will try' their very' soula. - They .will e'neouRtev . the special , -problenni--which-the-treW• reTaila- tions create in hundreds -of differ- ent industries. They, will • have, to make conees.sions . cove'r this special eircumetiiece and that ; yet ifthey. make too' many the whole etruetut-e will come tumbling d.own about their heads, and the effect of it he lost. It may with. reason be said; indeed, that 'this job of price and wage control -is, just as ,- 7-- difficult a job aSthe transformation iOf Industry • from peacetime to k wartime requirements. So -Premier Xing was right when he said that the experiment re- . quires the co-operation of the whole Canadian public—uresellish • co- operation which will place national advantage before personal advaut- age. Bilt after all. it is , to the advantage (#f the Maividual as wdleg -td .the adViinfage of the state that -the rise,in Prices should- . be halted.* They have already in- orea-`441 by, over laaa per cent. _gime, the beginning of the war. Th•e erux of -the sit:illation is that hers of,..lirookI,yn's losing team wilrget abont $4,000 each. So it ,bnece all grief for the losers. a • see_ There ie •geiteral approval of the Government's ipriceetlaing decree—ex- seept that tmion labor -Wade -le say it .is unjust to' labor, farmers' spokesmen protest that it is unfair to farineee, and the Seamen's 'Ultima exeisutive say ft should not apply to sailors, In other words, these, restrietive laws are all right 'Whit applieseto anybody' but ourselves. • ... * * • • . I n com Pie te ret tires of the 'Provincial general elections-jr British !Columbia show large gains for. the 4).(0.V. party, which has doubted its representation in the Legislature. . The I'attullo Liberal Government may not be able to emirs Mond e majority. of the new House. The, eonservatives apparently have- ten, members, the O.C.F.'fourteen and. the Liberals_ seventeen, with ,nureber of seats in doubt.. . , e • s A sample or IN•ozi, callousness and cruelty is ,the statement of the Nazi commissioner in 'Norway "It is a matter of indifference to Germany, if some thousands .os • perhaps tens of thousatik1S-of Nor- wegian men, women and children. starve and freeze to death during ':war. If Germany had taken - advantae of her right—of making the occupied Countries -provide for her troops—the hunger in Norway woutld, be more terrible than it would be possible to imagitie.". What wonder that many of the Norse peoplenre defying the worst the Nazis can do • and are asserting. their 'right to freedoni and independence, the right to live as human beiiigt IIphis °life!' of LIFtadows • DALEY TRACTOR If you !dell up- a book .of looms, by JanteS Whittomb 'Riley you'll see many interesting things about ordinary fame life as it :was back in his day, !How- ' ever, tinteS have changed a great deal' sine° 'then, IA place of balky horses ine cold, frosty,. fall mornings' in, our township, a groat many- people have ' to Put Tap with tbalky tractors, • , A balky horse was a* mightfllitlicult 4thing_to:get_dnnill.-W•411- O.f.*leer perverse natnre a balki -horse .-COC114-. Cause a man to lose bis. temper and literally froth at the mouth. Just about the time he was ready to give up and it _ do'wn exbauSted, 'the horse Would for no apparent reason switch its tail and 'decide to move on. There was a fair ohare of balky horses In, the townehip in those those, too. , It seemed at one time as if all the„horSe-trading gypsies -An the ,district hrolight Alt theg3Orlitlb nisai bastion niotn dioily, .incresas inogtat17 itno tthbee' balky horses in the Province back to i our, tovvnehip, Father, who considered air -ferrying of planes-. • ' . I himself to he a keen jtidge of horse 3. American , production -of ' ethese Idesb art& a keen trailer, found him.leif materials and•itighting tools tor it corn ands British ' ferces continues steadily at 'one, time with two balky horses-, When one would go the ether was to increase, although with som,e slack certain not to movespots and disappointments ' and , (now . '` Corning out thet the rate of ina's.is produetien is be, .- morning I decided from breakfast title ed to try to straighten coining higher) with a slower rate of the garden gate from its rather increase. In some essentials, such as melauchihy lean. It was a brisk destroyer's, and heavier aircraft, tanks, autame. morning . . .. the sun not yet armor plate, etc., the. rate of increase high enough to'banish the night's ehill. Still continnea'atatea peakesswilt net be The iron work on the fence was clammy .reached • for another year or more, but and cold and the leaves underfoot these peaks' are very ligh. rustled with a metallie rasp that •told oft 4, The; United States's own armed the pranks of Jack Frost. forees ere being formed intV-effiettive . • The clear morningair was pol-luted awl large Units, with a year of con - with loud noises . . . the hammering scriptioe almost at an eat. If laws of metal on metal and now and again are aniended to extend the perrod of the asthmatic cough of a tractor which 'service, these striking .forces Will have refused to get started. Neighbor Hig- sufficient time to be built into armies and air " forces comparable only, to gins was 'having another round with his balky travtor. But those bouts are more or less frequent.. It seems that eVery 'time we 'go to a 'silo -filling' at the Higgins pies* his tractor acts rtp..Being next-door neikii77 bees- of Higgins, l' usually go'over early to he.lp him get set up for work such a's silo-fialing. - This year Is arrived glsOrtly- after daybreak' and Higgins was cranking and cranking as usual. Witlr hat •pushedserte on his forehead . . :his emocli lyin,g over tae tractor seat and his left hand 'firmly anchored to the 'radiator -cap of the old tractor, .his right. arm was *Sing around like a - Th Miss .alacphaillaas mime good ideas, -but sometimes hr logic limps. ;The Ur day at Listowel etc was talking about the difficulty of, 'getting' better- brices for farm- products hecause of lack of organization, "For example," .She'said, 'athe prices Of beverages were raised recently. No -eoniplaints were made. But just let the price of milk* go up ,a - cent am12 there. are many p.oteete." . SmelY alias Macphail does not put beer on a. level with Milk. Milk is- artiele of universal con-. sumptien, •• and, it le espeeialle 'a necessity for children. A .rise in 'price is felt in, almost every home, As for beer, an inerease price is a matter of indifference .t he majority of cept Wet it le actually wel- comed -by temperance reformers who believe that the higher the price' the better: if it reduces consumption'. Where the farmer loses out—as Miss Maephall should' know ---is that he hes not control of the selling .price of most ef iris products. Farm products go up in price more frequently, perhaPs, than any other elase of -goods—as witness the daily market reports -but they drop back again just as freely. The producer, hoWeveess hos little' or nothing •t'o say, about it. Be'esells at 'the market price, and middlemen 'may make two or three times as much profit Tenn .handling.his goods as he does from grOwing them. Among townspeople the remark:As friAnWly heard that they don't mind, giving a liiglier prier for farm prodecte if the farmer gets the benefit, of the increale Current Views on the 'LW AFRAID TO TO TUE DENTIST • war.torn world, as -of miilsumnaer eau best be aneamiteleed in the oi- lowing i)ointts I. The United 'States is giving Just a bOu as. 'much aid, and tossiblyr more, to tlie nat4nas• tilghting fol tivedoint a..s if it were itself. a...belligerent. Its aU iss-far ahead of, What it was1n 101a, andr. far exceeds th:e Americaa. edntribution for maaty months aTter oui. entry into' that `war. 2 Xy.aellblis-suelr as. -the-, occupa- tion 'Iceland the United •States gives a quantity and quality of aid to Pritalu "short of war" which as explicable only in these, unorthodox' undeclared -war slays'. sealane Opens -to Iceland; a 'neutrality?' patrol based on that is- -land, aff•ord su'betantial acseistanee. to -the maintenance of the British 'Meanwhile,' Ameritan materials Anterica'e place and policy la this —whichcertainly is 'not- always othe price-fixing, _ thengh- .le May noe (1154 be '- Farmers stoOld organize, o f aboolutely .fair, to all, 1,4 •ecesesery sourse ; but we hope their organization keep (10*11 the coats of better than the wild inflation that! will 11-611 to . getting their sprOdtletS to the consumer, Minh] iertalialy re:suit in the aliseneer'' rather than to inerease the general ef regulation, • EDITORIAL NOfES They used to v'pour oIl 011 tile. trOubled waters:* Now oil`seems to be one of the worICs; big trouble -makers. , • • • • • Price-fixing and wage -pegging are bye -products of war. They • must lee a ba nd oned 419 •40011. iti11611 -peace- einnesee With, repeated Sinking:4, of rat. Dutch windmill on a windy day, e tractor was in mach"the Same 'condition as • very dead. - He stopped. and looked up, panting. :His conversation. wita.punctuated with a- ehoice. set, of. descriptive adjectives' which: in themselves sl should. have warmed. up the tractor 'motor. Thee with a most determined look an shis eyes he plat -Med his feet wide 'apart and griteped the Crank and began turn- ing in .earnest. Then ,. the tractor kicked- . . . and when -Say, kicked . . . it is for the benefit of city people who may, net lie.•eseare tha t a 'tractor packs as Much' dynamite its wallop as an oldafashioned American mule,. Higgins seeteed to 'coil up. like a snake and tben unwound. The lauguage began to blieter Onces again. I offered to try cranking the treetor but by • the time I Made the offer he e buried beneath the- hoied contraption with a hammer and a wrench. For • at least five .iniuutes (here was a busy southl, of -metal' on Metal, Finally it stoPped. "I think I hate t fixed," he said quite, prim dly, etarted crankTing -and kept it up steadily for another five minutes. This tima: the tractor was quite unreepone SM... "There didn't' even seem ,to be a kjek -left' in the metal. monster: Once agihn. he haried.,: himself. . under the hood .•.- eathie time locating a dis- lodged wire which a pp; t really hatl dead- ened the motor. The' motor would turn •over . . . . cough a couple of timee and then soggily stop. 'Thee was encou rageinen t at least. "It's flooded," was the :a le nouncement. , . For , five Minn tes we stood and smolte,d , and talked about everything, except thetrector. • Finally he went back to work. en it with. it vengeance. nig hand 'slipped and' he bashed his 'knuckles on the,.metal. Has your hand eVer slippet14-61T a. erank on a chilly 'morningsand struck lead metal? If •it has, tlien.' you will know about the numbiag experience that it really- is. He hopped Oil one foot, 011(1 then the, otlWr'end, tried tercrale haS whole -fiat -- blood, oil and all—into his mouth. , • For at leiret three minutesThe g2tood i.ot of living-.• stock still. 'Men with .Ins hat perched • on the back of his head . . . his hair. WAR AND THE CHILDREN pushed out over his fdrehead, . . blood (Ottawa.. Jolt rna I)• .,, •I -Germany's and Britalife. • 'a. Public opinion, meantune, like the man who. ouglit to go te the dentlat, puts ofethe -hour of actual entry into -the war, though With a .feellirgethat it is beconiing more and more inevit; able.. There 'sue sign that the decision .apProachee. We aet like, belligerents its thie undeclared War, and se limy; as- such action seems adequate we defer outright belligerency... Only when 'coe- ,tinually stiefigthening action.."short of war" no longer- seem sufficient to #iave Britain; or .when Hitler actually attaeks staple American outppet or inter- est more flagrantly than he has yet far • done, only then does our policy, 'appear likely to befome outright war. ' . If °Ile were eapable of ocieutilic de. taehment 04141 like Iliese, the most interesting phenemeanin orliDennocratle titia any real threat ta? the 'Safety of our people if it were allOwiel tto de- velop 'according to the Plan swbieh IIitler had " ontlIned with cYZ1hall franlineea, in arein Kampf." Tile shock of the-faal aft ,Pranee, which. was 'the real first rousing of the roritibli to the task before them, 'was also our firet real stret•hr We' had already morally taken sides, but we were toe whittle. to heels oar ludigitatien. betavioe would, .-eeM to a iuihersaL Characteristically We vented It1u pro, Ptha:anityiedaiszfr atheettownillistreeo atoett;iezeVelad. When nonneentellts oft the issue, 7in preach - has wee ee9p net inlay of the .euirir'itee1 naltra-ne'nalltr:tt;I:jillaninthdieuoinpuTstaillrlitutel:Iiiatic.:(tfulftllye of Hitler" Stales, iatit of every Other eou t that At h ' work in itaa waited, for Illitleis• ry„ t e (present, time, 'the most las Ole thedemocraeles and Upon states like, same if 'Ittifealit 'conitinnes. tO 110111 111• 14 1.611110•1°113a tieeanngSeei* is sf tlaflaatlsewe • This utaarbuese that has descended the winter. The same voices that only recently assured no that the vs'ar was iPelesely lost for 1Great. Britain, and that it was too late for any American effort lacount, have since with' equal Turkey isnot Russia, under the, inibend. ing threat of becozning diitler's next victim,:has been the, ;result of the inability of both •leaders and people to recognize -at iiirst the trueenature of the threat, Confusion has been wOrse assuranee told us that "Russia will cOnfortinied. by' the presence,. in every hog Hitler down indefinitely ; Germany, country of a large and articulate group has alreatty lost' the war," and so we who believed that 'Hitler Offered no need do not -Mire If they should prove real threat, that it was pos,sible tk) to be wrong about that, as they were "do business with Hitler," and who about the destruction of Britain by weletned him us a potential deliverer the air ,strength of -Germany, they will from the threat of Communism and, prgnaptly revert to the original lineand world" .revolution:'- This° failure ;both say that, having conquered Russia,' of the imagination and of the .reason in Hitler is m,ore omnipotent than ever countries. like Auetria, the Oslo group, and the It wirtild be folly to join issaes and others, was only in pert shared, by with him. • OzechosSiovakia and poland. Even in * ,` these countries; however, Hitler found What would be the state of mind Iii allies. Far more important, he of this nation, now arming to the found real support in the only centres teeth eand already, possessed of the of resistance which could, at an earlier world's Most formidable navy and of stage,. have* smashiedr him effectively:- a great haSptrained artily and air in. France., ...1131-tain, and le Russia, force, should we disintegrate into- aim - The mutual distrust between( govern- lessness, willieg by default to let others ing groups in Russia end Britain, well 'bear the heat -and burden of battle, founded as it Was, was undolibledly even though' We have deidared their Hitler's greatest aid in preparing and fight to be. our light? What would keeping to his systematic time -table of become of our unity as e nation? Whet destruction. of .our deobts and disillusionment con. 'When we contsider the Nazi inove- cerning a system of government so meta: and itg record of broken promises, hopelessly incapable of -de:el-Slaw in our - Its unlimited' appetite for power, -its hour of supreme test? The re- cord is plain. Those who have waited for Hitler have been half -destroyed .from within bY paralyzing doubts and fears; even before the 'blitz descended 'Querterly Review Thar- . mussOO»RZittl-, 1 WS, • • Airs 'swollen mei( brews; and deg, ir he mucus caused by gutty head. cold inuldng MO, miserable for you? Then xeuevo dtscomforts with ei few drops ,of Va4F0-ncl web, hostril- Vattro.noi u0 eueetive oeceuser, It does three important things - (i) shrinb swollen- Inentranes--(2) sootheSi1rit9ti0n-(3) helps ilushromts Passages, clearing clogging mucus, •... And remember, . when used in tinie, VatrOf101 belPaVICKII revent telauft. m develo Vfrillt041101, pICOBAC we Tobacco FOR A MILD, COOL, SMOKE HELP THE RED CROSS 'Ilinnsismommomme. declared intention ‘ to make Germany the ruling nation of the world, it is difficult to understand Why itg victims; whoup to 1940 possessed power ',enough to crush it, should, instead of conibin- itnitieudeh.ite,e. '.itssu, :merle their cowering at- , The intereet in this analysis for Am- erican'g lies, in the reappearance...of the same_pattern in our O'W.11 thinking and feeling. t first it was impossible to i convince e great ImIk df the American people, ov rborne by an intense feeling of the futility' of the last "peace settle- ment, that -this Wa r . was, in any sense differeet from the las* war, or that it 6 . lottesville, Va.). "ITALIAN OCCUPATION -ENDED , • The return of Emperor, Haile Selassie to his capitetl- atter five years: of exile Was greeted with unmixed satisfaction throughout the Allied ' world, This was partly because it was; felt to be, a portent, holding out the ' (bontinued on page 7)- I ATTENTION VIAND YOUR FEET " AT EASE .1 MET CANADA streaming froVil(nucklee . . face t)ne of the saddest 'things about war up in a very determined. way to tie. is its tragic impaet • on the lives of tractor. He shoved the crank in 'Co r,hildren. Nazi 1.A. i. of ilritish make connect ion, and then Sliddenly eiPattered with II WOG& Ile walked cities and towns has killed. many in- 'turned, it. The tractor started . . . nocent • little ones—babes in arms as Without a muimur or a ehoke. The ;well as those of school ages. The wdrniotor purred as Smoothly as it is cruelly has ended the Iives of a great possable for an aneient tractor to purr. number of eltilileen—inutiltited tens of The balky tractor stiarted, 51151 aa' the thousands of tealbsetirttent issfep in the ravaged• eountries of parolee. . ',Sjaethbricige Herald) . . • , I tering nerves leers atI_ )re,1 um, pt int A Happy family groups have been broken NOT LL SLACKERS easiqs by German torpedoes, Uncle up. X large umber Of chaldren have In an important Western- ceqtre there was a mooting of 'a group of war workers and one gentleman declitred vehemently that ite wohldn't move as hand to' •help until. there was-von- eometo Canada from Britain more fl101 seems td' he getting nearer dial r lifted States. and, in other landA far • from the actual battle zone. • Four dollars invegted now in a war• Tine -war will leaVe its mark en the scription of manpower and wealth, have found wartime homes • in the nearer to a m "gheotg war. Jive. of the children In (*anode they savieg•g eiTtifteate will be five dollars, - ' • "We've got to get these foreigners." lie • see fathers and brethers joining the in' a few years • when post-war living ' forces, going away' to serve. exelain*(1" •"14y two sons are in the air force and these ether fellows aren't doing it thing." There as a silence for a moment and then a man Well along in sears arose and said some- thing like Oita "r am a 'German, born itt Austria. -and all my tiVe ‚sons are in orrth,t4r backs, whieh is hotter 'than can We are fighting this war to defeat1114 Vanadien foresee I hate Hitler. be said of some of the European (Hitler end' all he stands for, to pre - t I would prefer to have him beaten probleins wile -hese to be met. • • • s Canadians have the prospeet of (-out- ing ',through the war with the shirts They hear talk of the war in their in ehe echoo le. A ehild, five yeast Of -age, looking up at an R.C.A..F. 'plane, was overheard to say. 'Hitler is a bail man. he pest:plias serve 'the diapoeratie way of lifea---for tion." The debate ended there. One foreigner ledit proved .that all forei,T,tiekS „weren't slaelieres enreelvee lett, More 'particularly for out Children. 'Ne, thinking, man or woman , A sad, Pleee of news Is that . fpwr noticing happy mantles:of children play- eueeem are4x.hig „eatwom ir.m;a4e-of Ing in a seboot yard or around their homes can hell; 1)111 meditate on what e thsoaring price of rowl...,--lithea did hats happened to.the eltildr(41 of turol,* the domestic geese and turkeys take in this war. liteel a tightening about . to tying? the,"beart, There will 1* ati WISPOICell "Thank 00(11 my ehildren are f=are bore ' and .then 'object to priee-fildia& TIS irQl;pht141,(;em?n,"mt ,f0llow 4nreis. an even iv ye untarafeeffort than by eonserip- V 4. 110.717, What 11 tit; the world in store People 'win) clamor' for a total war, "totalitariarrif;am,are', not consigtent. greater Ileternalrtatiou:to do all we qau, lIow can tittle lke a total •svar without 113 individual,. to seelltat the war jq won, deciRively „and as , quielay as po1. totalitarianism? pible. 'rise world tve want, to :leave to • them,' children of today—the„niest and ' q vnt'itx tnettilx.,r,ti of tite Yabkee3 worn.l.sr of tomorrow a world tlEat hageball team, winner:, in the world's j...1r, a going concern of faith, hope and 6eries, get 1$4 J1 each tut their auare scharity. We want thens • to on)hy the. ',fruits 31111 111P‘:;f410P of. deameraey I;ut of tiro "•take" for AO game% Meta- wanting. and wis1tln t,4 • ,L) sionowarrommok CKACHE OFTEN WARNING Radrache may be the rest sign el Kidney trouble. When your hock *the', look' to .4 *our kidneys. Don't fal te heed this warn. ing it is too important. Take prompt *aka te correct Backache., wits cause. At the fled sign ef Backache turn cartfidently te Dedd's Kidney rdis—fee ever hill * century the,. '4 favorite remedy for -Kidney solosents, to? CooddisKidneyPills. • .MANUFACTURIi\IG, HANDLING, OR DEALING IN FOOD FEEDS LIVESTOCK, POULTRY, YARN, QCLOTH, CLOTHING or FOOTWEAR • •C; UNDER THE WARTIME PRICES AND TRADE, BOARD LICENSING ORDER — ALL PERSONS" IN THE FOLLOWING TYPES OF ,BUSINESS Manufacturer Manufadurer's Agent Packer (meats, fists) Precessor 'Blender • Importer Exporter - MUST Groceries (getter/AI) Bread, biscuits,.• or other bakery products Fresbfruits and vegetables • Fruit or -vegetable priparations Candy:A:tr.-chocolates • Breakfast food and cereals • Micaront and kindred products 'Coffee, tea, cocoa, chocolate, or spices - Sugar or molasses I3utter Cheese • Milk (fluid) or aeons Warehouse operator . Cold storage operotor Shoe ripairshop operator Custom tailor Clothing contractor • Wholesale merchant or jobber Retail merchant • , Public eating plic,e operator , Reiff cielitateisen operator . Caterer - ° • Broker -Commission merchant *')•Producer who buys and pHs the products -of others Drover, huckster, • oi other who buys the products Or111:111. culture forosale • Auctioneer Co-operative buying organization Co-operative marketing or selling ' organization •- HAVE A LICENCE IF THEY HANDLE OR SELL Milk' (evaporated, condensed or Powdered) lie -cream Aerated and mineral waters a(soft drinks) rincks)- . cured;cannita mttd) .Meats 4fresh) Fish (packed, cured, canned) . Fish (fresh) • • ,Pbultry products (eggs, dialed" poultry) - • :Flour or mill feeds Feeds for livestock or poultry Meals or lunches (catered Or delivered) 5 • Meals or !Cinches 'gild focconsump- tion on the premises Deliptessen Products - Livestock ‘or poultry • • `Agi '40 Men's or beim' clothing, 'Mtn." Or boys' furnishings Men's or boys' hats or caps Women's, misses' or children's clothing children's Women's,: mbsee or accessonis (lingerie, corsets, • gloves, etc.) Fur goods (wearing apparel) • Hosiery ° Millinery' .11Q01$ and shoes Rubber footwear - • Boot and shoe Findings Yarn. or cloth of cotton (inchiding blankets) Yarn or cloth of yilk, artificial -silk,, 'rayon Yarn or cloth of wool (including blankets) Yarn or cloth oF linen ,'farmer, gardener, livestock or'poultry producer, or fishirrnen is not subject to licence, unless he buys such goods .or resale. .n.. After Dece• mber 1, 1941, when any of..the' above goods are' bought for resale, h.oth. the seller's and buyer's.licence numbers must' be -marked on the saki slip, invoice', or other document recording the tale Licente‘Application Forms will be distributed through, the mail. Persons' who do not. receive , • one should apply at their Post Office where copies of Oe Licensing Order may also be secured 11 A Window Certificateamid a Licence Identification Card.will be itsued to each licensee. The Ceftificate t R Must be° affixed to the main door or an adjoinirig window of the place of business. No licence fee rimuired . After December 1; 1941, nounlicensed person may buy „ , for resale, 0 : handle or sell any, of the above good . , . ' , J - , , INQUIRIES FOR FURTHER INFORMATION SHOULD OE ADDRESSED TO -THE REGIONAL DIRECTOR OF LICENSING AT VANCOUVER, 'EDMONTON, REGINA,,:WINNIPEG, TORONTO, MONTRE!iL, HALIFAX,' soiy JOHNOR CHARLOTTETOWN 4 11111Wed snider the eulhority of the %dim* irkes trod irode florsof.*TfititeiA, Crgirod* •t O 4 ••'-,--'-- '01 44