HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Goderich Signal-Star, 1941-11-27, Page 2drtid ina
I INtirTiiii)'4oppuien sxoNma .442U) THE GOD Iti[011 8c1'41i'
011)14410 by Signal -Star •Press, • IsilnitCds
West titseet, Gedesieis, 0 sane
" TittiRSDAY, • '',NOVIISIBMIt 2Tt le 19+1
EDITORIAL NOTES•er change in use of aereage within the
two, years of War thallauy other
,vountry in. the world for which I have
,s ,than a month to Chrieenit'.
been able to get • records. Canadian
QU'll, have to latireyt
farMers have made, greater proportion-
* 1, e * ,
, . ote intreases' ill the produetion of
It takes money to. beat Hitler. Act:0 foul • products required in Britain thee
• yOu'payine your share?
. have: lafin nit,,atie,by tiny other ceuttry
e „ * * -* for 'which I 'have been able to tire
, agile CeteatY Connell asks that.,neSv tb.e eecords," This triblite to Coeadian
6,ehool teXt430.01$ 'be bauti° until after egrieulturebi -Hone-dames - Gardiner
'the Wareltighto-geograPhles, Or'vas. indieates that Canade's faraterg are
*,,•• 4*,,, *. * I 11.$111g their heads a5 ---W4 a$,- their
At TeeSWatete where there is '''a hands, and Mr. Gardine s further
campaign In the weeeeee room -ques- statement is a tribute as well to theie
time,- the beer advecates say boot-, hearts. He saYe: "Every• yeer since
legging flourishes in firs" towns. • Per-
; 'haps: it doeie but the introdustiou of
• beverage rotiona doesn't stop it,
'.00derich well know's. ,
* t, * .
•..., •spread out on" the oiljcloth. She is
The hundredth" annlyersary of jtlie oOd from one ibraech of our populti-0 .
figuring with is stub of a pencil on the
nirthe of Sir WilfrULIeeerier was ob- tion much greater,than an additional back of an old envelope . . . 'and .lier
servedsin .4 inenieriar ceremony a his $100,000,4XXO
. ' logue. She buys 'very little from. it, 'Mit
hand hovers over ..the smailortier eeta-
,birtliplace ...at Set. Lin,- • Quebec.. The
it is a sure guide for prices an a eon -
fondest' dream. of the great Ca dian A REVOLUTION IN Stant source of entertainme-nt for the
•POWER DEVELOPMENT. whole familyo
statesman. was that he., might al the
. •---- ' , Mrs. Phil' is .figuring for Christmas.
•unite: of Ca!Mda se diet -m.00 divisions
(From Time, •New York, Nov. :24; 1941) She has her Ohrietraas gifts neatly
would not rend the country. is work
Steam at"'ItesettigbeSt pressure in listed on the back a an old envelope
is not ,et completed), but his example history drives a nese4urbine near South, and her supply orfrioney stacked On the
is not forgotten. V „ - Bend, Ind., with such efficiency that thei table. • 'Her forehead wrinkles and nn
*-
private U.S. power industry' antigipates wrinkles with -the problem of et
, *
' sa revolution in' the production -and, "I expect to sell some hogs before
The large proportion. of men rejected
they hope, the politics -of eleetricity. Christraas and I'll give you Some money
as physically entit for army service, The, turbine'ssinitial steam pressure out of that." I suggest, but she shakes
leads an obServer to wonder if the late of .2,300 lb. per sq. in. s'urpasses highest her- head at such a profane thought.
hours, dances, etc., which have 'become Previous pressures for •U.S. • central She Ls going to finance the Christmas
stations by a good 900 lb. Superheated season on the "cream and egg" money,
•so large a part of the life of Young
•to 940* F., the blaeting steam operatessi just as she has' finaneed all the other's
people in the last twenty years have the turbine at 3,000 rpm., ems turn out I Since we Were Art malried.
% not undermined thehealth of many 76,500 . kilowatts. It- converts-- one! How many times that old tea-pot
• who -otherwise would he possessed of pound of mediocre Indian ed soft Zoal 1 has saved this household. I- have
_
strong .physiques. Health education. is
receiving; gCeeter attent len thafes ever
before and is, uow on ,ithe sch6o1 cur-
• riculum, but all the te
•' don will be of little,
a' joyride as soon school' is out.
It's worth thinking out.
*
• THE GODERIOR SIM%YkirSTAS
Phil Osiler of Lazy Meadows
Dr naro, 4. Bork
.16
VOTRSDAY,, :NkElIBER
Current Views on the War ')
11lTTIMR AS SIREN B1: STRASSER tradieted with the /Significant erg*.
(The writer, Otto Strasee, now "Sparta was •not eons/stoat
Had. it carried out its interpal
'CREA51 AND FAG *ONE'S: • l'Oad.er of the `Tree Oerearme...) Was :43.c3te711" seirdom also .or-eign
wonder what eye vi do en, the hmec described br 1.)r- Vioeboeis ao politics -had it 'taken the 4Weaponsef
all .its enemies and made them its
serfs -it could' have united Greece bY
farm without the (Teem and 'egg money.
Tho.se very words have a faiAiliar ring
for 'a great 'many city ticople. That
• "Ilitier's Publie thaelny Number 1."
Probably Churchill has, eow euceeeded
to that title.)
• Hitler himself is`' -distinguished hy
providing4 they have ever lived on A tee jaek of any intellectual and. Mee],
farm . . . because to farmers the creana tee -teal aline, And lloilleee by the absolute
and egg ineney has been the founda.e lack of political Owl pere6nal.niorelity.
/ion ofetheir business for as long as the lie is the demon _of destruetion, the
majority •of to.1 earee to rennember. inezirnation of'negation and eVers evil
Akhoet this tinae Of year 3.drs. 11111 quality of the German race.
'6egius to get- f rugal witli the ineneY • I shall never forget the impreSsion
from the farm preduce. She takes eare eeeeived At my first meethig with him
alwiqs to meet the crenniqnan and, de" 1920. Next to his servility towards
mend tife elieck rbefore1 emit filch ,Ludenelortf, his morbid hunger for
a quarter for tobaeco.,- She tikes tile • power „repelled me most. "Wes must
eggs tp town herself theee days and come to power !", Thht wa3,„„theeetiotTif
ask.s for the money, in place of leaving :of his thcinglot and action. Be was
the ureltes•ae: she often does ,when buy- ,w.i.ylleye•-„iiiAtee.r_epeozo.ejiie methods,
ing, groceriee, In order -.that tthe "'OW to 1* etitpliiyetT.
bill" will take, tare of what we need inioxication Of power as sUch
during the leaeer Sliss-13 when the hens (which littler undoubtedly experienees
are not in the mood for laying and ae a substieute for the intOxlcation of
tliTmdrearil, "cheek has dwindled to a
the •war started Canadian farmers have. love for the intoxication of work and
mere shadow ef fte former size. evei;" for the into. xicOtion of alcohol)
Accepted; prices for their food coin I often' eome in from ehoring after
dominates hini to such a degree that
etodities whieh are so fair beloyv What supper and she will have the old he is ready to (-ger eVerythill to this
they aro entitled, to that ,the ace pone "crackkd tea-Vot tke table With neat idol-ereferably, of course, t e blood
little, piles, of silver and a few bille
stitutes a gift' to Il3ritish consumers of
(11,500 B.t,u.) iuto one. kilowatt hour
of electricity.* .
•
Since the average 'U.S. turbine now
requires tWo-thirds more coal, the new
"t -book instrec- turbine thus outs eoai conspniption. 40, 1-reasure-chest has 'managed to yield
per cent. belovithat of average turbines enough to fill the emergency. - Tax-
a Hie
never known how much' it contained,
u
becaSe the money is generally stuffed,
in among -coupons and old bills and re-
„eeipts. Yet on every 'occasion the
becomes-
• * *
There was good sense and sound
--ea Saving of 16,000 tons pe i nionth tine comes arid I dig down in my over-
To unite by force! •.That • Is for
Hitler's way of think -Able ms deck -sive an
idea as it was for the Prussian think-
lug of :1860 and IMO. •Aeut to rediree
others to serfdom, but to maintain*
themselves as the detninoting warrior
elaes-that is the mode. of life envis-
aged by thee,Prussian 'Junkers. • The
entire'foreign poleek of .Naziene there-
fore, has only one purpose. Other
Peoples' must give compulsory service to
enoble-raee," • They are to
be well fed (otherwise they ,cannot
work well) and protected by the' "Ger-
man cswOrd"---bUt deprived, of- all rights.
*• *- *
,Oz the American steamer oh'Whielx I
!amide the trip from 'Lisbon, I had as
table cOmpanions t WO gentlemen;
friends of each othee-ean American -and
a Swiss, both engrineers. •S. po11tial
ConversAtion- began, and both "neu-
trals" urged on me: "What • do you
and suffering' „of others., This un- want? Hitler :has brought peace and
NI
bridled "wrr ill to ,powejoined, with an w°1* to le "
rclunYow he will bring
• ,.!,
abli eolute lack of any soof mePeateand work to Europeand to the
enables Hitler to akethe most on rality,
vorld. .And. becauee"the capitalist's in
in - de 'c
en
tradictorr li
promises and pacts, enadon and New york do not want this,
reachery.
jesi replied briefly,: Were you ever in
t •
renders him capable of every kind• 0 It iele war.
If we recognize that' 11-Iitlerian'
Nof '
* ?-ison? Cpraplete peace reigns there's
'4d every inmate has work and fond.
azism is a conglomeration old
li'io much, for the ifirst point. Now for
Prussian power politics, modern ides.; Fie eecond. • Do 3-ou sincerely believe
magegy, and Tiensonal Tack of meeelite, at the labor leaders Bevin and Mor -
then we °shall immediately recognize rison are capitalists, and that Messrs.
the terrible world danger which. ibis
Naeism presents.
The old Prussian power politics,based
upon heavy industry, a powerful army,
'and a ruthless Police bureaucracy„liad
been for decades a menace to 'Germany
and to all pf Europe. Let us never
forget what the French • historian
!Krupp and 'Schacht are Socialists?"
Both neutrals remained silent amid the
laughter of all, those: at the table, but
hey were not convinced,
• Undoubtedly, Dr. • Goebbels, . • my
especial enemy for fifteen years,- is the
'met lute1lreiit person- in the Hitler
System. In contrast to Hitler, he is
'Lavlese wrote:: 'The unification of not merely lacking in morals -he 'is
,Germany, assumed the character of a iinmoral. While Hitler simply has -no -
conquest •of Germany by Prussia." Bi„, conception of moral laws of any kind,
Goehbels knews them' very well -and
coneciously, violates them. Hence his
keeseledge Of human netuee is without
doubt better than that of Hitler -but
the latter is- superior to him in sure-
marck said the same thing: "Prussia
Was not to he diesoleed In ;Germany;
instead: ;Germany watt to become a
)art of Prussia," But as long as Prus-
sian reactionary mns anifestatiowere
ie. sharp contrast to th,e modern demo- ness of instinct. • • -
cratic movement,' this menace- was -.The Dalhousie Review (Halifax).
• • localized. Prussian, power politics be -
(value; over $30,000). and thus giving ails for ?tray quarters and remember came a real world: menace enely when
lie owner, Indiana & Michigan ,Electric a .one dollar bill in a watch pocket of
Co., the most economical steam power 'my good trousers aftTgently ask Neigh -
plant in the U.S. • , • - bor Higgins for tht $6.00, he ceveS 'Me"
Upon iro great trick or dLscoiery . . . and still am eight dollars and
patriotism in the addrees.given by Tom
[ hinges thiSsudden spurt into onee un- forty cents short o2 the total.
Moore,. presideat of. . the Canadien imaginable Pressures, Instead it is the 4 Phu doesn't say enything, ThejMrs.
noney - .,
Trades and Labot Congress, Toronto climax of a decade. of development in ' anechaft from the various pockets is
welding, alloys resistant to heat and
. • , ,
the other day. "Wartisme is no time
ees •4 etresss seneitire eontrol instruments, the amount 'needed isereduced to .$7,23,
] piled up On. the table . . . and when
,
to think of' using threats of economic etc.
force or any other kind of force which Developed. by Genef-4 Electric, the always •Paid it. hack . .... becausex-
new
would stop vital -production," he Said.
!iOur problems artealmost .nethingecome
• pared with the bombings, and killings
going on in, Europe today," he con-
• .
. . • !she reeehes f - Or• the tea-pot. I have
new turbine is the best 130s of Many I perience has teughtthat it iseorteebank
-years to -forlorn U.S.--pewerm•e-ns-vehtel•whiehsdemends- MO e,Aeh leen .131CePneid andof .Prussianism' is, the esta-bilehment -important Still :._ the- oll-earrybigeeape.t,
Tare, long felt marked for Vitiro:atei bae.k.be.fore.adotherwill he Meet,de., ' : of a ,tate 15 'Which the common people, cit3r of the Norwegian n;terehant 'navy
liquidation by the •Federal GovernmentA great many farmers vv,ita iuceess. well fed put Wholly deprived of any can -he compared with that of the
Steam plants, largely privately 'Owned, 1.ful places should be -fishasiedeof them rights rights,. work fOr. the State, 'Which is 'British tanker-ileet. ;Only a small part
tinned, and he declared. that if ',there produce some 72- per, cent. of U.S. elec- ., „•ele-es ' !hen' they. -start boasting of
-- represented and doininated °by 'thin e., of the ,Norwegian merchant fleet .plied
were any. elaSs thattoocli to lose mO
tricity,convert an average of only, --S0 rtheir ability to finan. t'e. The majority ..,„cs.arrior ela"
ss.,. ; . coastal waters. ' The tonnage ,en -
its
sst
its destructive, force . was alliftinglr
garbed as modern demagogy -as' an
idea which would liberate -Peeples.
In the eyes of these Wag= re- what the Norwegians, that is to sa
actionaries, it was Hitler's greatest the Free Norwegians under the diree-
merit that lie induced the reople to tion of their .Goyernment now in Lon
-
accept the 'Prussian power idea. Even don; do , for the Allied cause. Just
a man like Schleicher said about this, before the outbreak of war the ton-
-nage of the Norwegian merchant fleet
came near to five millions, while that
of termany at the time was only
four -and -a -half •-million. And jnore
• THE FREE NORWEGIAN FLEET
. Norway had only about three' million
inhabitants, but it. is really :estoUndin
"Hitler is , pig, but he brings us the
people."
'
The internal political aim of Nazism
• A • 4, *,
per cent. of coal's energy into eurrexitj of them mprely..relied 9 .
1C- •the In a conversation we had about
In the event of a Nazi vietore,it, was Hydro -electric plants convert into -ear- of their' wi4s to Pull -them through'foreign polities, I 'defended the thesis
•t
the -trade unionists - and worker's. rent 75 to 90 per cent: of the energy' of , the hard times • with cream and egg , hat we must bring about a European
Words of wisdom from mli infillential fT1tn water . -t " Therefore the 'pos-.I motley"' reserves. They have alwaya federation (for ,whiehesit- would be
leader of labor. , sibilides of, increasing wer•-output knoWn, that no matter what came along necessary to come to an isnslerstandinfr
•
and lowering cots are f •'greater for/1n therayof extra expense 'they could with France) and, I recalled the warn
• , * &es *
A. sketch of the life:of the late N: W.
'Rowell discovers the.fact that he begau
his legal career as an office boy at the
• • • eonversion, was olreeted by .peseermen old. tea -pet -always seeins to • have • the •
the prev of bq
•
gaged in ocean-going traffic exceeded
that of the .United States and Japan,
and, was only surpassed by that of
Britaih.- And that is more -true than
ever today. r
Their merchant °Is easily the
goel. without saying, that a merelaant
navy Of 'that 'size bas tradition et
tirst-class quality et Men- .
The Norwegians specialized hi whale.
catching with special; vessels, called
whalers. Thoe whalera are fast and
sturdy sixim,, and they, are now used
for , special duties. Two4hirds a the
Norwegian vessels,- • are driven, by
Dieeel engines, and that) makes tlaena
eqpable a a speed ,of tweiVe to ilfteen
imets„ under:full Wed,' compared with.
an average speed of teeeknots foeteana
vessels. It -le' the, •most modern mer-
chant 'fleet he the world. •.
11
'WheeeGermeny ettacked Nerway in
April 1,ast sear, :the•Norekeglan mer-
cantile fleet eras epread all ever the
seven -Pecos. •,Only one-fifpi of our ships
weire in S,eaudinavlan port 0 and fell
into "the hands of .the Germans As
could be expected, the ,Gerinans 4ne-
.medietely radioed, faked orders to the
Norwegian ships on ehe high seas to
proceed to eeutral Ports at °nee. ,Ont
the other hand the orewe heard. from.
London, Parks, 'and the improvised 'Free '
Norwegian !Government .stations, that
they should take instructions from the
INerwegian Legation in London,. 4very
man. therefore had tO make. up hie:
mind what to do, Whieh side te choose.
There le no doubt that What haPPenetl,
in the last world war had a very de-
clive' influence on thorn.. • En the en-
trance halt cef thp Norwegian Sailor'
ehurch in London% you will #.1ad the
names of lig fewer than sevem thoueaud
Norwegian, sailors, who lost their lives
in the last war,. as if they ehed been
Allies, which, if not formally, they were
in fact. And so, this, time all' Nor-
wegian sailers, officers and •fuen,. all de-
cided to choose the A1114d side. They
realised that ,they wo d "be -cut .off
from their fanubee f the, dared.=
Of the war, but the did not _hesitate..
We Norwegians a speeialiste -in
whale -catching. The spring is the
time of the year when whaling -ex-
peditions come to an end. • Several
thousand Norwegians, who 'bad been
%whaling in the 'Southern 'Polar Seas,
came to- this country (Le., Britain).
About two-fifths of these men are re,a.1
sutlers. The others are workers 011
board these-41loatinc, whaling factories.
When .they are netwhalingthese men
are •small farmers,' iisherMen, and men
of Many other callings, but they aye
-not professimal sailors._ Adis these
people were glad to offer- their servides
to • the,Allied cause, "and jobs were
found foriithera in this countey and in
Canada.-. . .
We established a Norwegian Ship-
ping and Trade Mission here in Lou-
don, the vessels were requisitioned by
the Royal Norwegian ;Government, ansd
the :V1issidn now has the management'
. of the fleet: -More isToresegian vessele
coetinually 'being withdrawn' frein.
their old trade route and re -directed _L.'.
•fot •to- the United Kingdom an
other theatres of war.. • 'They 'bring
inilliqes of tons of ,food, raW
warVquipinent and oil to this country.
Indeed, a British shipping journal, the
Vitamins Alone
Not Enitugh
Three esseetial minerals
• also Emma in
Dr. Chases
Nerve Food
help to ina,ke thi
• true tondo Lor blood
and' pelves.,
Buying the largo
size eaves •Yon
- money Ansi
• ensures a supply
forallthefamily.
180'palse $1.8%
Dr. Cla.s.e''s
Nervelnott cone
tains vitamin B, .
"Motorehip," wrote: "It le, Proba'bIY al.44
: Urideratatenten t •-eo say 'that 'liaise Nor-
wegian merchant fleet means more.t0
us than a taillion soldiers:" Twenteeese
flee •thousand 'Norwegian sailors fa
part in, the' struggle against the COnlinOn
• enemy, with all their ability and with
pthistnn,t riSk of their lives. Theibave,
done their job a well In the evacuation
from Dunk and Franee, Greece and
• Crete, and in convoys sweeping to '
Malta right under_ the nese of•
Mussolini. -
the Norwegian fleet has sustained
losses on about the eame• scale as the ;
BritLeh. One lifeboat, from it Ably. •
sunk in mid-Atlantic, carryiing also a
number of American nnr.see, set' sail
for Ireland and sidled over• one thous-
and miles ieet„Wenty days. In another
caeee'sailorslleifting on a raft Were
approaphed by e British destroyer. The
captain on the raft shouted to the'
destroyer to forget about him and: lila
men end to attack the submarine -first,
of the mem . Tile if,J,boat was located
,cii
and heegav ndteations of the position
and, probably sunk, but the destroyer
did not An11. the rift- again until eight
hours later. • ,
Although our. Norwegian- sailers are
. , .
cUt off front their homes and seldom •
receive news from their dear ones, and
altholfgel they eeldem have an' .oppore
-tunety of rest and • vapatien, theiree
spirits keep hio. ' •
•••,,
Li:steno. Mention).
- -
•
•
steam. generation than for further depend on the old -cream_ jug or the!-in5s*, exampi., a, 'Greece: •Which so biggest allied merchant teet novv :serve
hydro -electric. detelopment. ' .. ' 1 erne1;41 tea-pot to give
up c'"iigh I Mangled itself in the battles between ink- the Allied caUSe. They have eon
-
The new high-preseure turbine, With 'money, to tide them orer elifficult.PIaces. 1 :
. Atliens and Spalsta that all of It (in- Whiffed. seven. huridted and • twenty
It s leap from 30 to ;:;0 per cent..energy- 1 Ne Metter' what you want it fer„..tlae,i-elowng 'Adieus:" and' Sparta) Warne ships of altogether three-and-a:001er
salary of two dollars a week. He he= last week aS one more potent argument t nriones.);per.h. ps,rberia s But ;Hitler seinillion tans, -. All e those ships, are'
• came one of the most „highly -paid against President Roosevelt's leng '''shoessfor PatrIcia- Ann or a new pair of
lit'l ' a new Pair of '1'itiss'lonate. partisan of ., Sparta, c'cu'i- •manned by 'Norwegian sailors. 'Anti
.• ,••• ,
lawyers in Canada. There is some- dreamed:of St. Lawrerice seaway -power , overalls for •.5ourself ... . or Mrs. Phil
which w-ould' threaten -with 14-1 may,• want ---a-- nt,w hat. Di ) ins- do
thing -here for boys to consider when4-Projeet.
they leave school and are looking for ; .-- ,
• i sceptre -like "yardstick" thegreat; lute the old tea-pot she •manages to 1 .
,-
, innately owned, steam-e-owered utility ecrape up enough to. • buy what she
•
employment. They may get-a:job as a ' systems -of the inilUstrial. Northea.st.,! neeas. Each week .when she sells -the i
roustabout in which the will cern1 tilityrnee-.7yf.r,ard the iiew terbine as ,eggseand the eream-tnan conies 'along i
stab ; a symbol, great as the monumental I with the check from •the Previous --week ; •
. rouiesit:S wages arid - learn nothing ,
4 - I dams of the several power AllthOritlei, I . . . she replenishes the supply, doling fA
• or' they niay take a positien at a small i that their tern spirit of technological; it out from week to. week.'
wage where they will be on the WaS"to I pioneering is not moribund, as friend' 1 • I WondQx what a credit compa.ny I -
s -
advAncement or be • learning a trade' of ..,Govrnmknit power elaim. As -a i w 1 saY if 1 gave InV 'financial back- •
' ! .40'und dollars -and -cents weapon against in, befilglhe eracked„ tea-pot 011 the 4.
whieh•will bring them a well-paid arid e
• Government control, it reaffirmsl ht‘au shelf': ' ' • ' - - - 1 „
F3dison's remariii "Steam 1 • :., „, _.
,
reseketetf' position • in afterlife. It.; Themas•
. .
. • • pays to to look ahead. I power - is business; hydro power is.
. FEDERATION MEETING •
ipolitics." i ' , , _ • • I - -
In . 199,1 seich kilowatt hour de- !'Gatliering at S.S. No. 5, ':Colborne on
. Donald Gordon, -the forty -year-old; * .
d sis to eight Ilis of coal.- I ,. ' Fridav Night. Last - ' .
Highland Scot Who has been 'appointed '1•?I'l'etson -of -water must fall one nille*;_' .....:-.A._ -successful 'meeting Of the school
chairman (yf . the ' W„ertime Prices and i to eqiial, the
e "enrg,y to the average! . '. ' • ' s. s e
s, ; section No. oVineh of the Colborne •
.,
- Trade' Board, of Canada, is said, to be ;Potindgi icoal. , , • . ----__ I unit of ,the Federation. of .Agriculture
..' * held in the school hOuse eu Friday
'• a. Tinanciai wiza„rd, and as stubborn as! . J T - even
uRoyl•Ea '-' as •
. ing- -under the management of
he 'is. clever. His jOb' is to prevent .1, . • .
„ ... . ' --:- ' • ,.,,,,..;,..,-.1,....Alex.. ' 'V and and 'Leslie. .lOhnsten. I
inflation Of pricessin Ibis cotintr- --(I : torOnto 'Association. -Ma's ErtieSt VV.'''About eighty'. .were , In . a deudarrite; •111,-- .
y an
he says he is going to do it. He could , • Hunter President '-'' . eluding the teacher; 'Mris, McMichael,
give fifty reaeons, he, says, why the 1 -At .a receet meeting of the ekemitiVe and pupils as well as the parents. The
• -- .
policy of priee-fiXing will not workconiiiiiitte Of toe sseree senility Junior ; children rendered Ta number of".selec-
----- - - , ;
re., se_ .Ssesciation of. Toronto, "EreeSt W.' dons; and Mr. and Mrs. -Robert Bogie,-
but there •4S One compelline ,asuu Hunter, C.A.,• was 'elected by acelam-; Cree Freeman, Grathain Bogie 'add
• 1•
why it, has to work and that is "national . aeon efesidetle of. the As.sociation for ' others furnished music. Addresses by.
neeeSaity .-- urgent, •dire, undeniable.
.•• There is-- iio alternative bat •disaster."
• ' .31r. Gordon :".4assehat- neceesary adjust-
„ monts will be made, but the -general of the. As-estociatien over five years ago. Federation; - were then given. After
polley of a prise ceiling, wilt be carried! Other officers elected WPre: (Irerald ' seme discussion ' the 'following reeolu-
,,
rr he 1 Stewart, first vice-president ; airs. -,4,Z;Istion was adopted on motiOn of 'Hugh
,Dut without- un y priesy footin,, ' e
I Parton, eocomi viee-president ; . Mrs. „I111.1 and °H. Glutton: That, this meet-.
PuUbj• c lik. es to ; a men who knows 4 ,Feed Elliott, seeretary ; Ralph Carr, I ing is not in favor, of any5priceefixing
treasurer ; and leetinszth I:. Stenbury, • of ,farm products that ;will not . Meet
director of publicitY, '.the oost of production or iie on a parity
At the annnel meeting of the Associe with other eeevice's and emnrrodities at
ad= held last motith tlie following"' 10204929 level."
sommIttee was eleeted for the confine! The ladies of the section provided. an
,
i
yela : ,Gridexioh-T-Mrs. C. Parton, Miss excellent lunch which all thoroughly
. After a eang period of failing health Grilse 'Stielitig ilnd Mk'', Elva Dewar:: enjoyed. After the singing' of The Nas °
'Gerald ' Stewart, Mies . tienal Anthem an hour was spent in
the Hon. Newton Wesley Rowse, 0114, f4'eliftn.,0,-,!Mi.
'utheriand ; Clinton -Mr., E. :W.' (lancing and conversation. • ,.
• of ' Canada's ablest juriste, died ' AIM ' S
last• I
Hunter, ..Mrs. Fred Silted and Mr' The next -meting will be .held in No.
week amid. general expet.ssions -of- Sfike fe.dolc;••Wingham----Miss*Mar'y Me-. 9 sehool and promises •to Oqual this One,
regret. Not only in hies but in church Gregor and Mr. 'Ralph:Carr: Exeter--; in interest and benefit), the date to be ,
• ..- ' 1 :11r. Gordon Fowler and •Mr. Kenneth Ca
. nnounCed later . ' -
and pul)lie affairS, • Mrs Rowell witt'S;
s „ , et a titniry ; Brti4els- --Mrs. Lloyd Grose ' ; • ___ _ ._ • __ .
outetending. lie Was leader •C)f t he 1 ,
, ,iiid 'Mr. ' \S ("d4 \2( 4. ; Blyth!. REvisiON OVERDUE ,
Provincial Liberal party fer sone. years, 1 and '1' eindgliore- -mr. Itelsert helper :I OPetrolia Ad5ertist,e-17oPic) '' I
and thong.h defeated ins one general " Ilensall M'iss Margaret,•Coriper. ., lt is reported that 911co11'14 Park is
: The eomnfittee wbuld lie glad to hear'; studying' thi. ppA4ibility of •revising the ,
eleetion he ntight, hare ,l&eonie Premier 1
• ;,. . .„,, of 11455;°a1 rivAls in 'Po -rialto 'from Mir= , Ontario- A g.s1.:4m11etit Act find making ,
of Ontario 12 114' had remained in the' ,
,. elotinte, and would appreeiate it if such' several drastic- changes., to eonforin to
„ Provineial''fleId. In 1917„110,WeV(T, he :•11Orsons would got in toueli a- tv I t h 4.114 modern ronditioiee \% 14 or not
entered the Tfnion Government al ' committee' members representing titeir the ProviTickal author:1/1es are consider- '
s, , , ing a land fax will kiZep propSrty-own-
' town •
Ottawa, retired in 1920 a
,, nd was 114.•544 ' . - .
. ._ .,.._ .,......e_.,.. ., 'g1141.Sifig. 'ruder sueli it tax the
4 agairt a figure ,in parliathentary life* I ilt.'110,,,,1 OLD BOVS_OF TORONTO, inunivipallty would have to raise its
Some• yeare -later ' he ,,was. appointedl Tipp' 'arintial mteetibit of the II'iron revenue from a toe, on land only.
.t • t . -
-, 'thief , Justice, of Ontario...tand he ,was! Old Dors% Assawiation of Toronto 'Will Thi're W0111(1 110 none on buildings. .,
. -
!-'f 1 held In the auditorium of die Y.M: 'Stub if reform 55(811(1 be of great benefit
"cliairiniin roal commi
a the yssion ott•
. , „ C.A. eorner '11,olleand Dovereourt , to a large. majority of citizens. It
DollaintolisPrOv,hwittl reLtiloeei
s , "llifit ! roadge , on ThurOday evening, December 'would penalize. the holder of vaeent
wan appeitited in 1947. • •-".4evor a , 44.11, at 14() p.M2. , Reports t''ot , the ,.land who refusep to E-4.11 Ind it would •
. 4
better
eseretary, ' treasurer and, ' onoourago building more and. •
robust"inan,, b15 laborz4 undermined. his I,' Preeident,
auditors Will tie the order of 'busineee, licino.:% Tito,' •amount of money spent
wail lie was*foreed tie retire., folioceed lie' the election of ofificeie for on d home would not figure in the-,
ye., Wilt have an lionoeed pleee,fa 'Mei the eneuing peargefreshmento will '144sopsinont. - Iteeisioneof .the Asseee
lint . of Canada's ° naost useful public, be OetVgli.„,rollwed by euchre did molt Set, ie long. overdue.
, ,
-servants. , , , • 1 bridge,_, Ali, Ituroultos in eroronto and
1, throughourthe Wovinee' are espeigally, Don't bus' with hubby 'about deop-1 •
invited to be 1)2(24111' ainr-tarce part hi Ailing, toinieeo at lles on the floor. They
"Canadian, farniera lid.W made :veg.' i lee proilrava, .•,ke-exi naotlia out and fitibby.' in.
, •
the corning year. Mr, Hunter, who- )...3 t)e' preSident pf the ..unite George
one of the members represent,ing the, re1l:41in., Hugh Hill, 4vicel-president, and
town of Clinton on -the committee, was J. N. Kernieshan, Qutiining the method
largely relpeusible for the organization ofteorganization •and the aims of the
where lie is gbing,, and Wilt keep a
4
critical but -:syriipatlietie eye on Mr:
Gordon as he, ,eoce about his herculean
task., "
0
EBEL
ICENS
will be gircillable:
DECEMBER bit, 1941
•frHE TERM of .1941, perthits and.licenses has •jpeen extended
to January 31st, 1942, after which date they will be invalid
and those operating with thern-subject.to the penalties pro-
vided, There will be no furtherextension of their term.
Secure yours early and avoid the usual rush of . the last few
weeks,
v,,
.*For your convenience, p;ermits and licenses areissiied through'
,The offices. of .191 agents located throughout the PrtiVince,
•
- Preserve your 1941 plate:s. Do not, destroy. or throw them
away.: During 'first two weeks of .February they will be
collected through Gasoiine' Service Stations by The Canadian
R,ed Cross Society.:
licniembei nth, 1941
•
T. 11. 1V1CQUESTEN
Arhaisha of Sigh way* •
'When driving along oar highways give�zzrSoidiexboysa ride.