HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Goderich Signal-Star, 1944-06-01, Page 2tr oberittlttr
MNIN4THE .110D!1iorkt sulNAT4 419, Tti/400p4itieel STAS
---1tub1th1ie(V---by-4igual•:Star-rreas,vreote4__
:west ; 4treet. Ooderich, Ontario -
"1-.Ptioa Ra an liritfr14-r-Poo At arto--
iTnLt
$2.56.
_
411167 in; Rates on request_ TelePhone
JUNE ist 1944
13,71,,viDA3?"::
._
t. 1#0.ara,:, the -0.0y. rally
*old on &ay Leivens,k
member the ,Ontario tegisla*e, ete
elared, that, his party'propesed*to place
,the 'packing hou:Se$ in the contr1 of the
'people.: .• , •
"We 'Will take over Canada packersse faStat will make them dizzy," said
Mr.'leavens. ' •
, In "the Ilouse Ocannions at Ottawa
.011 ?..3rd; Mr: Wright, •ac.F, mem
41 :.
etraaltf-h*gf-011)-had-Ile..*
tate ownership, ef packing plants
Weste* Canada. - •
160,4Sileaks,.; for the parg, Mr.
Leavens 'Ors Dir--Virrig-hri
---
• •
"ctvEER", Eivirms
of a snatiller value, to Itiosia, She has
se4i trocals to help, fight the Germans'
'and the'ItallanS; she could reCalt themteinorrow it,she wished to do $0." She
maintains A 'eastOnis tariff against 4n7.
porta from _Britain, raises or Jewess it
as she wills* if 'slier wiShed to do so
'she conld import goods the ITnited
States NVititont any customs Unties while
still maintaining duties on'georls Von),
In short, Canada is a free rind
sovereign nation., and is a part' of the
Em becauSe she Wants to
It is not usual -to find in'the) "liter-
ature of _ banking corPoration
treatiSe on such subject as the :con-
• ti without a "constitiition.") 'Of
the British Empire,. The May. letter _of
the Royal Bank of Canada is, however;
, devoted • to this .verY subje9t, and we
quote some paragraphs which fnay help
to cla.rify 'a matter which some people
ufind.- difficulty , in' understanding and
others find difficulty in,explaining.
• .In the first.place,, Britain -apes net
"own". the Dominions:, they are her
political equals; he goes not "own"
Thdra, -Which 18 -Steadily ---advancing to-
Rif Ilarry J. Boyle,
'THE OLD ,K110014-11010,Sig
It w.ati; AOt dOwn 1ter0-last week.
faet;• it Was- .the warmest. session
that 'we've hadso far this year. Kummer ,
-
of (0U1f. 1US prettY Well.. arrived. In
the matter of two or ',three 'weeks the
trees Int.Ve blossinned out .with' a full
• t ees
disPlay feliage and the lilac r
are Intrsting, ixito -full' bloom. I:hiving
,along the concession with the teani
.noticed seVeral women picking big
*.batieuets pt iilttCS for dinner 411)194
X guess, or el ke for the "big hOwle 'on
the parlor tab*, or the:Oro:in or‘plano.
The heat, Was Oite notieeable, 'so I
Pulled the teani up for a stor in the
shade of the Few of ,big trees along
the road in front of the sehool-house.
Abumble bee cruised along like a
bomber Over the dandelions scattered
;like golden, dollars aniongst the road-
side grass. A, pair of robins were
Playing tag In a maple tree and a
bushy-taileA- squirrel jumped from, a
tree-AoLthe ritigezhoard. of the Scheel
and then - scainpered down theroof
and disappeared into the eaves.
I could hear the lazy droning. sotind,
of .the children reciting or reading
HOW soy E AINIERICANS Vik1111 asks "What is' this4t
United '
_ C9.11•fereXtee on Food and AgrNienitiQunr:
NVIV- Work; which "WaS. raeutioned? 1 never 'heard
don, 'the' ti(,1k.o.holit America's share In. et
n attempts 'ter
7Y+,4r vieth31 "n answ and a P he rePresentative
fairly simple', and. fairly idealiStic. Vile of theert" it 0,7StiltIl'
pictitre ,comes in somewhat - different s
dom theilSroevi t States,
the
:I.:: eti' ICeine'g
g Innen must h staig r d
0 nion„,Chilut and,forty
ttVeriNg$i'aShs°-SrloloNtTw' higereQ‘lthegemte°X:1•14'ca"emw°11Agn "o°ffnletro 11°evdel'ha* t evening te ,collaPse had
' raise" ate erepis that will. make a •nightnaare in which a gigantie- figure
husines$ Pant portiOn, shouted' Into his Peet' Germany to ,develop, dentocra0
,
t, -the itlia teetiing ti After. seemingly
vaI
soMething. • 1-It-Was_interruptecl „period -
Plan: to
teeny by the teacher's 'voice. Thiswas
"- our concession School-110ns%. looking
just' as tired with shabbY paint as the
_voices of the children sounded.. 'Several
of the. belie -went TWindows, were gone
and one of the UpStalire windows was
coVred a...sheet j_of cardboard.- A,
fringe of out -out ftCiwOrSiStraggleci along
Several of 'the -windows, -a ,monnment
to the hrave teacher who was trying to
bring qt spot of "coler .into the drab
surroundings. . • •
I began looking -the place ov,er with
critical eye. The fences were • leaning
this way and that. The trees and
shrubs around the, place, filling out
with leaves' S() 215 to,,give a tine *repre-
sentation of their shaggy' appearance,
eertifying that no one seemeal to. care..
The . front Steps of the school -house
-were sagging a little. A dead braneh
. •
way of life is not a constitutional .doeu-
molt, but a Valltd aggregate of tradi-
tions, and habits of human beings: If
ft eOnatitutional dOcuMent turns out
to. be-"deVOid ot suchtraditions and
habits, then lt proves to he nothing but
Piece Of paper.'
- 'The -German' constitution .41-1919_„"iv_as
Midoubtedly one of the 1n68t democrati-e-
eharte.rs ever devised.Yet:, demoeraeY
f(tiled in, Gerniany.' The charter re",
vealed Itself to be. a useless piece, of
PaPer,yelken over
'' mans openly exptessed their hatred of
liaclemocrae'r, tOlerance, ,and. peace, Of
th fuOd. Iteie is an • acemult of an. one leg in farra overall, the other Ti •course,- it. was somewhat halye„ to' e
-actiitil Ineeting. Details i,hout it LU
concealed because the nitrrownesa of -
view. here revealed Is; not confined to
localitys-but is unluckilY rather
Widespread. ,•
The tnited liatione man; SPokeSmait
'for "the "Relief and Rebabilita ion Ad- feed those folks' the things we grow,
ministratien, Starts off -by stating' tha,t rdeardless, Iii distilftIng stuff to the Gerniany 184the only niftier country in
the surviral h 50000;000 people, - a .starving yeti niust make your, first con:- the world that has 'never had a,Popnlar
quarter ''ef' the huMan race`i. .depends sideration the *Making' Of Private trofit Tevolution.. The Peasant leIblution., of
uponintelligent andpronipt relief sup- by ,,,exppxters. You must 'raise ,high 1525 wee the only genuine mass re-
.
plied as raindlY as the MilitarY situ- tariff, walls around your products -so • .•
• The two big questions of the day
'When will the -invasion begin? Wil
lily' tires- last out . the , season ?-
+
• * •
9fficiat reports on fruit crop pre
spects
are Unusually favorable this year. We
haven't even -heard the mind forecast
of the failure, of the peach crop:
* • "40 -
.
Talking about the invasion, the
Saliford Sage says' the. Allies, are good
sports. They won't make a move until
theil, are sure the Germans are all,
ready ,to .fightback-. *
"Everybody know that the :United'
Nations is a elieftp pOliticar scheme
run by Tainniany„'„ If It's going to live
clown Its scandalous 'parentage, it must
in fourteen years, •when the,' $ a,
people Of the highest genionSi
have --.been:.atAt..;for,,,overSIX;Linindfed
years, and are, Still far freM'perfeetion.'
' The most important fact. abo,nt
the. Whole' t --Gerniatif 'history is that
20t: • that we can gouge enough Out of Our-
ation perinits. There are -at least
persOns domeetic consumers to 'enable us to
000,000 hoineless or displaced
ifl
FinrOPe* • perhaps 3Q ,000,00 , an e
organizing of relief, for theta and
fettitTg-them--r(44tubliShed--fa-,-itsolf-a-
t5iikcemparable magaitude to that
of ••organizing .the military invasion of
* from 'a beech laY in• a
ward independent Severeignty ; She does
AI.P.'s at Ottawa„Coraplain that their
not .f!own " the cOlonies„ in., relation to
sessional indemnity:is not large enengh,
*larch she „acts as a trustee: °,. ' after taxes are deducted„ to meet- the
It seems ‘difficiilt for non-33ritiSn,ers .c_._._- •_.
ost of 'living-7as an lux/ .. _Rat wo
* ujacierstarA,,,t44,t 4)-P_31,.13i-re C`COin- fancy „that most of them will try., their
,;,.---,,--,•in,OttiTealiPP,710.--41-7:411--, ..eLv. 4„ , p get.,,ha&--to-Aattawa.a. the
' Sit tin - 'tnipistb"------patfia.-- - .
out a con i u tt, -an , _
next --eleetiOn:
r;ient.or Cabinet; a'.'ce'ntraPrlefence-feree -,.. — • .. _._ ._,*.,,_1 * •,, it,—......—
or other exgtitive autherity. ' Ottawa:. -announces' a concession .to
'. r eople who, have designated the old -age Pensioners, in allowing an out
British Empire as: a unicfne family.
system of freely associated states, side Incenae of 4125 a year instead ?
5,5 a ,.xe,ar, as at _present. That is, a
stature, have not:been far wreng. pensioner eariiird erfe'C'etflirgliet *Ore
-
It has Many characteristics- df than $125 , year may receive the full'
family. Nations, after all, .- are .
composed of -groups of human pension, giVing him- (or her) •. a
beings; .and ..the Characteristics of , maximuni yearly income of 1425.
nationsakin to. those of- him= • * 's
beings, They are often dissatisfied
• •The famous Dionne quints were ten
With one, another, hut if • anyone
ontside ventures on criticism of years old onsMay..28th, .and according
othe fatally he 'finds 'that the to mortality' statistics liTive a fair
. , ..
quairds are Purely` -doraestic. . chance -of livin* g tc, a good age vvithout
-In ether. words, their •quarrels are,
. , ,
their oval; to outsiders, "none of your
business,"
British pipire of -today la• the
outcome of evolution, and has developed
great :capacity to absorb shocks. Such
an Empire could,not.be created by logic
Or planning, but only by a living
politieal .orgauism, capable of adapting,'
itself -to "eircumstances and posses -sing,
,
the flexibility needed for survival."
.For 'seVerat centuries the.•Wnire- -
has. been mOving.toward ever wider
freedom, and in recent years two
ptinie' ministers from sections
where =race-diffieulties raised •
their -heads .dayS were
able to point, With pride to great
sichieVeraeats. Sir Wilfrid Laurier,
famous Canadian Prithe MiiiiSter;
declared: "Since the proud day' Or
Rome • there has. been -rio title
• w
prouder' than the title of one. who
•- can .say, %I am a British, citizen',"
and . the Boer. world -statesman
General SmiltS, Prime Minister
South Africa, -cleEicribed the Com-
MonyVealth. as "this great- human;
exi-jeriMent in 'political eiganiz-•
• • ation, this proudest political '
strrictitre of time,. .thls' precedent:
and antiiipation, of what One hopes
may be- in store for Iiiirean SocietY
&years to come." .'iThese men,
• versed Empire affairs„ saw
„err; streaigth and unity, whereas an Ont-„
side: who apphed purelY have. :annihilated -settee? arta .along
standards could see y_ '
witn the steams locoinotive,the
the fraidest •of political strnettires.
COuntries thrive find develop •In and the aeroplane 'have shrink
' ' b se they --are not ' the world into a .inere 'neighborhood.
contintie to live here fuld attend to
our own busineSs without knowing or,
'carte; -about --these----wastefu
lapping, . bpreauckatic • agencies Which
you. starry-eyed idealists are setting
tip to- supply every_llottentet _
Europe,
Moredver, the speaker. points out if
gallon of milk a day. And as for ra-
YOrlaidose M.' ignore -all --hunianitarlan .tioning after the war, I'm going to eat
considerations, 'there are at'least three a big T-bone steak every day with
why ven•-people should.be interested. in I•ever
reasons, hard -belled, practical reasonS,two
p_olrinhdetivoefwbuntetpeurbinucelt(eNdewev_
the United-lsTations relief and rehabilit-
•
ation effort: • . „
1. AS war ends you may have• -on
hand considerable* surpluses of food-
stuffs originally" prOticed for military
needs which . you Can -only- dispose of
profitably if there is sorae Well planned.
international feed -distribution -mechan-
ism. .1
corner, dragged. out of the -way by the
children so aS not 'to. interfere With
their ball diamoncl, Worn 'spotS
ifl-
dicateci bases. They ;were 'little
breader than' the paths for
That school •certainly didn't indicate
Much, pride...in, educatien.1n our town
-.0111fw--..frai,-0--little,:-aSinuaa, ed., of
iny-
self.,---4s. a -Luta -ter- of fact,. I
schaoljneeting. one -night, tendering On
the wood, when the teacher 'put -lap -a,
strong b.ase for fixing up the grounds.
The trustees liste„ned„but said it would
2. If . we simply win. a military
victory. yet fait to" help. to set the -world
house ha order„ we will haVe a peace
•not much geed for .biisiness, as it will
be impossible to Conductbusiness trans-
actions food, or any other commQVY
effectively and -continuously.
3, EconoinictdiseaSe, physiblog-
IUNE 1st, 1944
you inVerman, life, and it wag quickly
SUppressed by the Princes- Incidental.
1Y, none other than Martin Luther ex.
herted the princes. to eruSh the rebels
regardless of the vost in blood and
suffering. Since then Germany has ,
never,. escaped fret:a . "Regulation and
DiseiPliner as the twit mein. pillara .04
el-soelar order and Political govern,
went: The seventeenth Centtitig is the' -
century of -tha, great -English pavan-.
tions; the eighteenth Of the Amerlean •
and Vrenclyreveintions, the nineteenth ,
of the "Italian /lisorgiroente and', the •
great popular revotutiOns "„in. Latin ,
America, and the tWentieth eelituryLhas
,witnessetl two of the mese' colosal
revolutions of all time, tite gussian and, -
Chinese revolUtions. The one -cOnntry..
that is canspicuously absent from tlils
114 Gerra4hY; Unless- we teMeMber '
this • fact,. we Shell tilulerstand, next to.
nothing about 'German civilization and . •
polities before, during, or after Nazism.
Nazism: has exaggerated this tract',
tieii,of authoritarianism in Germany,
** (Continued on .sg*
'
AN AMERWAN bOUHTS A DVIV0?-
1!. OtATIC'CUPRIVIViNY
•
Disqussions clbent post war Germany
areoftenbased on the assumptia that
be will be demoeratie after the -war.
Psychologically, it IS easy to understand
Wny, alniest everybody • (in America)
thinks of peat war peinifini only ,in
terms of republicari regenerritien.-It
-
45 so. diacencerting ,„,te envisage .a non-.
democratic Germany after the. war
that we refuse to think ratidnally about
such an eventuality.
' On the ontrary, we havete Consider
Uie teal disease, is contagious. Just as e ii. non -democratic regime as a prob,
"du" epidemie of the teens is believed ability or certainty rather than 'as a
.by some Investigators"to have started in possibility. But, contrary .to, the: pre -
remote Baliichistan and Afghanistan :valent opinion, this in itself need not
'.'. te leive spread betause- of .condi- . be looked upon as an irremediable
_. .
tons created by the First -World. War, cattiStrophe to the. peace. and freedom
iuf the 'depression of • the twenties and: of the world. - ' . . _ ' • •
thirties seems to have commenced with The Mew -thilt"'Llinocracy -can' be
Ihe_era:sh of. hanks in •far,off-Austria, achieved in Germany by ,outside ferce
-§lirelY,lf .-WeTeaVe::a.--1-1,03,Ire=t-th eart--he4ispoqed, of, „q3;kiddr'"4"rhe.-01-14
population Of the globe:to starve 'anii" andlenly-tiiingian.the Werht.thatsarraot-
-Inad .with-SUffering, an. economic ep e_foreed by anyone any-wl'ere hi the
demic Will spread to all the other world- is voluiWry aelion. EMY-thing
people on earth. including you who can be imposed except the will to do
sit here In this room. . - ' son3ething_voluntarily. Democracy is,
Thus far the represeiktatiyes of the in its truest meaning, a why of life in
werld dream.. Now. hear the voice` of which people act and think voluntarily
provincial realism.. '
•
.cost too much money. •
The inside of the school, as I 'well
doesn't look much better " than
the outside. ---The desks are hacked and
carved and the floor is warped,. In...the
wintertime it's closed up like a . tight
box to keep out the cold Etrid the heat
dries everything Up, without .al trace
of humidity. ,,In the suinmer-tinie 'the.
p:ies hold conventions in. school hours.
k -battered old teacher's desk wobbles
6n three good legs and a bookease built
-by a local barn carpenter fifty. years
a break in the circle. 'Butnever again. ago -holds a flock of dog-eared old books.
. - I wonder if it -isn't possible that we.
will they excite popular 'interest to the never liked school partly because or
ii- 1,--iwtiegree-as-when.-.1ittle-DoetOr..1).afa, • epze.tit,..t -
waS. waking day and night to keep froze „in winter, roasted in summer..
..
thein alive. and .the whole* Ontinent time. and hated° the' feel of dry, chalk-
' - .filled air and the sound of chalk . aftap-
looked en. - •' ' . -' . • ing,on. a blackboard. There was very
•.. • * -00 . little to, fire a .childis imagination in
The canadian troops in Italy • ave that school -house .' ... and the trouble
been covering theragelves ,with .g1 ry^,- IS that,having come ,throup that .ex-.
.. „ lot of us are careleSs .enou h
in 'official Iankuage, they have "greatly. Der-lence.' a • g
to let it be perpetaated so . that our
'distinguplied" themselves. h, their children have to come throughthe_same
action. in breaking through the -Hitler exPerien.c.e- ' '
advance on Roil*.• , 8.4.1*Tbl
ing,. the qualitY an. ,other of the . •
.forces, Ganadians have good Edit -or -Me gnai,star.
"I thotight we came here to discoss-demociacy is also the only system of
feed," says a leader otr organized
farmers. "But I find that we Were
brought herd to *learn about a new.
pcilitleal otiganization.P
"Will your ,organization make the
sanie rnistiitke aS Lend-Lgafte?" asks an
eXporter. "Will' it; to encourage
tree enterfOige? Will it fail to use the
serviees . of established exporters?"
back 'and tell Your folks in
In -
government that etnnot be imposed
upon a people, but lias-tO be accepted
freely. ' ,•-•• •
What about -•the chance Cif Gerrliany
voluntarily adopting liberal politica1.
institutions after the war in anything
like the near future? • _ ,
In talking apput democracY, too malljr
people .ferget that it „ more than a
system of government. In „an
'Go
articulate realization Of4 this faet
Washington." nclvisgs 1 -he manager of
' speak of the "A.merican way of life,"
the •stiite Chairdier of Commerce. that
'inyt-ifere-we-thinle--there.a.re..too.nm. tkX„
gove:rninent 'agencies. . none • of them
knowing what ,the Others are. doing."
clueSn't interest us much,. be
eanse evidently4amulail to ship cereals
and ,fafs to, thee people you've been
talking, about. and vve're intetested here.
ni,odueing, high-nriced fruits and
3,-ogetables." ",a3..r.s" the " spoiceataan ;for
lar0 proeesaing intereAts. •
libTily th-ht. it billy be necessarY
to • 'con thole $rs g here in Amerien
after the. wa • to.. en rrY. out this schem.e."'
remarks , a &dry, spokes
-
Man. the -hest dninitin 16 -that
-won't be, -neeeSSA ry
tioning liere-after the wur," "
".`"Wbat we need- here. if von yant tfs
tb. urodUce 6 Of food *pit yon if.4
tariff :to' •proteef us from .forei com-
petition." adds the representative of a
.erOvierie en.:Oriera
duet Whieh,.before the waf,,had -large
sales abroad.. . :
Finally there Was- the mumagei of
trade asSoCiation:' gentleman
Sir, L-1-Vhere is ileir • town- band? Why
reason
reason': to believe that their boys will :not have, it out to help' in•the weicoMe
• ‘..
measure •up tO-AnY othe0 as effective to °Ur returning soldiers? So far these
welcomes ha7ve :been very quiet-riffairsi.
fighters, . anejust among otirselveS We
the ublio in general knowing nothing
,may 'even believe them, "the -best, yf 8,--bou e -tan- typr were nil ' over. -
the lot." 4.: . If the band played, it wenld be a notice
. *. * _ . * -tt . to the people that something was go*
on. Maybe the band is not like •SmisieS,
-'' • 4:1S just one hundred years since
t . - t but surely. the boys, can give us„ '`God
Mor4. brought his experiments m Save the King" and •`10 Canada," and
telegraphy to success. To the present perhaps a march or tWo to liven things
generation',.the telegraph is Its 'ordinary, up. •s_ -4
. : l'OWNS3/141'sf.
as bread.and hinter; bat it:opened up '
poSsibilities which Up to that tune had,
rather than of the "Ameritan system
751Tare'r'ill—nelitr'"n"fh715-itetivintrtre -
Istic of 'Our--emintry. • IYeinocraey as ?,A,,
the familiar Martal-Senour sign is the one to look for
when paint plans -are pending. It is the sign that says.
—"th-e1-.00/6--PureTaint is Sold-here'!:Paint ofplity —
beauty and ".with staying power that endures longer!
When you want these qua,4es4n paint products
sure andsee the dealer wb:ose sign reads . . Martin-
Sepour HiS experience' and friendly advice backed by ,
the Ilighest quality products will assure you'rof Oinplete_„
s'atiSfatiO,n in,.your painting plans!
• 4444
ARTIWSE140U
07 PURE -PAT-VARNISHES' ENAMELS
. tocs heciithV, laupgry,.* 13.6y or.
. , . . .
Neil5On's famous chacolotii
Cocoa.' Try at, mother.
-1 11329c, 19c:
4t,
-
III 111/Pkii
Yells°40/17,
JERSEY BRAND
cocoAll,
on114,been iinagined. auccession the • (Elmira Sigaet)..
elegrapk,----the *subniarin&-' Cable, tn. *A" Canadiall,' a. prisoner 'of. war
Germany'. since the `firsf year the
telephone,: aneSvireles/ transmission • - • - 4
war, Wrote home- asking. relatives and
friends writing to him not to uSe eon-
tinuously the expressiOns:.."Keep.'yOm
chin 'up," `'Keep a stiff upper lip." Ile
explained that if he did all' the. things.
peeple him -to- do "he would walk
checked and iiistortcd l'hi fbte$, Of What' is left ,for the next linndred.years„ airmind, with a Permanently set face
fear,Insecurity.and traditional: „ ..,to bring forth? •:- • .., . with Chin up in the air-eTnd:a. stiff upper
. , ,.
*ontagonigins. AS an 'example ., to . ... ' * ' 4 .* . .... . -lip and a' forced, smile on his 'face.
the world, the *EtaPire is not so , . ' , „ • „ ... being in a Nazi prison camp four.
' signifleant_of what Britishers are -• A- Movement that crates sn_lendid
Years. such encouragement -grated -him".
:. as•of what Mankind ean lace0Me... , "et:Murat an(1,-educational-oPportunitles, 'one, eannot,,afay, in A .prison earn') four
W
• henthe Xing
, * viSited this . .
espechallY for people the .sthaller coin years, he sa.id, withont doing all thoge
. eountryld came as Xing of 'Canada. .. heard
,-Con: his ; returtt 'to -.England -.-be*- said :,' . munities; Is. -,. the esta.blishment -*ALI the ,Pitinbgesf;o.ra::,11.11onda,nItyr_u, h., ave never ;
win person,- f presided, i;iver the . county librarY. . Though. the litiron , , .. , , ., • . ..
--Cilliatlian:-..Parilument;and.assented, GountylLibrarY ',ASsObiation,„isLonlY, . in .-SLOT'_,Y1Acarsnat.'eurrLAVEPPi“..„
to -legislation; in person`ireceived , its infancy, it has Made remarkable *(CollingWood EnterPrise-Bullethq
' of Canada's 'great ,and friendly P - - ar
,V.- •"one-armed.bandits," *hich take thous,
ogress Ana its sponSors 'e pieparing Slot ilittehinek, Properly 'styled the
the credentials of the. new rablister r .,
neighbor,' the United States; in _ 0 inride new, lieles' ef usefulneps, ands of dollars annually .by hook :and
person 1 signed the
.. trade. treaty. . Last year., 'air sho,wn by the report Of the €roolc,will. be legally -out- of husinesS on
hetvi'''cell Pille tvc'41*.Oteltiles-" ' The librarian:MISS Aitkol, Presented at the June -5th; An Aet passed at the last
„,, Xing Was not. accompanied bY-b10." :
'United ltingdora ministers, becauso
in Canada his First Minister Is th'e
Prime-Vitrister of this Dorninien,
, • .
:_,..tyecasiotially.there is \what is called,
.
2 an ,"Imperial Oonferenee." ' This is -not
„
. executiVe body. It has. no authority
In itself, It .is simply a round...44.W
meeting a rePresentatives *of - the
various. parts of the Empire for 14.16
exehange t)f ideas and the Promotion
4)f a' 'common understanding. Any
"'decisions" reached "lave no.effect ex-
cept filacli ns,may giVen to them by
subsequent ttetion of. the various „GOV-
ernmenis represented, each, acting In titleot-whieh at present are , without
and for its Own cottritry., Baal. dominion library faellities. Another benefit from
/A tree to do as it wishes. Or to do, the 00tinty library 18 the 'Meeting qt
!kothing at all if it so ;decides. people from the 'various CominunitieS
Who editor of The Signal -Star wag' who Ar 6 interested 'in books . and the
Aire asked by resuleut.a the :United d ideas and, opinions faeil-
. Atittea, Why should Canada pay trthdte ittited- by their cornmeal interest In *the
to Great Ilritah0 The answer WAii,,.working of the Association,
of course, that Caliaditi \does not upayl '
anything to 13ritain, In this war. Mother: "When that nangbtY boY
catIltds figg siattut4rity sent ittrge''Aturted throwing sltones at you, why
oanionots, of war equiptort t ea! yittt come and tell me?" ii?m:
a good, would that do? You
tas tri13111; Abe hos outdo' a *lat. gitto.P'0011114141,1itt tit side at a hare,
meeting Of the -Asieeintl----------. 113, *ghdatl/T? of Ontario
_ . , ,
MOWS 110t our,. the operation. but the
1317Asels 14st week, itha' hookg had ,
circulation of 12,000, whidli Was more
than twice the circulation ',ef the •pre-
eeding year.' reur times a, yearthere
redistribution of the iscyous, so that
'each unit' receives a ftesti supply, with
tlie refinit that, the • naefinlneSSQ,ef'04c,11
ook„ 'IS Multiplied fotirf�ll., 'AO far
tlie unit'S', of the county library are the
; Or, brown heart. states - Scientific
local libraries , already established gr1cultiite.,
throughout, the county; hut it is planned,
to extend the seope of the 4S2+ociatien
to- include rural sehools and commull',
possession' of a "bandit" illegal. ,Credit
is due the Drew Government for this
legislation to protect the public against
itself: The next nitive is to See that
the law is properly enforced. .
,
-,spraying the leaves of turnips
With 0-561ution of borax, suffieleht
boron **ill he conveyed to :the -00th -
to give praetleal control of water core
'*1% cups flour i tlispn, shorten-
• . 54 cup milk " 1114,
tspn, salt :6 thisone. 'grated
cheese
2 toad; Maale BitictairPowder
(When lialt.lniktd, plaits equate
Of theft° on4top of blecultti for
extra ,ffivtor) -
$1/e dry Ingredients together; cut
In shortening. Mit in thee**
lightly; Add Milk slowly'. Roll out
on -floured hood to 1/2 -inch thick;
, tutwith, small biscuit cutter.
Make in.hot oven (47601?.) 12 to 16
minutes. bisket 12.
HEN you want sound advice you gri*
VY o a...friend who has had experience'
With whatever is worrying you. tlea you
have to have profes§ional adxice you buy
the besi you 'can afford. In the same way,
because the life insurance coinpaniev are
,the'guardians of the people's savings, thep
• seek the best buil:nos' brains in Canada.
• Individual directors .of_Ilfe insurance
companies often'occUPY similar .positions
in Many. other lines„,pf business. This is ,
because they are men who, have proven
their ability. It needs men of sOund judg- .
ment and wide experience to determine
safe procedure in matters vital to so mant.
'ntillions of people. ,
Life insurance is a business of many'.
phases. It bridges a gap .bervveen, your
present earning power and your far distant
cnenedtuse.
-ysometimes sparuaiug over half a
e
It is essqiitial to have life.insurance
pxareniersiendigct,ed' bY men of broad business
e
Ii s good citizenship to dvvn
LIFE INSUltAN
44 Mends; froto ibe Li,fei#sidflC Comiumio
$o C