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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Goderich Signal-Star, 1944-08-24, Page 2THE 8011-elleiter,negleeted-sWeethebadlios could finCexpression end genie brave- when commueleatiOrt lineS are..aireade, ill thousand of bac yar of the blite had been- Patched. up, ite and Itiglemi.nded„lnen who could spealCrtaxed'Airthe'liM 3' ilit r _demand* .. were Still eoule ergens by w fO•thie fresh 'Migration at a memene -liewo. Veer '41001, ha v atepped thein threatened throtigh •the ituseien ad. if they bid had the wiab, or the will; -puce. Their evacuatiou-ia ft p_roblege. little the German peeple count in their Denmark or*Norway'. But they must Ail connived by their indifference; not All available evacuation centre*, . a few have partiektated actively'. The such aa Attatria, CZechOsiovakia;`-aad - own tragedy- In the last war there lie,takee way and rpoin meet be Made world is their GerillallY, and the Ger •:- flowing. rraiiCe, the Low Countrieei many they woald save from utter del -1 Finland and the Belkalie are out of the struetiou is the spank Old Germany. e.-- question and transportation. faellitles Germany which, haa• devaatated the Bavarta, are alreadY janItned to. Over- ' It is pitiful40 have to record 119."C' dO fiat permit sending more refugeee to. ill as thet can only 0 the areas now recaptured 'Or inutledIately bil,4 ueately 1,000,000. 'Were titiertered la illittartia, ilro,:teras 24t1:0,, xta:w.,,no., Titliyeyo-reatroot e re ts.6ete'veosnituyovoneesto,ortithveinfgrona;coputt• odatipzie TgillpeaTrehisior:Is-of-sleaahrd::...wft,ealtlh"eeerxMineshtli:y33:0:sb'r'c'telroirl:::.°,04:1reectettitItsede,biliecii 4tholiGetetTiallgotwitit;h09.0thooe rehti;leacititertn'iret14-..- raelked4i'Vii fTifid---er •--asitigned'Ireltirglge-, eLitolitilieltitinbhlYrften4tilitpeeiteNsea4rairtp_l'ssThro°014e.sebtxMi:Alliisehthoiltage' to the Reich," ae,the Neel :!;logan tells the people. ,,. 7 ' . . •• , ..,..,.....s_. * This proeese of mevink the Velks- deutsche' to. the Retell 'has 'been going On for Only. a' few Mot:dila. Only at the beginning of the smellier did big 'coetiugeuts, totalling More t_lireoem.1.00131,aerk persees, arrive in, P,olalid i Sea areas. *The Boersen-Zeittier of „ . , . kOOntintied on page 7) . 74 11 11 AR Curren War N THE GODEBICII SIGNAL Tffill GO EttiO T Publiehed: by Signal -Star Pres0,141Mited. •.West Street, Ooderleh, Oatarie Sie'beeription Bates -Canada' and Great ,Britain, $2.00 •a yeer; to United State% $450. " ertising Rates on request. Telephone \;..71. VILTUSDAY, AUGUST 24th, 104f, IZE'BRZNDtM INAusititxra4 sti*T9Itour. 'soros. Austrella has ,bad refereirdnin on As The Windior Star observes thO''' question, 'giving the Federal Adolf ;shot the wrong, general8. ernment- la4r—ier-liKverS-in-nrder,-t - * .• t ' 4, 4"ii,„ Talking al.19tIst Ottry, SlItti,PQ,?t"7.111 Prf)jeet Pai.9i-7Vieli; , eXactIY Paente; '0,7govetumental .syliterii7Inhcif:hke that ot canada,,with authority divided, After ermany, of Coirse, there Will between: tke states (corresponding to be Japan to reeeive attention, But .provineeS) and the, central or that shoidd. riot take long. • ' • * :federal Government. In ,Austrelia, 4S tougbe'st job. we ,an, of iieldS Were busy with eel . JUS iTt Ca1414da, by agreement a-I:nag -the The where I turned on to tee line. I could 'NIL OVER OFAAZY NEAMIS .....4...,...,.....i..........-,.. , .,-...........—..................... .... lig flurry J. Bonk 'ANDO' ' ' N! VNIDEllt THU ISIOV - oior attlide. iiiiiito.eatt4,e,ititi:t•laeirloofoatit 4.116140arum tut IlAiltVliIST DANS ' , London'S* 8.,001r,00r PeKeple 104 their drinks. walked out, whietilege Even Thee are tile golden days of harvest Nvaliiiig” bOlire hatuited by one- persist - the street :wee eafer than ' a place Of . . . . and, satiSfYiug da$e ef hurl- eta, bedevilling fact; llYing boulbs- bottles and mirrors., 1. The danger ing .un end heat 'when every . della Alld the ilYillg bOmbs Were eausleg to0 paseed; they returned to Uwe:. beer. sailing in-, ever tee, horieeeein. _regarded MaliS -waking hears; there' was littlq By night,. 'the Lendott householder \yes governed by the "Menace. Thoub,. with. onweicn. . • yes, we have had ;iound sleep lin, ,1 Loniten, or. near . it. ' ost Londoners k.oew thet•the Thiuge ands went to the deep-reiblic shelterti. harNeSt--weather in this -township that,reinee worse en, nerves than the eutzint • ,,, , . . ..., no map., could cOmplain,•about Women its worst. It Vies ilot'so inueli that emelling ef, pekVder time perftene„ May, the Thittge killed, maimefl, destroyed, sit perspiriug in toWn restaurants, disrupted., As:they liad before. `tileY cemplaining bitterlY about the itea,t,'Altoidurtaelelu- thceautsoient4loveee, lifiowufrii.: .016.,-•4:yf tih4tittt .tehte elle,eiwn_.7folirelmaw4ningde,,lydwieavesSino4kt_hilet recently. Londoners eeuld, 4,Ike all ,Sweat and harvest dUst, are, not Coin- tl*t 4P -1-14Illat-'-114-4-10ndmieto.--0 pitlining, ; edee, was that the' Things fell, in no el- ..4.ei,ro.,-,_xo„, at. 4,14.etets_narninre Pattern at till:- TIley N'Seq IlitPredieV. doing the .chores "aud eating a hurtled ,,bW7-111e=13-10.0.A-4,1,0C---uelrentaXed for Dreak.faSt. I went off to town to. pick. ThaTthrlarvcallectenirtstl:a mi -P -0.43.4e0. Y. tubningln4-iiit-•4ri up a part ter the binder and \viten ' One. reSidential .subilrie aPPait. I Wes voming back aboet (l.30 the seAsei . . e ently ,•on the beam of -One distant launching site, seffered repeated blasts. Military de/liege: nil. • The boniliS fell; haphezard, all,- about London's •vast sweep. Seven, hospitals were hit . on now le that of the German editor Bee. the threshing crew -working around -+politiCal leaders tbe Federal, Govere- Just Who has to dish up, the war news in the'eseparitter and the big oil tracter ment 413Siniied over-all powers in m.at- a style to suit the Fuebrer., at, the Stewart place. Across the fieldf3 • I could see men coming with, the polished tines of their forks • gleaming in the early mereing sun. bonus LS alvibe,' what •was the premise I met jim Anderson on the read. .-O:r education -by fifty cent : f.whisy epetrateodrthae4tend acd7gembine. White the to a field w , to euf the, Ontario ratepayer's tax hill' He was ill4 tara11.104 o ask ;Oine odY else; pLol:-Y°11?ottly.1.1 to - -- - '- *----•,-* - 4e -------------- --- -ilia we-, a u .,..„ - ' " f:"I'll me for a moraent -Or- two. What •ctory--.--eelebration-ed.---,we-----inight a, weather- ana-coelzed...bir :heads' to :leo , at the already grinning sue. -We telked Abaii tiniet.iii-Weit ienY. „71-0-tt ---....- get in practice with a celebration of ."'; . : and prospect for the later oats about the' yields-.- . . and 'the sfraiiv the 'ceiripietion-of---the paving of the and barley . . and then he started Blue ...Water Highway from Goderich the tractor with a roar And -,moved to Sarnia! into the field and 1 went on towards . * * • home. • We've moved a long way in the past • . .„ -"Yeti Wenfd -h-ii-r-dlYinitiklire," says T6W—Yeare;wit's--puly--4.-- generatiee-e Toronto Saturday .Night, "that • the so ago that we used scythes and then reapers.; and from, that to binders, and the writer of _the Leaden letter in 'question Of -a 8UPPIY, -df , metal for now a machine that cutS and threshes in the oue operation. v° ' At......_............ . Victeria Crosses could ever become ....,...the Jenkins place they were so little, and. there are so fele Pf them takes ' drawing in. 'Wen bythattime the had taken enough moistme urgent. The little brown cross oiit a hundred in the'nearly five' of the dew so that they could go ahead . , , , . il and• draw in. Paul. had his Shirt Off. Years of _ this, war_: But trim to the They were . close to the road . . . so the* Victoria., Cross, has 'always been pling under the dark brown, of 'his Bull- ads&that "I coold, see, his *in,uscles..rip- ters relating to the prosecution 'ot the war, and it was tcNecide wh,ether sueh - poWers• Should , be , coniinued .in the Federal (lOvernanent after the war that the refereedum rue -held -1 . To result,Was the clef at of the .fri_,_ prepesal. ,Tytte. _la ,4„:144. „211.+Tkr,71,) - . opinion . in --- Australia -fi: orable—t * -, ' d th - :0state rights," Just Rain anada. ere is initch ,"provincial rights" sentimeitt. 'In. addition, the wart ,iine regulations -- and-reetrietione put in effect nil -doubt ieeessarily, by the Federal GoVern- meet , were reseuted .by many Voters, ; who perhaps feared that annoyin Federal controls. weuld be perpetuated , gilder the proposed rim • system and -who- dreaded. •the building pp_of a -powerful Federal bureftuctacy, . In Caeada there has been for some • years • •a movement towards giving . _treater anthority. to the Federal. Gov.. prinhent, ,.and Plans, 'tor a Dominion - Provincial . conference --on the queStieif , . leave been Under consideration, , but after the " - next Federal electioe. ..1 The matter bristles wit4'diffieeltie,s; Mr. Bracken, When -Prerkier Of Manitoba,. was: one of the.leading proponents of 'cOnstitn.- -tional- reform:in the direction PrePosed. Premiers Hepburn-„ of _ Ontario and Aberhare of Alberta were strongly op- p6Sed, aiiii though oue of them is now out Of office and the other is deed ..t'he - present •Premier a Ontario ap- parently, holds pretty much the same views on this - Matter as did Mr. Hepburn, Quebec 'also is jealous of her rights as e Prevince, and with • the two largest Provinces in opposition to prppoSed extensions 'of *Federal authority. fhe outcome is exceedingly ' derahtfel...- - • ' ' • ' ” • ...... , . One think - we Might learn from , kustralia is the use of the,ieferendem• Why should not important .matters drieh as onstittitional changes he re- ., fferred to -dfreet vote of the peeple, . instead/. of' being . settled virtually by - a few::peop e correctly represent-theTvi,: 'ews of their- - constitiients .in. these matters, , F4 •oge,-rtleing,a 'Canixittign,. preceding a '''' referendnm. would give -the voters - at large an understanding of the question at ',issue whieh• ..they. Would _not , other-, wise.ifebtain i. and the referenee lo the peeple would: avoid the .reprOach of "playing' politic's.", if tlie question of - family allowances, for instanee„ wore - referred- to a direet ;vete Of the people it could be decided on its Merits in- stejirof becoming a. political . football. ,.. FARM . PRICES • "DOWN .1 .:UNDER," '•• .i * * IOC , • Dorothy wants to knew,If thebaby Watersoaked earthen:400r reserfeeed, oet the truth. By their a n • , . The ilat-dweller wrestled with "his, well; as by the devices of Hitler thRY Morrison shetterz-a. Oat, table -like „ haVe been deprived of these", and it Is ,inetal affair raised from .the tioot, to only in the secreey of military eabals -Adinit,lnattres*--and sieeper,it*.__erdes :that.. werfle.:can _be whispered, plans wire -meshed, against tying; 'fueniture, ,formed, in 3,918 IC Was .Lilaildbilf, bricks -and ,glass. . The humped . bead,1 who ordered Gerinany: to have a . M.oilameasUre'd' diving_ under the .",democratie^Governinent and ordered laliRriSen) lv--aa no Itinker,wo#Ii',:eveii ITO ':tliat--::Go-Vernmerit,-..t.6,:asik,for--an--iirint, casual remark. . . . . ; 1 , .. istice, History intiy repeat itself ''60 AlMost• all other topics bad ,gone only after the Gernian people have paid out of 'meal eenVereatien. E-1411 last a heavier price prepertionate to the week' d good war nena WAS merely a greater crimes (and the fouler cam - minor point.* the business 'of getting inale) to whicli they •have delivered through the day. There was little themselves .up. .. Jesting' about the menace. Nicknames But when the time comes the Allies one day, threb More the next day. ie. for the Thiugs were short-lived. Most -should. have- no ,illusious*. It is not one, tell patients were killed. In one •Londerters, with proper respect, called virtue or repentance. which will have , but (next to 4 Inergae that housed the ,Things "1,)y their formal. name: dictated Surrender, but dire nedeSatY; more dead).,' tee bomb -flame& repair- flying bombs; • .. , It •is not liberal men who will, sur - men, , just recruited iii'. Scotland and By last week . nerve frazzle was 'render, _but ,defeated militarists. The Ireland, wereifilled. • noticeable; not Yee serious, but there. Allies will accept surrender from such London bad developed e deep • and Was increasing absence froni factories hands, but they will, not see 111 them 1 phobia:, glass It' had and offices:". . . The Londoner - was the hernia of genuine peace OX the —1- tradition established at its institution, tanned bide., Those Muscles ...seethed mafie;-027-g-npinetal-fx-0111x7RUSSian 'can! „te.;_flow in_perfect.order . . . smoothly non captered in the Crimean War. - And the Crimean 'War is quite a few Sun and fresh air quid harctwork have 'Mira back. Besides; -proliably not all given, Paul- a-.preeious endewment op thfth e caDtured Russian gees Were te. merirpt tj'acgarinleptso6 (t)Ifiet:hterairomsaeigcrhos served. for this high purpose. ,Even the ri'. er lit some placeswagons were wO ears -ago -there -was, a. report that wroellireltolzkit Monheerys, .mothers 0 a tli ib erstandab e„, . • heartened by a' two-day inn, after. a Are Waft of. a better world. ere rhoonlitnight.cit.-goo& , alway.s the tetiilitation after- ea mueh. .fighter pilots lerteeked down the ThItigec- -4=2 slam ce, e tenpins," tie- hoped for. More bort--and-:gild. it with the-nain suele;nights for proper •sleeping. But of realism, or generosity.....,,,Birt_we_can, ail -lover him was the constant ntenace not afford the luxury of self-deeeption of mere terror and perhaps Worse. tehreyofarteb.in. king our tasks easier. than • The---Maitehestet_Guardiare NOW GERMAN REFUGEES it the, blest of high explosives be - re. The . blast wetddr 1W -it .did,--striP, e clothing,„taft „a person near 4 factory. indow, tind leave the factory and Its aChines 'virtually- =damaged. -It ould, as",kt_did, suck the beer out Of mug in, a intufs hende-leave the mug, O man tied- his - heed_ uehtirt. It could also hill ,without leaving a vis - le wound. 0 - , He wished_ he could speed_ the clock's hand throegb, the War's-eleVenth hour., tint he kn.eW tee --roboinbS hattslowed But 'the robombsblast for eome his own bands somewhat. He could a1ste7°,slutttered- auf14,.st.411-take it -and-- • ,--but. -be was...cere eattered refire glass-4as sharp -piked 1 tamhe had htt a• -a. out eneugh. He herds and as fine -ground, biillef-like ,was thorenghly fed pp. • ellets. Far from a. bomies concussion entre, well beyond the ,range,,of, mis- ilee caught up in its cyclonic force, ondoners roimd---themseives ea.ught- terrible gists of shattered and pul- 'erized glass: ,If the blast caught,, •a •an near 'a window, he could lose the , , * -7-Time • g TOTALITARIAN " RESPONSIBIL . -Bandsteclt... bas Theen •dismiss.the. fact is not concealed, nor is a, serious effort 'made. to coneeal it. The eveht•. has a political rather than a military • - Another -of- tbe--Miiily_problemaliriV.- ing home to the Gerinaue their desper- atesituations-concent the persons ,who have been bombed out. There -was a thee when the population of devast- ated western aerinan cities. regarded the,„east lis, a perfect haven. Evacua- tion trains rolled ., eastward, jammed' With women and children who were distributed in Lithuanian, Polish and kin and 'flesh of his face and eyelids. sigejficance. . ... Just such a question- East Erussiau town§ and villages. ften the - glass would drive deep into ing hour is ' upon Germany and: upon There is P.9, QffiCial figure on the yes. Thus the Londoner stayed off Hitler. Surrender is the 'Inevitable number/ of Germans'eVacultted- to those lanned his day with the rebel:lib upper- elitre they will never siirrender must d°--e.clistricts but a fairly reliable estimate he streets as much as he could. 'Ere price- a defeat, and the rulers who Attost--41•;711fs. *kid. --He- ataYPil awayhe broken. , In the higher quarters of aPPeared to be that out i)f ' between 3,00.0,00' and 10,,006,006•Ger,reans niade rem' wind,owe.. On. tile streets he saw Germany; Camenr7tlie--Iffenr.'W-hb- --hY 'homeless %be- .Ailiece- -efeneing .approx- ;STAND j YOUR POT.. AT EASE. : 4 ,f hurrying -people; -notieeably.fewer than tradition and by self-interest' eta). dis- two months ago. entangle 'the Stte frora the ocetipaiits More than 00,000 1,4ondoners had of the ledtS of. a. thority, such theughts • been evacuated (more thousands, who muSt. be moving. They are not yet could afford. it? had gone to the country full -ripe, but they are - growing'. We 4 on their--cmir)--and the eeeend--millio shall...nee be far Wrong_ if we .take of evacuees had begun to. go. One Runsteclt as their symbol and his di8- 'result was a glut of food' on 'shop raiSsal asa measure of Hitler's con- coutiters. •Another result: no more 'cpleues in front of shops. Food ,shop- ping, which could. have been a pleasure exhausted. 'Bet apparently the report' at anOther they were stacking slieaves old steain-engine puffed assay stolidly, this original source of material was wap exaggerated. According...to a . . . . and then the vision was gone statement from the Ministry of Supply, as. the ear, glided doWn the hill. . there are still soine fifty pounds f 'A woman was driving COWS baek to a ,. , a-- pasture -field. Mrs.- Higgins and ••the metal left from the very last Crimean girls /were milking in th,e orchard Mal gun. That ought to do for finite a long Ed.' was rattling back to the oat field time, at the 'present rate of consump-- with the team and wagon, . Bruce tion." Gode• rich has some ' • Crimean' Lancaster, qur -soldier settler, had -a ..,. helper . .': ; his virife. The'Y were guns, . and it is i not improbable that hauling in oats and both gave :me a, there are others here and there in friendly wave. - It made me reel geed, this country.' Goderich Would . part and I determined that a.s soon as ••I vviiii-her---enelente,canno finished up the east fielde,i weuld• go • rer-atd--gi.ve-them_a-hande bile ihe but . if the . scarcity of suifale metal man cut the • -other „field. -- should becoine •really acute a' 'trade . Peter 'McKay, the •hotel -keeper, might be effected for some other relic. "NO NEED TO FEAR ' _Mindsor_Bta r ) -Aaiyone-tufra-itt-of' --peuee-sh-ould-have his, head examined. So many bogies are..mentioned to throw cold water on • • • entjausia.sm for: the end of the war. Qhief of the, bogies is that M some , Foamier •Russia will- gain -a- strangle- hold bit, the whole 'worle,.. If that happens, it means the other nations -are dumber than we think.' If the various countries like (+rent tritain, the *United States- and otfier_Suntller states cannot •,hold their own w115i• the. Russiens, we are niistakei. .• • • , ,Never •be afraid or peace, Never develop the thijiking that the:onlyeway to have brisk. business Is to have the great majority 'of • the people either being killed on ;the battlefield.or pre- paring ertgines of destruction at horae. _ 'THE nimsFERARLE yOTE (Saturday Night Toronto , The MultiPlieetiere of parties is :fast 'providing 'an unanswerable argunient for the tra,nsferable Vote. a Mining constituency. In (4uebec- In last week's returned. a C.C,F. • -candidate wile re- cOvedless thlin---a• gait -6 a the total tate polled; and 'se -knower'enough--'of the constituency' to be pretty Surethat if there had, been aAlroviSion, whereby the electors could Indicdte,•their second Choice this candidate Wofild nev-er have been elected. • There' were seVencan- didates, and it is Safe to 'say that the supporters of any one of the other•sixt •when once ..:assured that their mali tr.• T. -F. ponnelly, member for Wood Mountain ir' the I1O.iise of. Commons, recently returned from a trip to AUstralia ;and' New Zealand; and told _ his felliivemeinbers of some things he had..distovered* there.: 'Cue' was th the prices farmers lidowix 4inderr are reeeiving--fei-their•-"prodeets....denot •...Compare favorably, from the producer's • standpoint,• with, those 'received by Canadian farina's. Some of these prices are Butter -20c a pound ; wheat, •74C a 'bushel (Irthey sell more than three thousand bushels theyi get less; It. rens cleven-to 60c) ; barley -,1-06c. In •Australia and New Zealand, said 1:), Donnelly,. ow• „steer weighing'ab thousand pounds is sold for tit $61.20.' in Canada- we get about $1.10' ' or 015 for a steer weighing that much, or *nearly twice as much. 'in .keetralla *and New Zen1en:4 pig weighing. 200 , pounds , sells /or ,.$21.04). 11. sells An our cottntry for somewhere itt the ileighborhood of 427 or .1)r. Donnelly. (he'is a farmer as well as a doetor), went on to tell of the. prices ptdd itt Aristalia and NeW; Zealaiiefor agricultural three -furrow disc, pletigir sells for ..$12'.20. An eiglit.foot binder„ per- horge.hitelt. sellS for $525.00; a mower,' • Six-foot, 8eui -for' uaor; ; a nine,foot' sciousness of them and. of his dread of them. • (Note. This was written before the at last, was now a danger. Some of 'attack *On Hitler and the ensuing London's.' war artaoyances had Van- `"pui go.") ., . At, the swank ones the well-heeled I placed wingS: He is the typical ished.-- There was no longer a rush on • There is no need to fabricate legends Londoner :or American no longer needed. I Junker - soldier. and_ offspring of the restaurents: . too mucli glass about. about Runstedt or to lend iiim onis- a day -ahead* reservatipn. if it was •Generai, Staff. and the.- vices (f the ,ee. glass -fronted c tal4s were begging. for General Staff. are many and grievous.. j. cleansed the complexion should m ubMilburn elce",,r, tiuP.' W. 'Pirellis. Ont in There was an unspoken ritual This war is as much theirs as Hitlerl 's, 1 ork in the pubs.... When the low. of a bomb and se too its methods and its crimes. . s. -- Pimple Covered Face. 110 -11 -Many- a -Romano 'Ilte lives of, many young people ere made miser- • able by the,breaking out of pimples, and you probably , know of eases where a promising romance has been • spoiled by those red, -white,. festering and pus filled, sores on the face. • ' • The trouble IS not so much physical pain., but the . . • mental suffering .cansed -by the embarrassing 'disfigurement *hi& very taf.0:1 InaIzcs the sufferer ashamed to..go out in company.' • ,• The quickest way to get rid of of pimples is -to improve the generalliealth -* 6y a thdrinIgh ejeansing,pf the blood. . . ' v • , Berdoek BloOd titters ,helps to cleanse the bleed, wad- with the blood helping me •this week. 'Peter hasn't farmed for at least five.years, since his unde _left liim-the New -Corona, lint he came- out this year 16 give inc a hand -when T couldn't get a hired mae. His.rauseles were a -little -sere -at Bret, but he,soon showed, that he hadn't -lost any of his old skill. • • --Yes, _these are. grand, neighborly harve days. • HUNTERS • For tile firt time since rationing, was initituied. in Canada, sportsmen are- being allowed a limited amount of •amiiiiinition _for _huntieg,. it is • an- eounced, Itim fire Cartridges.and ,shpt eh:ells...only are being released. • Centre fire' cartridges, eannot be made eviili- able to srioresinen.beeauffe of the great deniend for this type Ofammunition frem essential, users, tartieelarly restdeetS of northern eutpesta., " In aecordance•with the new plan, for distribaion; every person: who pos- -sesses a registered rini -fire rifle'. may. 'Apply for a permit to ,purchase, not -more than .100 -rim ire cartridges. Every owner or a registered shotgun May apply for the purchase of 50 shirk shells. AVene possessing both types s'inay melte- ex Imitation_ for the purchase of both, types 'of .aramMaition. Btit'no Matter -110w many -gees he May have in-Tils po0son t purehaser.wal. be allowed •ne:inore than 100 'rim Ore cartridges and 50 shot shells.- Sports- men 'with shotguns of two • different ganges • may have 25 shells for one _gange and 25 foe the ether if .they wish. •+, • '4% , - ,A.:pplicatioes May •bemade at the neatest .Local • Ration Board froM August 15 to September 30; ••Each ap- plicant, must presenthis gun regiatra- tion certificate and also his ration book or ration card. No Purchase perraits Will be issued to spertsinen after SepteMber 30; but permits will be valid for purchase from. September .1 to December . 31, •sieclisive. ...Essential users of .Smallarms ainintration,, who, desire aintaunition,,for sporting.'7pur- poses; maYapply itt the sente manner 'as' other appl14anta for the .pnrehase. of extra. "ammunition under the, above 'terms.: This•, allotment for. himthig purpoSes wlil not-alfect their usual 41- . lowance „for, essential ese. • could not win,, wield have shown a erenee for deybodYe.exceet the „,ullilI. Youe-Jeitheek Want the ;•to Win Ot you :want to lose; you never feel that itiwill 'do just aa well." The great 'majority of) the Union Nationale inembere were•eleeted by tire vot6i Of .much less duel half the yoters in their' coestitueneies. • MONTREAL BUSINESS FIRMS CLOSED Two Montreal one dealing in fruits, • the other dealing in groceries, have lost .their licenses - and huaineSses have been closed for Selling at unreasonable priees,,,fellowing ac- tion 1)31 the Wartime: Prices. od.Trade Board and the R.C.M.P. - Benjamin Pima% a whott,sale grocer, and , Artliur Segitin, a wholesale fruiter, were eaught in their, offices surrounded by huge stocks of groeeries, ;rake selis for„ $70.05;. a 26/36. horse -„fresh fruit and vegetables whieli they had beep guilty of selling at unreason. -able prices. They' were required ,to turn over all' theirstoek ;Ind boela to the 'VVarfline Priees and Trade Board: This eyes not the first offence,of these two nipti ;, but continiied activities 111 soffit* quantities of goods at prices greatly in .witeess of . the maximum wholesale , price established, by the Board lost them the, eentrol of their 'businesses:, „Accountants from the Prices Board have been put in eharge of both tirnia and.--whert--they-have-completed :01 ihi ventory of the, stock the .goedS will be sold on the regular market' tir estab- lished ceiling, priees. The moner.frOlt L11('144' ital.i*s wUl lae filmed ever to the 'former owners, . power 102 ifienlOr Stinshine lqassey- liarris, -.rubber. tires, -r,;e11 tor $g,187. .1n other words, the pried,of the agri- cultural implements that tliey-htive. to ,buy is neatly one-third higher th*au in' this coluitry' and, th�. price of, the goods which they. liave to sell IA about, one-third .less,7t • * Our CX.J.111. friends oonstantli point to Aiultralia and New Zealand as - ineclelff' for (.1anada; but /)t Donnelly said he was' aver 111, it eountry where be found ittore discontent among the 1!ertnert4 than he did' in Austottlia and New Zeeland,. .1r/iRMERS Or THE FfIrittint. • (1:1„ C. Arason in ,London Free*Press) Ileard a. story today whieli may or may net' throw some light ..on what to -expect ,when. yew* Canadians at, present' busy; With jeeps and tanks turn back tothe land. ' 'ought to see the bull rake niy young nephew btillt„'? actid MY friend,. "When the old treetor broke down this boy's 'father WAS going to depend on horses, butthe boy .said. 'nothing doing.? no wos going to get 4.,new tractor amEreally xneelianie the farm. So they.got a \new tractor, and he be:- gan building maChinery to go With it, out of plti carparts; and tractor parts, and heaven knows what This buck rake 100103 aS ft It had just come out ef• a factory, and it does ajob wonderful neialtevi, lov,es Plotting, but he, saYs lie is going to make maehinery do Ali the heavy Slugging. Aral he's ,jtaSt eneitgli ii roechanic-that 'thet'e the way it's going to to, too!" Vitt, walk into an auction and find iroxiiiw-6ttiiii , oteitedratid wanting to bid, .1;*a. victim of "auction feyer"? Wartime conditions dadbreed "audion fever" it we let Orme Eveiyihing is in! short supply..Many more people,are able to. bid. .. if prices are bid op • all our dollars.will lose some . of their v,alue. Even necessities could get out of reach. What use is more moneYirif flviflg coos go up still higher.4 Whde-good are higher; nova's' to businesi, if they orei "offset by higher costs. Or What does the,armer toin if higher farm prices 'lead depression and low istices later. • Wepottot eontinue a fultwar:effoti and prep4re to the problems a the post-war period unless we maintain fi stable and') rOatonable Price level.noicr".4 . 601N101* WO AGAINST, YOUIR,1111LO 11111" -AND usual to vIN,1110 sikattiattio TWA** et Sort*. beteg Istee4ili14-thvemosell 401 itA010 P*000AMhis wow sutootitort, cansito,to opipitos4the hopotleeto of *vendee terthei 7,,30 0;mq LOW. kososeeie thttest MAIO ilk6W01411440141,,--WOIV's