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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Goderich Signal-Star, 1944-09-07, Page 2PHIL, OSFELOF tAZY HK -,CIODER,191 SIONAII-ANO THU GOD R, 0 STA.E- - • . Pliblislied by 'Si:Vial-Star Preee, • , • 'West Street, Ockletieti, Ontario Itates-70anaila and Great Britain, 2i00 a year; to United Statee.„ Advertising •-ttat4 tin 'request. - • IIjhOM Ti THURSDAY, SEPTEMI3Elt Tth, 10i4 THE' Holm. or TAU Vr.DITORIA3a 110TO r • ••• When' was the deeisive moment 'WhIelt-Iiitler should -have, what waS.th,turniug point of the war had whea be was, dreamiug of con- •Wao it when Hitler made his' quering Europe -.-"Don't start Vhat 401,0341 blunder in, insuaii4; itus,.s• you can't iinish," • broUght against him the astpuishing To "realize the rapidity With,. width letWer of the Soviet blic? .tbe way 1$, noe'e'eu.beque, lox ,up - Was' Iit when 1.aPan, Made its daily paper ten days ;old; 'It's the wanton attack' upon Pearl. IlarbAr end "blitz" of 1940 in revers forced the' baited States aCtively into . • et • * „ *. the 'war?: 'Was it whew the. German army was Stopped at Stalingrad. and lost the initiative in 'Rnssitt? ' was it When the Gernian%.,almost in sight of Cairo and, threatening the .'4v4e1e peeitiote'in the East:Were "det&ita'irEi• - sot ?lit -beoPinig mow ierosS ' North Africa and e‘.:enttiallfrouted completely out .of Africa? : Was -it WhOn the Allied a.rmieke made • their ,first crossing to „Europe by in- vading Sicily' Or wad -it when, atter disappointing? slow,logress Italy,..the flteS fanded ititrorce in Normandy and began the invasion Of WeSterfi Europe which ; in. the last feW weeks has crushed one German army after. another„, has liberated- grance, anti taken, the war right to the boundaries et Germany.? Or, to go back hi point of ;time, was the -dccisive- hour' when,. after...y.3:e fall Frane, Churchill iii the name -61 • Britain defied the Nazis to do their . worst,- ancl..roused Britons to deter.; . ;mined 'resistance? • s fliers of the. Royal Force turned back ,the • snRerior numbers' of :German bombers and together with the •in-domitable -spirit of -qhe British people demon:: - strafed; thai the Luftwaffe 'could not bring Britain *to .her knees?. - Or Was , .it when - the -L- submarine ecked and the; courage gallant.- naval: and flier,' n Saved Britain 7 fioni these things alene insured Ottawa •,annefinCes that merchant • a # 'serguen, engaged OIL Inland, waters have been "frozen" to their' present' skips. And. in prospect of the icy breezes �f the late fall, inoutliSton the, reat Lake§ that .word 7., "frozen" not ''. IA - .t , • appropriate. The, new: thiPleisis tainetr.: Quebec has ; twenty-one .• unprecedented number. 7, gested that Mr. DUpleSsis large nuMber so that sure of havQ at teat Son4e0.'ineW, * about him. ' ' • • • e -.- a The 'fellow who talks a lot„ :'## th theme "The world owes a man a living" 'too often ignores the truth that his duty to the rest of the woad is just as -agrept _as:is_itsza,duty .to Win, wisely observes The Shelburne Free . • Press and Econoniist. Perheps, the Germans have a -deep .'plot to ruin Britain by s,urrendering in,such large numbers that the British will starve them.seives to •feed;„ their Rarry sEtivEtvon* »Nic§ We threshed in the field. this )-ear, and I Must say that, while the Sun MS GM) Mat SIGNAL -ST Current VAX 8ICPVE is; risOWIAM OF .81EADVCATING 111:1E NAM •;• .A.gain and again, *believer the problem of re-educating • Germany, or de-Nazifying '.the young Nazis, is being i'L,L, 1),11raing U1) the grass and erasing 1jus1y aPProa.ched, some-, en tlie- witter-lioleat- it Cartain1,-SP: tia help- er-teeldent,tures,- iip„. to .niake„.„the, up: les$011 tlieY will learn from tlite past. • - - . ' 111, --fit of'nil -labor problem. We Parent trePelessriegs of the 'situation, --ee, eVii their.present a ' their T 8., future will-eertainly fortify it.- It i$ an illusion to*.Suppose;thitt.when the War is Over the werld will revert : tie Ih ar hoto bria%tie On -the Gereeetne Welt , r of history pe g ; lute and'disaeteeuSly. and With itbere ihould pa away Mt) tti lilbad, in cleistraetlen, awl 'in the dee greateet threat to theltberties and the aillisatton of the *Old, 'Unpalatable t tiOn tilanklL 81,Owly 'Man* a a" ltee a ut of them will queStion the price tte4. the' ambition 'which exacted that price,' and will come to itsk whether along that 1 • . •road a genuine satisfaction can be found, That MaY, eoneeivehly be the changed -Work .Q4 this line tor thtesh- inescapable. Take a ineseag us W ing and everybody 'ha$ Onished threSh? dar•ie Times:from elle of tiiitt'aPer'S 4ng now*and ,we're turning to the•fall ;special ;Correspondents in Normandy. was enabled. 'question,. or was war • „ , A I've turned the tere intotlie seeenil-: present a eut ,clover,' because the pasture •Nves bereed up dry aild have a, good -supply Of hay in tlie‘barn, and a lield of. • second alfalfa -,that, Woks , pretty good,: Another . field of timothY is •goirig .to seed. The Corn has come along well and this being my firstf'yeat ter 'trying the hybrid varietY. Pm quite satisfied. If. seeps ,;that jest about everybody I in the' 'toWnship. has expanded the poUltry 'btesiness -op. their 'farms. I built an addition to the lien -house last week. New lumber being stich terrific price, I tried going through the old pile .of, seantlings in the Viving shed, . I've lost my, flair with aTIUmrift r elte the -spikes being Asold,..these days are .soft, -.because it Pflegraed that jest about fivery, one of 4 t t the' qeesttoning',.ot, a group) metta:ce waS -.and .skill 'o Chaet sea •Starvation? None "o • victorY; each and every one of them contribtkeil Materially,' to suecess; if - any. one of them had been iniasing it 'might have meant defeat •.•Z)r . War 'drawn out over agonizingly long - period, ,this column: ventured to ..,eay last week, was 7 a decisive mo- ; •ment when 'Britain resolved no longer to 'Palaver with. Hitler .but to fight. :What might have: been- -the con- , ._____z_._,eeq.tiejices,,it-„thateilcgifile.O.:,4.14 nar keen taken, or yen It. had been delayed „ another year or tved, giving the Hitler 11-61-igef?' What will the-Alliek-dO-wit gang' further time to extend their sway Hitler -if and when they capture him? 'and build Up their power ! ' These are questions. siedeient to keep the armchair fellows, busy for a ,QUEBE,0 COVELVIE .1!TT , , • * . • • , . An admirable oceasioual-featUre of It was fitting that several Canadian the editorial ,pa.ge.of The London Free° regiments that took part in the Dieppe , i'ress is,. the republishing _of 'opinions of "Fiench;Canadian editorial,--Writer'S on national issues. These quotations bidicate that in Quebec. as in Ontario there is 0, .thyersity of opinion on 7such matters.' The other day there was a quotAtion from Jean Charles Harvey of. Le Jour, in •bitini-comment on the jubirations- of, some 'French-Canadian • .lournalists Over the liberation of Paris to which they 'had contributed so little, The' quotation: losses in 'the raid of- August 1942 Those who Tot five 'years .have knight to stibotage our war effort t ' - • • • - u: is gratifying to be that- - and used all-their.ettew. to_hinder the eacrifice net in 'Vain.' Military our etenpatriots ffom going to 'the experts state. that lesions, were learned rom -e-j-17(1-d-wineirsavea th.ousands- of lives lii'the later landirigs in Italy). lireM-vXfvlaffrmawAtsszothitivighTi*.• were driven in, faren,ough. The scant- lings splintered -and' some of theno,bad .punky ends . and -all -in -all it was fl. devil of a job. I lost my patience and hit my thump with the, hanimer end •swore .I'd never try to 'build any- thing again with reclaimed' lumber. Finally I had to buy some siding and' ,the planing mill salesman never even cracked a smite when he soaked me $48.00 for the little pile of new knottY, boards. The henhouse is .up now, however, and it doesn't look too bad. In' fact, Pin qu4e. proud .of it, although I don't s pose the take a picture of it for their bulletins on polirttY. That wonld be toe inuch to expect. The children are poking back to * • *. * a- sehool.as write. this. Some of -them are" -daSting-along "'quite -happy and- ellierffaaare lagging along as if hoping - the schoOl would barn dovvn before they got there. We have a new teacher this year. It's her first school to 1939..It is net einiply• a ;woe n of. the restrictions mid controls 'which of Gomm. ,,,prietyper$, , T ey - were the Allies will intpOse norof sueli in - asked what they thought of tbe. 'anti- teettational Machinery . es the Allies Hitler plot. *0`What do 'you naea.n, may constrict. These are Important think?". 'answered the Brat, "flnie .hut.'"over and- ahove there has COM a doesn't think." 'The neitt „eine simply. profound and; enduring' ehange in the said 4lutt Ids superiors knew . better , halaece of power. In:the. 'Europe be- aten- he did; it wAS hot. for Itini to. fore The • Wa, r (lernianY (So, :!.at least, ledge; . The third simply refitsesi ' to ' Gernialts mightwell , believe) ' Is11,0 the. believe there had been 'an' attack' On only Titan, . England was indifferent Hitler. . And.. so on. The writer's' or inert; Feenee was divided, under - general CODIM.ellt is, ",To- see and listen populatedr, industrially undeveloped, Iflogethoets%iGx!rlimaTane . ii.Y0433,,t134iLhQ.wslitihiceisz.tahz1 Psr ust ayintee::: 110,vbgeyir7Blroliyipsell: eefxvohiras iniuos. vt eod:Lin.lat::elvalsRussiae lesser er Unified command, had no Qrt Y -thing, and have been denied access to doctrine and...the Nazi view on every- was 1.)07011(1„the pele, .without. picture Which even to the 'High „Com -f friends, the battlefield of northweateru FranCe Contrary opinion and to foreign news. ex. i tatted offered the surest of .gpportun- from the rest of Europe, They had papers and :radio,' is a depressiug ' ratities for the cenquest of .Europe and also made it it,' place where the Ger- brings Men; ' ' unthinking, inhumed' to i.lic ' wilder visionaries for world perience. It IS /to this that Niezis ,dominatioxe, • It WM 4 ,f tmaainotia ManS' rolling 'stock could move only Iv eniviesureth-del:Iya-i?tfhlotlieG'es;mlini11Pwd °f193a9rifirait, The post-war World will afford no food for -stick, fantasies, ,.., !' ,. 4•J : Whatever may have ,been,:the•doubts kid ileAtatilm,5 of Bn011sb.., VOI,ie, filen in the years between the two Wars, faets such these may ; not be aPP ent yet to truCtilent yothigsters-bred on the heady Nazi brew, but the facts are there, and tteY will prove tO be May hope that iii -the process ef the reality will effect that ellAnge of inentelity Which the eatilabs*, will peed -if they Are once mord again tO take their due place in the comity Of stern And sure amolmasters. One nationS. 's .Maitehester Githreiae.. Ft JO! IR FORCE ftP - WORK In England, tactical" air force . men 'examined n. pieee of paper and grittuett, It was a Oftptured German lekitruetion f'tstrhiof bicycles), Dr. Chase's Ointment for Chafing Skin Itritotioqs Eczemasheetor•owing gs 'behind' 'treelts, 'It told them nothing • • • „„ new. Trittr,qt• was 'an. intimate proof ap.oeinegue,§.„ of hoW ;the greatest tactical : on ono road a mile-leng. coluinn of foree in history was workilig, .0erman vehicles travelling bumper to ' U.S. , and ,Britisli 'flyers, under. a t ft bumper was caught by Allied attack 'Planes. Which meshed Orburned neat- ly every .ene. III Washington, Secre- tary Stilwell declared that the amount ef wrecked or •aliandoned German transport in: seine places was actually• hampering Allied progress. Mr; ;Su:a:, ,automata, -whose minds have a rop lliec throu 1.1 not being -used. 'According to e,- , f.itnri-011igets., 00, per 'Cent. of the prieeMere have no opinions; they are not allowed to have OpiniOns and •have,stoppecl trying:ft.-1f so much as 60 Per cent. of that is true -we are UP against a completely intractable siti-i- ation. For to whom will this mindless' it is now a: fixed 'principle. of English policY to be concerned- for the tate of generation liste0 Certainly not to ' : its foreign victors. Still:, more cer- Europe.•Weknow now that our own tainly not, to, German enaigres;' mfate is bound up with that Of theostly. Continent.. The Continent cannot he - non -Aryan. .4 good Many. of them come the 'slave or the -instrument of a will; no doubt, be sent to forced labor * on reconstruction in Russia; that 'may Power without' dire. peril to ourselves. enlarge their horizons a little. But We know that and have let.the world: captives," Tile task of provid-ing food i and she's 'probably- just as ,frightened for weareer7rer.-net.ww27-0-f—mieettseitheLlitele-Jenkin,s-hoy twatceis rendere4,,' Gorman soldiers Must -Present lug to. schoel 'for the first time. Shell, Y' -91 s IrChitten7-Pr4-411"e745--L,qu*Y-le e, poses that the majority of 'prisoners be .rulers any future Germany ,nrnIt . 4 --,tremendous problem . -get eyed -up and -down -at_ church next, , h ImpreSsion. the Russian -point of -w nn may make On a mindleSs German is -MA -a question to answer_witle_cein!_' plete confidence: —The Speetator (London)4 , II \Yarning that German prisoners of war in America "may return to .G.ere II/any the most -ardent and. effective' • Nazis of them all;" the magazine ,Christiunity and Crisis 'urges that the re-education of these prisoners begin at ,once. The publicatieu, which . is night,' Where by day ta.nles,..ttuc s an railway trains' were se efficiently added with a twinkle Itt itis eye "spotted and' bombed, that no rap id -movement could be attempted, . no threatened sppt reinforced, . . • " New the Germans..ivere learning, as their fellow sufferers had learned 'en the eaetern„•front, that retreat for an iiemy without alr, cover iS an . -inferno, that nie,,devild irt' laell weld he worse than. the -pursuer's ground -hugging planes, stabbing and jabbingwith can- non, rockets,' fragmentation bombs* and that this WAS' 'A kindlof delay "to which Mir • ground forces 'could- be --. easily" reconciled." ° , The taiftwafte was •almost: clown and ;:Xiinhal„ Coning- liati)i 'and his faelEal .1Iyers were glad, to .yield meet' Of the credit to Lieut. General„ Carl -Spaates strategic hettyy bombers and their.Oghter escort's. The (Continued on know that we shall, spare no effort to prevent it. 1,11-, is any ambitious or hostile State likely to treat weeonce again as of• no account or -to i*deic, estimate the extent of the -resources we can and will throw into the effort The United States is r.further away from Europe and to that Lextent ; less, inttniately affected. -, But . two wars have taught American statesmen. that they cannot be indifferent .to its for - 'tunes, and the development of military technique has done much -tO qualify nt—h ist tee, --T.11 111111 "r•-meniokr.....1.10""ill 11 • reckon always with. the'xast Atherican , Sunday -and treated-like--n-Stranger-for encouraged-tOlearn the facts about -the a few weeks. w. ill, h ,s rdemogratic world- -and the metini pOtential, d. 1Vodehouse, the English aiithor, too easy with the childrenOthers indoctrination; withont any; high -Ages- .-But, the .biggeet Change of all 'Is the democracy "without any compulsory ilietites. - • - • admits that he Made a ',terrible•wlio• have children going will say she's It urges, also thati, emergence ,of Russia as the greatest Germans in 1940 h e made,••several b th too sezere, and finally she'll be -ac.. sure propaganda." cePsyteduasaa part of the counnunity. We a a bad windstorm here last soners be segregated rather than the ' pepulation -Russia so ure y e the famitical--Nazis among the military entity on the Continent. far .exceeds n fake when, after his ca inany as to reduce that country re ,broadcasts over the German radio. week It was one of the first We've antr-Nazis as at present. 11e offers various excuses, but neglects had -a -round here in twenty. years and it "There are ov.er 130,000 Germen latively to the' status Of second-clase the only one that would win'him much blew down a barn at the other side will -doubtless be greatly' increased in henceforth look upon the RusSians as Prisoners here now and the nuniboriPoweit. , gentian* GovernMent can sYM a wit p thy his. former. readers: - of the villag6 and tore an elm tree nt down in- our back pa stere. The barn the next , few -months," this -Qhnrch a horde. Behind them is a Vast paper Says. "To send them back to I dustrial equipment which in the years that he did;not have "Jeeves" With was pretty rickety and the tree was better fed and in. better to come must grow apace with the to give hini. needed advice. • pretty old, so we haven't Much to Germany 'physieal •And.nervous health than 'most population. Their military skill iS h * ' la abont. ' .0:;--of...their--.Countomen,Awt_unclianzed ferior to nothin ; which 't1 G , .ie ermans -How ion ,. • , oo er g now rt. II • • c 1 t'ihtg g vq.11 it take for the Allied Hi • ' h their minds—with perhaps less 44'3117 , ggms was saying t at on- Sunday . . .they will lia.ve, been spared -the had to have a little fire in the front cause • most shattering experieeces of the last room. Time certainly moves along in stage of the war—would be a colossal a. hurry. .. • blunder.' "At piegent there,is 110 serious effort REDUCTION itl`e THE RETAIL COST - . to re-educate these •-Germans. TheY " OF FARM, EQUIPMENT .. are allowed to spread within the_ prison Recent enquiries about the reduction camps their 'own Nazi philosophy, but in the-tigt9Puitinittorted-----tarm--4-equi. thernre--na--expeseeleteea-eenstimetiee- ntent_geneally and pf tractors in par- interpretetion' of life 'in deinocratie troops moving east to Meet the Rug- evening' when they had comptiny they ,sians moving west? Will the Germans put up a Stiff .resistance on. their. own: soil ;or vvill they collapse quickly and cry for peace? Will 'the war end' in September or drag ori, to the New Year? ,What Will Hitler -do when he sees that Germany can_ hold out no ness of mind than other Orerinans be- • • ' 7dr.1191.RI°4 Ifitince:Iiii3lii:#11aS -4:41tspn.4°. jiot...-4'6't$71:18eFis atrg-7:ars hea Add vc.gittur e ,ens go an rY:tt,con•::::e :afiefiwoftliatssu litotinge 4ner first 11:s: .nlo an ktie.:04ti. C allare lvsslaoho:ritiocuthbge .uaittnt:\cti‘giuci\e3/4,0d iArnededdhprAdirtualcick: s,°11.pen:proeriaindi: e%167:Ellin°". 411Pddfa-te °yen' (375 verasio baking se% a ticular 'have 'caused theregional of- terixis• • • • . . -. - _ What Isfeven more serious ,, in.some , fidials of . the Wartime Prices and, a cases, the anti -Nazis among the Ger- r i Trade Board ---to .warn.taxmen,against expecting too great a decrease in' the- -inwts, phraovte-ebtieoenn....eaengareeettheed.:.tfoarilitthiceairl . • retail price. When the 19t4, budget o ..V azis have been, left in a position tc,, was put before Parliament, the Gov - the majerity who are. not ernment,removed the clistoms duty and cinofirinvin6nece.ed Nazis?' - , the war exchange tax on 'imported a daft -grill equipnient and 'repair. ioners, lads Of eighteenornineteen, Scottish in which- there werela number the removal of such tax or fluty would duty free: therefore; any -reduction ie. said ' lose,. thirWar, -het there - are in' III • , -Some of the younger German' ie.. rai • of. 1942-7including the Essex lifft'S, onlhe-basis that the benefits• -of rarm .have been 'talking tether freely to Gode rich'inensheidd be intone th0 be passed on to the consumer. • • without 'firing shot. The ° despatch the cost to the consumer results from !eGdetrictatePily as we 'sere Tbey wiUw'n the next war.'! These boys 'have not realized wamt has befallen their countryz .and the Years of peace and punishment rally prove more educative than the -years Of. dorninance, of vic- tory, and .of arrogance, .NevertheleSs they testity:tee_the ':_spirituel problem which exiets and which' will constitute one, of the teughat taskg -of the post-' war. world. • ' But we' exaggerete the difficulty bY. thinkftig Of it in terms of inadequate pedagogy faee to face with stubborn pupils. There iso no recorded pre; their captors... "We'. --may," they have 'week itractols, exeept ter industriel,uses, are* forces _that entered Dieppe kik the removal of the 'war exchange tax says that on their arrival' the 'Can- adians were pelted .With flowers and given tremendous weleoine. by. the officials of the • Prices, Board French people. 'The press 'correspond:I PLienttionotiltrt, cost eqf upaoir.tie. feelings , ' ent doe's nth not atteinpt to describe • emachinery is cominited Only on ' farm • . the ini, the- laid-doWn.:.valtuf Of the .machiner of the men Who retiirned.after to porternot on the selling price y Oulitstances. --The Canadians bad many does not include the parts of •Canadian origin. necessary to .inake the tractor a eoinplete uiiit. as, for example,lights or tires, nor does it include transporta- tion and selling. eosis. Tfi, other :veordS, eedent or alien teachers sitecessfully taking-oVer-the_schooling. of a_ defeated_ nation, in its own Tan • or; s o we be se optiinlitie as to sittipeSerthat 'there is either in Germany or aniong the returning .exileS a minority either fit or 'iraineroui enough to undertake the dieitpy.rep:Tretta4d itioAceoown blood h d wayoLJh° has to cortvineer the german tluit ii has,Suecurabed.to the viceof hig, own PhiloSophy and not'fifereiY, to it• ralecal- :oulation .of chanceg and. fortes, An err 113 politieel arithmetic, not an 'error in, morals, is, the &In:titian:V. re- Aniong tlie Gerinans; If these youths express the, Mind of their countrymen. Nevertheless -there is an .edautional. Instrument more potent thatethe 'seheol and an instructor more eonvineingthan the professor—hard facts and bitter experienee. An the yeitrs after the armistice evertthe duller Germans Will _feel what this,adventttre hee-cost,thent " two years. under suchk, different cir- to the consumer. This Iaid-down value ..eid.of:Lteejend of our father§ have no right to celebrate t hncli of our 'former -Motherland. All the leaders and aposties.ot the Bloc, Populaire have, sh.own them- selves, during this period of 'shame, • to be- the eneraiesof Franee. They • upheld ,the_eause of the ettpitnite- tionisfi i.ind plaCed. Detain on a pedestal, 'ex- cused the treason of Laval ;•,. they ridiculed- our :krollmteers of the 'Canadian. army and insulted Who- ever pregented this conflict as the ,.. supreme, struggle . for :liberty and. civilization.. They' ineited 'an itt- eaicuiable number of our -.young --retertLto.„flee to the-Lattrentins in- „P.stead 'of taisteningto the aid,_af• 'oppressed - nations.. They ceifSe- , leggy vilified the righting French 'IrtOvement at thesante, time' they were throwing discredit on the war , . Alma' Of out nilies, England, the , 'United States. and- Rusgla.-., They, had tip,„tes a Model. 'to' our little .,; A:Province the stupid And absurd isolatiottisra: of . Southern Ireland. itte LaurnedeauS, .the OnItsr-the Maxitt4 and the little ' • Nazis enrolled ill .the • 7.110t have no right' to Appear 'before :a -".Tricolor . Without blushing.; .Let us' leave these traitors to their, pale eMblem . of defeat,: to their faded flag or Carillon„ to their corpse -like * rerhapa Outitrio, editorial writers, the reduction is not,tomputed on tli _tofal--,retallselling.7priM,of the trector or any other. piece of imported-:* inent, but only --on that portion- of, it whiclt is actually • imported from foreign market. • and France and . were an importiffit factor in the success which . character: ized these' landinga.. VOICTI1E` formic 'GOOD '• • (Calgary •Heraid) , there has been ame irritation. over :tile regulations of the Warthne Prices and Trade Board, most people realiie that they have result the pnblic good. There will be:objections ,from only a Oniparatively few people if. that organUation is .,permitted to Conttaue DT -exercise Control. oyer &ices in- the im'mediate peStrAr years-, A. sudden lifting of, all regulations' inight well have, a most tragic result to a large nuniber of Canadian peeple, in - :eluding_ those who ,did‘ their part so patrioucally in the war .years, WHY GASOLINE 'SOARqt P. in'Stead of failtaging In reproaehes . , against quebe'efor'Ats 'wrongheaded.. tAtteing 4000 barrels less daily than a , tesif wbieh, rorottokes 1,00:ahlogl year ago.„ Sixty per cent. of our im- Quehte add fbel to the fires of eon --2 rted erude oil has to COnie hy ocean troversit,-..,-would leave it. 'to French. Oitnialan Writers toSay •'vliftt. should , relations i)dtweett the tWo rtOvitice$ nitg1l be Considerably Unproved. ..” BENIVII1JaUP, -BENMILLER, Sept. 5. Mr. and Mrs.. T. Squire Of Goderie'h visited With Mr. and Mrs. Wilfred Fisher on M • onda. y. . School resumed op Tuesday., *ith th.ree new • pupils 'beginning with ft new teacher, -Misse.Y..„Straughttri of Auburn. . Reif...Harold Currie and Mike Currie arrived hone on Friday from their holidays and Mr. Currie occupied his pulpit On Sufiday, - Mr. and Mrs. Keith Gardner visited over the week-en:d at 7 '.11fieS "Betty Straughan. 01 was, home, with her parents holiday. . • - • A •nueiter from 'here attended serVice at North street 'United, c Goderich„ on Sunday evening to it former minister, Itev. of Val -ton. Miss 'MU Good of Woodstock visited with her parents over the week -end. ° ,Mr.arta Mrs, Goddard and family, of GOderfeb, spent .the week -end with Mr. and. MrS:. Wilfred Fisher. ' , Md a rs, Ken Reind family .left last week to Join her husband at,,Halititx. Mr. • and. Mrs. McKie of ' Toronto visited With the latter's mother, Mrs. Win.• Still:tight:Pi, Veer' the Week -end, Mr. MA Mrs. Jas.Beddlle of betroit spent the week -end With Mr, and .Mrs. Verne Mrs. W. Gledhill, Mr, Clyde >1155 Beulah Long motored to Orillia on. flundAy visit with Mr. ami1‘1/8,. Bowden over the 'holiday • week -end. QTT.A.At,A,' Sept. 5.---GovernMent in- junetions "Conseeve gasoline .by cur- tailing non-egeential driiing of motor 'vehicles is no idle talk, as there exists eriticakShertage in the light or wOr. necessities. at is Wert know that Canada's greatest source of crude oil, the Alberta Turner 'Valley fiekVis pro- tanker. The needs of aviation gas, for example, jumped Itoin 5,5•inlilion gallons In1030 to 170 jitiliLon gallons for the year ending. March, 1044. 'Our itorai 'Catiadhut Navy uses two 11)1111011 gallons of Olt a Week; it. takes- 10,000 gallons. to 'MOVe an armored orps jive and On top Of this there are the needs of ituititstry, and agrietiltare; truly' . staggering aMount when WWI an eartlicittake eV ty few !to *ears, eititadit is booming too molt talled. ' plain joy riding Is not tike Callforuitt—i0 Ittpatt, orouto the „the oh, 'at a wood • • larrhoca Dysentery • Private: "What'sen the menu?" . .., . Cook: "Oh, we ItaNe hundreds of thittgs to eat 4onight,i' • -Private "What are t1tey17 ,Cook!, Ileum," . „ - If you are suddenly -attacked -with diarrIncar4p3,,enterY,eolie, cramps or pains the stomaelt Or bowels, or loosenette of the bowels do not waste valuable tine; but at -once p16 - cure a bottieT, of Dr,. PoVfl'ees Ex- tract of wild Strawberry 7 Etna see how quieldy it will ;give yOti • When; you use '"Di. Vowlees” you are nOt'OXPOrinlebling aOrail ° nevr and untried remedy, but one that -114i stood the test of time; eine that lids been on the market for the past 94 , years. Beware o substi- tateo. They mil be dangerous to your b.ealth„ Got 4 4 Dr, Powler " and feel Ado. . The' 'V. ItfilVare Co., tel., Toronto.' Oat. 'ifi a much more determined chaiacter .than I look: . You ,see, have an Inborn sense. of responsi- bility. Thal why, " in addition ro:, devoting our Machine -shop exclu- 'stvely ,to armament specialties, I aceepted the challenge:, of Wartime • shartages,„and went it11-ou,f5 to main- tain- the quality of my product, :tollgate= Gold. Seal .Rug's and, tOugot,eucu bytile-yard: I reflected that by thus assuring, a dependable source of colourful, cheery, work - saving, budget-eaging floors, I would in my own quiet Way, be doing a teal morale job.' And thousands of -,Congoletun fans across Cinada, seem to agree with me." 'HOW TO HELP COLD SEAL , MAKE GOOD You can get Added Wear out of your Congo. leum goofs with 4,pery,.little,effort, mush. end , mop -them rogniarly and itelievi the brightness of, heir surface with an occasional Makp 4iate too, that the door undet- fleath is Smooth and free from, crevices or knobs., .1f left Mgt MOS it every few mouths to "spread" the totem Yes, a little ,tare will 'psy big atidoculs.