The Goderich Signal-Star, 1944-09-21, Page 2urnEUThZ
0101)BRIOil SIC*4.14 AND Vgi* OPDSAT.O'n Fre
_
Signet-SOO Preget Litetted.,.
Wesei'Otreet, 410dekieh, °Atari°.
,f/ #urrti
CliftittAMit A11,0E,S
Bitbeeriptiete Ratea-eikeada ead Great Britain, *2.00' a year;.,. to 'United I had. a• pair of Sunday ShOeS that
AtiVertielAg ItateS reilnefit. • iTelephime Were beglueing ShOw, the wear in
.8tIdefir ;2.50*
TatmsDAY,:. $WTEMBER :nit, 1044
, 010011 Oleo., ..:4)-04normea :thuut 410 ec-i• provided 'by are Worn to church, and soeial timer
,..- • .
• E )ttlIrr", 141-11q, MEN'inating" Men at work(*ging *PoSeeteleS hone Met now and Again to an auction' . • . • ,,,. .- .
and filling thein in again. ' The latter *sav-le if tbe Wea'th". is dry. 1143weVer'''
"10rCh," the Orgau a the Canadiae. Scheraa. Wonid ' peobably be the'-,-- -Leal% "en. Witirthls *4141/1/21 4 79'ea. tileY
- 00res, ASeoeiatien, ,saYS,f - ,exoe. navel_ . , ,,,, Were beginning te sea* .tee eitect sf
• The scale of war SerVice gratu, '
. .14141/010.gte
VIre Are On the nlOve.' "We?' *re .001uMn. 41001itiad "14 ttrhe'rilt *Fri
OSIDE„ A TANK IN [-Woo Auotted
tauUsl-inenatrouil„ .41at147; noiey ferty-Igaeoline trueke, Red -Croes loeriee
wltti
five-tOn affairs loaded, With certain tel -r medteal 43i-neeri and etvot01"-
etc vitoh tank oftole_ run Short of gaSoline fortheee hungry
4 "' MOPM.-Or YOUVS (Wideb. VOnStalle their-
teat tbe Ole eneMY and PO)le deathlWa"vs' a*1 still More tank*. If yOu
a rather bad Way. ree had them or
LI Years,"%ecause goo ettelea fern" fartee,-e-e'Wounder gu-u-s•ml °v'r one trandrede food at ;the rate •of two gallons per
tqauds-ets-Amvounitim---1°Pelf-"---It-hair -sow van alWaye lUt ufl at 'your.
ene maehine gee and. thousands a
• atY 1,80-e(14;e0ends, SO I took them, into
TommY 411c1(SOrtle ettee shop Tfor fixing.
- eas, 4.0. the". eXtretee, °The . rime .0n a, sheit was .4 :line-up of ShqeS
• miniiiter. in intrOducleg the resole.-
,
and I realised etenething weileittek,
Ore said: tf'Gratnities retteSent.' an • . ing. at them that I really had never
AtteitnPtte. reeeettise a Service ewe!, leceight of before. - YOu min ,tell a let
Witteh Me prig° On ever be placed? about/Peeigie by simply looking at the
' That is, a feir statement. TheY Seoea they wear. • New .filsoes Slum
represent reeOgnition. of, not, 'Pay- very little. eheraetee.e' Th.ere'f3 a .differ-
. nieutf for, SerVices td. tee. country ewe --wilea, the owners bate, . been
which are beyond 4117 monetarr set" ng them armiud, for a while.
apprtisal. 'Compared 'With .the . First Of altr.a. pair of bleele narroW-
--grAtaitieS ---Sta*.ed,,...atter .the „last '
. pointed "shoes stood off IfY theMselvee
war, they are princelY. 'Yet. feW .ilt„.1...1 ,e_erner where the Shelf ren up
' Veterans in 11)19'tilinight the Were 0 Ilii dlifelarY -NehineVe:-Ache-leether
badly treated; Toren Congratulates was flee And well cared for and the
' Perliament or, baying adopted
, Ileels.worn down .quite overtly. .A. eare,
ais ,measure',withnt 'disSent and
'believes that it will meet ' Wtth,
geeierat tater, .not only in the Ser-
eides, but "Among the Canadian
tie0Ple--.4'-large-7,-,.".---- ------- . '*
eu,-10--eXPreseJitee. „”
•:- *
that these gretuities will not be ' 'con.;
.
fuied, with plans for re-establishment
,
itiee rreeently. anneulteed rer4
woni_o>e, itn* itow.
e
TheP. the* raps will have to take
their tr- ,imining. • '
IF
Perhaps bre:hr.:Jannis we seall -have
those' colored lights back ou the
Square. _
. • - *
geexas that Winnie and Franklin
have to get together -every so eften 'to
11
ful Mart meet .have worn teem ,an
sharpen, the axe With whieb. they are t •
Iguesseil- tee sole% were down to Over;
Of • Service personnel an "a realistic
prograra-'•Oe trainieg 'whfeh to
, "the filkure vvelfare of Our service men
, and wcimen." We Wive taken Goverfl.
raelit aunmeacements to indicate that
2101014 for such training are under waye
. Certainly tbe men and warden who have
given sOthe of the most formative yeare
•.___ot their lives to the. service of their
sentry should* have .eiter5; assistance ( ; • *
Inad. " encouragehIentlir-overeomnIg-inY-, Contrary ta_preveous statements,
it
_handicap., under which they have thns, -is-new said that 'the aptotaobiles to
builet§,reeily:to be shot ,from it. ,The
teek also -13aS enough'Itige octane
gasoline. to keep. its pOwerfa 'Motors
eliurnitig - for ninety Mlles.- .If. that
gasoline catelies .fire as a rePit,Of *the
nceurate aitu of a German anti-tank
gunner -all' five elen , virtually.
,
cutting up the Axis.' the), thickness. Sure enough, the pair
• 4. Of shoes belonged to one of the town:
With restrictions on tea- and coffee otere'Peen. He Is Six feet tall, thin,
-aed - *laughed-. at. _my
have to go Me to get -e second:dills
of his favorite beverage -ie he takes
it without sugar.
14 , eWc* • aboutZthernivner-4 .1770,ef,*hoe
and then be 1ie1d up'.another-pfter,•.- --
.These -were wide- . 'eh% fact, they
looked fat, and the soles were broken,
through an 'the toes turned UP, and
although they ,tere.!One, ," they showed
signs that the owner. had been atQl.lit
cattle.. The shoes were expensive.
By looking at them you knew the
owner had prowled through pasture
fields in themorningwhen the "dew
was. on the grak becau,se the polish
seemed to have been washed off. There
was n� question of who owned the
battered, brown brogues, ,It must be
-George Welch, the town cattle drover.
Standing next to tbe brogue s were
a -pair et-zhiglehreed lady's- ILVOtS.-
These were the kind that Were in-
tended to be hidden under flowing
,few years age, Tommy used
to have a whole line-up of these quaintshoes, but the. changing years have
made all that .'clifferent. The shoes
mist belong to someone -clinging, to the
traditions of the pest. '; Yee, they were
the • shoes • or -gaffe Speneer: nod
certainly -wouldn't wear the, opervtoed.
s oes that-some-of-oni-wom
are beginning to wear. Shoes in the
girlhood, days •of Hattie were intended
to cover feet; ankle and a good share
of the leg. People aused, to say you
would get weak ankles if you woke low.
shoes._ Hattie isn't taking any chances
•after-eixty years -of. protecting her
ankles. • •
A 'MS. *doctor says it is biologically
pessible for people. of the neXt gener-
ation or the sacceeding. one nye in.
gOOd. health for no- years: But it
everybody has to retIre at sixty won't
tb,e last 'seventy years be rather a
bore?
'been' .placed:
come mit after, the war will have Ao
• startling changes in .stAe., Good news,4
MORE A.ROUT "DOWN if true, for -most a us, for cars 'et the
" UNDER" •
30's Would be badly' outdated it the
proposed new designs should appeaf
When-feur COX.' friendepersisted on the roads. •
in po'inthig to Ns Zealand
. 0•Overaraent, Th d- -demand as
s' Sotae people in thie, country began to
*indicated in-. newspaper ,expres§ions,
inplr- into- Conditions in the 'sister for t'he closing .of beverage rooms on
4down tinder:" and the A/store Day. Certainly it. would be
eascovered. Sortie -things wttieb Can ...
the 'wise and ,decent thing to t'do. If
idioms, ought -to. know. A few weeks' there is not going to be enough. en -
ago in thi§, COI.Uran :squotecl-Titroin- tbuerue_ms to---eelebrate- the - great -.day
" a speeeir'given in ParliaMent by Dr. .fittiugly without, alcoholic stimulant,s;
T. F. Dotmelly, Member, for a
it would he -better not to try to 'Cele,
Sapkatchewati rid:bag, who had ,jnst
, prate at all
returned from a N'Llit to Australia and • • •
•
New realW-Nlier-loanthat----0,0telltion., td easpepiall
-thre were, not at all ee'"Pietered. bY constructed submarine all ready to
-take him from German when it be-.
C.C.F: speakers. Prices for . farmers
11)rocbicts were diStinetly". lower eemes too hot ferehim tedre. .Aieothet
those! received by Cenedian fanners, . story is. that he has airplanes' in
' while prices' a farm tpwrilenleil. were readineiss for .a .sudden flight, Btit
• nes.ily . one-third high‘er than in flits Where on earth can he go t5 escape big
4eotuitry. , deserved fate? He, *cannot ,reme
In the meantime *others were digging under. Water'. or in the air indefiniterY.
.
tato GOveriiment reports i$Stled •If he e -ere acquainted with Dickens'
. • • • .
story of pothebdys Hall he might
Australia and. New Zealand, and.it was
.exclaim ,with Mr. Squeers, "It's all up
found that taxation in those -countries
' ;New Zealesei.'-'In this. _country the flying- distance in • the "Atlantic aird
wee ranch higher than Canada. with 171.4.44._e_r.,,
• ""*. is
Comparative figures have been pub-
- "Some Ainerican Congressmen are
•liehed and will no doubt be placed be
the electors in detail -Miring 'the. debianding that the United 'States take.
forthci;mieg :reameeIgn. -Furthermore.1 over the British -West Indies and
the Canadian .natiOnal. economy is, in a Bermuda, the French islands of Se,
-more.healthy Condition thee that of .pierre-Miquelon,and everything within
portion of the national debt. oW,ed out Patefie Oceans,"' observes The Port
side ,rof Canada is only per ,ceet. tiginTimes, Whieh goes en to suggest.
, • New ' Zealand's -debt- 33 per cent. that Canada turn take over Araslia.
payable .,ontside .ok New Zealand, The NOW theretS.' an, idea. Mat patch of
rate of intetest on the natimial debt territory on oer left shoulder
.highee in New Zealand thee in Canada, and ifolvn the- side of British Columbia
end the per capita debt also is. higher is not to. Canadian .
in ISTew.Zeseland.thae in. this country. ' * •
•
mobile gas station,
'
.Clouds of dust are chorned up by the.
,..
treads of the tanks as they Pound along
the main, roads or 'take this or that
'turning into wheat fields, Where wAite.
tapes strung along upright sticks muds
you- along "laves" which, have beep.
swept clear . of enemy mines. Tile'
locked at their posts undereeeth their tanIS make a, iriadiag, angry roar AO
tiASr Ate°1 bateheee are 14 danger o they advance sli.d, bebl.aelt thefri they
beteg' suffocated and burned beyond leave scorehing. bet Waste: of air from
recognition.
roiewooti Milts.Vots4Mottse co. ttivi
26-28 Irront St. Vre 4r0004?
,
-14,!rty Salo * :.WORAELL IIABDWARZ
But ineide.it 1041 RS IC".
01,04Buit,7.tratd:)pilalttaily:law4eciraQuilsrrit itthiii''ittUiti)11: tttteliffr eel? aounsetLveould ealToses- ; TOor .1)-tall:eetf: :1111trh(:erd'tbh:: lat4teliklito7milleoinhdo:: SQ 4113. th ' 14*.°°"lie in the litik
PleasaAt theeght partly beeauge you 1 1,17:17P, lleOrnaecswedellaulideneu' otituteteridew'uriSteuSi. , uiSeMok: tauWeiVelsword' to0 "steady,
,i,gh t . Next Yoa
leterceemumwation .sys -and (Atter it"- , Teen a voiee exineelatilMeldlig. 7i`043111 -dg
corateninieetion exchanges h een this Your six-poueeer .has been eroeght to
eta_
troop of three tankS end t et troop bear.O. the ettemy,'who is busily ehoot,
of ' three others Or this sane ron ' of ing at the ..tank whose Job It IS to`d,t.riv.
• d "treverse right," Yeer sie*.t to Yen,' Ole or „twO;rolnlites,,,of
' Mang uproar '10110w and
then; sO'
In aPeete. Mt Is 'deer." That
have tee, Many duties to per arm.
There is a dieteet eneesY,held ridge to
be eapturedoaed it's going Co, be tap"
eared et an costs'.
DUsll aheed-in your. rattling,
•-death- trap,-• You're
anti-tank• eereert 'has been, obliterated.
'Other tank forMatiens moots
own trenhlee. MaYbe they ,ttae0 ',had
to wipe out machine -pa PoStS, wlilch
must be liquidated if the infOtrYnien,
up behind are to advanoe *ith, _
• You oranaped in a narrow, hard seat and lvf°,11; te4e ettenA'nlighttee •c.The -4°/k °/1/Plantler 1/48-alig° e
-Your 1 ' • • e„ the • • minimum number of easualtlett,: UV -
eighteen tanks end another. On and his 'fire.
every bone in your, body aches as the "__ _ Kitty" or "M for Mses,"- and range. "Riker -lie Shouts. There. is betheyWe_ struek nnSeent .eleve.4.7
tank Inisess,. down into a deep aben You keep your ears attetned so that a blindieg -flesh outside from the concealed tioatiKlealtag- con-
every
14%, ,;„11,sroosiej., uteui now in the
,bottle- .,areag away. ,.InSide, the tankti • is Antall with * but tieice as Ulla. On 'You - go,
muzzle .of the gun as'its shell „Whi-tSes trAptione, about the sheee Of aPPle
heciorowe. oue ruoulut you ore `3: kereckhtg eaphones tell • hot blue sittoke , that niarta-r-t e eyes you, and everybody '0100p eaCh One in
covo,yteerr ciartcleuensP ttehinlentveill ra- will not mias Your call..
Au. You what direction to travel and what end claws at the throat. ' The'-gan hes his eroPor positiotif thitnirte to .411strtAc.-
Atevelling upward into space.
other monimit you hurtle swim -lege to bewo-re of. Yoe. are now starting, recoiled about eleven inches and tions received bYr those inescapable
noio 1),,,P that Prised ridge. The enemy is sprung. becit into pesition again with- earphoues our tetnelets are 'Westing
dewnward _ a yt., „It
fee over to the left or to the right. to relY` (?..n.Your--tenk `cOmulantler4o*Oe-- turret,' Whek;,.
riugisoleAstogomewhereg. and-;g004,have out hitting any, Ot the three men iirthe XOUT throat is parched. lot= 'tones
, You.r 'tightly Set headphones almotie eta' the next move. Your friends have to get out of the way- 1916-114011-411---aere61116e'r‘‘Ia07fial_4:71h6-'4''''1"..:
.114e, are weary. But you reeeh that ridge,
geetterish of. code sigeels, 'house, ich is now a sileut, smoking and the wireless operator ens reloaded. Ou. ton3e the infantrymen • to take
dealt virith that innecent-leeking farni- has plopped.automatically into a chute Wanted it, fre-ran have It. •
drive Yoe mad „with their incessAnt
dashei-of 'Wireless' transmiss-lOn ahd' r-nin'- thariks the *curacy of • their Tour gun .goesie again and -yet again •• (Continued on page, 7)
, .
to gun -fire, and t will- no longer TROelc - 411.1"4"."4116".".'
radi0- telePhOn0' messages.A0 Me tank youe 'path. with its enemy pereeneel
talk to that one or the leader of the
getlie tank formation' relays orders he sending signals back to Alleir, getillery-
to hurl- their_mertars here and
has received . frem -headquarters via men
there, at you. * - - - -: -- --- -
les battalion commander.; . -
tut there is still something coming
. The tank battle hasn't even begun. at you. That "something" has already,
stopped one or two other tanks,- welee:
There is a lot of , hard work ahead
WO* that, will call. for quick, clear', are now, pyres of flaming steel,_ dying
headed thinking and Steatly nervee.
This, therefore, 'is not e time to tee). monsters Whose death rattle is the
muffled noise of =Munition exploding
tired. .1That ,w1-11,-ecene. later, when the inside. • The tank gommander, squint -
ears gradually ' adjust teem:eaves to lug •through his periscope, has found
wit. is ,all. over and your deafened
what tbe reason is foe, this. grisly detay.
-----Bnt---to start baek at the "harbor There is' a "screen"- of /our. eeemy anti-
normia t, earing-.-; .*,. , '
tank guns someweere On the right:,
A harbor is either a clump of trees or guns . which.' wheii: accurately Axed,
hedges under which tanee can be hid -• seed a shell...testing about $6 into a
tank costing:soraewhere in, the neigh-,
an open field, bordered with higb.
den' in such a:manner that enemy air- borhood of $18%000, destroylng it . to
. -
p lie: spotters -cannot see• -,them. *The-
seether:Avith its--ef-fiveTmen,--weem
'officer in command of ethis--,partieolar n'e--ererrant-ef-MoneY-ten .retiletel'-'-***
Joe Simpson had a pair ,.of §liees
on' the shelf, He was a 'Welsh coal
miner befofe he .came over here, used
to wearing great steel studs allover the
he_els. to make sure of Ids
footing, ; - and ---1---eneSV-alre-tb-prOteej*
the soles frcira wearing... He is still
wearing" the Studs in hiS".ShOes,. al-
though •he has been- in this country for
going on twelve years.
Whet, a -.eel:lotion, of shoes he had
on teat -shelf I. Some were email and
pinched . and you' knew their owners
ore -shoes that were far. -toe emelt
for them because of ..'sinhe kind of
foolish pride. Others were big and
eomfortable-looking, and you knew the
owners didn't mind ,giving up style for
comfort. . Others Were siinply. plat -
farms With little straps that simply
didn't do armthing but keep them on
the Wearer's feet. There. were -grubby
little shoes for children . . . worn well
by an* older ched And now in the
process of being repairee for the next
one in the family, Tommy mist; get'
a kick' ciut Of the:5)1oei that -ceMe in
for repair. • . •
It is said that 'swindlers have their
0.0.7,,,Campaigner,s wanted to
Make comParfsoe • •-• eye On flite-4*-aediuntleted ..•-pay.-f "and
a -nada,. they loblie.e as far away as greluities of service men with the idea
they could, to the Antipodes, and .' for of fleecing them sooh as they •get
, & V.11,1e we were led to believe that the chance; To rob a returned soldier
New „ lend and ,Australia. featly )3.nd of the funds he needs to establish bum-
-managed things better than Oatie se in qv/IMF], "lite-wcmidthout--ae
Facts and figures; howeier, tell very Mean- a thing as one 'could imagine;
'diderent. story. • but racketeers` have no 'eel:science and
.no therey.. It Is well that the men
BOONOlindaa.4:. V14'801110 should be warned again.st all kinds
of sliek Schein -es that Will be designed
to. separate thein from their monev''
'"Graire" a • Obligation issued at ,..
Chicago in: the interests of the. Great • -*-
Lakes-grain trade, quotes _a iesolution
rigade-of-tanks-stnemene-eis,eolenele-T . •
-- - *i).- .4) what to do.' By radio he . orders -one.
lieutenant 1 colonels and*.nerha s one . , r•• •
Or two majors. Royal Air Force re- .:
membei a his • triangle to bear right
connalesahee fliers 'have brought ba ,
ie the. direction of the enemy and,,:i1Ta*
reports that a certain ridge appears their ere.. Then',he:tells_eis °Will erew
to be so strongly defended by the
--- and the, crew., of the third member, Of
enemy that_ it ,will require tpn.ks to , his troop to .bear.' left, take a semi -
blast him•-outreT-These .reports iii.e.. con- cireelar. course _ane then leffee -aWay,
firmed by 'infantry scouts who' have at that anti-tank - screen. .'r, You split'
crawled -cautiously. ahead, located' anti- up accordingly: our own tank hears
tank sites, "found out that certain in- left and geth into 'position • some toer.
nocentlookhig .farinhotises are Nazi or five hundred yards frotalhat deadly
machine gun posts. and , crawled birk seremi ,protecting , the ridge that 'nest
-again with their information. • . be captured. .. 'Then .over • -edur ear -
rehe-Teihnerinlits-12-111r-:efecers _
what the whole situation i.§.;= -In other .
Words, he briefs them,. or, as. they say,.
."puts therein the picturer ,Everyone
in that group knows the exact objective
and whykit,•must,he reached innxtediate-
ly. Zero hour. (Which may be at any
time of. day or night) IS decided upon.
"All wrist watches are, synchronized.
Once the briefing is over -the officers
climb into their little scout. cars and
scatter - back to their units. There
they brief the officers under them anOE
these in. film tell their subalterns',
sergeants, corporals and buck privates, 1
that another "Party" is about to .come
oft Finally everybody is "in tbe pic
Wye," which is what General Mont-
gomery insists upon on the eve 'ef any
battle, no matter -which branch of the
fighting services, is , concerned;
Presently it is ..almost zero hour -
the for the .attack. It is time
to, .,"get cracking," to start moving.
The tank .crews climb into their tanks,
slam their hatehes,.take their stations, •
adjust those tortuous :earphones and
wait for orders to liroPeed-
There are five men every •one of
these 'tanks. ' In front, 'below the level
of the gun turret, there are two hatches
barely wide enough for a man to crawl
into or olinkb out of. In 'one, batch
site. the tank driver. In the hatch
alongside him sits the „.co-driver, who is
4nitehinegtaner.l.ftpe-in-th
turret are three other men. There:Is
the tank commander, who sits. on the
left, -keeping his eyes glued to his perk
scope, .which he turns So he ,est.n. see
ahead„loOk at What is going on at the
right Or left and even at what is going
his -eyes( ..open. he is also flicking
switehes so that he can 'talk , over the
radio telephone to other -tanks, listen to
dots .and (lag* sigoalling instructions
from mobile headquarter§ 'vehicles, Or
give- orders .4.0 everyone- inside this
land Warehee,- whieh has com-
pactness of submarine and the
hitting power .of a bomber Plane.
In the centre of the turret, alongside
the breach the six -pounder, sits th
gunner,,,Waiting life Order. to ;Hie.. On
his right sits the radio operator, Who
not Only:keel:0 the wireless sets and
intercommunicatimie phones in shaPe
but (deo Seep that everything is in
,
Opinion -or, rather, guessing -seem§
pewee - by. the - New -York ' State to „ ,,
De concentrating upon some time
Chainber of • Coromerce In, opposition to .1.1 ,,
ni.,,, 3 December for the polling in the
the St. Lawrence .4,eiViltY" project. ''''''e Federal. general- eleetioh. Ileith the
seyenth Victory loan opening in
• refigintIon in part IS as follows. ; .
I. The eost of the project, October and, . spreading over the .first
.. estimated at $4,11,000,000 to_fiver
.. st00,0000, will tig_ fio.,.* ex- half Of Noveraberk tt "does not look as
.est, of any . sesessele ))enefite- If the.: dealer(' write- eauld-lso-issuect
which will, mine to -the nation As
a whole; end ite operation will.
RURAL ADVISOR QUTLINEi
' • SUPPLY SITUATION
- •
Piens for the solution of some war-
time -problems of rural housewites
form -the theme oe, a letter to the
Federated Women's Institutes • of
Canada from Mrs. Etta Dovvi. rural
advisor' for the Consumer Branch,
Wartime Prices ,Aee . Trade Board.
"One of most 'pre'sealk.problieuis,"
aceorZing te, Mrs. Dow, "has been. the
question; of children's underwear. I
ain gladsto tell you 'that no stone has
been left 'unturned to see that a maxi-.
mum quantity of children's clothing
has,--priority-over-every'" other.;_ty.pe.n.
She continues that "if It is not possible
for the manufatiturers to get all the
neees-sary.„. labor for raanufactueing
them, we farm women will understand
and will not complain." 3) -ow
also draws attention to the feet that
directiees have been 'sent. to manu-
facturers for an increase of one and
one-half million pairs of chileren's
shoes, -
be a subsidized facility for .the
minor beneAt, arise. of a smnii •
, group, of our citizens,.. and a* mater..
lal injury to many other groups.
2. The %economics ..of
and transpertatioe ehow that it
Is not.practleal t.0 build expeneive "
Machinery vvhioh ean only. be Used.
part of the year; lee eloeee ,the:
Waterway five MonthS, during the
*tinter season, so that- the invest.
,),•,ine..nt would I* idle and non -Prot, •
anctive 42 per cettl.". of the time
for transportatten. .
3. Only :short. waterways con.,'
,neoting large bodies of water like
the Aault Ste. 14.arieranititta, and. ,
Suez Canals tan Profitably be
itteited to any great, extent 'br
adorn -going veesels.;
=4. If all United States grain
experts went thrmtgli the improved ,
. St, Lawrence channel, the savinge
to the farmer,. .riseutuing such ,ertv-
toga dkl not 'go to foreign par-
„ '*Oliasertg.. would be enly A entail
pert of the ;Mint neeessary to .pay
interest and amortization of the
WaterWay.
som as. the Witt. over the $t.
Lawrenes project will be tooted' 4ts.,
ok.,„ of providing employment
.
before the middle ,, or last week
November, and thiS would ,bring po
lig deer' very, near to Christems.•,There
eaye been "eleetieng in ,December, but
a political Campaign and the prepare,
tions for .101tristnias,do not go very well
togeth'er. The aiterhative •Woule be an
election in *the, early spring aid for,
some rettion the"gueisers ptitiasido this
in -the meantilue nomin-
ating .conventions are being heid all
over the emintry,
cups"s•IsP;(4414-411;#4:;;;4:11.ilsii,.. .,-21'2.:4:0416111';:biglt:S.11:4411:1$b°11411e1$1111411;111.4.:::44:.-1.
164(31t. 414'? LE 1.14) t.1145
1 •
SifCOtg o -.A • ...art
13110C1 Otetteera ShviOuliceury gr:117. ut7';:t vio7ej e ct
r"111 .
45: 6 m stS leg 6 Vi t 0. nultne3,-, g°930;
MAKES "CV/it. ItOititst I
.,:•:••••••:,••
. .
NEW UALANII FINANCE.
•
.,, (Lethbridge, :Alberta, Herald)
The other day •The Herald quoted
figures from the New Zealand Govern-
ment bluebooks, the villeitte record, '0
-Show Zealand owed much
of het national, debt Great '13ritain,.
Cs.f 'whereas Canada owes only .S.3 per cent
, • .
LOSS TO WORKMEN
(Oshawa Times -Gazette)
forty -eight-hour weeloi MU:aped sbotad bo xtlt Int the tome ettrre4ey
•
of her debt outside Canada. .This in
spite of the fact that the C.C.P. soelat:.
1st speakers are always parading. New
'Zealand us. the Utopia' toWards• which
Canada should strive.
We've been told. tliat 'New , Zealand,
has socialized; banking so, that. debt -
free money is easy for that Dominloo.
There's no such 'thing 'in New Zealand.
Listen to what non. Walter Nash said
in his last budget sPeeelt: •
, ',his takes the to another method
by Which •money can be raised ---ex-
tension of eredit... 'hag been. stig;,„
gested by Many good citizens who have
not fully •examined the effect .of their
proposale that the full cost of the war
• ' • . . , ..
readinesO.
,Your earphones, givelyou' tbe. word
and 'away , go, 'headed' ultiiiihtely
for that vital: ridge. Motors start up,
'cuir tone' steel and tbe crew, con-
sioting ,perhaps -,of one -dine sehook
teacher, a forMer, Prilite, detective,, and
what. not -.1tireh 'into lite. e. -tank
,
In the Int4'Of ernIgestel'o 04'er Oli* train, the reserve bank. This is sueit
tario, has brought more than its share an easy'. road that if ,it had good
ot problems. We have heard or read fotindationsp, we shouldfollopt it, but
of typical sitiali town factory, where the facts of life *dye.) that it '$vonld.
,en-11)10Ye0 nilea to 'cork a liftY-four. lead to Ohaos',and disaster.".
hour wok. Government order that mt. $.$011 the 'wan 'Oho held tip
time and a half for all hours ,toCanadians lir Canadian 'socialists
in excess of forty-eiglit fortes that us the very epitome of,libertility in lin-
factory to -plate its, 'workmen! on a Once, let he says that the oreatiort of
forty-OrightY-hOur wok, with' the touu 'printing prose or fountain ntetieY Would
that erielt mart Will lose six hours of lead to °mos and IVIA.STnii,
work per Week, and alinoet &tee
pay -bringing his v4eekly wage8 'down
at a time *hen the cost of living is
high
Woivves are. reported to be nunteroue
•la" parte of the Bake Pen-
ifteot thia /eon
'
Cry .for .11
Most people fail to recognize the
iiiriousnoto of a Ina hark.
The stadia, britches, and tvirlitgas
'are bill Ma: and. 04146 great seal
faring, but back of the backache
and the eaini* of it all the •
ordered .kidneys .-ying out a warn.
A.-Irtg through .the beck. '
A. vain in the *noel is the kidneys,'
cry for Go to their assiiiitine*,
Get * box #of DettrOs kidney PM&
A. remedy for backache and sick
44.1)olut,01*$ . up in. tin
libloni grey *4 with oor- trade
"oak • a 44)asple Lear, on. the
-
Behee
oubotitutor, Oet 4nOttn111;,.1
Irk* T. Waver* 0o.., 1441‘, l'aritato, Oa*
k0AOPPER, rubber and other' telepb.one
'materials continue to flow.overseasin military
c,ommunications-equipment, as well. as in the:
form of animunition, weapons, aircraft .
During one brief air battle; for exainplc, this
.1101ter plane' guns.,,PlaY.sPit -en010 copper
-to several miles of :telephone line. -
War needs both:at- home and .abroad nitist
eeirae' first!. .Extensions to present teiepuone
:t.oripmerii; are strictly limited.. Fullest pos-
tale use must be made of existing etruivripa'ini4eentt.0
•Tckthose who hare been
.obtain telephone service, we offer Our regrets' --
and otir thanks for theiri4readx understanding
,of why their requests liave had to be denied.
• •-•
.7.••••;•,..,:•*•••;•:•:;;;;;;;*!;
r
eito, War $.4411161.*
t.'ertHicares Nigewtty,
Vt. .1. 'HOD°