HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Goderich Signal-Star, 1944-11-16, Page 20
THE riovinat starm-sTAR
OMBIKNG TUE GODERICII SIGNAL AND TUP GOptRICH STA.R.
Published 14* 0104 -Star l'retta, Limited,
West "Street", GOtlerieht Ontario
Rates--;Cenadi ea Great. Britaits, $2.()(t a year;
States, $2.50.-
dvertislug .Itates on request Telerifone 71.
'TIIURSDAI, NOVEMBER iptb, 1041
_
00:11N.TY naltoirszazi,T,
, isnepteltenSive, pltsii ter the;build-
ef a greater '33rose cOunty has
been ptesented. to the Council ot our
neiglibering .cOuntY: • 4haett, 'the ttet
ginning .4- the present Ceuttiry the
per:dation ot Bruce has fallen front
68,000 tOlat060, anti: the riopoials.rie-
seated by theCitlzeim' Committee for
bani. raanager,ft says „a ',Victory loan
advex'tisement. And .we doit't, know
that the help:ot a bank manager Would
make it qatte the Preper thing.
• 4i * *
Mr. Churchill bads put the, prosreet
ecepiete °victory over Germany' by
Ma of next' year. Nothing' is now
left to the Nazis but a "last clitelt"
stand, and ,the Alliek, air forces are
I. .
. 'NIL '04IFER , OF LAZY MEADOWS
. ....r.,-,i.,i,........i‘.....,1.,,,,.....»....".. ,
e..pli gam! or 11014 ',
I must confeSS to being feseionted
by gate, in Spite of the, feet „that I
ani not fend of them by way Of Making
. . .
theta pets. People who fondle eats and
try to read soimething hntanla Into their'
• - .
'aetitAis, 'leave me cold. Of all the
anlinals, I am convinced that cats. are
the lea,st human. .,4.. dog does, seem to
.haVe smite traits that . through ,the
years this breed bas ,picket UP- . ftent
aStbelatipit With *an. A., eat remaina
a crafty beast of the. jungle..
— In
sra ot,
Current Views on the War
raowtO,LieGERNINN' STRAtE61( I iera thy would roase the '0111AM:trent
detattation which would. reeult from
The *whole. Gem:pair, Outer defeneeti prolonged resistance within it border.
,the westetn treat- lieve nos, COI-
. I therefore eXpOet ,that the ,deeleive
laPed'itil e°mPlete 4110 lisParaneled battles bOth in the east find west will
disaster. . . ;What Polley will-II:le 43elc't be 0.414 in the •frontier regteils, and
titans now adopt? . The. Gerntan. gen- that if defeated -,ttt. them the arraY
exalt; evidently' 'realize that they have
lost the War, and it is hardly econeeivs
able ,that . they would suPport Hitler's
avowed intention of prolonging realst-
ance by gue,rilla warfare in the heart
Of. Germany --',4 Course which would
add ,devastatioa caused, by land oper.
ations to the devastation caused by the
increased .weight and concentration- of
air attaskg— The effects Of invasiofl.
have- never. Peen, to a ang Itualrian armies who have seen their
all probability I shall never base:the own countrtn devastated must in par -
Opportunity of going to darkest Africa,
, tieular be feared. Whatever Hitler%
but I have'`read , great InAF 1:1"•"' plans may be, it would seen that the
describing the •leep attraetton u
s „ch generals have decided to place 'all their
available resources in the shop window,
and. are determined to seek a decisive
encounter before ,•the frontiers'. are
crossed, even if that should entail. the
complete and final desttadtion of
,power to prolong resistaaee. By that
course they might dal* that the Ger-
than army had expended itself in de-
fence of the frontiers of the Fatherland
and had malntained la honor and
a tradition to be passed on to future
genera.tions. If they. retain a 'bore
that Germany...will . rise,' again as a,
great military Pett'er, the .present gen-
eration cdtild play -no _part therein and
might well sacrificed_in-the interests
of -a :tratiltion of unbroken Morale..
cannot believe that German' gen-
erals without Inc authority "of the
Ot
refit -war Attains:mg are designed o ,d ,....,. :.
any st tvitig it borne to titem that the tpula:thesrmhahv:...biOduein: eirtilourgerawwayroteup, in
arrest tiiiS deerease, by keeping thel,;t -,,r-they delay,. surrender the a shooting box ,in a taltjtree watching
Ili tlie'."towns , and villages and to at. greater Will be the devastation of that the tigers come out to. a water hele.
• Present Population on the farina' and longer''''
trn.et newefters from Britatzt,and t,he . He also ed to being so co pletes
Continent of Europe to augment the . ^is, * to shoot at 'theta.. T was standlng ty. absorbed in watching that he forgot
country;
look -
population. The proposals include an The Ottawa Journal calls for an ing out the kitchen< window ' todaY, at
'agrleatural demenaration farra and the twirling LNovemberiWind racing up
other meaSurea to promote the agri- a the laneway wW.'t.ndnight, our black
active campaign for the reetuiting of
. cultural interest, a fa'iWa'rct.400-king the °first. things that could be dehe ill cat, padded acrosa the lanewsev. flvery
nurses for 'military hospitals. One
- educatlenal program, encouragement of this Province would-Pe-to"Yeterse. the .,. . tfie-trauscies TIPPItrilk under the:
movement WAS one of Perfeet precisiOn
.the tourist business, an extended,poliey regulations which Prevent the '.training sleek' black *IliaP• pt.ntsEviegen. wash"e4,'
of reforestation, and the eyStematic thleVytill) aagTitn:11;:eutirar
of nurses in thi smaller. 110.8Pitals --4
' 'advertising of t.he county, its attrae- 'Ontario. . ,This would': relieve •raanY• looking for affection, they' seein never
`tions and Possibilitles. i graduate nurses for service in the to let their- guard down completely.
military hospitals, wheieth`ey will be .
Huron some years ago. had a County
•.•---Improvemeiit,--AsSitelatiots- tstt -Wrijiiit IA 4eIllattd-fOr..year5...t0 Sall9L .
....
sure that wag ite***Sietnal naide)---er n, , « « «
objects soinewhat stmtity to those now :--st '-`-hP sinking of the- Gelman battle-
ship Tirpits by Sir attaelt"pretWnearly
sought in Bruce. : Itgasted only a few
voliubxr. ,finishes the deStruciton. of the German
years,whether from lack of
navy 114 an effective force. The Ger-
any
or from a failure to prodnee
mans still have a few- surface silipi of
. any worthwhile results we t do not
the lines :the minor classifications, and some, sub -
or
, ;t -s re't`tval, folloWing .
b A ...• • : , •O‘'''....° marines are tir4-, foaming the seas,
or tee movement in. Bruce cOmity or
but their .bases • are, gradually coming
in. the' form considered, to be 'best
into the hands of the allies, leaving
,
adapted tothe altuitien•in this county, • - __;
,, • --•.t. .- . - - _tcln.. - - - . . -the LI boats 'at. sea to become ',Useless
-Lai nt negm. much needed process DI ,• ' __•,:-' - • - . ;
e*YO.V.3ri_deVetopment-entl.'„bettesititat ,,clerelicts. yne United Nations Will
i
p4eii-toi,W-tbti,,t1fori.niany-..-yeats n.lItiron. With It could be lt-ted* robabli
the -
to crane there: will be. no German navy
* 'Beards of Trade itesirhan cianniunities
'alitt •..t-ttell:.;". an "ergalli.Sationl. as the ' 7 ' Is * *
Agridifltnre to represent :-
Fed
At Quebec fast week. two R.C.M.P. eration of
constables were convicted .of i;laii.-
• the• rukarSections. ' ' -
, slaughter,....in the fatal shooting of a.
••_ Iffhateter the years ,after the. ttrar
..xiray.liring,..it imlatiomatic- that prosper- young - man • ‘-‘Fhir' Nts-i 'rUnning--- away
* • . . _ ,he,
ity will not eome without seeking, and Whenthey sought to arresthimT
inaless-tliireople of Huron planorgan*verdict should have *salutary results in
ize and work for the improvetnent s,' -
convincing impatient and reckless 'mein -
their county it will be ostripped by
. of
bers. of- the police force that they have
ut
no more right than anybody. elie to
.other Mere etiterprising-communities.
would. ntake. UQ eirO# to prolong. the
struggle, even silent(' Uitler's fanatical the treat `SlUtald have beeeme all the
followers cent:brae to fight . more obilotts, When the trout watt
, It. is • elear, that Germany's rapid eventually ehortened, it did little more.
cellar* bas been largely due, to an than conipeisete for losses -Incurred in
,
Obstinate oveiscliSpersion Of her forces. )44(114 the. longer front and did not
This has prevented her exploiting the .strengthen reserve rower. The cora-
advantages of her interior lines pos., 4Plete failure .of the LUftWaffit, in the,
:Rion, depend on.. the existence -laterspltaties Of the- ,war to mipport' the
of a central reserve° capable of Sup- army or to protect its cominunieations
porting a powerful counter -offensive in contributed itnnsensely .to German 'Alt -
at least one 'direction. Counter -at- asters, and the diversion of leclustilf to
tacks which eat', only achieve local and 010, deVeillplUellt • of secret wearon$
temporary success are purely defensive when. the sitnation Was beef:4)43g ins
and, tend Merery to exhaust reserves it
need, to eXeess. 'nerd° nOt tierloaslY
disrupt the enemils plans.
Prefennably (kaftans' elttng ,te her
eater defeneekllartlY 0, eV); Preteetto.
front air attack and parettr to 'retain
peSseasion. of the eeontellie reSOUrees of
Oeeupled territory,' but 'in seine In-
ntnlice0 Considerations of Prestige were
evidently given undue weight. When
it beefone evident that diatanee. alone
did. not give rroteetion frOm .01r atl,
ticks the advisability of latorterting
They are ready to splang .11s
central Government would take the
eously Into action . . . their claws
thed: for the moment in deceptive responsibility of seeking an armistice,
furaifd "theirteeth-covered---The..saroe
thing applies when a cat crawls up on
your lap.
'Cats also have the ability t� °make
themselves very comfortable. Midnight
hovers .around the kitchen doer these
evenings. and when yon open it he will
dodge 4n and try to make Ithpself
noticed in the darkened: piece ,of floor
space behind the wbodbox. Usually
someone will say, "That darn: vatis in
again" but 310 one maVs an attempt
to put him out. Basking in the warmth
of the kitchen . stove for a while. he
soon moves armind td the Mat 'in front
'Of the_ stove ahout, the time the dishes
have been finished. . Then he transfers'
to the cushion, on the rocking cliair or
the sofa. Stretched.out„ and complete-,
lyTfela*ed„heal purr softly in rhythm
with the bubbling kettle an the stove.
Midnight also knows when to head
for the stable. Perched up on a beara
he'll- Stay:- out of the way -until the
rnilking-staftss and then -in- coMpany
with the other cats hell hovefr around
waiting for a squirt :of warm milk.
Later they transfer to the Milk house
for *a saucer of nziilk.
That'S the good side Of cats. I can
never quite get over the way' they stalk
bird . . . cautiously, :patieatly and
deadly . but always silently. Of
course when they start after the mice
that's a different story.
,
shoot a' man unnecessarily.: . There
. .._
, „EDITORIALNOTES. have.been several cases' of the kind in
4 Ontario, but it remained- for a Quebec
"Don't co." n;Prcanise with your con- court to uptaid British justice in—theme
. ,
- selenee until you have consulted your cittumstances. . .
' •
Reinforcements QuestioN
In a radio' address last week Prime ment on. return from oVerseas.
MiniSter,King, speaking on the question
of the . reinforcement of the Canadian
troops overseas, sought to correct some
" "widespread false- hupressions" regard-
ing the draftees (the horde defence
force): These _ diet tees; he .said, were
'not being 'kept in, idleness. 'Military
garrisons in •Newfoundiaral and on the a considerable aggregate shortage in
coast. costa not be entire*. abandoned, ITAfaroy vkaux, have cle.c.0.0„ped,,,, an4
While he confirmed the Prime Mint,
ister's statement that there was *:"no
actual, shorta,ge of reiefercements now,"
lie stated" that °there was not a sof-
ficient backlog or pool from which to
meet ,any unexpected increase itt
easualties atrarticular engagement"
The forecast by 'officers of the Canadian
-army was that "by the end of December
and, there were certain: nen-ortetatio-nal that the aggregate infantry- shertage.
duties that are being 'Performed' by would progressively increase -month by
eh hot'•,ttt for. eelllhat service.' The month fn. the new year.'! This shorts
home defence'force was -not, Mr. King age, said Col.'llalston, could not be
. -_peinted _ont,.:a _static free Its 'corn- _met by„ enlisting untrained men, and
pOsition. ' Was cOnStantly changing. he considered- that the only practical
"Zhis year, , nearly - 16,000 men have relief for the . situation *as to draw
, been Called up and enrolled as draftees, on the trained N.R.M.A. infantry men
and more than 10,000 'ti.raftees have (the draftees N: An alterrtative was to
volunteered for general service7 itince .`reduce our eenunitmentS or break .up
the landing 'in France,. in . June 'more - units or formations,- ond he2could not
draftees had enlisted for overseas ser- concur in this. `
vice than. had been added to the inum- ,
IleiUE OF COMSIONS CALLED .
*
would. be called to meet on November \Vaiker, for the S'anatoritun,.. wb.ich
Aild it is a great year, said Mr,
• stream of reinforcements. ' : . I flounced -that the House. of ComMons
Mr. King thOugltt no argument was
needed to Support the proposition tiled
tives .of the people' assembled in Parlia- 'celebrates its thirtt*tfifth anniversary.
22nd. This will enable the representas
First established in 1909 as. a little
-theugla-at-the.last they, may Vounten-
alice _,pleceineal surrender:- The '•ex.
pedient Ludendorff aclopted`to; Save' the'
country from invasiOu is not open • to-
day, partly owing to the •attitude of the.
Allies and partly „owing to -Ilitlees de.;
terinination. The plotter's against
Hitler .may• have envisa.sed the pos-
sibility a adopting • litridendorfrs
course, Mit now it must be evident that
the 'central Government cannot . be'
coerced into ,accerting, the views of the.
generals Without a •ivil waist with its.
SupporterS; the ontcpitirofWhitt Might
be doubtful; for the array canno desert.
-the-battle fronts. to take, part in it
The decigiye,plittles,T,therefore, will be
fought in the frontier "regions with the
utmost ferocity and without thought a
retreat. There will be a'. bItte"r strug-;-,
glie, but the outcome cannot be in doubt
new that the enemy has been weakened
hi the decisive regions by a Series of
disasters and ,Iirthe isolation of the
large detachments in Pirdand, in the
Baltic States, in , the Balkans and in
Italy, nOne.of which gan'be recall,ed or
by -their actions affect- the' main issne.
,
* * *
",It will surely be proved that .BeSsel-
ring's obstinate stand on the getliie
line "has, been another of- Hitler's
strategical hlunderS, dr; possibly; an-
other example of the determination of
the arnik generals to fight to the last
outside the. frontiers of - the Reich,
rather than to'nttempt to prolong the
striiggle ,within its berders.
Kessel -
ring may be able to„hold„,..hist goSitions
for some' tune longer but it must be-
come •Thereasin,gly difficult for him to
.d1W1g440 or 'to „Carry out a - retreat
which would enable him to ifike part
in the decisiveline_ struggle. Strate-
gically his anny 'has for:a long dine
been a wasteful detachment. • It ,has
neither -been able to interfere with the
allied• -landings in Southern. Phince,
or with the development of Marshal.
Tito's °Orations, nor has it effectively
protected sonthern Germany., Kumanla
and:HunkarY from air. attack. ,
To summarlie some conclusions: The
majority of the german generals, con-
vinced that the -,war, is lost. .,are .
chiefly concerned to protect the honor
of.the German artily and its traditions,
even if that 'entailed exposing it to
rapid destructien in defence of the
froutierg__L The,3-_ cannot ' Prie-Yent- in- ,
yasion by ramie& Of gecupation;• lint by t
a.. meriting- decisive battle on the trent
-
eteasingly critical was dearly a- po
• ,
ammormimmumoiesirow.4 ' _
AhTI
ALL THE TIME
She felt etieershi..
tiraggy-4sw in 0411
....40WOr irk spirits. She
4441 thou& her
Iridium until fries'
Nits*ted DArs Ka.
taty Pills. OK* sho
took --Dodd 14 The
"washed our 0414
weelOen rePlEed by
clear headed cnoll ,
'Hesdochei Inalothe, hosithas and ether
signs` of foil', kidnIIS #1**Pftonnia. it2
• • Dodcl'ilcidneylpilis
of despair which only worsened the
sitpa,t/on. ,
--The Fortnightsy ateview tIsntaralt.
--samossiessossaa,
CHRISTMAS SEALS
Mr. thornas F. WaLker,rshairman of
the Christmas Seal Committee, ah-,
nounces7that' Queen Aleiandra
tOriuria will this week launch its
seventeenth annual Christmas • seal
e:ampaign and that to .the offices and,
homes of the •countieS of Middlesex,
Lambton, Kent, Elgin, Oxi-Ord, Perth
and Huron thousands of lettere. will
carry. the Christnias seal, which for
forty years has beenAhe"token ill sixty.
one countries of the world of the help
which people in all walks of life are
giving in * tire great - fight 'against
tuberculosis. '
This year • is a notable. ohLJnthe
hisernt-•of the,Christmas seal and-, in
'the' life of the Sanatorium. It was
just forty years ago that the Danish'
postmaster, Einkr tolboeU, seeing
thciuSands of letters going thrOugh his
dace at Christmas. tline, theught of
what a wonderful thing It would be
if everyone ,sending a -letter would :just
give a penny to help the needy sick,
and so his memory is • today- honored
because •he.gave to the wOrld the .little*
seal that Started the Christmas cant-
paigns which have already 'saved the
her ealled up. e lives of • thousands upon thousands of
, force was the soutce of a •constatit • , On Monday t1.4 Prime 3Iinister an- people. __ •
the army overseas' should be roam-
. , fogy -two -bed , hospital, it today
tabled as a 100 per cent. voluntary army raent ..to discuss the problem. 1103,V pre-
.
if this were Possible. Since 1030 nearly sented and to •determine the course to a eat institution a „No veils, the
nii 011 men had -serYetl-in Canada'sAbe-Pursued._ ,
_ „
- forces;--presentl , • '
..• - -
strength -of the three services was about THE NOltill TrAl-C,2041.--11-0211Y
•
three-quarters of la million. The present. • . • .
- draftee- force num.bered. only '68,000.
, Of these only 23000 were'frora.Quebee,
, and only, 2,000 from all Canada. wefe
Ilditor The Signal -Star. • .•
*Dear Si-.st , noticed' ..last ---week you
mentioned there had not been -ninch
"
FrenchgpeakirtgOf the total number
at • it sat diseuisien regard/lig. 'the 'north toad- range as
' -high as 70 or 8Q.
to'the harbor. There has been a lot Tuberculosis; therefore, teroains a
of discussion behind the Scenes, but! great .menace. , It still kill§ O'er 600.Q.
no one' teems to ,know any fsets sis,,,' Canadians a t -ear. It •is still the great-
,
ate nil, going toplay a gcttoe 0-i-pil.). -the- est • cauSe of- death in young rersonS
betweett_the productive ages, fifteen to
tail° on the di:n*6y, the road being the ferttsfiVe yeara,, and -so long as a single
tall. and ofirselves :the doniees. We case exists there must be no relaxation
are all blindfolded and nobody' will of effort . ' .
take the bandage. oft our eyes. :mr. Waiker and 31r. G.• L. Parsons,
,, Vii'llo • wants tile', road? W.ho will ettairMan . of the Gbderich. coinutittee;
benefit most? -Who will haVe' to pay express tiie confident hope that, *heti
for it? What'advantag,e wilt the people the Christnut:a - seal arrites at -your
paying get?* What will door, ev'eryone wili.join the great armY
,we lose? Who. now owns or controh3 of. those. who,. by their generous con- i
tribiltions,- •are helping .Queen Alex -I
1
andra Sanatoritim to -obtain Viettiry '
over man's most -devastating ,scourge
1,. • .,
—toberenlosia. • ' ' . • -
„third largest ,in the British -Empire ;
but, best of all,. the Sanatorium has
seen the- `-diam-fate-troffrtulyerctdes`
reduced. from 200 'per 100,000 of our
•Canadian Population to 26.4 here in.
Ontario, the lowest figure ever • re,-
corded. 'While the average. for all
Canada is 51.1, some 0f. it Provinces
.no more ,uut' were
serviee and .stifilelexitlY trained for
• combat at an early date.
At one tittle or another, Mr. King
stated, 650,000 met/jihad served in the
Canadian army' during this war.- Of
these a few might have failed to re-
ceive all the training, piescribed,
peten.t officers had • Made .the most
careful review and thef-foond that the•
• number of these eases was •exeeediagly
small. The record of the Canadian
array wak he believed, 'the best poSsible
° evidence of its -training. A , steady
Stream of reinforcements had gone into
the army and there was no ;shortage of Or holds the lease if any on the .said
potential .reinforeements„ Iti estimat- -property? Will Snug Ilatbor be 'filled
: i'ng beforehand ,the probable number*of 1 hi or fenced .in, depriving the smolt
10_,:inetual, combat' it was boat owner of parlatigi space .for bis
net possible to'lfitoW hoW "eaelt of the raft'! Will the •seexiery oPposite the
. various,serviee.s Would be affected, and bathing•beaeh be great lietipsof veal?
'the army had been Obliged. to transfer
toine of the men originallY ttiOned for
other arras into the pool of infautri"
reinfOreements.. These .4'reMustered"
trebps had all had :basic Infantry
I • "'
LOANS TO FARMERS
at reaiOnable rates aEe co• nstantly
-Made-by The.kl.oyal Btu's
• .' to buy livestock
... to buy fertilizer “, • - •
. to'repair orreplace,maChinery
• ..tO-buy seed *'
. to buy feeder cattle •••••,„
... to meet seasonal wa& bills
• forany other reasonable purpose.
.t.
Haywire comes in.
rnighty handy for many an emeroncy re-
pair around the tut it won't do when.
- farm machinery and other expensive equip-
ment breaks down, It's then' that repairs
, and replacements can. run ihttrreal money.'
• . _
Lotns to take care of essential repairs or
replacements are always available at any
branch of The Royal B4nk of ,.C,anada. • °
MOney spent for, such purposes is money
well invested; because a breakdown On the
farm often - leads to serious and costly .1'
• •
tiouble. When • you need cas,h to repair „
replace machinery. , or for any productive
purpose, call on the manager' of dUr:neatest
branch.'
OTH:ONAD
• GbDERKH BRANCH AN\, G. DULMAGE, Mancrger--
-.- • ,
_
MOO BIG RY PIALF2,
Will the beach and the water be ..The• Canadian. Mounties like their
eotered with chat dust? ',men lilg A: resident, a the '1JI is
The .people iii Belgium Spade ecatl;lands had heard.'abont this require,.
dratt, into elay iind.hurn it 'which makeslaent an deckled to apPly. The Pill
me wonder whether'. we will be able tolIslander was *a man of good military
and before being, sent into get enough Oat' duSt. -coming throagh,bearing, °,•"ror he had been •In, the
Combat they were given further speeiai7,1 o'ur, water taps together with , the. 'grind 4• Australian drinY. for *four years. Ad-
ized infantry training. (Int Ralston's And elay to enable us , to heat our, mittedly, lie wenldhave been it longol.
report, said Mr. Xing. raked the prob-' butises with the mixtttre., ' ileent figure as a moutitie, and there
Utv.rhOi, ,,gft,' it is antleipated to make .';.teotild have, been tew people who would.
ft toaling dock' of it. What benefit will have 'dared:to give .hita any back talk.
this be to ,Godericli., It doesn't Jutike Still, a matt Can be too big., even for
awe' difference, in the price to the house-rthe'ifigninties, and this orte was., The
Zeta, not of a proteht1bortage rpin-
foreements. but of a possible shortage
Itt,the tie%t few 3icinths: To theet'lliis
pAsibility. Mr. Xing. npwaled. for lull
• support of all the. people 01' Canada i'holder And , edal IS handled so inuell 41t.C.A.11. regretfully turned liim dont
increasing the ilii' nf tolianteers. The; by conveyer, that It doesn't help ein_.-1"---he stood nine ,fem- ten ttichealfill.
glory of Cent -Wass ilgitt ,for freedouttl%iyment very -much,. and it would. not
was the linp.;.;11able., facz, that q-!.oryi be.'tconotoicol tu bpcnil thougamis ofi TIME 4ixtEs.., szt-ARivra:VIAIN
Cans.dinn in uniform nu in the,. dollars ity.-•,t to give 8. .couple of yard-, ,Itt its broadeast service' to,,i,Stitttie
° att and on to,ry ...A.mt was men AWL a' trairl-driver a job, and spoil the 11.11.0. told its listeners that the
there by Ids own choiee. "Thi," said „ cow swimming, bathing. boatii4.' fish- eftorts of German propaganda to deal
ti* prin* :ktintster, "is not the bantt ing, tourist trade and 41'1'4111 ''''.vater4 with went disasters is summed up In
to 4ostroy that magnificent record" re
ure..wrotm, this latest wax joke of the ,tisgush
COL. itALSTON'S STAT11.74/tST, " fnle *ive I)* facti.4- ks•Pot.-131/1Y" rrollic,1 A German commentator eat the
001, litt•Mtity bight ithguedi l4,now w13.• conto..iis titaf protrrty and radio deciarel; oirrber6 115 grow%
a agatiremnit 1,00,10.14, os be toted. to:lakt) is agitating for the. 1'03 • Z' dinunits, *mcg our erten:kis,: wia
*Avert astr pins041* tits „ • :%.4 $
'0 FS! tbe Anglo-Saxons art ptitihing eat* the
fit *lot. bet. repotted to the insigt on drhing Inset
• lie gay nineties weren t vay, by todiw's standards., Think' ho‘41.
.the folks then would have felt had anyone told them of the Wonders
of the sibliirn motion picture theatre. They wouldn1 have believed it i
.
In the transition, from thos‘ tO this modem age we owea great
deal' to electricity. loday—we are dependent upon it 16 hundreds of
• ways. It will do more for us the clays to camel
In tins luta* Hydio will serve induitry, the home and the farm In even
measure than in the past. Platt now, to let Hydro' lighten your
tasks and mak* your living more comfortable in the brighter days ahead. -
110.120:11110 POWER.or ONTARIO