HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Goderich Signal-Star, 1944-12-07, Page 2ititertril *igtItt
Tlilit 001)111RWL:I „ SIGNAL ANp TUX 001)1
Vublistied by Signal -Star Pr e0 Limited
West Street, Goderieli, Ontario • -
SubacriPtion. BiteS---:Cantida, „a ki Great • Oritaln, $2.00 a . year ;,. to* trnitdd
stateo,, ;250. '4 .
"Advertieing'B,atea 'On, request- Telephone. 71: '
,
TIIIIIISDAY• nozmAtilillt 7th 1014
. .
'PHIL 0$1FER OF !AZT' MEADOWS
By Harry 1 #oult,
TlitAT "GOV'BigisunE* 400
1ia4-0;:o:verrtnte11t *Man': in ,:here.
the • other diy fle Waif looking for 41,
man to WOrk ferbirn. at fairly gad
tv witb a pension -and . the chance tional considerations of strategy and
13TiLI.4 i'AVITaNct. AT OTTAWA
'=The debate at Ottawa on the ,artuY
reinfereenienta .ipiestien is stlii con -
tinning, but as it is noW. generally
enierge 'With a cerisiderable' raaJoriti that Britain offered an outlet gor dauwl own Windt Kal," . " " ,130,ttie0. liritain, The Nazis have texicationt note Of ;festive se
ted, that the . Goveriiinent will beef at th* time, M.r; Oardluer stated,. he lett she just sat , tette
. _
the atmosphere of, crisis has retty veU
Thode - taking pat in` the
ileigite exhibit :many shades of opinion,
There are those Who • are for "itli'-out
eenseriPtion," aud these who would
, but- the •veltuitary .systein,
:and in between :are sortie -,-NytiO" are
_ready id:modify-their viewa _favor
of the 'velunteer system, feinporarily to
meet present situatioa, and some
Who consider that veltintary recrititing
13,a9 readied. its linilt and that compul-
: sion must be adopted for the remaindeoftke r
War:-Sonae-members-argue- that
• if.Patiatia has essayed to keep a :larger
•,array.in the field than: ean, be properly
reinforced the logical 9OurpO to adopt
would. be to ,reduce RS' commitments.
. Some of the Preech4Danadian members
deelare with • veliemeriee ,Quehee
Current- Views on the War moto Nation. will have their °Woe.
tunity to appeal to senae and reason.
(London), .
ENgtNouNo DEFIANClii
GIERnpl)i
laq
-"The war in gurepe reach-
ing a stage: Where =emotional factors
are. beginning to o4tiveigh. ra-
ttoanieun of travelling]
toliey Tlie =Mood and teraffer ot the
LW of cattle to the P.i,ited States could He 11.4d the idea semehew .0,12 Otber thtit 1 ' • •
not belifted at.th,e preSent time. The! i no'ght" be a good bot fOr this position, °erjuall
'course of eventS and , the* length • of
'PeoPle . 'may determine the
, .
1 iiii#ed. States,.,4's wo.i as tcanaila, was ne,- spent about three li.Oura trYing to vhat reMains Of' the lightiftg. There
having" --ditt.etilty - in handling' catIlell'i.11,1aaki .,nxe and 1:Museslirlie! was
Airs. ii.iiii cuo t , say temper
r nothing uew in.tkat..,The mood and
;inarketingS and did not want Co.nadian. leAr7,5,t D.14ttettk"t4.wenir*•le' lie ',was hei:G.,, Atter I en‘Per of 'tile British Peopl.e in. 1040,
. . 'Mune, your ,their emotional and not their rational
' d r ined the' course a the
•-The New State4Mtut and Nation
the forests, •rivers and lakes, the blue llialtDENINO THEIR HEARTS
olty,, the snerv...decliell' mountain$, "the' ACIA.P4ST .00,04A191'
laughter in the eYes of the children -4 , The pewe a thits, potowtryealleelal-
-tales of it,.. hOurs, of it, . surging, .'.opily„ those. • of * seuthern. thigia:nd-have
around tin) listener • until it'' drownWheen Under fire for nearly- five years;
him ,111, 4 sea of eraOtion, eneugli- et and five-, years', wafferC , of the brand
it to make . a big lawn rise in "tbe . that the . German people have waged
throat of the moat hardened cynic. 1 has brought them to conclusions they
Illenc suddenly the pietilre• challgeS,''mean to have reflected in the, policy
A country ringed 'with Area `on /UP -their Gevernment will -take into the
frontiers eMergeS, asSaulted , on all peace disenssions.
sides by death and ,destruction, flames . .Itecent straw . ballots taken .by
licking the sky, cathedrala And castle* British newspaperS filuiw this attitude
crashing, ferests and *fields a., sen,,,Of,;,very clearly. 'rhe opinic•ns "voiced in
fire, rivers 'and lakes red. .,‘Vith., the these polisaretonfirinecrbr eonverbav,,,,
bleed of the ,people -it is Sheer - in- lions In street cot.% huseq, triiina` and
, ' ts " The ballots have' • in -i
trouRSDAY, IgiCEMBErt 7th, 1044
weapoii. of detraction that was*tetalli
indisvriminate in use and that there
would Oe no peace on earth, until the
German nation Mat had employed it °
was rendered IMPOtent ever to wage
war again,
Then the Oermans, after the•lOss of
theirflying-boreb • sitea ,in Vraece and
the Lei* Countries, . brought into tisa,
the-letig-range y.2 rocket .anti made
teeie biggest psychologieal blUnder to
(late. The rocket bombe 'were the dual
word that cOnverted these of the,
"there' roust be decent Germans". sehoo
to the belief that the whole gerMan
nation must be hod responsible IQ
- (CoutiOn9.4. onini:ge 7)
" Aly mind wlis full ef the, idea* he iong• grasped that and are donstantle coulee ,i047i it,. of Jubilation at the dieated an ,ever-inereasiug number ()fir
I sacrifiee, 'chants -of praise and.glery at Britons., who W4Ut Germany ' to be
the altar of the Patherland; an orgy treated so sternly- after this War that,
of •Self -immolation, ..dro*ed. an mane she will never •again • be able to diatUrb
of surging 'classical music. And in ail; the peace in gurope and bring desola.
this not a word of National-Sopialismel.tion to Pli111011S of homes. - • 1
o le not 4 reference to the Fuhrer. The: I:turing the 194041 blitz„thes4;great„_.
appeal to the emotion's, freed of all , Modority Of: the British people held
rational fetters and controls, is .ov,tr-, the opinion that piloted bombing was •
.whelming, and he Would be an eston-4 a legitinp.:te ' wAr ' ris4, .and as sych. all '
ishing' German who is not, at, least for i stood np fo4t. If bombs knocked down
the moment, :swept off his feet, : f. ' I, houses and killed • civilians, the sur.
What is to be' done with, a Apeople ; *Wigs Were inclined to Say,, "Yes but,
while it is in Such plata*? There is look how near they .were to such and
no 'emotional counter -appeal -which the s c . . - naming a factory or '''t1i " ' '
mail -
Allies could use in order to cut short way station:. The bombing of Coventry
this fantastic orgy of self-iniraolation.land other. cathedral cities did. some -
The answer. is probably that . since i thing toward changing this attitude,
things have come to this pass we Must 1 and the change was helped too by the
adian beef'and that in the present year;
[at with'Ine- and after diunefl Strolled- -reminding Their, people o ,
Mere 111/4,e' cattle were shipped, to'the outSide to fl'hish. sonielioreS 1114as Well to face the fact. 'What Hiram -
British market than hat), previeuo.y been', the , stable, 5tanaing oa the hack ?ler (pd. his gauleiters intend, we
sent 10,,, the ijuited States and gritikin ,stooep, the first thivg that attracted know wifat we don't know but WILY
eiman pe p •
1•••••••••••••••••001P•••••••101•011,
combined. 'heped that announcement
planted.' clown along the fence as attno.w 'before long, is the reaction pf .the
my.atteutiOu wa$ the' rOw. of eyenreous
of a. continited.144rIcet'in Britain would windbr.eak, They've been in #01.' three' Germany , has lost the war, The
and Seem to- be -coming -along Allies- know ft. the neutrals. know it,
encourage Canadian. farmers to -held 'Years new-
untinisherl animals ' until they were, veyy well. Of coarse .if' I sold Olt, the Nazis know, it, and the Gernaans
ready for the =Market, The "present
of unfinished cattle. Floor prices;' be uP The hecige around 'the bankek's is metes's, at this
.stage merely preachOS
take care, of _conditions. ' 10,,iyn have come along pretty well in
laWn__in town; . *I to the converted._ German propaganda
blandly retorts: we•know all that per
further, had been adjusted to
TI16' WO- chestnut trees on the front
• ,* * the .past eight • years. They give -a:
fectly well, we can figure it out for
ourselves; and we Assure -you it makes,
Canadians who :believe in treating comfortable ,shade.' It's fiumy, but on not the slightest difference to our at
h ts uday aftern o mrs Phil d •
their leaders in Pablic life fairly must 0 -Al 0 n - • nn- titude. . •
-1,!0, kind of nii,ss seeing, them.. collie
generally 'know it, too.,, Allied radio
along. ..That's what was running'. and leaflet Propaganda Which'explains
Liguria.% on keeping them trimmed chance to win, that farther resiStance
to the Germans that they have no
through iny mind, 'and.1.besides that I.
cengestion in Canadialvstocicyards, he ,
said, was due largeti the marketing was
...1 both go .out there with our rocking . Nazi propaganda these last.- few
he 'disgusted' with the abuse heaped, by , chairs. Tne Sb.ade and coMfort under_1- weeks has been very consistent . in
_
certal.'m political,. jolirnals upon : Gen'..„, these trees "seeintte • be , so much -better hibis..iine: It is almost as if the' Nazt
tb eral Mehlaughton because at a time of,i, '..-84...,,under the otheFe. 'The reason -for 'poIrtotp"atgoa,ndisiS had systeMatically set
bas -been betrayedInresort 49, visis he came. torthe help 0 kill all ,ganceivable rational
. , i it is -of -Coarse because we planted them!
--Compulsion. .• . Some Lihera,l, members , he had organized and in, so doing I .,.
I Even the gate. on the barnyard had a ii maragnumlieenoptsieNvah, ibehosp:nitgilhatt give the tmhaeyGyeeri
' i ourseives.,,
-..
charge - that -the,. ;whol,e„,„Atuation.--.hastassociated himself 'with a'bevernineUt, particular , attraction. It wa'S.n.ny lirst win the war. . . . And if the, German
been worked up deliberately .by- the _which.the brides de rit
,•••• . . • i and scantlings together in o the form, decision going agabist -.Gerrnaliy.;:the.
t- like. Beeansellf P I - _ ' .4." , - .4 1 " . ,,, t' ' t t10104447:Veatileita4•41= iniliterY negligenee. Circe the reaction has set ,. ,.., ,
. • .,
. n.,..............;..............................................;...a. , . ely,40,be.,,_4010.4,7the...began ,t0,,, realize that_ here was-, a
--___ ........, .., -....... ..........*: .........._ _
••
let there take- care Ot.themse
Sootier or later, there is bound to be
a sudden reaction, a. sharp relapse in.
mood and temper. The mood of
ecstasy cannot be. kept at this high.
Pitch for leng--4.-unless ,something, hap -
rens that gives it a fresh impetus. That
something'can only be-sa miracle; and
it is for the Allies to see - that no such
miracle occurs through their fault Or
news , beginning to trickle out o a
ocenpled eolintries Getman atreelties
and terrorism. But 'there were -still
many thouSapds A17119' Said, "There must
be some good Germane
Then came D-day few day's
later the flying -bombs The- attitude'
of people here_ towards_ the, Germajis
as a whole changed in the -Course of
a week. ,-After adjusting themselves°
to the new f rra Of attack, Britons
Progressive Conservative Opposition to. he found after takinre er the post.,,o ,_
or a gate. It didn't hang so well at the Answer is wall shattering cyiflcism.
eMbarrass the Government.. • Progres Minister ' Of Pekence that conditions
. start but gradually by. adding a bolt or On the rational plane of - argument,
sive . CoitReiVatlye PleMber§, ,7ou the ' were worse than he bad believed, and 1 two and trimming up a board - 1 Man- -nething.- .,Nve are outninnbered, We
- oilier hand, declare that the *Govern-' to remedy, -tOose complied:la he "foundaged tb make it bang, My, but 1 was have been out -produced. That is not
flattered ,when• one 'of the neighbors our fault; it is nothing to be ashamed
ment liaSibeen' "c0Asting" :along With it neceasary to' take actidn on lines!
. . . came over to get the pattern for -it. l' -of.: Besides, we are no.l'onger on the
,
- the „„hopeef net . getting ,Into trouble which he had previously •; considered .. Closing the driving -shed dookr / re-' rational Plane. In this supreme hour
before the end- ' ofhostilities would unneee;sary , and. Inadvisa.ble, he iS membered the Plans for building an it 'would be beneath Us to, waste ' our
sole„ its diacuitieo: - . • ' owed- as if he -bah-created the--wb-ol ad. ditien... to It. The driving shed has time arguing and calcui4ting!'
.„ a. -gang,Way "and down IfinierneathAt ,Every effort is made by Nazi trona -
It 'is' expected,: :tot. the vote, or trouble. Getierai McNanghton'. was ..we have7 a cement-foul:Wadi:M., and a , arida tO Iiikige ti10 Peeple. on. an_ ex-.
. • votes,': will be taken smile. day this- not responsible for the.,.. ce4clitions he comfortable : pigpen., I've been Plan -1- ra
chiSively •eotiOnal plane and to keep
Nieeli. A few .T4ihe-kals :will vote ' with found, and he could°not in twentY= .ning .extending - it"ha
y. to "hake ,,a garage it -"there. There is hardly a talk . now-
. • • _ ,.,,,_ . .
• the Oppositien in gayer of cOnScription, four .honrs. convert ' a situation, which, and Underneath it a farrowing 'pen.' j'adays -on the -German radio in. yvhieh
At.the moment. I have an order in:at •:flie people_ are not warned s Whatever
., LI.,
but -the whole issue depends upon the' aceording to. theSe same' critics, baci
. - the planing Mill ler 'the- lumber and" yOu• do, don't , calculate. .- It only rills-.
number ofyrench,Canadian: 'members t been ,111031thS . iU, deNrOlOpillg. , III an cement needed; ifiiii about six weeks leads "you.• These are great historie
,
: Vile will vote againstthe .Governmentlunostentatious way .lie,has set about ago 1 drew the 'gravel up for the:Work. clam far the German nation,, and they
on the Main motion. The* only wayite correct, the situation, and it is Only The same thing aPrilles .hli around cannot be reduced to it simfgetwo-plus
• • the -place. It seemed as if every*build- tic.° makes four. Whitt If suddenly it
ill whieh the Government' caw be de- blind partisanship th4t refuse§ to. see
. ., ing and every fence . . . and the or- makes flve? After. all; miracles have
feated Is by a cembination oteenserip- in him the saute 'General 3,1.,,.Naughton
•. happened ' in this war. .A;'' miracle
. chard and the house...". . . all, had
Aionists (mostly : Progreasive coo-' who. in 'the earlier stages of the war something, familiar about them. This occurred in England in 1940,. another
SerVative0)-•.With -. the. Irreconcilable displayed- sneh.LOrganizing ability that ' Place is our, home and we have. Plans. at Stalingrad.„4. Who can say fckr cer-
• ,• • . There wa§ sometbin:g almost indecent ten.that there will not be -one Orr the
. anti-conScriptionists (mostly 'freln. -Que- many.. of those who are . now res mg
. about stepping out and handing it All Rhine .or at Seenigsberg? Rut even
. . ever • *to „somebody else • who woUldiftl.if -there isn't' 'one, it:will Analce,„41a clif-
bee). *ports from; Ottawa • indicate him Were shouting for him to come
. .
.... . .
that, such. a*.combinatio'n .is not likely back (from. Britam to take barge of know orcareabout our plans. ' " 'ference to.. our attitude. : All that
- By •th, time 1 ,opened theJstable*door matters now is to experiende to the.
.
to Prcidnee . a raajority- against" the army -affairs in -Canada; eartiSanshi
1 had made .up nay mind not to , take full, the ..overwhelthing. meaning . -of
'Government ' , • . .. in peaeetinie may7be -a-permissible 'the job.." There are some things- t at these- great -days.
'-- - In the meantime trained draftees are diversiOn, butAn_i_titheLbf war it
.• : The stpbborn, .ana. from a rational
is-. a meney Seems quite insignifiCarit beside -
being sent' forward to fili upany gaps curse. • . • • . . point, of 'vieW, senseloSi 'German s`tand
t - .fuily .api3reciated. abroad, at any -rate a. Aachen was not at all surprising:
- fronts. c ,__ .
... . 4 high SCh001 principal a Edmonton, in ..,.the yilito. t,s4.es. . _ Aachen was the test for the - feasibil-
in 04.0 Canadian lines at the battle.,
• • 1 . q la
curiouS as to the spelling - abilities of
. .• . . . ity of Himmler poliey of :fighting.
'swollen purchasing power is one of yard by yard -to -0e laSt.corner-of-Ger-7
, Hew can it be-,- in a Country -Tv -here
on . fifty fairly dornmon w,Orai.,-7-The i t4:inost pressing problems of the. war 'many.
asSaulted by -the Allies; hnd aecepted
If Aachen. the first big. eity
the students, examined 237 of thein
General Hodges' ultinaatutn, the whole
conception woilld have broken dowh.
If Aachen ean. surrender, COI5gneTtind
Prap.kfurt can- Surrender too; and no
good german need be ashamed p1! -
putting . Out., a' white pillow case On,
the other hand, if .Aacheri stands- and
-has to• be :,&thiced, house by house,
then Cologne and'Prankfirrtanay stand,
-tob-; -the-road-, to-7-ter1in will be very
long. indeed, and it :is -jut possible
that *something may happen to the
fies-cef.:
The- Children of Today Are -the Citizens of Tomorrow.
Will You Help Them Build for the Future?
Send Donations to .
WAR s 1,1EMORIAL CHILDRINS HOSPITAL OF WESTERN -ONTARIO
. . .
London, Ontario **
EDITORIAL NOTES,
-Christmas will be here in less than
three weeksjapt Juni, alas, is almost
six monthS itivay;
• . *
•
As the Russians on the east and the
Ailied al -Mies 011 the west' converge negligible; 3.74;•personnel, 174; _access-
upon4Germart territory;-tbe Hitler gat
muSt feel someWhat as did' the maw in
in Brltain
of stadents whO' failed to spell . the 40w .can it be, 'where' the postwar
nSwtetlar..
coats? new�f iias furresulta - Were ' as the figures pwalitt
After each word indicating the number
building of houses is looked ?upon as
word Correctly: *
a means of maintaining enaploynaint
Plebiscite, 203; rhythm., 1.87 reseind,
and prosperity, and not mainly as a
179; aggravate, 177; eiirriculum-, :175;
• means Of ' housing people whose homes
--on.?-third of all their homes -have
been damaged by bombs; aid --450000
destroyed. or Made uninhabitable?
. How can it be, in. a cchintry Which
has achieved new heights Of "Mint ,
navalf-air -4nd industrial-power.:_as__ a Street in • Britain appreciated the post
result •pf a war that has .cut into the tion. "We- Slionld.-liave - done -the
British position to the point of making. satne:' Was the general comment. "In
a creditor nation into-% people heavily 'Tact, we did- the ,same." What this
saddled With debt? • arentriOnt eVerloOked was the fact that
How can it be, in a country.looking in 1940 iIritain stiU had very consider
-
forward' to new opportunities _in. vvorid nble untapleed resources of 'potential.
Inarkets While the British are con- ,alfies. Today, in 1944, German ie
fronted by a' grave redUctidn fin their Serves Dave been.Used un.- There is no
merchant fleet, 'i cut of fiftr per cent.• neutral power left. which "could' 'dome
In imports and of two-thirds. hi ex: to Gerinany's- asSistanee_AR-RUSSia :PTA
ports" - the T1.5. came to Britain's in. 1941.
It is time someone began to tell the NeVeitheless. on the purely emotional
Plane. the suirit of Low's famous ear-
then of ;une. 1040. "Very well. alone!"
lias a menning ahd n messageL.for the
avernge rlermlua Ili, his 'nfel'elat'ineed,
•Winit this mood?, • We ain't know.
Int.Pne, needs enlv to listen with som
regularity to `Gernuin r16'ofittiiyt ti
gather what Nazi pronnaandh wiAeS
to make it.. ' Gerinarera dio prphgiiida,
these slays. is' heaVv., solemn, tragically
,festiVe. All Ahat ,is goed, richpure
In ,Gerraan finisie and literature IS
brought to the micrOolitme to ilt the
people with an. overwhelming tienSe *of
the , 'greatness ot their traditien, the
'beauty Of their %land,' the spleinlor
their tastles anti cathedrals, the
strength and e'xpressiveness 'of ' their
Mother tongue. rfihe cheap and the
shoddy, the purely larepagrrinlist, les
been discarded. there inc no military
mareheS411-these ProgriiMmes. not 'even
much -Wag,ifer. Tliere is Beethoven
and More Beethoven,. played superbly
by the Yienna.Philharnionle Orchestra,
ithere'is Bach, Mozart' Haydn, the„plek
'achieved, will only_ bring -Ilion. back to of the best 'performed with an a -Most
,
where they were when they made their t heartrending, , perre'MM
'llritish-its *meaning in -Costa as purest of, Gernian.poetr;v. Goethe,
interktersed with the finest
71 -ft t(h16edrasil)elitinti°ngimotfitrlei61S(1°•winafirrstot. thel'AtInad thi8
-comprehended. the *reesiti 141)0711i
1(tlefrullier
llY1' keti*°14)11111 fit°einida8litit'k;isci
o the Tintish to hold their. oWn in a, • ,.*.4....1*"‘"*".""1"!).*
'meadows Of the Fatherlandlire eVoked.,
of iii will better Understand the efforts
tolerable postwar. world WWII they •
havexontributed so much to gnarant
flI1 Attacks
'We- 174.4.-eon'tener, 10.0 ; strategist,
la; adviser, 1451- extravagant, 140;
aceommodate, 137 ;‘amateur, 132; skein,
the story ;who' was east into ,s. prisen,
132; preceding, 129; privilege; 128;
cell and, found. that the walls were 1 ible 118' eliminate 118.; assessor,
_ ,., , _.,
gradually drawinvtogether and an he 11h • vehicle 114' optuniam,--100-; ply-
. • i . ., , ,
Xotild do ' was 'Agonizingly. to Watc:h Snit, 100; superintendent, 100s alleged,
• 103; „parallel, 98; mania., 93; parasol,
,their slow but persistent progress as 8....;
o athlete, 82; propaganda, 81;
they drew in raore and inoreeloselyAo -I bouquet, 81 ; fascinated; . 81 ;, tariff, 7'6;
crushliina to .death. HoNsi' close will I purge, 6.9; neutral, 07; menace, .60;
, . .
- the Willis Of -flame and steel draw upon I similar,: 00; survivors, 50; recominend,
collision, 49 ;-*prairie;.48 ; fumigate,
theNazi monsters. before' they cry for
. - 42; technical.„20; _forty, 26"; practical
raereyl, 18; librarian, 18; committee, 144 fidca .
.• - ,12: democracy, 10:. easusli 9.- :- .. '
, official reports show' that. during the I The average for the 237' students was
. • 'War peried more ' than 23,000 British 118.4 errors. We •should say off -hand whole story of Britain'8 War effort. It
. , .
girls, have been married :to Canadian . 'that the ••tliree words of iliS. list .most :wish' otsime eprtehstientt csbeTatirtrilteys,.wtahse tobansi,scoon!
,..
sekliers, : s-arderg and airmen, aud mei often Misspelled- in our observatibn. are siderable - -
extent completed. while the.
-.13'. ritish_ held out against the vvorld
.process, is continuing at the., rate, of ,"Convener" , (almost .iniarilibly spelled
4, .
four to -11, hundred a 'week. Figures "ebiltuelibr"-)717-••="boutinet"- --, --(frequently.
are net at /Land off the .=, number Of spelled "boquet")". and ""accommodate,"
-
Canadian girls , who have married air- inaittersens, being unwilling, attar-
nien from Britain training in Canada, ently, td give it more than one t`ixL".,',.
hut. we -itriagine the British girls have It, would beinteresting to know liew
. pie eage by a large margin. Alto- Ontario high sehool students' would
getlier it, obould make for closer rela-leorne out of a test sirallar to that ' put
•-4,,h,:;.', . .
altions between these twe parts of the: to fhe Edmonton- students: .
Corninenv4Alth, . . . •
e. *. * ,, WHAT BRITAIN AS DONE,
. . ,
One of the in0St pointed cartoons, of
. . :
the Season *.as,. published , in The
'Windsor `Star fe'w • days ago. It,
Showed, oeean seofei the Peaks
of antleeberg,- labelled*."Zombie P,rolc-(
lem," .anil "Political Strife." While be
low the Surfa.c.e* of the Water , -,was thei
Vast bulk of khe iCeberg; repreSentingt
' 0.
enemyy-learn,what-that stand haS cost
in ."hlood, toil, tears and sweat!' . It
is time Britain'S allies understood iot
'only what Britain has already. paid on
this world account for the general
freedom. and security..and
'but what sort of future 'Britain faces
because she bas made: that paYmea
so wholeheartedly., • • -
.The White Taper on the war effort,
needs to be read with' ,understand..
ing that, beeause of the figurea'vvhfch it
Natal/1S, the British must .0olt 'for -
:ward to Victory hot. as to it lump
which, when" surmennted, will nittrk
the beginning of A fair pIain to plow
:and:pith:it for 'future -prosperity.
Victory to the British is a welconie but
fairly grim, opening. froth which 'they
can See only a steep and. formidable
ascent ahead. This ,ascent, when,
The 'foil:owing is an editorlal article
from The Obristiun science 'Monitor,
Boston, Xoyember 30,. and .1$ re-
published -fere at the request, of a
klhicago reader of .The Signal,Stai: •
MULTIPLZ BY THREE •
At yen are an American, ean
,
gra"s14the meanilig ifogures after they.
1 7, "Canada's Treinendoes War Elf:Port." .
sittis Iiits, oft. the situati6n. in attraida, .go into millions Aral billiens, then read
. the British White paper just released
''. ptecisely. ;'t is a thousand pities that, simultaneously. in Britain and the
the fecord of, five years' of .-Sidendidi *United States -and- Multiply hSt• three,
'croieali•or .ou the.paxt,of the -Canadian: Tills Vlilte Paper is. Pie' story 6 the
. i.,„ „ war teffort of a nation. with 47,000,000
pe'ople: should, bo lOst to "flow ''f... u: peopie4 The,,,,,rio3;01)0, c..astiatties. re-
. Pa/tient rtuitvot!. ' * I, portedlere tor .tiitain's, fighting foyees
tor 4r.. . . , it ' 1.7.--a 'figure somewhat laiger Allan that nits, oft Inc n.....D 0 E.s. ,, rie 51,.ATI4Eit? . , . .
Norman, isibotrift$‘, who tag been.% al for the 1.1nited States -hits' the ,Britisli
, (Windhor 511r)
tuition. Ilitli an'Impact equal•to that of , 0 . 0
' of the triiiteil States, saya,tha,t; a's/11116 ilniteil St,aths
it eilstiolt If t f 1 '' I( ( 00 f ' th (.0,fiDele„..,..perteiiiingit....thciettoirtlieisgioili,lasvoft;ibtit,:,)40iiiirlodtio. Livor Complaint
4. Cltildidate five thoes brit the- presideney y s ,o ,i( l.) „ oi . e
Ilie 1SoCialist party; wiii, ,A11,(1 UlliSt live The introduction" to ibis sVhite Paper, . . . 4
tts a great edueatimuti .' fovee, it is "'Statistics nclating to the WatAufort S. 'G. L. 181entughteu, Niiniter of Na. Billooness Is lust another -name
, .
as ,.(,„y 1111°4tila4 110 (414 °fa ehlil:rfttati 't'l‘'rlit.erclIllIetlig hntibn11- for
a eltIg‘g4ti 4r BilIggilh liver. It '
never likely to he An eleetot:at factor of °f the i'llitc(1 1 "10°4.! : *) ec)(A and (101181
is a very common contplaint, but can
, , ruttiest, a' title,,ll'iy ..the7%-v:ty; ,„
great conseottenee -in a national elec.- tsipped So Homeric an opic---makes this,seu, Nayg tha he is futd.aiway4 hes " be clitieldy remedied by t3timulathig
um, ,Itt thi 1ou try the ; rvation: ' Luta. now „,,it bit4 1 1)6ett 411,-A,11g11ca1 and -that In wife is the flow of :bile. Tills softens 'the
..
perty, etarting f)tif, ail fraitkly, Social., been lapsible. for reasons Ok'fieea
llritY, wl alwaYS hS
a'beoti it Itoman<fsawutrailated; mass,. the poisois ate
..atholic,,
e., •
„Aging hvgio, front a ., to publish statistics, showing. the extent
§e11001., OP 1945 liver ?ma boweift are relieVed, atm,
carried out of the syltem, and tiai
whir% the ITS011114('M Of the 'united St„livirvion
The e,Fecutive of Goderieli ,fitimmer toned tql.
igtiet ifeems to',Ito
forthright: deelaratiett .of Socislistio' ti:l'ingdoin have been mobilized for war
• , Tin' tin' iiehool met at the Mated church Manse Milbura's r, axittive fp,i,iis oldieken-
• Poliel. PoSeitiiY its Waft t ; :01(lize,`aa during the late five years."
: does 1st. Thoztitot, thitt tht,41. doe!vin" prejudiced reader of this lite I'aper in wattnii, ,,oth in:einber4litofient item Ana earivett the sioggilia .0,04 prat.
will meter ,cemmend '' themselves to a Iir4Y ri(r) that Pbra8e'; reas°115 e both Perth and liuron Presbyteries, 16g till "8141 4/1tttnel.' by cati6Ilik a
,,,....4...it, dt tho, cannot* ___ „ , security.o" Ire is, likely to,refleet that fore:suitoowr 01 it, bliiillscianogatetthir.u,siniapetturitisita. .
-- - Peurne• 1 for tties 'moot refit.SOniosecurity, jit:olititioritte4riirpanotr 1945.
ets for he ottzsalier,
katoftsitotity. mittiotor ffitrdtmor in, tin. publication of .thts tabulation of 1945 are; President and dean, Rev. 11
9... 11831e/rood; director, Rev. Xt. 1,), Thcy. ore small and easy to take,.
, P
- - 4". , ' , v itritain couid .,tiot. tinteit longer delay
4immiyhmilid fill, 1101100 Of ) tt,..64.,,,,,,,A. 41,),,, !keit in our minium(' war Agailifit . grip, *taken or ,slickent„
11141077i -164-14-c me ealbtro'oit 42436i4t:t7 ,irot,14, drool**, . niteA: ' moretary iltA treatsutor. Mr
. tabu* Os. 1,44.. Toronto, Onto
i 1/11 . rrlitni.-4,‘, WO trItilb effort is not Veusort Butter, Clinton.
0 4 . ,r• •
We can all do our part in making oure
- that a Long' Nstance telephone line,
will be clear for every sailor, soldier
or alrmazi, every WREN, C*AC
-VD who y vouuting on cailindhomO
oyer Shrismaa-o-r-New Year's. -
It means so ,much to tizem-L-Ileeide •
nowsend. your -greetings by
tuy Wat Sovtioi Manitit
'anti cotifkatat gsfgulafit;.'.
' ,