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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Goderich Signal-Star, 1945-02-15, Page 20 tottztt tztv OOMBINING itgp Goiimuou agoTAL 4ND. TUE 0004R•Ig4 STAR ., PUblished by Signal -Ste): 1).teas, Idraited, „ Weft Street, Godericli, Ontario • filubtx'rivition Rates -Canada , and Great. pr.itains 42.00 it Year; to United • : ' . ,„ Statee, 40.. „.. Advertieing Rates On request.. %.) Telephone 71. —., 'TIIVIISDAXt. PFXRUARY •15,(b.„, .1045 '• ' .......,,,,.................,,,,,r,..7.-..,..-......,.., ,,,,, ........,r,..:....,......,...g.......r....margm 1 ....;.,....,..,ci C3, ' other PrevinCe if 'the ease ..were pie+ Eig,,ToItix). kx. Avwxi, . sowed to him in .any proper"inanner; ... • ' - -7-7-- • ' , but reaSenably. and justifiablY, lie de, ....`,Aneflier° sign of spring; *Thr,eat of ciino to be bilif(ed and bullet:W(1, 'What -ii4ii'd's In the United States. , the SaskatchewanGoveninet iS- t.r3Tr.' * 4, , 4, • In to do bears out the toreeast made '''',•:.'1,)id, ,Sol Is beginning. to "Plato • hi,- 4. in these eolkunns when the CMS"; toot' Power. felk Once more., and srtowdritts offie,e in. that Province ----that it would. are gradually lasing their 'midwinter make ja4easonab1e...4eman.do „trocal the proportions. • rederal ,Adni.inistration and. 'Put , the , „ , „ , a * * , , . KRIAle-p1:100. Ottawa for its own failure . The Cabinet 3!tlinister „who *10$1' a' to make.good. on its election premises. .. • neat thousand dollars iira het On the ' 0. * ERICH SIGNAL -VAR oared Views on t e THU III-TA/71; A NEW WAIWIDIE, INVENTION I round an1 ran a 1.0rY Over it tO" Sett One. Of the mist. interestin .Of neW, effeet. The idea, 'proved. seund, and industries in Britain is the making 0. soon;, aided: by a-• ;umber of Village portable readS--..-Sounnerlield-treeket.,te wOrkmen he was ItesY ..tilrning out give them' their Official Panic.' SaMPleS for '•„army %tests. The testa Millions; Of yards of these reads: have hreved.srtecessfal,s4tna Production 'wits,- aireadr:beeti.' made find hese Paled started In :a.tunall'COnntry WorkshOp, a, tuOst ilupertant Part ilk niaify..;theaftee It Was not long * before governor - of war. Althrmgh theY' Were deigned traek Wee in.:enormous deniand; to serv6„ a wartime need, their useful; and It iSecaine large-seale. factory ness will contirm& into the' peace, prodeetiOn. ; The Somnierfield traCk ilesigNed Uoughly, the fraek„cOmprises a light rather on the principle Of tilt' spider's metal carpet forined .of',',Vire netting web. In feet, the' inventor actually strips', '..wb.ich, in turn,' are reinforced, oht,ailted idea frOnl 1Vateh- witiv.steel rods, containing loops at ,the ing a spider's weli in his garden, einIS;. • These Strips are Jilt over 10ft. was struck by , the fact that tife ,wela'' wide arid are made in toile 0 25 yards, gained • ita, strength largely through, each. Any number • of widths of frac* the two .ontside. branches to 'which it *eau be Unrolled side by Side find linked was 6,ttaelted, the same Way, it together by threading4, bars occUrred to him, a' track could be built through these loons. e wbole;: iS .by having a strong supporting frame. then etrained'vith the aid, 0 a tractor work, Usillg. steel, 'burs to. take the or bulldozer until is A taut 'as a ,Place of branches, Sontmerfield set tetinie! racket. The loops are tliefl to Work to make Ills metal "web." .elosea'ilnd "gest by a wetain'g ritoeesa and Mel:reek Is held:securely In place lvt" ineans, of angle -iron pickets, made with a fiat toP, which are driven the ground along tb,e outside edges ,of ,the traeli. In the case of an aerodrome runway About fifteen of these tracks are laid side,bY side:- As a test of their e*fficiency . for this purpose, the 'alit Sommerfleld track runway *TS laid on an airfield in Britain in 1941 and has been We° over since. ' tracks are being used in many other' Ways where a firm surfaee is required; Experience op the beacheg. of Pranee Showed that by *Means of „these tracks the heaviest types of "vehicles mere Ode, to travel over the ROft Stiid-attd-refitt\vidiant'the--nligitteSt. 7diffienity. Where the grequid is par- ticularly soft. however. the track is laid' on "some fdrm of Matting. "--The----Ititeks;•,•have been . psed on an enormous scale, not only in 'Pranac- but. else in North 'Africa. Sicily. -and `Italy. Indeed. it is ito exaggeratia to S0 y that they• have affected the whole course :,th,e war,- tor without. theni the Alliee could neyer.haVe Made such rapid, advances. It mast be rEralized' that even.' in the etirly stages of the ,eeonsi. Pout the traffic required to pa Ss over tbe narrow *lienchbeiids wee often-influitelv greater than .the norm-, ?int Of one of our o -A, 'Main ports like PortSinolitA or SalitlinnintOn: And it,WAS the SoM- inerfield traek that eneured .this con- tineal flow. . - Not only has .the trnek enabled 'firni 'snrfaces.tp WO obtained in the-Miniiniim Of time; but it has allowed the figlifing services- to...achieve 41 n would other- wise h,aVe been innnessilkl e. As an "exani0e, At tenuires only,. eighteen 12 - ton lorries to carry 52...0e0 square \mills --sufficient for a. nOrmal runway . • whereas -if', that same runwlec- was to hii 111: aof conerete. something like - 2.•540 lorries wmild he .nee-drd trnns- nort tbe In tOinls. Then. 'of eourse, there is 'also._ the:, inbor nuestion. large number of men -would be 'needed. to hty ennerefe rend or raTvay. nod 016wobld he occupied -for a verv lOng tithe at this task. On the oilier hand: Nor.th, Grey retult will not have to The PU14111,1/1 ceminenting ge made 25 yards' in the first place, and. then stretched it ont on rearshY .be.reihinded ie.:future that llorSe race's on the ANV.L.i'Vidsotle lad& something% and eleetiena are imeertain thingsnew to"the.diseussion, Thus; . _ On being ordered overseas, the ,fifingapere%le te be rebuilt and will members, of the 16,000 "of Canada's - PHIL OSIFER Of LAZY MEADOWS regain its status as a great Britialt, defence army ordered overaeas. 1 v;Tearttratentheemy bfltarktatitohneirlelt..ivt?ess.t, naval' base, we' are told. They. should , iock the back doer this time,. so the behind.' It was strategy, it was U10 ones.rwho didn't want to go It," snowed again the other evening. have such ari etisi 'Time caPturing the 13y.'llarry..r.Biijfr Jam; or arty other enemy may not claimedl-to find out in this„manner WINTER SCENE suppesedly,' mapregnahle :fortress. overseas, which was, accompliShed There's nothing very unusual iethat, _... . • is'ateautmeedrWilt---takeruStia-;.stepsIto' We can hargly believe the'DePartmeat big flakes and • covered. up the ,snow frem ,a. S9ftr spell we had been having the niunber7or-public---bousee.-and- a as --one may regard it,With tbi$ pieee , 6 for -a few clays'. .2' . -great campaign in favor of non-alCO. J:if subtlety 1, but, .taSilie7Durhain-edi 1,--left,',earky, the nett- morning fel go' . hale drinks. While here in 'Ontario suggests, it wouldn't have been a bad to -thevillage,...„71--wt-iTtlfetirst-on,e-outo that. morning and the sleigh .Swept, on --- the-iconsuraption. of,... stgotig -drink- IS idba. General .McNaughton ' may ' have the -t story a Gme-on,, wth-p at through* the --new layer of snow4-_._ I InCreaSill. g by..,leaps and - bounds wider recalled felt niore er-leSS like -ii -frail:breaker. se -Called Gekernment *centrel.." .' , the command of Jehovah led his army It was a Very"pleasant kind of -morn- - of ten thousancbto the water and fro' "' g;'. There was .jusf a'7-ditsh-of cold, . .... e ', Globe and Mail: "If Mr. McN4iughton thein chose.. the. three hundred whei- n. the air thspicy kind -that - made 'yoa'reel geod • . be ..e. 'sticks .to offi.ee after his defeat, such lapped the Water hastily, too .auxious ,sleightoaliNThe -bells sang out with their cheer - ..;:a. course wiltshew a complete 'contempt to get atthe enemy to quench their fill:jingle-jangling, • and that with the for the. processes of democracy' Nor4,1 .thirst lir *letsurely fashion -i -,and with thudding of the„borse's hoofs and the cr(„).- ' senee. *If retirement alter -defeat had ;the three hundred -defead the hosts unehing f the it:linters inthe 'soft Om seemed ro ,he • the only soiuids been the,rule, the careere of *Sir John a the Midianites. ,At any rate, it As $14-• -'' viten they went A,W.L. What because it seemS to be snowing. alrthe * use would men'of this type be at . time this winter.. This was a pleasant,' Freed from the Germans, France, tne oattieuelu, anYweY? lazy- snowfall that drifted down MI , , „, tonlhat alebbOlithn()•bY the r. action of of Defence:is-to be•credited--or debited, t,hat was beg -11'1141g t15- get'a-bit 'graY1811 af oot . . . .4 -at„ least until a. dog ran Maellonaid, Sir ::Wilfred, Laurier and evidept that General 1VIcNaughton's out barking ,from the Leslie place'w'''' ! Other- men prominent in ; Canadian idealt for , the .Canadial .overseas force We came_ to the top of. the gradei, . and I Stepped the .team7. it a. grapd General McNaughton would he a.. poor and best , 'equipment that'. could , he view .froin there;' although -the hill -is Walter if he gave " up because of one made ---44: army in which the fighting hot- very high. Spread out in front rePuise. ' spirit was strengthened by the best .Q2 me was the meanderingiver.. • * * products Of militaiy seigpee,,,.‘ it •was now .6, frozen vial:kik of Wver. The. early niorning passenger tiain 'from The campaign is .ou, again - for ipa- thus .he planimd, and that he had to the city Went scudding along with a • Inediate eonstriictien of the, St. alter his ,plans in an emergencY ler PAnne of smoke dangling in the air Lawrence seaway. ',Even if tii seheme whi_ch he was not responsible .is not like the ostrich Plume of ti. rieh lady. hill on the far side *were. free , Of. great defects, Ms would at all to his discredit. 'Those jourtmls , was a horse and cUtter and further COming down the he no time to launch Guar. an, under- and those public men who are decrying ° • . .. • . along _some S,*oungsters, were playing • taking. And its proluoters har.e. never him raeyeiy StultiO.theinselveS. with a toboggan. I. c,ouldsheae their - .. yet explained how a waterway that before -you' dig down into the valley - public life woUld have Veen' cut short. Was-. volunteer .ariny with the latest . * * * shrieking laughter even from that: would., be'viosed ANT months. in the With, it' great, lead of anxiety lif. ted distance. - • • . -„, . _ steeples of 'tilt "'United , church and are promised from it. The one ., sure ations, people of the.. more or lesi .catholic. church looming up on Main . thing` about it is that it, would Make 'united.", nations feel free to indulge street, afid down the river tlie creks-of a vast addition to the nation 4 debt In criticisms of one another, hncithere the white l.rame Anglican one Was' otir- ,.-1- imed against the Anil beyond. The ' aid to the' burd,en of interest that the has been. a lot of foolisn'talk „net con- - ' - " • ' ,.,. .year would Confer all the benefits that by the siiceess of the Allied war. °per- The, was. spread out the • • •• • - • • .._ NEW. S'ELF-CLUi6TING LUGS' "Vieodueiw" Used He will inspect your,tires, ship thenvAwAemeaml get ifiem back to you promptly. Do it before tIlie spring rush.. TERY Most. 1111c.Klern ETAPPeid Plant: MR. BRACKEN AND QUEBEC 72 whole place looked so friendly and • peaceful, like a Scene from a. calendar ' Edithr The Signal -Star. . • or a ,:nice poetcard, . The . chimneys were all smoking -like peaeeful old men With, .puffling pipes. 'Tina 1Viiirphy . . at lead the figure looked too bulky for any of the ordinary -inhabitants:. . *came out of his.stote..tihd walked mess to -the poStolfice. Tim would be after the •city paper to read at breakfast - time. -Then he wouldhe prepared with choice items Of news for the customers - who would_soon lie trickling in .to the' store. - , ° Therezs 11 friendifneSs'about familiar Places that's „hard to escape. t gives yea- a Warmth inside, equal -to -that. caused when 'a good ;friend returns „after a long, .absence. ' .Ivish some artist fellow -would earn along and .paint that scene 'just as it was ,the other ilierning., A' painting like that Would be- &Mighty' fine thing.. ;or us to have here at, Laiy lfreadowe.* The. only' trouble is that I probably Couldn't 'afford -it anyliew, and, besides, every " so often the real :thing coMes along- like' this and Makes a tired Old heart-Jut:pp?... - 4 WO -layers of Canada Aire earming. fined to .any one natiOn:' With refer.- * . * • .ence to things .that are • being Said ,The'citYward trend has -reached Such aiMing our neighbors, across the. line, • . proportions, that about one-fourth of A. writer in the Minneapolis... Star- tt.-PePtilatien of' Canada is contained Journal ,is quoted.as follows;' in ten of its elties. Confronted With "It,seenis to he open season 'en • „ this fact, everybody adMits that it is England. Lots of PeoPle are mad at ,,herbecause she doesn't do every - an -utfhealthY condition;--blit-there-47--thui-g the- Way we want it done. 110, agreement as to...a. reniedy. We Dr. Goebbels wins again. Be said must ' believe that fOi':eVeky evil there . he would splits '118.eventuailk.- . - e is .a..reniedy, and time and effort could Lookslike he ha's,tc. ,I 'don't. .„ see whY the British 'bother with hardly be better spent than in seeking us, .Why don't they tie up with to .discoVer, just what- S- it fault and Russia and- let •iiS go Peddle -OM. to put it right. The secret lies some-' papers 111 self=righteons isolation? • , where in economic -. and social condi- In that ease.of COilrSet We. "41411' ha*- the* to-liold-the-fort-for -us . tions; but the people will:have-AO see in the next war while we get read3% it and understand it before they will Oh, yeah, 'look at all the lend-lease make a change. . we gave thera.' Lend-lease MY. • * * • foot While -we gave them. 44, A change hi the° D,ominion Election • . • terials, they nave theii tiVeS-Inen' NVqnlin, and children. If we gave • ,Act that' Will, come, -Into effect. it the them lend-lease from liosir till ,nextgenentlelection is., important. doomsday we -could never repay , , There will be yo-iti°-,Wee-ki'-b`e-GZ`e-ii. 7them. they taidn't-stoPpe&-the- .. Germans at the English Channel nomination day and-poiling day, instead. we 'Would be Invaded right now' Of one week as wae the rale exCePt in by' Germany and japan. ‘: Our big those ridings covering- a wide area ,in trouble is that we haven't an ounce of grata -tide,. and personally (this . winda• more time was required for the ..„,writeisay,A,)7ri think W)' • are 0..pain_. ilhitiff `be.Mffi;ant---0-ther-p-eit- . in the neck. , big equipment.Presninably the change SOif Britain has: hr detractors she 15 wade IA 'd&trellVat also* , . • . es to the candidates. Forordinary ". pines a inaxinium .period of two weeks 'sholild 'be sufficient,„ and after the; war the Act- nitlY; be again revised to. this effect. • .• .Principal Sautes of geGillr.eljniver-,, -say is reported as saying that no :propaganda era possibly he - Mere dangerous- than that:of the ached: of. thefighe whieh suggests that after the War Canada will bekeine .an 'Elysian paradise' abbe to attain all the dreams and achieve all the ideals of her citizens. ./n suppoit ioehis, statement that Canada will emerge from the Witt' poorer than she Was before it, Princi01,, Janes peint4 out that ,this country taiS -,lot,itome of her ablest young men, has used raw. materials'lavishly" fon- War purposes, tibtl allowed 0, „residential ae- ,comirtedatien alt acrosa the country to detellorate. Statements like this may, 'be ridiculed -In sonie elreleg, but they exhibit a 'r'eall*fon ;if actual ten- ditions, : Sir;. -Iii.. view of the, fact that .at general election may soon be Upon iis, there, are some Matters which should be , carefully considered in the calm a the present, and before we are in tile heat of, a real Campaign. Softie,: of these matters are forced 'upon ear at: tention.,- by the campaign so recently 'cloeed. in Grey .Nortb.' Durink that campaign I addressed a letter to $iiIr. Bracken .suggesting that ; he tell the peede what..PriMe-Minister Churchill told. biin..regarding CaAa.da'S contribii- tioli7- in men and material tothe war. Insteadi- of quotingrMr.. Churchill he 'quoted Some unnamed sold'iers;Insisteft . upon"euality of service and sacrifice '11-tinie--Ol:war.11-andrtlint-all-10en inc.tw'• in uniform be at once sent overseas.. • ThiSSame - Mr. Bracken made a speech': in *Quebet "Some months ago:. Did lie 1(1:V001th “e0tiall6r i.Of..seryice .and _saerifice" on that .oecasion? '.'..iDirl, lie. stiv that every man, uhysicniiV ,fit should be in imiform? Did he SOV that (Very man' in uniform. _should at once ,be_ sentaxer.S.O.:si,-...Ne. he did.;inOt. The strongest .statetherit iii'-filiW-Fini- nectickri thet, lie Made on that .0e0tI5I011 WAS thkt •if the 'Men iii uniform were not. to lie .sent overseas...they should be -sent 'back .to :the 'factories and. the., Twins. • ' ' . ' . , • -1,7741TereV11l8'77.„--relifkon---2-01'--that.4-11111d stnteinent by- Mr. Bracken in gueliee. , 017i ttiejilatfei'm With Mr. Braeltert *AS: , il-e',,fikTAnilar4ettile Oil..§CTO'ht•I'Ve 'Teo (10+ : Trtr '-'11 ' 1:e' ' '- ixfoi..tibe ',..;qp e. SI NV 0 OprinSei .* itln,-. adn's elitry,infrr:Ille, War. and :ie still ()noosed to CnilltdilS mairing any com. trileition to tbe war effort. ,,On the pin iforin with 11Tniiriee ,ThiYilessis were other' Onebee ConseryntiV47-OfT like stripe who welcomed ifr. Bracken' to flint Province. What does all tills .iii•-am.e? Has ?Or...Brack:en one' nolieY for .0uoliec 'and another for the rest *of' Canada?. ' Let sits turiv_bileig..a 'few Tit!geg-of toemt ,otin Rfiln`tr.ilistery• and, see what they hove to tench. us'... -v: T -h 1 01 I. we had n rederal',pleetion whiCll, '..a.q fe, hate.been fought 'im the onestion Of recturocitY1 ,lnit only .a., COMfifirila.V41.V.,•few in flitebee ben -rd that Matte. .'IseliFified. The Conservative of '%Ottebee, trading ',littler the name "Nn tionn lists." ' iittn eked ' , Si r Wilfrid Laurier's 'poll& of. n 'Canadian riaVy. They Ileneiiiiited 'Stir Wilfrid'as an Ira. perin list -Who. to -keen in the good graces Of Britain. *aawilling to tgaice 'cannon fodder, of the sons Of Quebec.; .All that., Wlille in Ontario Sir Wilfrid was necuseir of betraVing the 'hest Interests of 'Canada and of, the Pritiab prelotte.- ..*At the •tinie 11tr, BilieWn Spolte In Onelve. that Ilirovinte hnd'Pa •Thberal overnment vrt:Iiich Was ,giving Its sun- nort to the - war effort of the Govern. meat at Ottawa. :Sliortlx after Ur.; Brnelion's "visit .to Quebec there wag O provincial election! and .not one PtooreSiiive',.Conservative .enkred the contest '„•-•tnider that name; Alley, , all 'entei.oajlie enritesttinder tile aiiti.war. : tunti-Ttritinh "tridort lAintionale" Winter 1 of Maurice -Dirnlessiti. 'former *OrniserY,- niive lender '..aral..eelleague of lir. .) Bracken ott the tilatforni.. , IS histortt to ,refietit itself- in the ,l'amiti.4 ifederal election? Ins Mr. '.11raelren one policy for Quebei., and another Mr the reAt. of (limitgla/./tend- ing,,,hotween the lines of what feek 'Mace ,$.fe .irecently in Onpec and in v , arm). North. one should lave Ale diri 1 Acuity hi getting ,a correct n n 4wer. it, Aft -ill eiint'n10 1,)tiett A tr. ititi101'e1'Veli. 10, 1015'. Rouse & Bell Garage, 'victoria and Kingston ev.McSee, Bodge &De:1601040 rho*, 695; figmiltotiSt a complete runway br 'Seminerfield track can be bid in ainatter of hours, with, if necessdry, the employment of a ,fractiOn of the'laborr Although gemmerfield track was de- signed and produced in the first place for war Perposesi it can be realized that it • has enormous possibilitieS. in the peace -time export market,, • -The London Times. THE IiIIRACULOUS HITLER , The whole of Gdebbels's weekly rtiele in Das 'Reich, according to the Versiaii, issued by the German news agency, is a fulsoine tribute to Hitler as a super -human being. It contains lye following pae-Sirges:.' • The Fuhrer takes the war more seriously' than any 'other ,statesmart. No details, favorable Or are hidden froni. him. • Nobody cap fool him. Ilis sleeplees nights as wen- ds hie daY's are Spent among his dose • - HOW TO 001,0BAT: Atirit itheinnatic pains are of -tin caused by urta acid --in., „This -blood impurity : Trelise,Velt and Churchill and Stalin can- be•hultItea bv the kidney3.:111ad"' meet. in 'lamicable conferenCe ohee :in a While pet/hap:4 we, May Jake it as, evidence that, the spirit ig Miity•created In adversity has not,yet departed: ivrAusou-ola .suootsTEb • , FOR SEAVoivra (-Seaforth •News) There; is diSciission-.nt the , present • 'time regarding the. urgent „ need' in Seaforth Communityof oa mausoleum burial chapei.to's'erve the needs of the surrounding tailfildpalities • In the 'winter. Extreme 'hardship has been .experieneed.. getting funerals [11 rough, blocked roads to the canieteries. It is :suggested that a mauSoleum 'located in town Yvould,,o' be easily accessible 121 all kinds of weather, and would prove. 'a comfort to ' bereaved families, friendii and all in attendance hy protecting them „from exposure in cold stormy Weather. I3Odies *quid remain in a mausoleum,- until spring,. , when they Could, be tconveniently rernoVed to he piace" of burial.- in nearby Ott distant cemeteries. neys fail;-anduric acid ternain1i4, irritates the muscles and joints Causing excruciating pains... Treat rheumatic pal& , by keeping your.kidneys in. good condition. ' • Take regularly tiocid'ii Kidney ' • half a tenturythefavoritekidney remedy. 109 ih their midst he 15 lonely, a genius would have him speak to guess his towering in icy .. solitude' 0among hi$ fellewe. , . 7 Neverdoe' s a ,iVord. Of levity or coarsenesspass his lips; Not for. him ,the „comforts of bourgeois lifeand everych.iy delights. If even 1' 'one's table in Gernmey were as Iritel a that • of the :Fiihrer, who in .the Sixth 'Year 0:2 war still retains _hiS 'vegetarian diet, tentions. He is the German miracle.. Everything else in our' country can he explained. He alone is Our mysrerY , and the -myth of the German people. The whole nation has been changed fundamentally by Abe - sheer force of ' his will, while he reniains. always the =lie; always nc ays uhanged. ' • • It 'is • a miracle that he still remains we . should definitely have xio food inehatistible in ' his ideas,. and' un-- simply worries.- ,,, • . shaken in his 'faith- that he: is in 'the ' . Today Hitler is the, same age as" Was hanc10 of a higher Providencewhich , , :.... Prederh•k the ' Great -When he acquired guidewhimeven itsometimes in tort* oils S, ' ' ' the nitearne "Ol(3 Fritz.'! Yet Hitler m • bywayto his OM. Ile has a an. sixth • sense, that is. the gift to pee If his head is slightly 'bowethat alinOst strikes you. as a young is what Is -hidden frtifii the :human eye because of his, continueup study , -.... 'ffs of Ile , knows about things to Come; ' Be staffMapso . , ., . , . . is truth pereonified. .Faith and will -. , . 4itler is a----niasthr•of 'thpower mil* from his personand oroughness. It is a tbousandopitiee bine his. eneraies nobody escapes his.spell., ' . . • 'de not know the depth of his contempt Ifonly the world knew how much for them and or their Methods of war his Iove extends beyoud.his own People Aire and politiesHe Canafford to f - towards. the universe. they would' for , ' •' ' -•(Oontinued onipage -1„) • ' , . circle 1 of laberators; and' yet even. .remaln,-Silentl----months mita). -otillers • 0004006.040.10,000100.000, , , k 7‘.• * 1110 Cr: Government of Saskatett. ewan, thwarted in its scheme to make favor with ,the, farmers of that Pro- vince at the ,eXpense of the redetat severities of the weather, which under , tteitsurle 18 indiotibt wfttt riving+ present conditions may result hi many: '.seriou 111110 ginister declares him guilty et, Inn 8ses' .t "high -banded" and "outrageous" action,i PititSONt* OF WAR and threateus• that tile liovinPe The amount Of butter tAent' I prisonertoPwiar parcels Iii•a full year iS 111 1'('21114e 00 -operation With fhe slivrt of two Weekle tatiena for I in the tutura itt-tbe &id ttottit.loni,ntbfe°t 'It.tvh.6' le population of Canada. and in other ,1144$.We have no doibt1 Canada at Present through the Can- . t Mr. lisley „Wald sitt$fik fraticadian fled ...Cross is shipping parcels t.poitng any bardsitio upon -the to prisoners of war itt the rate of , * • about eight Milliett a year, or over' "fm'rm.* 411',O.., .1. 1r4400.0- a vteek. r have been on quota; for some time and.":vv'iil likely retnain in that 'position for inonthi; .to oOme. We must therefore • ask our subsOriherS to pay for'their Signal:Star advance, We are :taking ,this attitude in seitdefehee... "Net that we truit our' readers agytheless, but becaurge nearly, elfery. business is befig oinidnete'd ori ac,.patili0haesia) and it 13 better for all oneerned, So please see' that your mil), ,This'is a reminder of thesuggestion freuunntly advaneed that a ehapel or xnausolutn at Maitland eenietery would be' a most desirable addition to burial faciiittbS 'in ''Goderieli. AS The NeWS says, it ..woold, proteet relatives and °theta attending funerals from •• the