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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Goderich Signal-Star, 1949-08-11, Page 24K4 r 11 d.:Agttal.- 11-urtori. 60uNrits Irorciamos vfrEfl. tax ' ..I * Published by $18111:4141tart. timited " , . . , 1'14441)000On Rate-S—Canadi and, •G'reat 33ritaixt.. 0•06 a year: to uatted . ,. , t Staes ' ' . . , ,,P -5Q. . , ill4Tortl81ng..14rateS OW. reqtient- Authorized as seOond-class mail, root. ' °Mee Pepartmen.t,;Ottawa, Tele),:dione 71, ' , : Member Qf Ofiliadian• :Weekly. IsleWspapers Association -- . Weekly CirCulat.iOn Over 2900 , w„ u,,, XplaigE1Qkil : • . GEO. L. ELLIS TUVIEFAD.4.;AUG6ST 11t1, 1649 Jib:90N ,QUOTA. Airrner *riting to Thelobe plaCes.: the hiame upon ,..4ticu1ture ;1441rtister Gardiner. for VT.:failure tO Supply:the quota of *aeon for the British' market this '•This, hecanae 7ie ga.ve no, labenr,Anee tO: the Canadian -.farmers ‘ierf ba(e, Contrad for 1949, in, time ter the farmers to Prepare for pro- ,. ••• • . .44qt4011. . "We knew," says the ---Ietter-Writerf--Athat•- 010eeeiellt was reached disastrous 1ce reduetioas-weadd result. And so thousands, like mypelf, curtailed , All:vulletion to plaY•safe.", . The letter -writer adtnite that it takes two to make a'Contract, and ifl',face, of "British hesitancy and rdiness' Mr. Gardiner could gi e assurance of a contract. . He lits!.however, that it is their be Canadian. 'Government's) 're- sponsibility. to assure the farraers a- 'Year in advance that; there 'will e' money-inaking hog prices.. If • Wey did so they could offer the re- 9,4red'eupPly, 'to Britain. With. con- *dence -• thabsoit would • be forth- - 5 • Let:us. see .how thig• would Work Witheut a eontract'ivi% ,-,Aardiner tells '''tPe, armers to go 'ahead with predue, .tion.„. The farfners Produce a large simply is not WI)* it" *as. era/sed hp, to he, We are hoping up our IforestS at a 'shaineful rate:' Our universities .are wasting a :great part of their tine about affairs of secondarY importance. The vim Siniply is'netin 'our.Atodent's when - it comes to thing of living, Why laot Alb Mit eyes and See what is going on?, We are second-ratern .a great man' things hi whicii Wei sho,n14:1t-and-otit leadeis." -A, dash. of cold water like- this shOuld revive, us and bringitus back - 'to our senses; but isn't the Exeter Man afraid, .of giving comfort to our arch -enemy, Stalin of the Kremlin, who delights in. telling his people of the miserable condi- tions in the Western-courctries, in- clring Canada?. • Xportable'surplus, and. the _British *eminent, 'quite well aware ,of hisifnSes to .buy except qt its e: fthliprs list sell at "disastroOs'! prices er Gardiner must persuade the. ancipan Governrcient to come to reScue with subsidies exacted Om the Cattadia4 taxpaier8.- I erinearttimeT-13-ritaia -,--either_ would reauce its bacon Talon or gli 'aeon front 'other 'countries. The Canadian Government could not go n:Paying subsTdiei year after .year, 411.the final outcome would be the Icisp. of the British" -market and 'Permanently lower • prices for the Canadian farmer4' hogs. . • It Canadian farmers, are, going to play the In -and -out game in kriffslog,. that Is _their „own busi- , . 'inesn,.• bat, they must» bear the consequenees. If the British .'inarket for bacon.is to be retained, 'they 'must supply the hogs In ...quality and quantity to meet the 'reqiiirements of that market ." *. . EDITORIAL NOTES ••••••,••••••••••••••••• • Dont conipiain about the beat— sweat and bare it! •., , Walking. ).s. recommended' as a *healthful exercise, and: seme physical- MS of the • present generation are attributed to.. the 'Icict that people' do" not take long .,•,:walks, as was • the: custom before the "anteinOhlie came in. The .'conntry-dweller can, mid probably oes, walk .sufficiently to keep his •••.''QyStein in good order; but where is the town -dweller to walk? . If on, the highways he is in -constant danger from automobile °traffic. If he takes a sideroad, with TOSS traffie, some motorist conies* along, offers him a ride, • and if he refuses he s put down as some kind of lunatic. . 11 he takes to the' farmers' fields he: 'mai,' be re- garded as a tre.spatser Zr may 'have 'the gnflty feeling that' he Is doing. setae damagei-and then there are the fehees and the ,doge' In years gone by, ci.group of men *add go off on longnisalks, eb.eer-, ith their 6om- PIK OWED ,OF LAZY MEADOWS RV Rarry BOvie ELTIME its t1yUine, .*„ ,swttehing-time "it what: Yolk maYV -flies have silddenly arr1v4 at Lazy Meadows in. aumbern, greater than we have, eicperieaced in quite some time. At *Milking time they•cluster "on the .cows' backs . are -switched away by constantly inoving tails ooly tO desceud on some other part Of the cows' anatomy. Mrs. -Phil is 'canning fruit and, vegetables these '41ttys. and the files are liter- on'the screen doot. Be- fore opening it one.„.niust take off One's 'hat and swish-and-svyooSh to set all' the flies' in motion. At the Pre,41s4 manent when you think they, 'are confused enough, yon open "the dbor quickly and. PIMP . . taking, great eare to see that the deOr •palled tightly' closed after yOu. Itt spite of all your efforts the dies do get in, They zoom around the ceiling and then dive for the syrup in the pre- serving•kettle.-, Laden-- with :p7.the sugary syrup they ,slip In behind the widow blind and in the warmth and comfort of this spot proceed to enjoy their stolen. sweets ancrmake traelss on the window pane -8._ Back' woodsheds are 'always a favorite spot for flies. • They seem to like claWling across" sundrenched spots in the wooden 'floor , . and clustering around soapy _water- left in a -wash. basin . . . and old. berry bOies and ;other spots where they "can enjoy themsel-Ves. Grand- father used to doze off to sleep •in an old dilapidated rocker that stood inside the back' kitchen dock. I Can remember the sun cutting in across the edge of the. door jamb' and lighting' up one side of his face. The flies used to have a great' time crawling around his mbusa'll hdwe ntr1r field day watching. A -fly ...would skin" back and forth. and finally land on nionStaelie* SOfiledistriets'eall'the Buttonwoods The moustite ''eg Would quiver and On their properties Piebald Trees, tWiteltand. thefly wauld hop. frOm though the name has never redlly onebristle to. the other. Finally -in got -foto circulation. . The effect a sleepy' half-hearted gesture`grand- Cedei from the way in which the Lather's hand Would come up and tree sheds its bark: All kiads of hrush , at the thoustache and the. trees, , as they develop, -.grow' out 'Ty-Vol-Adbe away E.O.P.A.P..4"4:44-***.otri4ATX, turn when everything, had quieted a small boy groivs out or nis jacket down. and knickers and d§ a snake gets * * * • too large for his skin. Mqst trees Fly swatters were a luxury in make'roem for their increased girth my boyheod . . . that is, the by pUtting pidats or wrinkles in "boughten" ..kiod were, Father used to_ "snip a, small square from a -plece-af--old'screeking-ane--7-motare it on • a handle and 'Inother would bind,' the 'edge of the screen up with cloth. There were usually two .of these arotind. the house. One lay on, the corner of the buffet in the kitchen and the' other was usually left near the .pantry • &ion Every i so ofteo mother'would pick up the swatter nearest to her and make a raid on the flies. Our front parlor was always kept closed in the summer -time. The idea per- sisted that in this way the room Could be kept • cool, But, in spite of all our care, flies always seemed to manage. to slip into the room. :While taking the dust covers off thefurnitureWither, would -wield the swatter on the files. Then the room would , be closed up to await the arrival' of the company. .-I used to like to sit back .in the_ corner after'. the company -Was. seated in the .pailor„ and Watch the flies pouring in from the kitchen. They would zoom in, to the door. way and for a. moment or • to look the situation oN;er. Immedi- ately after this preliminary check-' up they would line up their sights on the visitors and torture them. Be. ing visitors. they could not indulge in the arm -Waving andslapping that they vveald have -done in their own homes. The hies seemed to Sense this and it added to their enjoyment of the whole affair. M. Howe advises us to.. buy coal now—but, Mr...:Ilowe, how? pver the years the weatherman is making it hot fdr his critics • - - • it Soliztehody writes' to one of .the daily papers,=championing. the _WA5p• and, describing him agi a: destroyer gardst isn't so : bad, realty, If the dear' little fellow ,wOuld onlk give notice of h1 intentioik • . '* 's • The Saltford Sage has been read - WI -di -gilt the .newfangled paste' -that to, :411 tooth:--etivities- and do away With drilling and fill - the dentist'S. chair. He is: now more than ever Convinced 111.4 he was born forty years..too son. •* • •• - ,.„ p.nd their. cOnVersatio -hut' where' eould you get such a group in these days?, The. pedestriiin game of golf is ....recommended: But if you notice you Will see that the 'golfer ablest Yariably uses his ear to geti to ' the' golf cburse: Besides, if.every- " body PIa'yed golf there'woih't be TO= for the tees and the grounds- ' keeper would go dray. SO where is a fellow to walk— . he has .any notion: a _Walking? Reconstruction Minister Winters. of. the '•Federal Government as been conferring, with Premier Frost of •Ontario -not, as you might sup- pose, •about cooling things off, but about housing. Anct,in. spite of the fact that they are oui opposite sides of the political fence: there is said to lie no coolnessbetween them. • •0 • . .Businees. conditions are Surpris- ingly' good in Canada,,despite. the 'fact that many -persons, believe a slight "receSsion" would do no ham-. As for a depression such as that Of the '30's there` is no indication from present conditions in Canada."' If .a depression should come It Would be from tonditions outside this country which we can: not pieveot SO why worry? At any rate, don't let us talk ourselves into a depression. * * • TUI GODERT SIGN:41;04M The Blatt011W000 ,or Sycamore or:Or: ix...si=4iviiii:Poi; How •many -people of. Goderiell their 'bark.' The $hagbark,,Hiekory „Ik • " know- that the Attaitiand River fiats And thO Buttonwood bare a WAY • of their Own: they split their bark south of ..Saltrorci 'v,•ere Called Blit- xue pieces in the xorin tonwOod Flat§ a hundred yats or Warips or 'Oakes The -ButtOn- Mere ago? Not many, I• venture? NVood.throws of flakes' of varieim to say. )(et that was at that time •shapes,' some large'some *small, the -4.!onanion .narae for that traet. Tlais4 given ''..the truuk an : untidy There are a least two very good 'patchy appearance. - Retanantaef reasons why most citizenS of our the old daik. gray bark cling to day are unaware of the fact One tbe. trunk or branch and 'show up reason is, that few of us take pains strikingly against the white or'pale enough- to read the pages that tell green -of the „newly exposed fresh of earlY local laisto*-4.• the other is bark; 4JOhis conellieuous ,mottled. that most evidences of the trees effect will label the tree definitely from, wliich .the name a the tract anywhere. '‘ - was derived 114 -Ye. disappeared from The Suttonwood is really a that part of the MaitlandoAalley:, •Southern dr Carolinian tree, butyis However, there 'are en.ough Button- hardy enough to push its WAY spine wood trees; left in the valley in distance north in Ontarki. ,I know general to make them an interest- 'an, old tree in Toronto that, groVs lug. subject qf .an infornial chatbeside the old swimming: 'bole. on: The ButtonWood Is known by two the Den' River near,TaYlb'es other, common 'lathes Sycamore There is a solitary wild. tree near 'and Plane. Tree. Of ,all three Meaforcl. There are Many -Speci- names. the last Is the most nearly, meas in the river valleys of South-, correct, since it identifies It With ero °antic', for the species iS a family of trees very well known essentially a tree of river flats that in the- avenues: of -Iondoit, .,ngland,t -are regttlarly___Ikeoded ,each W and'Of the larger cities of 'estern. There are many in the valleys of .g.n.rope and of the Mediterranean the Sydenham ii Lambton, of tlie area. Indeed, the .Plane Tree was Thames in MiddleSex and Kent, of known to the writers of theew the Ain/ Sablea,•Bayfield and. MaltTestalaent. The word .Plaue4 is land in Huron. The flooding does obviously. an -abbreviation of Plat- two things to the tree; it carries its anus, • the name • by which the seeds dOwnstream 'where in. time Romans recognized the iree, Our they" take root; the ice batters, commen•name Buttonwood well de- Mutilates and uproots large• mature Scribes. the round • brown • button: trees. 1 have seen- hundteds of like fruits borne by the ,Plane" hi trees. in the long flat lands of the autumn .and winter. When f was Maitland betvieen Wtngbam and a boy furry brown buttons of that Goderich, but only a few of them Shape were hi vogue on woraearg have been undamaged brthe ice Of winter cpats.One can also identify spring bre'ak-ups. Most of them the tree by its leaves: these are are terribly deformed; many'have lobed somewhat like a maple leaf been' pushed over until they lie but are broader and sharply fiat and dead on the bank. The. notched. -- Most conspicuous example • of a „ But the most distinetiye mark of prostrate Buttonwood , is -the ,one all in the bark of this tree: there that sprawls on the sand and gravel is nothing like' it among all Our shore of the 'Black. Hole. One native trees. The trunk and larger viould think that such treatment -braneliesmate--piebald-in-eolOrr-re- would -exterminate the-species„elmt Minding one of a piebald „horse. far from it While men with their Indeed;_kt-have heard". farMers hisaws, and ice with its battering Tams- -haver -stripped- -,Buttonwood flats of its upstanding trees, yet their kind still survives and thrives farther upstream: ' Tht Buttonwood—of, if you pre• fer, the Sycamore or Plane Tree— is one of our ffneSt native shade .,;-;:"Aatile.•4=ottezentlered;wlik Goderiehhas, neve,'• platted any on her streets. It may not lie too late yet.. If and when new plantings are planned let us not forget. our own Horon native. ii?r4/•03ALL , . g*,a111ner .I.X110. 414.Y after /401.48 Bt,,Laurent was chosen 'leader o.f the Liberal patty 47!Isreportet, inet „a• Frencl,v, speaking meniber-..pf The XX. stiU obviously te;inoved by what hog shappened a.relatively few hours efore when roaring thousands had acciailned, the "succeSsO'r to 'Willintp. LyonVa.c, keazie King • "Yon.know:'' be said, ,couicin't believe therdlet us. haye jt (the7 leftBttvs'ilithPeV. • : And no* "they" — the „gitglish- Canadians — have given Mr. St Laurent an equalik .overwhellinin mandate 1ynn the Government. MaYbe-nOw they'll liSten'to what he himself says About this "perennial 9..tue;stardiyHe nag' e : hostiggs-that "There Is 'ctio doubt lye arena united'•nation today," - Let's go. on from there, :ie, SAY'S. 'Let's not4*.eep prObing fearful. fingers 'into the peteatial canses. Of .Let's -accept our .differ, mos; glory in: them and let them Male_ n_lfrgaderr_d_eeper.,,people. In our, different cultures, our different 'languages, our different hfiritages, he says,lies our real strength. They am • not frailties but, the springboards to a race and society ef breadth and varied in- terest. • ",We are a young people, barely - the threshold of , the future destiny, seems to have. marked for us," said Louis St. Laurent again and*.again to the people from coast to coast., And isn't there much in' what this stateSman says? Haven't we • spent toolong consultios our fears? • Isn't it time to: resognige that there ,are certain things. the French will alNvay be, certain things the ,English will always be, and there is plenty of room or both? To any newspaper .man covering .the Federal .Parliament this soon ,becomesviou.S..... Among: the, rePre:' ,sentatives of the two ;races in this forum of the .nation, there is a haracteristic14:AXAAPP-And-re8pect,, understanding aod.' give-and-take. The Toronto Star, declarbig feat "the recent crime wave smells strongly of liquor," warns Queen's Park against allowing an increase of legal outlets, for the, sale of liquor. In; iTdronto there are near- ly two hundred new applications for liquor -selling licenses, and, The Star reminds -the government of the defeat of Mr. Drew in, the High Park riding in 1948 at the hands of a temperance candidate. .Itt was hOped 'that Mr;Frost on reach- ing' the • premiership ,would ° turn over a new leaf in the Queen's Park record, but- to conlirm such "A"-'04CSIC-010-0074,Ii-WATtle tlie,..editer of The Exeter ;Advocate ip 'Conlirnied bellever• Seff-help.Ile that •tie Britt* rietiai %re facing .4 darker edits 'than' they. faced Vhen their houses were hang' leveled by *Gorman bonabs„.. Seetirity?, There .is n&�ucii animal this thing behig ,Carried about on a., downy tallow' trek the cradle the,graveIs not"Ouly the wOr,St form. of tolls' but the surest vast tO iota' evOi, aorisol.bf titiono. • 10,04011: can cenie to Ulm: .gre4t- 040. n4 long as efiSexdYriyollty Ilitoro a: larger: ilae A life than eta work. ‘atidi strict: adherence to the Golden Xtale.1%.. Catiada, too* the toter editor • SelareS, bn06010 Waking Itp to, fn. lids, regard. • „SI* hall been. Consisted of Mrs. Witt, DoaR, *Mrs. /twit atersi 0,101 'Zi! AtiStaY, -Airg Vir.;'' WO% Frio, A. Butler �f eorti resOtrces,. ger soil itygowts. wittan. hope a e mist meet. for repentanee. One •thi„o-,.g. be might well do ,wouid be' to revive the Ontario Liqu.or hot Act in C„T.A. counties.. The latter IS a good -act, but much strengthened by the Ontario get, and there is no. good renson Why the: two acts should not be enforced side by side,- 'THE-IvIETHeiti•th-F.Piltad 14y Joseph Lister Rutledge certain .V. , Karionoy, Writing in Moscow's "Red Star," official organ • of the Red Army, presents the Russian peoole with a .startling 5 ,pidure of life in the United- States —"The horrible Am-erican condi tions which doom 'iptfljon to hunger, illness ani r sudden death." Mr. Karionov itemizes some of these horrors. In American aotoinobile plants the average worker- becomes -an invalid after Ove years. In I939, 1,0.00000 persons were killed or injured'in industrial accidents. Twentmillion, Of the thirty mil- lion rural populatien, live below minimum, standards; ten million in' abject poverty: Average annual farm .• incomes„ total $740 against' the $1,800 necessary for a rainhimin subsistence. One-third of the American people live in -slums. Twenty pet cent. of the children have no schooling at all, while What schools there tqe are dark and falling to pieces: The people hove an illness ,and death rate higher than anywhere else itt the 'World. Life is insecure. The aver- age „man is •completely unprotected and, lives in an atmosphere of fear and oppregSion, under the, constant threat of the F.B.I. In 1948 'a major crimewas committed every eighteen seconds. Thirty-six per- sons were murdered daily and daily 22 women were raped. That is the story printed in "Red -Star" and -cabled backto the United States by H. E. Salisbury, Moscow correspondent of the unimptichahle• New York Times. If other proof is fideessary- there- is • this. Like all other :despatches, it passed the MoscoW certsors•hip, and. was questioned. Now the purp'ese itt pretenting such preposterous, so-called facts . onviouslyais to convince -citizens of the. Soviet "Union and . satellite peoples that living conditions under democracy are far wOrse, than under police statism. •The method isin the technique Of that 2W14ezted, tatb4igenittnni.401411O1114.11; liked to fasten on some minor of- ficial statement, inflate it and con- fuse it and:dramatize it *out of all recognition. It is the technique of Hitler'S "big lie"—that,lif only th'e lie 18 big enough it will he believed. _We- may recognige this preposter- ous story for what -it 13, a tacit admission that life under poininun-' ism must have fallen far short of the 'promises to require, that 'corn• parlsong be pushed to such ex- tremes. But let us, not satisfy ouri• selves that they are too extreme to be believed. Let us remember that no less. gigantic lies, fostered •,-by the- evil -genius -of-Dr.- 'Obehbela,- Were believed by millions of people. -Anarotherlitillions,411,1-belleve-this "picture of Violence—twelve thous- and persons murdered every year, _eighty-two_tlionsand • rttPedT indOstry a, great iVfoloch destroyin workers itt fiVe year. There is no reasoning With Communism; no 'common gratild--With people .WhO, base their n001111,010 on it lie. SATURDAY'S TAG -DAY' • ' FOR THE NAVY' LEAGUE n'aikeeiltnk.-.4ag oi Kaneda on §aturday; when $9().0 was Collected.. 'The WoMense Institute Inive---necepted;:the-' oi organiiing'these *Ammar -events for the Navy 1.4eagne and.liad their faggers on the streets early. • Dranster Allnest struck When the . , committee, on opening the box ot supplies- on 'ScittirditY,. diScovered that ttio .tag t3 had been gent 'from headattarters:): 'AAnitty-up„, call to the: NV:dittoes ItoSpital: Auxiliary "tqzeduced the,tedeMary bita of Oat& beikra, but when -14'0y League tag-, gets handed theta out Many Oeople were ntyatitied dna 'that, they had • Those were' ther..clays before streamers of sticky paper. We bought -ours in the flat sheets which were laid around the house. Dur- ing the season father always man aged,-,c'en at least two occasions, to sit in' the stieky paper. He would rant and rave and tear up a.sheet of the paper, and get hands covered with it : mother. 'Would .have to corhe to the rescue -with hot' water. The hardship of files and the Continuous battle against them has been cut doWn a - great deal. Fly spray -and gadgets of various kinds havebeen, intro- duced of -late years to 'combat the menace of houseflies. Think how locky you are to live in a clay and age when such inventions- are used iTritineff'&11dVrTilreafiVili liked to battle the -dies with such primitive Weapons as we were forced to use a few years ago. receiVed Autilintl' toga, bobby •Itannii won AM prize tor the intgeht ninon* thOucY Meted; ti.4My Munn ,Waa setend and !Beth': Anstay was third. Thi. terninittec of the .Vvoinoff3 Iirotitoto; rearquisible or .the., artatigefilents.; AMIWPION2-1tE4UIREW- '(Vancouver ;Province)* • • -,...tanada still -has plenty of oppor- tunities for the young fellow alert enOugb. to find them or make them. But they will' not be found or made, by the youth whose great a.mbitieh at twenty iS to get an. old -age petvion at sixty-five, A :GbODIXAM'PLE '( Win dgcnoSto r , Action of the (litisWit Police Coin- Missibil, in suspendinga :constable who. shin and Wounded a seventeen- year -old boy suspectes1 of a minor triple, might well serve as an ex- ainpie to other connidssiona. the constable now has resigned from the ferce; though 'there were some factors additional to the ,Shoothig. Policemen are armed,..and should lie: -TheY Arined for "their. own defence. and toenabie them to are not armed" to endanger the'llveS of persons suspected of small crimes artd-perliaps-th6se-ofintiocent-ty.,- staiideri are. running to eacape arrest-. Xt 'should not be the priidiege Of any policeman to arrest, judge and punish eulptit--especially when this is dime on the spur ,of the *MOW. and by,' ;revolver. bullets. There are- caseg, when a known triminat dangerous to pnbile safety 13 involved, .Wheti shooting is justp hed. hag 'not been justified In "some instances in Ontario:the past 1. Benjamin . Franklin introduced the broom So America; BINDER,. T'W.INE • FOREVER (The printed •k4Word) •The thistle, shamrock, rose and '1F-1—eit.ff-foreVerp Thia Was one a the great songs of our childhood. It had every- thing.. goise. • Community effort in 'making the noise. Patriotism. Nice prickly.- weeds • The. Irish Flowers. Trees, or at least a leaf, tlie loud yelling of:this song -Wag pleas -- Mit and satisfying because it was an against • the_ eardrtims that was permitted and 'even en- couraged • We felt that it was bad to Yell like .that when we were 41qt allowed to Yellat other times, so w'e-uspected the adults were mak- ing itt mistake.: We took advantage of it, expecting every moment to ,he told to hush up. What pleased us Most of' all, how- ,A1101/1q 1104, '1940,. • I). 13: E IN1), • C apd his orchestra • NtER MAL)) OF i011$ Club fond filr New Exeter Dos to4 'MHO NDAY4UG, EIL IVIcKAY and .his Orchestra YEATIAES MONICA TURNER --Vocalist , DON HARDING--of "The Don„.Harding Radio Show" F.RANK IVIONAGHAN—OBC Pianist MARION 1VIcKAY--OFPL Radio Artist A "LEAD THE' BAND" COTES.. DRAW FOR PgDIGREED BLACK COCKER SPANIEL, 8weeks Ad, from the Boug Kennels, London ° All Artists offering their services free. SIJPi'OR,T THIS CONCERT—HELP YOUR DISTRICT! YOU will benefit! PIXASZ oiler your supOrt in DOLLARSt—not a , ' , . ' • ever, was the twine...How had it ..got.into.the.. _Ong" often . ilizzled 'about this. %Weeds like -the thIstle_ could '; nnder,AtAna,, often thought of the Canada thistle, of course. We 'liked weeds. •And, we liked the thistle because it was good for scaring girls with by brandishing it at them, . or for _putting down inside the sheets of Of doing it, wondering how far •he would' jump. The shamrock and rose were leers you could expect soft matter like that in a song and we • tole ated it as the accepted r. thing, poetic and noble. • .4 iffc.rpnt T..hat meant binder twine-,--naturally:-You used it every' day, in all kindgi of activities from mending a school bag to tying up your little •sister, for -roasting over a camp fire: Adults' used it fOr work in the harvest fields. Binder tWine was well known. Everybody had some In his pockets or holding up ' his braces or for.. a shoe lice or to tie the' neck �f • the bag that held: such treasures of glass or a door knob. Yet binder twine getting itSelf into a sOug-thot- was PermlnektO - be yelled! This was an, aroving ,matter, It _saggested that th9 *G9tn,- Ing•n6it things and ereattitresi ''ii oneself, might attain. promineq.ee with luck, noise and the inatten, tion of adolts; , We have had through the years.a. kindred feeling for binder twine, a ,,parlism,senktment_The_tlantigt, s ThirdettdaelftrE-Wititia pull leaf 'forever. .e.hof life were, so simple as that -If one could. blunder along forever with. such mixed-up conceptions into.the bread meadows of happiness! • ••••.••••••••••41. Of :interest •toThabiet - :- foot tropical plant grown in :the West :Indies and other Niarni :countries. It is sometinteS called • the "era" plant. .Its roots fotro the basic ingredient for pacifying, nutritional arrowroot' biscuit If you 'Van keep from being envious and jealous .of your fellow': man, You are approaching the .out- as .bits colored' skirts of civilization. IN11111111111111111111111011. -couple Of ' :Alt tnettibere of ail pqice Drees, should be schooled: in wh,q1D-the Ilse .tot a gun IS $iistIfed, 4nvwho-dii* regard public p011ey bir 'risking the of ti suspeet who maY-be gilty et stealing :only it, tottedo.11arst,rand *ho -even May not be beinuilsitedv the *aye its .abst,*(otiler .oltlk(oti would be Who thus teat.' the 4w luto 1i1 .OWn hand& n.01i4 'AtiPtibrt �'the public.' hi, Main, tttlaing'lttw and order., .pttt this C .• ' . • support. Is not unconditional, and should tint eitond to timpegsstity or reekleSs risking or taking of,lives. 'Iii*kaiiitoba, n i94/, blter 23,00 antes of land *ere devoted to, the eomnierciat.growing of sunflowers. Oil from itif seedEt ranks close fo olive oil. In' texttire-and color ; the rest. of the plantlift many in- diistrial applications. The 'Canadian Fisher, .sothetimes alietl the` Pennant Or the Cat, is a ftivbeitring member of the votiset family, And Is Vie iarge4 of the Xorth American Martens, rot, its size„13 1.8 tht5 aVirlttOgt and Most deadirof our furbearerki. I raoltraNgougAnciit ON ‘.4sk...catti, QIFETILIZER' .UONC'ENTItATE, COME IN OR ,hALL TODAY! I • ' AL .,Try so• WHEAT.. AND SMALL GRAIN GROWERS -‘14.ACHURS" LIQUID FERTILIZER .CO.NCENTRATE.. year Last year sect rat wheat farmers treated. seed *heat with ,"NA-CHURS" LIQUID APERTILIZER (CONCENTRATE and apparently had good results. r this purpose' is still the experimental stage MO we Using a/TA=M13118" Liquid Fe er Concentrate tbelieire, you should try it.' l'relim4nary. tests inditate 'a qtt cker start which may aid in earlier maturity and beeter J • The cost is very little, and if it will increase your wheat yield, it is too good .to pass. up. Many enthusiastic growers have written stout the rpm results obtained with "NA-CHIJRS." " „. ASK„US TODAY ABOUT THE ONE GALLON TEST , One gallon, of '`NA,,C1:-IURS" will treat 8-10 bushels of seed grain at a cost of approxiniate- lx $1.00' to $1.25 per-acte. Enjoy these advantagese.,. OCO4PLETELY SAFE.240 BURNING, (DEASY TO APPLY..NOSULKY WEIGHTS ECOISTO OiVAST ••• coLow attAJOIGIES" GOES • GUM GEM oNTAni0 onAltio • '!;"