Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Goderich Signal-Star, 1951-04-26, Page 2• •PAORI TWO T.441't (Slibtrair'et Ofoitat-*tar HURON COUNTYFOREMOST wEEKLy Published by Signal -Star. Limited . . BilbseriptloRates-4nada and Great Britain, $2.59 a year:, to United 4 States, $3.00. • , ,.. Aidvertislng Rates on request. Authprized as second-class mail, Post . , Qtlice Departnient, Ottawa. 'Telephone, 71. . _ -- Member a Canadian Weekly Newspapers A.ssociatidu - 4 Weekly Circulation Over 2000. W. II. RQB•RRTSON . OHO. L. aLLIS . .. APRIL 29t11, 1951 0 NEW' INDVSTRIAL ERA CANADA :When the Imperial Leduc, the largest tanker ever built in Canada, arrived at Sarnia the other day with a cargO.of Alberta erude oil,'itStandard praise Of a former Liberal opened..a new era in this country!.. Finance Minister,' Mr. Robb, who Instead' of -depending as we have twenty-five years'ago brought down in. the past 'on. gasoline and other a.. hudget announcing ° slashes in ins •ell product* which originated in Cope •tax and other Lek reductions.. the.- United States, :Canadians will iht dollars to doughnuts that hack. In the pisscess thousands of Chinese are losiug their lives for the benefit of Russia. The Stratford Beal:on-Herald quotes 'from The St: Catharines THE GODER1011 SIGNALISTAR ° The Country Mouse- an Conservatio*n ISear. 1. riends,-One of the moSt Jives. Groat. industrial. Concerns pertinent toolof 'the day is surely w're„ not 'inst ble i factories, but , conservation. I seem to be heaxing the "groutt"had all been land- : . seeped. • AgricultUraL seltools and abont it at eery turn -or 1111:t•Ybe I: stations had been' established. servation maps of Manchuria had. I am lust ptting conservation -con, golous. '11insitrd two tilliss on the, 'beea made with., three- to live -year subject at the 0.E.A., none to the 'objectives.'4 Dr. McConkey ',thinks raral teas ers anti the ether to the we Steed something of the kind in nusfiectors and supervisors; • This Canada. last week, heard one instalment 1, Nearly all :the klastern• emtntries of a radio d•auta about Coliservatron need plans of this kind. P.A.L.Q. on the naQrttzg hool broadvasts, can do a --goodsjob by introdassmes, and titere JIiav. been .articles Westeisi techniquea and increasillg n.ewspapI and magazines on con-; the yields of cotton, corns wheat, tit,rvat. 'NVhen you realtSe what " and 'other- crops. Soil-buildloss is has happenect in countrliss where , one of the greates • nett s. farmers and others have not4prac- 1 Womb° Plan is a•great factor also. Used_ preper conservittiontneasures,. India is another eountry with it snakes you thankful that We are , hungry soil, and a great need. for •getting linsys before it is too late. good soil Practices. Iran and Iraq Or, at Wags, 1 hope we are. are now -creeping' deserts because -One talk 1 heard was by Dr. Me- ' the forest$. were all rut from this Cotikey, who has had -:Wide es- watersheds of the Tigris iind Terience in consOwation. Ivork, in Euphrates-. In Paletstine the Vanadit, China" and elsewhere... He:tit-brews' are slowly •--winning 'the brglin by bowing a National. Film Soil hatac to productivity. In Greece, Board film on China and the food the orips have been -very sum11,-but sionaion these part or ihe,fandue good ,use of Kneen manure as ii- noW oPerate their -motor cars on both The Beacon -Herald and, The mnditions• that exist in .China W. ereased he yield by sixty pi cent. Standard opposed re-election of Mr. dee • to improper farming. But 1' hi - a few 'years. North Africa, shall describe some -a the things which was the granary Of the an - I remember about the Ohm -There. eient worlds is now 'in .ft desert or was a vast sWeep of utterly- denuded near -desert condition. . The' whole hills, completely - useless -for agri- picture' was grins In the .25,000 Canadian gasoline, and oil relined at 'arnia will be used in thousands of Canadian Industries. It * worthy •of. note that ImPerial Robb and his party at the time.- ' The Labor Geverinne. nt of Great '--bgalr---its---seltrch-lor-ott-,---111- -has---fallen---on--eyil.--thw.s„ -einssseer.....Thsosestss„shli d„.heesssent_ miles around' the world, there ' is years..ago„ and .was only after lost a 6tvoug pillar by the death nntil th,ere Was nothing left that, and- much of it is being destroyed It took h Western Cahada .more than' thirty ISrinte Minister Attlee is in; has and then the -top soil washed away ieuls a thin veneer • or-T6rtile sat , t ousat. s of svould support; . plant life -the ter- , every year. 133 dry wells had been drilled. that -of Ernesst Bevin, and now three - Ministers, including Ani_urin. Bevan, a leader.. in the ranks of 'Labor, haye resigned, froth the Caliinet•in oil, Was fognd 'in paying quantity. Th.e building of the pipeline from Aperta 'to the head ,of the Lakes ,and the construction of two great tankers, of which Imperial Leduc is one, are features of the gigantic enterprise which means so much to. Canada and upon the sUccess of which Iniperial Oil is reeiving widesPread congratulations. .EDUOATIONAL. ,TRENDS • ' The ..Finaneial.'Post, referring to the "costly trimmings"' of Our pre- -sent edtiCationtil' system, asks, "Do get-f.ull sable?" andgoes on :to say:. * • "Fifty years ago, or even. twenty- five, .there Was very little of this girt- of thing even in the fanciest of .big city schools and none 'at' ail *in. the towns -and villages. Build-, . illgS-wese small. and ,plain' but, So. were, the local ,tax bills. Yet the students who graduated- from these schools ,were tertainlY • .w'ell educated as those we are turning -out today. And -they probably knew -just tustnueli isheut sewing, cooking, and carpentry beeause they were -Statights these things, at home.• by their :parents * and t . n� eXpenSe • ta the -taxpayer." n°21.1e 'Post, believes there ,ssiciergiseement With • .ehis, 'blunt• ss..stem'ee):",of The Weyburn (Sask.), •.10view : • • "This' tendeney • to -crowd . school. life with , domestic or , practieal graining cannot but ts.ke away from the .time for studies 'devoted to the, eleMents ry prineiples of school. life. It • ';;s questionable wnether •it is- of seal ftettefit to the pupils them- . waives. •"It frequently comes to. ons •ssietiee that young people. seek- - .tag, jobs have not the prop6r knowledge of the fundamentals --v.c1114,-,e„--Auttch-inore-1-inve-r-tnnt, • s - than isaraing how to entertain *. in. •finely -appointed- ',drawing . rooms, or handling. modern ap- . pliancess ,We hart youths coins , int b' our osVis Office who •san: '110.t spell' even. commonplace , - -wards .and• tlb ,not have the •foggiest• .notion of where to: place .,a,e(?mma.ey an apostrophe. Ati the things that 'students are tatight these days. may be ' very- title, but it Is. Very doubt- , • .ful. whether 'they should be taught them .at the expense of . . the taxpayer." "Lt's shout time," The Financial Post says; ,"ste sat ' hack and tocik • a' god hard. Wok at s the business Of' education S 'Costs have doubled and 'tripled in the last. twsnty years and, they Will -certainly double' and triple again in the next twenty unless , we deeide definitely • thst there ts'a It is true that 'Most of our schools; and equipment are far better than those ,of, a gener- ation ago but •it - is doubtful 'indeed ' whether there has ,been a similar ,improsetneut in. the amount of real • education' our piing - people- res • •"• s This okinnicut is reproduced here, not with prejudice to any local oct4Catiolial. undertakingGoderich and.. Huron county have to keep, Atiegion.whetherspresent ,trends are -stilogether in • the right direction -2 • • - Whether- 'emphasis, ke not being , -pleaded .ett relatively unixiipertant, int•edueation: • '• it-nrul me i -ear s ta, develop the top soil which 'esti , . think. of some of the'.high is. wash,ed away in one season. our own .Huron comity ands what !According to the speaker. there are mayshappen to then in sisfew years. 14).,000,000,000-7 people in the world • •• - ' CI irtil pro: and only 4,000,000,000- acres • of ins 14:s . 1 disagreement with the Government's f t cotton arable land. UMW the people Of rearuntinent polidy. With' its_ slim majority in the 'louse of Commons, , it can hardly liold out amyl' longer, ahd -a new election may be looked _for in, the nein 'fixture, (From Stratford Beacon-lierald's Fifty ears Ago Golitinu) Thomas Ws Belt, *Baylield road, Goderich ..townshin, pas made *a snuecess of hog raising. 'He now has a revenue of,$,500 pet year from this source, The saner 'day he Marketed -eight seven -min Yorkshire pigs .which brought0him the neat sum: of .$9L25: s, • • CREATURE COMFORT (?). IN : BRITAIN (Orillia Packet and; Times) A leading American jOUrnal per-. Petra% this: ,"The brave (Aul- erican) youth in 'Corea are putting to „shame those thoughtless. brethren in Britain -and France and eyen in .Americit •who begrudge the del - tars and peunds they mass now forego, who worship the false goas of creature' comfort." And thiSto the British; Whp,have-patiently eu- dured being the worst-fed'hation in Europe' autisduring the past winter have lived in cold infuses, in Order to provide their: share' o'f the cost of Wilding, up- a. 'defence against .Communism, and who have been spending a larger 'percentage , of their national Income: on arniament than were , the Aniericaes; iti comparative luxury and extravags. Imes,. -10-And new the British are grimly but deliberately -facing' a redtiction in their standard of •liss ing, in order to meet •the huge eost of a new i•earmament pregram, P,V1IENCI WORKS MMA -CLE (Gollingwi)od. Enterprise -Bulletin) The saving of the life of two- - yearsold-E-wartint-pissu -of ,Oras ville has been heralded far and .wide tis miraculous by the medical ProfesScon and' other •interested agencies. HWit is little body .s. dis- covered after . a ,half-hotir's iI1 icy water, and ,after 'four hours. of gruelling effort and. the aPPlication of every eonceivalile means the spark of life was • re d - Nixe' and .the, 'little lad was al- lowed •t to return home' with his parents before the evening Wits.over. Artificial, respiration , was .applied for nearly Iwo hours by Dr. W. E. :11endersoir and his three nursing assiStants Orangehlle. In 'ad- dition to massage, adrenaiin, ,fibt water nbottles and en •inhalator, patienee is credited as being it major hetet' in bringing theswe.e lad back. seornmeneing.'editorially, The Tor - oat° Globe and Mall :Said: "This is a ,case that Should be closely studied by every' doctor,, nurse, policeman, fireman, lifeguard by eVerlone who may eves be called. upon fo treat someone apParently 'drowned or apparently electrocuteds They should ' note how 'long artificial respiration . was applied.' 7 Not -for half:an-hour, not for one bonr, hut -for nearly two 1100112. • They should also:note hew . long the bey was in the water. It hn as been said jin after ifs -V. -Minutes' 'immersion there is no hope. •'The. ,OrangeVille • vase proves otherwise." • . SELLING OUR BIRTHRIGHT - abit_Rural Scene) • uce lugs ss and riee. Now -they are desolate. • the world are hungry- and many are - The aneient methods of farming ' starving. . could net cope" with the problein of 1 Soil -building is the major pro - erosion. Thea'. there were pictures blem today: European soil is Much et the river which- we- used to call '-richer today- than a few 'eentnries China's tiorrow„ Every,...,ye:ir there ago. In the ififteenth century the were terrible floods which' were the"' Was being' depletea. - Then crop the flidirect panse many more, TTifirn-d-H-Trif-retirgWit toWnWre. because the rich top soil was carried 1 was vast improvement: We often !think we have great •yields in Call- away by the flood. waters. Rigbt adis-but Britain has a higher "yield now, it is estimated that -there-are than we have.. The forestry prae- 80,000,000'people starving in China, Many -starving by inches. They ,eat tices' of .Gernsany .and of scatdin., the'food 'they can find, then grass evils are the beet ins„ the world. and leaves and any vegetation, and:'-Tifrugal French make use of thette. then the soil, itself -s -anything to tUM roots and tiny •twigs, where', just- barn them UP. There is ease the gnawing hunger. • -Seine. of ,we , too much waste in Can:ides As all them are getting food from North Auteriea, but .11 is sully St drop in good farmers know, crop rotation the buelset of the immense need, and live_stock spell better farming and eVerywhere. In Ayrshire, There are thousands' of hunEry, hore Dr; ll(•('enkey saw. oat -yields of 100 Clilint diSplaced7 children wandering over ' Wesare helpingcare for bushels 'to the acre and 40 poundsi , them with food, .clothing, medics). ;.to the .bushel. -Then eante the sad ' supplies; • etc. There ire relief commentary - on -• -our Cainadian 'kitchens where they are fed. Many iniethods. Sailing •up the St. Law men in China.are paid with bags of reuse, he. saw some of the poerest, wheat.' or. flour rather than money, stropsin. his traeels his first ims because of the .. terrific • inflation. pression on his retureto his native. land . The •.1110Vie,' shewed shiploads of . . grain and dour a rriving and • then • we have overcut thetimber in .Eastern.' America, floods; are up, tsoi %1N -V a y . inssruck cou veys to the tables are down, dessleation south and camel convoys to the '1;Nlaii. nerth.- setting in: the whole :balance , Many of '4 he displaced people arowa§ upset -1)y the, pioneers -itt their '• , s living thhasteto get landta. farm. OfiC e' most. crude and prim.; .i.tive cave homes. rj The Bethune rainfnil eulUes hiheavy deluges Peaee Hospital is helping in the rather than the misty showers of countries,. Which ziggrava tes relief Work, but food, drugs and the danger- of erosion. -We grow a supplies {If all kinds are 's6 scarce that it eau enlys tench thessiringe'.4101 Pereentage of lilled:crop, which of the -need. There are for res".1more erosion: than from4 grass gerop.S. There IS much • Wind the children and schools where the 1 erosion in the prairies, Which were scars of war are• being healed.' remembers • ie ,sniaiL, protected by a thick mass of root °fpicture of. :fibres in the days before' grain children playing in a rhythm band just like, ear favered -,Ganadidh ' 'growing in ttIQ \\."0:4. . We inu-st re - get:: turn -to more grass and legume children. The Older -people are EDITORIAL N'YTES Amyway, we are getting variety In our. vgiAtht.r. 'Some days it rains karder than others. * It los been disclosed that Can - $20,000,000, .autliorities ;icor ,financial contrilm. u ure with some UL (11(1 old coma- 4adittu Indlaits have local .responsibilities. op a- 30,000 -acre farm. Ontario's , the banik, drawing five per cent. wit' et: e m,eapts forest ' cover •Sbott 140 be twenty.ilee tries AS grim examples of %%bat will Altered?' "Lo, the poor Indian!" such graantsiliVialilds tts activities per cent. .of the land to maintain a 10eS 4.11.1,( on,-tcim polies. RP forestation,. must ,go up':f.wenty-,five Reereation depends on all Ong more kreedoin too, and there 'were some 'pictonres of an election liAL.,,y_Litinballet.:-Diiring_tht per_ cent. te restore sytt,ter ss and ie)itth;rs' --town=parks ass -well -a- : The speaite:i recommended ihiil wilderness: area's near urban muni- cipalities which are new. being neglected or ignored., Both' urban and rural people need -them. . For ---the application: of all this talk about ,conservation, the speaker advised more teaching in schools- -and .I„te was. ,spe4ing, -te the in- spectors and supervisors of train- ing., Basicittlyv"-conservatihn teach', ing •is an outdoor activity. In- doors, . there are many '-bulletins, hPREATEST STQRY EVER-TOI.DI 4. KROGER BABB and J. S. •POSSEY masEN:r, 'se wort Story ADULTS, 5R0, including tax, ,ORILDEEN, 2 .A.II Perrormanees .77511TIFED APRIL 30, MAY and: 2 "•Two Shows Daily: -7.30 and 9.30 p.m. Mainee Wednesday Only, at 2.30 p.m. • Goderich tices mak be Changed both to bene...(, • ithe. laud and as a - SOUrce" sreevntie,.. as L.well. as providing; re- creation, helping. - in 'flood Scontriirf• raising the. water level and Moves- ing,' wild' life.' • Floods- are spec- • tacular and we are 'aisare of the damage they do. Dams will helP 111 flUed control but reforestation Will provide a million' little dams.,; Wild life. will ',return to ,properly adjusted country and can be en- joyed if ttsed for business or plea- sure; but of course, it must not be allowed ,to interfere .with, Woes the ,great dyke (at the Yellow , 'a aa nee. m a • s 1st s River was- • destroyed ,,sy tve, ate , not going 'up -in spite -of im- Provements,. and fertility of the sell Japanese. sit is being rebuilt by the most' primitive Methods iniagin- has .thoPPed... , Fanners. ningt plow in more sWeet clover and minerals able. What China • lacks in mech-. unhaL deVelopment she. ma icreS up 11(12(10111g tO 'SOW tests. ' More which hold both top •solls in teeming manpower% sand• ail- the gras.ses buiiaing was being .done, by .hals. and moiSturenius.t be grown. There must tuore care In the, handling naked and, half -starving euolies. But , ba ray:1rd manure. •Gtiod farm - t ll'ey- watch the few Western ' ma- ' 4.1f to mg.- means goed conservation and, chips aN•ailable and are learning basic needs are good- farming use them: • 'When you' See 'picture.s two . • good foiesti.3.. One-third of magazines' and. new book.s available, likss that' ones yen begin to realize Had wits sos many Chinese sias ens.; the farina need draitung. l'Ne need • d • but he suggested that the *Depart- ment .Should Sissup a Conservation Manual,- 'with lets of7eolored, pic- tnres :something, peculiar to 'On- tarie,! net imported from the United States. Rural schools, have a great advantage the. teaihing„apd .study of ,conservatibn, because they-• can' see the need rrglirbefore: them all FOUR, ...FOLD PROTECTPi • . .• • • • • • 000 •oo • •00000 '• • 41 • • • • • • • • it pugs a monthly income to your A monthly. income' to you in the , are eomplete sod surveys. (Sent erosion braced 'Conpuuni§tn. ,- They is evidenced by thin •crops' Onsthe' waking up to the contrast betOeen Contour cultivation, ter','• the living -.standards of. China and those: of the West, andwhen the' racing and strip eropping Jong Lse.:_slopes *are needed.:. :.Cover .creps 'Communist propagandists Prom she.: stich a.s winter rye should *be -used theta -better things they. fail fer are . never on hilly. laird, and there -shetild be PronsiSes---even,..V ..they f d - . sgood •rotations. _ Flood 'control, re• ...., forestation and grass cover should is s ihe time, eis else sev conservation 'After the Jilin Dr. McConke3sgave Use of -in the whole river his address on "Soil Building and Ia..'" ma(1e basin,. not just In isolated places. should be taken •out to the cottntry in action. (lIty and town ch 116en •ConServation,"' In 'North Anierica. $1 spent in that way is wOrth $100 tn dams. There must be • more and in ,buses -and taught there -n• full there has been a savage and rapid exPloitation of forest, ranges and -.acres more edUcation along all the lines -day . in the 0 cotintry so . they cass, ex - sell Already 100,000,090 of ' , conservatoin - in. schools, perience trees and Soil. Ile sug- whole mental attitude must buses to ta-ke, them all arennd, the ge.sted a ''`conservation: trail," with have been lost. . Dr. McConkey had ' taken a trip around the world, a'archea, radio and press. Our visiting many countries on the way, from the •get-rich-quiek espailltriogne laid' be based his- talk on his ob- idea to that of preservation of our properly pttii_olpvv"itnog4witlidielqp.Ws7. dpalortkss,,coeitteto.,iiraeidt Nervations. Mitch of the, trip Was mitural -.resources-. labelled, •and supervised. by 'air, and ' that ninst be a •wohder- tile Soil, the forests and all wild nnd---4.'"h4l'e-- of 'There- ghOultrbe It -bulletin describ- life. If We provide a good natural „ Ing the trail. Many children who ful. way to see thes-eountry and just had been on this field. trip would, what is :happen4ng. die crossed. the habitat, ' wi.10 life will take card take their parents later and. se it Pacific and was greatly impressed of :of itself, and in that way recreation 1)3,7 the well balaneed economy would become an adult education ifieldS:.and trees; in Japan. That will become mote enjoyable. Nature SOO and nature walks wilt shelp project .also. One more thing was very rough country is well wooded . about cOnservationf epplied to a In this education: "Take eare of rivers -the wise us'e of all, natural, TRire for, all tinie„ MY head is simply whirling with conservation 'information, and you are probably ,:bored, but it appiles to all of us, either directly .or in-. .dtrectlp, and it' bliooves :us to get troy, so that our fair eonntry,, or province or county or tOwnship or fatm, will not hecOme like the bare sterile hills of China or the 0_494 of North Africa; • but rather that we may take rt lead in, conservation practIces and help inc., these other countries so that the desert shall rejoice and blossom' like the rose! • Sincerely, • UNTRY,; MOW4.4}1. Toronto. both urban and, rti 01, should think During the Japanese- ii-ef-tslireog:nar nr;oiwduo:ur. rs:oellai-n.iStitt;irl-:.etv•kvneeitic:parea twice before asking for, or: accept- ktupation M:anchuria, the same.'" ^ou' -a' lific • Ing. • flnauelh I assistance ;Fein' the Ontoills- _ . had been carried Mit, so that Government. , , Such, assistance create'4 In' the public mind tbe impression of some- thing for nothing, rind's- responsible (onset va ion consciousness and. law 'fa•rming .practites ttere are YY1ow Sea, change our behavior toward nattire, greatly improved.. Tste on the other hand, ,is with.' not only among gaits but. among the children. Field trip.s and „prac- the soil of 'C:hiria. And: at that Lot the spectaele of .'emadidates for: Point Dr. McOonkey, said that in. t ee projects o all kinds ,are en. cOuraged. Let the children hold ti. tam appealing for votes IkV •tiratois- 'spring time Lake Ontario shows Ing to secure 'bigger and 'heifer ,mud from 'the . Mintier RiVer for aildful of ,soil while 7:they "near Fronts 4.'roin the • Government., , three miles out. _ As one gees west where it pante from and the miracle In China, toWard Tibet; ft land 'of its production' and what it needs; .. le rises higher and higher' and the-4et them see eroded fields,,piles of ' 'rivers begin there. ' 'Again he told silt, gullies, and thin; ' crops, and of •the Yellow River, which''carries then teach.tbem ,about cOntrol' men - enough top soil every •year to build sures.. Paint the picture of the Nothrng ca,n undermine t u r syStein 'Of loeal self-gpvernment so quickly or so coinpletely as this practice of looking to the central happen . ig We do not ehangd our of using the ltInd. balante and preVent °this waYs 1 * *• around theln. antl soon finds that PrOt'r The other $peaker 'I heard was ' Lady Astor has got into trouble from one of the Provincial deparl. : for sayiag khat gtalin looks like molts. He made untnY of , the •,. „, points that ,Dr. AIeConkev otiesse 1 it ScOtAthan. She sheuldn't be .pay•- ,. . though he went at it ill a different Sng eonapi02.telIte to World ptetny way. 'Conservation to ' the farmer often mean41)1antink trees on waste 1. it, 'Thus pOwer illsses froM the locatj'bqatuse' of tho'60ctreltY of wood and • .1 It can't get along withoat Then it discovers,. that he who P1274 the piper- alSO ealls the tune. The goVernment attaelies. eond I tions to its grants,,and is in an exeellent position to enforce its conditions. same waste and'erosion.• China has not used s�H-building drops. There are too many people, they have not returned enough organic matter to the .soil, and molt "of the crop residue • has been 'used for fuel, dependents 'if you die before reaching event of yOur total disability through sick - ,retirement. „• ness or accident. This monthly income is doubled. if 'cou meet with death .by. -A-monthly income .to you "'for • ao-aident. • • 7- -at-retireraent. • Ask for our pa.mphlet "Four -Fold Protection .Provicles". It interest you. ihnbre you insure - Consult Box 810 Con ederatiort e H a a. II OFFICi Association" . *. 0 'KEN GILLIS, Representative s Phone 1244R• • • dOderich, •Ont. 11.111111111•1•1111111111•11111111•1111. •r0.1,1•••• o o 1 •• • • • , , On and after ..1.st, 1931 • Every Seaman* employed, on Canadian Ships operating on THE GREAT LAKES AND CONNECTING WATERS** musf carry a SEANICAVN ;CARD bearing a Photograph and Finger -prints. land,' to the naturalist it meang • todi-gererusaeue 6 central Authorities. The, cot4, The IXTUlation IS densehi 'retaining natural beattty, to the _ .00010 trt•pasr, kvaiss___,.esss 119 longer 1110 Valley,s; TWo-thIrds of . 411,6 (Imes needed to provide defenee Muster in own';'honte. 11115 1 111110 whleh WaS once forested, NP‘irtgiumi: 11 pregervilTibh Of • •101: tittitadil lit the threittelling WOrld. 4dmitle sttbservient to outsidems• 11.4 noW eroded hills. It Wpii certain.. AirelitriS" 'and woodS, and to th urbanite wh* •' stiffer,s from 1100a6 •Gt(verainerisi iy al fearful warning to anyone who it, ineahs a .iesietiing of .0004 iterhtt.tpol the MinisterS at shIo'ulklaewlb"e'r:h4)tivrivilt"lattlb , enterin* thinas of ti OttS,WiS, ottrsold Voct 011t Of into toritraet t s a would vat the oult agli" d ura cowl ry.- anelittrai angerS, •So It can' be classed ea Their {WA .00tkeittil Yederai 'authorities 'in position great agrieulturat reghnt novv, Stip. iLinint.d.:ipV0a:tearno: t 1144)anrdesatou Wthieldo'Lifi wttit 44,61 ,ito,.est Vhek 48 sane4040e0,009.tteres The SA altos 1 I otoply4fintinclai oressiito to tttom, , porting 13,7,000,000 /*nolo on and Ilecreation• . thee°, water TS * are interrelated amt cannot be v. flIers !rho 001800,,, goeS )1- r „port a the •pid rote that expoeted 4101,0 tCfr, 'Alt in its present railWayS, industries and health ser4' abatIt' i4611 r"-6tiees' rol'f"-gt Prite' 31',N. °tutees, they #rit Pushed tAxcs. • separated, t I need Sill 11P 11141* aligt Oft•dr 1.1 11 '1)Y. €116 everic *Ovorxiiiient to ealleet its own thriving ondition. they had bullt : ST. HELENS ST. MILFINS, April, 23. -Mr, ind Mrs. Callum Catneron and Carol, of Illetroit, .were week -end visiton4 with Mr. and Mrs. SOU Cameron.: Miss Doris Taylor of London and Mr. Murray Taylor lof Winghmn Were twine torthev week--entl. Mr. Bill lt,facrherson has reported , for daytron the steamship Boyaltoit sailing from Buffalo. „ Mr. atid Mrs. Stanley Todd- and .Andrew, of ....lignitotultille, were misitors for the,,week:end with .Mr. D. Todd. Services In • the :United Church Wilt "6001trie1lee. neXtp &Ind:1y at 11 a;in.f.dityliglit.Saving time, • • All Great Lakes Seamen should apply to:the nearest office of the. 'NATIONAL EMPLOYMENT SERVICE for 'an Ifiterim Card, bringing three copies of a 4u11 -face photograph 231," by 1.'S' in size, , 4, Interim Cards vvill be effective until July 31st next, *after which Regular Car& will bc required, *A "Seaman", as defined In the Regulations, "meana 21Tierson employed In any capacity on board a ship and include* the Muter 9121 ship", :OP "Otani Lakes", as.dailned in Ow Regulations, "means Lakes Ontarioi Vria, Huron, including Georgian Bay,. Michigan and Superior and their • connecting wateis and Included the ^: St, Lawrende Riveri as tar east 2121 11(21 , tiewor exit of the Lithine Canal and Ont Atietorhi Bridge at NtotiirOar0 'ORTHER DETAILS WILL BE -SUPPLIED *AT, NATIONAL EMPLOYMENT' SERVICE. OFFICES . These Cards are required by.the provisions of the GREAT LAKI6‘'SIAMAN'S SECURITY, :REGULATION1 10:C0.1431? cif March 22, 1951 4 Med. elder the 4mergancy powort Ad. Pubhshd Under The Authority of The Minister' of ta biour for Canada • . IA. Ali item 444di 4414 iamb mar ari4 *ON • 0,,,;00 4041i W.** 101 Ryer owia ilia • .4; al* 164