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The Goderich Signal-Star, 1946-08-15, Page 2
*PACIII TWO 60?teriril igttut-*tar Published by S ;nal. -Stir Pre' 3, I4imite=li WitaWnriptflozv Bates—Canada and Oreat Britain, $2.001 to States, $2.n. Advertising Rates on request. Authorized as second-elass Depart naent, Ottawa. Telephone 71 T1II'IIt iDAY, AUGUST lbtll, inn; TromaaL NOTES A dlburtage of nails is slowing con TRU GOBERI011SIG u e 9 - Visit Cheers Canadians P -STAR year; to United mail, Post &liee but many would 1ikt undertakiug next year. • v. o •o„ Persons who write from :t distance •structaott, and this 1s one .Lase where protesting against elle t'Te'l'ilUn of a a hairpin s'.1 t du: new court house ins Gutlerie'it to reiilace ° ' the present ' \'hich• they' re, The summer is waning and the member with Such fondness should .shadow of September aatit school falls bear in Mind that they court house across the youngste':s• carefree dues not belong to this tow • tvtl. It is ra re -4' holidays. the prtperty of the County of Huron, and tete County 4'utitici1 has decided ,ow they . are shipping, purebred that it is out of .late and is• willing cattle from Canada .to .south America to A„te the money to erect a larger by airplane. Not quite as high flying. ;cud modern building. The represent - of course, as the cow that jtuul,etl atiyOs Of the town 011 the County -over the moon. Council' have voted against the,pro- v, * * pusai on the ground of economy, but - A newspaper writer drakes a lung the majority rules. Aftx:r all, we defence of -the "funnies," which he says must remember that buildings do not bring laug t f.'r into a saddened wurlil. ' last for t`N er, and the younger :and %Ve like "funnies," tun --the ditliculty succeeding generations may become as is That so few of them -are really funny.' 9r.c:ttly attachcd•to tile new court house . O .. ° ° as the present generation 'is to the 'With larger supplies of sugar cowing • ,,ia use. to hand the- Prices and Trade Board; is allowing a slight increase in sugar ;caskatehewatl Liberhls have chosen quotas. The increase„ may not make a new Provincial leader, in the person any great difference, bud" 'it is a wel- of \ti alter"A. Tucker, who now sits come sign that normal conditions are is the Federal House as the repre- returning, with hope for a sweet bye sentative of a Saskatchewan riding. • and bye. The present C.C.F. Government+ of 0 0 ° . I Saskatchewan was elected in 1944 and The death of H. G. Wells, announced if one belongs to the C.C.F. party he this week, removes one of the great is ,:enthusiastic over its achievements figures of present-day literature. How in its two years of office. If one cloehn't see •such an .Highlight of the official openi,ng of the Canadian: wing of the Plastic Surgery' l'entre.,,at East '"G. rinstead, Slit:sex:England, was the Qu'issn's1 visit to the'lze•difution. HER MA:IF:STY. with her. well- known charm and interest, chatte'd with many of the men undergoing plast le treatments. Here 'she is s howl' -talking. to an - unidentiffed patient from Canada. WHEN THE DOLLAR WAS REAL MONEY „ (yort Arthur News -Chronicle) The Orillia Packet and Times delves into history tu republish some advertis- A PRAYER Give us, Lora, a bit of sun, Give us all, in the struggle and splutter, Our daily Inisad and it bit o butter; ing appearing in the weekly papers Of' Give us health, our keep to nutke, that town seventy -the years ago. One _ -kit' a bit to spare .for poor folks sake. firm announces the arrival of a. -ship, Give us sense, for we're some of Us nient of men's suits and, adViging the duffers, men „folk of the town . to come in for An' a heart to feel for all that suffers. early selection 'of their Sunday. go -to- Give us. too, a bit of song,- . Meetin's-regalia, gives Ihe price of the An' a. tale, and a book to help us along; -s- ( - nuareutly i., was With An' give us our share 0',, sorrow's leSS01.1 upper, class only-- the future will de- of its record is in order. Here in On- some effort that the storekeeper eP .t.-- a% e--ttray prove lio•w-L grief's Ti Announcing in -Parliament that the- terraine. His recent attack on the tart° we are -too far ziway .to judg-e the price nailer $6 but lie managed to give us, Lord, a chance to be Canadian copper -colored "nickels" are -British royal -family was evidently a as to the .Western''Province, but there do it. - goodly best, hrave, ,yviSe and free, being withdrawn front. circulation and • With suits- selling at 45.95 in. the' Our lak-minute flash and has not been is no visible indication that the C.C,F. Our goodly best for ourselves and expressing- the belief that "the move4 ._..., earlier days one wonders what has been ment will be completed within the near taken seriously. has recovered any of the ground it lost the use' and ben4tit gf all the strikes ' others. . , • , - * * - * iu the -Ontario Provincial election of] and other toul.'ements for higher prices. ,Till all nientlearn to live as brothers. future," the Finance Minister added . . that "the withdrawal was being carried An estimate of 'this year's tobacco last year. Most people, we believe 1 • , but it may be presumed 'that a $5.95, The exact li,gurn,s_are not available, WEALTH FROM POULTRY (')ut tit -rough the chartered-pankS." ' yield in Southwestern Ontario is 1.100 Would like to see party 'politics 'for- ;,-atit jo,;.Orinia's early...days represented * In the official. estimates of the pro- kind—tha-t this and that and the other We see so,- many statements. of that pounds an .acre. At sothething like 25 gotteu until the indastrial -situation about the same number (It hourS' of duction of poultry .ment, and eggs. for thing is , being done "through the cents . a -pound this *ould mean over ._iS cleitred. up. and the country haS 'a•ti work as a •()0 , suit today.: If stny the year 1045, the production .of poultry -chartered- banks"—that we pay little $250 an a-cre. To farmers in this sec: opportunity • to recover its' balance, 1 difference it Should be` less, because meat is- place -a -at 307nPI,000 pounds -or no attention to them any more,. . fluickly :is possible the i 111)11())(ideu7ltillolna.11:17111T has helped speed up . But we should stop and think about ton, it looks like big money. Perhaps shako off as gain, so far as it has as nompared with 315,179,000 pounds we shall see an attempt ' to grow effects of the war, and go ahead. in I. been translated into Improved livitrg in 1944, a decrease of Q,•5 per cent. it. - There are-- thosq..in this countr.y, no • tobacco along the lake- shore in Huron, a new era of concord:and prosberity. 'conditions, is all for the best hut, other- While production wits lower-, 'domestie large number, perhaps, who count thnt - u__-_--w-liere -taninexatures . are .Moderate. ' ,, . . . - . , s . wise, !the relationship of wages, and constnaptien increased to 322,654,700 day lost that does not provide them A SUNDAY PAPER? '' c.ost, of living is probably- uot- much pounds in 1945 from' 315,156,514 pounds with a elnuice to criticize "the ba.nks." . . ...._. . different over the lOng span. of -three--•-- in 1944, the difference 'being accounted . . To hear that kind of talk, you' wOuld When. people talk of the ..ho'hSing SURELY NOT quarters Of a century. for .by heavier ,stocks on hand at the imagine that ."the banks" do as they shortage, they sometinles loSe sight of ' ' , • ' beginning of 1915 than there were at please with other people's money and -the fact that more houses are, being I Is' Sunday- johrnalisin invading,- °the WHAT BRITISH DID FOR INDIA the end of the year. The cash income ,. their OWII ... . that they -carry -on with - 1 weekly. newspayr sphere? The Wing- , I London Daily Ma il l - from poultry Meat" amounted to $66,- out let or';hindrance, making their own . ham AdviNee-Tinun, clime out in its ,,, . . - 184,000, while -the -income in kind from For' well over' a -century we have •- laws and regulations, and •ge:nerally. built- than ever before. It is not so , much a Shortage of housing as a shift- ' latest issue with the date Ain.,4ust llth gli en - the Indian people an unbroken not on , ' poultry meat used on the farms was amassing fortunes for their executives -hag of population. There are any' . , lv Iii its front.pinre but on (..iich lwace• ' . tuirdveitiiltai4of t4,Nt..ilerel valued at $18,328.000, which made a and director's. _ .. . - ' '' r 1 4: ess It British. .4,11:.€-:,.f.alsti'loine °Toss income_ from. this .,source of ,i-.210.- faA..i.s.,,.. of . course, that ._biyik lug . • • i, may . jUsi b that .the Uriak(s-up Man ineu. :- suice We. Look ot.er- ITorit, -uu-s-, 4.. ,...i q in thrtiOnitifaiiitfitaValtr-qirlirtriir that luive only one' Or two people in , ' "-- • -". hadn't torn -the JUly leaf uff his rsueceeded. ° ,1 The production of eggs was estimated most' rigid restrictions- and conti•ols— them. :Hid no douht a similar c(indition , calendar, 111(1 . as. July Ilth was a! . We ha N e gn en lc . • . 1 at :I7.3,952,000 . dozen,' au increase 'of exists elsewhere. 1Thursdity, 1,11e reg-ular publishing -da;i, :justice, according to utirTlights, and a 13 *millions or 3.6. per cent. over the. . a a a- of The Advanee-Tkoes, we are willing., la rg-e measure of internal sectirity We 1944 estimate of 360,948.000 deZen. , te believe that the Sunday date was have given them honest and. hi sidue -The cash income received by farmers John L. ,Lewis has been declaring . lust ;i mistake any busy man might ways, highly ellicieut admillistration. from eggs in 1945 totalled $85,112,000, and eggs •used in •their homes were estimated value_of eggs used for hatch: - 1n°' purposes On farms was $3,785,000,• 11 . p ti�OU IlLikOTIOE Complaints have lava made, that oh,tldren at. the bathing beach were , owins sand into the bearings of railvvay ret ; it iia V .un Ate s3ltin alearby. Chief of Police Ross warn tlia� Elie Iractiee must be-utoi'adat --as- serious accident might result from the heating.. and burning out of the bear- ings because of • the sand. The Chief warns that, anyone found guilty of the offence•, will be ..dealt with severely. 'i'EA SAG SARDONYX FOR AUGUST A ,jaoetie legend tells us that the' August -born mast ,wear' a sardonyx to achieve "conjugal felicity. This stone is a 'member -of a very large family In the iniberal kingdom—the quartz fam- ily. The mineral, which is eou:lposed cif silicon dioxide, grows in layers of uni- form thickness. ..0 attractive -looking formation is produced , through one layer 'having the brown color of. sard interspersed with white • layers of chalcedony.' In -small ca)'es ,ti vuleanic' or sedimentary rocks one c(tald expect to find this .allineral. . By occurring in uu.if:.arnt layers, sardonyx is f'asily adapted 'to cameo engraving, where the cameo has the base of one color And the • figure, of another. Added to this feature, sardonyx, because of its porous nature, eau be artiflclully, colored -in order to deepen the paler shades. A calueo is disUlayed in the Royal Ontario Museum,. as well as specimens of quartz .with its ©many varieties, including sarduliyx. • NO BIRDS—MANY BUGS The value of bird life to agriculture has been illtistratetti- in Lord Howe Island, Which lies 440 miles northeast of Sydney, New South Wt,1,leS. In 1917 birds abounded on the island, states The Australian News;• By 1927 not a bird wai left. hats front a ship- wrecked vessel destroyed them, e);,en -climbing trees to get the birds. As a result, a flourishing palin seed in- dustry was wiped out by weevils, which the birds ,had' fornterly controlled. A WORD FOR THE CHARTERED • BANKS' tral0/8/8881Mik 0,20***020. .0001040000, .a."1"664^ not in thecae times of "contr'ol" alone, grounds for serious complaint. but always, in season and out of seaspn,' in peace as in. war. The banking laws of Canada 'are the most exacting -of all laws governing .Canadian business activities. All banking is done under the eye and supervision of Government. . . . And no banking system in the pworldointis sounder from the public view- . The banks of Canada -did, an immense job in wartime and are doing, ati hu - 'noise job this "transition" period. The fact that the public hears little about it is . an indication of howthis eountry some small measure of the HOW much free or near -free service NOW, MORE THAN EVER, ne of anada's Important oods! the riglit of vvorkers to strike. In this make. We'll wateh this Nv'eek's issue, ! 'We have created ,.in army which, country. and we pr(sstnne it is the though. to make sure. • . , .„, t rained and led by lirit !sit ollieetTs, same hi the ' T`iiit(s,1 St:ites, nt,OO(ly'' . 1 II:I S W.011 faun, in two world WarS. \Ve seriously elntlIonges that. riglit—it was . t Winds,,r Star , .. . buts (•tiStotos and prej inI ices of t he which mane -a. gross' value of .$1 18,89 1, - conceded long, ago. The point to whhh ' We have just been readhig in an Pc01,10, intervening - only.. when they 000. The $:1.787),000. it is pointed out, ' thouglit can profitably be directo(1 'is _kwerican magazine about the -2,400-•• threatened to provoke disorder, • cannot be e(insidere(1 tos income, be- ..,trti“, tiot- „ mile rail journe'y from Seattle to 1 1 4 11,1 1 4 r.1, n i 11, 11"Illt- t'l '"‘"" ilie cause it is ehargelible to the expenses not :is to -the right to Chic:1;2,-, being t he -1,,ngest ,)r all nu- ontY unit Y theY have' kn"wh- if "").v, of produci,pg chickens. means los: ior t\III Kfir1177 for employers ot.i.‘ the legendary. ' halting passztge against 1 4P.-1. . UNFAIR CONIPETITION ." (St. Thomas Tintes-.T(mrnall- can 10., ,,,,l,taiited •1,N. , our own ideas. of free institutions, fr(?e, ! • • negot hi i,,,, „ „a. -S111,, ria n.." " Iloilroads are charged' with trying compromise is infinitely to be preferred.. , Tlat, 10:,,,,,. who wrote that about the, electilms. fri.edolit 4,i. ....1)(4.',11, fref'11. lin t.,»140 1. the tst. Lawrenve seaway plan • . N111.1 11 .1 meri..it n railroads. 1 1,,,1 li the .1rrest- and detention. wit,hout trial., so in t•11' ,,, .. they! '1 ney ma ihta in ,their 0W11,rights- Wi,r11,•of.ni-doin .t'retii 'The Inirlinin . con:on:in 'Notion:it and collodion • that -they resent •encrOachinent ;won of -way, pay taxes on this and other Chrot,:,',,-: ••Itespite ;01 the ,.„,bbiug l'acili,• hate longer unbroken. runs in , 1 1.,,i,, as hotly as we sholild oursekes. Lake_ shipping. has every - 4 to the railw:iys. Ill,- t' N If rtut froni NI.ontreal to A seaway wount ne union' competition hlatne. \\ 11,%, ,•;111.1 we do something The .:C.P.It. from ....1,,iftreal to Van- tolcrattee• - thr,e0 tinn•s the cost -if the ,saine thing 'Vancouver. through trains betweeo :Niontreal. and “NVInit, sort of din: is her ii,--'• (11)114! privately. . . The irony of it in Alontreal on either railro,a(1 and "i111 1 an entoniologi-st It zi collector <It 11 is' that there ;Ire too many of us not "got off the -train until you reach i of itiSeetit.” .- nothing. 'Whose looney is the Govern- , Citizenship Whole wheat con- tains muscle-. building proteins, cuilLohydrates, and other vital elements you need. Kellogg's dian bole wheat. Busy housewives everywhere are on the Alert for suggestions' that will help them save time and effort.- Thousands depend- .. on Kellogg's ready -to -eat cereals' not only for breakfast, but: citiick snacks anytime! All -Wheat, Pep, COrn Flakes, All-Bra:n, Rice Krispies, Bran Flakes and Krumbles are --all made by Kellogg's, the greatest — - name in cereals, .AAVE4114-E.:-A-AVE-=-E-gliviAAVE FOOD1- By Edward Sans , • ' Din•ing a reeent speech in the, (nen- • ttiese words. -Three years ago I visited Prime ,.:11inisfer • King, eiceonitiani ed. .4 the Citizenship Act, the Iloll.„ Paul ('( thi,"trchitecture which the lionds by Iron. Brooke claxton. has been visit- \IA. ' 1 1 f ' ' ()" 2:en-- '.- --- '( h: an lineTrilig if'titil' , had -mounted into on harmonious whole. ath- iiiipressive -ceremony when a (planned ! This cathedral was made of oak,' id., has been received with honor liY a alien is awarded his citizenship us a ; granite and of marble. It is the image people 11 IN remenil,er with gratitu(14, Canadian. The idea is worth attention. ! a inn nation I w:int tn s.ei. Canada the achievements ,)f the nut-1(1hp '1,1inission into most fraternal so- ' 10,(4)1ite. 1 want:the marbli, to remain ' eietks is marked hy a ritual -calculated . the marble; I want the uttk. t,, remain troops in 1 ibera 1 ing, their country. to impress the initiate with the serioult4,,i the oak ; I want the granite to remain "'Everywhere the_ ,Ortnadians -went." : !less 4,f his obligation 'to his fellow- the groldte: and eut 'of these 'nlements writeS Itoss Munro, newspaper corH members. Admission. into anadian I w mild_ 'build a nation great among sufficIent dignified ritual to make.,.the There i!..*, inspiration iti those words, tributes to the Dominion. and her fight -I new Canadian remember his entrance and in the thought behind the words. big men. The tour probably was the into a new, life and"give him the pride We who through birth or'adoptien have biggest event far the Caen sector of! of maintaining his obligations to his established litirselves as Canadians adopted country. ititnal alone, how.- could do a great deal More toward i ever. will not accomplish tlos full' pur- giving n ha t counsel its full application. the northern 'French pro-vinee Alive , " ,Gerrhan defences from the hPhellef,4 two' impressiveness through the passing of participallon in the petty prejudices of years ago." Mr. King noted the eare! tiln". .' ' race or religion that creep into our I At the present 1 ime. more than at, conversation from time to time.: We . Whieh the Freneh people are taking of I any otRer peint in its history, Canada mold „contribute' a inore Wholehearted and 11 is being readied to absorb new citizens effort toward weaning. others from Such Canadian graves in Normandy 'thanked them for it. * * . 1, ' frl varions eountries in central prejudices. Those who are most bitter Eur nas. The desirabilities of thi5 in • their attitude toward the tWo- „ great Dominion have been earried to language ..polition a ty, thwartinn any In nese people by Our soldiers and other possildo solution lit• e very accentu- Godericili has had a good season of , sports and "tournameok” and "big ,111IlbaSs.adorS, ,,,0 that they' look ultnn :dim, they place .ii`ion the. question. days," -with more to comc: but in the Canada as; a haven of brotherhood and They only breed and foster new line Of water sports., for which it is! of 0 brighter life:- Many of these antagonisms., Ler tile marble remain t will -come to stay and to eAtab- , the marble and the oak remain the partieularly Well situated, it is negleetzh 9(4)•ilri Ilish citizenship; we who are lusre to , oak, ',1eavinf.A. 'the eventual . solution to fill Of its• opportunities. • :Inland towns receive them trUst they will leaVe he- ' the iflinircomplishing hands of poster - with only ft pool of water hold swim- hind the vicious national pre.lfulices ity. . ming meets', and Goderieh, with if gr(sit : that have established. Europe's reputa- Canala is it favared land; great in tion as the, womb id war ! Impressive , beyond any ritual, te ' and in opportunity. There. is room " ' 'ifwitntirrs. many plea sure yaehts and these newcomers, wroth]. be an tinder- here for worthy folk of many national- ollier wa ter craft, could put on a standing of Canada flA a natien where ities Irrespeefive , of race, religion-, regatta With a. ,pregram of aquatie' unity and brotherhood are rnaintained tongue or politieal eonviction. 'We limy in all degrees. -A emintry' so, great in regpeet these newcolners" to aSpire sin- bpOitS that would he a great attraction its national outInort that its bilingual •ierely toward Canadian -citizenship, and kind would grVe the nubile an Opportun- ' peculiarity is . rig hindranee to that ,• to respeet their obligations I-114,, sueln' its,' of seeing, what antatenrs in sailing unity.' and ‘yrhere 1.1in same Owl . is ' only ii' .1.'e impress them with the pie- -0111a SW11111111111g and water , activitieS recogniZed• it:respeetive of the choiee i titre ,of a .letin-cut young .nation etiger of altar klir Wilfyed Lanrier, speak- l for Its national unity, and equally generally are doing. it ift too late ' lug ,,to a oroup of nitiverRity studentu, ' eager for the abolition oft war -breeding to Oraitliii-g0 a rtTittta for this seci's011, ptit the idea 02. Canadian unity luta ', preindhleS, • • 11 you are a N6. 1 citizen, you will be doing your , share to' ward off the menace of inflation* facing Canada today. How? ... By conservation in your personal finances ... Here are five ways you can fight inflation: • Hold on to your Victory Bonds • Buy crnly those goods which are in fair supply and save your money for the day whiet goods now, in short•supply will be readily available • Avoid black market purchases • Keep up your insurance • . • Build up your savings acconnt • This is cOnservation—,the first requisite for personal .security—the first attribute of good citizenship. If we all help in all five ways, the threat of inflation —rampant in some other countries and now menacing us—can be beaten and stamped out. Here's the star in motoring built like a for- trese, as bal- anced as a pre- cision watch... that's the new J. Mills otor Sales Goderich, Ont. to the citizen, means simply less and less value for hid dollar . . . his living costs spar as free and careless speading drives tip the price of goods still in "shrort itipply. Inflation is no respecter of persons 4,: . like the rain, its evil falls on • the just and die linjust alike. Thus, Canada's fight against the menarc of inflation isjor fight...tb; fight of each of our citi'Yens Let us all be No. 1 citizens. Remember, if you are a No. 1 citizen, you will look after No. 1 . . . Save for yourself and you save for Canada. . BANK OF MONTREAL working with Canadians in evory walk of life for° 128 years ° BANlit, to A At111101 CANADIANS.