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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1941-4-2, Page 6THE BRUSSELS PAST wars,ss �-4 > %t. Give your 1941 chicks a "head stare, with Roeiritae-cod did 2y Starter —th farm- making that is buddies m ppey- altin o layers for leading poultry farmers. PTA At 7 weeks, "follow-through" with Roe Complete Growing Mash—the atomized feed that saves your chicks everything they need for steady, profitable egg production is the Fall! ars COMPLETE CtROWING MASH Roe "yrrAMIZED FEEDS ARE 5OU BY • EAST HUBROidePRODUCE WM. ZIEGLER Ethel GEORGEDUNBAR Ethel THE FREEDOM OF THE. PRESS 'Great men of history who have left us the legacy of democratic government all seem to have been on one mind, that ,the preservation of freedom depended to a 1ari:s degree on the preservation of the freedom of the press. That iswbv in all truly democratic 'states a free 'areas Is more than just a tradition— it is an essential principle of demo - ,e , One of the prerequisites of an autocracy is the abrogation of the freedom of the press, because this freedom has 'essentially, through the centuries, shown itself to be the one great force which has seen to It that the freedom of 'the individual has been preserved. .When freedom of the press is abolished, other free- doms ,go with it. There is little crs ? ta th+s time to stress that ix+int. There ,are so many poignant and *reale examples in the world :at- rial, orelay el a subservient press, that it ETc High-class g CICiBS f/V f� 'i"a d.trfCaP1t,":,hip Designs that are different ..Kemp AUCTIONEER (Licensed) Sates conducted Anywhere In Ontario -shone 38 - Listowel 3+NNeN••N4M4,****0 mast be obvious to any intelligent The Queen Stretches persoar that the treedoln at the press las :synonymous with the freedout which is democraoy. There have always been those, On Tip -Toe To Talk To Toronto Soldier �xr Major S, II. McTavish meationel who, often for reasons of personal below is a 'sou of 'tire .kite Lr, X. aggrandisement or lust for , power, NcTavieh and Mra, MOTarlah who would rob the press asf shits precious, moved from Brussels recently. jewel in ,the crown of liberty, There —x have "beets others who cry out for Their Majesties Chat With personal freedom at expression, bat who would, deny this right to tate press, • It has been claimed that thls freedom can 'become licena% but Shis is one of those halatruthg 'Somewhere in England, March 27 which unthinking people are likely -Bugles blared and a pipe band Many Torontonlans — King Rides Bren Carrier "OUR HAPPIEST_ DAY" to accept at its face value. Aotually .the press enjoys a free- dom which gives tt no privilege above the individual, It must con- form to the laws of the state, Its freedom is bound by the laws of libel and slander. It certainly ands of Canadians ,broke their lines and circled the visitors, cheet'iug. them with tin bats on their rules and waved wildly in; the air. speech with •bich every' citizen is The King took the cheers at the endowed as a birthright. .Abraham salute and the Queen smiled her Lincoln in a dente on the coast' thanks. 'Calls were made on every • titian 01300 said. "The -liberty of the unit in the division by their males'- ttes. They wore accompanied be Major-General,Yictor Odium, general officer comanding the division .several colonels and the divisional exists today; is the result of a lora general stair. and bitter struggle between those When the royal car finally moved who believe in civil right and con- off for the last time their majesties stituted authority, and' those who told the general it was "one of oar feared the exercise of these rights. ire'^piesrt days" They said they It is significant that the first were "tremendously fanpr ar to the Bill of Rights of with the way the division was sae- amendmentthe American Co rss::itution, adopted w51ing for battle. Their majesties in 1751, is one that relatto- t:' walked freely among the ranks, es freedom of the press. It renals. with sr^res of men, and. "Congress shall make no law res., laughed ata dozen little incidents. pectiug theeatablishinent of religion -King Gets Rough Ride or the proh:b)tton of the tree exec- His Majesty rode a Bren gun car - Mae thereof; or abridging the free- I r_• er for the first time. It was ori°Jen dean of speed], or 01 the press; 'r I by a yang .0auatidan officer, Lieut. the richt d rice je _P1e peadably to W D. Whitaker of Hamilton, Out, wailed a military welcome today as the Kipg and' Queen ,paid their first visit to the 'Canadian and Dibision. Elverynahere the royal couple went during their six -hour tour thous - offers no greater oPPartunity for defaming any Dereen or irretituti'un, than does the inherent right of free press is the lyraut'a s::c:urge; It cs the true friend and the supremely supporter of civil liberty. The prim cip1e of freedom of the press, as It assemble and to petition the govern treat for a redress of gtiveancee.' The very wo:•d;n g c.f tltie. ame:iei- y -• on the side plunged and recited dur- ing the trip, and of assembly. The Ring inspected the Divisional A Rhode Island State provisl'rl SIgt•:;is first. He ::taw this message sums up the question of a free press in a few words when it says: "The liberty of the press being essential to the security and freedom of the state, any person may publish bis sentiments on any subject, being respansdble far •the abuse of that liberty, and in all trials for libel. north civil 'and criminal, the truth, unless published from malicious motives, shall be sufficient defense to the !person charged;" Many other democratic countries have passed similar legislation, because Prom a wide study of the dangers of a sub- servient Dress, they have learned that a free press is the best assur- ance of a free country. To be fully comprehended the freedom of the press must be accept- ed by •democratic Peoples as a typical example of the privileges they enjoy as individuals in a demo- cratic state. To abolish the 'free- dom orf the press, is to invite the abolition of all freedom for the dividual. After a half -mile ride over mesa the Ring said he enjoyed it ver much. The vehicle, which meat places freedotn of the press 3u bore the nickname "Hell's Angel:" the seine level, and of equal import with freedom of religion. of epee;;it 1C� Farmers Should Plan To Help Each Other Should work on the system "The lord helps those who each other." in - that help There is. an old saying that "the Lord 'helps those who help them- selves," and dt would be equally true to say that "the Lord helps those Who hep .each other." Many Ontario, farmers will literally Have to help each other this year if they cannot get sufficient help for their own individual farms.. , There will be, from all accounts, a number of "One-man'" foams this year with a consequent reduction in crop acres as a result •of the farm help situation unless farmers co- operate inthe old-fashioned nei;h- boriy nienner of changing "work" with each other, Int will he recalle4 that during severe farm 1aibor short- ages in the .last war, nelghbors worked back anti forth 'helping each other with seeding attd- harva-1 operations. A return to this method . ,f operation will mean that farmers, will he able to plant and harvest More acres and feed more hogs and cattle 'then iirey would by attempt - ng to run the farm alone, • •.Tacit Thvnne Entertainer, Brt*aeoTs, Ontario. Reserve Wed- nesdaa • niobt, April 16 for e•nnt:ei'i and dance, Brtrtie13 Town Nall, under auer,ices, 14th Conceeeion of Grey', War' Wtirtk� era Club. cctn.ng aver the DACE wireless foe simile printer: "The officer comanding, atficere, warrant officers, noncommissioned officers and men of the Can:adiaa Divisional Signals extend' loyal greeting to your majesty on the occasion ^.f your majesty's visit to ,this. unit." The Ring, borrowing apencil from a Canadian officer, wrote a reply which, at the other end of the line, he saw coring over he his own handwriting. It read "I thank the Canadian Divisional Signals for their greetings, and I am very glad to have seen them all." At the Royal 'Canadians Army Service Carps. the King talked with Private S. F. Curtls of Toronto, who was fresh from a motor repair job and was wearing greasy dungaree, Ile also chatted with Lance Corporal Peter Magrin of Montreal, who was attired in a white cook's uniform. The King then visited the Royal Canadian Army Medical Corps where a field amb'ulanee band played "There'll Always Be an Eng- land." Later his majesty watched the engineers work and walked over a bridge erected . by Canadian sappers. His majesty spent an especially long time ,:with Major J. H. Mc- Tavislr of London, Ont. When be reached an all -Ontario brigade 110 petted the huge 531. Bernard mascot "Royal," of a centa'aI 'Ontario regi• inert and spoke to Private R. 1. Ward. of Toronto, who Wa's holding the 'dog by a chain., Queen Gets on Her Toes • During midmorning the Ring and Queen visited a central Ontario regi- ment of which ,,the Queen is colonel- inscbief. Teetering on the tip of s3r area she smoke first to Private George Wilson, of 'Toronto, a tower- ing sixstooter, The Queen asked Private John Sharpe. of Toronto. "Is .tilts gun deadly?' 'as she Potted. ]he barrel of a machine gun. Sharpe replied "It stare is, your majesty. T carill howl over the cnninv, litre nine 11111A r" The Queen. took pariieuler Miss - cad in a machine -elan r•raditetl with lm?n'R'inw down 5 re,•nrnn bomber when the reeimpsl was 311 the Eng- lish roast last fall Mother: was fetlins stortee 01 lit: 33110 all" wont -a lit 'le -.'mitt 'Tana,, Hernia listened thonvhtlnlly as site told cif riding a pony. gliding down (hp 'haystack, and wading in ` the brook On the farm, 1r'nanlhv Ore •said with a sleih. "7 wish T had met you CArita*. Nldthor,�' ' Wednesday, April 2nd, 1941 "Every 4uiy, weli and honestly done, 10 a contribution to victory," 'rim Tatra M1Ntsr55 or CANADA. A car with Nova Scotia license plates limps into a service station in Winnipog.Steam is spouting from under the hood.' "It's your water pump," says the mechanic. "We can have a new one on in a jiffy—won't hold you up long." Only a water pump—perhaps assembled in Oshawa or Windsor from parts made in half a dozen different towns, yet it fits to n T when this Manitoba mechanic puts it on a car from Nova Scotia. Uniformity—standardization—are big factors in tele- phone service, too. You can talk practically anywhere, any time, for one, reason, because telephone equipment made with meticulous care fits to a T in all parts of the system. Operating methods are co-ordinated, too, so that your call is put through quieldy and voice spans the miles di direct a"our '9 e s� to your listener's ear. To a nation at war, such standard. ization is at great asset. •e4.. Expert Calls Advertising Necessary As Free Speech Essential'for Technological Progress, Says Prof. Stocking Addresses Ad Club "In our North Asnerioa economy, advertising is as essential :as tree speech in promoting technological pruaress," said Prof. Samuel 13. Stacking of the department of politi- cal economy at the University of Toronto. Addressing a study group of adicertising end merchandising mea recently, he pointed out that while there might ' be some truth in claims that diotatorship in its carte stages is more efficient, "advertising is a very beset* part of all we North Americans are proud of," He altetohed arguments pro and coat on the economic and social ins- por:an:.e of advertising and, while he said he was willing to take a "middle of the road" position In some respects, pointed out hose ad• certising in some eases had account- ed for 50 per cent at tre spread "it better goods. Newspaper advertising especially had accounted tor a large measure of the success of war savings drives. and while it was true that products non-essential in war• economy were being advertised, he did not antici- pate government curtailment. A stopping of advertising might cause chaos in pertain industries and this was something the government was anxious' to avoid, said the speaker. John Doherty, president of the Adveatiaing and Sales club, thanke'l the 'speaker and 'those attending the course for the success et the ven- ture. EISIE THE COW TO MAKE GOOD -WILL TOUR TO ONTARIO I31sie, the famous Borden cow cf Hoileywoad and World's Fair fame, will visit the Province of Ontario for several weeks this June, in .p. pro- gram designed to cement the friend- ly relation's between Canada and the United iStaites and stimulate American tourist ,travel in Ontario, It was announced today by Douglas R. Oliver, Director of the Ontario Travel and Publicity Bureau. The 'famous cow's itinerary, whic'l will trite her, as a ttypical. American tourist, to 'such places " as Ottawa, Toronto, Winultor, London, I atnil. ton and Caliente; will be under- taken by The Borden Oornpany with rustic motif. Shc stood, or 're• clined, inan all -fashioned torus p 'sten lied, and SI- s surrounded by "sew-sized"'early Colonial furniture. Pictures of her a<tcestors hung On the walls, A transformed -batter- churn served as a reading lamp; 1ha chaiselounge was a conve-'te,l Wheel -barrow, and the Chandelier a group of Barn lanterns. Elsie has given receptions at tire, smartest of hotels .in New York, Chicago and Les Angeles, and has been tendered cu ktpil par.7es 331 several exclusive Hollywood night clubs, Her most recent e p oi-o iinclude a, feature 1 pe;'iarrna rc the Kansas Oity Feast Fair, last .st week; and her signing of a corastta 1 guaranteeing her appearance liar' Fall at a County Fair to be heal in i New York Madison Square Garden. t I+, is planned that Elsie will ewe* Ontario about June 1, accompanied by veterinarian and caretaker. and be greeted on the Canadian side of the Detroit -Windsor bridge by n representative of the Ontario Gev- ernnnent. 1 Brown said 'he could teach la p rrr::a to say 'Halla" 10 an hour. IL stzited and went at It for 30 minute* at :haat bis parrot taking the slight est notice. At last the bird turned his heat call fixing. Brown with a cold., eye screamed: Line's busy! GET YOUR PaRMANE.UT ON THE NEW ZENITH HEATE:RLE!SS THERM IQ U E End C.11 31,Dn and -1.50 including Shampoo ,stere eat 51.75, 52.23, • $3.00 Car loci„ding finger wave and shampoo —x-- P.drled Finger Wave 25c Shampoo 25c _x_ Telopho.to 5bx for Appointment 1RENE PEASE Over L. W. Ecksnier's Store TO BE SURE —• QUALITY — PLUS -- VALUE • • • THE PALACE BAKERY Phone 32X W. WILLIS—Prop. Brussels, Ont. OFFERS BREAD—brown & white, fruit loaf, Buns, Scons and Rolls. PASTRIES.— tarts, pies, cakes, jelly rolls, dough nuts, etc. (always a tasty treat) BUY BREAD BAKED IN BRUSSELS ievicanta • a�Rmaw•.a., a=+r.r""-Siff"-'„,-;.,rc-.inafys,... Cream Producers Bring Cr Semi Vcur Cream To RUSSETS S CREAMERY PHONE 22 BRUSSELS Your Patronage is Requested the .cooperation of ,the OntarioTilt ,aa iii Government. � sinter I01sle's featured appearance last year in, RIi7O'is production of "Little 'Men," she made asimilar 2- week awing through the United States on her way geek to New York, appearing for one day each m various large cities in the south and, sou:shwesi. 'During tills trip she was presented 12 keys to various titles+. During e ttvo-day ad.'1nd al. the San Flmileiseo Fair, slle smashe-1 alt attendance records, and after her return lo, New 'York, she was pre- sented, a sera by .T -Harvey D.`Gibson. Citairrnan of ,the Board of the Naw York hair, attesting to 1101 "Dis. linlgudsbecl Serbice to Humtanity.” Elate wart chosen as the cow wall' ate most "ctlnrateter, poise and le. {Anemias" in 1139 from a herd of Idh pure-biretl oattie gathered Pram all,parts of the United iS,tattos and . C'ene4a at Lite 'Borden exhibit at ib? New York Warld'e Fair, llen'o site lives] in a bonctoir, decorated hi the * We pre- scribe insur- ance by ana- lyzing :vital you need and by sell- ing you only what you Beed WALTER''SCOTT knulssels Representing PILOT INSURANCE COMPANY Wtridng sctetied risks in Automobile, Fire, Plato Glass, BurgIltI7, Public Liability, and other general insurance. Head Offiee, Toronto.