HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Seaforth News, 1939-08-31, Page 7THURSDAY, AUGUST 31, 193,
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THE SEAFORTH NEWS
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GAME REGULATIONS
The national parks service, Ot-
tawa, has just issued the regulations
regarding migratory birds for the
current year. A summary of the reg-
ulations as they apply to this dis-
trict shows the open season for
ducks, greese (other than bract),
rails, coots, etc„ is from October 1 to
November 30, both dates inclusive.
The uorthern part of the province
has a somewhat longer open season.
There is closed season throughout
the year on brant, wood ducks, swans,
cranes, curlew, wiliets, plover, stilts,
serf -birds, turnstones, etc., and all
the shore birds not provided with an
open season.
There is a closed season through-
out the year on the following non -
game birds, bitterns, gannets, grebes,
gulls, herons, loons, etc.; and also on
the following insectivorous birds,
bobolinks, catbirds, chickadees, cuck-
oos, dickers, fly -catchers, humming-
birds, kinglets, martins, meadow-
larks, night -hawks or bull -bats, nut-
hatches, orioles, robins, shrikes, swal-
lows, swifts, tanagers, titmice,
thrushes, vireos, warblers, waxwings,
whip -poor -wills, woodpeckers, and
wrens, and all other perching birds
which feed entirely or chiefly on in-
sects. The taking of the nests or
eggs of migratory game, migratory
insectivorous and migratory non -
game birds is prohibited.
The use of automatic (auto-load£ug)
guns, or swivel or machine guns, etc„
or any gun larger than number 10
gauge is prohibited, and the use of
any aeroplane, power -boat, sail -boat,
live birds as decoys, night light, and
shooting from any vehicle is forbid-
den. The hunting of migratory birds
on areas baited with grain or other
artificial food is prohibited. Persons
using blinds or decoys for hunting
migratory game birds are urged to
consult the regulations for details of
the restrictions. The shooting of mi-
gratory game birds earlier than one-
half hour before sunrise or later than
one-half hour after sunset is pro-
hibited.
The new office boy had been in-
structed 'how to answer callers: Just
before noon a man asked: "Is the
boss in?"
"Are you a salesman, a debt col-
lector, or a friend of his?" the boy
inquired.
"All three," was the answer.
'Well, he's in a business confer-
ence, He's out of town. Step in and
see him 1"
Send us the names of your visitors.
sfr
® Grandma always was a keen shopper and quick to "snap up" a bargain
... but you'll recognize these BARGAIN OFFERS without her years of ex-
perience ... you Save real money ... you get a swell selection of magazines
and a full year of our newspaper. That's what we call a "break" for you
readers ... no wonder grandma says—"YOU'VE GOT SOMETHING THERE!"
ALL -FAMILY OFFER
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PLEASE CHECK THREE MAGAZINES DESIRED
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GERMANY WOULD LOSE
There is evidence aplenty that be-
lief in perfect plans, quick victories
and unconquerable German might—
delusions which have already played
a disastrous part in German history --
persists In the Reich. And eonsideree
troll of the new German forces re-
veals strikingly to what extent the
Nazis have concentrated on arms in-
tended to win a qutek war: the air-
plane, the tank, and the submarine.
It would, we are told, begin with
an overwhelming aerial blow. All the
air power of Germany, Italy, and pos-
sibly Japan, would strike at the vari-
ous coneentratioas
ari-ous-coneentratiotls of the British and
French navies in an attempt to
smash this one arm in which the en-
tente powers have decisive superior-
ity. The oceans would then be de-
livered over to the German and Ital-
ian commerce raiders and submar-
ines, At the same time the lightning
would be turned against the British
and French aerodromes, power stn -
tions, arms factories and great cen-
tres of population. This knockout
blow by air would be followed by
land attack on France, possibly from
several directions.
But can a battle fleet be wiped out
by air bombing? Formidable anti-
aireraft defences have been devised,
and British battleships have been
fitted with heavier deck armor.
Some 50 over -age cruisers and de-
stroyers have been equipped as spec-
ial anti-aircraft auxiliaries. And witil
aircraft carriers available, the British
navy will carry a sizeable air force
of its own. Could so many British
and French ships be sunk in a sud-
den attack as- to raise Gernlauy and
Italy from the present position of
hopeless inferiority? (They have only
6 battleships to 24, and all together
three-quarters of a million tons to
two and a quarter millions.) And if
the axis powers made the experiment,
only to find out afterward that they
were wrong and the sea power still
plays its traditional role in warfare,
then their naval position would be
e
desperate, indeed.
d,
In the air, at present, the totalitar-
ian powers have a superiority of
about three, to two. But according to
reliable information their superiority
will pass its peak this summer. After
that the entente powers—which are
determined to continue the race if
necessary until they are back at their
1918 production of 5,000 planes 0-
month—will pass their axis oppon-
ents, whose air fleet is backed by a
monthly production of certainly less
than 1,000 units. And it is doubtful If
the totalitarian countries could main-
tain even this rate, considering the.
condition of their supplies.
This knockout blow from the air
has 'already had one lam -scala try-
out, in Barcelona. On March 16. MS.
the Italian air force based on Mar•
jarca began a bomburdtae ;,. ' l;ie•lt
was kept up for throe days d
nights. Ti planc.s .pped 1 t
bombs Irdiscriru t,1 e:y t (ey
swollen. with refug,os t
of nearly ;:,nee,eo r and - ly e
fended that the a1 --.
daylight. What was the s:ut
teen hundred people were kli,-' i. The
power station continued r : , p e -C a
street cars to run. and ntavi,r the-
atres to remain open acid find audi-
ences. The nationalist troops had to
light their way step by step for near-
ly another year to conquer the city.
London and Paris are infinitely bet-
ter defended than Barcelona. TheY
have farfiung listening posts on the
French, Belgian and Dutch borders
to give their fighter craft warning.
And anti-aircraft fire has shown a
remarkable development since great
war days, when It accounted for only
O News -Week, 6 Mos.
O True Story, I Yr.
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❑ Christian Herald, I Yr.
❑ Woman's Home Companion, 1 Yr.
❑ Collier's, I Yr.
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t 1
'THE SEAFORTH NEWS
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I Yr.
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❑ Chatelaine, 1 Yr.
❑ Rod and Gun, I Yr.
❑ Silver Screen, 1 Yr.
❑. American Fruit Grower, I Yr.
❑ Canadian Horticulture & Home
Magazine, I Yr.
❑ Open Road (For Boys), I Yr.
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SEAFORTH, ONTARIO.
D. H. MCINNES
CHIROPRACTOR
Office — Commercial alma,
Electro Therapist — Massage.
Hours—bion. and Thurs. lite: -
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FOOT CORRECTION
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ree:-
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Nh'ne 227.
THE SEAFORTH NEWS
Seaforth, Ont
PAGE SEVEN
one out of five el the planes brought
down, whereas it was responsible for
four out of -five in the Spanish war.
The lightning -war theory also en-
visages a sweeping laud . attack,
through ,Switzerland against France.
It would be led by tanks and motor-
ized artillery and infantry: No less
than five German divisions and two
Italian,counting at least - 3,500 tanks.
would be available for the drive. Ger-
man experts calculate that, given
good roads and good weather, 14
would smash through enemy territory
at the rate of 90-100 miles a day. It is
hard to take this estimate seriously.
la the Spanish War an Italian motor-
ized division was going to "dash" the
50 miles from Guadalajara to Madrid.
over the opposition of half -trained
militiamen. The result was that the
tanks outdistanced their supporting
infantry, and the whole force was
badly strafed from the air and thrown
back in confusion. After that, attacks
returned to the world war practice of
strictly limited objectives, with
heavy artillery preparation and
strong support from the air. in this
planner the Nationalist-Ialian armies
suceeeded in advancing on Barcelona.
against the weary, hungry and
supplied Catalonian Catalonian army. at the av-
erage rate of 20 miles a week
Many ingenious defences against
the tank have been devised: rows of
upended steel rails set in concrete—
"asparagus beds" the Frenett call
them; marshy pits covered with
grass, in which the tank sinks and
drowns; underground mines which
may be set oil by contact or by re-
mote control, Tanks which survive
these hazards must face the active
defence behind, such as Held guns
and the new high -velocity anti-tank
rifles. If tanks could gain only five or
ten miles a day against Spanish Loy-
alist defences, they are not going to
overrun France suddenly. The war
would settle down to 0 natter of
trenches and machine-guns on land
and blockade at sea.
It is apparent that Germany places
great reliance on the submarine as a
means of blockading England and
France. But the submarine menace
is an example oe those empty terrors
with which the dictators frighten us
into preferring peace at any price.
In the three months following their
declaration of unrestriced submar-
ine warfare on February 1, 1917, the
Germans sank without warning over
1,000 allied and neutral ships. Yet by
the end of the war courage and in-
genuity had completely turned the
tables on the U-boats. Thanks to the
convoy system, over 1,500 merchant
ships had been brought into the Brit-
ish Isles by October, 1917, with the
loss of only 10 torpedoed and 14
through straying.
Another most effective defence was
the deep nine barrage which cause::
;weld Mettle-- ter German submar-
ine. is the N::,th S `Pa at;d English
t':,.ua. !.
an et i C- k t _
i i 1
' 110 e t 1 :
ii
_bm t... 4 5t ceeer„ and ti. ta_.
-x:set:cis t. t '1 3i ., ..
t .tilt carry y ,- t
t, -r :,"i , t tl„• c 1 - t„r. t i:i --
were destroyed, In Winston Char. -ti.
ill's words. "It was they who were
hunted end their e't-wa W10 wore de•
moralized.' In the _text war, jud ine;
from British prepaeatioas for :hamaa!
ine hunting. recently revealed to rue
Conations, the most unhealthy plan
of all is going to be underneath tlte'.
water. Hope pf a quick Hitler metory
vanishes.
BRITISH CATTLE MARKET
OFFERS MOST PERMANENCY
Tlie success or failure of our live
stock business in Canada will be,
largely dependant on our ability to
maintain satisfactory export markets,'.
state L. E. O'Neill, director, Live
;tock Branch, Ont. Dept. of Agricul-
ture, Taront:t. In perhaps no other
line of live stock production have we
been subject to more changing can-
ditions from time to time than has
been experienced with our beef
cattle.
Our normal annual surplus of cat-
tle, approximates til million head,
and these constitute one of our great-
est problems. Where and how are
they to be marketed? Unlike our hog
industry—where surplus hogs are
processed at hone and exported in
the finished product—our cattle. un-
der present conditions. must be ex-
ported alive.
Our two great markets are Great
Britain and the United States- Each
has i,s -advat a es and d silva e
when cane:tie d cv:r 4 l:., 1 c'1
croft. The British r'.ark t
._ -. more 1 e7 . 3 -nt kat y
1,:t that it .dferst'` !
larz,lY by et 1 lt;f,• c t c .,r.
rani is, rot 11 4y t o
:y e.,..l to v_,., vt 1 . d
1a.'ge `” l0 lett ttrt „ ias rta tztatt"t,-,
ke
I Cil•' itsited Stneee.ill lir.'.
is close by and tra_:s 0tatta , 1s' re
problem as is the ca a at times in
shipping to Great Britain. Duty
changes have constituted a hazard as
illustrated by the fact that from 1030
to 1936 the duty was Se lb., was low-
ered to 2e ib. on cattle over 700 lbs.
and in 1930 a further lowering to
leac per Ib, on a maximum quota, of
51,720 head. During this period: the
duty on beef remained constant at 6o
per lb. thus effectively keeping out of
the U.S. market Canadian beef. It is
therefor+ apparent that our prodtte-
ers are at a disadvantage to the ex-
tent of the duty in competing with
American producers on American
markets unless our production costs
can be kept tower.
Records indicate, over a period of
years, that as producers we have tak-
en advantage of the U.S. and U.E.
markets according as they were pro-
fitable and we were permitted to do
so. This lack Of permanent policy has
made impossible the development of
a "'national steer" as compared with
our "national bacon hog." First, the
American market is interested :in
good type feeder cattle which are
Purchased in Western Canada. At
times they will also take heavy fin-
ished cattle. which to any large vol-
ume would ordinarily present a prole -
tem if left for disposal on our dom-
estic market. Any encouragement to
the development of the latter branch
of the industry is somewhat danger-
ous as this type and weight of . cattle
must in the multi be exported.
The British market has always
been supplied with the heavier case
of cattle, one reason being that ocean
charges have been assessed on a per
head basis rather than per ewt. An
adjustment in ocean rates to permit
the profitable shipping of lighter
weight cattle of the feeder type
would be of advantage as there is a
good market for feeder cattle In
Britain.
COLOR WHEN DINING
AIDS THE APPETi'Tlt
It is a well known feet that color
encourages the appetite. and c0a.-
verse£y an artistically arranged plate -
dinner may be one of the most ac-
ceptable meals. Color should be come
sidered first, then texture; flavor
and nutritive value are sure to fol-
low—for if vegetables look attractive
and taste good, they must have been
properly cooked.
Try such combinations as the
following:
Baked potato, buttered spinach,
escalloped tomato. celery curls
fuse fresh or canned vegetables).
Creamed asparagus on toast.
grated raw carrot. potato puffs, peas
Cauliflower with cheese sanl'e,
carrot slices. green bears.
rived potatees.
Escalloped p•atatees, butt e`et
succotash. cabbage salad.
Baked stuff s:i onions. t:t ,u,,i
nips. ,r -'t ' pea:. and
in p017 0055,4,
C1,1 t •.
- 1
'it l
.,i .. t:.. 13 .. i ..,
';; -;at . tint soireei tsi.
gttlt. d by c:.try. turnips and 1 i•.a,.
Cook yens(• ve;etallles i:: as Cele
water as possible. with sal; al.;o"J
during oaoking. Over-caoklne. ru nt+
all vegetables.
The pamphlet "Vegetables ter
Every Day" which may be obtained
from the Publicity and Bxtensioo
vision, Dominion Dept. of Agricul
titre. Ottawa, gives further iniernl,t
tion on Canadian vegetable'.
TESTED RECIPES
Macaroni Stuffed Peppers
11) oz. macaroni tooke.1 en -01 c mei"t;
Ur• cups old cheese ;;rated
1 cup atok d totttatrr_..
5 green pepper:
I cup broad crumbs
.11 tea;;P Mt ,31tfe -
Salt,
Remove t and e: t rzrs
and '1'lli h:c` :11ne:11e la it!.
\Cir tratas•.,tr.. 1 cite of
tomatoes an.,l .ranch., Sanco
•oilitng. t,, .teen. Drain tf1 Wei 1 er.;
and stuff with macaroni nuxtn and
upright in a baking .dish. Sprinkle r:'_
mainder of cheese S;1 top. If desired,
canned tomato soup slightly diluted
with water may be poured around the
peppers. Bake in a si,tderate .aces
until golden brown.
Plain Egg Noodles
Boil for nine minutes t pleelee of
n1.,11et in e pint of rental;' a1':t Lela;
water to which _ tall lost : n-
4014 have it ll t11ei x'ri
ie� r ithry la 1 hali.d
:mother ,cc t! l+.tte Pain
Jl r itgut •, ti. r. -r t fits, iaarnii,hed
e a, troA.: r -. cat, orsae ee. Teri, ;1:1.1. 11.1 i':' be el: •.1 0., 5c,•
p1T• starchy 354340.'4 °n 1 Hoge,,
to •;til-
Tieaclter—' Ltente.tooher, Jit.,oli-•. a
j •' de ne tv ri, 'r.��er w1>.ti - t Ili:tg
again,"
Jimntie—"Did yttu ever mow c,
lawn?"
Want and For Sale ads, 3 wks, 50tr.