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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1939-10-20, Page 6an in Minarets Quebec iviiere OW or Militia unit has ever par- . -armed guards do 24-hour duty euovinee's copper, sine and 4'fa1id Mines. Barbed_ wire eratangle- etite, erected by men e Who had to e SOO__ Vele throne/ just each barriers in the Oneat War, serrounded vital links ii the mining beat's power supply fleet:eau. The game ie true of tbe rich min- ing sections of (Wane, Manitoba and tette& Columbia. . For Canada's mines are at war with Germany and they will play a very important part in keeperg the Ent - eine armed. Copper, zinc and geld are all war -time neontsities: copper and zinc in armaments of a dozen kinds, gold irt purchasing power to brdng supplies to Canada from fee eign nations. iln 1914, Quebec's metal production was of little importance, for there • were only a couple of small emine,s operating in the eastern part of the provrince Last tem- tees province produced 100,000,001Y pounds of nee- ' Per, moot of it of premier quality, and $25,000,001) worth of gold, along with many thoue,a,nide of ems ot zinc, then not worth hauling to the Atlan- tic seaboard Septenaber, 1939, finds the industry geared to produce 150,- 000000 pounth of copper, $35,000,000 tin gold, and larger amounts of zinc whiich vvili now be readily saleable. Within a year or so the 200,000,000 - pound mark can be reached 'in trapper and with it another 'nigh in gold be- cause the gold comes partly as a by- product of the copper mires. At Noranda Capper such as that which comes from the iargesti oopper-gold mine in the world, Noranda, is invaluable for electrical con.duetors. It contains none of the elements which impair the neefulness of the metal such as arsenic and bismuth. Minute quanti- tiesof arsenic make copper brittle and unsuitable foe drawing into wires and bismuth has a bad effect en the electrical conductivity. Noranda e.n- gintiers have carefully guarded their product from the possibility of having its quality' reduced end (have been re- warded with the knowledge that it is without equaL Little Noranda cop - Tier has ever one to Germany, even. thaugh that nation hae been a heavy purchaser .of Canadian metals during re -armament. Most .has been, used in Canada and Great Britain, some of it finditig its way tato the engines of -.et with Meet/ the Empire is now fighting. When the last war broke out, Can adians miming was n its infancy. In the east, the Cobalt silver camp be- gan to slip as its useful life drewtto a close. The Porcupine mines had been producing for a few years but curtailed output within a short time of the declaration of war. Kirkland Lake mines had been diegoyered bet development work there rilancist -neat- en What are today twe of Canada's greatest gold temps lay stagnant. Oe- ly at Suclibury did mining boom in the ea,st. , becaMes tbe chief alloy metal for armor plebe and Sud- bury's great resources etood then, as now, at tee call of the Empire. Gold Mining What happenied to Poreirpine and Kirkteed Lake lust time witl not plague Northwestern Quebec thie time. For to -day not only the base mete& mines but the gold rainee, as well are of ireal importance. Canada's d]oller and the British pound has de- clined in 'comparison with the Am- erioa,n 'ilea lets the Ea' npire theca ,to buy from abooadt the better off it will be, h,enoe the necessity of ioareasing eopper and zinc peoduct non. "Phe greater the decline of the Canadian dollar in terms of Ameri- can, the more nieceesary win gold be in purchasing tilmee things which the Empire can not produce in ufficinit quantities to satisfy the need of the Empire. With the ppiee of gold peg- ged, at $35 an ounce in the United States, an ounce of gold will continue to buy just asi large a quantity nt co]mmaodities, no matter what ithe re - tenon of ,eur,rencies may be. No mine is inexhaustible but North- western Quebec's copper mines have tremenidous reserves of ore outlined today. One has 20 years' ore block- ed out with good possibilities of other ore bein‘g found. Another hat; known reserves of appromineately 1- 00,O00 tons, mime of it discovered within, the past year when diamond drille struck, at a. depth of 1,000 feet, a rich deposit Copper oance:res ars al.so beiteg re-ceived trom ine near La Sarre, north of the old tnanecontinental railway and not fer from the Ontario bcundary. ] is -another of Qua - bee' a copper m, a, ten in i les eat of Noranda and while the grade of copper is low- t w o ler oenl--minr and mill are operated at low not at the rate of 1,a00 tons daily. leolybdenite Presrecting will not the off entire- ly. Inteiteet in new gold eis,coveries may notbe eo great as in the pas] ten yea.: s for tee capital with which to develop them will not be avail- able. Nor is there a. need just now for mare base metal. mince. But etere is one :mineral .the Empire would like te Iave---molvbdenis. From this 111,e metal molybdenumuseful as an ieley. ten be brain d. There is nsolyeeni te i a No r thw estoro Queeec. The trick is to fled it in Insect enough quaelities to justify development. With older, eeperienced men free to carte on tees siearch, it is probable that bere the new north may fill an- other need. It isn't only metals new Quebec will send to ,help the Empire. It is so new it bas no hangover from the last war -no militia, no branch of the --rke.c.a. no arinitry. But the peo- ple who rbave come from Ontario, (Webers there &tifle and the Meet have retained scene f their caXoner. MY1319 wjth their florin r homes. Many have been called to ;,daties at Hali- fax, Montreal, Queben, Ilmonto, Win- nipeg2 Others hurried Went:tot at a recruit- ing office opened dn Rouyn. Bush Fliers The Rouyn rush Marked the begin- ning of commercial aviation ln Can- ada and the people of the towns that grew up have retained their air -con- sciousness. In the past tee yeans, several flying elute have found sup- port fromyoung men who wanted] to learn to fly. These have had, through Air Maa-shal "Billy" Bishop, a chance to offer their services. Response to ail anneal sent out in Noranda Walter Woollett, operations mama of Domini& Skyways and a fo Royal Air Force pilot, has he mous. The mere ether fly " bush" 'have also volunteered. know whet aviation under diff Is like. The north is a. melting pot or raany of Europe's peoples,. SPokes- neer)! for Czechoslovak iend Polish na- tionals said this week that organize - tions of "foreign legions" similar to those which went oversieas from Care ada last time isalready' in progress. Several hundred men, most of them halving had military training, are availableethe minute there is an or- ganization ready to receive them. North-western Quebec, an .element which did not exist in the last war, is ready and willing to supply two things: metals and as many men as call he spared from the mines. As It Was In 1914 And Now (By Bernice Ceffey,„tiet_Sangday ettooddiglia ere Canadians thinking and, ng dnoin]g the first month of the last Great War? Fon firsthand infor- mation we went to the August, 1914, files of Saturday Night and at times while ireading found it difficult to re- member the slightly yellowed pages were not these of a contemporary is- sue. For instance, On tbe subject of sugar hoarding - "Sines the .decla,ration of war sugar has advanced 60 cents per hundred- weight, or six -tenths of a cent a pound. Accordtng to a prciminent wholesaler the cause of the great iinorease was the extraordinary de- mand of the public for sugar . . . The man, wit° has tbe money is buy- ing sugar in large quantities, sending up the price, while the pourer man,, who has to purchase in small lots, must pay a higher price." One writer asks what use flying machines will be put to in bhie ware - will ithey dart here and there, drop- ping bombs all over the map of Eur- ope or crash headlong into each other in their own combats or fire aerial guns or what? He points out that they can travel at a speed of- a. mile a minute, and mentions teat France has 1,200 planes. Germany and "las- sie come next. "Whether ituesia has 600 or 800 is not known, for the mili- tary authorities there have tried their best to shroud mystery aeronautics in mystery." The fashion pictures show long hobble -skirted moidele by Daucet. The itewest dance craze was the Maxixe, a Brazilian idance. Mrs. Woodrow Wilson, wife of the President of the United States, died on August 6th, at the White House, Washington. The Prince of Wales, "now a lieuten- ant in the Grenadier Guards," is pic- tured in training as a private. Prince Albert, second son of King George V, was at peat with H.M.S. Collingwoon. Hon, John Strath,earn. Hendee, was the new Governor of Ontario "the cumbrous prefix, `Lieutenant,' having been abolisnedte Eaton's was adv-er- tisirg the Lillian Russell cant, "the mtodiel favored by .that charming actress." Many of the Canadians who had fleeked front the Continent to Eng - ;land were stranded there. Elsa Ryan was app,earieg at the Alexandra in "Peg o' My Heart." Marie Tempest, with her company from the Play - amuse, London, England, was about to open her tour on this continent in Toronto, arel Billie Burke was star of "Jerry" at the Princess. Nobleman's England In 1849 'Po us, who from tete perspective of anneter century look back upon that period it 'seems as if those three yearis betwieepe 1853 and 1856 marked the Moment wthien] th.e industrial rev°. luti -fiest drove ihome ills iron wedg- es ittho the fabric of society. It needed a war and the passage almost of a generation before the Reform Bills stif.sd thet inridence of power from the tenet:curial aristooracy to the He- ine middle class. Even in externals it is possible to teat* a transition from oligarchy to plutocracy. Never, for a pealing nobleman, would life he quite eo privileged. oreffortless a- gain. 1 hare before, me a miniature of lord Dales:in panted in the early •foities while he was tete a boy at Eton. The style, or more exactly the le tot of view, of that miniature die fete but sestet, from the Hommers and Itraelturns of t hie previous century. Cr -o sees not a schoolboy merely, but the representative of a special caste In a few years that boy would get to (-nett Church where again his life elle be differentiated. He tvoeld have h s ID Is at a separate table, his fees an his lectures welled be biased upon a speeal schedule, he would wear a silken gown and frgm the centre of his inorter-board would (angle a golden ,t-uft. On leaving Ox- ford the road t.o eraieence woutd be cleared of all subsidiary traffic. Did the hesitate to faoe the vulgarities of a parliamentary election? An English peerage was at once placed at his ellieeosan Did he desire to obtain A MILLION DEPOSIT ACCOUNTS DENOTE CONFIDENCE 2ftus, 49, will effialt AT CANADA'S PIONEER BANK o Here is a letter from a school teacher recently received among numerous others By one of our branches observ- ing the 50th anniversary of its establishment: "I write to condaiulate th C---- branch of the Bank of Illontredl on th,/celebration of its jubilee an an�o wish it continued prosperity and succer'. "As one of tilaltoaller depositors in your bank I have bee,/ enrolled there for most of fifty years;/ad have certainly appreciated/ the courtes, an friendliness of the stafy-and the fee1g of safety bich the name 'Bank of Montrea Hoping future relat0a.43--drON' -equal-1-y haalways m s 4ant to me. ay be added pleasacnt, and that_laairrniew friends • • _, .• i to your --ri. , I I 0 / '/Yours very s, ncerely, 0 _ -- B ------- " I BANK OF '11A BAN ESTABLISH 817 TREAL Clinton Branch: H. M. MONTEITH, Manage/ Kansan Branch: W. B. A. CROSS, Manager Brucefield (Sub -Agency): Open Tuesday and Friday WHERE SMALL ACCOUNTS ARE WELCOME"' tVt! scene ffioiaI postillion? He had but icale at Downing Street to become a Lord in Waiting. Did foreign trav- el attract eint? There was his sebooner, with the chintz 'and fire - tight in the cabin . . . Was he cur- ious to sample.. the anions of war- fare? British Acbmirale and French Generale violated all regulations to do hen honour. Did the Arctic eiretle enthrall him with the silence, of ite midnight stint A French frigate, a member of the French imperial 'house was all too glad to take bis soblootter in 'tow. Even in London, even in such a de- tail se hits pensonal 'attire, he was allowed and indeed expected, to mark the diffenence between himself and the professional or commercial clasn es. His tome emir was brushed for- ward above the ears and scented with bear's grease or Macassar oiL He could still, in 1849, wear a sky-blue tail coat without attracting critioism. His trousers were fastened, in. eques- trian feeblest by ,a strap beneath his bentep. His waistcoat was cut low acricss the stomach and, enriched with truttons of enamel. Above it billow- ed. a vast kerchief of black satin se- cured by two separate pins connect- ed] with each other by a thin gold chain. In his yellow eilk gloves be would carry a light cane and an en oreteus hat. The seats, at his fob jingled toge.t ter as he dewily wellete In the afternoon., in front of P9 Lower Brook Street., would wait thie olive green' cabriolet' which had been specially built fro ihlm by Thrupp & Maberly. Ile would gather the reins ite-getner as the little groom swung up behind. Round and rcunid the Park he W011id dere,. noting from a- iar the barouchie,s of his. acquaintance rec,ognizing them not only by their apricot or sky-blue pantile, but by the liveries of tee twa footmen who stood in the rtembe] behind, or by the vast cat s of arras ernbncidered upon the h aeon et -cloth . . . The whole Pa:k glittered with the twinkling of yarn- 1ee:1 wheels, the sheen of heavily encrusted barnees, the gold bee,id up- on tee hats of' the coachmen, the groomed flanes of superb horses. the white silk stockings of the footmen. the buckskin breeches of the tiny grooms. Tested Recipes Slashed Omelette With Parsley Garnish Beat four' eggs, yolks and whitea separately. Add to yolks 1 teaspoon flour, 2 tablespoon& milk, ta teaspoon ealt, 1/4 teaspoon salt, le teaspoon Pepper and 1 tablespoon or finely minced green sweet pepper. Fold this mixture lightly into the skiffly beaten] whites a.nicl pour into a hot frying pan, in which two table - spoors of butter are melted. Set the pan in the oven to stiffen] the omelette, finish browning on top of the atto-ve. Fold over. and snip onto ere pletter. Cut three long deep parallel gashes in the omelette, and fill cavities with the following mix- ture: Four large toroato cut up; 1 tablespoon each of minced onion, green sweet peeper, and mushrooms, these thiree cooked five minintee in two tablespetne of better; 2 cloves; diateh of cayenne; salt a.nd pepper to taste; and a teaspoon sugar. Cook and stir until tbickeneed and rich. Pour any remaining sauce around the omelette. !Banana Pudding Cream 2 .leve} ,tablespoons of but- €; i well 8 level tablespoons of granu- teed sugar, add the yolks of 3 eggs, well beaten, and 2 teaspoons of van- illa. Beat well untit very creamy and Adid 10 level tabt]espoons sift- ed flour and 3 bananas sliced very thin. Mix gently. Beat the wietes of the three eggs mail stiff and, gra- duany add the mixture. THITS mix- ture Into a- wielebuttered puridinig mould and set to bake tit a moder- ately hot oven for forty minutes. Turn out onto a hot plate and pour over it the followisig sauce: Mix 4 tablespoons of raspberry jam with 1 tablespoon sugar. Add le cup of. water and 1 teaspoon of lemon juiee. Ttx well and) place on Bre and boil for 2 minutes, stirring so that the sauce will ,not stick to the bottom of pot. Priscilla Cookies Cream 1 cup of butter with 1 cup of sugar. Add 2 cups of flour anted with 1 teaspoon be.kinig •powder, 1 teaspoon einnemon, and a pinch of salt. Mix with 1 cup of chopped nuts and 1 cup of raising. Dissoltre 1n, teaspoon] of baking soda with 8 table- eretems of mill, and add to the mix- ture. Mix theroughly, and drop from end of spoon onto a greased cooky sineet anti bake to a nice ibrown a moderate Oven, Yunthful Father: "Our baby is be- ginning to reoite, 'Bee, baa, black ebeep, have yea any wool?" Father: t 'Well, he doesn't say all M it yet, but he's got as far as the Princess Pat's Colors Heir Royal Highness, the Princess Patricia, it was noted, personally xvorked tee colors which she present - to the regiment bearing her name. Society turned out in full force for a private view of the year's pictures .1,'-te Canadian National Exhibition, wed the editor takes a lusty crack at Robert Smythe Hitchens as "the Ineular author of 'The Garden of Allah,' and Bella Donna,' eud other erotic and neurotic and at times rather it cimeoy- ro t i c tales." There were rumors that Ottawa might im- teen a war tee to meet decreased 'In- come. Tee new 1915 Ruseell-Knight auto- mobile was on, the market, th:e "Six "S" at $4,500, the "Six 30" at $1,750. Aliso on view in the Transportation Building at the Toronto Exhibition was the Rauch & Lang J 4 Passenger double control Electric Coarth. Price $4,000 f.o.b., Toronto, and "so simple thtt a obilid ca.n operate the alir with ease." An. advertisement pointe out that "a Rauch & Lang owner can, use his car as much as the likes, do his own charging, and hie current cost will be in the enetaberhood of $5.00 per month." In the drama column, the editor Tema the tlaat-"T he moving picture hes revolutionized entertainment of a patriotic kind. Years ago whexi there were wars and rumors of wars the public tree to be content with a few magic lante'n views of the King a.nd Queen., the other members of the Rcyal Family arid te few generals and admirals. New an audience may see on canvas (eir) whole .anmiee in, mo- tion if not actually engaged in mu- tual slaughter." The teal of Madame Caeleux in :tarts was e -cause celebre. The fight for women's suffrage throw the car- toonist's satire. Hon. W 1 n et o n Churchill, First Lord of the Admir- alty for Great Bunsen, Paned the Eur- opean criset wrth Ns fleet prepared for war. Prince Henry had a joily time during the Ikon amid Harrow cricket matches "and, naturally, lead a very special interest in the pro- ceedings as he is a'n Etoneben" flfs Royal Highness the Duke of Connaught opened Pernament at Ot- tawa on August 18, for tbe last titne as Governor-Genteral of Canada. He ware his uniform of British Field Marshal and ,on this occasion, for the first time ,since Confederation, there were no textiles on the floor of bhe House, Lady Williaras-Taylor enter- tained at bier reeiidenoe In upper Mountain: Street, Mentneal, at a din- ner 'IA tiltrotor of Colonel the Hon. Sam Hughes, Minister of Minnie; Oat. Wil- liams, -and three aides-de-camp. The table was diecorated with Canadian flags and the flags of he allied arm - tee, and red, wihdte andeblue flowers. Those invited to meet Col. Seen leughtes were: Sin Montague Mr. aind Mme, Hamilton (iault, Frank Meighen, Col. Peers Davidson, Mr. Hugh Allan and Mr. Travers Wit- biametTarylor, Work For Funds At a Patriotic parade orgamezed by a ieurtn,ber of Winnipeg ladies fully one thousand women took part, and Within one hour the entire supply of flagstssued by the St. John Ambu- lanoe Aesiecle,tion had been sold. A fele of these rocoupying the ope (hun- dred and eerily motors were: Mrs. 1). Martin, who was one of the prin.- capal organcizers, Lady Roblin, Mrs, ;5! ,]] Andrews, MO. ElYettrits IWO AiIdiles Mtn. alma% Niro. Francis voldi Man. greenwood. A� oyer0411WX10 Woman were en - Med 011 eannting thOtteT for the canafddosx Womoteei irosoltal Funds ..-Eter Mod Highness 'the - Duchess of c5onstrught called a meeting at Gov- ertunlent House,, Ottawa, on Monday afternoon for the PunPose of enders - Mg the Hospital Shdp Fund move - meat of which she le hea.d, and to give an impetus to the work in other places. Her Royal Hlghness aud tee J Princess Part/Apia preelded over tbe meettleg at which Lady Borden, Mrs. Cnorolble, Regent of the Laurentian. Chapter I.O.D.E., and Afro. Gooder- beim, of 'Deatteroft,' Toronto, Were Present." 1a Toronto, where Mrs. Geoderiliatm headed the movement, Mr. A. M. Iluestis, 90 Avenue Road, plaoeid hie house at the disposal Of the LO.D.E., and the Toronto Mee - Vic Light Conepany did fits bib by supplying light for the house free of charge. Shortly titter, a "flag" day netted the Fund the very respectable sum of $30,000. Advice From Yesterday The remarks of the writer of the "London Letter" of August, 1914, are almost uncanny in their application to present conditions. "It is not only by lighting, attending °lames for first aid, or by sewing, or by contributing to tee great funds for the people who will 'need help; it( is also by refriain- ing from various acts likely to ham- per the authorities and' to agitate others. Last night, for example, the London 'Globe' published the fal- lowing: DON'TS FOR ALL OF US Don't hoard gone Don't board provisions. Don't waste either. Don't economize at the expense of your staff amd poorer neighbors. Don't restrtct credit. Don't be panicky about disasters, inevitable in a great war. Don't be cock -a -hoop about sue- eeeeeS. Dane be rude to German residents. Don't believe pandek posters and headlines. Don't spout about eating Gore many. Paris inWartime (13y William II. Chamberlin) Four weeks of war and Paris is al- most unriecegritizable. The glamor, the cittio, tee gaiety are gone. The wen -dressed wcitnien who formerly crowdsed ,t he f aeltito a blie b o u lie v a ries and cafes are gone: many of the cafes are closed. The most famous Paris streets, Rue die la Pa'ix, Avenue de l'Operra, seem forlorn and dosed - int, with, their rows ef closed shops bnining, the familiar sign,: "Closed on account of mobilisation." Tee. large department stores are alm)ost earepty, with about hen a doz- en customers ion a floor, miostle ced- e:Joking' women dreesedi in blac. Nor is there nruce of an assortment of goods 151 tbe shops. For, the masses of worosen and children who were ev- acuated from Paris after the outbreak of the war (it has been estimated tent from a third to a half of the population left tbe city) bought what they needed before their departure anti the stores have not ordered new stocke. My wife was recently look- ing for a simple reit blue felt bat in a department stare and found only three thiats in stock, of which one had Vo be taken from the window display. The leading creators of wo-men's fa- shions' Lucien Lelong, for instance. ltave elosed their doors, with many of their employees at the front. 1t1s difficult far anyone not living in Paris to realize how complete bas been the exodus of men, except for the very young and very old. From our own experien,ce, our butcher, our grocer, our milkmaini, our iceman, our ehoemaker, ray wifets tailor have all been called. Our maid fled to her tome in, the country on the thy when war broke out and tier succeseor had been wiorkinig for a family in which the head had bieen called up as a re- serve officer. There are men to uniform (reoeut- by the British unitlorm is seen more and more frequently) riding in motor- cycles or automobiles or walking in gamma. The Frenoh are often ac- oemeenried by women_ A geed many _women are also 'n undform. Besides] tee subway and bus guards and coeductore there aredRed Cross nurses and' *omen in charge of "passive defense," responsible for or- der in the abris or unidttrgrounid air raid Shelters, and, for first aid to yin During the finst days ot the war there were several air raid warnings from the bliTeTIS wine] sent people, at any hour of tbe day or night, sCurrying to the cellars which are considered strong enough to with- stand the shock of bombing, earning their gas weeks with them. Howev- er, DO bombs fell alter the alarms and Paris le now in Mame ways less agitated' than it was during ehie first ()aye of the War. Some people who 'hurried oft to the provincesimmedi- ately after the .outbreak of bostilities have now returned, despite the dis- approving warnings whicih, are per iodicalle issued by the. authorities. Blackouts are still ienforced; but closing bears for moving -picture the- atres iand cafes hare been advanced respectively to ten and eleven p.m. People are also now more inclenied to terleadre their gas maske at theme, al- though the cylindrical' dazes, in whioh these masks' are carried are still a very conspicnoes] feature of Paris street life. Only recently I noticedi a little girl of about six carrying a eas mask in anylifand, -while she fo-eled a large doll in the other. In general, ihow-erver, Paris has become almost a chitdiess oity. The famlous fountatns, on the Pond Point of the Obamps-Elysees are no longer playing and the little crystal Toronto 13.10 pigeons ,ana rabbits which. fdrtnerlY MeNatight 11.03 seutrand up streams, of sparkling vre- Walton 12.13 bee are inourntnily anent. The large Blyth statues, representing verdant; Freneih Auburn IL3.191 aide% on the • Plat% de le Oencerde McGaw '12.49 and the cibeliek, the Parte companion Menriet 12.46 1155 JOE 119101101o4frmp' KEL KROS.0111141 Rocommilints wrii.ut000muy DoH" to Owego giegelswhat=sigheere, 114Aistnond *mew and ex -Argo leotealt star 57sretttirtatigniliftalials Euddenly dropping out of active sport....4 Mill take a lair amount of exercise as a preventive aa common allonento I depend e lot on my 'little daily of Krusehen Saito morning in a glaring 1 recommend it hesitation. KEEPS E FEEUNe UKE A MI ION VOL RS each for special purpose. Potassium Kruschen ntains several feebly xeringoesilidet, for forrhenmaticswalltomsaula of r g formation of harmful the nes. earisceen helps nese, acid oti t pot that .4 es in teresesh- .ideats s and imparts feeling of St, - makes you enjoy minute of the day., 25c. 4Se, 75e at drug stores. ITS THE LITTLE DAILY DOSE THAESff beliag covered iwith, seminal 'ding and sandbags 'In an &Poet to safeguard theta against bombing. Rut if the gaiety and joy of life are .gotte from Penis:01re French wit, the keen tremor, tee individuality isa., taste persist. L'Oeuvre, one of the popular niewspapers, still.. ,publishes its delightful cartons, somewhat re- miniseent of the New Yorker. 'Phie French artistic instinct has found a new means of expression in the arrangement of the steeps of pa- per wheOh are pasted over almost all windows in order to avert ,bomb con- cussdons,. The strips are of varied colors, from pale blue and seaegreen to tbe ordinary 'white and brwn]. Foe - designs the Parisians have selected all sorts of geometrical lignreg, squares, oblongs, circles, parenee limes and radiating star lines.' A large fliorist has put up a beautiful, flower arrangement in paper of var- ied colors and a steamship company offers an artiencally designed tropi- cal Island, with a -ship -approaching it. A young man consulted a doctor. He was afraid of a nervous break- down_ • "Why?" asked the doctor. The man replied: "Because I talk to myself all the time." "That doesn't prove that yotere go- ing to have a breakdown," said the doctor, "But I'm ea boring," objected the patient. mi•••••••ba In Toronto' 41044•1•11MIONL A Modern Hotel Convenient - Economical Bate Single IM 0 • up Ueda! Weekly and Monthly Balsa,. lyfrite for Folder. Rote rity 1: Spacibia Ave. at College St. A. M. Powell President , LONDON and WINGHAM NORTH -Exeter Hensel' KiPPen M_ 10.34 10.46 10.61 Brucefield 11.00 Clinton 11.47 Londes bona a- 1206. Blyth 12.16 Belgrave 1327 Wingham 12.45 SOUTH Win,gham Beigrave }Myth Londesboro Clinton eva..• Brucefield Kipper' Mensal Exeter P.M.1. 1.50 1.06 1.17 1.26 3.00 1120 2.10 145 Lift C.N.R. TIME TABLE EAST km. P.M. Ooderich 6.35 2.16 Holmesville 6.50 152 Clinton 6.58 SAID Seaforth 711 ILA "SL Columban 717 1122 Dublin 7.11 129 Mitchell 730 141 WEST Mitchell 11.06 9.29 Dublin 1114 9.341 Seaforth 11.30 9.47 Minton 11.45 10.00 Goderich 13.05 14.15 C.P.R. TIME TABLE EAST Godartch Meneet lifedlevir A rn Blytb Walton McNaught Toronto WEST P.M. 4.2411 424 4.33 4.42 4.62 5.05 5.15 9.041 to Itaidrelra “cleopoules Needle are WWII& - te.q. int • • Se X, ; s 4 4 4 4. yal tt11e]