The Goderich Signal-Star, 1941-05-08, Page 41112,001)1111,I011 SIGNAL.STAlt
Itr-(Sobtrittli Oiguat-
'0014111NINO THE oor,wreu SIGNAJJ AND THE Ci01)C
. PUbli8hea be ,7Signa1-Stee Prees, LiMited.
' Weat iiitreeti Goderich; Ontario
OH TA -1;e
- -A HURON 01.14 BOY $PEAX$ 'ti e- to read it all, and as Meet Of it
goes directly into the waste Paper
*W. Der4 Nielsen. the 'sole vmraan rerePtacle it represents a, waste,a tieee
**Weer,
et the HettSe ef Cprublruxn't and, e'orgy en the part of teese 411-13,0
„
edeenete, aeree peeullar. riewe le her prepare it and send it out. But it
' Opeeebee, end the"other day in the steeps Coining,
-
. „
!ti3Oteae 1, A. OregOry, member for 2,
leeighbOrrag Saskatcheivan, EprroRIAL 4,0,t6,0
401141m-14*d 'her 'right' to talk° as she
. ,
does sie the representatiee of her' cells If Mr. Ileley'e new tax enscosesetine
'Stitt/pates, Mr. Otegery, by the waS', is heavy enough to stop the sales, we
* 4 %Wire Of Jxeter i thisecountYs shall ,haye; a elianoe to see what a
*Oa Vveta' Well 4snown in Groderich, as a giri really leeks
yeunte mans cilie speeeh',.0i,S,'reported as ' 1,/ • t *
Celli:ewe; The Britlek,cetuntantier at Gibraltar
, ,
If a plebiscite were held now lo issues a defiance to illitler's "marauders
beridin.,'e1ghtY,4,1re Per ele114' stud baudits." Like the warrior of
the eorietituents. ,of Mrs. Dore another day he mieht haw tieelared s
_
Nielsen. would condemn lier viesrat .
Tile other ,fifteen per cent, would ome one, come all;
' ‘vosist otganinnios;o w4oixt• This rock shall fly,
there are mane' h that etnestitie From its firra base as soon as I,"
ener, the anti•evar 'prePagaudiets
and_other.subveriive elements:
„ (Saek-UCTieWail-e-baseeteeelargess-
' foreign -bore pepulation, Mr. Greg-
• ory continued; which "caneot be
exPeeted to have' the same venera-
etionter those thingeeve ealk.„Britieh
as ;those born. of British etock
"It shodld surely, then," be
added, t"be the duty ot thee coming
from 'British etoek to inculcate into
the foreignsborfl the value et the
"heritage'whtehiebeceme theirs in a
Britiels lende- Leedom, democracy,
the- rieht to choose and to live the
chosen life within the law:"
Mr..Gregery ealsis,"fear is being,
, instilled that the -Government has ,
enslaved, the people, tla.at
,Goveremeat is domineering, that
• the Defence of Canada Regulations -
hale destroyed demecracy and,the
rights andslibertieS of the peonle,
that the `libertiee lost in wartinte
may not be reg,ained in peace time." o
Sffeffiter teeenge
gest that the people ar disturbed
•
aid 'bewildered anq.ere filled with
fear .or thesaetione of -tis Gov- "
erairo.ent. or the operations of the
Defenee of Canada Regulation18
only le einegese that if there" be a
shred of truth in that statern.ent,
• then this state, of disterbance, be-
wilderment Or feer was net in the.
minds of those au.djerices until the
speaker placed it there," he said.
Mr. Gregory setoted as report of
„ the council of the Montreal Board
of Trade, which made "a thorough
Stude of the Defence of !Canada
, itegulatiens, h.geld, -and found
that "no royal citizen has anys
,thing to fear aeseeresult of ' th,eir '
enforcement."
es.aenater,e_Peeperesefr., Flori is a
aleppery individual. want e; the -
United; States, in co-operation with
Britain, to occupy .Greenlana, the
AZerese the Cape Verde and Canary
Lalands, !and Dakar on the West
African coast, and he -would like to
lieve U.S. air pilbts Ily to Japan and
"bomb Tokio uatii there would pee be
enough left, to build a !bonare." In a
verbal duel between the Senater and
Lindbergh, we'd put our money on the
Senator.
• It 18 grat/Ping -to have the evidence
of a good Britisher. like Mr. Gregory
th,at . the people of Saskatchewan., even
ef her. own riding; do not endorse the
views which 'Mrs. Nieleen hoe- ex --
pressed, in Parliament and elsewhere.
-
0
-SPRINO
!'khere'S emnethinwabout wing that'
you simply valet help butenotiee. Spring
is iz . the air that -yow be.-,eathe in the
early morning , .erp azui"freeh,
with A brightsun overhead promteing
heat within a yerY short -apace of OMR;
There'a toucb of spring in the way
the daiSt clouds up after the seed drill
or the herrowe., The dirt feels crumbly
and fertile under your feet, crumbling
as you walk and. building up little
mounds. of dost u the toecaps of your
shoes.
I like to stop and rest , at the end of
the ile_14,en4 eve where the leave* are
mistier,' over the eleaclowe of the bare
trees oft the ground.Treve la, wel-
come, frieadly Sound tie twittering
birds as they flit abOut on the, 'branches.
You can% help but feel ,the friendli-
•
It is not surprising to learn -that last
month. was the warmest April since
records. have been kept in Ontario,- a
period of ninetysnine years. Oki.
Country • visitors, we .beiievt, are. sur-
--4-effek7t-fansIrlibin
winter- cold to spring warmth which
they have -experienced here; but, al-
though the wiather -does eneeesmore
quickly here than in Britain; it inust
be said that spring in Canecla, does
not aiwascs dome *with. such. a jump as
.it did this year..
.* *
lion. J. L. Ralston, Canada's Minister
of Defence, was in Toronto for six
re the other day and in that, time
de an ,impartant international ad-
dress, inspected an arsenal,
lre-Cinithig depot, and a traieing.depai."
Ile had left his:office at the etipital.
earlier in the day ily to Toronto,
sand after his busy six hours there he
• flew tback to endi the day -at his -desk at
'Ottawa. It takes a strongman to et
through, a, day like that, ahd Col.
Ralston has been working at tilts pace
for months on
i -As the. greatest poultry eounty lo
'Canada, Heron should b eepecially
ieterested in the British order for
5,400,000 dozen eggs in May. As we
observed last , week, Biddy will have
to get busy. A. Government bulletin
says that' an addlitienal two eggs from
each pthdaeing hen in Canada during
the month of May would result in. more
thao enough eggs to fill, this big order.
:Cailade, it appears., has a hen popula-
Bulletins from the Ontario Depart- tioe of not, far_ from 'fifty millions:
• meet' of Agricultttee on "Soiling Crone' Poultrymen' are 'urged not to depend
• Valuable in Keping TJp Fiow," and wholly upon the patriotic impulses of
•-"Mei -18th- Best. - Thne-• .t° t etriI0ks, but telfeettthemswell ,and
. Potatoes." This latter subject "ins take good care of .the, eggs day by day.
trigtted" us, and we wondered whYs Britons must have their -bacon and eggs,
whenthe bnlletin was, so precise, it and "Canadian farms will not fail as
, say wheth.er the potatoes should provider,e.
be planted before' or deter church, tor •• • p.
May 18th atcordiag to our calendar will, It was expected that financial ar- Nazis- are not likely to want more than
'be Sunday. litosever, a glakeetVerugli, rangeinenti betWeert -Canada' and -the all -e oem
4,1
wirtilt$DAY. MAY 8th2
Current Views on the War
THE rliER,VilliN TEACIREW$ 04Tili we do net look, for a way over. We
The eontraet between the -Neat system itust g,O• straight through the river anti
edecation and education 'in thiS get te the ler 13311k- selgehow or
o ether. " We try to go acroea eotintry
eoutitry (England)t ,Vres referred to by like a welletr-aitied hunter. We teach
the President -of- the Board of Fedueal- ourselves to climb end to juirte) off tanY-
tion (cor.responding to elir Minister of
Education) vvhen speaking' at the au- thing up to a •twenty -foot wall, We
teaelf ourselvee how to move quickly
nual meeting of the Surrey Teachers'
, ' ' on dark' nighte; we try to go twe ot
Union
-Mr. liamsbotbam eald that all Ger- ,
three days without food-withont
man teachers had to swear the' folloWs i'vorVing about .0-0(1. We try to teaell
oath: "Adolf Hitler, we swear that ourselves not . to notice wet and cold
thg and cuts and bruises; we
we will train tlie -Youth of Gerntany -are, in feet',
that thee, grow up in your ideology, trying to fled out for oerselves jut
for ,our •aims and purPoses, in the 11°w' much I lean can do, and Viol
directien set by Your Will. This Is
pledged to you by the whole German
sySteln of education• from the primary
school through. -to the university."
"Oould a more effective contrast be
found than that oath and the complete
freedom vvhiele. teaehers in this country
enjoyed?"' 'There," continued Mr.
Itamsbothana, -"is- the poison- that haa
tiess of spring, It' e everywhere you
turn, Across the Big MeadowS the spread throughout thelife of the Ger-
Man people, through the prostitution' of
Higgins g-Irls are whacking earPet$ tYn its educational system, from lofeney.to
the line. . and the Wudows are open;
with. the curtaires -nein:Ping' in the :spring '14tbiaenillnQb."Iorti; 1.(21ret towtteetiliF:in114:1; aw4dar,Pui.nrL/),,It
breeze. the into living sacrifices. ne
Dogs have pecullag way of yapping
' children -
in springtime. Take for instance the cording to the whini and wickedness of
one man. That inethodeis not for us;
1)n'P here' .1 -)ver since we Started- seed" it never has beeneour method and never
Mg he has been clashingback and forth win, b'
inthe fields . looking over ground-
sh,(4..rei4je„;$4,neahtieivat,400,..etnew...tenant Ifirrirorta.C:4za_aes the statewasevery-
aud finding old bones that he buried
so carefully last year. ter. Our task wasete educate our
Have you ever Watched the hens' in youngespeePWThat they might .remain
_—
bar,apr,? Take , roe- men and woraen, but at the same
the nyard: on a_ iagda3,.
time make their proper contribution to
notice how they scratchon a dry piece
of ground. First, one foot drags :back the life of the society. Every sichooi,
if it La properly to perfOrin its functhans,
carefully and then the other foot care- must Create a real community life of its
funk sffatches twice. Perhaps that is owe, with a. wide- range of intereat
the Way the present day waltz origin- Anu acUr1ties.. ° •
ated. • •
Spring has come to the 'village' On the question, ",What are we debt-
ing for?" Mr. Ramsbotham said that
The gareen plots have been worked•up this Was. a war between tvio standards
ahd the menfolks are busy in their ef moral and spiritual values. We
shirtsleeves hoeing and raking or spas]; were fighting to *prevent the imposition
ing, while the wotnen-folks work in the on ours -elves, -and on otheiss of an in -
flower -beds. Trust -the women -folks to human system of golemment
think of the beauty and the men to
think of the vegetables.
Tim Murphy, at the ;general store,
has moved the soap betee out oil the
eront etepe. Drive into the -villa&
these evenings and there'e -a crowdi
sittleg era -War 'We-VISO- tille-lotabe•
meetings have commenced again. War
ws is interspersed' with the aceounts
__seeAing_<?perations eliessestrious
,farmssau'd. the recitals -of various iive:
stock deals of the pat winter'.
. Sitting on the verandah at, home
these :spring evenings we can waten
the twinklbap. lights of the planes flying
overhead. Night bombere! We watch
the red and green tips. of light that
sail .along like myeterions • stars •
thankful that, the planes'. go peacefully
on their way, hi place of dropping
boinbs that will 'destroy our homes and
property and the quiet, perfect beauty
of a spring night.
s Spring has dbine ter -.Meadows.'
It's aPparent in the lasylike way we
face life. There's something about
spring sunshine that makes you want
to prop a seed grain hag' up at the barn
door and dozfe a.waae an (afternoon.
• Bovvever, there's work to be done and
we'll, survive the easy-goings:less that
Spring sunshlue• preempts and get tele
worlesdone end wait until the tender
sgreeneshoote come poking up through
the Warm, moist earth'. Another spring
f a n .421, summer- season has- come -to. Lazy
Meadows
EDITOR'S MIL
'nevespeper men are not the
• kmawingest people in, the land, it is
their own fault. Nearly every "orgeniz-
• ation, in the country, it seeing, aims to
keep them informed Of its- aims, its
doings, and what it expects of the
public. °
..For example, in one afternoon's, mail
ethe peat week there .-came to this
-• editor's'. desk:
differeetiations betWeell the dietater-
Ships and the demoeraelee, and whits in
the phyeleal realm, consider that. Am-
erican ititereste eyelid not be affect
by the victory of ties, former and the
defeat of the aatter.
In addition, a conme, New or
contains grouper which are definitely
Nazi end. Vaseist. Them are also the
Communists. No' clear dietinctien
needs to be made ;between the -se three
at • the present time. They agree In
exploiting, the natural fear and ,hate
of war. Each euPplements the activi-
ties of the others, in'epreading diseen-
sion, confusion and suspicion hy raiss
ing, irrelevant issues. Edch ateempte
to delay and hamstring effective de-
fense :neves.• Each doubtless. con
-
teaching that man bow to use hie ,ag. tributes its quota of Vies and Saboteure
,gprro,liestansciiivseetorrisstti,unaletterblegittihsie:v.hionlidcisiperthu.neeb:awrinpfell• ,tleourso4th:eerpethospite:ra,lemdteeaftylk2chfoe,f0000011ranei:loodeoetaisit.ti:sii,
Is one day coming to the °errn"ns" New York were borrein Germany, and
It is also, our promise to you, mothers some 34000 ,were •horn in Italy. these
and wives and 'sisters, whe are, betng
le;mbeci In eitites-to Wree
Ohurehes and wreelted lioanittes and to
inoffenaive little horaeS which are
now beeps of rubble. It is out, pro-
mise �2. retribution, '
-The Listener (London).
NEW YORK AN» Tird wAit
Te,stif, ying favoreof the lendaease
bill, Mayor. !La 'Guardia remarked: "I
want -to-be realistic and ,‘ take_ .-no
chances. My city won't be iiiiinbed, if
the 'British fleet holds out." These two
sentenees-larelitW-o-hireesirfsetife.
reasons why meet New York. represent-
ateasee in Oongrese favor aid to Britain.
„Xs the Mayor said on ' the4ttme oc-
casion : qt'e very little torafort to, the
*Cities on Use Atlantic Coast and the
Pacific Coast that this country IS a
• citadel which. can never be conquered,
when you explain to- them that the
Citadel is west of the Alleghenies and
east. Of the Rockies." ss .
It should 'not* -be imagined from this
that New York does not contain fairly,
important elements , whieh favor ap-
peasement on one ground or another.
some are simply pacifist, either because
imposed upon tis, would ,ciesitrby all thatinatirtg good will, or becturse they think
-they are of abeneding and undiscrim-
we valued and would • be infinitely
already possessed. We Were 1Ighting to there. is nothing • worse elan war or
worse than, the social stem which we
keep open the Window of liberty which es , efrr 0 :mbeceaaurstehotgheeybs syttoyrk (tiogivanorainndg
dlirsittoh4
, , ,.. , , _ att -'t-') that -"war never settles
„ppm O.. • , „„. ,
r enPDXlentfinind neCeSserY to , cles0 anything."-- .Semesare. def,eatist.- ...Some
,because. they could Only inehatain- their
existeeee in the stifling atmosphere of ,
whose "protierty nerve" is -particularly
yPreagion. • TM's alone demanded and on any terms. Some hate President
sensitive would like the war "fixed tiP"
sanstifted'sour tamoet- efferts- - --- --; s Roosevelt sommuch-that7.--they --eaunot
-Times Educiationel. Supplement favor aty course he faeors. Some hate
(Louden), '' '
TRAINING FOR THE. KNOCICOUT elle
r 4 '
de,iit nOWeVelt. • , Some agree with Col -
England so much that they hate Presi-
1 Lindbergh in preferring peat* now
IA would not be unnaturaisif quite a 'to a British victory later. 'Some join
lot of people were wondering today Mr. Ford in wishing that both sides
'just what, the arm -y 18 England le Would be defeated and "punished," one
doing with itself, .whee everybody else for seeking to. conquer .and despoil its
Is so busy.. !Pilots, sailorsair raid rivals,the ether for daring to resist
wardens, polietire fighters
tion workers, and'ordinary; people just vlous47 hold
: most of the people who . -
•e, , muni-
sbeing conquered and despoiledOb
carrying on With. ordinary. jobs: all ure ch. eiews anot pro -Nazis or pro:
,.
these Semi to be so much more actively Fascists. The furthest' oee- might, go is
committ&I'to the war than 'the soldier
himself. ..Very -.properly, of course,
.people do not see the soldier 'going,
through the training' into -that' right -
.hand ,Punch -that knoCk-out • btew
which is. coming. one day freni us to
,,the -Germans; but I have been allowed
to give you just an idea of what- is
piling -up behind it, . •
' • belonr--twone -of many unitS-untler:
going training in, iiftensive action; it
would be more tree, perhaps, to call it
aggressive action', We -Start lay.strain:
ing ourselves, as well as we can, as
good soldiera.. We do that, of course,'
because the -technique of soldiering
must come first. .It is just as iniport-
era as the use ef brush sand paint to
the ,painter, 'or- the use of. tools to the
carpenter. More important .still, we
,have to train -ourselves to start off
doing .a tbing in the right way by in-
stinct. The welistralhed soldier auto-
• matically takes the best. way, to set
in connection with the resentescape and: about his object; and this is, the re-
re-captere of twenty-eight Germans suit. of ite acquired technique -the very
from the camP near Sehrieber has-been first part of an • Soldier's. trainink•
the death of two of , the misoner. Bet beyond that we, are 'training on
When, thiS news gets to Gerieeeiy; , whieh are really new td large-
uot likely to -make it.eaeier_foreBrittsle scale armies. Weare no longer moeld-
prisoners of war.. •The, incident will hsg uirrividnality eo -as to produce
help Canadians .16 ,nealise that this, nothing more thanemachine, -a body of
men*whose behavior we can aecurately
ides, and that the treatmera of peison- foretell -under certain accurately fore-'
atuestion is one to which there are. two
.ere of Vttr,:is governed- by very strict seen .eonditions.'"rhat is what every-
-international jaw, departure from s
which is eartainto bring reprisals: And we are now encouraging on. used to do But on the contrary,
We want eiteb. Man to act off his own
d'-yetiteeerttiugstostrtehem
'er's 'general plan and intention. . We
want him to be -able to do :that what-
-ever !happens, even in, the face of the
:moats enexpected --and difficult eondi-
tions. He will be thee like'partaif -the
eommander'S Mind offensively in action
against the enemy.' ..•. '
. And then we have to learn a rigi
.earade-greends clistipline, end.
neve that this, .is the cement WhiCh
binds all . the other. aggressive quale
ties together. . Thki is Perheles the
Most difficult of all. our jobs, because
.at one moment We, are asking a man to
use ,,,all the resource and imagination
which. lie in hires. and at the oext we
are •asking liim .for ebsolute unques-
tioning pbedience. . ' . •
n This -is the. sort of “, thing that We
are doing with outrselves. tp prove, to
friends. from across 5 -the lhie this three getting across the order. n., ourselves that . we can do more than
Summer, ' tlet boas novv lYgtn closed -0 bod.-5
even fhis le will adMit We march
them". Every escape, gives the author- -1-
twenty-five Miles 'in six or seven 'hours
ities a deal Of elerable. - But. there- iOtid; .an(wewine' hi' Wet,.
really ,no need for all the pother about
are trkt, all pre -Nazi or pre -Fascist by
&smut were pleased to hear of the
earlier Italian- sncereties, they bad not
,feit eoneeioue wed for them the wey
Ger- It-it,S tiring abrea'de thirsted fOr •the
rehabilitation Of the ,German race
through, Germaa arms. qtalianS have
Pew!: been 'much bothered by theories'
of racial euperierity or Inferiority. They
do not Suff'er fraan the German inferior -
try eDniplex, and de • not feel the
eianate !German urge' to belong to a
,race of onquering • heroee,
Two'other Of New York's eompOnent
mem elements deserve mention. .New
York Ls the greatest city in the
world, ahead of 1)ublin, and also the
world's Jewish, capitrae. with half ef
all the Jewe in America and over an
eighth of the total number inethe' world,
The ..TtIVE, naturally hate regintes
which discriminate against -their race, ,
especiall,y the: Nazi tegline which has
rAbbed, 1-vatele Jailed and murdered,
their brothers in Germany, They -are
anti -Nazi almost to a man, and. the
-st. majority are in fluor of helping
any means. Each. Vidal grouri is epins- langlands Now and then ow encounters
posed Of •two vocal wing e and a large
Inert mass in the centre, ,wilich tends
to shift its eyraPathiee In aceordance
with the Inert:tiling tews from Europe,
The general moss of Geratale-Araericalle
are more-inelined. to fator Hitler than
the mass of Italians are to favor Mus -
wallet, This IS partly! 'becau,se'even.
those who do , not `approve Hitler's
tyrennietil methods cannot help ,being
dazzled by his. successes. They try to
think a, him litsGet'inan rather than*
-Naziesterixte,-MoreteversstheeNazis4ov
eminent has, been exceedingly% busy
here. Nazi agents trace out with in-
finite care the relationships of every
individual in the ;German:American
temmunity ; and those with faintly ties
in the old cOuntry are given to under-
stand, that any neautiou,s, statement
4
or action will r , ult in .immediate ' re-
taliatory aCtions gaiest those relatives
by tbe G-estapo'. • '
TOO MUCH POTHER ABOUT
• ESCAPES
(OrilUa.Patket and Times)
If the Oanadian- authorities -in charge"
of Prisoners of war have ,beeu lax in
guarding the Nazis, it must -be said
for them that they have made a good
job of rounding thein np after their
esea.pe. The most regrettable feature
The Rattails, who admire Messolini
are less viacal than Elitler's -admirers
are, and, the Italian colony as A whole
has begun to look on, the -glories of
Fascism. with a slightly jaundiced eye.
Some of Mussolini's .earlier aemieers
had already -become lukewarm follow-
ing the adoption- of anti-Semitic legis-
lation in. Italy., Stories of food short-
age8 at ho were worrying, too. And
the price,- importedsdelicacieseeolive
-oil, cheese, salami -shot up - to:. en- -foreign,born, - - - - _s-
and North Africa, the •Greek victories Bu't there -is -no evide*nce that eithx
popular heights. Then came the re- '
versal of Fascist fortunes hi Ethitipla
in Albania and the British- bombieg of u/zt.,,, to tei6k, or natiegeolene, Naze_
foreign agents, or foreign -,born elemen
Italian ports. NewYork Italians slow that might naturally be tempted td
hie picture has begun to come down off Faecist or Oonimunist fellow -travel- .
lers, or respeetable people who halve
tell inguiring reporters that Mussolini
the walls of Italian- barber shops and ceme to doubt the merits of the Am-
is More a Fascist than aneItalian, and
-fruit stores. • • eriean viay of life or the desirability
and feasibility of defending' it, have
,. viteions 1,441,s.onsitan be
given for the succeeded in making any real dent in
fact that the' Italitth 'Government never_ New York's fundamental Americenism.
r feesionel Zionist Wild Is lee§ than
100 per cent for, Britain. And ee„
casionally an American of Jewish. blood,
-is diffident about urging a bOld attitude
Offer& the War for fear of attracting
jewebalters into fresh exeesses. On
',the whole, , however, New -York Jews
have been influenced by the same funda-
Mental Metives that 'move other sober
end, patriotic Axnericans And the ex-
tent of titeir charity towards sufferers
from the Hitler terror, Jew and !Christ-
ealikess-often %puts,. Obristia,iseetee:„-
shame.
The reaCtions a the Irisia-American
coinniunity ar -also of ,interest end of
great political importance. One qtee.
tion might be described as, lukewarm
with regard to helping England. An-
other section, not more numerous per;
shape but -mere influeatial, has urged
that every megna be used to defeat
Hitler, and that this involves putting
aside old grudges and4assisting Britain
to the limit. 'Neer York's leading
Ratifier -Catholic layman, Alfred E.
Smith, is of this opiniene There is
third -contingent, small: but vocal, which
hates King William ell (who died in
1702). to such dis extent that it loves
the enemy of any English king, even •
wlien that' enemy is Hitler. Th1,8 min-
ority includes the Irish -American fol-
lowers of --Father Coughlin, himself
..04••••
susceeded, • in organizing the Italian " -
'''Th Edit • or of VOreign Affaiis
'German e c eney. e (New ;ork).
,e6mmunitY in New York with real
•
lee reason is that Italian S- have. a
gronger traditional liking for liberty -
to say that mane of them are Nazi .the liberty of Mauler and !Garibaldi --
end , Fascist "fellow-travellere" who,. I than do the 'Gentians. Also, though
in the moral fealm, are not interested in many ,simple workmen of Italian
ffi 1 ' Th most appeal:
tree pia n t in g time is here -time to
-recall the parthag advice of a 'SCOttiSh
laird to his son. "Be ayesticking la
a tree, Jock. It will be grow& while
y're sleeping."
eref:is i!:"!
erer,leek‘g:
'
• •••• • • • • •
. I I " I I
'the bulletin reve'els that some latitude United States might- permit the relaX-' them tender. Prisoners; of war are
ation of the regulations which prevent 11°t
gaged in the -service of s•their eguetry,
crimmals. They have been en
Is , allowed flie.•potato-planter-"froin
- --; iCartadians from. visiting *th-e- United, however reprehensible we may eonsider
the leth` te the g5tx of May le the
most desirable time." ' States except upon business or fOr-ttlat ,Serviee to 'be. Th,eyecan be strictly
Next, a bulletin. from Canadian reasons of • health. The restrictions,' confined.may f•even be set to
. Housleg ilerews-"Permanent RePaill" howeversssare. being continued, the-
viork. IBut -their lives- must not be
Feature 'Olean Up.' " Waste paper anadessintolereble. -
olyject,' of course, being . to conserve It may as well be r,ecognised, also,
, 'haSket. ' • Oanadian fulfils Which are required for that theechief recreation of Prisoners of
Canadian Travel Bureau News- the purchase of war materials ',Aron' the war is planning escapes. It ts a game
letter. ,W.P.B, .. States. So vres shall hdee to cenfin between theenisoners arid- their guards,
(4ommunicatidn frons Press Gensar8 e. In the last war, hundreds of. British
our e'visitingr a*eross th. line to letters, prisonere m,atle their eSeape from Ger
4',.. Calladoe . Filed'•. With th•e promise, T"We'll be seeing you mah. prisons, and many • of; therti got
Bulletins from (Ntivy TA
--ague. w-P:EJ•--later." There is no- restrietion upon into neutral countries. This time their
slitn. But so are these of the Ger-
Ottawa. Read tind sent' oai-to " the Panadar and here in Gotlerich We shall man prisdnere in Canada. Sec far they
linotYPe fq.r. , hope to see great numbers of our have had. succe.ss, only two or
•
More agricultural bulletins: W.P.B.
tl
TW e sets of bulletins from the can -
radian Legion -liar 'se-islge.$
Morality bulletin of the Provinehil
Department of Game and Fisheries.
Handed to Doc Mabee. e
Large envelope from Direetor of
Publie Ieformati6o, Ottawa, tontaining
a dOien large leakee of information On
various matters:, mat for an engravflig
og simile bid shot :in Canada's war
• personnel; large map of western Part
Of Germany -showing places that have
been !bombed (intereeting but not par.
• ticularly ueefulje
Gardening -letter ,whiela. Gitootild ap-
pear in thie tette.
'Large :envelope containing C.B.C.
" schedule and a let of other information
•, on Tadio mattera which will be handed
ove'r -4oineone more interested in the
radio than( thie cditetr 18
Thieeegivce some idea of what an
editer ettPleVed to Wade through day
after day. Thelitext mail 'might bring
bulletifie from the Health Leagtte, the
• . ()N.B. publicity depaetment, ow or
more Of dozen 'GoveruMent depart-
ments. Mere ogriettItural bulletine, etee
Sorteeof tine etuft is meant to
be bolPful, but no Oditor could sPare ekunk carrying an 'umbrella?
• Alex, lIume's weekly letter from travel from the. JUnited tates,* into eha,nces of getting back to Britain will
",gvery duty, well and honesdy •
done, is a contribution to victory.ni,
NILE
•NI•IX, May 5. -The trustee hoard of,
Nile church met last Thursdayto'make
plans for the annetal 2411i of gay
supper and concert. In all probability
the event will ,be 'held on the 23r4 of
May, as the 24th comes on -Saturday.
Further announcements later.
-fiervicee at Nile 'church will be at 7.3,0 have Called jazk "barbaric," have been
1
in the eveoing instead -of in ,the after- -*thane an injustice to thebarbarians.
nowt front now on, , e! ' A South ' American explorer recently
Mr. I. Currey flak bought inquite teeted the musical taste of primitive
a drove of -cattle and has- them -placed, Amason 'River Indians -by inviting them
at different Plams for pasture, to hear iehort-wa,ve broadcasts from the
Milted. States. Symphony piecee leek/
them spellbound, but jatz made them
frown. .-They ealled it ugly: Jazz may
Itaie been borfowed from • primitive
muele, but these !savages considered it
hungry and ehlart of slep. Our
occasional breakaways. The prisoners
Muscles and, feet and shoulders; rather
are -Usually .reeca, ptured before leo&
'. naturally say that it is time to rest.
And in any event -they are not likely to
But we, do not rest We go on for
oapture Ottawa. e• ailother fifteen or tvventy miles, and
MUSICAL TASTE
at the end of that, of counse, it seems
impoliAbib to take another step or make
. (Boston Post) •
another movement. But really It is
It appears that music critics who Toeseoto S e go .on and do 11 (patter
of an hours sinarttarins drill, or run
to the top of- a nearby hill and iback,
or do a slinple infantry manoeuvre,
or praetise, -say, an attaek aerose a
!rough bit of eountry.
We have learned a lot that way.
&nue Of us, for instanee, have marched
sixtyethree mIleh !Itt battle order in
well" under t'Wenty-four itodre. Others
have -done over ferty, miles with full
paeke in well . under tweoty hours
anything but an improVement.
And all 02 tis ilialse done a sprint
mareh of' twouty.fouir irtkiieo with arms
and equipment and ammunition in eix
houre or lees. 'That 10 four mileean
Atnerhei'e feminine elothing industry hour --actually more -for -eix hours
Valuettlit t2i300,000,004). Never was eontinitonsly: No one considers the
so much ataid for on, I1tt1c oiibltity of falling out ott these
mardeee. .N'ite (lon't fall out, we go or,
Auiitie 41)o you ever Pim With bad ;There ieto way otiVef anything we
little boys', Jutve M oureeltes to do except ito
Willie: 'YO, Auntie." r eompletion„,. -
Auntie: "Why iton't you pias. with There are all .sora 'way a In whielt
good little boy" ' title diecipline 18 carried. out. If we
Willie: 'Their mdtherg worn let me." eome to a (rivet and we aro in a 'hurry,
AlIFIELEO
1s1witz6,d, May 43.-316. Charles
Rebb is home after a few' months in
WIngham lioopital. ,
aliee Sadie rarriali wae home from
'cloderleh for the week4;m1, •
• Mr. Alex. MaeUan 18 In Goderleh
novital, Gerlously ill. ,
Mr. and Mrf),,p.1Ibert Howes and
Mice am1 Xan, and Ulm 3Iurie1
Ilennlim all a Wroxeter, wore Sunday
guenG of Mr. Earl !Howes),
,Kkeptie Mtee: Can thisfeoat be worn
in the rain without huotitee Fur
Salteman : readY, did you 4we2 $et ik
OW VtilltAT DOES 'OILS MEAN?
(pondon Free press)
When our installer finishes his job of putting in your
telephone, he says in effect--
"Now'you can talk with ahnost anyon, anywherer
,
v.-
The.I.act la in.normni emelt yommay reach any
telephone anyiAtere —up to„more than 90 per cent of
the .total telephorterin the world. , •
Each year we have tried to make your telephone,
•
•
service' of greater, vatic to you than ever before. Calls'
2
are completed more quickly; more accurately. Tour
• voice i clearer, more recognizable at any
• interruptions to your servidet7-never frequent— Ili°
More infrequent than ever.
rew thins you buy are of greater value — day in,
day' out than your ;telephone servioioDependablois
courteous service, at reason-
able cost—that is our constant 04c4:00 .,e4444'w
goal, in peace and war.,
rj"
— .
*ft... •