Loading...
The Goderich Signal-Star, 1944-05-04, Page 2- THE' GDgRi Y' SIGNATATAR r POSOHNO4 THE- lalOtorcRIelit SION,Kto AND i GODER 011, Published by Prean, Xlimite4, a Welt, •l$tteet, G 1erich, Ontario ' i hon Ra't Canada and Great Britain, Saco a year; to United �oCRt t&tes, , ,Q, .. .. Tete ole •lL ,�:ddv�'i?i.�_�tatea on `scales„ Ph ` • :� •� RSD �.'�', � 1►iA-X 4th,- 1041 1.f"DO, • '. "f II imou h n o _t peep% a� �t1dE'i.i�. a d The >�' p ,. r cti ' ofM qui-. -,bounty: `fright .net be accused 3 _ e et toe ::tiueii �isiii _ if ,they did afiot nniforo r H dtQ orrises c2t y. pr . , .. , _ u heiu: by.'rtlae,'succ.e:�sf i �stte�°.Haase to t 1 el ' ca � " n � P • vi last o . e i th e' in„ can fiat s 4�. ou h their leader; novo Von, . Alto g ad held out • alluring Preuaier Drew, #i his 1• e, there`' was. pr4specks , �altwg t ).ii . M ^1. to e. titles_ ,the opposition of” .the; big of .r bo n thestub ;; ' reckoned :with, and - also , Attitude which: Dr Taylor, member for Anton,fou>�d to exist nniong• the •pf- Ontario: Hydro -Els h' &c' f e rad Q.. t knower Commission. It will tape more than a few polite requests. to overcome this opposition by the' supporters of` the present- order.. - ` Dr. Taylor at. his meeting here on Monday eight modestly admitted that he was .not as thora'ughly acquainted ils of'. Hydro riiitte•s-.as^ with the• iteta fie would like' to be. 'If he had' been, nn have been surprised .that' • otild_ ew iiss o� Ontario 1Vluuicipal Electric A.s- the Qu s, sociation voted down si • uniform rate - E . _. has *always, ,proposition. �he.O.M, .A bythe -city inter:. been dominated. big ' ests, ..To such 'an extent is this the . he outlying n1 ni'ct: ease thattoiany =o�.,t„ y g �, . • ,palities do . not bother sending - any delegates to its meetings; and particu- Iarly- at this year's meeting, we are in- - formed, the Outlying districts were, largely sinreprese ted�-beea-us --•of the distances to, be tray weather and the. - ea use of gasoline: • have exp eted t to by presea ' ny `•`p o,.lfoam:'ra. •. meat to the 'officials_ of 'the• H.Err.+C. lie older eeneration, and icritgiat by' the. t 3 i ,.;he . r{ 'generation:,,, ne 'a ii.',,. Addressitag. , , a. Younger' gf' i t o �. j atlieriu Y at London last week. -Itis t race ol,ser�ved, that the -present war'. has • been:iIitlicted . on:. the -world • by b . Younge. is -the° Nazi -educated' outh, ,pol2y of Gerniauy�-•-a,ud_ tliat it is the old -age - t hill 'o- rou • represented byChurchill, iX , R os� • group; 1 telt; Stalin and the. Allied generals, that is ''pulling too world '-out, of it. A,.iud- . Is• four mi have been. a;nothei gel al at fight° ha 11 PhD ostierof Lazy Modals • The asixs a. Bose Si 8 N r FOG There was a 'sharing fog this 'morning g we when et un . , a, thick., grey veil � d. sail pit g ix. o1l er. IieF ling tvsY at h, r. n ; �a'r al the �worl ,that --was- drtil . - -ea • 1,auati.. The -Me-' -h`,,� -oak t? ail fel' : stlell t�li;iilbs• :xis something . the ;iii' being cool load the•,gl:ound beau avarin. .. or ,airs other way itround;, t t it. is 't a, very colorful explanatio b 4 n na a otinds' too much like semet g Y Its. Would learn- in school. • v • ° . e ' d ii, .`slush bets A riry�,,gtuoidfath }, had . , r , a planation ,for the whole thing, • explanation s� •id : that „fog. cisme • in ,the fpr" said Natare, was sig b bet'gatt- Mother iy�t u . xiu the WOrld-`ttl) 'foi'r' sumo C].' th 1 thee night simply wasn't, is il £ . eTau she draped the veil over ev erythi so ] r, to give her a' 1 4th, 1944 Current Views*on War TUX. IT�f71aIt3►1Y FRQNT 111 the Italian: theatre Jim Alliea. have been facedsaby a foe''fighting under• serious: , disadvantages, but fighting ,t'leverly'and tenaciously. The .Germans tehed~ i he fir, � nt numbered 'At least at • the front. udder-. gunned .and,. tannest for the first time) very: uneven in the. quality of their to "fin ` hose.. of fo>"ivairions. As „i'n•;ti_ , al p... .. , the lest Is ar, officers 'liate: been -reduced h la:to,o1S being coma to a `zninitilurii, p' •n b N.0}O: s, Proles, Czechs, and zna sed Y d into" the. 'Croats have , been. drafted .t . -,of ,divisions. 'Vet, they ere or a i still forngi,dable and,efficient. - The r first-class.. 'Troops of • etic a ae. Har t � ani dl hx the 'FiEtli mr}d�r Eighth Armies . hardly ever encounter. a xu.achiiie-gain 'iiesta mel, which is not skilfully posted. The n sts will. bide their time with in' these , e , the s and u .11dns o e equi�k;psttiene a make deadly use ot.the extremely r p rate,ot f re of thieir autoivatie wea.pona. . The mobile'artillery and mortars are • brilliantly handled. Even when prisoners are found to be • stunned the by" 'Allied artillery concentrations, the - attackers have seldom had -an- easy passage to't-heir objeetives._ The ordin- ary infantry prisoners often come in in a state of depression; but those from special ormations are as truculent as ever, There isha trickle' of deserters, chiefly foreigners.• - Th. country lends itself to tt dour The derence in depth, and, even the - best maps and Iihotographs did not fully 'reveal .its' possibilities in this respect. flank the •chief obstacles O» tl,e�astern are the "river -valleys :.across 'the line of advance. s Most of these rivers. are i erable streams ... in themselves, iitcons d except When .swollen by hea�tyq ffows from the mountains; but they run in deep, precipitous gullies .cut through vnin valleys which the bottoms of yawning. y .must have,.*Cd'rriecl Vast volumes of water in pre -historic ages. Bad as is. WS: country, I rate it as better. .than :that to, the west,of the mountains, but liftle privacy, Nov the reason , 'to'' set' your imagination _� tiniliug;'thing c r r gine` 't p �•ha ,an�'f t e : ata x ,. wil lle l iiia ,. alded:'`t t u u � >i ' Tliere�Tsai w a h' ran it's:'soft,a i es g 13, fag u t p fall 1�a great 'part' of the • ebur en of about g Paying -for -it. • * *• ettie ,The .Globe and. Mail holds forth at ell in winter -ietions on the . „Taylor eadway • argu� '-They are wedded. -to -the-present system•; great -length. on the "strange and torttl-, ous• processes of the Government's re- cruiting' system" and the Government's "feeble, shambling polity -about recruit- ' arx�* ing."° The 0. and M. is so bent on And - lug fault that it fails. ,to notice. that this "feeble, shambling policy" a has produced 'a voltinteerp army, navy and itis force that have proved their gtial�ity which :oii everyoccasion.- The .figures w. "c. it presents, to establish its, story of •a "lost -legion'° are ridiculous in face of. -pls.-Well-known - . facts. of theshortages of manpower en ,the farms, in - the factories, in offices and it practically every .line 'of activity. "Canada's national newspaper" ,should not be at such pains to. four its own,' nest. Mf,. ALL RITES AGAIN Editor The Signal -Star: - Sir, --Once more Mr.:AI, S, I ernighan writes, and once More 1 reiply.. 'Thank en', i1t�r: 3 ttor for more space. . You use too, many adjectives, an• d pass too many judgments, ' Mr., ughan. \iy• st r'teiueitsi are Said to' be ."foolish," _ _"ridiculous,', etc. 'An ,old Saying - runs., blas way '",.1 -'he judgments --we . "make reflect `adore , our-, .„own tge oroughly conversant with all ' characters --:than - hey:.do the .persons of things j uldged." ' -Let us see • how w e stand-in. the- statements • we have made said this concTuaii ns we =h�•ve coins' to. We Will, take lap Mr. liei?nighan's points In the: order_ given. , - ,_. ._.. ,(•1): , 'I, did. not;say Communists never c;lianged• their , tactics, or . even their names. ,Indeed,, - ,I did not mention the Conwiunists -in' statement; I said .,` ,;oinniunistic •principles and aims are .is fixed as" the"�hxetl- stars:"-" Co ists;.`like some other. Political parties i,know,' et their sails to:eatch_the pre- vailing *•inch, but every turn -of the weathervane is a departure from Com- rates�sLeub for curs, . u.,au,,aGi a. ••,• inunism • vittaa.lIy. mennt'the tb'rQwnig vverlhoard (��,),. Z,_ _e paressed My' belief _that "bread 'iines"--existed--only -air Europe, of :th.e. "Hyd'ra 7.at cost" system and de- and Aix; ,$erii rm--fond^-outs of Hydro affair ve„ f, F• all: t e .argumente'it' the* finger$ ends; and are, always, ref F -n n c1 eager to . coli - found any person who v'entures In discusSion of these matters, it. should be borne in, Mind that neitfies ` the 0.M.E.A. nor- the Provinc,jal Power Cetiamisoion, has the'. 4ty as to yvheit. shall '1..)0 :Hydro epolley. The • • Legislature is the governing body, left, to itself- the, H.E.P.d. 'probably would. not have adopted the uniform nt nd s al . ,warm.' You look, moist and tX u ly away off dclgwn towards the barn and for a• tittle's ty your vision carries you, in •r th_ l everything a ceratin poio t e y but beyond has 'been wiped out. 'The . roadway vanishes tI o fence hoeters otnt . • ,• the earner -of the milk house is risible • ... but they all disappear into then silvery; grey veil of fog. '° • Sounds carry -,so well on a foggy day. The mournful mites "of at -freight train. the baying moans of dogs" and the shrill, screams ,of children playing over on -the Higgins fatal..'.. all come wafting to your ears with startling clarity. As,a matter of fact the whole g thn '• is a. bit frightening. I , wonder if ` certain people, completely attune with nature as -they seem to be, make use of this magical fog ,to read the. 'thoughts of their- fellow—men. . What nasty shocks . they dust get sometimes! Fogs are pleasant. I"remember once on a -trip to the. ocean that a'fog rolled in to Completely blanket the heaving, rolling water. •There . was 'an old .sailor sitting on a dock whittling out ,a,, iAat. from a --piece .of .cedar,.nnI stood talkiing to Bial .for -some ' tithe, it is on the • west that .the most import- Although his eyes couldn't,,Pierce the ant objectives lie ahead. Here' vol - mistiness . his ears were•' eampletely at- canis masses spring 4skyward, 'straight tuned 'to *the sounds. •..Such was the "Mary Ellen" a fish , that hoot Was the "Jo ` tug . . . the moaning.osound of the foghorn on the and be 'described for me th of a great ship coiningginta h •At first she was scraping' bar, ..then she was standing -t a -piror was getlini;-' boar ..,,. VI AT :1140/4;r917 ,n:.' TNEt • An ,the' hltttleflelda et, Africa, Lt. Dean Shatlaiu, a tank eantinander, amputated his Own toot with a jack- knife, and thought lie was dyirig. wad ;rescued by Americans and is now in. ,hospital iu England. , Lines whieh he .composed while lying wounded °avid hopeless were rescued Also, . aiiel .are ° • - , i Si 1 -:Star: 'b . a iuemher ut. '.thytceI fix o.d Ger�ich wiio •.els. now in Italy. • 'hat chief. you* do tciaay, `any friend, From nrarning' until night?` Low many throes did. you coniplain '4v The rationing As ;too tight?° When are you going toto de. i :g start i All the things, you say, soldier would like to know, -my Y friend, "What did you do today? • We. 'a the'"enem today Ao thew'U ys t or ! -lappy reading it will make For you tomorrow. morn ; ' y� With* ;satisfaction l,atli'll-i.ead s _•�. •- "i 1 i ole. h ii C tnifal n T -it�ie o 1 o Tit`; are, y�air fighting �'` f �, g ,, but What did 'you do today? My gunner died` -in my armsfo I feel his warm blood yet; T X - our neighbors dying � -1203 gay's A scream I, can't l'orget On 'nay right .0 tank was hit, , A $aslr and then a fire,; The stench of burning flesh Still 'rises from the pyre. and sueh ing smack 1111 Dov0.7. was the ,was • .. e• , passage arbor..;,. o. .-and el ` frail' a lighter and -then she_ in. Whistles, 'bells and hoo told him the whole steirand stood still when the great steldenly aut of the fog in the pier in. a perfect doeki Inst about the satne thin here On ft foggy day. I Neighbor Higgins opening door and I Can tell. the as they rumble across the ri You can hear the sound of team going back 'the lanetv Sugar -bush. Steve Ashton; in the village -and NVOrkg Wilson place, whiSt1es OS he the road on WS' War telling- .-viheit the Mail ha Fogs - are rattier ,pleasant -They give Yoe ft chance t sense.=,of -smelling and heari of depending on • your . eyes. can use. YOUT sense of -sine fozgy- day you can even tell Higgins -IS .try-ing -Onidns and sheer. At their feet the.ver dere -of the• fertile v1aileys ends, as if rlile�i"o�ff and the grey cliffs carry not a particle of vegetation. • - -The evenly buries .himself fin this couhtryh, `which affords' him' cover 'both :from . are arid from view. ' He blasts• slit tr Iiches and dugouts in.- the rock_ Ile =installs 'his • artillery; `screens-- in 4_. dune ps, and -fn- his eom.Dara.tive :gid moving.. scant transport ':in the, olive. grovea� ting horns IIe turns the mountain villages , . rt - y, Heart fortresses and . iiixtes�theF ends nd• inv ..ip lbomed tracks: He . 'hardly ever- betrays his and' swung positions• by Movement in daylight, 'but ng. there is .a deep- nuurement by night g happens and • little wire to Binder it, - The can hear Allied air forces deny him the use, his 'stable of the roads by day, ' and there is .ici of both,„ -evidence "that lie. is often. hard'Put to , it fiery truck to maintain' at-juil'acient flow of muni ser bridge, 'tions °qnd food by night'. Xt must be: the Wilson admittted that the manner in which he fly , -to the Maintains the defensive battle in such n.ho lives eii•cuinstances is evidence:of 'endurance out at the and ,of" a high :stan`dard of.discipline. goes along Allied tactics have steadily improved "work: 'We ,and n.°high -standard of skill has --13,q11, fighting. Armor ..e mail -box Shown in the `recent g �'. s'`•b'eeir , e= was:Tsed it re set-, bough` on-•a-who`ll ' • 'scale,. in the Sangro-Ort:o-iia .battle: It after • all" has as yet been given few opportunities use your on ,the other side of the mountains since ng. in plaice the lighting, in the Salerno plaids; but Yes; you some will 'certainly Corrie its way in 11-. On' a the near future, , The air -arm, in ad- when, Mrs. dition to strat'egie bombing,. contributes ,with- ,bet by paralysing:- the --enemy's_ .-.fru n_sp2rt_T�._-_.._. T_ the and in' some cases. cutting his bridges from and railway tracks in the-tactical:zone, but it lnrs•' hitherto--feun'd-few to ge,,t�s•. or the'elosest form attaetical-support. It is mainly:.aP infantryman's Campaign atid:i�s .likely to remain .one.- ,.Artiilery' support is, needless to 'say, indispens- able in attack and valuable for liarass- ing fire, but here :again good targets I. have been rare. • ' The. deliberation of, •the tactics is •ei.sily explained. • Against` "stubborn and well -armed: troops, adequate—i�p numbers fel- the t ont to be defended, deliberation has always been the rule in xnotintrfi i..warfare. The valleys can - :not be used 'until 'the heights which command them have been cleared 'of the enemy. The• passage of water- courses „is rendered slow by their pre- cipitous. re-cipitous- contoiirs' and by 'the general roughness of the country. Normally a Commander forcing -the passage of a rivet likes to create a big bridi ehead: tis soon as;: possible and: continue` the ad- vance from it at, the' earliest,, opportun- ity.' pportun- itv. -• . Here, however.' he may be ,cei* •Belled - to start off with a' shallow bridgehead because' he.cannot Put his nppoltin Dveatifons.;across--the 'obstacle quickly, and moist t'heref'ore! in the first: insta.nce.use the•xnajority of -them "froni'•his+ origziittk' _position. The' :infaintrymatl's existence . in -winter" is naturally full of hardship, The 'Allied troops are better :fed ' and probably 'enjoy • more . rest than, those' of the enemy, .but they are w}ors'e 'What did' you do today, my friend, ' To help us' with the task? Did you work harder and longer ,•for less, Or is it too much'- to ask? to ask yen What right have .I . , � this, -Ton probably will: say, Maybe now .you'll understand— 'You 'You see, I ;died today. out GODERICII '. ' 'OWNSITIP Mies. Esther Mellwain of Hensel' spent, the week.eud with their parents, Mr* anld " Mi'si Geo. Mcllwain. Airs. Mary Phillips • and Mr. John Lightfoot of Goderieh visited on Sun- day wtth Mr. and -Mrs. Percy Speiran. Mrs. , .Gordon Orr, Mrs, Robt. Mc- Ilwain, Mrs, A. Tieliborne, Mors.- Geo. McIlwain•, Mrs, .11.:Er�11er and. Mrs. Ilarwood . attended the 'W.M.S,' ..Presby- teria.l meeting in Clintonon Thursday, • -='J_-Q' t . ' 'i�ieetixi ;- onda ui afternooteAtie'i ieiii'bers `o `Ilnicr Al. S. • were entertained ^'by the members - of . , Victoria:, street W.M.* itt their lAeetine,'. Mrs. A. ,'T. i►ICliayepresided ,and 11irs.• Larwood presided'. at the fano • The Scripture lesson was read Breen, and prayer was by M s. Doi xlun articleoffered ola teinperaiiceyr, 4vas readsb.y Mrs. Hannah P it x ip, s. ,. A solo, olo, '' S ortie .D tlY IAl`1s}H iidszrk,i i,.w.y reading, toIt,fi tbisY . ' Afoigan s Quarter," wa's read by Mrs. l?liillips. the` gues • s ,eaker was Miss Mary Curr n,, , of . Neil >., act_ gave • an interesting 'a c k'on"' Iter, • rk • in., , hom •.ae misSid __The meeting .(oS wit r 11nin ndaray er and ...the 4i. N a .ions Athem. A bountiful lunch 'OS ed 'ti of Victoria- treet ,sourer.: GODERI'CII• TOWNSHIP, May .-- J?te.-Stanley McIlwain of.Cornwall. and `., BUY .130111D . TO' 1BEAT , ITLER • "Our Family • ula 'Or is r • DR. CHASE KIDNEY- PILLS" LIVER PILLS" ..too u lis:` ,0�1bleSOti1p n Steil' . _Are :Hard .on , It'sthe cough that sticks; 'the. cough. that is hard to•..o g . . get rid -of' the cough.acxo?npanied by a tickling in the throat that causes the nerve and throat wrttoking • trouble that keeps you awake at night.. , Dr.. Wood';s Norway Pine Syrup helps to, relieve . i, io. bysoothing the irritated parts, this coughing condition . _ -.. anis and when this senin the phlegmand _ stimulating the bronchial, org •, %io done, the troublesome, irritating cough may be relieved. is' _ t has been on the market for the past Dr. Wood's Norway rine *nip :, . "3: Pine Frees years: The. Trade �arlf 48 yea , , �YFace 135c a bottle; large family size; about 3 times ag much;. 60c at a,U drug counters. e. * ` - Limits . Toronto Oso. .. o .The T.�Milbtlrn Co , sl _ . t .prived the supporters of present Hydro lias-assistCd in "soup 'kite -hens" in Tor- poliey of their s•trongest argument.- onto. But "Soup kitchens are -not ".bread __4The, threat ef throwing,,Hydro sins! lines.", 'I'hese rati express the kinder- arten stage ottlic same neo, but theY . _ are -not the same. thing. In earlier days ities, in,-,Gederich, int.? a general relief was neighborly. Now ° Gos-ern- jackpot was, as Dr. Taylor suSpected, ments--municipal,• ProvinCiat and Fed -- a pieee •of 11.1112.0„ bluffs: If it were eral—laave t4en up the work because the needy 'have inereased i4 • attempted—which is quite improbable -7 the Legislature -would. bate the' •5;ser- -.Nothing wits.said-at Monday's ineet- ing of the Sarnia plan; wMch would per 1.12.p..' but would leave -the. lowet rates now enjoyed hy"Toronto and other ' •-eitieS -at: their -present figUre„, This WoUld do iaWay with' the objection •that - the, adoption cif it, fiat rate would mean. s a_ tiresome choreTWEieti: you., come:, yelax • 9n4 a clip- of. ,Neilsoies Chocolate. COCQG: /4//h .3reits 6# DIP JERSEY BRAN - 'COCOAllll These reliq- ,measures probablYThotatoes. in spite of ,the fact that and •• distribute the goods_ -of the ours. !--Haves"' to the 'Have -note until :all are included in _the have.-nots. '.(3) I stated that no- Government °in Canada has. ever used the ,police or soldiera to suppiess strikers unless they •were violent,. and Mt. Kernighan didn't' shaW anything to the% contrary. ,C.C,p.'s to rail, at the GOvernment an4 call the police. or soldrerS who •are sent, to preSbrve the .Peaee nasty names, but anch lowdown tactics do.. not • diSprove never planned:to socialize farms. They certainly did. Their :prograna was 'for complete socializatien. Air. Woods - Worth, the founder of* thel PartY, • No ,more specific -promise was eve`r. made to the electors Of any riding than was that of uniform Hydro -rates- -which. was presented toiauron-voters in- the election of last, ,A•ugltst. . In S,eptember :Taylor reneveed his . pledge, and afthe same tiAe the -people ...of tie'. Cabinet that the• /promise inade, orge the member fer Huron. not to Slacken. in his effortS and• not .to,alleve his leaders' ,to forget- their promises. -11ydro•rates are a matter of .vital con- cern to _this tiown of Goderich, and pr. 'Taylor 'have the backing of Its cltisens regardless„ of' put:3- politics. in keeping the' matter to , the forefront, 'in the Legislatitre and willstheeCatfinet,e EritTORIAL NOTES firSt'weeks of the War are five years', OM." One does -age more qiiickly wartime,. Of contse. ' It *WS. Slated officially at Ottawa last ..week that. at the .end pf Mareli...there Was a labor shortage Canada .of poop, exclusive pf the npinber required for lurabeting operations. Wasn't it tlie 0.0Y, leader,' who -it few mouths ago predicted there svinild 'be 10,0.000, 1)ersons out" pf work' in Caraula by April, 1st? • the basil Oreat War the Ger learned_to respect and grudgingly ndian :soldier. Once the- First Div got into action in: this war. it -did take Meg for' ,,stother generatio Germans to _appreciate .'the settiu et' the- Judgment of. their fathers. Q lv in Sicily. the CantiOipn.srle feared as the_ "red patcrtifi.V110,,.7 side , the Canadians in Sicily eon from personal observation the fea "Grim and -:deadly tro this witness calls the Canadians. and.-Mr,-.-Kernighan, -a candidate,. for had_ alwaYs -thought, lie said, tha parliament:Irk 'tenors; will prove My Australians were the world's tsui statement to be' i:#riect..„, Ur, W-oodS- fighters,: but. now be mUst giv worth, in a speech in Parlianlentiwhieh falni- to 'the Canadians: — Rani was Sent "all over the eountry, in ,advd- ',Spectator., f • • eating *his "planned eednoray" used *,. • • - these Words% "The' fitit 'duty- '.Elk any RESTRICTIONS 'ON MEAT STO 'overament, Parteers will be :glad to know -t Peonle";" and now Xerniginal.says, they Wish • to store meat in st requires ownership," Thank yiku, Mr. that sinee the suspension -of me icernighan,•16r proving my state.ment. tinning. the Wattline Prices and But isrd paSSing strange that one Board is allawing farmers and would.: affirm; soinething..in One breath whe;make a practice of storing arid :deny It in the:next? Indeed, how thiiitig.,The summer inonths toren would any Government feed and -clothe It meat rationing again ,goes rsion net n of lness nick - tame firnis r the patch fie t the ghest e the ilton hat lf orage aimed Trade meat into • produetion- :• and distribution? Mr. Kerniglian„ says furthey„..:Soch an ars ously' only possible in Osten). where produetion and distribution are.planfied statement _Mt. sgernighan 11- itiatrateS liy..refetexice to certain enter- prises Some 61, which ' are "publicly owned," and, some '"priVately oWned." Our tsvp great railivays, the Hydro; and ()there, are eited, and the C:C.r. would "eitend,the well-known prinelple which has been proved satisfaetory in opera- tion, and stiperiot %to? Private ;owner- ship" -4 Statement which is certainly ittot true.' The C.P.E. is more efficiently • Were ever , daffodils So brightly yellow, was ever grass fa) green. was ever Robin Redbreast so vividly colored. Its this spring?. Who would want to Rye in those warmer regions Where the Inhabitants' tatve not the Aeliglit **lug vegctition ands -Other .thirigs of springthne appear once more niter the winter's snow and cold? Arehbishop Seager has What one might Nal ttn "original" mind. .bas a truism—that war itt brought on bl only hope the farmer bas of getting out effect, those. who have f plan will have te comply' of debt is in the sodialization of the land,- which Will free him from • the intoierable burden of debt# Ile is be- tween the devil Of hopelesindebted- nesS vvbile retaining' title to his land and the deep sea„of owning nothing wjth freedom. from, L advise Mt. Nernighan not to tell the Saskatchewan farmer that ,the C.C.F. -will slot', social- iselis land: lest he turn from the C.C.F. to Social Credit, as the electoral distriet MacICensie did a few years age. (5) . My stlitement:that "no economic system can be half state -held and half ellowed, this • Please: 4on1 rfiah. to the telephone- - the; telei3hiine t6 pass:the Wor'cl.along -tiat callS only especially whew if we thai:'.0).ephc).1* the criifeal ;rjoitths Ow_ ad, statiiinS, friends. * Please -don't .6.4. ‘, Public sery:i.ces essential to din health ' eafetr depend,. On. the.telePhont.. Until the lastrehet is 'fired,,and 'even ‘*. of urgent ,iinporfance are goin.g heavy load to Carry:" tszi 'keep' with what, honsed because the Germans do so re 1iiiposed. -much damage -to the towns and 'villages befote quitting . theirs and sometimes, like 0,rtona. these , have already been virttmlly destroyed hY bomb and shell. Onr men. however. stand .up welt to the eonditiontbs syProlonged Wet and mud `gertbeni :down" more than -cold: Almost all:the British.-Derainion, and Indian troops SW' lUiC1 'endured long ape,11 at -the f,ront; of the history sure, and the 'Y'rench are more recent.'„, atriVals.' But .all of theta ato line, Wjiich have to be filled •by draft:4. operated, and costs less •to operate than freehold" is not discounte satisfaetory if we may judge • by' the prises. We still have be• end •of cemplaints coming from, till system which the C.C.P.'s quartertti -It is also well kFtown that into a socialistic system. Publicly -owned enterprises usually fail system is, or seeing to be, tit ply dividends, Whilst privately- he replaced, btit "eo far Mr, gernighon's reference ta the the C.C.P.. so far from tiroving that More deafly if we' rega that party will nof soonlizo their farms, Jective the prodaction jUSt proves, the opposite: Probably services for • huinan 'eo ninety per cent. of ' Naskateltewan ,plate of providing work farmers, are. iti debt several thnes over has been the ,COMMOIX. ob the Anita% of their farms, and, they stifficient ;answer is that never hope to -become free -from deht— both these things noW, ' total debt. The loan companies ehatge we produce is for Inuniu up the Original loan with the eonstantly I And we, try to previde w acetimulating interest against the ,employed instead of ON farmer, but they steadfastly refuse to ling them free. Let us dispossess the farmer, or take title to better Way, • tile farmer is able to pay from year to 'Wrong ttack, Witl WI year, Ile it lunch or little. Tints the' biter. — "Yetifs -evened enter-, deillocratic ,we still haVe 1110. ninS up thus: be understoOd rd (ink ob- nsumption for peopre as jective.", -The Practieally all ork for the no- ting and cloth - keep on in Our IN are. ,nti the you about -it. -AS G001) AS' CASH not„ investing in war bonds,'t " said a young man the other day, '"Elow GOverturient going 'to pay ..back the money?" he asked- "There's what • saveti from a good fat' pay cheek, and I'm going to bang on .to it while T have it," . he said, "C"an. you read what is on that bill?" we,asked. "That twenty -dollar made of, a par- :ticular, kind of paper with printing on On it, ft says the, Bank of dollars. A. bond is another kirjd. of paper that says the Bank of Canada will pay the ,bearer whatever 'denemitt- talon the bond happens tO lie. The dollars you. "Catry In yoor .poelt.et are no safer,„ than the bond you liave in your rio.ssession. *Buying a bond' to help protect. your country is loaning your tututey at. interest to„„protect the A.1.41,IN. things that you possess,' 60440