The Goderich Signal-Star, 1945-03-22, Page 2obrtirl) $taI
owatotIN( T,10„4 ioomatiQU SI(NAri AND ' ."$ GOD I •: T&
i
•ess►
al star
6040,0 lv ,
• '.. West etreet,, Qntartot
Creat Britain, $2:00 a year, to'• Vn ted
,�anada and
It States, 3• •
�. 'J eie 1bQan 11R,
n re nest
TU RS X, hMAUCH 22nd, 1.941
B
•
are Weil fee`; ' Fr.Q,i�t 'report
OA' ', ,.*,'''' they' say,. k
� **NTS s
.a. � � that reach.. this, cotznur, we believe that
. . aQ ds it neeessar Britons except those •wbo ,can afford
• uctton in.take adva tage Of .blue ;markets'-•
to •make. `a � dra�ti+e � red to R
United' /Xin- Welt- fed,though in comparison
uf lint to-,t�e Lint • . ,g are not_we i
s'h''aght's - � :� 't e•' devastated
ple of Britain, With the: people" , of h
dam, and tntt.<<th�t3 ,
;. i• to be s..of the' Continent ,they' are
airready. on �,t�iw. ;��tioz}s► .�a a be, well
.
- s aarvatiou no do bt well off, What is e °: o" be
Mill Headier the .t. , • 1i . -
I► than meat' mit be es i noted is' that : manx Britons
!fit more (hxns�,. .: �' �,.
dd availabl ''far - ,them, Tlaxs cavi r the reduction of ;their own
.. iii; two .ways -!by en" rations in order that the food thus
bo a��eComp]ti�ed � . •
lxrging • production. in. this country, saved nay be .sent to „the Continent.
MA by'• cutting:; noioaumption of meat 'This • should provoke some thought
axi
in. Canada. There has been some con-
meat
Je�e�ture Al*. to the resumption of
in this.,e0e try, but Chair:.
rationing
tnlui' Donald Gordon ' of, the - Wartime
Prices B
decision
need not
e has been no
this effect, This, however,
revettt a-tvoluntary reduction:
of meat consumption. in Canadian
homes. in order that more may be sent
overseas to our ha,rd-pressed British
cousins:`' • Canadians are eating more
nnea.t than they did before the war and
til can afford to do' with less.
GODZitiCIESIONMAITAit ,4
gr
I/l ODA
ARCH
1
„
the War in wand, "q'ppaa;� Silet�ia, the �aitiu
A u
rrenta l fitates ' and ' angary. ' $tddtag lr.,
mMan eun�fimuoaas xeies � onatacks iia, the more
the Meant • for
x)x 'ICU TIES f OF tom JN life deOeUde on its: pre-war re/liver drove across•, the Tolling, fiat lands until
s.rten
• Carrying.
fo
od and
coat' aul �e
imsat'
xs
eastern river r bur x
moi1a
d
With two colleagucs� recently made textiles and business mon. and 'finds a temporary hAlt for �aaa1ng or
a visit Jo France on behalf of the unionists. it ,will he a very .long time Winks, troops and supplies in pr r-
Friends, Relief Service. It was our indeed before,. French life Can be any- ation for the all-out assault <un Berl tR
e . i like rmal. -,... ether Russian .,aria es are 'tow buss'
^ thing , no
of Fit s e 'end to eo- sia+e r • of Xa a . h rts• h mselyes trenien� -, .hicliing out, oiie bar- one, the.' dangers
of France .and, ko . catnsider • with .the As forthe �e � e- , . � .
sale;11404.
he x4
horeaal .cosemake to- meet.; ane t °Us bus- ixeen, done � seeking the tot Ru•
Preach authorities
iribut0ns we . d bestq usable, but the towns are, in a In the west, the strategy of deet
14those .needs. Between us ^ we pitiable condition. Le- llavrez is the Allies' unties „ Seems to have followed
Out of 10,000 build- the Russian. pattern aimed at the
Visited _Park, � the Channel Coast, fi,om worst" tlls;t "I saw. > . ., . h to
C. i is Lille Chalons -Sur-, hip), . 10, have 'treed. ;utterly ,de :Oat, open country from the, Rine
Gaon to a s. . .
and 'the Midi 'fro)* lice, stroyed, a further 2,000 .,are�„eonsidered Berlin; afteraa period- bring which, .the
blame, e .r v foot -slogged throw h mud
aro h 'Marseilles ..to 0~'oulouse and unrepairabio.. 0,000 are, :capszble Wye- .arunies,,ha.,,e
a . e relatively umlaut- and ° lug to. gain "vantage . pointe in
ontaulon. ' i�veryavhore we...found pal; and �',OUO r. ... y
'• in laces aged.' ' :Fro >.the ua side to, the Hotel readiness for the'break-thrOugh that
�! ranee .cola, It is httxi�.y p.. ag m n ,, y uta
,` - e Ville,and ri ht awayto the west,,now• is. in process of being carried o
and in; assay pla�e5 homeless. Wher 'd . , and g .
r • t are ere is 'anarea of utter destruction' Hew 'will the weather• during the
'ever, those conditions , -ecu_. they there . e
than a hin we know greater • than • anything 1 have seen next two or three months. affect aper..
much worse t ,
nyt g
in England. ', , .; ,. anywhere in England. Throughout ations • on . both fronts? •
After about three weeks in Paris, we' the. Coastal area thtire fa food to the From now' on, -,winds; sweeping over
tllx ee
separated for 'varioue parts of France. agricultural environment, but • very Germany. from the west- to the east
Oneof my colleagues went little im the towns, simply for the should benefit both. commands. Now
wi
here she found Condit sus far'
worse• want of local transport. In..a three that 'February has passed, ',with • it's
than in Parise -With no hinterland .days' visit,: in the Pas -de -Calais district dangers' of unpredictable. . rain' and
of general farming, the Mediterran"ean• 1 saw neither butter, cheese nor milia snowstorms,these winds ---•often 'roach -
in any town. An effective service of lug gale • force --generally are *arm
local. lorries could put this right reason- and dry, Sweeping; across • the Low
ab. p
1 tro ble i • tires,at • o the Reich's western
The u s
Countries t
les quickly.
h a .. fuel ' an .vehicles sthe winds will help to'dry out
least °as iitu it , s d )borders, i for
themselves: the rolling, flat countryside suitab e .
The trouble Foes deeper. "than mere 'open tankrork and help to disperse
supplies, At Calais, for instance, in rapidly the snow and ,,iceirruling. on
early . December, 35,000 out of 65,000 Th'
citizens had returned. In consequence,
there were many children about the h d with its aid bot7i commands
.place. The municipality was making
great efforts to organise.schools in the
remaining school buildings, but it had
been found , necessary to .requisitions
every one, of these for the Allied troops
who were Working on the restoration
of the pert. Calais was warmly ap-
preciative of the .job that was being
done in the port, particularly as ;loco -
Motives ,'began to' come across ; but
meanwhile they contemplate 'the child-
ren kicking about in the Muddy streets,
ill -clothed, poorly fed, coming home to
houses that are old and damp, ,•
°
One could go on. multiplying
instances : of this competition- between
reconstruction and war needs, which
must strike every visitor but against
it all 'one 'has to set the vitality which
comes. from liberation. In some ways,
the most' remarkable, thing about
France is the absence of cynicism about
the war: - For thein . the four years,of-
oceupation are terminated with , the
restoration to France of an opportun-
.ity for Frenchmen and women to say
and • do what ' appears to "them to be
wise. and right. Even 'silence and in-
offensiveness during the occupation
was: ,no : guarantee against • arbitrary
arrests,' deportation,. torture or death
at the hands of Vichy or'the"Nazis.
Now that it is over, Frenchmen have
the spirit .•to -make, things happen.
There is , a :courage and dignity about
their outlook -which • I found both mov-
ing and stimulating.
The trouble •Is that _while the spirit
of creation is strong; so little effective
action ,can take place. For shortage
of equipment, France is not, mobilised
for want of raw materials, France
cannot produce ' for war purposes, ; for
want - of transport,.' France cannot
organise her civil life.- : fear •is•
that for want of any sense - of achieve-
inent the vitality which followed liber-
ation may disappear: , into thin air.
That is' why` there must_ be great satis-
faction ' with the recent announcement
adze coast is in a desperate state for- every -
among . Ca$ . � ns ,.who,.. though they ,.
are better pa than ever before even'
in .eticetime are inclined to grumble
P T.
when asked -to cut down their con -
w
suinptibn •of `butter or sugar or any
other article. Such self-denial as
many of ' the people of Britain have
shown .during the war is- not greatly
in evidence on this side of the Atlantic.
RCanada, , it,.., seems, hasn't enough and butte eggs,
political parties, so a smart young
chat): at: Vancouver is. launching an -
snipping space is sai ' other; with • -a large-scale 'flan, includ-
' shortage o f •
to be -an .obstacle to larger shipments Ing "ultimate unity" between the
f 'meat to Britain, but if the United United States; and Canada, putting an may or may not last out the winter.
o _
►5itat
es is •Ship1 ng less there -should end to *unemployment, raising the But Beed muddy fe in the squalor
of.!-ruined
f rumedends
s c. available for Canadian.. popfiiatian of North America, to .three.
mood deal on .dequate food. I wenn
bn moire pa e
products, and every effort should be bund°red millions, and "to make life . toe' Lille,"alais, Boulogne,. Le •Havre
Duns
.•.��- - •-- e: --fife- Facilities news- with ►'nt fear a reality:' The and some smaller places on the coast:
. xirnrie �to proved �•,. _ ......... o _ _ - ., afair amount of railway -
travelling,
A i- proposes himself. as This involvedui y-
s,aacy for the largest possible shi$ments..Vancouverrte px p travelling, and it . was on these slow
°u farmers' have 'none wonders in Canada's coming Prime Minister, and and uncomfortable journeys' in a single
4 x ,
therodncttoii.yof Work,- beef and other as-his,.naree • ;Smith, and• there are diesel rail -car that �I *gni to under-;
ff and tf they, are to maintain .a lot of 'Smiths, and there has :lot stand why material recovery' in France
foodstu s,
.. • their effort every- expedient should be yet been one of them Prime Minister., must
b isheAi to not slow
can Jan-
' e io yed. 10 provide .them •with needed the. young man might • conceivably, if agine what is meant by Seen_
bombing c.of
zap y
help. At this stage: of the war rein all of theme determined it was to e railway yards and the shooting up of
e i.ts for• the, farnf,are as vital to have a Smith at the top, get a.:19;
trains., Junctions l like LAO, Hirson,
�eQrcem ,
.• • at; reinforcements .for the _army. ' Be- near: to it as Al Smith .dad over m •Catnbrai and Creil, • exist•' simply as
• .ai' des..the people of Britain, there are U.S. That is,_ •be might be a de- piles of mammoth splinters,. with loco-
• motives and rails and wagons and
large•:populations in liberated Europe feated candidate. Trouble. is, most of ablocks of masonry :its -the. items, In
to;'be• fed: ' Australia" and New, Zea- the Smiths' in this country are either the centre of Lille you would not know
..•. land, whiieh were looked to for targe Grits Or Tories, with a few C.C.F.-era 'that there was a ` war on'i ialf a
s ' li. s of . meat, have had severe and perhaps 'some Social Crediters, and mile away the goods (i.e., freight)
Ali production.drought4, curtailing It 21 „.:11 �,�� awfully hard Work to me yard 'looks as if a score of V -1's and
V -2's had landed at once • in a • half -
thing, even 'for; :the roots and green
vegetables which exist'in the northern`
g
towns. .Babies in . Marseilles are . a,r-
rivieg between dve and six pounds
in weight, and only a quarter of their
mothers can feed them, as compared
with three-quarters Tore the war.
In 'Toulouse the Quak r workers had
seen no sugar for four months. Many
babies have no milk at all. The
second of nay colleagues went to' Nor-
mandy'," and fed magnificently on. milk
r and that could not be
shifted: out of,, the. district for want of
transport, and on ineat : 'too much • of
which came -from ,cows killed because
of lack of winter feeding-stuffs. Nor-
mandy is living on its • capital, which
theta away from their foundations,
politically speaks : However, . there
is no law against starting a new party.
"Washington 'reports that American
engineers and technicians have Worked
out. a program for the' spending • of a
billion dollars. in the live years to
follow the war in - the industrialization
of China.. The idea is to provide
China with the tools of industry 'with
which she may world • out her own
future. There Is an immense' held in
China for industrial projects: With
400;000,000 customers, as Carl Crow
points oitt, the biggest market in the
world is•'to be supplied., We believe
that China• is destined to be_one of
the greatest 'countries in the world,
industrially and otherwise, and when
" OnIy
Cup, of Meat
r
IN THIS
,,C.Ifickey•Puff
13. cups Boar - , >t cuc ant
teapoonraa Magee •2 twwpoon!+�pid•onlo s.
Baking Powder „' cup grated rownowsot
teapoon Salt : 2 tables nielt.d'
2± *' ,butter, lckenfat.
• 1 calls tank: 1X cups chicken gravy
Sit
t - o ether r .
:� fleer, bsdd� 1�aw'de�r e�aXt, edit
beaten egg yalke and: sunk. Add chicken, onion,
Pirated carrot lend melted fat and mix well. Fob
last !bea�tenegg,whttea pekeingr'ease :baking
dick; in hot Oven 'lit "Orr. for *boat 25•.miautea,
Servo with hot chlckeu gravy. 6 servloge. '
,� � .,, .. iondesbdrough. Luclsnovy�;
ippen,
splais
RETURNS s Varna, Walton, gham,
i g Am Fort Albert, ria•,
Wroxeter, gurich.
• """-.� amounts received from the 're-
The a o counties - the n..M.......:_.
Star has
eastern side �f Germany. Th* The Signal- followingreceived
fro r
the .publication. the
weather is typical for the,time of the 'the secretary of the Christmas seal
Year, an wi
looks • As if Canada must go to, the § mile 'squire, doing. ' their typical . de-
.
cesciie and"become the great provider ,l struction: All along the line you pass
i t burnt-out trains• and railway wagons
oflbod. for'famished Europe. and derelict •engines, and. you .realise
what the shortage of rolling-steck must
• bridges .are,- crazy wnAden
structures • which cannot possibly, take
continuous . heavy_ tragic. , You: creep
over the ,great viaduct outside Le
Havre; terrified as you realise that the
actual hits on it 'have• -been patched
with sleepers -and a few steel girders."
'Even did -the needs of the Allied fronts
not `have . pribri�ty on the railways, and'
leaving out of account altogether the
,shortage 'of rail Vehicles, you cannot
fail -to realise that, in -so far as French
ONZ .ELEOTION „ENOUGH
blewspaper-i v,vriters. at Toronto say.
tb t a erisis 'is approaching in ' affairs
at QuebaiS -Park:-with either an elec-
ti,
tin or a change of Government With-
) 1 an election as the possible outcome.
- We ;du .not believe the people- of : On-
o ` want oto go p to the trouble of
dieting -a new Legislature at this time.
Ali' election for the. Federal House is
inevitable; as' the term of the present
P trliarnent is nearly' rtin out; but it
irs' less''rthan two years since the: last
Frovineial _election. -
It. is difficult to see what any, of the
will Abe able to make plans for using
the German countryside to the full.
,Spring showers can . be expected, and
if Hitler's weather luck changes again
and heavier' rains, than usual are ex-
perienced, then the tank forces. 'and
motorized infantry might he compelled
titee parties in the Legislature can the, Nipponese are.'banished •and the
reasonably expect from a vote at this sturdy, hard-working, intelligent.
Blame fot bringing .on.' ,.an people- of China get to work' with
°._ei',,ction would :rest' upon all parties. �moaern tools they will make amazing
r f
lkf r. Drew's attitude—as much as to I progress.. Itt the past we have sent
ssly, "Let us ;do -what we' want, or the: nussionaries- _to China :vitals : the
peoople-;, ilc..11 ild,-"`you responsible for next few decades there will be as great.
, casing in election"—is irritating to movement` of scientists and technicians
_... to other.parties;but-the,rC- us filo - to, that country, until the Chinese raise
P °ilius: •=issue • in sight. • which vwar- that,.:. -.9.1w, . Arany,. ,ain'b tious • - and-
r :a-tio ler leott"n '-' Noi `".fan We eultcrli ui nun `Canadians will And;
i41 -ti:aL `':'.ally _party would- obtain tl ere'.full s -t for their -abilities, :lite:
a:pnajgrity of seats in a • new House, as one of China's' neighbors; Canada
dieted. at. this time. Mr..Hepburn is as a whole shouli 'profit by" the de-,
crDdited with: putting new life into the 'velopment there of a great -market for
,Irijiberal group in. the Legislature, but goods which 'this country,.can produce.'
. il!#; Iie should gain 'a few seats' at the • _
w4uld'Oot mean that an./ party would
, orld war 'Canada
Is remaorookasbel.y arl.r. off in evry ma -
among Ontario's with what happen
"44p0Sdible t 4. It
VORTIJNE
(London Free Press)
,vath would be repeata its sixth' year
*sent :situat'
been com-
paratively little rationinags. There have.
.T exPlaft the Pl'olrineini been -Mid will I*, as Kr Gordon ad.
uko. them they might eaPsaiP1;114 th"st LivemelnrarY—h d
vIat.t,h live sets of ballot tit there is a Wa. '
g 'e,daft on politics., 3olf)t,dealll°41iig•slallegitliliedete7,°sIedffi°11eongt
I' PHIL ''..OSIFER OF LAZY MEADOWS
REMEMBER PETER McARTHUR?
A friend of mine gave me'a little
book the other' day., It, was;• written
&Sent Peter McArthur,. Peter, as. you_
older folks will recall, used to write
ay be inconvenienced; ,we shall
come to
06t• suffer. The Wartime Priees and
the ;eo hiSion",that the peapte tit home
to keep to the line network. of. motor
roads in theQRuhr and eastern Brander -
burg. But this would not • materially
hinder Allied plans:
The strategic air forces;',because of
the better weather expected.. from now
on, '*ill .be' able•to maintain their lar e -
scale offeensive aimed at breaking u
German ~tank • and -hoop concentrations
and smashing at rtuilway Communica-
tions. of"vital importance to the enemy.
The heavy.bombers of the Royal Air
Force`' and United . States Eighth slid
Fifteenth Air Forces will *be able to
increase the already tremendous ton-
nage • of bombs dropped on main rail
centres used y
transference � troops to
the Germans for the
areas threat-
ened by 'the Allies and,, in clearing
towns'4staitding in the path of the ad-
vancing' troops in the east - and the
west. ' .
Russian armies facing Berlin can at
the appropriate moment launch an of-
fensive against the capital over roads
and . countryside suitable for . heavy
tanik work. -In the, west, . the present
offensive, aimed at breaking the Ger-
man forces against the ' Rhine, is also
directed at the towns that straddle
the Rhine crossing`s—the last strong-
holds before the open country to the
west of Berlin' has been reached:.
If the ;weather due over, the battle-
fields for the.next two months is up to
the ' average experienced over 'the last
few ye rs, operations will be stepped
up . slier -full advantage taken of the
proverbial °`March"- winds" -' --
-The Ne* York Times.'
committee _,fin' connection with th8
Queen Alexandra Sanatorium, London,
Ont.:
I am desired by'. Colonel fbbQtson
Leonard, president of Queen Alexandra
Sanatorium, London, and : Mr. Thomas
F: Walker, chairman, and_,meanbers: of.
the. Christmas Seal Committee, to again
express their deep .appreciation of the
splendid response- made by the people
of Goderich and Huron . county to our
annual campaign. • •
. rThe. Huron returns, which will be 'of
the greatest assistance in' enabling the
a.natorium•, to maintain its travelling
clinics and to -carry on. Its. preventive
program, research and education are
as follows: : -
Gocteridh ...., ' $':4492.27
Exeter .a 218.18 - .
Seaforth .•....�-,r 175.58
Clinton 158,1$
Wingham 200.46
County Centres. ,,.:.,- 572.8 '$ 1767.00
Smith: "They tell me Booswell has
that the British and Amthacan Govern- a gciod 'voice. Is he cultivating
ments are attempting to make avail -1 Vines :*'"I vvouliin'e know about that.
able to Prance More -taw materials But he certa‘nly irrigate§ it frequent -
it Will -be weeks before these can begin
tp make a difference, and meanwhile
France, gets hungrier and colder.
• —The Spectator (London).
THE WAR AND THE WEATHER
• FolloWing the hardest winter • in
western Europe. for Seteral years, the
weather • has • begun its first" seaSonal
change. .1n. eastern --Germany - frozen
:rivers_ arie• beginning to _break, up .and
hard ground to soften, as the approach.
of spring makes its presence felt. In
western Germany rain and fog are be -
°ginning to give way ,[1:rying
nd_bursts Of sunshine. While the
those delightful articles "in the old
Globe about life on hit farm down in
Ekfrid ,township, which is near' St.
Thomas. This little book was a sort
of evaination of Peter as an...author
It -*as -quite - pleasant .to read the _de- ;freezing: weather • in the east a ; the.
tails -about pis Mat- remarkable Can- RUSsianein their 'offensive during the
Wn6; Otter living. In -New -Yorlv.winter --months, •the Anglo-Amerlean
and, London came back to an Ontario' armies lu the ,West Were net sellizeky:
Frozen lakes, :rivers, and countryside
in the east made it pessihle for the
Russiane to deploy • heavy tanks and
motorize infantry to' the greatest
Vantage. . The low-lying -66initly
western Etirope,, together with the
conditions" making for clogging mud.
addition, the topography is less
favorable, to manoetriiring than in the
eketeheS in the newspapers, but, it
appears he was probably ,a better poet
than a *titer .Prose. I'm .not much
of a judge of p6etry. Of course at
school :we had- some of ft. -crammed
into_ our heads arid . I can still reeite
num with Soul.so 'dead," aid -get along
Milli,. ;well. .JuSt the Same, I found
some of 'peter's poems ;quite fascinat-
' There- waS one in this little*yoltnne
about f‘The Stone." ' Well, Sir,' it Was
really good. It Seenis there was a
Stone; on the sixteenth 'concession of
Ekfrid teWnship. It was (pate 'a. big
stone and' he re•membeted it as a
boy.. He Was alivays intending to dig
It up, bit folks alwais said as hovic
it would. take dYnamite 'to move it,
cussed it. 'Lovers le 'buggies were
closer. together.. The township eotm-
cillors pretended it motet there when
'they, ; tan over it. Of course they
Board have conipiled a booklet Present. Were thinking about' the' tax rate. The
lug?' the otvantages, possessed bY, the
town for the 'iodation of induatry attd..alwaYS deterMined to protest tO
two!' Centre., The •'hooltfet is now, le the read' forerimn. , rarmers"
in their ,buggies were
them relidY for distribution- by the Pell, te4 4tIgirt about-. it when ---the
middle of the. MOGI, Phetea 'Of the main sloshed hp'and spilled over the
town's industrial plants together .with edge of tho lip, of the Can. '
atm:alone for the tourist trade and Peter Made great Story abent it.
Anybody who has lived in the country
maps of eta/fable plant siteK, ate in-
eltided.• *With Manufacturers moving can voueli for the story. It may be
to opening'branehes ins the Smaller OlvobrthiatinWei.tbhoogahl4ore Pirlitoe°,.kmib441* into: .
fog ideal advantages. Barrie 'and eidtuallP inst the seine as the `stone
in the road. Zverybody deterMines
Owen Sound have both secured
f6Tii fOr farming and ,writing both.—
Peter makes great fim,' of himself
as' a fa,tmet. He was a- Pretty. good
farmer in spite of - what he had to
lot of peel* to this day who can't
thinfrking of the one Peter made. famous
under the name of Fenceviewer.
I, was both Surprised and pleaSed
to And that*Peter McArthur was a poet
of the critielsmS" are the reiult 'of the
fkiliTORTAL NOTES' natural vexations and' 'irritations
have the active siMPort of every,
you :done your bit, for the
4kheiLondon 'tree Press speaks of
expreapion, its efforts , to
e Collingwood Board of Trade is
Dike Of Windsor's' career. Seine bring new , industriea Collingwood.
0:40leetottld use other terms- In that Every inquiry; IS Closely followed up
cort. ion,
and all informatiOn -requested As suP,
osiumbs, slim. 6,66 tite, render this Service the oilleials, of the
•thirdt We had understood
'Oat, was ,practified ex-
*
Tinnysett wrote in stort
of. the' Villatre maiden who sighed:
inaining SIX district are :
Perth. 2,621,60
Oxford ° 4,091.43
Kent - 3,760.36
The suceess of, the 'campaign was
due, first to the continued OW siip-
port of former contributors, to the
many inorpasing their contributions
-and the inanf*giving for the ;first time.
The mailing of receipt cards accept-
able • for tax, purposes liaS Pre e
much apparent .satisfaetilm • to our
supporters,
Our 'sincere thanks are eitended to
The Gederich Signal -Star, our chair -
Club, the movie theatrer.the Boy Scouts ,
and all who helped make the campaign ,
so outstanding a success.
. :Yours sincerely,,
• FRANCIS B. WARE,
- Secretary:
Hydro, power loads in this distriet
ih December fast, as rePor.ted' by Hydro
News for March,- Nv6i. • as follows:
Myth, 133; Brnssels, 166;
Wingham, 768..
This amount shews an iedrease , of
The county , centres pentributiug . to
the above aMount were ; Atiburn, Bay-
field,' 'Belgrate, Blnevalee-Blyth, _Bruce;
field, Brusiels, Centralia, Crediton,
Grand Bend,. Hay, Hensall,
Troublesome Night Coughs„
- Are Hard on the Sister's'
It's the cough that sticks; the cough that is !lard
. to get -rid of; the cough accompanied bY a tickling in.'
.the _throat that eansed the `nerve and throat wracking
trouble that keepsyou awake at night, ,
Dr. Wood's Norway Pinev_'Syrupinel_ps tO relieve
this coughing eondition by soothing the irritated parts,"
loosening the phlegm and. stimulating the bronchial organs, and when this ,
is done- the .troublesome irritating cough may'be relieve& ; ' .
Dris,Wood's Itorway-pine syrup has been on the market for the past
48 yeard. 'The Trade* Mark "3 Pine Trees"
Price 35e a bottleilane,faraily size, ab.put 3 times as much, 6043 at, all
drug counters. •
The T. Milburn 0o., Limited, Toronto, Ont.
•
the Russian High Command Could have
desired. "PerfectlY equipped for. winter
.Warfare, the ItussianS. seized and ex-'
plaited to the full the weather ruling
brancii.014 of eiotrie, ,lippiimwce terms some time or another te"do something
roeetztly, while .Attit,stort vas sgoeted about it., but nobody- quite ever gets'
that he were once more that .„1,0 a wearing aPPnrel The Ward around to doing it,
virmoh illy believe their booklet will assiat in their Peter built it up and up, going back
eitar6, caw. win appreeiat arty, 14. to legends of the very early days tor
heart ,froin met"' titlfrit'S or information freft ariVnie genie of hia irtspiration. Firtrdly one
* • interested leetthig here.% day 4 stranger tame along, tappekthe
' stone 'with his stlek, grubbed.. around
British '1°4°11(41-'1' kW)Ilt"t thorn atr ....six' Three.; 100 eati moticm It a bit and "then pulled it up and
Ifeat--41" bteall'*1 PutOettl18 tho and the .„...tro gitotitosSed it over to the roadside. You
try &Imola atarving while aR nt.xt to you. see the stone was, dat„,
geld° and night coug ilia
that goes to work lesteatig.i.
..Napoittth on throat, chest and
hank. Then watch its PEKTRATN*
STIMULATING,* 401,104 Wag relief
ffrtottt distress.
ing , passages' with soothing
cheat and back inirU,001
Stan keeps: on.Worimigfor hours,
avers while vas' sleep - to ease
coughing SOMA% rellelre MOM*
le soreness and nessoas.n4
IPIGIITOTG'tlirough the rand and* icy. slOSh
'6 Of flooded battleflelds, our boys in the grout
line have learned to bless the tens of thousands
of devoted women 'who laber as vOlunteer
workers for the fled Cross. '
Through Ave years of war, these Canadian
"Illue.Smock's workers have knitted hundreds
of thousands of pairS of 'socks , made, mil-
lions of other comforting articles of clothing
--packed ot Red Cross food' parcels.
Other specially-trainavoluniteerwoinett serve
as drivers, as „nursIng aides, as office 'workers
and _Alletitians,
hard-working volunteers °make iour Red,
'Cross dollars stretch'farther. Thanks to„ their
efforts, each dollar yein,..give is maltiilled
three times in the value.44 food: clothing and
GIVE -- and giVe generously* to sappcirt their
' selfless work, Let you4 'contribution to the
Canadian Ited Cross be the token of ,youto
,i4haiiks to these devoted women who,,scrve
wilt truth, as "another giothet" to your boy;
input friend IV neighbor in the „fightiog Hee.
NiNfit 'St, (i1;04141011