The Seaforth News, 1941-11-06, Page 7THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 1911
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Showing (been Gables House --Prince Edward Island Nat. I'ark,
Prince Edward island, Canada
A recruit smoking a cigarette,
walked past a captain without sal-`
uting. The officer called him back.
"Are you not aware that you should
always salute an officer?" the cap-
tai, asked.
"Yee air," replied the recruit., "but
tate sergeant always told me ttevet'
to salute with a cigarette in my
mouth."
"isn't a lawsuit involving a patent
right about the dullest thing imag-
iueuble?" said one barrister to all.
other,
"Not always," was the reply.
attended a ease no timng ago that
was really funny. A toll lawyer
nailed Short. was reading 8 0,000
word document which he called
brief' !"
"I
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(' .1'10 BRETON III( 1111,.1NDS NAT. PARK, NOVA SCOTIA
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We can Save you money on Bill and
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It will pay you to see our samples.
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Features, Together with the Weekly
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The Christian Science
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,.•..'�• •t.1,,,,,, .l 0 5'-' fllfrY, i8l4'," 4
THE, SEAF()RTlI N1�WS
'fin: NATIONAL. PARKS
OF CANADA
Aiming r'anabiah ,,t.•atest trniri::1
atlraetiaus are her national parks.
areas of outstanding beauty awl slur..
crest which have been set. 'wide by
statute for publie use, origina I ly .-
Into.l
)1 i�:] i 1 nnaiutain the primitive
beauty and wonders of the landscape,
they are also conserving the native
wild life of the country and preserv-
ing sites of national historic inter-
est, As recreational areas, too. their
value is immeasurable, for they pro-
vide, in ideal surroundings, unequall-
ed opportunities for the enjoyment of
outdoor life,
Canada's national park system was
instituted more than fifty years ago
when a small area surrounding hot
mineral springs at Banff in the Rocky
Mountains was set aside in 1885 as a
public possession. Other additions in
the region formed the nucleus of the
great chain of national playgrounds
which now stretches across ihe Dom-
inion from the Atlantic coast of
Nova Scotia to the Selkirk Mountains
in 'British Columbia.
lu these areas may be enjoyed the
attractions of majestic mountain
ranges, suoweapped and festooned
with hanging glaciers, beautiful val-
leys, sparkling lakes, sandy beaches.
tumbling streams, green forests and
phettresgne stretches by the sea. As
wilts life sanctuaries, the national
parks are also serving 118 vast nntdeo'
nmttseums, where tiie faun'' and flora
may he seen and studied in its nat-
ural state.
The national parks of ('"nada re-
present a neat natural resource
which, with reasonable. care. eetitert
b • depleted by use They are ,ileo an
Important eeottonu5 t ••t ai u,,r
Nle, lint 11 font the standpoint of do...
11,,:11114 of the nation, and as an uti
tam to American tourists who brie.;
'ant, then, dollars mu'11 need,s1 l,on
t in er t s war purchases 10 the T ni1-
e d Slate. It is estimated that more
than half the total pr pulatint of th ("tilled Sats, ttaa' 1 for 1 ,l atihn.
education til enjni lie nt oath ti ar_
III a vast wave they spread ,ten the
North American cnunnUtt. ii itfng
their OWI' national p nI s, n ttinilai
inonttmi,nts. and historic sI ions,
Many incline in their itinet ttv ;nue
counter part of the e plats of Int-
erest in ('allada-.-wit re. they are sure•
of a friendly 'welcome.
The usefulness of the national
parks as 111casnre and ltealth•giving
r'sorts is becoming more and more
recognized. This is evident from the
rapid growth in attendance during
the oust fees years. With a Iiomindon
wide system of these national play
grounds and an evergrowing volume
of vaeationists becoming nut
park conscious substantial increases
in the number of visitors to the parks
maty be .'stteet.ed in the future.
ANNOUNCE POLICY
OF FREIGHT ASSISTANCE
ON ALL FEED GRAINS
Wheat, oats. barley. rye. No. 1
feed screenings, No, 11 feed screen-
ings. whole or ground, and wheat
ran, wheat shorts and wheat mid-
dlings ft'om Western Canada ship-
ped either by rail or boat from Fort
William, Port Arthur or Armstrong,
Ontario, to points east are eligible
o participate in the freight- assist-
ance policy. covered by an oder in
council, an announcement from the
Dominion Department of Agriculture
stated on October 21. The amount of
the assistance for the Montreal
reight rate zone, which includes
,ractioaily the whole of the province
of Ontario, Montreal and Quebec
City, amounts to $4.50 per ton. This
lgure represents the average of the
eke and rail rate and the all -rail
ates within the zone. The new
order in council rescinds the former
one of September 25, 1941, whereby
ne-third of the freight allowance
as granted. The new order became
rfective October 20, 1941. The orig•
nal order in council will cover any
one fide claims against which sales
o 'feeders had been made on the
uses of one-third of freight allow -
nee from October 1, 1:141, to October
4. 1941 The reduction of $4,50 per
011 plus the balance of the through
ail carload freight charges to . des -
tuition will apply to the same group
f feeds shipped to points beyond the
tontreal freight rate zone, including
rte maritime provinces. For north-
rn Ontario the reduction will be
tale upon the basis of the local
'eight rate from the head of the
tkes, provided such reduction does
nt exceed 84.550 Per ton,
This order in council besides ill -
'easing the freight allowance from
ie -third to cover the whole freight
llowanee, also gives a match broader
pplication of the policy to general
an was given in the former er(ler
1 councilpassed on. September 25,
19 II 1r1 f«u't. is hill s,. .n that 1'
to',`515 r 401)0 40111n,-
nr ihr• ,. p,;cih,vl mils t•....1 ar,dr 1?'•rte
i.Vest,,rt1 whet. will 11'tr•'3t by tins,
rednei.iott, Assistance, on 1rei'ght
e iarmeF, will 114 pit'ttl on 811,•.,1, aalb,
barley, rye. wholee nr ground. '811,11'
brat', wucat shorts, wheat middling
or tin. 1 and. No. 2 feed rereenings
Aliened in carload lots atter Octnbrr
19, 1941, and distributed for use ex
elusively int Canada as feed for live
sleek or poultry before July 1, 1942.
In order that full ave may he made
of Western grain stocks already in.
I•.astern Canada. consideration has
been (:18411 to 1110w those brought in
since August 11, 1941, to be drawn
uponander the terms of this amend-
ed policy, limitation being that
claims will not be arr.'pted against
amounts of less than thirty tuns
which ntav have been in storage
prim' to October 19. 1941. Provision
is also made for wheat bran, wheat
shorts and wheat middling: milled in
Eastern Canada front Western wheat
shipped after August 21, 1541. to pert
elevators of flour mills in Eastern
Canada when such by-prig/nets tire
distributed from the ntunofaeruring
mill after October IP, 1941. for use
exclusively as feed in Canada.
TIN FOR TIMOSHENKO
Is Being Rushed to the Soviet from
British Malaya
Russia's war fa,tm'ies at„ stew gs.t.
tin„ hugs eimeignnlente of tin from
1 aiti:-6
1114171.
'MT, is a 1 drainatie 1 tp in the
;nal telt -hipped, -''- ',escarp,
1 th;rII' "4., ten t4 . !.t
1he soviet 1'1-1 11 ::eel at, 11,--
011,1 of Irl. 711W ..1'11140, ,•, lis
n r.li1•ihl Sl,hi. t 1 1;,10,:v.,1rrp
1l 1
nn la DI.
u t h l ni ;Ow
ticb ., . 11• i 10, 4 rv1.
tt Lith I tl 12 u-ftL. 114,In 1.,
tnl14 i, a tt'- f t ria'_
Incl armyI rti t. r c t
tJ,Ie
for 1115 it p ''e lir Pl 't t:,:
for '.Sari to stn°'
Pis -i a Ila. Ino Tin . i4• wn. 14,.1'
11,s tit,• 11(11.11 ill ,a <a•rr
ttU+i
y.ar yearthey use te-rveen (1,--'';
't t1, 1111 1 .'tri..) teal,
cent of tit- world pIodn5,lua. Heti,
,,,49 4-i,,1e:4' ,1,1
r, Nuhn' ial7,nrt-
and Th. .. :h )tu1.1j1'= ast(i 1
have ,. viten.; monopoly of ,
wherein, tat,, n;.i: up).1y t;; port,cul
trly short o._ h•n4 in 11'11'&'8n amt
in o, 5 ala d territories. Iiler 'raged
Stales was ; Malay's biggest cust-
omer in .1,411, with -total imports of
1h,ltnt., ,, 1',11Lida flame next with
1 ', eio,034. The. Soviet Union was
third.
Tru supplies come'' largely from the
"''stat tin sinoitrs at Singapore and
Penang in the Straits Settlements
and front the islands of Banka and
Biliton in hese Netherlands Indies, an
Indication of tate importance of these
Allied territories apart from their
strategic value.
PAGE SEVEO,
:."EF Nt4IVES FROM
SITS OF BOMB'"
F.rrive From London as Star Sets'.
enirs
Tion. att.is r,f ,tides from the 1111'
2 -me, people are aloes slitting their
01).'11 with -paper knives made.
f0om bits of bombs rained by the
Nazis on London in the blitz.
The larger pieces are melted down
and ttserl again by industry, but
small fragments have here 4411111,0.4
-11,10 blades, leaving the bundle in
the rough of the, original splinter,
The paper knives are front sig
nt -h. ' to tw" f. ,-a long and quanti-
ties el these sonv,•nirs have already
b• -.en -:hipped to lit,• Dominions -and
1- S. A.
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