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Canadian Statesman (Bowmanville, ON), 24 Sep 1942, p. 2

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PAGE TWO TH CNDIA SA~A UWIJ ?N T rj' 7AR zi,14 c Canada's New Deal The wxar-shîattes'ed i v<tisas of t bis xviii, unî- like lIeuse uof thie la.st euie. ar'e tii lie g'iveli a - ' iexx deal - 'ini thi' î'eiriciitatieî iliei'ssa'x ii ini.î tbcîii iiav- tii uiliial. peacc'tiuiie existence .. at luot iun ( ausila. TIlîc stîr-v ol the oi~uuiîu f a xast nîatiuunaul plais wxltîi this ini viewx is tilu oitî ilic fronît page oîf tIiis iýsi. hîîtli xvast c Iuiuid ii îl xvust cd neu tiu'-' liîeî' ini assuiatiui aine tu lui î'î'b)hiil- itateul hitr-ri sîinîtî ags'eement lias beeii effccted andi planus liavxe gholue xxî'I foi'- xva rc xxi t hiiurha iii Co'uiiit %- th e scelle oîf thîe fiî'st unîit ini fuis g-reat scliesine. w'e hss'ge evîx ri'accu te stusdy tis ar'ticle luecause of its highl andi local imîportuatnce. No aftcî'-vai' plans lias eveu' been lex-eiep- cd thuat blîîhcs suc'l pruoinise as this anid ne movesiielt lias se quicklx- seized the iinagiii- atiosîs cf mniu in lîighi places xx-Iose infifhîence ini turn, lias itîdîsceci goverîîments ahmnost iun- stanthy, to -i\-e effeet to thîcir recommenda- tiouîs. Great credit in uîrglng tîsis plan gees te a ianu and returseci soldier, ,J. D. Thomsas of Goderich, w-ho w-as chairman cf the txve original comimittees wbiclî did tise ardueus groiiiidwxork. Tociay- tise sames of those associated xvith the iicvemeut reads like a 'Wio's WVho" Cauiadian Director-. The Statesman feels sosuexx'at distun- guîishecl in that by inivitationi it wxas choseis as representative of the xveekIy p'css ini Onnada tii report lu its latest two issues, tIse steries cf two great nsational unidertakings. A w'eek ag-o the Nationial Ntutritionî Plan xvas featured. Thiis report Iiuoughlt a request for 500 additiosîal reprints for cdistribîutions te maîîufaeturers. Noxx wxe record sonie un- pr-e-ssiouis cf the Nationsal Rehabiiitation Plan. Botîi are cotsc<ruied xvitî hcahth ancd ultinsate natinal uplift cf v-er- ' reatest imnportanice, andc bîctîs ar'e alread xx'ehl foî'î- ulated. It is a niatteî' of loical pricle that onu' niative Censtx- csf Durusasi lias beesi chosesi as the first iuit lin this x'ast sclsine that xviii spread frem ceast f0 ceast. -V M rs. M iniver To the list cf comîîpulsionis Cauîacian cuti- zesîs arc ferccc te sulîsuit shieîld bie aîiceci 'Mrs.Miivr' I t xvcuili cIo mor'e tiucd foi' ('a îîada anîd thie cause cf thie Unitedi Nationus tîssîi ail the rulisîgs cur liau's'ossed g<îveî-uiueui îîffic-ial.s eati tlîîuk cof. l!îlîs. Miîix-er' 's 11uî) diiuht thec gî'catcst play the motion01 p ict ue iiiidisti l'v liais pro'- cilsîecl. A simle stuir v ofi ili uh I'c s Eisgîisuî fansil x-,. it siîîîxs tiîc'iu' lite liefere tIse outbs'cak cof the I>uie \ \\'sîî'l ini 1939. andc it guuîs uoit te) îlcsvi'îie liîix the Wxsii affccted thein. To sîpprecuate thse satf'tt\ an iîîîl nifr ofu'îii cuir Caujaiian liues. eue lias oiu] v tii sec the Misulvers eou'hiod lin at ait'-s'aici shelltes' xvith thie .Jcnis let tiu- ig l hî'II se areuiuuu them. To reahi.ze tIse fiendcislî s'uîeltx- cf flic Gernuan cîie bas oit]' tii sec tlie R.A.F. planie go hu'tlisg dowxn ini flaîîes te) eas'tl andu xvatcb the 1Jun folhîîxx it cloxcîx Ici sach ine- guis the ;uîrvix'ors. if aîiycili coîîlî suriv'-xe sncb a bell. Tii apprci'iafe cuî' ehutircies cone bias cnlyv te xvittîess tise scene il) thie litile Aniglican clsîrclî. \Vatcl tIe i'-oîgregaticî i li tuie pexvs andc tIhe c'hoir bîîvs f'ile up the aislc' and take tîjeir places auîîuîîg tlie î'uiîîis. 'Sec the -iî'as' stasnd xvitlî the dayîig-lit stî'easu- iller uuw'n cn hînsi tîî'uuli thie gisp ini theu roof xvîeî'e the Gerumaitî beîïib lins fsîlleî'î t \Viat cf tlîe maîsv aîscl liaustiful ( ajiadlias ehus'clses h)artly filîcîl eaecl Sunclav? ViJli it fake Ger'miai bosuls tii inaki' îiaîsx- ( aii- 'Il] ~di.ans s'eslize xvîat thci r religioîî inesits tii them andî bs'ing fluesu uiaek fo chuirch ?) Tcî a;uprec'iate that xxaî' is sno u'espei'te' oif perseuis, listen te tlîe vicai' syipathize xvîth the families of tIhe xsctssns cf tIse Iast air raid. TIse x'ictimîs-a choiir box' front tisat chuircli, tIse stationi ulaster, andc the -randl- daughtcr ef ant aristuicrat w-bu is inc'iî(leîs- tahiy the w'ife oif X'inceîit Miîîixer, Mî's. Minivei"s son. Perhaîîs the highli spot cf tlic play i.s xvhen Vincent Miîix'es', the lîereax-c< aitnmai). ut. ter listesi iîg ti thie 'ic'ar tel] thens tîsat t lis war is thie Pi'<phc 's War, leaves thie luexx whei'e lus suidîl î-class fainil v sits andii crosssîîg thie ai.sle fokes lus udîîîe xvîîli Laui- Behlaî ini lier' p)ex. 'fliex sliure usa xtt book andu silig ' -01xvaî'i i'îrisu iaîî Sol- dieu-s." lIce wu' hx'sîiblieil,~ a dIta. matie mîontenît thli Nw-IpIuli dao Ofi clois' distinîct ions bv tilie xvar1. If (.ditdaî'- î'aî 'de axuox frt'oî îui M'4rs. M~iîîixer xxitîuuut au lifl. xvl<uu u-Ic swehhiigiiin thîciu' lîî'aits. xvitliîîuit a "Iîu Black Markets ln Our Midst 1 Establisbed 1854 AN IINDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER Witb which ls Incorporated The Bowmnan'vlile News, The Newvcastle Independent, and The Orono News. 86 Year's Continuons Service To The Town of Bowmanviiie and Durhami County. Memuber Audit Bureau o f Circulations II Weekly Ncwspaperse Association Class A Weekiies of Canada SUBSCRIPTION RATES $2.00 a Year, strictly In advance. $2.50 a. Year i the United States. GEO. W. JAMES, Editor. agiliîgthiîgs tilii' îîsed agailiseulize tliat thli aî'tii'lcslîuîlîl ot have lPenticlisiardIccl ry' sO sîuîî O I'Iii'ey are'e Iîar'înîg tii get aliiui se wiî <lineauiulhler and lte eo-îîîerate iii Meîir 20( ve-ntur'es cul'<l lcutîîîg and1 iaising ione vis aId and tMee t wo lîportatt juaitieswHI stand hw thei inl good stead ini later life. Ho AsiSee ut. By Capt. Elmore Philpott About a year ago ive gave editorial ex- pressionî to thi' dangleî' cf the developiinent lu Cantada of Blaî-k larikets". This terni is used iiiBru a ili te îlcsil-late thoîse iviîo 1) \- iietlicis o u llinczlc('Pptieli. suîbter- fluge, and1( evasien. seek te break doNvii file raiiniîg laws h stiippliiig ,,people iwith feeîl-tîîffsai a nd baîulielliiîd the ]ai%. Onîce aigithe11'\- ai,,'e ula h itb severelv. I n scine cases aun utî'ic publie ulcmaîîds tlhe peuî- alti- for' t raseli . .. tlîat is. deatli. They r easel t lia t iliese w hi> siisî'ribe te tlîat sort efthtlîîîg are literallvil piîgfood froni the eui.sî'tuliîllia îîds* cf Iittle chi!dreîî. Oveî' there tbîs sugigestionî is alicist aetuality. The pioe' niay blicsenieilat severe as ap- plieid te sinîllar eidfitieîîs alreadv clevel cp- iîîg liere in ('anada. Black, Markets have ilevelepeil silice meat andc beef have becenie searve. It N i uir epiioneîthat these nowv cvacliig tIse law. simiplY are net reallY aivare oif its ternis a ndi nspecters have net informn- ed tlieni. Oui' duty lies ini siînpliy suggestîuîg te tliose melst iîiteresteii within tb is coin- mniît '-vthat îlîeý- bevome isrnineiiatelv wiell inifernîed in tliis Nvlîoe prop)ositioni. Leariî and ocîlev Ilhe lau'. Tlhe (3aîîaîiaîî Press lias just issueci a waru in ýr iii reirard Iote le beef andî fresh ineat ('risis. Tlîev quiote lDena ldi Gordon, lîcad of tbe Wartiîne lriî'es and Trade Board : "' lice la oe f Black Ma rkets is iî<uînd to eivoliipluîiîder eniit ions <if short- a,-es... et(!. '*aid lie £rees on te suggý(est that econtrol bli vai- cfs'a tien iig is liiedr (dis- Cussien as wvell as, a ccii ing cin lîve i'attle. The ivhle cpoinlt is thiat thlev are determ iued tlbat s'etail eeilin-s nnîist held . . .....se. Inflation înust b)e uefeatecl at al 'csts. C'onsusmer rationeu iiilu îr opinion. is just areîind thee coi'ei'. If se the ecure xwill be i'oî'se tlîaîî the l)ieselit ccondition an(l theî'e wiîlIlie peunalties for the '"bllack nîiarketeers'ý-, that ivili put thîem uin 'celd storage" for a long, loing tie . . . as they now-docieni Brit- ain. To an.,, who îiow-niav be on the fringe of involveintt ive slould caution: "If ini doubt, eonsult the Wartinîe Prices and Trade Board at onice." -V Don't Leave It To Politicians Wc are in ag-reement with every word cf this editorial writteiî bi- Editer J. H. Cran- ston iin the Micland Free Press: Canada and the United ;Nations are noew at the suipreme ci'isLs cf the war. Wlîat are ive geingte do abouit it? ê'an inothiîig be dune te smash dow'n party lines so thiat a national government may be feî'îed xvhicli Nviii draft the best brains that Canada eau muster? EMer PIhilpott writing ii 'Nexs"de- clares tlîat iv'e shiah net coine tliroiigh the ordeal immiediately ahiead cf lis uniless thei'e s.s an entii'ely new spirit, îlot in ene partx- but ini ail. Ile fears that wve ray have te jstanîd on the verx- brink cf visible catastî'e- piîe before ive iake to the filet that Caunada and freedoni niatter a grreat deailucore than Kin-, llasîson. Celdw'ehl, and the lparties tliev liead. Býut ivc muist siot leave it te the politi- clans. Tliev xvon 't do anytliing iiiiîless iv'e foee tlîcn te, for the l)arty sYstcîi suits thein dewîî tethe g-'ound. Eiiclîoee cf us lias te wake frein'h i i'Slliiii i letiaî'gy. W'î' îîîîst fau, the 'faet tliat ve arc e sfiîi the w 'a r 10 date. ianid tlîat ive slal Iliîse i t sîtei' luiîlcss tlie eeiîîîiiei peple uof tlîe 1 iiiited -Nationss ivake to the faut tlîat noe- tIiiîi- cIse oc'îim uit viî-tîî'v. îî leiil s ive iavec wagc disputes, efiilipt hIlIf eiiei'- gy cilito îii'iuvi'tio<ii.liv I ixui ies. w.îstc raiojs listeniig tii radie eniîîcututirs w-li elistiiit viet eiv ouit cf defi'at. wveilîseive to ]ose the 1a'1a(d îi'îîlalv ivill (I So. Wc c'enu akc up anîd ive nihîst. Ili thiat ivai <iii v lies filial victiîu'x. Community Pattern N osma Eli.zalîethî 1e-Ic of Bîrketn inî an ariîle iii The Faî'ser 's Magazinie, gives lis a -liîîîpse cf wliat is goiiîîg on ini xvliat Anîdy Clarke calîs "tlîat imnportanît part oif 1Ontario tîjat lies oîitside thie ities". Miss cccx'y, as a selîcci teacîser, ceuses ini contact ivt represeitatives of rlchofeî's mcevliv (xlaî c e\-rtsoftefra sli maesevr) theic winieiliand the 'lilîdrej of Car'twr'ighit Toivîslîiîîini suppcrtiuîg the Red Croi's.sthe Navv Leagîîte. the Britishi War Vietisiis' Fiusd, andî otîser war cliarities. ('arîtwright Townshiip is but onie cf thec tîîcisaîids'cf cotintriy areas tlîroiiglout ('an-c alla xvl e rur~al foJI kar'e doiiig tbeil' bit toc bl) licw-%ar effort. Evervoiie fî'îîn graniîa ilcw-ute sistci' Stizie is lius. v itl kiittiig, seiî.andl ethles'rk.-1 PREPARE FOR PEACE The western world is now in grave danger because we persist- ed in ignoring the danger of this war tilliti was tao late ta over- came the long lead abtained by aur enemies. We disregarded the aid adage "in time o! war prepare for peace." Now we are doing ex- actly the same thing the other way round. We are drifting toward peace without any adequate plan ta meet the problems which peace wîll surely bring. Unless we begîn ta do somethîng more about it than we have done so far the ' -- after-war persod may brîng the greatest social upheaval in aur history. This possîbslity bas been ism pressed an some people su Cana- da dursng the' jDr. Cyril Jamesi the Princspal o! McGill University, heads the gov- erument's commjttee wbose job it is ta make plans for re-establish- ment o! the peacetime ecanamy. He has just completed a tour o! western Canada. He bas made many speeches - aiways in bis graciaus smiling manner. He has uttered some nice saunding plati- tudes. But wben what he sacs is analyzed this is what is found: The present government bas no real plan ta deal witb the vast problem o! re-employment whicb will surely follow the "cease fire" bugle caîl. The pretence that it bas such a plan la itsel! a dan- geraus fiction. For it will aggra- vate the troubles wbîch are prob- able lu any event. Wbat the Canadian goverument bas in this matter is a very nice false-face. Usually the false facesi which smali boys wear an Hal-1 lowe'en are ugly affairs. But the1 King gavernment's reconstruction false-face is the reverse. Dr. James smiles pleasantly and speaks nicely. But wbat he says lu public (and much more pointedly what be says in private) ail cames down ta this: We have as yet no adequate re-emplay- ment plan. FATAL FLAW Dr. James says that the prin- ciple o! the government's re-es-a tablisbment plan is simple. It la based on "full emplayment for I everybody." That, o! course, is o really an important declaration. L Ten years aga (as I found te my s personal cast) anybody wbo ad-p vacated publicly, '*the rigbt o! u every man ta work," was branded r as a Red, an anarchist, a wild- f eyed-revolutionary, and sa forth.v That was if he really meant it, ii and had a concrete plan ta appiy it. If it was just talk, like "Work p and Wages" lu British Calumbia b -designed mereiy ta xin the . tl IN THE DIM AND DISTANT PAST Frosu The Statesman Files TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO Frosu The Canadian Statesman, September 27, 1917 Bowmanville Fair was aver... For the firat time iu 25 yeara Samuel Allun !aiied ta show Shortharn cattie. -. *T. H. Knight, local dealer, xvas lu charge o! the McLaughlin autos... A. W. Pick- ard bad an exhibit o! Overland cars ... Grain exhibit was rather smaîll. . . Manager W. E. Jewell was the busy man. . Thos. Rab- son displayed a large case o! photos. Lieut. Juatus Williamns Paul and bis bride, Indianapolis, were re- cent visitors at the former's grandparencs, Mr. and Mrs. Thos. Hamblyn. Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Curtis and Master Harry Terry, Tyrane, visit- ed at Mrs. Hockin's, Wellinsgton St., fair day. Rev. S. Sellery was ta preacb on "Manlinesa" lu the Methodiat Church Sunday evening. A. M. Hardy was in Akron, Ohioa, on business for the Good- , year. Miss Allie L. Bragg was back a!ter visiting relatives lu Wesley- ville and Part Hope. Mr. John and Miss Eva Heliyar were visiting their brother, W. H. Hellyar, Clinton. Whoever took the panama bat fram the cauncil chamber on Court Day was asked ta leave it at C. M. Cawker & Sons and get their own back. A 3-day canvasa ta raise $6,000 to pay debt incurred by erectian of new wing ta Generai Hospital was being planned. Mrs. Gea. Argue, Enniakillen, was ill. Sam Deweil, Mount Vernon, had his leg broken by a kick from i horse. Corn cutting had started at Ebenezer. FIFTY VEARS AGO From The Canadian Statesmnan, September 21, 1892 At Solina the Sans o! Temper- unce were planning ta retebrate tue 501h anniversary cf the or- anization. . . . During the past *'eek the house o! Thos. Baker as been blcssed by the ad o! a Jaughter. Arthur Brent and Milton Wer- y, Tyrone, were planning ta go oGuelvb O.A.C.... .The Tyrone -haci board ordered a handsome 00 lb. achool bell during their ait ta Toronto last week. -... Thie d Jardine !arm south o! Tyrone as been rented ta Mr. Thos. lar, Bethesda, Mr. G. H. Jar- dine havîng decided ta give up farming for a time. Geo. Ormiston had purchased the house and lot owned by J. W. Efliott, Raglan. Haydon news contained the fol- lowing poem. Perhaps some of our readers wlll recali the story behind it: "Not a drum was heard, not a funeral note When Victor cut his horse's throat. The axe did execute the deed, And broke the skull of the noble steed. In Ashton's swamp the poor brute lies, He cannot even switch the flies. No fault can be laid to the noble .steed, It was all on account of the lack of feed." At Kirby the honey social on the l3th was a success socially and financially. R. Sleep at Columbus was retir- ing from the farm and going to work for R. Hugo at the tailoring business. Mr. Frank Morris had passed the Ontario Sehool of Embalming examinations. Geo. Patterson, of Alvinston, who was visiting T. C. Jewell, vurchased a fine Dominion piano before returning home. Mrs. Thos. Hoar was home from visiting in Manitoba. Rev. R. D. Fraser, M.A., was attending the Presbyterian Con- ference in Toronto. YOUR Estate is bifferent from every other. Many prob. lems are lnvolved - family aind finoncial conditions, requirements and objectives are different. No ane persan could be expected ta effectively deal with the many duties required of an executar. The Sterling Trusts Corporation brings ta these prablems the cambined experience of a staff fully quolifled ta administer your estote pramptly and eff iciently. Name as your Executor TIE STERLiNC iTRUSTS CORPORATION 372 SAY ST., TORONTO election-that was different. But the present attitude is even more dangerous. People, like Dr. James (who speaks for the pre- sent powers that be, whether iu office at Ottawa or lu power at Mantrefal) grant the theoretical rght o! eery man ta wark. But iu practice they have no practicai plan ta appiy it. Thus they deny in fact wbat they grant lu plati- tudes. Under cross -examination, Dr. James suggests that there will be no centralized plan for employ- ment lu Canada. The national commission will leave the actual prajects ta the provinces and r.-unicipalities. It wiil give mere- ly general direction ta tbe plan. If that is the intention it is as certain as tomorrow's sunrise that this country wili undergo a social convulsion. For the provinces wili be even less able ta cape with the next unemplayment Problem than they were ta cape witb the last one. There will be tbree-quarters o! a million men and women now in uniform ta be re-establisbed in peacetime jobs. There will be more than that number engaged in war industries whicb must be trans!erred ta peace industries. If the gaverument, or any o! its cammittees, really imagines that it cala enter a new period o! "passing the buck" between gov- erument and gaverument - about who is responsible for finding wark for the men, the outcome is a foregone conclusion. There will be a nasty smash. WRONG END PLANNING The government's preparatians ta meet the problems a! peace- time re-emplayment are open ta exactiy the same criticism as are its war policies: It persista in backing towards an attempted solution rather than marching right up ta it, face ta face. In war the goverument backs into ail its major problems. That is true o! conscription o! man- pawer. Similarly it backs towards the problems o! peace. Dr. James, who is in charge o! peace re-employment, gives no inkling that the gaverument bas any intention o! grappling with what will surely be the very core o! the question wben it cames. And it will came-perhaps burst- ing on us in a matter o! months. The question is tbis: Np western industrial nation hxas been able ta salve its unem- ployment problem since WorldC War 1, except by preparations for inother war. The reason for that la obviaus. Et is impossible ta give ail the otberwise unemployed jobs on building roads, public buildings, s and sucb like. But it la also im- i possible for tbe state ta put the ( unempioyed on the public pay- t roll producing things ta satisfy c family needs without ciashing f writh some veated private business o nterest.l Thus, if Hitler or Mussolini bad C put their unemplayed ta work C building new bouses, or other v hinga o! buman usefuiness, they 1 a 1would speedily have reached the point where the new houses would have destroyed the earning power af the old buildings. The banks and mortgage companies would have stood to take considerable losses. Hence any government which tried to solve the unem- ployment problemn in the obvious, direct way would have had ta fight a pitched battle with the whole financial set-up. Hitler and the others took the way out which suited them-as well as ail the big business in- terests. They provided an un- limited market, and sure profits, for goods intended ultimately for destruction. That is, armaments and war supplies. MUST CHOOSE The choice which the western democracies must make after thîs war is simple but serious: They must decide whether hu- man beings or the financiai sys- temn is to be the first considera- tion of the state. If the decîsion is for humanity first, there is no insurmountable problem. Men and women can ail be given jobs in peace for peace just as easily as they can be given jobs in war for war. We can use every ablebodied t man and woman in Canada after this war to build the kind of Canada we ought to have. But we cannot do so unless we fight thro' the reai battle. That is, whether money is to be made the servant of humanity, or whether humani- ty is going to continue to be the servant of money. START NOW Canada should set up now-at the earliest possible moment-a National Employment Board. That most sensible men and WOMEN available. It should be the duty vailable. It should be the duty o! that board to provide for pub- lic employment in peacetime of a number o! Canadians equal ta those naw in armed services and war industry. That board should be assured in advance that it will have avail- able the whole money and credit power o! the natian-exactly as the fighting services now have. It probably will not be neces- sary for the board ta provide the number o! jobs mentioned above. Private business may be able ta stage a strong comeback and ex- pansion after the war. Sa much the better. But what is ail-important is :hat every Canadian should know that this country at least had for- ever banished the monstrous doc- trine that the only time ail Cana- dians are sure o! steady jobs is w'hen they are engaged in the destructive business of war. WORE GRANDFATHER'S ROBES The golden wedding anniver- ary celebration of Cal. and Mrs. J.A. V. Preston, residents o! )rangeville since 1906, was fea- tured recently by the christening of the couple's grandson, the in- fant son of Mrs. Norman F. Parks of Guelph. The babe was dressed in the baptismal robes worn by. Col. Preston at bis christening. Col. Preston is a native a! Man- *ers Township, Durham County, nd is a graduate o! Port Hope High School. Mrs. Preston is !rom Millbrook. Coi. Preston was in te militia for 50 years and was . .ommanding officer of the 46th Durham Regiment when the Great War broke out in 1914. TIMELY TIPS ON SAVING ELECTRICITY FOR WAR PRODUCTION WA HEREVER eyes are used for close seeing in your home - Thave adequate, protective lightingl But don't use ight wastefullyl Dan't leave Iamps burning in vacant rooms and passages. Don't use dark lamp- shades. And do keep bulbs clean. Do place lamps for better seeing. Do use bulbs of th-e right size-and the right make- pre-tested Edison Mazda Lamps. *... the Army of Mercy brings the dawn of Hope w 1/HILE brave Canadians are facing shipwreck and violent death ini the cause of democracy, other ... men, women, ex'en littie children.-ï are struggling in the grim ciutch of circum2xance on the Home Front. To them The Salvation Army stretches out its band of mercy and Christian brotherhood. Feet are turned from pathways of error; wise and experienced workers give heip and counsel; eyes are lifted ta the dawn of a new and better world. Money is needed for this human reclamation work. This hand of mercy is YOUR band. Do not permit it ta faiter or fail. Support the Army of Mercy! ;r ADJUTANT JOHN HART, Salvatlon Army Officer COMMITTEE: W. -R. STRIKE, Chafrman - F. O. McILVEEN, Treasurer Convenors of Canvas: AUBREY SMITH MRS. C. W. SLEMON H. M. COLE Business Section Residential Section Goodyear Plant k'___ lARD WORKERS This doudcous corsai - heIps keep you fit. Gives 3 Important Bonoflts . .. .. .. ..1 Helps prevent constipation due to lack of bulk. 2iron and phosphor of 3Wholesonme, nourisbingle full of delicious flavor. POSTl'S Brand BRAN FLAKES WITH OTHER PARTS 0F WI'EAT IMLIIM "Taking a long-range v iew of 1 to go wvrong-but 't is in the bag." the war, we must expect things 1 -Churchill. THE CANADIAN STATESMAN. BOWMANvmrr- nwmAnirn THURSDAY. SEPT. 24th lûAý

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