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Acton Free Press (Acton, ON), March 4, 1943, p. 7

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telttksdbat march 4xk ims the acton fttee peess page seven zc the weather looks bk rabx when jwn 7u sonst complain u v g we bitter cs shabal th fifc jpx wjv task air far waste- an 4nf putjow tmstta god twenty years ago get ready for sprinc- w nine mire toronto women are fighting y llght saving wholesale shipper m p- barry shipped a car of potato on satur day he bought them lor- 50 cents per bag rev j c wusoa bj of wey- bura sask uas elected moderator of the presbytery and appointed a com- missioner to tto gmenl assembly tbnv wtv fiftyfour students from hatton county attending tor onto university last year rev lewis r klpp editor of the canadian baptist delivered impres sive discourses at the baptist anni versary on sunday the funeral of the late j w eas- terbrook was held at ebenezer ceme tery mr easterhrook was for many years a merchant at broolcville he precedecl sir elsley there dobie in acton on saturday march x 192x to mr and mrs james e dobie a son scott at the homestead 6li line esoueslng on wednesday febru ary hth 1923 william scott aged 76 years wren at kits residence toronto ontario on friday march 2nd 192x john franklin wren md in nts 60th year 1jimdsay at the residence of her brotherinlaw e g huff mat ash- irrove on sunday march 4th lttx jennie a graham wife of nlnlan y ijndsay ol tabloid freight when peace here noted scinuisl tod itier gives ideas for findwar air- shipping winnipeg icp sir hubert wilkin famed british explorer- scientistr and filer says the basis for settling the world after the war must lie in guaranteeing the provision of the physical an material require ments of all peoples no matter what l heir nationality race or color interviewed here sir hubert vis- toned a postwar world in which giant planes would carry concentrated freight such as oils over great dist ances more cheaply than ships or railways alrjuanes however would not replace existing transportation services he said lmkrsaaluaa flyia sir hubert who has flown thous ands of miles in many parts of ttv world and now is working for the- united states army military planning division said the experience mined in building buheuanes in this war would lead to tra development of giant freighters of the air and facilitate international flying after the war international cooperat ion on weather reports would make long distance flights safer he added and predicted that scientific longrange weather forecasting would play a big role in the future of human so ciety enabling people of the world to plan their food requirements a year in advance through a world system of meteorological stations man will be able to plan accurately for both food and clothing for a year ahead he said pa8iuon ts woatdh fashions in wordsareukr fashions elsewhere most of the time they are overworked and become common place and then tiresome and then vanish almost as fast as they came without having done any particular harm it does not matter greatly if for a time every book reviewer finds every new book to be exciting even a book in praise of the hermit life will he exciting it is so excitingly quiet it does not matter if for a time everything is streamlined from automobiles to annual meetings of the professors of philosophy it may have been irritating as well as weari some when everybody recently went in for frowning on complacency- new york times sweet caporal tfrait teachings against drunkenness golden text strong drink shall toe bitter to them that drink it- isa 34 a lesson tex i sam 3016 17 isa hfcl4 7 cal 51321 exposition l prink a national evil 1 sam abofi tt this passage relates to the qnrct off zlkjag hy david after fct had been taken by the ax words indicate thai it was owing to a drunken debauch that the city was no easuy recovered the story is this when david took refuge from king saul n the philistines he settled inziumg a city situated at the con fines of phiustia jodah and amila it was there that he received daily r accessions of forces 41 chran 121 30 also he heard of sauts death there 2 sam 11 410 when the philistines gathered together to ittack israel and david joined them because they suspected he would switch his forces to the side of israel in the battle they sent him hark to ziklag in the meanwhile the am- alekites taking advantage of the ab sent military lid invaded philistia and conquered klklag where they were encamped enjoying the fruit of their victory thy gave them selves to eating drinking and danc ing evidently they debauched them selves for david found it a simple task to cut the invaders to pieces only 400 young men managing to et- cape this is the historical passage chosen to teach what a menace is alcoholic beverage to a nations security and welfare there are abundant evi dences of this fact in the sordid re cord of military and civil history the night that belshaxzar and a thousand of his lords drank wine and spoke blasphemously the great babylonian empire succumbed to he forces of aledoxersla we know that an al cohol soaked soldier or sailor i un able to perform his duty properly in a democracy it is the citizen who is responsllde to cod and to h fellow men we cannot ascend any hlglier than we an we cannot be a pure efficient and idealistic people as tang as tlie social evil of beverage is allowed by our citizens any revival of relighin hindered by this evil hut the bst way to get rid of it is by a- widespread revival of uhedteme to cwl h godv hatred of drunkenness isu s 1t t we luive here an illustration of tlte country editor sees fftu0 g wccclv msrarsavcsts or ciuuo svyjm ctrrnut tfite tnnni even the pa lhim in a city apartment is ind inter the fact that it takes farm machin ery to produce the sie of life ajlmlnistratorh h- bloom had some of the answers for me in toronto first 1st me pass on the- information that our tentative allocation tor 193 is 2s- of the 1940 toaaage or farm machinery and 150f tor repairs thats not as had as it v when one considers that the russians found it possible to produce materials in factories six months after they had been blasted to rubble by the nazis and retaken that takes ingenuity and improvisat ion the canadian farmer can do that too why is 1940 taken as the basis uecaihe that was the axt normal year in the implement business and the terlod used by the united states also from whenv we have some lu- ikridnc for materials thine werent so seriuus in this line in 1912 for when the smoke had cleared away a healthy business shows a statljltal reality betwen implements and re pairs we hail a b6c overall tmnace manufactured or imported u ay materials are kearee but theres a different picture for 1943 shelves are bore and no inven tory to speak of you on the farm in the towns have got to get it into our noodles that materials which go into farm machinery alto go into the machinery for killing nazis and japs as the administrator explained it and it sounded reasonable it would luive been simple to make an order stopiilng importation of not more than 25 gross weight but there were other considerations for one thing they curtailed exports drac- tlcally yes thcy have io export mi certain amount yet to new zealnnd and australia who have some udttr of argument jl hat jt hey atv dependent tponolt uii in that they al hmve ta 1 dure the food to keep them alive just like our own city apartment dweller they are interested in ma chinery then the administration made dividual tanner can snake application to the rationing officer for farm ma chinery he thinks be esseatialh re quires the mechanism tor appeals is also provided for weltj tnats the story i got from the boss of farm machinery boiled down to the space available they realise the labor shortage presents difficulties they are sympathetic to the fact that a farmer cant get everything he wants for replac or new equipment but theyre mak ing every effort to be fair and equit able to all with the amount at dis posal of the country as a whole that means harder work taking rare of present equipment to make it last longer the farmer likes to crouseyjust as the soldier does but they both give when its needed because theres a strious war goingon the farmer will we think without hesitation do the btst he can to make machinery c round to the best advantage the comparative rationing has been set up hecause there s a scarcity of ma terials and tlu- ri4vsitie of war pro duction weve jurt got to like it and moke what weve cot last longer to is the tfclra of m series of art icles by mr oierwhut canalian sliips in maiiv waters canada triird ansotq7 shin-lluim- ing counfrirsi or atlicrl written for the canadian pre ay stan mavtimu- tononto tcpl now tldrd-rank- ing amonu the shipbuilding countries of the vnltel nations canada will shortly launch iter loflth cargo vessel since sejvt 1011 bringing tlic canad ian merchant fleet to its hi chest level in years shipbuilders wiy he flet of 10- 000ton merchantmen will play an im- surxey clear across canada distus- i wrt uhon the allies open the sing the situation with deputy mln liters of agriculture evperlmentul station superintendents tlie supply divine judgment which is visited upon hoard ami others to see what types mitlonw which allow their people to and varieties were most essential become drunkards the crown of pride in v 1 refers to samaria cf it x inul cf i ki 1624 it is uken- ed to u elmpel of flowers on a drunkards brow the people of the northern kingdom us a nation arc de scribed as the drunkards of ejm- rtam drunkenness had become a national sin isa 5j11 1- kfos- 7 5 amos 26 8 12 zlz 66- they were smitten down with drink their chaplet of pride and glor ious beauty was after all but a faded flower so it is with every chaplet of pride and all the glorious plication of the survey beauty of this present world 1 pet the prophetsanswer to israels confidence and pride in her corrup tion wjis that jehovah had a mighty and a strong one v 2 this was the king of assyria 2 ki 181012 the assyrians themselves were a bloody deceitful and rapacious peoplpnah 31 but they were gods instrument for fulfilling his judg ments on ills rebellious corrupt and proud people ps 76i0 the assyr ian is described as coming down like a tempest of hall a destroying morm a tempest of mighty waters overflowing it meant widespread and overwhelming destruction such is the manifestation of the wrath of godagainst proud and resistant slnw all this happened because they obeyl ed not the voice of the ilord their god t2 kl 1811 12 jesus issued similar warnings against thne wki refused to hear ills words or do them matt 726 27agod punishes sin with sin when an individual or a nation adopts a course of pride and corrupt living there is inevitable and dire penalty exacted rom 623 gal 67 8 iii the works of the flesh gal 51921 if the spirit is not given control and so the flesh has its own way it works its own works and it u a dark dit tonal remuneration is altagrln catalogue of works to contemplate turn representative he mifiht be first we have sexual impurity in the superintendent of an experimen- three forms then holatry and then i tal station or one qualified and dele- occultlsm in its various forms sum- gated by him to assist med up under one miord sorcery as a further consultant to the rn- then eight forms of bitterness or one turning officer some prominent far- ncmlnst another the commonest form mer of the reclon is chosen who has of carnality in cola tin and in the confidence and respect of the others world and in the church today jos his judgment is used in dealing with 314j8 by heresies is meant the border line cases because as we making of parties a common manl- j neglected to mention earlier the in festation lof carnality then drunk- chnefcs and revel ings the form of carnality that we usually put in the j kingdom of heaven and ask ourselves forefront chve the catalogue and am i doing such things now comes n warning of awful to stop here will not be enough solemnity v 21 1 cor 68 10 eph we must have more than a negative 55 these are most solemn word attitude toward strong drink paul and it will stnhd us each in stead to exhorts us be not drunk with wine go carefully over this catalogue of therein is excess but bo filled with things which shut men out of the the snjrit teph 518 tltts a good approach unt it in western canada for instance they found tliey could do without threshers mow and wanted comhlnes increased they could cut out drug harrows for a year hut wanted one way discs as a result they were able to order varieties eliminated in the west from 473 to 73 from that many to 117 in eastern canada walking plows ias an example will come in only five kinds as compared to 52 ims compare ta 1 94 and here is another practical ap- they will allow manufacture of 75 of 194ft output of cream separators with combines down to 33 but still like theuflusslan simile quoted above sat isfactory grain drills for the west will he on the basis of 15 of 1940 but 30 for eastern canada the westill get xt i j in oneway disc seeders and eastern canada nlll the tonnage was computed separately for east and west as essentially requir ed the administration knows there will be a bigger demand for farm machinery this year because general ly speaking there was a better in come in 1942 and farmers will want increased and better plant facilities fabor will be scarce so then what better than a rationing system t we studied the british system and that of the united states to guide if possible said mr bloom out of the cumulative study and research they evolved what they consider the most simple and least expensive way to work out the farm machinery and equipment problem which is nation ally important in scope here it is lnn nutshell just as easy for the city slicker to under- stand as for the farmer in the regional boards across canada four teen machinery rationing officers have been appointed acting as a consultant in each case uithoutad- hlg push on germandominated europe stretcjhed end to end the fleet would form n folid line of ships nearly 10 mllet- long and would re quire approximately 5000 merchant teamen to take them across sub- marineinfested waerto encland their value to the allies when the second front gets under way is best told in ficures released by wartime shipping tltd here is what 100 of these ships will carry to europe mo torized equipment to outfit 100 infan try battalions with bren cun carriers trucks and motorcycles enough bombs to load 95000 medium bombers for- attacks on berlin their cargo holds could store enough aluminum to build 310000 1 medium bombers or 640000 fighter planes these ships will also have space on their afterdecks to hold two complete bombers i when the fleet is completed many of britains food problems will also be alleviated the canadian fleet is capable of transporting enough food- vt uffs to feed 2z500000 persons in britain for aweek some of the fleet shipbuilders say are already in action on nearly every hattlefront the balance now being completed in yards across canada will shortly join them on the atlantic trade routes clergyman asks spiritual heat bath england cp rev g a i hutchison rector of st saviors here answering grumblers who com plained churches were left too cold because of fuel economy wrote in his parish magazine that the best heat ing apparatus for any church was a crowded congregation giving off not enly bodily heat but fervent spiritual heat mr isaac p booth cm saw wjk ilk s fcr hs a am as it wilis rtiai nail i br an lircr m ti sssa has uit ihw tsnvtb the value of your in local business the free rs la an important part in all local affairs it enitjos wageeariursrivhose homes are in the town from which it secure business these wageearners pay taxes support churches make their contribution to local appeal lake part in community organizations and spend most of their wages with local merchants it is no idle hoasl that il has heen the means of giving welldirected pnhlicitv to this town and district there is no business institution which gives so much free service as a local newspaer were a merchant asked lo give the equivalent in goods that the newspaper gives in free service to all local or ganizations he woidd find il impossihlc to meet the demand when money is spent for printing or advertis ing with your local printing office yon are helping local printers to help you you make it wssille cor them to serve you hetleroul oft own printing sales men take money out of the community paying no taxes buying nothing from local stores getting all the caiii and not caring whether you sink or swim as merchants expect customers to he loyal to their own community in buying goods from them so might merchants remember they too should follow the same ideas in regard to their local print ing office its good business for ll of us customer goodwill in this town and district can best be developed by regular advertising in your local community newspaper the money spent for advertising and printed matter goes back to local merchants in increased trade your dollars do double duty when spent with your local newspaper- they help you directly and others indirectly r your home town newspaper the acton free press phone acton 174 mill street

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