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Canadian Statesman (Bowmanville, ON), 12 Aug 1943, p. 2

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PAGE TWO THE CANAPIAN STATESMAN, BOWMANVILLE, ONTARIO THURSDAY, AUGUST i2th, 1943 The New Government withliî a ye O ii'iio lias ball four pr'emiercis. A pî'cinic' sJolb is to direct (Iii- brio's lii.rscstlisîness. 'Silil rapud v(IiiiiXs iiiii îîîîa'elliicif w old bl'ii oîiliioliîIo fa'îiî oî' factor v. Ofut ui' 1Boarduof 1Di- i-et ors I le vlc-bia~u ~leeîi t-ulled f0 rcîî dci' a dcc is i oi - now fi 11(1 tIeiiisel ves fa e- cd witl h a split verdict - A siiap clcefioiî fouîid tiiiii(5îcu Ioîi210vote tiih u'(iuili siiecri' îsgîst - Thei e 'stîlt iiakes oî)i)ii(flcL flicpr'oposit ion of cmîîisiyvof iig. 'Thei iicw governiciif mnuiiiist take over uîiide' filic severe iiaiilieal) tlîîs forî-cdl iil)oii if. Geor'ge l)i'cwxiIpr'nlabîl- libe called fo flic îuimiiciship. As w-e siec it. lie lias, these alter-natives :(a) Foi'iii a céoalition wifli Liii- crais, alloffiiig proportionte Cabinet por't- folios; (b) go alicad on lus owii fmusfiîîg f0 Lil>eîal suilport. Iceinist stanîd or faîl ac- eoriiîig f0 Libei'al votes in ileflchotise, for fhe C(.(F. w-on 'f(dea] witl itcflerod-ui parft We sîîggcsf flic latter' chii(e as flic Nvisest, iolti.cally. Mi'. Nixon w~ill hîave a "hcaacie 'decisioîi. By d(efeafiiig ])i'cw in fie Hlouse lice will fuîî'te anofhici' lc-fioiî. To defeaf iiuîî lie niusf vote with filic C.(.F. Will lic (Io su? The ais-em'is "NO" einiliaficall ' . M r. Nixonî led lus partv f0 a shaffering defeaf. He ni(w lias omilv\-13 followeî's on flic flooi'. Should lic foi'c an carl v ci et ioiî lic woîild dcstî'ov lus îooviiieial pa-tv uffeî'ly. To live down ,ia'c-iiiîîlafcd wrafli at l>uoxîes. disfi'aiîc'iiseineif of tlîoiisaiids tIi ioigli ha~st- ilv cornpiled lisfs anîd allcgcd Ottaw-a dicta- tli,wil I take a loîîg finie. No. lie nîîîsf stay - af fl -ic wli' 'of lus -wrecked miaebiiuuc anti join inii c<îniiioîî ('anse agaiiîst an ag- gyressivse, militant, eoiîii, pol ificai toc. Thecîe will lie atiîe frtinî Ottawau, tof course, and MUr. Nixon nisf accepf if. Iii luis incw capacity, (Geor'ge 1)îew'xill mîeti ail]flic fcaricssîîess, sagacîf3- ai tolcraiîcc af bus commiand. Hepburn Comeback Firsf eaiididaf.e declared electet ini flic rcceîît coîîtest wvas lâlitciell F. Ilepbuirii in lus homie c(iiiify of lgiuî. lis piîalify was 2523 anid lic poil d mîor'c votes f liuî bs fwo oppoiielîfs ouiiîiied. f)Ii Iibe il Iurals. aiigcu'td iat ls attcks iMu. hiiig. cilillied fhiaf lie, was tiliîslictlwhl îlie ivas, peslli abl 'v, fuuu-eîlout f othflc îu'iiiershili1îat of- fauva 's tienîaliil. .Iîsf d(ott Ilîe "' li Ii s ilt-idiual isiii lie i-a n ai, au I dependeîîf Lib- eral. Il is fariir fî'icîîds refuî-iicd uin ciii- pfliatieauly. Anid Eîgiii euuiitN- agrarialis are pu'obally as wvell eifflili ieti, polit icall y, as aiîx- setioli of the' îiî'viiic. Mitc'hî is sfill iundefcafed iicavy-îvcigliit'liaunpioii of political Oîtaî'io. Many papers, îniciudiîg llc Stafc.sniaii, fook luisf- si-ats af liiiii i flic past. Bult now wc joinî w'th hlus;conisfifiejuts iii cou- grafuiafioîîs on luis retuî-ii tf0hfli louse.Ilic will bce heard froin. Ife lias a gm'caf oppor- tunity niow fo leîîd weighit lu stable gov-eu-i- ment uîîder precarions conîditions, Maiiv dlaim thatfltie defeat of Nixon's goverîl- ment and Hlepburni's refnrn ai-c a rebuke f0 Ott1awa. We liope Mifch w-oii't faîte if as a reneved manîdate f0 aftack Mr'. Kiîig. Hie isn'f the sort fo kick a manî drapet i1 the ropes, listeningr to fleue oUunf. His talents may turn to reiîew-ed fetîd ifh the ('.I.0., as represeiited iii fli ('('.F., for' lie ean sec the haiidwrifiigt on filic political blacklioau-d. But lic lias flirted wif hiLaboîur and skiî-tcd flic shores of Social îcrdit fis- cal doctrine. lie coîîfesscd 1îulliely thafliahe read a book oni fli subjecf. With flîis ii mnud 'T'lecStatesian iîow forwaî-ds tf0 huai ifs serues,"W'liaf lime C.(.F. lPlanîs f0IDo .With Canada, ' withi compîlimntîs andf col,- grafulatioiîs. Th'lis miay- serve to indicate whereiîî lis lîighî talentfs nîay best serve farmers and the provinice at large. -V WooI Gathering T. C. GlaspelI, Dîrinî Couiify, Vice Pres- ident ('anadian Slîeep Breeders Auociatiouî, came iîîfo flic iictuire iii Ilouse of Comiions debates, JuiN. 14. Mi'. Ilackîîîor<', a westerni member, quofet iliim oui (anada 's woo! situt- ation. Mr'. Gînspeili uot' an art iî'b'. Sheep Industry Is Sile,'whiieli was widciy quoted and iiiwhidAi lie pî'ovetl, Nifh fig- ures, fliaf wool t'aiiot be jirodueed ini ('an- ada under 50 cent s lieu-ioiid foda3-. ,M r. Blackunore quotc'd wool prices as fol- lows, fromi the books ot a westernî lîîeeder: 1923-20.6c - 1925-22.4c; 1926-16.1c; 1927 -19.8c; 1928-33.7e ; 1929-16.5c; 1930 - 7.5e ; 1931-3c, etc., and wecnt on, up and dow-n ifi) 1942-27.lc per 1îiiut.Ie w'cnf gbeanubÎan et4teu Establlshed 1854 AN INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPiR WIth whlch Is Incorporated The Bowmanville News, The Newcastle Independent, and The Orono News. 88 Years' Continuons Service To The Town of Boivmanville and Durham County. Member ~ Audit Bureau of Circulations Canadiane Weekly Newspapers Association Class A Weeklles of Canada SUBSCRIPTIO14 RATES $2.00 a Year, strlctly in advance. $2.50 a Year ln the United States. GEO. W. JAMES, Editer. wlîaf a leadiiîg official of flihe $ War Pro- diuction B3oar'd rececitly, tuld fellIow-Amieî'i- cans: "A. mew c îsitriîeu-is bon'iîevcî'y 1l0.4 seconîds. An old ouîe (lies eveî'v 21.6 sec- onds. Iidiîstry ]oses 1,450<,000t( old eus- foinnrs iii a year aid gains 3,020,000 new ones w'lo kuîow nofliing of you or of your liroduef. ' oif the Minister of Finance. Ile said, 1'. 4875, in part:"The maîî inp(ipse is bo sec that %vc gef a siippîy of wool at reiisonal)le prices . w.i.elî flic l3e dard lis been miosf succcss- fi ni doiîngý. Beasonable pnices! And insisting that flhc govcrinînt wvas paying a bionus of 4 cents a pouiid whicli brougbit the lînie 10 30 cents, lie answcred a question, "we nced an iîîcrease iin wool do we"by saving, -1 do îlot tlîiîk we do.'" Lafer, w'len Mr. Blaekînorc sugcgesfed, P'. 4881, -'wc do not require to take aîîy speciai ineasures 10 get more wool ?", the Minister said : -1 lîiîk that is correct" and -1I think tlie Camadian Wool Board arc entiflc(1 f0 fle appreciative gratitude of flic Catiadian lîcolîe for flic wav flîcy have handled if.*' The Statesmian gave muciili free space to flic poliev of iîîcreased w'ool production iin fleic iîifrcsts of local farîners. Now, today, t'îankly we donî' know wlîat to say. \Vc lt'ave t bese items for farniers' consideratioîî. Jîst look ovcî' tlicaliove price fluctuations, nmotec the apparent chiange of policy. and de- vie il '-(in suliscribe tf0 apprecitive grati- tiffe ' *. Mavlîe H arold Skiiner, AIf. Ayî'c aînd ot lier local wel I knowil shccp lii'ccdcrs in Duirham C(omnly can enliglîfen mis on tîis s h lj et. Election Lessons Oni' estiînate oif flic Liberal defeat iii On- fari va cn be siiiiîuned uip ini flrce words: Labîourî. Ottaw-a anîd Proxies. iin the oî'der iiaîned. Let us examine resuits, first in D)ur- liai C(omnt ', second. acî'oss flic province. In aîîotlu'r olinii will lie founid a tabuilafcd sunnna-v. "'TlicBowles-Mercer NVofe". ]t slîows lîowvflcthe 0-E~ vote undernîjui- cd thie Liîeî'al candidate. Mi'. Bowlcs drew- liaif bis strengili, or 1119 votes froîn the fbircc factory t owîîs, Bownaiîville. Port Hope anîd Ncw-castle. 1)arlington Townshipî supplied 443 ]aî'gel * vin the UFO. district. Po(rtf hope and Hope Townshiip sw-ung f0 Dr. V ivian. \Vbaf happeniiei )urhain vas î'cflected, geîîerally, acî'oss Ontario. 0f flic 33 seats w-on bY thfl.c (F.. 29 were industnial and war-plitnf etres. Oshîawa anîd Ajax. for instance, swaînped botb tld-liiic candlidates. Tlie farniig areas held solidly against Soeialisin anîd tfliC .I.O., wifli Irem out- draw-ing Nixon by- 70 per cent. Th'e farni- ci' reaet ion aaîs fariner Nixoni is somie- lliiîg yvf f0 eng-age flic attenîtion of îiolitieal st'a teuists. L'amipaigii advisci's witli an cye f0 flic future wîll set about fliat task. When nilie Fedei'al Cabinet Ministers caime to Toronîto as absenfees froin their wvaî jobs af Ottawa f0 lenti weiglit tf0thfli oie of Mr. Nixon as provincial leader, wlîoiii turn, caled a hasfy eleefion, thaf nove îvas îioted by flic elecfoi'ate af large. Few doubt fliat Mr' Kiiig waîîted to test Onitario 's polif- ueal opinion. Labour, irked lîy taxes and restrictionis, gave 11h11 flic aiîsweî'. witlh farmîng districts enîphasizing their priofest. W'itli fli war iner'casiîîg in tempo ani with Ontaî-io 's lessoil so enîphatie, if se'iis un- likel v liat Ottaw-a will test flic national political sfrcngflî until ifs teî'în expir'es iin 194-7. Pî'oxy votiiig and widespread ivilian dis- fî'aniî'lisenieîit and geneî'ally po0î' naxage- ment addcd f0 lUi'. Nixon's, debacle. Figurîes are iîof yet availalîle luit IocallY if is kiîowii i liat thie great inajoiit.v ofI)rlan' absentf sîldiei's got nio vote at ai I. Thaiv as iati buisiniess.' if et'îtaitiîlv lîad ils t'ffecf on flic issue anid wc lîaveiî't lîcard t lic last of if. If iniiîsf îot liapîîcîiagaiiî. '1'lentt'i'c w-as flic llclseît e. \vlieh Ini thiefic muids (of niany, g i iyliad ils wveigit tliiown uiito theflicla- alie. Tlie above, iIlI geiîcral, secîn f0 becflic mai election lcssoiîs, as we sec theri. _V The Homie Front Battie Must Go On Wlîeiî flic Scot, John Paul Joncs, fouglif lus fanious sea baffle ag-ainsf flhc British during flic Anerican R.evolution, lie fouild hiniself oîîfmanoeuvi'cd, oufiunibered, sur- rounidcd, and was ealled upon f0 surrender. ILis î'ply became a classie. Leaviîîg ouf lus preface of brimsfone explefives, wc re- ineniber his slîout of defiauîce across thie wasfe of waters: "We laven 'f ycf begrun f0 fin-lt."And lie wenit onaîd won flic fighf tatfcred. linipinig, bleediîîg, but ulîconquier- able. Ontfario af flic moment appears f0 îîeed a Johiii Pauil Jonies, or' îîaybe fwo or tbiree of thein. Monflis ago TflecSfatcsrnan took flic leeid in cnlling attenition fo flic possibilifv of THREE-MAN CONTROL NOT GOOD ENOUGH Mr. King Had An Unluck3 break the other day. A few hour before the Allies landed in Sicil' he made his most imporfani speech of the year. Unfortun- ately, if was complet ely over. sbadowed by the news of thE fighfing on Sicily. Whaf our Prime Minister wa. teiiing the w-orld in bis f00- tame, foo-polife manner f a- - tract wide at- " f e nti onr, was' thaf there was a profound weak- ncss in the po- litical set-up of the Unifed Na- fions. The var- w-bich comprise the Allies wcre safisfied w itfh ui control b eîni~ cxcrcised s now - because off tbe prcia u necessify. B u t Ihey were increasingiy and deepi' disfurbed because the big polit icaý decisions being made righf nov w-erc those of a finy handful oi men-and men responsîble oni' f0 a few of the many millions af. fece d. That is rny condensation ol what Mr. King was sayîng-anc if was very much f0 the point For there is a greaf and growing evidence that ail the smaller naý fions, and a great mass of peopbE in others, are increasingly con- cerned about the polifical trends In piainesf terms, fhey sec no cvi- dence, as yet. thaf the net resull of the policies will hning anything like stable peace, affer thie ap- proaching military vicfory. Churchill, Roosevelt and Stalii are really running this w-hole wau on the Allied side. They ane running if extremely w-cil, fron the purcly. milifary aspect. But the polificai side of the picture is anyfhing but so brigbt. Here we sec rapidly evoiving, not fhree- way confrol, but bw-o. We sec policies making for conflict, not unify. The State Deparfment af Wash- ington is now dominating Briflali policy, as w-cii as sbaping that of the United States, The most strik- ing proof of that is the receni abandonment by Brifain of her relationship f0 De Guaile and the Fighfing French; and bbe adoption by Britain of the Stabe Deparf- ment line in regard f0 Giraud, and other international figures. The Soviet us aiso foilowing ifs own lone international political line. If is a line so different fromn that of the State Dcparfment that bbc nef resuits 'of the differ- ence could be worsc than embar- rassing. Thme Furore Wltlch Followed the recent formation, in Russia, of a Comttee of Free c3ermany in- dicates sôtne of the darqers. Only two weekt carlier a Feée Italy Commiffee had been fattnéd in Britain, witli officiai blessifng.. But tbe difference bewcen the two commîffees wag striking. The one in Britain was c4mposed of fIaià- ians wbo confcsscd that tbey had no0 practical plan Oif action. The amne in Russia was' Composcd of German exiles and soîdiers w-ho werc prepared f0 us& their 0wn lives and purge Gé1rmany of Naziism. lb was composed flot just of Communisf exc-deputies, but of officers of aristocrabie oni- gin like Count von Einsiedcl, greaf-grandson of Bismark. The Crities of The Soviet Rave immediatcîy burst info full cry- in profesf at the formation of this group. The îsolafionisf press- (5f the U.S., whicb bas long heen the founfain-hcad of the most pienti- fui a n f i - Soviet propaganda,1 shouts thaf this means "peace by negotiation," or whibtlcs down the "uncondifionai surrender" formula. Botb these compiaints are ludicrous-espccially coming from those wbo have worked as- siduously for a ncgotiafcd peace, as proposed by Joe Kennedy - and who, right now, are urging beffer "conditions" ta obtain tbc "lunconditional" surrender of Badogio & Co. A study of the foulltcxt of tbc manifesto issucd in Russia by bbe Free German fîgbters proves that if Germany is beafen f0 the point w-hicb this committee accepfs as the preiiminary basis of ifs own y proposals, this war wiii be won -s complcfcly in the miliiary sense. y' But wbat is more important: If kt ail the Allies gef bebind the plan i- iaunchcd in Russia there is real -hope of a stable basis for peace. e GERMANS VOLUNTEER TO ýs OUST NAZIS In Launcbing The Free Ger- many commitfee among xvar pris- oners in Russia the Soviet govern- ment bas jusf faken a leaf ouI of our own book. In encouraging these Germans f0 beip organize Hifier's overtbrow in Germany the Soviet is doing»exacfly wbat w-e arc doing in Ifaly. If we bad taken as practicai sfeps, monfbs ago, as the Soviet is 00w taking we w-oold nof be getfing the ron- around fromn the discredifed ex- tools of Fascism, like tbe Ifalian king and Badoglio. The program of the Free Ger- many committet speaks for ifseif. If says: "The day is approaching whcn Gcrmany wiil collapse un- der the impact of simulfaneous y' blows from ahl sides. The w-ar is N already 10sf. But Germany must ,fnot die." y Ifs concrefe programn of im- -mediafe action calîs for a general strike in Gcrmany f0 stop ail pro- d duction, and for soldiers fo furni dtheir w-capons on Hitler and bis gangsters and supporters. If cails ;for the formation of a national 9government w-ich w-iil order the immediafe cease fire, and with- edraw-al of German armies witb- in the borders of oid Germany. 3. The program for a future Ger- Àmany is set forth thus: "Frcedomn t f speech, press organization, con- 1science and religion; freedom of -economie life, of commerce and frades; a goaranfea tuf the righf f0 w-ork and the righf f0 own n acquired propcrfy lawfully." r If is obvious fromn the above e that the organization sfarted in i Russia bas gone ouf of ifs w-ay f0 ýt demonstrate to the western de- s mocracies that this is nof a Com- emunisf set-up; but onec whicb al i- the Allies coold support. e The criticism of the commiftee's ft program, fromn wifbin o the r Allicd coontries is osfcnsibly on - two grounds: That one clause -i states that wben the German farmies have lîquidatcd tbe Nazis - and retreatcd witbin their own tGerman borders the movement rw-hlch bas accomplisbed Ibis pur- *pose ýw-ll "open pcace negotia- i fions."' And funther, bbc com- Smitfce expresses bbc hope that 1when if has convinced bbc vie- tors of ifs good faitb Germany 3w-lu not be entircly disarmed. 1 I See No Reason to ExPect Ger- Lman anti-Nazis ta desire, much lcss f0 request, any Worse treaf- ment for their ow-n COuntry than Italian anti-Fascisfs *xpecf for theirs. Certainly Germans w-ho 1arcs wiling actually to figbf Iagairsst Hitler deserve nlOte un- iderstanlding and support frotn us than people ike tbc cunning ifle king of ItÀIy, who put Mussolhiîl into power hi. the first place, and1 w-cnt along Wîthhbina for 21 years wifhout uftcriiig one syllable of public profesf a t àny 01 bis crim- mnal acfs. The German î?fff-Nazis cao well be encooraged t6 hope f0 "ýnegofiate," as best tffey tan. But bfiey are to be cona letely ringcd afl'btnd, not only by the Russian, British and American ar'iies - but also by those of Franr.Ç,. Bel- giuntf, HolIand, Denmark, Nor- w a Y, Poland, Czechoslovïkia, Greece, Jugosiavia. Wbaf cociùfs is facts, flot words. If in sonife peoples' opinion w-bat woold bap- pen then wooid be less than "un- condifionaf surrender" then a thoogbt might be given f0 how the Poles, Czechs, and Dufch are likely tof0 bc about if. From the borders of aId Germany the Allied armies, 110w available, could literaliy sfamp Gcrmany i!nto bits and pieces-if fhcy 50 désircd. Unconditional Surrender Is a much abused ferm. If does flot meun that there arc no condi- tions in a surrender-for that w-oubli be a physicai impossibility. It means thaf the conditions of the surrender are made by the~ winner, not by bbc loser. Thte winncr cao publish the conditions in advance. as Messrs. Churcbhil and Raosevclt and Generai Eiseri- I N THE DIM AND DISTANT PAST From The Statesman Files FIFTY VEARS AGO TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO August 9, 1893 August 8, 1918 The Excursion f0 Niagara Falls The Girls'-kazýo Band and the on the Garden City was a huge Wheel-barrow Parade will be in- success. Many who patronized if teresting features in the Girls had neyer seen a large steamer Patriofic Club Street Fair next lighted with electricity and fhey week. were entranccd with the beauty One homesick and i o n ely of the thousand small lighfs out- soldier on the European front who lining the boat. 1 O. & P. CO. has no regular correspondents in band also added to the cnjoymenf the home town wrifes: "For a of ail. copy of the home paper I'd give The excursion which toured the up six months' pay," and quotes Thousand Islands last weck was this verse from Edgar Guesf: not as successful, as those who Said Private Johnny Baker managed the trip, or the owners It's a funny thing f0 me of the bioat, the Carmona, very But they seem f0 think a paper carclcssly, thoughtlessly or pur- We don't ever want to sec. posely, neglccfed to provide They write us cheerful letters drinking watcr for the patrons of They send us things to wcar, the excursion, and many had to Tobacco and fine cigarettes go for over seven hours without And we're mîghfy grateful too, a drink of water, and. this was But fhey plumb forgot the paper hard on the childrcn as well as From the old town over there aduits. How was it that the bar It's a thing we neyer part with was open af ail hours and lîquor Till we've read if fhru and fhru. wvas always on tap? (Your answer to this plea foday Lectures by rcfurned mission- will bring happiness even greafer aries from varions parts of the than if did 25 years ago, because world were always well attended, there's so many more boys from and the talk delivered by Rev. J. this section in this conflagration.) G. Paton, 80-year-old workcr in Two or three farmers irom the the New Hebrides, wvas a marvel- district rushed into The Stafes- ous description of his work and man office to show the letter "B" the people among whom he which appeared on the blades of- ]aboured for so many years. oats, thinking if was an unusual (Nowadays we can get a more phenomenon, and musf mean vivid picture of the regions cov- something. An article was pub- ered by those infrepid mission- lished and the reaction was that aries and the dangers and handi- several old timers proved that caps under which they work, and such markings on oat blades have we wondcr how humans accus- been noticed periodically for over fomed to home comforfs can en- fifty ycars, and that if had no- dure these discomforts and do the fhing to do with the World War. wonderful work they accomp- It took two years for the news lish.) of Robert Campling's death, in The editor received a great the early part of the war, while many complaints last weck over a prisoner of the Turks, to reach the resulfs of the Enfrance Exam- here. He was an employee of inations, as only 50 per cent of the Goodyear who rcturned to the candidates passed. This was England to rejoin his regiment not blamed upon local feachers and was sent to India for service. but on the exceptionai severity of the Grammar paper, which inl- BIG WAR PRODUCTION DUE vestigation showed was suffici- TO FRIVATE ENTERPRISE ently difficult for a Third Class_____ Teacher's examinafion. (Marketing Magazine) hower have donc in Italy's case over the past few weeks; or the winner can wait fi after the sur- render, then decree the condi- tions. The conditions -in -advance plan seems wiser to me. For if those conditions are just and states- manlike they themselves can greafly foreshorten the war by breaking enemy resistance from wifhin. Moreover if Britain, the U.S. and the Soviet agrec among fhemselves in advance there is less danger of the dangerous dif- ficulfies which could occur later. "During the pastF few munths the economnie sysfem known as pnivaf e enterprise has been sub- jecfcd f0 incessant and prejudiced atfack," Lord Kemsiey, chairman of Allied Newspapers, Limifed, London, fold sharehoiders af their annual meeting recentiy. "The criticisms have mosfly come from those possessing littie practical knowledge of business and who are accordingly ignorant of how privafe enferpnise has benef ited the communify in the pasf and is bencfifing if in the present. "I say in the present because if is oniy by means of our wonder- fui industrial apparatus, the off- CHEMIJRGY -THE SOLUTION TO OUR AGH ICULTURAL PROBLEMS. Fr5S MPLE-IT'-. HM£ E1 AGGRESSFVE ACTION NOW WILL REVOLUTIONIZE CANADAS WNOLE ECONOMV WHfATARJE WrWAITING F'O A~1 Seet. By Capt. Elmore Philpett spring of private enterprise, that we have been able to achieve our immense output of every variety of weapon. It is *a striking and conclusive fact that Britain and Amnerica, which are severally pro- ducing a greater volume of arma- ments and munitions than any other country in the world, both practise the principles of private enterprise in their economic life. The totalitarian countries - whcre, by definition, the State is paramount-can furnish nothing like equal resuits cither in magni- tude of production or in the wide- ly spread welfare of the individ- ual." THURSDAY, AUGUST 12th, 1943 PAGE TWO THE CANADIAN STATESMAN, BOWMANVILLE, ONTARIO Now, more thon evif, your Children depend on YouI Women in wartime must accept m.any responsibilities that are nor- mally a man's. And no responsi. bility is greater than that of assur- ing that your children will always be secure! There is only one way to gaear- antee that security .; . tbrough LIFE INSURANCE PROTEC- TION on your own life as welI as that of your husband. With the assistance of a repre. sentative of The Mutual Life of Canada, you can create at once a substantiai. estate for them. Let him show you tbe wide variet of pro- tection plans that are geared to wartinle incomes. For compiete information, write or cali your nearest Mutual Life office today. THE Established 1869 Head Office Waterloo, (Qô Insurance in Force Over $638,000,MO Branch Office - 435 George Street Peterboro - - Ontario

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