LOSEâ€"UP DEN‘S! _ tation J in order e particâ€" T. Six or eveloped ints 25¢, enlarge. e silver. quality iims _ to LC Moâ€" ydrmulie ernious, Urctors, Nervice, resund. Porom io. No 19 S: SOMte; ed quan. ARTS eathing Colds nough for Ozden‘s, T H CS \y T * * + ++ 4â€"0â€"4â€"@. Hamil understand cir cigarette the headline ever tire of Dy hantecley"* ve )t the of thâ€" ot T J"«e1 occupation," Dr. G. J. Wherrâ€" ett of Ottawa, executive director O©f the Canadian Tuberculosis Asâ€" sociation, said late in August. ‘ PREVENTIVE WORK IMPORTâ€" ANT "All the contributing factors are there," he said. "The disruption ®f preventive services and treatâ€" ment and the famine or partial famâ€" ine can have only one result. In central Europe in ‘17 and 18 the mumbers of tuberculosis victims woent sky highâ€"starvation bad a good deal to do with it." Steps such as the Rhumba, Conga and Tango have gained greatly in favor since the first ef the year, promising to be among the bestâ€"liked dances of the new fall and winter season, association spokesmen said. "GROUP DANCING" The dancing masters said anâ€" other significant trend was toâ€" ward the dance evaluations of America‘s past and adaptations of foik dances of the old world. Group dancing, they commented, was being featured in many bailâ€" rooms, as were waltzes, "which never really have lost much ground." The consensus was that the jitâ€" terbug vogue. was really petering out now. _ Some instructors obâ€" a tow;â€"ox'xi)_'wa hundred years ago ol en L in ABMAAAEE mAE CIRSs iucor reise " ow tradesmen not to sell trcops "on .credit. 115,'(-)66,000 sheep in Australia. When soldiers were billeted in Folk Dancing European war and the conseâ€" quent efforts to create a Western Hemisphere solidarity have greatly popularized Latinâ€"Ameriâ€" can dances in the United States, it was reported at the annual conâ€" vention of the Chicago National Association of Dancing Masters. Gaining Favor A jump from 33,000 feet in which his parachute won‘t open for $1,000 feet will be made by Arthur H. Starnes, 35, in the inâ€" terest of science. He will carry equipment to measure respiraâ€" tion and pulse during his leap from the stratosphere. He is shown in a low pressure chamber at Northwestern University Mediâ€" eal school, Chicage, having his reactions tested. ‘"Anything which is going to be a problem after the war should not be forgotten now, Indeed it is doing the most efficient kind of war work because it is eliminating situations which create terrible difficulties and problems after the conflict is over." MORE CANADIAXNS DIC "During this first year of the war more than 6,000 Canadians have died of tuberculosisâ€"less than a thousand have been kilied in the war. Preventive work and treatment in Canada is more important now during war time than ever before, he continued. "Our experience in the Great War has cost the govâ€" ermment of Canada $150,000,000 in ageans ie = h ct c c ol sA ie n mdstVun Lt the last 25 years to look after the 7,500 cases which developed in the army during the four years. Ten per cent of them never even left Canada. Nazi occupat;&;x:'-'ci-)‘r. ett of Ottawa._ ever E on s oo e n ogy" €ulosis epidemic in European counâ€" tries "is bound to be one of the graver consequences of their colâ€" Japse and disorganization under ty us 000 FZ L Expects T. B. Will SweepAJl Europe He Jumps for Science On This Continentâ€"Jitterâ€" bug Vogue is Going Outâ€" Rumba, Conga And Tango Inâ€" crease In Popularity, Too to War Vutbreak of Epidemic Foreâ€" cast by Ottawa Expert, Due may amount to to warn to Paddon and Herbert Greenway. The young outdoor chefs were required to prepare a camp meal for six persons the menu comâ€" prising broiled beefsteak, boiled potatoes, a fresh vegetable, stewed fresh fruit and coffee. The Boy Scout woodcraft cookâ€" ing competition held at the Canâ€" adian National Exhibition, and open to Scout Troops throughout the province, was won by a paâ€" trol of the 14th Toronto Troop. Second place went to the 1st Huntsville Troop, followed in orâ€" der by three Toronto Troops, the 26th, 68th and 96th. The coo«â€" ing was judged by the head chefs from the Royal York Hotel and Eaton‘s Georgian Room and the incidental woodcraft features by Scout Field Secretaries A. E. camps were permitted. It is planâ€" ned to make the competition an annual evect. Fireplaces were to be built of logs or stones, and various camp kitchen gadgets used at Scout As in Canada, Great Britain and elsewhere throughout the Empire, the Boy Scouts of India are busy at many kinds of warâ€" time service. Patrols of Bombay Scouts are attached to air raid posts throughout the city, and a further 100 Scout cyclists are constantly standing by for any emergency calls for messengers. In Belgium and Luxembourg the collegiates and universities have been emptied and thousands of stuâ€" dents have taken to the refugee roads on bicycles. Many of them fear their return to their own counâ€" try for Germany has announced they must work in the fields, forâ€" ests and factories to support the Nazi war machine. Ironically, a new headquarters for the Boy Scouts Association of Warsaw, Poland, ‘completed shortly before the German invasâ€" ion, is now occupied as a headâ€" quarters by the infamous Gerâ€" man Gestapo, SCOUTING . . . So too in Poland where the great university of Cracow, one of the oldest in the world, functions only in part. Of its professors some 160 were put in concentration camps and the student body was scatterâ€" ed. Armies of them till the soil at Nazi bidding. In Hollard, Belgium, Denmark and Norway schools have been deâ€" stroyed, educational systems disâ€" rupted and teachers driven into exâ€" ile. Documentary files kept in Paris before the French surrender showâ€" ed that in the first year of German occupation in Czechoâ€"Slovakia 60,â€" 000 Czech and 40,000 Moravian and Slovak youths, many of them uniâ€" versity students of medicine, law and philosophy, were sent into Gerâ€" many to work on the land. Thousâ€" ands of others left their schools to escape to France and then to Engâ€" land. Some of them, at 17 years beâ€" came air pilots to fight against Gorâ€" many. GIRLS RESTRICTED Girls no longer are allowed highâ€" er education in Czechoâ€"Slovakia. In a country which had 80 women members of parliament, 1,500 woâ€" men doctors and several women senators, in which girls might even become judges and ambassadors, girls may no longer attend high school. Education Under Nazis Declines The Ontario Federation of Anglers is vitally interested in this whole project which we told you about in our column of last week _A committee appointed under the chairmanship of Dr. N. C. Douglas, Owen Sound, reâ€" cently inspected the swamp and the drainage ditches. This comâ€" mittee reports that the construcâ€" tion of an eight foot dam across the Black river would restore the water levels of the swamp. depends on the maintenance of the soil and the waters. Destrucâ€" tion of either one should not be permitted and where this has oc curred in the past means should be ‘taken to restore conditions as soon as possible. Luther swamp is of vital concern to everyone in southwestern Ontario. We can all help in the work of conservaâ€" tion by backing the project for the restoration of this area to its original condition. . the sorl and â€" tion of either permitted anc curred in the be ‘taken to as soon as pos iS of Vita] C (By G. C. Toner) BACKING THE PROJECT Conservation of our wild life depends on the maintenance of the soil and the waters. Destrucâ€" tion of either ane shanld4 «_4 L_ Girls Are No Longer Allowed Higher Education in Czechoâ€" Slovakiaâ€"In More Recently Occupied Lands, Schoolâ€"Life is Disrupted A. F. could retain mastery of the air until September 21, he intimâ€" ated, Britons could then prepare for a great offensive against Germâ€" any. ... Meantime the world knew that enormous help would be comâ€" ing to Britain from the United States in the form of planes, amâ€" munition and other war material. Our Exâ€"Allies Threo important leaders of old France were arrested during the week, former Premiers Edouard U. S. Secretary of the Navy Frank Knox last week gave Britain a ‘"better than 50â€"50 chance" to hold out. He declared that the exâ€" istence of the British fleet bottled up the German navy and that the Nazis had been unable to establish sufficient air supremacy to make surface invasion of England feasâ€" ble . . . Lieutenantâ€"General Sir Ronald Adam, Goneral Officer Comâ€" manding the Northern Command in Great Britain, told the people that the next fifteen days would show them "what is to happen" with reâ€" gard to a Naxi invasion. If the R. Great Britain, shuddering through the most soulâ€"destroying experience in her history, held on grimly with a threeâ€"fold hope: that the blockade against Gerâ€" many would soon become serious enough to cripple the Nazi war machine; that the relentless atâ€" tacks of the R.A.F. could disrupt German industrial and commerâ€" cial life, ward off an invasion; that the Nazi air effort would exhaust itself before British enâ€" durance came to an end. A "50â€"50 Chance" In Berlin, highâ€"ranking Nazis declared that new waves of Gerâ€" man bombers flying against Lon,. don would carry out remorseless and incessant warfare until (acâ€" cording to a United Press disâ€" patch), "the smoking ruins of inâ€" dustrial and military objectives, decimation of the British Air Force and shattered morale of the British people bring into power a government that will acâ€" cept German terms." The terms were regarded as unconditional capitulation. The final death struggle beâ€" tween Britain and Germany apâ€" peared last week to have begun. The German Air Force was throwing its colossal strength into an ‘"allâ€"out" attack against the British Isles, with three main objectives: the destruction of the fighting power of the Royal Air Force; paralysis of Britain‘s supâ€" ply system by sea and by land; the shattering of civilian nerves, the breaking of the people‘s morâ€" ale in the face of an imminent invasion. The annual sports day of No. 1 Service Flying Training School at Camp Borden was climaxed by the presentation of wings to 41 graduâ€" ates of the intermediate training squadron. The graduating class is shown, UPPER RIGHT, and a general view of the presentation scene is shown, LOWER RIGHT. C. L. T. Swale, of Edmonton, is pictured, LEFT, as Group Captain A. T. N. Cowley, O.C. of the training school, pinned the coveted wings on his breast. THE WARâ€"WEE Kâ€"-Commentan& on Current Events REG‘LAR FELLERS â€" The Cloak Room t ys 4 ty no cs ,,'%*“e\xe ,"': E s ;.s-v-w-»...;,,..,..,ww eronnn on mm es o ce on en t o n n wl S i se ts ts We ppree e esn o o t t e rtneid s h Mss ts lt c ct 3 y onl ty ce oc ts L4 m oK c ol ty _0 oo coagry.s 0y cssc yssm io §3 ks : > t t 009. hests & P ty tï¬ o fag s ki nc t Jns t otet. madetl hk t o t ce .. tve hx I{:w & 4# e n y nsc ; s i o e s Cl sn hi i cssy .cc tioaant.t : s t e o o e Te F _ & ig® 3 s ies stt usece +. P > q ol . is 1’--1,7?"1 wi io k 7 % C k es s ol ce un o e ho hk ‘ .:;;:Ev._.‘: wad f.l-' 4 c Soe S », 3 m w 25. ~ i8 x ~~,3.‘._.::E-:.fvz'ï¬;::-'g’f'fj, wl es ) mc ¢ s ol a is a H [ ns t e mt 9 ks s k : $ $R .8 â€"~ e e a o ie .0 . $3 is . Q&:ï¬z o y 1 **" > ‘&ï¬, e ie 4 iss ts " e * onl § S caaten o. o :2‘3 t : a c m . ï¬%?:"\!?& d ue as S : e k. . BC : T9 § 5 s x 78% â€" 4 C : .. oo 6e oo â€" ABs 9 e Chll < s â€"~ w l i f & t ue ols ts â€" F h f f M jaus d 4 #¢ <i s . 4 fls o. k Baa k ’; P h 3 . ; on 5 3 4 â€" ce f s uk: i ols 8 5 ' ai i . 23 oX ts & s eP k i & 2#3 i .# 0 Tess 5 s MEA T Bhath ul * ho i; iC d & T 4* M ae: 96 i t F3 . p°8 * 3 J flls l ; smcs ~a A coolp hi. : m S onl i ‘\‘f o M i P C , stioacs a e w# Fr s e es o 6 j A * autal‘ on & ip h i P 3 $s s eP ~ ce # f > Es Mn t ho R Fâ€"® € o * w M hP e uns se on * * _: es ie :2 ons % * + e TBOcva uo t A2 f #4 3 ** _ ,@l t is e 3 ~< § ) A mt > F3 5 m : * & .e . Pcn 2 o o ns $ hn M en‘ i 3 Pm jR PP mwwb n it LE m s m t M l “'M»%*MW en € es 2,. us s e P L e l anaia n o oo e $3§3 f M aese 38 $ w Lsnt o o e e oo lt P Â¥e ns s [ :t';:: ‘ \\(/ M # oo o o i Soe 5 x e ts _ . e a sone h . ‘ mb s . cce 2o S oc 5 P E & o s s ues * *~ e : o e . oR s P ies M P k m i e Ar ht 4* ; M Tok s : sls en nnater .0 B % > oi‘ ic s . n s es â€" , s P o C llnaes .nn e ol 3 Mess P [ oys Gouts Cppte rin® onl tm R f M P *â€*a:i' t * , v:â€â€œ > s,,‘»"',’ { AÂ¥e ym . o s s c e ¢ e s se +*"" & CE F e o e h ons â€" 4 Ԥa 0 "C7 Tw e *# & s se B 2e o ie e e ues ooo Â¥ Meo â€" h o C i P Reseme y o kc ks s o h e Bosa nds 9 es (anh . o m l e * l atoige. % aks y * ors" "§â€" . e lies sn e s o t s Bs s i F C Salr Py ze _ uns i o ,ï¬â€˜( s )7«!;;;?%’% P es P C 6 Tok % M io «tagn B o iHgins f $26¢. comedtignitimaes css 2o s ttaarrhe, :C tiho m ce P a g n j * * & .‘ t y s itonlr: escb yhale:‘ 3 e e c( osvco e s?y ooo e 7. it es en e â€"â€" s D i m e 34"“«";»\6%‘;3’ ies es s on en o c e xn . o ie e ds sE es 00 en o 3 i# ï¬.’:--‘»\.“'v/x:t‘k&g-\’.‘-;l e ccmemindn n t 99 h In ces ce t : e uy luce ts t s mm kE en o en rad n a ies n in l cA y l en maole Coennielnue ti e t t on Pemae : 4+ â€â€W"‘;m@ s ie m wl e en onlcion omm rrneneeererninnnd . n ceeestapeamien nc en es ols ... oo me ippennnnennies perenny s t en hP auu "Come All Against Her, England Yet Shall Stand" Nee #0 Ate w3 8. in ho s 00. 9m e uim .o Aenanienr FORTYâ€"ONE PILOTS RECEIVE WINGS AT CAMP BORDEN CEREMONY Daladier and Paul Reynaud, and the former Commander of the Alâ€" lied Forces, Gen. Marieâ€"Gustave Gamelin. Their detention was orâ€" dered under authority of a decree law drawn up by Daladier himâ€" self when war broke out September 3, 1939, providing for internment of persons considered dangerous to the national defence and public security , .. Word.â€"ame from Vichy that a new Cabinet had been formâ€" ed under Marshal Petain. It includâ€" ed Pierre Laval as viceâ€"premier and General Charles Huntzinger as the new minister of war. Marshal Petain took over the office of chief of state and Gen. Maxime Wegand was designated to go to North Afâ€" rica in charge of all political and military matters. Armed Peace In Balkans Out of the spotlight for the time being, the Balkans were neverthe less still seething. King Carol, acâ€" companied by his sweetheart Maâ€" dame Lupescu and riding in a bulâ€" letâ€"pocked train, had escaped into exile, leaving his country in a state of turmoil. The Rumanian masses, under the heel of Antonescu‘s milâ€" itary dictatorship, were already in ~a state of nearâ€"revolt, while religâ€" fous persecution campaigns cornâ€" ered thousands of hapless individâ€" vuals . .. German troops moved up to police the Rumanian border with the Soviet Union â€" a United Press dispatch estimated that 1,000,000 German soldiers faced the Red Army along a line from Norway to the Black Sea . .. A military move against Yugoslavia appeared in the offing â€" the magazine "Newsweek" quoted from highlyâ€"placed diploâ€" â€"matic sources that the Axis has prepared complete plans for: sudâ€" den occupation by Italian troops of the Dalmatian coast; 2, simulâ€" taneous German move across the Croatian border; and overthrow of Prince Paul‘s regency, establishing in its place a puppet Axis governâ€" ment ... Brewing In The Mediterranean Italy was defin ely up to some thing big in the Mediterranean basâ€" in meanwhile â€" either the longâ€" threatened drive against the Suez Canal; or an early attempt to ocâ€" cupy Frenchâ€"mandated Syria. Asâ€" sociated Press correspondent Edâ€" ward E. Bomar expressed the opinâ€" ion that in view of Italy‘s limited resources in oil and other muniâ€" tions, the restlessness of the Itâ€" alian public, something more deâ€" cisive than the odd air raid on British bases or convoys was on the books . .. Ready to deal with any new action in the war‘s southâ€" ern theatre, Britain was busy reâ€" inforcing her Near East fighting forces with thousands of troops widets y yoy uos ic , y 1 vey, ceccers » 1e s a (| T cant oc eaer PS MAE P W Parc/rcers J O ligy3 in on out / l x\//f 20 L / y (’:/\â€:/ ,lv ~/ c 8 // R £43.. P dÂ¥ C 3 / f Y Pnd £30 ce al) //# B * "I 4. o _ 2 l",» Jtu‘c@-; i7 C rone ~ P ~ Q}/’ -»* es %:;g"’!éf 2:.2â€"| < _ LE _ _ _ WPP y u... ~tne YOU KIDS WILL H@r’ %&r%ï¬Ã©Ã©s“" CAN‘T GET ETHER 7*% IN OR OUT /. masr t Nt ds ic on m 2 m YX The Canadianâ€"American joint deâ€" fense board sat in Washington disâ€" cussing air and navcl bases, straâ€" tegic highways, military supplies for Canada. As a result of its deâ€" cision, it was expected (as one Canâ€" adian writer expressed it) that "Beâ€" fore long the Union Jack and the Stars and Stripes will fly together over Canadian strongholds on Atâ€" lantic and Pacific coast .. . Before long Canadian pilots will fly over American soil and American pilots over Canadian soil." . . . 534,000,000 Bushe!s If the war had not been going on, the bumper crop in the Canadâ€" ian West (more bumper even than last year) would have been headâ€" line news every day of the week . . . and the problem of what to do with 534,000,000 bushels of 1940 wheat would havo occupied "the main field_ of attention . . . Neverâ€" theless the government was busy on a plan whereby cash might be advanced to farmers for the wheat they must keep at home â€" there would be no room to store it in the elevators. Probably the only person in the world to own a private subâ€" marine is Mr. Barney Connett, of Chicago, who has a homeâ€"made affair which resembles a huge fish, complete with mouth, eyez, fins, tail, and seales. It is 11 ft. long, 87 ins. high, and 23 ins. Birdmen From Canada At home in Canada, the deputyâ€" minister of defence for air, James S. Duncan, announced that thousâ€" ands of fighting pilots, air gunners and observers trained in Canada would "soon" start streaming toâ€" ward England to fight with the R. A. F. "Our task," he said, "is to provide the United Kingdom with an everâ€"increasing flow of air crews, whose arrival overseas is to coincide with everâ€"increasing supply of aircraft from British and American sources." . .. U. S. After World Supremacy Commenting on domestic affairs, the U. S. columnist, R@ymond Clapâ€" per, wrote last week: "Our role is to seize world naval and air supâ€" remacy ... Our role is to be hardâ€" headed and shrewd and to play with cold calculation for the stakes that are within our grasp . .. Our role is to assist the British to hold out so that they can preserve their sea power . . . We must solidify the western hemisphere." . . . immediately to fronts "somewhere in the Middle East." $3,861,053,312 Contract In Washington last week the United States placed orders for 201 warships involving an outlay of $3,861,053,312 â€" the largest defence contract ever let in American hisâ€" tory. The order followed a few hours after President Roosevelt‘s signature of the $5,251,000,000 deâ€" fense appropriation bill at Hyde Park. The United States‘ gigantic preparedness program was moving ahead. landed in Egypt, to be despatched Lives in a Fish "WV.' C sls ~#€, ,;gl c inrens ue idb tWe o t i Reg Doh nc .000 00(4 ar e The most ruthless rationing Canâ€" adians encounter in this war has just been initiated in the case of aluminium, says a story in the Toronto Globe and Mail, It will be gracdual in some cases, abrupt in others, depending on the time inâ€" dustry takes to complete articles now in process of manufacture, Aluminum cooking utensils are on the prohibited list and as soon as present factory production is completed not another aluminum dish will be made in Canada until airplain requirements are filled. During the last session of Parliaâ€" ment Munitions Minister C. D. Howe forecast the restrictions, but the present rationing system has been put into effect with the full LIFE‘S LIKE THAT Aluminum Goes Into Aircraft at the widest point. The interior is fitted with submarine equipâ€" ment, blowers, oxygen apparatus, air pump, respirator, and storage batteries. Already Mr. Connett has made 300 trips in his queer fish, and has travelled as far as fourteen miles under water in a single journey. As his periscope is only four feet long, he usually runs atâ€" a depth of three feet below the waves, but he has been down to thirty. Rationed For Dominion Now â€"Being Diverted From Cookâ€" ing Utensils to Plane Manuâ€" facture ONTARIO ts ...L, By GENE BYRNES The gross revenues of the allâ€" inclusive Canadian National Railâ€" ways System for the week ending September 7, 1940, were $4,696.182 as compared with ... 4,165,511 for the ~corresponding period of 1939, an inâ€" crease Of .....008% Smerr There is just about enough alâ€" uninum used in cooking utensiis every year in Canada to make & thousand airplanes. CANADA TOP ALUMINUM PRODUCEX Canada produces more aluminum per capita than any other counâ€" try in the world and is climbing rapidly toward the top in total proâ€" duction. British plane factories are relying more and more on Canadâ€" ian aluminum and action to control its use in nonâ€"essential products has been taken in time to keep pace with the needs, officials say. coâ€"operation of the industry withâ€" out a public announcement. â€"Victoria Daily Colonist A CITIZEN‘S PRIVILEGE Ottawa would do well to enâ€" courage the expression of inâ€" formed criticism, even when this is directed at military measures, provided it is not helpfal to the enemy. This is not the Government‘s private war. It is the people‘s war. They are going to pay for it â€" in life, in health and in treasure. They have a right to be curious about policies adopted and steps taken. They have a right to make suggestions and ofâ€" fer constructive criticism. That is the privilege of citizenship in a democracy. EMPHASIS ON That quaint and f pression of the West, meet you," has ah peared. It was a ste sometimes _ insincere and has been replace: time formala, "how « which is more conve which ccommits its us which which ing. the ow much : almost died. anadian â€" National Railways Revenues VOICE PRE S S â€"Edmonton Journal insincéere _ grect _replaced by the , *how do you . re conventional ts its use to n By Fred Neher and fricndly husband hadn‘t stereotyped use: "pâ€"eased to nost disapâ€" $ 530,671 or 12.1% e old do," and nothâ€" Te Bc se if L windle