ts P# & < & f_ft: e t Z§ : & . . *4 wb Give your Home Newspaper Your Printing Vision (glass area increased up to 33%) & NEW Wider Seats . NEW Longer Wheet base and Springbase. YOU CAN BUY A ‘41 FORD FOR LESS THAN ANY OTHER FULLâ€"SIZE CAR IN CANADA NEWBigBodies.NEWMasm've Beauty & NEW Faster Acceteration . NEW Heavy Rigidl’rame.NEWInï¬eï¬orLuxury.NBw Stabilizer Ride Control & NEW Soft Stowerâ€" A BIGGER carâ€"A BETTER suy‘ The Durham Review w»*NEW BIG Good Printing of all Kinds Bring your Printing to We offer you the same or better quality at as low or lower prices and guarantee better and quicker service than you can get from outâ€"ofâ€" town printing houses. NEW Massive Beauty eration . NEW Heavy nterior Luxury . NEW You expect your newspaper community drives for charity, etc.. You expect your newspaper to help bring people to Durham.... to interest them in this tow n Your newspaper does these things and helps you, Nexttime an outszide printing salesâ€" man calls on you. tell him you‘re going to buy your printing at the local newspaper office. _ You expect your newr;arer to boost fo geood roads, good schools, and support communâ€" ty celebrations and associations.... You expect your home newspaper to give you all the news.... a You expect your newspaper to take the lead in advocating community betterment.... Canada utilize a higher percentage of Canadian material and labour than those manufactured by Ford Motor Comâ€" pany of Canada, Limited. Add these to new massive beauty and luxury that matches the brilliance of a Vâ€"type 8â€"cylinder engineâ€" plus allâ€"cround economyâ€"and you get just one answer. Arrange right now with a Fordâ€"Mercury dealer to inspect and drive this bigger car, this better buy! CANADIAN CARS FOR CANADA. No cars sold in Body? Entirely new and bigger. Wheelbase? Two inches longer! Seating width? Increased as much as seven inches! Better vision? 22% more vision in sedans, 33% more in coupe. Ride? Completely reâ€"engineered for amazing new comfort: new soft, slowâ€"acting springs; new ride stabilizer. Acceleration? Already famous, now "steppedâ€"up" for even faster pick up. Let‘s look at the facts on the new Ford car for 1941 to support THE DURHAM REVINW at the versary. Lorne Kraft and bhave been called f der that Ontario dces not experiâ€" ment in the sanfe direction. An area of a few hundred thousand acres in really good forest â€" would be . worth something some day in the near futureâ€"Onward . Some citizens of New Jersey are anxious for the State to purchase at least 500,000 acres in the pine area, and set it out as State forest. It would probably pay. â€" We won: Britain‘s evacuee children have their own time in their new aâ€" bodes. One boy surprised his mothâ€" er by turning up suddenly at home in Hull, and when asked why he had returned he told her that he heard the farmer say that he was having the "thrashing machine" in the next day. The boy thought he had better leave before it arrived. The demand for tin seems to be even sgreater than that for iron since the war ‘began, and attention is called to the fact that when the United States mobilized its army in the last war they required 20,000,000 pcunds of food a day. This meant a lot of "canned" goods, hence the the demand for tin. The Eskimos of Canada have now the Bible in their own language. Canada circulates the Bible in our cwn country in 110 _ different languages. FOR x 2 «5 aft and Addison Schenk called for military â€" trainâ€" tz TORONTO Lver aver August, according to Bureau of Statistics. Thj est point in 26 years. Favoured by munt iron and steel industry marked expansion . £. _ Rurear â€" af Statisties in Inatrial evewfalll 0s NA*~kar +. Index of phy: business in Canada seDtember, a gain c work necessa International St. Lawrence. #. Canadian â€" destroyer rescues 118 survivors from two ships torpedoâ€" ed by German submarines in British waters. 7 new amembers and formal prorogaâ€" 1. Second session of Canada‘s Nineteenth Parliament â€" fourth sesâ€" sion of the Warâ€"opened November 7. Previous session, which opened May 16, adjourned August 7 till Noâ€" vember 5.. Proceedings on Novembe: 5 however limited to introduction of Othéer popular patriotic composiâ€" tions at the present time are "We‘re All together Now" and "God Bless This Land â€"of Onre The three branches of the active service forces are singing such songs as "Lords of the Air", "Sons of the Air Force", ‘"Wings Over the Navy", "Shout, I Am A Canadian" and "Roll On, Rolj On." Patriotic and war songs have rapâ€" idly been gaining in popularity durâ€" ing recent montbs and the national favourite, since the intensified bombâ€" inz by Nazi planes of the British capital, has been "Till the Lights of London Shine Again." ic." "Music," Mr. Fenwick pointed out, ‘"is the fourth need of men. There is food, clothing, shelter....and musâ€" "Patriotic songs are a means of expressing loyalty to the King and flag, and seventy percent of the pubâ€" lic and separate schools in Prov. of Ontario have music on the course of studiesi." E. Roy Fenwick, superâ€" visor of music in the Department of Education, stated during an . address to a Toronto service â€"club recently. He stressed the importance of music, particularly in wartime, and expresâ€" sed the opinion that everyone was more or less musical ibut that cerâ€" tain conditions vere necessary to‘ bring the quality out. j 2. Canadian Che Burkum Aeview _We fail to see why the British Government should show Eire any jonsideration, when these bases might mean the saving of hundreds of lives and many thousands of tons cargo, of torpedoed ships. Churchill should deâ€" mand these bases, and if again refusâ€" ed, take them by force, hold them for the duration of the war, and inâ€" tern or wipe out any who dare opâ€" pose. ‘The use of Queenston, Galway and other south Irish ports as bases for British vessels would cut the disâ€" tance in half for refuelling, from the present English or North Ireland bases, but the Eire premier refuses to allow such, so strict is his desire to be neutral. That little independent nation will even lean backward, favâ€" oring Germany, to maintain its "neuâ€" trality". â€" Without the British navy and air‘ force‘s guardianship howâ€" ever, Eire would now _ be an enslaved nation under German rule, similar to Poland, Holland, Belgium, Norway and France. ° NEW PATRIOTHC SONGS been losing an excessive amount of shipping, the vessels in the main being torpedoed by German subs. operating in the Atlantic some 200 to 500 miles west of Jreland. So seriâ€" ous has it become that Prime Minisâ€" ter Churchil; the other day referred to it as Britain‘s No. 1 menace at present, and remarked that had they the consent of the Eire government to do so, they could use ports in south and west of Ireland for reâ€" fuelling bases for submarine chasers and other convoy ships, and thus not be under the bhandicap of being so far from supply bases. «_ Survey crews open P. RAMAGE. KEditor and Proprietor SHOULD USE ALL IRISH PORTS Septembc During recent weeks Weekly Review of Developments On the Home Front: . _Oct. 3ist to Nov. 7th. CANADaA‘s war EFFoRT evnh'nv";n“t inrraa <o of of Ours." _ _7 "~ _*â€"9 per cent wate This is largest SUMMARY of Statistics index, physical volume â€" . This was highâ€" i was 155.4 in of three points munition orders WINNING FAVOR pen preliminary development of section of the showed an 2.5 per cent recorded ho Hunuarc t it s oi 1"seum of the Elsie Perrin y liamg Memoriat Library in Londca of Canadian painting that was of James painting School of Art. Aâ€" number of his" pictures been shown in London and in Ontaraio Exhibitions. A j Pradshaw, of Artists and the Royal C Academy. He was born in Durham, _ and is a son cf Canon A. A Clare Bice, of London, has been £lected associate of the Royal Caâ€" nadian Academy of Arts,. _ Mr Bice, who < has advanced rapidly to the forefront of younger Canadian artists, has ‘been showing his works for the past six years at the Ontario Society of Artists and the Dawar anlo s o Darham Boy Wins Fame : ‘2.. Ween the accused spent in jail. To Sawyer, who told the court he had a family, the magistrate remarkâ€" ed ‘"I‘m afraid there are a lot who do not realize what a responsibility itis for aman to have a wife and famâ€" ily and how so many come into court here forgetting all about them." ‘ bates on gasoline tax. ‘The court levied a fine of $50 and costs of $58.90 for a total of $108.90 besides "I must impose a penalty that will prove a deterrent to others who have been and may eommit a similar ofâ€" fense," Magistrate Walker of Walkâ€" erton, addressed Gordon Sawyer of Glamis who last week pleaded guilty to an attempt to defraud the Provinâ€" cial Government of some $40 in reâ€" Thou shalt not covet thy fellow motorist‘s place or anything that beâ€" longs to him. â€" Safety first takes no chances on sorrow. Mind your own business for conscience‘s sake, and above all, be courteous. . Thou shalt not bear down upon thy fellow motorist or pedestrian unawares, nor blind him with glarâ€" ing lights. Thou shalt not steal thy fellow motorist‘s part of the road. Thou shalt not muddle thy brain with intoxicants, sleep, carelessâ€" ness or any other encmy that hinders thy alertness. FINE GLAMIS MAN in Honor thy fellow motorist, that thy days may be long upcn the highways which the ‘state giveth thee. ‘Thou shalt not injure, _kill just or inconsiderate. Remember every day to drive careâ€" fully. Be courteous to all sons daughters, servants, animals and strangers, that every day maybe free from accident. Thou shall not study the law in vain for thou shalt not be held guiltless as if thou art; ignorant of the law. Thou shall not make false trafâ€" fic signals ,false laws nor serve them, but shall obey all traffic signals and the jaw. â€" Stop, look and listen. P Thou shalt have one driver, that one a gcod one, at the wheel. 7. Contracts awarded during week ended October 25 by Department of Munitions â€" and â€" Supply numbered 2745 and totalled $27,819,729. & TEN COMMANDMENTS increase indicated in 20 years. o on B ol Bice | was Recently he was appointâ€" Or _ of the art gallery. and 7. BP . opdn olsc York at and â€" the Wncs oeale ruanl Government‘s exhibition art in New York laay GASOLINE TAX CASE FOR ALL MOTORISTS De the An smdem' â€"â€".-.,_' ie ‘,-“ * .7' s " have Wesley Weppler. mtitiny, inrmrntrrinintiiinleiiata es 2 Alice Webber. Grade 5: Chester Fee, Elsie Weppler. Grade 4: Irene Gor don. Grade 3: Pearl Marshall, Billie Ellis, Allan Lindsay, Irvin Marshan C 8: â€"Jack Atchison, FEdna Lindsay, Ruby Watson. _ Grade 7: Yors® aeo W Ju sympathy to the bereaved family.. Mr and Mrs Stanley Reay and litâ€" te son of Walkerton, were visitors fhis week with his mother, Mrs Thos Reay and family. uh3 bnenetsan eoly CEZ funeral of the late Mrs Thos. Bell whose remains were brought from Toâ€" ronto that day and interred in Berkeâ€" M _ Mlom / with Mr and Mrs Joe Crutchley. Mr and Mrs Wm. Bell were Neil McLean. were guests 1 Mrs Clarence tended to Miss Georgie Mill»r and Mr Harold Barber of Owen Sound, who were married on Saturday. Mr and Mrs Cecil Noble and family Mr. James Wilson, Arth evening recently at th Mr and Mrs L. McLean. Miss Isabell Lawson, Toronto were weekend guests with their parents Mr and Mrs Robt. Lawson. Mrs Albert Middleton and daughter bounded. â€" Here we met Mr and Mrs Jno Vollett of Durham and enjoyed a real old time visit. With daughter Myra and her husband and 2 daughâ€" ters it made a perfect holiday to be happy over many a day. UTT neveatos snn olsA ies i rcvan e n t but the the view made one forget all Okanagan Valley with its very lovely iakes and acres of fruit lands. Mr and Mrs Will Harris made it the went up and ‘down the mountains unâ€" (We‘re really not half bad, even on the grandest hboliday.) Other oldâ€" time friends from Saskatoon, Edmonâ€" ton and elsewhere made the coast trip one long to be remembered. though Keyworth was young when he left Durham. Mrs. Harrop and her sisters were lovely hostesses . Mrs McKenzie (Mary Jane Mcâ€" Clinton) of New Westminster is very interesting. Has raised hoer family well, though an early widow. We were pleased to know her hetter. Her halfâ€"brother, we had not met before, a fine looking police chief, offered us ‘"protection" in case we needed it. Mr and Mrs Robt. Pettigrew are the same contented couple as alâ€" ways. The years have changed them very little, we were happy to find. Mrs McCrie, though often alone, is very happy and enjoyed a chat over Varney days. The Harâ€" ed ease. It was a treat visiting them in their comfortable home. We didn‘t see Will McMitchell, although we heard he was somewhere in Vanâ€" couver. May Leeson) of Usona, Alberta, we quote the following relating to her trip with her husband to Vancouver, Victoria and elsewhere in B. C.: Met Many Old Friends on Trip thru B. C. to Coast Ther on the return took a couple (for September and October) ROCKY SAUGEEN of NOV. 14th, 1940. this week with Mr=and are holidaying with Np Wonders will never o Belgian has orginated he calls ‘"iceâ€"cream," its base a special meal from cotton. It is sai pale chocolate, and t« combination of mapje 1 ed milk. 118 acres more or les 2, Normanby, propert; Thomasena Byers. Ho) banked barn. _ Propert and watered. . For pa terms apply to David ministrator or C. A. 1 BABY‘S SKIN AIL! ema, Chaps, Cuts, ete ly to "KLEEREX~â€"T ing Salve". A‘lso heals perigo, Erythema, Pe while you work. 50¢; SHEEP FOR SALE Oxford Down Ran Cotton IceCream FOR SALEâ€"Piano, ca; ture, typewriter and â€i Cal in morning if p.m{ ;88. Mrs A. W. H. 14 und 2 XX. +« Shand Bros.. R. Phone 122 STRAYEDâ€"to. Lot 6, mont, 1 yearling. _ Ow mame by paying expens PIANO FOR SALEâ€"S sale cheap, in good c at Review Office. RIVER FOR SALEâ€" driver for sale or tr A. R. Henderson. Ho NOV. 14th, 19 THE These offers This Newsoduq {] Maclean‘s M [ J Chatelaine, 1 []J Canadian H« [J National Ho [] Canadian H« [] Magazine . [ J True Story [ } Silver Scre {] Christian I [] Fact Diges [ J Science an {J McCail‘s M [ J Parents® M [ J Open Roac [] BHome Aris [ 1 Screenlang FARM FOR * AvGU| THIGS SURSCAK aying expen: Thomas Mount. Fon on~NE 0 Canadian H Home. 1 yr This Ne GR