.'I HIS 1 `IS NO `TIME ` FOR. 'PAR'[`lSANS!!IP BL'ITZKR:IEGWAR EFFORT CALLED `FOR nu; nu; . Wht1e~ the losses of the British and French must havv been vory heavy. the losses inflict- ed upon the masses of attaacking Germans must have bwn much greater. The" German losses in men. tanks. nuplnnes and the enor- mous expmxd`1t.ure of nunxmons were ~far.m ex- cess of the value of the ground gamed--great us that cm-tumly ls. . rn|.,. uu_...n....,. .|.- _.....I-l.;AA-\ The ret1`mt from Hauders is reminiscent of the r9t.1'c-at of the British` expeditionary force In Spain 128 years ago. Sir John Moore was sem to co-operate with the Spamards in expeumg the French. Spanish apamy and other causes weakened his hands, and in De- cember. 1808. Sir John` Moore htound mmsulf with 25,000 men M Aswrga. with a French iiorce of 70.000 advancing against` mm."Re- ' but`Moore was kuledhx action. treat was necessary. but disastrous.-`He was overtaken at Corunna In the act of embark- ing. The final victory lay with thealingllsh, -cu: nv.\u\r`s ...... ...--_.. -.. ...-....-. -At that tune the entire comment 0! Europe _ `was under Napoleon and the farltleh Isles -were isolated. Napoleon. repeatedly threat- ened to Invade England, but the Bcltlsh navy kept him at bay: Fortresses were built around the Brltlsll coasts and armies of yeomnnr voli- unteers were recvulted-In readiness to meet the extended mvaslon.rHlstory is` now being repeated. and while the Germans may suc- , eeedtdn bombing Brltalnuzmd landing para- chutlsts from the air, they will have to wipe out the British navy before they can land tr90DIlr0ssthoEnllIhChannol.\ >` mEER THURSDAY, JUNE 6; HISTORY -REPEATED , 1940 Happy is the business man who can keep on good terms with his banker. This has been '~very`difi`icultfor-many in recent years, and ~ no-one hasdeplored the` difficultymore than the banker himself. Banking and business are mutually dependent upon each other. I -Idle r` busi'n'ess`means~ idle A moneyp and it is rno-. ad- ` vantage to :the. banks to keepmoney in'itlle- ness."I`his fact has become more and more ob- vious as-a result of the depression andrit is perhaps responsible for the manylmore or . lessvwiid. schemes:devised- as =remedies` for our ' inonetary ssystem`.-The onefobjeet-bfiall these schemes is to get money in circulation, but that is also the sole object of "the banking sys- - tem.-'-Fhe-more money there is in circulation, -the better the banker likes it. One of the most encouraging signs in these dark days is the friendly attitude manifest in all parts of Canada -toward the country's banking system; This is doubtlessdue to the ' adoption of aimore liberalized-policy on the part of rthebanks toward the small borrower. * Moreover, the irank advertisements. of the '- `Canadian Bankers .Assoc-iation`and~ the in- formative buiietins` issued have` helped" to ' build up public confidence.~.In -this-`-way our 'r banking institutions can be- a great service to ' business and to themselves. There is now a much more general acceptance of banksas 7. useful servants instead of the "money bar- -~ ons they-were portrayed in other days. .1 ..m..nm..~. tho imnlm (in n mhnlp int. ni` ser- ODS" I-Hey--wtiui ]JU1bl'd._YI:u Ill uvucn un._ya. 'ln wartimeithe banks do a whole lot of ser- vice unobtrusively and` without reward. On ` the-Canadian Red Cross` national war appeal they accepted subscriptions tfrom the.-public as wellas from local collectors,` for` transfer without charge and they cash the Society's `cheques anywhere at par. The banks also act ~ as agents for the `selling of'Wm' Saving `Cer- ztlficates and ~Stamps~.as a free -service"to the State. Thesexand munylother` similar services ~ in -connection with patriotic funds are per-. formed gratuitously by ourbanklng lnstltu-M ` tlons. SHOULD SHORTEN -.Bi'3ER. SELLING HOURS ,. 4- --_ A ...-.-.5-nJl6lr\v\4 nl` "-:,\V .*g$q "1 ~'\ `I. 5:15;; id 9'`: `A 1 \` '61 M` ` s`L I`; ` = `w. . r .~,.,`. Gllvullu Lvlnvuvn-nu` .-us;-.a--. ..........-..... --_. -_-.. F`ew,.`if any; destrevto 'see as -repetition` of ' such conditions as existed in Barrie` last; Sat.- urday. The beer parlors were lledvafternoon and" evening which was: not surprising with such a large number of -men in town -with -little` to. do but amuse themselves. ~ _,__-__; -_...`L...... 51.-.... {.4 Sn`: nan--n 'II|I|IlC |Ill`\alU Il\IIItA I I A u u u v A . V . - . u V . . V ... Under the present system there is far more drinking of intoxicants than there was in the '.-days of the open bar. One way to reduce this is to shorten the hours of sa1e.'~I-Iavmg `these drinking places" open ` untilrmidnight` `should not be allowed. In the `olddays; no customer was allowed in a ban after 11 pm. and on Sat- urday nights a.ll~ha.d to beout by '7-0 clock. rmm hnvovoa-n mnm nrnnruatnrs cannot be ufay nlglllas H.II`llU.Ll IJU DC uuu U] I '\l\.1I\I\4lIo The beverage room proprietors cannot be V b1amed'for the 1at,e'hours/In` fairness to them, it. should be stated that `the local hotel- men voluntarily agreed last. Saturday morn- mg to close at 11 mn. on Saturday and pay days. ' '1"hn. finvnrnrnnnf nnd' the` 1.101101" Control ~(19.YS. The Government. and` the` Liquor` B,o'a"`rd, -In -their 'inbi`cunb:te desire` to ` get` the: ' last cent out of the. beer parlor.4patrons< to swell.the big profits accruing to provincial revenues from this` trade. have set` the late hours andvhave tried to `shirk a responsibility which is entirely theirs by giving municipal councils the right to reduce the hours. 1-: n.,. m..mi~.m-c nv fhn Rnrl-in 'I"nIm Cniinnil COUUCHS DUE flgllla LU '|t:uul;c uuc uvuxa. ~ If the members of the Barrie Town Council are not-prepared to move for earlier closing of thebeer parlors. let them take a plebiscite on the question. thus letting the citizens decide. Should they do this there is little doubt as to_ what the verdict would be. ..__.`3 .:___. According to the Brampton Conservator, the bulk of Canada's fireworks are made in a Peel county plant.` Is 'this,re`sponsible {or the lntenslve political. pyroteclmlcal displays for Which Peel lsnpted? There is ample evidence that the Nazi "fifth column" is already in the United States and doing its utmost to `scare the American people with radio parashootists. ' ..__.\q\:.._. We will win this war in the air." declares Air Marshal Bishop, and that assertion is borne out by the valiant and efficient air- -manship of the British and French sky~fight`- Iers over Flanders` fields. ,,_..\_,, _, Canada has under construction 82 air- dromes. 175 construction projects including coastal fomfications, submarine detences and hangars. while-20 Canadian shipyards are engagedm the production of 90 vessels of `war. Not a bad nine mom.hs' work. A ._____ V ..._... Most of the pioneers of Ontario hailed from the coastal districts of the British Isles, and seamahship was in their blood. There should be no difficulty in recruiting 4.000 young Canadians for the Royal Canadian Navy for they are the true descendants of Britain's Sons of the Sea." I I I|_ may u\u\-- -r u. ..v...~-._.- - Established 1864 A weekly newspaper devoted to the interests of the -Town of Barrie and the surrounding country,"isaued' .. at the. Post.office--Squa1'e_;=-Barrie, every- ~'rhursdey morning by THE BARRIE EXAMINER LIMIJFED. With it is incorporated The Barrie Advance. ostnbg-I lished in 1847. -.'I'he Barrie: Examiner! is- ainmembei-.- ` iof ."I'he3Canadian "Weekly `5 Newspapers "sAssoeiatiol- `and `of Class -`A`-Weekliesof Canada. nvvf-\tVr'1f\*l"l\I'r|Yr\\'I `[3 A rrvno American sciantists are=working on the de- velopment oi` an atomic fuel which they claim will enable aircraft to y indefinitely with- out refuelllng. If Germany wins the war in Europe. this new fuel would enable the flying Runs to continue their western drive for world domination across the Atlantic. Premier`IIepbm'n. in a message of Wei- come to Ontario". denies rumors circulated in the United States` that visitors to Canada may be interned and their money or goods confiscated. Such rumors~nre. of course. silly; but there are lots 0! good camps open to vis- itors, and` tourists will scarcely expect to re- turn home with assmuclx money as they had when they started out. __.._@_;_ year 0! _war. I The huge task that Canadian transporta- M tlon systems have undertaken in the move- ment 0! war supplies IS indicated by the` fol- lowing statistics: 90 per cent. of Canadian lead and zinc output. 80 per cent. of copper production, over` 5.000.000 pounds of bacon--a week land.-a substantial amount of lumber must benmovedt by rail. truck andairplane. These are only a few of the leading products already contracted tor by Britain for the first V BANKING A NA;ldNAL SERVICE EDITQRIAL This `Shining Tfiing in `Soul's 7 23 Of `Free "Men ~Httl'er 5 ('3annot` ;::iCommand, rAttain, -3.Conquer% It seems almost-asdmpossiblo to J crowd the overwhelming events of I the pnstweek i nto'u brief column ' as it does 10' find words for the be`- ` truyul by King Leopold of the arm-_ ies he had summoned to his aid. the epic i'eur-gu:u'd action of the Allied troops in Flanders, thv stir- ring rescue of at large part of them frmn`~the outstretched claws of the Nazi tiger `by the Navy, the` ever ' more wonderful fonts of the R.A.F`.. `the steadiness of the British-and _ French people in the. face of the most terrible military offensive in history (ought we over here to be less stout-'hearted?). ` and` the real 'beginningot` Canada's war effort. I n\A`\lI:i\lf hnnlr .~.n.u- 0|-an r`,nh~vu\n|\ ll`Ull[lL'I' '(.lt`Kt:lll.'t`5 2a'( fE Hl LU HEIVC 51V`. en way much more quickly. They gave way so quickly, in fact, that _ the Germans sweeping through the hilly. wooded-Ardennes (mo tough i for infantry passage in-1914, _!h_ut, ` `ideal over far-imotorizd columns -' today) reachedvsedan `before `Gen- eral Corap's `armywas properly in positinn `there. A gap'was made which -was literally. pushed all the ' way to Calais. It. never was stop- ped. because the German invaders could move faster than the French defenders and Leopold `kept the ` British and French armies in`~Bel.- gium from falling back in time. 'I`\..:.. fill` Ar `I ........r..l,I-.. ....... .... anon uu5un-nus xu \4nIIII\1II.1 vvul l.|l!llI.. Looking back over the German campaign to learn what we can` ' from it during this brief breath- ing spell while es his forces-for spring. it does seem as though ` things have come ou.t pretty much as 'the' Germans planned. except: for the high price which we exacted and the escape of an important part of our army. If the Dutch held out longer than the Germcms expected. the `Belgian ` frontier -defences seem to have giv- en wnv muvh mnra nnivklv. T'hev Hitler re-0rganiz-_ their secnnd v UH >UL VIIIDB 11 ` IV \-vnnn\..:~ v L V u . - u _ -. SUBSCRIPTION RA Anywhere in Canada, $2.00 a -year; in.United States, $2.50 a year. pay- able in`- advance. Single copies. 5 ' `-`cents. .1 A T\/| nnT.A`R'F.'N Prpcidpnf and 1) . es hi. spring p ` th bun... Ll`Illl nu.--"5 Alwyn: nu nun... This act of Leopold's was so fate- ful that it is being coupled with the strange death of his pro-Ally fath- - er. found dead at the bottom of a cliff while presumably out -cl-im-hing alone. the marriage of his sister to the Crown Prince of Fascist Italy. the breaking of the alliance with France in 1936 and accepting of a guarantee from Germany in 1937. the refusal to hold staff talks and arrange a common defensive plan. yet the appeal to them nevertheless to leave their fortifications on the French border-and cotne out into the open Flanplers plain to the aid `of Belgium on Ma_)_j,I0th,;and.'fiital-I ly the suddem.'stlrre_ij:dex' iatghisz ' army, coveiing -the :Flaiidrs-fpe')r` s I i just at 'tt:le-vmomenti that.` the `Nazis were reachihg"ou`t' to c|oe'th'sack 1' on our forces. to suggest that he was actually in complicity with the en- emy. This evidence is. however. purely circumstantial, and the full truth will not be known until the history of this tragic chapter in Bel- gium's history comes to be written. , At any rate the almost miracu- lous rescue of a large part of the =British and F`t'ench Flanders force left uncovered by Leopold's defec- llnn h.'a< fpmnarhd tvhsa Minn:-nae: `New> `torn. -June I--Innnn "'UllIvIu'Iur -mun-cu nnu..._y ~ trunn- `- kh-k"v'. the~xNeui Wirki '1`! es-ndidw-ulay: So ionm `us `and glluneqqygu `8m'VIves}'-tile`-won! " lhillklrk - wlllvbe-ap'o'keI1 withvreverentm Ior-inltaihirborurln-such 1- hell-as ' Iwver bluzedmn ea1rt|`t~li eloro;'-at`!-lie `e'nI3of i.-~l os| btHle'."lhe~i'II8`3i1d 5~ hlemlalwsf that -have l'iMden'-tI1e`so`u|4of~ 'dj9IlIol?Bey"feI| away.` There. - -beaten but mmconquermgin=gmnmgxdplohdnrsln-1aetd`|he `enemy. " ". l`hpv -tint nwm) `than wnnndhd'"9SI'3"DItll-"dIEd`Bd`IBlv `others mil uIu:uvrreu uy Lieupulas (lPlL'- tion has tempo-red the bitterness against the yoiing`l{ing. -The `re- treat on Dunkerque and the-actual evaciiatioii. an operation -always among thi- most difficult and dan_- gerriiis and made incomp`arably |"n4ll`(` so today by the constant aer- ial observatinn. bombirig-and `straf- ing at` the enemy. will go`dowii in l'llSI<)l'_V as one Hf the finest exploits- of tltv British forces. Indeed by the naming of tlie_ci:`cle of defences aiuiiind Diuikerqtie'- ` the Cortinna l.im'-" it has already been coupled with Sir John. M0(it`e's famous re- treat lll face of Napoleon in-1809. Now the thing to he decided is whether on balance Hitler has gain- ed mure than he has lost and whe- ther he still has the strength left to fiiiisli tiff what he has started. For let me repeuit once again. he has to knock out France and Britain cmripletely and right away or has lost. while we have only to hold on until his fury has passed and final victory is assured to us. HP has gained one at his objectlves.`thp Channel coast, but has been partly cheated of the other. the annihila- tion 01 the Allied Armies in Fland- ers. and he has undoubtedly been forced to pay a far greater price than he expected. . ls his `strength relative to ours*gi-eater on less to- dhy than when he started`? `His lass- es in inan-power-are estimated at half a million kllledvand wounded and are almost certainly greater than the British and French. I But `it is not inan-power but machines which have given himlhis decisive advaiinage over LB so far. and here his losses are on a much,.greater proportion; probably between a third and a half of his tanks-are out he~ of action. and a fifth 0! his` first} ` line. planes. 1 The French. for their part, have had time to re-form their line, and though they have lost 3 quarter of their first-line strength, there is no um): in the worlq in such a toad 5 imtle`r sPropaganda- and Mussolhws! T;;:ts; Ihtndd (ll) : 1-Keegi Us Guessing `Uptd 'thd l.a~st~M|nute ~m*a.len 'b'lII!'llll0OIl1]1lEI`B(I`*."|l|:BhITf`lIO'llIIOI'|'!lI-'liIl!CIl Inc `euuluy. l`hey -sent away ' the wanndbd - Hts!-Hmen `died ` sd ' that ~ 1'o u1d'esuape:` ltr~was"not~so-simjlle d1tIIhIg*ns'wurn[e; whlclrthe * Nnzih |Ihd~m*-plenty`:-II. wusmm so=shn'ple mum: aI*'diwI=pIh-e. which mg -be` hgmmgndzfhoirjnglj a.`df|l|"'K.I'-[EI`I'-l."W33` I10! |Q`l`(`.- mm of ua|'el`ul1:IavmlhgS- lorohcre -Olild` Imv-'bun1|ttle!*l0 was the - -nnnnnunnnnnnn `hlftlu-' `hon nnnntrlns.` Tllinl"iIl`3I|l"hi!V.~('0l'V' '01]! `Of sllltvol ua|'eI`uIr1Ilan'nmxs-lorohcre-uoulmnarve-'nan1mnes-u was me: nommonwlnan "ol=the' 'l'r;e countries; ning"iINA|l-1him-[Iory- mill,-`M`I'Iue.4actory:~ mine; lnrm~ andfshlpy Kqiplyingwo wan" Ohv les- mm.-r learned when he" went dowIIlhe~5sIiM| bring o`ul*h!wpp`ed - comrades.-when"hlnlrIbdih'Ii!eb0ai5&hI'o|igll`I\slIrf; when -he - `endured ~porverty~=and~hai-d work -10% his ?clIdren'n-mks. ` `"rl'm_-z-uMninnr`- thin:-in=whyssdu|sNofree'wmenwllltler oxnnot -povertyvand~hard~ won-In -tor ms =cIInu|-en n-Elle. "`Thls=hinh1g`-'thing`-in`ithe\~sduls~>o-~free'>|ment`lIl|er -command, -orfttain. -`or1:om|uer`-`llhas rllnhtdilt; whar` hrodld. - lrom -German--hearts.` ltd.-1 -ue greatflndition-'ol"demncI'acy3 It is -the `l`umre.'ilt` is victory." `-`Wi|Ison ~*Woddsld;'s*`Woakly Ma r*-' Commentary ` -`cents. J. A. MacLAREN. President and Managing Editor; W.` K. WALLS. . Vice-President and- Business v Man- ager. '~New' Ydrlw` -J1me` I-1-I-Iunan -'-ldorlull -u`nm|td~n|IIipl_v "Dun- - um. Non} Mai:-Ir; ?l$nun.-nilulumulnvz T`:iE-BARRi'EiXAIviiIL-`R. BARBER Giviih EANABA `ll polsition` to fill` the gaps with re- serve officers and`men. `They have had time.` 100. to `improvise defens- `ive'me-thnd for dealing withHi1,- . Ier`s new mclics, whose surprise- -vaiue is nnwused up. and Ihey hnvv become accusthmod to the div b0m'be1'. "I"hn (`inn-rnnn Arrnu I .n....1,l L-4.17 D()I`l"l'DI'. The German Army, I would say. husabo`ut' two or three ln0l'P bu,- nl`!e`nsives in its system, even` though it- is-aunlikely ~that it can ever again deliver such a blow us the'ane justnished. It is remun- able to suppnse that Hitler h0|`lL`S to knock out Britainr with one nf these-offensives and Franctr with another. -But which one is to CONN` first--that`s what everybody wants Ito know. It dnes look as though the ccmquest `of `Denmark and Nur- `_ way and now Holland and Belgium } and the Channel coast`-are part of a consistent plan~to "encircle" Bri- '- -Cain, to gain air bases from which ' to drivevher ~NavywIrom `the -North `Sea wand her:-merchant shipping from`the" East "Coast. and positions -ac`:-oss `the ~ narrow" Straits '0! Dl)Vf.`l' from which to` invade her. '`I1u65.h|e9. 1:: nllnrivnna In-ml nnrvxn ||'UlU WIIICII` L0 ITIVECC ner. "But.`-just--as everyone had come ` _ to `expect-this a'Hitler's-next mnvo ; a noisy-Nazi propaganda campaign . be'gins about French atl'ocities" to --`German prisoners-uand about l-tal- ian vandvspanish intervention. which might indicate that France was to -be next instead. "That is. of course. J just the intention `of the German I propaganda. to keep us guessing V right` up to`-the last -minute. His , `army; too, is in such a position in _ Flanders that once it is re-rm-med and freshly supplied it could "be turned jat"short notice either to. _ wards the Channel ports- and -Eng- ` land or -southwards against Paris. , It may be noted that a new British , =Army has been sent. Lo'the Somme Front, whereit could either take`- the former move in `the flank or stand directlyin t-he way-`of the lat- _ ter. i"l`\..n Al.......a i.. n..:...:.. _-..........S LEI`. `The threat to Britain, menaced from the Channel, from Holland and Norway. as well as by iandings of parachute `and air -transport troops working together with such Fifth Column elements as the I.R.A., and bombing from the air. is the most dreadful in her history. F`rancg- is in nd less happy .1 position, with the Germans on the North and Ens! and.tht="Spanish and Italians to the South. Nevertheless. I can Sm : Ihoso encouraging factors: 1,'ThP' Cnrn-i::n< hnvn nu-nhnhll" isnljeuus ii )S`C0nSClOUSly or uncon- `sqiously acting as an `agent of Hit- ler. '3. =British sea-power still stands between Hitler and the t;in~ tali'zing"chalk cliffs of Dover. just `as it did in~-Napoleon's day. Sea- power enabled us to evacuate the B.E.I-`.' from Dtinkerqiie just as ll ` would have a century ago and "Il- ler's air power. for all its triistrrited fury. could nnt prevent the opera- tion or cause any siibstaiitial loss. -1.The' closer Hitler comes to the main homevbases of the R.A.I-`. the more his air superiority diminishes Considering the lesson of Dunker- que can he hope to so dominate the air over the Channel as to land an expeditionary force with henv_v equipment in the face of Bl`lilSll battleships. destroyers. SD(`Pd- l)u(Il5. miges and submarines. ma. gllllhl machine-gun nests and barbed Wll`t`. the R.A.l-`.. and an amused Britiiiii" 5. Should he turn instead :ig;uii. the" French, the latter ought it. Dr able to hold him more and more in even terms as the German l`nt"Cl). ili ical equipment gets used up 6 While Italy's air force might caiise much damage if thrown nnta France's back. the Alpine passes ov- er which her armies would have I-- nv-.'\r urn .-.1 zllfinuilo ohvn =.nnnn .l.._ encullruglug (actors: 1.'The` Germans have probably` delivered their heaviest blow al- ready. 2. France and Britain still stand undaumed and unyielding. under superb leadership and closer `n spirjt.thaI1 `at any time in the 'a6 ;w`ar.`.'I`alk of_ France making a ;se_5p;arage` peace is , Nazi_ pI`:)p,4g3l1d(i. pure? Hndslimple, ant! `anyone who ._s;'3vea'ds if is*cohcious1y uncon- `seibnmlv nminu :1: an ':m.:m nrnio. El WHICII HUI` Hl'll'1Il`b WUUIU ll'dVC' I cross are so difficult that 50.000 dr- fenders_m.ight well hold up 1: m1]- lion. '7. Spain can hardiy be re-:.dy `for another light. after three ex- hausting years hf civil war v_-__...,-_ [0 l 3VC| U]? IUllDWIll Slfaa. Little Lake Road, Sophia St. from Bayeld to Mary: `Reid St. from Gowan ta Burton; Mllburn SI. from Gowan to"Bunnn." Perry $1.; Fran- ces Sl.,' fr0m`Blimbeth In P9rr)". ` St. Vincent SL, from Duckworth I1 Penetang. `I115: Ffnnrinasxr rpnnrirl than in. .lar1y the personal attacks upon` Prime Min- fortunately, however, the debate resolved it- eral election, and Liberals responded with `The Conservative `Opposition in` theV'House ` of Commons at Ottawa may be :small in num-- = bers, but it cannot be said to be lacking in vigor as an attacking force. The virulent on- slaught upon the Government, and. particu-.- lster Mackenzie King, during the debate on.. Thursday 1ast.were reminiscent of similar. scenes in the British House of Commons prior` to the resignation of-Mr. Chamberlain.` Un- self into a disgraceful party squabble on both` sides; Conservative speakers displayed bitter partisan chagrin over their defeatin the gen- boastful taunts at their beaten `political op~ ponents. r1..-.x:s .......L I... ..-i...-..-. lsnvuvnurnu-' on fhn l'\n_ Addiiaonal .. 53:5} M WWII!-Ie' Gvavelled On recmnmendat_I'on of 'I`0wn Engineer `E O. `Rawsnn. 'I\)wn Council. Monday evening. decnded to gravel ' the following streets: linl- [Luis Rand Rnnhia S! frnm l'E'tR.`I.lI5 ~ The Engineer reported that In- nisfll, Caroline. Dunlap, Grove and Eugenia strata had been grawlled as I previotlslv instructed. ` Vnctona St. had not been gravel]!-d. the re- port said. Up to the end M May. 555 cubic yards of gravel were used, valued at 1277 `-JUNI-I 5, mm 1 ' Di.-atrlc-I. In-0-(Is - Hay and Pul.4m`s :.::w mill :1! NI'W Lowt-ll has burn rImnin;'_ (Iva r ".ilnl'-` thv br-ginniimf uf May . . . Nvwhm Robinson Clllillh; in Dr as In-1:1 and aesthetic us`. any lmrnl:-1 m lhv luml . , . Kuonzmsvillv wumllrn mill wnll soon be in full hlznil. , _ 'l`h~ lm-v ka`rds uf the Sc-rm-In .81-Illa-nu-nl wtll hold H1e=ir:~unIm.'nl lm/6~ I"--nut and um mersirm on Jmw M . _ . (`zultlr and hnrsn fail` at Htnym-r yo-5-:lM`(l:ny . Prmly much all ;.uli1u-; m mu" I-x nl-ununnn shin Innnll A .a4.;.~.,...A.;.l` IlH"l}nl|Hl Ull nllllll` l`I \ .l|IIl` allllll !~H.:uym-r 3 - H1 mu` I-X` ` challgos; this W('|`k. . . A tl::iI`yIv::uiI` social at Alliszlun Iwlls-(I Ihv Mvthu- dist. Church $60 . , . (lvnrnw (}r::h:nm. Cnukslown, )ffc`I'S 2{'.. :() In :m_vmw who will tell him win: puisnnrtl lln`. dog . _ . (fnrnpluinl is: mmiv Hm! AI lismn lnwn be-ll is; 11411 ln~:u':l nml that sturnps: aw mum-ruu~: in I"lz~I L'h`l"S puml . . . 1\/lr.~'. II. (imu-. Sr. relic: uf Squire (':rn. J.P.. 1.:-fray. has pn.<`..s`e(l away In In-r 7`:-5| . Hunt! H<~:u(l in n-um:-ni7.In;', its |n'.'s:;:~: band . . . 'l'hv luy_:; Kt-mlrick and C()l'H[U('|`uI' both low! luw.-1 nf |u;`,.~` lust W('(`|-2. and 1h<-.s<- W'I'(' :u-:um-1':-(I all nluny 1hr we-:;I s:hm'4~ In!` lmkt` M.....;.. 'J;~Ik'- (Sin-.n.... Inn Iilhl VVl'l'I`n. illlll llll`.\l` \`V('|I' .'\L'nll|\'ll'Il, lmkvl Sim(!m- , . . .l:1s:p:-r lvlnrlin. Hills-l (lulu, has bougalnl tlw .~;k;lin;g rink and will uszu it fur llHlllllI),`, :l;',ru-ul- tum! l'Xl')ll)ll.lnl|S . , . lVl.'nplI- s_vrup| ll1l(`V(.`S are 4)pvmlin;!_ at Wyn-l)rid;'_v; thL`_y tank .'nlmul I5 ggullnns; l'I'mn lVlr."., Wm. } .'u'lu-r s milk lmuszn. I Ly U1 [HP IJUUIIU. iI.\ II, I.\ J|lHlll|U`lll_`y (mo of the nmst (i:m:;m'u1|s vru.~,.~;- ings in lhv (.`UllH1_V. A-1 thv .I;um:n'V rm.-C-ting of Ihv Gunny /.',uncil :. depututiun was appuinlr-ml In vi.--.i1 Ottawa 1.0 ask fnr 1!,nl..<.. 'l`h:'-ir ro- presentatinns were successful. 'l`hv compzmy has been m`d0rt='(l to pm up gates within one month. l"0I'(-.(-.(l to II. Al l.:I.s'l For years nth-Inp1.: hnvv hm-n! Inndv Lu induce 1h:- ;-ulhuritirs; nf] the Northern Railway, hull) l):~l'-11`:-3 and since i! (:.'um- mm pn.<'.-4:-ssiull Uh the Grand '1'runk. In place mm-s ml` the All:md.'1ln~ cmssixxgz fur Ihv s:uf~ ty of mu public. as it is :ul1ni!tMIl_`,'| mm M` Hm mun! rl:zm!z-run.s` (`rm :- Fifty Ye:11's l)`Alt0n Mc(?:u'th_v-Edilnriul "l)'AI`.un IVl('(,`:n`lh_v. :r: :1 mm: }JUAu5Iun3. Credit must be given..howeve1-,' to the Op.-`; position for a measure of 'sinceri.ty-in its crit icism of the Government, but it suffered from- a lack of -constructive leadership.-`Some-of-the - ' criaticism by Conservative -speakers v was `ill- considered and liable to give ioomfort to the enemy. The charges of.-Rodneyhdamson re- .` garding Bren gun and Blenheim ~bomben~pro- . duction ~were evidently based :upon..hearsay.. Such criticism is mischievous; On .theW`other hand, the attack of Agriculture MinisUer`Jas. G. Gardiner upon Hon. Dr. "H. A. Bruce and Conservative members generally--was not a _ very vediiying exhibition. ` Fr0m`tht'.' Files of J The Northern Advnnve ; 1 m- Kt-ndri nth d we-rv an A l Marlin unhl, s=.ku1i1 hultlin;,;` vm....1. . T0 the imliritlunl. ulu-ther he 8`l`\rs un the lighting {rum nr thr Immr from. life inauram-' l`d)lllillltPs In guaruntt-t-. num-int sc-n-urit_\ fur his family and him- self. It means that his luv:-4| um-3 arr prntm-to-4| and will be sup- purted in linw uf need. It lltrtllla that he will have Inuury for c-mc:r- gem-ies, and a nest -egg to provide for bit old age. ~rs $50 :lI|_\ uIIf`| 11 pc-isnm hut] In /\I-7 um!` VII`! Nu;-;. `$13! J.l ., I.I-fx'u_V.' I n 1.. 1.... rue! War 1-Inplmsin-s the i|npurlam'1- ul lilo ins||ranu1- Guardian uf liuundiuu Homes fur um-w 100 Years `. (II m;!_>} - ::L':ntlL-rvtli ~ l.uk(- lin, Hill I T and political force. towers fur uhuve any ulher mun in the Duminiun l'.'u'li:um,*m, He is an f::u`lcss and in- ch-pt-nch.-nl iacivucutu of right against pnmy (`X})('((:llC_y. His day is cum- 9,: 11114,. '1' Prim-.0 Ar'.hur nl. Allumlzlle l I.::::l '|'hur.~.!:uy nfluzmmn, 2: |.'u'y,`* lmdy Hf lhr nuns! I'L`Sp('('3(l|lQ* untl influt-ntiul (-ilr/41-us ml f$m'ri:- mud |/\l|;m(lnl:_- ::s. :-I Hw /\H;m-` ::|.':l4~S!.':1iuntn:-Jmw their Iuyulty mi Hn- (Jum-n hv ||nlIln`iI||I h...~ mu HEIH` I31 Hm (Q '|'h:Ii H _l)Iu'ln~. `r. .. .. . ...-_, .....__, ...D ...-_..._.-.-.V. :'Dri Bruce, as a sincere believer in'_'Nationa`l -Government as the -best means of carrying l on. the war. effort, was perfectly within` his .rights.in sqgg _' that.~Mr.`lKing-`follow. the example of" fl _ ' am by resigning; Mr, `King was notxi68d4'to-follow the suggestion, and there was no division among Govern- ment members. as there was in-the case of Mr. Chamberlain. The -success of the German blitzkrieg drive to the English Channel was unexpected in both London and `Paris, and Canadian preparations were proceeding ac- cording to schedule. The ci.isaster.in` Flanders . has stirred Britain and France toa. morain- mnsified effort. and `Canada `and the-United States have awakened to the 'seriousness of` the situation. .. .,, -._.IA.l.I ` .`3x.IuuH 1:: :-.ImW lnull` my Queen by hmmrin;-_ In II the h`.'Iin Lu-:n'inp, lhv Du -lu~:`; of (Junmnmhl wmu :: fuw nnimm,-.; u: All:-m In!-.1! I1. l`..-:.nl.. nu..- business trend Big business is ht-coming less and less an expres- sion of the efforts and genius of lll(ll\`l(lllZll men. For one thing; it is too big. its siiu:1-ss today depends on the effective CU-()l`(lll11lllUll of many different types of ability. Tlic m()(l(:rll Trust (Iompuny lmmllcs cstuu.-s on similar lines. ll] W/hen you appoint the 'l'oromo (`icncrnl Trusts your executor you reap the hcnct of the uunliincnl prac- tical skill of its tifccrs, who have haul long training in all the various aspects of estate inunaugcnicm. (iroup discussion and group jmlgincnt ensures` the thorough exploration of cw.-ry qucstion that urisscs in Carrying out your will and mzllu.-s for pruclr.-nt and f:Ir-si;v_lnml dmisions. (]] \Vc invite your impiiries. T0lll]N |`0 GENEML TIiUS |`S Managing csrurc-9 and WAR TIME . Tu llw uuliam. Iifr iunuralwu fuml.-I rrpro-~rnlin;.: Ilw 's2l\illj.i4 uf ||u'iI'l_\ |m|ir\||uIu|rr~. arr pI'n\i4|- - ing lllilliun-4 uf |u|lur~ -m m-1'rs- vary for lhr claw:-Iupnu-Inl of Lanaalu. The-~r fuml-. inw-.Io-I in lhr rt'IIlll`('o'~ uf um-1-uumr_\. urn-. thus Illnlbili/4-1| fur Iho- In-In-I'll of thr khnlr nnliuu. In Mar Iimr as in pram-. lifr insur- unrv .-alanclu fur imlixicluul W - uuul nulmlml ac-4-urily. .401. -CORPORATION PEACE THE um... -.. v-.-- v.v-. . This is no time. for carping criticism or ~ ` party ~rec1'iminatlon. The Government has re- sponded to the situation with intensified ac- tion. It was generally anticipated that `this vvwodld be a long~war. but Germany hasforced mthelpace. Hitlerzknows that he must-wins a blitzkrieg victory oven` `the Allies or not at all. Canada mustt:h'ereiore key up its war effort to a blitzkriegmempo. This can only be done by a solidly united Pariiainent-and; people. Partisan bickering, from whichever side it comes. is treason anti sabotage in this hour of peril. ' ...._o\...._. Iii, ML-Phoc. and Liam. Kortright in uniform . ` . In clnsc proximity 10 lhv Huynl party stood Mrs. Judge |Ard::p_h, with her youngest daughter ()l:ud_ys. and Philip. u young sun 91? Muynr l L-plvr. rm-udy 1:: pwscnt 10 lhv lJm:h<<.x.~' :: m:u;;`nif1(--I11 bmlqllei. `.Vl.._vur l'.].I<-r n:ul :m :u l-tlrtss to In. 12...: u:..\..... ' _y.n` l'r];luI' rr- ;R..y:ul lliylnn-; innr M:|ll-r.s` Ix-unHu~|):1y1:IlGly.. . '1| ...mm-I I\ lunduy ev- 1.-uul .'l`lw Juniu)` 1.11- ..r iurrw urv spoiling Hm. .`~{un*1huI'(:n\N.'lll .`n*n;|[ul' \n|w.IIl Irl`i|_V fl'nl' hnme. lJ:`t-IHH` igl Ell!`- 'I`hw m.'u`kr`l lust II\.\ nu- Ill!` III-lV|l\l`I lnlnu I1 :I|J<)\'4 lhm` i|V' mrkmi imprnve- .1: :35 In 40 UFKS ml-:.~. (" ..r|< wnlh com- `.-> m;-ins have |-:;: HI. from 1882 Napoleon once declared that an `army ghts on lts stomach". He should ' have known what he was talking `about, for that -saylng was tragically borne outln`_-his-army's cllsastrous retreat from Moscow. A_ccor.dlng to one explanation of the King Leopold's sur- render. of his army to the Germans lnv Flan- _ders,`,the Belglan soldlers y_w_g`re said to have beenshort of food supplles. They could: not have been any worse off. however, than the French and Brltish troops who had gone to their ald and whoware left exposed to flank attack by the Belglan capltulatlonf I`he`wh'ole - lnslde story or that surrender has yet to be told, and lt ls the part of charity to suspend Ilnal judgment for the tune belngnand make the best of :1 bad job. I`he "never-say-die" at- tltude of the Brltlsh saved the day and turn- ed a defeat luto a. virtual victory. The extrica- tlon or most of the Allied forces ilrom thelr most perllous situation and landing them ln ' Brltaln is regarded as one of the flnest uohlevements in the history of the.vBrl-tlsh `Army. IIl|.1I_ .n._ u.__._ ..x AI... r\..:.A-..\. ...... In...u..:.|