Ontario Community Newspapers

Porcupine Advance, 19 Oct 1939, 1, p. 3

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

The first letter, from a town in Southern Germany, reads: "Reports of Polish atrocities which PHONE 607 28th, One Week Only. This radio wave instrument is based on the theory that all matter is, fundamentally, some form of electrieal energy.. Each tissue, organ or gland of the human body has a characteristic vibratory rate at what we term normal health, but that viBratory rate: changes at the first sign of discase. s d e oo k. mg, o This microcalibrated instrument is so sensitive it detects the slightest deviationâ€"of the normal vibratery rate ofâ€"any tissue in the body, thus locating diseased or unhealthy tissue. It is not used to the exclusion of physical and laboratory diagnoâ€" sis, but rather as an accurate and dependable aid to them. * I have secured the assistance of D. E. Quilter, Chief Technician for the Electronic Laboratories, who will personally examine each case during the Clinic Week Remember the dates, October 23rd to October If you are in doubt as to your health, have a radi0clast examina- tion made during the clinic week. . j Radioclast Diagnostic Instrument CANADIAN BANK OF COMMERCE BUILDING Phone for Appointment mmwt«mwmmfi prevent it. The only effect it has is make people taik less freely about eagerly to foreign radio no "Food was extremely ‘bad and scaree during the first few days of the war. Now it has slightly improved. People are very depressed. They still listen eagerly to foreign broadcasts. . So far.‘ wireless sets have not been confiscated. The broadcasts of records of Hitler‘s speeches from France were very imâ€" pressive. They ought to go on. f ‘Even the farmers can obtain meat and flour only with ration cards . The harvest was not finished in the beginning of September. For example, potatoes and turnips have not yet been: brought ‘in. The setond hay harvest (so ivitally important for cattle feec~â€" ing) has not been brought in ‘either. Women and girls who have been reâ€" cruited to help with hnarvest canâ€" not cope with the job. . .Even the men who served in the last war have been called up. Most of them were‘ full of bitterness and resentment when they left for their barracks . C "During the last few days they have. been recruiting in the villages even. those youngsters who have not yet: done labor service. Artisans up to 50 have been called up with their assisâ€" tants. Many of the smaller workâ€"shops are left without a single hand. The peasants had to hand aAll their horses over to the army, with harness_and carriages. Every tractor, every car has been confiscated." Leaflets Are Effective . The second letter, from town in Western â€"Germany, says: are trying to hoard whatever they can lay hands cn. ~Ration cards have ";een introduced for almost everything. Even shaving soap can only be obtained with ration cards. The ration of flour . is half a pound per head per week.. Responsibility for the â€" administration of_ . London‘s vastly important oczan shipping centre rests with the Port of London Authority Easily marked for enemy air‘ raiders by the Thames river, London‘s port and its safeguarding becomes doubly vital to theâ€"city‘s wartime existence. The King ard* Queen ° showed e "Someone â€"gave me a leafiet that fell from the air. TheseCleafleis have an eflect Mine found its way to me from ~‘a town 40 miles off. They are so clearâ€" ly printed that it is not even necessary â€"te pick them up. You can read them as they lie on the ground. "No casualty lists are published and it is forbidden to wear mourning . . . ‘During the last few days all the civilâ€" lansâ€"«who were left here received evacâ€" uation orders,. I hope and pray that we shall sconâ€"hear more from France and England. â€"What is the trouble ‘"‘In a ruralâ€"district not far from here a pregnant woman drowned herself after her husbhand had been taken off. There is the case of a man who was at the front for four years in the last war. ‘He refused to: report for service this time.> He was shot, and his wife was informed that her husband had been sentenced to death and that the senâ€" tence was carried out on such and such a date . . . "Butter, fat and oil are practically unobtaingable. It is no longer possiblé to buy fresh fish â€"or even smoked fish. Boys of the ‘aged 14 or 15 go about giving adults orders about blacking ouf their homes . . . The fact that almost all the higher ofrioials of the iparty have still got their jobs and have not been called up does not imâ€" prove the attitude of the general ‘public towards the Nazis. ‘"Many women were quite desperate when the final mobilization began. On Saturday, August 26, there were scenes of open protest in the streets. Women refused to let their men go until miliâ€" tary officials of hith rank appeared and they had to. ~â€"Quite a number ‘of men failed to réport for service with the colors. . They were at once arrested and sent away. Their families do not know where they are. In a small town nearby a ‘woman went mad when the police came to take her husband away. their realizstion of this when they visited the Port of London Authority headquarters The Queen is seen chatting with officers of the merchant navy, when they went aboard a liner in port. On these men Britain depends for getting food and other suppltes past the German submarine barrtier. University of Toronto. In 1930 he was appolnt««d inspector of public schools in ’I‘emiskamlng and Cochrane districts: Later he ‘was transâ€" ferred to the. staff. of the ‘Peterborough Normal School. ~In 1936 he was apâ€" pointed to the public school Ainspecâ€" tcrate of North Waterloo, and in May, 1938, he became generalâ€"editorâ€"of text 0 The late Mrs. Roscoe, who was one of the early residents. of Timmins, had many friends in the camp, to whom her death came as.a great shock. She is survived by two. . daughters, . Mrs. Jutras, and Mrs. A. C. Boyd and one son, Frank Roscoe. . ~"By reason of his experience as pubâ€" lic. school inspector, ;normal school instructor and because of his close <asscciation â€" the ~revision of the courses of study, Mr. Elborn," said the ‘Minister, ‘"is erninently ~well: suited to continue the work begun by Mr. Mustard." â€" â€" . Mrs. C. Roscoe Passed Away at Home of Her Daughter The death occurred last night at the home of her daughter, Mrs. â€"J. H. Jutras, 163 Elm street south, of Mrs. Ellen Roscoe, wife of the late Mr. Clifford F‘uneral services wfll be held on Friâ€" day morning, from the Church of Naâ€" tivity, and ‘will be conducted by the Rev. Fr. O‘Gorman. Fort Francis Times:â€"An apple a day keeps <the doctor awayâ€"imaybe! Deâ€" pends whether the apple is green or at Ottawa Gives ' exprewed a | will lllCidelltS Of War uss terms with the Gerâ€" dmflbed the bombing of chikiren Foresees Revolution in Both ' m flocks of seese. Some of those Ottawa, Oct. 18. â€"The new Polish Consulâ€"General to Canada, Victor Poâ€" doski, : in an address to the QOttawan catastrophe for the Russianâ€"German pact. He said that he foresaw revoluâ€" tion in both countries. , The Consulâ€"General, who left Poland on Sept. 6th, told of the situation preâ€" vious to the unprovoked attack on Poland by Hitler and his gangsters. "We tried not to irritate our irriâ€" table neighbor," he said in reéferring to Russia and Germany. FPor TYOoUuNG MEN AND MBN WNHNO SsTAY YoUuNO A Custom Service Second To None MARK BOWIE CO0 174 Pine Street â€" N. Britain is Journal:â€"Great she is gain ; cause of decency for : weaker nations; she because she is comâ€" ht by u_ae lthx d"â€"shgp- : she is fighting only for of endless turm>ll and bloodshed in civil« Here is that distinctive custom smartness of style for which Society Brand is famous. This outstandâ€" ing appearance is a perâ€" manent part of these syits . . . put there to stay by the expert hand shapâ€" ing. and hand needling, the precise styling and "out‘‘ that went into their making, The woolens are of superb quality and are developed in exclusive weaves and patterns. There‘s nothing finer anywhere at I â€"TOoâ€"MEASURE SUITS brutality of the . which Mireatens Timmins

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