Ontario Community Newspapers

Port Perry Star (1907-), 1 Jul 1943, p. 7

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: ; -- === -- Al Learning To Fly VOICE . § . { In Link Trainer p R E Ss S § Amugement Device of 20's / Trains Fliers On Ground DRIED APPLES -- rh : ---- [Owing to-war condittons it is an--f------ Remember the barker at the nounced that dried apples may BM eounty-fapt---- | come into popularity again. While T FE "Just like riding in an air- this may not usher in the old-time B i i - plane," he shouted at the farm. | Paring bee, it will recall to old- dN ers and their wiyes. jiniers the Seiicious Biota eman- , Mer x | wn ating from quartered apples strung > "Think ; of itt" "he gael in many a kitchen for drying pur . i y R wenty-five SIMS oe that's all. poses. Dried apples have a speclal ® x > y Joh, oe - gst a quarter. and you pilot a flavor of their own, and require ERR th vifadoa a. : > is I 4 ve Houser brisk. Yo 1 no containers, either metal or bite do o ' a a fo : : FEC usiness wag brisk. You crawl- glass." BE . i ' . Fw 1 a y Ae) rg gn ed or-were pushed into a crate- --Renfro ercury, : I A : WA K I Sy 0 D : & W ( M 13 cd be ne hl na re te Seu ~~" HIRAM WALKER -- GOODERHAM & WORTS LIMITED = | 7 lid down over your head. There | WE pAY QFF iii is Fein a - on . i - : | Side before you was a panel board and Realization must be dawning ------ : ARORA. ONL ; ANY all of the gadgets that go with even on the Axis that we pay our - i : ) a real ariplanc. debts with Interest. For Dankirk, THE WAR . WEEK -- Commentary on Current Events OTTAWA REPORTS Rate of Wages Paid Farm Laborers It would roll and bank; twist we paid off at Bizerto. We took = - B D d M th I All P inces and turn, and between yom knees our Coventry, and came right back s - . . 7 rovi was the stick to get it back on an 2 Golan Now, for Malta, there After Two Years of War With Soviet: That Canadian Wasdive op ' y vay an onth th \'4 even keel again. | s Pantelleria. ' &o . 0 ion . Statistics ro ; y increase Perhaps on the fuinge of the ~wigsor sur. | | Huns Can't Start Summer Offensive bE Agkisnn of Tob the rahe of wae pando. form on ot Hoy 15, 104: us compared crowd would be a shy, silent six- ro. EH PO PT i i i with the same date he 1941 and 1947 na footer, Edwin A. Link, who had FAST TRIP BACK Recent discussions regarding A ror hr oe yuyyod Uh Bll ORI: 0A Tor figured out this scheme. He never |- "It took millions of years tor This is the second anniversary | east Is not halt what it was. Their future relations between Canada the Nn Ping thy . the plein a Lh I or said anything; he just watched. monkeys to become men," says a of one of tho greatest and most satellite armies are deserting cand tho United States recall the / ers where "he farmer. provided 'Doe board was ¥ Ko per day at May "Link Amusement Devices" scientist. Several men we know fateful miscalculations in the his them. Tho thought of anothor win. amazing degree of co-operation 5, 1943, as compared with $1.91 a year previously. : eA Now, this wasn't too many years | 0 do the return trip in a split [ torr of warfare, says the New York | ter of war In the Russian snows and gedord reached by these two Where the employee provided his own board, the average rate i ago; say in the late" twentics, On | Second. Horald Tribune. Two years ago. | fills them with gloom. At the front wartime allies, motivated by good of wages for day help was $3.16 per day, compared with $2.57 at the outside of the box you clam- --Peterborough Examiner. Hitler and his generals launched itself desertions aro mounying ahd will and considerations of mutual May 15, 1942. For men hired by the month, with. board rovided, 3 A bered into was this neat inserip- tn --0-- thelr "cataract of horrors," as Nazl military prisons are said to aid and protection. the average rate of wages in 1943 was 301.16, apainst $42.49 in 1942, i y Cio: tinserip- { ---- THE ANSWER | Churchill called it, upon Soviet | bo full of recaptured' soldiers Long the world-wide example oy hen no board was Boies, the average monthly rate Was ni _ tevin Anybody wondering what bee Russia. Now, lwo years later, awaiting punishment. Not a drop of neighborly understanding and | $71.78 in-1043, as-compared with $08.80 in the previous year, Wage I 0 . Link musement evices. came of the canned salmon we though they' have looted and of much-necded oil has rewarded amity; the peoples of the United rates for day help was "uniformly high," but x whed the highest MYULS Today, Ir. Link is one_ of the used to enjoy? Well, 'last year we slaughtered their way across an the costly campaign, whercas the States and Canada have even mark mn Alberta, where the rate with board provided was $2.89 i most important men dealing with | shipped to the United Kinglom immenso territory and piled an in. Soviet armies are' as strong as teamed up in a Special Service ba ey, help paid by the th, with board, the hiwhe . ade als the air branches of our armed 73,851,800 pounds of it, calculable toll of cruelty and mis- ever and the Red air force holds Force, and this group of Cana- wits paid Ie ria yn eh an per month. WE a forces. His anruseent device of --Ottawa Journal ery upon that of which they were local air supremacy amd bombs dian and American fighters will Sonid Wis provided, the daily SCRE rate was highest in British { ; ~the twenties has been transformed ' --0-- already guilty, they find them- German communications mor e form the nucleus of a force for |. Columbia, the burcau said. i ' into a machine which means & WORKS BOTH WAYS selves defeated and stalled by one heavily than before. unified operation in any defen Iigures included in the report, the bureau said, were provided : vital saving of manpower hours No fewer than 104 Canadian of the greatest, most herole de; Think Only of Victory "sive or offensive operation, by farm correspondents in all provinces of Canada. Since collection : and materials; it trains fliers _on girls have married British airmen fonses ever made by a determined Indeed, the Russians think only . ' of this data was begun in 1940, no comparable figures for previous Z i the ground. All of the trainers in | at one Alberta centre. Good going! people. ' of victory this yer. Given sixt - in hae teem > years are available, ! which American, Canadian and Those British girls can't grab oft | ! Gi Six Weeks hy year. sty The main machinery for Cana- J : ; British fliers 'get their prepara |- our fellows overseas and ToL way "dl ig! XW os oy have British, Canadian and Americdn dian-American war-time co-oper- DAY AND MONTHLY RATES \ > A get away n those wo years ey he divisions fighting in western Fare ation is provided in five commit The first of the following (ables lists wire rates paid farm labor- } tion before going into actual without retaliation. - lost the war. With the megalom- ope. they say, and the Red Army . hich sib -reprossntnliy : Wri oT Wo; 3 contact are made by his firm. : --Ottawa Citizen. ja of their previcus successes, he GG tees on which sit vepresqutatives ers by the day in all Canadian provinces, with and: without beard, and : . ois ania 1 will do all that is«required of it of "both countries. hy are: the second lists the wages paid per month to farm laborers, with and What he builds isn't actually --0-- \ they planned in tho same 'stroke nthe east Permanent Joi Hoar without board, as at May 15. 1941, 1912 and 1943 "an airplane, but it is the closest WHAT'S UP? WEEDS! |. to crush the Red Army and to di- This is not boasting. The Soviet Jere on og Des Ard; 83 al ay ih, Id, 1940 ahd Ae, thing to it on the ground.. kach It 1anyone shoukl give us the vide and paralyze the democracies army today has been reconstituted bh neo, y BS * Le a-inlisating With Board' Without Board single place Link fighter trainer | friendly . old™ salutation, "What's while they were doing so; then, and re-equipped, is well supplied SA PHIL oi _ . EAA ES 143 1011 1012 1943 has about 6,000 parts, and is as up?'--we think we'd say, "Weeds, With 'thoty hands. freed 'and with wis A sock a Meng ws ee, wit h EL Laan iii Fdward Is. Let 3 15g 3 y L703 2.08 § 2.36 0 vi 2 sn iin ir % . ¢ 3 B R a or J 2.16 Mh! b perfect a piece of working ma mostly! unlimited resources at their dis- ons, many of them Dritish, and Fores an WY SHER Nove Jeany be 4 2 A 2.90 p chinery_as an airplane. ----0Ottawa Citizen. posal they would turn, destroy above all, feels It is unbeatable. comm . on pn gg Nh 4 Quebec Ne 131 166 2 aid Jae Mr. Link has been building --0-- their last opponents and achieve The Red air force has received > 2 Hem oe of He Mo aie! Ontario fe 1.75 20% 2. 350 3.32 - trainers since 1927, and flying SAFETY HINT their mastery of the workl. Con- thousands of new machines and oi Des, > oar) . ah . Groat Manitoba... 132 1.852 2 2.50 3.04 5 | much longer than that, but it © You're more likely (0 get there ceivably they might have done so. enormous quantities of British ritain and the United 'States, Saskatchewan... 1.39 1.56 a, 2.49 3.30 ; -- r wasn't until recently that the | safe and sound if you limit_your zven supposedly expert opinion in | equipment. The Soviet "war indus- It was on August 7, 1910, at Alberta bt 1.54 2.03 2. 2,70 3.67 "a real importance of his work be: | speed rather than speed your lim- | the democracios, as badly deceiv- | try has largely regovered from Ogdensburg, New York, that Can- British Columbia L657 2.00 2. 2.92 3.84 1: came known. it. 2 ed as Hitler himself, gave Russia (he setback due to its big-seale ada and the United States signed Canada . S$ LIB 3 Lu $2 $2.57 3 3.16 £404 First Trainer Simple a --Kitchener Record. | six woeks at the inost to hold out. removal behind the Ural moun- the agreement on which. co-oper- With Board Without Board - ATL Mr. Link says the first trainer i fi Many, Dblinded-by the traditional {ains, and indeed the only weak- addon is based. This co-operation 1941 1941 1942 1043 ; } : ed was a simple thing, which en- : i be fear of Communism, could see ness is the food shortage, due to has resulted in North American Prince Edward Is. 325.19 $30.61 $49.64 sha.86 no 35 abled a student to learn the -rudi- be THE BOOK SHELF neither the greatness of the peril the fact the Germans still hold preparedness moves of which few Nova Scotia... 30.57 13.96 61.06 G4.84 ES ig & ments of flying, but not much ' lit Hitler succoeded ner the greal- the rich Ukraine wheatficlds. id and Joi ae i) Brunswick .. 3% 2 430 an iL fas more. Once he had the basic DRESS REHEARSAL ness of the opportunity which his N } yoaware, an we complete uchee o.oo. 28.6 11.8 1.4 37.4 hE idea, though, improvements (The Story of Dieppe). barbarous gamble presented. i, aire Sten ot wan story of which may not be fully ORAL on suncsnconnn 31.81 60.03 59.91 71.10 od sprouted like weeds in the spring. ~:By Quentin Reynolds Crisis of War to yield victory and endless loot toi uli tees the wav. ein oo 30.41 1 ah 4 pig an 2 LW | In the big barn-like room of |. When Quentin Reynolds was in- There still seem to be a few who in threo months, is aboul to be- . * * ' Ahonta ren a 35.42 145.53 GLAL 52.18 GT.10 $7.96 TN his plant where at least 40 per vited to breakfast at 10 o'clock one cannot sce it yet. But Mr. Church- come a two-front. struggle against As part of this vast program British' Columbin . 29.97 11.00 A720 50.46 68.67 79.98 3 ; cent. of the workers were women, | fine English morning by Major ill---and it was one of the greatest which every German military of defence, Canada has construct Canada... ORBLO0 0 342.40 35046 $16.15 $68.80 $71.78 st there are several score of train- Jock Lawrence, aide to the Com. of his services to the cause of writer for the past half century ed a chain of air bases between i ers in various stages of construc- mander-in-Chief of Combined Op- freedom -- grasped the situation in- has warned his fellow-countrymen. Edmonton and Alaska and the - ! yao _tion. Fach one is a replica of the | erations, Lord Louis Mountbatten, stantly. The attack was _made be. All Hitler can do now, as mili- Alas Highway, The air bases American joint activities to speed in an atmosphere 'of respective cockpit of -an actual fighting ho refused bluntly, But when Ma. | foro dawn on June 22; it was tie | {avy commentators here seo It, ty | Weve-opencd to traffic in Septem: | phe Vietory would be lengthy, independence, with the United plane, and "the instruments are jor Lawrence quietly ordered Mr. same evening that the Prime Min to hold the eastern fortified front ber, 1041, and proved of great and, indeed, unending the met [Tg 00 Ln conmlete Cane attached to recording machines Reynolds to report for breakfast ister made his memorable - with a reduced number of divi assistance in the construction of total atid scope of the interna- Te En ! ha alt which log every move the pilot with his war-correspondent's unl- ation to Parliament: "We _ shall sions, lannch local blitzss there to the Alaska Highway by the United tional co-operative effort is un- ad's part inand Canada's devo. makes, He gods through every form packed In a bag, he reacted give whatever help we can to Rus- stultify the Red Army offensive, States in co-operation, with the approached in all world history. tion. to the British Empire, { phase of actual flying--except like a racehorse at the barrier. The sia and "the Russian pcople. (Hit shift what troons can be spared Canadian Government, And it all has been accomplished -- Ii. G:; SMITH. RENE he doesn't ever leave the ground. casual but persistent invitation to ler's) - invasion of Russia is no | to central Europe, to be held as | Then tire Materials Co-ordinat- & Fes Weather can't change -the ig fued out to pT more than a prelude to-a attempt reserves to he launched against ing antes Spas established, R = schedule of air forces in war. © to the biggest scoup.in Quen- ed invasion of the British Isles. ie Allied invaders, and if this and through sab-committees on al Io MN " That's another reason the Link tin' 'Reynolds' amazing caréer. The Russian danger is theroforo fatis, to retire inside the inner forest products, copper, zine and LIFE 5 LIK 1 HAT By Fred Neher. i trainer is so valuable. All flying | - Not until he was on shipboard, | our danger and the danger of the | ring of Germany's defonces aud ferro-alloys, the movement of rr -- rey 3 is by instruments -- the popular being introduced to the Canadian United States, Just as the cause | mako a prolonged stand there. primary materials between the a Z ra 27 - i AE but incorrect term is "blind fly- || General Roberts, did Reynolds' | of any Russian fighting for his Needs 200 Divisions two countries is promoted, avail- 7 15 SPICE AZ {s ing." In the past, students need- know that he was to be an eye hearth and home. is the .cause of To hold the consts from Norway able supplies increased, and in- _ % vs 5 7 : ed landmarks to guide them; the witness to the historic rald on | froe men in every quarter of the to Greece, Hitler neers 200 divi formation exchanged on raw ma- 7 MN 7 pain Link trainer changed all that. Dieppe. With his great abilily to "| globe." sions. He is 60 short. His Luft- | terial stocks, productiof and 7 V2 77 2% { 1 } : ! transform a mathematically cal- On The Defensive waffe is declining. His fleet and consumption in the United States 7 3 -- ) culated military operation inte a Two years ago, writes A. C. Cum- that of Mussolini no longer count and Canada..Joint Economic Com- ia : 3 . vivid human drama, the battle for mings, London correspondent of in comparison" with Britain's, And mittaes were formed in June, 74 7 N Court Decides Dieppe, as recorded in these pagos, the Ottawa Citizen, Hitler launch bombing has carried the war lo 1941, to act in an advisory capae- 7 " ' ' becomes an 'unforgettable action ed the whole might of the German the doorsteps. of millions of Gor- ity to the governments at Ottawa Z, If Ship A Prize picture. army along 1.8 miles of the mans. ; and Washington on foreign ex- 4 - Mr. Reynolds proves in this book eastern front, cerfain he would de- "Russia updet all 'our calcula: change control, economic con-v that the Dieppe raid was, in every teat the Soviet Union in three tions," moans the Berlin radio two trols, price policies, tariffs and Ownership of Captured Ships sense, a dress rehearsal for the months and then turn and smash years after Hitler had claimed the duties and way planning. and 'Cargoes Determined by- | grand invasion of every Nazl Britain, Today he cannot 'even Red Army was "annibilaled." . . . Joo Interndtional Law . |" stronghold. It anticipated the launch his long-planned summer - The Prime Minister of Canada eta ro North African campaign and es- | offensive In Russia becauso the -- = and the Pro ident of the United ( Britain doesn't automatically: be- tablished the pattern for the ul- Allies, already far more powerful 3 . } States, at Hvde Park ow York =f EN 3 eons wo hy Axis gi owt timate invasion of the European than the Germans, are waiting to German Prisoners ) on April Iidg 1041 ire Has a b pec 3 W nial bya on the high seas or found in continent. ' break in-at any point they chooso 1ta1 Wa it aa 3 St ot or : : . 3 ports taken during an offensive. Press Rehearsal . . . by Quentin on the outer fringe of 6.000 miles Not Safe In Britain govem), rises go jo Mg / HEAINTIN ans International law demands that | Reynolds . .. The MacMillan Co. | of Europe's fortified coastline. THD, AT OL tr ih 1 ny Cosel NSN Sin certain procedure must be follow- |. of Canada ... Price $2.75. Thus, contrary to all theories of var Be nent, cach wounny should pros EK ed before ownership can be estab- Ls y war in Canada are Germans. The vide the other with the defence via) lished. ' +5323 i . De eartare. Germany | Malians were found satisfactory | articles whieh it is hest able to : When a ship is captured, for A Field arshal The worst Wunder in German or Le) fos ie Aen Britain, buatuse, and, shove. dll, produce fnstance a "Writ in Prize" is . Stalingrad. Today all that th ad . W Gerinans were not safo 3 quickly and that programs should - . Wit out A Baton 8 y at the Naz Sngland, because they would have be co-ordinated to this end." SIN ip ng pulsed 18 he - ' -| commentators can offer by way | been freed to fight, if the Nazis Rist Uinta onion : -- London Gazette and advertised to Lord Gort. now b of excuse js "our military experts |. pad mad A a 1 ie United States has "agreed Whee ! the world. Alter an intérval the Lor , now back in Malta, CN ; had made a landing in the British to buy enough Canadian war . 1 a " is'a Field Marshal without a baton had no knowjedge of the enemys Isles. Thousands of German pris r00ds to enable Canada to pay I writ is solemnly considered in the déspi he f 4 real fighting "strength." 3 ° int Unitadi = Kingd K ons anida te pay 1 Admiralty Division of the High espite _t e fact that since, his ners in the n Hy ngdom for essential war materials from . } Court. Nothing -- ship or cargo-- promotion he has been received ag 4 Millions in Russia would be potential fighting op- the United States, Ganda does Ng . is considered to bo a "lawful prize" by the King, He has dispensed 4 The Germans have lost nearly ponents, it their own side had not use lease-lend accothmodation 1 $30) unifl 8 court of Jaw has passed with the baton in order to save hones of their host Aroons in gy prison camps and utilized by other United Nations. =. Sh Judgment. labor and materials, . ussia. Their war capacity in the | opened the gates, . ' A detailed list of »-Canadian- "Give my report card to Pop. . . . I'll he in the woodshed." pI Proot that Britain carefully fol- The baton of a British Field : _ i Wy lows the principles of internation. | Marshal is a- choice work of art, | : : . i al law was given In an announce. St in, Soe ; i zo i - - 5 ment recently that six ships, In- iH 9 . : nein : h, i bf Pov a mer- days, gold must be safeguarded, REG LAR FELLERS Allez Oop . ) By GENE BYRNES ) . chantman, two 6,000 fons and a | 8d so it was decided to hold I ORTER TAKE YOU a COCKERS ARE SWELL DOGS . il ® 5,000-ton liner, together with two over the actual fashioning of the BUT THEIR EARS ARE SO LONG HOME BUT YOU NEED ~ : Italian floating docks, discovered baton until after the war. More- THEY DRAG INTHE MUD ¢ THE EXERCISE ! - . TS two years ago at Massawa, the | over, most of the expert gold- : . Red Sea Port in Italian Eritrea, | smiths are engaged in the forces : k will shortly be the subject of court or in war factories. . gd hi Ty action, h The baton remains the personal ) Tho enemy, too, is Invited to | property of te owner, and is a 3 . _ put in an appearance at the Law | ehort stave symbolically decor- * 3 Courts to stake claims to the-ships. |- ated in gold, and surmounted | - It Is rare for such an favitation to | with an effigy of St. George be accepfed,- but on several occas. | about to slay the dragon. Batons fons the Germans havo entered a | of Royal Field Marshals down \ defence through the Swiss Govern. the ages have been carefully pre-~ 1. ment the protecting power, An of- served, and in the armory of ficial, well versed In Prize Court Whnidsor Castle the visitor can AS 2 procedure explained that in theory, still see the batons carried by the ] TP > n and to some extent In practice, In" | Dukes of York and Cambridge, - ea Der 4a"; ETN _ ternatlonal law In this respect is | when they were commanders-in- 12-10, S04 tn ca ave Bales followed by all belligerents. chief in the 19th century, : FEES HAMNER ) - - - LE ' T ind . r a : ' & 3 i M : HIN : : AL LRTI

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