evil thing only. NOTEâ€"This chat is issued by ‘The Tailâ€"Waggers Ciub, Willing Mouse, 356â€"360 Grays Inn Road, London, WXC.1. The Club will be pleased to answer any enqguiriee submitted by Tailâ€"Wagger owners in connection with canine byglene ception, the mongrels appenring at the bottom of the list of those acâ€" cepted in an extensive recruiting extending over many thousands. lef that they are cleverer than the aristocrata. The German tests put an effectual end to t«is misconâ€" of this scheme have decided, folâ€" lowing on the German experience, to train only pureâ€"bred animals, which the consider to be the most carry messages from post to post, and perform other duties of a more are not wanted, in spite of the beâ€" cerned with sentry dutiess The more advanced will be caught to eatch and hold up any suspects who may endeavour to escape, and coâ€"ordinate all efforts for the utiliâ€" zation of dogs as sentries and guards, both for the army and civiâ€" lNans. Professional trainers have been engaged and the services of qualified amateurs are also being fld. Training centres have opened, which will have the assistance of travelling instructors. ‘The ideas seems to be to produce three grades of service dogs, the most elementary of which is conâ€" have instituted Dogs for Defence I am glad to say that, in spite of difficult times, we are receiving a fair number of uew members every week, though of course not in the volume of preâ€"war days. We are grateful for all the help possible as we are hoping to pass the 800,000 mark before long, and we are anâ€" xious to continue doing everything possible for the benefit of our canâ€" nine friends. If all owners of Tailâ€" Waggers would do a little recruitâ€" ing we should soon exceed the totaj at which we are aiming. American doggy people have lost no time in setting up an organizaâ€" tion for training dogs for the army. We were slow in making a start here, but now, I hear, things 60 St. Paul 8t. . St. Catharines f (Acrous from CDM.) Goblin, .RPremier, Hoover, Electroâ€"Hyglene, Royal, Eurcha, Airway, Apex, Ohio and all Amâ€" erican and "anadian makes, also Parts and supplies. Bage, Cords, Whasls, .'fl. ete. consulting reom. If he did it dis appeared, and so, to make sure of reading it, he was obliged to take eventualities without delay. Inciâ€" dentally, this gentieman mentioned that The Tailâ€"Wagger Magazine was the only periodical that hbe could not leave on the table of his VACUUM some add donations as testimony to their goodwill. The other day we had an enquiry from a veterinary doctor in Cincinâ€" natti begging for information conâ€" cerning what was being done here about dogs and other animals in air raids. Now that war has come to them so closely they are setting Central V acuum Cleaner Service movement there, and express satisâ€" faction at the regulrr delivery of The Tailâ€"Wagger Magazine. Good friends in Americs continue to Men‘s hearts ought not to be set No better evidence of the univerâ€" sality of the Tailâ€"Waggers‘ Club could be asked than is furnished by the letters that we are mveiving even now from remote parts ¢i the earth. Supporters in Australia still write enquiring about our welfare, y Tailâ€"Waggers i<elp The War AT HOME AND ABROAD REPAIRS . The promoters Tth, 1942, â€"Curlye, the ment basis, each family making a voluntary subscription. The Community Doctor is asâ€" sured a reasonable standard of livâ€" |ing, a minimum income of $4,000 being guaranteed by the Ontario Division of the Red Cross. To apâ€" ply against this are dues from subscribers, fees from private practise from residents who are nonâ€" subscribers, and muncipial grants. The doctor‘s duties are unâ€" derstood to include preâ€"natal care, infant welfare care, immunization, school health, as well as the usual at‘ention to municipal sanitation. Unlike the muncipal doctor plan, _ ln French Equatoria‘ Africa, al present of strategica) importance during the war, farming used to be a woman‘s occupation, the men merely clearing the bush and breaking the land. However the inâ€" troduction of money erops has inâ€" Auced men to take up agric.iural Inbour, the strongest stimulant beâ€" ing that, if the native does not proâ€" duce calh crops, be has +0 work for others for cash to pay »Xt8. â€" Men Displace Women ~ in rread" omm = Wdinburgh University, is the first Community Doctor. Unti) just preâ€" vious to Pearl Harbour, he was atâ€" tached to the Scottish Mission in Manchuria. His new duties include the rendering of medical service to four rural municipalities in the District of Alguma. Consideration is also being given to the posting of Cor:munity Doctors at Lion‘s Hea in the Bruce Peninsula, and Rosseau in Muskoka District. ‘The Canadian Red Cross is apâ€" pealing to the public for $9,000,000. It needs this money to carry on its vit,! services, Don‘t fail the Red Cross. It has never failed you. a patient is free to choose his | nels with remittance to each farmâ€" own "family pkysician." No one|er for the full amc.; t his scrap need support the project who preâ€"| brings. ‘There will by n> charge, fers to get medical help elsewheve.| no commissions, or no profit in it Municipal politics and dingruntled | for the Harvester dealer who nerâ€" taxpayers are eliminated. forms his service as a patriotic Stations at Desbarats, 30 miles| duty. east of the Canadian Soo., Dr. Wilâ€"| "A measure of the possibilities." regular medical advisers have enâ€" listed or are serving in some other wartime capacity. Over 25 perâ€" cent of Ontario doctors have "joinâ€" ed up" or are connected with war services. ‘The people most affectâ€" ed by this are the residents of reâ€" mote rural communities. ‘The new plan will be worked on a preâ€"payâ€" Doctor Emergency Plan Launched By Ontario Red Cross Big city doctorâ€"country doctor â€"and now community doctor. He is an innovation of the Ontario Division of the Red Cross in conâ€" sultatior with the Ontario Medical medical service to the people of d:‘“‘u!mh.-d , cooling them quickly and holding them at a temperature beâ€" tween 55 and 65 degrees, in a room where the humidity is between 75 and 85 per cent. ‘This is an imâ€" portant factor and cannot be overâ€" curing warm weather it is advisâ€" able to limit the amount of grass and scavenger feed that the birds The air cell increases in size, and this along with a visible yolk, gives the candling appearance of an old lmmont.andlntulnhn‘a practice of keeping them housed during the forencons. A temperature of 60 Fabrenâ€" heit is high enough to start the germ in a fertile egg to develop. The physico chemical changes which break down thick egg albuâ€" men are very rapid at summer quality may be prevented by allowâ€" ing the birds to range for one or two hours in the evenines when With the approach of warm weather, more laying flocks are mmmwmwm and allowed to range. The increasâ€" ed consumption of grass and other material picked up makes for lowâ€" quality eggs. The yolk colour may be high @nd the albumen thin and watery, states Prof. J. F. Francis. Tells How to Avoid Low Quality Eggs Eggs held in rooms where the At least eral Times a Day In Warm Weather Most Important. of. J. F. 0. A. C. &'_@‘% Sevâ€" Agricultural College, house products or small fruits *o the valus of $50, or more, and (b) farms where there were 50 fruit trees or more in 1041. IInder the heading of Fruit and Vegetable Farms are included (a) farms which produced for sale in 1040, aither vegetables (Other than potatoos and turnipa), vegeiables In order to be reported as a farm for the 1941 census, such land W.«m. have been of one acre or more in extent and have produced in 1940 agricultural products to the value of $50, or more, or under crops or employed for pasture in 1041. A farm, according to the official designation for census purposes, is ull the land located in one municiâ€" pality or subâ€"distric. which is diâ€" rectly farmed by one person conâ€" ducting . agricultura)l operations either by his own imbour or with the assistance of members of his household or of hired employees. It may consist «. a single tract of land, or of a number of separate tracts held under different tenures. "A measure of the possibilities," Mr. Ray said, "is the enmorous pile ment of National War Services. The campaign has been undertakâ€" en by the Harvester Company in the belief that the strategic locaâ€" tion of its farm equipment and moâ€" tor truck dealers in farm trading centers and their acquaintance with farmers provide the shortest eut to farm scrap collection on a large scale. The plan calls for the establishâ€" ment by the dealers of scrap colâ€" lection depots to which farmers may bring all the scrap metal they can find on their farms and from these points the scrap will be sent as quickly as possible to factories turning out guns, tazks, and other war supplies. ‘The scrap will be sold through regular saivage chanâ€" nels with remittance to each farmâ€" er for the full amos t his scrap brings. ‘There will by n> charge, no commissions, or no profit in it The drive, Mr. Ray said, is a contribution to the national salâ€" vage campaign. And has received official sanction from Honourable from farms by Har in 3000 communities. An organized effort to collect all | of scrap iron and steel on the counâ€" the scrap metal possible from|try‘s farms. The estimates run into Canadian farms to help meet the| hundreds of thousands of tons. But critical war production need for| unless this scrap starts to move at scrap at the nation‘s foundries and| once, steel mills will have to reâ€" factories was announced by Mr. H.| duce operations, the production of C. Ray in charge of advertising|arms will slow down, and more and sales promotion for the Interâ€"|lives, time, and money will be national Harvester Company of| spent in fighting the war to suvsâ€" scrap at the nation‘s foundries and factories was announced by Mr. H. C. Ray in charge of advertising and sales promotion for the Interâ€" ers in their localities ’*â€&’i.'ié‘iil'..,.,‘" a Dominionâ€"wide drive for scrap| know! cheaper and onarser the better. Not Harvester Dealers In Drive For Scrap Iron From Farms To Help Win War will also do the trick. Care must be exercised to keep these materâ€" lnais away from wanted grass, flowâ€" killers to prevent grass or weeds very fair results with quickâ€"growâ€" ing annuals in both the bushy or vineâ€"growing types. pleasing results follow where the shrubbery, vines and flowers mereâ€" ly break the lines of the manâ€"made structures behind them, but leave enough showing for contrast. For this work the gardener usâ€" In screening, it is not necessary nor desirable to cover the whole of reason for them otherwise the whole effect will be artificial, At the bend in the driveway or patb, therefore, it is well to have a tree or a group of shrubs or a flower A curved walk or driveway is alâ€" ways more inti‘guing than a straight stretch, but if we put in these curves, landscape experts say, we must be sure to make a What Is A Farim? THE _GRIMSEBY INDEPENDENTt GARDEN SERVICE «â€"â€" By GORDON LINDSAY SMITH â€"â€" Adding Intrigue Weed Killers SCrap | knowing umdunwflom’â€'J’m'":u"'m"' rious of| money orders, No bother. Poerâ€" than farmers to a cause of this â€"Arthur Bartictt Maurice. kind, we believe the farmers in our Wmmmflm“mm get this scrap into town and on its| OUR CLASSIFIEDS PAY BiG way to the factories." DIVIDENDS is a lot of scrap fronâ€"scrap that is tables, Started plants, Gras# hints. methods will be the most practical and effective. Big trees will be deâ€" pended upon to hold the general slope in place, with here and there extra support furnished by steps or short bits of wall. For the part intended for a rock garden simply fill in space loosely with well enclosed rocks, as rough and picturesque as obtainable, and fAll in space between with special rock garden plants listed in any good Seed Catalogue. Steeply sloping, narrow lots make ideal situations for rock gardens. With this sort of ground, the creation of a really unusual and individual garden is made simple. Experts do not advocate carrying on as it is, however, but would sharply divide the different levels. To do this a variety of devices is recommended suth as a stone wall, & less ornamental but stronger concrete wal screened with a hedge, or a rock garden with a few stone steps connecting the levels. Sometimes, where the slope is very great and over a few feet only will a liberal application of thisâ€"about one or two handfuls to the square foot â€" destroy grass, weeds, poison ivy, etc., but it w.‘ also bind gravel and soil together into an even surface, keep down dust and repel frost. \ 2006 408. 2 Rock Gardens Canadians are particularly forâ€" tunate in the variety of f»hml«- at their disposal and wide ¢ of apesioe they contaln, Thoms nz from glant AUantic tuna and prve beomdeting mnss Phl hn igg â€" ces d scrappy . muscalunge, pic rh. bass, salmon, trout and other resh water favorites inhabiting Canâ€" ada‘s many inland lakes und streming, again wken viewsd by an ndw?’m the nank of a fustâ€"fHowing Canadian atream or from the prow of a canoe on a tranquil Canadian lake. Nor does any form dm&m'ry mmavu-mm health at a time when rhylnl htâ€" ness plays so vital a role in war work. Sport Fishing from Coast to Coast Only a little less famous than Robin Hood himself were his assoâ€" and Will Scarlet, and Allanâ€"aâ€"Dale,| Place your Bray Chick order and Friar Tuck, stout of arm,| througk. us No writing. No |a mythical title, assumed by or given to any great wood!and outâ€" law of the hourâ€"the name being an elisional pronunciation of Robin a‘ th‘ Wood. 1 believe, however, tuat there was one man who wore it with more dignity than all the rest, that he was born at Loxley, near Sheffield, on the lands that had belonged to Earl Wa‘theof, the last great reaistant of the Norman regime; that, with inherited antiâ€" pathy to the Norman kings, he joined the popular side, under 8tâ€" mon de Montfort, as did Little John: and that on being defeated at the the battle of Evesham, in August, 1265, the two formed a companionship between th eimâ€" selves, and a leadership of other outcasts and sympathizers, stok: ing refuge and subsistence in the woods of Northern Notts, and in the dales and cloughs of West Yorkshire and Derbyshire, but mauking occasion excursions to othâ€" er regions; and per‘, s sometimes dressing themselver : we are told they did, in ‘green ad gold,‘ to ‘r-dortl-dmhuw in landscapes where broum and gorse so abundantly flourished. For the reat, I believe that suck outlaws were regarded by the populace more as honorable, thoug.. unforâ€" tunate, patriots than as thieves, and under the particular leader in question (Robin Hood) conducted themselves in a manner, to some extent, justifying that character." As a hero, Robin Hood was all that the common people of his time had, yet they were not long left in undisputed possession of him. Robin Hood was thought to be too good for them. Historians with leanings toward the nobility began the task of tracing his origin to various noble houses, He was put down as Robert Fitzâ€"ooth, or Fitz 6‘ Doth, descended on his mother‘s »ide from Guy, Earl of Warwick, and later succeeding to the title of Earl of Huntingdon. The same story makes Maid Marian the Lady Fitzwalter, daughter of a noble Norman house. Other favored fwning sones include Quebec‘a Laurentians, Gatineas dis trict, hastern Townships, Lake Temâ€" inkaming and Muskoka Lakes, while md.? salmon and trout u:L-m up #udl w» the rivers and lakes of ow ‘wï¬a and New Brunawick, est of the prairie provinces, whoss northern areas pay The Canadian ture ‘: further enhanced rail hotel services of rn Pacific lWolwav, whose lines take .ï¬ direct to such mmvmdfhh!q%- as Fronch River, Lake of the Woods, and Western Ontario‘s rugged Lake Huperio® country, where muskies top the 90 â€"pound vark, Guides, bait, and tackle aro available at larger resorta, The Canadia {urther enhance hotel services of lolwav, whose direct to such re as Fronch River mich dividinds to the angler, the Robin Hood ot Sherwood Forest (Contirued from page 2) :m of Rocky Mountain aro Grimsby Fuel& Grimsby During a tweive months, purchase of ties amount to approximately £,500,000 units A considerable number are treateéd with preservaâ€" tives which prolong their useful life in the track. Beamsvilie _ â€" . â€" _ Ontarie AUCTIONEER & vaLUATOR Licensed Auctioneer for the of Lincoln; also for the City of ~A ing affidavits. Phone 56, Beamsvilie or Grimsby CANADIAN RAILS NEED MANY TIES Crimssy MHours 9 â€"§ â€" Saturdays 9 â€" 1230 Harold B. Matchett Business Directory BARRISTER, sOLICITOR, ETC. Vernon Tuck OPTOMETRIST Complete Eyesight Service Phone 826 CRIMSBY J. W. Kennedy Henry Haws, Grassie OPTOMETRIST AUCTIONEER E8QUIRE LEGAL SEVEN