llnodevq‘l'hnudnytmofaeeofwbu-‘ cation, M rin and Oak Streets, Grimsby. eï¬ o / h ols ts < ie ind "; .w ROBERT wW. GLENDINNING oi se svom a segiest on the part af per Editor and Publisher :'mmwmn“““'““'"‘; o~~os cies attempting to perform a """"“"'“""‘m mm-cz.wwmummml“.m “‘glflw: but per year in United States, payable ‘ operation of parents ahould grateful,. is Ldvance. | who, when interview®d by a citizen trying to help The Grimsby Independent "Lincoin County‘s Leading Weeklty" Established 1885 humnmudnfldm- ing dependent, and true dependence leads always to the most perfect independence. El-Amn’hnhnhuâ€"d.urunob servance of "Army Week" throughout Canads, ard it is to be regretted that the smaller communiâ€" many of the centers of military activity, are not uble to participate in more extensive programs. In Toronto and other large centers the days are filled with interest for those "behind the men behind the guns", and while no formal program is being underâ€" taken here, it is hoped that this week wil} see a Burry of parcels and letters being sent to the boys and givls from this district. Yesterday was also an important day in Canâ€"| children. | ada‘s history. It marked the seventyâ€"fifth birthday| _ Contributing to juvenile delinquency is a PUDNâ€" of this Dominion. ‘The two events should have comâ€"| ishable offence, but failing to contribute to those bined for some sort of formal observance, but the of a child‘s training which prevents juvenile saw inspire | delingquency does not appar hy "he him to believe that Canadians were interested in | criminal code in such a mnner that a parent can be the fact. It was just fifteen years ago that Canada ummb-‘flï¬dhfl‘- celebrated her diamond jubllce, and doubtless condiâ€"| responsibilit‘ for crimes which, committeed by ‘a tions at that time warranted a "do". Grimsby‘s Main | person of sixteen years Of age or older, would reâ€" Street yesterday presented a dismal aspect, with the| sult in penitentiary cr reformatory terms. Yet two or three fiags which were displayed standing .-.gmmwhflmh"' out to accentuate the drabness. wwmh’fldï¬ï¬f-"u" ‘True, we are at war, and we have many things on which to think these days. ‘This fact, bowever, is hardly enough to warrant our completely neglecting Army ‘Week and our national anniversary. ‘The two events, coming as they do at the same time, sbould haeve provided ample opportunity for a patriotic display which could have been qui‘~ simple and at the sume time quite impressive. If the ap~ would have provided a necessary antidote to the mmmm-&anuuh'ap ping. One United States tourist, stopping off to -mqmnumummnu. When told it was his only remark was a oneâ€"syllâ€" Yes, we are all busy right now, busier than we have been for some time. Yet there were enough citizens taking a bolidey yesterdsy to make some community celebration a success. The contrast in mt-mamm-mu-um will "blow the Hd off" next Saturday will be sharp oommunity. Juvenile delinguency, inc:wmsing at an alarming rate during the past several months, has mmï¬mu“m†be sorved > ignoring it any longer. Mayor Foric Johnson, at the June meeting of the Grimsby Town Mvmnmmmmu that time when he remarked that practically all crime committed ben\ recently has been the work of juveni‘es. Those who have an opportunity of n ine the problem cannot but agree with this WPRRseRne ty Yor what it }1* « t*, it might be well to conâ€" vider souse Of Te ts * «> .Jous features of the prob» 1em. mnmnxmwm{"‘“ â€"ens at some time or other, is that ot the trouble nscurs at night. There is nothing on ouf streets to attract youngsters at ten and eleven CC _ _A wtrce ho Aiovole Jaonk XHRE C TN Hudits y “gurflelï¬w been gviSE .g‘mdddhfl""""‘!"â€' M .“flâ€"-h‘-nfl.‘» o‘clock in the evening, but scores of nine. tes, shm«e unc twleve year old boys are to be seen mmmuwfl" mm ECC 2 > namnnt Tok prx inharesicy es Houk** "** * C ce orking, to divert youthfu) energy alone Muumuw“""‘ _ °C Wns Unumils Lkous Tidk vâ€"iw II The ataP ut the 3 post. ake es e . mm-,,,,â€u.m-uudl- studving or in bed. Another factor which may not be familisr to T L s1_0.â€" & aveeNl anmeivie en en tC â€"â€"M mom.l._\"â€"- ::;..-u“ Order ot Deughters . the Exipine spousor scouting and gude work ‘The F ROOSCR * _ _ oates «nd TockLy pouiidh become memmea s® s T _ 8 a “Mmâ€"w‘mâ€"flfl mflmm-num-du-l proup is simest invariably found to have been Amâ€" plicated. _ _ L in sÂ¥ *h sercoltem. thil It 4 A Dismal Dominion Day RIMSEBY is faced w*‘ one of the most lMpflâ€"-pd“du"dO mmwmnym emeege e e e lss 4ering cannot but proâ€" Such purpostless wai ening «WA "*C 0 A Problem To Solve dor the achation cA it« in which the whole cont involved in the Main Street Wednesday morning was Telephone 36 wwwâ€hâ€â€œ is the number of times a amall group hm _ #e Mas avimm‘~g cuczcunity abou)d busier than we eald to be Many of the men of this community have been mww.uunmunw some of the 1ads who have found themselves getting ints trauble. ‘Their work. of which little is known, is valuable, and in many cases produCcu right results. Y mmflmmm in the best interests of our mmm-muum- thich have been made by the yoongsters their children, «buse him with the same LYP® ""| vocabulary of the Youngsters. | mm.-'fl‘mmm‘ of Grimsby generally almost as much as it does the m«mwhm By now it is | mwmmmm“'"‘"‘m‘ over their fear of any conmPequences Some of them | have been heard to remark that the only result of a» m-.wd"-“‘muwt in mind, they have a feeling that they are immune ummwdw""‘" To punish these youn@sters would, of course. bring some alleviation to the problem, but it would would not soive it. What parent can claim imâ€" munity from the acts of his or ber children when Mmuuw“"‘““‘""" and eleven o‘clock in the evening? Wha: is there for children to do at that time of night unless it happens that there has been & concert or some ‘mehl“bwï¬-ï¬uhswfl.? TA TD e io Sh s bmant Lo Autrcmmalh cvtrmmmndiciedicetmis. disenmenediiiuns ‘The law makes parents Fesponsible for the actual w’u“'“:,, __..m ..‘: _â€"â€"'Illinv- L but .â€m makes no Purlner claim on them for the proper upbringing of their Contributing to juvenile delinguency is a PuUN® ishable offence, but failing to contribute to those md.m-u-â€"!_m"__"‘: death sentence or life impr L Electric Power Conmmission of Ontario has 1sâ€" sued a modest house organ type of publication called "The Bulletin® the purpose of which was "to furnigh Commission, to provide a medium for the discussion of Hydro matters und to maintain the coâ€"operative spirit between municipalities, as well as between municipalities and the Commission." Largely techniâ€" cal in content, The Bulletin also has served in later. years as a forum for Dr. T. H. Hogg whose utterâ€" ances upon any occasion were given & prominent wnmnmduâ€"nnflfl engineer of the system. mmumuwm modern, more expensive and extensively publication called "Hydro News". Its new editpr comes direct from an advertising agency to become l.-â€"ndm%mdmmk* viously to sell the gospel of Hydro to a larger audjâ€" 1t is wellâ€"know that Hydro has no difficulty in w,‘.nm,.-unm'*undw umâ€"mflmg"“un vincial taxes and very, very little in mu.‘pal taxes and cll surplus earnings are being plowed back into reserves, it is not difficult to see how Hydro car afâ€" ford the additions! ©XPense of its new publication but one may question the purpose and the necessity of the change at a time when even the amount of metal going into printng type and engravings is amounts of rmomey each year for the purpose Af maintaining its unique position of freedom from waxes. t is attermptiDK to combet a rising tide of sentiment on the part CA municipalities and taxpayâ€" ers in general that gOVenmentâ€"owned properties usâ€" uwmmnnmm sbould be subject to thet;ame rates of taxation at are privat=lyâ€"guntd ‘Siinces. Myuro‘s growthand stremgth have come in large part from itSaimost tota) exemption from tnxation. It is noW «tter able than most to pwyÂ¥ taxes and its share Clthe cost of the war. In fall« ing to do this and inpecking to direct public «entiâ€" .-ummmmumw man HydroFlectric ower Commission of Ontaric is actually doing in}Uice to the great eleciric ayâ€" INCE the days of Sir stem that it controls. It is aald, rightly â€" wrongly, that had Genetal Rommell been in the snadian Army there in =ory chance that he AugBDt »ve beed made a sergeant. versmem oA the d $*oen. However, U in dourddial i# this will work WBb we discuss the Axis Armies, There has been jJult byt enough laugning at them. ery a Y3 : Hydro‘s Propaganda The cont A OX ar «tlort snoud trighten uo i A T is y tz jrh‘&“hwu- KOTESMXKD COMMENTS THE GRIMSBY children, there is a stiff poduï¬nd tu> many of the The Battle For Raw Materials led in that fact. We Bave I"" with pride to our own . imm materiai resources, our source materiaje from other countries [ +1 042 3.cos wopeieiiedamnaiieetntentine have thought in terms of spending not of saving. Now we must save or die of our own folly. y 50 on mmmnie Bremmnmfftcenn iveaperizgian .amnco-w'"â€""‘ victory. Now we are startled and surprised at how relatively little it has accomplished. Let us adâ€" mit that it has failed of the accomâ€" plishment we expected of it beâ€" cause of the intelligent devotion of allies owned or controlled 92 per cent of the total world‘s supply? Why save tin when, again, we controlled as much? Why conserve lron and steel, when we had vast resources sat hand, and while we controlled the vital alloys? almost our hope of it More and more men are needed, more and greater machines. Where will we find the surplus men to provide our fron and steel in such prodigal quantities? Where will we find the â€ummwm ties from overseas? Where will we find those raw materials, now that the steam rolier of Japan has takâ€" en from us â€"most of our sourte of rubber, of tin, and much of our reâ€" sources of oll and ‘tungsten and been imposed in part by enemy . acâ€" tion, in part by the expanding deâ€" mands of war. I we are to meet it, we must forget, for the time at Jeast, our high standard of living. We cannot continue our old wasteâ€" ful ways and have victory too. We need 50,000,000 pounds of When A newspaper a day from every|\us all: that every twenty pounds mmmumlduflu-ï¬mw 5,000,000 «ontainers for twoâ€" produces as a byâ€"product two pounaers taiik shells. l)“ i glycerin, enough to woudaunli.-mnp'â€"hl-’-tdm ~â€"and many people in this country : enough cordite for a 4.7 shell to deâ€" going to find it? Synthetic rubâ€" ber won‘t be available this year, and our ordinary source of supply is closed to us. We have left only our swiftly disappesring reserves, and that great potential source, the odds and ends of scrap rubber that are found in every home. Here is your chance to help. ‘There is a need not only for, wummmdw‘ We need 2,000,000 tons of scrap| lron and stee; alone for making| on Canadian ‘arms. As much more in Canadian attics and cell.: . nd ters of a million tons of iron and there is still time, for time is limitâ€" An Editorial From LIBERTY MAGAZINE *Â¥e need paper, 200,000,000 poinds of it for various war uses. We are faced today with an ecoâ€" Piaged a viied part i ie aay efent e Puibt ons a THE RAILWAY mjm_éwn 3.# *> "Ry Theratem 7.’,._.01 Two of th» famous West indies luxury liner -q %fl flm’: vichim C?n'?:'" Tw £Xt) in sdddti is Uâ€"boats. At oun ships mox Tnelady Somerssequisitioned The la for War Service was sunk in gpot MME“QI.x'Icm T:\hï¬ As an qmxiliinry crusmer, o Chiat OH PAkKe " KR Je oo nexe, = saile 4 "BM-J fefae %m.u?d:h:y'.' o ng picked u, ® mï¬c sur%iocm *tom; N* We must change with it + We bhave pointe an economic block our sources of In Tobruk has fallen and with went thousands of British prisoners and a countless amount of war materâ€" ial and stpplies Its fail has posâ€" sibly opened the way to Egypt and oil and many other things that hearten the Hun. On the heels of that disaster has come the news If the Allies have to suffer the two, the situation in the Near East will be something that the enemy can view with glee, whle we must view it with an element of despair. Even the home news is anything but theering Jrpanese submarines bombed points on Vancouver Isâ€" land and further along the Ameriâ€" t ] A _ y '}‘L 1 2. Y ; go=Vmf? u. f (/\'ï¬â€˜ /Jé’i" /; «T > i * \)' ib .q.' y{ :: l4 g24 /5 S ?/,;i'\A(' x~f" ;/ ARAi\e the fact that so much bread was being imported into its market by trucks from outside that it could Ironically enough, this business bread. If a bakery can afford to was forced to quit by the very| run a truck all over the country to same tactics it itaelf used when it | sell its bread, it would seem to us started up a few years ago. It had | that somebody is paying too much trucks in every town in this viciniâ€" | for itâ€"probably the patrons in the ty, sold its products at cut prices, town where the bakery is located. and did everything to put the smallâ€"\ It certainly isa‘t the people to town bakeries out of business. Now | whom the bréad is delivered. One it has folded up itself for the same| bakery had trucks al) over this reason: too much outside bread country selling Afteenâ€"cent cakes. beicg brought into its home marâ€"| If it could make & profit on this, it are still wondering what they have | stroy an enemy sub. Fifty million to do wilth allâ€"out war. No one has |pounds we need, half a pound to convince the Germans. Every , weekly from every bhome in Canâ€" one in the enemy country knows| ada. Bongs make vital glue for the facts that should be known to| airplanes and fertilizer for ecsenâ€" us al: that every twenty pounds|tis) crops, , of household fats made into soup| ‘This is a war of raw materials, produces as a byâ€"product two|the materials that you and I can }"‘"" of glycerin, enough to| spare. Don‘t let us talk of outâ€" make four pounds of nitroglycerin,| right war if we fail in this our Citizens Must Share Responsibility From The Durham Chronicle The lady Hawking was . mt Porgio it drad of There was too much A Grim Prospect From The Huron Expositor . â€" > .,-:‘.... .r. ie u ® is sh p 4 ps h:nwvi: many tons of war moajterials 4o the VArIQuts war zonmes, their importance to the war situaâ€" tion is mil, compared to the far reaching consequences of the loss of Tobruk and the fall of Sevasâ€" fact that all the sweat has not yet run: that all the blood has not yet been spilled, nor have all the tears yet been sked. It is not pleasant to contemplate, but we have got to face it, und to hope and pray that it is not yet too late for time and concerted effort to bring a change in our favor. There isn‘t much one can do about At #f the psople of a town want to patronize outside bakeries. In fact there isn‘t. anything that can be done. People jpist buy it. that is all, and we .doubt very much if this bre=d that is being peddied around the country is any better than the smaller bakeries To us, there is something screwy about the whole method of selling bread. If a bakery can afford to run a truck all over the country to sell its bread, it would seem to us that somebody is paying too much for itâ€"probably the patrons in the town where the bakery is located. amg, " WE ht Surdriy ore. Ne & «h railways have g.*;:‘..ï¬g.mn Aho untimsued talleA #4 % would