THE _ cRusByY "Linge} e eâ€ï¬em dovteh:o fl‘nt the pay the > I‘!fl Established 1883 _ â€" .mmt‘;{a :°°" ‘.‘""‘m' im maured 1;5-!&: office If the community eation, Main and O-khl't:u.. t p Loo ï¬'.‘tï¬ï¬‚:";:: then the j052] ) thmain a amoâ€" T""Mbmdnfld ‘. ing dependent, and true dependence leads always to the most perfect indep God, Father of Freedom, look after thit boy of mine, wherever he may be. Walk in upon him. Talk with him during the silent 'Meloftbod&m spur him on to bravery when he the cruel foe. Transâ€" fer my prayer to his heart. A MOTHER‘S PRA YER dying faith in his God. Throughout all the :'iymdh:n.kup'hh it high and his ï¬%fl:flï¬h&wï¬&;ï¬n'fl:} gave birth, satisfy hunger his soul with the knowledge of my daily Behmyehdeqtm Take care of him, God. Keep him in health and sustain him under every possible circumstance. 1 once warmed him under my heart. You warm him an*w in his shelter under the stars. Touch him with my smile of cheer and comfort, and my full confidence in his m # L 4 # Fail him notâ€"and may he not fail You, BANNERS FOR CHIMNEYS E Smo.:> from farm chimneys indicates the passing of the season. The gray penâ€" nants are part of the landscape picture when the growing season is done and the rich promise of fruition is at hand. _ Asthemyh.nnenleflethendchhn- neys, climb into the air, change to faint wisps and tattered fragments, and finally disâ€" »tk n o o e k Es mormaiie Ain. solve in the frosty air, the countryside "*°* gins a new day. Amrmm across _the the barn, and 2 horse neighs for his breakâ€" {fast. # * # # Whilctbcdwnlmbdum.fln mmu.mw&mm"“" mintbedrwdalh:mdh grant coffee. They mean a cheery, COPY Foom and a kettle singing on the shining house with the milk pails on his arm, he plances at the smoke. A good fire, & TAMD ylantes 4* *"" ""veast. That gray bannet ie °> a ao room, a g0d breakfast. ‘I" curling into the air means _A good way to lonk at is ism, and a Governmes:t Y it ing, is to think of how * ow IT WMSO‘:'T . Canaiian sity or LDMWIHâ€"â€"ZIIF®®""" . ofthe.flle.flâ€?‘ t # After si, Canada consist oriy Of C munitics, and it is quite eary to #et 27 ; munities» £00, ) en in Canada as 2 W + 4 aoaruon 1N wmiunities, and of what migh* by thinking O community. _ hmwmm“m ‘~xailable to TUD ces thing in the country, Pnat the IDdF, wmdfl“""‘kmh er he fl!wwmnveallmw“u. 6 hhi:mwwn.tta\odw ch be run by the ‘xal authorities ‘mifd wiar Pr hown byâ€"inws; in which Te rg~ ...uu-nbeeombmedinwooeh‘l""’""'" Mthewn;in"“m‘w i caee (ry on Pling which ,m.,mzmntbe on ,,huhnldwtbewhm Jocal M u.fldhh“b’m # e / «* * 5 4_.â€"--mm Of course, uL tributary to th* ** FACTS &# FANCIES MSBY INDEPENDENT PUBLIsHNC JOHN w, a D â€" GLENDINNING, President. ":.‘:'.:2..%@%_':__“'“‘:.":.,'1" ember Canadian Weekly Newspaper Nights sw oo l, 1o, O . .\ __%2.00 per year in Canada a "'"""Fï¬â€˜.‘..‘.‘.‘“‘-m boy inspired e eP Aefhired me the never what might happen ut on the trvowr., Tht wiWs" """_ ‘theo coon “mtmmm * the _ price of °* ,._ul-hdb’mw c at this talk of Socâ€" »t which runs everyâ€" x tris would work in in Canada and $2.50 :;'W'Mm mfnfl'n!fl"'†the Jr. available n idea whole in one quodrc:m."-â€"â€" # # ""den Sonator Duff is a Liberal appointee of rhole thcswundaneo:flucflwm tmloflmmhudv-umdbu- one M'Mi;pvumdmdud Mmm.mwâ€â€˜""“t’ ofmnlfli'mw' â€ï¬‚un.'m Jable iwwhmm-.m is a idiviâ€" â€" bents a program which would ¢ inter. er he W.nmeprumtmtnllmd w hich, â€" ferences, in fac, would expand the T & Id be â€" ad infin. & + # # # # # # If th community to remain a amoâ€" i."‘“%..‘"& ?‘;.:.,“;,‘;ï¬-w‘o:: ve the farmers of the Surropnding aree. ° as that. ‘The more the individus} se IAt. | "Tha m,,, ;t _ "C 18 JUSt as simple as that. The more the individual citizen tm‘m‘m.theleulikelyitmtht he will really like this system. Under it, of mwindividunmldflalurtlm fthlnt o:euttbdbythe:n:hdï¬:.e Th 8k to m.; mldhnvetothinkofwh:‘uflght:m to make in this town then every one to forhfldingthefnetorthhieh itwu:ybemde. Uf course, if the goods from that facâ€" tory were to be sold outside a town and its own farm area, the quality and price of these goods would have to be settled by some more important central authorityâ€"but that would only be an authority very much like the town council. Aifter all, the same sort of people get elected to Parliament as get elected to ""_m_..twmmoxw:d.{; civil servants Ottawa as are employ town authorities. If the Canadian people could only get acâ€" customed to thinking of Socialism in these terms, they would have a pretty good idea of m’itt:.touldwm'kâ€"ndbi:dou not seem there would be so many people ldvoutingSo.daH?utrm?wm A SHINING EXAMPLE mmhzuï¬l:umma dhisnwdhaleehil“hmu an ill clad beggar could have the benefit of its clothes for this fall every woman would d2 well to consider this shining example of them warm. A LIBERAL COMPLAINS Senator W am Duff has sold out his Nova Scotian export fish business, because pehufoundtheeomplexiï¬uudirritsï¬om impossible under "present restrictions, burâ€" eaucratic red tape and quota and allocation controls." The Halifax Herald carries a rews story of the retirement from business of the Senator, who when he was once 3 Member of the House of Commons was often referred to as * a lot of endorsement from business me everywhere in Canada: "Goveâ€"nment departments at Ottaws seem um-hflc“-hflb' through." Senator Lvs said. ‘These reguls~ tions require such lator and bookkeeping and accountancy staffs that ordinary office help is mnm""""‘- tripticate and sextriplicate manifests, permils, m‘w-flâ€._'.ï¬'-‘lluu which are moetly unnecessary. It‘s just bewild cring and the delays are ruinous, when perish able cargo is involved. "When 1 take it up with the Minister be un-oumm-wlhb“ m,u_.-...u.-wfl Business unwummhfl-fl’ writh t .nwfl-‘mm Mu-u,uanumm_nun m-nnhflwumm -tammnnm"""‘"‘"n‘â€â€â€˜ lato, _ sition without any qualification ohue When th mwllkh of sound reb iness back on hi S ace irony at times forgot to put # Roomevelt its own 1€0°0% a# and irrilations :'wn‘."'â€" :dâ€m CR MSBY INDEPENDENT of people are Chureil in ONE TOUCKH OF KATURE Nobody loves a censorâ€"outside the cenâ€" sor‘s family, that is, and those who know him, That‘s the very trouble: we don‘t know whohe is or where he is, despite the fact of hélm:llflalomomthenvdopemd ove to his office, ï¬&“'ï¬m over or up the or even write him a letter and tell him what -emmmmmmanm place nemes and descriptions in Jimmy‘s letter which resulted in eliminating, on the other side of the sheet, half the mesâ€" mbMMthw to her fruitcake last Christmas, or he 1ad to:sleep on the night before, or what ocâ€" curred at the end of that wild jeep ride. But now and then a censor does things whhhmthalt'hchkhhdlthomtd us. Sometimes he pencils an explanatory note. Sometimes he takes the trouble to write out the inadvertently censored materâ€" jal on the other side. And then at times he plays Santa Clans â€"as when he slipped an extra dollar bill in the letter carrying $2 to a soldier‘s daughâ€" ter, to be divided with her four sisters and brothers who are in a public home while their mother is in a hospital. | ,!.muath-mmmu have not heard of for a long, long time, and a great majority of the younger generation never heard tell of it Yes, censors may cut the heart out of a lettâ€"râ€"but still they have hearts of their THE OLO BAND ‘With apologies to James Whitcombe Riley. The names are those of members of the Grimsby Band of €1 years ago. # L # # It‘s mighty good to git back to the old town, shore, Comiderin‘ I‘ve be‘n away twenty year and more. Renmse I moved to Kansas of course I see a change, Acomin‘ back and notice things new to me and 1 want to hear the old band play. In fancy uniforms and all, and play out on the streetâ€" Whit‘s come of old Bill Grobb and the Hunter felâ€" where‘s Joe BecorA at? And Jake and Joe Warden; Ari Groce; Jimmy Durâ€" ham and that Ald brother of him played the drum as twicet as big Jim:; And old John Duvall, the carpenterâ€"say, what‘s beâ€" mmuâ€"*mummmm _ come o‘ him? I make no doubt yer new band now‘s a competenter CHARTERED BANKS of Canada keep abreast of the Dominion‘s expanding needs. ‘WAY BACK WHELN week 1 am giving you an old time poem that Every ten years the Bark Act has bee¢s thus ~zvised. Each one of the nx deseunial sevisions Six «. ns since 1870 the Bank A..t under which the Chartered Banks operate has been rem d by parliamentâ€"six times in that period the activities of the banks have been carefully scrutinized by the pecpic‘s representatives. L sÂ¥ * T Th #L WA P13 play by hand, And stylisher and grander tunes; bu somehowâ€" I want to hear the old band play. Sich tunes as "John Brown‘s Body," and »weet! Alice" don‘t you know; ‘ And "The Camels Is AComin‘," and "John Ander. Was favorites that fairly made a feller drem,f" Heaven, And when the boys ‘u‘d saranade, I‘ve lain so still in bed I‘ve even heerd the locus‘ blossoms droppin‘ on th» son, My Jo;" And a dozent others of ‘emâ€"*"Number Nine" ans When "Lily Dell," or "Hazel Dell" had sobbed an I want to hear the old band play. Yer new band maybe beats it, but the old bana‘s what 1 saidâ€" It always ‘peared to kind o‘ chord with somepin in And whiles I‘m no musicianer, when my blame eycs Nigh drowned out, and Mem‘ry squares ber jaws __ and sort o‘ says She won‘t ner never will forgit, I want to jes‘ tw And take an‘ light right out 0 here, and git ‘sac West ag‘inâ€" And stay there, when I git there whore I rnever haf to say I want to hear the old band play. I sing a song of the optimist, To the man that is brave and strong, Who keeps his head when things go right, And smiles when things go wrong. I am proud of the genial Optimist, His radiant voice and speech; It helps smooth the rugged path Of all within his reach. I like the way of the Optimist, Who looks for the bright and the best, He scatters sunshine as he goes, I am glad to meet the Optimist, With his message of gosd cheer; He carries hope and coni.dence, To those assailed by fear. So here‘s a song to the Optimist, Who joyously works and sings, And daily ahows this weary world The way to better tihings. As a fonu mother, when the day is o‘er, Leads by the hand her little child to bed, Half willing, half reluctant to be led, And lsave bis broken playthings on the fioor, So Nature deals with us, and takes away Our playthings one by one, and by the hand Leads us *~ rest so gently, that we go Scarce knowin, If we wish to go or stay, Being too full of sleep to understand How far the unknown transcends the what we Still gazing at them through the open door, \ Nor wholly reassured and comforted By promises of others in their stead, Which though more splendid, may not please him made up the committee, which examined witnessesâ€"among them bank officers, government studied erhibits fled by various individuals and organizations, Findings were submitted to the House, and later that year ts Bank Act was revised in many important particulars, And leaves his fellows blest. AB NATURE DEALS WITH US Thursday, Octorr 14th THE OPTIMIST â€"Henry Wadsworth Longfellow. . 1943 "¢