Essential Foods Come If the: Brltish farmer do duce more, many people w gry and‘ some may starve. the committees concentra production of those foods go farthest toward feeding possible, and they try to cu of all kinds, Wheat and ; duction seems to have soa That sq‘,ums s drastic, Actually," M _ practice, largely vqluptan be farmers : are ‘wmmg anc operate as‘a patn(m( C themï¬e ‘i’(.‘n they democratic country an own nei “ are: on the plan w a Adargely coâ€"operatien." But to looks rather, gxflmom will not eg.0pberate, the power fm him to entirely inoompctem t« he may be taken fron few rugged 1ndixidm1s to jail. Farmers Told What to Raise. Essential Foods Come First. Quality of Farm Stock Improved. Farmers are Given Protection in Several Different Ways. for‘the first time every acre of land no unsightly ferc matter, there are ly wood and fo scarce and so he fields aressmaller and the farms al But evidentlyv, th land, not only on small farms., S been drained: m Whatâ€"thefarmer in wartime ds not left Every country has its j Committee, and these, committess in all distr mittees are not made 1 but of wWQofking farme and farmli >‘ colleges h!ï¬ een clos ors and o aâ€" exnert time advtabxs on Everv'~ faxmer is inte »rgive him i what to ‘The of Britain must eat. imports from Eurcve have keen cut except occasional shipments of orar from Snain and Portugal. All impo: food must be brought from Canadg farther away.. That costs money | lives. Shipping space is precious. cannot be used for animal fosds bulky articles such as packaged bre fast cereals And every ton of e: food that ‘can ‘be produced in Brit is desvte rately needed. . Cost has come a secondary consideration. Farmers Told What To Raise A few‘ mpnt.hs before the war ac ally started, a ‘bonus of some $800 acre was offered to farmers for acre of new»land brought undex ( tivation.â€"s _ __~ Agriculture Carried on Bravely Under Difficulties in W artime Great Britain icles on â€" Britain an ten for th Canada hb tive, Hugh Newsâ€"Reco No doubt : weekly news: something Britain, an Travelling w city papers, 1 unity to stucd would have pick un a go trips outside grass 1 turned million tivated while t] Canada,. Sceotiland Pefore thi food consu ed, either 4 European C and other p only that, h animals was of the chick ‘The f2 importan munition PHURSDAY, MAY TTH 1942 This is the epresents Athe voluntary efforts of employees at the Hydro Administraâ€" ltion Building alone. Proceeds derived from the sale of old bases to lamp manutacturers are turned over to the Club‘s Consolidated War Services‘ Fund. In the background of the above repreduction is an assortment of orap materials which will be turned over by Hydro to the salvage iuthorities. OLD BRASS ADDS "BRASS" TO HYDRO CLUB WAKR FUND. ed ; UuUnC r y 1€ farmer grows on His ‘Tand <©Wamp meadow t1 l ceding as many as v to cut out waste t and potato proâ€" ave soared. Oats corner xÂ¥ fence Jecause T nd anxio * PrICUTS. (Inese comâ€" un of politicians, ers, land owners The agricultural ised, and professâ€" rts â€"serve as fullâ€" se committees. interviewed every is told what he imittee may even im a plan of his t to plant in each 18â€" PrgCcIOUs.â€" Lb inimal â€" fosads or packaged breakâ€" ry ton of extra duced in Britain Cost has beâ€" w and ‘a land 1S h L T he 1€ Ces. _ materials )€ ed If a farme mmittee ha so0.; If he‘l pieC oduce more ;A e been gont used. Most this country at and tidy. much waste tates but on pieces have s of oranges All imported i Canada or OLll 11 First S no There h 1 IKnglan idea that There are For that Evidentâ€" erials are judgment. fricultural 1i, appoint aese comâ€" na a¢ li of ‘a r an. ddetr were in ive been actually are culâ€" 11T mittees, luntary sider it farmer t proâ€" o hunâ€" art nportâ€" other ‘anada actuâ€" ad pride pa heir the will he ven his ach e t bu 1€) ind | searc It| with All ABal |l'y of 1€ )1 9t ing the harves experienced f; Canadian Arm to farms near They did a go ports that the any hired hel own country, y ungrudgingly. the tim minimut 1942. °T 60 shilli empted same ; dras m UC chic of s and cities. pulso: There mont made to weed ing then umb milk susply. certain w with less the eggs village f; even a t Or a pig where gas( cidedly sca so many tr evidence of their air. The nu England s were mad PTIVE from goin ‘*Th ariving arcun ing""and har, Farmers ob regulations a farmers CcIC main read be thougzh! ind imé 1€ On Al Inâ€" m Drob g1iegam opped might l1d Qualitv ive sto ‘tees o a: evera it t n «h16 the | * s TTE hilling 1] it )€ 1a T pi Argt armers Are Given Protection His -hired ibout Cmm iff In ock machine DUl W umb in a nei )1 m 1¢ eéat ration han 50 h 5 they likt 1€ in ling C220 ligh bor 11 id Il! Farm 16 ed m iUU, COn Onta: ; §: inC diC U 11 em 12 British farmer ff than ever beâ€" 1 is in the same ill kinds of farm the Government re a profit. ‘ ‘And l pil rio, has his collec +o Adminis Inere nave where â€" farmers ight raids and nned from the last fall, many 10w with the and, were sent ps to help out. Jnmne farmer reâ€" ar better than ild get in his ir longer hours a€ are also set. l in October. ng when the uld be set tor re asking for seemed likely r about $13.00 entirely exâ€" n,. enjoy the tion workers. course. Durâ€" il s in earlier ts have seen ‘m and have chance that re have als» Improved n disbn ind soimcâ€" These ar up spac? 1 1p ma Within ight had d Army. t of the blackout ns and is comâ€" e: to dso. A 1 tion 15¢ in them untry pace uble tillâ€" med Fain ver; )6 ‘aps. with raps see ther ood. ired <epnpt roâ€" | other branches of the service, possibly ing because the khaki uniform does not rms| lock as well as the Air Force or the raw| Women‘s Roval Naval Services. Their mgf obs mav lack some of the glamour, fqut ._â€"Put there is no doubt about the‘ir ind A S 11 _ Vegetables were vlentiful and they !helped fill out manvy a meal in Britain in the nast few months. Literally millions of persons were growing vogeâ€" |tables in their private gardens cr "allotments." They had sacrificed many of their flowers, though nearly every garden still had roses, and the blocoms in Eepntember and even in Ocâ€" tober must have cheered many English teves, as they did those of a Canadian ccunty committees evidently guess wrong. As so often habvers with farm produce, an article that is scarce cne year will be overgrown the next. In the soring of 1941, onions were seldom to be had at any price. Last fall, there were too many cnions and a danger that some would rot. every gar blcoms in tober mus me" Prime Mi WC 00. uU isefulne efulness. I supnpose that n some ses thevy taks the place cof hired en, but those I saw seemed to be crking in threshing gangs, going from rm to farm in groups. There is some grouching and comâ€" aining., of ccurse. We heard one U Assistant Director sSceleclive service 1( id me grrouching and comâ€" ccurse. We heard one er say that he was alâ€" business, in spite of the He could not get for his rather large filosck. ‘t think the distribution well carried out, some of jad. In other cases, the nittees evidently guess QOttawa Naval Services. Their some of the glamour, is no doubt about their uppose that in some a the nlace ¢of hired OT of National . workers ous time you h It is effort many farm responsihility COMMILs3SSIONER S. T. WOOD Head of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police Photo by Karsh, Ottawa due in y° YVOouU . Minister of Labou A SKULKING TRAITOR betf 11 11 1€ 1 Inea made, ive farmers and ied such a heavy vyou do in this jefore have vyou losition on iny previâ€" started. T ‘s call as wo years. re to the l spite of Cartgonâ€"Caurtesy Halijfax Herald 440 Albert Bargman rcccnvmg a big qupplv of house paint from ared and served in C.N.R. troop trains. Napoleon St. Pierre, fo maintenance job. Josephine Skull, (lower right) instructress of w nterviewed by "Spook." Ottawa Journalâ€"Hitler hasn‘t much luck with the Russians, but when he needs a victory he can always crack down on the men of Vichy. A way in which weekly newspapers can contribute to the promoâ€" tion of the war effort will be the theme when Ontario and Quebece weekly newspaper publishers and their wives convene in Toronto on Friday and Saturday, May 8th and 9th, The morning sessions the publishers will devote to business. Friday afternoon they wil visit Manning Pool of the R.C.A.F. and a Bren gun plant.. At dinâ€" ner on Friday evening the guest speaker, Rishop R. J. Renison, (left), will tell of conditions in warâ€"lime Britain. At lunch on Saturday, when the group will be guests of The Toronto Daily sStar, the well known Star writer, "Greg" Clark, (right), will carry on with Bishop Renison‘s theme and tell of the Red Cross British Bomb Victims‘ Fund. President Frank Maclntyre, cGlower left) will take advantage of the occasion to make a gift on behalf of the publishers to the fund. Mr,. Clark, in turn, will present to ane of the publishers, the handsome Joseph T. Clark Memorial trophs (centre), won last year by Mr. Macintyre and the Dundalk Herold, for the best Weekly newspapers published in a town or village of less than 1,500 population. ‘The trophy, in memory of Mr. Clark‘s father, the late editorâ€"inâ€"chief of the Toronto Daily star, was gsiven to the Association three years ago by The Star‘s president, J. E. Atkinson. Keep Him Bottled Up For The Duration 41 LCA Sudbury â€" Starâ€"Another couple of ways to help the war effort would be to open the shirt at the neck, and shut the face at the chin.