LSi ^^ < 4 * f If Htenust for breaktast-but These days Kellogg's cereals are more important in our Canadian diet tlian ever before. Tliey're easy to digest, appetizing anytime! A satisfying main disli for breakfast, a welcome cliange for luncli, between-meal snaclcs. Add flavour to left-overs too! The King Practiced With Tommy Gun When Invasion Threatened Britain ^- Prime Minister Winston Churchill in a moving address of •ongratulation to King George on the victorious conclusion of the var in Europe disclosed to the llouse of Commons that in the days when Britain was threatened with invasion, the King practiced with a tommy gun and rifle in the garden of Buckingham Palace. Mr. Churchill said that during the first days of his administra- tion in 1940, the King often came into their luncheon conferences irom his target practice. "If it had come to a last stand in London â€" a matter which had been considered at one time," •aid Mr. Churchill, "I have no doubt that His Majesty would have come very near to departing from his usual constitutional cor- rectitude by disregarding the ad- vice of his Ministers." In a warm tribute to the stead- fastness and leatiership of the King. Mr. Churchill said with emo- tion : "I do not tliink any Prime Min- ister has ever received so much personal kindness and encourage- ment from his sovereign as I have. "He is well beloved because of his courage, of his simple way of living and of his tireless attention to duty." * The Prime Minister also extoled Queen Elizabeth for her war work. "I am sure," he said, "that many «n aching heart has found some •olace in her gracious smile." Mr. Churchill said the King re- ceives him in audience once a week when most of their business is done at lunch. "We have the strongest Parlia- ment in the world," Mr. Churchill said, in conclusion. "We have the oldest and most famous, most Iion- ored. most secure and most ser- viceable monarchy in the world. "The King and Parliament botli rest safely and solidly upon the will of the people expressed by free and fair election on a basis of uni- versal suffrage. 10,000 Women Bus Drivers In London Since the beginning of war the London Passenger Transport Board lias trained 2,1,"i0 male con- ductors to be bus driver.*. Many of these men have been replaced by women. There are now more than 10,000 women conductors in London Transport Service. cAV£ MONfK Ay staying at FORD HOTELS Modern, Nrepreel, (Mnwitirily l«iy Parkiog Montreal Toronto a /id the LORD ELGIN "Ottawa per person, 5 °:',„ No higher I j ,, â- vjOfl JW* 100 lovely rooms with radii' LEOPOLD UBERATED WANTED Woman l.u..'n-t na <'<:»nii>aniori to ady at summer re.<iort and td :issist ill the preparation of meals. EvorythiiiK found. I'rivale rabin accommodation. Salary SI on for season commencinr: .fnne t(i. Write In: B. GREEN. 101-2837 Yonge Street, Toronto. Easy Way To Treat Sore, Painful Piles Hero Is the chance for every per- son In Canadn suffering from ."ore. ItchinK, painful piles to try a simple homo remedy with the promise of a relir.lile firm to refund the cost of the treatment if you are net â- satislied with the results. Siinii y go to any druKglst and set n hot lie of Hem-rtoid and use as directed. Hcm-Hoid is an Intern- al treiiimrnt. easy and pleasant to use and pleasing results are quick- ly noticed ItchitiB and soreness are relieved, pain subsides and ai the tronlment is continued the sore, painful pile tumors heal over leav- ing the rectal membranes clean and healthy. Get a bottle of Hem- Rold (odnv and see for .yourself whni nil o.isy. pleasant way tills Is to rid voiiisclf of your pile misery. NOTICi I'lie sponior of IhU miller U n reliable firm, ilolnR bimlncM In <*iiniii1ii ffir over 'JO yenr*. If 70D nre trniililrd nrMh Kore. Ilehlnc pnlnfiil nllrn, ifem-Rolil niu>< help Ton nulelily or (he uninll pnrchiMC prire nlll he KlnillT reriinded. B's a SENSIBLE way to relieve MONTHLY LydiaE. Pinkham'aVegetableCompound not only helps relieve montlily piin but oho accompanying nervous, tired, hiah- strung feelingsâ€" when due to functional periodic disturbances. It's one ot the most effective medicines for this purpose. Pinkham's Compound Htlpi naturel Follow label directions. Try hi King Leopold III of the Belgian*, his wife. Princess Rethy, and four children have been freed by Ameri- :an Seventh Army at Strobl, Ger- many. The King had been prisoner since May, 1940. Three Centuries Of Wheat Growing The growing of wheat in Canada can be traced back approximately :!40 years to the summer of 1605, when a French settlement in the Maritimcs cut the first crop. To- day one of Canada's leading export coimnodities, Canadian wlicat, was being exported as far back as 1754 to the tune of 80,000 buslicls. CANADIAN GENERAL THANKS HIS STAFF ROll YOUR OWN WITH British Consols CIGARETTE TOBACCO Grateful leader Gen. H. D. G. Crear, G. O C Fir«t Canadian Army, thanks men of his Head- quarters staff for their loyalty during the tremendans days between D-Day and V-E Day. Britain 'Drafts' POW For Work Nasi Captive* in Britain To Help Clear 'Blitx' Area* The British Mlniatry of Work* announced German prisoners of war would start work at once to help rebuild damage they oauRed In Britain. , , , No fanatical Nazis will be al- lowed in the battalion* that will work on roadmaking, dralnac*. sits preparation, sewer constnio- tion, and clearing of rubble from bombed buildings. Britain needs a million house* at this present moment. If ortho- dox labor market* only are tap- ped there Is not the sUghteat chance of getting eufflclent help. For the coming year Britain will hare available only half the num- ber of building workers It employ- ed In 1939. Under War Office The War Office will settle how long they work, what condition* they will work under, and what and how much food they will eat, and where they will live. But tha Ministry ot Works and Bulldlnj* says that the employment of prl«- ouers won't mean that a single British workman will be out of a job. The utmost care will bo taken to safeguard tha conditions of British labor, and for this reason chiefly it is intended to use prl*- oners only on unskilled work. Considerable hopes are enter- tained that a satisfactory amount of work will be got out of German prisoners working under the new plan. In agricultural work, espec- ially In Yorkshire, they .have done quite a good job for a few shill- ings a week, and there seems no reason why they shouldn't answer just as well In demolishing rubble as in raising crops. fOICE OF THE PRESS GUARD AGAINST FIRES With the camping season just around the corner, folks arc again urged to guanl against causing for- e«t fires. W* can get along much better without that brand of trail blaring! â€" The Kitchener Record. BIQ JOB FOR ALLIES The task confronting the Allies in Germany i> a tremendous one. Some people think that it will be almost a* hard to put the country together m it was to take it apart. --The New Yorker. SOMETHING TO REMEMEIER Don't forget, however, that ty- ranny and oppression aren't a« d«ad a« Mussolini, nor at missing as Hitler. â€" Windsor Star. BRIEF VERSE Two ilown. One to go, Rush the war To Tokyo I -Christian Science Monitor. HALF OVER DAY VIctory-in-Europe Bay wag ac- tually only Half-Over-Day â€" and we had better not forget that sob- ering truth. â€" Stratford Beacon- Herald. Churchill : 'Carry On With The Coffee' Prime Minister Churchill sat calmly drinking coffee when a bomb damaged 10 Downing street during the German air blitr on London, it was disclosed recently. Churchill was dining when the ceil- ing and chandelier hurtled down. He merely said: "Carry on with the cofTce." Britain Recruiting Demolition Squads Whatever methods are employ- ed by the United States and Russia to make it impossible ior German industry to engage again in the manufacture of weapons and war material, Great Britain's modus operandi has already been decided on every definite lines, it lias been made known to the Ministry of Labor. More than 10,000 British scien- tists and technicians are being re- cruited for the British Control Commission to "blu»-print" Ger- man war industry for "treatment" by .\llied dynamiters and demoli- tion squads. "We are recruiting technicians and scientists with experience in twenty different industries," a La- bor Ministry official informed the Industrial correspondent of the London Daily Mail. Only eight of these are not solely engaged in war production. The rest are to be faithfully dealt with under the Yalta agreement. Death warrants have been signed for armament and sliipbuilding industries. Farm Machinery Goes To UNRRA One of the most pressing needs of the liberated peoples of Europe it farm machinery. Canaiia hat undertaken to supply UNRRA with 22,500 tons. This, plus our e.xports to our old markets, will take .^0 per cent, of all we produce. The rest â€" 70 per cent. â€" ii distri- buted through a permit system to farmers who can show the most urgent aeed. au'l to servicemen being established on farms under the Vetrans' Land Act. Canada's total milk production for 1944 is estimated at 17,000,000,- 000 pounds. WHAT SCIENCE IS DOING Ash Bricks British scientists liave produced a new fire-proof building materiid from wa.'ite ash which may save millions of dollars annually. It is claimed that its strength improves with age; it is not in- fluenced by frost or damp, it i* vermin-proof; it can be plastered, papered and painted in color, sawn to any shape and will take screws and nails. The new material is, made frota waste product of electricity power- stations the ash residue from lur- naocs which burn pulverized coaL It is claimed thaj over 800 mil- lioin bricks could be produced i« Britain with the ash, wliich is now thrown away, at an approximate cost of $0,045,000 a year. The ash bricks have already been used in the construction of office* and workshops and one new housing estate estate in Central England is to have the first house built entirelv of them. Robot's Linniitations One of the biggest problems of modern farming is labor-saving machinery, according to a BBC broadcast. The cowmen on my neighbor's farm phrased it rather neatly when a milking machine was installed. He said: "Well, ac may be all right for milking but what other use it er? I've been a milking machine for forty year*, but I can lay a hedge or make a stack or hoe a turnip. You try taking this thing out and show er a turnip." DID YOU KNOW iHat Maxwell House Coffee is *'Radiaiit Roasted" to cap- ture all the extra goodness of this particularly fine coffee bleud. Try Maxwell House !