is rehabilitation, Charlie Macinâ€"}row, 9,445; celery, 3,915; hubbard; ' tosh, recently discharged from the|squash, 385; corn on cob, 12,723; KCAF opened a bakery speciflizâ€"|frame cucumbers, 66; swede turâ€" ; ing in wedding cakes at Powell Riâ€"|n:ps, 89,114; parsnips, 10,000; crab | ver, B.C., believing there will be a|apples. The nuru given are the terrific surge in nuptials . .. T‘was|number of pounds raised in each‘ ‘D.lL seily a November d? in Wiarton, Ont.,| case. | F but Mrs. Ruth Ferrin, and Mrs. Alâ€"| Full scale revival of old songs vin Winch walked around, each|and dances of the Cowichan ln-‘ 129 wearing a fresh pami 'rlucked dians marked presentation of a from the garden . . . E. ennard |Cowichan sweater, made by Mrs.| ; is getting the jump, at Radville; |Patricia Charlie, for Prestdent Harâ€" | | Sask., with a quickâ€"freeze cold|ry Truman of the United States, QQ+, 190. King Puniro findine., |~ ~WeIP §he sutect storage plant conuln.Lr':s 400 indiâ€"|in a ceremony at Victoria. B.C., vidual lockers (pop. 800) . . . Beâ€"|with the U.s.eonnuaceefuu for "Gosh! How will we manage now? That was your type umnommndm-notmm-mm.nmhm odu:gnl writer Anger, wasn‘t it 1" perly filed, the mayor‘s andonlbob.eh:w&s:tï¬:w e * a couple of council seats in the front On . this: ‘"‘This "1IM orr; m | At the provincial mental hospiâ€" e tal in Weyburn, Sask., truck farmâ€" * ing is really on a grand scale. Some 92,948 seedlings were raised Bits of Canadiana: The Far North ‘at the hospital greenhouse in the in Canada is a fruitful place, just spring, transplanted to beds. And saw a picture of a 10â€"foot sunflowâ€" ghere's what they raised last fall: er grown at Fort Laird, N.W.T. . ..}Potatoes, 10,851 bushels; cabbage, The old remedy for colds, Col. T. L. 71,035 lbs.; rhubarb, 15,948 lbs.; Kennedy, Ontario‘s minister of green onions, 1,475; dried onions, agriculture told a farmer‘s gatherâ€" 44,631; radish, 1,560; carrots, 57,â€" ing in Lanark County, reminding |671; lettuce, 3,876; peas, 6,973; them there are more vitamins in chard, 7,918; white turnips, 2,453; an ounce of black currants than in |beets, 26,999; wax beans, 2,043; 33 oranges; advised them to tl%ul: caulifliower, 6,798; tomatoes, 3,327; next time for the snifflies . . . cucumbers, 4,194; vegetable marâ€" is rehabilitation, Charlie Macinâ€"}row, 9,445; celery, 3,915; hubbard; tosh, recently discharged from the|squash, 385; corn on cob, 12,723; KCAF opened a bakery speciflizâ€"|frame cucumbers, 66; swede turâ€" ing in wedding cakes at Powell Riâ€"|n:ps, 89,114; parsnips, 10,000; crab ver, B.C., believing there will be a|apples. The nuru given are the '.er_l:inc surge l'n ngptal'l + 4s 'l:vgl number of pounds raised in each Bits of Canadiana: The Far North in Canada is a fruitful place, just saw a picture of a 10â€"foot sunflowâ€" er grown at Fort Laird, N.W.T. ... The old remedy for colds, Col. T. L. Kennedy, Ontario‘s minister of If the City of Toronto were a private business, it would be easy to see that the whole situation had become absurd. If the City had to pay its taxes to someone else rather than itself it would not be so easy to arrange a rebate. And if its landlord were not the Dominion Governâ€" ment (with everyone‘s income taxes to make good deficiencies) it would not be so easy to suggest foregoing the rent. ho e e taey the $6,000 a year rental paid to it, thit would allow a further reduction of $10.00 a month of each level, to a minimum of $29.00 to $59.00 a month, and this and other means for reducing the rents to less than the actual upâ€"keep value were discussed at some length. But apparently, these rents did represent the rockâ€"bottom figures of a balance of income and outgo. The city couldn‘t cut the rents on a basis of reducing profits it wasn‘t making, and it had to think of something else. So it decided to forego the municipal taxes of $3,500, and proudly announced that this would enable the rents to be reduced by $6.00 a month at each level. Still the rents were not being reduced to the level that prospective tenants were willing to pay. One Toronto newspaper suggested that if the Dominion Government would forego This essential problem has been made even more clear by a situation which arose in Toronto not long ago in connection with that city‘s effort to alleviate its housing shortage by taking over a Governâ€" mentâ€"leased apartment house with the idea of renting its accommodaâ€" tion on a non profitâ€"making basis of "fixed maintenance charges". The resulting rents ran from a minimum of $45.00 to a maximum of $75.00 a month, and there was an immediate outâ€"cry that these were not the "low rentals" which had been expected from such a public "non profitâ€" making project". p The catch is that it is not really possible to do business without profits. This has been made clear this last year during the crossâ€"Canada meetings of the Commission investigating Coâ€"operatives. If the income exactly balances the outâ€"go (that is if there is no profit) then there is no possibility of improvement or expansion. Without profits any enterâ€" prise (whether it is run by a Government Board or by private enterâ€" prise) will stagnate. Machinery will wear.out, and there will be no possibility of laying by anything with which to replace it. New maâ€" chinery may come on the market, but to set aside funds to invest in it would necessitate interfering with the balance. The goâ€"ahead coâ€" operatives have thought up all sorts of dodges by which they can retain those surpluses, which they should strictly speaking distribute among their members, so that they can improve, expand, and keep going by replacing what is inevitably worn out or outmoded. It is a favourite belief of the socialist that the woes of the economic world (which is the only world whose existence he admits) are all due to profits He believes that if it were possible to "produce for Use, and not for profit" then there would be no more want or unemployment or citizens dissatisfied with their way of life. Waterloo is the only town of its size which has not a police commission, who cannot be influenced by outside interâ€" ference and petty politics. The Ontario Legislature at its next session will consider and no doubt enact, legislation to force all municipalities in Ontario to operate their police departments under the control of a police commission. Surely, Waterloo will move to correct this evil immediately without being compelled. For the good of the community at large, and for all concerned, town fathers and citizens alike, should take immediate action, so that ugly rumors making the rounds can be laid at rest and properly interred. Our chief of police is rated by those who are in a position to judge impartially, as bne of theâ€"ablest and most efficient officers in Western Ontario. This man and his department should not be handicapped by the constant yearly changes on the police committee, who bring with them little or no previous police experience. Neither should the operation, efficiency and morale of the department be undermined by outside influence. How can the chief and his yery small staff hope to control and eliminate juvenile delinquency, instill respect of the law in our youth, take care of lawâ€"breakers when they are so handicapped? PAGE TWO Waterioo is the largest town in Ontario without the Bbenefits of an impartial police commission. The foremost question which presents itself at the present time is who controls the police force? If the chief of police, very good; if the police committee, why? and if so, why a police committee? Surely, Waterloo has matured sufficiently to dispense with this antiquated method with its resulting unnecessary interâ€" ference with the efficient administering of our police affairs. Waterloo, one of the finest towns in Ontario, now has nearly 10,000 people, and a few hundred more will automaticâ€" ally make Waterioo a city. Yet, we continue to transact our civic affairs as they used to do in the horse and buggy period. Will Waterloo Ever Grow Up? How Not To Do Business FRIDAY, DECEMBER 14, 1945 . . . dont all crowd folks . . . Mr. and Mrs. John Gask of Sgringside district, both celebrated their 69th wedding anniversary in the Yorkâ€" ton, Sask., hospital on Nov. 26 . . . Proprietor of the Brampton, Ont., Bakery, had this sign in the winâ€" dow (in desperation maybe): ‘"This $10 bill is for any person who will biing me a baker." town of Deloraine, Man., will be empty after the new year ... Hockey farm or what? Jack Adams of the Detroit Red Wings has donated $100 towards the Boys Hockey League in Melville, Sask. 'hom fear, hate and greed which cause tnem to fly at each other‘s throats. Men who, under God, have found this real unit{, can make their exam%le so revolutionary and appealin= that it sweeps across the world. Then no one will want to _ From the Melfort( Sask.) Moon, this bit of good thinking: "A naâ€" tion cannot exist half free and half slave. And the London Conferâ€" ence has just shown that neither can a world. But nations and the world can together find freedom They produce silkworms in the Alberni Valley, B.C., yup. Dr. French of Victoria recently shipâ€" ped 20 ounces of cocoons to a plant in Texas to have them unwound and treated. They were taken in the harvest bi’Mrs. Lode, who with 1her brother, Mr. Trevers, operate a farm on the Coleman road near Sproat Lake. At the time of colâ€" lection Mrs. Lode was unable to }unwind the cocoons owing to presâ€" sure of other work on the farm. and when Dr. French asked her to ship them as they were, had no idea of their value. f Food production de luxe: Not satisfied with laying 25 eggs last spring and hatching out 23 fine gosâ€" lis in the usual way, the two geese on Edward Baetz‘s farm, near Moltke, on the 9th concession of Normanby, insisted on layin&fl more eggs since the first of Octoâ€" ber, and one %oose is now sitting of 13 eggs, while two hens are each hatching six eggs. _ We always enjoy réading the Far north‘s lively weekly, The Alaska Highway News published at Fort St. John. Here‘s a sample of editorial: "Those of us who have a stake in Canada with our chilâ€" dren and our ideals for them, canâ€" not turn a deaf ear to the political need of our country any more than we could deny the need of home, family or community. We have to have politics so long as we have a democratic government. It is beâ€" cause so _ many have left it to "GEORGE" to do, that we have the two great old political parties, that built us into nationhood, often weakerfing and floundering in a sea of political apathy." _ s All three collegiates and ten of the eighteen schools in Yorkton 4{Ont.) township failed to pass fire prevention tests to the satisfaction of the fire department officers. Inâ€" stallation of appropriate measures was urged. â€" _ _ Maybe you don‘t know, but men who watch the level of Lake Onâ€" tario admit they‘re baffled because the lake is rising when every law in the nautical book says it should be going down. The old pond has been behaving very unnaturally this year. â€" ks _ garment is warm, like unto our thoughts towards you and your ‘ountry," printed in Chinook and Anglish. o _ Nes 1 ntSeSeeesees 2,200 CARS SINCE Vâ€"E DAY was the record of the Canadian Pacific Railway at Montreal up to the end of October for icing the refrigerator cars which transport perishable food for export to Europe. Of these cars, 95 per cent were loaded with meat, as scen in the refrizerntor car (above) which keeps its valuable cargo at low tempcrature by having up to a ton of crushed ice (lower left) and salt (lower richt) added to its bunkers daily. Keeping Meat Fresh for Europe LAFFâ€"Aâ€"DAY The farmer who passes a good woodlot protected from grazing and managed for continued producâ€" tion is usually more_prosperous than neighbors who have allowed their woodlots to deteriorate. Maâ€" ny of the farm regions in Canada have become deficient in forest coâ€" ver, and serious consequences are becoming evident in the form of erosion, soil deterioration and lowâ€" ering of the ground water table. ‘ The forested areas found on farms in Canada and generally known as farm woodlots, supply about 30 per cent of all wood cut in the Dominion each year. The large part of the fuelwood is used on the farm but sales of | fuelwood, pulpwood and other proâ€"‘ ducts contribute to farm cash inâ€" comes. I Canadian Coâ€"operative Impleâ€" ments Ltd. have patents rights on a rotary harrow invented by Elmer Carlson, Wetaskiwin, Alta. It can be used either behind a oneâ€"way, or independent, guaranteed nonâ€" clogging, will clear itself of any sort of trash, ideal for oneâ€"way stubble. Not a bull in a china shop this time. A horse pulling a rig on a Hanover, Ont., street, failed to make the turn, went through the window of Hocking‘s gift shop, toâ€" tal damage to china, etc., $150. The horse got only an 8â€"stitch gash Farm Woodlots Have Great Value drop bombs on anyone else. Any lesser solution is and will always remain a Utopian dream." _ _ Within a radius of one mile of Killarney, Man., there are five fur farms specializing in mink and fox, }he largest has about 500 mink, 300 oxes. off _?n'p' ximatel perislm’l’:l:s mont| Montreal. Of this supply, 95 perâ€" cont is meat. To pour up to a ton of erushed ice d'xilg‘reinto each of 150 "reefers", which is the daily servicing averaze in the Canadian f;m-iï¬c ards here at Outreâ€" moat, a system Kns beon .developed ‘Xhis formula, carried out daily on refrigerator cars full of food for Europe, enables the C.P.R. toâ€"send 489 ‘Reefers‘ LEach Month Canadian Pacific Record MONTREAL: Pouring in a load of ice, wdding a girntâ€"size dash of salt and mining well is the recipe the Canadian }V;aciï¬c Railway follows to I > [mividc meat for Europe. _ E pppzoxima.'.elgl 400 carloads of ;rislmbl‘es monthly for export from | _ _LONDON. â€"A new â€" technique likely to revolutionize the treatâ€" ment of brain diseases is being practised by surgeans of Saint Maâ€" ‘ry‘s Hospital, London. The patient is injected ‘with a solution of maâ€" lachite green dye. The effect is to turn the diseased tissue in the brain green. The normal tissue reâ€" mains white. So well defined is the area of unhealthy tissue that the surgeon is able to remove it withâ€" out damaging the brain as a whole. The London Sunday Express reâ€" purts that the consulting surgeon to the hospital has so far carried out twelve oï¬eratiom with the aid of this dye. He is convinced that it will reduce the death rate in brain operations not only by ensuring the complete removal of the disâ€" eused part but by preventing a reâ€" currence of the trouble. The dye method opens up a new approach to the investigation of epilepsy, the cause of which is .311 unâ€" SPECTACULAR BRITISH ADVANCE IN BRAIN SURGERY During the fall, winter and earâ€" ly spring the active feeding period should be extended by the liflï¬ng tc about 14 hours each day. ngâ€" cr periods are likely to offset the advantages to some extent. It has been found by research at the Exâ€" perimental Station at Harrow that longer periods of light had a tenâ€" dency to increase broodiness, As a general rule two 60â€"watt lights are required for 400 square feet of floor space and a reliable time clock with timing resistance should be used to ensure regular intervals of roosting and feeding. _ Due to this all round action there is also a better resistance to disease and a higher fertility in the eggs that are used for reproduction, all important economic features that fellow the application of lights in moderation. | _Without doubt the increase in the amount of feed consumed is a conâ€" tributing and important factor in increasing the egg yield but the true function of the light is beâ€" iteved to be the stimulating effect that it has on certain glands that play their part in the process of ovulation and more eggs are laid and a greater appetite develops as a result of this stimulus. |Artificial Light ‘Advances Egg Yield | Much has been written and said ‘regarding the beneficial effects of ‘artificial lights on animal and plant #{ife but 1&.‘ is ?oubtful if “{ts true v:; ue to the farmerâ€"poultryman fully recognized, says W. T. Scott, | head pouitryman, Dominion Exâ€" perimental Station, Harrow, Ont. !_If it were possible in Canada to {keep biras on range outside in diâ€" For the 2,200 carloads of perisiiâ€" ablcs for Europe which )mrbeen h:wrlled by the (POI’R jn its Montreal yards from Vâ€"E Day to the end of Octol.ar more than 9,200 icings were underiaken. On a recent occasion more than 200 cars were iced in one diy. There are several fngctions assoâ€" ciated with the beneficial use of lights in the hen house that are not generally recognized. Using lights to increase egg production has long been a sound, economical practice with the progressive poultryman, generally under the impression that the longer feeding period alâ€" lows for a greater consumption of food and the greater yields of eggs is the natural consequence. Ths ice is loaded throuch busker opcnings by means of a shuttle track which earrics the ice upwards from a erusi:ing machine and slides it in > the bunkers. Sackâ€"loads of e=!t poured into the bunkers intensify the cooling. rect sunlight all the year, artificial dsht wouid not be a factor of so much importance. When, however, it is necessary to confine the birds to the house for about six months of the year the use of artificial light during the short dull winter days is a sound and helpful practice, he emphasizes. which makes it certain that the cars will move on time. Â¥7% __ Fne United States Army authoriâ€" ties ceased buying Cunn&m‘ poulâ€" try shortly after Vâ€"J day: For the moment, there is little movement across the line, but, says the Curâ€" rent Review of Agricultural Conâ€" ;iitiortls in Cl{nda. alll pouiblebeo;:‘t- ets for us poultry are explored.m'!lgul exports of drenes goultry by the Special Products card to the United States from January 1 to September 30 this Year amounted to 11.5 million pounds. Peppercorns and black and white ge{;kpuq which make up the great ulk of the peg&enr of commerce are all derived one species of ‘Phe United States Arm: COMMERCIAL PEPPER « RELY ON CANADA The Ovistion Science "..‘“I !"W â€" *__' 120 000g00 _ _ One, Merway Street, Beston 15, Mose. _ D ummhsgm name _ _ mmm S:cololeyn.“ The growing recognition among physicians and others of the value of thought in the treatment of disease, Christian Science shows to be a development of much significance and promise A Christian Science Sunday Service will be Broadcast over Station CFRB at 11 a.m., Sunday, December 9th, 1945. THOUGHTS THAT HEAL AND PREVENT DISEASE POULTRY TO U.S. THE ROYVAL BANK OF CANADA WATERLOO BRANCH â€" A. C. HOFFMAN, Manager se pammaliona ns Rortliond :mlhh:cu income, by convenient -fly::n.. Rates are s e gï¬.hmn_".ub businessâ€"like basis. Pay off your coal ol Mundow-monmi M.asammeverrryrr:...s.... .. .. trigl wg‘mlpnm":o :m 1 istion «ence onitor, e cvertrerernn. ... SPATE...!!!... for which | enclose $ J 4 houschoid finances on s Ask for this bookie. Manthiy re ude It seils all ubout personat idhies 27 + > tondlipimmisii d monthly instalments cver pasaaeessss +ss du@ged in the United Kingdom in the next year or two from a thouâ€" sand tons of aluminum scrap reâ€" covered from obsolete aircraft. vealed recentl{ by ‘Mr. Arthur Woodbumi‘Par iamentary Secretaâ€" ry of the Ministry of Aircraft Proâ€" duction. Mr. Woodburn who was opening the first aluminum house erected in Blackpool, England, said: Beating bombers into bungalows is the modern version of turning swords into plowshares". Fifty thousand bungalows will be proâ€" some European countries, liveâ€" stock resources are seriously reâ€" duced and will require several years to build up to a preâ€"war leâ€" vel. In addition, transportation systems have been disrupted thus hindering the organization of disâ€" tribution. vealed would have increased obligations with regard to feeding both liberâ€" ated and liberating countries. In LONDON.â€"Â¥Five great United Kingdom bomber factories are now t out the world‘s finest preâ€" fabricated houses. This was reâ€" All surplus Canadian meat is made available to the Combined Food Board for distribution. With solution of hostilities in Europe, BUNGALOWS FROM SCRAP . aa me on sn ad CSâ€"t â€" #8