* BE EDE D sHomnnts In steumion 5 | LA Odd Things In the Mail woce ooo cnstie not (fogue t it | toe officient Soutput \__ memse _ _{fie that the Canadian public does | *94 P"OoRet â€"_, ._ hth--dlï¬dn.“mawm_ï¬m‘leflwfh'ï¬â€œmm mmmmmmnm.pnm-ï¬-:o‘:“ %m“w* mmuhmmmamwxmmmmwM'Mmm d..mt,‘: are now not earning any wages. * * it C io be bopes imot the Whtir |af Cntorne." thess ay The letter also points out that eveny Province, with the exception | y eforts of medical science to de| do a thorough }j0b of are similar with the exception ‘The present strike was called by the Union without any attempt Wvokiw to use the legal machinery set up by the Provinces and designed to 5 -mhm prevent such strikes. f for diphtheria and In the same mail, there was also a letter from the Union conâ€"| . YABURAbOP "A h ducting the strike in the form of an open letter to the farmers, and|the same thing with supposedly written by an ordinary union member. mmm‘mv hthhhmr,m»alhd“mflei'dosmm&chdemw ve that there was no attempt made to negotiate with the companies before cough preventive. the strike. He gets at his tale of woe from the farmers‘ angle and wl'“‘:m“";ï¬m m_thgbto{mhmrflghmlotdm.wm. weliop"mï¬ve.bu‘i ud-eu:c: course to mention that the farmer works twelve or fourteen hours a day to the worker‘s seven or eight hours, and that the farmer must make a considerable investment before he can ever hope to make a cent for himself. wallowing in prosperity and that the worker is overpaid. Also in his letter is included the plea for the farmer to help the strikers by putting pressure on the packers for "a fair settlement". * ‘The farmers on the other hand did not go to the bother of issuing a letter, but the fact that over half a million of them are unable to market their livestock and face a staggering feed bill because of the strike, does not make their feeling towards the strikers any too cordial. On top of that, at least half of the consumers in this country are going to be forced to go without meat, and badly needed exports of bacon and beef to Britain will have to be curtailed or discontinued. Whatever the cutcome of the strike may be, it would seem that the strikers are going to receive very little sympathetic response from either the farmets or the average householders. Even if the strikers win the strike, they will have lost the br:in( of the general public, an asset that will grow in importance in years to come. Farmers who have not yet seâ€" cured their supply of seed for fall wheat would be well advised to seâ€" T saae wiane seppine are m are avattsore. says i. . Goodin, fiekd REGISTERED SEED man of the Ontario Crops, Seeds partment of Agriculture. Registerâ€" ed seed is a good investment in many ways, he points out. In the first place, it is a guarantee of gerâ€" mination, purity of variety and suitability to the district It also contains a minimum of disease, weeds seeds and serious pests In order to obtain these high stanâ€" spend extra time and money. If they are to be encnonfed in mainâ€" taining production of high seed standards, they must receive suffiâ€" cient returns to make specialized seed production worth while. But the buyer who pays the preâ€" mium for registered seed will obâ€" yaB Bai» PARITINCG & PORusRnG ico.© 1 Owners and Publinbers £ udberiptionnt Peyable in Advence 4 L $1.00 per year in Cunade; $1.00 par yoer Ouiside Canada, SBtmmgle copies $ conts. out, 6 Authorized as second class mail, Post Office Department, Ottews | th4Pâ€" THE WATERLOGO 18 A GOOD BUY «â€"Man who Fhink of Somorros What MAKES a good citizen? He is moderate in his thinking and moderate in his actions. the good citizen knows, as The â€" House of Seagram has so frequently pointed out, that he has a personal responsibility to himself, to his family and to his country. He puts the welfare of his country and his community for good seed means an added exâ€" origipal cost. In the megxï¬me, the ï¬rower has satisfaction in knowing e has used the best. With labor scarce on farms, it will pay indiâ€" vidual farmers to buy a few bnfs of clean seed from a desirable source. A farmer t afford to Te anything but high grade seed, stance, 50 cents per bushel extra penditure of $1 per acre for fall wheat, but the resulting crop should yield value many times the cure supplies of ;:g wheat seed from wers in their oï¬ma mny‘:’cure lists of seed available from their agriâ€" cultural representatives, or direct from the Crops, Seeds and Weeds Branch, Ontario Department of Agriculture, Parliament Buildings, particularly this year, when urâ€" gent demands prevail for fall wheat, either from a cash crop or a feeding standpoint. ‘ Farmers who are unable to seâ€" When an occasion calls for the enjoyment of whisky, It is to "drink moderately" . . . ot â€"not at all! " sets up a THE HOUSE OF SBAGRAN He is moderate in his use of luxuries. He avoids bigotry and intolerance. and respects the rights of others. good citizen respects himeel . .. before his own advantage. 35‘?".(’/5‘;;‘ F9 Te pninin‘s snd phooping wugh the preventive, once it is discovâ€" ered. However, polio will continue to take a toll if the presence of a polio preventive is ignored in some ‘ Vaccination has just about out smallipoxâ€"toxoid can c It is to be sincerely hoped that we soon will have the benefit of a polio preventive, but in the meanâ€" Mgmâ€e mm]dmm use of the preven now in our posâ€" session. That is why the Health week of October 5th as*"National Immunization Week." This annual national observance is designed to draw attention to the fact that certain communicable disâ€" whooping cough and smallpoxâ€" are preventable. It also is a means of making known the fact that fedâ€" eral, provincial and municipal country are working continuousiy to eliminate these preventable disâ€" eases. s e ho pas conl sveperpiien out is the per cen of the general public. The tragedy of the public‘s â€" ance or apathy in ard m available ventives lor diphtheâ€" Ts ana whooping cough is writien heaith Repartments throughout the n ouney are gorking contincousiy in the statistics for 1946 which show close to 500 deaths in Canâ€" ada from these two diseases alone. COST OF LIVING vs. Hardware and Metal and Electrical Dealer, the argument that an averâ€" age Canadian family maklnf an average wage cannot keep itself clothed, housed and fed without running into the red doesn‘t hold The hardware business paper esâ€" timates that the cost of living for a hm%? of four today is close to $35.46 per week in Toronto. Averâ€" hackticin® shnt? iter calier n on t dtavints nfe rate of pay for skilled men in 21 trades runs about $46.01 (the range stretches from $38.28 to $58.â€" 31). Family allowances for a famâ€" ily with two eligible children add an extra $3.30 per week. So when all the adding and substnctintï¬ is done a weekly surplus rather than done a weekly surplus rather than‘ be obtained 5y application to th a weekly deficit appears. Regional Foods Ofl)m at London. | Practioe Moduration Todagy/ of Canada, the Dominion‘s voluntary health education WAGES IN CANADA ‘s preventives taining regular crop rotations, and inpre hok seed thould be varetuily snguod of NY Mel ioleening piania ere oon during the 1947 growing mmesun. season in order to ascertain the prevalence of bacterâ€" ial ring rot disease. Several groups of potato growers have requested this action in resolutions received by the Department, says R. E. franed of Ine Ortrecte Pevertment of Arlnllture will provide inspecâ€" tion for commercial potato crops on _ Many potato growers have taken advantage of similar service in reâ€" of dollars by checking this very inâ€" of dollars by checking this very inâ€" fecï¬ou:nndydemucuvedhmclnd halting spread of its organisms. ported in 1938. â€" _ * wim:uvieeo!gqncu&nhmde thout charge pota wers Requests for this n'eons:rviee should be made before August 1§ to 1Nb es 9'; direct to thanm, Beeds_’m‘ of Agriculture, Parliament Builâ€" dings, Toronto. TO ALLOW SLAUGHTERING DURING MEAT STRIKE W. Harold McPhillips; Prices and Supply Representative for the Warâ€" tions for the slaughtering of liveâ€" stock will be granted to producers of livestock, wholesale and retail Much has been accomplished by way of education, as bacterial ring rot is a conmantively new disease in Ontario, the first cases being reâ€" da{en during the current meat Tivisle poesifle mest sporiages in ev. meal tres lied b: kâ€" ?:: mmnnu‘:lli.plsly :uu?Enrhnflmll ing permits are and meat dealers. the report that special authorizaâ€" companies. Authorizations will it:‘fmimte one week after the strike “feï¬'ï¬ï¬m to Board officials the % icia meat shortage reported from other become apparent in this district where many individual slaughterâ€" ing permits are held by farmers The special authorizations may be obtained by application to the As a service to potato growers, W l £ POIEC FOR POTATOERS JUNIOR FARMERS TRAINING â€" CAMP ON LAKE SIMCOE MMIE L RoD uo e emararame es from all parts of Ontario, equally divided betweenboysm\n}‘ derwent an intensive in community leadership work at Onâ€" commum leadership work at Unâ€" C As heldJ t Camp Ahsh amp, al on £lk! Simcoe near P‘m during the week of September 1 to 6. With Norman C. Lindsay, Superâ€" visor of Community Programs for the Ontario D?-nmentv of Educaâ€" tion, as unï¬edw' assisted by a wellâ€"qual staff of experts in various fields, the young gfovle NOC LLILL L Samiaiwâ€"nf minibstt the Agricultural Representative Branch, and Miss Florence Eadie and Miss Helen McKercher, of the Women‘s Institute Branch. m: ing at the closing Council nre.lrmnhnon't::edhhna; qualified pleasure at the apparen‘ excellent results of the week‘s training at camp, and voiced the hope that the lessons would be carâ€" ried back to the communities of Ontario and put into practice there. were taught a variety of subjects to be taken back to their communiâ€" ties for incorporation in Junior Farâ€" of Kleinburg. Rev. Douglas Davis, of Stouffville, was leader of a group studying religious programs for Juâ€" nior Farmers. A class in drama~ tics was conducted daily by Mrs. E. C. McLean, of the O.A.C., Guelph, and William Mitchell, physical diâ€" rector of the O,l&.C..d cond.:lacted courses in physical and social reâ€". g'eaaoi:'. gfl:flmï¬s were t:uthh:‘ udrey Spencer, o “romen’s Institute Branch, Toronto. Each forencon was devoted to pracâ€". tical demonstrations of the work being done in them, so as to give the juniors practical experience in their subjects. The camp was organized into four Indian Tribes, the Mohawks, Iroquois, Hurons and Algonquins, and social and recreational activiâ€" ties were conducted on a tribal ba, sis, with keen rivalry developing between the four tribes. Each tribe took its turn at conducting an evenâ€" daily edition of a camp ne . ma:y. Sq::.n:, was wï¬%’»‘-’«‘f’f: open house, many vxsiuérs garae to the camp, @55: ing C. D. M ty Mi ter of Agriculture, Dz“Cockbuï¬ M. Winter and Archie McKenzie, nnpdeuts repressot the splat of the Camp, as the ou g:ner,mdtolldntthelrucan- T. R. Hilliard, Junior Extension ar-’cmm"m.umeof SM‘y,nerr-du!dnlubhm as Junior Farmer advisers to the camp director. 8e » rmnll o the, mgernn ot the cam; na:i.uur unior Farmers in Mwmbewmï¬w next year, and in years. need where and when they wish, ;:monthnnln.tofwun:om- coupons, is a mystery to Canaâ€" dian Grécer. 'mem{bmlnm mmth.eucbh ts current As of A\;gst 9, there were 81 million pou! monnwmmd cmulimm-m on hand in than a year ago, mmmm The new Cuban is only 8 mï¬-orncm.mnhnm took its turn at conductimg 4n eVE n%vesemmmd producing a daily edition of a camp newspaper. atecr y Mize Margaret Watson ALL THE SUGAR CANADA MEEDS CLAIMED AVAILABLE W O RKING WITH CANADIANS IN EYERY WaLK OFP i1FE S1N°CE 1817 m3 * users in. Canada are were taught by Mr. +_ to be another big one, close to 6 Banx or MonTrEAL Waterloo Branch: E. B. LAVELLE, Manager be: Troduced in Europe and in th:nï¬n ted States. Canadian consumers appear on the average to be getting all the sugar they heed on their coupons. 96 King St. West KITCHENER Phone 1 C. F. PRICE, orrometrist °® can, obtain more than they 8 TEELE‘S CANADA COACH LINES Why not make sure yes will have the needed cash pext year . . . Decide sow to put cnough money aside cach menth at the Bof M to cover the expenses of one ddy of yorur 1948 holiday. It‘s far casierâ€"and surerâ€"to provide for your ‘dream vacation this ‘savings‘ way. Over a million Canadians are saving at the B of M for the things they want most. Buy one day of your 1948 holiday shis payda7. . . open Almost everyone has a "‘dream vacation‘‘ in mind. Bur many folks have to postpone it year after year becauseâ€"for one reason or anotherâ€"the ready cash is lacking when holiday, time comes. a*‘Vacation Account‘‘ at your nearest BofM branch. Kitchener‘s Reliable Optometrist for 23 Years BV S TIMETABLES CHANGED P" Uuy your 4s vacamon _ Zted@'â€tdï¬me . ol All Canada Coach Line Busses Effective Sunday Sept. 29 STANDARD TIME at tue BorM Will Operate On re%uire but other ï¬et less. weeteners such as glucose and dextrose tfeo; industrial use are beâ€" ing gran imron permitsâ€"they have to be paid for in United States dollars which are scarce. Yet there is plenty of sugar available in Canâ€" ada that can be released. Clara Mayer, 48 Alexandra Ave. For Complete Satisfaction 23 Years of Service 7 P.M. SATURDAY W BANK Phone 2â€"1936 3W