Waterloo Public Library Digital Collections

Waterloo Chronicle (Waterloo, On1868), 9 Jan 1948, p. 2

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The second important item on which British and American exâ€" porters will be given similar tm:}: ment is tinplate. It has been lowed in g‘ee from Britain all along. Under the Geneva 18!'& ment it will enter from the Unitâ€" ed States over a 15 perâ€" cent duty, and Canada has undertaken at the present session of parliament to glace a similiar duty against the ritish product. . â€" One of the most unfiorhnt exâ€" ports from the United Kingdom to Canada is woollen fabrics, includâ€" ing worsteds, tweeds, cashmeres and other suitings. The old preâ€" ferential tariff was 22% per cent ad valorem, plus 12 cents a w This tariff was reduced by m cent under the Conservation and moved back to 20 per cent and 12 cents a pound in the Geneva agreements. However, there Iz an overâ€"riding provision that the duty shall not be more than 50 cents a pound. With existing high prices for woollen f‘bfiuii\ shoving up the ad valorem duty, the 50 cents a pound has become the effective duty and will be unchanged. The duty on this commodity will be the same next week as it is this week. _ There will be no change in wool tops and other combed wool from Britain which will continue to enâ€" ter free as will chinaware. â€" _ British anthracite coal came in before the war over a tariff of 35 cents a ton. It was made free by FAQ Sends Europe Hybrid Corn Seed yricultural O?mluflon (FAO) the United Nations is the exâ€" change with other nations of techâ€" nical knowlodf: on â€" agriculture. As part of this service ments have been made fir% ing 28 bushels of hybrid corn for field tests in Europe. The seed mmummmwflfl‘c‘"“m' y..mmmmnn-mwumdw Waterloo has other distinctions, obtained at the same time. We are also the smallest city as regards population, in Ontgrio, and we are the latest to be changeg frepy:tow» to city status. One of the main things that we have to Took forward to this year, is the fact that we heve, a new. gouneil, mostly comprised of local business men, who so far have giyen every indication of being able to handle the business of the Cityâ€"in the same manner as they handle their own business affairs. Their insugyral meeting which was held Tnel OWR UNEIVORE . MERMIRM. RMMWIO ARARAROn OE CR Om C 1 un =_ ie Monday night of this week, would tend to indieate that they have the such student to stay in college. mauayumummmumw It was also recommended to the m“ia'mwum.dw‘“flwmpfin'_Hmm government that the student vetâ€" eran body be represented on stuâ€" wrong Wed. . . dent veteran loan boards at uniâ€" Wahrlooummufiyunold.&ndwhfleoonndmblevgflm mh-bmud-mwwioddyuu,muvem Other recommendations: That times during the history of our community, that we would have proâ€" {"‘n“bee,“f:dedf“'m’d“ ‘m‘“wmu“um“hm“mmc:;pmolmedmlm;flmfl narrow viewpaint takep, by .some of our citizens, These men, although| some method be found to make thcymmh..wubdmmnototthetext.boohu:dothetnnlvuiv betterment of the community. It is hoped that if such cases ever supplies available to student veterâ€" arise in the future history of Waterloo, that the council then in office mt‘?m@m"fem‘:‘:og will take steps to stop individual profiteering at the expense of the readily available. . Goa w the Conservation Act and will reâ€" main free under the Geneva agreeâ€" ments along with American anâ€" thracite. ‘Under the old tariff, the British preference duty was 25 per cent on such clothing entering Canada from Britain. Under the Conserâ€" vation Act they were allowed free entry. After the new year the preâ€" ferential tariff will return to 25 per cent and under the Geneva agreement the tariff lf:oinst simâ€" ilar American goods also will be 25 per cent. This is one of the two importâ€" ant items on which British and American manufacturers will en‘ the Canadian market on footing. Before this was Canada obtained Britain‘s consent to the change. _ . | Tariffs Restored on Goods From Britain new people should be given every Waterloo. » commodities entering Canada af of Jan. 1 as a result of the repeal of the War Exchange Conservation Probably no other centre of like size has the industrial and financial resources &8 has Wateriqo. ‘Those we have should be well ‘uarded.mdnothnwemualwmmnbe‘d.mmm restored on many United Kingdom sweepinfirl;eductions in the tariffs egainst itish goods as the govâ€" ernment sought to conserve Ameâ€" rican dollars by shifting Canadian buying from American to British markets. When the legislation was passed the government made it clear that it was purely an exchange conserâ€" vation step of a temporary nature. Although its date of expiry was postponed several times, a trocln- mation was issued this week endâ€" ing the reductions on Jan. 1. The 1940 tariff rates, except as altered by the Geneva trade and tariff agreement, will come into efâ€" fect with the start of the new year. As a result of the Geneva ‘:fitee- ment, British preferences be eliminated on cotton clothing, inâ€" cluding cotton dresses, shirts and a long list of other garments. OTTAWA.â€"Stiff | tariffs THE: WATERLOG Watevlioo Becomes A City FRIDAY, JANUARY 9, 1048 show a certain amount of responâ€" sibility along with it." Ask Youth Lead In Farm Affairs the Dominton as far as opportuniâ€" jl.heirod‘ °o bilities, Nee twis}ed ‘ , have uâ€" m and intolerances, we ca‘:xreer pect the”ehild to reflect the same Suhm ol‘ t‘l.fut:lhand hone;‘tz are "cal not taught," accord: to the writer who states further ‘mtlnagootzoh&unthechggg expected . Ww that he m.f‘u..ve 1 some other child; nor is he KINGSTON. â€" R. A. Stewart, president of the Ontario Federation of Agriculture, addressing deleâ€" gates to a short course in coâ€"operaâ€" ._"The good home shows a biendâ€" l"'s M-Aâ€"L-â€"JO ?;- E'M‘. ili‘z‘i_ vidual member of the family has mofiln years for the fostering devei‘oping of healthy attitudes and emotional habits are the years of childhood. There are two imâ€" portant features of these years for mental healthâ€"the type of disciâ€" pline and the character of the patâ€" fmno of behavior the child has to ollow. not hindered by too much parental protection or %mim_tkm c tion in rural leadership, urged young people to take more enerâ€" getic part in the affairs of their favorably with other provinces in Pn repring ts the sood home, the en rlhiwbd 1 prow up soo is "The oimd home has an atmosâ€" phere emotional security," he writes. "It is not merely a haven from the world but a real part of the world in which mutual cooperâ€" ation, trust and good will are doâ€" minant, It requires this kind of an atmosphere for the individual to maintain his mental health." The writer states that the most j\atment, while the poor hame gives training which leads to neu:â€" rotic and even psychotic behavior." Dr. Bernhardt describes a good home as one in which all its memâ€" bers feel at homeâ€"a place where the individual has a chance to grow and develop, where he mental hygiene is the home, acâ€" cording to Dr. Karl S. Bernhardt of the Department of Psychology, University of Toronto. m‘ and develop, where hC doesn‘t feel mpe? and hemmedâ€" HOME LIFE FACTOR right kind of emotional atmosâ€" phere u.@fsol' its members mmt conâ€" tribu to umu&pmw mental health rai erthmu\em piness and good mental health that should be its usual product. i-;'l-.“fi; fe}lfs he is accepted and unâ€" HEAL! official magazine of the Health of Canada, Dr. says that if the home fails to provide the right kind of training for its children or the "The good home is a force for mental health, the poor home is a menace as it makes it almost imâ€" posible for its members to be in good mental health," he writes. "The good home provides the kind of training necessary for good adâ€" The most important agency for wrifing' in the current issue of that "if his parents evade esponsibilities, use twisted IN MENTAL HEALTH in ernment was m' to exiend free medical and services to deâ€" pendents of student veterans atâ€" 2y aith Un mehurency ciains ies | mate in mevalopary Pest erowive c nce claims that in no restrictions be placed on the -n-ldmnz-lnrrbdnu- dent veteran of wife can ‘carn during the academic . _ They are presently to $15 in order to get allowances. two years‘ internship following completion of medical courses; that some method be found to make text books and other university supplies available to student veterâ€" ans at less cost; and that loans to readily available. The conference has asked the Dominion Command of the Canaâ€" dian Legion to present a brief conâ€" taining recommendations to the Ottawa government. The brief will also urge that grants to stuâ€" dent veterans be increased 5 perâ€" cent for every sixâ€"point rise in the costâ€"ofâ€"living index since 1944. _ D. McVee of Bishop‘s University was elected president of the naâ€" $o on Heag Wwiline Coligs, 0 e 1 ollege, vice-ptm Â¥ :: exhausted. or -homm aqpemngy Bhovcree y o vh For Families ||_ "CGREAT" in the scope of activities, Canadian National Railways is the largest rail system in North America. it provides transportation to all the nine provinces of Canada and with Uts extensive United States lines serves many large American centres. it maintains 24,000 miles of line, employs more than 100,000 men and women, and has offices all ever the world ... Canadian National ewns a chain of nine distinctive hotels and three summer resorts in Canada ./. it operates a fleet of passenger and carge ships sailing to the British West Indies and along the Pacific Coast from Vancouver the bridges the Atlantic to the British Isles . . . Canadian National Telegraphs maintain 173,000 miles of wire circuits providing tast and efficient communication with all parts of the world 1. . Canadian National Express has worldâ€"wide ramifications. northwards . .. it owns Transâ€"Canada Air Lines which spans But Canadian National is mere than a transportation company. C_donhdou, Agriculture, Industrial Develppment, Natural Resourcesâ€"these are some other departments of the company that make its services so complete. By every standard of measurement "GREAT" is the word for Canadian Natienal. tpe wad are alte good ege moot $ Hm.mowâ€"i of still greaterâ€" importance on & when Phrds are waie t raiienrt bf Tanters from the Begianing of and high egg production are not fimitatlons of a roreed (ot marker, Rprofuctine eapacion, cag s tre: are markedly affected. An examâ€" Ts is the Cormih byeed, which it probably the peak of what is deâ€" sired in marketâ€"type poultry, but this breed is not popular because its superiority in menwpe is offâ€" set l_by poor laying hatching qualities. Breeding work carried on durin1 té'xne last few yc;n at the C:m\s perimental Farm, says Johnson of the Poultry Division has produced one breed, which inâ€" corporates much of the marketâ€" type of the Cornish fowl, and which, it is hoped, will have suffiâ€" ciently ‘food egg production and hatchab ;ty to ‘:ew sulubl:h ielan' oultry keepers rested y ?:umarket poultry. This breed is whiteâ€"fleshed and whiteâ€"feathered, as well as being fast feathering. It has proved useful in crosses to improve the market type of some of the established breeds, such as _BRBNATIONAL ,;-g . | in gpout three per cont above the fi".?.‘»a- io ai moa m .."'..J::zz Hax seed, ‘ouckwhore sod n in 1NEX Ine Stnake for iL In *47 wheat is valued at $398.7 million, a reduction of wb£4 million from 1946, and reflects the relativeâ€" vinces this year. Declines in the production of oats,, mixed grains, grain hay and dry peas more thah offset increased prices, and values of these crops were baow those of 1946. Production in 1947 of barley, dry beans, soybeans, shelled corn, potatoes, alfalfa and fodder corn was below that of the previous year, but substantially higher prices for all these crops bring their value of production above that of 1946. Both higher producâ€" tion and higher prices caused a deâ€" cided increase in the value of the 1947 cror of rye, buckwheat, flaxâ€" seed and hay and clover White Leghorn, Barred Rock and New Hampshire, particularly when the birds are raised to roaster stage. But the desirability of such crosses can only be determined in controlled experiments where equal nun bers of the pure breed, and the cross are raised together for some time under exactly simâ€" ilar conditions. ) ,,,//.,,./l////éf AW% 3 PE Â¥ ///{'/’//: Chateau Laurier, Ottawa, one of the warld‘s most distinguished hoteis, is one of nine Canadion Natienal hetels. and three outstanding summer resorts. "Lady" liners plying between Canade and the West indies and "Prince" boats «long the Pockic Coost form part of Canadian National‘s woterâ€"borne services. these crops and for that.reason|.> 3k Ci xt Pegegorale rrreiie mas on sns in 11 voy a us conperrs ns With normal weather hz zes * $ w4 a var} : . 2 s Straw M;. E F be é;: quite as exfentivel) | SBen paacce in ns 4 in 1948 as in 10947, when there was| retiring and to transact such. buatle . ... some indication of a surplus, Inâ€"| ness as may progeriy be betore . €reases of other fruits are ezredâ€" the meeting > ed to vary from six per cent for| All policyhoiders, regardlessisf the _ pears ,to 26 per cent for peaches.| amount‘insured, are eatified to vote. Thas Euagfl'uhc "cqml: m;o:.m.uu-y 2?"5 for a 19 per {% watesige; p . expected increase for all fruits will| December * 1941. is creases for some fruits are expect edh“fl-wheu Pouou:?n same level as in 1947 of 494,400 .fluk_will gh-hb provide a crop ient normal domesti¢ l.n:d:xpor( needs, without creating . an unâ€" Mn aibe The ou for vegetable canâ€" ning crops is for acreages about the ho se pook normal wing conditions, there lhouldg: eanldcnbgular:er packs in 1948. The Christian Science Publishing Society One, Norway Street, Boston 15, Mose. sisasererse4se. . . @FATE * ++# * o a MA 80404 9 p ++ ++ 6+ 0+ sa4+0Â¥+ +6 $Pheraeae ... for Motorists u;mmw that a great many ur traffic accidents areu causeg by hckk‘ol caution â€" in pulling out of a parking space. The wnsc:ncfrxvu will look Mz_bo- fore swinging out into the of traffic and be sure he isn‘t stigkâ€" ing his bumper and his neck out too far and too fast And when driving down the street he keeps an eye open for other cars nosing qut‘of their parking places. Ch for ] Please send somple copies of The Chnstion Science Monitor including cosy ot Weekly Mogozine Secion. Pleose send a oneâ€" month trial subscription to The istian . Scince . Monitor, whuci1 1 enclose $ K 2244

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