4. The Northern Star, Monday, November 7, 1949,DEATH NOTICE HUDSON, Jfrn Oliver.—On Noveirber 5, it Randwiek Hospital. Dearly loved slflter of Jack Hudson, ftickey Street, Casino, and of Frank, 5 Criess Street. Ashbury* Sydney,SPECIAL ADVERTISEMENTS-A.E,M P S.,IN MEM OKI AMBRAND, CHEMIST, opp. Canberra Hotel, LISMORECANDIDATESC1HIRUPOOIST—BERN aED b CANTOPEN CAMPAIGNS ONBLADES.—In loving memory of ourj^ WELL M^.Ch. M.I.LCh, Has friend, John Blades, who whs called commenced practice in Room 7, B.G.F to rmt on eth November. 1948. /Chambers, 104A Mrdeswartb Street. Lte-Always remembered by his friends, the: more. Phone SLWhite family.BLADES.—In loving memory of our dear father, John Blades, who passed ft way fttli November* 1943.Today recalls aad memories.Of out loved one gone to rest;Those who think of him today.Art those who loved him best.Inserted by his loving son Ivan and daughter-in-law Freda.R1NTES •—-In loving memory of my dear wife and our dear mother who passed away on 7th November, 1946. We long for the touch of the vanished band.And the Bound of the voice that {Is still.Inserted by her loving husband and sods and daughter-.(LifeMONDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 1349Co-ordinationEconomic EffortCOX,—In loving memory of our dear mother, Jane Rosabella, who passed away 7th November* 1938.A precious one from us his gone,A voice we love is still.A place ts vacant in our home.Which never can be tilled.Inserted by her loving s011/5, laughters* •on i-in -law, da\;ght er -in-1 aw. gTa ad and great grandchildren.NDLESS British-American financial talks call so clearly .'or i nte rna tional co-operation hat thought flies back today toELECTORAL BORDERTwo Federal Countrv Partv candidates, Mr. H,L, Anthony and Sir Earle Page, opened iheir election campaigns al ISimbin 011 Saturday, speakingfrom the same platform.Mr. Anthony is the member for stances would have bought maxi-Richmond and Sir Earle for Cow- [mum stock before devaluation, pet-- The Cow per-Richmond elec- “I his was (he first blunder. Austral boundary is at Nfmbin, tralia could have been saved theBoth spoke over loudspeakers Pa^ic and the rationing and main-the footpath in the I 3 normal economy..he superlative achieved during That conflict masterpiece oftan integration,way this was World War II. furnished a British-Ameri-at all com-frommain sheet of Nimbin during the town's busiest shopping period—11 £L#m ■« Sir Earle attacked the Labour Government's handling of the coal, petrol, butter, bank nationalisation and Communism issues.“His second blunder was agreeing without protest toBritish decision to make a 2 per cent, cut in dollar imports irrespective of whether they were essential to us or not. The Hat agreement to the cut was JustLRSBON—In loving memory of my disar husband and our lather, AlfredLarson, who passed away on the7th November, 1948.Inserted by his Ibvlnj wife and »om.1CARMONT.—In loving memory of our dear brother, Churls, who passed away November 7. 1944,The passing years can never change. Our thoughts of one so dear;Fond memories linger every day, Remembrance holds us near Inserted by his loving broth nr Bister-in-law. Earle and Mona.nand and operational levels, oefore it ended. But when the war started integration was just i vague hope, with apparently song odds against its realisation. Time, trial and error, plus tenacity. brought It about.It can be done again. But theHe said ihat today there existed s^P.1jj .a greater menace to freedom than . M:/- Chifley s third blunder was ever in the worst years of the war. fwhug to procure available It was the Chifley Government. stocks of sterling oil curing the The Chifiev Government hasjPa£ti.t^ee mr°hth5 to enable the gradually been sapping the morale, * unctioning of essential industry.integrity, ambition and the will to work, and respect and lore for free institution and the democratic way of life among the people generally, he said.From this 14regime the people risked losing all the vital things that mattered. Some day theyrorld has changed in 10 years awaken to find iheir Jib: ‘ ... .. isrtles gone because they were notresolution of the problem Is defended when first attacked.IClberMARMONT,—In loving memory ClinSe, who paseti away No\et 7, 1944Five years ago you passed HWiiy*From those you lovea so bear;Still memory is^ts the same today.Aft though you were still here.Sadly missed, by loving mother* sister and brother-in-law, ivy and Bert.Special Anglicaniar more he Reich towered Europe, is Russians, describedsufficientdifficult. Admittedly,' ■ i believe that the people, of theof Adolf Hitler, whichmenaccountryside of N S W. in particular, arc peculiarly fitted, notoveri merely to defeat and destroy thisa dust heap. But the who were seriously as not possessing effective organisational power even to mobilise their armies properly, now aresocialistic government policy, but by their own progressive democratic approach, and the develop- \ merit of their own great 'resources,'The fourth blunder was in refusing Mr. Fad den’s suggestion to permit AmpoJ import an additional 40.000,00*3 gallons of petrol. The Chifley Government, he said, would set 1(1 ^d a gallon customs duty, and if it gave a rebate of 3d to itep the price down to consumers would still get 7id a gallon, or :25,003.“Australia has hundreds of Trillions of tons of coal deep down .n the earth which could be ob-■ained by pit mining, she has also millions of tons of coal close tche surface which could be obtain'd by open cut mining. She has t’sn millions of water horsepowerYet, although there is need toIk'Servicesfreedoms.The nature of our resources areI HWtauUltas the world withp wSf|ir(1»yfeXTouCf tS .hem afcr crushing a German [diversity of our products andclimate/ All these give us in thisto form an everlasting buiwark, Zl™™ . in building whic h•«**“* “» •» °“lr '«my out ill forts o'f°The inaugural service was held at Gundurimba Hall yesterday. Tile hall was crowded. The service was conducted by Rev. James Psyne and the preacher was Rev, Eric Parsons, Rural Dean o£ Lismore and Casinu.Members of St. Andrew's Choir, with the Choir mis trass iMiss Mavis Pvej and choir secretarv iMiss N.nvdsion and surging forward to the western precincts of Europe, The vanquished Japanese, according to General MacArthur, have been converted under his care from raging militarists to Oriental democrats. Only time will prove Justification of themi— a. _district ideals of freedom au d aspirations to secure constant employment under ideal conditions”,It was the peoples duty to wipe out the Chifley Government* which was no longer Labour. It must be turned out because of its blundering* lack of vision and foresight and its cowardice in the face of the Communist threat for yearsna stand repairs that can only be done by increased supplies of 'coal, Iron and steel. under the Chifley taxation policy the output barely equals that of pre-war, said Sir Eearle.Strike HandlingHe criticised Mr. Chifley in his handling of the strike early this year, when union funds were frozen. Sir Earle said the Arbitration Act protided in Its first clause for a penalty of £1000 for a strike or lock-out, but Mr. Chifley had Introduced panic legislation.Sir p^rln fl-ia kntfAw:-:o:::: .. ■.1■ ■ ■ a a. • • V. I*AV.W *i '-W?■ ■ ■ ■ ■ I I mm I. Jr. .’-v^^?agglS. . .v. .'.vvv,VI ■ l. ■ . 1 ■ ■rj', ■¥ :o:*. . V wJ , V. .■■. ■ .■ ■ Jl ***■» l ^ * ™* % * a m •... . rS‘* V ■- v (■,V 1mbVi ■ ■ * ■' *. ■ 1Ctn ■’ I •.'■(■■.VVAV■Tl H wmmm.m mm m m ■ . I-W-'-J. vy.'-/.■V 'AMr, H. Authorill thepaign;PRLAt the Athe Mason oran, Air. served wit presentedof the R.S notified lilr ag:o and which he 1 south Afri President R. Baiter; sub-branch lifts. They estimable \ 50 years* Mor thar attended i these were served witi Service in Mrs. C. W, Mrs * J. Bserved in 1iaa