RAGE FOUR TIIE BIIARLIITTETOWII GUARDIAN Morning Daily iFounded in i881) tum: Lieut. Col. w. chum 8- Mvl-m Prutllico President: J. R. Burns“, FJ-l- gmpgtary; Lieut. Col. l). A. Macltinunn. 03.0. Editor and Managing Director. J B» 511N191!» F44- usociate Editors: Frank Walker and llll A- 5'17"“ SUBSCRIPTION BATE! a; mu In r.i-:.1.. $4.00 n" "l" 32-5" '°' I‘ '"°‘"'" $1.25 for 3 months; 50o [or on! IIWINII uh Deliver) $53" P" Y9“; 53-00 I" ‘I ‘gm’. $1.75 for 3 months; 80o for one 20:0 "u M ll to ther Pruvinucs and U. S. A. . ‘DU’ Bahamas) iseukiyi 5754'" P" Ye“; “'00 h" T ‘an-um 50a for 3 IIWIIUII obtained at her Yorisi 01d washlngtnl. hlillhllilLi null! l“ ‘ harloueioou , 1 u” C Hnml unnum- mlunuwsi hi“: {l-iliinltci-wor sun no “W”, -hul‘lrsruiii.l‘lillsn so“. Axrliry, use Peel s». Iluhliirk-in- I-‘lnv, as: tin,» 51., Toruntn; hows stud. Cimllvnu ‘Lnurn-r. Uiluun: “ill”! i\'“' s"nd‘ uudbu" orill, llnh Fnlrzu-vu sin-p. Alunt-ttnn N. 8-. “The Strongest fllrmury is lnVea/rer than "l! Weakest Ink. VAITITAHLTI-ISUIGT 1942- Archdeucon Scott's CyniCism Tlic wicran and venerable Archdealcon F. Scull of {jut-hm has wrillcn in caustic lcrml I‘! llu- llomrcul liIi/ivllé as full\l\\'53 ~-<g,-_. ,\1,,,» l lpiilu uuoiiici;ill_v make a fillii‘ - v . . _* . gcsiiuu \\'7.i‘vli uugdl .~\‘l“-<‘ I" ‘lulct ‘Iluilhllulwonb in llli‘ iiilll‘l< iii lllll lmlmlllliml M [his nme‘ AS (Jupllytf |~,»..\;,,.-t~_ with us ucziriicss l0 lllv A!‘ lruuic ilccau, and its will? rlvfl" §llel°lle5 {mm glp- gca-luiaril is the pathway l0 both. lllc Dom‘ llllull and tlu- lhitcil States. and as air and sub- lnjlfillp aiiziclq: miglv. cndlv ilzlmngc our QHCIJCC Ilriilgr‘, 5n bluclviuq- the Si. Lzwvrcuce route for uizmy months and possibly yours, for two twisted steel spans h: still beneath the surtacc, and as flit important aluminum works 3t -'\l'\'ld3- alld the cities of llisicrii (Ymmla lie m)?“ l" 5llllm5e as‘ saults from ab» air by an uver»L;ll>rad<)r roule. rE' cmlrsc shorld be had at once tu assistance ff0lll our great ally to the South. A: day fill" d3)’ passes, we have to have our ears fillcd with talk. m; rd defence, bur of aim-conscription pro- paganda. (if coursc. in a democracy. we nluili tolergtc free speech, even if it is uttered by people who do not know what they an talking about’. My suggestion is that, while allowing this privi~ lcgc, we should take steps at once to prevent a Pearl Harbor surprise on this gateway of the continent. "I would propose that, in view of the peril that comes in this war from waste of time, we should invoke the terms of our alliance with the United States and invite the American army to send three or four of its divisions to guard our shores. They would consist of artillery, anti-air- craft batteries and infantry. This army would constitute s wall of dcfcnce around the arenas of our parliaments, so that discussions pro and con on the Plcbiscitc might be continued without danger to our hClOVCrI Canada. After all, the Un- itcd States cannot afford m lose the war because we squabble, American troops are already on guard in Ncvvfoundlaurl anti Northern Ireland and arc now bring svlll to England. \\'e are told, rightly or wrongly. that their introduction l0 lllc fll<l<‘<l colony has brought in many reforms such as better roads, better housing conditions sud oven pisiciiririug milk. We could imag- Illc what a roiuluc from our complacency in this llupriilvclcil civrucr of Canadian life would re- sult from the [YYPSPHCQ of troops who felt the dangers ihzu lonmvtl ovcr North America from the wild Pris: Cfiflsls of Quebec. lVbctbcr or not HCllFlu on illr liucs l have suggcslcrl is possible at flu‘ prcscui iinif’. l lrn-ivc it in "llllllilry and naval and 1dr exports m dccidc, but uubodv can read the .~‘i)(‘f‘t-'ll(‘.~‘ of PTPllIIPl‘ (iodbout without a thank- ful feeling that in T1€§li quarters our French- Weilflllfl Cfllllpiilriflis scc zhc danger that threat- ens us this spring. Tu quote, wit], a Change’ H“ old Ixuin hymn, "Tilie fimcs arc very evil, The hour is waxing lair, Be careful and kcrp vigil Th0 I'll,'.\' ic at llic gate," (Sltucdl Fruanmzicx GEORGE Scurr. Qucbrc Alflrch (uh. I012. _____________________ New Tax Convention Good ucws to Canadian investors in American securities was contained in the recent announce- ment of a new fax convention between Canada and the United Sialcs. 'I‘he Dominion Gflvsrn- mom also hnpcs to lucuofit substantially, Revenue .\Illll>l€l' ilibsim explained, through "the avoid- aucc of duublc iflXlilfill, the prevention of fiscal evasion-and the general promotion of the flow of commerce between the two countries." Briefly, tho convention follows along the lines of a previous convention which existed from i936 uufil .\pril loll. Deduction (taxation) at the source in the lfnilcd States was increased in i941 from 5 to 27 1-2 per cent 0n dividends, interest, rents, royalties and other periodic pay- ments Coming tn residents in Canada. The new convention rcduccs this tn I5 per ccnt as and from the lust ilil_\’ of _l.'um.1r_v, 194i. Canada also deduct: 1;’, pcr ccui in respect of interest, divid- ents and rr)_\'aliics going to the United States, so that there now exists substantial equality of de- ducfion at tlv- source between the two countries. lndividuzils rc-"idcut in Canada who are not citizens of flu» United Slates arr not subject to the graduated rrilcs nf fax in the United States and arc um rc-quircrl f0 file Llnitcd States re- turns, unlu-s they luivc zm office or place of busi- ncss ilrt-rciu. Fur p.'ii'<‘ni rouipzuiiirs in Canada rczeiving divi- dl-uds from wholly nwvgrl subsidiaries in the Un- iu-d Sirius. 1hr ilcduciiun at the source is reduc- (‘ll in Q pvr i‘(‘ll|. .\s 23w ouivciuiiui civmcs liiln forcc on ihc first day of _l5lllll1ll'_\'. llLll. .1 rcfuud will be made of all i.'i.\':'s lli‘llllt'li‘ll zu ilic suurcc in excess of tlic i5 pm‘ ccni ur 5 p'.'i' ccui ralc without application Tic-lug mzulc thorn-I'm‘. us the rcfiuids will be made by dirsciiuii of the Government of the United Siaics through the mciliimi of corporations and Ilhlllllliilils which iniii.'illv nmdc the deduction. Th4; (‘rill\'i'lllllill providcs. “wiih a vicw In ilic ‘WM of information between the revenue authorities in each coimtry “insofar as such information may be of use to the authorities of the other con- tracting state in the assessment of the taxes to which the convention relates." Matters of this kind arc public property in the United States, but not in Canada, where federal income tax returns may m; be dcvulgcd even to succcssi0n duties su- illorilics of a Province without the consent of the estate of the tax payer. The new convention goes far to remove such secrecy. at least insofar as investments of citizens of Canada in the United States, and vfn vans, sreconcerned. Six Weeks of it Our House of Commoni. says the Qllawl- Journal, has been sitting for six weeks, ind ll‘ ready members have read or spoken words which fill some 1,200 pages of Hausard. The first definite accomplishment of the ses- sion was the passing of the plebiscite bill. last week. For a month the members opened their hearts on the debate on the Speech from the Throne. For a fortnight they discussed the plebiscite. And already they are making plans for an Easter adjournment of a couple of weeks after which, but without any improper 1185i!’ the budget will be brought down. The House has not been sitting Wednesday and Friday evenings. Nowhere is there any sign of urgency, any indication that the members feel they are wasting time and money, that cabinet tniuislers in this emergency could be b¢tt€r em- ployed running their departments than sitting lhrough dull and repetitious debates. Nobody will read the Hausard rrport of this session without a sense of depression. There is the political by-play, the jockeying for tactical position, which make the reader wonder if the llouse knows the Japan's-c are at large in the Pacific, that Germany is threatening the world. Little in these 1,200 pages speaks of drive or force or inspiration; painfully little shows any under- Ztauding of the deadly peril in which we live t0- 3V. EDITORIAL NOTES We should be free from equinocial galcs round about the 20th, seeing experiences we have al- ready gone through. s a e u ‘In Westmont residents have been fined $10, Wllli $4 expenses, for non-effcctivc observance of black-outs. n- o u a The S. S. Prince Edward Island must be in poor shape, when with all six boilers going she takes ten hours to negotiate the passage to Tor- mentine. iii! As the Irishmen of the city afe not going to parade on the 17th this year, it does not matter much whether or not the streets are fit to walk upon dry-shod on that historic day. s: n: s x Sugar in Australia, like wheat here i5 at a dis- count. Because of thesmaller quantity of sugar Purchased from Australia this year by Great Blllalll. 850v! 450,000 tons of sugar cane cannot be harvested in Queensland this year. Production of sugar will be about 60.000 tons below the out. Pill f0!‘ 1940-41, wllcn 260.000 ions were madc. s s Remembcrf-in fighting japan we are not op- Pusfd Y0 a civil -cd,—far lass Clrrisuun, foe. ja- Palls Conception of war-fare is “women and children first-strike at the hearts and homes of the enemy.” They have done so in l-loug Kong, and for lack of white women and children have taken flic yroung lads in uniforms, ticd them io- gfilllcr. truFsed them, and then gratified their blood lust l)_\'l)3_V0ilClliil;1 thcm. Uf such is ihc Kingdom of l-Iell. w s m s Lucknow fell this date 1858; the Indian Mui- iug broke out in I857 at Mecrut; the chief ccuircs of the war were Delhi, Cawilpore and Luckuoiv; Cawuporc was the scene of the “Bloody Well"; Luclrlloiv is celebrated for the relief brought to the British garrison by General Havelock; with ll"! Calllure of Delhi, the headquarters of th‘: rcbcl troops. the back of the rebellion was broken; the Derby-Disraeli Ministry llicn transferred the (iovernment from the East Indies C0., to the’ Clown; the last flames of the Mutiny, kept 3ll8llt_ b)’ Nanna Sahib, were quenched by Lord Canning 1859-62, but the unrest in many parts, “Peclally Bcngalitha: bien serious cver sincc. i Not before time, the Federal Govgmmgm i; lll-‘llflng In attempt to economize in stationery. Every newspaper knows in this connection sinful waste by the host of bureaux now in existence. A five men committee, with Mr. Justicc T. C, Davis has been appointed m investigate and re. port. The committee was formed after Mr. C. U. Staplcton, manager of office services for the Canadian National Railways, told a gathering of interdepartmental officials that Canada faces a stationery paper shortage of 100,000 tons this year. Suggestions from various departments at the meeting included use of cheaper paper, re- duction of size of forms and elimination of un- necessary types, economy in use of kraft enve- lops. substitution of ordinary printing for em- bossing on letter-heads and use of both sides of letterheads. Ullllfl Because he has accepted socialist Sir Stafford Cripps as his deputy in the House of Commons. Mr. Churchill has roused the indignation of the old-time laissez faircs of Cliveden days, and now the two Astors, of The London Times. and The Sunday Timcs are joining with the Daily Mail and Evening Standard and other malconicnts with a view to curbing the powers of the Prime Minister, who is also head of the Department of War. The curious part of the controversy is that one half of the critics blame Mr. Churchill for having appointed Lord Beavcrbrook, subsequently dropped, io the production Nlinisiry, where it is alleged lie got at ioggcrhcads with both army administrators and industrialists. retarding instead of expediting. hence his substitution by Mr. Oliver Lytileiou. a socialist, in whom ihc other half object. Altogether .\lr. (‘hurchill has not his sorrows to sock running the Empire and the prevention of fiscal evasion" for an exchange war, not io mention the House of Commons, I v fi jrnsm cuancorrufrovvu _ IIIITES BY TIIE WAY Pass: e inlo 0U!" hum‘ “I u“ travel agency 0f 1'50""! c°°k 5‘ 50;; l; m’ interest to multitudes who» convenience, comfort. and pleasure it has served so 1011C- Forlunslely, its name, the girdle I! has put round about. the earth, mmains. 1t has seemed s. superior- ity to some to smile at Cook's tour- isiis. Yet manna 000k 6v 5°" h!" no mean plane 1010118 “will” Ind benefactors; 1nd they hid u" imagination of amt snlemrlwl- mamas Cook began work at 10. He was gardener, wocd turner. Prlfllfil‘ publisher, Bible under. Baptist homo missionary. pmclwr "1 M- totaiism. A temperance excursion by s special train 0n lhe Midland Railway in 1841 was his first ven- tum into transportation. He mnclo excurslonlng his business. In his axrflflflilflkllll with howl keep- ers he invented those coupons for hotel bills now familiar to most of mankind. His son. Jill"! M5501"- was over here 1:1 1866 and studied the North American business. n,“ he provided for special pas- saucer traffic on the railroads M the Continent. His steamship and postal service on the Nile, his how] and hospital" at. Luxor, his transportation of the British wounded and ill afier the battle of Tel el-Keiblr, oi Genera] Gordon and British armies, marked suf- ficiently his activity, H; was mas- ter of the Nile. He extended 000k- lsln to India at the invitation of the Government He devised means for the safely of pilgrims to Mecca. I-Ie steered the late Gen-nan Em- peror u-p Vesuvius and on his comic expedition to the Holy Land. He established an frrmense collateral business of banking. exchange. shipping He got rich, as he deserv- ed. He and his father added to the experience and the happiness of millions of men and women. It, is just» that their honorable name should continue to be written and heard - New York Times. Our men aro lighting not. bo- mus; fighting is their chosen pro- fession, but. for a concrete purpose: to preserve the dcorncics of de- mocratic life st. h:me_ They can- not b; expected to face the savage ordeal of battle fire unless they arc certain that. life at home is as free, wholesome and courageous as they left it. I! life at hflme be- comes tirnid or hysierlcal, if it de- generates into stupid wrangling, no command to go forward into the perils of battle can carry full weight What. our marines did at Wake Island In the face of over- whelming odds and nhai. General MacArihurs men are now cloin! 011 Bataan Peninsula and on Cox-regi- dor express the spirit of men who love and trust the way of llfe they left at home. Al. a time like this the individual citizen can con- tribute scmeihlng vital to the war effort. by self-discipline. He can assume an attitude of personal re- sponsibility for ih-e war. Itf he keepsfresh 1n mind the prlncirves for which it is being fought. if he understands the lntimale relation between his daily life. his home, his job, his arcoclaiion urlih ifs friends. his cultural life and the fury of battle against the prophets of an- nihilation. he can strengthen our cause. Not only what he docs hut “hat he fAllIlik-r and says affects the mini war effort. - New York Times Two hundred tons of rose hips gathered from the hedges of Eng- land and Scotland lail autumn have been turned int-o syrup for the older children in Britain who cannot. gel. a regular supply 0f oranges. Like the orange, rose hip-i are a rich source of vitamin “C" the anti-scurvy vitamin Before l-he war it. never occurzed to anybody to use rose hips, but. when the sup- ply of oranges durlndlcd a small army of Boy Scouts, Girl Guides. teachers and Wrmen's tistitute members turned out; into the lanes with their baskets Even house- wives who were expert Jam mak- ers found li- dlfflculf to IKGQQHIIIQ hlp hairs out of the syrup and the hips were therefore sent off to nino factories which have now pro- duced from them M0000 bottle of syfllv- Young childrfn are sipbin! ii. with rellm at the rate of one leaspoonful a day Two teaspoon- fuis in the twenty-four hours give all the vitamin C which older boys and girls require. Britain's min- istry of health are so pleased with the result that they are hoping for a much bigger collection of rose hips when autumn comes round again, _- By Robert Williamson. Opposition will no doubt be met. by the proposed law in Ontario re- quiring those lntenduing marriage to submit to blocd tests. Legisla- tion seeking tho some object, but. broader l; scope, in fact, had to be withdrawn two years ago, because it was so violently opposed. It is difficult l-o understand the an- tagonism to this principle. It aims to benefit the general health of the people and bears the promise of healthier generations in come. Several states require such ex- aminations, and their experience with these laws has been splendid. Yo; them are prejudices no be over- come, and they die hard. -- Wind- sor star. British Columbia ls to plant i0,- 000.00) young trees on iis logged- off lands this year. That, it is stated, ls the full schedule planned by the ibrcsst Brandi and will take all the seedings available in the Green Timber and Campbell River nurseries Ten million trees will require a lot. of handling and will replsnt ten w fifteen thousand acres of logged-off land. Prcpm. in; the land and planting will in- volve a lot of work and ihe ex- Dsll-se will not be light. However, if British Columbia expects to keep in being tho forests whim provide the mater-in] for the provinces premier industry. there is nothing for it but to undertake the work and spend the money. - Vancouv- er Pivvinco. t. 611532.119‘ PUBLIC FORUM Illa sold-l la 0M0 IOI ill Iljjflllh. by onsroepenlalh 0| OI IIUOIOIL The “a. III b will"! OVERSEAS MAIL Sir:-.Prom tame no time 1 luvs brought to your attention cant whore s considerable volmno c! mull was lost. duo to curcumstanoes beyond f-hs control of this new"- mont. Buch a situation has just come to light. again and the Post- master General, Hon. Mr. Mulock, has asked that. the can be brollilit to your attention, Word has been received that a westbound steamer, expected to reach Canada with 906 bags of mall on board, has been lost due lo enemy action. Naturally anxiety will be felt by the addressees when letters and parcels they may have been ex- pecting fall to arrive and no doubt complaints against the Post Office will follow-you will, however, ap- preciate our position. While writing on a Postal sub- ject, I might mention that the volume of Military snails shipped overseas continues to Increase. During the h-lendar year 194i some 5.566 ions of Military mall only were despatched-a gain of 3,568 tons over ihe calendar year 194-0. The mail forwarded overseas through the Base Post Offirc dur- ing i941 was made up as follows:- 11.413.B.'l0 letters. 1.346.751 pounds of newspapers and magazines, 9,571,138 pounds of parcels, ln- cluding tobacco gifts. Scme 65,000,060 cigarettes are now helm-l Slllplkd monthly to our fighting services overseas by the Canadian Postal Corps. Ln playing their particular part in the en- deavour to "keep the smokes oom- lng" (as our troops request. repeat. edly in their brotucasts from Eng- land), Canada's Army Postal au- thorities are giving every possible attention to the careful and sys- lemalic handling c-f tobacco pay. Gel-B throulh the maib, and are Slllpplng a. supply sufficient to av- erage. roughly. 12s cigarettes per man oversaw. every week t0 our forces. As revealed by the break. down above of the mails shipped Over-lie“. the tobacco gifts are Just a part of the entire volume f’! mil- llflry mails passing through the Base Post Office. The ellllrmoll-E 88in in the volume v1 military mars in 1941 and the fact. that. an uptrend continues, serves to emphasize the constant, need of co-operatlon by the man. ins Public so that the full time of the Canadian pasta] authorltics may be ‘levoled l0 expediting a regular flvw of malls rat-her than diverted to attend to letters which are im- Dlvprrly addressed or to re-pack and re-address parcels utrch for Wlllll 01' lldflqllflle preparation have been dflmgised in the malls. i’ am. S1r.etc., B. J. FARRELL Acting Director, Post Office Department, Ottawa. Marl"; 10 WE MUST BE FREE It. is not to be thought of that the Of British freedom, which to the open sea Of the warlzrs praise from dark antiqu y Hath flowed, ‘with Dump of waters tbs ood' unw . Roused though it. be full often to Which“ spurns the check of salutary bands. That this most famous stream in b0il5 and sands Shouldogsrish; and to evil and to K Be lost for ever. In our halls is uni! Armour of the invincible knights of We must‘ be free or dle, who speak the tongue Thai: Shakespeare spake; the faith and morals hold Which Milton held. In everything we are sprim l: Of earth's flfit blood, have titles o . -Wordsworfh (18_0_2,.) manif MAGS iililii Restorer A delicately perfumed ure- narstlnn which restores. pltrpnlihens and beautlfles the a r. Ii will restore rray hair to its ori lnal color, prevents Dandru and stops falllnl hair. bottle Get your today. Price Gil cents. TRUSSES I Modern and nn-tn-dlle ones from a lsrso assortment of American Trusses first received. All silos and styles st nrlces to unit every one. Call and luvs n: flt you. COLD! I Prompt and effective relief Is obtained in coughs, colds. chills. sore throat. whooping cough and bronchial troubles in infant and adult by MAC! AMMONIATED BRONCIIIAL COMPOUND This nrsparatlon h oom- oounded from pnre drugs and us been thoroughly tried and Prion 50 cents per no e. We have a commute line of in r o» r u - utili- aIgayrs lnostzohmen" Til! TWO MAGS Mail 0rders Given Promos Attention. WORDS OF (‘HA LLENGF A Thought A DI! For A People At War "but us than march forward tenet-nor. facinc dancer. ban:- ln: saor lrioe. taanpetin: only m the effort to share even more ruuv in law upon us all." — D. Roosevelt. rmsidlant of the Unlifld Bum _i___._ Tunnelhng History (Wlnmiwl Free Pleas) A nhowsrapn of a Lime goon 0f Canadians buying fruit a spamsn peasant woman is appear- mg m Umlea sums newapapersfrne men are hard-rock mmers wno went away to me war out nave been for l year tumzeums info Gibraltar. A cavernous city nas been blamed out by mew. deep below the stronz old. ‘mls laoinnuum NIJGB-l rocky bowels is a maze of secret and lofty recesses. although spies 00min]: ually 1n the disguise workmen from Alzeclras and Le Linea, would uke to wreck it. know- mz than what mvnamltle has excava- um dynamite can destroy. This deepest level in Gibraltar is new construction, and a refuge. s stor- RW. I Masai‘. an arsenal. an im- pregnable. or untouchable. base be- neaun the lmpregnabillty which COUIG. crumble unaer the bombs and gun-fire of this war. ‘These Uananlans have been open- lnz a book or history as they have been tortlrymg the stronghold. The pages of prehistoric eons have been ruined in the tunnelling into the lueonerranean formation. Blasting Jurassic sandstone has revealed stratified evidence of geologic axes and people swept away 1n them. Hugh Miller once carved history 1n the same way out of the red sand- stone. and gave life to the stony uena. but ile was a stonemason. a numole craftsman compared with these Canadian rook-miners. They blast. their wny, excavating voids for IIOSDIBEIB and all the accommoda- tion xieodled by the cmllan and mili- tary ‘population of a fortress be- sfege . Yet these untutored rock-miners from Cannon can rival savanls. and m their own rough bowing reach .nuu.n and remote axes as accurate- ly as did Flmdcrs Pebrie. By dig- ging. by excavafuig. and by a little blasting. mat. famous Eizyiolozlst scooped for long-past history in an- other Mediterranean field. and un- em-uied ions-lost Grecian cities in the Delta of the Nlle. The rock-miners probed deeper, and the stratified fossils they found and saved tell the stories of eons that. had passed before the Phar- aohs became legendary amouz the mixtures of races blended through the centuries into the Mediterran- eans the Germans despise, as they would the little Spanish peasant, woman from whose basket the Can- adian soldiers in the photograph pick fruit. to their likinu. The—Wa_r 0r Color (Winnipfis Free Press) The color question will be not the least of the racial ncnaces the Germans have unleashed It is now being used to good eff;ct. by their allies, the Jnps, and may yet upset the human ri-latious of the world. The first thing the Japanese did when they attacked the Philip- Dln-rs ivas to shower lenflos in- viting the Filipinos to join breth- ren of their own color to drive the white men out of‘ the Far East. 'I‘lmt was not. the first mention of this racial purpose by the Jap- anese, for they had long insinuat- Qd l0 Aslfifilcs that the time had come when the yellow people should rld themselves of white lntrudzrs. That appeal could conceivably have force. In a way, ii, was the motive behind much that lmd swayed the Indians in their do- mand for oompleric independence, although their demand was bilscri upon recognition of their moral and menial ability to rule them- selves. The appeal bore fruli. when lnsidlouslv conveyed to the People of Thailand, and equally lnsldiouslv found disciples ln Bur- ma. Mr. U Saw. the prime minist- er 0f Burma. was not. the only Bur- man who was iurnlnq to the Jun- anese to rid themselves of British, or white, sovereignty. The leaders of India have no misconceptions about the Japanese and would not substitute me auto- "RPY 0f NlDDOn for the benevo- lent rule of the Brit n. The Bur- mans might, and ind..i are under- stood lo, have negotlael with the Japanese long beforg their prime minister was placed under restraint la a military necessity. They oom- pcse that ethnological section of me population of Burma which have resented the culture and superiority of the people of India and detcsteri the Chinese. They were fertile soil In which Japanese promises could flourish. And to some extent their leaders particularly were ripe to divert their allegiance fro-n British rule to the imagined happicr as- $018110]! with Japanese domlna on. So the war that Hitler was to confine to Europe, so that. his New Order might be wholy contained and constructed within s Europe that. would revolve around the Germans themselves. spreads ru- oisl oonflagratlon, It Ls s. fire that WEEK-END SPECIALS Men's suits, new Sprln! M04618 2 panis- _. Men’s Trench Coats, Navy, Air Force, Men’s New Still"! 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GEO. ST. PHONE 1500 M53911 B4942 422.50 Fawn — —~$ 5.95 .59 .85 r dcsistin from actual flilhtin! all’; be unabgle m querwlh- It ma!’ yet be mourned by tne Germans as well as by most Ol-hvl‘ while peoples, a; the cause 0f H Wfllld upheaval more devasting than the demolition of warfare. Public Examples (Judith Robinson ln “News") Somebody said it was 1100 bud about Mr. Roosevelt deciding to have Admiral Klmmel and General Short court-maxtlaled; they mllfili feel ible about. Pearl Harbour anywa . When the Brlikh Admiralty couri-martialed and shot Admiral Byng for letting a. French squadron under Admiral Ga-lissonxere GSCBLB from hlm a. great many people in England said 1t was o b . and the French thought it very funny. It was an odd Enizllsh custom. a wit. said; shpgtlnizu one admiral to en- o iers. coiullciieas if turned out, that. ls what dld. Admiral Byng was condemned to death "for not having clone his ut- most," and was shot. at Portsmouth. March 14, 1757, one hundred and eighty-five years ago next satuxlay. And it was as though the shr-t. wakened England from a. drluzflid sleep. Admiral Byng was shot Iii‘ incompetence. It. was not his fault that he was incompetent. but. he wflii shot for it. just the same. The effect on all the other incompetents in the British navy was swift. Less than three years after the English fleet had muffed the play in front. of Mlnorcn and drq 82d away throuzh the straits of G raltar leavinz the zarrison Byng had been sent. to re- lieve to its fate. English squadrons under new commanders without in- fluential connections were carryinn the flap‘ and the name of England in Lriump over all the seas of the world. It could happen that way again for us all, lf somethinil can LIGHT In view of the recent order prohibiting the falilllgll‘ tering of Hogs weighing less than 130 lbs. warm, dressed carcass weight" we would urge that all farm- ers in selecting Hogs for market adhere to the Pfafi lice that their Hogs weigh at least 200 lbs. live welfl when selling. ‘ Your co-operation in this respect will result infll; maximum number of Hogs grading within the desire DAVIS & FRASER weights. MANUFACTURED BY IIIMEEY & iiliiiiiilfflli ‘Tobacco iio. ltd. Charlottetown TANKS WILL WIN THE DA Y Because they have what it takes. They make head- way against obstacles, and our tobacco also has wlll‘ it lakes. It has made headway with the Pllllm ‘m. the day ii first went on sale. iHickeyis Black Twist Chewing" Tobacco woken us 1n time. This is not an argument f shooting admmzls or xenerals such. It is not even an an: for shooting politicians. But ii is ar ent for letting a sense of .. . portion develop with our peril. Three thousand Americans died Pearl Harbour, Two mousand Ca adians were killed or taken prison m; Hons: Kong. One hundred th sand Empire soldiers were cap at Singapore. The facts are h .v and dark enough. They should or shadow the small importance - those who did less than their u most b0 ensure the humble actors these tragedies everv chance ih Lrnlnln , equipment and int/slime p- nun give men right f our freedom. The the cries of sensibi ify that keen: i keenest pity for the sufferings of t well-connected. If public examples can help con viznce the smug inertia in high D = >- that high places are no :- healfhy for smug inertia. public e amples should be model It may ' uncomfortable for the examPlEs b ii/s an uncomfortable ivorld. CAPS FOR. CHOOSY GIRLS LDNDON-(CP) - Factory ‘ now have three call slyl“ which to choose. The)‘ have ' designed by experts for llre Mi Lstry of Labor because maul’ W" ers ma preferrcd w risk herd l Juries rather than well‘ all ll! mob cap. DID MAN'S JOB LONDON-(CP) -Mi's. Zoe Wl kin, Auxiliary fire service W4!" manned a pump so curable 4:‘ n raid that her mates didn't l1 until the next day she was s. W0 an. Use Mlnnrd’; for dandruff. HOGS 5657-3-2- ->.