" \‘ ll‘. FOUR j uusi BIlfIRLDTTETIlHN GUARDIAN Shutting Unlly lkwlllfilfll u! W8“ Pri-sulriii. Livul. (in. \\. Chester S. McLiu-e \lt"g \‘,\‘»\tl\'I\\'. J. it. Burnett, I-‘JJ. srltl-tnii- inui. tel. ll. .\. bluclllnnon, 0.8.0. I m.- .iiiil .\.l..u. -_-,ir.-_» iliri-i-iur. .l. 1.. Burnett, F..I.l. As.mt,.'.i~ Ltliiuis. linult Yiulker and Inn A. lfllrnetl Sl UNI Illl"llU. RATES By .\l.iil lIl ['15. . siwu [WT W"; $2.50 for 6 months. glili fui a mouths; 50c for one month City lhlflvl) rft/Jl) iii-r your; $3.00 for 6 mouth: t-l i.» Lu .2 mun-hm, 60c for one Month B)‘ Mail to utlivt luoiiut us and L‘.S..~\. $5.00 pet year Munro,“ \\\('l\l_\I . rim p1‘! ymr; $1.00 for B months. ' I-ur lur 3 munths The (‘bl 'l\'lll\\ll (iuiuuiuu may be obtained ll "Ulltllllll; s .\l'\\\ .\ m»). runes square, New York: Ulrl south .\\'\\\ \-.;rul-,\, (‘tirui-i- Milk and Washington “Ilslnlll, .‘\f('ll.i[ll-lll.|]] .\t~~.i> Agency, 124B Pee] 5L. illuuirinr, I lun~ 11.11 tiny $1., ‘foroiitu: News Stand. (‘liultniti I...u:.l-t. llllnuzi; “lilies Sew; Stand Sub- but) Uul . Hub iotnitt-o shop, Aluiicton N. B. "The Sttotlucsf Memory is Weaker than l!!! Weakest Ink." izoxiiil‘, OCTOBER l9. I942 lli. lkiq Qt r Lcremony inspiring ceremony wl- rln- lliiril Yictory ": g l~i lite 13,," includ- rd soldiers who were . v... ing relatives here. \~.\ rcuiinrlcr of the fact u‘. v. v.3 ‘lihc cnctiiy lurks right o ll_'\l with the uiust mur- 1 \l.l ileslructiciti. The bereav- i». iiltl» “CFC lost will have the if everyone; but we owe t‘ than sympzilltv. The l)('5lI inst a repetition of such them permanently to an .iii."_v over the enemy, is by .'.i~n in Canada's war effort. _l‘i\~’ l\\\\\’, concentration of all the Yiclonv Loan “over ASWEY to Hitler's latest act casualty incurred should be igation we assumed in the sinews of war. That was ‘ulllCllt ZMlIlTCSSCB delivered .. ticctit tnrnottt of our ser- orqaiiizntions and civilians, \l't’ll for the success of the ijgii. I-s oi oi a Trill. \\ .v of lt‘.()\" theme of at ycv-rdnys viro \\"li.1l \Vei'rre Paying For China." reminds us after the l‘\4 in the Allied Nations had a mitimetit, \\'lllCl’l was a product ntiticss and partly of pcztcc dis- u retuember of course the fam- Qriict on the \V€stern Front." tl t'"c scntitnent of practically all brink was translated into many lan- .~" ft world's best-seller, ~s at Uxfortl and Cambridge or- : zed pence sticictics. Those pacifists pledg- ' y iwnltl not bear arms even to defend "zitcs returned m isolatiouism, re- ' lg to pazxlewpiite in the League of Nations and to interfere with European affairs. In the tics tifrzr the First \\'orld “Car the ties was predominantly pacifistic in iv val state in Europe and Aut- nn tirinsual historical oppor- "im the rank and file and des- at_v provisions one by one. . . not was France able to lu the civurse of only seven -< l; rzticiny was fully armed and to Siilfi a new career of world ag- ~P the lfnited States was still paci- i QFP-‘s yiasserl the tieutrality law, ill“ cxtcnsititi of foreign loans ' ll1l"ll of arnicuneiits in American airis nit until Hitler had vanquished i-iiis that the American peo- . the inevitability of a second - iii-t lllllll llccctllbcr 7 last that ‘i s ll- ridcd to declare war on the ll The Prairie Income < income itidicale how de- ‘tc provinces between the -'V\(§ will are on the wheat l'lll was n poor nn. S0 the pwlnrts was $33,500,000 ‘his war. ‘:0 zucrcase in the sale of . the year, the prairie - tt-rii lwll_i' off indeed. ~ filril a large part of rr- of the wheat crop, ‘i ‘Hit ltili‘. "lit nris up $l6,500,000; frluti dairy products, '1. |l~ti':r_i' and eggs, $8,- .. 4l‘ll: “Wolf crop tiutirccctlcut- |Jll'lll iiimttie should bc . l \\'lml You lluqlit To Know ‘ill ‘ ll-"nt ll'|\\l\ lt- tropical l. -i lQ_ \\ .-i~hiiii_'ltiii tiews- ll‘ jd/llll‘, "is us inuircgu~ ' ui-t l><~ lllillll‘ lit-cziust- tlic . w trill l‘llllllllll('lll over ll(‘l'f‘ ~ l» irnl liPZlTPIl frtiiu l'<-:irl W-liirlilttt lu discuss the cou- :t:'<~ uipi-Iiitiq for fighting ' t'l‘l \\llll'l'~ --l'it_flititig them " ~-i.- lit" lvirlg ztrllclt’. "this ' sitvs lo liziuuwr the effici- l w ‘til \"t“~u~ litwztttsc it permits llll‘ ziinzilrur lic- '.'l~ lit ilslt and illl‘ \xis prrtlinqiilld- isls t» “*l'l"lll lllt‘ llltvlillY old lies lhzit ‘litiglntitl tail.’ f1”! thw lu~t .\ttt<\rit','1|]' and that [he btiiir-l 51ml» is pzviiuz: fur llll‘ WIN." ltvirrilitnt tltrll lrtttl-lrttsc aid wnrks both ways, Karly *\2lll‘.\' tlrtt for cvCTy airplane England im- w. t! \ti1it»pli-»liis, l" _ M~THEH CHARLUFIEJYU WIN_‘UL_JARDIAN ports from the United States, she exports four of her own manufacture to Russia; I01" ab°ut 20o tanks sent from United States last W“. Britain put into action 3,000 0f b6!‘ OWH; that British railroad shop workers did a YQHFS WQYk in ten weeks to build L000 freight cars for the Trans-Persian line whiCll IWYQFICFI" engineers completed to curry British and American sup- plies fruiu the Persian liulf to the Caucasus. "lteuieuibcr that if the British had not don‘: their job so superlatively ivell,” says Karig, “Hitler would be in Windsor Castle today. Hc might even lie in Ottawa, to hcartcn his troops itivzitliug the United States. Remember that for itiorc thztn two years the concentrated Nazi might and power has been perched only eighteen miles from England, and that the island has been under ziluitist continuous bombardment all that time. (Ild stuff, hut remember it anyhow." — EDITORIAL NOTES- Victory llond Day. n at u After yesterday's popular demonstrations, Government and salesmen should experience little difficulty in disposing of their gilt-edge securities. i Rcichsitiarshal Goering has deposited about $8,000,000 in foreign countries and has pur- chased a villa in Sweden where he hopes to live in security after Germany collapses. Hope it won't be long. ill! fiififi Sir Charles Wheatstone, English electrician, died this date, 1875; his first researches were in connection with sound, and was appointed professor of experimental philosophy in King's College, London, in 1834 when thirgv-tuo years of age; three yczirs later with Mr. W. F. Cooke he took out a patent for the first electric tele- graph; he also invented the stereoscope and in- struments for measuring constants of a voltaic scrics. v n- : n- Sir Thomas Bcecham, millionaire son of the pill man, and distinguished conductor, hates critics. It will be recalled he turned on an Australian audience and abused-them for their lack of appreciation, and now it is his wife who is threatened to get it where the chicken got the axe. Sir Thomas who has been con- ducting Seattle Symphony Orchestra, wants to divorce his wife, Utica Celcstia Beecham, daughter of a prominent New Yorker, because she allegedly belittled his success by “constant harping and adverse criticism." He filed his suit Aug. 26 at Idaho City. w w n: v Enough said! When Col. the Hon. I. L. Ral- ston, Minister of National Defence, recently paid a visit to sortie of the Canadian soldiers ivouudctl at Dieppc, he paused for a few words with Sgt. Ernest Thirgood, who had won the hlililnry llctlal for gallantry in action. The Sergeant pfOllflly showed him a. picture of his little dzuiglilcr, Carol, and as the Minister turn- ed to leave, he said: “I've been wondering why we haven't got conscription for overseas service." To which. so it is reported. Col. Ralston te- plicd: “If you came back to Canada you'd find out." n- n- is a Mr. I. F. M. Stewart, of Canada's National War Finance Committee, told the American FCIlPIZIlIOII of Labor couvctititiu that the fin- ances of the Dominion are sound and that Can- adian people are united in the war effort. Re- viewing Canada's war finance, Mr. Stewart said that this year the Dominion Government's ex- penditures would total $4,00o,ooo,0o0 — eight times as much as the $500,000,000 spent in I939. Fifty~tivo per cent or more than $2,ooo,ooo,ooo, would b»: raised by direct taxation and the re- mainder would come from the sale of war sav- ings stamps and certificates, compulsory sav- ings and in two Victory Loan drives. Cau- aclians, he said, have three "hates." They hate war and provide money to end it; they hate in- flatioti and control wtages and prices to pre- vent it; tlicy hale ivaut and war savings will liclp to prevent want in the after-war years. it 4- w r What is sauce for the U.S.A. goose should be ditto for the Canadian gander. Prices Atl- ministrator Leon Henderson, Washington, an- nounces the government's plan to provide tires ‘to keep every United States passenger car “roll- ing for essential mileage" throughout the war. The announcement-setting forth strictest con- trol over mileage, speed, rubber, gasoline, tire care and car-sliarittg~—\vzls the first Official in- dication that the Office of Price Atlmiuislra- lion construed the recent Bernard Baruch Corn- mittce report on the rubber situation as calling for tires for every driver. Mr. Robert W. Horton, deputy director of the O.P.A., in charge of information, confirmed this interpre- taliou whcu questioned by saying: “The Baruch (‘timmitlecx after a long and careful study, said that everybody could gct tires. This is our plan, to try and get tires to everybody." m a n- n- Cztrl Samlbtirg, says the Montreal Gazette, told, a few months ago, a story he had heard from a French veteran of the I940 campaign. The Frenchman had captured a young, husky Nazi. After rcfitsiiig to answer any questions, llic (icruiau whilctl away the time boasting to his cnitlut" of the critcltics he had committed as rt Storm 'l‘roopcr. Had he ever killed a man? Vortninlv llml lie ever tortured a man? Yes, lllflll)‘ limos. There was limiting, he said, that lll‘ would unl do for Der Fuchrer and Der Valer- lllllll. “\\i'cll," said the Frcticluunti, “I am pn- triolic loo. I have ncver tortured a man before, hul I am nut loo old to learn. I am going to put this cigrircllc of tniuc on your eyelids." It ticvtlvrl no tuorc lliati that. The Nazi fcll on his kucrs in tears, told what unit he had conic from, ivhcrc llivy were going, what llicy had ltcrn d0- iug, and wctit on to beg for mercy. This ivas the sort of language lic coulrluurlcrsland. Hans llzthc, loo, lclls in his hook A Tllflllfiflllfl Shall Fall of lrytittg to itifcrrogntc a Nazi prisoner and gelling vioivltcrc until, rcnictnltcritig Gcruian tttcthritls, ll(‘ hogan to shout and lilusfcr like a Prussian. Ilis prisoner immediately told all he knew. NOTES BY THE WAY Benjamin Disraeli was famous in ugemtme and pJAllliCa for t..:e keen- mss of his P611 and stiuiptiess of hi5 wit. ‘This W115 illustrated 1n a conversation with a conllflllllvn 116 they slrollczl kllOlIg the bun}; tl the ‘Ihaincs. Upon bring ukial l-ic difference bet-treat ctiluituly- and cutustmplm he replied curlir. with. out. hesit-ancy: "If my opponent 14511 mm m}; river, lt would be a calamity, but if I felt ‘in, it would a catastrophe." ——Clll‘1$.lZ\II Science MOIIILCJ’. If by flJIy chance Mr. Willkli: should have occasion to campaign In this country azain, tltu travel- ing part of it 5lIDUlClII‘I,_ tioudlg 111m in the least. Kill‘ ' " Ctly 'I‘ll‘ll('.> Though n soy burn Sllllbllfil‘ has betn d1 vised Vl/atsliiuutoii exprrts "o said to be stymied by the qll€sl'l0n whether;- lt can be lawfully ruled a sausage. It~ wouldn't exactly do to call It plastic food, either, -Ncw York Suzi. on the basis of present fnxallnn, ll, ls lmhkclv lihat- tlicte \\'lll be more than V0 Defilfil? ln Canada with net. income after tans of over- $15,000 annualiy - Canadian Business. honey shortage! ’l‘lizit's a “hone_v"f0i' tilie radio Zzidlrs ulio have been exhcrting housewives t.> Ilse it instead of sugar In ivartlnie cook- . The only safe bet seems. to be wheat. -—The Ottawa Journal. A; reported by The Financial Post, a Japanese radio broadcast ln Muricliurla sold: “HolIi-ivccrl lx-zls been dealt a crushing bl: w by the wax, Plot-tire production has ceased, and the female stars such as Jean- ette MacDonald and Shirley Tlentple have retired to lavish imdcrgrfitnd caves ln the Inland mountains cf the MlsslsslITDl River" Tho Japanese version of Hollvwocrl ls about as axxvurute as Hollvivocdls vcrsicus of some other things _Bmntforu Ev- posit/or. There has been some confusion with regard to the question fls in whether cough drops are coiislrlcrrd as ctmdv or as a sulistvlltl" for candy, for the purpose of the 30 percent, excise tax on candy. An early decision was to the effect that 000g? dlflps were taxable, but this dec 0n was sulosequentiv reversed and the Customs and Excise Div- lslon 0f the Depnrttiictif o‘ l- tonal Revenue has ncw rirftnilci- ruled that cough drums sold and adver- for the relief cf sore throats, are not. taxable. -COIl5lll7\t“.'5‘ Bul. letln, In 1939, dairy farmers were mo- vlding the people ‘in Great Britain with 750,090,900 gallons of milk In I941, ln spite cf labour itiortaittc and trestrlctlom on Imported feedlng stuffs, they produced 940000.000 In May last yea-r, In one monxfi, they pruvlded 133,0C0.000 gallon and now theyve beaten rife-n that lll ‘i level. As a. result cf U115 rocbrzl l c Min- lstry of Flood has been rhfc- to mi- nounce recently that, until fu her notice, llicrc ivll‘ he I'\‘\ I‘(‘§‘.l‘l"7:.()\’\ on the sale of milk. —Bl‘fllldCll Sun. From varlou; sources vumr com- plaints cf ‘rio DZ‘ v1" “l r. "w 15m, of men who \ out of six days in war other vital lndusi-t-ies, bee: :0 the new income tax deouctlons Qulte probably such lurllvlclnws soon wlll be tilt by iemilamons di- rected against absenteeism by government. Why should soldit-m, sellers and almlen be ccmrwllcrl to work seven days a tieck. on duly twenty-four hours a dnv when men working on the production of muril. I-lrn; xvnrlc as and \\"‘»E‘I1 they please? ~—Nls.gara Falls Review. It ls easy to fan passlnn Info n flame. "This is not n uctiflcmnixts affair. you know -__vou cannot linve a kldzlcve war " ‘The Cr0TTTlflIl§ and the Japanese have shotvii its the hestiaf rfiomentnl: of mllll Wn ,-!.i"-.i'1.l not emulate them nu self, If this war irns lo slio we are tougher and more (lent . lers than the Nazis or tlic Jails - and nothing more _ll. \\'0lll(l not n“: tot‘ "which side Won. ~- ‘f Tfnto Gldbe and Mall. In an official (‘lil-icre rcnflrf, broadcast from Cliizngkintz on Fri- day, lt ls stud that quantities 0f gram dropflvd by Jzipnncse pant-s M. Nanyafitl. In Iloriati Prov me, Aug., 30, were flzmid to be 1m r- nated with lmibofiin tilaguc b“! .~ r This may Seem times‘. ltiri-(lrfbl ; but Quch reports, fflll(l\\"‘(l in s n"c oases by accounts of local rpidotnicsg hill/Q been coming out of Chrk 2mg and 851mm Biovlncee for more than Mo years. 1n April. (cf this your. Dr. P. Z, Kim, dirc-flot‘ ale-um. rf Guru's. Nublowtl Healut Adtr-ln sm- tlori, slatted Im- iyubloui-oiti ‘l..- at lnl‘). many 14>», had coilfzinur; I, t- r3.- splclon f/ll- t l-hc Jitptutesg nth" fort: iwu ‘hrymg to aimed (Dlbuihfhl by dropping harulil Ln food. -lvew York Herald Tribune. No lmpoflaul. nillltirv Mvcrztllfvn whether b? sea or laud, cult new suooccd sgnlnst supremacy lu the all‘. Victory has become drpcudetit upon the Ccmbftls of lllliClfll. Tin» closest oo-operal-lon lzrclwccn uie Alr and the other Scrvzoes must be established, but until ‘the Air Form has cleared tho skv rlccrsive action b_ ot-ltcr sirnn; cannot bu tak- en. mbso ulo command of tho air, 1n the sense that no enemy planes llllre attack L; no doubt ns ltntttt-ninnblo as n absolute rtunuirttid of tuc- seii. was e/ven ln NPl$0'l'.-i rlni: but control of the nlr must- bc allnuicd to make any offenslve on the onrmy coast possible. To attain ll and maintain lb requires um provision and concentration of grt-uttii- num- bers of aircraft lhnu rvcr The ‘tsk ls well wllhln l-he power of llio Unl- ted Natltms: but they must realm- its magnitude. — Dally Telegraph and Momlrig Post imndont. Tho bureaucrats job alone at their pence-lame pncr, Th.» B11155 Hats Insist. on their fontis and cere- monies. and an M. P. pills rimvn a Parliamentary quesllnn about. the sad state of saluting in Intirlon. Time after time “export (1\)i.I\l.0tI" has bklden Us rrly IPDOII d-ftuccs which have broken doun The Mntz- inot Line, the mount-alii cmuitry of the Balkans, the sumtnri- heat of’ Lllbyn, the Jimrzlvs of Malaya, t-lic enemy's slrelchorl lino. of com- munlcatilon have all proved l9 be budmn reeds. We have brcu fed ‘l0 mud: (in q dlet. of worrls ——‘l'llil we are getting used to 1t. ‘There is tlho danger. We have wllihdriiwii from so many pfaroq tbct wlth- dmwal begin: to nnD-"nr i1: nu (‘))'l‘~ atlcn fhnl wlll srmfioiv wri ‘ho war. The rein-at frrm Norway shock l-hlg cotintrv to the ccrv The fall of Frann- arousrd u; ti» ri pil"h of stubborn (liEtfWmlllflldPfl flint. was the wonder of tho world ~-'m(l which saved the world . . ."It. wlll a-llcomerlahtln liheend" This dcsircd. the u Government Pay _ Spent In Liquor A correspondent writes to the Halifax Herald as follows: "Mr. Donald Gordon, of Ottawa, now has the power ‘to direct ra- tioning and generally control llv- lug.’ "If that ls so, ll/s too bad he couldn't come down to Halifax for u. while. There are some Win85 around here that are being ra- tloned ln lust the opposite way from what niev should be. ~~Tiiere are tca and coffee. for instance. _ "If {III airman. on his way Over- seas, perhaps, or some dlsabled sailor off a tot-pedoed Ship, asks for n second cup of coffee 1n a Halifax restaurant, he ls told, ‘No; you can only have one cup. It's rnllotted.’ Families go short on tea. try- inv, to itiuke the small allowance stretch to cover three meals. can not have u. cup as a ‘plck-up’ after a hard day's work. even on coming home from a. war-factory night-shift. Yet, at the blg supper dances, ten and coffee are served galore in h0tels or clubs or \Vh€I'8\'PI‘ the party ls held. Since many of the guests are well ‘llt’ by the time refreshments are served, often half of this spread, includ- ltig the tea and coffee, ls wasted. At one ball not long kgo. lt was reported that dozens of cups of tea and coffee had w be tlirotvn out. All this, while fighting men in the forces, and all the rest. of us, are held clown to one cup. “If it, ls really true that Mr. Gordon now has power to ‘control living’, I would like to introduce him to some people I know who are certalnlv in need of ‘control’ of some kind from somewhere. One couple I have been told about holding important executive posl- tloris, thanks to wartime actlvltles. are making more money than they ever had before, In the past three years, lt ls stat/ed. they have not made any worthwhlle contri- bntlon to the wur effort, either physlcally or financially, but every week. I tim told, their ‘booze’ blll averages $30.00. Think of lt-rnore tlizm $1.500 u vcar for liquor for two people. They are unobtru- sive, heavy drinkers, and are squanderlng ln this manner Der u-eek a sum cf XTIUICY wfvrn rt"- rious to the Wflr would In re se-m- cd 8 good salary m either of them. - "Liquor consumption in Halifax, both ‘in private and ln Dllblllf, ls §l9lllllg to be a definite form of mass insanity. If Mr. Gordon ls vested with the control the pn- pers claim for hlm, he ls just the man we need! He should come rloivn and brlnir a wrecking crew! I think we could show l-tlm things to make HE liulr stand on end!" Little Saving (Toronto Telegram) ‘fThe Oval" ls the name of a. per]- odicnl published by Canadian In- fllzstrics Limited to convc , in pop- uirir form, some idea of t e growth nnd dcveotinteiit of Caitadititi ln- (llLSLflfIl processes and accuuplish- inents. When this lnstructiw. pub- Lcntlou first outscored ‘it contained t Sill) asking the rcciplent ivlietlirr c English or Frctlch edition was Thut, lt must seem, was the rutionnl and businesslike meth- od of meeting the fnct that there tire two major language cups ln Canada.‘ Instead of muk nrz every copy bilingual and thus doubling le cost of IIEIDCI‘, postage and handling. sufficient copies were print/ad 1n eaoh language to meet. lie requirements. The Federal Government l; faced vvlihdhe some problem of publishing Its (IOCIIIIIQIILS and communications m two languages, but it. has not taken the businesslike course tn meeting the situation. For some lllll-(IIOWII reason, eitery publication must be a. hedge-budge of rich old Eitgltsh. The conscq cnt aste ls an extravagance and which ollfllllfil not. be tolerated under war- time necessity for economy. Ari Instance of the Government inctliocls ls the Cannon Gazette. The lsSlle for Septunbei" 26th con- Lfllfls 113 pages and weighs half a pound. The first half of the lssue is printed ln the English language hind the second half ln French. Ilie two halves are n duplication of the same uiformatloti with the ex- ception of certain items of local in. wrest which are printed only In Elitglish or French. Since the fig- mand for tlus information 1n French can be scarcely more than onu-tliirrl of the total demand, 1f that much, the prlntln of Hand; lhr: sh the whole cdililon l5 two- . Why should this El‘”.£l other Federal publications riot be printed in separate French and Ifnfhsfi editions? If some curious uicilvldtiul wants both the English rrtrl French, 1t would cost no uiore than under the present system. lIou. _.I. I... Ilsloy sets n good ex- titiplo m lils correspondence by hlllllg on both sides of the paper. It is mi example that ls extremely iicrtlncnq, when he l5 endeuvorlntz to convince Cariadlnns that the taxes ivhlch are being levied are only uthrtl is necessary lf Canada's nitof the wnr effort is to be citirlcfl on effectively. But 1n these billlnguzil publications there ls surely a wide field in which pruning ivouid produfie rich PGSIIlIR. If Mr. llslttv ls Slllfxfe In exhibiting his imocl intentions by tynltig on both .~t<l0.s of hi5 letter paper, and not, gust penny wise and pcund foolish, llu- ticoiilo cf Canada. can be saved l! Licv sum on the Government's prlntlu" bill by following out this stiggest ou. Commenting on this situation, Harry R. Jackman, M. P.. has said flint with n sabotage of manpower unrl malerlnl the lleoplc expect the (‘rcvcrutnmit to lend rather than to be behind lri the matter of pre- venting ivnste. Gestures nre ln- stifflciottt. What the pGOIIIQ have n tight to expect ls a thorough- Jlntz nllnlysls of nll Govertmont txpetidituties- the biz llcms as Well us the small. A generation older mid wiser than Mr. Ilsloy wlll know what ls meant by snv ng m the spigot and losing at the bunghole. Aciins or soiiriffins c s WIISIP. The lslflhds llsll:|'l_\’ crmurlsed ln the lonn “South sons" have n mm- blip-d lnlld area of 391.000 sovmre m cs. CHOCOLATE niroiiviviivos The mnklng of chocolate from the cumin bean wrw n well guarded secret of the Snanlards for nearly n century. FIND TIIEIR. OWN KEEP Must South Sea island colonies arc scl importing. (Fondly phrase slriilcl he abolished whiln lhc wit‘ l’lFlS_ It wlll iiol. nll creuc right in lh“ mid \‘lI‘ll‘.‘S we ivozk nun fight. and strive grlntly Will] nll we havo, facing rcnilllcs and mill-lug away false comfort. -- Dally Mail Lmtdon. .--.QiJJQ§I3.E._1?-_L9_‘1_Z~_ THE MOORLAND MAP Our maps are mulslc and our north- ern titles. Like wind among the grass and heather. krleve. candid charts of desolation And wear the Pennlne weather on their sleeve. There's Howl, Moor. Wctshaw. Winfcrlngs and Gutters. Mlrk Fell and Dirty Pool tmd Hak- worm Hlll. Fog Close, Cold svke, Ravock. and Crooks Altair ' And Loups and Wlirim and WhaW and Rolf/tn Gill. Our maps are muslc and lliev sing the miners’ Old Wfistlidwlth the rocks for irleld o e : There's Old Ganiz. Wlruleilfl. ESKBIGTII and Crackoot Tfiicv And Rnccn Vcln, forsaken. arc (lead. surf?“ at: dang“ lily Our maps are muslc and fhev sink the farmers’ Long battle to wrlniz fodder "Om the fell" ‘rherefls Stonv Men and Ncftlcpot and Sour Nook. 'I‘liere‘s Pasture Emd and HalfncnnY. and Farewell. --Andrew Moorman. In the London Sundav Observer. i>~€<~XTxA>€~I r. ' . i“ lnlll? r, the l The World or Tomorrow By F. H. MacARTIIUR N“Nx\"\'\7\?‘¢\¢\\cv When I was at Vancouver, I wandered one clay across the mountains to a lonely, wind-swept range for removed from the noisy world. Why I ventured so far from civilization I cannot say, but. some unseen force seemed to lend wlngs to my feet, carrying me farther and farther Into that de- solate. rocky region. suddenly my attention was cen- tred on someone standing 0n a high ledge and holding in his hand u strtinge-looklng banner. As I drew nearer he waved the flag, at. the some time crying lu a loud voice: "Hail the New World Order!“ Deemlng the fellow insane, I was about to turn away when he crled out again: "Turn not your face against the Light, for I am here to tell you about the New Kingdom which stands proudly above the ashes of a ruined clvl tlon. the kingdom which mankind has dreamed of for nlgh onto two thousand years" “What, and ivfiere IS this king- dom?" I ventured. "And where cllcl you come by that strange ban- ner whlch I see In your hand?" "The flag," sold he, “ls the em- blem of the New World Order - llie flag of all nations. And the klngdom whereof I speak can be seen from the ledge on u-liicli I now stand. But conic: lay hold upon the rope which hangs before you, that I may help you ascend the sleep c1lff." Upon reaching the side of my strange companion, he pointed to the valley below, which stretched out on nll sides as far as the eye could sec. I rubbed my eyes 1n bewilder- ment llke one who suddenly finds himself awake after a pleasant dream. Before me lay s. land of’ rare beauty, whose fields blossom- ed like the rose, for ln all that splendid country no fares or Weeds choked out. the lush grasses and beatitlful trees. Everywhere beauty reigned over field and forest, rlver rind stream - truly a land of en- chantment which filled my soul wltli a thousand happy thoughts, In the midst of this Eden I be- held a mighty metropolis larger than New Yoik and London roll- ed Into one. At sight. of such u vust clty, I was quite naturally as- tonished. so that I turned to rnv Companion to ask its name as well as to learn something about. in lnhabltants. "The lty," he informed me. “which les before you, ls the New Vlfurld Metropolis, tinting ns the business centre for the whole of Clvilizflllorl. It l5. in lrulh, the capitol cltv of the New World, and its rionvthtlon ls made up of nll races. crrcrls nnrl nations brought, together unrlcr one government,- n pcrfcrt tinlflcatlon of all proples. But came! Lot us descend to the tfnln so that. together u": may en- tcr the clfv, Wllffl? vnu shall sve for yourself the WOIKlCIs CQYIIQ to puss" And I entered the t-ily without. visa or passport, which seemed a remarkable thin: slnrr- I was but n stranger. Mv fzttlde Informed mt- that undcr the nriv svstun everything lizirl br"u cliatigecl and tluit I near! no: br- stu-giriccrl n; anything I mipilil soc or licar. Mlle nftcr mil‘, I was lvtl through spriclous tice-lltied ave- nues with nrettv homes on either side; nowhere dlrl I see the trace of slums. Evrrvwlicre smiling groups of people Dnssctl Ils as we sllentlv ivcnt our way. Soon we had renclictl llic business "s-cllon, crowded bv tlicttsnitds of busy folk. It was her»:- fliat I got the biggest thrill of all. I soon dlscnvcrfd flint amongst this tffily cosmopolitan throng everyone spoke the snnic language, used the same currency. as wéll ns employing a universal standard of weights and measures. My gulch‘ stopped here lone onourzli for me to satisfy mv curlnslty on ‘llils point and that. and so that. I mlght become somewhat ticqunlnt- dew llh the manner lti which these peoples carrlrd on tliclr dlf- ferent lines of business. ctr. Once agtiln lalclug no llie lead, he bade ma. fnlloiv. This time our course was dlroctrd llirouzh the heart of the metropolis, which, un- llkc any other cltv I hurl soon. was bullt with fl. vl-civ towards cotiiiilr“ freedom from couznsllnti Th1 streets were broad oiiouuh to (‘flrtv all truffle in ortlerlliiess null safety, while tir-drslriaus wltliitiz to cross from om- sldc to the other dlfl so by mctins of an tintlergrotititl passage. Magnificent nflrks with nrtlflclril lakes were work/ml ltilo thr- bulld- lng gchemp, glvinr: the place rui ntmosnlwrt- of nuirl and rest which was both ulraslntz rind scuslblc. for if allowcrl tiflrsons mi fowl n tilrvl‘ to salt mid drink ‘iii the lwnullms of the New Kingdom. fly ffIlS ltmc we had touched a spot WlIPTP the hllllfllll‘! irll nixvav. leaving tin nrcri of manv ncres uti- occunled snvc for a massive cdlflce which stood ln lbs con BUY THE NEW VICTORY BONDS s. A. McDONALD or my guide as he hailed l“ of its well-kept. lawnsw 1d “You are looking at thff °Y _ Conn," he Informed me. In W" d“. bund-mg we have a leglslatlv0 wembiy ivlilcli acts as trustgpstfs; all the peoples Members t m assembly control the Vléem W Soyu-Qeg o! earth and use us! regulate mo, as well as to saturé human needs. IP01- thewflpgt there In the hlswrv of the ° ,1 are éuséice and equality for B mun in . ,, "But come." sold 118- enter the building. that Y0“ (s; see and hear for yourself the w dom or tltll? universal system of goverumen . _ Here I learned how the my» keys o; m9 world had been t ordnnilea and develop“! 8° m“ distribution of its products "Wm be equitably rfiglllamd- Under this plan all economic barriers ha been swerpt BWBY- At last the light of understandt; 111g began to penetrate throut; my brain, mm the wisdom of the whole plan revealed ltsclLI k_ Addressing the membfls. 15 ed: “HOW has this new ordenala fected me peoples attitude tptwafw war, greed and class distinct ons “we are glrid you asked that question," said the nssembly lead‘ er "for lt ls n most important one arid we nrc desirous that SQ" should comprehend lls full slglll" nqinfiiti‘ new society — 01' 511B“ I can i; new government? - W111 be the chlcf means of ubollsn ctuise nf war, ln that it has brought, about 2t comtllile ‘MW amlty nnrl co-operntloii which past governments failed t0 8111511 Wm‘ its Introduction class dlstlnctlons. excessive wealth mid cllre poverty forever have passed nwfly- “Now, with short hours for la- brir, the weutii mid surrey 01 the iiatloti are to be utilized to fur- tlirr liumrui DFOQPCSS 11nd lmowl‘ edge, to 11ft humanlty to the high- est standard of llvlug lt ever has known. "Furthermore, thLs elected as- scmblv has tlio authority to carry out n-uv Just flvfilfilfills flYflVf-‘(l "l" r15 well as lo sctde all disputfs which mlglit arise amongst the various groups constituting tne new soclefy. ivlille 1n case of serf- ous disorders we have the backing of a smnll international timty." I had no llmr for fitrthcr flue-l‘ lions, its mv tzultlv lnfortuctl me “mt If I wished l0 ndvtitice ml’ education I must follow ltlm \\'l.l~l\— ut. rle ay. o A livciitv-mlnulc walk brouflhl us lo ii distant part of the cllv WlllClI one might ca'l tho out- skirts. as nivny ff‘\\‘l\l'(l llic “Tit I caught. for tho first lime since I had left the mountain rldSfl. l1 vleiv of the Counlrl’ bsvond- Here ln the centre of a grant common was the place we snufllllt- "The Temple of Unlv-crsal Brothvr- hood," cotnmcuilv known as the Temple of Worship. Ncvcr dld rnv pvcs rcsl. upon sticli a spleutlltl orllflce, such a gem of architectural beauty. “Surely? I tlirtuclil. “this ls ‘in truth l1 rlulnr time 1m" tbs worshln of God by all the mtlfillfi of cnrllt." At last fllc llltht of truth 11M imdersfaitrllnq dlstierscd tlvi I'VE? . C. JOHNSTONE, C-LU E qulred front Provincial hianagcr SUGGESTS: Th“ ynu make a date wllh your wlfe and nsk her how and where sho would Invert 55,000 In hrlng her n cvrlnlv monthly lncomig Ask vnursvlf question! Then: Ask mo about Domlnlnii Income plans. the sanw You rim reach mo at: l1l-Il5 Grafton Sir-H‘! “" llllllllllllll llFE Séfifffiv“ lre. "What bulldlng ls this?" I ln- lng the ' _' of Ignorance. and I realized Llicitn after ages of mls-governtnctit and,‘ wars, the human race had real-beds its long-sought goal, at las if; entered lnto that Perfect. flit» don't which the writer of the! Apocalypse preflgurcd in the Mill- enrilnl Age. , "Arid I saw u new heaven find l new earth; for the first heave and the first earth were passe away." ', RESTRICTED JAWS only up an A cat's jaw move more» szdel . down while a dog's a ways. . __.________ . 'TIS VANILLA BEAN The flflVOldflff-Vilnllift comes fruit; u long green bean grown lu the tropics. 1 Kidney Acidsi Bob Your Rest? Msny people never uein to at I 8°04 night's rent. They turn and lou—lio nylkl and count ilieep. Often they blame il on 1 "nerves" when it may be their ltltlflrll- l Healthy kidneys filler poison: _fmm_ llll t’ blood. If they lie faulty Ind hil, pvlwfll i Ally in the lyitem and aleeplaunau, lieirl- =_ clie, bncklche often follow. If on ilnn’\ . sleep well, lry Dodd’: Kidney illl 4N ‘- half l century the favorite remedy. I31 . Budd's Kidney Pill!‘ i a v l Fitting and sunnlylni: 0'1"" l u. .1. EllIABON OPTPM ETRIST hlontague. P E. l. Office flours: l0 to l2 n. M 2 to M. llolldn)‘: ytc. 0v. ulllloluimrnl Office Connected with DRUGSTOIIF. Swine Breeders Now ll tho time In tin-nll lzitlnsl I‘! (l IVOIIM lly Uhlllf! (he must cl‘-'l'i‘l"' rrmrdv on the miirkcl: Inn's PIG ivouu TONIC rowuiait It wlll thoroughly abolish trace-v of wnrilin and Ilvtuitlq thi- liczfllh nl H025 nmLv-iuy. nltzs. Price 35c and llll l“ package: nnlivie- Ami corn" Rl-IIVIEDY Relieves rouzlis. rolds._ Will‘: rind all infections nl hors- lunizs. Price 50c. Are You Troubled with Lumlinllr nr Sore Bark If sci we have one of the bl‘ rrmrillcei tn offer mimclv BACK - RITE TABLETS Esncrlnllv rlfectlvr fnr In?!" bngn, scltitlrn. nourlfls. W“ muscular and othrr forms rheumatism which flfflllllh‘ treatment; fall tn rt-tirli. Pl’ 50v. m-r ho!- TllE TWO MACS Mall Orders Glvrn Pnimlll Attention. ' l i