all» 91$; Llldnlah ldltaru- rlmriowllcusililiiil were. B. no w... an Bl Carrie. ‘ lanai-s Dell: (handed usi) sacs per rear (la advance) cosmos. “é 04- manila ssvanealseauesisoaasssasa llallsd Stains. a; I l TUESDAY, ROVER U. 18H haallsat, ll. X1000; IJJ. lsleer ass I oi t .~_l a a eel 1.6.1. Ianagng nuns Iraa The maintenance of official dig- nity in r" is, apparently. a. atter’ of no light ‘ to the state. One remembers the lolemn orders issued ln Austria by the Government of the late Eglebert Dolflisa forbidding the circulation of jokes based on the SHUTS’ CREDO ‘bible rector-ill address at ‘s: llldiews Uhiverdty, Scotland, Gen- anmtr. of South Africa. said: . _.~__-t.fWa console ourselves with the ouritnliqn that we are living in most "Whieresting times. But thS hard _ th istllattheyarc the most Ill!- ‘ ' _ andcritical times which man- WSpeI-kingheretodaytoyou, Chancellor's siae. A similar problem twenty-two icreisu- The Mal im-in Germany has been met in lure ports in i088 slightly exceeded 000,- 'manner. Germans, now, in washing 'mm‘ pgoph of this unlvgrgfly. ‘nleXknt Of 111300 0W“- =_ “dd, hard-bitten campaigner like "iamylll! might be asked how I view _ prospect before us, what mes- I have from my‘ own exper- fflfsncasscnswhohasgone through FASTEST TRAIN A comparison of train speeds is a goo “m” o; which gm omgguftllemaelves, may not use cakes of Dominions and Colonies are credit- ed with 117.000 owta. and foreign countries with 388.000 ewts. 0f the former the Irish Flee State was tbs lwlius supplier with 102.000 om, Canada being Qoond with 10,800 _‘E cwtsHi-lllelrywasthe most im- .. .‘..-.<'kind has faced for many centuries. ‘Wftlllt 01 "l9 $011180 011119114118 the countries with shipments to the soap embellished with Adolph Hi let's face. nor may their chil play with dolls dressed like Storm Troopers. Nani officials have forbid- den these forms of propaganda (so designated) as "inconsistent with the dignity of the Reich sFsldent and Chancellor." Ono touch of assassination doesn't make the whole world kin. to precl ‘ ‘ a representative statesmen on ~hsnd forthefuneralofz an-oslain ""1958!!- havc taken the oppor- tunity to combine business with oi- iiicial mourning. President Iebrun the immense experience of our gen- item" c! a German official nubllc- of hence had a. long train talk to those who now stand on ation. 1t is claimed that the Ilying with Jbfeign Minister Yeftltch oi mamburser u still the fastest trainiywwhm- "l" l" 1111101101 with threshold of this strange new >‘ Laurie. “Hy fundamental impression of ‘life r can give you in words which 11M Berlin-Humour:- Nexus placed conference with hiss ‘most of you know from your childhood. They occur on the first in Europe, maintaining an average speed of 77.4 miles an hour in the ‘the ill-snob train on the stretch Di- lion-Isrochc, which averages 74.0 ~ p“, of the greatest book m the milessn hour; and after itthellng- l _ ....“,-1¢_ mey w.“ m)... the youth lish G. W. It. train which averages r v » w); m, worm’ and today m m, mat- '12 miles an hour between Swindon w "mikity they are truer than ever. The and Pmdmflmb mmr°8lYd W9!‘ press trains over the whole of the is... is good. This is a good world. We need not approve of all the ‘Gemini and 311811411 I'll-ill"! IRWIN err.» " "ill-ls in it; but the’ world ‘ ‘oil: courage and manhood. It is in- ",'. a. world built for heroism, but ~—--"~=e_1 things which is alien to what is U M ‘fhlgliest ‘fulfllments and pez-fections. "75 tariff preference that has W. A. Wilson, Animal Products ‘yfltelns in it, nor of all the individ- R581‘. is more than its parts or in- .....'liividuals. which has a soul, s. spirit, fundamental relation to each of Jfs deeper than all other relations, is g friendly world. It has born us; fit has carried us onward; it has ‘immunised us andguided our falt- ' “éilog footsteps throughout u... lone _,a_nd slow advance; it has endowed us with strength and courage. It has proved a real vale of soul-mak- ing alid created for us visions. "mil-cams,- ideals which are still fur- ther moulding us on eternal lines. ‘it is full ‘of tangles, oi ups and h... ...~.~."downs. There is always enough to “ bite on. to sharpen wits on. to test also for beauty, tenderness, mercy. "time is nothing in the nature hliestin us. There is no malign fat- _ ilism, which nlakes fools of us in Tour darkstriving towards the 800d- ’? Zpn thecontrury, what is highest in ' ps is) deepest in the nature 0i’ things, and as virtue is its own re- i-lward so- life carries its own sanc- """tlons"'arid the-guarantee of its own no" ' Thatis my ultimate’ credo; and lt 1S “hot founded hearsay, but on my Frat-build slrperience in that crcssq section of the world which I have l lived uirougb. This is no doubt a slender basis of fact for so larse II a coilclilsion. But the final convic- tions are riot inductions from exper- .' ience. but insights into it. I remain _ at heart an optimist." . U. K. POULTRY MARKET been granted on ‘the imports into me United Kingdom of nnpire , poultry makes a clean line of de- ~i marcation between past business and future opportunities, writes Mr. Trade Commissioner in London. i!‘ tbs Commercial Intelligence Jour- nal. The excellent standards of a different tale is told. Whereas 85 per cent. of mglish expresses aver- age 55.8 miles an hour or more, only 325 per cent. of German express ‘trains reach the same standard; 'moreover, 20.4 of English expresses average about 50 miles an hour or more, against 13 pcr cent. in Ger- many. But for the highest average speeds, of 82 miles an hour or over, Germany shows a figure of 6 per cent., against the English 3.9 per cent. Since these figures were pub- lished the English have introduced- a new express train for newspapers, which, it is claimed, is the fastest of [its kind in the world. The 133% miles between Paddingwfi and New- port are traversed in 18’! ' utes. EDITORIAL NOTES Murry people are here ‘for th Fox Show. ' ‘lb have the first domestic bred silver fox, and also the first male tortoise shell cat Ls some record for the Island. The successful trip‘ of Sir Charles Klngsford smith from Australia to Claifornls, shows Uncle Sam how easy it would be for Japan to fol- low suit. Two important political events take place tomorrow-the annual meeting of Kings County liberal- town, and the announcement oi the reorganisation of the Bennett Cabinet at Ottawa. Sir Alfred Gilbert's Eros, the god of love. is easily the most popuhr statue in London. Last year when it was taken down temporarily owing to improvement operations. there was a pr- longed newspaper correspondence lest the authorities would not replace it. It is ticlpated that the Olbinet reorgan ‘ “n will include the rep- resentation of each province in the qaulity and method shown in Can- » adian poultry shipments packed in, Conservative Association at George-l Government, and there has been s g. q ' ' 1m and exported early in 1934 rush to Ottawa from every Pro- - i ‘ mm”; my effort of the past ten vince, save this, in the interests of years. Better standards are possible, expect-wt Wilt-MIM- Mf- GPO“ however, and those for the 1934,Sterling. Yale, now in Ottawa, is I pack, having regard to future trade ‘the likely choice for British Colum- possibilities, should be as near per- ybls. Vice Mr. Stevens. Col. Henry " mm... as possible. No detail is too s. Mullins, Mr. for Marquette, f small to merit the closest attention ,whose name has frequently been on‘; supervision. Buyers for theimentloned in connection with Sen- ’ beat trade look upon defects per- zate appointments and the post of taining to the appearance oi ‘either ,Lieutensnt-Govemor of Manitoba _ censor-v i-"i-“i ..“_'_2_.l.., the package or its contents as avoidable. ‘rbe precedent set in the keys from the Dominion is a good ' example of what can be done. and tbs satisfaction expressed by the trade in these shipments was re- flgstsd in the second year's busin- g 51mm;- good-will and co-opera- . gym the trade can be enlist- has reached the capital and will be there for some time. Hon. Raymond stalwarts of western Ontario and Mr. .1. Br! Lawson (York West), and Dr. M. J. Muloney (Renfrew South.) Mi‘. Oneslme Gagiioai (Dor- chester) have turned up at Ottawa over the week-end. Mr. f‘ is being urled for a. cabinet post in ‘case one of the Hench ministers Mr. Maurice Dupre, goes to the Senate. Moat of the visitors, who could be designated as party lead- ers, however, are from Ontario and much of the discussion with cab- inet ministers has to do with the local provincial situation there. especially as to whether a conven- tion for a new leader should be lisidaowcrdelayad tillsfforthe first session of the legislature. AtbflCQiWllhiflIViiildmitei-lilt Cami of Rumania. and. after the coffee cups were nlled, the luncheon developed into a political officials of glilrance. the Little Entente, Turkey and Greece sitting in. Great good to the troubled Balkans and to Europe may come of it. Anyway, such w... sations are better than gathering around the casket and looking daggers at one another.- Border Cities Star. ll! I10 other criminal charger are excuses so readily accepted by the courts as in motor slaying cases. The leniency so persistently dis- Played is as incomprehensible as it is amazing. Either in the law or in its interpretation and enforcement there is need for s. sterner view- point. Liwnipetence at the wheel of a car or a faulty condition of the machine ought not. to afford im- frlunlty for those who have through either of these causes become re- ponsible for the destruction of a human life by a motor car. Ullllllly It may seem wrong that taxes collected in Vienna should not be credited to the ‘general fund and made available for Aus- tria instead oi being earmarked for the capital; but it must be remem. bored that Austria's great trouble is that, after the wholesale ampu- tations of territory, she is in the situation of having a. capital many sizes too large for the country as it remains. The ever widening diffusion oi’ the Bullish language is shown by the fact that within the last two months Latvia and Estonia have of- ficially adopted lmgluh as the only foreign language to be taught in the element y schools and as the Pliiicipal foreign language in the secondary schools. There is a keen desire throughout the three Baltic republics for lilnglish books, espec- ially of s. technical. scientific and educational character, folyfjse in ‘their schools and universities. Last slimmer Latvia sent over 1'10» uni- versity professors, government - of- ficials. business men and students on a visit to Great Britain. Hitler has bowed to the dorm raised by church people who refuse to bow the lmee to Reichbishop Mueller. thepcclesiastical bully who has used Nazi weapons to crush and int date his opponents. l-lis ap- po tment was as insult to Christ- ianity, but it served the good mu»- pose of pricking the consciences of millions of Germans who had sub. mitted to the loss of their civil lib- erties but drew th line at Nazi domination in the religious domain. Catholics arrayed against him. Hit- ler has decided to keep his hands oil the churches for the present. The spectacle of {iueller and twenty-four bishops of the same kidney left to cool their heels in Hitler's ante-chafnber i.s one of the most hopeful developments in Ger- many. It shows there are limits to tyrarlnyreveri under the Hitler re- me. We cannot always choose the guests who come, to our house, or our ofilce. Few know, or understand the problems of this mind and heart of ours. But in this mind of ours we can invites “ of guests of our own choosing. Down the lanes cf memory forever walk the friends cf our youth and our more mature years. And those wliofn we have never met--the world's great-artists, writers. scientists, statesmen, singers, inventors-these all are privileged guests for this mind with which we have been so mg; year's QxpOfT-l of chilled tur- .Moratid (libsax Inst). one of thelwonderfirliy endowed. How roomy is this mind of ours-never too small to accommodate whom we will. How clean we should keep this mind of ours-and always in order-fit for the hurnblsst or greatest of this earth-as our guest! trade agreements, authorised by the act of June l2 of this year, we are willing frankly to admit that have now repented. Just as we set t-be vicious example cf erecting the indocedotbersiofcllowumsoncw we are asking other nations to Join usinsnattempttouridc madam- III our collective action has work- artificlsl and excessive impedi- mntsputin the waycfworld com- by restorins W individual count- qaeskiili ountriel. 11m I002 of f Quart radio announcements that b11118 esstctho den- ideato iists. noculstion for and the super-v "mdflcillrltloalscdoesth trouble and so a great loss of bus.l-. ness to dentists. . _ Did you ever think about the length of time-it takes little organ- isms to work their way through the hardest tissue in the body-tug on- amcl of the tecthr-and wnen they get through the enamel they meet the next hardest tissue in the body_ the dentlne? n is only when these organisms have worked ‘through these two hard tissues. that they reach the ‘pulp" of the tooth where the nerve and bloodvessels lie. It is when the organisms andthelr llmdllcte roach the Pulp that pain or toothache occurs. This pain is-sevcl-e and while drugs may be used to re- lieve this pflin. the individual should realize that he has been attacked by organisms, just as in any other in- fection. And these organisms and the poisons they manufacture are now actually "inside" his body, having passed right through the tooth to the little blood vessel in the centre of the tooth. This means then some real work for the dentist as he " whether to try to save the tooth by removing the nerve and filling the canal, or whether it would be safer from the health standpoint to remove the tooth: because infected teeth cause ailments throughout the entire body. The point about seeing your den- tist twice a year than is that if a small cavity is discovered and filled the organisms just can't get into the centre of the tooth to get into the blood vessels. ' Don't wait for toothache t4; send you to the dentist: by the time toothache occurs some real damage has been done and you may lose the tooth or have t0 visit thedentist a numbe of times in order to save ft. More Beef Than Pork Eaten Although there was more bee! eaten in Canada in- 1088 than in the preceding year the latest sta- tistics show that the total con- sumption of all kinds of meat . , ‘ 5s decrease of 9s million pounds in; 1933. Although, there were 1,46; million pounds of the variousmeats consumed in that sauna mun n81 s1- vouil. scone! sun roua a Po have ' amile ' l You ‘when you are $010‘!!! magazine. newspaper, and should visit your dentist owicgo: year. "You may think it is iustan biisin Asarnattergpfxaclti just gm. ° dllill. th rla. ision a. milk eand m1" lllPPlies prevent disessafrom among srrtcdins and so take business away ination, cleaning, and the flailing‘ of any small cavities every six months prevent a great amount ‘of’ tooth '11.. PubliirlJbrarY city Lib 0! 00001‘. lug- to the Library Association Conference in London , there was a blunder in the Association's manual fol- small libraries which declared that- wrtisacolmnonharelythstali libraries should have a represents tive of books. . “Books which promise Q . moi"... talisman... “The task of the new school of libraries." he said ironically. was: “Buy the books which "go," leave all the scholarly works to the larger libraries and watch‘ the issues climb.’ "In selecting furs library reader value has no business to be ignored." he went on to say. “Is the man W110 borrows a Shelly or a Gibbon, or a textbook on physics or engineering, ofnovaluetothellbrsrythanthe man who never gets away from Edgar Wallace‘ or William Le Qusux or one Hundred Funny Stories for After-Dinner speakers? In the intellectual cilnency of the library, what is ‘the rate of ex- change between the one type and the other? If high issue-value is to be the basis of exchange then the dope reader is worth more than the mancfpartsbytc or100to 1. That at bottom is the real issue which faces the public library, to- day. Are we to cater for nulnbe n or for quality, or are we as the libraries have, in the main, done in the past cater for both. but with a scale dipped decisively in favour of the reader who is worth while?" ‘The country has had some sixty years of compulsory education," says the Manchester Guardian. "and the results are only now taking their true dimensions. The first generation learned to read and to think beyond the boundaries of their own immediate lives, thus making possible the tremendous rise of the popular press. “The second and third genera- tions are turning to books as well. The whirling ksleidomope of recent history, the war and'the depression which followed it, the stress on democracy, and the spread of wire- less. all thus stimulated the seed of inquiry and ambition which him already been sown in the schools. and the inevitable and true result has been the desire to read. "Like every other educational force. the library must seek to raise the standard of the pleasu nu it pro- vides. It is true that there must always be sufficient light books to suit the taste of every man: it is true that it is better to read some- thing than notlllng: it is true that the libraries must never turn their backs to ‘atistics of public taste. ' "But just because one remember the pepper there is no reason to for- get the salt. The cclnme ' l ‘two- penny’ libraries should rather be welcomed. Lei. them provide their special wares, and let the public non-commercial library be content with offering better books at a far cheaper price. - ‘Eflliais not to’ advocate the ‘hilhbrowb’ choice, nor yet the easy acceptance of the ‘ready- madc’ list, for the second is as dangerous as the first is foolish: but it is not even good business to follow the lowest common denomi- nator of bad taste. "Just as a fine building attracts .' Jast. fol-marl!‘ m- L . 1n: ores noab we Gdout to the open downs Whit! llllO care, And will shake my shoulders free folk bear- walk, and where The downs sing to the sea. Iwill tread the path they trade; roar- Out, out to the open road. Man And Atoms “ii (London Times) Newton likened himself to a 011114 plgldng up s. few pebbles on the With up stars above and o. turfl below, Whersthe ribbon ct road rune! . wr- ncmthstoiiandfretcfthetowns. From the weary burden that towns- I will walk where the great winds Iwillgoouiblikemysiresofym- I will know the fret of the towns no more: l I will go out ibom their dust and -Norah Holland. ‘Novena @193. § v-iTol-lavfe The Beet Cough . l RemedyMix It At Ho “mph effective . t’! so -..‘.‘.'.°"" -: .‘.2il§"..%.'.5i.’*i.i"°' n Norway Pine, {slab-us fog”? . membranes. - Tiien make s syrup bylstlrring two _ a concordance-wilful i.f'.i...__~'::*.i?iill~.l; I will ‘f: out where the areal winds S07E15,‘ NoCcokiug! your money. k’ lcalan l‘ "'1 » "8 uni? in“ I will leave behind inc cafk and rill!" 95"‘ W "ilfliulllli "P011311: uuilsmede membranes, loosens mm“ i cups of granulated sugar siid~oos cup please you in every wsy, “FE. t’ k 23.. mes lllctfiolbfanglefid‘ and add “your mo. his Ives scrunch. scald,’ and you get four tines as much i ft never spoils, °' F-Gilillltuh love it. h uougitl be amazed byutlie way it tlil- c severe ~ m! . . ltcggolthe’: it" tll l clears illc bagel?‘ Laden phlegm, and Money refunded if if. awn.‘ llllle v Buy '_ the Best TEA - _ Orange Pekoe Ceylon Small Leaf European War Hysteria, (Eldhl-DIQ) , The possibility of war between France and Germany over the Saar| The Australian Public new,“ u-biwatn- has refused the copy“. tion (if-various classes of the p“. tai Workers‘ Union for a reduction ofworkinghours fr0rn44to3634 hours weekly. shore while all before mm lay the plebiscite wbebeld on , 1am vast ocean of undiscovered immqncxt has been worked to the limii The lihyiicilis 01' "15 "W" d" by the mimpem press correspond- appear to be throwing in the stones In“ m“ 4m‘, much “Eden” and troubling thfl "W"! I4 "m" should be given to the reports com-, as they vau- A few rem I00 "HY ‘ing out of troubled mirope it is dif-I seemed to have reduced all mm“- ficult w say, but from this distance‘ With militant Protestants and tion. year- Bide by side with the ~ in- people to go into the library in the crease in beef consumption, there first place, so too an easy and varied was a decrease in the use of pork display of boob, in a 11b,-,,.-y_ and mutton. Each Canadian in whistling-it b9 qommgg-cla] m- m... 1933 0118111060 56-09 ’ 0f commercial in its basis, will lead bee! 88 @8010“ 56-03 in 1933; them on inside. An appeal to the 74-58 pounds of pork compared eye can influence the choice of a with 85.01 in 1932, and 622 pounds ‘book ssvmuch as an appeal to the of mutton against 6.9‘! in 1032. m brain, and once a. man begins to 1933 there were 114.144.3103 .- " chance that lie will want to read it. 0f Wllltry eaten, or 10-68 pounds "There is but little danger that per head 0! - vulcti ; 801.0110» the librarians will find their “issue W0 P0111108 01' butter, or 30.04 figures‘ sinking even if they take P011110! P91‘ heed; 359041.030 pounds the" bolder line: the great stream of 0! cheese. m‘ 330 P0111108 Del‘ education and culture has long held: and flii.000.000 dozen e888. lnlrstthe hanks of class and spread or 81-45 down per head o1 poliula- over the whole population. It will never be confined again. and there Coffflilwliding to the amount of 15,110 reason to suppose that the meats and dairy produce wn- sorinss will dry up at the source.” sumed. the estimated number of . farm animals in June, 1033, as compared with the preceding year of Queues (Saturday Review) showed an increase in cattle and lord Nutfield did‘ s good service V1118 The number of milch cows was 3,694.000~in 1035 and 3,624,000 in 1032; of other cattle 5,182,000 in decreases‘ in sheep and ‘swine. 103a and 4.000.500 in ioaa; sheep m"’°h“ Bww“ ‘ mm‘ not indeed to the ail‘. firs water. 01‘ earth of the ancient Ionic-us, nor to the prima materis of the medieval alchemist-s. nor yet to thephidrflflcn oi the more scientifically minded Prcut, but at least to a combination of protons and electrons. Out o! these two f ‘alriental entitle the whole material world, so bewilder- ing in its richness and complexity. was held to be “Give me matter and motion and I will con- struct the universe" was the boast of an older generation. "Give me protons and electrons" was the de- mand of the newer physicist; and he very nearly did construct the material world. So satisfying was his structure that , it seemed . as though all subsequent work would be merely ornamentation. frhe basis looked so secure that theniorejim- sginative thinkers saw in ti!‘ Proton and electron the origin of sex. cilia hydrogen atom the ‘first’ i’ ‘ more was the ,.proton. . so stable, so positive. ‘so and there was the electron, soJight and wayward. bllt-"faithfliilyfclinfllllfi- » l rd. er dado 0W round him. - . therefrom to s, sevitude. 7" V , It was a beautiful it has come tumbling over the ears of‘ its builders. 'i‘h_e simplicity of the old proton-electron sqhenie has gone. and when physicists‘ assemble in conference. as they did last week, their talk is of positive and negative protons. of positive and negative electrons, of neutrons, or diplons, of neutrinos and anti-neutrinos. Con- fusion is worse confounded who!) taste in alter-native names has to be recognized. and the right of a man to speak of deutons, uteroris. posi- trcne. and negat crls admitted. It is true that not al these entitles have yet been discovered, but what the mathematicla predicts to-day as s habit of becoming what the physi- cist finds tomorrow. Ncr is he con- tent with finding, but immediately proceeds to hurl these elementary particles at matter in the hope _cf releasing the vast stores of energy building new elements after his desire. So Lord Rutherford souls fifteen years ago flung alpha-partl- cles at nitrogen and pl ‘uces an en- tirely new species of olwienrand in this present year, under the care- ful tending of M. and Mme. Joliot and Professor ‘Ferlni, a new series of radioactive elements has sprouted out of apparently inert matter after a kindly shower of alpha-particles and neutrons. Sometimes Nature herself takes a hand in the bom- barding gia-ocesses, and with lisr locked up in the atom, or even of . it would appear that the picture is painted in rather pessimistic colors. i Why should ~Germsny want to, launch a war at the present time which could not but end as disaa-f. trouslyforheraadidtbeworldwsr] slis started in i014? mtler may bel linsane, but lie is not so mentally un- balanced as that. who would sup- port Germany in an unwarranted attack upon France? Not Great Britain, not Italy, Austria (her main , colleague in the World War), Paland, - Russia, Yugoslavia. or any other important power in Eur- ope, Turkey excepted. _If. percbance. a conflict should occur between France and Germany, over the Saar vote, the League of Nations would certainly be involved and have to take s. hand. Paris talks of Germany havinl _-two nsilliofimen ready. for the fray figs. larger force than aha had in “4- Churchill pictures her as so ' _ _ wfor enemies that she will not “m 550%.... France butwillrctcrt’ “Us -Baldwin's rhetorical re- t “our frontiers are the gstbarhamaa." The elm-Kaiser may ave been mad enough-to risk taks today. as the Montreal Star says, their war preparations mcaniittle or nothing. j‘ The pacifist-s who are always falling .. us that __ paredness for war leads j" directly fo war will be compelled to .. get "a new line." In this case, pre- cessary. Take the matter of big guns alone. When - its-preparhtions did not possess guns heavy enough to blast to pieces the 11 old-fashioned steel fortifications of .. Liege. Her entire army was held up -~ ‘and her long-ready plans for the in- jj a. wheeling ~- movement - thrclllh Belgium were j_ ‘ seriously, perhaps fatally thrown out .. of gear until she could borrow the -- neccssary guns‘ from Austria and jj ‘ ,rtthsmtotheMeuse. Who -. imagines’ that she has guns today 1 formidable enough to breach. the far .. strongsrlkench defensive works all -- vaslon of France "by along liar German frontier? ‘P with the reply that “our tar- -- 'i.. ,... adding. Great Britain to his enemies ~- in i014, believing that she either jj would not or could not fight. but it .. lain cdibletbatsnyflermanleader ~ wo d make that iundsmentarmis- II ~ If Germany is ready for elective war with Rance at the present time,‘ . parsdness aeenrs to be not even ne- the Great War broke. u the whole German Ihnpire with all j‘ Hitler, as we have previously in- I timated. have some insane fio- ~ tions on orld power, such as the j‘ former an Kaiser had, but he ~ has not yet displayed that imbecility j‘ which would lead one to think ‘he is .. puanllng cosmic rays. which have ready to ramble all asaiultihc mt we have erred in the past, thatwe ggmu trails barriers of high tariffs which " ed. We wile to break down all the "1 3.305800 in 1033 and 8.044.500 in 1032; and swine 3,000,700 in 1038- and 4,830,100 in 1032. The total for all classes of poultry on farms decreased from 64,000,200 in 1033 to 50,324,400 in 1083. ' . uslly Yugc-Slavia at the requestof its people. In the case of St. Pet- ersburg, the "Saint" always weare- dundant, an English idlosyilcrsoy since Peter the Great was certainly no saint. but St. Petersburg became Peti-ograd, and then Leningrad " the desire of its inhabitants the national g... ent. towns in lrelsm and. cities elab- since the turn of the century. Meanwhile it may be wall call that Gonna-us have been a little disposed to insinuate that the Supleme Being wor- endom. Before and during their Servla became Serb] and evsnb ' where have changed their names ' ‘flare-A f way! initu ship is not quite the God ofCliristr lat 0f Ruskin @1189. Oxford, his fare to Russia. and Mr. Brown who is an honest Socialist, has done an ually good service in telling the tii about his visit. Soviet; but his nul goes on far beyond the ignorance and lightened political associates so per- sistenty applaud. "I um glad to be back" he use. - . - Housing condi- tionslssevile . . . One doesnot see queues and the standard of living il definitely below that of a man on the ‘dole in flilland." thsfiinttifneinths been held to account for everything 0i frorn-‘ “ tothsexp‘ of the universe, she shows how puny are man's mightiest forces. Here is s. mystery calling all man's ingen- uity for its resolution. Help Kidneys Bladd W k §'..'.".‘§i’.'.'.."§2?."l%?r'.. u..;'o.&?.i Jp Nights. Nervousnssa, Dlrlinaal. ‘Phehuinanflea isreportod for Doctor's x tel). lust an Q money back. MAGS the filed‘! Greases"! Guiascl . b- win - little zlfleultto J . thousht 1:“ this." resard. Yugo?‘ "*- , habit fspeaking "our shake- "“' m“ "' °"""" mm} m“ "W eagle-summonses. wants toclaim as ltbbetiss than salasq iowhiah italnvith timers oeagb-asieioea, assault! 5pm cf humorous malisa. Goethe was Italian. The ortuu- “guns: maimsst to W“ ' wit» \' .. future A . biaedsalbelf- ‘Ida fees-ovens us one hlsillelfiifiw - rafosmarnaorrin s‘: u‘ 170s Two Mites It. . M...’ a . Anidltmtmrrf‘ ' mmm" xrosomhi-lgtig; Cysts: ‘I-i... ' ur troublas fir! II '90!!! Tie at flflflh ' THE IBIPOBTANCE 0F 111E WAY '10 , BEE There is little use in asking a person haw well he sees. ills answer would have no bearing on the way he sees. And ilic way you. see (whether nor- mally or otherwise) ls for you the moat important of all the vision questions. and one to which you should as econ as ponlble find the answer. Seeing welifis no proof that help/inflict needed. (i. F. IIIITBIIESUII OPTOMITIIST Christmas Greeting y Ca rds ‘ . n u a “bit early but ad- vertisement is for those who wish 00 lend GREETING CARDS to friends abroad. Carter? Bookstore‘ is again headquarters for the finest and best lino of Xmal -- and New Year ii Greeting Ca rds Prices are very low this r001‘- Wonderful values indeed. Call and see the Iplnadld ahowinl o! Ollill h the 300K810" ‘(um floor) am choice la best- Barter & 00. Limited