\ l 'L ii »i ‘ ii E1 .fa ‘ .` -_? it x if 94| - ‘.-.1 4,.; . . , _ l .‘ \. i i , -s i»‘- ~a-9-_ 'i- "3 Ii* aut- ..._ " Z- if W Q! , M aalav,-_ii»=._~ - ‘ \ ' ,.\l1'_' - ‘T { _ ~ at ,,,- .His _,.,. V ; ‘lf-T vii" ,l'¢` .i-, - “ l. L- I ~i- . ;;_i -T ~ Z 'E .. is lg." 1 .1 i f t- --iii if flvr , if .."{;“:i ‘ii i i ~» il ; " L th_if ._ _ sp I f i$§"11 _ foil: “$1 __ as`$[ mi. 'I Ci; . ¢ - qg' gl. .1-i.» A ‘ -id- M ""‘ ...a._i»< /li-o-Q €f'U"° 5:: '-4 m- -e-U3 _ _ -in ' - '< `“ "` ' ' -‘ V _-ti-v'L.;.' ._ M. ._ ;~ <- ‘ O .“" _ .4 _ sv ii* i 1" \_ -fancy-n7@°_' -.wwf __, _ will if A _;;_i;J’Z3- _s--..s»~`-f s 1 'li » iz fl l_ i W sl sh' > `\ ___<- *L i 4. .___, Q 1.i.~-v_"-Zi.-~ - _ :ii » _ . ‘\ pu l il; i -9; _ ff, i », _A f' ' lc 1 1`,_ _ sv 2 ng; mn; _ m_ column ii _ OCTOBER 11, 1918 f* 7;; _ ` g _ , L 1 -- ._. ° _ ___ lla Gliarlillalm lliiaiiliai_°“r “"i‘"”-3.”“if‘i»`i£‘li§.*ifiii3ii'i€`?l- ar \ pai evt s mand every ;ollar now lying idle. I ‘_ 4, _ -.mm mm ,mud ,,m_“m W yu, ,,,,,,,,,_ i 'We do not know 3-et_wha_t the allotmer. ._ , . , ~ - aimed at for this pronnce is but we tr.i_--f’ R .0 T umm' an W ,W wa M) In mam W that as in tha- case of the last Victory Inarij C¢¢\a¢n,and$3¢50|ofU.8.A. _ -,_ i L., f, i .f ' Hua ollee at ciui-ieemwii. an-ieii offices as som I - moulds, Alberton. Bowls and Montague. President-lajor A. A. Bartlett Editor lid Publisher: : Associate Edits' ` _ IJ. it. c i ` _ J' n "mm We i Tn the four years that she has been been oo iw mini num.-»:i< ii-.iwir e sii_i|csi»:ass_,ni ffsice ofollumul vit will be oiersiibscribed. .\.\' _‘i \lliRl('.\.\` TRIBFTE `at War Great Britain has asked for no en- comiums foitine part she has played.- Thr tact is charas. eristic. rin Panel- caiiifaiier. l'- "- *' Pfiwle- K- ¢- "° i` England has not propagandized here. autlioéiaed the Paper Manufacturers in increase the pri ol paper to newspapers to $345 at me mill per 100 lbs. have a retroactive effect from July l. The We WIP PP' eeiit.'1'lie price of Linotype metal has jumped ffofn Sc ff-lgei-man_v has. Germany. as we are seeing ff lin the Rumely hearngs in' New lork. sold Ulbonds, bought newspepers, establishe; was $1.50- This represents an increase of over 1W P¢ loiagazines, liijed correspondents, "alloted" \» Tadvertising, did all the thousand a_nd one 16'/29 ver '\=- 'ok hu wiv vii 5° W win *we ‘°° P' ,~ tricks of publicity to create in neutral Am- erica a svmp;-.thv for her cause. This offi- ffe-iiht ew have wie Uv in vf°i>°m°" A" W" ¢="=°f lie, agailrand again, as did other newspap- ¢¢¢¢_ nlegrapiiie news 500 per cent. while wages. wa ii ywwgpapen have increased their price to help to meet 1 rrs, felt the waves of letter writing, of tele- iiieieasea me of pmeimioii. a few i~¢=~=¢» °¢-~i= **°"‘ graphing. of iniieuendo, of insinuation from ton Timesrlrom 2: to 3:. and annual subscription from t the "leagues" or “clubs” or “alliances” to $6; lloncton Transcript. drtto. The Halifax Herald anf. the Chronicle have advanced their rale to 3c per cop_ f IMI from $3 to $7 per annum subscription. The SL Joh which Bernstorfl"s agents financed( .\`o such itiuences were ever felt from liingland. iiaiim have alw =¢v=»¢=d the-if of-=e» 1"-e Gu=f°‘=' l Yet Germany with that calculating im- il reluctantly compelled to take similar action, and fro today the rates will be as follows: 5|NGLECOPY...._........_._.._ _____3Cen ffl morality which is her greatest sin, accom- panied her own press debaucherles _by 1 _charging a similar crime against “British - A-iiiiial siiiwcriwoii- =1='~°f=° -- - -- - - “ff lgold." This sin she also committed. it wil. Annual Svbwivt~°f=- bf Mi' - -- -» » WD .be reniembered, when she preceded herown The subscription rate will be eflecbve from Oct. 15. FRlDAY. OCTOBER "_ 1938 use of poison gas by chargng the French '-.vith using it. It is an old trick. The worst 'if it is that iz worked, Not until John Ratlif om of the l"z'ovidence Journal uncovert-_1 ~Dumba'< pa-.ment of $1600 to George Sy;- ( M " .’ . . ivester Vierez;-:`;~t magazine did the -tide be- )i¢,n¢|ii\-. _xi-tolii-r 14tli heliig olii-wrvi-il ii- igin to turn. ow we have before us the ful.- Thanksgi.\'li;; Iliiv :iiiil ii _~t;i1iitor_v lioliiluy lI'e\‘elatl0l’lS i' T the New YOl'k M311, Of th'-' The .\loriiiiig Giiziriliziii will not be i_~4_~'iieiZ'l7reCi0uS “vi--:am Bayard Haiei the prow' on 'l`ui-siliiv. The Eveiiiilg (iuiirdiali will iiol U13! G€!'ma1‘.j.' (lid whélll England SCOI`Y1€d 1'/ hi- iisslicil oil Miiliilziy. hilt “ill hc issiieil ii.-gdfl. ~ usual oil Tile-i-illay. .\d\vrti~vrs please iioti' tliesc cliaiiges. _\` E\\' \`l(_`T()li\' l,().\‘.\' England, with that strange British trust ,in the power of truth, simply waited tl.2 lthe facts sh-.;'-ld become known. They have ibecome knot. fi, and the mean lie that had Qso much to -io with keeping us apart is ldying. ‘ ` lf- d i I\'everthele-1;~' another German-made lie Af H meeting i“ “'¥““iP@g 1”” Tues ai'lequa11i'mea;-__ equalli- huiifu1,sii11 lit-es. ii. night Sir Thomas White launched the new’ is the lie ma; ..Eng1£md is nm doing He, Victory Loan and the full details will be,Share”'in‘\t'HgQ_,_.a1._ _ PUbliSh€d thT0Ugh0ui C3na‘la,“"_thln thfi England _-'till waits silently for Truth to next few days. As to the details it is sur-gdispmve ,M Hun_,.aiS€d barriel. to gow; flclem 1" know for the p"e"`5“"_t that the5"undei‘standing. She permits the publicatio; will be l’1`aCtiCaH-V identical] “nh thoiff (ffiof the official statistics of what she has doin the last loan; that as an iiivesitment it 1< .` , ,, _ _ ylto date, p1_orf-fled anyone is willing to dig' absolutely safe-having all the resouicesyup the requfme “White Books" in th., of the Dominion to guarantee it; that if a patriotic duty to invest in it every dollarl that can be saved from everything else. - The aim of the new loan is to F3156 half billion dollars. This money is to be used by the government not only to finance Cari- , ada’s share of the. war but to help in dev-_ eloping Canadian trade, Canadian resourc- es, Canadian industries. It will be-a nation- al fund to promote Canadian business. The money for the last Victory Loan was almo :I , . 1"case. But she will not buy newspapers or bribe correspondents or hire advertising Fspace, as dir.: the hypocritical power whose virtue Viereck and Hale and Rumely pro- claimed. A- 3. through the natural avenues of intercourse the attitude of the Britsh. This belief is probably justified despite the activit ' of = . . . 3 "t various anti-,war Americans in keeping the ~ _ _ _ 1 That the facts will seep through in time ima eoiiimii-al',i'piii-iii.1m Cas, between Erigianfl and America seems to be, ther- °f wi- ' in able- Ss wholly expended in Canada. Much of it had gone towards raising and equipping and, maintaining the Canadian army while inl Canada. A large quantity of the loan was” expended in advances to Great Britain for, supplies in Canada. The whole Victory Loan ,{ goes to Canada’s war efforts and throught these to Canada’s development. l The Victory Loan is used to provide ai market for our farmers, ourfishermen, our manufacturers and other interests thatl supply the British Government in Canadaf It is well known that the British Govern- ment can only purchase in Canada if Can- ada supplies the money., For instance Can- ada has an exportable surplus of cheese to the value of forty million dollars. Last year the Victory Loan advanced the money for that cheese, otherwise there would have been no market for it. This year the cheese export will be again bought in the same way. The wheat crop, the salmon pack, shipbuilding, aeroplane building, muni- tions manufacturing, lumbering etc., ai'e financed by the Victory Loan and through these other industries and other activities are created which serve to circulate the money right here in Canada. It will there- fore be to the interest of all to return to the Victory Loan every dollar _that can possibly be spared. -». Investment in the Victory Loan encour- ages thrift, It is a liberal interest bearing investment and is not subject, as many safe keeping devices are to drafts for unimportant and unnecessary expenditur- es. It is laid by not only for safe keeping but for steady interest bearing and the longer _it is invested the greater, will the desire lie alive. _ But it does seem to us that it is the duty of some American leader, preferably the president himself, to put a quicker end to land's service. The president could make this statement cover not what Britain has done for the whole allied cause but what she has 'done for us. The transport and convoyof our troops abroad is a case in point. Assistant Secret ary of the Navy Roosevelt said in London cent. say nothing about it! Over here, last week ‘ It’s not fair. I tlf`ainiess-that’s'”what we need in our re iii ions with England; fairness that is bas e upon Truth and Knowled e Anglo-American misunderstanding by a' fair and full statement of the facts of Eng-Z , -Think what this means. It means that the people of England voluntarily gave up their food in order to transport the American army to Europe. _It is perfectly .true _that they made the choice made necessary by the terrific pressure of the German drive, Nev- erth_ele_ss,_it is a splendid example of nation-` al discipline that permits a peope to cut its ,i,Sf¢l'§,tal°y Daniels SP0l<€ in praise of what _ 0111* navy had done in getting our forces _ Safely through the SubmaI.ines_ Sixty per 'rlifi right tlievlnwllect tn train cent of the work was done by England, and She 8'€fS not a word of acknowledgement - 'riie rigiii iii uve _rox Him you love. - 959151; lo t A"` of .ut are l -hi" cada# ~.,, to ad;1_yijt_ and to fiavg othe(ii°wise. By Order:-l` ffiiiilliiii,--i C A. E. W'\llll'l§.Y. Sexy ' 1-795'_l.0°8lll4iD(l and ,s e ti t the truth pldihefo i - i7 ‘ Y . _ .-va- A " ~ :._ CWM" 'lil rim would aa* uf you suddenly ionggpqr inwme ,$1 'duced z certain lmuuiit. How wogyi 70'! 5-*fe U10!! Vere"compsllei! ml ‘¥J'e? Q ’-..~‘...l`L'. ` ` 1 Y _ _ , ; -\|f‘¥1¢!' fihlheidvcd for tar pur-f ‘P0595 5)’ avoiding unnecessiry' uipgi lon railroads. The railroads are neeii¢§‘ ‘for irar service, both passenger lnd- ‘frfigkir Think before you go. Save- li':.i_~ ':`iioiiey for vicwry-_ - _=_==.==.=e-iiaiacaari-4=e=i=»sa_' ; Yiiiii- Pmiiifmi solved.;-i "‘ lv nsv_:l'.s.i_insco‘r1',ii. a.;§ ,;.i~'ii~ vi iAii i-xgiiu imrnil) -2 2 is eeeeaaieeesaexal _ Dr. Liniicciit. in this column ville helv you solve your bean pmblemf frBli5i0lis_ lmuiral. social. financial audi every other anxious care that per' gplexes you. ll s personal answer la ml _qulred. enclose a the cent stamp. No: lnames will be published; l! you pm; Tier, sign your initials only. or use si _ pseudonym. _ STORE .\'E\\'S: _ ".\ .\lerchai1t" a-‘i;= my advice as to ima' much' lshoulfl spend in aflvertisiiuz. l can I LV .1 '.r.~'r_ aiisiver this riues:;on spc-cillcall;i';| that is something you can find out by; uf.-tual te-sz. Get a pointer from ihel way the Department Stores advenisef izi the bzg cities. Many ol them use; a ful! page in a great Metropolitan! paper daily. at a cost perhaps ol; 31.50.00 to $300.00 a aa,-. 'riiey give! the store news written in an attraf.--S live way and it is read bytens 0:" zhousands of interested readers. lt _ will pay you to advertise in the Guard- :ian in the same proportion. Give it ii trial. Q l'i.\`()\\'LEDGE AND l'ROSPERl'I`\`i “Upon what kind of luiowledge does; the prosperity of a nation most de-i pend?' asks John T. The name -ii' the knowledge is Legion. It cannot be-5 expressed in one word. There mu.st§ be a practical working knowledge riff earth, sea. sky. and of the minerals] liquids and gasses in the bowels of ti.-ff earth. A scientific knowledge of 3;;-' rlcuiturc- is a basic necessity. aiiii next perhaps in importance "Ls manufactural knowledge. Cheap por:-§ er and transportation are also esse"i»I tial. Knowledge of God and obedience to lllni is essential. THE \\'A_Gl'.’5 OF -Sl.\': H. (I. R.l I am not ififiieflical docfér auf 'sdan-I not advise you what to do _to (ree, i yourself fromlthevdisdlsl aihiiii You! prescribe lor you and likely tell who* aww. .°“i 2 what an insane=fool you have heel'-\~ to contract what is most likely an -ciiraiile mainly fir iifliashol i>1f=aSi1rE,~ lf you inari’Y..klIo\Yl|lK Y(>.ll_"3°|1d"_l°7§i i you deserve llle ll11l7|"1l0ll!¥\€lll» lemasculation. lf there are no sue" legal pemiliier' fomaiiah a~.¢llalioli<~a& - crime lllere' ought to br. ~'lf~ 9'-Nl*--l'6°.i lrain from hiarlillgf 111 YUM" 'PY_"599'm' condition. 'G'*"‘f"~”-»'- _ ' , _ _ _ ,,.i.. _ , . € " ' """i ' ' ' ' ' "' “'=iL.»...'_...c.... lemma .-. ». ` - all . fi' < A ir* ':':'.‘:.°..i‘::°.'.1.f.-i‘.:.1':.’l‘1‘.f.. L°~°-we-*»__="t‘l ._ °°“""’°¥? °‘°"“‘“" “““’°" "‘-“i"‘m"""""° '°' 'f"=°=='°"-