I Building, New York (‘itv (lent-nil Sinful’! lluilliuig, Detroit interstate Build V on‘. thu- PAGE. FOUR THE GIIARLUTTETOWN GUARDIAN ' —W. Ch t S. Al L re M. i’. VlcrPrsoldont-J. K Burnett lands“ Serfi".‘:l:\'—|;i:ll!‘.1-l'0|. l). A. lflcKinnou. D. B O. Edllflfilfld Alnmiizin; Director-J. it Burnett Associate l-Iditorr-Fr-inlt Walker and D. K. (‘urrlo Morning Daily ifounIlv-l 1&7) 3'55‘ W" W" ii" I'i"ll!\‘e) Ii lrered. Mao Der your iln advance) niuiied in Fluids null United Sntes. AUYl-IIITINIFG IKICPICESIINTATIYES UNITED STATESuThe BI-ckwliii Sperm] Ae-ency lnc. New York Central Syndicate Trult BID (‘niengoz rug. lhinsns Cil_v_ wniuugiihv Tutu‘! liuiiilliig aloiindnock Building, liuiiiling, . Louis. Glenn Hull» Hi-inia; Francisco; ill,"- Ni», fTf-ih Slrltizl l'u -i-ii-ii.n blaming M axlm People know it is best to pay as they go, but still they get mad when their grocer tells them they have to do it. Tlll‘IlSl).-\\', Dl; EMBER 29,1932 ____. "1141 yOES 1T ‘ynjpm’? ‘zi-ie whole European situation is v totally dlferent, from anything that on liii.‘ North American con- Tlicrc is little doubt that if leading organ of the party QiXC-EiCVGYy European country were sat- “iiff-‘iriruifl Lwficd that it had not-hing to fear ‘mm its neighbors they would all. - cvcpt linly. be w-illin; to, Lab-uni jcuulpwlism has sunk to u cxksus low lcvcl In this Province when 'irc merit. publicity to uivscrifzcd lav cx-juil inmates, and not only iiiil“ LliiVQilTlKlLJS, but in- sisis, without knowledge tlI-s facts and in lace of emphatic con- tradiction by the authorities, on re- ' mg "nun. The Ctiviwlian yes- ; iiKPSP “i .1 i‘0I~tiI\v;tlI, at least to cut. Iiouu tlrczr expenditures on arms-i nicitfs. i . “f: is tho-Kc icrday cur-vied an official coutziuiie- w ‘m, u“, ‘vurhke 030mm, sets the Lon ziiitliorized by the Attorney pace‘ with no mtemauonm pouct General, llcn. J. D, Stt u‘ one of situations “"5 K- c" force, one raugnucicus nation, just “m i" "“r Mild“ i“'°“ll"iii‘i.izti t.‘ ‘ bml man, can make it nec- hr*ri.l of ih~Ii\\\'iil(j;I:i;i.ii.\Ii bfuuiit- v 5m. .‘~_,1c,0,_._,,,.5 w be a: least 0d Pfiilt"). Thai. ihc u 3rd of tin-so pa: ' prepared for war, and Europe cchturzes of wafare behind her - :7 I r =- i ' v _i TPSPOlloIDA.‘ OIIICHIiS sboiudbcigtior was ed and the 532th‘ bi-ziyen m wiutv- y” ma.“ hm, norvouy h-‘iitlinq liIPIitS l‘:")*'il!\‘t’i in sczirp ._ . . ‘ "llic [gliiitci States cannot be ac-l iii f.'t-.~.ii'<l.i_\'.~; 1.12;.- lipe Oll ed of anv great munixtzciice t0 get than t! ii’. _ . i n into a tght w.th a powerful enemy [for inc bah‘! o." ensuring peace. True, no oziici‘ ain't. ..i_\' of ex-lnmaics and street rumor, will certxiiziiv occasion surprisi- lni _ i _ r ishc rrimc In near the end 0f the "i: Provmce. i_ , r Lust \\'.il' \\'.‘.(‘l1 slic was .0I'c0d to d0 this l.i'.\' ' Ill" v to paint ' iso lo save her pride, but. had she was tbs duty n! our con- , tcnzporziry us a. lll‘\\'.\ll‘l}ll_‘l' to cnni- , ' _ _ , ' , =. I curly in the itiriiggle it llilllllCllli} at 011cc with tlir- nut new“ ; .:l , us rc- f ' ,, . Io in‘; ‘it have lxitn, . .‘ Ti: Cf I"..llll \'.'. i tliere vials for the illlfzluii ferred to. Thr fact that l‘ did not ‘M n w“ tiny i" r. and i. i0 iiurh blimblicil undi sioiy- would not. have had l0 do‘; i nu: herself at all." i, do s0 showed c‘e;ii“i' thu‘. ~ i1.» pain-min of the, n7" (‘<il'l‘l"C‘[ illifil l" .il\~ , , l , i . . D‘.'o.'I.'I:<-:it 1n c'.>.i.i.':':i. i AI‘. I .i'-~ "i ‘T MC H‘ '0“ “vhi sired, bu; in .e§v an ltppflftllilli? of L“ glut 3L “Mike Pi-‘itudnmies mi i . ‘ ' i‘ l throwing Inud at the lail author-Lie ‘WW1’ we Same pubimuon ltles. i 5W5“ MU,.,O,_.‘.,._ i, i, m “In the absence at the present. the. Li... Ii-itzcs of tin: press, ‘ grub“ Countries a, was,‘ to 5U,” ‘might act as a. police force, (for the port. constituted authority with aimague ‘Jf Naim“ "5 MW “mm” view to prezvciiiing IIpi-lsines byflicd m“ “at axe“ anything mi‘ rcvolutionists Zlllti kiiztii-r-tl-iiiiiitlcdfnmm prgbwrci each of the Bum" derr-d one of} svdiiiontsts. If the lpsc tlixi: of cv- Wan ilili-if-‘Iis feels if. necessary to My m. any inmate of a L,“ “.011, protect hcr own interests. "If ~cnch felt. that the others livoailrl (firm-m they would all disarm, QOWJPlilllCllt, of llic ciiiyr, iii-IN‘. soon but thugs are not. lust like that. “The strange thing is that the mc-nt. in this or any other country. Unlmd 5i-flie-i W761i B11934)’ i185 \Ve bclicve we spcftk for the pco- powerful land rind sea £01188 H73 lc of thir. Province when wi- say is ivflfilibiy tilfi most SEW-CORNER“! fncc of the earth, tn be flCCCptvfi iinzi exploited at the cxpense of the uuilitiz-Itixs and the would be on cud to civil [rot-orn- tlmt tiicl’ liiivs: too much rrvpect nation on the ‘Nil rcr full weigh‘. in favor off n kidy who chose liiin ‘will be ‘ m ‘time, hiYnLVCi‘, of any power which: ruggukigporrizrowN GUARDIAN _ . .. nilllzb BY liit Will Words spoken by the Massachu- etts Stat-e Commissioner of Corpor- ations and Taxation in decrying the common tendency to increased gov ernmcnt casts Iiecd to sink deep 111 the minds of all who are ensusfli ivithin and without the public Mi- min stration here and cizewiierc. “Whether they like it. 0r Iict," the Commissioner said, "and regardless of possible insistence that the costs of their departments cannot, be lor-Jeréd, our pubic adiuinzstrators and our public servants and depart- ment. heads must face the fact that government costs must be JOWBTPd regardless-or else the structure o! government itself must be endang- cred." His Majesty King George deliver- ed his Christmas mcssiliit‘ 1115i» 5W1‘ day which was heard iliougliciit all parts of the BrtL-lr Empire. Wlint better intimation o: iiIc wonders of modern science, of the marvellous age in which our lot is cast. of the rapid and unprecedented annihila- tion of time and shaft. (‘Quid b0 given us ihan'b_i' an event of this character? What event could better benefit the special cond tfions of the era wherein "ccntuves are crowded into nu afternoon" and inyrifids 0f folk of cvcry race and clinic can,- almost instaiitei‘, lion»: the voice of i one man ring around the wliolc' world? And with this wizard-like means of converse at our bchcstfi how could it be more wortliily and, advantageously employed than ;n sounding forth the Chi-Latinas Ines- sage of good cheer and good will. ‘ I It is tlie tremendous significance of things that lie iiloitg the ordin- ary path of life that constitutes the i miraculous. We live amid forces so iim lllllgfliifltiilll lllxllllllf. rvflilC 0 estimate l.i ziiid inuIsiux-lcss cflv l. i The suit of :1 Seattle furmei- to liar-c ins soul. marriage annulled on the ground ihiii. the 3." mg; lllilll ~.i'.i.i hypiioiiztti into Ivu .oi'.. ed with llXLOTIkE». The piozipects are rather alarming, for. there are Iium- hers of men who actually walked unto the married state w thaiii. real- i zlng their fate until they were at ‘tire altar. and even then they were tin a daze. Perhaps hymnloiisnr has isecn practised by the girls on an mxtervive scale as the S91v1‘ pet- -It;cn suggests. i It is recallcd that on irbruziry l. 11917, just before the United States icntczcd the ivar. Mi". lloovcr‘ ea d: “flamenco. will be rich, p: sperous i and WEJIUE.‘ 21,5 a result w‘. this war. LWe shall have made untold mil- lions 0f this wealth out of the woe and welter of Europe. The mane-Y lwhuh has ccmc to Iislfvom these ipccplc is Incney in tri ‘. and un- less America recognizes this trust, i i l i i mstziics that the X ray, and radium fliiiiat 980112 at pours [in lies . Burton. M1). DIFFERENT FORMS OF 'I‘R‘T.\T.\IENT FOR GOITRE Perimps you sometimes wonder why one acquaintance with n well nIni-kcd goitrc seems to get along without any particular treatment, unotlici" Iicciuuintance with goitI-e is required to take regular doses of incline, still nnotlier is required to rent u. portion of every day, another ls given X my treatment, another radium treatment, and still another ins a portion of the thyroid gland removed by surgery. \‘i‘lI',' should there be so many Inethods of treatment for goitre? The treatment of goitre depends upon whether the type is simple or sever-c. In inc simple form, rest or iodine treatment ls sufficient. It is in the severe type that many forms of treatment are now in use- X my, radium, and surgery, and you may ivondcr why one or other of ilnsc tlircc methods of treatment. should not be used in every case. DI". G. E. Pfohlcr, Philadelphia, is now being IIIorc generally used throughout the world than at any previous time. He bclicvcs that not surgery; nor the X ray, nor radium, nor medicine can be, depended upon to cure all cases and no onemcth- od is so much superior flint it can be IccJniIiIcIIde-zl for all cases. Ii is the general oplnioirof spec- iuiists in X ray and radium that in ull cases which are not severely involved by the pressure of the igoilre, or so serious as to IIIakc the kiwi)’ of II inuntli dangerous, should lie treated by ihesc methods rather than by surgery’. If tlicrc is no cle- Coffee Houses - And Clubs on Dr. Johnson considered that "thfl full tide of human life could be seen nowhere excel)‘ i" the stmnd" but in 50 years afici- his dcnih the centre p; 50cm mndon had inoi.'cd somewhat further west, and Theo- dore Hook. in the reign 0i Wiilmm IV, maintained that "the real Inn- don is the space between Pall Mall on iiIc south, Piccadilly on the noriii, St. Jamcss street 0n the west, and the Opera House to the cast." At this period it is to be ob- served that he himself lived just outside the “social world" wihlch he defined with such gwgfilllhimi precision, being then a tflllllli- 0! a house in Cleveland Row. Many of the old clubs have pas~ scd away, (or thouglrisome of the"! m- similar societies may still cxlsf. they live behind the scenes, lmtead o! figuring conspicuously 0n the stage of life in the metropolis. ‘Quite e new order of things M11118 up: from small social meetings livid periodically, the clubs have become permanent establishments. luxurious in their appOiYitIHBUT-B» some of them occupying buildings which are quite pallltiui. ‘iiiackeray was a member of the Reform. Athcncunr and Garrick glii!)5_p9rhaps of others, but. it was in those named that his leisure was usually spent. "The afternoon of the last days of his life,” writes one of his biogI-nifliev, "were almost entirely passed at the Reform Club, and never had he been more gen- ial or in such apparently happy moods. Many men sitting in the libraries and dining rooms of these clubs have though; this week one of the tendercst. passages in hi8 early sketchcs-‘Brown the younger iii. a ciub',—in which the old uncle is iTllfFfifllCd us telling his nephew. while showing him the VBIiOUS mom: in the club. of those who had dropped off-Whom HHITIFS had finite iinpruveiiicnt after two or Lin-u.» monilir». .‘~.llI_1"l‘_\' it"! natxlicui trufitincni, and tiic use 0i the X rays brings about n cure, and an operation is thus avoided. Haw can the physician know whc- lilbl‘ or not the case is improving? l3:/_ilic metabolism iesi. inicasur- ing the rule at which the body pro- ccsscs are working) the physician can tell Ivhciher the rate is getting slower" or faster. If girfting sfowci" rest; rind medi- cine is all flint is IIOCCSSAFY. 1f get- ting faster, immediate operation may be Iicccssniy t0 save life. Air Service Development IExchange) i Al: service wihin the British Empire is bring hampered in its for law and order, nixtl for ilmwhiziks it necessary to spend each she Wm pay dearly and mum“, for grow“, bccausf, of mtowflrd bush authorities appointed to enforce ,l_‘>'08l‘ huge sums of money on army law and ovrlcr, to tolerate suchIQnd navy, and to maintain a fleet methods of yellow journalism. equal to iluit 0i Great Britain, al- Tiie assurance given OfiiCifliiyiiilOllgh her position is not nearly and emphatically the falsity so vulnerable. It is hard to imagine of the rumors broadcast by thfliany‘ of the European nations starv~ Liberal organ in this instance is mg 1,119 mquntry in any important therefore all that should b: requir- way, ed to satisfy right thinking citizénsfi‘ "If the United States believes the ‘European avmdfic-‘nis are unneces- sary. licr own armaments should be of Our contemporarys responsibility for descending to such method: in its HCWS columns is the only qiics- ticn in issue. Since that is the con- cern chiefly of our contemporiir_v's readers, we shall to their own reflections on the inn:- ter, only requesting that they ml: thcrnselvws seriously ivhat it manna, and what, effect upon the rising T319 gygm which various generation e continuance of sucumaue at Halifax against an "ntion methods would menu to public Ho to tiiPil‘ Imixc countries may bc ox- tn this‘ country. ,cv-:~n less necessary and she could ‘play a noble part in world affairs by sctfin; thelexampie." leave ihcin (fluff) TO RETURN pinzncd by a short item in an On- tario exchange. Three Finnish fam- iles settled in Ontario a few years U. S. AND DISARIl!.»i.llE.\'T View and puupcred in their new sur- ' ‘I-oundings. Unfortunately they were More than one publicuron has. 5,.d._._,,.,1 by ~Rcd~ pmpag3nda_ Th2“, coximmied "Vmi m0 ai-miid“ )5 mclrxinc to bilevc that Soviet Russia United States wllvflfd dis-‘Yiilflmcili-irvouid be a paradise for them‘ and N09- tiiB iP-fifit i5 Ti"! -'-'ii‘ll"iilfi' lidocxlcd to cnicr it. About a your 8-80 Timc-s which nnkr- iiwflniifii: com- i-jppy iumqi igmjr “Iarldly X)D5"cr§\on5 i -—---- IIV-‘Ilt "ii-Q" ti"! Yul". ill-ii Vi!‘ U‘ 5~ -“-~ ~11‘) Iran and hziiglit their tickets i5 maknii; huge cxix-IidAurI-r, upon rm- Ruggia, my; land Qt the [reg defence, while at the vauii: i-ine. crlt- STilPy left hcrc voliintanly and were ifilillf.’ EHFOPPR" TIT-ions 1'0!‘ tilvirhxo; tlcgiortrtl. Nvw they are back at expenditures upon flffilfllrcliis, m; "EWW time u"? film-Sim" 0f W" iinmcy- thug; imtl when they tried t0 debts COmOs up." sixties The bipn-Wicavc Russia was confiscated by the ctary Timcs, “the Unzted Stat-es Svvlc‘. authorities. 'I‘lIey want to re- ralses the disarmament queitiozi and cuter Canada where they o'er-e happy argues that until the European ‘find ])l'O$])(‘i‘0il5 before they absorbed countries reduce their armament i‘"Rctl" doctrines. Tlicii- return ls an expondn-m-rs tltcre is no reason for admission that. Canada, 3;; ,1 gugd ' x vxitlinut a. penny, Wliatcvcr any pets/m becoming unpopuiiiz- by place iu Lvc m. They inighi, sug- gests the Lfazl and Empire. be allow- advocniing zi reduction in zinc war‘ ed re-cniry as g, living answer i0 dcbia. "The thinking element in the those in Camda, both pmlciariat 1m" cd stair.- 1;: nr: so determined "Rctlii" and parlor "Pinks" whr) pug on Ill!‘ (yin-lion its arc some nf the forward the advantages of Soviet others who fail to recognize thlt Russia- ; its poscss on. I i Ju;t thirty years ago, lrsceniber izi, William ufcrconi sent. the first ‘(wireless message eastward acroas the Atlantic from Table Head, Glam iBcy, where, udcd b; subsidy from the Dominion GOVCH‘ At, hc had established his first 5.311611 on this continent. It was a Ffifll incirmge and not merely the letter "S" as was the case when the first Sgnals wrrc received at Si. John's, Neur- fountllaitd, on Decrnzbcr 1'2, 150i. The most reliable economists and trade experts in the world nrc agreed that nothing now prevents a great expansion of business and o.“ in- dustrlal activity, except the liugc and unpayable aggregation of Will-Ty debts. All realize that they will ultimately be wiped out by iitvriin- tional agreement, but no one knows when. The decision rests with the American Congress, which will act only when it must. Former Premier Picrrc Laval has put in a zuitshcll France's reasons for refusing to pay war debts to the i United States. Geman dcbw ‘to France are ylially related to France's debts to the Untcd Staics, he says-i If the fronicr debt is to be wiped} out, the luiicv debt IIZILSL Rial) bc wiped out. If France must pay the United Mates, Germany must pay France. It is helpful to keep in mind the essentials of the war debt situ- ation. Out of the financial cliaos| that followed the Ivar and peace! pacts three nations emerged as ul- tlmaic creditors. Britain “'11.; the greatest creditor. But Britain, be- lieving that. war debts would bring ruin, forgave her debtors all save an amount sufficient to pay the United states. France perssted in her de- mand to collect from Germany, more than she in turn owed, until the Lnusanne Conference of ihs xicnr. ‘Fhen, under pressure of world; opinion. France also agrrcd lo “incl ‘ncss conditions, according to the London Daily Telegraph, a ivritcr in which points out that support by gowvimienihs is necessary because of the magnitude of flight under- takings on a grand scale. Neverthe- less there has been a great. advance in recent years and some very long Imperial routes are regularly being covered by airplane. For example, there has been extension of the air mziil route through Africa from the Gvcat Lakes to Cape Town. Klimt service, it is explained, saves sLx days us compared with surface transport betivecn London and the Cape and it. may shortly be so im- pro 'tl as to save eight days. This lllilli route is receiving considerable public support, Iiboiit 14,000 letters coming into London every week from Africa, while some 12,000 leave , London weekly for that great con- iineni. Such letters have to pny extra pcstngc, but tlie higher stump charge is more than made up in tlic saving of a. week's time in the delivery. More postage business is anticipated. when conditions defin- itely turn for the better. Like the Afi-lcnn route, thc Iiirliiin route is doing n steady business in nlr malls, anti at.‘ Christmas time the patronage is swollen to extraordin- ary proportions. lndcod, the habit of faster miiil coininunlcatioii is lacing established in tiic public mind, and it is predicted flint with- in n short time the airplane way will be accepted as the ordinary mciuis of express delivery, at least so luv as communication between Iiilklziiicl and Indian and African points is concerned, Tlic big trunk routes are but loosely connected at present. Aus- tralia. being cited as an instance. There ave regular air routes strung around three-quarters of the coast- line i4; serve the large towns and. also operating inland to the farm- ing centres nnd to some isolated disiricis which otherwise would hm“ "0 Teillilnr communication; but there is n imp of a thousand illiiffi 71'0"“- iiiri icimiiiiis of any one Ciill stilf be , Tillie.) u Cllliinliulllull o.‘ rest, ‘ (pd Th-mvprpy) nppvsu-cd at the end of the club list, tinder the dismal head of ‘hlcwihcrs D?c‘ns“d,' in w'i‘it‘il. Tad‘ ‘you and l shall rank some day?" Whatever may have been the "rules and regulations" of a certain type of clubs of the 18th century It wide difference cxisls between them and those of the present day in the matter o! bacchanallan fes- tivities. It may be said in all sin- cerity that high play and high fectli-ngn are no longer the ‘rules; in fact, clubs are to many persuns even dull and unsociabie. In most of the clubs of the Johnsonian per- iod, the flow of wine or other li- quor virus far nIoi-e Iibundant than" that of mind, and the conversation was more generally easy and hilar- ious than intellectual and refined. The bottle, or else the punch bowl. playedby far loo prominent n part and sociability frequently took the form of revclrgv, or at lens‘. what ivould be considered such according to our more temperate habits. Though in general the oldc" clubs encouraged habits of free indul- gence as indispensable to good fcl- iOWShip and sociability, the modern clubs, on the contrary, have done considerable to discourage them as being vulgar and ungcniicmanly- “Reeling home from a club" “Wis i common ¢XDTCSSi0lf used izi bygone ccan the slate, as fur as shc vcur. , <i these to iiie nearest line which able. The United States is the onlyi “lllilmis with Europe. Canada is creditor to refuse to do heI-"share. also brought into the picture, reg. days, ivhcreas to day, inrbt-lcty, or the symptom of it, in a club would bring clown upon the guilty" lane's i anathema and disgrace. The pleasures and comforts of clubs and club life t0 i110 510M101‘ whose means and position permit of such luxuries have been often grnphicailv and humorously des- cribed in numerous publications for the pivt two ncniurics, and nowhere in a more amusing man- ner thnn in the "New Monthly Ma- gazine" in 1842, which states that. "After all clubs are not altogether so bad a thing for fnmliy men. They act as conductors to tiic storms usually hovering in the air. There is nothing like the subordi- nation exercised in a communltv of equals for rcdiiclng n fiery and uri- conirollable temper." Thesprcad and increase of clubs are remarkable signs of the limes. Their use: and advantages are such as to make one wonder not only why such things were not estab- lished much carter than liicy were. bu‘ how "men about town" existed ivli-hout them. --E. Lytion Vvjvbcri. D. P. S. erencc being made to "a very good series of air lines linking the east coast with the west, running out from the prairies northward into undeveloped territories, serving towns in the United States." Hero again ,t.here is stated in be a lack. in that the only air link with the rest of tho Empire is the ship-io- shorc mail service opt-rated by ihc RCA I". The hope is ihai, eventu- ally there will be n linking up of the disconnected services. The coni- pletion of Imperial routes will come in due time. MEMORY ' ~When summer heat has drowned | the day a With blaze of noontlde overhead, And hidden green-finch can but | say |W'hat but a moment since it said. When harvest fields stand thick with ivhent, And wasp and bee slave, dawn till dark- Nor liome, till evening moonbeams beat Silvering bark: How strangely then the mind may build A magic world of wintry cold, Its meadows with frail frost flowers fllled— Bright-ribbed with ice, wold! the nlghtlars oaken a 1‘ rozcn When dusk shuts in the shortest day And huge Orion spans the night; When antlered flreflames leap and P183’ Chflquefin! the walls with fltful ' light, Even sweeter in mind the summer's rose May bloom ugulir; her drifting swan Resume her beauty; while rapture flows Of birds long since to silence gone: Beyond the Noel, sharp and shrill, Of Waits from out the snowbound street, Drums to their fiddle beneath the hill June's mil! wheel where the water; meet. O angel Memory that can Double the toys of laithless Mani --Walter de la Mare in the Winter Yale Review. Home - Keeping , , Authors l ' (London Times) Hardy is the capital exampl. of a novelist who found within his naive district all the life and All the setting which his genius needed i0 Siildyi and none has kept so Closely to one region as he. But other authors there are whose name; immediately sugest a pa)" iicular part of the country. Scott took his subjects from all climes; yet it is his Scotland that comes first to mind. To say the name of Bronte, and aspecaily of Emily Bronte, is to say the moors of Yorkshire, no less than to say Wordsworth is to say the Lake ‘ Country, or borrow the heath: of ‘Norfolk. Some very great. authors there are who seem to have n0 spiritual home where their minds may breathe trim air that gives them llPiV strength and understanding. ‘Dickens may be allowed, perhaps. his Llmdout but Thackeray was in that. sense homeless. In sheakes- menrc the meadows and the high- iiands of his Iiative place are al- ways peeping ihrough, and fielding never forgets his West country; yet. neither Shakespeare nor Field- ing is plainly a regional writer. On the other hand Arnold Bennett founded his whole art. llpjfl the spirit of it's Five Towns; and, though Mr. Kipling has put a girdle between East and West, and roamed the Seven Sens and search- cd ilic hearts 0f mcn under every shade of skin, some of his readers find a special happlnss, a. luminous serenty, in what he writes when his mind and heart. turn home to Sussex. The cffect of this home-keeping or home returning/as it is wit-h some. upon an author's work, and whether he loses more by the poe- slble cramping than-he gains by the poise, are questions that make go0d subjects for inconclusive but agree- able discussi The effect of the author's work upon the region is not so often considered, yet per- haps it is worth a glance. Once more the extreme case is Hardy. Before he wrote there was Dorset. Hampshire, Wiltshire, and so forth: but there was no Wessex. And the Wessex that ho created is more than a. geographical division. It is an intellectual or spiritual entity. capable, in its whole or its parts, of affecting thoec who see it as it never could before. so also it is with "Wuthcrlng Heights" and the country in which i‘. l5 set; and so with the Scotland of Walter Scott. nnd with the Sussex of Mr. Kipl- ing. 'l'hesc authors have not mere- ly Wtittcn about these regions. They hnvc new made them and have given them an existence transcending that, which they had before. It is well that we should acknowledge this criative power in our authors arid be grateful for it. For our debt t0 them does not end time. The least. poetical or well- rrud of men unconsciously finds ihc world a Inore beautiful and interesting plum because of what the poets and the novelists haw found it and have made it. DPZQEMBER 29. 19a: " , .,_ __ S i , ICE CREAM We will continue making our SPECIAL FRUIT BRICK during the. Holiday, season which may be obtained from any Perfection Dealer. Also n» DINNERS, PARTIES, BANQUETS or on... occasions. DECORATED CAKE, NUT ROLL, LOG ROLL, and INDIVIDUAL ANIMAL MOULDS. -Place order 24 hours in‘ advance_.. CENTRAL GREAMEBIES LTD. Phone 848 A Pare- Tea V Brahmin Orange Pekoe Sold Only in Bled Airtight Packages. ,- __ . .- ‘.10. avaiiioisoiib LACK AUTO RAISES PERFECT OR/CHID FORT MYEIRB, rial, Dec. 2a- Jnmm A. Hcndry is a bit astonish- od at the vagaries of Iiai-ure. He operates a nursery and for years had been experimenting with orchids. It's a. tedious process for a man is lucky if he plants 100 and gets one mature specimen. Yesterday he decided to use inc old automobile lie reserves for trips over rough roads in search of wild orchids. It had stood idle for sever- al months. There, growing right out of the ragged Iipholstcry. was a perfect orchid. Now Hcndry can't use his car until the orchid is old enough to transfer to a pot. Thad: norhlq lo equal Minlnfo. ll "the hold”. Anflaepdgoocdailghalllg Olveoepldnlell ‘ L NARUS I ILM. Lampson & c». LTD. 84 Queen Street London. E. C. 4. England Public Auction Sales RAW FliilS Dates of Sliver n; 531“ to be held in London i: December 1932 23 January 1933 6 March 1938 22 Mny 1888 37 September 1933 8hlppln| Inn may be ob- tained free o! charge upon application to It. T. Holman. Ltd, Snmmernfdo. For full particular! In ra- Jlrd to packing, shipping, in- surance and conditions of sale, apply to Alfred Fraser, Inc-i 211 Fifth Avenue, New York. N. Y. COLDS l Prompt and effective relief is obtained in (Boughs, Colds, Chills, Sore Throat, Whooping Cough and Bronchial Troub- les, in Infant and adult by MACS SYRUP TAR AND COD LIVER. OIL COMPOUND This preparation is com- pounded from pure drugs and has been thoroughly tried and tested. Eradlcatc colds quickly bo- fore they become deep-seated. thus tending the sufferer to serious bronchial and pul- monary conditions. 40c. PER. BOTTLE AT THE THE 2 MAGS Drugstore I MAXI. ORDTSRS G l V E N PROMPT ATTENTION m a mm?" coco ow 84W s HEB The best Iortlflcltlon with which to face the winter l: that sense of security and comfort that comes from a cel- lar well supplied with our high grade coli- Phone us today COAL .ii-fiillis&ilo I-IIoNa I16 \,\