W-ldgisiical figures. PAGE FOUR g TllE ciisiiionsroimi aiulnuisii yiw‘ Ioralal Ball] (Iallldl ll IQ) about in the rolling stock already listed. Early this year a disputed point was whether the new- ly mobilized army had s strength of eight or of nine millidns? We see those millions still within the country milling around, as it were, 1 i leuretaryi Lleul. Col, D. A. Indiana. DAD, ldltar and laaagl | l-llroeeer, J. I Baroda, lJ-l. Alsoolate Hfllllillhl frank alter, and Hue, Ill l llurlsall, ILOJJQI, t0! Aetlva IONOQ) BUHSUIIPTION IATK lylisllla P,I~l.$l.\0 peryeanIMluO-ealll 51,2} rai- s amatlu; Q00 le {be naalb (Flt; [lather] saw par nan $3. 81.75 lnr I mustang We for la loath I] lall lo other Provtlieua and lJJ-A. Il-B j IX Illllldl) Weekly: 82.00 per your; lhfl III I Ioltla. Wu for I mania ' The (‘hullollelowl Gnarsllan may be obtained M lintulllngs pews Alene], ‘linen IIIIIIO, I loutli sewn Agency, Uorla ll gun Ialtoll llulrupnlltuls s.“ Alrrscy, ma Pool It. lle real; J. rlae Ni Ill] III, ‘furoutn; News Ibllfl UIIIOII IJIIIIW Uttilwa; Wolle‘: hswa bland Ilsllblry, 0ll~| Iii Toltilvru 5110p, llullrloll, H. B. “The Sfrohdest Memory is Weaker I'll! the Weakest Ink." ruunsmv. Auousi" iz. 1945 Churchill In Canada » .\l€-ii-:l-i- lluzrchills arrival in Canada lliltT llllll ii was zllmost t\vo years ago l-.~ lit.‘ il;l_v-— \u;,;u~t l). li)1l—Sil1Ce he and Pre- sident Hui-sc- ll held their first momentous con- frrcilci- ahmird battleships in the North Atlantic. Sin; llllll zlu v llllYL‘ met in Washington thrce (llllts and lllCl‘ in Casablanca when President l\' l>*t'\.‘li lllUlli‘ hi; unprecedented flight to .\'<iiili \l':"ii'a fnr a lrn-driy conference with Mr. Lliiiifillll l'-l l:.iiii.'ll‘_v. ' t- ' ill‘_' v ilfrrcnce, like its prede- >q had news for the Axis. l pr. ~- iialls it as an “excellent sign" ' .\llivd successes have come so spi-el _ _ . iilust he i1$<11l11€d that they have oiilriiu llillllh lllillll‘ at Casablanca and \\'ashing- li‘ll, \\i:ih the U-hout losing its potency, the ‘ '\"illl~' flllli-ilcillg slczltlily 0n the EJ516111 .\llird air flcuts pounding Germany and lialy \ ih 1'\lL‘llllt'\S and ever increasing blows, the Sicilian campaign in its final stagli—~there is evcrv rt-asliu lo assume that the Allies now re‘ quire a llL‘\\' blue print for a concerted campaign. There are also indications that the Germans are attempting to strengthen the Reich for a priilriilgcil defensive war within an inner Eur- Ojlezlli lorlliiss- Tllfst and other developments in the military field call for a review of Allied strategy, invoh" ing such [li-ofound questions as whether Europe should be invaded through the Balkans or across the English (haunt-l. Churchill and Roosevelt are the only men who can settle such questions, af- ter hearing the advice of British and American staff officers and, perhaps, the advice and wishes of Russian military leaders as well. In any event, Prime Minister Churchill's sec- ond visit to this country since the war is news of major importance in itself. He is the great- est figure of our day and generation, and the man to whom, above all others under Provid- ence, we owe the most for our preservation. “Fish Shortage ‘T _ Evidence is accumulating which suggests that s fish shortage will occur in Canada during the winter months. This, according to one authority, will be due primarily to the fact that 25 per ccut of all fresh fish taken in eastern Canadian waiters and 10o per cent of the pollock and flounder catch of the Atlantic coast will be ship- ped to (ii-cat llritailt. The minimum quantities of fish which Canada has agreed to ship to the (lid Country are 2,000,000 pounds from the Pacific. $000,000 pounds of cod fillets from Illf‘ .\ll:miic roast. 1,000,000 pounds of pollock flllsts- and l,(_l()(),()OO pounds of floundcrs. 'l'hl: ll ulaiiil fur fish is already far greater tlriu the supply, with the result that the stocks, which were previously accumulated, are being giwliluzilly rcducl-il. Since it mew be lIIIDO-Silblfi to ziccumulzui- lzirgc stocks during the present s2: fll, it is l‘\'l(lf'lll that the shortage may he izh in fiiliiix- nl-vuths. lxist vrar. ('::ll:ul.'l had one of the greatest Haj s iif r-‘Clvfivc Wllllltlll. What the catch will l». ihi- i. not certain, but manv believe that. ~l s than last vear'e volume. Most it nill l iii iiis» ‘ll ii:i:I.-. fir». will go u) Great Britain N} .-~,;,- wiqi 300.600 cases will be released f.i-.- ... - cl iisiimptioii. lu order to increase _ h‘ <zilmuii Indian fishermen on the w»; haw llfTll organized to work in :1 villi Wlllif‘ iishcrmcifs unions. M iilirms Under Arms 'l'lil- \\':u- ll‘u|lIll'llllL'lll at Washington has .- a f w -li'll.lli"lll$ llizlt must he bad news - thi- \.\!~ [NH More lhaii two million btliixi Si: - trill." arc serving outside the re- l puhlrc. .\l-i:\~ lllllll l\\'(‘llly million tons of army carg-i l‘.'ls l1t‘\‘ll lllllYCfl to more than fifty coun- ' l'iiiiiwl \'ial<-s island possessions since '.' " mr \\ attacked. ' ~‘.ftll~llt“i indicate activities that must have llt".‘ll illlllt‘. foreign to the usual concerns of a grull jmiplc living industrially, coming and going. Hing :iud buying, planning and making things, and giving lll(‘it‘ thought and time to eilriling and spviidiilg. \\'|i<-ri- lllv_v thought in terms of raw material ri-ijiiii-t-d flii- lllf‘ |)l‘ll(lll(‘llf)l'l of so many scores or hundreds hr thousands of utensils or appli- aiices or \'(‘ll| 'l('= O1‘ other articles t0 be PC5565:- = ment. logistics forming themselves into proper columns will in another six months or so tell of more hundreds of thousands of sleeping cars having been used to carry troops that by then will have been added in their millions to the two mil- lions now overseas. - EDITORIAL notes - Home Week. in is a o There is the finest exhibition of old autos here to be seen anywhere. l i The Allied War Conference will tend to re- the worry over the domestic political house of cards tumbling about his ears. u u n- v The cry of the period is for something "else"; tear down and obliter the old, substitute some" thing new in men, materials, machinery, organ- ization, immediate prospect; time will prove this to be a. mistaken policy, but like the spirit of the crowd generally, when it isin the air it isliard to withstand. in is a a . George Stephenson, inventor of power loco" motion which paved the way for our present day airplanes, died this date 1848; he was a mining engineer working underground like any ordinary miner when he invented in 1815 the safety mine lamp, first used at Killingworth Colliery where he was employed. His steam engine “Rocket" proved the fastest and most reliable means of transit of his day. u n- u n- . Use of sulfa drugs has reduced casualties among members of the armed forces in the war, Mr. H. Charles Peacock, drug company excell- tive. said in an address to a Montreal service club. Where 80 per ant of the men who suf- fered abdominal wounds in the last war died of infection, all Canadian servicemen with sim- zlar wounds in this war recover if they survive shock and there is now not a single loss of limb from infection, he said. Credit for this is due the laboratory research men who have brought about rapid strides in the use of sulfa drugs, he added. i l i I Due to the fact that some agricultural seeds are higher in price in the United States and other countries of the United Nations than in Canada, consequently making it difficult to control exports from Canada of such seeds in a way equitable to Canadian producers, the Special Products Board has been given authority to buy through trade channels and become the sole Canadian exporter of such seeds, the agricul- ture department stated recently. Any profit made in the transactions will subsequently be returned to the producers of the seeds brought for export. Among the seeds most urgently re‘ quired at present are alsikc, red clover and alfalfa, but conditions may develop that will make it necessary for the board to acquire sup- plies of several other kinds stated the depart- I I i I Now that Parliament is safely home, so there would be no unseemly debate about it, maybe the Government will see fit, says the Gazette, to extend once more the area in which the Zom- bies, our famous stay-at-home army of “home defence" conscripts, shall be required to do their home defending. Last autumn their despatch was authorized to Alaska, Labrador and New- foundland. Later the \\'est Indies were added. Since the Aleutian Islands are part of the Ter- ritory of Alaska, (loubtless a new Order-in- Couucil would not even be required, if Kiska or Attu were now to be included, as a Liberal MP. suggested last session. There is no reason why the Government should not take such a step, but there are elements of comedy in it. The bovs who wouldn't volunteer to chase Italians beside the balmy Mediterranean, would find themselves fighting a stubborn, entrenched Iap in the chilly Arctic. They would not even have a choice between the devil and the deep sea, they'd have to endure both. l i I U Ceiling wholesale prices at which cuts of lamb may be sold in any part of Canada are established under an order of the Prices Board announced at Ottawa. An order issued july 27 fixed maximum wholesale prices for carcasses and sides of spring or summer lamb. Up to now prices of cuts have been required to bear a normal and proper relationship to those of carcasses and sides, but new regulations were found necessary "in view of the wide variation in interpreting ‘normal and proper’ " and a uni- form differential has been set up. The whole- sale carcass ceiling price for spring or summer lamb has been fixed for zone 6 (Toronto and Montreal markets) between July 27 and Aug. 31 st 3o cents a pound. The new order sets a corresponding price of 36 1-4 cents for pair of legs, 36 3-4 cents for pair of loins, 23 3-4 cents fnr pair of front quarters and 14 cents the flank cut a a n- w Writes an Ottawa correspondent: The spec- tacular Liberal losses will make provincial Lib‘ eral governments pause and ponder. The life of the Saskatchewan Legislature has been ex- ed, their \\‘.'lr Department breathes a note of prid.~ in Zlllllhlllltlllfl that an average of 7 1-4 toils of supplies a illali a month had to be ship- ped for lllL‘ initial movements taken in the war. and a toil of supplies a man a month has since had lo hr !~lll])]1('(l for maintenance of each man in iliiifririn abroad. Rfllhfll)’ sir/Q tics have been turned into army 'l"rausporting more than twelve million troops in uniform and with equipment took the use of 72,368 coaches. 241,- 166 sh-vpiug Cars. 49.087 baggage and kitchen cars, and 101.881 rvfrigeratnr, box, flat and gondola cars. Whcn the War Department at Washington anumiiiccs that l\\‘lJ million of the troops it rais- ed and trained arr overseas alid now in action. tended but whatever the term of the extension it won't be long enough to cancel the effects of what happened in the east yesterday. The gov- ernment of Prince Edward Island will be ob- liged to go to the polls next summer, but whe- tlier or not the car ferry can transport enbugh socialist doctrine across the strait and its ad- vocates make it take root when it lands. will re- main to be seen. Then there is the province of Quebec and the oft-repeated story that Premier» Adelard Godbout will take the plunge this fall. lt is still believed here that Quebec people will he balloting this fall. probably in November. War participation is certain to be the major issue, and it is just possible that the scare tlle C. C. F. gave complacent minds in Ontario being transported hither and thither, so that the Good weather continues to favor the Old lieve Prime Minister King's mind for a spell of Mussllnl IUI OUT TIRID ACHII Ilstes Iv The thy i’! Ilble If d In Ber Norgvsfy, the Nani ‘rlglghop 11:11:? §’m‘“‘°‘l.lél§°t‘&°°$ ‘will hliilihistfl“ un Book of Revelation, Jays Blnllle summer's day a middle-aged apple water out of the ground. , , ., all but a small part of the water out tnto the alrfl-Llfe. 1m“ nofebeen so trlllollor the veep . a merry com c opera could be written on the fiasco of l6 l modern Caesar. H absurd coverings and bombsst would have made s. perfect libretto and Hamilton Spectator. ‘_ De Galslls declares 1n a radlo roadcast to France that the B's-anon ubllc must have is part 1n any Un- t-ed Nations settlement with mly. Who will represent the French pub- lic-he and Giraud will have to settle that In a hurry-Owen Sound Sun ‘Hmea. Turn to Chisnsklnl when strikes and rnoe rlots and bickering and about set you down Chlngklng for an h ‘ ., example of what courage and humour and reasonable forebesranoe 1n the light of a greet purpose can do for a longsuffeirng nation. —Prv1i2sz;ce Journal. -turn to ___._. A mlerwhone-ampllfler eombl- nation now tests the soundness of casting and forglngs. When the piece 1s struck with a hammer. 1t rlnis; n microphone amplifies this sound nnd filters out harmonic frequencies so that the base fre- quency msy he compared with a standard tone. A defective part will not vibrate as n good part does, just 3.5 cracked bells do not ring as whole ones do —-Exchange. Russia has awarded a prize to is farmer-scientist who 1t 1s said has developed a type of wheat that will withstand the cold and drought of Central Asia. And not only that but 1L will produce n second crop from its stalks, without replanting. Something like that would push Canada's frontier back another 100 miles, and at the some time tempt B lot. of furthers to pull up stakes and move with 1t. -W1ndsor Star. "Twerps” have been dcllnezl by Admiral Sh‘ Edward Evans, Lon- don's Regional Commissioner. as "those who go on strike without Justlficatln, those who do nothing for the wnr effort but moan, ind those perfectly fit men who will not do fire watch " The "twsrpfl it. will be obvious from this. by no means 1s confined to Britain, and has the additional disadvantage of being more obnoxious than the "gremlfn. " The prefex "Won." is bei"! quite extensively used 1n connection with the 11111.8: of men taxing part 1n the provincial election cam- paign. Everyone who ever held Cabinet rank 1n a provincial Gov- ernment ls being given the "Hon." But no one is entitled to use it un- less he 1s at present holding prov- incial Cabinet rank. Not even for- mer premiers. It's wrong to speak of Hon. James Bracken, former Pre- mier of Ontario. And be 1t said to the credit of both of these men that they prefer to be addressed by their plain names without the pre- fix. —St.. Thomas Times-Journal. Glue-Itch ls eausnlg much lost time 1n plywood plants report Drs. Louis Schwartz, Samuel Peck and Jclm E. Dunn of the United States Public Health Service. Some 600 out of 800 workers 1n one factory were affected during its first six months of operations, with the loss of 1,- 500 days of work. Resin adheslves made from urea-formaldehyde and phenol-for-maldehyide caused most of the trouble 1n the plants inspect- ed, but gelntlnglue or casein-glue may also irritate 1f they are not pure. Dressings of borlc acid solu- tion or Burrows solution are the only known cure. -Exoltsnge. It will take lflng and patient llelp for Italy to achieve real popular Government, and 1t will have 1ts ups and downs. and the neighbors will probably have cause occasionally to complain about the noise. It w1ll be dlfffcult some- times for us not m be dictatorial, on the one hand, or patronizing on the other. Home wasn't built 1n a day, and Italy won't become q pure racy in a day. But the prin- cipal thing 1s to get the world on the right track as w overall stand- ards and their enforcement, so that we can live 1n n world which re- wards decent rather than lndeoent national behavior. -Mlnneupolll Star Journal h your reeord n! the tnlereatlnr ceremony of last week at which His Majesty conferred the honor of knlgthood on the actual site of s recent African battlefield, you dld not psrtlculnrlne the last ooesalon on which such a scene occurred. It was on the evening of June 10, 1m. aknost exactly I10 years o, when King George Il blighted th his own sword mamas Brown, a dflsooin of the 3rd Regiment (now the 3rd Hussars) who had out hls way amonc Zlltench cavalry to re- cover a lost British standard. and tiaroutht’ 1t back tho n e sword cuts -tie h: fingers of his right hand. The Kin: appointed him "a tleriien ln me of the troops of L e Guards” at the ssme moment. Brown was the lest man to be tghted that evening, ._.._.._.__....._i_.._.__. "if nndltflD may solidify Quebec distrust of extreme posi- it says nothing about the millions being moved tions. trees will 11ft s00 pound; o; the fortress of Canada's ancient 1e from nature, later m fight over 1t score for Gilbert and Sullivan - rnench blunderlntl 1n our own country just my rm: guAizLor-rsrowiv GUARDIAN Historic Scenes Recalled By Churchill's Visit S QUEBM, Aux. 10 -(CP),-—Ll8hts from Quebec City's Chateau non- eered by a modern luxury hotel rlslrig from capital. All about them are tnders of the glorious panes of history wrtt- tien in the bl P9113132. 194; HOW yo CANADIAN: CAN HELP r0 wnv r115 WA‘);,; 1n the tieuso—comm nd the 0w- poogg ""51"" "'5 Th’ Nnlm’ ___ l adfan Goveniment for conferences we" mflgwmigian‘ qgmqgmnty w. "m uh u, I. u“ won“ 1n eotton with Prime Minister YOU PROM - msmmom” ; I .9 up; 155mm‘; "m" (and, com (Xturchllls vfslt on this side of tho Mgsjflqwll ywmqwmgmp‘; ~ centrate on rural home betterment Alhmlkwfll “bu” “mum “m” 551191151! ‘l4 MILLION \ as their 13311951“, mat-w" Mm’ the broad silent st. Lawrence River. mum“: MW "u, °"°,‘if"“'|,“°°‘ ‘ 1”“, "'*"‘"“° ‘mm ugfdmiios“ ‘lkyllallugcknldlfi iiiinliiirotse tlsrbeaiz " ‘amid. h m mt mum,“ H"- nnobe hi. from Indian campfires In __._. fin years up, offfptslthoongglctég A u“ t; mu], | mosecu on o I an elaborate wsterwog; fig’); l: Nations we: effort are meeting 1n f,“ sacrtftceth ood and . e brilliance and lntrlsue of those who came 1n the 17th Century to wrest this land from the Indians and until at least 1t became the symbol of s British, United Canada where and mgllsh — nnd In- d1sri-oou1d live 1n peace and har- mony. High above the river, on the brow of cape Diamond topped by the grasrgrow grnnfte ramparts of the citadel, the chateau Frontenac raises its many-storied tower from the cluster of sprawling, spacious buildings which were started a. century ago on the site of now- crumbled Chateau St. Louis, head- quarters of early Canada's vice- s. At the lnvltatlon of Prime Min- ister Mackenzie King Mr. Churchill came to this fortress-like setting. From the windows may be seen the river up which came the British ships to pound and batter at the ramparts of Quebec 1n their first vatn efforts to reduce the power- ful cspftal of New France. 'But this "Maginot line" of the Old World fell as others have fall- en since. A mile up-rlver 1s the 1n- dentatfori. now Wolfe's Cove, where, on a moonless night 1n 1759. Ger.- eral Wolfe led hls legions ashore and scrambled un the steep em- bankment to deploy on the great "mo mummiv irs ssour ms oumvss m m: READING. w" W m: soimi seas- i ma. ll-MOSI‘ imul seam "There’s a wartime duty for every l ill ‘§ _ SURE-IT TAKES my Mllfl) RMENJNEYCERTAINY ‘f : um to KILL TIME RNDflll. é i we new is MORE or my _ 5 plain to the landward side of the citadel. There the surprised General Montcalm saw lined up 1n the next morning's sun the Redcoated Airnv of the British force, and he led his men out to the decisive battle. ‘Inst night Quebec had fallen and both Montcalm and Wolfe were dying. hand. Down below the one The red men of Stadsconli were first disturbed by the pioneers 1n 1635 when Jacques Garner's nuy sailing ship, bearing that explorer on his endless search for a short route to the Orient. sailed up the St. Lawrence. He came ashore and the Indians brought their treasures to lay be- fore him 1n the hillside market place ivhlch now is Place Dhrmes beneath the Chntealfs main en- trance. Cartier sailed on up the inland waterway scanning for China, and it was not until 1908 that Samuel De ChfllTlP-lfilfl came out and est- nblfshed the French settlement on the site of Stadacona. By 1629 when the English were successful in occupyingnthe city for a time. Quebec had 85 white citizens, 555 in 1666, 56,700 1n 1872 and 148,L\'10 in 1941, The early settlers fought bitter winters, dis- ease nnd the ever present menace of scalp hungry Indians. The great citadel started by Champlain stood off silage after siege following withdrawal 0f the English. while other French settle- ments 1n Canada shuttled back and forth between French and British hands through the blood of fight- ing men nnd the whims of treaty- mnkers 1n the old world. After Wolfe's brilliant exllolt the wars for Quebec were over. Since then Quebec and Canada have been British with s peace that eventually brought harmony and union between the conquered nnd the conquerors. The Plains of Abraham, s0 called because they made up the fields of . one Abraham Martin-n river pilot: turned farmer-now are a Nation- al Park and its most commanding feature 1s the graceful monument equally honoring the two generals of invaders. Now great ocean on the wny w an TlVEI‘. Some folk think provlncfaltsm of On satisfaction over th the Mnrltlzrtes. a frightened horse word “secession? these the constant "Upper Canada" a time Provinces 1s s tom of impending those who worship rank heresy, ous god for Canadl blind followers of ing with the same the same drinks, e coast to coast. and 1f we didn't Ontario would lac well-meaning soul whose deeds and those of their ‘ollowers make this hallowed ground. From the Chateau may be seen the spires of some lo-odd churches. the first: being the Senior British general with the Army. Lord Stair. —5lr Charles Oman 1n London where would we be couldn't chat qunlntness. while Times. avenue? Some P601119 W0 in one b be] 1t "Canada." The IXWlBOTHMIIK Cgpg Breton would Max Factor Color llarmony Make-lip Ibee Powder - ‘lle and III Foundation Cream —————15eandll-35 Cleansing Cream — — - 75o fir": _°':'":~_ 932:: Lipstick Refills 00o and 11.00 Rouge lefllll — We and 81.00 Dry lkln Cream 15o and ll-Ill Make-tsp Blender ——— ——— ‘lle and I135 Aalrlngnlt —- 75o and ‘LII iii- ATTINFTQN SWINE BIIEDEIIQ Ne Ilfll Cline! I'd ma. * "- IKI - WORM Iv Islna an m mom rmedy en lheumarkeol. MAO’! PIG - WOIM TONIC POWDII “Ill will thoroughly abolllh of worms and h- rovs the health of erd. Prlee 85o A 70c Per Paehp. TIIE TWO MAGS 148 Great George street ( r llNlMlNl Mall Order! Given Prompt Attention. Quebec ls a Roman Catholic City. corivents, monasteries nnd religious hospitals, the great Laval Univer- sity and seminarles are on every the riverside lies Lower Town, once scattered and levelled by the cannon seaborne trafflce of the world tie up there 1n times of peace or pause land port of Montreal 200 miles up A Dangerous God (Halifax Chronicle) They gag every time a ‘roronton- fan smacks his lips 1n smug self- ln Canada's biggest small Others rebel at what they choose to call the dlsloynl separatism of They shy off 11kt —- feet of the idol “National Unity," the notion that Vancouver should flaunt its balmy climate frozen faces of prairie dwellers 1s But national unity 1s a dsn er- For 1t is a god so easily misunder- stood. And 1t. has feet of clay! Yet unity cult would have us all speak- food. living the some way. fl'om We would. 1n short. all have to march together. probably march straight to per- dltlon. Life would be awfully dull lf Toronto folk didn't feel a trifle uneasy 1n Nova Sc didn't make our hackle: rise by becoming patrontztngly aware for the first time 1n our presence of the fact that s thousand miles of Canada lay east of Montreal. And about shrugged their shoulders 1n won- der at the width 1g strslghtjacket and ls- be any Acndlsn French for them. Chateau along liners nnd the d from the 1n- the strutting tarlo 1s a crime. e Joys of living town. at the very To such as feud between nd the Marl- sinlstcr symp- dlsaster. For bllndlv at the 1n the ans tn wors 1p. the national voice, drinking sting the ssrne we'd all very otls. trip to lo s1 fence and fold k zest if some Shine rob-hung as before: lhfl in Ontario stealth 1f Wlnntpegers Quebec's good Quebecers of Portage uld put us all There wouldn't character of vnnlsh, smoth- _ l-AYINO MASH l LAYING MASH IIIPPLIMINT OGILVIE HOUR MILLS L) M l'/\ N Y the duckies, kingdoms and pr1n~ As change creeps 1n a loved nnd ered under the bulky garment of nationalism. Lunenburg and all that. 1t means as part and parcel of our culture would disappear into the drab, monotonous whole. Quality. character, would be trad- ed for quantity. National unity as s. purely p011- tlcal idea. may have merit. But to make the term all-embracing in the social, cultural and econ- omic sense would be the worst sort of folly. National unity would ll"“1 nillr-klv become simply a Cant adianlzed verslon of National So- (JlflllSlIl. Certain groups 1n Canada seem to have forgotten this rather sim- ple fact. Inter-provincial bicker- ing 1s not all bnd. Talk of seces- sion 1s~not essentially dangerous. The difference in speech between Halifax and Victoria does not. fore- tell‘ national disaster. Provincial- lsm is not a crime- Englamfs strength lies 1n her provlnclallsm. The man from Kent looks with scorn upon the "nan from Durham or York. Both rp equally British. yet both 1n- dulge to the full their diverse pro- vlnclalisms. That. too, was Germany's strength 1n a by-uone age. from WELL SPENT aging face, Nlgh imperceptibly, the yell‘ 810w! Tomororow hazel and water-willow 8 will lock the same. and Yet thin on space; A shade from setting and from 1'18- fng p ace The sun will alter, though loyll l! cold Will tumble the aloe‘! full 1111x1119 r to use O 11fe fell spent that. slips so. half aware 110w hip. haw, robin every day. some Redde; of signal, how on stubble! BIS And wide the glesnlng poultry- lodfils roam _ Slowly t surely ever nearer home. Yet trusts the future, since the past was fslr. —0eoffrey Johnson 1n New York Times. —-Ben Jonson. IIMITII) war-éswlii came much that literature science. subordinated to evll of militarism l 1k Canada can bi~ force greatness i, ing to make her 1 step. to speak llll‘ run the risk of lu. spiritual and cuhu which true grculz» the individual or l-i finally rests. Ago Today (Bv The (‘in AUGUST 13, llll . French troops 1"" t 1° Fresnqv-J-es Rave an l conjunction with ‘ ild\‘.l' Pr! di iu Pr"~sl French fort l0 Anollm $10G’ Flgwleg diamond “l ,1“ tlnctlvely di-slitllvll “‘“""¥ matching svi-iluliq; l‘ I "l beauty. I847 llfitltltSl - cflrludn s rmai sill-t For Th .- llr From . In You rnn choose iflallliujj," and First ovc 1mm“ aervlces fnr 6 M‘ — W. W. Welliier Jewelers Si ncc l3