‘IAI‘I.‘ PQUR . ‘I'll! llllAllLllTTEl uwll Glllllllllll Morning Dally (Founded In llll) Prcllllonsi Mont. Col I, Obtain I. III-IN u" Pyonlclolli. s. ll. Bur-m. ltJ-l. ‘sum-q. 1.1.." m. n. s Inrltlnnol. 011.0. mm," ‘m, .,|,,,,..|rlng Isms-am. 4. I llnrnott. IJ-l. luau-Info Ellison: Fmnll Wall". I'M "Ffl- ‘l. l Hurllvll. llfih V If. (On Artlvo Ilorvlro) BIINIPIQIPTION IA‘!!! I; sun n- w, a 1.. um nor your: IIM l" ' I'M"- H25 Inr 8 mnnlhn: Mo Ino nno mnnlls (‘Irv nollu-oy 15.00 nor vonr: HIM for I Innniho n 1.1 n" x vnnnflll: om- fnv mt- mnntll Mull In nlhor Provlnron and II.I.A. $1M I" "W" n-"uy, v-nn "or wmr- ILM for l months Mir for l lmsnlhl F! Inturllay Guardian Inn! is ohtalnol at Timon Iunnn. Now looks mu Ylonlh Nowu \uonr_v. (‘nrnor Mill and Wanlslnflnn nun-m. Dlv-lrrtunlllfllv Non-ll Aunurs- l"! W" l". Qlnnlr ._ 1-1».- xru nr. Toronto: News “land (|,,,|,.,,,, Wolffn Noun flhnd Illll- hury, mm; us-ru Shun. Mull-Ion, U.S. “T ‘he btrorihcsl Memory is Weaker Than the Weakest Ink.” wabulsslinrililivuanvnziwldsa. Tho (‘hnrl-ittolntvn Ilulalllnl’! New: Annoy. fi Rationing Policy In Food Accra-tint; lu thc .\'t~\vs-l{cv_ie\v_a U.S.-Catt- adinu nct">1'tl on food bllPlllY 15 hlghly llllllorl‘ _,3|l_ 'l'ht-r;- alrt- worse shortages of many foods, in mam areas of the U.S., than have yet de- wlopetl anywhere in Camtda. It is (llfftcult to ascertain the cztuscs m’ food shortage in both r-onntrics, but. in general. it appears that the prilnc cause is increased constimptlott, owing to IIIVFCLISUII itltnntts. 'l‘o that there have to hr added the illcrcnscd volume of exports of mam’ foods, for \\';\r purposes, and some signs of mztlrlistrilnllioll. Actually, the amount of fond which Cztnutlu can provide for the U. 5- r-r 85 a W511], of a food pool between the two coun- 1ries—is very small; much too small to be sign- ificanr. in the L15. picture. Yet, as a matter 0f i|1{(>r11;1[im|;1] policy, llIlS p001 \Vlll lJC arranged. Yew Sgfilrlli problems arise as a result. We in (nnzulzt hauc kcpt wages down more than has been done. in the U. S. We have kept d prices down more than in the U.S., but, on bfllatlCfl, we have kept the pressure of purchasing power arising from xvage increases under'bctter con- trol than have our neighbours. That is. It seems C€Fl£llIl-—\\‘l[lI0lIl any statistical proof he- ing available-that "war prosperity" has not in- creased the dietary standards of our people to the same extent as has been the case in the U.S. If we now pool food supplies on the existing basis. the effect will be to freeze a condition un- favourable to Canadians-unless uniform ration- ing be adopted in the two countries, and even equal rationing will not always avoid the dif- ficultv. Butler, for example, is used per capita in Canadanin normal times, 50% more than in the U.S. Other domestic consumption of fats is less in Canada than in the U.S. The Can- adian dairy industry objects to the use of fats commotily used in the U.S. If we reduce Can- adian consumption of butter to U. S_ levels, and do not increase Canadian consumption of other fats to U.S. levels, we shall injure the dietary standards of the Canadian people. If we attempt to make the consumption of fats identical in both countries, we must remodel Canadian domestic eating habits. Equal distribution of present butter supplies would increase average per capits. use in U.S. frornfsixteerrftiseventcen pounds; reduce Cin- sdian consumption from twenty-six to seven- teen. This gives the whole situation in good perspective. Food rationing in Canada will, In consequence. bc spceded llp—p¢l'hlp| beyond the needs of our local condition, and against the wishes of the. Canadian Government. Three Vacancies Three amstitutcncies are now without repro- sentation in Parliament, — Humboldt, Saskat- chewan; Selkirk, Manitoba; and Cartier, Mon- trcal. In the general election of 1940 all three were carried by the Government, the Isberal majority in Humboldt bei 1,272; m_Selk1rk 4,154; in Cartier 15,837. ue margins sug- est that these three seats should be-safc for the overnment when the by-elections occur, but the Government's record for the put three yen-s has been such u to render doubtful its chances in the strongest Liberal constituencies. It is therefore possible that Cartier is the only one of the three that Wlll again go Liberal in s by- elcction. In Humboldt and Selkirk, the Social- ist or C.C.F_ candidates were the runners-up, the Conservatives not having entered the contest in Humboldt. The 1940 official returns gave the follow- ing results: Humboldt, Lib. 8,308; C.C.F., 7,536, Selkirk, Lib. 11,023; C.C.F. 6,869; Con. 3,890; Cartier, Lib. 18,191, Nationalist-labor 2,354. Notwithstanding the large Liberal margin in Selkirk, when Mr. King offered Mr. Bracken that seat without s contest he was offering something which was not his to give. Whether or not the Conservatives win Selkirk, the chances are the Government cannot hold either that constituency or Humboldt. The Govem- mcnfs reluctance to call these by-elecfions is not difficult to understand. But all three must be held not later than in April. Science ls Winning Scientists and technicians who are working on the problem say that the battle for rubber, to ob- tain artificial substitutes that are u good as the natural product, is slowly being won. Several successful formulas have been found, and all that appears to he lacking for the present is plant cap- acity to launch production on s large scale, The experts also agree that the synthetic pm- dncts Will be much better than natural rubber, will have a longer life and prove more satisfactory in every way. As long ago as 1938 me prominent manufacturer in the United States succeeded in turning out synthetic tires with treads which gave s longer wear than could be got from the best of natural rubber. \l"ith plenty of the latter raw material then available. and the outbreak of war still months away. there was n0 demand for this artificial rirc, but the fact that it could be produced st that comparable stage of the industrv is inter- csting and also gave encouragement to laboratory workers in their more recent researches. It is estimated that once the plants have been established to produce synthetic rubber in quant- itiesto serve consumption, the advantages of the artificial commodity will be readilyseen. More- over. the progress of development 1s_h_kely to be rapid. On the basis of what technicians know even now, they are confident that 35o worknlctt m a factory will be able to produce tuorc rubber than is possible with ten thousand men on a plantation in the Far East. Expressed in other terms, forty acres of factory space can yield more synthetic rubber than fifty thousand acres of plantation. ptbllURlAl NUIIIS- January is the month of congregational meet- ings when the rank-and- filc mcct to review the past and lay financial plans for the future. I j I C - It is interesting to note that in _thc mau- slaughter case while the accused Indian has re- tained Mr, j. _|. Johnston, K. C., assisted b)» _\1|-_ Lgglgf O'Donnell to dclcltd hint, the Federhl Goverunletit has retained Mr. George J. Tweedy, K. C. as well. s- v s s In New London they have an active go-zthead Presbyterian tninistcr. Rev. ll_ .\l. lituituin, ll..'\. greatly interested in the yUlIlIg. Recently he has formed a Boy Scout Troop, all unaided except by advice from local headquarters. He invested himself, then invested his troop. That is the sort of enthusiasm that lcztds to success i i i The first English Parliament met this date, 1269, and included the archbishops, bishops. ab- bots, earls and greater barons together with teuants-in-chief under the Crown; recently (lis- covered writs show that this parliament ant|~ cipatcd to a great extent the developtnent of flu representation which fitarkcd the so-calletl “M0del" Parliament of 1295, famous as contam- ing two knights from caclt shire. two citizens from each city, two burgcsscs from cilch bornuglt and representatives of cathedral and parochial clergy. t U i i There should he not a few vacancies in Gov- ernment departments soon as the result of the publication of a treasury board illlvl'pr¢wllllll of a cabinet order. Young men of 18 years and over cannot remain in the Government employ. It provides that no physical fit male employer of the Government tmdcr l8 years of age may remain in that elnployntcut after rcaclting his 18th birthday. This should result in freeing a considerable number for the armed forces or for other essential war service and will help to reduce the ovcrslalfing in some departments. It i i X i On January 8th, tho. Hamilton Spectator carried a 7-column ad of the store of A. M. Souter 8t Co, Ltd., which is so courageous and intelligent, that we pass the idea on to our own business men, and quote excerpts from the copy: "Only a year or two ago many of us wou- dered whether or not any store would have even a pair of socks to sell by 19.43 . . . Today wa say: Essential needs are available . . . and will continue to be! . . . Today a ltost of new ntercharldise is beginning to come on the tnarkct . . . ‘miracle n1erchandisc' it may well be term- ed because much of it is made of materials or months ago. It is merchandise that you utight not have been able to buy until 1950 . . had not war shortages of many common metals, woods, fabrics etc., placed such a terrific pre- mium upon the resourcefulness of Canadian manufacturers . . . A legion of new products resulting from Canadian creative genius is com- ing on the market . . . everything from new plastic tables so new bcdsprings." s s s s A McGill Professor, Dr. A. S. Lamb, has been getting after the bureaucrats at Ottawa, those of the National ‘Health Department in particular. "I can think of no more absurd, short-sighted policy than to be-moan the high incidence 0f preventable disease and, at the same time refuse to print the health records so that the public might be kept informed.” said Dr. Lamb. "And we are paying our money to keep such nitwits at Ottawa," he added. "Every day, $0,000 men are absent from work in in- dustry on account of illness, and 200.000 are every day unable to carry on their usual work l because of illness," said Dr. Lamb. “Well over 1,000,000 were admitted to hospitals in 1940. Twenty-five per cent of our people are medical- ly indigent. Ten per cent either have been or a will be incapacitated by mental illness. Ap- proximately 5o per cent are bordering upon, or actually are undernourished. The direct cost of sickness is $300,000,000 s. year." He felt that all efforts to develop natural resources were doomed to failure unless human resources were also developed. “If our manpower fails, then all else fails," he declared. ‘IOU Is thcrs an election in the offing? The semi- official voice of the Winnipeg Free Press savs "N0." The Free Press holds that there exists no present need of a dissolution and an appeal to the people. It says that in March, 1940. less than three years ago} the Government obtained a clear cut and decisive mandate, imposing on it “the duty and the responsibility of ntakiug war for a period of time. fivc years, which, judging from the experience of the last \var, is ample not only for the duration, but for at least the pre- liminaries of peacemaking. The obligation which the Government thus invited still rcsts_upon it with ever-increasing wright.” The Liberal Free Press is positive in ileclziring that the tiovern- mcnt must not turn aside from its imperative duties. "Within the next twelve months," it concludes, "thousands upon thousands of Catt- adians who took part in the gaictics which mark- ed the coming of 1943, will pay the last full measure of their devotion to the cause. What, i" comparison with their sacrifice, does ll politi- cal casiialty to an individual or to a government amount to? Considerations of lllis character are beneath contempt; and we do not believe that the (iovermncitt either collectively or by indi- vidual action, is giving a moment of time to than," by methods practically "unkrioivif until a ‘few’ H I'III'. llotss By Tho Way Because no one. In future, wIII be sent around to wake them up. cu- guie drivers on an EniLah railway nave 8011a on strike. That would be zome men's Idea of Heaven. dmdsor, Star. Don't overlook Guerrilla Lender Gen. Draja Mlklmllovltcn o! Yugo- slavia, wno. as they my, really Is ‘going to lawn" In Ills Irregular military operations against the Nazis. A German troop train divert- ed Into a ravine and destroyed ls a good day's worth-Toronto Globe and Mall. Sentence. passed on drivers 0on- vlcted of operating motor cars. when drunk, are usually ridiculously light. In point of fact there ts no excuse fora snotorlst being found In that condition: and as he voluntsnllv untlts himself for performlng a (Elf- flcu t and dangerous task. he should be heavily penalized when convicted. Fifteen days In lull, or even c. month, Indulgance that L; always danger- ous. and often fatal to members of the general public. —-Guelph Mercury. Who said the Eskimo was a pour untutored savage? He has enough to eat. a place to sleep, neve- gets up before noon. punches nu time clock, never gets II‘; pays no Insurance prem ums; has no wrist. watch to get out of order; no ‘ncome tax forms to flll In; no aptitude tests: and no bills. -London Eree Press. Slncc United States made lfhe move, there is talk about canned good rafloxrng In Canada. Among other things It could amply to can- ned music. -Port Arthur News- Chronicle. Canada has some 52 rlvers of more than 809 miles In length, but of tlrse. the Columbia. the Kootenay and the Yukon are only partly In Canada. More than 2,800,000 m les of the country's area drain Into Hud- son Bay and the Actfc Ocean. The longest river is the Mackenzie, 2,- 514 ml es, and the Peace, which aslo empties into the Amt c. has a length or 1,014. If the st Lawrence be measured front the head of St. Louis, ftllnn. and through the Great Lakes, Its total Is 1.900 miles. The Church- III, which flows Into Hudson Bay, ls an even 1,00!) miles. Ontario has 0111-,‘ one considerable stream, be- szdes its sha e in the St Lawrence the Ottawa, 696 miles, and that rlv. er for a great Dart of Its course Is the boundary between Ontario and Quebec Quebec has the Saguenay and St Maurice. bes des several sntallel- streams, many of them l'i~'-’l<.!nlz_ lflflle power resouces. New Brunswick has the St. John (399 ml es entirely In New Brunswick) and a dozen less Important rivers, whle In Nova Scotla. no part of which is more than 50 miles from the sea. the streams are all snort and fast flowing, affo dine numer- ous small water powers, bri of little utsp for navigation. -Montreal Gaz- e 9. Under fuel ratlonlm; it Is estimated the average Japanese wlll be able to heat his home for 28 hours this winter. They nested to make ful use of the stuff that comes out of their radIo5,_ Edmonton Journal. Those Canadians who Includgd matches or "loaded" c garelte light. 81's n1 their parcels for friends or relatives 1n the armed forces ove:-, seas must be feeling pretty sick‘ Wdfiy. for the may have been the cause of the _ Hfsiéihnptitmrtly e - ec- "ziositiais" o r s mas aroel :\ 1'1 ~Fro It ' Edmonton Joiirnnl. m t e Not the least of the .3 antigen of, enYstIng youths at the age of 1’! Is‘ the time allowed for fuil and com. 919W irfllnllll- Bows who sign up at. this‘ age are offered unusual op-i portunltles for advancement, though the policy which has been an. nounced by Army offlctals. Such] young recruits have n long rlmg. to spend In tratntngi They cannot be sent pverseas un I they are 19, so there Is ample opportunity to, teach them: The long months “n. not be entirely taken up In impart-l lng drill and the manual of nrms, so the authorities have wisely decld. thlt these are men to be made Into specla Ists. They W111 be given training In skilled trades. which wlll make them more valuable soldiers and which wlll also fit them more adequately to make a living on their retum to clvll Illo. While they are In the Anny they wIiI have oppor- tunities for promotion and my. depending on how well hey a ply themselves to the Instruction ven them. There are many In- ducements to attract boys of p17 Into calling where they can "gel; ll, on the ground floor" and make for themselves an assured future. - Windsor Star. When the war ends the problem ‘of the exlles wlll be Infinitely great- ‘er than It was after I919. Theze are millions of homfegs people, now, where there were thousands after the other war. The continent of Ilhuope has been literally churned .111» by the wsr and peopus have been ‘scattered to the four winds. Eus- slans. Czechs, Poles, French, Nor- wegians have been dragged Inbo 99mm? ls industrial slaves and Germans have been sent to settle fslr lands outadle the Hatch, Tho IGermsns have estimated that. they have 5.000.030 people of other na- tfonslltles working for them. But no one has counted the mllllons of Jews, Russians. Poe; and others who have been dnven from their homes. A preliminary estimate places the number of exiles at 15.000.11.90. Merely to transport so many m1]. Ilons of people and hundreds of thousands of prlsoners of war wlll have to be added- would In Itself be a gigantic job. But. In s. de- vastated Europe, where are they to b6 “Imported to? How are they to be fed? How clothed? There Ia obviously an enormous lob of or- ganization ahead wlth work for all sorts of technical committees I-‘iorn Vancouver Province The Brltlsh Arrnv Signals Bolton have found that the beat back- lz olmcl- training for a Ivnrse oner- ntm- ls to have a dance band lend- er or n coal miner. Good speed In Morse Is not learned slowly by read- ing It. It has to be Ieamcd from Its rhvthm and vlsltors to s Brit.- Isl‘. Armv Signal school w‘ll find a. choir of men clmullnl In unison, "da-dl-da-df-da." The candidates ape lenrnlnv. Morse bv lcarn‘m: to sng It. Hence the advantage of hsvlng been s dance band leader or n con‘ miner - coal miners be- mg famous fnr their singing. _- Mormeal st...- nre, of _' course, ex- I CflAltl-qffliwflftflillhlglllefi ruauc rottuu AZITB-HJTIONS FOB SPORTS- HEN Slr.-- ‘n-svsllfn: about the Prov- ince and‘ discussing the various attributes of this the smallest pro- vince of! the Boxing‘: $7.191! res‘; n. n an ur ere so i" l‘ 'a“u:.“::tt"::» per manna u. wig“ tsssurs for nu! zllflvfcrcnttscuglpaskp‘ that or. ow are esosii: goody fl streams and: many tourists receive folders de- picting some gentleman or lady warty fishing In some qulct stream. (It might also be ldded- that. these pictures very seldom If ever show‘ results of what the angler ll do- No doubt the Tourlst Bureau Ia, spending money to attract tourists for the holiday season but It would‘ seem that the above atbrsiklom should t» boosted and fostered by! some llvs Fish 6: Game Assocfm‘ n. During travels amongst acquaint- r-utces of the sporting element In our sister Provinces one hears and "ees evidence of worthwhile results ‘rcm actIvItIes of the Pfsh do Gama P-otectlvs Assocfatlon. For Instancw ‘tencton, Fredericton Halifax and] "t. John have excel ant meetings ""1 wel arranlted programs that ~nt only entice the amateur sports-i nan to become fascinated but holds the attention of the more ardent, sportsman. ‘they usually have s short sport film depicting fishing! ‘cunt-Ins. etc. Arnouqh at this time our re- ~vlar methods for travelling to out-lying points to fish and hunt seem somewhat out of the picture for the duration, neverthelesswhut an opportune time to get In some reel effective work for what we ‘tore and expect Is s near post we." period. Some short wrlteuus have appear- "d In the local papers o! hunters ‘rum other provinces enlovfng our ‘mlted Hungarian Partridge sea- son. Thls cool-I be augmented by ‘conducive some new types of, "Mcc birds. , "PM! subjects perhlnlniz to ‘oz-t that cnt"d be included are "or necessary. The main obtect Isl "ct-ion and ".lbl‘l0l"‘h hunters’ and "shermen throueh their license, "rds are members of the “sh d: "cme Assodatton It should be‘ “vrri everv consideration and Im-' "edlvte action "We" rj-nr-lpq the” free W"‘l5er months to man out g1 rvrowram that w!" Interest. our "ttve rons as we" as the tnurwrz "om the other nrovIrw-c "Wfl our "od neighbour-s to "w; mo‘), I 3m e1». an. l "SPORTSMAN." Ctiaflottetown. i ‘s no adequate penalty for a self- Ing) Mr. MacDonald’s ' ' Speech (Hamilton Spectator) - The lucid and. interesting spesch which Mr. Malcolm MacDonald. the High Commissioner for Great Bru- rutn, delivered on Thursday to the Lmplre Club seems to be as good anu convmcmn a defense of the great political society over which t thcrcl l bu ldln lstcry. But while the siege lasted the ‘Lake Ladosa the Russians built a i tsnlngrad‘ (l; (hi-IAI- Cranmer) AIOdlbd PIII Shl Will‘! Leningrad. second largest cltv of. the Bovut Unlon. Nputcdy was built, on human bones. Those are many more bones there now other n stale whim certainly ls “Th” $5.113‘ midmlllgdus? ‘u... a so the stoic had been lifted after 515 days. Since Auk. 21. I911. Ito 8.000.000 Noble _r,hc normal population - snd Its thousands of Red Amy sall- or, and worker defenders hac- endured conditions of sblo nrlvstton and the terror of al- most d shelling snd bombing. There ave been longer stages. The siege of ancient Troy. accord- Ing to ltmaturc, lasted nine years. Gibraltar was besieged by the Spa from I779 to 1783. But never In hlstnry was so Isrlo u. city compelled m endure for so long. Innings-ad casILv holds the recozd for length of Uege In thts war. Named for Nikolai Lenin. father of the soviet Union, Leningrad came under attack from virtually all sides nearly a year and five months ago when Hitters nrm'es drove , Smluesselburs. I0 miles east of the city on Luke Ladoga, and completed the nng from the south. To the north Flunlsh and Gennan‘ armfeshnd cut the city's last land Ilnk wth the outside worid by driv- lng down the Karellan Isthmus be- tween, the gulf of Plnland and Lake Laden. Prom than on the city's working population endured tczrors and danger; of the trenches. They were shelled In their factory gs and apartments. They were bombed. They were subjected to the slow effects of disease, malnu- trition and cold. 311i the)’ never sursenrfercd. huge the front The siege has been mosf Incom- nlerely documented. Perhaps some Russian Homer now wlll bell the Russians never wshed the Germans to know of true conditions. The occasional news stories that came from there said the people of LCHIIYS city were carrying on their usual pursuus as much as poaslole -~libra'ies were crowded, newspap- ers were atIlI published. museums were open, theatres played to large crowds. From the Axis camp came an op- posite propaganda picture piles of dead ittered the streets, the people were reduced to ‘gnawing the bark from trees. emac ated and starving erwlvres stalked the parks. But the city never was cut of! completely from outside resources. When the severe northein wlnter closed down and froze the Ice on tiny railroad across It and kept the population suppfed. When the Ice went out In the Spring they still kept It supplied- just how they never did sav, but probably by boats whIch could ems; at night. or perhaps even ‘n the day time. and by planes. Months after the siege had he- run the Ruslans said they wee still getting aluminum for their airplane plants from benklgrad‘: big alu- minum plant Its factories continued to pour] smoke Into the sky as they busily oroclueed the munitions of war, the seem surprlslng, but It. u to be not- Is not covered by ordinary lire Insurance Policies, For compensation s us: propeny loss, arising from enemy action or tom GIPIOSIOIIS of munitions, you need special insurance under the Dominion Gu-ernmenfs scheme. Consnltdyour Fire Insurance Agent, or Company, for full stalls as to rates, particulars of Free Com- pensation to owner _ ' ’ homes, household effects. etc. ~ Delay rnesns risking a heavy low-loss of you ,, home, your personal property, your business assets. Delay jeopardizes the earning power of your business i WA R R I S K INSURANCE is s r‘ p. cCIUIIOII right now. The time and place of enemy action is un redictsble. No Country can count on immunity. he Dominion scheme pro- vides compensation for property which is damaged r-i: might be yours. PIIOIIE IOIII FIRE IIIIIIIIIOI IIEIT, OI GOIIPAIIY, TOIIIIYI rams.) s, Asmlniry .1 1s. Mm."- .1 rm... 4x W6 picture It. reveals In _me planes and warships for Unlted Nation and the three Axis oowers as In I93 M-men; warships, Fr G. Po Russia U. S. . China . The man ower figures re resent all the act ve armies and reserves, not. rse the total. potential Ievlable strength of the countries listed. figures the totals United Nations now once. gives 350 troops, 9. 1,173 warshlps. Here are the “responding totals for the three Aafis no¥ersz ance Britain land Germany Ital _ Japan Totals In some n, tanks. the chief SIOCKHOLM — (CPI -- S Is calling out Its armed forc- 9. div T-tanks; P-Dlanes; W- M T P W 6,150,000 3,500 1,800 181 750.000 600 2.000 B10 1.80.000 200 400 18,000,000 3.800 4.500 2'14 530,000 1,000 2.000 354 3,000 000 400 periods of tratnln rained of cou job “In m Illegal way." Adding to these for the other In the alli- gand total of 34,918,- 1 tanks. 13,176 planes. OPTOMETRIIT 4.250.000 4.500 Mununa‘ P. ‘ I. P _W 5.000 I31 6.400.000 1, 1.800 222 6.300.000 2,000 3,000 204 163150.000 7.900 9.800 620 respects these figures llollrl so. my OI’ c: 001M180.’ OBUGSTOEB wrmriifinuész” Offlcs flours: l0 lo II n. I. I tn B P- M. tnont with Russians said. The Clllv orizlnally was St Peters-burg because It was founded In I703 by Peter The G"eat who had the British tlapz lltes as can be ol- lered, He wisely Blended for oat- Ience with its Amer-lean critics, whose ignorance of Its realltlcs he attributed Iargelysa-our, own £3.11 to advertise Its lmerfw. and he ad- dressed himself with marked sue- cess to the task of outlining the fun. damental principles underlying the governance of the Commonwealth and the related mph-e, and of sur- veylns In detail the results of their judicious application to the oom- ponent. part-s. He. was emphatic that the aim of the constantly changing structure of the Commonwealth and Empire was to spread freedom adually to all clntmedl wn oufh of the Neva River. 1t Rained its renutatlon as a city constructed on b030,: because so many laborers died during Its bulld- Pre - War Strength Of Warring Powers (Sydney Post-Record) Office of War Information at. Washington has prepared and n. statement supported by statistics showing that the I939 armed stre h of which are now the Unltcd muons was overwhelm. iiiiffitriifvermifrig rsutfksfnfns or» ama colonies to the support. of Brltlln In September. 1939. was due to the‘ firm conviction of their varied neo- ples that under the British flu: their .__%t .butlt_.gn__pjles In. the; marshes-at. a ed that only modern planes ready for combat are llsted In each ease. Also that account Is only taken of high-seas fleets. The figures In- clude Jtattleshlpsu. brittle-cruisers. Irér carriers, cruisers, dextros- ers and submarines. By and large this tabulation fl- lustrates how Illuslve pears as second on the list and as havlng only a modest e ge over Russia's. Similarly Italy's army and trained reserves Indtcate mill- tary strength 50 per cent higher than Germany's. and rather mater than that bf France. But the whole summary Is of Interest. It serves too to dlsslpau some fan- tatlstlc Ideas as to the relative and I940 In tanks and aircraft. - strength of the billlgerents of I989. l wade CS Islons and other units durln winter and spring for one niou I QUISLINGT WHIP IDNDON_- (OP) - To tighten orders "freezing" Norwegian work- ers to thelr German war production - » lobe the Nazi authorities have or- dered Ioss of worklng and ration " cards for any worker leaving his a nun; and Supplying Glasses I ll. J. IlhIlBllIl “COMPLETE INSURANCE er 9°“ -vvar when It. broke out. In Septem- Indlvldual characteristics cultures and religions would be respected. »mhat€veulidwa good 1n tlutléhwgys of e 0 Preserved, a from latitude for the develo particular sptftudes and. tutu Hwould be allowed, and steady pro- gress toward full political freedom would be assured. l-Ils rise exhibit for t success of nl ous l tlfitlétll: .‘l’..‘..f'°.."’.l.'..'l.°‘l°.‘tr.tl s B shown In practical fashion their gratitude for the concession of s new Constitution wlth s consider- ‘able instalment of se in idao. But mus. provided only Ia‘: ..‘".:.“'.;t.:....°'- undress: pollcy, which Is to teach people, even‘ when theyittlselong boxer; bee: war commun es. s n mo securely upon their own political iiild ssliriivfslstelftiiv ‘dill: “tiny Brttlah er Colonial Office Il-rse numbers of In. nlsiuiidglntillfatlwwofflgfdalg and agricultural. medical and u- catlonal experts, with the result that certain African colonies have now avsIIsble excellent nltfvs heads of departments. Iudses and leaders of Elillflllld‘ 2%“ f?‘ fi.."...“'li; measure ofdocsl self-government. The people of India. socordlnll to Mr. acDonald. have now travelled _so far along the road to self-lovem- .mcnt that a definite tune has been act for their srrfval at It. I-Ic rowd- Jated the notion than; s lymnn 'li.'l°“.l‘.?°lf'"rl.‘illl~.'?..s'“é‘.fl’“is’fi maintained that. after the wu- ends, as soon as the Indian factlons cl com so their deco pIctc m. c th r Inlon status Insfdo the wealth or with unquultfflod inset» endence outside It. As for the self- nvernlng Domfnlons. the Immed- i ate entry of four of them Into the her. I939. was proof that they were not reluctant or half-hearted rari- ners In the Oommonwell . an the latitude allowed to l fifth DomInIr-n. EIN, to remain outside the slrulrltlc even when her neutrslltv exposed Britain to ems dunner. was the crowning evidence of devotion u» that principles of liberty. Mr. MacDonald Iustfflsblv lhfnks that the Brltlnh Commonwealth has already made n mat contribution to human urowrcss by msklnl I suc- cess of the one strut experiment In frlendlv co-onsrattovn- between f nations. It has survived severe tests and continues to and he hllltdtd mlmwssnk In ; reached w» some? In u; , _ evolve well-co-ordlnatcd noIIeIss for Ingly ‘foster than that of Ger- many, tsly and Ja an combined. Had the United Na Ions of today been an allied combine‘ 4 years a110, Germany could not have started mllltary operations with any prospect of and World War II would have been averted. wspfih £1 the dwfllillllllllflhl . v .sn ey seem amply borne out by tbs publish- Qdvlih urefllftl t t to , an er u cu conquer Ettrope In 1939, thIs report sa s, trained manpower In t. e armes and reserves of the present. United Nations was double that. of the Axis. The respective totals were 39,918,860 men 5.51m: 16,950,000. The nsvsl stress of the AIIIcs was also nearly twice as zrestplylll war» ah of the flve prlnctpal cate- gor es, against 620 for the Axls. In the slr. survey shows, Ger- rmd Japan could mus- um of 9.800 ftrst-Ilno plum. sssmsr a mm of 13.175 s Allies could have mar- shallcd against them. The Axis powers were st s sImIIar dlsad- ymtlse In the matter of armored ‘Illlisrsurvvy Is of articular In- urmmsusslr will t.h m: amt-n: run?“ rglucl- _1=: sntfvwsiriiif" DI In: mot lgn scientists uncove cu s Ion stable dattng from the Bronze Age containing the well-preserved bodies of f0 horses. saddled and brfdled. woo urns. now Scientists’ discovery of prehlstorlc 14-inch oyster shells In New En- gland Indlcates s warmer climate lomierly prevailed there. Evans Stomach A very effective menus of ubtalnlng relief from disord- whloh are attended by zns. headache, heartburn, and a sense of plultlre brlow the hurt. Recommended for Indigestion. Dyspepala. Sour Stomach troubles. Prion l8 cents per bottle. through 50 feet of Ice Mixture the digestive III II Professional Ba and sll munch the affinft and tsnk on ins of the Id‘ test the outbzgrnk lofmdgr. if"? the ..___..__._._______________, by Its example and future bollcles It mIfi-llt-m a . stlznlflcentcon- t.rI tfon to the framlnz of s. better the world has ever-l . M the close oLthIr excellent s och he might have udd- sd fiofltably that. the effectiveness cont button In he newe- I Id be more firmly as- Dtrt-mr natfons would h which thev could the If. '53 EMULSION W I. HENLEY. l. G l- A. BENTLEY l. O. SNIPS sIONIY ‘I'0 LOAN IN Prfnoo Stnsl Contains Vlnsllno A and I I and ...|i PILE GIVES QUICK BELIEF! For many complete and external and Internal I'll“. Triple effect. Sashes. , I - Lularlutss. 3 Poles ‘ sat. . Tlll‘. II rd 0 from‘. MAOmnvcn MAC! OIN'I‘MEN'I‘ Clurlollolowl ‘uivuhil f f ‘idle-ll. files. I-‘or ‘ I _ nnnsuaum sumlrrlvl. O0 “M: tubs. W0 l-llt3 M. 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