% * r ARE YOU ASTINC HONEY THIS TEA IS FUll- iFlAVOUREO >1k INSIPID TEA ? UPTONS TEA "Change to Lipton'e" ... a limple thing to do . . .but it will be a revelation to you in more satisfying, mora (ustaining tea enjoy' mcnt. For Lipton't it never insipid . . . even though you brew it weak. Its rich, fuU'bodied flavour is concentrated in every leaf ... In every cup of tea you make . . . giving you a fragrant, tefren'ilnR beverage youll appreciate more every time you taste it. FREE I Save the coupons in Upton's packages. Tbey'll bring you exquisite Wm. Rogers & Son SilvsrplaU GifU. WriU now for Pramium List, to Tiios. J. Upton Limited. 43 Front St. East. Toronto. 13c H lb. SBe H lb. 40eHlb. RED LABKL. ORANGE . . YELLOW . . UPTON'S ia more economical â€" Koee farther. Ifa tke larceat aellInK tea In the wortd. UPTONS n'^uM^&uM^Juut TEA. VOICE CANADA THE EMPIRl THE WORLD AT LARGE o/ ih^ PRESS CANADA lotnebody't Doing It Cbiiiu'a casuiiltics have passed the lillDon niaik. ICvcn J^paii aliould be ropare'l to ailmit that this Indicates hat somebody la at war. â€"Financial â-ºost. Training In Taste Music Is hoiMK taught in m class- rooms lu thn rural schools of this dis- trict. In spite of that fact we imagine that many of the pupils still continue to tune In Cab Calloway. â€" Peterbor- ough Examiner. Those Markers { Science has now changed its mind about the atom. Is It, In these circum- stances, too much to hope that the Ontario Government can change Us collective mind almut the 193S auto- mobltn m.irkers?â€" Toronto Qlobe and Mail. Four Eclipses Come In 1938 Canadians Will See Three Partial 5<}ia<lowings of Sun In Year A«ain lu 1IIH8 K'Iciitist.s will Itiive to vcnIUK! into rt-'Uioli' un.MH of the world to si 11(1 v phenoniPiin alltMuIant upon .1 tola! I'clipso of the siiii. I^'ist year invt-HliKaloni Jouriieyi'l to I'erii- ylan niut:nlaiii lops anil iiiid-l'.icillr Islets to ga/'- on the only tolil solar •cllpKc. In 111'!!! iliij suii'« lull" loial shall- owing occur.i May 2!i, iinil will lie vis- ible only 111 the extreme southern por- tion of (he Atlantic Ocean. I'his is one of four ecllitses during the year. Two total lunar eclipses are visible May 14 and Novomber 7. The remain- ing one is a partial shadowing of the sun on November 21. Must Get Up Early ('anadluns can witness the last three, hut they will have to rise early to see llie May 1 1 lunar show. Its period of greatest tolalily is at .'I a.m. The other lunar ec-lipse lakes place at live o'clock in the afleriiooti, when the brighlncHS of the hum may hide H. lirillHh Colutnliia is the only pari of Canada fMlvllci^ed to witness the partial eclipse of the sun. .November 21. Most of the west coiiHt of North America will lie able to view the si)PC- lade. Royal Bank of Canada Reports Gcod Year Total Assets $869,538,000 up $14,000,000 â€" Deposits Increased $10,000,000 â€" Liquid Assets 65.53', ot Liabilities to the Public â€" Increased Profits Shown The .\iinual lialance Sheet of The Hoval Hank of Canada made pi:lilic shows a moderale giowtli In ileposita and total a.-iaets and a strong l!c|uld pusltion. Total de po8lt.s anlonnt to $73'i.08!i.<;H(; and are highoi- than ni any period In the bank's history, with the .single exception of 1!I2!I. Commercial Loans Increase Current Loans In Canada, Includ- ing loans to MilMiclpalilles and Fiovim lal Covernments. amount to $200,r.i;:i,727, an Increase of appioxl- mately $12.7l>.'i.iliM) as coinpare<l wllb llu.' previous year. Current Loans oiitsido of IJanada aniomilInK to ;(Uil,14r.l!)8 are ap|i! oxIiitaliMy I^.OOn.ilun lower than last year. Coming as It does after a steady de- rlliii' in luiieni loans over a period of Kevin years, the reversal in the trend of commercial loans la en- couraging. As inl!(ht be expected In view of the present slock mar- ket Hlliintlon, Call Loans both In Canada and -abroad have been siib- stantially reluced. Call Loans In Canada anioniit to $19,:<92,9nti, a re ductlon of approKlmately )6,7i)0,i)iiO. Call Loans abroad amount to fin. O70,5RS, a n-ductlon of |4,50O,eiiii. Strong Liquid Position The liquid poHllion Is gtrong, to- tal readily reallTiable assets IxHng |614,671,:<!lfi. or this amount tlOH, 6.)8,92fl Is repiesculed by cash on hand or on deposit wltti tlis Bauk of (Canada and other baniM, wtila |L'ir>,G0(;,:i7l is riMiiesenKMl liy Mo- tninlon and I'lovlnclal (ioverninenl securities, riibllc Hcriirilles other than Canadian ainoiinllng to $;;ri.- !>27,182 show an increiisc of $1.!. 9:{7,3B;!. This increase is iinder- jttood to be represented in United States and Itrilish (iovernment so cnritiea. T<ital Inveslnieiits amount to $.'il«,568,917. an Increase of $2H, 398,096 fi-om tlie previous year and a new high record in the hl.story of the bank. Total llijiiid assets are ii,5.B.1'?'r of llabllilleH to the public, which of course, Is a reflection of present conditions rather than of deliberate policy. .Vo doubt the bank would have been glad to have replaced a considerable pioportlon of Its Investments by commercial loans. Profits Higher Net prollts for the year are shewn at $3,711,;!K9 and coniliared with lit.'lS Indieati? an Improvement Of 1207, LIS. nividends paid absorbed $2,800,000. The usual appropilHllon of $200,000 was made for Bank I're- mlaes but the contribution to the Tension i'und Society was incroas i!d to $.'!00,000 as compared with the former appropriation of $200,000. Halancc of I'rollt and Loss Account carried forward totals $2.325, 17t1, an Increase of $411,380. The Annual Ceneral Meeting of the Shareholders will bo held at the Head omca of the bank at 11 a.m on /aavaif ll, JMM. M'-rder, Not War War, says Vitlorlo MuaaoHn!â€" "war I.H the (lulntessoiice of beauty." What th:;t young niogalo-nianiac doesn't know about war would (111 the archives 111 Uomo. To rldi; safely thoHiunds of feet In the air and rain bonibj on help- 1-'8S natives Is not war; at most â€" and at bestâ€" U le cold-blooded mnrder. - Halifax Herald. An Important Selection Parents should lake enough Interest in the public school to at least attend tl>o annual moetlng and vote for the election of a trustee whom they be- lieve has the liiterest of fhe pupils at heart rather than the saving of a few pennies to the ratepayera. The years spent In school are very important In the lives of tho boys and glrla.-^ar- mer'a Advocate. THE EMPIRE Solitude Wantedl Did many readers notice a small ad- vertisement In The Argus recently in- viting intellectual and rellnod people to form a colony on a South Sea Is- land? Apparently many did, for the advertiser has received more than 250 icplios from those seeking solitude â€" Iirovlded It is not too lonely. The ad- vertiser, who produced his credentials. 1.1 a member of the Royal Australian Air Force, perfectly sincere In his In- tention to form an Ideal social centre, 'to eliminate hatred and poverty and fear." In his Utopia he promises wild horses and cattle, cascading streams, tropical fruits, and no tax collectors or other pestilences. It ia not true that of the replies already received to this alluring advertisement nearly all came from politlclar..< and bookmakers seeking surcease fri.;n turmoil. They came from ordinary simple folk wbo are tired of this civilization, and who cannot stand the noise of the trams In Kllzabeth street any longer. â€" Mel- bourne Argua. In Soviet Russia, more than 43 per cent, of the entire present population was born since the revolution In 1917. A-C Mysterious Fish Suicides Solved Sclar.tls'is Z:>y Pobr 5cheols Weic ForceJ Into Warm Waters Mass suicides i-t fi.'jh, a mystery that hai been bafTIin^ nairitime lead- ers and scientists of South Afr ca for years, have been explained. Hot and cold ocean curicnts are held to be repprrsible. Tens ( { miilion.s of dead fish float- ing on the surface of the South At- lantic recently have forced many steamers to change their courses. The research ship Discovery has just issued a statement, made publ.c in Johannesburg, that the "fish sui- cides" have also been seen along South Amerca and that they were caused by the finny swimmers, accus- tomed to cold water, being forced by shifting South Pole currents to death- dealing warm water along the coasts. FROM TORONTO N.U I HOCKEY .rVL. PLAYERS IntervieweJm 'â- ." NETWORK PROGRAM : Listen to Wes McNight inter- view your favorite National Hockey League Players over: Toronto CFRB London CrPL Hamilton CKOC Chatham CFCO KInatton CFRC North BayCFCH Brantford CKPC Sudbury CKSO KItohanerCKCR Sault Sta MarlaCJIC StraHord CJCS KIrkland Laka CJKL WlnflhamCKNX TlmmlnaCKGB St. Catharinea CKTB EVERY SATURDAY NIGHT 7.00 P.M. iwHxrtd h tb* "Ml SUf" Emrgy Pcod BEE HIVE GOLDEN CORN SYRUP Commentary on tbs Highlights of tiie Week's News by Peter Randal P'AST PACK â€" In tho old days, so they tell us, history moved more slow- ly, at such a leisurely rate. In fact, that people could sit back and specu- late a v.hlle about each event after It happened. In these times we are al- lowed no such privilege. Terrifying things occur in a grea-t many parts of the world simultnii "usly, nation-wide movements surge up and threaten to engulf us whenever we pause to take thought. Dr. Aloxls Carrol, world-fam- ed medical scientl.st, says tho reason for this state of affairs is that man's control over matter and over his own mind has not kept pace with t'l â- â- me- chanization of the age. Machin ' > ive gone ahead. Man has stayed behind until now things are happening too swiftly for him. Whore does it all end? If we wish to turn aside the sure and fearful fate awaiting our present-day civilization, we shall hare to become once more, masters of our own destinies. REST IS BEST â€" The best way to fight a cold, either bad or indifferent, Is to stay at homo and go to bed, says the Toronto M. O. H., Dr. Gordon P. Jackson. Rest is the most important thing, If you want to stop short of in- fluenza or pneumonia. Incidentally, your staying home will help your fel- low-workers to avoid Infection. country called Cau.-idu is a real coun- try, and that the name ' Canadian" borne by Its people Is not a term mere- ly of convenience. Haven't you noticed it, too, this new npirit which has Just begun to be felt within the past year or so, the last couple of months? A graat many fac- tors are contributing to its growth, not the least of which is the deplor- able state of aXairs in many foreign countries. By contrast we feel our- selves extremely lucky, draw closer to to one another within onr own bord- ers, are prouder to call ourselves "Ca nadians." Editor Dafoe expresses the hope that our whole Canadian system may be strengthened and vitalized by the new spirit instead of lorn asunder by sectlonalist agitation in this and that part of the country. There are three times as many parts in a piano as in an automobile. Women are being taught to run farm tractors in Soviet Uzbekistan. A NEW SPIRIT â€" There's some- thing going on In Canada vhich belies the separatist attitude shown by the Premiers of Ontario and Quebec, and that Is, according to John W. Dafoe, editor of the Win- nipeg Free Press, "a national In- tegration, the extent and strength of which is not yet Iiaown." Following this strengthening of the popular will, he continued, it will be found that the LISTEN CANADA-I938>^i IMPERIAL TOBACCO'S /^ -»' j INSPIRING PROGRAM Every Friday iNight on a Nationail Coast-To-Coast Network Onthrio/ CW/\PLEAU ECHO 6AV ^ BRUCE MINES THESSALON WEB8W000 BLIMDQ/VER E 5 PANOLA NASSCY Twice each week day The Toronto Daily Star broadcasts news over the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation's new high-powered station CBL, Toronto. Mornings â€" 8 to 8:15 A.M. Evenings â€" 6:15 to 6:30 P.M. â€"on one of the highest-powered stations in all Canada â€" 50,000 watts â€" covering practically all Ontario â€" on an air-channel free of all interference clear as a bell. Get your news Red Hotâ€" news from all the worldâ€" brought to you with the imâ€" ">se •'aciHties of Canada's Greatest Newspaper. CAOP \l BUCKINGHAM RUSSELL ^'"^^^^^ HAWKESgyRY ACE1/\NOWA COBOEn ^ .^^ I I ( «