. "APRIL 16. 193s IIIBLBTTETOWIWQIDIII Noll“ BY 77" We! ‘ 1- " . , - . . _ ~ - ~- use Only two years ago in Soviet ‘u.’ h.‘ . "and"... ‘llllel.’ “mu ' ’_L Rli§ll great processions acre held _ _ .. cum“ B“); _ aaaadaarIaseea-a wean sauna-wreak. w “NW1” °“Pm“‘“° mfllllli!» pun", “may,” m, ‘M; h“ - _ - . , v the enemy of the workers. Efflglea Mm u“ gqggntly by many spell‘ A B0 {WK GIAYWI‘ of Prime Minister MacDonald, Aus- m “ma,” ma. mm.“ ormu r5 30"“ _ _ _ _ M. M k ten Chamberlain and other Brlt- “mam ‘ ' a" ‘m’ "' M ' ' v "‘ erosion in Western _ i Senator Riley's warning that the destruction cf farm lands by dust stormsis, one of the most serious "'”'. W"... ....'.'.".'.* TUESDAY; APRIL ll. b Wlrdglwnh are bright and Whale th '25 trout lie gg-the n5» alto over thfia?‘ e ish officials Iwcre paraded with warnings that England was plotting '“ "a" the downfall of Russia and the dc- alnd have hastened to you "th slrpetlflilous one in order tlwrt ‘ ‘His Nibs of Saskatchewan ‘and Alberta J. B. Kinacr, chief climatolog t at W ”' Ag ..._. :1 I ‘d - j I - d Istrustion o! communism. Th;- other . . , _ _ o! om, “anemia mnbhm‘ h not t.‘ m. I .- IIPORTANT, MEETING votes the-n at will-pin them; mdl night Captain Anthony Eden, the M NEEAL roons lvacassaay mm ,;,,mm M, m, a w,“ w ‘"7 °" 3"" ll"! me- _ W b, n,_,,,.,,,d w m“, a, one“ l outside ‘of Ootarioflit will galnthomfniicl-"i-l envoy ioxRlliilli from great F011 HEALTHY Nlltvla w,“ u, ‘um; mm,“ Wm, mm, m, hymn,“ m“ u” ( Guardian.) ‘ .__;_,.__.____€ .' ;- “mum h m u w ‘nothing mg y... p_,_,,,,m,,y mow; Brtac. was sllen e ballaue- in - , measures to n. against test, . r -—The new Office of War", narrmlrtsr rarer: oomsuy , . “n °‘ ‘d m“ m4, y; pm,”- m. 14m‘; m. ' M°s°°w by u“ ham‘ °f m“ 5W1“ on or the mum,“ threat of permanent sterility the Where the hawthorn blooms the order r-ostrictlnl the W" a w!" ——-— vblt this evonlng of w. m. n. m. mwiumy on m‘ dmww "m ‘l government. brim-c “the speaking sufiefms Wm‘ mmwflafdwfif m” which gcntzibute go much to lweetest, w» w civil servants to one tablet (q y, p, Guardian's Special w“, , atlierlntendent undcr the h . ,6“ . " _ “fiiftiell "ii ‘$15113; Helen ltllmslsr. ,»,,,,,,,.,,,, u, thmun‘ m, u he m, Olll’ national wealth. W11"; the neetllnu chirp and flee. per hereon every W0 mwlmnbmff; "mimw- 51"" lft-Balliurst - Parmera‘ Creditors‘ Anallicmeniww ow“ my m‘ 0mm" 5 " “mu ‘HID ' umsc’ g ks “m she does with assmail amount of .1119 problem ll 0!‘!- Phye "m! Th“ u" "'5' m‘ Billy and me. calls a story 015"‘- w~ 5' G PW" ""1P5P¢1' Omllmllwl-lmlte l~ h h m ddr t. tatlvel. whether Mr.» rennet or hfmt I Fslt, y°“' he fwd» l” food as possible it will be "emu" that -in several of the Western - youymul , ill I- Gwm‘ today reported 1934 net earnln L j‘ ' ° w “ “s “ "T" m‘ ° tvzevem. or artothél’, it gives hlm it 41W‘ t° P“ r."°“m‘ °‘ m’ Mlllfliy on the dlgestlvs ores-us and there 5M"- Wh“ h" 1"" "in"! "ll" WM“ ‘h’ “W” m" "la lllel-ll- we“ Ofllu- "m" d°1"°°“m°“' l" $5M‘ Com farmers and others interested ln they,“ MM w _ “rm,” m“. m 514-113 Gelrsr- 4306"" P“? - will not beas much waste; 1mm m, Great American Desert" enters 9"- ‘ His chief, a rigid economist. pared with a deficit of $14,163 in f P. W. C. hall at s p. m. The opera-l l“ ~ Y1 - food left in the large intestine. wedge-like into the southern parts W11?" the hay lies thick and strictly regulated the issue o! 1988. . ' ' M stationery. I-Ie allowed each clerk ___+ Thus hello-EDS liuch-h constant watch on his food intake and the amount of waste that is . , the .. llutit "gets on his mindfland actu- ton. has pointed out, like many l1 l!‘ affects his mental as well as his others. that "man has contributed pIlyulCill health. This fear of eating vcry materially .to the damag‘, and of the accumulatl of wastes effects of the Great Plains drought 'rn ‘that at th org ra e homcwar bee Thats the way for Billy an: mo: Where the hasel bank is te Where ihe shadow fallsltireeperslap. 98 . . Where the clustering nuts fall free, twelve pen nibs a month. but on one occasion accldcrlta?ly_ B!" Gilbert thirtcei. Gilbert went i0 him at once.- deulmlmd Y“ make the best of his opportunity- "if you please. sir." he besan- "In lands never rent for r‘ figs; ., and it is the M I the gambling of losing his‘ Conservative has yet dreamed of go-l Pamxr, come s. matter of Canada-wide ln-‘slitlxnthsngiiiluzol ‘Q22: l:;§‘-?f""-_ta' _ “rut stated m a deslmch “rmore cautious, the less revolution- 1 WWI. my Eli's yesterdays Guardian, at the end oflny‘ the m“ fl-mm" o, m’ twa": shirt for three 3c last month 40,316 farmers through-lire“ “ma” lulous 611L120: of‘. lion of this legislation has now be- all \»._*~.\\ \\ \\ l} 0 I) l)'s',’-' jcbs, but styles have changed and out Canada have sought the beneq {PR a - "_*<‘~'“’ w, “f w“ 1cm“ the ‘bum. o; ‘he m“? through - chmvaflon when _ i now d, m“ _.. fits of the Act. There have been.’ :“_::L“Ll_ fezefiwsén-‘relgsfiiaflg tgiggsgrrgxtsttfilndarlts wrmk and also it never smlldnlillye 29911 ‘lzflzclw- Th!“ u“ w" m. Bmy m“ me‘ ‘xi; eartntgt [53:18 “ti: matter." K U D E Y 2:142 voluntary settlements effected; , _ ' I a ce,i,,,-_,,l Sum“. 5mm, 0,- ,.L,,_,,,ue_ __ - ed . . . . answer ere swer why the boys would d“ ‘upped mewme,’ m“ w m, .7, after interviews with the official re-l MK “Ma's 310G349 H Y "lilo sim- roars hold the toy soll- snug? fiifdlii §3i§§§;°.°°‘,,'3§1"',,;';f"}.3;§“§,';,',,{§g; Little sweet maidens rronvlefilglay, "m1 "I “Md” “M” $1,, ‘“‘ ,// S _.. i ceiver and without recourse to the A biogrwm, o! w. uackénneunwf _ m°§mw'.. Over = "m"; "Ml- Ellfie!‘ ""1611 1mm 111* too close grazing; and anv device ¥f,,,‘{’-'°,,Y," bum“ md mm so wen’ siyutwfiyglizd U l Provincial boards of review. Print‘? K1115. by Professor Norman Mc-Leodl Tort-wall‘ g-iutdkits Qllllfil‘ m c-tflinlgg ffntgirngagltlrthzi T1551: that wiutlfeimkillifll) "dc surface will s e mm‘ I my" could ten- “: have ncfww; to question your“! I \ j Edward Island, it is stated. had h pawn“. "m, m _..,~,-,,,,,,,,_, ,._.»,;°,, n. k d“ _ w y e __ W "l °°ll=="° 5° But this Iknow, Iloveto l wisdom. rmerely wish l» Mm L \ Rbgers, as recently appeared. The . . t l .cy ml agrees with them un molsgum “mush u" meadow. “tax the “m, I have {waved thirteen hum __ L K I D N E . ‘ ‘i .i1 illey come to subsist upon a very imcd m”. In gene"! the am Mr. Morris Markey, who has been studying the conditions in Dakota. “Ac K5674 EBLES q‘ more applications than British Col- umbia, and more settlements than can“ Journal h” weighed n m! .cl€L:'hCll.—~EmpQl‘l& lKr-nsus. Gas-l‘ 3y| UP l-hlwliliel‘. and over the lea, car m?" \- --~-......- L1} but... n. M Nova Bcotia and New Brunswick combined. More than 3,200 settle- ments have been effected to date throughout Canada.‘ As Hon. Mr. Rhodes points out, this is one cf the strongest rug ‘s that could ‘he cited in favor of the legislation "The first thing with which all in- terested k1 the Act are concerned, h first hand information as to the scope and provisions of the scheme. His and other matters pertaining b the Act will be fully discussed by “1lr. McPherson at tonight's meet- hg, and it la hoped the attendance will be large and representative. HEPBURN’S BLI/NDER The ‘lbronto Saturday Night, which k anti-Conservative and Iaually pro-Liberal, has a scathing hont paOc denunciation of the Ilepbml Government in its current Bus: "we shall make no wolesy." it DUI. “l0: devoting the major part - of our space this week to the Dill introduced by the Hepburn Govern- ment for the cancellation of the contracts between the Ontario P10989141. “l! Uld dignified, but m h is u th we u ‘and ,, ,, “fin 1 w a . , n . _ - 06mm d“ ._ "Yd" °°mmlssl°n "id ttrlelll P"°l"“““ “°'°"""°""' yo: agfvigothe $11.5- 0: Zul- m“ u menmmd 'b°"" gar-kl; 3.31.9 it iswnccezary to well plelisfm it Vt: 318251112: . mill let ti-ld- mo! w“ Mn MM w» w min» Greatest 0f All Worm Remedies - companies owning power develop- ments in the Province of Quebec. The subject is of the utmost nat- Wllll imWYtB-"ce- If the PWDNEd , I Europe, there is no reason why it Afguses Concgrn oe-rlcellatlon is carried into effect. Th’ 1°91“? °¢ Flt" ll i!‘ i" 5"‘- ghould not be agreed on through the ' Semtor Riley seems to have o; 56 fest, so it is evident the Ground ‘ worm) agency of the League of Nations. (vanmuvu. novmoe) scsneth‘ of the same kind in Tmng Mun; 15 my, so gm“; a; 1g and permitted by the Dominion Government (which has the con- stitutional authority to prevent it.) the rergllt will be such an under- mining of confidence in the valid- ity of contracts in this Dominion as to make the restoration of the free now of credit practically impossible “l” ‘l ‘he "MPF-"m °f "l" lt takes. llelns concluded at Geu- c;- p, h m, many yams‘ we are not “a? Dennnett’: good health. eve. under the auspices of the Lea- gggéigfigemfigngd erosion be bwllflhl- ml" “l” wu‘ mum M “Rd m" "d9" "m" G9" There are very few fox rancherawho have not heard of ' gue. A united stand by all the non- mum do that so“ o; mm‘ m i“ Mr. W. L. MadDe-vlsh. Editor of man industry, ‘m’ "bu", "mum Nobody ‘h, h“ m”; |g c“ flig- flrmly adhered the Winnipeg Evening Tribune, has Remembc that Captain Eden w“; m 35mm,‘ n. “gm, 1| "may; mg “is in every grating when we say that s. suc- cession of episodes such as this- and one affords a. precndent for others—mlght easily be the final and fatal obstacle to economic re- _ _ QOVQTY under the 0111901153, System. count.’ “d mu“ be 7mm!” 1°" American-Japanese vows of friend 21w“ntkgoogfizhggét;hgefléqfivgglyf katchewaar, ‘L000 in Manitoba and h f u _ $10-00- for hos ti ct‘ 11 ‘W shl r newed under 2,000 gorg- _ 18.000 in Alberta. The drought area ave requen y announced their ~ ma,” e,,f&er?n°?he“,;:,,'°“ y Aeeerdlns to the Toronto Globe oougl; ildzsomlng Japanese cherry m" “s” ‘f’ ‘m "fnp°“‘“‘,b“,‘mt is roughly 10,000,000 acres ln ex- apprehension res .. the policies n“ M” "'° ""'°"'°"""°°"""',"‘,3,"“'{;.9"',‘,‘3£ y of _, - . _ essandsocalway lronoha 1h d, 1 _mdthemhnno Mm lnbczeaofllbtlfllooandllooCapsnlesa ,I-. - untrue“ is indispensable and the successful st _ of clauie trees on the blanks of the Pox- you cm think on md m Mn]; laeniayéloilflugoolafléloltllnuudpf?“ Then try to "gene mg“ 1 andflfm. Prenaidtoanyaddreaa. - ‘ Plays PNWI "that-clean entertaln- m” w'-‘*““"°“ m“ °“ “d ° l-I vN-lldml °‘ m‘ Nmhm‘ n: owealth. 1ts'_ productplgn has with the statement that this hifh- V . might leave us no option except to turn to that form of economic or- ganlaatkm which i; the only pos- sible alternative-the form irl whiah the motive power is not faith but Thedact thatthe Conservative: .. p m; governmental compulsion. , _ ." _ Roosevelt mplles that she hopes dme t’ hi; h; h e m“ n. from dfWIhy-dir 1mm »6 m . banquetted Premier ltewart unfor- ml; generous fecllng may grow markmy n“ an)? ma; ‘assent! m: “If”: glfizilréekgleatggittlrr sq, gughm,“ mpg-lbw," (or p, n, Iglgnd, "A governmrlt which sets itself . up to act as a court. without ac- cepting any of the customary rules of court procedure. in one case to which it is itself a party, will even- ‘iually do so in other cases. It may- if repudiation‘ is to become a policy of the Liberal party-be followed by other Liberal governments in other Provinces; and eventually. slurp, the Lib:.al party is also a national party. by a subsequcnt Liberal government at Ottawa. It ls impossible to set any bounds to the extension of the principle adopted by Mr. Hepburn. , _ , "The bill itself," continues the Toronto paper. "is perhaps the most childishly drafted piece of legisla- tion that has ever been presented as a government measure in any Canadian legislative body. . ‘. . “If Mr. Hepburn insists upon the paQge of this eaaure. and it be- wares a legislative expression of thc will of the provincial Liberal party," concludes the Toronto paper. ."we no alternative for Ontario Liberals who still believe m the binding nature of contractual obli- gjtims except to withdraw their Ii ftonl the provincial party the {ecml Liberal party advocates aesuch policy. more will all“ to: them 1w proclaim a. the balance, and found it wanting. We quote: "Biography. to have value, must be objective, must be free from mere eulogy, must be as economical of praise as of blame. 1t must not merely recordJiA hero's actions, but must tell, as far as possible, the motives and thoughts behind ac- tions. In other words, it must be a portrait o! the men himself, not merely a reoordofhla actions. “Judged by this test, Professor Rogers’ biography of Mr. King is of no particular value. One may read here the chronological Jory of Mr. King's career, the dates interspersed with explanations of his policies and political philosophy. But of Mr. King's thought regarding most of life's problems, of his ideas outside the realm of practical panties, of his manner of living, of his tastes, pre- ferences, and prejudices, this volume is a blank. Instead of a. slurp etch- ing olf the nan himself, there is little but a blur. "this is. not to say that Professor Itagers’ book isn't worth reading. It is. But it should be read for what it is, namely: a. piece of political EDITORIAL VNOTES There is» no use u... Lebattempt- lng to fool the people at every elec- tion with a false "economy" cry. Ill‘. King is anticipating trouble when he publicly expruaerhls grat- It la not always, nor even often, the bighelt economy to displace hand labour with machines. After all it la the “ element that ment. produced by clever people, has lost h0ne of its oldhppeal to the theatre-loving public." tunately during Iamt, 1W1, should have been suflicientwarnlng to the Liberals not to go and do likewise this year. The consequences we on their own heads. It la remarkable how generous the Government and House of Com- mons can betln cases» of lugent need in the West-if only we could touch such sympathetic chord; in the case of cur. railwpy faculties be- tween eeckvilla and here. It is refreshing and encouraging, to receive tsuch-lettera-as that of Mr. H. G. 'A. Adams. Rcokvllle, n.3, 1t 1| practical prop; "or what Governor Deilois advocates-the friendly. in welcom- ing and entertaining visitors and tourists. ' ' ' ' ' good camels wellaa spud ob- jective. aothfnlajlaonour. Ilium. nommine omit fcrdciting and entphaaidnt its im- portance. and For the past two or three years Canada's maple Siigill" production has amounted i0 about 23,000,000 pounds annually. Tile production has been maintains-cal fltlrly evenly for some years and does lzot show any falling off as one might ex- pect. Producing msp’: syrup and maple sugar is one of Canada's oldest industries. The Indians were producing them before 1673. 0f Canada's delectable crop, twenty- five per cent. is exported to the United States, most of which, so the Government informs us, is used in flavoring tobacco. Plus XI“ . . . has seen the wis- dom of making his molest now. It was a stern warning to those willing to push to suicide, to ruin and extermination not on}; their own nation but a great part of humanity.“ The climax of the allo- cutlon came in the declaration of the Porn that if the desire to com- mit the ‘nefarious crime" persist- ed he could only pray God to ‘scat- ter those peoples who desire war," This will. of course. be accepted as a warning to Hitler. The propaganfa for n. new deal in the railway setup of Canada would carry more conviction if the propagandlstg would put more em- phasis on saying-as they quite honestly could-what giving the ads. a. I chance-Vancouver Province. Germany ls apparently going to be out anyway. Great Britain Ls still the most powerful influence in the League, and as the rest of Europe apart from Germany inevitably looks to he: for leadership, she will likely declare _for the final Euro- pean security pact whatever shapr: German nations. to, is more in pros-rant than dissipa- -tion of the only real agency for world peace and security-at. Thomas Times-Journal. country listens in while Ambassa- dor Rlrosi salto declares "Japan has presented to you her soul and spirit as token of her friendship v and deep affection for the Ameri- can people," and Mrs. Franklin D. each year between the two capitals and the two countrlesIH-Surely these nations, in saying their full say, can say it with flowers. -In his lnteaesting volumc. "The World As I See It," Professor Eln- stein makes this slgrllfllmnt re- mark: "Force always attracts men cf low morality. and I bcllve it to be an invariable rule that tyrants of genius are succeeded by scound- refs." It is qultn easy to relieve that the great scientist had some one specially in his mind when he used these words. Professor Einstein in- slats that a man's value in the community "depends how far lib thoughts, feelings and action are dimcted toward promoting the good of his fellows." A very sound philosophy. , The main thing told by thh re- port is that with batter business conditions, plus a maintenance of the ‘ “ economy in operation. the position of the Canadian Na- . tlonalwlll becmne far from des- "ygie, It may be mveral years yet befoae flee disappearance of deficits, any‘ even be that deficits of some sort wll remain permanently. but that la far dilerent from the talk in sole quarters about a certain unspent of bankruptcy-Ottawa Journal. ‘Ike I ralreada operating oat of Chicago that have decided to use newspaper advertising to make a better comeback. made no mistake, in the opinion of the 8t. Thomas Tllnel "hemagresi many thhgs in tr.- world that are lotensting. It i; not pouible that r: concern ourselves intimately with them all, but we ought to leave just as few of them as pohible outside the range cf cur faltercat and our understand m. l! there is to be a new line-up in - hccrlmes so poor from the chemical tipolnt, that malnutrition and . . of weight results." "Pile nervous system needs a de- tmite amount of certain foods and when these are not eaten. the ner- vous system can be definitely harm- ed. The foods containing mineral salts are ' lly necessary to the nervous system and as you know the nerves regulate the body pm- cesses. Thus these nervous inward looking. excitable and emotional in- dividuals should make sure of a lib- ersl supply daily of foods containing minerals. . _ ‘ Thc foods rich in minerals are milk, cheese, leafy vegetables, egl yolk, whole grains, liver, sea foods.‘ nuts. dried fruit-s, fresh fruits. The foods‘ poor ln mineral sails arefat pork, bacon, lard and auet. butter, salad oil. sugars, confection- cry, purified starches and whim flours. Fortunately no harm comes from rating an excess of these mineral foods. Lf the amounts of fruits and vege- tables, eggs and meat in the diet must be limited on account of the expense it is wise to. use whole grain breads and breakfast cereals the instead of those made from highly milled grains. _ "The way to make sure of pro- viding a safe surplus of mineral els- ments s-to include in each day's menu liberal amounts of one or two foods rich in each of the mineral elements calcium, ph “ and Toronto Culture All we know of what follows is what we read in The Ottawa Jour- nal, and we submit that it la cil- culated to give us rather wondering- 1y to think. , The Journal says that when the news o_f Mr. John Buchsn's ap- pointment as Canada’; next Gov- sleep, and sometimes slecms as if it does-sent out its bright young men to get interviews. John Aird, president of the Can- adian Bankof Commerce, ta ‘Sir Aerial Minerals Exploration And if the Star's young men came back with what The Journal says they came back with, they got interviews on Mr. Bucfmzfs appointment which were, u. Fa- sdvertisements say, Sir John Aird said, or at least The Jouznal says the Star's young man said he said: "I have never heard of the man; I know nothing of him." Then we come to Sir Al- bert Goodcrham, and he said, still as before reported: "l don't know the gentleman at all. I never heard of him until the other day. I would rather see one of the old nobility of- England appointed." And last of all, Mr. l-lammell of the aerial ex- plorations is reported, again as be- fore, as saying to the young Star man: "l never heard of the rna-n, though I did see some of his books. I don't care who they appoint so long as he is not a wooden-headed Governorllke some we have had." The Journal is not shocked by all "l! this. but we are not quite sure whether ‘the Journal fails to be shocked by all this because it hap- pened in Toronto. or because it was reported ‘like this in the ‘lbnnto Star. or because-and we should never put this past an Ottawa news- paper-of both of those circumstan- ces. The Journal is just faintly sat- irical and It little bit tired. as if The Journal should say: "Look, Mother Canadoflf you can bear to lock. this is your Toronto." The Joanna-l contents itself with the gentlerull- tion to Mr. Arthur Meighen. HIM the next time he delivers hia eate- brated lecture on 5h in Toronto, he should begin by telling Torcntq who Shakespeare Ill. But why should ‘rhe mtawa Journal tske- this gloomy vino! thscultureof l rontotafteradil Sir John andjir Albert andfi’. Hammell of aerial oration hadn't heard of John Buc an. m they just hadn't heard of him. if they were not afraid to argue themselws unknown laecause he wasn't known to them. all the more honor to their cancer and forth- l-lahtncss about it. . If it comes to that. wnlteule 'I'bey went to su- “l l/lontana and Minnesota. observes that the drought; area there (like that in Canada) was never a uni- form plain. It was crisscrossed with lower areas In which there were marshes and even small lakes. Farmers, thinkingvof the land un- derneath. drained of! the water with d ches and tiles; and even built slllices to carry off the water, from the melting snows. "The re-" sult is obvious," he adds; "tons and tons of water is deliberately remov-i ed every year from land that has, barely enough water in support plant growth." There is a wide- spread opinion, Mr. Markey finds, that much might be etmomplished were drai _, ditches blocked and (‘ams built across the low ooultees that hold the reserves of water and by means oftlle generous plant- ing of trees in all directions. One of President Roosevelt's pet projects has been the planting of a shelter belt of trees across the Great Plains. Despite objections r-aised by Comptroller-General Mc- Carl to the carrylnf: out of the scheme as a drought-relief meas- ure. approprlations were made for preliminary work. Experts of the United states A8- riculturc and Interior Departments have not felt that one great tree- bclt of this kind can do a great deal to prevent the dust storms. The opinion has been expressed tint the molt direct way to check the ' ol-‘thlrd year. There are many ed- vocaies ofthe return of dry-farm- ing areas to grass and ranching- ‘save where irrigation i‘ possible. mind when he remarks that nature never intended that the extremely shallow land should “be cropped to the point of desolation." Rich soil when it is blown away cannot beput back. Only by a slow prq- cess of nature, assisted by meas- ures in conserve moistu e, can the fibre which will withstand wind been a vigorousexponent of soil- nscrvation policies. He points out that this year 87.000 Western Canada farms are out of commis- sion, more or less-o'1.000 in Ber been as high in value as 8400.000.- 000. Speaking in Edmonton. Mr. Mac- Tawlsh sounded a warning. The northern area was perhaps immune questlonably expanding and no man knows where the ‘line may be drawn." ‘Certainly, he argued, it would be sound business to assist the south n working out conserva- tion measures. At rlo place in the West was there now surplus mois- ure. The drought problem is a chal- lenge to Canadian resourcefulness. The Federal Minister of Agfieul- ture sometirrle since announced what was called a "New mat" pro- zram for the west, which included moisture corservatiorl measures. tree-planting. and distribution of It'll! lead for areas which it wts felt fllould revert to prairie gras- ccnditions. Mr. Robert Gardin- er. MP. for Acadia. Alberta, press- ed a few days ago for energetic, measures. ‘ The val-‘nus problem have been locked into in some degree hereto- '1‘hat’s the way for Billy and me. 41mm Kiss (1750-1835) Fame Is- So Fickle (Btratford Beacon-Herald.) ‘ —'I‘hcre are two enslnes in for "1 Overlwullns at the Canadian "etlwel shops in Btmtford .They stand side by Bide away down at lheendofthellxleOllelscfthe 6.000-passenger mountain type, and lthasbeonforfouryearsontbe run between ‘Ibronto and Home. Dllylle. Even with the wheel; and cab and outside covering taken off it is an enormous looking affair, ll-lld Ill/es the impression-which is" Notably correct-that a. railway locomotive is pretty mug-h gu boll- er. If this one were standing in line with others of its kind and sisc it would not attract mulch at- tention. It is a big fellow, but when a big fellow stands along with Oiilltl‘ big fQIIOWQ b0 dog; “Qt m. ccivc much notice. Next to this 6,000 l! the boiler o1 a Grand Truck Mogul. Now there's a name for you to conjure with. Thln/y-dlvc years ago since it was built, and when construction was finished on that engine it mes con- sidered lust about the last would in motive power. In other words it was the dandy of’ its day. It was considered large: it was just such a Butltdoesnotseemtomakeso much of a hit today. The holler is about 3i feet long, and the 8,000 type standlm next to it has a boiler used to be. 1n recent times it has been running on branch lines out of Allandele. In its day it was fit for the main line and all the big to the effect that the German Gov- ernment had signed a credit to Soviet Russia of $80,800,000. which and Sir John Simon had been in Berlin a few days before, and that Captain Eden's mission to Moscow we; to persuade Russia to join in a collective peace pact. Runember also that both Litvirloff and Stalin @111 lllecment has been under neg- otiation since last sunlmer, but‘ that it was only a few days s50 that the Gennen Government made an offer that met some of the Bo. viet demands. credit accord unless lt bad expect- ed to benefit therefrom. The politi- cians and the statesmen might say as many hard things as they liked. There have been many bites;- w. cusations hurled to and no be- tween Russia and Germany remng. 1y But while this game of tit-for- m w» proceeding merrily, the bus- iness heads were engaged m 0mg;- matters. The new credit is the re- sult. Germany‘ gains in large trade orders from one who is, by s11 m“ standards. her hated neiihbour. arid Russia gets what she needs mm than anything else in ‘the world today-another larp nation- al credit. rsacnrnsl Wecarryaecaaplets Arltelq. lineal the fact that a Grand Trunk Mogul has come in for an overhauling created not a ripple of excitement. After all fame is such s. flickle thing. < “DER TROU RHEUmATIS Life I offers a Investment Without a Hazard andcomf 1 Lower Queen Street so many fox those who we way. wonder! ‘ Capsules. . _.alllliiil l}. T005000» C0. LTD. I _, - . We may have to confine the prac- never be surprised if we ksew-al- ltllaia and (IIIQQTTITQWN l‘ teal-seine aatab- tloal activities of our lives within though we should be very amused -. _ . , ~ m, .mgmmg,g,m rbtllfvnarrowlimltsbutithatdocs tohearthathehad the. _ - “ ‘ ' not justify 15in shutting our minds John Buchsn had never KM ‘ boating ‘ land -- glnatlcrls up in close su Jchn and sa- Afeort and Ilr. least the tbanleriia eaau qnrtera. nansaeiltaltbart , ' ell- Al» in; Savings with Protection. The more you have of it the better oi! you will be when you reach the age at which you want to retire from business activity. Great- cat Life policies make secure the future welfare of many thousands of Canadian homes. l For insurance service consult any Great-West Life lup- Ieaentatlve, or get in touch with ' IIYNDMAII & 00., LIMITED Provincial Managers DR. FFRENCH’S VERMICIDE CAPSULES“ (Round Worm-Hook Worm - The season ls now on when every fox rancher should guard against the terrible worm menace, which carries of! pnpseveryyear. Thlspestbaancterrorfor “FF” VERMICIDE CAPSULES heading fox men throughout the world endorse these _ Theflmsalaeiauaedfromiandaysiothreeweeka- Put up in boxes of 80. 100 and 500 capsules at $1.00, $2.50 and Order at once and timely’ delivery.‘ E. l. . F0$TEB‘-'-—lltntral llrlisallllt t’ v ‘_ vli. - gal. lllcxrv e nltilolleii Charlottetown '* .