V0 DU cs1 kin th '0 >1 ‘ PAGE EOUR IIIE IIIIIIIILIIITETIIWII GIIAIIIIIAII InsIlsnO-W. Chutes l. IaLIro. l. P. : w-Prolldonb-i- l- Burnett sorts iv rm: In 0n his voyage to Imadon. Ml!"- oswnnry-Llout. Ool. ll. A. lnnllnnn. II. B. 0. Aloociltl Idllll‘ Ind Inlslglng Dlrnnnn-J. l. Blsrlell Inns Wslhos and D. IL Osrrls lornlnl nsuy (founded uum sun n: rel: (ls noun-r) drllvfld- sue pl! you (In scrum) lulled In Guilds us llsnod lI-slrb WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER ‘I. 1931 that the cow ceases to, be a milk l producer forthwith." (71 m; 11mg V1511; to Pflnfifl Ed- The credit for making this Pro- iwnrd Island 10rd Bessborough can vlnce a disease free area is due $3” Wm; gags“, wen], vgdi, vlcl," largely to the manner in which our B]; Excellencys victory was achiev- farmers co-operated with the Stew- ‘d, not by {one 0g arms bu; by his art Government at the time the lenisl personality which captivated movement was inaugurated by the m wllh whom he came 1h Con- then Minister of Agriculture, Hon. “ch Th,“ hm mo, Wm have hleas. J. H. Mycrs. It was one of the elec- ‘m memorles o; hls "h, to the tion pledges of the late Lea Gov- yslahd pmvlhcel. and that he wlll ernrncnt to advertise the fact that find the Ohporluhlly to revlslt us Prince Edward Island was a disease next summer wlth Lady Besshoh frce urea. Too little attention was “ugh and lamlhh ls the wish o; given to the fulfilment of this pro- m our readerh misc but it is to be hoped that un- L4 MEMORABLE VISIT toms Gsndhi set a precendent that thousands of travellers would like to see generally adopted. The In- dian mystic refused to give s single tip during his trip-Vancou- ver Province. ' - lot of foolish talk. The truth is, of are not Efllng to be. Twenty years from now people will be looking back upon these days and saying that we llved in the golden age. Something new will be ruining them. A United States editorial writer. comments on the flying performan- ces of the British Lieutenant Stain- forth, who madeamarkofdbd miles per hour, and says: "A nation that can make such airplanes and find It wss Adsm Smith, ssys sn ex- change who once said that there was a lot of» ruin in a nation. Also there ls a lot of talk about ruin. A course, that we're not ruined,'and 8| lass IV. Babs. I]. GUARDIN G YOUR IYISIGHT know there is the oculist, the opto metrist, and also the optloisn. the eyesight is defective. in medicine and surgery, Perhaps you wonder sometimes just where or to whom you should go to see about your eyes. You ' The oculist is a. graduate In medi- cine and surgery. who, nowever, gives his entire time to eye condi- tions, that is diseases of the ayes, and also to prescribing glasses where The optometrist is not a graduate but has spent considerable time in studying the eyesight itself-long sight- saaaaaéiiiiS2l§i n was gmlllwhg to have the as. dcr the new Stewart administration nuance o; m5 Excellency that he every; effort will be made to em- wpreclaled the loyalty o; our hmh phasize this important advantage ple the Btlllsh throne. and lhal in connection with the ‘dairy in- It would be his duty and pleasure dusm’ °7 the Pmvlnce- lo communicate this fact to His Majesty King Gcorge. Encouraging, too, was the Gcncrals expression of confidence in Can- ada's ability to pull through the present period of world depression. With the tremendous resources of the Dominion and the determina- tion and optimism of its people. he was convinced, now that the up- couraged about pounds sterling one way or the other. It is what men have in their brains and hearts, not the gold reserve, that makes a country." A Canadian in attendance at a. Buffalo church was astounded yes- terday, by the announcement of lhc pastor. “I would like to ask the con- 1 _ ng a $900,000,000 deficit by econo grcgauon to remember m their 0L mizing and borrowing $800,000,000 qcrmry to place nolhlng but Uhlh ls not working out. says a Well ln- [ed States money. Contributions in formed exchange. Revcnucs are ‘Canadian money will make it very running far below cut expenditures Iombanassmg n” m" treasurer? iwas the substance of the injunc- and, from the way things are going . h ward trend had begun, that Can- _ tion and the lmpeac ment of the _ presently, the United States is Cahadlah hlchel and dlme lda will be one of the first coun- ' b] _ l e heading for a deflclt of perhaps 1,- 1g must come a5 a terrible shock mes w enjoy the essmgs o r 500031004100 by Jung 3g, 193g Even _for Canadians to realize that while tamed DFOSDBYIIY- k5 I its If Should there be a moderate rem,“ ltheir money is heavy discounted by 3 ' Of‘ l? . such B’ message 5pc cry in business, which would bring! we wmmend it particularly to the money changers on the mart, it is also unacceptable in the sight of "use who are Inclined to take a in more revenue, it is still clear Jehovah m, loom View or the present m“ that taxation will fall far short of, The Canadian who reported the u 5 It 15b O ison with 0m Xncgflng the Government's need5_ lincidsnt said he felt as if he were, . C m 8!‘ — - _ a on m ym t in t m Confronted by such a sltuatlonvllndeed, m the Valley of Humilia er coun cs a e rue pos on Mr‘ Hoover and secretary o! me-tion-St. Catherines Standard. of Canada can best be judged. And -———- who is better qualified to elzprcss Treasury Mellon are changing theirl There a" lndlcallohs, lhal the minds, considering new taxation. United States is awakening to its an opinion based on such compari- son than the distinguished repre- Republican politicians, of course,-T@5D0l’l5lb31ill88 tOWBYd the r9515 0f sentative of the King? U. S. TAXATION Governor President Hoover's phn of meet- rh raEEJEBEm-‘ZEH "U O F"¢“'””‘°'1"°.=ss*<a.;~ will oppose anythlng very drasticlicivilizatiolzi. ircsidefnt Hooverxlre- as new taxation on the eve of alcem d6“ aramn o a mom rum ‘on international war debts gives a Presidential 810001011 W111 not help ‘clue to the dlrectlon m‘ which the their party's chances, already none wind is blowing. We believe, more- too rosy. Unfortunately for them, °V9"- since m" 8199.45, T501151“! has an unsettled or disordered public .5" m“ "m" m“ mad’ m“ ‘I Wm find some means of extended co- finmwe has no pity for the fortunes fopcration with Great Britain and 9f a Presidem m‘ his Party‘, and the other nations of EllfOpe for the stern action of some kind becomes 'general_benefit-, of mankind. We lhevllahlm look to see it agree to a. general what form of taxation will be scaling down or cancellations of d l d _ t t 1 t ‘international war debts and re- ev so '5 no ye Gear‘ sen“ °r parations and to find some way of Reed, of Pennsylvania, who is close using n5 immense stores of idle to Mr. Hoover, and who has the gold in the promotion of internat- support of the Hearst press, wants “mm trade and renewed PmSPBY‘ mans. Eminent doctors insisted , "y _ la ll: per cent. sales tax, claiming that it was; no less eminent ones, _ . that it would bring in $2,000,000,000 were either doubtful or opposed to of revenue a year. Mr. Mellon, on the idea of any possible danger 9.5 '14 PROVINCIAL ASSET The remarkable progress which Is being made in the testing oi’ dairy herds throughout Canada, says the Montreal Star, is one of the most encouraging signs of pro- grass in the safeguarding of the public health. Twenty years ago controversy raged as to whether bovine tuber- culosis was communicablc to hu- EIPSVII-AQUW .g-g-=+Hr\"rff‘\5'/l During the first 10 weeks of the fiscal year wlfch began on July 1 the income of the U. S. Govern- men to run them ought not to be dis- ; few miiflon short sight, will enable him to get the best pos- sible use of his eyes, and prevent strain. An optician gets the prescription from the oculist or optometrist as to what is needed, and grinds the glasses according to thLs prescrip- tion. Now to whom should you go to have your eyes examined? Generally speaking it is consid- ered wise to consult the oculist if your eyes are bothering you, as it may not be a matter of eyesight but some other condition in the body that is causing the eye trouble. . The oculist is in a better position to locate the cause of the trouble than the optometrist or opticlan, who of course are concerned with the vision only. And if it is the vision that is defective the oculist can prescribe the necessary glasses. However if you are having no trouble with the eyes, but naturally would like to know if your eyes should be having any help owing to the nature of your work, or if you have no pain but think your eye- sight is-failing, you can quite pro- perly consult the optometrist. He can measure the needs of your eyes, and fit you just as well as the ocu- list. He is absolutely safe as most. states and provinces require an ex- amination in this work before he can call himself an optometrist. What you should not do is walk into a store and fit glasses to your eyes and take a. pair that you think suits you. Nor should you buy glasses from any vendor or salesman that calls at your home. Your eyes are worth very much to you, and you should take no chanc- cs with them. Was Never Delivered (Mail and Elmpire) Why the smashing blow was never delivered, which Germany m f “k f T the other hand, favors a widening from e use 0 m mm m mg of the base of the income tax; and cattle. And while the doctors dis- this is what is most likely to hap- agreed it was not surprising that; b“ i 1 ml t be a u ed pen. Like all taxation in all coun- O l1 Oil COLI lO F0 S I p“ m op b1 t d that m m u tries, it will be unwelcome, though c e s n on e s“ e an g 'Amcrlcans should not complain. of Trchdcattle was not serious? lThe worst that Mr. Hoover and Mr. cessar mcasu e, “"5 "e as a n8 y _Mcllon will do to them will leave of health protection. G d n m 18M l evldencvthem still a long, long way from’ ra ua y e we o mcnt from all sources of revenue, fell so per cent. below that for the‘ samc period a year ago. It is lil$-: slblc that before the present fiscal year is ended taxes may be raised. or business conditions, and there- fore Fcderal income may improve, ‘year with the plight of their British cousins. ‘$995 000 000 below even its reduced I 1 I shifted to the side of those who saw lrecelpm during 19304931. small. the danger to human health-par- ticularly to that of the child-in the consumption of milk which even might be tainted with the he American Legion he is now Wdirccting the most drastic econo- Those who think editors shouldlmy lh every nomvllal branch pol disease. The perfection o! methods be as neutral in expressing their'the Government. opinions as in funiishing the news, of detection of the germ in cattle. _ l might read with advantage the made inoculation simpler, surcrl h . and cheaper. Rates of compensa- lwmmem °f t ° New Ymk Hmlwzmavharhols scandal. cry out from tion Payable to farmers whose re- ITrlbune on m“ subject‘ A scmpul- the valley °t Hummathn _I'h“t_th° actor cattle had to be climlnatediomsly Mr presentation o’ news Federal Government is doing “me hmd a wlde ohm door ‘m. the c» or nothing for unemployment, well- _ informed newspapers in the United prasslon or ‘wary variety of 188m- Staies comment with admiration 58am“ ignorance and weed was mate opinion are the standards by ‘upon the huslhcssllke manner h, “my 101m d which a reader is entitled to test which the administration is hand- Ithc greatness of his newspaper, thclling a serious economic situation. "Just h°w long and smw u‘ has Heraldhfilbune say? but Bupple_‘Aftcr printing aserles of articles on been Government veterinarians and ' the ollawa Ghverhmehtrs method health authorities all across Can- mentmg this lmpartm magenta’ of meeting the relief problem and ad“ can lcSlll-y," contlnues the tion of the facts, the editorial col-Ialdlhg the lobkss, the Rmhesgel- star wrlter. “It ls by no means won umns try to express clearly and Times-Union says. l kl lh l l lh _ The program of relief outlined yet and will not be won m1 there is m" Y ° "m" “m” ° ° "m" assuredly ls bu“, h means meehng 'WhiIe disgruntled partisan news- papers stung by the disgrace of the as milk producers were fixed upon and the long, slow and uphill fight DEDCI‘. EDITORIAL OPINIONS llvonder that President Hoover toldl .i__ I not a completely untested herd sup- plying milk for public consumption from one end of Canada to the oth- er. But the advance mode has been remarkable and with each herd tested, each reactor on the way to the butcher, the obstacles in the way of a complete cleanup of Can- ada become progressively less. To their eternal credit, there are three provinces in Canada-Nova Sco- ila, Prince Edward Island and British Columbia-which make re- turns showing all dairy cattle as having been submitted to the test, in other words, as being free of tuberculosis, since in all cases re- action to the inoculation means "We know from our correspon- dence," it continues, "that many of our readers disagree these opinions but we know equally well that critics as wcll as sympathizers appreciate the cun~ dor with which these opinions arr expressed. A neutral editorial page is, in short, a waste of space. It is as great a disservice to the reader to disscmble opinions as it is to distort news." EDITORIAL NOTES Commenting on the fact that all the Ministers in the new Stewart Cabinet were reelected with- out opposition, asks: "Can anyone give a ‘single reason. in a few well-chosen words, the Sydney Post __ a. peace time emergency with some» ihing of the same energy n5 i5 call- wllh led forth by war. It is well worth by the 311M511 ‘studying now, and its ultimate IouLcome will bu equally‘ worth not- mg. Canada evidently has a dcgrcc of confidence in Premier Bennett be- |y0nd that; ordinarily accorded a party leader. And ‘it appears that the Canadian governmental mach- lincry can work with a speed and idircctnw unknown to our rather cumbrous system. l- Ih m“; meeting this emergency .Chhadh l, "dim; to an already heavy burden o! taxation and debt. The Dominion has, however, natur- why Ministers in such a case should be required to be re-eiected at all ?" - nmwww» - wamfliaaw had planned against British sea- astigmation and so forth. The properly qualified opto- metrist gets his name from the fact that he measures the eyesight of the patient and prescribes glasses that (Reginl loader) 3y s. solemn covenant to which every state hss given its llmllllil/O- cal adherence the nations have banned war as In lfllltfummt °3 national policy- “Why then." asks Sir Robert Borden," should effective progress towards disarmament be so long dellyed?" Neither disarmament nor peace resides in covenants alone. butin the Bilirit of 800d faith in which they u, hem 11; L; a sad commentary on the peace pact that armaments are still bur‘ ‘ and menacing the world, and that despite ex- plicit agreement on the matter, the nations are experimenting with pomp gases and other inhuman methods of warfare. General Sir Arthur Currie, re- marking that one of the dearest hopes of the men who fought in the Great War was that they were thereby ending future war, says "So far as. its aim was the estab- lishment otpermanent time. the Great War completely failed." These remarks are not outdated or wrcnched from their context. They are taken from the current issue of “Intcrdependencef the or- gan of the League of Nations in Disarnment Conference _| um’ 0mm. UNKNOWN SINGER . are There has coms a bird-note new Deep h; the wood today. A flutelike theme deveIOPlIJB m lyric roundelay. wmi sPY-Blm- Wk- "d we“ step I will not track it down To see what suit the singer wears, Yellow, or blue, or brown. some fancy bids me not to pry Within its Ereen retreat. Unclassified less sweet! -Exchange. A dull ear that which finds the sons ' Honor Where Due frlxchange) l The announcement that _McGill l University is to confer an honorary , degree upon Right Hun. R. B. Ben- nett, Prime Minister of Canada, is . one which will meet with general approval. Such an event will bc Canada. in a discussion of the amis crisis. I Discussing the causes of the, breakdown of the pact and the. fact that the land, sea and air forces of 1931 are far more form- idable than those of 1914, Sir Ar- thur says: The United States of America, whose President put forward the plans for the League of Nations, whose government promoted ‘the treaty denouncing war, has only re- cently declared that its navy is to be second to none, while no nation has made greater strides in pro- moting the strength, the effective- ness cf its military power. Whom will it fight? Japan? Rus- sia? France? The British Empire? France and Italy are building up great armaments. Against whom? Again we may turn to history for a. lesson. Armaments are created to be used, and, if. they are creat- ed, it is more than likely that they will be used. The very burden of war debts from the last war is one of the possible causes of another war. Germany is smarting under a sense of injustice and a burden of reparations. France is ‘aiming at European dominance. Japan is establishing herself in Manchuria against the hostility of a new China. Fear and distrust have iso- lated Soviet Russia and placed the world against her. At this crisis the hopes of peace lovers turn to the Disarmament Conference to be held in Geneva in next February. It holds the hope of the peace of the world in its hands. If it fails, there will be a race in armaments, since no na- tion can feel secure against anoth- er with heavier armaments. Peace will hide its face and Mars will be the world-god once more. borne trade on the outbreak of the war in August, 1914, is told for the ‘first time by Hector C. Bywater in the London Daily Telegraph. Before the war Germany owned a. merchant fleet second only or bvth- At the Present rate. how-luau of Great Britain. 1t included‘ ever, the Government will end thfilggme of the largest; and gugesli receipts approxlmatelyl ‘liners afloat. The potential value of lthese ships in war time had long ‘been realized by the German Ad- miralty, and Admiral Von Trlpltz, on becoming secretary of the Navy, decided to utilize them as an auxil- iary arm of the fighting fleet. By lauiy, 1914, he had thus listed well over 100 armed vessels, as many as Dossible 0f which he intended to ‘use when war broke out for a simultaneous raid on British com- ‘munlcatlons throughout the seven seas. l; The arming of the ships offered ltlie chic.’ difficulty. Prior to the ‘war Britain strongly suspected ithat certain German liners carried Iguns and mountings in their holds, and that guns for liners were stored lln camouflaged form, at German lshlpplng depots in the United States. South America and the Far ‘East. It was due, however, 1n part, lMr. Bywaler says, to the collapse lof the German espionage system iln Great Britain a few hours be- lfore the outbreak, when nearly 30 lGerman agents were a/pprehendedi Secret Service, thatl lthc grandiose plan for parlyzing ‘British ocean trade failed. This al resources of vast extent offering great potential producing capacityl Too bad we can't import a lmlc of the spirit of clean Justice and Canadian common sense into ml; country." says the New York Daily Mirror, in referring to quick jug- tics of Canadian Courts. Thalia the kind of publicity that Canada wants in the great republic l0 the south of us. where ganlstcrs 1m for years beyond their lime__ Petrolis Advertiser. left. the German naval staff ab- lsolutely in the dark as to the movements of the British fleet. "The evidence which has since lcome to light," Mr. Bywatcr says, "leaves no doubt as to the gravity of the peril which confronted our ocean trade in 1914." Had the German plans reached full matur- ity British shlpplng might have been ruined within thf; first three months of the war and the coun- try faced with a food crisis of ex- treme severity. ' To the vigilance of the British navy and 0f British intelligence agents abroad, belongs largely the lcredit of frustrating the Von Tir- pitz"plans for paralyzing British commerce on the high seas. Mrs. MaoAndrews: "My, is this lnot terrible? It says here that in lthe Solomon Islands a. wife costs seven shillings." MaoAndrews: "AyI They're prof- iteers there Just the same as here." regarded by the public as signifying l the appreciation by a great educa- iional institution of the gravity of , the issues with which the head of I the Dominion Government is called upon to deal, the burden of re- sponsibility which he bears, and. perhaps, it is not too much to say. of the energy and singleness of purpose which characterize his ad- ministration in a time of national difficulty. The university, year after ycar, is turning out young . men and young women specially I equipped for the practical business of life, and the more the interest of i the undergraduate can be directed to an intelligent and impartial “ study of public affairs and public leadership, the better it will be for the Dominion. The action contem- plated by McGill will serve, to some extent, that useful purpose, besides constituting an éminently fitting tribute to one of the foremost liv- ing Canadians. “That mouth-organ you gave mc for my birthdayjs easily the best present I've had, uncle." “I'm glad to hear that." "Yes; mother gives me a. dollar a. week not to play it." 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