A ___ PAGE FOUR THE culnionnowu ausnuun iii NOTES ‘BY TIIE WAY Empire Trade i.‘- (Exchange) ‘Ststiatiosf’ says The Ottawa |—i_ 151R. BROW i‘ STRAWBERRY 300p ' PresldenfFW. Cheater s. saeLni-e, l-r. Vice-Freaking. ‘l? Bin-II"- 74-1 lroreiary-Lleuu-Uol. ll- A. lluelfilnnell. - I L . calm and Mullins Dunner-I. B-Bvrle". -°- m m. Assoelusu ltilitoro—- trunk Walker and D- L ll’ ‘ [g l; [mposslblc to expect that any Journal “while they wear s look o! of us will ever become completely’ impressive authority and plausible a I ...._,-1,. ADVIIIIBING llll ururln arenas-rad mediums [Ill Building, New Yea-ls Clty, v l . wiu hb rd er Building chlun- Glenn Bu!" Baum!" Kufirasdncla §Iud:::' {on grnnclseo; ' u -j Alllnll ‘Ielgilndelphlnf aromas, was: l. 1m- , worms or WARNING “and: the heading ‘mam m! ' l Level Crossings," the Csnsdisn Ne- u gd ) delivered "';3{,°',,?‘,',‘,’..",',.‘,"1§'1..‘fi$’ $231‘: and 'fie.=e States s tionsl Railways Maswne Presents h; vigorous fashion the tre-inms-WI view of tragedies that occur ei Nob paces. It is pointed out fir-st that of a total of 35.000 deaths in the Unit- ed states from automobile acclde ‘ only s little more than f 991' w!" recurred st railway croseinfl- The mssuine dos not minimize the danger of level crosdndfl. hi" bys mphasis on the assertion that moat accidents time could be avert- ad by exercise of common sense on lhe part of travellers on the high- whys, "n, musMJe rememberedflsays the magazine, “that the locomotive driver and the motorist are not on Iven terms. The railway tmin has the idght of way. It is also con- fined tc two ribbons of steel and, because of weight and impetus, cannot be controlled in an instant. whereas the motorist can swerve, vr stop his vehicle almost within ls own length." "l FOURTEEN YEARS AGO rburteen years ago last month, Al- ~ cock‘ and Brown flew the Atlantic f‘ ferthenrattimemsieieviere-ia bomber these British pilots flow iffrom Newfoundland to Ireland in 10 ‘Q and l2 minutes, creating a ' record which stood until Amelia lies-heart cut it by three hours. Bir dohnlAlcock is dead and the ' story of his exploit with Sir Arthur Whitten Brown is an old one. "Yet we are tempted," soy: the Calgary Albertan. “to Naneniber- this ' anniversary and to dra/w attention .-.v_ to 1t editorially year after year, be- ; cause these men never seem to have ___ received their due from the public. PBEBEN TATIVE special Alene; "h. New York Cola- Motors 1135 Ne. 00th Street vanced to the Reconstruction Pin- g”. corporation this fiscal year 14 91111 the Governmet/s large r0- iief activities. The one and three-quarter billion dolilr deficit and the payment o! more than s billion dollars to the Reconstruction rinsnee corporation was financed b? "i9 W597i“ Gm‘ eminent thi-oush large bond issues- The financing sent the public debt gm. mqhth t9 the highest level in nearly eleven years. The public ddbt of the United States Government last month was estimated at $23.40s,020,70i, ere-Inst 015507001000 on June so lastpan increase 0f nearly 3.00043003799- Th“ was the highest since June 20, 1022. when it stood at 02.964.019.000. The Government's $300,000,000 public works programme and the $300,000,000 emergency relief organ- isation, now getting under way, will call for nearly $000,000,000 addi- tional in new money W b6 017F111“ by adding to the public debt. ‘This would carry the public debt above the war time peak of $26,590,70l,648. IN EIGHTIETH YEAR The Rt. Hon. Sir Robert Borden. the Dominion'a war-time Prime Minister and for twenty years active leader d: the Conservative party in Canada, reached his seventy-ninth birthday last week and has now entered upon his eizhtieth Y9"- N9 living Qunadian, says the Montreal Gazette, in commenti _, on the ari- hiversary, can claim s place in the respect and affection of the people throughout the Dominion, equal or nearly equal, to that which this educated, for life is s continual education. inch day. every lwk 0! the eye, every thought, the moat in- significant corilwl. 63¢“ Ind l“ make up our education. The more thoroughly we are educated, how- ever, the more efficient we become in the carrying on of our Wrh. I111! the happier we are as human be- ings. Are governments sans, or are they controlled by madman! If they sre sane, why do they welt/O foul‘ billion dollars a year W710i! 9° maintain a deadlock which would be the same if no nation had a gun, a tank, an sir bomber or a battle- ship? Palestine threatens to become a sort of foreign colony for Jewish capital, and the National Home for the Jewish people, a home for Jew- ish investment and speculation-a. very different thing indeed from the dream of Dr. Herzl and of the other idealists of that great folk movement. Dr. Dollfnas, the Austrian Chan- cellor, paid another visit to Rome last week-end, with the obvious aim of strengthening his hand in his struggle with the Nazis. In that he had s c- " nlble success. He got Italy's promise to implement her guarantee of a loan to Austria; he signed s Concordat with the Vati- an; and he was able to announce (what is not news, but is repeated as a warning to Germany.) that "an independent Austria had a warm friend in Signor Mussolini." Am in- dependent Austria-may be better than an Austria absorbed into Hit- ler's Germany, but, in the form to which it was doomed by the trreaty of St. Germain, it will remain a discontented and a dangerous unit in Europe. The only intelligent sol- ution is an economic Danubian Fed- eration. and of that there still seems no very near prospect. When we tslk of freedom in the political sense of the word, what do we mean? The basic convictions underlying the idea are two-fold: first, that every human individual is entitled to Kihal rights before the law, and that he ought to and distinguished statesman enjoys. Nc one has so fully earned the felici- iationa which sir Robert has rc- ce.ved, and noine could find in them evidence of greater sincerity and __ "They were the true adventurers. v They flew in a crazy old crate of a 7'5 machine; they depended for suc- cess upon s wind which blew them across into an Irish peat bog; _ theirs was the uncertainty of men m. who are gambling upon the elements ' and their own luck, and their; was .'. the thrill of the first achievement." ____.___.______ U. S. DEFICIT L4 BILLION When United States Secretary of the Treasury Woodln closed his books for the fiscal year i933 on June-GO, he did so with the second largest peacetime government de- ficit in the history of his country. Preliminary figures show that the Government "ran into the red" to the extent of one and thine-quarter billion dollars in the year ending lost month, even with expenditures of more than a billion dollars by the Reconstruction Finance Cor- pcration. 1n the previous fiscal year ended June 30, 1032, when Government ex- penditures reached their peace time Pfiak, the Federal Government op- staid at s deficit of 02386162000. In the war time year ended June 30, 1919, the Government was faced with 8 record high deficit oi‘ $13,- l70,637,000. With expenditures for the 1N4 fiscal year starting July 1 slashed by nearly a billion dollars, Government statisticians feel that the era. of liirsze deficits is passed. Expenses and receipts for the coming fiscal Y!" are expected to balance at lffiimd 81250000000. The Government's income for the year ended this June 30 will Up- FIOXIITIMA 01000000900, while 0g- penditurea, exclusive of more than s billion dollars spent by the m- construction Finance Corporation, aggregated approximately 83,750,- ’, 000,000. If all expenses cf the Government in the current fiscal year, includ- in! the Reconstruction Finance ‘ ‘Corporation advances were includ- rd, the deficit tlrs year wollid stand it close to $3,000,600.80. , A total of 01241362054 was ad- C. good will. For ten years Sir Robert Borden fought an uphill fight as leader of the Conservative Opposi- tion st Ottawa. and for ten years he controlled and directed the affairs of the Dominion, including four of the most critical and anxious years which the country has ever known. He took charge of the fortunes of the Conservative party when they were at their lowest ebb, when the star of Laurier was in the ascendant and biasing with its greatest bril- liance: and by his perseverance, his scrupulous integrity arid his out- standing ability as a parliamentar- ian, he accompished what seemed at one time the impossible task of party rehabilitation. ‘Phat confidence was never for- felted, never impaired, and the old maxim that the crisis produces the man was never more strikingly ex- emplified in courageous and construc- can acquire the capacity both for self-government and to think for himself: and, secondly, that human progress will spring from giving free play to individual initiative, imagination and character, not from enforced obedience to constituted authority. Freedom leads inevitably to democracy as the system which enshrines the principle of individual responsibility and is the best guar- antee that law and govemment will, in the long run, rest upon the consent of the governed. The Wsshlnkton administration now appears to be concentrating upon domestic policies of recuper- ation rather than upon co-opera- tion with other nations. ‘This is why it is holding hack on war debts, tarifls, stabilization of ex- changes and other problems much to the fore at the London Economic Conference. It aims st promoting the return of prosperity in the Unit- ed Ststes by means of inflation, centralized control of industries, Hdiustments in the agricultural in- dustry and a vast program of pub- iic works to provide employment. A crest immv Americans doubt the feasibility cf what they term the Government's "grendoise" experi- tive national leadership than dur- ing the critical years of the World War under the Borden Govern- ment. There has been, indeed, no finer figure in this country's public life and Sir Robert's reputation and practice sre not only Empire-wide, but world-wide. l-ls is hale, strong and hearty at seventy-nine, and though free of all political respm- sibilities he is not idle in retirement, nor has his keen concern in the welfare of his country ever abated. EDITORIAL NOTES 0M 0f the most cheering devel- Wments the Maritimea have ex- perienced since the general busln. esa slackness set in, is the great renaissance the lumber trade is now undergoing. The British m“- ket, closed to Russian lumber, is taking the largest quantities of Canadian snriice and m- ever ship- ments. They experience a whole- some fear that once inflation gets under way it will fall out of control and run amok. ____ W. G. Carlton lfall in the June number of “The Navy" criticize; m, proposed reduction of the naval forces of the lhnpire. The public! 1110M!» 119 "H. is being spent on a Kffllt number OI people who gm 8114113 no actual return for the re- lief, while the navy, which is called upon to come to the rescue in nat- ional extremity, is not "mug m, help that it needs as a safety ih- stitution. Therefore, he argues that the State would do better to place men in the two services of the Army and New Ind there feed, clothe, "l!" ""1 Ply them, rather than mend more money on them under the dole system, The Americana have been reason. ing somewhat as follows: "In order W Drotect the home market we have lhslsnd. and this nmvement, QM. ped overseas in a single season, ‘This trade is transforming the Q0011- omic situation in northern New Brunswick. In Nova Scotia, it h said by those in the trade that enough in: daily, can only be limited by the limitations of the sources of supply, Within the past month the price of limb" his risen at the Maritime mills, under pressure of the Brit- lumber cannot be procured to supply the British demand. Within the past week a half dozen large cargoes were shibped from Nova Bcotis for ish market requirements, by mom "W! 84 per thousand, and is now higher than at any previous time in the past two years. ., of - Quilts Bylum W. BcfenJLD. l, HAY FEVER SEASON SQON AT HAND ' ‘mere have been many forms of treatment for hey fever, and it would seem that as years pass suf- ferers flnd out how to get through the hay fever season without too much distress. As you know many take the in- jectiontreatment starting in June and finishing about the third week in August. This helps s number of cases, sometimes taking two to three years of treatment before get- ting results. Othcr cases have tried the injec- tion fiIQBfviIi€DtS>WilhOUt success and are looking about for any kind of treatment that will give help, as they are unable to go to any of the sections of the country where there is no hay fever. Some have used the "filtration" rooms with great success, remaining in these rooms about 12 hours of the 24. The drugs used during the hay fever season are adrenalin injected under the skin, or the adrophin (Chinese drug) taken by mouth. ‘These give temporary help and en- able tlie patient to "put in" the day. Some European research physic- ians have been cauterizing the muc- cous or lining membrane of the nose and the particular substance in the mucous membrane that unites with the ragweed or other substance causing hay fever is destroyed. As the mucous lining of the nose is thus removed for the time being, there is no disturbance from the hay fever until the mucous lining is replaced. Various methods of cauterizing the mucous membrane of the nose are now in use. One method is the use of a cot- ton swab with 20 per cent cocain to deadedthe painnnd then the whole lining cf the nose that can be reached is painted with an aqueous 50 per cent solution of trichloraoe- tic acid. Another method is the use of pure phenol applied by means of a cotton swab-saturated and no more— wound around a bent probe, which reaches practically the entire lining of the nose. This doesn't interfere with the sense of smell. This treatment has been success- ful in some cases of asthma and in preventing colds occurring too often. ‘The thought then is that hay fev- er may be fought in ihcse various ways when the injection treatment, starting 6 to B weeks before the be- ginning of the hay fever season, fails to cure. C0 Tali white cliffs, an emerald hill, A red flag flying free, Swift grey birds which roam at will And brown boats on the sea. Crimson rays on waters green From opal sky emerge; Foam of pearl and silver sheen The yellow sands submerge. Tawny shades on distant bluc From canvas russet-brown; Wavelets flected with orange hue, Each crest a golden crown. Dull black sails-which loom afar As giant moths at night; Clear and cold the Vesper Star Now shines with solemn light. -Marcis. Knight, in "Milestones." elected high tariffs, keeping out, for example, a. wide variety of Can- adian products. Finding that we would not willingly trade with them, the Canadians came back at us and put up high tariff against our manufactures. Te retain the Can_ sdisn market our American manu- facturers have had to put u-p some 908 branch plants in Gil-finds, gm- ploying Canadian workmen, using Canadian material, pgylng gm“- ian taxes. etc. These branch plants have ‘gone Canadian,’ in many cases. We have conserved our qwn market, but have we overdone the tariff game and invited retalia- tion to such an extent that we lose 891101191)’ In the export market?" SCIATICA Internships-q with duality an ottersll the more mis- leading on that very account and should be accepted with considerable reserve unless, like the prudent purchaser of s second-hand "car, one knows all about them." llknstheleaa the statistics showing how Canada's exports to the Unit- ed Kingdom have increased as e. result of the Ottawa Conference seem to leave little doubt of the benefits received tom those agree- ments. Hon. H. H. Stevens, Domin- memibered," curred in ordinary times. Not 1on8 88°. Hon. T. L. Kennedy dom, comparing 1002 with 190i These figures show: Cflllfiibs fruits Oats ' Bran Flexseed Tobacco Bacon Beef Pork Poultry Canned milk Canned meats 1... the Imperial agreements operative doubt the benefit of the of Canada. Tree Superstition (Edinburgh Scotsman) At this period of the year we eXDcct to be visited occasionally by thunderstorms. The months June, and more especially July, known of old as the "month of‘ thunderstorms and thistledown," are often marred by such visitatiohs. Many folks fear the lightning, and when caught out oi‘ doors in a. storm hesitate about seeking shel- ter under trees. It is only natural that many au- perstitions and beliefs connected with trees and lightning should have been accepted by old-time country people. By some it was be- lieved that the elements respected the oak; others aver that it “draws the stroke." We find these conflict- ing beliefs set down in rhyme. ‘Those folk who fear the oak when thunderstorms are raging never shelter under it, l membering the old verse, which couples the ash with the oak as a dangerous tree:- "Bewsre of the oak, It draws the stroke; Beware of the ash. It courts the flash; creep under the thorn, It will save you from harm." Others say that you may safely seek shelter under an elder tree, for the lightning never strikes it, sTnoe the Saviour! cross was made of it. The thom tree is also said to be immune from the lightning flash, and it is better to shelter beneath e thixt hawthorn hedge during a. storm than under any other tree, Many other superstitions regard- ing trees have reference to weather lore. For instance, it is thought that if the cal: bursts into leaf before the ash, we shall have only a BMW"? summer, but if the reverse we shell experience s rainy season: "If the oakis before the ssh, Thm you may expect s splash: But if the ash is ‘fore the oak, Then you must beware a soak." Wet summers are Iupposed to b, assocsted with an unusual and ex- ceptional quantity of peed; on whitethorn and dogrose. If the ha]; bears many acorns, it fcreiella a long and cold whiter. Scottish peg- sants associate an abundance of rowan berries with much rain and light grain cropsz- ' "Mm! rains. mony rowshs; Mony rowsns, mony ye-wng,» "Yewns" means the light grain BOXES i ONE HUNDRED THOUSAND Just received regulation (1 gnarl). AIIO PIN’! I for SMALL FRUIT!- t i A very large crop d STltAWBEltBlESsreinvlew thissessomGrcwes-Isrild- vlsedtoaecure theirnrpply eerlyastheremsybasscar- Fire, Lifle, Accident, Sickness and Plate Glass Insllfdflf-‘e at Lowest Rate. Agent at Summer-side, Lloyd Lewis 146 Richmond St., Charlottetown . - eetroy . the Restoring Loulsburg ‘w’ m” "" " °d a" ion minister of trade, puts Cen- ada‘s export incruse during 1902 B0 $10,000,000. Al”, "it must b8 N“ LU. 5161C!!! lddBdp ' “that the volume of business must ' Th’ °1d I"‘“w:h(fn°“°$e“,b)mu' have been much greater than that m “p” B" to ed‘ shown by the increase in value." “m” t” b: ruinrNénhc Amer,“ Because of the exchange situation, ‘hrmwst 1°’ n“. ' the increase in value of these ex- it 93”“ mwgh “W slew “d ports is he: l8 great as it would W" 11mm!’ “my” by m‘ Em‘ have been normally and the same “h- BY m‘ ‘"7’ n“ “mum's” o: ' i M - exchange situation has moreover zzzufaxgaifn 230295222829 ,0; held back the increase of volume ’ th u c‘ ill that would undoubtedly have oc- m‘ i‘ “bbrated m ° a m“ Ontario, minister of agriculture, prepared figures showing the in- 1 crease o‘, “rm mo“ expo l l Ochiitree Macdonald, Halifax, gves from ohm-id w the United King- “l” ‘n “’P°“d‘°°‘ ‘he 5"“ °‘ m‘ m‘ Percent .. . 2,49 These figures are remarkable, and it must be borne in mind that only for a few months of 1932 were stiitistics may not be fully reliable unless everything is known about them, nevertheless statistics seem to be proving beyond reasonable Ehnpire trade treaties, at least in some parts o! and wounded, English and French, (Winnipeg Free Pres) the Review (June) Vauban was born in 1&3. ' An interesting monvgfflillh’ "The Last Siege of Iouisburg." by (7- tory; and there is Senator Mullen- ' nan’s History of Louisburg. Of coursefl Parkman describes the Flori; in vivid terms as it was 50 years ago: "Not all the efforts of its con- qurors, nor all the havoc of suc- ceeding times have availed to effacc it. Men in hundreds toiled for months with lever, spade, and gun- powder, in the work of destruction; and for more than a century it has- served as a stone quarry; but the remains of its vast defenses still tell their tales of human valor and human woe." The ruins and about 80 acres of land passed some time ago into the hands of the Canadian National Parks; and at the first meeting of the Historic Sites and Monuments board, attention was called to the importance of restoration. A Nova Scotia. member of the board was very keen, and he found that the original plan were preserved in Paris. By their aid, the new struc- ture will be a replica of the old solid fortress, the signature of Vau- ban attached. It originally coat I mint of money. In 1717, four years after the Treaty of Utrecht, the building of the Fort began. The last siege was in 1758; the total of killed was 854. When Quebec was taken, France retired. Wolfe was at Louis- bllfk, and the spot where he landed is known as Wolfe's Rock. So I learn from Mr. Macdonald’s book. The order to raze the fortress was 51511861 in London in 1760, and later three warships beat into the her- bor with skilled miners to destroy the works. 230 guns and smmuni. $10M Wm shipped to Halifax: also “one 1'01’ building. The citadel, "a place is now piotectedifmm 0117M- vsndals. Not 1011i I80 the coiilns of French Governor and s Hench Admiral were ilncurthsd and will besenttollrsncmmanoldlnir- lal ground, hundreds of French and English and New Erlglsnd soldiers were buried between i746 and 1768- pm- New zmglondm were than mitish. In 0001590113011 their bones lie in unmarked gllvea: French and English and colonists, Catholics and Puritans. aide hi’ bide, , returned to dust. Many will wish that a monument should be elect- ed in honor of the unnamed dead. and many may wish the fortress remain as it is, but amply Jimmie Jingle Says : Each day of every blessed week The best of food you ought to seek. -—Stelz'art's Bread und‘ Limited l i ruined ‘ city before the end of the season. rcn sans at our (Seed Store) Queen Street.- Garter & 0o. Eye fiomfort for eye workers ls s nutter tal importance. From ea-rly morn to late st night we "crowd" onr eyes re- lentlessly, from one job to another. flow long will they stand It? Are you now enjoying that ef- ficiency and comfort which ought to be yours’! Consult n: if you are not; You have much to Ill!!- ll"! nothing to lose. In my case the knowledge gained from an examination, makes it well worth while. a. r. iiulciirsovi OPTOMETRIST “The Highlands” > GEORGETOWN, R a t e s : Board and Room Inclusive:- ssoo, alias and $4.25 per day or sumo, $21.00 and $25-00 per week according to sc- commodation. MEALS:— Breakfast 60c. Lunch 75c- Dinner 90o. special Week-end Hates:- _, ‘ _’_., evening dinner to Sunday evening dinner “~99- ggturday evening dinner to Monday breakfast 55-75- Wednesdsy dinner and dance 81.15. rm ens cold swine we“ l" - every room. Modern Conveniences. Opens for Season JULY 1st. Remember 0n: Wee!!! Dmccl. Your Destiny, Health and Suc- cess depends on your horoscope. Send 50c for complete Reading. Give date. place and hour of birth lf possible. DAVID I. PARKINSON Suite 3 l10-l4ih Ave East Calgary, Alia. E101" MORE July 3-Mon. 3i ._-.__..__._.._'_.._ 0r. W. R. Carson CHIROPRACTOB Three Year Palmer Graduate 124 Prince St. Phone 1072 Home Calls Made. 0o. llot Neglect, Your Eyes An examination mllht b9 "7 greet benefit to you. E. W. TAYLOR J. S. TAYLOR OPTOMETRISTS loath llde Queen Ball-IN June 30-41. t. Max Factor ‘I Society _ / Beauty Aids Crested by Ma: ‘lads!’- Hollywood's inns-up ml" who for many years luo be"! chief cosmetlclsn to the screen and stage profclllbll- am mm- mural-iv" are in a large way relllmlm‘ for the splendid 0010019!‘ of the celehrltlu. some of our lines lneludl! FACE IOWDIB FOUNDATION CREAM SKIN AND T-ISBUI ORB U! LEMON CREAM. ROUGE AND LIPHTIUK The" parstionl nrfl made from the purest in- gredients, in correct color harmony shades to blelil with individual complexion oolofllllv and‘ h 31112-1 perfumed _pesse 0 fastidious tsete. - Visit our store sud see lhll new line of Toilet preplrle tlonl. . 0'7’ . i. f/yt, iklh ‘RI/id . "i ; A bettE tobacco and e. better cure-that accounts for the popularity of our ‘Buck vwlsv cu wmo which the farmer finds in a 53d sesson.—A. S. - TIIE 2 MAGS