filhqil-rlfi’h'smmlfjig|f_j PAGE FOUR TllE BIIARLOTTETOIII GUARDIAN Morning Dally (Founded 1887) President UeuL-Col. W. Cheater S. Molar: Vlce Piesldent l. ll. Burnett, FJJ. Secretary LleuL-CoL D. A. lllzclflnnou. 0.5.0. Illllor and AL ‘ Director J. B. Burnett, FJ-L Associate Editor Frank Walker SUBSCRIPTION RATES $5.00 per year iln advance) delivered to City $4.00 per year iln advance) mailed to l’. $5.00 per year (in advance) mailed to banana and U3 Members Audit Bureau of Circulation: “The Strongest Memory i; Weaker the Weakest Ink." FRIDAY, JULY Z2, 193B Less Talk, More Action A timtly warning is sounded by .\lr. Xugcnt Al. Llougatrr. iii lJjllflJll, linglantl, in an inter- \lt'\\' ll\lllll~llk‘ll n1 _\e~.tt-rr1a_\'s liuardiait. Uther \'1.~1il.!l': haie ni-iwl, as .\lr. (lougher does, that there i.- ntnre app. cnt cnncerti here zihout war than in liuropi». This. tl-ics not incan, of course, that lllt: ptoplt- in Elm linitwl liingtltiiu are fro’. fitilv :i\-.;.i' of thi- ilingri‘ dtuare tu a much grczltvr rxiirt illull Ell-i", l Tillilillilllrsrlllll it does lllt‘f.1l 111.1‘ tl.--\ do lit»! in:‘.t- i\:ir 2111' stihjt-ct of Ll tlrtnv imp ' 1: :1: ' Vtawa exchange .,,\ fi ‘ti 11-» l1 t. -' .1 "rllziu hniut- in the l1,-i t iillffl". ' in non.- that hi- lni-i 1'11 oft ~111M- cu-ry time a quadiiiz. of .- int-r hi- garden-i. Ducal‘: thi- i . the slglllllCilflCtf Of that i . but lll~l('flfl of talking 'll>l!'ili _ fzite- in air raid ilcfeusc itt- strutxhn twirl. . vwvlt. and perhaps has an auii-ziir-rriit -< 411i hon-ed in his zutic_ This sauit- lid-t l1'l\r' txvu-iril himself "to say llPlbi to :1 n ' when in fact he was answer- in" qutw :1» iii an .\ir ltrii-l- instruction offi» Owl‘ as to hwy lll?|l‘_\' Iffuilllf‘ his e-trite might lion-t" in tlw i-vt-nt of <1lflflvll evacuation of Lon- dun. .-\-tro,noinical figures in taxes are being paid in the Glrl (Yiuntrv for defense purposes. They pay more for find as surplus ~tocks are stored awrtv in t-a-t- of need. Tihev enlist in iticreasing nurilvw-w they lt-wrn. lnuv to use gas maslts; tllby‘ rvttd daily lllr‘ ilittriiletl riccoiints of llouse of Comm ms ltl'41\'l'4'1l:ll'_'~ which are devoted so per-"i-tt-tillv to eta-lug 1111- strain and ‘lress of llut thev carry on their pezirr-tinie on" ‘ as usinl. and refuse t0 be stnrripedw‘. . tiiting war as inevitable, or making it an Tlllfilll-(trlllng topic of conver- internwticiivtl r-‘aii- us. ‘flu .1 uni-Tim. Till/me who rr-inr-inbwr how London theatres did lulslllis~~ as ll<llfll ilnrinig the Great \\':ir l\'l“ <i"lf‘l1lll‘l'_" of tht Fnglish psychology" in this matter. British Lobster Market The United kingdom is lfilillllfrlllllly Catiadzfis mwt important export itiarkt-t for czintit-il lob- iti r, and tlt'.\l tu czintirtl slillllllll this product is itlll li-e large-t ilein in point uf value of £111 Lanzirhzin fi-ii product- Jltlll regularly‘ in that n1;ii-l\i-i_ “rites .\lr. .\' \'. Allen, Assistant Can- adian Tirade Coinnxissrnnei" at 11111111111. in 1111-‘ Current is-uc 0t llte tonitiicrtsi:il lnti-lligi-nce Journal. This Iuhlllilll has l)t‘t‘ll iuziiitiziiiietl de- spite the di-crt-a-e lll recent y"<-:ir~ of the quantity of eannul lob-fer availahli- for export. United Kingdom trade returns record an increase in X937 imports of czinnetl lobster from Canada, re- ceipts during the year having reztchetl 16,297 cwis. (of Hz pounds) as coinpart-tl with 15.056 c\\'f5_ in {n31}, Total imports into the. United Kingdom for 103'- and 1937 were 18,041 cwts. ind 20,400 cuts. respectively. _\'e\vfou11lziud's 51131-5 of this midr- ;il_o increased slightlyt from 3,307 CWl-l. for logo tu 3.727 cwts, for 1937, In the first four months of 1033 (‘Iltlilllfl SllPPllfll Luot) cwts. out of total imports of 1,147 cwts. In cnmpetiiioti with cattnt-tl lobster imports. to- tal linitwl Kingdom imports of catined crab in it,_v,7 were 90.718 i‘\\'l.~. (U1 111.337) as compar- ed with 545.547 cwts. ('if>'rl.3351 111 1935- Rf?‘ ct-ipts from japan aggrvgzitcd 39,221 cwts. (51,- 084 cwts. in 11,311), while those of Russian ori- gin zimounted to 31.477 ewts. (28406 c\vts.). Some zidiled competition has resulted from int- ports of canni-tl crayfish from South Africa in recent years, hut dealers do not now appear to regard this rn-oduct as vying seriously with can- ned lobster. A Momenlous Visit A laindon corri-spoiitletit set-s the possibility of a political parallel l)‘.‘l\\'(‘('ll the Royal visit t0 Paris this wet-k and that which preceded thc mnntenliitis i-venls of twellt_\'-f<1ttr years M10- Tlit- pri-st-ut \loitarch is accotupanierl by the Iiortzign Secri-taryg Lord llaifax. Sir Pidward Grey attended Kitig (lt-orge V in a similar cap- ncitv. and said in the chapter he contributed to "'l'lic Life of King (lt-orgc" that the visit was purely cert-iuoiiial and without political signific- nice. llis .\l.'tiest_\"s speeches were studiously non-political. The event was interpreted. never- theless, as a warning to llerlitt that the Fntente continued unbroken. 'l‘here are stronger rea- tons for vit-wittg the present visit in the same light. for Britain's commitments to France for ilt-fensc Dllflmses are clearer todav than then. King George V and Queen Mary wit-re claimed with unhonntletl enthusiasm in French Capital. Tiff‘ reception accordvrl ti"! prgsflflf Sovereign mid his Queen show the French peoole no less eager tn cement the cordial relations of ymrlnorsliiil. The trin is certain to be regarded with profound significance in the Chriucellorics of Europe. There is no reason to mnsider the event as portending war because war followed rm ti“! previous occasion. More than three months af- ter King George V's visit Sir Ftlward CITY sought a conference of representatives of Ger- man“ Ilnlv and France. still trying to avoid cnmnifpgyffrmg, Grrmnnv saidlhe cnnferenct-‘was “not practicable." If the prevailing delicate gimmkm drags along to a similar point (lermnny mnv hive a different view. M“ " The penile] ls impressive. however. m some ' qynhe Glob: and Mall.‘ France then 3f‘- the was an ally of Ruuil, which was committed to protection of the Slavs in the Balkans. Today the triangle involves Czechoslovakia and thc Soviet Republic. _Then, a5 now, Ggfmany ‘v35 trying to hold Britain off while proceeding with her plans. 1y. Sir Edward Grey's peace efforts were ap- plauded in Berlin as adroitly as Chamberlain's are now. Hitler has given assurance that Ger- man_ aims do not extend to French Continental territory: In I914 the German Chancellor was prepared to undertake that there would be no territorial acquisitions at the expense of France in Europe, but this did not apply to French colonies. \\'ith even less ceremony than attend- ed the acquisition of Austria, Luxemburg was occupied and Belgium was invaded without the excuses now being used against Czechoslovakia. The reports circulated that the Czechs ltave mob- ilized and that Russia has declared a state of emergency on the Mauchoukuan border are typical of those in the ferment of 1014. There is lacking as yet a Serajcvo incident, but this did not come until two months after King George \' was in Paris. Klanifestlv there is no need for a parallel, ex- tensive or slight. as an omen to war. The pres- t-nt King's good-will jottrnev inav forecast con- tinued twice. The co-operation between Pr?- tain and France is known to the ivorltl. It has been stated officiallv that llriiish arnt- will hi» "t the command of the Renitblic 'l“l~i- visit is a rt-tninrler of this without niakiu" a iitflllfll addition to th" undertaking. \ P-riti-h .<I\\‘f‘l'(*1"l‘l can still convev tnessages of good-\vill to vit-itrhboring countries. It is the first iournev of the kind bv George \'l and his Queen since the Coronation. Thev ‘fave not yet been ahle to tnake the contem- plated visit to India. It would be admirable if thev could carry the friendly British spirit to all the Capitals of the Continent. :0,- ,l».f,-.,.;.._ .r Editorial Notes 1 Co-operation is making strides. U F F The Royal Visit to Paris has been an unquali- fied success. n n- u e Our military guests are gone-they made a brave show while under training. o 1: Alexander Mackenzie reached the Pacific this date t793—first white man to cross the Rockies. I U a n- President Roosevelt intends making a good- will visit to Canada next month in connection with the dedication of the Sarnia (Ont) Port lluron (Mich) international bridge. a a: e e “The manner of the police officer was ex- emplary and charming in every way," said Owen Nares. actor in Yeovil Police Court the Othfl‘ Nevertheless, he paid a $5 fine for speed- 8 I day. ing. I 1t 8 t This is what the Globe and .\lail said editorial- lv:—“l‘rince Edward Island Boy Scouts now liave a camping ground of their own, the gift of Lieutenant-Coveruor George l). Delllois, which at an impressive ceretnony recently was dedi- cated "to the service of (Zmatlian boyhood." The spot is tiainetl Catnp ltucltzut, in honor 0f the (i0\‘(‘fll0l"~(iPllCTfll, Chief Scout for Canada, from whom a cordial message of congratula- tion was read at the dedicatory ceremony. This is a delightful and practical plan for encourag- ing the Scout movement in thc Island Province. The organization there is itiakiitg good progress, hut, as elsewhere in Canada, there is complaint of a scarcity of qualified leaders for the boys. There is here an opportunity for young men to do something of great vvaluc by giving direction. to the activities of Ween-age youth in this country." n w =0- 1v Hughes may have given the New York \Vorld’5 Fair its greatest publicity, but there is one who claims that his suggestion of the idea of such a fair is worth two million dollars. Joseph Shadgeti of Jackson Heights, who asserts he originated the idea of thc New York \Vorltl's Fair and who is now suing thc New York \Vorltl's Fair, 1939. lnc., and (leorgc l\lc.’\nen_v. former president of the corporation, for $1,000.- 000 each for alleged damages, won thc first round in his legal battle in a decision handed down by justice Henry G. Wenzel Jr. in the Special Term of the Queens Supreme Court. Counsel for the defendants had asked for an or- der directing Mr. Shatlgen to show in a preli- minary trial whether hc had signed a release of his claims, whether he had been subjected to fraud and duress and whether employment given him by the Fair corporation was compensation for his alleged ilamages. Justice \\'cnzcl denied the application on the grounds that the issues would be decided in a general trial and that there was no need for putting the plaintiff to thc expense of a preliminary trial. The papers in the case disclose that Mr. Shadgen was em- ployed by the Fair corporation from March t. i936, to May 3t, 1.937", at‘ $635 H M00111- Millions of grasshoppers covering more than 16 square miles of farm lands northwest of Pendleton, B.C., have caused damage estimated at $40,000 and have left more than a dozen farmers without any crops or pasture for their cattle. More than 10,000 acres of land are in the affected area. Between t5 and 20 farmers have lost everything except some corn which may yet fall prey to the pests. The present pla- gue is the worst in more than 75 years, accord- ing to john McAllister, 81, who has lived in the district all his life. Scores of head of cattle have been moved from the area to rented pas- ture lands because they were starving from lack of food. At least a half dozen of farmers, when they saw the ravages of the grasshoppers in their grain fields, turned their cattle and horses into the fields and let them eat what remained rather than leave it to the pests. These farmers now are faced with the problem of buying feed until the pastures cmne in next spring. Gardens as well as other crops have suffered and only in a fefw homer were there are any flowers, all hav- in| been men of! to 01s mm Professing peaceful intentions, ht-r. army and navy had been strengthened enormous- ‘ TEE CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN ‘iiorias lulu: 1m l Hon. Harold Kirby‘: belie! flint; there are people tn Ontario men. tal hospitals who would not be there were law proctectlon better,_ is starting. Nevertheless, it la a 1 thought that has been in the back of people's heads. Novelist: have played up such situations, but 1t may be mat. not all are merely flctlon.-Toronto Globe and Mall. There i: eyerythlng to b; um for the formation of an hfema- tional code restricting the use of weapons from the all". Though in war we cannot guarantee that. 8 desperate enemy will not break the law, none the less a Law em- , condemnation of the world; and. even an aggressive government ‘ W111 hesitate to ignore a rule the breach of which will bring the certainty of reprlsal upon its own nationals. Therefore, though war has not been abolished. lt ls not idle to do what can be clone to minimize wars horors.-—Chrlst- inn Science Monitor. We recently siruck up an ac- quaintance with the property clerk who cares for all the goods and chattels picked up by the Police Department-stuff seized tn raids, lost and found articles. the property of pesple who have died without heirs, and things left tn taxlcrths, a hodgepodge that, {i115 the Cleiks office and three large u-aretiouses. Articles unclaimed after six months are sold at auction, the proceeds going to the ' Police Pension Fund. At the last auction. the cops tock in over $7000 and disposed of odd lots of blvycles. addinB machines, row boats. printing presses (confiscat- ed ln obscene literature raids), brief cases, a tombstone, and 232 automobiles. tSome 4000 cars year- ly are abandoned on the streets’ of New York.) The New Yorker. For well on to seventeen years now Canada has had a bacheloras Prime Minister. and the women-or those women who flnd time for tea. between speeches at the Conserva- tive convention-have decided that this ls not a good deal. “Why, marriage ls an experlence—every- one knows that," one of them pm. nounced, "and it's an experience that broadens any one. I'd prefer a married leader any day. This ls. of course. a dilemma that slmply can't be settled by any but the women. The mixture of marriage and politics is an essentially hu- man one. and men would thus be out of lt. philosophers and even psychologists. Mr. Bennett and Mr. Klniz are. by the textbooks. fairly eligible bachelors. - Hamilton Spectator. Mr. Wllllam B. Stout, Detroit en- glneer who addressed the Windsor Rotary Club yesterday, envisions the rapid development of com- mercial airplanes capable of car- rying 100 passengers. This ls the type of machine, Mr. Stout ex- plains, that itvlll be able to stay aloft flnunciallvas well as mechan- ically. Mr. Stout gives credit to Mr. Henry Ford for the 100-pas- senger ldea. "Mr. F‘ord‘s lntultlon." Mr. Stout explains, "is much more to be depended upon than anyone else‘s judgment." Plans have been prepared for these giant machines. Cost ls estimated at 83.000000 each. Wlthln three years, Mr. Stout be- lieves the big ships will have taken shape. A plane to carry 100 Dflsfienlzers can be operated at n greater profit than a trans- oceantc steam-ship, Mr. Stout sug- gests. A modern ocean liner makes a round trip ln about 10 days; a 100 passenger plane 1s capable of flve trips in the same time. — Windsor Star. Alffifldy- ln so short n time, all has changed. The smart res- taurants can sell their pompimo again. with an occasional bottle of wine. Thoughtful old gentle- men who came out of the 1929 crash with a few ‘cats and dogs‘ are feeling the stlrrlngs of the ancient hope that perhaps after all, everything ls not lost. The yachts are belng repainted. The wise boys along Broadway stop each other and whisper that. something ls 1n the lr. which ls probably true. Advertising men, salesmen and men of vlslon have come out of their lethargy and are once more on the prowl. The window-shoppers have crawl- ed out from their hldlngplaces. Even the man who ls broke, who owns no stocks and bonds and never particularly expected to, ls caught. up. whether he wllls 1t or not. in the curious wave of opti- mism. An office boy puts lt. suc- cinctly as any one could. “Maybe everthlngls going to be all right after allP-New York Herald Tribune. The "Durande Wedding" has come down in hlstory as one of the most magnificent social events of the old South. Charles Durandem wealthy Louisiana plantation own- er, determlned to give hls two daughters the most epectacular weddlniz ln the history of the state. From China he ordered a ship- load of spiders. which were releas- ed ln the mlle-lonlz avenue of great plne trees leading up to the whlte-columned house; and as the day for the double wedding drew near, the trees were webbed with i thousands of yards of filmy lace. Couriers brought from California hundreds of pounds of silver and gold dust: and Negro slaves with hand-operated bellows sprayed the glittering metal over the webs. More than 2000 guests marched be- neath this glittering canopy to an altar erected 1n front of the mansion. —New York Tlmee. The hippopotamus, which look: llke lta sesqulpedallnn name. la actually no called because : Greek traveler thought ft resembled a. ,“horse of the river." Like horses. lmost hippos are klnd and gentle, though a. few are extremely cruel at timer. Ordinarily doclle l: Route, 15-year-old. 3.000-lb. female hfopo ln Manhattan's Central Park Zoo. who lust week gave birth for the first time. Despite nookeeperii’ nrecnutlona. Route butted her new lv-born unmerclfully, refused ll food. The bnby hippo, a fl-lb. mule. wna moved to e separate cage. fed Rout‘: milk and cream through a hone. But sud-eyed end dejected by hi: solitude. he new weaker. in flve devil‘ time dlod of lnternnl injuries. Time. A mnchlne l: o heat more! Id- ucotnr. If a : dmkiy i tantamount PUBLIC FORUM eorrolverdzntp- NON-ENFORCEMENT Slit-Having returned to the Province after an absence of al- most two years, I have been start- led by the apparent increase of drunkenness ln the Clty of Char- lottetown. On Saturday night last I saw flve drunks on one block. To my surprise only l3 drilnka out of the large number on the streets bailed m preclse “greemems l‘ appeared on Monday morning in a. ‘Elergrmh um’ “vemmel” the police court. Rumor, ordinar- “m ° a m" ‘he "Wm lly unreliable, has it that the number of bootleggers 1n the clty has increased enormously. The evidence of ones eyes ls that rum- our ln this case ls, sadly enough, correct. To see a considerable l umber of drunks on the streets ln .13. towns 1s not unusual. nor surpris- lnc, since the -‘c:ntrol" system in our sister province permits what is to an open bar 1n most centres of population. It is no exaggeration to say that drunk- enness in Charlottetown where the Prohibition Act is supposedly in force has become. in the last three years, almost as noticeable as lt is in the towns across the Strait. Present conditions cry out for reform. One wonders lf the govern- ment is in sympathy with law en- forcement. I am Sir. cttn. EX-GOVEILVMENT CONTROL TEBHITs weeps Sin-I think 1t ls very apparent to all thoughtful men. and espec- ially the citizens who are inter- ested ln Agriculture 1n the Pro- vlnce. that there is a decided ln- crease in noxious trends on our farms. The fields are becoming white with daisies and it seems to me that there ls not as much care taken as there should be. The daisies are not so injurious as oth- er weeds for the reason that, if’ cut at the proper time, that is, be- fore the seed is ripe. the land ls saved from extra pollution of ewed seed. In addition to that, the dais- ies that are cut and stored in the hay mow do not contain seed which would grow the following year after havinn been fed to the stock. This ls one of the means whereby seeds are distributed over the land and. in mane cases felds become lnfested which. up to the present time, have been free from weeds. The most injurious of all weeds perhaps is the Wlltl Mustard and Radish. This Department contem- plated puttinz on some experimen- tal work this year. but owing to extra work- ln the Department 1n- volved in the distribution of seed grain. it was impossible to attend to this work at the time when ll: should have received most careful attention. namely. when the plant: are tender. or when the blossoms first appears on t_he Wild Mustard. We are maklnr! arrangements to take this exnerlment un next sea- son. and we are instructing our fleldmen. as they travel through the Province, to note carefully the sections ln which appear large areas of mustard, so that we can try the experiment in a section where it will benefit the largest number of farmers. In the meantime. I would strong- ly urge the farmers to do all thev can by way of cultivation to handlc this menace. and would sucgest that they sow a crop of buckwheat on the land as early as possible, so that it may be ploughed down before the mustard seed matures. You wlt have ample time to sow a second crop of buckwheat which again may be turned down. No doubt there will be a thought ln your mind that the loss will be too great in sowing two crops of buckwheat. but. the increase in the fertility‘ of the soll brought about by plowlnz down of buckwheat, thereby adding nitrogen and hum- us to the sol] wlll offset any loss which may be sustained by the seed sown and cost of labour, you will find this method will not com- nletely eradicate the weeds, but they are largely brought under control. I am Slr, etc. W. H. DENNIS. Department of Agriculture. fi>. odZdQm/ziu. rm: CHANGELESS Nothing 1111s Ohflflked; 1t u still e same; The small my hearth wmi ltd golden flame, The wide-armed chairs and me candle-glow Down .n the hall where the sham ows grow. Nothing has changed; we are wait- in; still, The home and my heart. and the orchard hill. And the slm brown path that wok ycu down The edge or the field at the edge of tOWD. Come with the dawning, or come q te late, There's welcome pinned on the cot.- tage gate And a. window lighted the whole night. through To let you know. and to speak to ou, To tell you more than my llps can soy Oit the long-alone since you went. away. Oome when you will. 1n night or noon, You'll find u; here on the little lll— Woltlng and needing and loving you ltllll find what la wrong. That in reel education. The machine, further- more, has made the present: gen- eration of average men more careful and conscientious than would have been thought possible ln theMlddla Agni. Just think of the mllllona of engines. motor: end oi lone: which ere set. 30in: every ey with human llvea do- pendfng on them. Think of the mlllons of workmen who, u a mutter of . lcok over these muchln dolly and m thnt their innumerable pom are ln order. And we. the public. trust. our liven to them without further thought. trusting thet amon: all those workmen no one will have made em Ilnnnrtwnt milxthl-ren. ‘Phat is vuhlm whlnlrfllln me with won- ' r-“Gllbifl Illlrrl! in Th 0 Ult- ° .. . ~- illibat £11111’ of i Quurs fi-Icngllgeoellb. DON'T WORRY ABOUT YOUR HEALTH Most of us believe that the greatest asset or gift ln life ls to have good health. To have brains. ambition, money, all give llfe more fullness but. cannot make up for poor health and a weak body. If then, good health ls the great- est. human asset. .no one can be blamed for trying to attain and maintain good health. Rekular vlstta to the physician, the dent.- lst, the ocullst and optometrist should be in the llfe plan of every- body. On the other hand there are some who appreciate good health but are so concerned about lt that they worry constantly lest they lose lt. These are the individuals who think and worry so much about health that they tire them- selves physically and mentally; they are called neurasthenlcs. Socrates says that there is noth- ing ln the world that so hinders us ln making a proper demand on llfe as an exaggerated worry over our bodies. The point of course ls that there should be thought. not anxiety, about our bodies because an ach- ing tooth or stomach. an infected tonsil, the slugglshness of the 11v- er that manufactures insufficient blle and falls to remove polsons from the blood. the slowness of the gall bladder tn emptying bile lnto the small intestine. can so alter the thouzhts of the mind and the actions of the body that we are not our real or true selves and our own llfe and the llfe of those around us become changed. Belniz anxious or worried. which ls really a condition of chronic fear, not only falls to help but can, as Prof. Cannon of Harvard has shown, cause real organic all- ments in the body. This does not mean that you should not think of the body and its needs but that you should thlnk of these needs in a constructive way—-common sense 1n diet. common sense 1n sleep, and common sense in exercise. Common sense about food or sleep ls reflected in your weight. If you can keep your weight to within flve pounds of the ideal for the shape of your body (length and wldth of trunk not total height). you are fulfilling the body's needs and helping to lessen or prevent infection or other ailments due to underweight. and overweight. In reizard to the third need of the body--exerclse—we have but to remember Gladstones state- ment. "All time and money spent ln tralnine the bodv pays a larger rate of interest than any other investment. " U. S. Farm Scheme (Wlnnlpeg Free Press) U. S. farmers who have fulfilled certain quallflcatlons are now en- titled to substantial loans on the value of the grain they are now harvesting. The loans are given on condition that. the grain ls not. to be marketed. and every man who gets a 10cm must. sign an agreement to restrict acreage next year. The scheme Ls therefore double-barreled. The wheat on which loans are made ls thus withheld from the market for an lndeflnlte period. and the second part of the contract is intended to result ln no surplus of wheat next year. It ls part of the “ever- normal-"granary" plan of Secre- tary Wallace which, ln the lonir run, ls to bring production down to what the officials estimate con- sumption will be. It ls, in other words, part of a great scheme nl’ agricultural planning designed to bring better returns to fan-tiers. What ls disastrous about all these plans ls that, they are designed to restrict. rather than to increase. productlon. The U.S. farmers are to be made prosperous by growing less. and the whole nation ls to become rich by eating less and producing less. Thus the whole course of economic progress which has been directed to increasing production and wealth. ls to be turned lnslde out, and thrown into reverse. It will. of course. fall of effect. ft ls ln a word. crazv. From the Canadian point of vlew, one may venture the oplnlon that, insofar as the scheme means the ‘irotlrement of the US. farmer from export markets. lt becomes a distinct betterment. for us. Can- ada lit a comnetltor of the United States ln the exoort wheat. fleld. If the United States ‘itoliintqrllv Withdraws. there remains n turtle market for us and for the Amen- Hne. and fer Russia and Austra- llo. True. the American so-called Better something. ed designers, suits that reputation. as =za ‘s2 Other Special Suits Plllflill TB ELEM! $21. $22M- its. When we advertise better suits we mean suits made by makers whose name on the label means Whose suits are smartly modelled by high pric. points where hand work is essential and made from cloths imported from British firms with a Hyde Park and Fashion Craft Suits Hyde Park and Fashion Craft Suits Hyde Park and Fashion Craft Suits Dress up in the best you'll get longer wear, a better fit and more real satisfaction. endersnnslluilmii MEN'S WEAR. 311-122, 19_as ’ SUITS have hand-work at all ‘20 ‘22 ‘25 $14.50, $15.95, $17.95 effect on world prices. Holding off the market. as we :11 know, does not strengthen prices. Once the sun and the rain have done its existence in the potential rld supply affects the world pr ce. But. the acreage-restriction scheme goes into effect next year. lt. ls obvlousw going to mean : broader market for Canadian wheat. This 1s known ln the United States for. with the announce- ment. of the wheat loans, comes also a demand from the United States that the world exporting countries should get together ln a new world wheat agreement for limitation of exports. with its corollary of limitation of acreage. At this point, Canada again be- comes involved, and lt becomes pertinent to ask what our western farmers are izolng to grow, lf they don't grow wheat. We have a home market blg enough to absorb only a very small percentage of whet we now produce. Export markets are essential to us. If we agree to llmlt our acreage. we are signing our own death warrant. Besides which, llmltatlon of acreage does not mean reduction ln total world yields. Every farm- er all over the world knows that. He knows that. lf the weather la rlght and his work well done. he can grow on a large acreage ff conditions are bad or farming poor. This ls elementary to every man who makes hls llvlng on the noll. and makes a mockerv out. of the repeated assertions that our agricultural woes can be brought to an end by a reduction nf acre- age by lntemntlonal agreement. It will do nothing of the klnd. It will instead increase int/ema- tlonnl difficulties and. so for as Canada's special position in the world ls concerned. it would be u special dlnster to us. RECORD EXPORT KINGSTON. Jamalcln -(CP) — A record ln banana exports tor stems were nlitced on board vessels ln a week. About tl75.000 was anon! ln Jnmalca for services necesmw to take the frult from the trees to the shins. not including the amount paid to growers. Use Mlnnrd‘; for bites. The 0f theuluul: at W"!!! tobacco. 10o Per Ieufuhroil ly f. lllckey a Nicholson their duty in producing the wheat, 1 "A" this Island was set un when 736.000 - Judgment roerelungtortofbothtoltoaldtimo. BLACK TWIIT C I I W I N O F0 Vitalitt] alwaqf ule BRAHM IN n - -\Il ("a l \7¢l' l. ' 'k—d dabl . 1 (Fain: “Truth-g. lhltifuy lfm. 60b lull “drum .. _ “kfimvtt; Sassy Stomach! RELIEVED If you hlve an! l-WIW yplur etgmadi inch : n ‘c: on. spcpsm 90 stomach. helribum, rulrlt dlltrel: 010-. then don't dr- lny tflnl u bottle of Dr. l- B. run’: Stomacl- Mlrtlt! Immediately. Ivan’: Stomnch Mixture I I preocrl tlon of Dr. L Evnnl. no English Philh- Iun of which we have the wk rlghte .10 lnd um #1111111 . hove received numerous t1- tlmonlul: from satisfied 111"‘ chueers. Try n bottle todny. Pr!” 85 acute. ~. I If it! it srucuts Inst nrrlved lerre 1M0‘ _ ment of marlin; can: I" Beech Bus. Blllllllg cop: In all c0101! ranging‘ from — — 20¢ W l“ Bone Bun m an T" or Itoee - — — — — — 51" Molt: Frelh Mlde (mol- :ted-----39cl’erl.b- Box 312. THE 2 MACS DRUGSTORE 149 art-n Genrrfi 51"" Mill Order: Receive P10!!!‘ Attention. Canny blender: vos w‘ It he $521.. l. CKIY’I I'll .. Av--.._n-.unu\-...