_. .-._.,._-......,.1- .;..~_h=. 1,3,... 03-0": . g ' n ls in times such as these, says Saturday I b: PAGE FOUR. TIIE Blllllllllflilflllll“ eiiiiiiiiiiiii Inning Dally (Iciildw III) Pie-Idea: new. Col. w. cnuur l. IeLuIn Vlnl a dent J- B. Bill!" P‘. il- l- ldlver and lialnglng Dlraetur J. I. Burnett. I. l. l. lenrettnry Llent. Col. l). A. llneklnann- D. l. 0. Anon-Into Edit-in Funk Walker and II. I. Onrlll HUBUCI-IPTION KATIE .00 r ear (in advance) delivered l0 0| u: pcrmyeayr (In ailvunoie) miallecr tn P. I. [and $5.00 par your n» advance, mulled to Ouada nllll U. I. llemhun Audit Bureau n! Ulreulntionn “The Strongaat Memory is Weaker than the akest Ink.” MONDAY, MARCH Z1, 1988 o Modern Warfare ueadly and horrible as iiiodcrii warfare is, zhere is some consolation, says Scientific Ameri- :an, to he derived from facts learned from cer- tain military failures in Ethiopia, China. and Spain. lu these three brutal reversions‘ to sav- ztgery. science. as expnssscd in the itcwcr mach- ines of war, has not Ztl\\'{l._\'S shown up so effic- iently as a maker of military advantage. In Ethiopia, optimistic [irrdictioiis of attacking commanders put the iiivziiling tirmy iii Ethiopia} capital in little more than marching time. Months later. despite vast} stiperitn- equipment, airplanes, tanks. guns. and even oar gas. the invaders were still llgiltlilg bloody infantry battles far from. their gsal. ' It is in F-pain. huwevei‘, that the calculations/of the strategists have stitleretl their most serious tipset. 130th sides in this fraternal strife have been \\'cll ~'tl|1llll(‘tl with liltlhs mid the most motl- :rn fighting and btmiliiiig planes. Yet neither of these devices has proved as successful as was ex- pected. The great speed of the planes has mili- tated against their ('ll4lL'lt'llC_\', and mud has proved he nemesis of the tanks, Plans bombing bridges, rail-heads, tllltl other important military object- ives harc failed generally t0 accomplish their destructive jun-pose; their very speed has made their marksmanship poor and their bombshavc fallen far froiirtheir targets. Their real effective- ness has been as frightful “strafers” of civilian populations and as a tllcans of lowering the-iiior- ale of troops. In China. poorly equipped and poorly trained Chinese held off the Japanese at Shanghai for k m "1 h u _ , d d_ during the period were three, and in no case was ;fa“.:rf‘;r]e tinccjtidif; iltislijiigegugoogrgaia] there an investigation. Mr, Brooks, M. P., elicited Superior this information in the House of Commons the equipment and training of the Japanese finally “h” d“? vessels firing at poiiit-blaiik range. pushed back the Chinese, but very slowly indeed, andat terrific cost to the invaders in men, muni- tioiis and planes Yet if .all this is reassuring as to the relative wall" K- 511181’! 0f Nmlhweslefn Ufllvemlly iiiefficacy of the machines of u'ar_ there remains lmmmams the“ words f0!’ first P1391’- 3-"11 amfmg l0 be considered the human factor, the woeful savagery of the military mind. This has shown it- self in all three of these bloody affrays iri a total disregard for the humanities. Prisoners of war have been murdered in cold blood: thousands of civilians have been destroyed, principally by air- plane bombs, and all manner of tin-military cruel- ties have been perpetrated in the iiame of nation- al honour and furtherance of megalomaniac ideologies. Federal Contributions file following figures relative t0 federal as- listance to fishermen in Prince Edward Island during i937 are from information tabled last week in Parliament: Contribution to provincial funds from which aid was given in establishing or better establish- ing fishermen and groups of fishermen in the in- dustry, $§2,4o6,82. Fishing bounty payments, $13,494.45. It was also stated that the Dominion Depart- ment of Agriculture for the fiscal year up to Feb. 28, had paid $8,182.95 iri subsidies and grants to individual firms in the Province to- wards the construction and equipment of public iiold storage warehouses, The amount paid in 1936-37 was $611.88. U. K. Poultry Losses Afirnough $1 50,000,000 worth of eggs and thickens are yearly produced in Britain, import- ntions from the Continent, even with eggs from China, continue, all because birds and eggs to the value of $20,000,000 are lost every year. The special technical committee found the foregoing t0 "be the result of its recent survey and dis- patched the statistics with particulars to the Miii- istry of Agriculture with the suggestion that the government take over the control of the poultry industry in the United Kingdom. The report tabulates each county and every one reports var- ious diseases as the principal cause of the loss of birds and their poor feeding the loss of the eggs. The suggestion of government control would be txercises through a State commission with the following functions: Arrange compulsory regis- tration of all who distribute poultry stock, hatch- mg eggs and (lay-old chicks iii considerable quan- tities. Suspend registration if there is evi- dence of disease, or that the parent stock is unfit, vi‘ the premises unhygienic. Apply conditions to hatcheries which will ensure that only eggs are being used from blood-tested stock of reasonably good quality. Formulate a scheme for the estab- lishment of stations for the production of foun- dation breeding. i‘ ‘I i I - The Price Of Freedom ht, that the absurdity of the popular-vote- r; ing-to-war idea becomes apparent, What i‘ be of judgment in such an infinitely question, as the present European situ- ean be possessed by voters who know no f ftp ‘realities than they can gather from a V of contradictory despatches in the _ f If ls not by holding plebiscites that m» mitt-ms havrrtiiilntaiined thfémselvesi h; igulim the aflrenoiis Ofltyranncn “ ‘I iflfflixjflrly courageuua ' rig than: to doth: lieu that could "first; if. went.’ iii M...“ m,..1»e' tiful words he chooses murmur, memorial, lullaf- disagreeable.” she has not been gossiping about the case is some times accepted and she is allowed to remain. Evi- conversed with a female witness at a will case be- . from personal practical experience, having been pelted iutoi activity by the pressure of "constant Wfvlld" And they are powerless unless their efiom are combined. But they have preserved when absolutely necessary, to fight for it. Is it not; possible that the apparent decline of liberty. in the‘ last ten years has been due to tlirfact that the free nationnexhausted and‘ disillusioned by the‘ Great War, have been seeking to convince themselves that liberty could _be maintained with- out fighting, by Leagues and regional pacts and covenants and economic sanctions and the “out- lawing” of war? It may not be absolutely nec- essary for the free nations to fight a war in order to bring the decline of liberty to an end; but it is absolutely necessary for them to stop being afraid to fight one. .1 Editorial Nolesi J‘ Foch died this date i929. I 3 i U We look to verdant Spring to make its appear- ance over night. i 1i i I Senator Siticlair when he gqcs to Qttaiva will be able to report to Mr. Dunning that his (the Senator's) brother-in-laiv has been ap- proached to allow himself tobe nominated in his (the Senator's) brother's place as colleague to him (Mr. Dunning)_ We are sure Mr. Dunning will be delighted at the prospect of keeping Queen's in the safe keeping of the family. I i l I‘ Mr. E. A. Henderson, Boston, writes: An observing visitor to six different Cities iii the States says Prince Edward Island is well adver- tised. In grocery stores, P, 15.1. potatoes, in department stores, P. E. I. Silver Black FOX furs, on the news stands souvenir postal cards of Freeland Lodge. a tourist place at Freeland, P. E. I., at the top of the menu in hotels and restaurants, Prince Edward Island Mclpcquc Oysters 1-2 doz. 35 cents. Well done, P. E. I. keep it up! m in u v During the past twenty-eight months, the per- iod of the present Liberal administration at Ot- tawt, there were no fewer than 312 dismissals of postmastcrs in the different provinces. 179 of these dismissals were made at the instance of a member of Parliament, the remaining I33 after investigation. The dismissals in this Province v u’ n: v Chalk up one vote each for “thing" and “ain’t" as the most abused English words. Professor other overworked words he lists: In business- “proposition.” Among womcn-“awfully, ter- ribly,” and similar words. Among writers- “so." Professor Smart picks "no” as the most helpful word, “stop" as the most dramatic and “ubiquitous" as the ugliest. For the most beau- by, roar, roam and dour. He characterizes thb last as a “caressing word which defines somethin ‘ti! When a man on a jury is seen to converse with a witness, it is presumed that the conversation is about the case and the juror is disqualified. When a woman juror is concerned her word that deuce showed that the four women jurors who fore the Leeds Assizes the other day, had merely discussed hats and garments, nevertheless, they were disqualified, and the trial was adjourned, while four others were sworn in to take their places. In disqualifying the four the judge said: "I am not saying that you have clone any- thing wrong, but it is desirable that you should not act as jurors in this case. You have heard something about it from one side before you come into the box to judge it. I will, therefore, ask you to withdraw." n- 1- n- : ' Among human beings the male is the more vulnerable of the species, Analysis of mortality figures released by the Metropolitan Life Insur- ance Company shows that each of the more im- ortant causes of death, with few exceptions, has a higher rate among males than among females. Science Service reports. Men .are engaged in more hazardous occupations and take part in more dangerous sports, on the whole than women. This may account for some of the sex difference that shows in the mortality figures. tart of it, however, is due to an inherent vulnerability, a: shown by the fact that even in very early child- hood, when boys and girls are living essentially the same sort of life, the male shows a higher death rate than the female. Four times as many white men as women are the victims of homicide, and men are much more apt to take their own lives than women are. Syphillis, heart and kidney ailments, pneumonia, tuberculosis, appendicitis andinfluenza each kills more men than women. Cancer, on the other hand. kills slightly more women than men. Of the childhood diseases, only whooping cough shows a sex difference in the mortality figures, This disease kills more young girls than boys. ‘Illl The Archbishop of Canterbury revealed the other day in London that he knew about slums forced when a clergyman in Leeds to live in a two-room one. He was excoriating "shame- ful housing condltions” in an address at the opening of a new block of flats in Clapham Road, I ‘ Y! Wllhfi, ffiififi‘? i,‘i'.'.’l.’i.l’df"l§a fiffililll: culty in standing upright; I was able to have mi’ meals elsewhere, ln the Clergy House, which was a disused public house without‘ a license. "I always rejoice to think that in those three yearn I knew what ll was like to llve In conditions sim- ilar to those of many of my neighbors ln Lam- ‘e wasa corlennri ‘otn what 1t. would have mien lllie lf-Ii lnilhad‘ child- rcn bout s. "I l, . f problem, tliwizh. lent‘: not how ioheiflof , m0 small and to he overcrowded. but how to ‘not brgiinlveekfor curate-r; Their _ him, because "dim-have 10,0: com-never overgrowdgid." . l’ ‘ liberty up to now because they have been willing, Thenevnllnrnntlp rend!- pess o1 Russian primal! awakening of pctrlotlnn-man o: "he durum Marmot: own retina- tlon. Nor can 1t. he attributed to hope of meivy-srecurd; of the put prove that hope valn. , only meld ‘lcm for such a similarity l8 l0 be found 1n e ghuzslgigviuzofliod of e third rees. uwd b A] my“. mt’ Ouu HEALTH INNELLIGlNQI first mplilgi ‘luv-WIT no e Ice the --—- worlila. n dim lgglftal c.- well 0'" of 1M wells!» ‘services u; warm-Mai. w xvelwlslvel, "film: gym 1m‘ ulgurgw 13$- wvea . rim, u P111116: per c mi torture." Whenuthdvemtfif ‘mmmlifll- Wm w their th readily believed. n 1t llev the hablt- of confessing needs no GKplBflflllO!Z—l'8fl-f for wives. children and friends. added to the fear oif physical torture, will break down the stoutest resistance. -Toronto Telegram. ' Sometimes the impossible ls ao- pllshed. Arthur Little. Boston chemist, once made a silk purse from a sow’s ear by dissolving out the gelatin. which he squirted through a splnnemt and solidified lnito a filament. The fllamenls were twisted into threads and these were knit Into a. purse. Put out the nets at the right time 2nd right place and they'll come in heavily weighted with fish, as sctners proved once mcre 1n the Quat ino Sound area of Vancouver Island on one recent fishing day when they landed 950 tons of herring between slx o'c‘ock 1n the evening and I2 midnight. - That seems lf-ke a lot of fish. and 1t 1s. even when 1t represents the catch of a number of fishermen. Perhaps the quantity looks blgger still when expressed ln pounds — 1.900.000: but. of course the her- ring runs are blg 1n British Co- mibtla waivers tn the normal sea- son and a sebier my capture a good many tons of fish 1n a. single "set" or his neL-Canudtaii Hah- erles Bullotln. , We've henrrl n alory about. a dear. fuzzy old lath! who recently travelled by air for the first llme. making an evening trip between 17188011181011 and Newark. She was a little punled by the green light visible from her window and finally made inquiries 0f the stewardess. “It's a navigation tight." the girl told heir. "If you look out the other side. you'll see a red one. 1:00." The old lady seemed to be fascinated and all during the rest of the trip kept looking out one window and then the other. After they had landed she sold. wh1‘e the stewardess was helping her with her things, "The young man who drove the plane la really wonderful, my dear, He kept right betrween tihcse lights all the way from WB5Illh§¢0h."—'rh€ New Yorker. Translating from om language 1.0 another 1s the finest of all 1n- itpllcuclyuat exercises; bridge problem to the crowword are footltng and vulgmz-Mr. Carl Ommotly. Things are looklng § up 1n the world o! invention. Lynde Hokerk, of Utlca. N.Y. has taken out a patent. on a cake of soap than can't get aiwey. It 1s mode 1n the shape of a ball with a hols through which s. alrmg 1s run. You hang the soap around your neck whllg 1n the tub. We knew the Democrats would finally do something for tihe country-New York Sun. Back-of-the-mlnd plan George“ VI has. 1s to vlslf. each o! the Domlnlons and open local Parlia- ment 1n State 1n the Westmlrilster way. This would mean vlstting one Dominion each year over a num- ber of years. State conch a Windsor greys might also do the , . George VTs idea is to show himself 1n every Domin- lon or whloh, under the West- minster Statute, he 1s monamh separately. --Oava1ca.de (London). Moat people muslin that auto- mobile origins today are much rfut than they used 1.0 be. ml; 1s perhaps not no well known 1s the ollne required by modem en lne 1s derived from roughly onc- 1rd as much crude oll as that ed up an equally powerful engine. say twenmy-flve years ago. 1111s ro- maiilmble 1m emmt has been due to two matn factors, first, greatly increased recovery of gu- ollnc per barrel of crude 011; second. greatly improved qiinliw of the manufactured gasoline. - Nattonat Research Council. Two mlnula lllnnds ln the Pael- ftc ocean. and on the route from America to Australia, have Jumped lino the limelight. But for the ne- vekiipmont. of trams-ocean flym. they would never have been heard of; would only have retained B. re- mote lnlieret 1n recollections of seamen who found mnny more n1 them. Canton and Endeiby. 1n short, have been fatten out of obscurity to rank 1n a sort n1’ minor lnbernatloml controversy. 1n the esfabtlslilng o! air routes any of these potential 1n- termedlalc landlng fields and re- luelllngmatntloris are valuable. - Haml‘ spectator. The mayor of Ln Bodielle vvnl more than a little surprised to re- ceive opdletter recently from a 16- . l1‘- or a pe for . W101. true Gallic galumtrv he sent by return of post lPWGOtIAQgDOS, one a a la poulette. the la Buumllcnonnm-Lmidoui ‘rlmes. Foreeall Clint a pliellne would be co “ ‘ ’ between Turner Val- ley and Vancouv and rm ‘W11- llam 1n provide oulldn for Al- bem mode oll 1f riliivovs fell to roduee 1 in was made o! hluionwn qpmeaat oil r...--.':".."""~. cit-stirs ‘pliant-ta Add h anooag, W011“ muons:- ~ - ' The palillu la n! um sire:- iioiiis in, iiiriniii u. t belt . p011 holders. Unfortunately, a numeur .0! pouoy holders do not rake m‘ VBHIIBG of this privilege as they the lnifoa-inatlon will be - led on to the company and peg. 118w meet thelr policy. Now nonlung can affect their pollcy l! Whey W111 the truth (or believed they were letting the truth) artlie time they were applying for the 1n- sumiice. By not advantage 01' W8 nrlvllsxe o1 a tree examina- °fl "W? may be inlsaing some tiealgi saving or even llfe saving Ln addition to advising the pol- -1¢v holder as to his exact candl- tlcn, advice 1s given on daily health habits that 1a word- mugh l to his health and happiness. i l I recently came across one of the examination forms ftleci out by the physician on one side and by the policy holder on the re- verse side. We sir;- lil more or less faaulliar . with wont. is called the lntelllgenoe ' test whereby the intefllgxence o1 ii. | My or girl. man or woman, ts measured by the way they answer a number of questions about, aver. 118v affairs. haw they would 34:1; uride r various conditions and other practical questlmis. The ic- sultam, monk ls called the *1“. tellgence Quotient’ (I.Q_), In a similar manner, insurance companies ask various questions about, the individual health of the Wllwholder under ‘the heading Keep Flt. Before asking the quex- ggidi: three general Sta ementa M18 1. Are your health habits such as to improve your health or otheirwlse? 2. Physical fitness depends on god health habits. Faulty health bhls lessen your ability. mental and physlcal, and are a factor 1n calving many physical defects or ullmeiits. 3._. A measure of your gcod hearth might: be called your Health Intelligence Quotient (H. I. Q.) and to obtain 1t. check the follow- iniz 11st. Total the Yes answers, 100M015’ by ten and the result 1s your Health Intelllgenoe Quotient. Faulty health lmb m; 1. Have you a regular bedtime? .Doy0utallte ndaflyrestllfl. D0 You refrain from overdolng at Work. or eating when over-tired? 4. Do you take regular vacations? 5. Do you can; moderately. slowly and ill- mealtime only? 6. Are your mealtimes regular? 7. you a regular time to bowl move- mml? 8, D0 you “T- sufficient exercise outdoors? 9. Do u use ten. coffee. or tnbaoco m emtely? l0. Are you tree from undue won-y and ti-rt abt‘1_t.y'! It 831M110 be of interest and help to all o1 is to answer the above questions and learn our HLQ. Pulling " OntariosLeg (Mon-treat Gazette) it has been the praotlce In Ori- lnrio. and particularly 1n Ibmmo, fowl. the finger at Quebec us n. ho of Fhsclsm. Evidence that theme are a number o1’ young men in this province who tke to call themselves Fascists, and to dress and drill and salute after the mari- mr of Mr. Hitler and his party, has caused some people in me neighboring tgTOVIXICE to thank their stars that ey are not: as other men are. It ls not a halter-than- thou attitude, but an assumption of, greater intellectual vigor which enables the Ontario citizen to greet a Irtezid without. the senseless gesture of stloktng out his arm at an oblique angle and followings the lest of an inane procedure. A o 1t l! 111191160 film-t the Ontario mental- lly 1B Bllperlor to uhe political vo- garfes which 11nd favor ln Quebec and Germany, but. not 1n fiance, and that 1t 1.s immune from om. tamlniition. It has all been very to the m]: of this provlnoe. most o1’ w are whole- heartedl ashamed of the reputa- tion wih the local outbreak of Phsclsm has given them and an v11 hly unhappy about the 8 whole , In these embarrassing circum- tt. is decidedly comforting to learn that Ontario itself has be- d imd that the dla- ense has taken a particularly strong hold upon the city or ‘lbronto, Fmm the point of nrlew of the To- ronto Sitar 1t ls. of course, most un- fci-fumte- and lb must be equally dcSOO to all 1.ho'e neigh- bons of ours who have so smuzly censured us or condoled with us. If they are inclined to do anything aboutlttliey wlll haveto gowtlielr felow-elittzen, Mr. Jcvrph C. Farr. who. according to a Toronto des- pa-tch published 1n The Gazette yesterday. 1s the organizer and Illiliiil s’ leadfinls It Ottawa Iy Dean Wilson . It i“. desist-ism " - -~ o e he; been 1n power 1n Ottawa since 1081 there has never been a aes- slon when the Government was not: attacked for the methods employed In providing 11d for the destitute, and tip present session has been no “glib mlliaderal authorities have been confronted with relief pro- blems or to 1081, but every ear llnce t these i elm seem lo w ln tude 1n face of the s uous e forts solve them, especially 0n account o1’ the severe drain on the national trea- ury the droiwht eon- dltlons ln the West and an ever- e '0 SSIIIQQ QBHPQIPI-llll. mwflKfilfitmhdllwmpowm|oem.%yfl fiCK CITY TOIAIO COMPANY, UNITE, OIIQIK I_ Ccnndlnii nnd lndqp.~' » Y clttei. throughout Can- ada brought on by n decllnlng out- put 1n industry. Then again. muntctpalltles and provinces 1n all section of the AJOIIIIDlOD have ex- hausted thelr normal sources revenue and yet. reports o1 balanc- ed budgets are rare, that h a strict economy bordering on se f-sucrlflce hw marked their administrations 1n a great many cases. ‘Therefore, everyone turns their attention b0- wards Ottawa for hel 1n provid- ing nld for the unemp oyed wlthtn thelr jurlsdlctlon. and thou most of the govemmeiits-are ORANGE or fitali] . ‘i . A, waUS us BRAHMIN PE KOE TEA i recognize rellef as a national pro- m _ h t t aiilthciirlttes, re- ga esswu pary - npower, encounter untold symptoms of dls- unity and lack o1 co-operatlon, be- teween these widespread local gov- ernments. In other words. the more fortunate sections o! the country are unwilling to eopnrdlze their own financial tlcns tn order 1n d their fellow-Canadians who hip en to be 1n tempo dlffl- c res. which sh es t very foundntlons of O0 iedemtlon. For example, Ontario and Que- bec have been sending threats and iiltlmatums to Ottawa and t-hest warnings demand that the Pbdera‘ Government should remove some oi the jburdem which these contra. ovemments have been 0digital; . 5y m. or the 98st several years. claim that: they have paid $0 , 423,000 between 1981 and 1037 be- ing made up of $410,613,000 1n - eral income taxes, $114,800,000 and 087000000 by Ontario and Quebec restpeetlvely for provlnclnl rellef, an a. sum of close to $34,000,000 by the muntcl allttea of each o! these provinces or 1:11. some purposes. On the other side of the ledger. the Federal Government's total refund {or reliflln "rgoses wit-bin se wo v ces as n only 100,- ciiiruig thls pbgod and they asert that thlslsunreeaonnble, de- ma that the ljedeml Govern- ment. ould relinquish some of their revenue wlthln these Drov- lrices, especially the Income tax. In contention, s“. |(_$_ llillljlllli, |.A., 0.P.A., fir; Oortifioil Public Accountant t and Auditor Bookkeeping systems installed or revised Profit and Loss Accounts Computed Trustee tinder the Bankruptcy Act Company By-Laws- Minutes, Annual Statement: and Reports Prepared. Administration of ‘Estates a Specialty. -MONEY TO LOAN. 88 Great George S1,. Chhrlottetowiu P. E. l. app the famous speech o! F‘ omas former ‘illlilnlster of mince. w e was e vex-ed 1n the liletorlc session o1’ 1915, 1n the corner o1’ whlch he said: "Mfl chief objection lie an income tax that the several pi-ovtnens one likely to be obllsed tn resort to measures for raisin additional revenue and I am o the vtew that the Dominion should not enter upon the domain PUBLIC FORUM Illa oelann ll-Iflll he lib dlaoualnn by Jlnupendenta e1 qnenllonl of lntcreal. I ohnnlintelnwn Bnanllan deal t neeeuully lllfllIlO the oplnlnnu el correspondents. 1o vigleilclé they ‘are confined to n ea r ee an ls eceesnry 1n e iiatloiigiarl interest." The Federal Government points out that the same cfltlclsm has marked every Government which has held power 1n Ottawa ‘during that period, ardless whet polltl- ?i‘.".“.'ft'..l°l% ......"° "Li?" "‘“',,‘,'.l::; as an but an entity with every section responsible for the whole; that slr Thomas Whtbe had made his ss- surance at a time when no person could foresee the severe dmlii on the Dominion Treasury; that every .i.dd11;1ona.l obllgatloi-i uuined by the Fbcleral Government means more axes which are underalrnble; that t: more public works are created by Ottawa or 1t’ legislation force! private Industry to rnlae w q;- 16111; Iniiyredrmen. lt wou pm- V 8 8 y efled u u work and lndlrec 0a p fly n ‘woul r’ 115W l0 Day lnvlsthle levies 0g their earn and u. 1n ti; $090.11" m’ mu" a as , clothes. houma. fumltiii-s, m, 1e i; an artificial boom" of p, klnd that my cause more hcrm than good as witnessed 1n the United Btu . tl when economlceoriditlous are far W0" then ncda. u a result ol such im experiment. 81‘ ._Q-k_i i» .. .wfil@otmm. mom “A SIIIIOPSHIRE can" I heed and lrenched and weeded, And took the flowers to fair; I brought them home unneeded; The hue vie not. the weal. 8o up and down I cow them For lulu like me to 11nd. When I A deed lh f shell llebelow them, men 011$ 0f fllllld’. Some lead the 01rd: devour. d some the aeuon mars, But, here and therq will flower aolltary‘ stars. And frhndn viflt yearly w 1J1 As lldn-baved mung firs. o‘: And trickles lodaiwlll wear than when I Ill dead ivuq gone. s nieint-lii ii home much ton large and cmiaiily - U. Sin-With all atmosphere, whtcnreoent events 1n Europe world's newspapers. 1t is curious to see the dull markets. On the day mcnt of Germ De Austrian border. here was the reper- cuaslon 1n the lniil wheat broken a one th knit. at 16. Ami-wild: the evlta yyheatiggflolt eounlrlaa that home ave n IDOOCII§~ production "aell-u flclienc. ' 01a The NI’! fornlu) estimated. the that Rather) 1n the crop veal‘. July 81 next. would gall for =ome ii a o. breadlra Th1: level o! import: 1a about o - lhlrd that of 1927. bra wheat-deficient nations are amply "vlalble" deanlln low siinnlles 1n the bllll of Arzenllna and Canada. In e 1a r. bv the wiiv. today) lust. about: normal "natlcn- at safety’ kl-l. e. about so million bushels of common bread whats-but. Aunuat 15. ls ntlt! -= 1on2 wav off. ‘ A Business Letter $5.112 INDICATIONS 0F WAR 0B PEACE? tlils “near wnr" have ennuidered 1n the reaction ln the wheat foltowlnn the move- ui troo ncrou the DDQINC 00110811 UNI-Y, b0 Mk0 DIOIllGI 0111f» 0f 1'0- eent N106 bulnea." It. would be lnwroetlnn 0o com- uctlou at the some infi- blltty of the comm: auulizte was a more fraction of today's war lemmas this‘ letbarnlc echo 1n u» ' Ma wopldys wheat-um. Sh‘. be taken an [the a rue buome r o today. I hone so. because then the newspaper renorla are really dark- than the fact-i. On the other hand. the “bindi- DU- ot 810.000.000.000 on the 10 armam 1n dnvs o1’ “recession? that vaat ex- penditure ndtwlt-hstnndltid Ibr almnlt decade now. moat of the one-tine and normally 1n lump! m. mod Ruea Institute (Gall- other dnv. Iranee-Geriiiany-Italv (te- endlm mfllo l0. so that the ndiraln needs of the reel of the there are oboe I .8F; 1.. am rec ca" (The How‘ York lun) vlwn § "in 1-93 to your letter d rebruary g, we are quotlnl I $361101‘ thousand’ . . .' u "Out; out the ‘ls’. 0! 0011m- . "You've out out ‘widgets.’ 1M Mr Slocum My” aav that’. Out_o'u't "the iirewil rrlce.’ toopJuat start. from ‘we In quoting‘. Hclw will that read?" , so I dld. _ will! thlnk lhnl-‘s all 118M. MN We don't. make "Yea; Slocum. Shall ltyiili 810W "No, watt. a moment. M155 J0"! I told ‘em 2 percent. of! fortwgll and 1".O.B. New York. dldiit I? "Yes. llI." "You can cut all that 01mm Those are our regular terms, they’ know. 1t." .. m m," ."And réei of that abou letter‘. They || a,” - ' lk ~ ‘ ‘Yo; mllhg.’ nsmvclllvsa uoua. Widgets are never sold 1111i other way. "Yea. slr." "And somewhere 1n there 11114.. uotlng. N0 0y uskedlus to quGteJO, were 8-" ‘we are that In. of course "Yul. ctr" "New we've not 1t about iliihl To Peter: ArPlncua. Inc., men‘. New please read me bogy of the letter. as We Y’ the vim! 1 w. knndwmslffgiisfhls ts ii, to’ their letter." w “IllRll 0ll'l , All Wllllllill w Dragghgueiindeuh day. nnabla low 1uow i titties gum lode h! 1 Ill: , Headache hfll°nlll '1'“ Doll's “they Pfin clear the l l"! flvh| name a chm to mlm ‘u -Iiaaarg. Bnyulah. Slle Kidney Pills i A TT E N T I () N sviiir iiiirrniiff [lull ' . PIG - WORM Tonto, Powder l. Bill l’ Billy llllflfl u- it ed iii d” “hiya: use leavtnl ‘Gentle- . bail ‘Q "Q. x . time " QQIlI" . Worm .. , ,.-..~....,.~ www-ewwllv"“""* "’~" ' Q-IIR’ ¢"»"I"VIYBBDWI' fro"