Inrntug Dolly. (Founded 1881) Prawn Hut. Col. W. Chane: 8. MeLm Vie: President J. ll. Burnett. F. J Sear: u ecuuxkukéaiunouixno. “nAnrieiiate Editor Funk Walker SUBSCRIPTION BATES 00 your (In advance) delivered to Olly 4?; pupeytear (In ICVIIICG) muted to l’. l‘. Island - ~==-~;*1e.~i--.- . $5.00 par year (tn advance) malted toCumda one v.5. a Member-n Audit Bureau o! Ctrcuhthuu “The Strongest Memory to Weaker than the Weakest Ink". ruonsnav, my, 19, rsaa Page Mr. Dunning Last week there was put through the House of Commons a vote of $370,000 to provide for the difference between expenditure and revenue accruing from the operation of the Hudson Bay railway for the current year. Transport Min- ister Howe explained that last year the deficit was about the same figure. Asked how many vessels came into the port of Churchill during last year, Mr. Howe replied: “There were two cargoes shipped out last year. There was one in and there were two out." llon. Mr. Pcrley expressed the opinion that as the lluilsou Iiay railway and port are “more or less the baby of the Finance Minister", the Government should make every effort to ensure its success. Questioned further, Mr. Howe said the port and elevator expenses were not included in the appropriation for the railway deficit. “We shall come to that later." There was, he said, only one train a month into Churchill during the winter". Hon. Mr. Crr-rar adilcrl that that service was quite suf- ficieut to meet the needs when the port was ice- bound. Mr, Pcrlcy: “\Vhat is the population of the port (luring the closed season?” lllr. Crcmr: “it depends upon the volume of trade.” Mr. Howe: “There are about 20o people, in- eluding employees of the port, railway men and 1 few wives." So much for the port of Churchill, Mr. Dun- niugs “baby”. on which millions of dollars of the taxpayers’ have been expended. What is there to show for it? “Que cargo in and two out" last year; and a train a month meeting all the requirements of the winter service. Klcnnwhilc, a delegation is now in Ottawa‘ from Prince Fdward Island. urging long over- due improvements for the harbour of this capital citv of the Province. Lot us hope it will be successful in persuading Mr. Dunning that this project, too. should he accepted as being “more or less the hahv of the Finance hiiuistcr." —— a lustier hahv than the Churchill “Tilklltlg. and worthy of more atten- tion than it has received from our fatherly senior Queens Count)’ representative. Rash Criticism Our evening contemporary quotes, with seem- ing approval, a strongly worded criticism of the brief presented by Mr. Hepburn, Liberal Pre- mier of Ontario, before the Rowell Commission, in which the Premier's utterances are described as “a mixture of petty provincialism, callous in- difference and sickening unction." "Suppose however," says a writer in Toronto Saturday Night——”arid it is this possibility which is worrying Parliament Hill’s most thoughtful minds-suppose that Mr. Hepburn employed a ‘ghost writer’? Would the reception accorded the brief not have been different if it had been known that Mr. Hepburn did not write it, but only adopted it? . . . For example, the Ontario Premier conceivably could have employed W.H. Moore, Federal Liberal M.P_ for the constit- uency of Ontario. Mr. Moore is widely recog- nized as one of the most eminent economic minds which Parliament Hill possesses. He is known to be very close to Mr. Hepburn and to have been his economic advisor on more than one occasion. One of the outstanding argu- ments in the brief—the argument that further centralization menaces individual freedom-Ja- miliarly' echoes. furthermore, a warning that the forum" Tariff Hoard Chairman has been dis- posed to emphasize in his Parliamentary ad- dresses for a considerable time now." The Financial Post goes further and associ- ates Mr. Moore's name directly with the Hep- burn brief. , Our contemporary, therefore, had better watch its step. Mr. Moore is still a supporter of the -,l\Iackeuzie King Government, and who knows how many other party stalwarts were involved, one way or another, in the Ontario Premier’: presentation? It should also remember its own fulsome eul- [ogy of Mr Hepburn when he visited here dur- , ing the I935 federal election campaign. Aberhart As Campaigner V, With the Saskatchewan election scheduled ;,for June 8th, the stage is set for a colourful psontest. An incalculable factor is conceded to " be the Social Creditors, who are reported to {have been feverishly preparing for the Saskat- r chcwan contest for weeks past, with Alberta's iIPremier Abcrhart waiting to play a spectacular .role_ 5i‘ What is there about Mr. Aberhart that makes __,» Liberal governments so jittery? The answer, ac- gjjcording to the Edmonton correspondent of the Winnipeg Free Press, is less the policies than the rsonality of the men. Those who have not ollowed him carefully are all too likely to be misleibb his public utterances. His rustical- j dallyei- uplzeches appear at first blush to be ' " but pointless bellowing: and aimless ', ’ y‘ His rough-erid-ready phrases and, okec suggest the half-baked ama- of the mark these first impres- evident only after a prolong- at what he says. bur of “UfliPlHl-wherl he nyrlt- iftiirniorrrrovin eunnnun . l. Director J._ B. BIIIIIIIS. F. J- h don; Canadian Pacific e64 l l of mass psychology and parry prejudices. The trap-hazard mixture of barnyard philosophy, old fashioned religion and horse-sense politics that constitutes most of his speeches have a habit of leaving just the impression with the listeners that he desires. Opposition tactics take‘ on a sin- ister aspect. Social Credit mistakes miraculous- ly dissolve or change into signs of progress. He criticizes his failures to fulfil promises so round- ly fliat his audience applauds and makes excuses for him and his endless stories always seem to have the faculty of making studied theories, r- ous. It is all so easy, so simple and straightforward that few give him credit for the genius with which he sells his cause, side-steps the pitfalls or dainns the opponents. He conjures up the il- lusion that he is merely following the only pos- sible path, the obvious route, and that all others are taking devious courses because of ulterior motives. i This is not all. In addition to selling his own wares he antagonizes his followers against his opponents so thoroughly that they won't even listen to the oppositions sales talk, and the most world is but wasted breath if there are no lis- teners. These are but some of the reasons, says the Free Press correspondent, why the potency of this man must not be overlooked, and to them can be added the fact that he talks to the aver- age person in his own language with a vkabu- lary fiill of catch phrases such as backbiters, forces of ontrcnched greed, or slavery league, which are not only remembered but which deride the opposition. Our Brother's Keeper U. S. Senator Borah has been charging with characteristic indignation that Britain and France were guilty of “a shameless betrayal of a small nation,” the nation being Ethiopia. And to him the best answer comes from a great Am- erican newspaper, the New York World-Tele- gram, which says with biting irony. Perhaps they are. but the Senator should be the last miw on earth to say so, For he 19¢ m, little band of ureconcflalbles who kept. this wllniry from 101111118 the League of Nations. “To Senator Borah and the rest of us Ameri- cans our brother's blood crleth from the ground Britain and France ere no more giulitly than wt; We refused to help from the first, while amen; at least made an effort." ' That, as an Ottawa exchange remarks, seems to cover the case. I Editorial Notes I Mr. w. E. Gladstone died this date, 189s,“ Ill It 1k 1k Road work will soon be general in the prov- irlcc. absorbing a portion of the unemployed. m w x Taking it broad and long what has the Mac- kenzie King Government done for this province since their return to power? Lean in his gentle appeal the other night sup- plies the answer—less than nothing. Mr. A. E, Mac- : 1k i: u Next week is Clean-up Week for Eastern Canada and the Maritime Provinces when all good citizens and City Councils see to it that everything is made shipshape for the coming summer. Illl Chief Justice Rowell, in evident reply to Pre- mier Hepburn’s protest against the legality of the Royal Commission over which the Chief Jus- tice presides, stated in Toronto that it is merely a fact-finding body instructed to give an opinion upon the facts disclosed by the investigations. Adoption of any measures as the result of the report must be SllbjfiCt to the approval of the re- spective provinces, 4 m n- m “Dave' Spence the popular member for Park- dale, Toronto, who gave the Island such a boost m Parliament the other day knows whereof he speaks for he has been in the fruit and vege- table business all his life, and is now the largest importer of nursery and garden stock in Can- ada. He is a native born Irishman though a citizen of Toronto since 1888. He has sat con- stituency since I921, having survived no fewer than five elections. 1k x w- »: I _ Miss Clara Dennis, LL.D., on whom the dis- tinction of doctor of Literature was conferred by Mount Allison University, is the first of her sex to be so honoured. Dr. Dennis is a. daughter of the late Senator Dennis and cousin of the present Senator, and has long been associated largely with travel and tourist possibilities. Dr. Dennis is active in Red Cross work and during the war was known in Halifax as “The Soldiers’ Friend.” ii- a a n- Rose Day, which is observed tomorrow, is orial of Queen Alexandra, in whose honour it was first organized. The Imperial Order of the Daughters of the Empire, which does such a lot of good unostentatious work of I really Rose Day here, utilizing the proceeds to benefit and it is hoped the ladies who offer them will be metwith a smile as well as a hearty response a u c a The Guardian has received from the C. P. R. the first instalment of its Foundation Library. It consists of nine volumes nicely bound in red imitation leather and beautifully printed. For variety the volumes could hardly have been bet- ter chosen, consisting u they do of, A Diction- qy in Correct English, (Pihnan); 1110 of Canada Through Biography, gDeut): Frenc Self-Taught, (Minoan): Au ntroduction to (Ryeraon); The Dntrlinion of Canada, non); Factors in Railing and Steamship ra- l 8M‘ \ billionaires!!! Ill ticularly those of the opposition, appear ridieul- h compelling sales talk or political speech in the' whole, rogresstn I crisis g with the Halifax Herald as a contributor. She whue has also numerous books to her credit, dealing. it now a national institution and a permanent mem- m“? charitable and benevolent character, are behind the Inndon the numerous. deserving cases they have in- an hour vestigatcd and adopted. A dime oi- more is the a‘ charge made for theQucen Alexandra Roses, ' Economics, (Macmlllnnh Speaking in Public, Ryer-i uuurdfigumgfim" IOTES BY TIIE WAY thinner Abdicate» hum Wt uld uneolnnnm u“ mm blndersarial toTelo- pty more attention to Us no lriell-htndam-Toron mm. HCKIIIQIIIILCQICC m? It rial 1n the Canadlan hnttflrm 1n resulted when one of the boys dawned an ammunition x on bk foot. What kind of war 1s this lnywayll-Globe and Mall. v Only by Invitation will Alberto eln Saskatchewan to but Social Credit over. says Premier Aberhnrt. As his Government has not accom- nllahed the task at home. there 1s little inducement for the nebhborfl to ask his aid. His Social Credit record has not set a very izood ex- emple-Moose Jaw ‘limes-Herald. Those who hold that present day methods 0t education are not. inw- zetner satisfactory nave convincing broor ot men‘ contention. onrrkes oy wlumnmu students against; revision o1 examinations for oiwcalureate degrees swelled into, rloi-s m which four persons were kllieu imu so m- Jured 1n various Clelflfi. Tne deaths occurred at. rasw. where strikers av- tacked tho regional assembly ‘palace and clashed with soldiers. more man 40 persons were wounded there. Just. homo from n. trip to the backwaters o1 tne AlnaZ/ull, ‘when: he found Junale tribes strikingly tree from wiune mans 111s and WhILB man's ways, uno. eminent soi- enttst gives us new evidence that the umuwreo savage nrcoably is a great deal happier and physically sounder than we are. AUDQd/Alflstl far-on wateiways this scientist found jungle tribes wno go quietly about. their business; IIOLLIlDQ wor- ries them and nobody hurries tnem —e.nd they never have cancer, nlgn blood Dlessure or heart trouble. Many 0f them live to the age 100 years and remain hale hearty w the lastr-Vtctorla Tlmes. informed that We no reliably the chief bait. o! the Social Credit invaders of Saskatchewan will be $1,500 u year. have bekun to laugh every time $25 a. month ls mentioned 1n public Premier Abernart has been force to changem mun more mou - i: than a pfflln Th pomp]; $25. the Saskatchewan farmers wnig) will be composed ofeevery standard haven't had a crop tor seven years will be oflered the $1,500. Not at a1 will be said about the seven oer cent farm production "tax.- Dzvhbrldue Herald. Now that. people his tune. So as $1,000 111118 Some Japancos leaders are urging their country to help India. gain ln- dependence. Japanese refer to “Indian Indep- Of course when the nuance." they mean the driving e out of Great Britaui and establish- ment of Japanese sovereignty 1n India. The object has a two-fold In the first place it purpose. _ would brtniz India under Japanese rule and mark one more ste for- w, ward 1n the Japanese cum “Asia for the Asiattcs." In the sec- ond blace the loss of India to Japan would mean the graphical wedge lnto from Great Britain to Australia. and New Zealand. Tokto would hope to out off trade between the British Isles and the two Antlbodean dom- futons-Clark in Windsor Star. driving of a geo- the route A barrister attending the C ler- ence of Astrologers at Han-o ate said that the basis of astrologygwaa Iortune-telllng. and, the IBWB afifllnst heretics and vinteh- craft. thoso casting homwopes were still liable to be prosecuted for m. according w 1n witchcraft. He was of the opinion that such prosecutions could also be taken against people W110 nave weather forecasts. Mr. Alexander Runertt, of Ilkley, fpld the conference that the modern world needed astrology desperately bwfl-use the whole world of human oolleetlvttles — nations, families, m. 11110115 KWHDS- WI.- was 1n such a state of chaos that the individual, kihtiidftfé ti?“ will?“ “"2 ere. of all vrlthln hlrriiself. mos of chaos was the curse of modern man. Astrology could remove the cfiehbg showing to every mam. This feeling llfe pattern as an ordered rom crtats wards an even greater measure f minim t d f . tionr-Loniilon Obsei-iilenm p” ec Helen-hag to tho work of building an up the organization of Cimadl B11‘ ‘almost literally from the 1118 to rrround up‘ the Vancouver Province obleerveis: "The m n no I18 s ow was , A“ going oroug Justification o1 Malls proves ef- - Air ficlent when we get 1t. there will be no more complaints for the slowness of tts coming." Now "efficient" 1e a wide term. It can be aplplled w the an actual organization hand of equipment. getting the beat use tinuously as a Conservative for his present con- $1“ c! ma” to h and. and 1 ylniz on regular schedules. ‘an? 1t should also imply tn its most complete m e be irlven 1n this oo o handllnz of mail after 1t. arrlves at the debut or terminal o of the Dominion, particular stress re- ward to New Brunswick-Campbell- txm ‘Iklbimc. Pocelbly as l. counter-blunt to baickwardneu 111- 1s nrlce level as laid l rutfibninnorcrrrorrugl,customise.» ' Financing. Farmer ~ "And ' Producer (Contributed) - l uuuuc. FORUM. firearm: 500M“ ilonlulbulv ‘l ‘Gil Ilfiliflvfllfil" dilator: llll"'”' uuorflv gmlpm the 0M!" " - series o! four articles 15.5 gar-nun o! the proposed changes the gold-oonltdancesystemto the 86141 and oommodltlea ‘system. lapeorlnc 1n A. G. Street's recent» ly-mrblkhoa book. ‘fund Everlast- 1118!‘ _ II Ourjlnanntura wou1d_ welcome an lnemuo tn prices 1f may could ob- tiiln 1t‘ by‘ way of‘ our‘ existing ‘ Le, the 301d- Sfly. an in confidence could be engineered and the neces- sary credit: no created by our bank- ing tnutttutlom. But. to them, any 10511886111 that a proper relation 1e maintain- ed between the amount of avail- able mix-churn: wwer and the volume o! goods and services need- 1118 to be exchanged. 1a aacrllege. Ilbtth 1n gold la l mere illusion- " s 'I‘o itme the bun-ii - 0w ulna value o! the dollar stable when we have reached the 1924 price level the Central Bank o! Canada must have complete control of money. Whe- ther 1t ts 1n the form of currency or bunk t. The maln provisions of the pro- posed Currency and Credit Act» would be: 1. The Bank o1’ Canada. wtll be permanently relieved of the obliga- tion to my out 301d in exchange for legal tender. In place of this the Bank shall be required to keep the Durchastna value of the dollar 1st of reprentatlve commodttles. This 11st will be oom- o! prized o1’ every standard o! com- ancl modlty quoted on the market. 2. The ultimate value at which the dollar will be stabilized shall wrresoond to the onttclul index ftg- ure for wholesale comm prices on June 80th. 192k The Statistical Department. controlled by the Bank of Canada wtll be responsible for the tabulation of the schedule and for the dally calculation of the down by the new currency law. commodity quoted 1n the market but where t/wo or more commodities i: to the raw ma al stage wtl.i uled to the exclusion a flour). All Drlces will be takenlk wholmalc rates ROB. quoted. Prices are not accurate but are used merely to illustrate level. Say wheat. (Munutobu No. 2 hard) ls at present $30 a ton and the price at 30th June 1924 the ce was $45 a. ton and stmtlary °I the prices of the following com- modtttes were as shown below. A B Present Prlces at: Prices 30 June 1924 Ptg Iron $15 stun $20 a ton Raw 1.50 acwt S a cwt Rubber .06 a lb 12 a. lb. Coal 1S a ton 20 a ton Tin 400 a. ton 600 a ton 848.12 ‘rlils figure o! $643.12 1n Column B of the simple tllusmttve sched- ule 1.; the total money that 1t would take to buy e total quantity of the commodttles given in Column A - B when 11101924 price level ts reuhecl. The de- ftnlttun of the commodity must be unmlnakably fixed, cg. wheat could be clearly defined u Manl- tobe No. 2 hard. Coal could be any distinctive qualwy tn common use. The prices ct individual com- modities may vary greatly but it will be only the total money value which will govern the wrrency and credit machinery trolled by the Dank of Canada. The Bonk o! Canada will 1n- erease the currency taue and 1n- duce the bonvwin: of Bunk credl totnordertolnoreaeerraduallythe dollar level by 1% th w limits-teas‘! level of Khalil-ire, Ini order to do this there mint JnthQ-amoimt of 1t In boom 10d, with our Iold-olus-obniitdencgcriryfl- tern necessary increase tn cover for all their loom tn the 01.50am Bonk shape form of o! Canada credit oerit-lftcatee, the banks our only Increase the 1 ctr cuotmnux trot of n11 borrowing the money from the Bonk of Canada. But although the Bank o! Can- ] ada. will be the only source of all new money. there will never be uno And, to provide Bonk of Canada will credit certt- n y system, plus-confidence system: thutis to 1f increase mt o! money. to ensure have much the some ultimate use, m“ m only that commodttyeghtch ta near- mm es be taken (6.8. wheat will be sched- 1'10 The following commodities are 0X AGRICULTURAL INSTIUUIION» schools. 1t will be many years be- fore 1t puts the dollars 1n the pockets o! the farmers that the now much abused Potato Growers’ As- sogatlon dld tn the years 1920 to Unfortunately the Constitution. and by-lawis of the Association dld not provide a reserve. burl why h‘): on that now, and partcularly to Mr. Boulter. He. on many occasions pointed out the danger of ‘uctlng a bus- iness running annualy into mll- lloru. without a reserve fund. But it was not done. Mid we cannot do 1t now: not until we pay what we And then A -or81u1tre and pro- vlde for a. reserve. we can do this with the co-ooeratlon of the farin- ers who know the value of such an 0W9 organization. (I! the knockers of Assocla moss). tion will keep out of the I nu. 511'. etc, E. B. MCLAREN President. P. E. I. Potato Growers’ Assoc. KING'S COUNTY NEGLECT , Bin-The winter ls past, the sorlniz ls near ended. but the votoe of the road machine ls not h 1n the land of Eastern X11188. Dur- m 80 traffic compelled to bass over 1t, but. woe bettde the unlucky truck- men or motorists meettng 1n one the many bogs (now sparouy provided with brush and stones 1n an attempt to lessen their depth) this cute not. so 1on3 exert-he the method o1’ calculating the price gamer 11;“ d or the m“: t c. Traffic on the Sourls blue Road and along the North sire road 1s now fair-g! safe, thanks to some va ve split log a still 1n {are district glhlfxl‘! hglpmmsnalput mood use e r roads. iiiho have abandon?! these all hope of ald from the Public Works Department. or of seelnz . e units o! tts formidable park of road artillery tn this sec- tion of the Province, in time to d the med work now co necessary nt- ter the beet two years neglect, fe one o! our reoresentuttves was busily employed runnln up mlleuee at elxht cents per e for fpiplshetlwf, oveé :13 hlgptpuyslol Prtntcie co . an e o er palm .00 busy denudlng the dliirtct cl ts little btfi to neg any gtenylon l‘) our u c wor , or e cry unfair dliitrbbutton of relief moneys through highway employment shown by the Peibllo Accounts o lust yea; where two hundred and twenty fve thousand dol ahown tgohsy; FD lavlmod on Prince un fairways, Jae miserable cola o! aev 5.2g“ a in s County roi- the‘ n. iii limiter-stood the County Engineer 1s now bus em- -%iyngpy on Tea H11‘. u b road machinery no hut looalltv mtg/lit. we sirapeot, be ound l ed in vut wheeiineiiiiali where, 51:, representatives? I . . . Blifiullllgi‘ iiisr noun‘ i 880D Ofllbdin .llld&l . Bmee-redwulutiidulinardmindtan wines Ilkomtisrfiiher hair: such balsam n Down sea-side mountain wdedtals. Prom tree-tons where tired winds And straw faint sweetness from $32221‘? fine worm-eaten shroud breaks tn dust when once shredded inriume. 11h a cloud clout lone to outs vowed. Wttlrmothed and (from) 5'39 Bin-I mud m. manna mm‘ 14th- lnd I fiiilhiffl.“ ‘h’. ammu- dm mule m; remarks about Mr. Boulter. I8 %’°flt‘ "w" ‘timmuiuiiiém... a as the rural!‘ schoo " over which tloned at any time by Boulter . why any man. and particular a 0 education. when wan to get 111s imaginary igemy ould stoop any o er person or or- nnmm nu . Reddln CIGARETTES For Vitalitu alaUS use BRAHMIN OAGE PEKOE TEA asthmatic can obtain the lttt dons —k'eetflitn h Research Jele. Strand, Inn ants who have Asthma for any length of time tend to develop a wrong way of which interferes with the of used air from to ~ promote thin: are assailant which should or Muse-Ia... ' results o for 1987 were: asthma h d entirely o! be- come ‘ tlstocausq no tn- qnvenlmoe. 1n about 80 percent "e mm the condition was very much 1m- Bnent with tiie vast and howling m“ main. of niluree. ‘lbtreuureha-lttbmtelnnd nmwmm] i: F? ,§g " on befomlnmgiiiiaoiirlht? tzgileexpert famed a the lrullneu mungensult ll m i? it v - ., or F , . . k . iiinrrrt W l. r I ‘vmmwlr- ~-: ‘i-m .- Iu Juno: W. Barton. MD. EATHHWG EXERCISES BRING SATISFACTORY RESULTS 1N MOST CASES OI‘ ASTHMA In tudent. days the cause o! asthirigyviaa unknown That ll: and that all that could be done was to give nmyl nitrite during an attack was about the extent. of our knowledge and treatment. To-day 1t is known that n oom- ullments —hay fever, -does run 1n and the members of uch families are predta have tissues that are prod posed to fever ,and eczema, ed or wn uiany are now kept free o! attacks by svotdl these sub- had their " —ttny n- mounts of the substance being tn- tcd utggpr the skin as 0th ndlttons wht th-“caw t the attacks such ea defects and infection o! the nose and throat, so that even when pol- gpear to be enter into lleved, because o! emotional die- germ} and thtlperts the trawl-t- no ma ti‘: lpsothmctto attack-s. mehsrpaiortg; iifii» thing 88701:: advocated n: e a o Asthma Research Council Britain and outlined. or what. causes but any lo I nta - to Been unctl, don, W. C. 2. re‘ 1a no doubt um all pati- euflered rom therefore a b: given to Hospltd 1 this HEN Sll RID mixed wttlimtiit o‘ iwrawfi o or oo ours tortilla; fashion news for men mot. "Red and o for office II t starts to othu. ' ‘i \ 4 ,l “- rump-Y wr- y.‘ Kit-Qqwfpvxel.’ we i , w“ 3,4» 1- ' Broadcasts Again (Hamilton Spectator) There was quite a remarkable 4;. bate tnlthe House of Commom Wednes on the quest-ton of whe- ther or not Canadian Broadcasting Corporation radio commentator: should crtttclze the faring: policy o1 outside governments. this in. stance the storm arose out. of the recent attacks on Great Brlmlxrs course by "Interpreters" for Dom- inion listeners. A highlight of the proceedings in parltammt was the contention of the Prlme Minister thpt such comment ahoudl not be o ed. Tliere followed the familiar flush o! oratpry 0n the "freedom of who dlsazr with t taln’ f tan polliiy, and general lib-ad: t t by who thlnk at England. present world min. we ' w bruit there was a very great. differ- ence between publicly-paid where people are paid to comment on the news. they should not “trust to their lmuglnailon for facts." It goes, indeed, farther than this. Rltigitly or wrongl —otten wron8ly-— e public usual feels that such a. body as the Caruidlan Radio Corporation 1s apart, and tndependeut of. political influence. As such ft relies on 1t to be strictly . The authenticity of its Sponsored broadcasts even tn the 1o airs, F O UN D nasty M We-e" BMUT 0N‘ GRAIN F ORMALI N hiiifhii-‘ih-“e... ‘hi’; gagfaawad m l2 tun oauosrone r0 Crut out:- 8W“ suitor-emu! mum m Armand“ some WIIICOIIIIID gurus. tpuclalj 31,5 -W1Il-*'“m~