., p1,. PA? I FOU“ TIIE GHAIILOTTEIDWII lillllllllzlali THE CHARLOTTETOWN , GUARDIAN Notes ByThe Way There has been a slackening of "ii? Pi“ in lhe British recovery which axnmnd the world late in l933_ and early in 1934. Even Prime Mlnzstei- lvfacDonald, Optimising s.- he is, admitted he was not Slflg- iied with m: existence oi 2,225,009 unemgnoyed iii the sixth year of the dc rrssicu and tuc fourth your of Britain's march toward recovci-yu Iii-Iain his ills. about held her ____- _ reaping prior to maturity ss food for livestock. to increase the quan- tity of which special efforts no in be made in the immediate future. Experiments undertaken by indiv- idual farmers and encouraged by the Government have gone to show that the letters ambitions in the realm of agriculture may not be disproportionate to Newfoundland‘: capacity. If, therefore, the people ulio are directly concerned are duly Agriculture University (KMH. in the Winnipeg Free ‘ Pies) Within this neon-Ionic and econ- omic area oi north central. North America, thers are st lesst half a dozen universities all with facilit- ies devoted to the teaching of agri- culture and research into that science. The experience of these In . h. V.‘ Pnellelfi-I Cones-l iii. use vies-mug. ha,“ le-Iwtary-Lgumzl l) A hrl|l|sg.?.-|IJI‘° I. "i Idlin and llanullg Invasion-J l Qlrlsill, I J |, luorlnlo Idllorn-lfrlnl Wllilv all ll l fnrle. “:i"if..‘i'*.'!..“.'."."2:“..t..'!“.’ 3.1‘. 1'.’ .'_.1:'...;"..':'r:r.:. Till?!" FRIDAY. FEBQUARY 8,3005. REDEEMING PROMISES The Liberal press has apparently rnrirx lllITlI s co. 58-60 Cannon St, E. C. No. 4 London. lgingland‘ sILvER FOX AUCTEONS LAST ‘RECEIVING III with other races; the experiences oi central and oriental Europe prove that s. mas of farmers can survive {iris-a lV-BolsmI-D. ___, YOUR BODY HAS A THEKDIOS- no BXIilanation to offer mi- its varl- any ordeal, when it is cemented to- mmnm‘ t m’ Admmmacbns §$§,,f.'f.“.,-§t;° 5'5. _.‘*'."‘-““ °f 1”‘ rs-r - HEAT iruuupsrnvo “”“'°‘,'§,m§f, “ "““;¢°“'- I“ m: SALES DATE IN LOND m,‘ mwbatemenu’ comma m ‘m, gem" by me u“ o! bmod, o, plea that they shall make agricul- rovemént g“ 11.118 o! im: EQUWMENT case. e res prair provinces an w" m, uutrumnt by which a n _ a0 sed dissatlsfec ______ the Dakotas and Minnesota. the _ Februa d 1 column, regarding the federal con- language,’ of life in common, and l" er na_,,°nn, 1nd “define m 1.2011 lllsltle the British government _ communities served place agricult- Mafgh ry r a trlbutlon to the Cbarlottetcwn-Bor- c: religion. But these explanations beg bed m “We a, ‘PS c,“ and out" dhlsc yolilcfn 19:’ ‘ul ‘llnmefiinn? ‘ti-gift’; um to the 10mm,“ M mm m‘ Ma May den highway. We pass on then to so not explain away everything. m me {cw f: WE, ‘:8 p “ p“ "r take it 0J1; who] obj cl. lg"; homes gt": ihgmi Wpfellilflié §?’Zl§'§i%uil§s°§$.°fi§& u: “ifi? y , a Augllflli 31st, 1935 "mm"? Whliih 1i will!“ V’ b‘! °1 find 1i? 1-5 SW1 Prfldlfloliii that M1011 a a as oi education is. in the first Slflfleftfl ‘he Emmi“ ‘If 3"“- a-"d m" “re ately high costs. In eaehpcageo there September more importance, namely, Mr. Ben- nett's promises. What seems to have surprised the Liberal press ls the fact that the Prime Minister has never l radiate‘ a small number oi families should have been able to survive, without being stifled. assimilated, or re- fected by the c!" lug masses which pressed against them." stantisl as the Government antici- pates in its current statement of policy; but at the some time will have reactions so far as an export market for produce from the Marl- traln the faculties of the young in such a manner n5 to give their pos- sessors the best chance of being happy and useful in their genera- tion; and, in the second place, to furnish them with the most im- elsewhere where the exact amount used extensively in machinery and of heat must be known or regulated. As there never was o. piece of machinery madc by man that could compare with that body of yours, it is earnest endes as" on the pert oi the faculty members to serve agri- cultural interests and if possible to make farming less chancy. No one finds any quarrel with this situa- tion. It might be inquired. however. For further deta instructions plea ils and shipping se communicate with our New York Office i““““““°“‘.‘.““ "° “m” “--—-—°°“°"“°“' ::$:;:..i":ii?:1:.::.‘::t.:"::::r:r. ‘iiibiftldii l::i."'.:':“.:r:"...l.:l:“=mails: 151 we‘ 3°“ Si» N-Y- City -C d i h f d rul ' " ' i ujigtafi amicrgavssi 3i, a r t STORY CONTEST EDITORIAL NOTES race which we csill knowledge oi 35,33,332; “PM” i" m‘ °‘ u... how much of C3311 other‘: suc. ‘ g‘ e u We“ "“"°"s k‘“"‘-"*H‘"“°Y- m. c. s. Lakln u. the London mi“- Ths Pmblfmi- W“ l" “l” i this assurance to Premier MacMil- lan last year, frankly acknowledging the obligation, was something un- dreamed of in a. partisan philosophy. There was then no election in the oiling; Mr. Bennett was not looking for votes; he hud no political object whatever to gain. i-lo could have said, as Mr. Mackenzie King said on another occasion, that his elec- tion platform was merely a chart by wiiicn to steer his party mm Offliit —a mere scrap of paper which could be repudiated as soon as the election The announcement of the Prince Edward Island Travel Bureau spon- soring a contest with the idea of gathering stories of the Island and its people should result in unearth- ing many incidents and or ‘otes, and perhaps bring to light some al- most forgotten tales of former times in this Province. Stories of adventure, of men and women, and of strange happenings, add spice to history, and create i.n- terest that should be valuable in making our Province better known All the Minister of (a Charlottetown has accepted an official lady.) Mrs. Marshall, referring to a using contretemns has arisen in Ontario political situation --tl'n Cabinets’ ladies have revolted against their husband's boycott of Government House. The revolt is led by Mrs. Duncan Marshall, wife of Agriculture, invitation to attend a luncheon at Govem- rnent House to Minister's wives. “l don't know about the others," said wives of Cabinet ministers, “but I No tree ever produces a set oi rings exactly like those of another trwx it is said. But the unique id- entity of each tree-ring group B035 farther than that: the minute pare- pattern on the end of a. piece of vocd lxlcngs to just that spot on that ring and cannot be reprodum-l ilflyWfl-GJ: e15: in the universe. Hence the identification of a piece of wood can be just as certain a; the ichntlflcatioii of the prints of human timers-Quebec Chronicle- Telegraph. Harry Blskeslne of the American Petroleum Institute concluded a Lancet reminds us that metabolism (building up and tearing-oz" wcaring down of the body cells by the body processes) is responsible for heat] production, that n centre in the brain is concerned with body tem- pei-zllilre und this ccritrc is “sen- sitlve" to the temperature of’ the blood passing through ii. j If the temperature of the blood is raised the various means for in- creasing the loss of heat and de- creasing the production of heat are brought into play. If the tempera- ture is lowered, those for decreasing the ins; of. heat and for increasing‘ the production of heat come into: use. cation and research, before them are almost identiral. so, too, are the vicissitudes of financing. It might m. that close: communication per- liaps through the formation o: a Council which once a year could meet and if not figure out a cam- paign amen} them then at least compare notes and fln1ln"s. would, if it did not lessen expenses, per- haps tend m mill’? th: work going forward that much more effective. Last year the University of Al- berta. received $390,000 in Legislat- ive grant, of which $90,000 went; to' the uses oi the Faculty of Agricul- tum. 0f the L786 students enrol- led. B8 were in that faculty. and l4 resesuh but it does not include any apportionment oi overhead ex- penses which am assessed against the University as c. whole. So far as res:arch is conoerrizd the Faculty, lacking neither en- thusiasm nor ability. has been ham- pered by lack of funds. However. five departments report investiga- tion, tliat cf Agxiiomy undertaking special work in s*'l S!'f'"l‘ylflg, cs- peclally in the drought stricken areas. Amon; £01.. .ops.~ teats were made cf various types of grass- es and cereal crops. and. brccding operations were continued, this sec- tion including experiments with soy Act. Hawaiians opposed 1; ‘- trictions the:ein imposegutlgull: among other things, that, m.‘ Hawaiian Territory is an "integral and iiworpomtcd part of the United States" and therefore in respec; q sugar is entitled to the same ecu. slderation given to sugar beet, 354 sugar cane areas in the United States. “ubsequently an under, standing was reached by the A314. cultural Adjustment Administration’ and the Hawaiian Sugar Planmy Association by which it was agreed that Hawaii would accept an adjust. merit programme. meanwhile drop. ping all court proceedings W“ 9V"- MF- Bemel-Vs “ttliilde to ourselves and to outsiders. , _ excepg has been quite dmerent. Contributors to the fiavel Bum“ am accepting Mrs. Brucesi invita silijortt rixalrgicle E811 Iiicifldgilt move“- neflhunsnéhauthgéoédxtafrlglruguilnn“the othiirsltwere graduate students in b33113, and with barley, in this lst- "i058 wnoefllod With the questing, Th , h h m b“ t, _ tion. \ n _ ._ en n t e dictionary ~ '- B81‘ C11 llfe- The W110i"! of the 1f“- ter case chiefly directed to the pi-c- .01.’ Howells inclusion as an liltiigrn] ii- e B5 0 91' ° Ea ons. contest will find. a great deal of the wo.d success’ comes age,- mg al glands situated one on top of any sums the research dealt w“; ducflon o, the maltmg varmw m p“, o‘. the Unued States Th, h however-obligations arising out of P165511“; 1n pleclng tggethgr the m- Mr Randolph Church“, m word ‘hustle.’ Quito true Harry. Wc Each kidney, Wfzfklilg byflincgris C! poultry diet; production of milk the entomology department h-fe ‘something upon which the l? a - ' e ervous s s em are r ans t .- . ° ' ' ‘ " ‘ world econcmic condmm-‘s over mm“ details m wwwmg a stow cerryihs tho fies oi “Dieharcv Tory iiifleksgielitiulligry?“ 121:: gitijieiouxcgniil; wmélhed in regulating thee he; vi ixixiivigraimigrwvggtvilggiriibrfszla‘ ‘iziiliiserghincdhletleeslgrxzst grulgeisrr-retgiilazgs-m expect“ won“ which Canada, directly, has n0 con- or drama. to delight and entertain the blood. - ft lbo, if t _ - - l, "°‘_"““‘°‘ be d°”,’°d‘ "7"" ‘m’ their readers. besides, having the ,,§“§,,,"',1'f,ffi,, Elsi-Yugo. ruiiegilutictinlesmgirorgeigie so,“ yogi cggidscf 113w 5mm"; if Ehpniflixzletléi vaiorlilgtieshlielrtéfi- plgiiirsicnewsn has eighty-five From Kin Wm- fliic 0K MR Beiiheits oleotioh DFO- pleasing prospect of winning one of safety, health follows oral-else and ukngrhigztrwhwl’ f, g know: mi, esting machines: in field crops, a Students m m- dggpc .- u g~ bu: g lam misea to bring in employment in- the prizes offered for the best selec- lorial Conservative candidate is but following in the political footsteps thoughtlessness is just a few Jumps “head 0i tragedy. while idleness. during muscular exercise the pro- study of the origin oi the false wild oat. the composition and quality of in this, university. as in the others, the faculty covurs- much c.:t .i. . l (Fredericton Gleaner) surance legislation, to establish farm “on duemm o; m.“ in we body ma be _ - _ g ch - Poverty and unhappine. 1 ll - " Y wrcat in con ti with f e lo , 5 _ In 1697- when 5°11"! °f hi5 A081!- marketing boards, or to introduce, Zfuhtngfigeggufifaxétslrjtd 88:; cidents. And we thougisit aebwwgge méranmgcfaxrgigsgg gm: “m; a ochmogli-c. zzchhle t: zwsgt Zfgxng‘; ‘:33, tall‘? Jtigle itsprgzfigi“ can subjects were WOfShlppklg l‘: , as was done this week in Parlia- ment with unanimous approval, a bill for the expenditure of $90,080,- 000 in farm relief loans. Yet these, A SIGNAL TRIBUTE Mr. Mackenzie King's attempt and other measures included in the scope of the Bennett Government's economic and social reform pro- gramme, are regarded as of para- mount importance today. Govern- ment revenues are being taxed as never before to give effect to such measures. And Mr. Mackenzie King, eager to keep step with the parade, is declaring they should go into force immediately. What has our contemporary to say to these obligations, which are not "in the bond’ but which the Dominion Government has volun- tarily assumed? Are they of less importance to our farmers and cl!- lzcnr. than the trans-Canada high- way, to which the Dominion ls al- ready contributing. on our contem- to show that Premier Bennett was converted "over-night" to his econ- omic reform policies has met Wllh a humiliating snub from his own leading party press. to wit, thr Toronto Globe. In an article from Ottawa the Editor of the Globe recently challenged all M1011 BMW- ments by recalling Mr. Bennett's attitude toward industrial evils some twenty years ago, and show- ing that his present course was perfectly consistent with his stand taken at that time. A correspondent in the Globe sought to wealrm the effect of the editor's statement by cumin! that. whatever Mr. Bennett may have said twenty years ago, “his courage was not strong enough to defy the Insubordination seems to run in the Churchill blood. Lord Randolph Churchill made a sensation by un- expectedly neslgnirig the oiph Churchill, both of whoni in their day were renegade Tories. The former temporarily deserted to the Liberals after the Szuth African war, and tho latter attempted to create a. cabinet: crisis by sudden resignation from Lord 51150111155 administration. in the pres-ant in- stance, by dividing the Conservative vote, young Randolph has enabled Labour to gain s victory in an otherwise safe Conservative consti- tuency. Ii the Tory vote ‘lad not been split, the Government candi- date would have won by some 10,- 000 votes. Chancel- lorship of the Exchequer in the Sai- lsbufi’ Government of 1885, but had the consternation of reading in The four of its students on the list of on the right track, for they tell us that old Noah Webster was infal- lible. S0. was our face. red wh:n we looked in the book some more and discovered to our amazement that wealth follows laziness, ignorance and indifference are followed by success, and finally, that under- taker comes after eve":ybody._ North Sydney Herald. "W" llflhe brings up to its high- est tension all human erprgy and Nils the stamp of nobility upon ‘h? P600188 who have the courage to meet. it." ‘The foregoinr (‘eflar- atlon by Dictator Mussolini is char- acterized as a “vile gospel" by m; Ottawa Journal. And so it is. It i5 a vicious doctrine, but on; whjgh is being pounded into the mind of the youths of Italy froc- years old up, and in the .-- hundreds of thousands 1 5311100980 youths. particifczrly the children of Cnrmsnys-St. Gotham ines Standard. Yale lends American colleges with shoivsthe wonderful heat regulating power of the body in the average healthy individual, because in “fev- ers", the production of heat may only be increased by 20 to 30 per cent and yet there is a rise in tem- perature. that scmething—‘nicction~is dis- turbing the heat regulating parts of the body. the increased temperature being due to the fight or resistance put up by the body against harmful organisms or their poisons that are attacking the body. Before the fireplace there they sat Their chairs drawn close together, This rise of temperature shows the “it W. ‘ii-fig’ 0141M. THE END 0F THE ROAD in pence, plants for resistance to hot winds The p. blems of the province are and drought; nutrition tn connec- tion with caitle and swine. The University of North Dakota has its School of Aizrculture on a different campus from that of th‘ University, and combines p. depart- ment of iistructiun, an Experiment station and an Eixtenslon service.‘ which it will be noted is analogous to the set-up in universities this side of the line, with different cap- tions. The department of instruc- tion l'|-t year received $55,000, while the Experiment station re- ceived $112.000. Of this the per- manent annual allotment from fed- rrul grant is $90,000, the balance be- ing local income ircm sales. Th: State makes no appropriation for the Experiment station. The Exteri- slongservice. which rims to $ll9.000. is also supported, with the excep- tiori oi $5,000, by federal grant. Tm report of the Experiment station. which is exclusively devoted to re- search, contains a detailed account of soil fertilizer experiments; of the testing oi various types of seed wheat. com. oats, barley, flax, alf- brought into the laboratory and research work centres about them. An analysis of this were repeats largely what is being attempted at the other universities. civfiiit; fertility investigations, studies in animal pathology, cereal breeding, and studies in entomology. 1n all cases, it is possible to in- clude only a sknleton rePil-"i °1 what the agricultural faculties o! the universities a e seeking to ac- oompllsll, but it is enough to indi- cate that all pf them are aware of the importance of research. rd all of them are seized with thi hih adventure o! it. Further. they are engaged often in identical P0111. always in analogous problems- Ii the universities could afford some system by which the ships could at least hail one another durinw the years, profits might accrue bnyflfid that of mutual interest, althaugh that is not to be under rated. Propaganda De Luxe a fort near the Battery in New York, [King William 111.. of England, gave young Trinity Parish the land on which ‘Prinlty Church now stand; at the head of Wall Street. in New York City. There was no street then, but a. wall, later razed to give the little city on Manhattan Island room to grow. Later. the royal hour} was struck with the thought that the struggling church could well do wth some funds, and he gave the parish the right to sell all whales, wrecks and flotsam arid jetsam flung up on Long Island. What revenue, ii any, Trinity de- rived irom that privilege has not been discovered. At any rate, flag parish did not prosper fast encug for Queen Anne, and in 1705 she bestowed on it a tract of land, which became known as the Queen's Farm. It. yielded a revenue of '40 pounds a year. As the thriving city began to spread out on its narrow terrain, the Queen's llbrm became covered with rent-paying buildings. Sub- ways under-ran it in inim- years, and rents went up. ‘Though mm slices of the fasrrn were taken to - ' » i. i , m hi u th test a e.” 2 _ “m i0 hm . zirtls 2r: m“: m» sisal». .122: in ‘m. .1 s::r..::.: s... ....:s¢::.r.::> .. t»... i- - c‘ de Eran vemjmend w e,“ $3,,“ w e the nnnouncenvirit that he had Princeton third w‘th two Twenty’ F, death?’ r6108“ with regard to nutrition of lfesiock the; Hawaiian sugar planters paid churches. King's College. how Col-i Bilh a, H5 fl 8885. Bil bye 3'63 - O I ’ ' ' , f ' “ d- 3 re 5 been succeeded by M‘; Go5chen_ three other schools have one each om 1E2; ulllmliiagge and Nedom and u! the production or various M!“ Amen“ Earhan $10,000 m xilfglglathgnllltilglgliuifgllf gtfhflxlebgblad er prosperity? This is the compar- lson which the Liberal organ itself invited last October. “orty per cent contribution under the Liberals; as against fifty per cent, plus the full cost of the concrete highway to Bor- den, under the Conservative agree- ment for the current year, which may be renewed, on perhaps still more favorable terms, next year! What is troubling the Liberal press at this time, oi course. ls not. the Borden-Charlottetown highway. “,Our St. Jacobs correspondent is under a misapprehension. Tlhe Journals oi the House of commons show that when a vote was taken on May 19, 1014, Mr. R. B. Bennett and Mr. W. F. Nickle of Kingston, both Conservatives, voted with the Opposition led by Laurier and 53.111151; the Government. forces led by Premier Borden, in full accord with their spoken protests.” 1s 1; rem to find such evidence oi consistency to one! eonviotiiiiio "D4,," Goschen." He had anticipated that Salisbury would recall him, as there was norn in the Conservative ranks at the time of sufficient calibre to fill his place. But Salisbury offered the portfolio to Goschen, an inde- Liberal sitting on the Cross benches, dished-and out oi office for life. he exclaimed, "I pendent and “ltandy" Lord Randolph's son, Mr. Winston Churchill has been a life forgot on the list announced by Dr, pram; Aydelotte. American secretary of the Rhodes ‘Trustees. The awards. made on scholastic attainment, dififflvler. Physical vigor and p0- tentlal leadership. give the winners two years at Oxford with a yearly stipend of 40o pounds. Outstand- ing students get a third year—-Cecil Rhodes’ dream of setting an indis- soluble educational link in Amen- can-British understanding beczmes a siiiiiivlhs T69~1iiY-—6teele in Mon itor. "- l! leneraliy recognized that For fifty years they travelled down While side by side they weathered They realised they soon would leave the 10E And pass into a fuller, brighter life. So there they sat, and sweetly told As once more, hand in hand, they 0f close-bound harmony that leads The commonplace. and toward the life's road, storm and strife. their love, walked the trail above Holy Grail. types. Bacteriology and Botany in- clude studies in forage and pasture, in stem rust and testing resistance of varieties of wheat and flax to disease. and of milling qualities. For the University of "‘ ncsots the total enrolment is 12,472, and of these 913 are in the College of Ariculture, which college is allotted ‘l per cent. 6f the University bud- get. The report of the Experiment station there explains that only in- vestlgation was emphasized which was immediately applicable to the "predicament in which agricultural industry at. present rests," and fly from Hawaii to the United States and, theil refer f0 the i535 from which she came as "the allur- ing south-west comer of the United ‘ States." They intimate that Miss Earhart flew mainly for glory but was glad to get the cash; that prow- agsndists for Hawaiian sugar were glad enough to pily the cash if i.» meant furthering the notion that Hawaii is. or ousht t0 bi’- PB" °l ‘he United States. The implication is. of course that the flight and the flYiWs subsequent remark have reference to proceed- ings to tart the constitutionality oi 0f Wall 801100 had 701 lots re- maining, and prospered until ii became the wealthiest church iii New York. and, probably. iii "i" United States. Recently the parish sold the wt side of Hudson street from West Houston to Clarlrson street, PM‘ "l the tract it received 23'! WW5 W! from King William. The traniivi marked the first change in ownel" ship of this particular Propel" since the royal sriiiil- Fm" and m‘ storey buildings and the land 0i; which they stand are assessed n aaegvmm Its growing concern is about the in political life. Rarer still to have Boswell,’ L“ o, J h is t with me welpspgnl, they faced the lgrgely hm u, do Wm, “land u” the Jonebcosttqan sum,- cqntrol “t: highway which Premier Bviihvii the evidence pointed out by s lead- mutlnecr. Hc kicked ove. the traces the greawstebwgrgplilife? evuongrg‘ unknown mam, pmbhm, tam,” Sewn,” m w y _ hi! Paved into the confidence and in rirwsPflller of the opliiosin! M‘ “b11012 in the army with hi5 dllCKLIn that record of a noble life ‘Selma-l’ ‘rusting l" ‘(W93 b°i1¢°ll lama“ w “Fwunure- 33" ‘I F B th B t . _ regiment u. Egypt, he applied for Boswell gives an account, f iizhi. credit problems. particularly in the ily 6 e5 "tflm d the deem“ “d the a” Pam" l“ "e1“*‘°u°“ M ‘he “m” d 1 gllmpsg 11¢ once m, m; to D“ farm (iortgsgc field and efficient most unanimous enthusiasm and mm o; “,5 own leader. Widely ‘,5 permission to coco: ed or :3‘; Johnsmrs watch. M": the ‘idoctoi; ~0llvel Scott Stainsby, in “same; m vygdugghn used on A support that his policies are rccelv- the globe may differ from Premier L: ‘iéxhohi: haptuecia fwxsrieaw ‘drew 1, "Qm h“ ‘Mk2,’ one d“, _fl_____:,;__:'§'i}e_ $229,051 '__ farm ‘afcountllng recginisp macaw: . k The Torrid malliitieitlasbneeicortllfg Bennett t‘); puny; iolmczdeiicenx got it and went to South Africa tlifuintfifilult, bartieivsfeeregc has the simplest of movements. con- Fplgdifcquiliig eargenilzf. 03:02:22: supbor a en u. . only has e grea cs con i Co rm .. ' _ ' slsting of th cc cogg-ed uocden @115 a593, ' g; of 11 w); m0" 917115” and "llsmllrwenlallil" his sinmrity. but it does not hesl- m‘! 5996181 War correspondent, 0i hmlrvéatéh fifglgoéalfiaglfjllliiitgdg wheels. disfiases, 0.1311: vii]; ogreventiorilesarid Ceyk)" Sma" Leaf‘, - we may expect from the disgruntled tote to affirm as much whenever the W 1mm“ Diiui’ m“- i?" "P ‘"' that no dgy 1.5.5 fuevp, D,._ control of the grasshopper invasion. Scouting Sta nds for Service t opposmon organ quesuon “misfit And Mrixmgmust ed; escaped; wrote up the incidents Johny”, always ma,“ death; bu, Canada is air-minded and nmbl- A; the Unlvmygy 9g Manitoba, i’), -, “ACADIAN MIRACLE” It will lrc recalled among those who visited here at the time of the Jacques Cartier celebzstion was M. Gabriel Louis Jaray, who visited Rustlco and Mlscouche to inquire into the condition of the Acadia-us. reflect bitterly that. it is s. long. long time since the Globe, or in- deed ariy leading newspaper, under- took to pay such s. tribute to himl NEWFOUNDLAND FARMS The Commission Government of Newfoundland is tryinl i“ graphically and sensationally in his paper; and became a national fig- ure. After tactfully sending in his resignation as an officer to avoid being cashier-ed, he returned to Lon- don as s politician. Hr: took active part as s. Liberal in i093 election: was made Colonial Secretary in the bell Banriermari ministry; Assistant Camp- Miimiiliiy tells us that when at last it came it had lost all its terror. "HLc faith triumphed over all his L fears: he talked with rapture of thn love oi God: he pointed his friends to the Cross: and he confldentlv resigned his soul to his Saviour." Many times he had recited with fear tlin words “The Night come-thy but Johnson passed through the Eight to the dawn of an endless sy. Nous to have an adequate air sys- tem of its own and looks even be- yond the transcontinental a trans-Atlantic mail-carrying llnc. The first slflp will be s, 3 1-2 day plane and steamship service from Montreal to London. The experi- rhce gained in such a service. it is believed, will lead in gcod- time to s trails-Atlantic mall service alon‘. one of the three route airmen think system he new airway will inaugurate to the dual facility of Agriculture and Home Economics enrolls 16.7 per cent of the total 1,818 university students in the regular degree courses. Agriculture alone accounts for 4.29 per cent. The net expense of teaching departments of Agri- culture last year was $49,831, and in Home Economics $15,182, a total of $65,463. This covers instruction and possible, the two shortst of which .1~»‘-.~.-5 - in an article on Acadia in lg Ilernps, of Paris. M. Jaray reviews the history and progress of the Acadians. After recalling that in 1711 only i249 "Frenchmen" were left in the Maritimes, and showing their gradual increase, as evidenced make tho inhabitants agricultur- ally-minded and that it is seekinl after the attainable in this respect is shown in a "statement of policy” which disclaims all pretension that Newfoundland can Produce staple products that may be sold abroad coigned the euDhcnioui P111180 "l terminological inexsctltude" for "a d-ned ‘lief’ when challenged with Erossly misrepresenting, for elec- flQn purposes, Chinese labour in the Rand Gold Mines as “Yellow slavery?’ there, keeping The Enllllh villlle of West ny- ton boasts the grandfather of all working clocks: A clock construct- ed entirely of wood has been tick- ing merrily away perfect time. since 1492, the year Columbus sssiled westward; The clock, owned by 3 private family, the qmsucu oi whether their ef- forts have really extended the span °f lllw-meiiiiihk. of course. the nor- "ill BDan. In the convention of the NQW York State Medical Society Dr. Canads-Philadlphin Bul- The doctors are discussing again MAGS BLOOD F000 FOR; PALE AND THIN by successive censuses, M. Jaray in competition with the 0004M" -—-———- é ____ r 3, proceeds: "m the three Maritime o1 other wimiriw- Bill ii i4 “"11" commen‘ ‘ion of Pwmiii‘ Ben- " "“""“"“‘ $111??? ?.;..‘.“‘.1f,“§‘,‘,1.§”.§',".?,“§,'3§§ PEOPL! Provinces the Acaiiians have seen ed that surely it is not Ni ""0"" nett's marvellous success in weath- lion to‘ the religious situation. There be Hilliifl-ified: that whst medicine t their numbers grow from 109,000 w sible m: to provide for the home ma; tiie depression comes from Iii is no hope that Nazi tactics will $1 {urge-Irv had been doins was 200.000 between m1 and l93l~while markets so that the movie Ihlll 1* quarim- Discussion Rethi- chonsei moderate, in the speaker's opinion, ,,,,‘°,.{,,,,,',,';§§;‘,',;“‘;;*; fifmifrmgq * "whim! semi-ll: the total remaining population in- made more self-sustaining. Thefo in investment. conditions the Feb- bump, "u", “M15 know m“ m, 5mm whlch u wmetmng qum ""1""! ill "I! "fitment of creased only by 9.000, going from are many Newfoundlanders who “my Bulletin of Messrs. A. n. wlygn they m‘, m”. m‘ ¢°,.,,,e,._-- different from lengthening the “m” “f” "M" um’ . 1.000.000 to 1.000.000; it is. mm- neither crow wretabiu mi hi" Arms s. 0o. m. has mu to m: Unchecked by criticism, ‘the totsli- ‘Pm-"Cillilmblll- Diiveivh- "m" l‘- m’ “' "‘ "‘" s em, _, u, estimated that these the means to buy them. Acosta: "Chief scion; the broad and in; tlrllil state is going forward on HQ,“ “nmh” °' ‘h’ _, .. figures under-rate the truth, and ly. the Government, as the relchiiig changes“ of recent years m “s11 o,- mghgni" b"5,_--you Wm -_ , , - A that in m4 the number o: Acad- pm or its recovery policy. is eii- the growth of national self-reliance soon see s. renewed and even mole . “ ‘ . °"’ °' m ""““ ‘"4’ lam in the three provinces reached oouraging this class to grow sufti- u. u» investment field." Tables powgy-[u] “Hum 3311M; ,1; m, . I ( ) ’ “an” ‘WWW vi INI- a total of 228000. cient for their own needs. To this "e “m; ghoym‘ m; mm; of m,,,.,,;,_, h, Gemmyy Mum,” ' ». m‘ ' K a capital issues in Greet Britain and the-United states during the per- iod from 1W1 to 1034. and it is indicated that followms upon the reduction In international lending. Canada has "attained a state of self-reliance which would have been regsrdsdss incredible s few you! ego.” Prince noevsnmin his been in Montreal lecturing It the father'- llflfl» lflotill I M iii I filt- end, thorn who are unemployed are, ss far as practicable. being settled on the lend or shown how to util- ise whst land they have. 1t is sub- mitted that, with care and proper ‘tivstion, vegetables. such ss pg- tstoes. cabbage, beets. carrots and psrmips, and fruits, such ss copies, nlunu. strawberries, raspberries and currents. can ,be producedinmostpsrtsoithois- lend, whilst in certain sections osh can be successfully grows for less, opposition was neither defeat- ed nor ‘ , ‘ . Courageous leaders of all sects hed dared to tslre s stand against Neal encroschments. and Prince Loewensteln firmly be- lieves that the church would triumph in the end. Be dismissed as pure legend the popular belief ‘that Hitler had "saved Germany from nolshevinn.’ The communist den- se‘: use been IIQfl-fllfllfll. he de- clared, except as s bogey in Hui WWI!!!“- . . Fer those. who luvs id their lbllllto m: rims v .- wlll Drove the restorative. GIT A 30X NOW. He. inn orsm mmsuy .. simian u. Prescriptions s lpeelslt). The Two Moos , - "Qush is the ‘Acsdisn miracle,‘ mom stupendous still, than the Canadian miracle: it is doubtless pfilltle to oM-llle "Y! vital ele- simq which have allowed Ioi‘ mu i, KI n N EY l