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He did not th it would be to the detriment of the industry if the mud could be obtained in quantity. m any case, potato production has been i! curse" to this Province, and has tended to kill the livestock industry. 1r the Government acceded to the request of those who were clamor- ing for extension of the fertiliser bonus to potatoes, it would ruin the . "rhis was the talk we heard in the House the other day.’ he said, "and it was quite foolish. 111 my opinion." Resuming the debate on ‘Ikiesdsy morning. Mr. Jones said it had been suggested that a floor be put on the price of potatoes in Ganula. 'l‘his will involve, has it had in the United states. the limiting of iwre- age. or else we will have such an amount of overproduction as will be very embarrassing to the labor sit- uation, the farmers and probably to the Government. It is too bad, he said, that the Government interfered at all in road Speaking in the Budget debate Cardigan be attended to _ in the legislature on March so. MI- Referring w the Ge0rIl9tDWll£_ J. Walter Jones, Fourth District of ries he said tbeinsdervo sbsgemnn Queens, said the question had been buejnof peoPlfl m“ hedgrlventhenufle di the!‘ thilyel-r He noticed that there was s eon- siderable sum in the estimates for sub grading and asked that his dis- trict and the Cardigan district be given a. measure of it. He referred to one strip of road. of four miles -that. bod been sub- graded and srsvelled at s cost of a little more than $500 l. mile. Oars were travelling on it all winter and it has given great satisfaction, Mr savillc observed. - Georgetown, however, was the only town in the Province with a population of over B00 people that did not have a paved rowd- Th1 time may come soon. he said. when the Georgetown harbor will be used for o. base from which to patrol against submarines and a. good road would be essential for the move- ment of supplies. It is an im rt- ant harbor and it always 1 b9 and. if there is to be any pavins at all this year Georgetown should get first consideration. He disagreed with any suggestion that the Department oi Agriculture The coiling should be scrapped. This ls an agri- ilEAll Pilot's LETTER PASSES ioiicii oi= vicioiiv GRUSADE T0 ciiiuinuius Tim; in flight .s.. ‘will’ gronomv). April a — A letter written by a zs-vear-Old bomb" pilot in the Royal Canadian All‘ Force and left. with his corrunarid- p1,; officer to be released if the ilot were killed has been received by Judge W. '1‘. Robb of nearby Grangeiillc, Ont. ' The pilot was Judge Hobbs I011 mt,—&t- Reg, Robb. He was shot down on a bombing raid over ene- my territory lost February The leiter was addressed: ‘Dear Dnd, blather and All The Beloved Robb Family” and flhe first P5111‘ graph snld "I can give this letter no date, as it is possible that it may never be used, but in C1159 anything goes wrong this will be my lost word to all of you. ." ‘Don't feel sorry for me," it 00n- tinned " . . .lt was natural that I should answer the call of my con- science to join the service in a crusade against a barbarous enemy who ihri-ziiens to annihilate man- kind. I should never have been able‘ to rest. in peace fOr the rest of my days had I ignored the call. "The greatest problem I had to solve ivns the one of the Robb family. l know that having been brought up as true Canadians the xvnol: rrimilv would plunge into the (‘oiiflllti body and soul. and that tlivrc would be hearts broken. “Wm: tho supreme-sacrifice too Illi-‘ll i0 giYl‘? No! A quarter of a ceivuiy ago thousands of our young men were forced to make the same decision. They held up their part brnwaly and died in the realization of having accomplished their goal. But. the goal was not reached —it was only a lull in the storm ill Bomb doors open. There go the messengers of death. One from Lon- don -onc from Coventry — one from Birmingham —- and so on un- til the monster will be repaid t tliousandfold for the destruction of our people . . . . "I will say a, prayer for these people . . . But after all a mad dog must be extermlnatcd . . . "Horrible venegcziuce will be meted out to those who aided the destruction of some of my best. friends. ‘Suddenly there will be a hord- ble crash -We've had it! A lucky hit-or perhaps I should soy an un- lucky iiit . . . . I om not afraid "To you who are left behind is a task-n huge task. A new world order must be created where men can live in pence and plenty with- out fear or prCJlldiCe It is up to you to see our job finally complet- ed. No more lives must be sacri- ficed . . . Beat your swords into ploughares Preach the gospel o! 'Pcoce on Earth. Good-Will Toward Men.‘ New‘ again allow the rivers 0f our world to run rcd with the blood or our youth. I nm depend- iriiz on you to aid iii this move- ment. . . ." "One of these nifihis 1 will min; into my plane and take off into the block . . Blue pencils of light will slob out, scorching franticallv for the death-dealing monster that is ‘_ cominiz m revenue those people of ‘the horribly-scarred English cities. l‘ "R91" l. son’; _?g llEliDlii BRUS. TOPPER Products for Sale at RQddlt Bros. For that Stubborn COUGH Take Redillnis Bronchial Syrup Large Bottle-Me C-O-D-O-L with Creosote and Gualacol A Reconstructive Tonic l6 oz.—$1.00 Leave Your Fills At REDDIN BROS. For Finishing Wampnles Hard Rolled Candles cellophane wrapped packages 25c Molasses Kisses Snli Water Kisses Rum and Butter Kisses 10c per bag. REDDIN BROS. i. M. noncrrrrs: n. M. SMALLMAN -______________i for collection phone- I437 Dlfl. will rim INIIO Had tough To Australia putting on a ceiling. will have to come off in any case. and he hoped the effect would be to allow the law of supply ard de- mand to operate. The loader of the Opposition had asked some questions which would almost indicate that he had "a private wire into the Department oi Agriculture." He was the man who hnd begun "letting the department go to seed under his administration. "An it has been going to seed ever since. until now it is little better than weeds." Mr. Jones added. "We hardly need this depart- ment at all," he said, “with the activities which the Federal Gov- Far Cry From Flying efllltglltiéleliristhtieill'l‘lyfi on today." 0 l d C r a te s I n Mexico To New Ser- vice. By Clark Lee Associated Press Sh!“ will" MEWHERE A€STRALIA. Avril 5—<A1“1—-1i was at Brilbucnu ni;p@l'i M- Me” ico City six XQHPS “$11 111M I “Fm last seen Charles Baugtilui, an air- man who nay. iicd men. B5 he gold, "by guess and Hod.’ Just ihc other night we moi again here M the dinner lain» and now he M5 learned go ccicsiuiig‘. Ho i5 a capiqm u: RAF ferry ccminziiiu hfifi 1115i llCWn a big 531i) iic for Australia's uifnice ilfld of- fence against $111811» we did a. lot of flying around MGXLCO in CtiiiueiTfi 91d craw- having to seek u ‘landing every {ow hours in tic ii wing gather or patch up the motor. His old planes xvi-re bafgfl-l-"S 9i a. couple oi thousand pesos. The one he just _ here-hurl it dscluu fly alone-is one of the urorldis ilmst bOmDOT-S- Charley could always fly B113’- thuig with viriugg but he navigated. as airmen soy, “l>' the seat of his pants," and I cou dub D-Ciilre him covering {he vast distances in the Pacific without getting lost. "Well," ho told mo. "I figured the boys doing the fighting need- ed planes so I checked up found 1 have to oelestiate (navi- gate by the stars» So I E0} I119 i book and learned to celnstiaie and I am real 500d 110W. B1" helpcd as much .15 cclsntiating on this l-rip." Baughon, 40 years old, from Kingsport, Tenn, Low as co-pilot with Qapt, sianley Klusek, an Am- erican. with radiomnn Al_ Mc- Mnnn. a Canadian, and illlvlgfiifll‘ H. C. Rowell, an Australian, flit Tropical Storm Near Oaliu they hit n tropical storm extending 2o 8.030 feet. "I; the storm, we flow right over the island and mls=cd it com- pletely," Bnuglian said. “Finally we found a lmle and Kat down but there was nothing but water and with the radio. oiiacrivise we could have located ourselves okay. "I couldn't celestinic as clouds were almost down to water, night was approaching and we didn't have enough 8415 i0 chance climbing back through the clouds. We were crmphtely lost. “I told myself: ‘Ciiai-‘ey, this is lit. You've been through a lot of them before but h're it. is, finally.’ "I was dczid sure the airplane was gone and I know the chances of being picked up were the slim- mest. I land already told Mac to open his rear escape hatch and get ready to get out fast. "We had three tons of airplane to set down on ihe wntvr at 120 miles an hour and she'd probably go down in ii hurry. ‘men I got o thinking maybe this wasn't it and maybe there was some way to get out of it. “I went back to where Mac was lying on his belly, sweating and working to repair the radio and finally we goi, it. ticking and got through to a certain station in the Hawaiian Islands. "me station wouldn't give u: a position because our signals were so weak they might have told us wrong. ‘they insti-uctedusto change 8111111111086 the Premier on balimc- standard our course, flying an hour and try to contact them again. A Close Cali "In the meantime. darkness came and the gas gauge clicked lower, After an hour we contacted them again and they advised us to fly another course one hour more when we would hit land-ff the gas held out. "Exactly one hour late-r. the nav- igator shouted ihat he saw s light. day went. Government," he continued, "a letter was sent out asking that our butchers be not. allowed to ship meat into the neighbouring provinces of Novg Scotiar and New Brunswick and ever since then we have been try- ing to get that regulation changed I have even gone so far myself as bring representations to the presentations to the Nova scotia and New Brunswick Governments that zliese three pfDVlllCPS be made one disease-free area and we be al- lowed to ship meat throughout the i)l‘OVlllC€S the same as New Bruns- \\"ck and Nova ScOtia famiers can were no bett/er off. Nova Scoiia is one of think they were in as good o. posi- oan’; tioii as they were two years ago. He ship meat our great markets and we cultural province and if there is any province in the Domlniim that should have a department of agri- culture this is it. important Industries The minister had done a great deal for the cranberry and the blue- berry industry and both of them are important. He had also helped and encouraged the poultry indus- try and was aiding in providing limestone. Mr. Seville agreed with Mr. Jones on the value or oyster mud and the suggestion that it should be dredged from the rivers. ‘This oyster mud was much bettter for the land than the ground and it would be of great benefit to the farmers. "I do believe that is a. policy the Minister would do well to take up," he said. Dr. McMillan: "Would it help the potatoes?" Mr. savillc: other things as well as potatoes in to 1N NORTHERN Minister of Ottawa. He made re- the WWW; 811d I @1111" thmk 1'9 would hurt potatoes either." If conditions favorable to scab were created this could be controlled by treatment of the seed. ' Farmers were getting more for their crops today. he said; but they He did not ship now unless we go through an didn't think there were any farm- me PAC.“ inspection WlliCh costs our people ers in the Province who would have a lot. of money. one of the ai-gu- a. net income of $1.000- menis used WilCll‘ we got the Wood Islands ferry service established was that the ferry would overcome ii, to field some extent. There is no law pre- b°°k5- io_ venting the shipment of live stock election time that this would be from one province to another." When a bigger boat is put on the be established on the other side and we can get into that market free. Federal Activities The speaker cited Dominion dc- partmcntal work in plant and ani- mal disease. meat and poultry in. spccrtion experimental farms, etc. stating that these federal activities werecontinually increasing. In this Province between thirty and forty F1911 1119 employed by the Domin- ion Department of Agriculture, oov. Hing every possible field. He referred to the possibllitigg in dehydrating vegetables In tho 155i W31‘ iiicre were sixty plantg on- ilflgvd in tlrs work. Ho stressed the importance of Novn QSCOtlZi‘ us the natural market for Pi ince Edward Islond bnoon and c ‘eese- We 111° 11°i Shipping directly to Britain, but by supplying home market we are bacon and cheese incos to do so. The Opposition lender was con- tinually stressing the need o: spend. mi? 111010 1110110)’ on health and edu- cation. l-lis argument was that there should be a doctor in charge of the Jones did was as important dellllty. A farmer gOOd Minister. or PPCidllclttg prov- as having a good might make a the oven an Attorney Genera] if he had goodwill. diplomacy and a prosecutor under him who would notlbeyinfluenced by politics. "If we coud tot an independent progocug- inf; attorney, it might be beige,- go;- ai concerned_ One-half of the Op- position leader's speech was about preventive medicine. It showgd he “'35 V"? biased in that direction." Our biggest problem from the health standpoint, My, Jones thought. was lack of physical train- miz in the public schools. He cited what. the totalitarian countries have 110118 111 this connection. This wimtrv. he niodicted. will have b0 follow suit or we will not survive Mr- Jones repeated his objections i0 Paying the full salaries oi high school teachers. "We are doing Well/ he Brililfld. "when we pay about four-fifth of their salaries.’ (Mr. Jonw was followed by l-lori. J. P. McIntyre, a report of whose address has already appeared), MB. GIO. I. SAVILLE Mr. Geo n. viii. or roost. .32. .;Ji‘i.f’".‘3‘.ff 1118 the 111158“. despite the con- stant Jeers thrown at him in tho past that he would not succeed. Replying to a diarge that. there were seven or eight foremen on one hishwoy 10b in the Ge- getown district on which there were o 11 or l2 men. Mr. saville said that. this was incorrect. citing examplsg of various projects in hi; dlstrioi Mr. Baville said that one foreman and a sub-foreman had ligndiod the Work and that the sirb-forerrisn worked just the same as the other lie congratulated the Minister of Education on what. was being done to help provide the cost of school "I promised the people at done, and now I am glad that I can go back and tell them that Mexican Wood Island ferry he looked fQf- what we promised has been car- brought ward to the day when nbattoirs can 119d 011V" He tii a n k e d the Chairman of the Fisherman's Loan Board (Hon. Mr. Cox) for his co- operation and referred especially to the erection of a fish house at Cape spry Four years ago there was not a iish landed there_ Last year 190.- 000 pounds were landed. said Mr. Saville who predicted that this veni- there would be hzilf a million pounds of fish landed tlicre. He closed with a reference lo the war and predicted that the time was coming when envoys from the enemy would approach Britain un- der a ivhltc flag seeking peace and asking terms according to the terms of the Atlantic Cliarwi‘. MR. G. H. HARBOUR Ml‘. George H Barbour. 2nd Dis- irlct of Prince who followed Mr Savillc. began by paying a war-m me tribute to the late Hon. G. Shelton onapiing other Sharp, a former political opponent as “fine acne as a person could uush to meet svith." He said in reference to the agree- ment with the Dominion, “This is uot the time to try and get as much from the Federal Government as you can get. because they are push- ed to their wits end as no govern- ment has been before." ln reference to the Prime Min- ister King, he said that Mr. King's arinngc- ments with the United States would Woman to head Oldest Daily In New York NEW YORK. April 5-(AP)-A dark-haired hazel-eyed woman of 39, mother of three children and an active worker for social reform, is the new publisher of New York's oldest daily- newspaper. The fact she is assuming the helm of the New York Post at l. time when the paper is taking one of its most advenurous steps since Alexander Hamilton founded it 141 years ago excites rather than gibl/Lktfbl its new boa-Mrs. George ac er. That step is the conversion from to tabloid size beglnrii tomorrow. The Poet for ssve weeks has published a tabloid edi- tion on seturdays only. lished in tabloid form for l. fem weeks ln i934 and then returned t0 regular size. Mrs. Booker acid she was “a little afraid" intellectuals might feel it a. vulga-isation to present the news in tabloid, wit... "w .."°*...'°'.”r ti’ . e ep e regular features and services, and the policy will be some as a}: xnzlaikfrlgwatwtlul: magi did and that he received no under m husband." enoiiilh there were the lights 0f a ex! a‘ pay‘ 59am l)" "14- "" Wm! ogftflin mm“. n reply to a o a political will be -' liberal, independent. and "I w“ M, m, “mm” and _b.,_“_ discrimination he sai so far as he not pro or anti an lag" meept ed m, Sh“, sham“, w was,’ no and the Minister were concerned, anti-Nari end snti- ilt. time in “mm dow-m M w‘ MM there has never been any discrim- Mrs. Becker took over the job to o. standstill our engines coughed and quit. We did not have enough gasoline to taxi off the runway." SOUP TRICK if the soim stock seems loo greasy tie a cloth that has tee-in wrung out of cold water over the top of a deep “osmium "ihkiiiiii" G c. Q stiould olhe as in lnation. Orders were given that there should not be any and. said M13 BBVIUB. "I don't think there is a man in Georgetown who can come before me arid any 1 discrim- inated against him." The roads in King's County were in good shape, He invited the hon- orable members to come down and have a. drive over them. and thank- ed the minister for the attention he falsmméisher BetuBi-dsy after he; as dent and editor because of pIOOIIQG ill hfillth. N0 119789!!!" FIN. Mrl. Backer, granddaughter of Jacob H. gehiff. banker p llsnihropist. has served as vice president and treasurer of bttzgdfiat- lilracetxshe and her hus- acqu e lpq- in from J, David 5km? n” v vvvvvvvvvw 154 Gt. George St. RPRIL L199 nvwsemssN wnw=icuarqrgfiisstwivco 1' NEW SPIIVG 111.4119 s Iolil sad Strain 2:29 h .___._______________ COATS in ievenlrlu, Crepes. Goberdinoo, and Poles in Novy, lleck and ell high colours. ‘12.50 .. ‘Z195 SUITS Tailored and Sports in tweed: and tricoiliieo. ’ ‘i s15 .. 21.95 _ _ _....._-_q ILOUSES in Slicers, Rayon: and Coiions. 1., 98‘ $2.98 DRESSES in Crepes, Royons and printed Silks. Timur, 1 ALA 4 ‘l .98 EVENING DRESSES in *14.ss “Well. there are Sheers, HOSE. A recent arrival oi Chilton Hose-Substandard 59‘ A SMALL DEPOSIT WILL HOLD ANY COAT KE N N E DY’S Ladies Ready-io-Wear ..‘~14.95 Nets, Crepes and .. ‘l 8.95 i=1- m1" Phone i766 l go down in history as some of his best work. He cited figures to show how the pavement west of Summerside had stood up well under heavy traffic. Turning to farm problems Mr. Barbour quoted figures to show the steady decline in farm income throughout tlii- Dominion in the last quarter of a. century. Quoting figures prepared by a man who had studied the problem it was shown that from i915 to 1919 one third of the people were on the farms and they received one-third of the nationul income From 1926 to 1929 they received only one-sixth of the national iii- come and from 1930 to i940 they received only one-tenth of the na- tional income. In other words. he said in that, ten year period one? third of the people received one- tenth of the income. In i932 the farm income figures dropped to its lowest and the aver- age total income was $198. The cash income for the same year was $111, he said. Farmers are not receiving the same amount of income as the lab- orers those who work in manufac- turing industries and the salaried people, Mr. Barbour emphasized. Unequal Treatment The farmers in the cast are not getting the same treatment as those in the west. sold Mi‘. Barbour who recalled the pfiCf‘ culling-s plac/id on butter and on potatoes and con- trasted that with Wllllt was done when the Preinir-i- of Saskatchewan went io Ottawa recently and secur- ed curtain guaranteed prices. Western farmers are guaranteed 90 cents a bushel for ivhoat at Port William The price of cats is 45 cents. barley 60 cunts. a two-dollar bonus is paid per acre on land cil- vorted from whrni and they have been guaranteed $2 23 for nil the fléix they can grow in Western Can- a a. . ‘Ihcy are ilivcn guaranteed prices on goods this“: not» perishable; . Grain will keep for years if stored properly. and yet the Kovefnment placed a ceiling on potatoes, a. per- ishable product. Referring to conditions in this Province he said he believed it was the hardest. hit in the D0m1t1l0li- We point with pride to the large number of young men who ‘have enlisted and rightly so, he said. But lie said many of our young men were out of work and perhaps many of them are now getting steady work {or the first time. "some day they are coming back, he continued, and I do not know what we are going tn do un- less we can raise the farmers’ in- come on s. level with that of sal- aried officials. The farmer is the largest purchaser and he could look after the employment of most of the returned men if this wns done. But the farmers and the working men are not getting a fair share of the national income. he stressed. Taking the recent Victory 1mm as an example. Mr_ Barbour said that about one half the bond issue was purchased by about 200 big companies. And we don't know how much other money they had in their vaults besides. ‘Ihnils vii-lat the trouble is today he added. "If we could create in Canada a system whereby more of the money was going euch week to the farin- ers, the fishermen and the working people. we would be‘ doing some- thing towards solving the problem It is up to all governments. fed- eral and provincial, to study how to bring about better conditions. he sod. If we cannot create in Crin- aris conditions, where more money will go to the ivorking people, tiien "something has got to happen. If we can raise the income of the farmer we shall have gone a long wny toward relieving unemploy- ment and putting the country on ll sound basis, he said. In clcs-‘ng he said a great work is being done and there ls work for everyone to have a share in defeat- ill-z the greatrst enemy that civlliza_ti_on has ever met with. f May beYourVlaminq yriiioiiiiiiiouiiii Returns To iiana Mr, Reg. B. Faryon. formerly President oi Lord 8i ‘Iliomas of (Tsniida. Ltd., and Vice President cf Lord & Thomas, Chicago. hi! been appointed Vice President and (icncrul Miinagcr for Canada. 01' fcctivé Monday, April 6, to suvcvcd lllr. Roy E. Cutting Binrn st lion- don, Ontario and educated in Lan- adc, Mr. Faryon has spout all_ci his business life in the Dominion except the lust two years, dull"! which time he served s: Vice Presl- dent of Lord d: Thomas. chican- Mr. Faryon has many friends in tho Quaker organization due to hu long association with the knowlerllt of Canadian advertising and selling problems, and the announcement of his appointment will be enthus- iastically received by all those villi know him i-Ils firm is looking for- ward with confidence to very real progress in Canada under hi: leadership. and he is sure to recelvl all possible co-nperatlon from MR7 member of the Quaker ‘lihrnily. .1 a. isms-Jon.» _JFJ_..-IE<I§‘TIQNL-An— - 3