. r»; v=~'.@ ~ "was w‘ ~ ~ -..¢.-—~.= ,_..-, .. . <.».~... - ’._.='?$";u?;."‘ r r. Treaty. did not secure a single sent in r1101: 110p}; TNE ' . BNAIILIITTETIINN GUARDIAN lloruln; Dill! (Foundod llfll President. UeuL-Col. W. Chute B. Nolan Vice Prulflenl, l. B. Blruelt. IJ-l. COOIOIIIT, blunt-Col. D A Mulilnnon. 0.8-0. Idltor and Munlgi Dl-rtclol- J l. Burnett, FJJ- Auochto dlwr, Frank Wnllu SUBSCRIPTION BATES 35.00 per year tIn advance» delivered lo U01. $4.00 per year tln advance) mulled to P. I. Island 05.00 per year (In advance) nailed to Canada and ll-I. Members Andlf unreal of Glronluffono “The Strongest Memory ls Weaker than the Weak at Ink." I: """‘"' i121 TUESDAY, APRIL 11, um —a_. Federal Election Prospects 1'he Montreal (i1\zette's resident correspond- ent at Ottawa, .\lr. l‘. L. Klcans, PlQWS the led‘ eral election day in the -carly fall, probably in (he firs‘ half of 1 umber. "There is a strengthcti- ing \"ie\\'," he writes. “that the general election will he held in the fall. probably in October. N0 the tiovcrniucnt. for obvious rQQSOIIS smtvtncnt that would warrant a (lefitiite tirelictwin although Fiflnntc Miflifilef Dunning came ilangcriwttsl_v ncar it a few days ago in the lll|ll>(‘, iluring discussion of an itcm in the new trade agreement. “Final LlCClSlUII as to the time of an elec- tion is one of the closely guarded preroga- ll\'C> of the Prime Minister. The generally ac- cepted prediction that Premier King will name voting day some time in October is based on two 0r three considerations. , “Firstly, Premier King has a notable weak- ness for :tnni\"ersarics_ October I4, I935, W115 a ntentorahle day for the Liberals for on that day they were returned to power with the larg- est majority in Canadian political history. “Secondly, Premier King is not one 0f those who consciously [Slaces hintself on the spot or who robs himself 0f an alternative. If he were to wait until 1940 he would be obliged to go to the polls that year no matter what were the ec- onomic conditions; there would be no alterna- five. ‘A respectable programme 0f caring for all parts of the country in the supplementary esti- mates, early completion of all the necessary electoral machinery including promises of a drastic reform in the relations between can- didates and electors, and a. generous sprinkling in the sessional programme of what might be called New Deal measures all contribute to a state of prepardncss, from the Liberal stand- point." Assuming, as nearly everyone now does, that the Dominion election is to be held this year, the Government has but little scope for the exercise of its preference with respect to the time when it shall take place. The present Parliamentary session will probably be concluded in May, the Royal Visit will absorb the following month, and a midsummer election campaign is obvious- ly out of the question. September and Octo- bcr are the two most likely months, with the balance of advantage pointing to the latter. flldlllllfl’ of has 11111110 any Citing Nova Scotia There was one method, said Premier Camp- bell, by which he could have shown a. surplus instead of a deficit last year. That was by reducing the sinking funds. In Nova Scotia and New Brunswick the sinking fund provision was much smaller in proportion to the bonded in- debtedncss, and if we had followed the same practice it would be no trouble to show a bal- anced budget. It was annoying, the Premier said, to see the favorable publicity Nova. Scotia was getting for balancing the budget, while this Province, because it was making more adequ- ate sinking fund provision, was ranking year after year as an “unbalanced budget” Province. All this is very true, but the same con- dition applied to the previous Conservative ad- ministration, as Hon_ Dr. MacMillan pointed out in his budget speech in 1935. \Ve do not r..- call that it received any consideration from the Liberal Opposition, which continued to insist on a balanced budget regardless of the fact that the then sinking fund provisions were the high- est in all Canada. \\'hile the situation in this respect remains unchanged, there is one aspect which has changed, and that is that while Nova Scotia last year was able to show a surplus on ordinary account, in 1934 it had a deficit of over a mil- lion dollars, itothwithstandnig its comparatively low sinking fund expenditures. Nor was there wrv-wq?‘ - -—- in the border States will have no voice in the new Houses of Parliament. The King's recent appeal to the Belgian people has certainly not been without its effect, and the pro-German forces have been taught a salutory lesson, which may also give the German Fuehrer additional food for thought. It constitutes additional proof that the Nazi policy of expansion in all directions, regardless of the rights of other nations, is likely to meet with stiffer resistance from now on than in the past The reclamation of all territory formerly belonging to Germany is admittedly part of Hit- ler's fixed policy; but he is not likely to find it such easy sledding as at one time his bloodless triumphs may have led him to believe would be the case. I‘ Editorial Notes 1 American Civil War began this date, 186p i i i Design of the menu for the Royal banquet to be tendered to Their Majesfics the King and Queen when they visit Montreal is to be done by Clarence Gagnon, R. C_ A. ¥ i i It now transpires two full-fledged repre- sentatives are to be sent by the Campbell Gov- ernment to represent us at the New York Ex- hibition, handing out advertising data in the Federal section, “work" that could easily be done by a junior on Mr. Leo D0lan's staff, But "to him that hath shall be given" is evidently the policy of the Govcrntncnt in these ap- pointees. ‘iii Canada's $50,000,000 loan floated in London last July was sold at a discount of $730,000, and costs of the floatation amounted to $583,476, Finance Minister Dunning said in a return to the House of Commons. Brokers’ fees amounted to $570,616. The remaining expense was taken up with printing, stationery, telegraph tolls, ad- vertising and lawyers’ fees. The certificates were sold to the public at 98.50 per ccnt., to yield 4.34 per cent. n- u a r Some idea of the importance of the maple sugar industry to Quebec is to be had from the fact that last spring, the output of the industry \vas 2,354,000 gallons of syrup and 3,212,000 pounds of sugar. Syrup retailed at an average price of $1.10 per gallon and sugar at $0.10 per pounds, for a combined total value of $2,910,- 600. In 1937, maple syrup production totalled 780,000 gallons and sugar, 4,020,000 pounds. The average prices were $1.11 per gallon of syrup and $0.11 per pound of sugar. Last year there- fore the value of the industry's total crop ex- cccdcd that of 1937 by $1,602,600. iii! Queen Elizabeth heard Prime Minister Ne- ville Chamberlain’s announcement that the strength of the territorial army would be doubled from the Speaker's gallery on one of her rare visits to the House of Commons. She had gone to hear debate on a bill for permanent camps to which children would be sent in wartime. King George cannot enter Commons because con- . stitutional practice and tradition debar the sover- eign, Queen Elizabeth and the Commons so agreed in the sixteenth century in order to insure the right of free speech in the House, including the right to criticism 0f the Crown. King Char- les I broke the tradition when he entered the House and tried t0 arrest five of the members, iii Will it be possible for the Government to raise a sinking fund for hardsurfacing roads when water and lye are substituted for gaso- line? Mr. Henry Garrett, 76, electrican, in- ventor‘ and supervisor of the Dallas, Texas municipal signal system, has patented an auto- mobile carburetor which uses water and ordin- ary lye instead of gasoline. "The only adjust- ment necessary in present automobile," he said, Wlll be to adapt the piston chambers to the mpre powerful explosion. One gallon of water mixed with a can of ordinary lye, sodium hydroxide, will, with my carburetor, do the “Wk 0f 2,000 gallons of gasoline.” The carburetor, he said, breaks the water into ex- plosive hydrogen and oxygen gases eight times morepowerful than the vapors condensed {mm gasoline in orthodox carburetors. Its operation, he 531d, i5 Simple. \Vhen the water is reduced to hydrogen, it is carried into the intake manifold, thence to the piston chamber where it is ignited by the spark plug; I I I I One change in_tl1e Criminal code, which the Minister of Justice intends introducing this a province in Canada able to balance its budget during those years of world depression. The liIacMillan Government's showing in this Pro- vince, compared with Nova Scotia, was gx- ceptionally good financially. The Campbell Government's showing compared with Nova Scotia is, 0n the other hand, exceptionally bad. The Premier hasn't attempted to explain that fact, which is much more to the point than his re- ference to sinking funds which, as pointed out, have been high under both party ad- ministrations in this Province in recent years. Nazi Reverse Iin Belgium fhe result of the general elections in Belgium, notes the Montreal Star. will be another blow to Hitler's pride. Not only did the Fascist party lose In all directions ,-—-17 of the 21 seats -thcy held in the Chamber and seven of their r2 Senate seats. ~—but the pro-Nazi party in the mnton of Eupen and Malmerly, the two districts ceded to Belgium by Germany under the Ver- HrJT-Iduse, despite the fact that they ran lull throughout ‘the entire region. "l. _ . ‘v . ‘ Ilielgium rejects flu! Nazi movement’ ’ 1 one, time It was feared was destined " m! , Wsfik. would prevent persons without proper cre- dentials from loitering about plants making de- fence equipment, such as war planes, the Bren gun and other weapons. The onus would be placed 0n persons found on or near such premis- es to show that their present: was necessary. Other ‘provisions, it is believed, would bring the existing Canadian law more closely in ac- cord with the British Official Secrets Act. Vl/hile the actual provisions of the amending bill have not yet been disclosed it is known the Government is determined to check effectively subversive activities, especially where these im- peril the scheme of national defence and manu- facture of war instruments. The Justice Klin- ister has introduced what is described as in real- ity a history-making measure dealing with the sealing of royal instruments. Thisbill relates to the coming royal visit and also provides for a permanent arrangement affecting solely Can- adiap or domestic procedure. "During His Maj. estyvs presence in Canada," Mr. Iapoimg ex. planned to the House, "under existing laws and practice it would not be possible to issue royal instruments under thegreat seal or the signer. . This bill provides foffpassing such Instruments under the Great Seal of ‘Can-ids, of 0mm In connection with giving full powers for tho Tllhature of treaties. Those are royalwinstru- flilii ‘some saoendency, and thePro-Gennsn ‘ollflftnts represented. by the German minority monks. and the Greiit Sulhsi to be used." relation to Canadian‘ affairs; for instance, In ' 111E QIIARLOTPETOWN GUARDIAN NDTES BY TNE WAY A l0 thinks that u- lmplu ould be made of people who drive old motor wars upon whhh no Iasumnoe Is con-lad and who no financially unable to make settlement; for locldenta for whlfi on actionable. Man; poop who have suffered from such s ooublnntlon of circumstances will thoroughly agree with 111m. - Brockvllle R ‘ . and Times. the 40-0110 During yearn of sutomoblle msklng In America. shout. 1,000 companies have built cars st. one tum or another. ‘I'm names of their product-s con- frtbirtod an lnferes Ing nomen- clature Io the youthful industry. Among the names of passenge cars of yesteryear were: Auto-go, Anger. Bugmob 1e, Club Oar, Crouch. Crow, Dsrllnz. Dewabout, Fsrrno- bls, G-asmobi, Harvard. Imp. Kidder, Mlghty Michigan. Pneumo- blle, Red Bug. BtaJlc-Super. Zlp. — Autofnbllo Facts. Nova South's entire pack of dried apples, exceeding ‘$00,000 pounds, has been purchased by Germany 11132.10 oer 50 kllos (110 1b.), a figure which repre- sents 2 1-2 cents per pound over the market. price. Some Canadian Joumsls fear that this order will mean a shortage In Canada. but such fears appear groundless when one recal‘s that Csnadtrs exports In recent years have ex- cezded 1,250,000 pounds annually. —Sydney Post-Record. On Easter Monday (April 10) the smgum village of Hala- ton. In Leloestershlre, engages In the peculiar custom of “Hare Pie Scrambling" and "Bottle Kicking." local legend attributes the for- mer old custom to a. thank-offer- lng made by a woman after her escape from a bull. At the critt- cal moments a hare had sprung up and sorfiilverted the bull's a1- tsntlon. Be this as It may, 1t. 1s a fact, that at some remote period an unknown benefactor bequeath- ed to the rector of the parlsh a place of land, on condition that e and 111s successors should pro- vlde annually “two hare ples" — together with a. quantity of ale and two dozen penny loaves - t0 be scrambled for each Easter Mon- day at. the rlslng ground called Hare Ple Bank. a prehlstorlc en- campment about a. quarter of a mlle from the village. Though ahorn of some of its ancient mm- mlngs, the custom Is stlll vigorous- ly maintained and Hallaton men come home from n11 over England Joln 1n the celebration of their village's red-letter day _ Event-s 1n Britain. If. now appears that the reason 50 Senators were ready to intro- duce the war-profits tax b11l was that some of them hadn't read 1t. The were told that. 1t was a b11l to {ax the profits resulting from war, and they were all for that. so they signed on the dotted 11ne without tnvwtlgmtuzg. This rsay be shocking, but 1t 1s also human. ‘was sat Peer: 1 re uc an ng a 1s pignlfed fir“! them. ‘Thege 1s hard] town n Ameroo. arse enough ti: be s tied 1n theiztlsses that hasn't a lbogend of how some the baser sort not un a. that began with a loud demand that vice be forthwlth $2M‘ anrd uhperbuaifedttt“ nhuii; or so o e as c z: s slgn 1t. although down pt the bot- tom was an inconsnlc ous para- ‘€§S§l1.°l1;?.““€ll“ 12.31.?‘ .3311" ‘.35: loved eccleslastlc, be hanged with- outto trial‘; g ordlnarvthcltlzfins mfjall . s ev o n- ixfontlsgiic meyapsshoiild. perhaps. not iludge too harshly Senators who all Into s. more elaborate trap.- Baltimore Sun. The uulertalnment of an ICIN- nblo German aviator slx years ago by kind people 1n good home! In Winnipeg links with the news that, the Germans seek air bases and landing fields 1n Iceland and Greenland, sud, Incidentally. gives a clue to how aviation event; 1n the year 1933 changed the strateglcal situation 1n the North Atlantic‘: and lowered the defence barrier that ocean was thought to be against attack on Guiana. The vlslt paid to Wtnnl- Gsmmander Wolfgang Von showed the Germans what. they could do tr they dominfltsd the Greenland a1: route. The Ger- mans have been neither lazy nor short-sighted. They long ago realized that w domlnafc that alr route opened for them the back- door Into Canada. and lhfiy "W flnd that backdoor defer ‘ 1y wlder opan today than 1t was even six years ago. ‘The Greenland alr route dls so cavallerly by Ottawa experts In defence and 1n aviation, offered other advantages to the Germans. They see 1n Its control an even greater strateglcal advantage. man unimpeded en- trance Into Canada. They see 111w by dominating that. alr route they can give counter-stroke Io the supremacy In the alr over the North Atlantic gained by the British through events that. took plraoe 1n the year 1933. —Free ass. fellow of petition 1m: by Gronau right glven 1o 111m by Naval Expanslon Act of 1938 and has liven the navy authortty to grower; wtth the construction of wo 45.000-wn batfleshlps Behlnd the debau over the Naval Expans- lon Act lay an Italfan newspaper story to the effect that Japan had lsld down two MAIN-ton bs shl . That. story. prlnted In the FA of 1037. has not. been conflrm- ed from Japanese sources. but haw successful the Jlpaneae are In gunrdlng the detalls of tlgirsnnvsl a .14 b; ashlpl. b prgsiod, ta found the mas entry, ‘Not known." Presumably the Presfzgnt ond 111: naval advisers have Isoovond more evidence than the n r on 1001 affords that upon or some r MD smggimt: our...” ' ' quuuuu to . ' hi-"rstishricfihil s11 wit: ' n and 111s stazement was subec The President. h: exert-Iced 3:0; many March emitted men llonlfke hen- oencm as dkphwod on March the 30th o1 this yeormgovvéver, not even me weather co fact the detarmmauon of the to 11nd out. gt, 108i Canaan‘ IIIITIMdO on 101-81811 policy. and r exact. poslnon m we 811mb Common- wealth o1 Nat-Ions. 14mg before 2 o'clock on Thursday afwmoon s constant stream of ywvylC could be seen wennmg their way to Pulls- ment H111 and corridors were nuea to overflowing before the bell rang tio u-semlble tne commoners to near the momennuotu decLu-a . .Lf 1.1191’ expected a definite talle- ment from tne woredfwd Lea r of the Canadian people they were doomeu to ulsappolntment. A11 his previous demonstrations of vanilla- tlon were completely by the perfoxmarwe of the rrime Minister on Thursday afternoon. lmperlallsm, lsolaflonfsm, pan-Am- ericanlsm, 11x15, League of Nat ns. Canada- British Empire" he flirted with Vtnsm all but felled t0 disclose 1f his intentions were serious towards any. 1-1» made of external affairs an Internal Issue and Ls speech 1e11, little doubt. 1n the minds of many experienced parliamentary oh- aervers mat. 1t was prepared and de- livered with a view to 11a effect on domestic politics rather than as an Canada's atrtttude on ‘s onctltaflan of opposites has meant the acceptance of mutually contra- dictory prmcfples. For examne. the statements that the government op- po;es a neutrality declaruzton. that ‘élrarllament. wall decldelh said ‘Unis; e governmen opposes e oc e that Canada sho d follow Britain 1n war regardless of British y‘; are all flatly contradicted by h next statement, namely ‘when Brlt- ain ls at war Canada 1s at war. 1s s reallty which ‘cnpnot b; ignored?’ Canada's sufiplils butter 1s 1o be given to farnl es on mllef. N0 announcement has yet. been made as to the amount the Dominion Government will devote to this pur- pose, what the prloe wlll b: per pound, or 1f there will be an extra up roprlation for this purchase of bu fer. The provincial governments are t0 be consulted and their oo- operatton might. It will be remem- bered that 1n a revlous Issue of the Mirror of the atlon attention was 988 of butter Into Canada. during were over flvg mmfonJsounds. On April 1st. the doors were again o ned to permit the e 0f cat- te Into the United States. It ls re- rted that some exporters slurred i e cattle over In bond, prievlous to that date, In order to get the - vantage of the reduced uuy on the regular qtuots. In other quarters the sto 1s hat the full amount came permlssable under the quota. was assembled at Winnipeg ready to be shipped over the line on Sat- urday. Mr. Lookh , the mom- ber for Lincoln has already told the House: "1 know or s cattle raiser who has fattened about forty head 0f cattle which he anticipated sell! In Buffalo . . . He made fnqukles and the reply was. th of the lower rate 0f du 1s to we. t untll after A r11 1st en watch your step an get ahead 0f Mexico.‘ ' Unless Mr. Lockhartls friend srupped his cattle over at midnight m-lday, ft as 1f he may new looks have t0 watt until Julv 1st. O C I l Last week's threat 11y the Miniatu- of Finance to mums press was carried funher this week when the Prime Mlnlster of Canada objected to reports of 111s speech from the press 58.110111. I1 has been many years slnoe n. political leader has objezgetinm re rts 111s stame- varlous interpretations. The y way his statement could have been correctly re rted was by a. verbatim account wh h would have preclud- ed any conclusion as to n. single of It. He has since expressed re- gret for the lncldouv. gibbon _ SHIPS OF OLD RENOWN Tnlremes (l) of the Roman, crush- mt; uown to Antioch, Iongsnlps of the Normmen, gal- ‘Tml launso. Spa-n, gleaming carnvcls, (2) swlng- I 111$ 1n the tldeway, Never ma.“ the sunlight glld their | 1am again. Never shall these white calls. 112t- Inlgon .ne 8_B'llZIC, swoop 11 e a. swallow 11.6fm! the blinding blue, He (a) and eanvel, lying neath the waurl. lWalt m1. 11,35‘ egmiea shall n11 the Then 811p“ the darkness 11a frfend Drake's Eng _ nea- Wstut? the call that nun sound rem coast to 000st. Wlmhlllr: Ind memhantmen, lying ouiavgrpgtms Alflfifles: uia imi- Hwl <4) of 1421mm mu huuaht slum o1 Venlc mm shun lbs sunlight; gllde'thslr -—NCIh Holland. one of our own poets rm" fl Imlldlfll bnttluhl lb! ‘r36 totwwhstth: overshadowed PM‘ 10f sales, while In the Mnlwrslty of Paul" was once s tempt. a. public DNDQYW. I110 who never 111d the 8t. $800. ties, ecndltlons. ls asked. real West" none M $35 P7999753’- anotlwr Canadian sold. These a the death-deal g And the above have the edges then handed out. from $1 to $70, to Ions circle. funds with which these plemenls death- llitatlon". era! electlon) wltl Why not I-Yy tlon. n system by of new structures, transformed (m- those wanting I am, Sir, etc, FARMERS’ reed an article Anti-Steel Trap D.C.. on the month dens speak half. Blologlsts‘ Q01“! neaufffleg the motel a new era. Just In carefully and umued It the MAC’S 61m one; m1 Piles ulck almost. fr? the effort to treatment by which could be cured without re- sortfng w. m o n remedy has 011a ointment, [Remember don't fcrnt The 2 Phonn I15. Prom residential , lnurent, Lambert, Iota, assessed at 0500 to boucht In by tho municipali- because no one else could buy and ply the taxes. are now of! orbltsnt taxation. this city and province and swiftly drifting. sword. In that for sold, a govemment-flnanoed bulld- Ing Is placed. emptying some othor person's property of n. tenant. which. In turn will be again and bought 1n for the are merging from an oppo a friendly word research at the Mlchlgan reporting after exiunlnlng stomach content! of 1700 skunks, found not a "M9 i MAC’S HAIR RESTORER A delicately perfumed pre- pu-nlon which restores and If will restore [My hair M if; orlllnll oolo Mu’: lhlr lluforer growth where the hair 1s full in; and h remarkably ulefu. In prevontlng dnndru am. datroylny flnflsltlo hllr klll- uw the direction ""15°ni’éé"‘&‘°c‘£§z¥§. OINTMENT of“ Internal and Exter- A safe and efficient remedy In the treatment of 11m ‘ ‘ turfnrln glazes stubborn. r Itching, stfngfng sensation of piles Ind la s poslflve cure There hm buenIIor years an discover some local ef s Tube today. Price 801 If led wlth twill Evan’s Stomach ' Mixture Prloo Pcr Bottle B5 Cont! P. 0. Mlentlrn to Orders. Mirror Of The Nation PUBUC FQRUM Br “Cannons!” II vv-Ihmff, UITAWA, mu 10,4 blinding w-Iw g“ - thuzit-‘r-‘I-lr’ snow mm usnend u; mo long "- ' mo: debate on forebn policy lfllifsfi‘ “.‘i'd$it°° $1" S‘; T“ l“. “m” 11°" h“ l“ "mm °1 sm- ‘Robbin: nui- w p87 matter for con- If ls now developing into virtue. The deprlvo tho frugal savfnu life-time, to exploit It for those a stroke to earn It. scheme 1s to earner of hls often of l suburbs of and 5t. hem. st. Pierre. s11 such lots $5 on In Ville La Belle $10 the same but not many “classy Mont- are sold so 10w 1 hiwe personal record of a assessed at $11,000, in cltv, which was sold and did not. realize enough to pay the faxes for which it was nly srnhll samples 0! systems of ex- and In which Is so surely give-sway prloes of is two-edged every $1 lot 501d taxes, and to another for again create an- other vacant tenancy In the vlc- And those propertlm which are belng sold. and rnanv others which owner; retain with difficulty, have been. and are belng chasm of extinction. to simply me taxed bo the the city wields of real estate There 1s talk of "Farm Rehab- whlch rafter next gen- becomo a. 1eallty. a. sound system tenancy and progertv rehabilita- whlch. Instead‘ the run-down publicly ruined elf; houses ma)‘ be Into suitable homes u. residence at. drB/Wn to the fact that Importation-s the public expense? LEWIS P. TANTON. _.___?.__i. FRIENDS BIr-I was much surprised 00 by the Natlohal league of Wash. humble and much of despised skunk. Now durlnfl u" of Aprll when the skunks their winter rfune time to tn their be- I. W" and super-Io; you Wlll bi reaultl. PILL Relief In IDA und off- sane. burn l. Pile: tlnn. Such n found l1. you are troub- uh dlstres: MAGS x f" lull not a crfnunal. he Is the valuabl; course of a year. Isn't that cheap IN pars. Ono farmer's bulletin 031ml 1.1m. u 1m alone mum wiflclfln upuherstsmdmloonrvlmdfll! farm. lDd advises farmers to leave them alone u they are the fum- er’: most valuable servant. To Idd this any that we Island onlcy‘ ru l um body and women who follow Llmflwh" In: profession on P.E.I., nwved that steps be taken to abolish 1-110 bounty on our horned owls. When such an intellectual class of our citizens maliu the need of such s step. surely 1t Is time that some action be taken. u the horned owl 1s rapidly becoming soarcer and soon very few will be left. He In servant of agriculture. 1n; check thousands of roden who. 1f no check 1s put 1111011 l-hfim would won ruln our email! 9°" need proof of such a sto. erit. 8° to some farmer's orchard 1n the sprfng time and see the YOIIJII frulf trees girdled by field mice, 1n fact the wrlter has seen whole or- chards almost, ruined; and yet we would seek to take the life of the one blrd who 1s helping us when we sleep at night, when our guard neither slumbers nor sleeps. Durlng the day when the greet owl Ls resting we have a wond - ful ally 1n the marsh hawk and many others of 111s kind. We hope the farmers of our land will see the need of protecttng these ser- vants of ours. who work for us so cheaply, asklng perhaps not. more than one chlcken or hen 1n the w 1’ am. S11, etc. Friend of the Farmers’ Friends How Are Your Eyes‘! If you are having symptoms of strain-handouts. more eyes or Madness-consult s spec- nun. “In 1g! lei-viola wlfi: year; e once refrnxnillng servfaciis. - on!" 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