_.,.-, _;-:(x‘1“\.-A»....~.3:‘:,<:1:E;.—\,;;-;;-3&-é(Arq;,~—:§':~:'-:l.-sr-v:iv>-r:-h<-I-‘V-~»-av-,3-r-;-:> «. .. ‘ ‘ . PAGE FOUR f TIIE f;l}llAlll.0T'lETllWll lillllilllllllll M ' Dilly (Founded Ind”?! President. Ll~.u¢.-Col. W. Chester 8. Manure Vloo E‘:-esldent, J. ll. Burnett. F. .|. l_ Secretary. Lleut -Col. D. A. Maclilnnon, D. 8. 0. Edltor and Managing Director J. B. Burnett. F. .I. I Asloclnte Editor, Funk Walker SUBSCRIPTION RATES 85.00 per year (In advlncel delivered to City $4.00 per year tln advance) mailed to P. E. Island |5.oo per year (In advance) mulled to Canada and (LI. Members Audit. Bureau of Cfrculatlons “The Strongest Memory is Weaker than the Weakest Ink." FRIDAY, JULY 21. 1939 The Carnival Spirit l A week of unprecedented celebration closes ; today with military and naval sports, military tattoo and a farc\\'ell function for the popular visiting firemen. The \\'Cillll('f‘lllZlll was on his best behaviour, and everything, from the speech- nzaking, street parade and patriotic pageant on the opening (lIl_\' to _vi-ster(lLly's successful farm- ers’ picnic, linrsc racing and evening camp fire went off without a hitch_ The carnival spirit reached its climax during the hilarious hours of \\'cdncsday night and Tliursday morning, when lll.’lS([ll(‘l'Il(lC‘l’S, fire- men, soldiers. sailors, and S\\'.1l‘lllS of gleeful yotiiigstcrs joined in a sainrnalia of nit-rr_\-mak- _ing. Like the historic Conference which the events, in the main, were iuteiuled to comnicntorate, this week too will go down in histor_v. Old men and women who are now children will recall the details, and many who an: not children will shortly begin to wonder \\’llC'.llt‘l' they really happened. What, it may he asketl, has the carnival spirit‘ to do with the venerable I7athers of Confeder- ation? History supplies the answer. VVhen the representatives of Upper Canada arrived here seventy-five years ago, only one member of the Government was on hand to receive them. The test had gone off to see a circus! "Looking To Charlottetown" "It is not too much to expect that the com- memoration proccmliiigs at the l"rince Edward Island capital, marking the 75th anniversary of the first pre-Confederation conference, will pro- duce something more than a record of mere so- cial events, of an exchange of memories on the part of the descendants of the Fathers of Con- federzition,” says The ;\lonlre:il (izizctte, “It should be possible for these meetings to recreate or, at least, to revive, the Confedera- tion spirit and to show by what means the (lif- ficultics which now beset the union may be over- come. Thcsc difficulties have reached a point ‘at which the provinces and the Dominion must choose between greater centralization and some- thing more nearly approaching the provincial autonomy which was contemplated in 1864 and which the provincial clclgalcs at that time believ- ed they were safcgtixirrlitig. If the drift is not to be towards centralization it is fairly obvious that the provinces must share to a considerably greater extent in the revenues collected by the Dominion than they are now doing, that the system which has been cst.1blislic<l in dealing with unemployment relief must be adapted, more or less, to the permanent needs of provincial ad- ministration. This is a matter which migh well engage the attention of federal and provincial Ministers now assembled at Charlottetown. Their conclusions, reached in so historical an environ- ment, ought to carry great weight throughout the country and possibly have some bearing upon the recommendations of the commission which has been studying these matters.” A Hundred Million Spending Spree The pre—clection spending spree on which the King Government has embarked is unprecendent— ed in our political history. Actually, says the Globe and Mail, the elec- tion burgee went up over Parliament Hill early in the session with delivery of the by—clection promise to complete the C.N.R. terminal at Montreal at an estimated cost of $12,600,000. The wheat bonus, first set at 60 cents a bushel, then raised to 70 cents under pressure from Prairie Liberals, may not be a. bribe in the sense that its sudden application to Ontario wheat is a bribe. The practice was there to be per- petuated. But the to-cent reduction from the fixed price of last year is not the courageous gesture it might appear to be. With it goes the acreage bonus scheme of Hon. James G. Gardiner. By this farmers with short crops can collect anywhere from $1 to $2 an acre while wheat sells below 80 cents the bushel. What has been done for wheat is being done for cheese in a different way, on a lesser scale. Ostensibly to improve quality, standardize brands and generally equip the industry for a bigger and better market, the Government is to subsidize plantvimprovemcnts, extensions, ctc., to 50 per cent of the cost. Seven hundred _ imsand dollars seems little enough to “better estgblis " Maritime fishermen and expand their markets, considering the‘ state of the trade. It is. important in a $roo,ooo',ooo spending spree fqnly ‘as’ evidence that no interest is being over- looked. » ' i In tlie Central Mortgage Bank Act, the Gov- ‘ " w"ll assist the lending‘ houses to ab- _ 1 of a ivritedown in principal and Ialln-,..ai,ll. the other bromides, it is {title hard-pressed land-awm " "paid for out of their own » _wés«‘med to mice are [I11 couragcd to undertake at heavy cost to them- selves. It is in the distribution of public works that the gravy_has been lavished. Ordinary esti- nmtes provided $i2,457,532 for the maintenance of, improvements, repairs and alterations to Gov- Cfllllleflt bllildiflgs. services, etc. Another $17,- 257,000 was voted, all of it in the last two days of the session, on what can only be described as election bribes. This sum was spread so wide and so thoroughly that Mr. A. A. Heaps (Win- nipeg North) asked whether “any inlet. wall or breakwater has been missed out of the esti- mates.” The “roll-call" of the votes, and that was all the attention they got, he described as a geography lesson. hamlets, towns were cut in on the $3,159,265 voted for construction, repairs and improve- ments of harbors and rivers. The votes ranged from $2,400 to tiny Anse an Beaufils for pave- ment to $325,000 for the notorious Richelieu River scheme in the constituency of the Minister H0“. P. J. A. Cardin. Harbor improvements at Sorrel, home town of the Minister, will take $250,000, or $242,000 more than was voted last year. In the "ilrClli(€Ct's branch" the list of im- provements is just as complete. It takes in "CT." l"0""1C*'= and looks after those com- munities not fortunately placed on some stream 0r b«?}’- Public buildings are to be scattered in profusion, and, singiilarly enough, where pro- vision had been made for them in the past the cost in this year's estimates is invari:il.l_v higher than the original votes. It will be argued that these works schemes are necessary, not-to—be—done-with—out-a—clay—louger programs. In some cases a nccll will exist ; very probably the work should have been done before. But it is no Coincidence that they should all be provided for at this pzuticular time, and with such obvious attention to the electoral back- ground. I Editorial Notes 1 Confederation Week has almost equalled our proverbial Exhibition \\'cek for fine weather. ll‘ 1! * V Robert §urns——“Thc heart ay’s the part ay that makes us right or wrang"-—died this date, 1796. A week of festivities unequalled in the history of’ the province is brought to a close today, as it began, with the Naval and Military units holding the limelight. iii? fitfli Writing in Canadfrm Bu.cin.rs.r, organ of the Canadian Chanihcr of Couuucrce, Commissioner George Warren of the Victoria, B.C. Publicity Bureau takes strong exception to the magazine's use of the phrase “from Halifax to Vancouver” as embracing the whole Dominion. The editor replies: “Commissioner \\'arrcn is right. No longer will Canarlian Business says ‘from Hali- fax to Vancouwei-', which leaves out such im- portant places as Victoria and Charlottetown. llcnccfortlt the watchword will be ‘from coast to coast.’” in xv: »- it Mr. Patrick Josepli Dollar, Lord Provost of Cxlasgoiv, Scntlzmrl, the first li-;-ad of a Scottish city ever to visit the lfuitcd States is at present xiirtkim,’ a business visit the-‘_c, taking in the Fair. Interviewed on the ivt‘.crn:itiot1al situation he ex- pressed the hope that the United States and Great Britain would “make it clear that, while we stand for peace, under no consideration are We to be intimidated or bullied into doing any- thing that might be considered as yielding in our fundamental principles.” it it at It Stocks of eggs in cold storage on July 1 totalled 7,300,000 dozen, a decrease of r,ioo,ooo from July I, 1938 although recording an in- crease of 1,500,000 over June 1. Fresh eggs on hand amounted to 1,000,000 dozen, an increase of 0.5 million dozen over last year's stocks, but a decrease of 0.3 million from June I. The stocks of frozen eggs stood on July I at 5,- 9°0.0oo lb. an increase of 1,400,000 over the stocks on July 1, 1938, and 1,500,000 over the quantity under refrigeration on June 1', 1939. it It or n According to a usually well-informed Ottawa correspondent should Hon. Charles Dunning, Finance Minister, resign before the general elec- tion because of continued ill health Premier King would be compelled to name a successor to this key post in the Ministry. Should such 3 change occur, and it is not yet held to be certain, it is probable that Hon. J. L_ Ilsley, National Rev- enue Minister, would get the promotion. There will be no lack of aspirants to the post of Sec- retary of State. Mr. Thomas Vien, aggressive Montreal member, is on the list of possibilities, but a good guess at this stage is that the port- folio will go to Pierre Casgrain, present Speak- er of the House. His name was most frequent- ly mentioned some months ago when it was ru- mored that the late Mr. Rinfret would then go to the Senate. #11! The Montreal Gazette has come to the con- clusion that there will bc a Fall Federal election. Notwithstanding Mr. Mackenzie King's alleged indecision, it says there is virtual unanimity’ of opinion at the capital that a general election will be held in the latter part of October and there are evidence: of official preparation therefor. The leader of the Opposition, without knowing what is in the Prime Minister's mind, is already campaigning, and while his activities are more or less speculative it is not without significance. delivering public addresses here and there in de- fence of-the Govemment’s policies and record. The Minister of National Defence. also,}ls'not' idle. The Civil Service at Ottawa confidently I[6lflfl"fd1‘VI_lfll We may“ ~ one tends to‘,guj:r,‘:;¥tb‘l‘. coir” u daveloplnenx i In Quebec, for example, some 102 villages,l that the Minister of National Revenue‘ is also “ expects a full election and ltfuslully knows tvlruz?-. ls it, tlte,l'efoi'e:_‘ ll0'lES BY THE WAY onlyrmree out of 100 penoul see themselves as others see them -in busmess. Elghty-two rate them- selves higher than melt friends rate them; 15 rate them.se.\'£5 lower. so says William Iaoultpn ,Mzu-sea; tn the current Rotanan tlugazlne, reporting on a survey 111 ‘which he asked more than 10,000 people to score themselves on qualities whlch personnel experts .be deem essenial for .s'.1ccess_ in bus- iness “The tendency of me over- age person ls, naturally, to l..’lllll{ more highly of nlmself than any- lbody else does," the Qcicholonlst writes, “and. consequeiny, L0 fol- low his own dlcta:es rather than those of his superior. “Bul.." he adds, “until the ambitious worker learns somehow or other ‘to evalu- ate himself through the mind of his chlef, he ls likely to be more bother than benefit to ills employ- er. The average person. he bt.~ lleves, is unable to understand other people’; oplnlons of him be- cause of a “deep-seated determina- tlon to assert oneself over others and never permit them to exert; control over you. In short. there exists a widespread delll-510D thfit success ls attained by leading others; never by following some- body else. The truth is quite otherwise. The world needs manv more followers than leaders and. consequently, yields its rewards more readily to those who know how to take orders. Moreover, wllllngrness and ability to follow furnish one of the best posslbe and most practical preparations for future leadership But. the average individual, unfortunately, refuses to be led. and tlicrefon: never gets an opportunity to lean". There is a. belief, held by many. that newspapers welcome war news: that it is pl‘0fll.2bl0 to a newspaper. It ls 3 superstition. Wars and war news are as hatin- ful to newspapers as they are harmful to everything and every- body else. War news means that buslness becomes nervous; that. ad- vertisers become nervous: that there ls less revenue for news-_ papers. The sale of a few extra hundred or rhousasds copies of a. newspaper do not compensate for loss of adveitlslmz revenue. —~0t~ tawa Journal. The I)'0yly Carte Opera Com- pany — that is lne outfit wliclh gives the non-swung “Mikado - took ln about $190,000 during lts nine-and-a.-half-week stay at the Martln Beck. At the last perform- ance—-lt; was “The Mikado.’ Of course there were ninety-four standees, the record for the visit and at the conclusion tlw, cmnpany sang "The star-Spangled Banner. Apparently the record Savo.‘/aid was a young lady in her middle twenties who attended everv WT- formance except Wednesday’ mall- nees all thrriurzh the run, Just had other business in the mlddle of the week Dr, Oliver L, Austin of Tuckahoe was runner-Ur). zoms at least; four times each week. Most popular of the Voperas “The M‘ikad0;" comp aims were received that “Princess Ida" and “Ruddlgore" weren't included It the repertory. -- Now York Times. lvuclmel 0'14.-ary, Irish-Canadian ed the British army at the age of 5o_ As ., red-headecl “bl‘O\.h of a boy” from County Cork. he first enaered the navy, then spent seven years in the Irish Guards. He later went to canaca and Joined what lwas then the Royal North W835 Mounced Police. He returned to ' old regiment when the Great began and was 9. lance- War ,c0rpoi-al when at, Gulnchy in 1915, he captured a German machine- gun nest-, killing eight. men and capturing two. Helsaved ll. Brltlsh storming party from death find was promoted sergeant on the field. Mentioned in the dlSP3l5che5. he rezelved the Victoria Cross and was made a. second lieutenant. He was the first; Irishman to gain the covered Cross in the war. and when he returned from ghe from he had a. "wonderful time in Lon- don. Slnce then olaeary has had many ups and downs. Qt recent years he has been B commisalonalre at the May Falr hotel, where form- when in London. Now he has to report at York as a reservist: for ttalnlng with the Royal Enzlneers. "You won't. get A chance," his friends told him. “to add 9. bar to that Vlctorla Cross of yours, you will be on home service.” “Indeed", he retorted. "why in the next war the front won't. be in France, but in this country. you'll find." A fact that ls becoming all too obvious to Londoners, these days of war preparations. —~ Edmonton Bulletyln. ha.-I Whlte Plains. NY‘. llrst name court. and had his ' changed to Philip. He doesnt understand why ll. 15 true, Osterhuudt. told the .ll1d88.- there appears to be a st-lama at- tached to the name of_Percy in the minds of many ople ln this country, and alnce c lldhood your petltloner has been subject. to con- siderable rldlcule and {est for the reuon that he bare hat name, whlch has been I hindrtlnm 00 him In buslneag as well_u in me soclal relations." From time lmmemorlsl main have borne the name of Percy or lta equivalents. and most. 0 them seem to have been pretty tau h babies. There was Perseus, or Greek legend, who chopped on the aorsoxfs head and not I whole constellation named ln his honor. There we-9 Percevsl, or Psraual, hero of the, quest for the Holy Grail. William de Percl helped Wllllnm the Conqueror to take England and founded I fnmlly famed tn Engllsh hlstp . Henry de Percy subdued Sea land for years. Many later Percy: and ln battle, lncludlng Sir flanry Percy, who became I sol- dier at the age of 14 and mowed mm zeal in border warfare that his enemies called him X-lotspur. mt may xuueat an explana- tion for the beulnerencc of than old-time Pemys, Perhaps -..‘t_‘.ha THE Cl-lARLO’l"l‘E'l‘0WN GUARDIAN‘ Victoria Cross Winner, has rejoin-' rercy June: , Usternoum, or ' zone to . 5 PUBLIC ronun ‘nah column In On: In the dluuulnn by IOIIIIDCIUIIIVI DI qnutlolu cl lonll. ‘ll. Charlottetown Guardian long not necessarily endorse the oplulnnn at cnrrupnnrlanll. ‘ ‘ --wusus or ronrunrr slr.——All the advantage seems to ,“ with those operators of the , wheels of fortune on the square llhls wwk. The other evening I 559.3’ a dy lose about ‘fifteen dol- lars in 9 space of five mlnutea, j5hB felt very bad about it as she .left. A moment later she reap- peared and demanded that her money be refunded, threatening that drastic measures would be taken if this was not done, she succeeded ln “throwing a scare" Into them, and lung back half of her money_ ls was only one instance. Hundreds have been duped here since Monday. You may watch these games as closely and as long as you wish, and you Wlll rarely see a wnme;-_ You may see a man, rently wlnnlng; there are two or time of these lndlvlduals at every stand, sharing in the "winnings" that ‘hell’ the Operator allows them. and thereby drawing the unwary to the slaughter. (um this not only applies to the wheel games but. to the dice and other number machlnes. fool enough to nlay these games, let him take the consequences." That ls a. rather weak argument, and does not remove the evil. The Playe’ 15 In SW3 faith. he has no idea that he is being duped, and_ in a frenzy to regain,‘ what». he has already lost. he eats out of the 0D%ratar‘s hand. 0 8 Brent many. all thts is not “°“'v but -ludslng by the numbers, Wh° “"6 been playing these ~ _ 0 po a ton asleep. ‘There's one bom every mm. ute,’ said Barnum. Let us hope that the “one,” which he speaks of, fill not be mailed too frequently Ignfihe People of Prince Edward Is- I am. Sir, e ., “ II City’ F. A. B. THE CIVIC MUDDLE Slr:—’I'he Special Aud;tors had It dmlculn tau. rope-rlorni. 'I'ne mu. patron was exceeumzly complex, and .wltn the material at their disposal, the report entitles them to the .ellc0xnlu.ms tney received. yet all the nnom-.;s_ and many of the as- Sh-|Y1l>~l0n—. 1 5'uD!mB i4.ll not scand tnc vésus of accurate ttnatliy. j That may. 8.110 the Mayor and . council behind them, were impartial and WIUIOUL vismte prejudice is in- uicabed on the nice 01 me reporu. yet on the whole it imparts superflcal ,lmpresslon;s upon the public mind, which I scarcely believe the authors .lntcnued. t lncldenllally the late Clty c;enl 9-Dllsflrs as me "LIJRE". ‘eh is careful Stud)’ might reduce gr s‘ca.us to of a kid amongst. the goats. Equally so the substance alleges ad- verse "irregularities" to the tune of $69,s..6.4.s while by delving into the lbe whittled to an almost point The auditors clpner absence Qt vouchers and or evidences to establmh accuracy in many ca. es. ’1hey also disclose wmcn auually appear on the face. which in many cases may be ac- ocunted for. The unfortunate illness of Mr. Nicholson makes it impos- sible for film to concentrate and ex- , plain in great many ltems which are capable of clean explanation. This report is not by any means a d1s:lo.ure w.thout precedent in pas. history, at best. lit: only claims an lnslgm into some up a.r:mc<-.5 of the recent; present. Ye for nearly alfln century charges have been ,‘ publ.;.hed tn the less, and on sever- al occaslons vent lured in the courts, lequally, if not more serious, than the offlclal revelations of this uud.t. The art on its face displays ‘several ltems which are }XlO0nSl5i- em with the guilt, alleged. Yet they lmpart. the bad impression of sum, or guilty collusion. For instance they report that, — “In addltlon to this we have found or Premier Bennett usually stays ln_t.lte‘Olt)’_Q!f_h>_Lq&5,11 tnothej-0l»81 NEUTRALIZE FOOT ODOR lfl U-FEET INSOLBB cil'i§iI'.".'.'tl. :..'i.'i..ii'"'i.p'li'i'ail" r.s:umllu foot odor: updd upudlol" brln III and comfort to la 1 (on. Only 251 a pub. ‘NU-FEE M(D!C/lY[D INSOLIS ‘Sassy stomachs Relieved 3'01’! hereon la b troubled with p. u. all iicomui. and ‘ bowels should get a hum. of mi! “nil: s'ifr'.'iI:"i’hu will on use w 0; re- lieve lll'Illl$fG:I1ll[,Iylnpl0lll3. Slurp palm In the abdomen or About the heart are often iuo entirely to an DIGIIPO. 01-. Evan! Stonmll taken at I this nrnvenln R. but It remote: the func- gafle stomach. flonul mtl I of 3 ¢k the up to. Dr. luau stomach Mlxllln I: sold I the Two men at 850 not Get Your some ‘nay. BAIEHIG GAP! W In nodvql ° .35‘ l'..'.'...... «J31 ‘figs In Illa vary bun lllxttm not only solo from ,. —_ one may 333'. "Oh, if I fellow is 3!’ undlscovered past, those sums mlgh. freely admit that they were seriously hampered by the dlscrepanc es .(.v‘u|.l..l. b'LAi.“.i.‘r.Al 8Xn1r'.l‘0M8 - BEICHING, NAUSEA—ARI VERY ' COMMON Plhyslclang going over the rec- ords of t.-heir patients find that from 5 to 10 percent have gall bladder trouble, and yet. lt lg known that ln examination after death about two ln every three show that ,there has been trouble wlth the gall bladder. of course, these at- ilents cud not die because of elr gall bladder trouble but the fact uthat the bile was not flowlng freely from the gall bladder may «have been partly to blame for the final lllness. me gall bladder may give trou- ble in one of two ways. Flrst, there may be a spam (preventlng now of bile from gall bladder to in- testine) which d-lstends the gall Luncheon: amomme; lean the House of Commons‘ secow, bladder. out, and so again the meat broiled: white potatoes; are: the body which I obtahi from m‘ gall bladder ls distended. of peas; gelatin containing rult; permanent ofrlclals: thirdly 3 ml . It is belleved that before severe weak tea. raratlon which I try to gs}, gm mptoms of gall bladder t/roublel Mid-afternoon lunch: cracker: g recent, speech of one of mym, appear, the patient has been su!- or mu; weak ten. eloquent ." fertngwlth such symptoms zsbelch- Dinner: Same as lunch. _ 4 mil. Bus pressure, occasional nausea Bed-time lunch: Glass of rank. for as long as ten years. Gall bladder sufferers are made up of overwelghts and under weights. The overweight has al- ways been a heavy enter. and the (underweight, on account of so many foods causing belching, paln, and nausea. has cut down his food Intake so that he is almost; starv- ing himself. A dlet for gall bladder peaglent who is overwelght is susges by Drs. J. M. Blackford, R, I. mug, and K. R. Sherwood tn the Joux. nal of the American Medlcal As- sonlatlnn. ripe banana, or baked a le; poached egg on alternal): dig: “ 99“—°°"—3—‘“’“—L_—‘“3“’- amoimc of $817.99 over and above t.he amount required to be on hand.” Is there reason or logic to justify a °°nc1uJ0n. that an official within. who practices: systematic dlshanesty, s..“.::“s:“:.c *“:.q"°~=t " touched? n me "n" Next, they quote the Auditor of 1932 as fai10ws:—“Due to scanvy records. and in some instances pr-ac. tlcally no record. at all, a grea... deal 01 dllflwlw has been experienced to verify the outstanding debentures, gprtlcularlv the older issues." If . in 1932. were recognized as “older issues" how old were they, and what relation did they bear to bran; 0d.um or prejudice to offlclals of the present; decade. Moreover; la ft. a certainty that they are actually in defau t. al- T-housh on present appearance they are under unknown Identity’! As far back as about the year 1900, a Mayor mslsved, against the wish of the Finance cc lttee, upon the City purcttaslns alter Debenturet .l.ssue-S. from thelwatcrworka slnklnu‘ funds. and h0ld.ng them as alnklng fund investments 11- IIIIIJIIIIIJIIIIJIII; slice tout. small amount; of butter. l Breakfast.‘ Strained orange juice, Notice to all costumed Participants ‘ of Historical Parade, ram.- & carnival Parade Facllltluhlvehenmadelorecolve all costumes at the pg.“ lonlfht from 6.00 1’. null! 9.00 P. M.; Frldly from 0.00 A. M. tlu 12.,“ noon, from 1.00 P. M. ml 5.00 PM. and from 0.00 PM. until 9.00 PM, In all costumes have been supplied by a Montreal ooncern. It In vlt.’ :_llry encntlal that we on for every continue to In returned no later nu. “day gum In order that they may be repucked to_ be returned .g WE THANK YOU FOR YOUR C0-"OPERATION. CONFEDEBATION CELEBRATION COMMITTEE. speech-making. “new it ls: “Elm of all a humorous beginning which I get; from the smoking-room of all amount of cream. Mid-morning lunch: one-half Midnight lunch: Crackers or OPPOSE SUNDAY RUGBY rolls ——-- What about the underweight JOHNNESBURG —(CP) —. A; with gall bladder trouble? The application by a club to partlclpm sugges lon for underweight: is to la exhlbltlon rugby matches on add bland cereals and some fruit to the nblve dlet. cream and but- ter are also added if they do not disturb the patient too much. Sunday has been Lumen OOWII by a spectral sub-committee of tin Transvaal Rugby Union. -———-——% LEEDS, England -(cpl .3... STEPS IN SPEECH-MAKING belt stucllffe, famous Yorkmlzg and England cricketer, this 5“. son became the sixth Erlgllznma: my toscore50,000runa1nhl.s!lm.. .1 class career. He la 43 year old. J iwiiiilsur Oll DOMINION SQUARE IDNDON, July 20-(CP)—Ollver Strmley. pmealdent. of the Board of ‘made revealed his real J. ALDIRIO RAYMOND vac: nuunulr Farmers and A Weed Control I would not dogmntlcally declare this as a solution. but has the en- qulry been sufficiently searching to make sure that here may be found the seat, of an apparent mysbe ‘I ’.lhat. the "Cit received no cam" such B. trans er would be evident. at retaining the bonds retained to he city ,9. cash equlvalent. The .clea of establishing "am arlthmetlcally correct ma) balance- by writing up a rough work led er from information available in 0 Annual Reports of the ally" is car- tamlv novel to those familiar with the tactics of petty politicians con- trolllng the finances of peak ov- ernmencs in this, and, I eve other provinces. It is generally ac- cepted. partlnularly in election years, that public accounts and bal- ance sheets are. as the auditors say. "Jug led", to catch the eyes of an-. oept le voters and are no more de- pendable as 3 Ioundltlon for mathe- matlcal precision than an election speech at political mountebank ls for BGMUBCY. And yet, such ‘ are ln most cases only cooked for transient consumption, without any- allty. Th find! "\‘. Glfid bond; heldnin Ollie dilly amt but which were fully Aiefotlnble in their cash to any to dispose 0 them." emf: “ got "lthoiiaand d?roes syn in", u many distant trom any form of evt cries of criminality on thevmrl. of my ggiordlnutc offlclal ha Access to em. . i The present situation is too Important to be treated with the apathy or the put. and fun to be hoped that mlnklmr mlnds vrlll gm close and impartial study to the civic slbiiatl In object- iwlth thew live ea-ta lshtn Oglllhd . TAXPAYER. Frifisslonalllirds ll. F. llllGll|BAI.ll chartered Accountant 140 pllelunond In-out Phone 47. P. 0. Box I! _.1 ' .Mc|.EOD a. sinner _ I. K. c. t _ 3 ._. H-><——h-4-I-1-L1IQ—v< ldel. of tom: to comb and , ,... at mine: not hnvln been 111- 1 ' 5p§c|A|_§., l.‘.'.‘.*.§" -;.."i:' '.“.*:.*M::."“‘:° them. to grldlcula. ma . .. 90995 "WNW V“-l-3 ms: on new York World-'rele- ,, 39c.pu-. he a J real spice or savor of actual crlmfn- . of bl I cut annltv to substitute this fun -century-old condition of civic chaos; _'A A D I am sir, etc. 4 The Provincial Government, being vcy much concern- ed about the prevalence of weeds throughout the farming districts, more particularly in regard to wild mustard, liars decided to inaugurate a series of experiments to deter» mine whether anything can be done to eradicate these obnoxious weeds. The Department of Agriculture has sent, where they could, an amount of Cyunamld to do approxi- mately one acre, asking the farmers to keep record of the time at which it was applied, the condition of the mustard at the time of application, whether it was well in blossom or just coming out, and to reply to the Department of Agri- culture the effect lt has on this particular weed’. Hoping that we can get. some lnformatlon that will In ‘of benefit to the Department and to the farmers through- out the Province an to whether this treatment can be fol- lowed during another season effectively. W. H. DENNIS, Minister of Agriculture F0‘ Vitalitu lwa use BRAHMIN ORANGE , EKOE TEA WHEN T . ‘WAS. . YOUNG , Soldier: marched hand In hand with the plou- In developing the Rgéniizry. Ewlm‘-o one: than 7.)‘ .. _.._. j early; . an-lvnll 9 labored in Ontario vobaccu ‘ vim,