y‘ rm: cnaatowsrroww. uuaaoiaa‘ .1-.-.~. '\ m I ‘ Dy Analyst an admit manlpluation of Mr. Hepburn tried to cover New Zcaland butter bungle King government, attempt- make cheese tho‘ Boat to the sin into the wilderness lrsued that the purpose of_ j lug New Zealand butter was boiflllble dairyrnen to divert their talk into cheese which command- ed s. paying price in the British market. The camoufiege will find very few ignorant enouz-h to swal- tho dose. hatter in 1927 sold a t 45c wholesale, the average price of choose was 18-51: per ib. To compel farmers to convert 42c butter into 18o cheese which nothing short of Liberal folly would undertake, and which only the most szupid would ' offer as an excuse to cover up the blunder. But this b just what. the King government actually did. They made a. wide open door for New Zealand butter, imported over 40,- 000,000 lbs. per year, smashed Cun- adian butter prices to i4: (Pre- mier Hepburns figures) and "forc- ed Canadais farmers to turn their milk into cheese. , The fact that milk produces a. greater bulkage of cheese than of butter, and cheese consumption be- ing lacs than half the value of fbutim- consumed, the vastly in- creased production over stocked export markets, and forced local 1111065 down to 9c per lb. The result of this was that Prince Edward Island farmers had to slaughter thousands of spring calves because it did not pay to nice them into milch cows, and sell them to ranches for fox feed, and to fishermen for bait, the most complete ruin of our dalrying industry that it was possible for lnygovernment to bungle into. The organ of butter price ruin- Ibion now tries to make a. case out of the fact that there h 8,000,000 lbs. of butter in storage in excw of the five year avenue, It conceals the fact that this excess of store butter is not. sufficient to meet the increased demand for home con- sumption. It does not tell its deal- ers that there is a practical short- age of butter for home consump- tion in Canada. It omits to say that our butter markets are firm, that prices are rocketing upward. Under the poverty of the people, produced by Liberal policies, the consumption per capita. (per year) was as lbs. That under the policies of the Bennett Government the pin-chasing power of the people is increased, and the consumption per head in i035 is over 8i lbs. per capita, 0r 3 lbs. per head more than under the King depression. This increased consumption of 3 1b.‘. per head on our 10,000,000 pop- ulation requires 30.000000 pounds more butter per armum to meet home consumption, and we have only 8.000.000 lbs. excess of butter stored to supply this excess de- mand. This is why butter prices have been jumping upward, and \vhy prices much higher. are stiff and going Yes; there is 8900.000 lbs. more than the last five year average in cold storage, every pound of which will be in active demand for home consumption, putting thousands of dollars into the pockets of farmers, in addition to over 50,000,000 lbs. increased‘ production per year, al- ready to 12c per lb. higher than Macken- zie King prices. And to prevent "any glutting of markets the Con- servative Government pointed export agents to handle any surplus, exporting it to Eng- land, the loss (if any) to be paid out of the federal treasury, so that present butter prices will not be allowed to decline. sold to consumers, and at 10 have ap- This is the policy which Hepbiu-n and the local Liberals denounce. Brilliant Little Bulbs forthe Rookery IDANT HINIMYURES IN FALL; - I THVY BULBS ARE EAR.- L T SPRING BLOOMERS. IOCUS, GRAPE HYACINTH. BEEF-IAN SQUILL AND SMALL IAIICISSUS EXCELLENT FOR 10K GARDEN- , ____ ‘Dc tiny plants which would be hi h: the perennial border or the JQIDl cordon belong in the rock ‘ don. Many of these miniatures i ' Hi9 faithful little bulbs, and the fist. masses of brilliance in the garden will be the soft coior of he arllcst bloom—the snowdrope, hike with Ewen trimming‘ ' lbw is the time to go over the iochry whore the plants are get- l The rock garden is not for the common run of garden plants. It is a garden for the smaller plants and especially for the species which often‘ retain a delicate beauty 0st in their more colorful child- zen. Plant crocus species. as well as the named varieties. There are a number of fine sorts. Plant such snowdrops as you can find cataloged. Try the tribe of muscari, the grape hyacintbs. The California. dog-tooth violets or trout lilies as well as the east- ern forms are beautiful material. The little yellow winter aconife, eranthis hyemails, grow under ordinary garden con- dltions, usually takes kindly to the rockery. difficult to "*s The Little Bulbs Are Real Spark! g" in Th; Rock Garden, lip; ready for winter's rest and whzreever o. bare spot of soil ilhflws itself luck in a few tiny zbubls. Thcy will pop up with the 41m warm suns of spring, llva inhocrily for -a. few weeks, and when wither back to the tiny bulb dntime to be out of the way of the llchr subjects. i; Spinning and Weaving - Hind nu your wool to be snub Into Iii! and wove into Blankets. The , ‘ u are: rinsln yam 23 cents. ‘ M cent: per pound. Blank- W u: u unhindered mus: ; l s lbs. of wool r Blanket. I I bowcllwclcdand all and bum cloud out. The also fill! vu-n in medium. and doub- (lnu. medium. coarse and “gum-n. Psi shipper-famine q; all parcels and owner's name. Jinn uul inltructicnc mm. by mall or IIIIIM. ipeclnl lot washed wool with dirt and flckll out. Iloilht will be so II II. lots. WILLIAM CONDO". l . lived. Chcllcmcwa- -,, ,. W-tl-Nflv- ‘ A4AAAA “A‘A VYwvvwwvvwYiv 8 0 @AAA vv vv such as the lady tulip, are fine rock garden subjects. You- may steal a march on the season and have the rock garden a thing o result: rock The intense blue of the Siberian’ squill. which will grow anywhere is a. fine rock garden note. There are other squills of equal beauty. California offers some tiny bulbs of rare ‘beauty in its butterfly ulip and brodiac. Some of the smaller tulip species, clusiana. f sparkling beauty before the- garden pernnials tart their season by the liberal use of bulbs of early spring. The miniature narcissi are in- dispensable for rock garden use and are one of the real gems of the miniature garden. Soptlmber’ and October m good rbnutirguths to plant most of all mull need lime special attention. Many . For the most part, they f them. like the crocus and the ormwdrops, will now without any can whatever moderately rich loll. fmh manure. Plant than shallow in heavy soil and deep in light. Three to 4 inches i| about 111N- Th0? with kl -.A- ll s ;¢ vwvv vv v w. v injury to the mouth. If horses are not eating their feed properly their ing is necessary every clay. Work horses perspire freely. their coats are damp with the per- spiration, the dust from the field they are working in settles in their ANIMM. NEWgy lvoms nusamnnv A IITTEB 0!‘ THANKS (Continued) There u a difference of opinion. $0M time w" I‘ My whims at as u. the value of boiled feed for M-w W“ w ha" c hmchold horses, Experiment; g0 u, Show‘ pest identified through this col- thag cocking does no; 11¢ dlnhfumn. It was the “larder beetleP-n tion, but 11 barley i, m be 19d 1; destructive insect in any stage should b; mum; 5mg“; m- mund] ‘except. the egg!) but particularly as the gram 1,; w.) hard go chewjso in the larvae stage. This corres- Boiled barley has been a staple pvudcnt. writ! asalu. says in food for horses, about once or twice m“: "Hwmg "en ‘mly "- few 0! a week, on many (mm-m ‘arms the beetles I did not associate them and it may; seems to be keen], y. .11 the larvaewhichlsentyou. Later mum“; A bucket o; hoped bum), slough, I saw dozens of them; but with enough bran and“; to gape I think. now, that I know where up the moisture, and a handy,“ o; they originated. Tlhey had been salt thrown 1n, makes y, very apQcoming out from among stored petlzmg radon m;- homesl andlfeathors. However, the spraying many. horsemen regard p; u a has been very successful and I am way desirable, Iful information." I This, of course, “kc some other‘ 1t i?‘ very gratifying hip lklnpw ceding practices, must be a; thati e “Nowsy No s" ave ep- the discretion o; the geedint gm my correspondent, and more so bran and oil cake are sed, hOfSe5TtC be thanked for it! I am able to need not have feed‘ 30km fcj-‘Eivc a little more of the life-history them. of the larder beetle (Darmestes lar- Horse; are being fed ensuage onidcrius.) from that monumental many fanns. It is good succujeny-work, “The Coleoptera of Indiana" feed, but should be used sparing-Til’ Robb. Blatchley- ly. It. was at one time thought. to: It is said (says Blatchley) that be unsafe feed, to use, buy, that m“ an erligrei gelncragiziin o1: the Eseetle has been wen Q 1046.1 may eve 0P6 n sx wee , so Ilmsilgqe 15 @113)‘, feed and Wm that. under proper conditions of 11:21]) to 9mm, the w“ of wmteb warmth and‘ food supply the in- 8 horses. ' crease 0f t e naect will be very Ivar-m 11mg; Shoum be 1m Ouhrapid. Most of the species are ex- on pastime 1n {he summen nceedingly destructive to skins, furs working they shoujd be fed oahgand oiiiier dried animal substances. and, a, small “mount, O ha _ “On e caresses ofoead animals Pasture glveg horses! ,1 greedomlafter the soft parts have been 'de- that they enjoy, and a diet, Mlvourcd by other scavengers, and fresh 3mg L; vary healthful ‘openly the bones and skin remain, them. ‘they can usually be found in A supply of glean, fresh wager is numbers; while one or two are essential forhorsesWhen hot fromimmmcn household pests, found labor in the fields they Should notabout refuse lard, bacon, feathers, be allowed u» drink all th and chew." '~. but should bq refreshed elbywisg; The larvae of the ‘ majority of small amount of cool water when Dermamd‘ a" brwm- "m"? 811106. they come in. and given more a clothed with long hairs and usually littée later. with a brush o1 similar hairs at I was at one time thou ht u. the end of the body. Many of them horses should not be wateiid aftzl- have‘ a peculiar gait, running for feeding, but careful experiments a short distance, than stopping and have shown no dmemvwe m the vibrating the hairs with great rap- resulis from watering horses be_ idity. At times they appear to be fore, during, or after 19mm; able to live for long‘ periods with Horses should not, be gnawed to little or no food. The adults usual- 8°P8e themselves on water if they ll’ "Play P085031" when difitllrbiid» have become very thirsty Rom folding back their legs, and rolling some causa. It; must be kept m over 0n their backs, where they rc- mind, however, that a horse will main quiescent for some time. drink from l0 to 12 gallons of wat- "When a ham or other object is er in a day and in hot weather already infested, the affected por- perhaps m0l‘B- Whoa getting feed tion should be cut away, and the rich in protein, such ~35 E1311,” surfacecf the remainder washed horses will have greater thirst, with a very weak solution of car- A supply of salt where they can bolic acid.’ ‘ reach it every day is very ncceg- With regard to the stored feath- sary. Ii’ they are fed boiled fem ers, my correspondent would do or scalded bran, ii; 15 a gQQd ppm well to examine them; since the to give it g, cure with 551g. but larder beetles always leave a great “a” "t?" i?“ 2m" fir‘ :;.°*'r;**°?:.*:.*r..“s:: .22.“: access sat a all times. The‘ e3’ °' Y1 - ' relish salt vary much 3nd 1; 596mg era may need to have this “screen- w be a mineral food that their ed" (sifted) out. systems demand in considerable amounts. A home's teeth require attention. If tbs milk teeth remain too long in its mouth, not making way for the permanent teeth, they should be removed. Its teeth sometimes weer unevenly and should be filed! or floated off. Young horres may have very sharp teeth called wolf teeth. and these should be remov- ed or filed. so they will not cause THE ARTS DECADENT? Not long ago, in fact just this summer. a. friend sent me The Il- lustrated london News, wherein were depicted sketches of busts and statues by Epstein, a sculptor ac- claimedas the most representative of those who lay claim to "modern" art. His works have created much controversy in the Old Land, but he disregards this and keeps on with statuary that is wholly ‘uncon- ventlal, to put it mildly. His art is irugged and queer, though not so ,hOpCl€551y bad as that of the cub- ‘ists. If my readers ever visit the “five and Ten" I would strongly recom- mend them to purchase the little pamphlet entitled "The story of Hsnovcrlan and Modern Britain ,told in Pictures." by C. W. Aime, M’.A., (Cantab) Amongst its. 050 illustrations we must contrast those on pages 41 and 62. to mark how the art of architecture has fallen teeth should lie-examined at once. Thorough and systematic groom- and while hair, and when they dry off, their coats are matted with clay. This condition is very uncomfortable and it also closes the pores o; the skin. As soon as a work horse dries off after coming into the stable, it should be gone over with a curry-away. The formerpage embraces comb and brush until its skin and|the Victorian period, commencing hair are free from dust and dirtywlth an illustration of the British Its comfort and health both dc-Jiouse of Parliament at Westmin- mand that this shall be done. ‘sier, built in i840. We are all, I If the foams are not pmpflflyithlfili. familiar with the picture, cleaned they will not thrive wellpandgnost. of all with the tower con- while being worked, and it'will oostlmlning “Big Ben." Twenty years more in feed to keep them up to after, st. George's Hall. Liverpool. their tasks. - was built, but the architect in this AGRIOULTURIBT case had taken his ideas from - Greek Classic models. The Albert Natives 0f South Africa Buy Salmon Hall (1871) still showed classic in- fluence, but the "iilnglish Gothic" By Shape Can One would not suppose that the is seen in Truro Cathedral, the shape of c can would have much Tower Bridge 1804, the Imperial Institute (i803) and Evil-ad's Lib- bearing on its selling qualities, but down in South Africa the native rary, Manchester. (i000). The eye and Indian purchaser will buy scans all these with satisfaction. but when we turn to P189 01. with its contemporary architecture. tha satisfaction disappears. Nc dates are given bore. but evidently we “mud “m” 1“ '- ml ‘mi "m" may consider all the buildings u thin that Packed in fiat tlnl. "'1' "twentieth century work." Contem- dsr the impression it contains a greater quantity. Another reason for this is that several well known brands of high-node salmon are put up in fist tins and the aver- m ‘ T‘ porary Architecture, any; Mr. Aims. is dominated more by, scientific. . upon tho tall u cbocper which in usually social, and economic influences than by tradltlon- or national char- acteristics. Only economic pronoun could excuse the baldness of the can aorta." which "chum" or "pink". Canadian canned ___-_ . . r-ws- == fab!) “Willa”! iwvalzffl in arm Britain. Colour u of 11m l"! ° 0 ° 0 n im ortance. liven whereau anal louth us» wma m Duncan the " ma? chief um II in the Japanese ‘more in c growing demand. - over. for salmon, . cited in i 1b.- fllf “M; 1!‘! Dllflilfl Ulfl “mum gqwrdln] chow: other mm to be of the ~ ulso In! , and 70ft ‘ill Min when there m mo: native - ‘ w! sigma ncoulnflm. a . , mm of m coda cumin ycl ‘ - nu bcm adopted amid: “Milan Notional a ~ it ehimsd, improves. the iv. ‘ . ,. » The may %UIH1I~HVO'IIUII' ' ' . i *2.“ d ....‘°“‘““"‘...... In KIIIIMROHWO-Ifil-Sllliififl saga laudable enoush: but on unfamil- change of feed may 1,. 1,. eyel-ywery grateful to you'for your heip- 1:1- sipuud the idea-s like ltransc B KPH more accurate in his daily fore- casts: I am inclined to think that they are over ninety per cent cor- rect. But when he tries long-dis- tance forecasting the resut is not. so satisfactory. This is not so sur- prising if one remembers the num- erous factors which may complicate his findings. Lwally the weather is influenced by mountains. arts, vegetation, oceans, ocean cur- rents like the Gulf stream, snow. clouds, humidity, and winds. This ‘formidable list is further extended by the influence of solar radiation or heat, And. we must not science is coming to recognize that plays some part in determining the days creep on. The leaves, the vul- nerable parts of the trees, change life-blood of the plant, retreats to the sheltered roots, where, beneath tile mantling snow. it will rest till The animals thicken their spores, seeds, winter-buds, cozoons bdim to be modern music; which - thinking in a. composition of pur- looka like a number of boxes of VI-lylfl! heights. set at different distances "in ths plflllN." No. ll is a sketch of "St. Saviour’: Church, lilltham.’ which looks rather like a section of Mr. Fords factory at the Chicago World's Fair. One naoog- nizes it as a chumh by the long, shallow intaglio omss running down the end wall. The Shakespeare Memorial ‘Ihcaf-ro at Btratford-on- Avon, is u. marvel of -mechanical ingenuity inside. but looks, on the exterior, somewhat like a brewery which was located at Newcastle- on-Tyns in the late nineteenth cen- tury. There is doubtless an inton- tion to be original, an ambition LONG-DISTANCE WEATHER The weather-man is getting much des- ionlzed particles. forget that and the universal law of gravitation coming weather. It will probably be another hundred years before any degree of accuracy is attained by this class cf forecast. Meanwhile we, along with Dr. James H. Scar-r of the U3. Weather Bureau, may cqnsole ourselves with the thought that there is no bad weather: it is nothing more than "a superstition created by people who don't like rainy days!" Weath- er is the perfectly harmonious op- eration of natural laws, and instead of bad weather, it is just a differ- ent kind of good weather! Doctor Scarr thinks weather the greatest physical influence in the world; and without the rain and its ac- companyinr clouds there would be no rivers, lakes, vegetables, and in fact, no life! Our own rainfall is influenced by proximity to the sea, by the suc- cessive rings of land and water of which our Island is the centre, and an unknown factor which de- crees that local rain is more liable to fail during the hours of dark- ness. "PIS THE AUTUIHQ ’ On tember 23rd the sun enter- ed the constellation Libra and Aut- umn began. “Autumn is the fall of the year, the ebb-tide of life, the animal curfew, and only a few organisms, like. the migratory birds are able to evade it altogether." 0n the one hand. retreat, retrench- ment, and death itself: on the other, the air is full o: flying seeds, m provide in due season a renewed vegetation. There is in nature an alternation of work and rest, of building and down-breaking; end rest for that the food fllpply of most crest. ures ‘Lv. restricted in -a.utumn and alioaetun- wanting in winter, in our latitude. The radiant energy of the sun is diminished too. as the color and drop, and the sap, the the returning sup calls it up again. coals against the coming cold. and many of them prepare for a. state of aus- pended animation in which deficient food and sunlight have no power. At the worst the individual can die, as do the majority o1 insects; but the race is continued by germs, and chrysalids, which defy the winter's cold. "While all these preparations are bring made throughout the animat- 00BX11 0! that day. ed world, the shortening days, the falling temperature and oven the position in the heavens of the sun. moon, planetr and conspicuous ciostellations mark the slow but 00h" steady approach of winisrb-Prcf, John Britten. TIIOUGIITI 0N MUSIC There are. rays w. l. Gilbert. c class of folk who “praise in en- thusiastic tone. (very century but this and ovary country but their own." Tho pmienr writer would pram Mf- fo‘ bflilmblfid with them, because he sees many cd- vances in science and art since his eailow ma. lul music. Oils would think, in 1m‘ 01o trench lexicogra- clisr‘: crab-ll is was backward. It is my privilege (to revolt to the first omen) to bur over the radio. at odd time. what I W m! ponies: melody (over-bordered we have reached the time when ‘Mmual Gene!“ M69“!!! of the earth prepares for its long winter sleep. Besides the necessity which makes animated nature repairs. there is also the stem fact Plant Cutting Garden This Fall; It Will ' Save Spring _' " . Work A Garden of Annuals for Cutting to Fumlsh Bcquets for the Iloulc There are, two use: for annual: in thcgarden quite separate and distinct. one for cutting-to fum- ish bouquets for the house. The other is to figure in the color scheme of garden decoration. Many gard- ens make t-hom serve the two pur- poses at once, but if cut freely for “ uquets, naturally, the color ef- fect in the garden is spoiled. Gardeners have adopted the plan. quite i'"""‘"v, when they have i room to do so, of growing some of their annuals in rows like veget- lblfl Wlely for cutting Purposes and use others 'in the garden scheme. A large number of annuals mayjust as well be planted this fall as next spring, particularly the cutting garden. Centauneus, which have little gan- den decorative V8lll0,‘~8.l‘6 very val- uable as cutting material. They will whiter safely if they come up from seed this fall. The same is true of annual larkspur, indispensable for cutting. Both had best be sown this fail to get an early start next 0131118- v Other annuals that can be sown now are all the various members 0f "W 000m’ tribe. petunias. armp- dragdns. alyssum, nicotine. (the flowering tobacco.) gypsophila, Chlnoce forget-me-nof-a. caicndflaa and hosts of others. The tender an- nuals such as marigolds and nin- nias, should be held until spring, although occasionally marigolds self-sow. I Snapdragons which have bloom- ed this summer may be cut back and given a protective cover and come through for early bloom next Spring. Experiment has shown that. the California, wax paper cloghu will bring the snaps through the winter‘ in fine shape. The cloche should have a small ventilating slit cut in its side. The one factor in fall seed sow- ing t0 be attended to is mulch. Heavy rains will wash the seeds out of their regular rows unless a pm- tection against the driving show- ers is given. leaves, straw or 5mm; , of the flower ‘garden will give ample protection. If the seeds can be sown in a seed bed for trans. planting in the spring, a. wooden curb about the bed to prevent the washlnz or heavy rains u. advisable. What. I ask myself, will next vagary? Sir Ivor Atkins, gpegkjng a; the be its Royal College of Orgcnists, Inn- r1011. said some things which mus. icians should take to heart. sir Ivor 1a one of the examiners for Fel- lowahlc "paper work." i.e., for theory and history. one of thg most essential things to a must. 01*")- hc Bald. is the possession of sound, indcpende judgmenb... trustworthy because based on his own study. "Too often, whccmr‘ w, are conscious of the fact or not, the opinions we hold are those of othcr people, o.‘ which it may be that wehave not even tgken m, trouble to test the value." A good iwalthy lrnoranca. he considers, u a batter thing in hold on m; my . thing rather than to bsoorns m; mem echo of contemporary opinion and taste. "Ii is the present fashion, for example to condemn every-chm; Victorian, whether- in music or u; 157” Wheel Base. ‘One Ford Truck-iwlfiilli-wiih Cab and Express Body-Dual Wheels $175.00 R FR STOCK BREEDERS. AND’ GA1iiDEN isRs rnucxs-mucks-raucxs Potatoes Will Soon s. Moving _ One 1929 Chevrolet Truck with Crib and Bqfly 3150.00 One 1931 Chevrolet Truck with ‘Cub and Body_. noun‘ DELAY GET A BARGAIN NOW A. HORNE ,8: ‘B0. Charlottetown. The tots l ares. of agricultural land occupied in England and Wales in June. 1935, was 30,370,000 acres, compared with 30,454,000 acres in 1934, a. reduction of 84.000 acres of 0.3 per cent according to a report just issued by the British Ministry of- Agriculture. The area returned as under crops and grass was 24,048,003 acres, a decrease of 82,000 acres of 0.3 per. cent. Con- trary to the general trend in recent years .the total arcs. of rough grea- lnss at 5.432.000 acres urhowcd a small decrease 0f 2,000 ‘acres com- pared with the previous year. For the first time since 1018 the steady decline in the arable area has been arrested and there was an increase upon the area in i934 of 144,000 acres (1.0 per cent) to 9,804,000 acres; the total arable land is now rather larger than 1932.‘ This in- crease was due almost entirely to the expansion in the area under clover and rotation asses. On the other hand-the area actually under crops, excluding» clover, and rota.- tlcn grasses. showed a decline of 62.000'acres or 0.9 per cent on 1934. A further sub- at 6,715,030 acres "tantiul reduction of 15.0 per cant o 288.000 acres ocourred‘in the ea of bare fallow. This was the lowest figure ielumed u under hm fallow for several years. 11b1- the second year in succession there was a reduction in the area 0f perman- ent grass amounting to‘ 327,000 representing 1.4 per cent, the acreage under permanent grass of 15,554,000 acres being very little more than in 17980. The filial area under cereals de- clined by 41.300 com or 1 per cent to 4.095030 acres. increases in wheat, oats and rye beinl more than counter-balanced by a. sub- stantial reduction in the acreage of barely and a smaller decrease in mined corn. The potato acreage showed a further moderate de- crease and there was again a re- duction in the area under roots, a small increase in the acreage of Ida being more than offset d 11191189 bythe ecllne in the acreage under turnips and swedes. After c. sub- stantial increase in the previous year the sugar beet acreage in i085 showed a moderate decline. There was» a small decline in the area under the four r ‘ ’ ‘ vegetbles. but a. further net h crease in the acreage devoted to fruit. The acre- age of hops was unchanged. That Waterproof Cape Various people have been ex- olaiming over that epidemic of waterproof capes which descended upon Edinburgh during a recent torrential weck- id‘ whence came they? One had not ncfsd more than an occasional cape during the preceding weeks or months-and than suddenly they came forth upon us like a swarm of locusts! More strangely still, most of. them were white of very light-coloured. They appear to be extremely con- venient garments-no fastenlngs. no walst-belts-mne slight heavc and they are over onc’s shoulders at the first, suggestion of a shower. But they do rather tend to float about in the wind, and one feels that a ‘light grasp must bc kept» upon them last they fly up over arm's head to she's dire neglect of the) Highway Code. A closer acquaintance with these capes is evidently essential to an under- standing of their little way!- Agricultural Land England And Wales, ‘Specified-Containers For Shelled, “voters Under a new regulation made recently under the federal Fish Inspection Act, shelled oyster-h they're sometimes spoken of as "shuckcd" oysters-must now be marketed in glass or paper can- taincrs and not otherwise. Each container when filled for market- ing, must bear the name and ad- dress of the original packer and it must be marked so as to show, in liquid measure terms, what quantity of oysters it holds. Thus the buyer will receive his purchase in a sanitary container, he'll know what quantity of oysters he's get- ting for his money, and if it should happen that there is any cause for ccmplaintthc name and address on the container will enable blame to .bo placed. As a matter of fact, however, most t? Canada's production of oysters is now marloed in shell, not in the chucked from, and regulations as to Alas and marking c’ barrels and boxes used in ship- ping havc been in force for some time. Some ameudm ti» have recently been made to these earlier regulations but the changes are of interest to shippers, rather than to consumers. From the consumers point of view probably the only change of interest is one which provides’ that oysters in theshell may now bo put in boxes of three different sizes a quarter bushels, a vbox containing not less than a bushel, or a box holding a. half- bushsl. Hitherto, only one bins has been permitted, the bushel and a quarter box. A8 pcrhapo most Canadians know. oysters are taken both in the three Maritime; Provinces and m British Columbia. and 1084 land- rcll. with a marketed value of nearly $158,250. New Brunswick is the biggmt producer. In the Atlantic area. only one species is cauflht but in British Columbia there are three species, tho Native oyster, the Pacific of Japanese oyster ,cnd the Eastern oyster. The latter, of course. were introduced from the Atlantic coast and the Pacific “fliers from United ‘States and Japanese sources. I Green Stockings Coloured stockings again, say an fashion experts. and one feel; in- cllned tolrreathe a little prayer of dissention .W'ho wants coloured stockings, apart from the varying and indescribable tints cf beige and brown now available? Once upon s time only black or brown were considered "lady-Ilka." The same remark would now ply to brownogbcigeif that adjec vshcd not become almost obsolete. Black. we hear. is to be worn with smart all-black afternoon mllcttss: fine silk navy blue sincklflil with navy shoes-one does not object to these: they suggest all that is quiet and neat and fashionably appro- priate. But green stockings to match green accessories-somehow, green stockings have an unplessanl suggestion. One recalls s not si- togethe fluttering custom which presented them to an older sister when her younger lllinr wcl married before her. They may be "the smartest thing for golf", if so. lct them be restricted to tho links. hut perhaps yflll don‘t agree?" Exchange. her forms of art. The opinion 1| very strongly mid b luperlor 0110M today thstfl or, 13am, y. Dvkes. and other Church oom- produoed no muvlc that on not hcpcllllly bed from cvcry point of view. I am not loin: into the mcrits cf thus men's cirncd with such a view as this, for Ji- Ihowl little sanity and less judlmcnti" T081!!! In example from Dr, Dykol. l! it comm-y ‘for anyone with Judlmont to pour room upon luch c tune u "0 comeand mourn with ml awhile?" "It 1| true that it commits the rather unpcrdonable offence of euhibiting lympcthy‘ and, faiicl. which in this more bland mmnotwbofoundmbern- pcllcct." but it is o consolation that s‘ modern compour. ubm . bu llVlIl n. no an ‘liar than: m“ of an olnn Olwrcll n u the fashion rumor-vs “to his ll th f color. ‘ w...’ "&‘f-'l§-.m'l§ odaiism blessed to W11! 00007" “id ii!‘ Ivor, “ the ‘fix hind’! do find myselgncon- Mm“ naiunncur’ . pum- Ihyray Ilsnflhcn the A A = The Hall Potato iggar never bruises the numb. ii in sully handled. by m ‘horses gterlziatrnngllybuiit, chad if‘ Insulin! 1 or w an ou , .. i Kurt of: r1113.“ {Ill mm u the um frame in undcn all theloirupiomenls. . ~ " i HALI- 21:22: POTATQ o-ADJUSTMENT .3 DIG GER "”"“-'f>f:££a'/7~ QAISING L‘VII e-ouooa consul limit him? l nu , bio; “vies! z in anksuil a, get It. _ small“ tlu mp amounted in n1 to 24.094 bar- _'