Voice of the Press Canada, The Empire and The World at Large CANADA Moit Northern Golt Linki What ia iiiobably the world's fur- thest north Kolt liuka la located at CUostorlleld Inlet uii the nurthoru •hors of Hudson liay. Also It might be called the most exclusive ot all golf clubs as It has a membership of ouly four, consisting of the Church of England missionary, the Koman ('ath- ollc tniuslonary, tlio Hudson's Uay Company's factor and his assistant. tho membership fee, which entitles the payee to life membership. Is ten polar bear teeth. The course Is still In process of building, so far three holes being completed. They are 400 yards, 250 yards and 350 yards respec- tive! in length, and are played three times in succession. Par for nine holes Is 36. While the tundra moss was .suitable for the fashioning of an excellent fair- way, the construction ot greens pre- sented some difllculty as grass will not grow so far north. This problem was solved, however, by building the greens from bard packed beach Band ot which there is an expanse of ten miles near the course. Four Kskirao boys, one tor each member, form the regular roster of caddies. â€" National Revenue Review. Empire Trade Dried apricots ami peaches, raisins, â- ultanas and canned fruits from Bri- tish South Africa are now purchasable lu Ottawa shops. And attention is be- ing called to this in advertisements by the South African Government. Fine business.â€" Ottawa Journal. summer U to be green, we are told. The onco-bluo suits should be just about right by then.- Ottawa Journal. Unchanged Dr. James M. Kloran, prenidcnt ot Hunter College, New York, not long ago finished his 50th year ot service as an educator; and, as men v.'ill on such occasions, he looked l)aekward over his life, smiled tolerantly and re- marked: "There is nothing new under the sun." Fifty years ot watching young iK>opli." give a man a philosophy all his own. Dr. Kleran, considering tho way.^ of youth, pointed out: "When 1 was in college, when you wen; in college, wo thought we were tho most Important people lu the world, and the world just couldn't get along without us. For a few years that continues. Then we get quieter, more conserva- tive, and look down on these young- sters and say, very wisely, "You'll jjet over It.' And they do." Xo one who ever stopped to look back over his youth will dispute that statement, sure- ly: and somehow, when you stop to think about It, tliat is one ot the most melancholy things about lite. Y'outli does "got over it," alway.s.â€" Kitchener Record. THE EMPIRE World to Cast Out Devil The United States have come to the climax of their inuludy while they are still strong enough to copo with it. They will build up from the base a stronger, more stable Industry and commerce than the fantastic structure which has toppled from the height of the skyscrapers to the duht. Japan will halt her invading armies before she raises the new dragon of a nationalist China against her. She will be content to have expelled tho chaos from Manchuria which threat- ened her material interests. "Consolidate, not cou<iuer," will be her policy now. And in Germany, when the blare of .Nuzi trumpets has died down, tho dis- ciplined Intellect of the German nation will assert itself, modifying the forces of reaction, building a greater Ger- many than the world has yet seen. The.te things will not come over- nightâ€"hut they -will come. The duty of Great Britain is plain. Wo must regain our own economic health and vigor before we shall be able to help others. We have our troubles, but we have also within us the powers for complete recovery. We shall best serve the needs ot the times if we restore ourselves to full strengthâ€" the first .sound nation in a sick world. In doing that wo shall hasten tho way when the whole world will cast out the devil that possesses it at this hour. â€" Loudon Daily Express. Non-Skid Surface Creative Spending Though expcrienci' aliroad may have shown the futility of nxpanding cnulitg without .some sure prospect that they will be used for productive and not merely for bankiiiK purpose.s, there Is no longer any reason in this country why public credit should not bo used This elevated slralght-away between Boston and .N'ew York is uow being considered. Paved with a resilient non-skid asphalt, speeds up to 100 miles an hour wll be possible, it is claimed. ^WITHJHE-A> LONESCOUTS Scout Equipment Lone Scouts will lie glad and in- terested to know that tlioy will receive to sliniuUite public and private enter- 1 a copy ot the new IMH Scout Cata- pri«e for really produc ive purposes j logue with their issue of Lone Scout and to the public lieiielit. The essence Trails for March, which will be sent of the whole matter is that It is now out in the next few dii.vs. safe to pur.-vue a forward policy on lines which would have been (juite i;:i- safe elfihtppu months or even a year This catalogue contains many very interesting and new items, and will no doubt he studied very carefully by ago, and that a forward policy, being all Louies .safe, i.s urgently necessary if the re- ward of past sacrifices is not to be de- layed and even imperilled. â€" London Times. Canned Salm'on Tho salmon industry Is an imporantt British Columbia industry. It has yield- ed over $18,000,000 a year. About 85 per cent, of the output goes into the export market, where is must moot with the keenest sort ot competition from American, Russian and Japanese salmon. It ia ot first importance tkat the quality of tlio fish be maintained, and the canners liave already received stern warning from iIir Department of Trade and Coninierco that otf grade sa- lmon has been getting into the export trade. British Columbia salmon has been gven a preference under the Ot- tawa treaties, but preferences or no preferences, It lan only hold its place In the Umpire market it it can estab- lish its merit. â€"Vancouver Province. The American Ordeal Aside altogether from tin. natural sympathy which the Kngllslispeaking people have tor the great Republic In Its fiery ordeal. Canadians In particular are deslrou.i, from the standpoint ot self Interest, to see the United States return to normalcy as speedily as i>6s- sllde. Canada has no desire to profit at the expenst! ot other people's trou- bles. That Franklin D. Roosevelt may ho alilu to restore confidence to his country and siibstlluto order and pros- pcrty where there Is confusion and adversity Is the fervnt wish of ev('ry loyal Canadian. -Toronto Telegram. Reason For Gratitude \\'it!i drops of 37.3, I!,'.. 7 and .'il.l per cent, in the exports ot France, Ameri- ca and Germany respectively aa com- pared with G.9 ill our own c^*e, J/, is obvious that we are weathering |lie storm better than any ot our rivms. Such inilustries as are active are thn^^e to.Hiercd by tlie recently impose^ tariffs; and bad an things are, we have strong grounds to be thankful that a National Government has saved ns from a situation that might have been Inflntlely worse. â€" Edinburgh Weekly Scotsman. THE UNITED STATES Tact Necessary It is said that that great newspaper circulation builder, the soclul column, is a difficult assignment to handle. Though readers are more than anxi- ous to 'see their names in the i)aper" they are equally quick to criticize the most trivial error. Tact, therefore, i.s a vital attribute of the editor, while. In small towns especially, no action ut any member ot the community must bo overlooked. Both tlio.10 virtues were evident In an Illuminating item in tho social page ot a country dally which recently slated 'Mr. George Sncdo has return- ed to town from where he has hoen vlsiliUK for the past SKI days." â€" [-'inan- clal I'ost. Practical Christianity All exaniiile of practical Clu i^liiinity <oMie.s from Soiilh Shields, Kiigland, whore a Bible class during the past year built 24 houses to he rented at J.'t iMT week Id the poor. -St, Thomas Times-Journal. Average Citizen's View The average dllzf-n ot this piciviiico would rather see twenty hunk bandits get away with llieir loot than imo hlt- andrun motorist es<apo after killing a (hild. -St. Calharine.s Stanilard. An Optimistic View Ihe world economic crisin, unless all sIkus fall, has about run its course. Th'', tinBruial collapse of tho i;iiited Slatf s, in spile ot the fact that most of the world's gold is held there, will probably prove the last stage before rerovery sets In Certainly. If Mr. Boosevell's policies are broad enough •M big enough to meet this Initial emergpncy of hU Rdminlstrntion. re covery there and throughout the world mould he under way In a matter ot tflonthfi â€" Winnipeg Tribune. Where They Shin* 'i'hu la-hioimble color tui men ifats Chinese System The Chinese, it seems, have quaint ways of dealing witli some probbnis. For instance, when business becomes bad, the Occidental employer lays off a few hands to cut down exi)enses, which makes husinotis just that much worse. Faced by tho same problem the Chinese employer hires another man or two. He may not pay them liiiihly, perhaps not nuu'e than ennug<i to pro- vide food and shelter. But each one <'un count on that food and slielter un- til hii Is able to obtain niorc luiralive empl(i> nienl again. When Charlie Foo arrives In, let us suy. Bostons China- town, lie may not ki.ow a bIiirIc per- son there. Charlie Foe, lieing jieiinl- less. it would seem that he must bo- coniH either a beggar or a case for or- ganized charity. Hut Charlie is un- pi>rliii'beil, for lie knows Ihari- is an iinwiiiieii law tliat protects him. He can gn III any employer and demand an opportunity to work for his food and shelter. Thus a hungry, begging das.s In Chinatown does not exist. - The Christian Science Monitor. Smart Scout Hats Talkir.g oC eciuipinent reminds us of tho fact that we have sometimes no- ticed that Scout Hats get very much out ot shape, it not treated properly. This is especially noticeable after camp. We have ..(ten been asked what to do to stlfTen the brim of a Scout Hat, and here is one useful method: Mix ono ounce of ordinary Flake Shellac Into a quarter ot a pint of denatured alcohol, in an old glass jar, and allow the mixture to stand for about 24 hours, with the lid on, of course, to prevent evaporatiou. By this time the shellac should be quite dissolved. Give the Scout Hat a t^liorough brushing with the stiffest clothes- brush you have, and then work the mixture into the underside ol the brim with a stiff brush. The mixture should be used sparing- ly, so that it will not come through the felt. When you have applied the mix- ture all round the brim, stand the hat on a piece of flat wood, until It Is quite dry, which will bo about 24 hours later. Then give t another good brushing with the dotUesbrusli. This method will darken the felt very slightly, but being on the under- side of the brim It will not be notice- able. The proportion mentioned above should be sufiicient tor four hats. Do You Know That â€" Gold cannot rust'/ Arabs never eat fish? The coflee tree is an evergreen? A camel can carry a load of over halt a ton? About 5000 words in the English language end with the letter "Y"? Sand coiit:iin3 (iO'^o ot microscopic shells? The average whale yields 2000 gal- lons ot oil? Totem Pole Carving For Boy Scouts Full-sized totem pole carving has been taken up by Ottawa Boy Scouts under tho Dominion's leading expon- ent of the I'acilic Coast Indian art, former Aircraftsman Abolit of the U.C.A.F. The first pole completed will be erected at the district camp site. Austrians' 20th Scout Anniversary Celebration of the liOth anniversary of the founding ot Scouting in Vienna appropriately opened with a service at the Chinch of the Barmherzige Brud- er, or Kindheurted Brethren. The I're- sldeut and the government were ofll- cially repesented. Scout Honour For Belgian Leader The Silver Wolf for outstanding ser- vice, including the organization ot Scout troops among Belgian refugee boys in England during the World War, has been awarded, to General Commissioner van Hoot ot Belguni. Scout Training Saved His Own Life Boy Scout training is credited with saving the lite ot George Kane, a young Toronto man, when his jugular vein was cut in a hockey accident. Kane kept his head, held the cut to- gether with his fingers, and assisted o companion, also a former Scoat, In completing an effective first aid job. Farm Queries Henry G. Beli! B.S.A., Dept. of Chemistry, O.A.C. Address All Letters to Farm Editor, 73 Adelaide St. West, Toronto. All Answers Will Appear in this Column. If Personal Reply is Desired, Enclose Stamped and Addressed Envelope. Questions and Answer* J. F. â€" I would like to ask a few questions about sweet closer. I have 20 acres which were in sweet clover this last year. It was a good crop and was cut for seed. It Is a clay loam and Is in fair condition. If I plow the stubble, will the clover come up again or will It come up It it is not plowed? There was a lot ot seed shelled in the field. 1 have some very sandy soil. Do you think It will bo advisable to sow sweet cljver on it? How much sweet clover should I sow to the acre'/ What can I do to help get a catch? Answer. â€" Sweet clover Is usually a biennial. If it Is allowed to form seed, chances are unlkely for it to sprout again the next year. However, It much seed has fallen on the ground, in all probability quite a bit of first year clover will come up and ripen again the following year, just the same as though It had been sown. The way '.o kill It Is to cut the clover when It Is green and plow under the stubble. Sweet clover will be especially valu- able on very sandy soil. It makes an abundant growth ot roots and thereby adds quite a bit to the humus of the soil. This is especially valuable on your sandy area since sand is very short ot plant fibre commonly called humus. The Field Husbandry Depart- ment recommends 15 to 20 lbs. of sweet clover seed to the acre. Two things can be done to help the catch of sweet clover. One Is inoculat- ing the .seed with the type ot bacteria that grow upon it. This can readily be done by obtaining from the Dcpt. ot Bacteriology, O.A.C, the right culture for clover seed. Prepare the mixture according to directions and add it to the seed. Remember this is not a fer- tilizer but i.s a bacterial culture and .simply helps the growth of the plant in that respect. To assist in the catch of clover it would be well to add some fertilizer to the soil. It you do not have much manure tor tho soil, our experience is that two to three bags per acre ot 2-12-G fertilizer gives the crop a splen- Roosevelt Helped Raise IVIillion For Boy Scouts U.S. President Roosevelt, who is al- so Honorary President of the Boy Scouts ot America, was twelve years President of the Boy Scouts Founda- tion of Greater New York. In that capacity he helped raise a million dol- lar Greater New York Scout Camp fund. Another Anniversary The Ontario Lone Scout Uopartmeut is now entering its fifth year ot ac- tivity, and during the four years in which it has been operating many hun- dreds of boys have passed through its ranks and received the benefit of Scout training. Lone Scouting has reached boys on farms and in small villages and towns throughout this province, who live too far away from an organized Scout Troop to be able to take part In Scout Activity through the regular channels. The Lone Scout programme is es- pecially designed tor such boys, who are thus enabled to be real Scouts, and who are assisted by competent leaders through the mail and by other methods. Applications for membership will be welcome.l from boys 12 to IS yea>3 of age (incl.) and should be addressed to The Boy Scouts Association. Lone Scout Department, 330 Bay St., Tor- onto 2. â€" "Lone E." Trawler Makes For Port Diabetea Diet Allows Sugar All ertei-liK. diet worked ont for diabetes calls for the onretRlioo: bread, riugar and pofatOR^ In amounts I nullalilH for the individual ca.e. Th<< vsrhilion Is that the palient eats about 20 per cent !»?-« fat llian nor- mally. I Breasting a heavy surf and hnffeted by strons wind.s. a Lowestoft trawler makes her wav to s]Mlt«T 1 the ttoiiny North Sea during a recent blizzard which swept the British Isles, did start. This should be put on at the time that the nurse crop ot grain and the sweet clover are sown. In fer- tilizing the crop after It has started, however, our experlmenta recommend tho use ot 0-12-15 fertilizer at the rat* of two or three bags per acre. R. B. â€" I have three acres ot medium light soil that I wish to put in potatoes next spring. It had oats last year. What is the best way to prepare th« soil and the best variety to plant? Answer. â€" As a general rule it is re- commended to follow a legume crop with potatoes. However, In recent study of the question we find indica- cations that exceedingly good yields are obtained following grain, there- fore we rather favor your plan. I as- sume that the soil has not been tall plowed. You should work it aa early as it is sufficiently dry in the spring but do not plow too deeply. For pota- toes on sandy loam soil, in our de- monstration tests largest gains have been realized from the use of 4-8-10 fertilizer applied at the rate of 750 lbs. per acre. It you have a potato planter with fertilizer dropping com- partment, this machine will give the fertilizer the best application. How- ever, if you do not have this machinoi strike out the furrow for potatoes or dig the holes, scatter the fertilizer fairly generously along the bottom of the furrow or holes and pull in a cover- ing ot the soil. Then drop your pota- toes and proceed as usual. Do not allow the fertilizer to drop right on the po- tatoes. Likewise, do not drop the po- tatoes immediately on top of tho fer- tilizer. In either of these cases injury is likely to be done to the germination and growth of the seed piece. For early potatoes the Field Hus- bandry Department, O.A.C, recom- mends Irish Cobblers, while tor Kita potatoes Dooley or Green Mountain are favored varieties. rt Grow Some Tobacco Plants With money scarce on the farms saving is very much in order. Grow t patch ot tobacco this year, two oi three hundred plants. This can be usee in the control of animal parasites, and will save you money. The growing ol tobacco requires about the sami amount ot attention and labor as does the growing of cabbage, with which all are familiar, and the method can he the same. Seed may be sccurad through any seed house, and tho little plants are grown in boxes, in time to be set out when the danger of frost ia passed. The fully grown pUuUs are harvested before frost in September, and hung up to dry well, previous to being pulverized for use. I'ulverizing is best done by running the entire to- bacco plant through a feed mill. The pulverzed dry tobacco can be sacked up and kept until needed. Farms that make full use of the home grown t> bacco in animal jiarasite control will not need to make any cash expendi- tures for this purpose. The powdered dry tobacco can be given in teed or in salt licks, as a worm preventative, to all animals, and it can bo used in washes and dusting powders in thi control ot external parasites. Trj growing your own supply, it will b« worth while. Any farm in Ontario cat grow tobacco that is quite good enough for the destruction ot anima; parasites. C.N.R. Wheat Tonnage Shows Increase for 1932 Ottawa. â€" The total revenue ton nage ot the Canadian National Rail- ways in 1932 was 3i,376.60.-, and io 1931 it was 41,708.212. A tailing oil was noted all along the line, notable exceptions being wheat which in creased from 4,754.957 tons in 1931 to 5.336,038 tons in 1932; api les fioto 97.796 tons to 109,449 ton.i and liv« hogs from 123,697 tons i., i:; 1.218 tons. The comparative table in ton.-; Id the year 1932 and 1931 foil >ws: 1932 1:1?, I AgricuUur.il pro- '•"cf' 9,577,202 i\J87,i6'. Animal products 93S,0."i.S 1.07S.42< Mine products .. U,554.4GS l.';.920.91! Forest products.. 3,546,.394 4.sa«,22( .Manufacturers and miscellaneou.s S.760.4,^:! li,li».-.,094 169,895 Licensed Radics in Five Ontario Citie> Ottawa.- The live cities of Ottaw.i Toronto, Hamilton, Windsor and l.on- lion. Out.. h:id l(5t»,89.'-. radio -ocoivins .lets for which licen.ses were in.id. ac cordiuK to a reply pivcn in the Hous« Mf Commons last week. Th..-c were (iistributctl as follows: Ottawa. 19- 08'!: Toronto, 105,264; Hamilton "i- !»<it!: Windsor. llV-M. am! U.^mJo^ ^_ _. Brazil to Curb Borrowing Uio Up Janeiro. - Rratli. with mo.U of lier foreign debt in sii<po.nsioa, plans a constitutional barrier a-,alnst tuluve horrotting orgies by the na- tion, states and municlpalitips. Ths con.ttitutional dratllng mmmi^sioB ha« approved an article providin-; ihal foreign loans rtiay he contracted only for productive projects. ' w