k; ; & { [» U. $. TO BLAME. Britain‘s attitude on the war debts has, of course, never had any real connection with her ability to meet the bill in the usual commercial way. If the United States would accept British goods instead oft demanding British gold, the debt could be paid mnd no doubt would be paid. But the United States will not accept goods. â€"Vancouver Province. the larger yart came from British India. In that year Canada imported only about 31,000,000 pounds ot cofâ€" feeâ€"New York Times The favorite beverage of Canadians natural, considering the British an. cestry of many of them, is tea. A reâ€" port just issued shows that the imâ€" ports into the Dominion during 1932 totalled 40,437,747 pounds, of which CANADA‘S PREFERENCE These. and other iMuminating fig ures show what the automobile indusâ€" try is doing. how it is leading the way.â€"â€"Border Cities Star. FIGURES THAT TALK. For the firt four monr‘hs of 1034, production of Canadianâ€"made _ cars, trucks and busses totalled 48,018, as compared with 21,543, 24236 and 46,â€" 612 in the corresponding periods of 1933. 1932 and 1931 respectively, Ex poris in the first four months of 1934 have already reached $5,585,000, conâ€" trasted with $1,654,000 in 1933 NICKEL EXxXPORTS. If Canada‘s sales of nicki! are an Index of a coming war,. it will come from unexpected places. For the exâ€" y~ * wickel in March was of the vain= of $3.66%.649, compared â€" with $1.125,8786 a vear ago. The chief pur. chaser was the United States with $1.762.748. followed by the United Kinâ€"~dom with $1.262.202, the Nether lands $298.977 and Germany 3102.496.! â€"Brandon Sun. wWAT PROPHET H. G. Wells t ol his appe; somew here 1 sell on his e off his boots thing to say have been Conrierâ€"Adva tbeart and legs, he wants fresh air for his lungs. he requires no: ~apers 0 magazines to try bis «yes. He vants to go somewhere whore he can danh himself with fAy dope and no one will have any remark to make about the «mell of it or t« make fun of his appearance, He wants to go somewhere where he can throw him ‘ se!l on his cot without having to ‘ake off his boots; where nobo Iv has try. thing to say about whether his shoes have been wiped _ or â€" not â€"â€"Trenton Above all He wants . be wants a whEn a man coes FISHING EMPIRE TRADE., Nearly three times as much _ ham and bacon was exported to the United Kingdom in March as a year ago in the same month. Empitre trado is cerâ€" tainly growing in leaps and bowunds.â€" Kingston Whigâ€"Standard. Only five men have ever driven â€" an auiomobile faster than 206 miles an hourâ€"for which the w d is duly thank{ul. Winnineg Tribene. CAUSE FOR THANKS. Spring‘s other annoyances . comforts could be put up witl fully were it not for thos ¢( ailments of grip and colds wh most prevalent in spring. Peoy get plenty of fresh air, who v their bhomes thoroughly, who drafts and wet feet, and . w1 careful to take a good amount ercise are the ones least at Fresh air is a wonderfal med Welland Tribune. FRESH AIR Kansas City man has invented a lawn mower with 24 blades. Now, all he needs is a good, husky wife to push it around.â€"Border Cities Star. This incident emphasizes the need of strict regulation to cover the use of aged and decrepit machines. One can imagine the kind of car that is bought for $5, nor is much thought needed to convince one that such a car must be inherently un:afe to its driver and to others. Why should not all such wrecks be ruled off the road? Surely the highâ€" ways are dangerous enough even when cars are wellâ€"equipped and in perfect condition? To permit $5 cars from the junkâ€"yard to operate _ in public traffic seems to be sheer folly. â€"Quebec Chronicleâ€"Telegraph, moTtive rower ‘° A suggestive footnote to the autoâ€" mobile age wa sfurnished the other day when a man bought & used car for $5 in a New England town, drove it out on the highway and a few hours later got into a traffic accident â€"typical~ of its kindâ€"that did $100 worth of damage HIGH COST OF sunk _ Wells, the prolific English and _ selfâ€"appointed _ prophet. lal a general war in 1940 is a ty. In reality Wells knows as about it as a .en months‘ old Brantford Expositor Advocate all he is looking tor solitude ® quietness for his netves, : a bit of climbing for his s ‘morougn!y, who avoid wet feet, and who are ake a good amount of ex: the ones least afflicted s a wonderfal medicine.â€"â€" uid be put up with graceâ€" it not for thos> common grip and colds which are CANADA Voice of the Press annoyanc+s and ais ‘mbing lor his wants fresh air The Empire and The World at Large ng. People who . who ventilate soRrRows OoF a Hong Kkong LANDLORD It would seem that landlords are being made to pay heavily for wut-‘ age of water by their tenants and as the charges amount to something like $40 to $50 for excessive consumpâ€" tion each quarter the sympathy of any unbiased person is with the landâ€" lord and there is no doubt that some. thing should be done to make things ! easier for him. But the dlscontlnu-, ance of the meter cvatinee"te ues ~ For young people, at least, model cars and airplanes have cever re. placed the trainâ€"perhaps because youth loves their larger complicaâ€" tions; their tracks, curves, junctions, sidings, signals and tunnels. A glorious affair ty construct and manâ€" ipulate! And the model, like the real thing, is beginning to look picturesque and to remind us of Old England. A Rusâ€" kin of today, instead .of denouncing the devastation of beauty by railway enterprise, would work up romanti. caily eloquent paragraphs about the glory of engines that stick to their appointed rails (barring accidents), instead of careering to the public peril all over the roads, and, soon, all over the space above them.â€"The London Daily Mail. ‘ If railways ever dlsappear, in favor of airways, from the surface of earth, we shall stil‘ have to indulge ourâ€" selves with exhibitions like the one being held in London. Discontented chefs in an American hotel recently smashed all the furniâ€" ture they could lay hands on. They must have enjoyed making a hash of the joint.â€"London Sunday Pictorial, LOOK AT THE TRAIN! #ive her their blood. Within a few days more than 400 people went to the hospital and offered to submit to transfusions.â€"Chronicleâ€"Telegraph. A CHEFS‘ RIOT. A 17â€"yearâ€"old girl was taken to a ’Xarge city hospital the other day, suf. fering from a rare blood disease, Only a number of blood transfusions could save her life; she did not have the money to pay for them, and the hospital was operating on too limited a budget to buy them for her. So an appeal was made to the pubâ€" lic. announcing that the girl must die‘ unless volunteers came forward to AID WAS FORTHCOMING _ Given the conversion of unemployâ€" ment into leisure, how is leisure to be used? Surely the éssence of it is that the spare time which science and technical improvements provide should be used for the things a man wishes, himself, to do. And the: tragedy of it is that man has not yet learned what he really would like to do with his spare time.â€"London, Eng., Herald. SPARE TIME. [ There is a great deal more money about. Since the heginning of this year £1.553,172,000 more than in a correspondins period of las year has passed through the London Bankers‘ Clearing House. Do not mistake that figure for a total: it is an increase. Money is the life blood ot industry. The more freely it cireulates, the better â€" for everybody,.â€" Manchester Sunday Chronicle. ‘ MOoRE MoNnEy. The man who writes to a daily paâ€" per, saying that Orillia is Ontario‘s most beautiful town, is asked to come up and see vs some time,â€"Fergus Newsâ€"Record. ANOTHER CLAIMANT Many educated persons seem to take curious pride in the difficulty of their handwriting. They ascribe to personality the twists and twirls which are. a fatal batrrier to the stranger who seeks to read.â€"Charâ€" lottetown Guardian. A Frenchman had a lottery ticket and died. They buried the ticket with him. This appears to be a successful _method of treating a lottery _ ticket. Anyway, it won a million francs. Five others had shares in the ticket, and they persuaded the widow to exhume the lucky man and found the ticket in the pocket of his dress suit, What may strike the philosophic mind about this is the various kinds of luck that a man may have.â€"Hamilton Herald, HANDWRITING WHAT A LUCKY man: Another item of interes: newsprint industry in Carad: statement that newspaper cir in the United States averages cent. greater than it was a v It was reported the other day that cats hbave hearing many times more acute than man, and that a cat can hear a mouse walking a city block away. If that is true, why do cats talk so loud to one another at night when people want to sleep?â€"Belle. MARKET crows. PERTINENT QUESTION Port meter system | js THE EMPIRE reater than it was a year a‘;o‘ Arthur Newsâ€"Chronicle. try in Carada is the newspaper circulation WO interes: to the by no the Twentyâ€"five miles ~ vern is Strattordâ€"on., 22â€"we@k | Shakesnaaes In the Chapter House 0t Canterâ€" | bury Cathedral there is to be preâ€" |sented "The Young King." an un. published play Jy Myr. Laurence Binyon, in the Festival of Drama and Music arranged by the Friends of the Cathedral, June 9â€"16. ‘ Sir Barry Jackson is continuing at Malvern the theatrical festivals which he was held there in recent years. Two plays new to London are to be presented â€" "A â€" Man‘s House," by John Drinkwater, ~ and "Mutiny" by David Stewart. "You Never Can Tell," by G. Bervard Shaw, and "The Moon in the Yellow River," ’by Denis Johnston, are to be revived in the first week of the festival, beâ€" ginning June 23, and lasting â€" untit Aug. 18. Performances are also to be given of Christopher Marlowe‘s "pr. | Faustus," and "The Marvellous His. tory of St. Bernard" adapted by Sir Barry Jackson from the French of | | Henri Gheon. 1 ten per Londonâ€"A number ol towns and villages in Great Britain are organi. zing ambitious dramatic festivals to attract visitors from home and abroad this summer. Dramatic Festivals in Brit;ain Offer Wide Choice of Plays "We will be leaving shortly. There will be no interviews, but 1 am happy Shortly before he left the Caseâ€" ments, his Florida estate, Mr, Rockeâ€" feller walked downstairs, hitched up a chair near the office of his private secretary, Ward Madison, and said: Dictates Statement »ears in peace and quietude, sur'- rounded only by his family and intiâ€" mate friends, | _ His bealth mended after nearly four months at his winter estate at Or. ’mond Beach, Mr. Rocketfeller sped | north ward, ostensibly to his Lakeâ€" wood, N.J., home, behin@ the drawn blinds of a special compartment car, occupied only by members of his household. ‘ The kindly old man who built one of the world‘s largest financial doâ€" mains from a setting of turkey eggs â€"he ‘made his first dollar from _ a hatching of turkeysâ€"has ceased beâ€" ing interviewed by newspapermen and wants to spend his declining years in beate and | Autabmas . ".. on COOZ REUIT 1 is Strattord-on.Aven. whe ‘eek _ Shakespeare Festival Memoria} Theater began Anii JACKSONVILLE, | Fla.â€" Jo Rockefeller, Sr., _ approachi wantsâ€"and has just about att complete seclusion from the at large. John D. Rockefeller Says He Will Not Grant Any More Interviews. a time. However, i househo!d was luck; tain an average of day!â€"Hong Kong W MV TGn ahirinBtdinet ies D is A0 Lh .2 lem. During the serious water shortâ€" age of 1930, the cry emanated from dwellers of Chinese tenement houses that those with meters, while paying heavily for their water, were not suf. fering as much as those who had to obtain their water from a street founâ€" tain. It will be recalled that at every street fountain, people were lined up in long queues waiti â€" for their turn to draw a supply of the precious fluid. There was no restriction by the authâ€" orities then as to the amount one was allowed to draw, so long as no indiviâ€" dual Arew more than iwa hnolats a, means the If you think th real technique. statement. In Seclusion TA KT 11 Health Mendeu age of four buckets a Kong Weekly Press. best answer to way from ~Mal . so long as no indiviâ€" than two buckets at er, in those days, a lucky if it could ob. Fla.~ John D. approaching 95, about attainedâ€" S where 1Â¥al ~at Avril 16. trick is difficalt, the p Anyhow, that‘s what the probâ€" world in ET mEVECELS TT ERUITEV and Juliet." l A project for a Scottish summer festival of drama on the lines of the Malvern festival has now reachâ€" ed the stage where only the place remains to be chosen. Strong candiâ€" dates for the location are Dumblane and Bridge of Allan, either of which is within easy reach of the thicklyâ€" populated areas of Scotland. The idea of this festival originated with Dr. Gordon Bottomley, author of some wellâ€"known poetic plays. The Welish National Thoater, which began its opérations «in ‘London â€" a few months ago,‘ recently ga\tzblinhed itself in ‘the howa‘at HatÂ¥P hq 0. WE‘D SAY "THE WINNING LEAP" About Un‘ a year ago there was a spring festival at Stratford followed after an interval by a summer festival, but the demand for seats at the performâ€" ances is now so great that the fes. tival goes on continuously from April to September, This year the proâ€" grams favor the lighter side of Shakespeare‘s genius rather than the tragedits aDA InstiAs umm . m l Until a year During his sojourn in Florida he had a deadâ€"end street at the rear of his estate closed to trafic and a Ar6e gate placed at the open end, The Otly family residing on the thoroughfare During the past few years he has ,been approaching this tranquilization. Gradually he diminished his golf from eight holes, to six, then to four, then two and last year he practically quit the game which for many years was his chief hobby, This winter he did not play at all and didn‘t even go to church nor entertain groups of friends at his home. He left the grounds only for short automobile rides, carefully guarded against the public gaze. Sees Few Friends To all outward appearances his health is as good as tould be expected for one of his advanced years. He walked about his gardens, went up and down stairs unaided and otherâ€" wise enjoyed the seclusion he deâ€" manded. He saw very few friends,_ only his closest neighbors and his pastor, the Rev. George 1. Owen. | 1O _ MOTERALDGOZEA But ‘he man whose benefactions run well into nine figures, will be 95 years old July 8 and therein lies his desire for future tranquility. Madison elaborateg on Mr. Rocke feller‘s statement that there would be. no interviews. Several attempts were made by a newspaperman during the train trip between Ormond Beach and Jacksonville to see him. Twice his secretary went into the closed drawâ€" ing room with requests for an interâ€" view, but as Madison said later, "a rule is a rule," in the Rockefeller household and they are obeyed, He‘s Not "High Hat" _ Madison hastened to explain that Mr. Rockefeller‘s selfâ€"imposed secluâ€" sion was in no way to be taken that "Mr. R."â€"as be is known to his staff â€"had lost his interest in what was going on about him, nor does he want people to think he has gone "high hat." Nothing is further from the| fact. tragedies and include "The Temâ€" " "Twelfth Night," "Much Ado it Nothing," _ "Love‘s Labour‘s " "Julius Caesar," and "Romeo _ "I bave had a very pleasant winter, and 1 am much improved. I am very grateful for the kind treatment of everybody and 1 hope to return early in the autumn." He autographed photographs â€" for several newspapermen in appreciation for their courtesies during his stay. ‘ to make this statement," and he dic tated the following: young lady does it before warming up to something demanding t she says and her instructor, lying on the ground, verifies her TORONTO «64 "Can he that has + wife 6‘6r adversity?"*"" Surely @11 ‘married men must feel grateful to,. Pope these &m"-{n !‘ $il) ts 1 f t arge‘ la dparl canoq. 16 RDG TT a1 i+ Laughts,.~; (.vil.'“W!‘lmQ.-'fll health ;o[....;..J9dy; and|soul." Apae HixhBzig Llunyg it 1s 08 "A light wife doth make a heavry hubsand." . Such words of wisdom did Shakespeare put into the mouth® ‘of Portia. wlg "He »that would have fine guests let him have a fine wife." Ben Jonâ€" son, who said this, certainly knew the value of a good wife, who is also a good hostess, _ "Marriage ig a tam‘ng thing!" said George Elliott, the famous movelist, "Hasty marriage seldom proveth well!‘" declared the immottal bard. "Women who have been happy in a first marriage are the most apt to venture upon a second,". paid Addiâ€" practise, * Making |â€"samnt JOHN, N.B.â€"â€"For the firs An increased return of 5100.000;:;'“;9"[:“ l:ne:ieB::M;:::h ‘“':‘:;m:.‘ to the cheese factory patrons loffOn- l eges in an incubltors ~The “n?o' tario will result, it is estimated, rom ; *‘ L * the Eraorni we of a nen tepe of wide nootrorhn enoutane matian Pand curd knife developed by the [!an‘y CYy Gere are watching. . the experi Department of the Ontario A;z'ncul-lmem with unisual int pg"+ tural C "ege at Guelph. _ Already Four eggs were or â€.’l' iÂ¥ tnotkh. over 6" {nctories have adopted theseJer bird after she d;““';um' Struck new knives. Investigation has shown | by branches of a tree felled DY woods. that these knives increase the yield ofl men at Mispee. _ They. waited three cheese from one to two pounds for‘ days for the bird to reappear but she every thousand pounds of milk, also . had definitely deserted. The eggs were Improving the texture of the cheese. brought to Saint John in a round nest! Once thoroughly tested, such ‘deâ€" | of moss, A e velopments as the wide curd knife meedeitometentrormenirsmtmcentioeneemeagage are made public and putâ€"into actugl| ;3 fre C Better Methods in Cheese §i _ Likewise in other Ontario consumâ€" inq_ centres, milk producers are now réceiving improved prices. â€"Without any burdensome increase in price to consumers, the financial position of the Ontario dairy farmer has been materially bettered, offering imâ€" pressive evidence of the soundness ot the policy of aiding producers to. solve their problems through their own organizations. | d This striking improvement in price | has followed the reorganization of | the Toronto Whote Milk Producers, and the Ontario Whole Milk Producâ€" ers Association. into strong organizaâ€" tions that can act effectively in the interest of the producer. An experâ€" ienced organizer, with special knowâ€" ledge of the milk producer‘s prob-j lems, was loaned by the Department, | and for nearly a year devoted his full energies to building up member-, ship and placing the finances of the' Whole Milk Producers‘ Association on a sound basis. As a result 90 per | cent. of the dairy farmers shipping | milk to Toronto ure now members»’ of the organization, One of the most | effective reforms that the Associa-l tion has carried out is the introducâ€"‘ tion, by agreement with the milk disâ€"‘ tributors, of the quota system in the " marketing of whole rilk. Producers l are now advised each month by the |, dairies of the quota that they will be q expected to deliver, and the unpopuâ€" t lar system of "holdâ€"backs" is a thing ; of the past. P _ Over $2,500 a dayâ€"nearly a milâ€" ‘lion dollars a yearâ€"has been added ot the returns to dairy farmers supâ€" plying the Toronto district with whole milk, as a result of a twentyâ€" five per cent. increase in winter milk prices compared with a year ago. Four thousand farmers who ship milk to Toronto dairies are now getting $1.81 per hundred for their milk; a year ago the price was $1.45. | Better Milk Prices Obtained was given keys to the gate. He wantâ€" ed more privacy for his daily strolls about the gardens. Marriage TIVITAYMHMRI@UOD J id Do on O ', WINFIELD, © Kan;â€"Nudi. ‘Ar | fee) " Bolved othe problem of how * wife C‘6r feel all "Rarried '~°_; ?hg_thqlr cult in Kansas, wh |_ They are taking or Ahe.. forms at the top .of "â€"â€"Alâ€" Such:spots, they. secinded than syly sections offer few trees tion from the public eye. PARISâ€"The typewriter 18 being admitted to society, and mechanica] fingers now are permitted to write | formal notes for social usage. â€" Seyâ€" | eral society typewriters have been orâ€" dered here in mahogany and, walnut, , with keyâ€"rims and metal accessories in gold> and silver. They are nolo-‘ grammed on the spacer and are equipâ€" | ped with: ashtrays attached at the 7. 7 /4 IO9 | HeenprematinA LuP. side, cigarets i;iâ€"a lighter Use® T SAINT JOHN, N.B.â€"â€"For the Irl(.l time in New Brunswick an l!tenpt, is being made to hatch ‘woodcookl eggs in an incubator. _ The nests of woodcocks, camouflage masters, are rarely found, and officials of a hatchâ€" ery here are watching the experi. ment with unusual interest. | The combination of beige and cap ucine (nasturtium) is one of Worth‘s best for street wear. He# uses light | weight wool in the beige for a smartâ€" | ly tailored suit of" skirt and hip. 'leng(h jacket with straight sleeves and no collar or cuffs. The front of ' the jacket folds back and a belt holds it in place but there are no fastenings at all otherwise. The front of the belt consists f a wide band of bronze with two buckles at each end, about flve" inches apart. The rest of the belt is of wool. The wide scarl, which is an important part of the ensemble, is worn ascot fashion and its bright redâ€"orange (of the more brilliant nasâ€" turtiums) lends just the right touch of color for conservative smartness, Hat, gloves, purse and shoes are of’ beige, matching the suit. | We‘ll be using panne velvet for _ summer. _ Worth uses this fabric in |a quality so fine and g‘ossy that you | can scarcely tell it from satin. In ‘red, he makes a delightfo! evening !gow'tn trimmed with one of the new fineâ€"sashes of a lighter â€"tone of red: ,velvet ribbons. The sash comes down | to the waist and then sticks out in | loops that are very gcometric in | their angles, ry Incubator For Woodcock Egg; Worth Combines Beige and Nasturtium Color as a preliminary to developing plans which will extend export markets and bring a new prosperity to the 25,000 Ontario farms that are supplying milk for cheese production. It has been the policy of Colonel, of Colonel Kennedy not only to aid‘ producers and factory owners in imâ€"] proving the quality, but at the same | time to encourage producers to orâ€" ganize so that their marketing methâ€" ods can be modernized to suit prosâ€" entâ€"day conditions. The whole probâ€" lem is being thoroughly investigated Reputation for quality, the greatâ€" est asset of the Qntario cheese indusâ€" +ry, has been built up by a thorough system of inspection and instruction carried out by the Dairy Branch of the â€" Department of â€" Agriculture. Creameries â€"and cheese factories throughout the Province are divided into groups, thirty in Eastern On-! tario, four in Western Ontario and one in the North Each of these| groups is under the personal isuperâ€" vision of a Dairy Branch lnspector.l who, by visiting the factories and their patrons, strives to improve the quality of the product. A keen,| friendly rivalry has been developed ; between these groups, and both . friendly rivalry has been developed between these groups, and both! cheeseâ€"makers and patrons coâ€"operate | to maintain Ontarios reputation. The " Dairy Branch is in daily receipt ot‘“ reports on the grading of Ontario 4 cheese. Cheese not No. 1 quality ill' reported immediately to the Inspect-:‘ _ or in the district where manufactyrâ€" | ed, and an effort is made at once to| # locate the cause of the trouble. The effectiveness of this work is lhown't by the fact that Ontario cheese is now‘ p grading over 96 per cent. first ‘ndel c where some years ago it was under| p 80. Its popularity on" the British market has been retained in face of | r 9nergetic action by New Zealand to ; a improve the quality of cheese trom' a that country. i8 Because Ontario cheese commands a premium for quality on the British market of 2¢. per pound, cheese facâ€" tory patrons in this Province are in pocket by $1,700,000 on the 85 milâ€" lion pounds of cheese produced. Ninety per cent. of this aheese is exâ€" ported to Great Britain, and the reâ€" turns to producers here are entirely determined by overseas prices. | For Social Notes pp 3 . _ J 1M08L any, other thing ; a © pibhe ont N Poiecil hann af Bygienic . Jaws, _ , e public eye, ‘ takes:â€"the Torm of ©¥ercatin aking sun baihs on plat. *'*Nl(, is very "‘"’V to top of idle.oil.derrieks; â€" "h““'( oA Chriatt; tley..m.ah'bm:.u,.m g:;‘ ï¬"‘" 5){( Â¥im o syly @Jaderl) m whaid Cigy ol TA td n 1i ols ¢ i:u ye# sbrl of sing m‘g":ï¬\‘t"": T44 S t 30X _ x f .'â€. i‘ 4 & s# -.;;I JR‘E% C{.IA.."J!H 4 “ 3 \\ + "CmmiSbe m.ll 2g0 08 Om CSv@n Hell of how ‘“"m‘]n:‘:f:?t.l_ A_‘And bad temper | ase of beige and capâ€" is one of Worth‘s ir. HMe uses light beige for a smartâ€" skirt and hip. commands | â€"~ A busy housewife, after years of ov erdoing arnounced that she had (;< COVQâ€â€"â€â€˜.â€IG not wash, iron and, be, a . Christian all in one day Some young people have found ou:! that they eannot do their school wo; k go to & «party that lasts t, the small hours, and be a Ohristian next da\ Madustk fasess cdizse o2 watch for newspaper advertisements of special sales. That Muttrated advertising _ was preferred nine to one. Both men and women picked news papers first when asked what adverâ€" tising medium they preferred. The newspaper continues to be the cheapest and ‘best form ~f publicits Of all lines of business,‘ Nothing be. gins to approach it in rcr ching . ALL the public and no other medium is as inexpensive. thrown into thélr yards. That eighty.â€"six per cent. men and seven per cent. ¢ The Border Cities Star reports one of the most exhaustive surveys of buyers‘ complex and wishes ever made in the city of Los Angeles and the fol lowing are the conclusions reached That seventyâ€"seven per cent. paid no attention to advertising | matter PRRW LAE WE 3 Oe iss Cheapest and Best Form of Publicity If men had the gift of there would be fewer Cas first sight. Perhaps a man is dubbed a bad egg because it is disagreeable to encoun. ter him when he is broke. "That‘s a nasty knock," . said the householder as the impatient landlord hammered on the door . Beware of the anything wrong, for everything, A noted lecturer announ« retirement from the platftorm his recent marriage. He will audience now, Â¥nen a man goes away from home» for a change he usually comes hack with less change than he had when he started. Some men awake from their dreams when they hear the alarm clock Others when they hear the wedding bells. ~ The woman of the hour is the who promises to be ready in a sec "Bacon should never be served half cooked." It simply isn‘t done. A :‘~‘ckster is often merely a man who gets the best of a deal with Â¥ U Why doesn‘t some shrewd boardâ€" inghou:e keeper suddenly acquire a fortune advertising her place as a home for the cure of obesity ? What Do You Think | Farmers in the great wheatâ€"raisâ€" ; ing belt, their winter wheat crop deâ€" lvmted by the driest spring in a quarter century, recordâ€"breaking spring heat and swirling dust storms, found themselves in a position where | they cannot readily abandon their ’ w@.t fle!ds for another cash crop. rule has placed many of the producâ€" ers in a precarious predicament. Unâ€" able to produce a wheat crop of any proportions, they can plant their abandoned fields only in foliage and sorghum crops for use in feedin#» When a man Preparing _ to _ abandon _ their drought ridden wheat fields and plant them in corn, producers found themselves bound by the federal plans whose bounties they have pookâ€" eted not to plant the fields in cerea grains. This application of the federal 1 Their pockets bulging with more | than $5,000,000 in wheat _ benefit . payments and nearly $25,000,000 in ! federal loans on warehoused corn ‘sealed in farmâ€"yard cribs, Nebraska producers were preparing this month | for a flood of more than $40,000,000 ‘in federal money in the form of ; benefits for adjustment of cornâ€"hog | production. Bountiful as such totals may apâ€" pear on the surface, however, many farmers are finding that all is not ideal under the federal programs for adjustment of production to levels commensurate with domestic conâ€" sumption. | _ Lincoln, Neb. â€" Nebraska farmâ€" ers, facing their second consecutive ‘yeu of heavy drought damage to their crops, are looking to federal |bounties paid under the agricultural adjustment programs as the one sure | source of ready cash. i Nebraska Farmers Face Ruinâ€" ¢ a Christian "*»~BIx per cent of all woâ€" even per cent. of the men newspaper advertisements ed Wheat Crops, Bonuses Forbid Corn Crops lecturer announces his man who There‘s a for use in feeding of second sight cases of love at tÂ¥ d platform due to never did first time be the the one second . The deeper men go is their convi is not all .. .. .. t to God and hbas of on endless !fe."â€" A The Townships of Gwillimbury and the market have placed t men at work making reducing the cost of 1 The Onta E also supported t fall granted $30,0 be seen small a geeds of early ; Smail shac %n different and the grow 4s becoming #an fruitâ€"stor« lucrative va‘h bought up 12 and are grow %e supply the The work the marsh : which was | ago, has gon and west ro entrance of : morthâ€"south | river, has be & distance o the marsh, i: In a few we the corner 0 Graham side Of King Tow gardeners on the one MHoliand Ms concrete re; first of 10 First Tree PI ln HOIL Mrs, Sne« «o anything t There eupply . and this Exp« #&round #he virtues, yet good opinion of «mount to muc} €x pe Or med Most c by requ« #inger, FEdithâ€"Why di engagement? Janiceâ€"He wa Bhe found he w pther girls and h of two. A child told 1 father was very Teacherâ€"You Childâ€"I guess #aw him drink it And who . 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