2 Redd a dh a *ee hn i Sh hh dd i a d Voice o f the Press Canada, The Empire and The World at Large > Bde ie a 4 Canada Trihute to Toronto «The people of the Province of $ : Ontario will rejoice with unteigned if satisfaction at the observance of the 5 ' hundredth annivers y of the incor- : poration of Toronto as a city. ~~ The lremendoys growth of Toronto in one hundred years is a tribute to the en ergy enterprize and enthusiasm of : those who have conducted he affairs of the city in yesrs gone by. Canad- dian% are proud of the Queen City.ar Its achievements, It has been a lead: er in every good work for the ad. vancement of the country --The Brantford Expositor, & A Good Reason Too 5 ; --In Great Brituin every other home ; has a radio set, And the folks do not have to listen to announcers asking, as in our fair land: "Are your corns "bothering you tonight?" That's one reason why Britain has so many lis- teners.-- Winnipeg Tribune. Engine Without Steam SehhE --There §s only one recipe for cur- ne lug the depression -- more employ- ATA 0 RE ment and higher wages. Those who fi BE have not learned that in the last four ; lx { years can learn nothing. It is not a tHE in our modern world simply "his own WEE affair" if a man cannot find work or an has to work at starvation pay. ~ This is also the "affair" of every one who produces things to sell or offers things for sale, The business system without public buying power is like a locomo- © tive without steam, The machine is all right; but it won't move, Buy. - ing power, in the hands of people who need or want to buy things, is the prime mover of production and trade. --Iidmonton Journal. Anglo-Canadian Treaty The whole Canadian press shoula - mobilize its forces in support of the Auglo-Canadian trade treaty. The pre. ference given to Canada in the British market conslitutes the finest oppor- _ tunity ever presented to Canadian ex. porters over there. It remains for our producers and exporters to profit by this opportunity on an ever-grow- ing scale. It is surely up to every newspaper-in the Dominion to preach 1his gospel continuously. -- Toronto Mail «nd Empire. Alberta's Solution The Province has avout reached the end of its borrowing possibilities for the present. 'The one promising solution of the problem is that some _tiing may be done in the way of re- * ducing interest charges on the public debt, but if alleviation is to be se coved ouly at the erpense of those who have invested in Alberta bonds, public sentiment will demand that the Government in turn should grapple move effectively and sincerely with the problem of reducing genera] gov- ernmental costs. Sacrifice should not be entirely laid on the shoulders of investors.-----Calgary Herald. : 2 x =o Ee ne er : " . Newspaper Style Many of the editorial articles In The Ottawa Journal, the Globe, sthe Mail and Empire, the Montreal Gpz ette, just to name a few of the dail- fes ot random, have a notable literary 2 oF style and need no apologies on this a : score. "There are weekly newspapers Bi that despite the pressure of time and hd 5 circnmstauces are still of distinctive 10 literary flavor. There seems to be a A ~ tradition, however that newspapers oy should-not preter. to any literary Ak $18 s'vie or carefulness, though it this ih were actually the ase Canadian news. SA papers would not be as good as they 3 3 are today --Timmins Advance, aA jah : + Sounds Better In Feet --Somelow the news that Glacier, B.C... has had 379 inches of snow this 4 season leaves us very cold,--Vancou- 3 ver Province. Fai 400 Man the Real Danger'. Ao HRg "If 1 ever come out again, I will have another story for you," recited 15, & radio talker last night, dilating on the alleged dangers of the great Can. adian woods. 2 . What 1s it makes men pose as brave souls, who blithely defy cold, snow, A fe iH AR wolves ard wild animals In thelr {hg talks? A "Thr truth Is that a man is safer FA from harm in our forests than on the Al mtreets of a village. He won't be rob. ba ~ bed or attacked there, He can find PAE free food aud shelter and warmth in 1 the forest. The records of a big city ds store sliow that {ts delivery men were / 4) bitten by dogs over 300 times in one Bi * year, Hardly a week goes by in the AIRE Bummer that doesn't record the at- Fh tack of a bad tempered rural bull, of- ve 2A! ten with fatal results to man, woman rot or child. ; Foard Of course the real danger every. T4, whore {8 man himself, Compaged to dd him the beasts of the field and for- 5 eat are as cooing doves. If you want i : to lead a perfectly safe existence, get y away from your fellow man~-Sault it Bte. Marie Star, } J "Gun or Camera? There can be no doubt that this gteady annual slaughter of moose can- not. continue indefinitely without in a 'the send leading to serious dépletion - taking the place of the rifie to a much greater extent in Nova Scotia.--Hall fax Mail, An Illustration Those who have experienced 'this so-called good old-fashioned winter in Canada will have ¢ clearer understand ing of what is meant by a mean tem. perature.--~Montreal Gazette. er n---- A Pioneer London Township has lost a faith. ful servant in the death of Miss Mary Grant, clerk of the township for near. ly 85 years, It was in 1900, in the days before women Lad entered busi- ness life to-day, that Miss Grant be- came clerk of the township, the first woman in the Dominion to hold such a position, succeeding her father, the late James Grant, clerk from 1873 un- til 1900. She became an authority on rural municipal questions and her ad. vice was widely sought. Miss Grant was one of the pioneers in the move- ment to introduce Hydro in rural dis- tricts of Ontarfo.--London Free Press, It's In'the Air There is something in the atmos. phere that makes people think things are improving. The Empire A Liberal Education - To Induce the sense of being a shareholder in the treasure house of civilization is the essence of a liberal education, --George E. G. Catlin, in the Fortnightly Review (London). Roosevelt's Trial Roosevelt keeps in reserve his un. equalled power of persuasion over the air, having wisely come to the conclu- sion that a President, while feeling free to talk on ceremonial occasions, should be careful in his use of the radio for statements of policy and appeals for public support. Franklin Roosevelt has yet to be tried in the fire, and tried beyond all question he will be. At present we can hail him as by far the most attractive man oc- cupying high office in any part of the 'world. On January 80th, 1934 the American people accorded him an an- niversary celebration which, in spon- taneity and universality, must be de- scribed as tinparalleled. This was his 52nd birthday. If it should be given to him, in 1935, to enjoy his 63rd amid circumstances in any way comparable, Franklin Roosevelt will indeed be a world's wonder.---8. K. Ratcliffe, in The Contemporary Re- view (London). Pioneers ; It is too much forgotten that our forefathers in similar times. of crises, as, for example, in the early years of the Seventeenth and of the Nineteenth Centuries, organized great settlements ifthe New World. They did not, as some imagine, leave the populating of those newly discovered lands to a vagabond . chance; but sent out well- equipped communities, and supported them in their early weakness with capital and necessities from home. It was thus that New England and Vir- ginia and New Brunswick and New Zealand were planted, to mention few notable examples,- and there are still empty and ample spaces for similar development it our nation today would show the same enterprise. But in this matter enthusiasm and expert knowl. edge must go together, and they must be backed by the energetic support of the Government.--London Morning Post. 4 . Dominions and Inumigration The colonization scheme proposed by theeEmpire Development and Set- tlement Research Committee seems to us worthy of very, serious considera. tion. The proposed Chartered Com- pany, supported financially by the Bri- tish Government, would go some way to meet the difficulties in the way of the emigrant that have revealed them. selves in recent years «But ih< an sent and cooperation of the Dominion Governments would, of course, be es- sential. And the difficulty - here Is that the change In world economy, which .s throwing out of business the great food-producing provinces of the Dominions, is bringing the Dominfon Governments face to face with the ne- cessity of providing for the future of great sections of their own people. Until they see their way to settling that problem they are hardly likely to add a new one to it. But there seems no reason why the new settlers should not be self-supporting, and. surely for such there must be ample room fn the still very lightly populated Do- minfons.--London News Chronicle, News Cheers Britain There is always good news to make you forget bad news, British imports have risen. Canada's exports now rank her fifth among all nations, Aus. tralia will have a large export surplus, In Britain all rallways carry more traflic, showing Internal trade fim- provement, The chairman of the Westminster Bank comes out advocat. ing slum clearance as a national In- vestment. 'The banker suggests it should be done on the lines of public utility. Rejoice! The light is spread- ing. ~London Daily Express, - Protecting Scottish Oats The Government has at last made a definite move in the interests of the at Middlesbrough., Scottish farmer in placing a genuine restriction on the import of oats and oat products, The new duty, which represents about 70 per cent on the value of imported supplies, is prac- tically prohibitive, and should give the farmer every encouragemert to main- tain the acreage under this crop with. "out leading to any evidence of scarcity to the consumer, Britain at present can meet all her requirements.--Edin- burgh Scotsman. Australia's Problems Australia suddenly finds herself caught up in the. complicated design of Pacific events. That she must co- operate wholeheartedly in the plan of Imperial defence is too obvious to be disputed. But there is another res- pousibility. The peoples who dwell on the margin of the wide Pacific are uniquely different from one another. in racial characteristics, in ways of living, {nh ambitions, and in colour. Yet the advance of sclence has nar- rowed the span of the ocean, and the problems of one people become; moro and more international. Among, nations which share a common lan- guage and common customs it is of- ten difficult to promote amity; it is: infinitely harder to do so where there is no stich common ground for meet- ing. In the Pacific, Asia and Europe! meet.--The Australasian. - New Zealand's Air Force In ordering eight new reconnaissance: airplanes for the New Zealand Air! Force, the Government is carrying out its avowed intention of increasing the effective strength of the Dominion's air defence. It is ultimately proposed to station four flights of four air- planes each at vantage aerodromes in both islands, thus establishing useful home defence units capable of operat- ing over large areas of country. The significance of the Government's -ac- tion will be fully appieciated by those who realize the practical value of avi- ation as applied to the protection of closely populated districts as well as to the patrolling of stretches of vul- nerable coast-line. It has also heen decided that torpedoes will not be carried at present, on account of the cost involved.--Auckland News. Expects Large" - Business Gain Magazine Forecasts Big 1934 Improvement in the Dominion Montreal.--*Canadian business ac- tivity started on the up-grade exactly a year ago, and during the next twelve months the rate of progress should be accelerated," says Canadian Business, the magazine of the Canadian Chamber of Commerce, in. a survey-of business conditions, The. survery continues: "This is not a casual observation. It is based on authentic reviews of the present situation, backed by precedence, and confirmed by the security markets. "The advance in common stock prices has represented substantially more than a return of speculative fer- vor, While the recent uprush in quo- tations may be traced in part to the scramble to secure equities in time to share in the: prospective business bet- terment, all the buying did not reflect unreasoning speculation. " "The increasing confidence and the concrete improvement in underlying conditions, have revealed themselves in the trend of the bond market. More than a handful of issues, which' could be bought for less than 15 cents on the dollar, are now commanding prices which are materially closer to par, °, Higher grade industrialists have risen as much as 50 per cent.'in value, while governments and municipals have been experiencing a keen demand with sell- ers at a distinct advantage. v The Duke of York accompanies the Duchess of York, in performing their parts in the opening ceremonies for a bridge across the Teesy Er ------------------------------------ ee ------ ; | eral. = Fo "The financial situation ,however, is by n> means healthy, Federal, pro- vincial and municipal deficits have as- sumed precarious proportions, although Hon. Hugh Guthrie (Minister of Jus- tice): recently forecast a balanced bud- get for Canada, Critical as our fiscal ing prices and the quickening of the business . pulse must create counter forces which will ameliorate the bur- dens which we are bearing." Dusty Act of 1713 : . Is Dug Up » Columbia, S.C.--Yellowed with age, a provincial Act of 1713 under which the "true and absolute lords and pro- prictors of this province" created a "hight watch" at Charleston, was dis- covered here recently during a general Capitol. : The historical document; - entitled: YAn Act for 'the maintenance of a watch to keep good order in Charles Town," provided a picked force of three officers and nineteen men to pro- tect the young -town from Indians; prowling pirates and evil doers in gen- An amendment to a "previous Act was revoked in the following language: "For the better preservation of the said town aud the keeping of good order and a careful and strict watch thereon, be it enacted by the most noble prince, Henry, 'Duke of Beaufort, palataniate, and the rest of the true and absolute lords and proprietors of this province, with the consent of the honorable as- sembly; now met in Charles Town, that the Watch of Charles- Town shall con- sist of three officers and 19 watch- men." The personnel of the watch were to be. between 16 and 50 years of age, and were to bie properly armed and carry at least 20 "cartridges," a provision of the Act stipulated. Million-Dollar Apples _.._,... Country Life in B.C. ~~ That Million-Dollar Apple may be developed from one of the 1,600 sced- lings that are now being nursed along, in this pious hope, at the-Dominion Exs perimental Station at. Summerland, B.C. One of these seedlings may com- 'bine the. outstanding virtues of the Mec- Intosh Red and the Winesap., If it does, it will be chieap at a million or even two million Government 10U's, But this quest tor the golden apple need ont be confined to an cxperimen- tal station nor to technical pomological experts, Any apple grower, ambitious to gét his cent a pound or better, may, if he uses his eyes; spot a sport in his orchard that will make him a fortune and add. to the revenues of thousands oi his fellow-growers. Fairy Story--not a bit of it. Sime ply another of the lessons learned by trained experimenters, Time was when it was takeu as a matter of course that certain things could not happen and could not be done. Nowadays nothing is taken for granted, Everything 'is Subject to test and trial. And so it has been found that bud sports on apple trees may quite easily produce types that will have higher commercial values than the parent stock. N Sets Milk Record - 8t. Thomas, -- Dowdle DeKol, Dor | the boys 'of to-day by Louis M. Mec- | them, but his ability to illustrate points problems are, the ultimate effect of ris+|" clean-up of the basement of the State|- Character, Courage and Abil. ity Given as Fundamentals. ---- Windsor,--Character, courage and ability were outlined as the'three quali= ties to be stressed in the moulding of Night, associate director of education of the Detroit Institute of Technology 'in_an address at a recent father and son banquet in Lincoln Road United Church. ein : \ ADVICE TO FATHERS. Mr. McNight's .address may well have been labeled "Advice to a Father," for it was given almost entirely over to with chumorous stories made his talk equally interesting to the boys in his audience, "We look forward to the day when our boys will grow up and be ready to take their places as good ditizens in the country," he said, "but too often we look too far ahead and forget about the little journeys they must make and expect them to make them by them- selves. Modern engineers are not only improving: the motor car so that long rides may be made fast and in comfort, but are also cencentrating on the short er runs. They realize that it is the shorter 'journeys, from stop light to stop light, that are important. : . AGE OF SPEED. "We sometimes worry about. the out- come of the younger generation be- cause of the changes in living' condi- tions in "the world, Time doesn't mean anything and distance isn't here any more, In the old days of the stage coach if we missed one and had to wait two or three days for the next one it was O.K., but now we get sore if we miss one section of a revolvingtdoor. "It is' true that to-day things are moving faster, but we must still take the long beaten highways in the build- ing up of our boys," said Mr. McNight. "One's life to his neighbor used to:be an open book, but now it is tog easy to' evade 'the responsibilities of good living. - If one fails to make good in a community it is easy enough to move to another one." Mr. "McNight stated 'that in .the United States they are: doing great things by' rearranging the alphalet with the AAA, CWA, and RFC, but by far the most important is the CCA. CCA, he went on to explain, stands for character, courage and ability. MUST COME FIRST. "You can strip' young manhood of every other vestige and leave with or give him CCA and he will rehabilitate himself and. go on living, Character, courage and ability by all means must come first for without it a young man cannot be successful. 'They are the old landmarks we can't desert, for in trials and and tribu'ations we can't do without them," ; The home; school and church were given by Mr. McNight as the three centres around which the life of any boy must be built, . "Although many domestic duties," he said, "are now done in a shop and we travel miles to work, leaving the youngsters on a narrow lot -to make their journeys alone, the home is. still the place for association, but it must have something else to support the work, such 'as the schools and churches. (Eg CHURCHES ENDURE, ~ "When one visits the British Isles and is pointed out ruins of many 'Roman buildings he gets to wonder- ing just where is Imperial Ronie. True it has left its imprint on our Jaws and customs but where is it? Some 1,900 years ago a Man was walking around teaching character, but Rome appear- ed to-overthrow him. To-day we look down on the ruins of Rome but the church bélls still ring." The speaker told a story of liow one of three friends on a train together fell asleep and his conipanions decided to hide his ticket as a joke. Rather than face the conductor the victim, although positive thas le 4aG< ga chased a ticket, hid under the seat while -his friends covered him with their rain coats. When the conductor came to collect their tickets the two friends handed "him - the three, and when he 'asked where the other man was they told him he was unde: the seat, but preferred to ride that way. "When the time comes for our boys to take journeys we must. train them to stand up' and face the conductor rather than get under the seat," he said. Use of Sodium Illumination to Do Away With Glare of Lamps, Says Engineer Toronto. -- Illuminated highways that are sufficiently well lighted by the use of sodium light to permit of the driving' of automobiles without head- lights was seen ag a possibility of the future by Mr. W. P, Dobson, chief testing engineer of the Ontario Hydro- Electric Power Commission, who dis- cussed new inventions and discoveries in the electric lighting field at the con- 'ties Association here recently. liska, a six year old Holsteln cow, bred and owned by Duncan McBane, disrtict farmer, has just finished set. ting a record. of more than a ton of milk a month, In her 365 day lacta. tion period, the cow gave 2,109 pounds of milk 'containing 868,76 pounds of butter fat. : dium light. with an expenditure of two Illumination to an intensity of 8- foot candles could be produced by so= kilowatts a mile. The replacement of Outlined vention of Municipal - Electrical Utili=| -- H ¢ : Debates Ahead -- Com- milles Sit. Ottawa, March 25. -- A short week looms ahead for parliament, which 1s scheduled to adjourn Wednesday or Thursday for the, Easter holidays, In the meantime it will discuss unem- ployment relief and a national mar- ketiug board aud concentrate on com- The bill to create a Dominion mar- keting board 18 scheduled to be brought down te-morrow, With the exception of the budget itself, this will ba the most important legisla- tion still to be brought before par- liament, It ig credited: with contain. ing provisions which may place the marketing of a considerable number of farm products under the direct control of machinery built up by the Dominion and provincial goveru- ments, : p The Stevens committee will swing back into action Tuesday when rep. resentatives of the Quebeoc Retail Merchants' = Assoclation will be wit- nesses, The banking committee also will sit 'Tuesday, continuing {ts in. quire into Canadian banks apd bauk. ers, The most important legislation of the session, the budgets will be pre. sented after Easter by Finance Minis. ter E. N. Rhodes, but the date has not been set; Officials of the finance and national revenue departments have been working on the budget for weeks but it was not expected to be Dresented to the House for a week or 10 days after the Easter adjourn. ment, . "The length of the budget de- bate will be determined "largely by the Finance Minister's disclosures hut it is mot expected to 'be shorter than a 'month, Yesterday council was in session throughout the morning and = after. noon, hut no official fuformation was disclosed. Some indication of the na. ture of the Minister's deliberations 18 expected to be given at to-morrow's session: of the House, It is anticipated that Hon. E. N, 'nounce the" goverumeut = decision duction from the: 'salaries of eivil 'servants, The: general belief is that for 'the year. commencing April 1 the 'lower paid civil servants will have their: salaries' restored "to the level existing at the time the cut . was put into effect two years ago. . Just. where the dividing line will be is not known, but it is believed those getting salaries in- excess of $1.600..or possibly $2000 will continue per cent, deduction to suffer 'the 10° for another year. Tn Jackson Dodds, general manager. of before the Stevens Committee with Mr, Bennett and Mr. Beatty, will he adian "Bank of Commerce, with fur. ther reference to 'the 'government's guarantees to the banks for wheat operations, ' : Canada to Buy Six War Planes _ Ottawai--Six new airplanes are to be purchased by the Department of National Defence at an estimated cost of $30,000. As the House of Com- mons in Committee of Supply approv- ed Hon, Donald Sutherongs & oes of $1,805,000 for the Royal Canadian Air Force, the Minister told of plans to purchase the ret planes from England. The grant of $1,805,000 represented an increase of $400,000 over last year's, ; Col. Sutherland declares that since it was agreed the Dominion should have an air force, it was considered it should be given as much assistance as possible. . The force had suffered severe retrenchment in the last's few years... Two years ago many men had been let out so as to maintajan the force within the reduced grant, Last year the vote had been further reduc- ed, but now it was decided the force «could not be fittingly maintained ono the low figure and consequently an in- crease was being sought from Parlia- ment, : The Minister could not give details of the class of machine to be purchased from England, but declared they would be of the most modern: construction and capable of filling the many needs of the force in carrying on advanced training. : ¢ de of Fat Officer is Costly . MILWAUKEE. --Rushing up to a portly policeman, Edward 'A, Wie- land, 27, pointed and breathlessly panted: "See that truck two blocks down the street? there's a murder being committed in it," CAR Gun in hand, the officér ran top speed to the truck, kicked open the Sprint merchandise. : "Why," asked the policman, "did you tell' me there was a murder there?" Wielapd repied: - "I just wanted to see a fat cop run," < He paid $56 for the privilege in dis- trict court, 3 ; - Ld incandescent lamps with facilities to give cold light was foreseen, as well as great strides in the eléctro-chemical ficld, > PRICES DECLINE Wholesale commodity prices in Italy have been steadily declining since h 1928. Rhodes, Minister of: Finance; will an- with 'respect to: the 10 Per cent, de- the Bank of Mo: id. ntreal, who appeared; 'in reality to.satisfy the lust, of the de- questioned again Tuesday, with S H.|. Logan, general manager of the Can.|- "| peal to the Government Yo help on dour and fonnd nothing but a load of ibis af ---- tx Ex : Erieau Diniver Had Been acing Charg e of Man-- Che slaughter . ; cig © Chatham, March 26.-- Awaiting preliminary hearing on a charge on 'manslaughter arising out of a fotal TEE lmanslaughter arisibg out of a fatal = 3 Dear Rondeau provincial patk several Sra weeks ago, Sam Galbraith, 47, of ~~ . Erieau, died in the Public General - Hospital early this morning from in- juries which he suffered. It is not expectd an'inquest will be held. Details of the accident were 4 obtained 'at the inquest into the death 25 EE of the first victim, John D, McKin. ot ley, a native of Australia who had been living in Windsor, : The jury found that Galbraith was under the Influence of liquor when driving his car towards a goverits ment construction eamp at Rondeau or Pack where they were employed. His : car got out of control and overturn. ed into a ditch. McKinley was pine ned under the wreckage and killed in- stantly, Evidence revealed they had Yisited a "blind pig" during the even- ng, ! ' Galbraith suffered a fractured shoulder and head injuries, and ap- Deared to have recovered in the gen: eral hospital, He was taken into cus- tody, but after several days. in jail suffered a relapsg, and had to be re turned to the hospital. Women of India of 'Discuss Bill for Protection of Minor Shiny Ras Girls at Council : Bombay.,--Mrs, Saro Jini Naidu pre- sided recently at a meeting of women 2 representing all communities and faith, -- : convened by the Women's Council, Mrs, Naidu remarked she was pltas- ed to find that the women of Bombay had: recently begun to realize that it was not enough to stand aloof. from life, but that women had a responsi- bility toward © their sisters, and that it was necessary to fulfil that responsibil ity by taking an urgent interest in the prayers. . One resolution discussed was in cone nection with the bill for the protection of minor girls. In' this connection Mra, Nadu said that the fact' there should be a necessity for such a bill was an artaignment of educated Indian woman hood. The next resolution dealt with the question of Devadasis and the pre- vention of their dedication to service in Hindu temples. 'Mrs, Nadu explain. ed that these women dedicated to the temples were presumably 'intended 'ta he of service in the temples but were: i i votees who attended more. vital problems. Ottawa's Cancer Clinic -The decision of the Ottawa Civie Hospital trustees to establish a Can- cer Clinic should he widely recognized as of real importance in the effort to stem the progress of a disease that has killed in past years so many of our relatives and friends, and that in. 'sidiously attacks men and women in al] walks of life without known cause, --Ottawa Journal, to offer their Single Jobless Demand Aid Guelph, "March 25.--Pressing their 2 demands for some sort of relief al lowance, single unemployed men in Guelph have named delegates to join members of the Ontario Workers" Fe- deration in other Ontario centres who will interview Premier Gecpyge S. Henry seeking assistance. Claiming that they are a burdwi on their par- ents-and relatives, the men are con- 5 ducting an acti'#a carspaign with a view -to 'getting relief from the Fed- : ral Government, province or munici- ality, and dre organizing to call for a "showdown" in the near future, The single jobless prop in (iuelph have already made two direct appeals to the city council without success. Scottich Unemployed - Receive Aid GLASGOW = Seven Scotamen are said to be on allotments in 1938 for every two in 1932 as . result of the | 3 i : i WA activities'of ths Scottish National : i: Union of Allotment Holders ahd the ana Scciety of Friends. It is claimed that 2} 8880 men have found fruitful occu. pation on the land for their enforced leisure, fits 5 In spite of a total decrease in the number of unemployed in Scotland, the need is felt, according to Sir Ar- chibald Sinclair, a member of Parlia- ment, for a speeding up" of the pro- vision of allotments, A urther ap- the work has just been made here by the "Duke of Montrose. : ce . Ne ushoys Forbidden to I Shout Name of Papers LE MADRID,--Newspaper carriers are " ; prohibited from shouting the name of the newspapers they are selling in an order issued recently by Senor Jose . Valdivia, director of public safety. | Henceforth they can cry "morning. papers" of "evening papers." The measure designed to oreven: battles between vendors of Rightist and Left. ist journals, :