"A War, Thomas «aid, was inhereat in a capitalistie, nationalistle governâ€" ment. "We must change the sys *tem that breeds war," he added. "Why*" he continued, "because eertain men, the munitions manufac« turers and those belding stocks in their compunies find that war and the war seare make profits for them." ‘ and mine," Nye said. "Last May and June we sent our navy on man« ecuvres into the Pacific nearer Japin than our shores. If Japan did that to us, we would demand of the Government how long they inâ€" tended to put up with Japan‘s bullyâ€" “l-:‘ '.mlul.ho-l‘. m hnhnml-hflluâ€"-ntlh 40 per cent. Japan has increased its armanent 130 per cent and the United States 197 per cent Nye deâ€" clared. h "No other country is doing. more to lead to war than your country Nye and Norman Thomas, Socialist leader, addressed nearly 1,000 Harâ€" vard College students, _ Munitions Manufacturers To Blame, . Declares Senator CAMBRIDGE, Mass..â€"U.8. Senâ€" ator Gerald P. Nye (Kâ€"ND.) chairâ€" man of the Senate Munitions Invesâ€" tignting Committee, declared hl last week that the "United States leads the armament race." US. Leading Arms Race, Nye Asserts ‘Telegram, nominstor which uppeals like to President and longshoremen, small :yu‘h::tlflh::‘.hhnl- one spen lh-rlq afterncons. â€"â€" New York ‘orldâ€" The wham and bounce of the ball through a clear opening between a couple oi outhelders is a common deâ€" words hamlet is so .l:.-nh and searcely spinster‘s «o shelt» loul-.l:'h-bflvb-hmb ball season. big business as the average corporaâ€" tien. But baseball has none than a commercial side, else it never could have penctrated American conâ€" sclousness so deeply that no backâ€" ao Seaopell, whieh io aot a ty me Rubt now sees the opening game out of uniform and from a seat in the grandstand. And now, more reliable than robin or daffedil, the smack of bat against ball is here, in the sandlots as well ns the big Welcome, baseball! It seems only yesterduy that football crowded you out. Time ‘fles, and an aging Babe Foxall was successful in having his Iâ€"au.iddl-rd..‘b-y of counterclaim, this being monies due the insurance companies for Inâ€" surance premiums. _ The . British Columbia Court of Appea! reduced the award to $2.250. From this judgment, appeal was taken to the Supreme Court of Canada. ,‘ maintained. considerable business to him. Foxall allsged he lost considerable money as a result and suffered severe damâ€" axes which he estimated at $25,000. Mr. Justice Lacas found the action of the Insurance companies was highâ€" of the insurance was highâ€" handed ‘and nwarded Foral " 1006 During his illness he alleged Shoâ€" brook broke into his office, seized and earrled away all his books of acâ€" count and records, collected outstandâ€" ing accounts and converted them to his own use. It is alleged also that Shobrook neither returned his books down. It was alleged he was not in a fit to transaet busipess while in heiphiat. for the insurance companies To ‘shice‘ giabrint ateh ai" man aser. Foxall became ill in January, 1982, and suffered a nervous break» Passage East and Gets â€" $1,303 Award OTTAWAâ€"Clifford Francis Foxâ€" o ioi passage successfully maintained before the Supreme Court of Canada an award given him in the British Columbia 'i-.:-:‘ummu.. m ment in his action for damages nsurance companies. War Veteran Wins â€" Works Play Ball! as the sure sign of d a bit of ’h Toronto and over a. )nlo‘/"“â€"o'f years the distribation does not "beâ€" thet anty To per tem. to 10 fer Sm cent. to 15 per cent. dm%ï¬uâ€"hw is vaceinated. authoritles admit having no check on the number of children vaccinated by the family dectors but they have another means of | substantiating their records. Practically all the vaceine is dis« tributed from the Central Laboratory ’“nm':;:MriraM:u according latest records, have been vaccinated. If taken in comâ€" 'I.-’muhldbbmi- 8 «d as understatement. In fact, it is decidedly high. ‘ _ What are some of the facts the :‘!hh ':l'tl'ht attention . to. ‘onaider one disense, smallpox. Recently a responsible public bealth authority in Oitawa made the stateâ€" ment that so far as the dangers of that disease were concerned, "we are sitting on a powder keg." Less than '.’lh“ 7-7]-!.7. reaton a e« guarded, should fall m.-y-l these communicable diseases." tion and so are active agents in It is a faet that while much in the way of public instruction reâ€" mains to be done, people are much more familiar with the superficial facts of health and disease prevention than they were a decade ago. Yet Tnkgs To Hinn vax profecgun y own Some authoritles are inclined to think the answer is "Yes", In a reâ€" cent editorial the Toronts Globe deâ€" elared: _ "They (the pareats) take -y-_l-l Simallpox Season Approaching â€"&olly 7 p. of preâ€"School Children Protected. countries rich, while his land lies fallow and unproductive. The incvitable result of him to €artail production has been to make his competitors in other Anima! oils and fats, edible, Ib. . 1,723,216 18895241 Hides, Ib, .. . .200,770,432 308,475,433 Tullow, tb, ... 42,815,209 245,850,022 Carpet Weol, Ih, _ ....... 85,181,282 171,504,101 The tremendous incresse in the amount of these products imported last year over the year before is traceable directly to the artificial reâ€" nlnhnd'nu!hhlhuflr†and the throwing open of the domâ€" estic market to foreign farmers. / '-.th:‘dmw deâ€" velopment prosperityâ€"and now the New Deal has repudiated it. And it has repudiated more than that: for it has denied the Ameriâ€" can farmer the right, which he had always enjoyed to sow what seed ’hp Thed ant twke O at "herout time all that Nature vouchsafed to Corn, The most startling shift from ex» porting American products to imâ€" porting foreign products is revealed in farm commeditics. _ The followâ€" ing table shows the amounts of cerâ€" tain important farm products which we imported from abroad in the past lhl.‘ld“;“‘ economic truth. Yet along comes the Brain Trust and sells Mr. Reosevelt on its doe» lrh-d'-:nny.no-n-db- ereasing wealth.and . prosperity éf the American people. What have the results been? The Department of Commerce‘s statistical report on our foreign trade for 1935 shows that our exâ€" ports ‘to other countries increased over 1934 only 7 per cent., while our Imports from abread increased 24 per cent. ‘ DCIZD‘ "% Not money, as those who talk glibly about redistributing it seem to think, comments the Deâ€" troit Press. Wealth is made up of goods and services. And the only way in which wealth 56â€"tb, bus Commodity _ 1981 _ 1933 On a Powder Kes HW ceia mss rnenig Drnviln Aercinies 5,580 407 1,107,020 MITIATG 7,730,582 140474 127106 16.653,242 22014612 27 438,870 43,242,206 10,10€,003 8,584,114 WOpeniephn it es 7 Wneenganend nmdiptcres. Gibson who hailed from Armstrong County, Pa., lived most of his life :‘Pm-hw::lhrh%oth, April 18, at age llbhvfldnhndx h "I have, throughout my i been impressed by the misfortune of persons in dire need of medical and hospital assistance, but unable to obâ€" tain the same because of poverty or limited means, Also by the fact that worthy children of parents who are poor or of limited means cannot obâ€" tain the higher education which they erave and which, if they could obtain, might greatly increase their hapâ€" ..hn-_ndlhit-f-lnnnl.. _ The fund will + known as the Addison H. Gibson foundation. The rest of Gibson‘s estate, estlâ€" mated to have a total value of $2,â€" 500,000, was left to relatives and friends. \ ] Mis estate is to be preserved in a trust fund for peor and needy m-::w.u-h.flu‘: tion to pay for the education of | _ PITTSBURGHâ€"Addison H. Gibâ€" }:& a ll::ium son who became proximately $2,300,000 to charity in his will, filed for probate resently. been a serious outhreak of smalipex in Ontario for three and a half years. Bot they would not alter their preâ€" vious opinion because of that admit« sion. When they look at their records the only conclaslon is that the Provâ€" Ince is fair game for another outâ€" hnhfltllhâ€"-hnnr:‘:-u. pox season appreaching. unâ€" fortunately, it is not characteristle of smailpex to pay hamans the courtesy of announcing in advance that it is coming. An fsolated case here and there wou!ld be sufficient by way of a fuse. __If less than 15 per cent. of the school children of Ontario have been immunized, and the Toronto ratio can be accepied as the customary spread between the two groups, it ?ucfl.d.:tâ€-b:l-:ilh per t mflnuhn::nlh any authorities base their criticism ‘and m;.fln:fl!h-.um were to adopt the deseription of the Ottawa suthority as applicable generally . . . literally the homes :.N-'nvhnmnuflolmln ‘l"hnu authorities . would . be frank to admit that there has not medical health officers show between 65 per cent. and 70 per cent. of the school children are vaceinated while less than 35 per cent. of the preâ€" sehoo! children have received that gin to approximate the yearly birthâ€" MME‘-‘-O-â€"}:-::N.T& Carol MHughes, charming young actress. t cont of blue flï¬.-‘h-‘n.â€"hh-‘-flhl:â€". The gown !l_‘.im.dhwvfln*‘u-nddhm SHIMMERING SILVER STARS IN EVENING wEAar To Charity the News denartments moved next and then the executive offices, Canadian In N Manitoba barley â€" No. 3 C.W., I:M No. 5 barley, 47%c deliverâ€" Ontario grain, approximate prices ’u:t.hmnhlâ€"m:.nu ; onts, 25 to 28¢; barley, 35 to 38¢; corn, 40 to 42¢; rye, 40 to 42¢; malting barley, 45 to 50¢; -"Hu‘ -h.ï¬lo‘ _NAY AND stRaAw Manitoba wheatâ€"No. Nor., #2%¢; Ne 4 t h Ne wass ie e . lnl::llg ll«lfl&:: yonte, 4 allâ€"rail shipments livered Ontario pointsâ€"No, 2 C. W., 4dc; No. 3, do., 40¢; extra No, 1 feed, 39%e; No. 1 feed, 37¢; mixed feed, Sic. No. 1 feed sereenings, $18.50 per Mtber Suitm Tiey park betan toree; e Nez pjenic s 34 °0 het nork loing, 19% ‘ WHOLESALE PROviGiONS the m:: prices t .: t p roine Abarl ts 2 ocd * §10; No. 3 timothy hay, ton, 87 to §8; straw, wheat, -::. tom, $5 to §6; cat straw, $5. _ _Lardâ€"Pare, tierees, 12%4e; He; tak Haetipdae, 196 * M orteningâ€"T ’-â€"â€"l:‘.n tubs 11%¢; pails, 11%e; prints, 11%c. Over 5 Ibs, .. 4 to 5 Ib«, .. 3 to 4 Ibs. .. Old roosters ... _ _ BUTTER â€" No. 1 Ontario solids, 20%4¢; No. 2, 19%e, United Farmers® Coâ€"operatfve Co. Satorday were paying the following No. 2 timothy hay, baled, toa, $9 to POULTRYâ€" _ (Quotations in cents) MARKETS hroughout â€" PRODUCE PRICES Live Dressed Milkfed 16 14 11 ss Is Building 17 asÂ¥e BM $156,281 in 1935 against $120,981 in 1984 and $74,064 in the previous year, Clay pottery production shows little change, helding around $51,000 $32,650 yearly through the last to yearly through three years. Face brick output, the largest item, showed a value of $545,917 in 1985 compared with $479,850 in 1934 and :l‘l.ï¬h ;‘lï¬.i'ho 1981 output a value 1,278,054. The value of common brick proâ€" duced by Ontario plants list year was $269,100, compared with §$227,276 in Structural, roofing and floor tile is also on the ‘Increase with a value of the previous year and $163,238 TORONTOâ€"Output of clay proâ€" ducts in Ontario, -fldnm sharply in 1932, is slowly recentl h:d“:vth ines depart mines = m:fM 'l:dl’m::-“d Japan are not as as many suppose, Mrs. Baldwin pointed out. The larger ones are under government supervis« lon but in the privatelyâ€"owned corâ€" porations, "sweat shop" labor is us ed. Formerly the country was ridden with tuberculosis because of the inâ€" ferior food and the lack of exercise, but in more recent years conditions are being improved. An extensive athâ€" letle program has been .introduced. Although _ retired, Mrs. Baldwin r-flmnmnfl of â€" August with her daughter, Cicely, to the country she knows so well. Children are almost worshipped. Anything in the form of beauty . or youth is adored. "Even the cobbler working on the street will have beâ€" fore him a vase of flowers or a potted plant, at which he will gaze fondly." In the schools, flower arâ€" ranging is one of the clementary subjects, _ In speaking of her evangelical work, she said that in Japan strangâ€" m:-unbmlh.rm lhl: in t procedure. outu:':’:i‘kilhwhnd. the woman sald: "I have been sitting and waiting for you to come and see me." ‘ In an interview Mre. Baldwin said: "In Japan there are temples in every corner, temples with gorgoous rituals and ornate robes for the officiating pricsts." nn-nnrni-m-'-’-ii-}"d goods or articles imported per= sonal use of the blind and free entry of all educstional sound and sient Duty exemption up to $100 on wfl'nn-l-hnï¬uob ird travelli abroad .'w. exemption is granted only once every four months. furtough, told in particular of â€" the diversity and strangeness of the reâ€" ligions of that country. . mungn. Mâ€":lllh a _vivid Polenin, of Fivemis, n mtesiouney ‘on the tariff schedule and upward reâ€" vision of 12, Including 50 items reâ€" duced under preferential tariff and no Increases, Meavy reductions in tariff rates on British cotton and silk fabries and manufactured cotton . and . artificial silk goods from intermediate tavif countries including United States, _ Excise tax on Canadian brandies reduced to $3 per gallonâ€"now $4. Drop of 1% cents a gallon in gasoline duty was from 24 cents a gallon to one cent. Rearrangement _ of excise . a n d eustoms taxes on automobiles deâ€" signed to lower prices of small curs to consumer. Sales tax increased to eight per cent. from six per cent. and corporâ€" ation income tax rate increased to 15 per cent. to bring added revenue of £29,000,000, Three year exemption from . corâ€" peration income tax of any metalliâ€" ferous mine coming into production between now and Jan. 1, 1940. Anything in the Form of Beauty Or Youth is _ Deficit for the current fiseal year to be less than $100,000,000 comparâ€" d with $162,000,000 in the last year. OTTAWAâ€"Following . are â€" highâ€" lights in the tax and tariff changes announced Friday: ; Tariff on agricaltural {mplements «m Intermediate tariff countries to Sales Tax at New High â€"Companies Levy Up Budset Highlishts Downward revision of 104 items in Fond of Beauty On Clay Products ’ "A rubbish pile to a child with a match is a great temptation. 1f «a ‘an'lh-plhdlltvn away from matehes we can at least clean up the \u“hh-i"-hp"bohcno:“',‘o\ mateh ‘m*fl or a child in the first cost, +ut the second cost is very high." The need of cleanizy out garazes is seen in the number _ of fres in such buildings, Chief DeFle!ds added. Useless bits of oily rags, that could ensily be cleaned out, are the chief hazards, be commented. ger spots of the homes for fires, the chief urged that pqrticulas effert» be taken towards cleaning up bue ments, "A fire in the basement fills the house with smoke, People are amothered before they are burnsd," he warned. _ Chief DeFields also pointed uat that during March, 38 fires were started by . children . playing with matches and cbserved that 90 per cent. of these were the result of *n child, a match and a rubbish pile." "I don‘t think the cleanâ€"ap camâ€" paign affects any department of the city as much as it does the nre deâ€" partment," he remarked. "Too mauny of our fires lately have been start=4 in rubbish piles." _ Observing that a large percentage of the fires of the last few months have had their origin in rubbish, Chief DeFields pointed out that it costs the fire department. und thereâ€" fore the taxpayers, just as much money to answer an alarm to a «vall blaze as it does a large one. 1 WINDSOR. â€" in conjunction with the Chamber . of :-tm'- cleanâ€"up campaign now in progress. Fire Chief DeFields urged a cityâ€" wide removal of all rubbish a* a means of eliminating fire habards. Declares Rubhish Windsor Fire Chief Comâ€" mends â€" Cleanâ€"Up Campaign which are believed necessary." But the end of Federal deficits will not come this year. Estimated expenses of all sorts will total $509,â€" 000,000. Revenues, including new taxes, will aggregate $415,000,000 to $417,000,000, leaving a deficit of alightly less than $100,000,000, Of the new taxes, Mr Dunning had Mug: "I am confident the feel it "uhno'm: necessary have a deterrent effect on the busiâ€" ness trend which is now _ definitely upward. Rather 1 do believe that businessmen and the public generally Fabearer io sropple rigursonty wilk to grapple vi c-v::ib-d-n-fll-mnd will willing to coâ€"operate wholeâ€" Then be went on io say: "That purpose the Government intends to pursue steadily as an essential conâ€" dition of the restoration of business eonfidence and the free functioning of private enterprise. This, it is beâ€" Neved, will contribate more effectâ€" Ively to the solution of the problems of unemployment and depression than any other sinwle thing which #overnments can d0." In this examination of the nationâ€" al bankbook, the finance minister reâ€" ported a deficit of $162,191,000 and rwhm'nh«nh ï¬utnmmh ':.0 the era recurring deficits." Canadians will be permitted to go to the United States or any other country, stay there 48 hours and reâ€" is pngs eamd a y 7 limited to three times a year. _ lowered dutics on yarns and fabrics ;- b:nb. ll::'h-. ‘ cerâ€" hhn-ln tobaeco . and rlfl.n" brind ant at Gaviy essrring » mant many Income tax was boosted to still higher levels on corporations, alâ€" though individuais were not affected by the changes. *a* _ _OTTAWAâ€"Finance Minister Dunâ€" ning presented a highâ€"low budget to Pariiament Fridayâ€"high taxes and .'mhlh.-t time peaceâ€" deficit in Canada‘s history, he inâ€" creased taxes by an estimated $26,â€" 000,000 to $30,000,000 this year, headâ€" ed by a jolting revision of the sales tax from six to eight per cent., the highest point it ever reached. Total of Dominion Taxation Bis Fire Hazard Deficits Not Ended hi parents come down to court w4 unly one thought in mind â€"â€" to get him out of trouble, That he may need a swift rap over the knoet‘en to straighten him put rever s erme to enter their heads. They weep over hm sad rsddie up to bim and save him, if tew «ther car statinn, s sateh him abidunce beginning in the "owe,* This is no. undeniably true sb to be self.evident. _ The police courts, Jails, penitentaries and death chan» bers in the United States tel. an anâ€" speaknble tragle story; and it is a story which, in the vast majority of¢ cases, begins back in some Ame:}â€" can bome in which the father and mother made a terrible mess of theiz most important Job, f Back of many a crisinal stande a parent who failed. wama just couldn‘t be bot‘eres to enforce discipline set up hish r=rmant standand and, in wenersl, se to it that Junior set bis feet in the wap that he should go. Worse ;:«:-;I-.d Mr. Peaver, when one of these vzyward Toys f_ilrloi_hu the to‘ls of th» law, J. Edgar Moover, head of Uncle Sam‘s Gâ€"men, told the New York Round Table Forum the other day imâ€"* an amazing number of the erimes charged to the American unâ€" the underworlding‘ he bed s parents . writes the Kitchener Record. Some 2 per cent. of the crime in the United States, said Mr. mosver, is committed by lads who are not yet old enough to vote. _ Many of these youngsters sre still of hizh school age. Pract‘cally all of them come from homes where papa snd The dftack on criwe, then. Moover concludes must besin . "a recenstruction of the Amer viewpoint . toward . better pure diseipline and a greater sonso of Lack of This Factor Accounts For _ Much â€" Juvenile Crime M« many groups competing for pub« !My.auhhuhldlbuhu'm ting special favors in the newspapers, is a very hazardous sort of responsi~ bility, one requiring the most exactâ€" Ing attention to detail. That we should have emerged from this year of combats at the polls with practl« eally no complaints of our service is a splendid tribute to the geseral manager and his staff and is a reâ€" cord of which we as members of the Canadian Press have every reason to "Through its own efforts and those of its allies," he continued, "the Asâ€" sociated Press, Reuters and Havas :."...u,,“' the Canadia newspapers, m Press supplied to its members most complete coverage of all the news doâ€" mestle, and foreign and fully mainâ€" tained its reputation for speed and mecuracy and the general reliability of its reports." Discussing radio broadcasting of news, Mr. Preston said: "If there is to be news on the air, it is vital from the standpoint of the national welfare that it be in control of an organizaâ€" tion like the Canadian Press that has the British and Canadian viewpoint, ld'hl:.‘m'llu::hd accuraey impartiality in the prepâ€" aration of its news have been well established. It was for this reason the Canadian Press has offered to supply, free of charge, bulletins for three or four news broadcasts each day, available to all radio stations," Speaking of the Dominion and Proâ€" vincial elections, he said: "To handle the news of an clection campaign, especially oge for the Dominion, with Wntrowien bast mevr appeerel is a nover to hun-‘vnu;tluhh:‘m‘: very extraordinary period, a [ }ï¬ï¬‚&mdl&hmm m'h-hubuu-lhlhm highest ideals of modern journal« with extraordinary events, the Canâ€" adian Press has done a very good jJob, said W. B. Preston of the Brantâ€" ford Expositer in his presidential adâ€" dress to the annual meeting of ;h- M.w"h" m L sociation of the daily newspapers of Year‘s Record â€"W. B. Presâ€" ton Extolls Coverage, Accuracy Needed in Home Wins Tribute In a year crowded i\