# Tnc WarerLoo Cmunromers | Â¥4AY Touny athaighy. *\ Life is Like That When a man and his wife start to go anywhere. ho tells hor to get his good suit, fix the buttons on his shirt, get his socks and good shoes, brush his hat.â€"perfume his handerchiet, tie his necktie and do a few other little jobs. Then he puts on hi# hat and gays, "Great grief; ain‘t you ready yet?" When seeding down be sure that the fertility level of the soil is high, especially in the materials such as lime, phosphorus, and potash. ‘The best plan is to send a composite sample of the soil, taken at ton difâ€" ferent places across the field, to the soils Department. Ontario Agriculâ€" tural College, for analysis. The re port and suggestions from that de partment will enable you to fertilize wisely and economically according to the fertility requirements of your soil type. Minerals increase the chances of securing a good catch of «eeds, lower the percentage of winâ€" ter killing of the legumes, and, what is most important, increases the proâ€" tein and material content of the feed. to the Ontario Agicultural College, Guelph, for Circular No. 28, "Pasture is Paramount for Milk and Meat Proâ€" duction in Ontario." Mowing ‘pastures should be more widely practised in Ontario. When the new pasture is established and weeds begin to show, mow early every season when the weeds are in the first stages of bloom. Most weeds are readily killed at this period of growth. The mower bar should be fitted with adjustable skids which raise the mower bar about 6 inches depending on the roughness of the pasture. These skids can be easily made by the local blacksmith and are inexpensive. For further information regarding mixtures for pastures and bay write Old pastures infested with weeds like Canadian thistles, wild carrot, etc., are a weed menace to the comâ€" munity. Plowing and clean cropping, and in some cases summer fallowâ€" ing, are the best methods of getting rid of the weeds and preparing suitâ€" able soil conditions for seeding down to a profitable pasture mixture. _If you have a weedy pasture of this kind, plan to plow it this fall and start the improvement plan as outlined above, and it. will return you many dollars of profit over the present low producing pasture. Plow Weedy Pastures this Fall ‘‘There are many old unprofitable pastures to be seen in the countryâ€" side heavily infosted with weeds â€"goldenrod, ‘Canadian thistle, wild carrot, etc.," says Dr. O. Mc Conkey of the Ontario Agriculâ€" tural College, and he continues:â€" "These can be improved 200 to 300% by (1) fall plowing, (2) cropping for one or two years to clean off weeds, (3) raising the soil fertility level, (4) seeding to a well balanced pasâ€" ture mixture of legumes and grasses. As C. L. Burton, president of Simpsons Ltd., recently stated, the fault in mounting government expenditures liee basically â€" with each of us as citizens. One body of citizens after another exercises pressure on public men for measures and expenditures which increase public debt and taxation. While politicians are pressed into enacting the laws to bring extravaâ€" gant measures into effect, it is the people themâ€" selves who are directly responsible for the "fmal discouragement of enterprise and the impairâ€" ment of the workers‘ pay envelope." k At the beginning of the Great War, the net Federal debt was about $385 millions, By the end of the war this had risen sevenfold to $2.3 billions. With provincial and municipal debts soaring at top speed, the total public debt in 1929 reached the huge sum of $5.5 billions. The depression added another $2 billion, bringâ€" ing the grand total to $7.3 billions. _ _ In order to balance its budget, the Dominion government will have to make a sharp reduction in expenditures. It will have the effect of giving impetus to business. Increased national producâ€" tion will follow and thus increased revenue. Last year 217,000 paid income tax and the governâ€" ment, if needed, could secure increased revenue;] from this source. With provinces and municipalities likely to make increased demands on Ottawa, during the coming year, for relief and other wmednl serâ€"! vices, the Federal finance minister be called : upon to find further revenue. Another loss of | revenue expected is the twenty millions received j in 1937 through 3% excise tax on imports from | United States and foreign countwies. This tax, it is stated will be lifted next month as a concession to the United States in the Canadaâ€"! U.S. trade agreements now being completed. I #mARZIELE, VVIVEIL IH, AESD |w" m M. l'inh. -.Mmt P t & houses and auditoriums have a right to expect OTTAwWA NEEDS MORE REVENUE 'thnt the owners or those m:t'i‘yble for‘iutl ecarmistrammane maintenance be required to prom carry ou The failure of even the threatened EurO ‘any neomme?l:htiou made by the fire inspecâ€" pean war to boost the price of wheat more than tor Greater lance on the part of the auâ€" a few cents a bushel means that the Federal thorities h'namd. iderabl wni::i:'edmdendt f 't:m faap: *With | O EDITORIAL siderably inc or the year. NOTES wheat at x; 65800ent tlevel, 15 cents below thel Suguntecirngremsenge government‘s 80 cent guarantee, an estimated N t the situdtion in Europe is fifty millions dollars will be added to the ehnnd"Cat::dim en 1ook forward With con. twenthy-_thsee millions deficit given in the budget fidence to a revival of business. | speech in June. â€" e i m chttetctnercem camcous \ # cents, Friday edition $ cents. donammasl Ard ««numÂ¥ "% +°*" / ordered by the fire inspector, several lives were DAVID BEAN & SONS LIMTED |mn3-anmnmt¢omtmm Owners and Publishers . ‘six victims included:> the proprietor‘s father, ROY 8. BEAW, "m--.& )mother, sister, and a twelveâ€"yearâ€"old nephew. NMenccine Riéiter, , : ®#***: The hotel had been erected only a year ago. e rmeres potath hi Ponna ced . vetee! " This disastrous fire should prompt the fire ind foreign countries. . copies. «iite® marshal of any province to insist that recomâ€" HUGE NATIONAL DEBT FRIDAY, 14, Ironically, Mr. Homuths‘ nomhu-lendo of the platform," «coff tion address came exactly 19 years speaker.â€" ‘"Then we would ‘nner he was frst nominated for a|heard some real arguments : parliamentary position, and in the{ing the Liberal policy on in same auditorium. Recalling portions |and labor questions." of his pledge on that occasion, Mr. Mr. Harris prophesied th Homuth again pledged himself to enâ€" | premier‘s trip down into the sure every possible protection for the | States was not just a pleasure industrial worker. but prophesied the premior \ Need Labor Laws Remedied end up in Washington to ne _ ‘"We must protect him against the |another trade agreement. "T menace of cheaper foreign labor and |agroement made was a decide assure the children of the future of \ment to Canada and so will : a place in their own municipality," |ditional agreements into wh he declared amid the plaudits of his |enter with United States," audience. ‘The Federal government | clared. should be held solely responsible for| ‘The speaker lauded the . industrial stagnation, and the "checkâ€"| Trade agreements as negotia erboard" labor laws which vary all|the Rt. Hon. R. B. Bennett, an« the way across Canada must be re|ed out its benefits woere stil medied," stated the speaker. felt by the ontire Dominion. Flays Pasteurization new agreement will be at | _ While admitting the pasteurization |pense of that one. ‘The adve act which has caused considerable|sult of the last treaty enter furore throughout Ontario, is a good |by the liberal governm« ‘hw. he fiayed the government for |enough to "damn" any govert overlooking the required establishâ€" |declared Mr. Harris. mnt of pastourization stations for the| ‘The speaker urged that ( farmers. "They have no right to be |forget about trade negotiatior deprived of their customers and to |"Uncle Sam" and turn her n be driven to the big dairy interesta," |nver to England entirely. he asserted. have more Canadianism and |s | Mr. Mompth axpressed the bellefvincialism, too," he concluded Referring to hospitalization she stressei the need of supplying the needs of the poorer class of people. ‘"‘There have been schemes found to be workable elsewhere, she contendâ€" ed, and there is no reason why they cannot be inaugurated here," she asâ€" serted. First Nominated 19 Years Earlier "In regard to the railway question, the government must be made to realize that this question must be dealt with courageously in a bust nessâ€"like manner, immediately, and not put off for future years." She urged the insuguration of unâ€" employment insurance, but atressed more particularly the need for "inâ€" surance of employment". Pointing out that her party had always stood for employment and the working man, Mre. Gibson, flayed the handing of huge orders outside ‘Canada for production while Canadians worked only half time,. ‘‘Taxation must be lowered and the budget balanced, but this can never be done with the railway carrying the country further into debt at the rate of $1,000,000 a week. If elected, I shall do everything in my power to see that the cost of government is cut by the reduction of duplication in social services in the provincé and throughout the iDominion," declared the nominee. ‘ In moving the nomination of Mrs. Gibson, youthful Harry Rits oxâ€" pressed the belief that the idea of having a feminine member in the Fedâ€" eral house for the riding had found favor in South Waterloo. Says New Blood Nujod ‘"The youth of Canada /together with oider member# Of the party feel that the National Conservative party needs new blood in its veins, for which reason I agroed to allow my name to stand at this convenâ€" tion," declared Mrs. Gibson, speakâ€" ing on her own behalf. larly the nominee‘s interest in child welfare. r Karl K. Homuth (Contnued from Page 1) *J Driver of a racing car sees 400 miles per > hour as the maximum speed for cars. Personâ€" ‘..Iy. we wouldn‘t care to go a great deal faster ‘~‘than that. | Wheat may only be worth 52¢ a bushel at ‘the mill, but it is worth a dollar to the man wtih .& bunch of hogs at around nine cents a pound lor a flock of pullets laying 30â€"cent eggs, comâ€" ments the Farmers‘ Advocate. â€" | Another of Canada‘s leading weekly newsâ€" papers, the Simcoe Reformer, celebrated its eightieth anniversary. To commemorate the event a profusely illustrated and wellâ€"edited historical number was recently issued by the Hhhsh', ers, Messrs. Bruce and Glen Pearce. e Simcoe Reformer, now a semiâ€"weekly, serves in the prosperous industrial and agriâ€" cultural districts in Norfolk county and conâ€" tinues to prosper from year to year. as possible candidates are former Mayors Wilâ€" :I'-Dlï¬nl. B. E. Rate, W. W. Frickey and Congratulations to the editor, Adam Sellar, publisher of the Huntingdon, Que., Gleaner, on ‘the fine profusely illustrated 46â€"page historical edition issued recently to commemorate its 75th anniversary. The Gleaner is one of the best edited weeklies in Canada. May"It continue to Orangeville‘s Chief of Police, C. McNeill, was highly commended by the local weekly newspaper editor for courtesy shown to a moâ€" torist who figured in an unfortunate accident. \'l‘oo often one meets a policeman who acts in an officious manner. i The duty of the Federal Government is to complete the evidence in the Bren gun contract inquiry and ascertain if the charges brought against the government shell committee can be mendations in regard to erection of fire escapes or other changes be made at once. People in Because a hotel proprietor at Rimouski delayed six months in installing fire escapes ardered by the fire inspector, several lives were "I think we should have had this meeting in Kitchener and had Hon. W. D. Euler, that "globeâ€"trotting" minister of trade and commerce, and Premier Hepburn ‘sitting at opposite ends of the platform," @coffed the speaker. â€" ‘"Then we would have heard some real arguments regardâ€" ing the Liberal policy on industry and labor questions." Mr. Harris prophesied that the premier‘s trip down into the United States was not just a pleasure jaunt, but prophesied the premier would end up in Washington to negotiate another trade agreement. ‘"The last agreement made was a decided detriâ€" ment to Canada and so will any adâ€" ditional agreements into which we enter with United States," he deâ€" clared. ‘The speaker urged that Canada forget about trade negotiations with "Uncle Sam" and turn her markets aver to England entirely. "Let‘s have more Canadianism and loss Proâ€" "Why is it that 30,000 cans of beef cattle in tin cans were imported into Canada in the past year? You must put in a government at iOttawa, who will make absolutely sure that Canâ€" adians are given the first chance on Canadian markets," he stated. Liberals Divided ‘The speaker flayed roundly the lack of unity in the Liberal party throughqut the Dominion of ‘Canada, and charged that Certain truths were withheld "because the press at the prsont time are seemingly conâ€" trolled by the Liberal party". ‘The speaker lauded the Empire Trade agreements as negotiated by the Rt. Hon. R. B. Bennett, and pointâ€" ed out its benefits were still being felt by the entire Dominion. "Any now agreement will be at the exâ€" pense of that one. ‘The adverse re sult of the last treaty entered into by the l4beral government is enough to "damn" any government," declared Mr. Harris. "He did his job well and worked diligently at his position, and on be half of Ottawa and ‘Canada, I wish to tender our regrets to his wife, and children," said Mr. Harris. ‘ Need Trade Protection Discussing the Canadian situation at the present time politically and financially, he regretted the fact that "nearly 1,000,000 souls lean on the state for sustenance". "Why there be any need for such a state of affairs when there is so much room for the expansion of industry, farming and livestock raising?" de manded Mr. Harris. ‘"‘We worked together in the House and compared notes, so that I got to know Mr. Edwards vory well," related the speaker. "A few weeks beforeâ€" his death, he called me into bis office and showed me how he had analyzed trade in the iDominion in order that he might point out the demands and needs of the people who he represented. that the Eastern Canada farmer had equally as much right to a minimum wheat price as the Western farmer. Pays Tribute to Late M.P. Introducing Mr. Harris, guest speaker of the evenlnï¬, Mr. Leonard referred for a moment to the late Mr. Edwards, speaking of him as "one of the finest men who ever sat in the House. Mr. Harris too, spoke at length on the late member. Judge McFadden concluded his judgment with the statement, "I must come to the conclusion that }Dr. He‘t knew that the late Caroline ‘Llebner. who was 72 years of age, was not responding to his treatâ€" ments, that payment of his charges ‘was money wasted, and a charge of $1,100 in the circumstances is an unâ€" conscionable one." According to the judgment the account was not renâ€" dered until four months after the death of Miss Liebner in April, 1937. The judge said he accepted the eviâ€" dence of Ernest Liebner, brother of the testatrix, that Dr. Hett had claimed that 20 or 25 serum treatâ€" mens would be sufficieont for his paâ€" tient. He also revealed that in his evidence. which was given before him in chambers, that the Kitchener physician had. intimated a willingâ€" ness to have his cancer cure investiâ€" gated by the cancer commission. CHATHAM.â€"In a judgment handâ€" ed down in Surrogate Court by Judge Uriah McFadden, of Kent, the claim of Dr. John E. Hett, of Kitchener, for $600 against the estate of the late Caroline Liebner, of Morpeth, was dismissed with costs. Dr. Hett‘s claim was for amount he maintainâ€" ed was due him for the balance of 44 serum treatments for Miss Liob ner, a cancer sufferer. The physician had already received $500 for serum treatments which were given at a cost of $25 each. Edward C. Horlor, Plant Clorkâ€"inâ€" Charge, joined the iBell Telephone Company at London in 1923 with the Plant Department; was transferred to Brantford in 1933 as ‘Clerkâ€"inâ€" Charge of the old Brantford District, which position ‘he held until transâ€" ferred to the enlarged Kitchener Disâ€" trict at this time. Judse Refuses Claim Of Kitchener Doctor Hubet M. Morris, ‘District Plant Superintendent of the newly organâ€" ized Kitchener District, has had conâ€" siderable telephone experience. A graduats in Engineering Class 1924 of Toronto University, he joined the Bell Telephone Company the same year at Toronto, transferred to Monâ€" treal in 1925 as ‘Construction Enâ€" gineer, and then to Ottawa in 1927 as ‘District Plant Superintendent. In. 1930 he was transferred to Torâ€" onto as Division Construction Superâ€" intendent and Engineer of the Cenâ€" tralâ€"Northern Division, which posiâ€" tio he neld until his transfer to Kitchener. Roger J. Monkman, Traffic Assis tant, has had considerable experâ€" ience in Traffic work. A graduate in Arts of the University of Toronto, he started ‘with the Bell iOrganization in London in 1928, spent two years in Windsor, and six years in the (Toâ€" ronto Division ‘Traffic, from where he was rtansferred to Kitchener. Transferred to the Traffic Departâ€" ment in Toronto.on special work in 1925, then to Hamilton as Division Traffic Supervisor in 1930, back to General Office in 1933 as Personnel §upervisor, to St. Catharines in 1935 as <District Traffic Superintendent, returning again to ‘Toronto as Diviâ€" sion ‘Traffic Supervisor of the Northâ€" ern Division in 1937, which position h held until his present transfer to Kitchener. * Wallace Macdonald Rankin, Dis trict ‘Traffic Superintendent of the newly organized Kitchener District, comes to his new position with a wealth of telephone experience, _ A graduate in Arts 1924 iClass, Toâ€" ronto University, he joined the Bell Telephone Company in the same year, and worked on the preparation ot the first dial exchange in Toronto with the ‘Plant Department. New Superintende it Has Much Experiezce WITH MALICE AFORETHOUGHTâ€""We‘ve been through our pockets and it looks like we‘re gonna wash your dishes!" A QuUIET, werr Conuctep, comvEnigwt, Mookrn 100 Room notkiâ€"as with sath wRITE FOoR FOLDER TaAKE A OE LUXE TAXx: FROM DEPOYT OR WHARF â€"ABs "I wouldn‘t ‘go there under any cirâ€" cumstances," he said. Mr. Hepburn made his speech at a goodwill dinner. Host was the Sarâ€" nia Chamber of Commerce. Although following soon after dedication cereâ€" monies to open the new Blue Water international bridge, it was not a part of that program and there were no United States guests on hand to hear the premier and other speakers. Mr. Hepburn followed his critiâ€" cism of Mr. King with the statement that he, himself, was not aspiring to the prime ministership of Canada. SARNIA.â€"Any: thread which may have held together the already strained harmony of Ontario Liberal Premier M. F. Hepburn and Federal Liberal Premier«‘W. L M. King, seemed broken gctnnhy, after Mr. Hepburn had loosed one of his sharpâ€" est salvos to date aimed at his erstâ€" while chief. Mr. Hepburn in a speech had just concluded enumeration of several inâ€" stances where he charged Ottawa had blocked proposed Ontario legisâ€" lation, when he said: "At the last election I was foolish enough to get up.and support himâ€" a mistake I never will be able to live down." Will Never Live Down Mistake Hepburn Renews Aitack On King TELEPHONE TALKS IN THE WATSON FAMILY of Supporting Premier. erttsesenssesessssessessesseseeseesse000 0 o t e e ty Emm eeneenne and other ordinary diseases, quick! spond to Physical Cultare. icubainn + san We in natural methods ONLYâ€"no -:‘mlrm operations â€" no drugs. Our h‘imh-;hhu-vmlhmund“yu play while getting well." This world famous resort founded tants, trained in his measures, closely superviso Folks suffering from digestive ailments, nervous use letter, post card, ‘phone or wire. M this paper "ad Ior valaabls boerkler‘ on Tar mt madkâ€"sabt â€"health lectures. Never a dull moment. _ â€" Woekly rates are very reasonable. PHYSICAL CULTURE DANSVILLE For complete The Road To Mealth beautiful