The other day we happened to be in on a discussion about a friend of some of the chaps in the group. Somebody said "You Dr. Jim Gray of Friendship, N.Y., has been paying his first visit to the holiday resorts of Onâ€" tario. And apparently the Doc and his family left for home an extremely satisfied group. Doc is an ardent angler, and he was out on lovely Lake Kashafawig:mog at every opportunitg' ust before he left the Artfields of Holiday Inn, Doc decided to try the Onâ€" tario bass just once more. So, he went out for a spot of flyâ€"casting with Phil Schick, anothér Holiday Inn guest. Doc soon hooked into & beauty. He had all he could do to hold this battler with his light fly rod, and the fight developed into twenty minutes of the pretâ€" tiest action you‘ll see anywhere. Doc finally boated the fighting , bass, and he went something over three pounds. This is no record, of course, for that district, but he was something to recall joyful memories every time Doc thinks of his first fishing holiday in Onâ€" We heard not long ago of a| strange and fortunate accident; which befell two American army“ boys while they were vacationing | in the Haliburton district. Apparâ€"| ently the damage to their car was | of such ap extent that they had| to send away for parts before they | could carry on. . . So, they wirg: their Commanding Officer, outâ€"| lining their predicament, and reâ€"| quested an extension of their‘ leave. This seems to have been granted, for the boys settled back ; to await their new parts. .. Here‘s‘ where a most astonishing coinciâ€" | dence cropped up. The boys found . themselves ensconced beside a . beautiful streamâ€"one of the best â€" trout streams in the Haliburton| area. So, the poor chaps were) forced to while away their bitter| hours (waiting for the "parts" to â€" arrive) by catching some of the | finest speckled beauties to be‘‘ found in the province. . . Sure was a tough break, wasn‘t it? But, you know, there may not be any ] speckled trout where they‘re goâ€" .ï¬_mn.n..hilï¬hh.uï¬-‘ The next time you are tempted to sacrifice your holidays angd keep on with "business as usuall"â€"don‘t do it Both you and the business will suffer if you do. return from a holiday. Many busy men are now taking holidays one or two days a week during the summer months. IT"S NOT ENOUGH. â€" If you are an executive or a business man, and are busy to the point where you feel you cannot spare the time to take a holidayâ€" take it anyway. The business you_are now steeringâ€" will operate when you are dead, just as your work will wait for you until you While the average business man may be under a great deal more mental strain than the average factory worker, the monotony of repetition in a factory worker‘s job also creates a strain. A week or two away from his jfob can easily make things worthwhile again. Admittedly you do not get as far behind in your work, but you have no real chance to relax. ®"Phere she in! All we need nmow is a motor!â€"Where‘s mMW;’ Time and intelligent research have proven that regardless of a man‘s job, a change of scenery and place is good for him. The same old grind day in and day out can be easier to bear with thoughts of a pleasant holiday to either look forward to or back on. It is not so many years ago that a holiday for other than the wealthy, was considerde a luxury not essential to the ordinary workâ€" Editorial Comment $3.00 per year in Canada; $4.00 per year outside Canada THE BEAN PRINTING & PUBLISHING CO. Onmudm‘ s Subscriptions Payable in Advance â€" Single copies 5 cents. Authorized as second class mail, Post Offee Department. Otiswa. The Waterioo Chronicls, Waterice W? w-m,muumd '.'.?u-ho.mm iï¬m&'ï¬"â€"-}. of the Canadian Weekly mgmun..u‘d Holiday Not a Luxury THE WATERLOO CHRONICLE cussed. The commission will urge the federal Works Department to authorize payment of its 37% per cent. contribution to the project. The Thames in England is . of the world‘s muddiest rivers Possibility of éilii.i).;%'téfliiers for the proposed $4,000, Conestogo dam at Glenallan will also be disâ€" lhe commussion expects the $300,000 project will be confpleted befque_‘tt_ng_end_ of the year. Ferg'ur;;‘ E. F. Robérts, Brantford, secreâ€" taryâ€"treasurer of the commission, in notification to the members, fixes the meeting for this Friday at 2 p.m. at the Commission {:odge, Grand Valley Dam, near Inspection of the work proceedâ€" ing on Luther Marsh dam by members of the Grand River Conâ€" servation .Commission had been scheduled for this weekâ€"end. pace, and you know it. . . But everyone should make a deliberâ€" ate effort to try and find solaceâ€" ‘and the place for us is the outâ€" {know, it‘s a darn shame that he |can‘t seem to relax at all". This “ comment rang a bell with us, ‘right away. erhaps our years |have taught us a valuable lesson \that could well be passed along to the advantage of countless |other people. Anyone who leads ‘a busy and hectic life during the | working day needs a few days or | weeks every year in which to reâ€" “Iax and forget the tension. . . Sometimes it‘s pretty tough to change the pace of your life over ‘night, even thon:ngh it‘s a killing Conservationists Plan Inspection Of Luther Dam doom,j‘:‘li:;e nature canheï¬othe; your nerves you to forget your imnï¬â€˜ilate probâ€" | lems. . . Just absorb some of naâ€"| ture‘s quiet peactâ€"watch a hawk | or a squirrel or a chipmunk for| a while. Or just lie on your back | and listen to the cicada‘s song.| Relax. It‘s well worth it! I * A replg we liked to a stateâ€" ment by Dr. Gordon A. Siscoe who claims that Communism and Capitalism are both defective # Clipped sense: "Crown agenâ€" cies already get awgo with murâ€" der by not g_aymg minion inâ€" come tax. hey should not be allowed to get away with mayâ€" hem committed on municipal taxâ€" payers. CCF.MP‘s do not inâ€" variably attract our very warm and undiluted admiration, but they talked common sense about this question of municipal taxaâ€" tion on Federal property. Many of them backed Mr. A. Macinnis, who _ said, _ ‘"Federal property should be assessed the same as other property in their muhicipaâ€". Aly, and the Dominion Governâ€" men should pay its fair share of, taxes. (This is one occasion on which we have evidence that C.C.F. M.P‘s can think in terms| of ordinary common sense and can get away from the idea that the only good government is one | that robs everyone and wastes the | resulting loot." h _# The Cobourg Sentinelâ€"Star is amazed: "It never fails to amaze us that a person can be born in a country, grew to adulthood and there and then take up the cause of a foreign country, a country that has nothing good to offer Canada in the way of progress, democracy, cultural advancement, or any of the four freedoms." @ Sherman Adams, Governor of New Hampshire: "I believe if we all would decide this year to give a half a dollar more work for the dollar we receive, we would all come pretty near getting the half a dollar we are losing beâ€" cause our dollars are only worth half as much." ® Philosophy from the Stettler, Alta., Independent: "At the hosâ€" pital a man can get acquainted with his mind as well as the nurses and the mind is a good deal more important because he can‘t take the nurse with him when he leaves." ® Vernun, B.C. News, boils it down to this: "Canadians who want price controls should take a look at the U.S.A., and perhaps of lesson will be learned thereby." ... At Langley, EC school trusâ€" tee Roberts, speaking on the poor water supply, instanced that he had visitors from Vancouver who brought a special supply along, "straight and pure from a Vanâ€" couver tap," for theirs in preferâ€" ence to Langley water. . . The Inâ€" dian Head News delightedly tells of a local lady whose telephone went haywire while trying to get the CPR station, and a voice anâ€" swered, "This is the Kremlin, the ; Roosians have taken over." . . The |Chilliwack, B.C., Board of Trade officially invited Hopalong Cassiâ€" (dy to come and open the 1951 ‘Cherry Carnival; Clark «Gable |had accepted a similar invifation |back in to 20‘s. : . From the Picâ€" |ton, Ont., Gazette local news ‘items that is really Canadiana: "Johnny Moon‘s pet skunk, Petuâ€" nia, is back after an extended trip about the country side. She did not return alone, however, and now it‘s debatable whether Petuâ€" nia with her newly acquired famâ€" ily of eight is welcome, in the Moon household in Trenton." . . . What is probably a record price for land sale was the price obâ€" tained by George Beatty of Midâ€" napore, Alta., for his 640 acre ranch farm. It sold for $130 an acre and a total of $83,840 excluâ€" sive of stock. . . D. E. Winslow of Notch Hill, B.C., a 46â€"yearâ€"old farmer who has spent 30 years completing his formal education, has just finished writing his senâ€" jor matriculation at Salmon Arm; he chose for home studies Latin, Greek, English, mathematics. . ... First assignment that Shawâ€" ville, Ontario‘s new _ veterinâ€" arian Dr. Armitage had, was to perform a caesarian operation on a heifer owned by Lennon Thomas, the paper there tells us. ® Canadiana: At Kitchener, Ont., the boyhood home of W. L. McKenzie King is being restored, brick for brick, beam for beam, as an historic site. . . It is interestâ€" ing to know that the first woal carding mill in Eastern Ontario was opened back in 1830 by James Rosamond in what is now Carleton Place, the mill later moved to Almonte and from this small beginning has developed to the now famous group of Ottawa Valley woolen and worsted mills. FAMILY AFFAIR AT BLOOD CLINIC. While their 5!/â€"yearâ€"oid san, Jackie, looks on, volunteer nurse, Mrs. Thomas Crawford tapes the arm of her husband, who was among 900 employees who donated to a Red Cross mobile blood clinic at a plant of Canâ€" adian Westinghouse Company Limited, Hamilton. Jackie, a victim of spinal meningitis last September, owes his complete recovery to free Red Cross blood transfusions and :.,he sk']i‘ll of doctors at the Hamilton General Hospital and the Hospital for Sick Chilâ€" ren, Toronto. Country Editor By Jim Greenblat ® Canadian Statesman, Bowâ€" manville, Ont.; Money is not proâ€" duced; it merely represents proâ€" duction for the purpose of makâ€" ing exchange faster and easier No amount of legislature handâ€" outs of money can ever support a sane economy â€" only production can do that. @Civilization _ doesn‘t _ make sense to the Battleford, Sask., News: "We often wonder why the most adoting creature of the enâ€" tire animal worldâ€"the friendly dogâ€"must have a license in our city and towns while the house cat is let off scot free." from the Christian point ï¬ view : ". .. It is fashionable in Socialist circles to lump capitalism and communism together as kindred evils _. . the danger inberent in such an attitude of mind is the failure to distinguish the fact that capitalism has its roots in individâ€" ual freedom, whereas communism rests upon tyranny, . Christian teaching constantly emphasizes the worth and dignity of the inâ€" dividual, something that communâ€" ism utterly denies." ‘ their live« and @20 _z. o."; Nndor British leadership, the people are nfl;ï¬mmï¬ their lives and . Pictured (right hoilding cane) is Sir Gurney, l:l C mra-;n‘J upi?;::{mv- Bentong Home Guard, t~ frst -::7:. Malaya‘s State of Pal ho for ahoukt An td e o ces se us â€" has so far about 50,0"" FOR THREE YEARS the homes of Malayans have bec-nmedibry Chinese Communist bandits sweepâ€" ing out of the jungles. Now, under Mfl-‘ leadership, the people are raising their own army to defend their lives and propertv Pieturad (wishe Laldi, __ 0*,°05,2050°C "°C *A INCiF own an Mr. Murphy feels that too much emphasis cannot be placed on The Perennial Sow Thistle has deep yellow flowers of about 1‘%" across while the flowers of the anâ€" nuals are paler and smaller. The leaves of the Perennial Sow Thistle are deeply cut with the segments pointed backwards and they are slightly prickly. The Common Annual Sow Thistle has deeply cut and lobed leaves and are scarcely prickly. The Spring Annual has leaves which are waâ€" vy on the margin, prickly and often decidedly waxy. Sow rpot Mr. Mutphy goes on to point out that there are three varieties of Sow Thistle, but only oneâ€" Perennial Sow Thistle, is causing any great concern. The other two â€"Spring Annual and Common Annualâ€"as the name implies are annuals and areâ€" comparatively harmless. He says there are four means of distinguishing the Peâ€" rennial Sow Tuistle from the two annuals. Perennial Sow Thistle is a tailâ€" er, more slender plant than the annual Sow Thistles. There are numerous underâ€" ground "roots" on the Perennial Sow Thistles, particularly Peâ€" rennial Sow Thistles, are still one of the worst weeds in Gntario. In fact, K. S. Murphy, Fieldman far the Ciops Branch of the Ontario Department of Agriculture, feels that they are a menace to agriculâ€" ture, since in certaim sections of the Province they have made proâ€" fitable crop production extremely difficult. Sow Thistles thrive in both cultivated and uncultivated places, but grow most vigorously en heavy damp suils and where the drainage is pour. _ WEED OF WEEK Thistle, while the Annuat Thistles have a single taf sSOW THISTLES e Home Guard, t~~ tnuhu.ii'{fï¬arm.’,'_ï¬ :'nn‘t‘::.e‘ru East, Kor "mu-. for some {3.“0 and Malaya for 17 Under the plan set up in 1949, landowners are asked to submit their requests for trees on the standard application form, not laâ€" ter than August 15th for xl.nlm. the following spring. gplk‘a- tion forms may be secured from the office of the local Zone Foresâ€" | ter, the county Agricultural Reâ€"| presentative, or from the Pal’lin-; ment Buildings, Toronto w1 To ensure that the species seâ€" Farmers who have waste land which could be brought into proâ€" duction by tree planting should be planning their planting for next spring now. Since 1906 the Ontario Department of Lands and Forests has been providing nurâ€" sery stock for windbreaks, shelâ€" terbelts, erosion control, water conservation and restock ing woodlots. Land which is too light, too stoney or too steep for the production of other agricultural crops will gmw trees. Trees are not _ provided _ for ornnmenul‘ planting â€" DEADLINE FOR j TREE APPLICATIONS a skate protects its eggs. On hatching the little fish shed the covering. He stresses the fact, that no matter which method of control is used, Perennial Sow Thistle should be given every attention to bring it under control, and in A "mermaid‘s purse" is the leatheryâ€"like covering with which An effective control can also be obtained with chemical weed killâ€" ers, states Mr. Murph?'. All Sow Thistles are susceptible to 2â€"4â€"D. It may be applied to fields of %rain and corn where Perennial Sow Thistle is present at the rate of 8 oz. acid per acre. However if the spray is being used on grain that is seeded down, not more than 4 oz. acid per acre should be used, as the clovers and alfalfa are easily damaged by 2â€"4â€" D. For best control, it should be applied prior to blooming, when the flower is ip the bud stage. controlling Perennial Sow Thistle and everyone should make an efâ€" fort to get this weed under conâ€" trol. There @are any number of ways of controlling this pest, but improving the drainage and culâ€" tivation are two of the main ways of _ controlling _ Perennial Sow Thistle. _ Mr. Murphy mfgesu that low-lyins undrained fields be used mainly for hay and pasture, rather than for grain crurs. but where and when possible, the field should be ~properly underâ€" drained. Cultivating when dry is one of the most effective means of: control. However, he points out that the disc harrow should not be used, as this implement is inâ€" clined to pull the root stocks over the field, thus spreading the weed further. Plowing in midsummer followed by numerous cultivaâ€" tions will work very well as an alternative. | ks tation from ?rninj. N § C 0C Reforestation is fl;;zlan for toâ€" morrow that starts y. many farm properties and bring back into production many acres which now lie idle. The only exâ€" pense involved is the transportaâ€" tion charges to your nearest railâ€" w':l station, the labor in planting, and the protection of your planâ€" A planned tree planti proâ€" gram will enhance the vrauc of The purpose of having the apâ€" plications submitted by August 15th is to permit time to carry out the inspections before a blanket of snow conceals the nature of the planting site. It is hoped that the supply of trees may thus be disâ€" tributed in as fair and efficient manner as possible. lected will grow under the local soil, light and drainage conditions and will accomplish the purpose in mind, the Y)epar!men! now provides an imrcï¬on service through the Zone Foresters. These men are school of forestry graduâ€" ates and by carelu'u)hnnin. with: their help costly and discouraging errors may be avoided. ‘ and 540 lbs. of fat, qualifying for a Silver Medal Certificate. So extreme is northern Onâ€" tario‘s cold that locomotives freeze to the rails, can‘t be moved without help from another engine. The high two year old is the same cow that led the 365 day diâ€" vision, Golden Meadow Basil‘s Louisa â€"190731â€" owned by Docâ€" tor Wilfred W. Sherwin of Orono, Ont. In the 305 day division Louâ€" isa produced 8,660 lbs. of milk, In two times milking, the leaâ€" der is Nobly Born Zana‘s Spot â€"174066â€" bred and owned by Fred S. Liebrock of Wheatley, Ont. Spot went on test as a Juâ€" nior four year old and in 305 dgs produced 9,304 lbs. of milk, 536 lbs. of fat, testing 5.71%. The four year old record was made by Brampton W. R. Sybil â€"173009â€" bred and owned by B. H. Bull & Son, Brampton, Ont. Sybil was milked three times daiâ€" ly and was awarded the Silver Medal Certificate for her record of 10,139 Jbs. of milk, 597 lbs. of fat, test of 5.89%. She, too, is a daughter of the superior and Meâ€" dal of Merit bull, Brampton World‘s Records. The hi‘h two year old record was completed on the farm of Dr. Wilfred W. Sherwin of Orono, Ont. Golden Meadow Basil‘s Louâ€" isa â€"T90731â€", completed the Silâ€" ver Medal record of 9,802 lbs. of milk and 624 lbs. of fat, with a test of 6.37%. She is out of the grand champion bull Edglea Baâ€" sil Butter Boy, â€"110441â€". In two timed milkin%lhe leader was bred and owned by Paul L. Nathanson of Mn.:r.le Crest Farms, Maple, Ont., a has the three year old record of 11,900 lbs. of milk and 663 lbs. of fat with a test of 5.57%. If this cow freshâ€" ens in time she will be awarded the Silver Medal Certificate by the Canadian Jersey Cattle Club. In the three year olds on three times milking, the leader is Caâ€" vamba‘s Arizona Victoria, â€"185â€" 144â€", Victoria trroduced 8,916 lbs. of milk and 527 lbs. of f3t with a test of 5.19%. In twice a day milkin‘. the leaâ€" der is also owned by B. H. Bull and Son with Brampton Melba Pinn, â€"171245â€", ukinl: the lead with 10,826 lbs. of milk, 620 lbs. of fat with a test of 5.13%. She is a daughter of the Superior Sire, Pinnacle, â€"100201â€". L Another daughter of World‘s Records leads the 4 year old class, three times milking, Brampton W. R. Extra, â€"178118â€", bred and owned by B. H. Bull and Son of Brampton. She is a leader with 14,468 lbs. of milk and 694 lbs. of fat, with a test of 4.80%. ‘ Don Head Farm at Richmond Hiii, Ontario. Goldie produced 14,989 lbs. of milk and 774 lbs. of fat :.I:I:hl te.:‘ oth:.lli. She & a ter t &mflu re, Brampton Standoff il, â€"10P sil‘s ï¬oi@i‘,-:l-fl'i&'â€"‘â€", one ol-t; outstanding producing cows in the milk, 856 tbs. of (at in 365 days ofthe teat of 32%. ‘Thi makge in o n neamang 8 reshens in ti i tor ied a uen ooï¬â€˜ * * The leader on three times milkâ€" ing in 366 days is Don Head Baâ€" §on and Â¥wned 04 tested o it prerigd i h y + t cow produced from S_fl of One of the records made is copierâ€" R. mâ€"l“â€". TL adkw ing ing cows in the DOMNT put up with "octopus‘"‘ wwmmn outiets and the inconvenionce of cach bod and within 6 feot of m.-o:-d..b- .d-h‘nlc-u.n‘o,d: mont inâ€" arder to in anothor. _ and other appliances may be veed., The whole cause of organized labor ard of industrial peace is sorely damaged by men who resort to such irresponsibility, and who deal so contemptuously with our laws and institutions ‘"We hereby give notice that your company has the union‘s perâ€" mission to deliver . . . to Jewel Stores . . . on condition that the earning capacity of our driverâ€"salesmen is in no way impaired." Labor has been guaranteed many rights by law but tactics such as there are intolerable in a civilized society j To the credit of Winnipeg, the city raised such a pro week the union climbed down. In so doing, however, it lessening whatever of its grossly exaggerated idea of i importance. In a letter to bakeries it announced: I In Toronto last week 100 paid AFL organizers got together. Claiming to speak for 200,000 members, they said they would ignore the law of Ontario unless it was changed to meet their view. The immediate issue was the nowâ€"famed Gale d!c‘nsion in which a judge granted an appeal on the grounds that an applicant before the Labor Board had not had a fair hearing. What is of vital importâ€" ance to every citizen in this democracy is that a powerful group dares to flout the law simply because it isn‘t what they think it should be. This reckless and deflant attitude leads only to anarchy. As Ontario Labor Minister Daley does well to emphasize: "We‘ve come to a pretty pass when powerful organizations which might be in disagreement with the law come out and say boldly that since they don‘t agree with the law, they are not going to live up to it." This is only one of an increasing number of ominous signs of a growing blackjack philosophy among some labor leaders. There is the shocking case of the Winnipeg bakery union orderâ€" ing bread supplies shut off from a store because it was selling more cheaply than its competitors. The union was not interested in the important fact that this store was lowering food costs to consumers. The union‘s concern was that earnings of its me'r;ben;n;g_ht‘i.â€"e jeopardized. THIS GOES MUCH TOO FAR (The Financial Post) How much longer are we going to submit tamely while a handâ€" ful of labor demagogues, with a wellâ€"developed totalitarian complex de(yr thg public and the laws of Canada? =LECTRICAL TIPS FOR THE HOME . N You Use Several Lamps and Applianaces in the Bedroom . . . _ f ONE PER CENT THINKINCG (Christian Science Monitor) Subpose the United States should say to Indi: shipments of grain to help feed your starving p consent to stop the 1 per cent of your foreign trade the Iron Curtainâ€"a 1 per cent in which the large gunny sacks. Could one devise any single action to arouse deen Indian ratanimant ansinc 11. ar :o is & dsn feat io dstsrie l : bohheit Those who work for wages have lost much of their freedom. Under the closed shop a man must pay union dues or not work. The privy councii decides that, under the law of British Columbia, there is no legal redress when a man is evicted from a union and thereby loses his .right to ply his trade. Under the iniquitous Rand formula it is a commonplace for a worker to be compelled to pay tribute to a union for which he may have neither use nor love. Among the freedoms left is the right to complain, the right mL‘ publish. And, thanks to Mr. Diefenbaker, the police still haven‘t the right to tap your telephone, even if they suspect you of taking bets on the horses. ~ | Still another great loss of liberty is the denial to owners of resiâ€" dential property the right to dispose of its use as they wish. Me.. wise in demogoguery decided that renfk had to be Axed to suit the tenants, not the market. The result has been a withdrawal from landlordism and an apparent shortage of housing. The housing probâ€" lem, over which every petty politician sheds trocodile tears, is an economic phase of injustice. Lear remarks in his hallucination that he cannot be charged a; a coiner because he is the king. Prior to 1939, the Canadian dollar was partially backed with gold. Today a benign government can, and does, Issue as much paper as it has a mind to, thus robbing every saver in the nation of part of his substance. Moreover, it is now a crime for any citizen to buy, own or trade gold. P ARaliduiany! Abuignainionibiiyé D 10 0 oC PCO CC RNCY CUWTT: Next in the list of liberties that have vanished are the shackles that Western grain growers put on themselves when they permitted their government to decree that no wheat could be sold except through a government agency at prices fixed by governments. In such circumsfances it is hardly more than a fiction that the farmer owns the land on which is grown the wheat that the bureaucrats controlâ€"absolutely. ‘ ‘ huth.oluw.cndooeo!lhecnmut.;mw-md&o ‘penunhe-ou hCunda.prmtoufl,vhnlmund was his own. He needed to account to no one for how he spent his money. He could keep his office in his hat. Honest gains were gains. Now a person is accountable to a government for every cent he takes in. The government can examine every detail of his personal affairs, can tell him how to keep his books and arbitrarily determine what is an expense and what is a business man‘s luxuryâ€"say, giving a secretary a mink coat. mmmuuunymmmmumsumcrm of a Canadian loh'quld&uhhnmuuld‘flout No country is free if its citizens are not free to leave it. Canadians don‘t want to get out but would be even iess likely to want to get out if they could. Next in the list of liberties that have vanished are the shackles that Western grain growers put on themselves when they permitted their government to decree that no wheat could be sold except Thrauth n antamnsess accc o e W s BOME LIBERTIES REMAIN (The Prinied Word) P : Enslavement, like old age, creeps. Most men in their Afties. they‘re as good as ever. Then something reminds them. It & a tussle with a fourtyearâ€"old grandson. Or a game of Or chasing a burglar. muamummm. AhtulflJ m“hummnt.thnmmcumoh-dl aingle liberty since 1939. Ilatpophwhodon‘tlivcmonnwo- think of a dozen lasses. Poo.hvnonldom.uuw-y(mmw may think al! is good in a good world. r Editors Say... the city raised such a protest that last es should say to India: We won‘t send feed your starving people unless you of your foreign trade that goes behind nt in which the largest item by far is A% \% B m action better calcu‘ated t indicated no its rights and