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Northern Tribune 1938-01-05 - 1939-08-10
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Date
1939-04-20
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THE NORTHERN TRIBUNE s 2 dead loss to him (1 speak of re - : le AN INDEPENDENT WEEKLY The kine is made up of two classes: THE NORTHERN TRIBUNE protect democracy but to save their obsequiously and awaits your order. jeopardized self-interests. Well, you gaze at the imaginary Everywhere the leaders would menu, and, this being the first time, supply the talks and the money for you may not be able to see those Hibiiscd: Geery Teieades et Ormnen Ge Wanders more Bed. mace weoe : Prairie, Alberta. The Tribune's alm is to thoroughly the local news field with fair- ness to all sections and parties; also to aid in the development of the Peace and help make Krown this northern Inland empire's many Advantages a8 a home-land. All news do without: not that he hasn't the fs printed without intentional distor- tion. The paper s opinions are ex- pressed only Im its editorial columns. Letters for publication are wel- comed. A pen name may be used, but correspondents must also sign their proper. names, not necessarily for publication. but as evidence of good faith. In publishing a communication The Tribune does not imply agree- ment Legal and other advertising rates furnished on application. Subscription Rates: One Year, in British Empire. One Year, in United States. J. B. YULE. Editor. THURSDAY, APRIL 20, 1939 AITCER AND MUSSOLINI RESPONSIBLE IF THERE 1S A WORLD WAR In his message of peace to Hitler and Mussolini, President Roosevelt made it quite Clear that if there is a world war the responsibility defin- itely rests with the two dictators. In his frank message the President puts Mussolini and Hitler right on the spot, where they are held up to the view of the people of every nation. Should a world war occur there will be no question as to who ccrning the issuing of money free of the ranges of self-sustenance; the other is inclined to break through fences (moral restraint and laws) and feast upon the fields which, they argue, are partly theirs by right. The consumer: who scorns relief must either provide his own needs or willingness to work, or skill to pro- duce, or brains to serve. or even products to exchange; but because he hasn't the medium by which he may exchange what he has for what others have. And the producer cannot sell for the same reason, no matter how dis tressing is the need for his products. Financial security, so-called. pressed to the extreme, dries up the cow and defeats the financial ex- ploiters' own scheme. Yet how does our expert economist answer Mr. McGeer s question con- interest? In reply he gave warning against the grave danger of inflation, stress- ing that remote and future possible hazard while seemingly insensible to diate dangers. He warns against the GREAT danger of inflation reasonable standard of living urgent projects done started it, History will be quite clear on that point. But the question is, why should we have war? We feel that we are within the fects when we say that the great masses of the German nation and the masses of the Italian people do not t war. n the other hand, the democratic nations and all other countries do not want war. The masses of the people of all nations know that they are the ones who will be driven to the shambles and the ones who will suffer. Common people of one nation have no quarrel with the common people of another country. We ask again, Why then should we have war? The reason is not far to seek. If war comes it will be because two dictators. drunk with power and am- bition. are willing to bring on the ovhe in order to satisfy those ambitions and make their respective nations rulers of the world. Under dictatorships there is no such thing as minority rights. emccracy vanishes and individual freedom becomes a dream. International wars. speaking gen- erally, never permanently settled any question and never will. War is a breeder of hatred and revenge that eventually forces expression of those 01 In previous issues The Tribune has contended that if the common people of the world had an opportunity they would outlaw war: but, unfortunately, the common people are not in power in any nation. In Germany and Italy the dictators control the guns and the ammunition plants, and the result is that the people are whipped into line and are made to bow to the will of their Talk of DANGER Danger is al- armaments, and the average folks would be expected to furnish the annon fodder. And we all claim to be civilized ) What an abominable joke ype Fascism, Nazism, capitalism, can- not stop wars. They incessantly contrive for them. Peace, to them, is only a recess, in view of war) preparations. Cut off all wars and their preparations, and their rapa- cious activities would almost become as entirely paralyzed. Of all things, if there are any, that the average folks hate the most, are ridiculous doings. A war will not kill another one, but ridicule could Why not treat all war threats with contempt? Contempt's quiver is always full of arrows of ridicule. Fancy Mussolini and Hitler trying to combat true democracy, and the capitalists feigning to defend it Fascism, Nazism, and capitalism all have a fear of socialization. They all fear that an impending war could turn into revolutions, such as they all dislike. .The whole situation is franctically ludicrous. There is our present sufferings and imme- something that is more sacred than the preservation of the British Em- pire, the French Empire, the Nazism of Herr Hitler, the Fascism of 1 Duce, Great Danger, bosh DANGER of the integrity of the pseudo-democracy lt;nivering bodies being clothed of the United States, of Canada, and DANGER of empty stomachs being some other countries; and it is Peace. filled DANGER of comfort, and a Without peace. the Christianism of) the Occident, DANGER of effecting exchange of Islamism of the Orient, are all goods and of services DANGER of ostentations. . preserving men s souls from rotting True democracy despises wars: by giving work DANGER of getting True democracy means peace the ideal of socialization. True democ- racy will some day, possibly in the lready upon us Lights have already near future, destroy all war material lturned red Yet there is no appre- and war plants. ciable slackening of our speed no noticeable change in our course And in the face of this situation is jing institution, so blind, or so thoughtless, or so heartless, that he will warn a FUTURE danger of lifeless metal. and cold ledger pen marks, while even as he speaks masses of feeling humanity are acutely suffering and manhood putrefying suffering and putrifying from conditions arising out of the lack of the medium of ex- change concerning which he is warning? Pray of what spirit is this warning? Or is it insanity? Cold. feelingless our servant, the master of our bank- P : sie 5 - Otpoum TAKING IT LYING DOWN How the capitalists and their satellite moralists delight to see us staking it lying down. And our cringing passivity, not to mention our egregious stupidity in taking it in gradually increasing doses, culmin- ating in this latest slap in the face and kick in the pants combined i.e.. currency held more inviolable than human needs, ledger pen marks more No. 1 wheat, basis 60 cents Fort important shan the,reljef of suffer- William must cause many pudgy ling flesh, and interest charges more sacred than retrieving and preserv- ling characters, thousands of which are now in decay. T fear that he who has the high privilege of being the towers of national strength chooses rather to contribute. unwittingly of course, to our impending doom. In our effort to save our life we are in a fair way to lose it. Our ill-directed cencern may defeat our own purpose. AYE THERE'S THE DANGER God pity the men whose power it lis to safely steer the ship of state; yet let her race with gathering speed toward the fatal falls of greed. . and muscle-less hands to rub to- gether in satisfaction and lard fat- tened waist-lines to vibrate with chuckles of derisive glee. Yet, we stand for it. and we are supposed to be educated and intelli- gent. We can. only stand in helpless onder at the thought of how the ignorant, illiterate. tradition-shackied religion-soaked moujik threw all this slavish gear overboard in one night, never again to return to it. We warider round and round on the out- side. stopping often to gaze through crystal-clear windows into the world of our dreams. Not a world of imag- ination, theory and conjecture. but a real world. A world of common sense and irrefutable logic. full to overflowing with all the good things of life necessities and luxuries in endless abundance: and a method of distribution so perfect as to enable ll these things to be placed within masters. It is a terrible state of FIGHTING COWBOY HAS DEALS /the reach of all hu: ty white affairs. As the situation appears now, un- jess the dictators listen to reason war is inevitable. for the democracies seem to be determined to stop further aggression by Hitler or Mussolini. To H and Mussolini we say: If there is war. then the awful re- sponsibility rests on your shoulders, and not with your people, whom you are supposed to represent. Along Trail By J. B. YULE TWO McLENNAN BOYS: ON ADVENTURE BOUND Harry Erickson and Bob Frigon (age 12 years) of McLennan were passengers on Fridays train en route to Dawson Creek. The boys, who are as bright as a new fifty-cent piece, informed the writer that they simply wanted a change and hopped a train for the end-of-the-steel town. M is the finest town in the world, Dat you can even get tired of that, the young chaps remarked. They had never visited the thriving town of Dawson Creek. When warned to be careful of the street cars they refused to believe that Dawson Creek had arrived at that point of develop- ment . In fact, they were a hard pair to spoof. 3 What a wonderful thing youth is fow 1 wish I could live mine again Dad s Notions By E. S. Stanley When homesteading thirty - two years ago. I had two neighbors who worked cows as you would oxen. One was very good to his cows and they not only worked but provided him with milk. But the other neighbor was brutal and a poor feeder. His cows quickly -went dry, got poor and were soon too weak to work. He saved in feed but lost in milk and services. He him- self defeated his own purpose. Under the pangs of starvation his cows forced the fence. One disay to hustle for herself, and fared much better than under her owner's care. The other broke into the fields of grain and ever after had no respect for fences. Shortly she had a herd of range cattle following her example. A complete loss of crop all the re- sult of greed, brutality and insane management. To the Editor of The Tribune. If a man like Tony Galento, who is pitted against Joe Louis for the World s Heavyweight Championship and who drinks beer to get into con- dition and brags that he doesn t train. were to win, the effect on the athletic- minded rising generation would be about as upsetting as the advertisements in so many magazines which teach youth that in order to become famous in any line of ath- letics or business they must smoke a certain brand of cigarettes. JONAS WEBBER. Sexsmith, Alberta. AnImpending War By A. C. LaRiviere A possible impending war would not only produce a ghastly accumula- tion of crimes but it would also exhibit an abominable blunder. Of all the wars that have afflicted the course of humanity, for obvious reasons, it would be the most stupid ever conceived and perpetrated. Owing to present-day enlighten- ment, and especially to experience, its silliness would be so utterly despicable that it would not even be worth the shedding of crocodile tears over it. Humanity would deserve contempt and not. commiseration. All argu- ments or pseudo-arguments inducing such a war are troubleseme-and-de- ceptive. Multitudes, here and there, may be fooled by insidious braggarts with their false pretensions, but once con- fronted by a true sense of realities these multitudes become more and more inquisitive and restless. Such is their actual condition and situation in many countries. All leaders of Fascism or Nazism pitalism in pseudo-democra- cies, although momentarily badly embroiled over matters of exploita- tion, are nevertheless subconscious allied fakirs. Their ways are not dis- dissimulation and exploitation. Their diplomacy is a constant deceit. The almost recent Munich affair has turned out to be a replica of fhe Hon lintervention pseudo-plans; a miser- able farce and pretension. We have reached such a high alti- tude of material progress and possi- bilities, that the vast majority of us are getting tired of such stupid ex- hibitions. We are wondering why social conditions are not improving and keeping pace with progress. Instead of rejoicing over universal peace and progress. we are constantly forced to listen, on the radio, to some damnable war propaganda. We do not need to go to Timbuctoo to find the real cause of the trouble, of the alarm. Mostly all countries have their re- similar, for they are all the ways of men and black. red men and yellow. So we continue to wander round and round. gazing through the windows; and we cannot see the open door- We fume and fret at our . while the voice of Religion Patience. patience; these things are not for you. Be meek and humble. Through trial and tribula- tion, and purged in the fires of self- denial, starvation and want, you will finally attain that contentment and satisfaction which is of more value than gold and precious stones. THE BARMECIDE FEAST, OR MORE FOOLISHNESS What's that Mr. Editor You never heard of a Barmecide Feast? Well, probably you have heard of it, but it's so long ago you may have for gotten about it. You have heard of jthe Sixty-cent Peg. haven't you? Yes, I thought so. So have I; and it femember the story of the Barmecide Feast, which I read about years and years ago in The Arabian Nights. When I first heard about this 60-cent wheat business, you know, being like so many more dependent on wheat for my bacon and eggs, so to speak, if you can grasp this rather i t away something would have to be done about it, and like a flash right away to pass on the idea to you. Now, don t think because you happen to be the editor of an influential weekly that this sixty-cent business is not going to affect you. You going to have to tighten your just the same as the rest of us; here is where you are going to this Barmecide idea invaluabl maybe. I hasten to add here it is supposed to have any connection with the word balmy. though I wouldn't say for sure that I may be able to catch on to the thing you, on account of imagination gets the best results. Well, this is how it works: All you require is a table and a chair the rest all comes out of your imagina- tion. You can practise right in your own office; but if you want to get more realistic and quicker (accent on the quicker) results, just saunter down the street and pop into one of Grande Prairie s high-class cafes at your next regular meal hour. Now, having popped in, you can select your table and sit down. For the first few minutes you probably will be ignored, as the waitress may be. as is usual, too busy is this which caused me suddenly to I figured 5 stricted coterie of exploiters, capi- exchanging back-chat with young imaginary items caviar ,on toast deviled eels, roasted quails. Don't despair, it will all come with prac- tice. No, this first time you will probably say: Hussein, bring me liver and onions. Be sure to say it quite loud; this will inspire con- fidente, and insure quicker results. The slave You will realize that under the circumstances this is not a-hard feat for him to accomplish. Then in a flash he re- lappears. This is much harder and calls for a good deal of concentration on your part. He its one by one the various silver or gold, if you prefer dishes on the table and de- parts, leaving you to the full enjoy- ment of your imaginary feast. Well, you now proceed to take off the covers from various dishes, one after another. You get the first imaginary whiff of steaming liver and onions, and you eagerly transfer the imag- inary food to the imaginary plate. You cut off a generous portion of the liver, heap it up with onions and raise it, pausing for a brief moment before transferring it to your mouth, and noticing how good and appetizing it looks; with stray, gravy-soaked, stringy portions of onion from your fork, and the gravy drip- ping from it onto your vest. You don't have to worry about this part of it, for imaginary gravy on the vest is easily got rid of. Now, transfer it to your mouth, and enjoy the full, rich imaginary flavor. And now, having got the idea of the thing, I can safely leave you to the enjoyment sf the remainder of your imaginary meal. I would suggest for dessert a peche Melba or chartreuse d orange. What's that you say? The idea is though I don t quite like the way you put it. You see it s supposed to be there that is, in your imagination. But, anyway, try your best, and con- centrate; that's the main thing. You'll get onto it after a while. But this is going to get me no- where, you protest. Don't kid yourself. You are going to find out that you are being noticed by people, who before this were hardly aware of your existence. Just keen it up and this notice is going to increase until you will suddenly find yourself removed. through no conscious volition of your own, to a place where you are going to be looked after, clothed and fed for some indefinite time. Where you will no longer need to worry about sixty- cent wheat, and you will be able to forego the necessity for a Barmecide Feast. ; SMALL TOWN STUFF There is nothing more pitifully amusing than the few cases which have come under my notice of that small town snobbery. bred of and thriving on an abnormal narrow- mindedness and colossal ignorance. Such cases, happily. are few. Even 50, it is safe to state that very few of our small towns can boast of being entirely free from it. Women, as a rule, and, by a curious paradox, those who have the least knowledge of the world, are the worst offenders. When I go to town they look upon me with an ill-concesled disdain for my overalls and torn mackinaw, only exceeded by the amused pity I feel fcr them. To Tam a simple farmer with all commonplace trimmings which the word implies to the ignorant and uneducated. And they are town people, don t you know; and it is quite the thing to look down on the sons of toil. the humble moujiks. For they are modern, mark you. Yes, they listen to the radio and read the magazines. They know all about permanents, nail paints. deodorants, etc. They also know all about life from the pages of some true story magazine. Those guys. Homer, Chaucer, Shakespeare. Palissey, Eddington, Jeans; also those dames Elizabeth Fry, Madame Curie, Edith Cavell, Grace Darling. and Helen Keller, no, they don't know much about them, and, anyway. they can t be of much account for they seldom hear them LA cs give tiem att te ling to them, for they surely need Outside of all this, their land knowledge of life is jbounded on the north by the barn and on the south by the tors and railroad track. Of course for those who TIMELY QUOTATIONS: Gaunt visits Are to a wise mam ports and happy havens. Teach thy necessity to reason thus: There is no virtue like necessity. Think not the king did banish thee, But thou the king woe doth the heavier sit Where it perceives it is but faintly borne. honor, And not, the king exiled thee; or suppose, Devouring pestilence hangs in our air, And thou are flying to a fresher clime. Look. what thy soul holds imagine it To lie that way thou goest, not whence thou comest: Suppose the singing birds musicians: The grass whereon thou tread st the presence strew d: The flowers, fair ladies: and thy steps no more Than a delightful measure or a dance; For gnarling sorrow hath less power to bite 2 The man that mocks at it, and sets it Responsible Government By 1. V. Macklin What we commonly call respon- sible, representative or democratic government demands a high standard both of intellect and of character especially of character in order that it may be a success,* These qualities are required both by those that govern and by those that are governed. . Unfair dealing on the part of the government and indifference and neglect of all these things on the part of the public have reduced Canada to a condition rather approaching chaos. The mayor of the largest city in Canada (Montreal) talks about seces- sion from i mayor himself as dynamite. If R. B. Ben- nett had had him along during his term of office, he might have been A Different Set-Up - Today, the field of combat is not so jnuch man against man, except in agriculture. In the other economic realms it is class against class. Today we have no absolute mon- archy standing out above all classes to uphold the precepts of justice. The government of Canada, instead of being over all, is recognized by all to be under the thumb of a very small number of Canadian citizens who belong to the financial and big business classes. Seeing little hope from such a government for anything but a further continuation of general pov. erty amidst plenty, the sad fact is that a rapidly increasing number of people are turning their thoughts with hope toward dictatorship, seces- sion and what-not. An honest - to- goodness farmer asked me the other day, What is there in Hitler s program that makes so many jing nations seem- ingly glad to come under it? I do not wish to discuss that now, but to say that in the past the doctrine of Mthe Divine Right of Kings was Apply these incidents to our talist pro-fascists, easy to detect. economic situation: The public is the They generally make a big fuss about cow, and the standard of living is ber the absolute necessity of the national iigestion are budget to be balanced. With them, business transactions, the flow goods and services are dominated and of milk is profits. restricted by a money complex.) This cow is starving, her flow of Under them, money or capital, keeps milk is drying up, and she is fright- its dominating features. and labor its fully emaciated. constant and submissive duties. As Bawling without rest, this cow is a ar as this is Fascists, Nazis and capitalists are all similar in their aims. In an impending war, Hitler and . Mussolini would not be fighting espe- cially democracy, but they would be defending their false attitudes and their selfish interests. The capi- talists first intention would not be to sparks in a nearby booth to bother light. with you. This time, however, you can laugh at her indifference. Should Bolingbroke she. though, O. who can hold a fire in lay the cutlery. H.P. sauce and tomato By thinking of the frosty Cauicasus? sauce ketchup. just politely shoo her Or cloy the hungrey edge of away. and have her remove all these By bare imagination of a feat things together with the sugar bowl, Or wallow naked in December snow, napkins and glass of water. By thinking on fantastic summer's And now your imagination comes heat? into play. For you, now, the pretty O, no the apprehension of the good, waitress is non-existent; 'you simply Gives but the greater feeling look right through her as the worse: om oe exotically dressed, tall, black Nubian Fell sorrow s tooth doth never rankle slave, with a single large diamond more, flashing prosches your table. Stopping at the Proper distance from you, he bows the sore. commonly held. It was said, the king could do no wrong. Respon- sible government did not exist. The king was responsible to no one. Well, the people didn t like their lives to be in jeopardy or at the whim of a King, who might be your friend at one moment and in the next order off either your hat or your head. So, tiring of the uncertain whims of irre- sponsible kings, King John was forced to sign the Great Charter of England, and today a great part of the civilized world has tried respon- sible government. They have neglected to notice, however, that a government respon- sible for its election funds to capi talists only can be worse to the rest of the people than a dictator respon- sible to no one. Business Is Business : Let us not make a mistake here about Hitler. Hitler is responsible, but it is to big business for his rise to and retention of power. The iron and steel men, the armament firms, and the poison gas men backed him. It is a business proposition with them. You have heard men declare that business is business. Well, wars armament business. Human disaster is nothing; national desolation is nothing; death is nothing. Business is business International death brings arma- ment profits. Death is good business when armament profiteers are in control. How are Bren guns being Germany. Hitler bonuses births so that two suckers will be born every: minute where only one was born be- The belief of the Japanese is that death in battle provides a sure certain entrance into eternal bliss. Mussolini teaches his people the same. constituting a All places that the eye of heaven DOo gt; Go, say I sent thee forth to purchase 7, If the general public of ever wish to have a elected to look after their the public will voluntarily have to stand the expense of the election. own conclusions. concede here in his white turban, ap- Than when it bites but lanceth not only stighly, the ment. and war scares are good for the THURSDAY, APRIL 20, 1939 founded by common people who be- 1933 the annual average amounted to lieve that they will 164 million dollars. Toute Gtizens, de-not-eondemn The debt of Saskatchewan is regunaible government just because about 25 per acre of seeded crop Tr Peeen responsible to the wrong ; It would require at least 200 million Tt is your own fault that it dollars to bring the farm, buildings, in your own hands machinery, household furnishings ee a a TT tet ae katchewan up to the moderate stand- The Price of Wheat lees ot 1982. The particular question being dis- Conservatively, it would. prob- cus Pi Western Canada just now is ably require with average yields a the price of wheat. Heavy blows by farm i for wheat of average the eastern powers have fellen with of 90 cents, with coarse grains a sickening thud on the peg of in proportion, to maintain a reason- western wheat, driving it away be+ able level of living and service the low production cost. present debt on western farms. It However, we could continue to sell would require somewhat more than our surplus wheat at the low world this to restore the farming com- price if we could buy there the things munity to the condition of 1931. we need in exchange, because the . Vv. M. asks you if that quotation price level of their surplus goods is shows Coldwell sa with as low as the price of our surplus 35-cent wheat. But I quote him Seat. But eastern Canada won't further. May I say to our eastern Met us do that. We are forced to sell friends that a-prosperous West would for cash and to give the East from go much to solve not only the prob- the same to ten times as much cash lems of unemployment and industry IN ce would have to give our world put also the problems of the dairy customers for the things we . farmer and the fruit grower, both in We have surplus wheat, cattle, hogs. the East and along the Pacific Coast. Other nations needing our surplus The time is rapidly approaching, products have their surplus rubber, in my opinion has already come, coffee, spices, oranges, lemons, oil, when this country will have to adopt and all manner of surplus manu- minimum prices for. various other factured products. farm products. Western Canada need not be poor. ' And now we will from the If eastern Canada would let us trade other Saskatchewan C.C-F. member, our surplus high quality wheat for r. C. Douglas: the surplus goods of other nations. What we are trying to do is to we would still live like the lords of point out that the same people who creation. The tariff costs Canadian are exploiting the western farmer are consumers 425,000,000 per year. We aio exploiting the eastern farmer, pay a big share of that, and the East nd that the same economy which ante aes as makes it almost impossible for the Canadian big business won't even western farmer to maintain a decent allow the West to use its own Alberta Standard of living is having exactly oil resources without exploitation. the same effect upon, the eastern For fear that world competition farmer. When we ask for a fixed might drive Turner Valley fuel oil Syaranteed price for our agricul- down to where they wouldn't be/ turalists, we are not asking that for making such big profits, the Dom- western Canada alone, we are asking inion has placed a dumping duty omit tor all farmers generally. Their foreign oll. problems are similar even though The government will lend some their products may be different farmers money at 5 , but will lend when I hear a man like the for a town sewer at 2 . Headed off premier of Ontario saying at a ban- at every point, hemmed in on every/quet in Toronto last fall that the side, the farmer will feel like East is like an old milch cow which crawling into that drain pipe and the West has been milking for years, committing sewer-side. . all I can say is that if the western The farmer of western Canada is farmers have been milking that cow like the scapegoat of ancient Pales- for come years, they have been feed tine turned into the wilderness with ing it for all the years. the economic sins of every other class y should like to draw to the atten- in Canada loaded on his back. He is tion of the house the fact that the like the of China, the farmers are operating with increas- untouchables of India. incomes. He is up against an impossible proposition with 35-cent wheat. It is true that we have known three- dollar hogs before and 20-cent wheat, but we struck the low prices of 193 with all the pep and power of the 1926-7-8-9 good prices behind us. j It was Jike an old Ford hitting a mudhole and going through on ac- cumulated pep. But we have DOW pi had nine years of never-ending mudholes, except 1936. The West hits this latest one with no reserve. It is there to stay; it is the end of the old capitalistic interest-paying, profit- making system as far as the western farmer is concerned. False economists have declared that we must have the profit motive as an incentive to action. Thirty-five cent wheat will not bring a profit it will not bring the cost. It will bring a less to the farmer, but weeds /Manitaba. A truck in the US. 785; Will be a greater loss. . and in Canada, 952. Coffe The tartoer ig driven to production Cad 26 cents; 48 cents. Four- for use how about the government buckle overshoes, 1.98; 3.29. These producing a little oil for our use, are Se he te pot of don Deca ie eee ne Rockefeller, Jr. Attitude of C.C.F. Leaders Speaking of Bee oll ei posit continu eir on the markets of the world at a figure provincial C.CF. et not given them a, decent in he People Wen, pur Sart otc ast were. Now, in spite of present intolerable difficulties, let us not even contem- plate discarding representative, re- sponsible democratic government for a dictatorship. If we had a majority Now about the CCF. members in Ottawa There are none from Al- Father My son, I won't have constantly at the bottom of the class as you are . Aged Seven (bored) Can't see it matters, myself, Pa. They teach the same things at both ends. + small bill by mail send a money onder. This is the approved business-like method. Exchange is prepaid. Your correspondent con cash a money order at par anywhere. Money orders cre I think farn of them all as lo ture to grow cror Alex. McKenzie speaking from z ence. Sod, grain st obstructs Fan-of with oceasional erosion on plowt its fibre. Let us Farmers buyin field, crops woule ing experiment t garden. An oun of row of veget tilizer is best pl side and a littl but it may be m the opened drill with the seed. diluted fertilize: contact with po or other vegetat The family s c raised in a high which may be c rrotect from au finish off the bl the soil is suffic well watered. th thickly enough largely. Care scald the croop 1 during warm think we spoilec fall. In the pr good success wit It has been in to observe the e wy the elongated lit any .considerabl accumulated on of the dams bro tration in ditche times along and : direction in whic drawn. A br driven crosswise still much to co plement for the Stubble land thu very readily wa * Dividing and 1 el es 5 i pupeyeper
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Image 539 (1939-04-20), from microfilm reel 539, (CU1726808). Courtesy of Early Alberta Newspapers Collection, Libraries and Cultural Resources Digital Collections, University of Calgary.