Richest Street In World The Leader for Over Forty Years "SALADA TEA “Fresh from the Gardens” Shops Of Curio Dealers In Delhi, In- dia, Contain Many Treasures What is the richest street in the world? Without taking into account the environs of the Stock Exchange and Wall Street, where unseen for- tunes change hands, the little-known Chandni Chowk in Delhi has sub- stantial claims, It has often been re- ferred to as the richest street in Asia, and, unlike our own commer- cial thoroughfares, the greater part of its wealth is there for all to see. But many are the treasures which — are hidden away in secret recesses of the shops of curio dealers and jewellers in that picturesque street. One of the dealers, the walls of whose he Forty-Ninth Parallel establishment are covered with let- An interesting and thought-provoking editorial article appeared recently} ters of appointment from Highnesses fn a popular magazine which circulates extensively throughout Canada and | and Excellencies of all descriptions, the United States. Its subject was the forty-ninth parallel across the world. | has manufactured countless wonder- The people of the North American continent regard it as an imaginary line ful golden and jewelled embroideries which marks the boundary between the United States and Canada, but, 8aY8| ¢or crowned heads and ruling princes. this magazine editor, the wise ones of the earth regard it as something | yye was responsible for the historic more than a hair line on the earth's globe. It is, he says, the world’s line of destiny. one thousand pounds, which the late Elaborating his theme he first directs attention to the fact that in Lady Curzon wore at the Durbar America this invisible international boundary line is a line of peace. No} Ball, attended by four thousand frowning fortifications dot its length; no jealousies are pent up along its guests in the Delhi Fort in 1908. borders; no racial hatreds batter its boundaries. For more than one hun-/ Here also are all the richest of the dred years it has been a line of peace, a magnificent contradiction of the embroidery merchants, whose cloths Old World's barbaric philosophy that two neighboring countries cannot long |and cloaks, scintillating with costly exist without strife. | ornaments, are not only intended for But tracing the course of the forty-ninth parallel around the globe, he reigning princes, but for Staté ele- finds that the symbol of peace in North America becomes the blood-drenched phants. Here, too, are the carvers line of strife throughout Europe and Asia, cleaving through the very heart} of ivory, and the traveller can see peacock gown, costing no less than You will save money by You it lasts longer in your pipe. your own way, coarse or flaky —long or short, as you prefer. DIXIE _ PLUG SMOKING TOBACCO king Dixie Plug, b can cut each pipeful in Rate) lnstraction The Saskatchewan Government Cor- respondence School — Radio Broadcasting 1934-1935 The programme of Radio Instruc- tion given by the Saskatchewan Gov- ernment Correspondence School dur- ing the past three years will be continued for the present school year. From Monday, October 15th, to Fri- day, December 14th, 1934 and from January 14th, to April 26th, 1935, a of the world’s worst trouble zones. He continues: them exhibiting their skill in evolv- “The ‘line of peace’, upon spanning the Pacific, marks the frontier of| ing delicate figures and animals Asias’ powder magazine—the northern boundary of Manchukuo. On one} from solid blocks of ivory, sawn from side the armies of the Soviet maintain their well armed vigil. On the other | elephants’ tusks. Japan bides her time in the puppet state that typifies her first tr toe-hold on the mainland of Asia. “Travel with the ‘line of peace’ across the flux and change of the new WAS CONSTIPATED Red Russia and note its sinister significance as it pierces the inner core of : Buropean turmoil It traverses the Polish Corridor, constant source of FOR 30 YEARS statesmen’s uneasy slumber; flanks Austria’s troubled boundaries; bisects a re-armed Germany; skirts the fringe of France at the most jealous point of —o national pride, historic Alsace-Lorraine; tops the rims of armored steel that} Woman's Long Search mark Belgium's sullen frontiers; then wings the Atlantic for its more pacific mission on this continent.” For a Remedy And he asks why should this ‘line of peace’ assume such a devilish per- The trouble with most remedies for versity in its travel round the globe, and finds the answer in the character constipation, as this woman found, is of the nations it touches rather than in the nature of the line itself. AG NST a ee eee All of which is true In North America the two adjoining nations are conectlve? she writes to tell us about peopled by those who speak a and who, there has | jt:— come a great intermingling of many races, still trace their main descent to) _ For upwards of 30 years I was a one racial source and have proved their ability to, in large measure, assimi- see Ee aE eCint ie pele late those newcomers of many Faces. and all have largely forgotten, or TRSIBIE to try. 1 admit I was a dropped, the old ani ies, j and hatreds of pyeona) chronic case, and every new remedy which are and kept ‘alive in the countries of the Old! I tried helped for a day or two—after World. that I was just as bad as ever. Three * kk first ite of America is fortunate in this, and stands as an object lesson to all AED) Urea or eee ee ae lands. This being so, have we been as good neighbors as we ought to have) since, and every morning so long as been; have we taken full advantage of and reaped all the benefits that|I live, my first duty upon rising is should have been ours as a result of our preferred position? True, we have| MY Kruschen, I honestly feel a dif- kept the peace in a physical sense in that we have refrained from war, and ferent woman. My bowels act to the Z clock, and my friends remark how the insensate folly of building up huge armaments one against the other on} wej] I am looking. My only regret is the false assumption that only through such so-called “preparedness” can! that I didn’t try Kruschen years peace be maintained. ago."—(Mrs.) A. M. s Se beaiigrsaris ninth parallel eacoms porn gAéries ikmnobuguitel the}. emachengnalts tai Neture a ee pe - = for maintaining a condition of in- imaginary line it might well have been to the advancement and benefit ey ternal alcaniinees: The six salts in people living on both sides of it. There are no forts, but there are all too| Kruschen stimulate your internal many legislative barriers imposed along its entire Jength by both countries, | organs to smooth, regular action. barriers on the one side being duplicated by similar barriers on the other side. Your system is thus kept clear of Sen oie Pesecint en ets tinlat dea ta nies iatrd enerrerats lel DoCndaty | eee ts een a pe eatee accumulate, lower the whole tone of line; we construct our railways to the same gauge in order that trains may| the system. move without pause from one country to the other, without tr of passengers or goods; the ether waves flow uninterruptedly across the line Took Chance In Dark carrying radio messages to and fro, and the same is true of the telegraph and telephone; our books and papers and our i ‘Four Aviators Left "Plane When cross and re-cross; our mails move without restraint or loss of time; our | Trouble Developed trades unions are international in their character; so, too, are our fraternal “[ just came down by parachute— societies and service clubs; our sporting crganizations vie with each other} . on ‘on common flelda: where am I?” was the query a Being so favored, and having done so much to promote our common in-| startlea\mototist/gotion, phe nighway, terests in so many ways, and haying developed an international friendliness | meanlGulldford, EG eben ue unknown elsewhere, and having utilized all that science and invention aa ae tae byzeniay lator waynes bestowed in order to promote this fine and mutually advantageous inter- aay ere Sean Onavatatheeeront course, why have we proceeded to erect artificial barriers to check and stop) | 4, naa equcavcutlana eevee the flow of trade which all these other agencies have been perfected to} lane at a height of 2,000 feet in me encourage and deyelop? The people of both countries are deemed to be| # i ae t i ta th d highly intelligent; they are not inmates of lunatic asylums. Then why have regres iL Ae ane aaige Gey they acted so absurdly as to hamper and cripple that which they have spent they went to look for the others. untold millions of money and energy to encourage? A hundred yards farther on the car i Theses OMe ne aet and eb ame dafe Re Zune fa shercuptalty was stopped by another flashlight. of men ler , on 3 0 ie “line of peace”. i v Nature designed that the northern hale of this great continent Bronte ‘the mee as ieee on a complement of and to the southern half. The Maritime Provinces with their nes wae fi ead ae ees di will be given daily, except Saturdays -and Sundays, from four- ard Time. The radio broadcasts will originate at CJRM, Regina, and the network will include the following] police Find Place Where Boys Ar stations: CFQC Saskatoon, CHAB Moose Jaw, CJGX Yorkton, CHWC Regina, CKBI Prince Albert. The instructors will deal with the earthed what they declare to be Strange School In Cairo Taught To Beg Police of Cairo, Egypt, have school for beggars at which 100 small difficulties of pupils and will answer! }ov; were taught the latest method not only questions in the assignments) o¢ the art. It was found following thé arrest for begging of a ten-; 0 reaching the School from teachers and ae ‘ahlontiad! eae cist pide . home for several weeks. The b said that he was playing in the when a smartly-dressed Egyptian of- fered to take him to his home give him good food. The boy but also questions that are daily pupils. Ip order to have a fuller ap- preciation of the addresses pupils are requested to have their Correspond- ence Lessons before them. The following is the programme to thirty to five P.M. Mountain Stand- be followed: Science | History | German Gde.{ French | English Latin or Geog. Grade IX | Grade X | Grade IX | Grade X IX | Oct. 15 | Oct. 16 | Oct. 17 Oct. 18 Oct. 19 X | Oct. 22 | Oct. 23 | Oct. 24 Oct. 25 Oct. 26 IX | Oct. 29 | Oct. 30 | Oct. 31 Nov. 1 ICME 28 | a ~X | Nov. 5 | Nov. 6 | Nov. 7 Nov. 8 | ——— | Nov. 9 IX | Noy.12 | Noy.13 | Nov. 14 Nov. 15 | ——— | Nov.16 X | Nov.19 | Nov. 20 | Nov. 21 —— | Nov. 22 Noy. 23 IX | Nov. 26 | Nov. 27 | Nov. 28 Nov. 29 Noy. 30 X | Dec.*3 | Dec. 4 | Dec. 5 —— |] Dec. 6 Dec. 7 IX | Dec.10 | Dec. 11 | Dec. 12 Dec. 13 Dec. 14 X | Jan. 14 Jan.15 | Jan. 16 Jan. 17 Jan. 18 IX | Jan. 21 Jan. 22 Jan. 23 Jan. 24 Jan. 25 X | Jan. 28 | Jan. 29 | Jan. 30 Jan. 31 Feb. 1 IX | Feb. 4 Feb. 5 Feb. 6 Feb. 7 | —— Feb. 8 X | Feb. 11 Feb. 12 Feb. 13 __ Feb. 14 Feb. 15 IX | Feb. 18 Feb. 19 Feb. 20 Feb. 21. | ——— Feb. 22 X | Feb. 25 Feb. 26 Feb. 27 Feb. 28 Mar. 1 IX | Mar. 4 Mar. 5 | Mar. 6 Mar. 7 Mar, 8 X | Mar.11 | Mar.12 | Mar.13 Mar.14 Mar.15 IX | Mar.18 | Mar.19 | Mar.20 Mar. 21 Mar. 22 X | Mar.25 | Mar.26_| Mar.27 —— _| Mar.28 Mar.29 IX | Apr. 1 Apr. 2 | Apr. 3 Apr. 4 | ——— | Apr. 5 X | Apr. 8 | Apr. 9 | Apr. 10 —— | Apr. 11 Apr. 12 IX | Apr.15 | Apr.16 | Apr. 17 Apr, 18 Apr, 19 | ———. X |) Apr. 22 | Apr. 23 | Apr. 24 Apr. 25 Apr. 26 and sr the are invited. Might Outshine Sun Scientists Tell Of Heat Contained In Are Light Carbon The hottest known thing on earth, we are told, is the burning carbon of an arc light. It is so hot that vol- canic mist forms in the incandescent crater, a fog of pure carbon vapor. Formerly this fog was thought to be liquid carbon, but a recent re- port to the American Chemical Society concludes that: carbon does not pass through a liquid stage in turning from solid to gas, at least that it does not at atmospheric pres- sure. This may be a reason why dia- monds have been so impossible for man to make, says the report, for diamonds apparently are the pro- ducts of a liquid form of carbon. But, if diamonds cannot be pro- duced from carbon, more heat and light can, it is hoped. Three Cleve- land scientists who have been meas- uring the heat of the carbon arc declare that “under the right condi- resources are the natural complement of the Atlantic seaboard States; Quebec | had balled out when the machine, | tions, and with a little further chemi- and Ontario are the complement of the Central States; the Prairie Provinces | which apparently experienced engine are the complement of the middle western States right down to the gulf; | trouble, was only 500 feet up. British Columbia 4, the complement of the Pacific coast States. Yet puny .f man tries to defy Nature and, as a result, has made a sorry mess of things POCA ES EE Ne throughout the whute realm of trade and commerce, finance and economics. volad Watna Drive The forty-ninth parallel across North America is a splendid object les- Waolce Warps Overs cal aid” arcs can be made to burn |with an intrinsic brilliancy slightly greater than that of the sun. This would be a novel achievement, indeed, the creation of an artificial son to all nations except in this one respect. Let these two great peoples| Jf you are driving in St. Louis, do the sensible thing and set another object lesson for and provide leader-| Missouri, and you suddenly hear, ship to a world now suffering because of the wholesale destruction of inter- | coming as if from nowhere, a sten- yee torian admonition about the way you ——~|are handling your car—don't be \aiarmed: It's merely something new If it's a color you want, says the| Immediate international action to} jn polite police work. For the “traf- Edmonton Journal, a new pnicticn: eave Western Canada from more ex-| fic school car,’ equipped with loud- ary” just published by the British) tensive drouth damage was held nec- speaker and manned by vigilant color council, ought to fill the bill.| essary by Sheriff Malcolm McGregor, | officers, has made its appearance on With 220 shades given in color and| of Brandon, when he returned from| gt. Louis streets. supplied each with a name, it should|a 3,000 mile motor trip through the | now be possible to ‘‘match’’ a stock- | prairie provinces. He recommended| A perfect bone needle, 25,000 years ing or a bit of wool for your wife 2M damming of rivers until they hold the! 914, was discovered by Jean Caze- even to give an exact description of| normal running flow of an average! dessus in excavating at Ganties, in the most variegated of sunsets. crop year. the south of France. Plenty Of Color Would Conserve Moisture | Although Africa contains the Few People Escape Attacks int 'Shay or wit annals in te Of Summer Complaint world, no tigers have been found on the continent Summer Complaint may be slight, or it may be seri- | ous, but you can’t tell when it seizes you how it may end. | 40 ; 2 Allow the profuse diarrhoea, the vomiting and ie Re ag evn no then! 2ao ing to continue, for a day or two, and you may become | youth hostels. These hostels are pro- weak and prostrated. vided as an overnight stopping place Just as soon as you feel any looseness of the bowels| for young hikers. go at once to your druggist and get a bottle of Dr,| Fowler's tract of Wild Strawberry and check this un- | natural action before the weakening looseness can get started, Don't experiment. Get “Dr. Fowler's”. on the market for 88 years. Birds can see 100 times better than | man. Tepes been) W. N. U, 2067 ; | light brighter than the sun! It sounds almost presumptuous.—De- jerolk Free Press. | The Cross-Word Puzzle | The cross-word puzzle, which be- | gan before the jig-saw puzzle, seems | destined to have a longer life. It is |remarkable that it finds a place in such grave publications as the Lon- don Times, the Manchester Guardian, the New Statesman and Nation, the | Spectator and the Observer. | A census of dead animals on roads of England has showed that dogs are the great “jay walkers”. | STOMACH COMPLAINT Simcoe ndon, ‘Ont. says: Some years ago I used Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discov- was run- down and awfully ner- vous, belched gas fre- quently and the gas would press up around | | i r | heart, The 'Discov- | ery’ toned up and strengthened my system | go that’ I felt 100% better.” | Write to Dr. Pierce's Clinie, Buffalo, N.Y. | for free medical advice, | Little ‘Journeys In Science DIAMONDS (By Gordon H. Guest, M.A.) Diamonds are the purest form of carbon, an element which occurs in almost every living substance. Found in the sand and gravel of river, lake, or sea beds, the stones are separated out by a washing process which car- ries away the outer coatings, leaving the diamond free. These gems have a crystalline form, but sometimes the stones are cut by jewellers to further enhance their brilliance. Clear diamonds have the greatest value, al- though there are rare occurrences of delicately colored stones which are much prized. Black diamonds are more plentiful than the clear stones) and are used for cutting and drilling. Diamonds are also used by engravers in making etchings. It has been the dream of many) scientists to make synthetic dia- monds, and this has been accomplish- ed occasionally, although it is found that the process does not produce sufficient stones to make it worth while. Moisson, a French chemist, in 1893 was successful in producing a small quantity of the gems by heating charcoal with iron to a very high temperature in an electric furnace. The mixture was then cooled very quickly. A coating of iron was rapid- |ly formed on the outside, but at the | centre the cooling was slower, and a | tow very small clear and black dia- | monds were found. Rubies and other gems have also been made synthetic- ally, but not with great success. Diamonds are measured by carats, a unit of weight which is equivalent to three grains troy weight. The larg- lest diamond ever found -was the “Cullinan” which was mined in South Africa. This stone originally weigh- ed 3,025% carats, but it was later cut into smaller stones. Mistook Ducks For "Plane taught how to beg, then detailed Science a “beat” in the city. rested the tutor and more than children, most of whom had en anxiously sought by their parents. Il of $50 a day. The police a is estimated the boys collected a total Is Reaching Danger Point Many persons seem to think that the spending possibilities of the Ge ernment are limitless, but they lose sight of the fact that every do! ar appropriated for public purposes to come from the taxpayer. Wh they also forget is that there is danger line in taxation which i reached when the levies become “ oppressive that they cannot be lected.—Philadelphia Inquirer . (MINARD'S| , | Kc OF PAINS ILINIMENT|| Even Sell Meat Drug stores sell almost eve but, down in Florida, they have go far beyond the variety of the sto: up this way. A United States erui stopped at St. Petersburg and ni 15,000 pounds of fresh meat. The p chase was made at a St. Petersb drug store. YOUR LIVER’S MAKING — YOU FEEL OUT OF SORTS Wake up your Liver Bile 2 —No Calomel needed Rubber mile posts that are pushed out of the way when struck by an automobile, and then rebound inte position, have been installed along some German highways. Baked elephant’s foot is one of thi greatest food delicacies of the Af can bushman. Sixty per cent. of Japan's 19: revenue goes to the army and na MATURITY—MATERNITY MIDDLE AGE At these three critical peri a woman needs a medi Phantom plane was sought at) Hove, Essex, by hundreds of people | who spent an all-night vigil looking for a mysterious "plane that was sup- posed to have fallen into the sea at) dusk. The “plane” was proved to have been a flight of ducks diving for| fish. she can depend on. 1! why so many take Lydia Pinkham’s Vegetable Co: und. 98 out of 100 say, lps me!" Ler ithelp you, LYDIA E. PiNKHAM’S VEGETABLE COMPOUND