} Not thar’ Publicity Stunt Flying Does Not Help Aviation In Any Way In the Preakness, N.J., airport on a recent Sunday, 5,000 people were | watching the marvels of skill inj flight when an airplane driven by} veteran Alden H. Russell, went into | a tail spin and crashed, injuring Rus- | sell seriously and his one passenger | fatally. More than these two fen | were endangered; the crash came within 300 feet of the massed specta-| tors. In Toronto at about the same | time a pilot and two women passen- gers were burned to death in a low crash after stunting. The friends of commercial aviation in view of the number of such fatali- may well ask themselves what kind of publicity will most benefit SALADA TEA STANDARD BROWN LABEL NEW YELLOW LABEL ties, lives theirs, or the story of the really re-} | markable advance that is being made ie in aviation with a purpose. For, < most unnoticed along with all this os : ° dangerous stunting the carrying of s air mails and passengers goes on with * arative safety, which should b ASK YOUR GROCER FOR _ emerve sates, whe snoua be if attention were not constantly di- verted from it by fatal accidents in exhibitions, most encouraging. It ought not to take a major ac- ONE OF THESE BLENDS— THEY ARE BY FAR THE FINEST YOU CAN BUY AT THESE PRICES. | by a "plane out of control to open |the eyes of aviation authorities to | the necessity of curbing the practice 28 recklessly showing off what won- | derful things can be done in the air— | with luck, which does not always at- Salas the venture. | | Tdnemilec ment Ree Policies Hog Production Declines | for the future, because many of the ¥; ‘sought to improve and cure. out Canada. t ytoa Unemployment not only casts a sinister shadow over the world today, | _ but the substance of the thing has hundreds of thousands, even millions, of | men, women and children in its grip. Admittedly the situation is a serious livestock market review prepared by = one, first, because of the actual suffering entailed thereby, but also because +), pHominion Department of Agricul- | it is causing men to “see red,” as the saying is, and lose faith in all estab- ished and orderly methods of government, society and business. The ten- | 2 dency is to repudiate economic truths, ‘any hair-brained proposal that may be advanced. » Here lies the real danger | , and to try experiments with almost suggested remedies would result in a state of affairs far worse, and cause more suffering, than the condition they | One suggested temporary remedy for present unemployment that un- _ doubtedly finds support in many quarters is the substitution of handwork, _ manual labor, for machinery in prosecuting relief works. For example, it is : reported that one large United States city is developing a program of winter _ work that will substitute pick-and-shoyel brigades for machines, the object being, of course, to give work to a larger number of men. _ gestion is being advanced in connection with munic'pal relief wdrks through- The question is: Should we deliberately abandon our labor-saving devices and revert to the painfully slow methods of yesterday in order to providé jobs for the unemployed? Is it wise to do so, and, in the long run, are the unemployed benefitted thereby? The subject deserves close study. ive Without doubt, a good deal of work can be manufactured by substituting | i pimitive manual methods for more efficient machine-processes, remarks the _ New York Journal of Commerce. Indeed, by some systematic elimination of our modern labor-saying devices, it goes on, we could speedily reduce any modern death from exposure. is the suggestion good in any way? In one of our prente provinces where much road work is. is isan carried decisi "on as a means of pre is ‘the greater mileage involved. “a result. relief expenditure. long run. Fifty men digging a trench for a * quired. There should be no hasty was reached to build a cer- 1 tain road without use of ernie Rad solely by horses and manual labor. | Objection was raised by some people that by using maohinery for certain | phases of the work, a greater mileage of good road could be constructed for | the same money while giving employment to just as many men because of This view was rejected, no machinery was used, and the work proceeded. A total of five miles of graded road was the Now it is realized that with the sanie number of men given work, | practically the-same expenditure of money, and the use of a certain amount of machinery, three times that mileage could have been constructed. Pe farmers of the district who-were given relief work on that road would have "benefited more from fifteen rather than five miles of good road, while in the “years to come they must pay their share of the taxation necessitated by this | They gained nothing temporarily, and will lose in the | The sewer or other pipe line with pick and | shovel will accomplish just so much in a day, but the same fifty men working | in conjunction with a trench-digging machine will accomplish several times ‘as much, and with little more expense. Or fifty men cleaning snow off side- walks with shovels will only do <= fraction of the work that the same fifty men following after snow-ploughs will do, yet the same number of men will | be given work and practically the same expenditure of public funds be re- that the ion of the unemployed can be thus provided. Min carrying out unemployment relief works is wise, or that more work for It does mean, however, that less will He accomplished for the money expended, and for this economic loss every- | a tion in the years to come. body, including those at present unemployed, will have to pay through taxa- | Other suggested remedies have more to commend them, as, for exam- ple, the proposals in Great Britain and Germany to raise the compulsory | school attendance age by one year, thus keeping some hundreds of thousands | ; of children in school for a longer period instead of having them forced into employment replacing others now at work, or merely added to the ranks of the idle and out-of-works. ‘tional standard of the nation. So, too, is there much to he said in favor of the suggestion that the! benefiting the coming genemation of workers, There is something constructive in such a policy, and raising the whole educa- present six-day or five and a half-day work week be reduced to a five-day work week, or that the present 8-hour day be reduced to a 7-hour or even a| The same sug- | which would require the full- | time effort of every able-bodied person to prevent wholésale starvation and But, without carrying the policy to any such gy me ‘neglected their suffering grows more Gradual Falling Off Is Noted During Past Five Years Figures supplied in the annual! ture disclose a steady falling off in |hog production during the past five years. From a total of 1,286,154 hogs graded and sold in 1925 production | was down to,a total of 1,060,542 for 1929; a decline of over 125,000 hogs. That the decline has been gradual | is shown by the fact that production Buffalo, N.Y., Utica, fell off in 1926 by over 140,000; in) 1927 by 21,000, in 1928 by 27,000, and last year by nearly 30,000. General indications for 1930, to date, however, suggest that hog raising is- losing , none of its importance in the live- stock industry, being essentially on a ; Sound basis with the prospect of in- creased production in the near fu- | ture. A Mother’ S Anxiety Instructons For or Poultry Breeders |Course Is Announced For Young’ About Her Delicate Daughter be fading~~ away,” said an anxious mother recently about her daughter. Thousands of mothers could say the same thing. Their daughters endure a trying life robbed of all vitality and brightness. Their cheeks are pale; their eyes dull; their step languid and every move- ment tells of shattered health. If “She seenis tO acute till decline sets in. If your daughter complains of weariness; pains in the side; weak- | ness; headache or backache; her ap-| petite is uncertain and her spirits low—anaemia is the cause. She needs | new blood. Give her Dr. Williams’) Pink Pills at once for these pills | |The 1930 SdakntOhePanulsh ave Was | HE Roo E “Thomas Thinks Next actually renew and enrich the blood. They make sickly girls well and hap- py; improve the appetite and bring |back all the charm and brightness of | perfect health. | Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills are sold by all dealers in medicine or by mail at 50 cents a box from the Dr. Williams’ Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. Pioneer Passes | Death Of One Women Born In Western Canada The death has taken place of Mrs. | Elizabeth Adelaide Mary McKinnon, al-|1y when the air | £375,000 and burst before she }for 97 hours, and burst. | £350,000, and was never completed. | | officials at it Colds Yield to this Cae OI Reson chest I Sieve hot wet TY Sones rub on— --apply thickly VICKS awVAPORUB OVER 12 MILLION JARS USED YEARLY eo 3 Cost OF Dirigibles Britain Has Built Bight At Cost Of Over Ten Million Dollars There are certain facts in connec- tion with the building and flying | their young industry; the plaudits of | #ghter-than-air machines in England) sypmerge the machine rifle in a tank the crowd gathered to risk their own | Which will be bound to have weight | of mud and water of mortar-like con- in secing reckless pilots risk | With the Government in determining | sistency. It survived, with its mech- its future policy. They were laid | before the House of Commons recent- estimates were up) for consideration and were as fol- ,000, and she flew for 800 hours and burst. R-34 was flew cost inflated. R-36 cost £350,000, R-37 cident with a hundred people killed R-38 cost £500,000, She flew for 70 ©, P.R. To Commence Work At Once hours and burst. R-39 cost £90,000 and was never finished. The total for eight ships is 2,340,000, and the total flying time 1,540 hours.” eat cost | She was | scrapped and used as a stress test. | | R-40 cost £275,000, flew 73 hours and) | burst. Works Like Machine Gun Even Under Severe Test The possibility of making every infantryman a machine gunner was demonstrated at Bisley in the pres- ence of representatives of the War Office, the Royal Air Force and the Admiralty, when a series of tests were made of the Vickers-Berthier land service rifle and the Pedersen self-loading difle. The machine rifle was subjected to m severe ordeal. It was buried | deep in the sandy soil. Then it was | resurrected, and in the hands of a jcreaule demonstrator it ticked out single shots, and afterwards spurt- ed out lead at the rate of 450 rounds a minute. An even more severe test was to | jane efficiency and accuracy unim- |paired. The weapon was taken int6 Ss heap of its component parts in 10 seconds. It was quickly reassembled | ana ready for action. One thousand rounds rapid were fired on the 100 yards range, that being the average | period of its burst of fire. | New Railway Construction | On Saskatchewan Branch Lines Immediate work on a hundred miles of new rail construction in Sas- katchewan is foreshadowed by D. C. | Coleman, vice-president of western |lines, Canadian Pacific Railway, in announcing the award of four grading eaaeaee which form a portion of the | construction Drug Ring S: United States Federal Agents fem Thirty Arrests. Thirty arrests in seven cities, and seizure of drugs valued at $25,000, | were reported by Un{ted States fed- eral officers who for six weeks have | worked under cover in an effort to} smash what they described as an “in-| ternational drug ring—one of the big- | gest and most powerful in the United States.” The secret government agents | caused the arrests in Syracuse, Albany, Troy | |and Schenectady. The coup was said | to have been engineered by narcotic | Ww and New | president of the company. The con- reeanend recently referred to by E. W. Beatty, K.C., chairman and tracts are for the completion of the | line from Nipawin to Henribourg, 20 miles; Rosetown to Gunnworth, 20 miles; Medstead to Meadow Lake, 35 miles, and from Hamlin, northeaster- ly, 25 miles. Trip Will Be > Mainly Unofficial Prince Of Wales Will Combine Pleas- ure With Business On South American Visit When the Prince of Wales visits South America next year he plans to York. | Three were taken into custody in Syracuse Saturday night, Nov 1, af-/ ter undercover men, who had gained | the confidence of several of the men, said by them to be members of the ring, were lured to Syracuse with in-/} vitations to a “wild oe eats Ye Breeders Of Powitry By Calgary — | Poultry Association | A course of instruction ror young | poultry breeders is announced by Dr. | D. S. Macnab, president of the Cal-| gary Poultry Association, extending | from November to February 6th. A | matinee poultry show, when each stu- | dent will be asked to judge a section |of the show, after which competent | judges will comment on the awards, will conclude the course. | Stock and Feec Feeder Show Suceessful In Every Way | The 1930 Saskatchewan Stocker | and Feeder Show and Sale was suc-| cessful both as regards the manner | jin which it was handled and in the_| jSecretary of Dominions, in an ad- prices paid for the majority of the stock, It is the first year in which | ho three-year-olds were shown, the| exhibits following strictly the dictates | we have been,” Mr. Thomas said of | of present-day demand for young and head of cattle were shown and sold. | Persian Balm is unrivalled for pro- | |77, one of the first white women born | moting feminine loveliness. Tones and |in western Canada. A native of Fort |rejuyenates the skin. |Garry, daughter of Phillip MacQuire, | (US leedded to soothe and relieve rough- | went through the Indian rebellion at|ness or chafing caused by weather) Fort Garry, and the 1885 Louis Riel | genditions, |of the Hudson’’ Bay Company, she rising, when she was living at Qu- | "Appelle. She was the widow of John McKinnon, contractor, Winnipeg. | A resident of British Columbia for| requisite for the woman who cares|and 10ft. wide, and it can accommo- | | outlined with shells and stones, | is decorated with | | 30 years, she was a pioneer of Prince | Rupert and had lived here for 12 ears. Makes it ex- itely soft-textured. Makes hands | lessly white. Especially recom- | Indispensable to every) dainty woman. Cool and refreshing. | Delicately fragrant. Magical in re- sults, Never leaves a vestige of sticki- ness. Persian Balm is the one toilet for charm and elegance. | |sold everywhere. with The First Pipefu Tui rret Pipe Jobacco Is Tells th Tue first pipeful tells the story better than « full pege advertisement — Here is « cool, fragrant smoke that lasts and lasts. All smoothness and favour of finest tobsccos properly aged and carefully blended. This new screw top tin Is m | in perfect smoting rite smoking condition: and when ‘ampty, ean be tH usTurret family —Turret olgarettes, Tu ind we now Invite you to give this excellent TURRET PIPE Wey Turret fine cut ut fer thesewhe rll thelr own, To the Land Of the Pharoahs Marvels Yet To Come Of British © Forwarded To Egypt Regarded as an important trial shipment, 2,000 cases of British Columbia apples will be forwarded to Cairo, Egypt, shortly through the co- operation of the markets branch of the Department of Agriculture. Extra Apples For Train Tele- phone Has Great Vision For — Fature Forecasting the future always isa interesting occupation. While in Tespect the chief interest of the Be lic is in the weather for tomorrow, other unusual prognostications at- tract attention. An article in Mac-— xcept for opening of the British trade exhibition at Buenos Aires his trip will be an unofficial one, and few} definite engagements are being ar- \ranged. It was learned that while in Argentina he will be the guest of | | some of the large private estates and | screen events. A young man was tak- {may visit Mar Del Plate, the seaside | en on for a small part in one of her |resort near Buenos Aires. In Peru) and Chile he will spend some time} | sightseeing. | Cause Of Asthma: Wo one c9n say! j with certainty exactly what causes’ {the establishing of asthmatic condi- | tions. Dust from the street, from | flowers, from grain and various other \irritants may set up a trouble impos- |sible to irradicate except through a |sure preparation such as Dr. J, D. Kellogg’s Asthma Remedy. Uncer- tainty may exist as to cause, but} there can be no uncertainty regarding | a remedy which has freed a genera-| tion of asthmatic victims from this scourge of the bronchial tubes. It is Sees Hard | Times For US. Four Months Will Be Tough The United States will “go through hell in the next four months as never | before,” said Rt. Hon. J. H. Thomas, | dress in London, England, before the American Chamber of Commerce. “America is up against it, just as the depression. “You in America | Of the First White |jignt weights of stock. All told, 1,473| must have faith in your institutions | and you have a right to be proud of them, for you have made no small contribution to world progress.’’ | early days in the theatre, and she ) dustry may be turned by the powe: fancy Yellow Newtowns and half fancy Jonathans will make up the Lean's Magazine dealing with the genius of Mr. John C. Burkholder, shipment. The apples are being im- ported by an Egyptian firm that plans who is as for the “train torus Fi ofthe on the Cana- dian Natal Railways, sets forth — other ideas in the mind of this in- ventor. te Among the marvels that are to come, he sees the time when news- papers may publish in different — cities by transmitting the whole edi- tion, page by page, illustrations and all, by telegraph, with only a m: ter of minutes until the presses are ¥ running. City streets are to be three- George Arliss Apparently Knew His deckers, and moving sidewalks will Business From Start |do away with street cars. Television — Mrs. Patrick Campbell was remin- | and radio will bring from London oe |iscing the other day, aécording to ‘ana New York the greatest stage | word from the Gold Coast, about her presentation and “the wheel of in- — British Columbia product if the re- sults of the experimental shipment are as anticipated. Other and smaller shipments have already been made and have done well, arriving in Egypt in good condition and finding a ready sale there. Story About Noted Actor mentioned one little incident which is | contained in a glass of water and its worth repeating in the light of recent | plants lighted by rays captured from = the sun.” Perhaps. A few decades ago Bel: lamy had such a vision and a great deal of it came trie. The world is not slowing down, and possibly the © most vivid imagination cannot for- — see the marvels that are yet tocome. __ | plays, and she took him aside to give him instructions about it. He listened courteously and then said, “If I am not impertinent may I explain how I intended to do it.” And when he got througn“sire-said)—“That's. better | than my plan; go to it.” And he walked away with the part.” The young man was George Arliss. equate “the Form — ae caine and stock raiser should keep a supply of Dr. Thomas’ Eclectric Oil on hand, not only as a ready remed for ills in the family, but because is a horse and cattle medicine reat potencf As a substitute fe sweet oil for horses and cattle affect- ed by colic it far Surpanies on that can be adminis! Judge: Were you sober at the time this accident occurred? Reckless: As sober as a judge, your honor. Judge: Six months. Radiators installed“in a new hotel now being built in New_York will radiate heat in winter and cold in summer. born witness, “Well,” was the reply, “Tm paying as little as I can.” Heart and Nerves So Bad Was Unable To Sleep For Hours Miss Theresa M. Rayary, Gallingertown, — Ont., writes:—‘I was troubled, for almost a year, with my heart and nerves, especially on — retiring at night when I would be unable to sleep for hours. I was easily fatigued, and be- came very excitable and irritable. A friend recommended Milburn’s Heart and Nerve Pills and after taking them for a few weeks I cot enjoy a good night's rest, and rapidly regained my former state of health.” Price 50c a box Sold at all drug and general stores, or mailed alrect on recelpt of rice by The T. Milburn Co., Ltd., Toronto, Ont. One Of Smallest Churches Building On Island Of Guernsey Accommodates Twelve Persons One of the smallest churches in the world is on the island of Guernsey. | The church is 16 ft. high, 13 ft. long, | date about twelve persons. The out- | side of the building is made of clink- Western Canada Sugar Production About 24,000,000 pounds of sugar jer, while the interior formed of broken Canada and Empire Reforestation | Will be produced this year from sugar | various designs the colors | 6-hour day. As the head of one of the greatest industrial corporations in ag Heats cvontie, aiKvl _|beets grown in Southern Alberta.| pottery and ormer shells, the world today recently pointed out, the greater the amount of leisure time | Canad’ is yearly Playing & bigger) s1,,ut 14,000 acres of beets were un-| being blended artistically. ‘The little | enjoyed by the workers of the world, the larger will be their demand for the Hey ee ear oy ares pm tty” ger crop this year. The centre of the | steeple contains a bell. | things necessary to the enjoyment of those leisure hours, thus creating a sale mone “a east Dritain, [industry is at Re | ec a | greater demand than ever for the production of the things they require. Thus rate ate cent to New Zealand and —— Minard’s Liniment refreshes the F d Ww t would more men be employed, more goods produced and purchased, a higher, | | ase Fs oS PEAT Treland,| Before marriage a man is usually scalp. oo as age yer, § rd of living created. coca ‘ i - CARES ReSpeR iat suower/ standard ic 5 2 ey : __|and other parts of the Empire. Dur- ees: atterwardey he, ta) gue Germany Holds Strange Fair --- by covering all perishable =F 7 ing the past ten years the British | Spoken. ‘ ‘ : Has it ever occurred to you that| Customer: Hayen’t you anything Bi ID Eas ae hase amiantadl — One of the strangest fairs in the goods with Para-Sani Heavy there {s no last number? The pro-| you could guarantee to waken me|149.900 acres of softwoods, the great-| Modern auto service stations, pat- | World Is to be held at Frankfort, Ger- Waxed Paper. Para-Sani - aia 2 y. It is an insect fair at which A i ss of counting cannot conceivably early in the morning aa a a mane : 7 t st ex after those in| ™@ny isture-proof texture will ke cess oO} Fe4 5 4 er part of the seed used coming from | terned almost exactly | collectors from alliparta ohithemworld moist P ep be terminated, Dr. Dantzig points) Clerk: Yes, but I don't think his) Canada America, are to be built in India. thon ttataleniayethelaetara nutter: them fresh until you are ready out. Every number has a successor. | mother would like PALEIDE: with him. ee is ei | gather Pay flies, moths, beetles, grasshoppers, to use them. There is an infinity of numbers ema | Banish pain with Minard’s Liniment., As late as the seventeenth century, : 4 coment t ok aed = Swedish vacuum cleaners are com- ay butter. was. sold indrug, sahopa’¢ of | ee: crickets and other InaectshHuge You'll find the Para-Sani sanitary Nearly 3,500 automobile busses are peting with the American product for Meat Consumption In Canada Spain as an ointment. sums of PE oie a te in SRE knife-edged carton handy. Or belng operated in Poland | the British markets, The per capita ption of : - =— | of phase Insects, between various’ cols use “Centre Pull” Packs in sheet _ | lectors. meats in Canada last year was: beef, form for less exacting uses. At 676,900,352 pounds or 69.09 pounds . : per capita; pork, 798,638,774 pounds Chapped Skin Silicate of Soda Glue grocers, druggists, stationers. or 81,52 pounds per capita; mutton Wind, snow and sleet bruise || In setting up paper boxes, a min- a and lamb, 70,511,238 pounds or 7.20 unprotected skin _ surfaces. || eral glue—silicate of soda—is of great | Minard’s heals the raw skin | utility, and, in connection with this, a number of experiments are being carried out by the Forest Products Laboratories, Department of the In- | terior, Ottawa. POUNGE Re MGe Ns tissues and affords fu'l protec- tion. ZAM-BUK Rub It In To Relieve A | ‘COLD ON CHEST Medicinal Soap 25. Salt In Manitoba In Manitoba numerous brine springs are found in the area west of lake Winnipegosis, and brine has been en- countered in drill holes in the dis- | | trict between Winnipeg and the boun- | dary of Saskatchewan. Snuff-taking is again the vogue) |in Europe. | ” Western Representatives: Bebb ip esa & co., REGIN! : Two women are training as air pilots to every three men in England, Ointment 50-- W, N, U. 1865