—____ABROTSFORN aac ann camsnrre 7 RSSORNONE Be AND MATEQ direction is jo'nt @#@fion by the Dominion, Provincial and municipal authorities to lessen the possibility of accidents at level railway créssings. Stich crossings are always dangerous, but with the advent of the motor car, : : , “While a figure skater’ learns al-| | toriously unbusinesslike. They con- ee ay ene ae d =e ae nae mania of reckless drivers, the death and accident toll has | ways to lean toward the direction of| Would Furnish Valuable Information| duct thelr affairs in a way that Land Of Living Skeletons Noted Speakers Will Be Hear TSR eae his turns, a ski runner may have! in Regard To Forest Resources | Would make a dyed-in-the-wool. busi al AVINg — anual in nearly one thousand accident cases reported to the Board of Railway | to lean toward or away from the! since the two great manufactures| "°SS executive tear his hair with Will Deliver Addresses At An *® Commissioners during the past year, there was danger of loss of life or damage to property because of negligence at highway-railway level crossings. Of these accidents $69 were reported on the lines of the Canadian National system, and railway officials have carefully classified these. It was found that more thm forty per cent. of the accidents were sed by some form of downright negligence on the part of the motorist. Of the huge total of accidents, no less than 325 were cases where | vehicles broke or damaged crossing gates which had been lowered; 23 where drivers ignored signals and drove right through gates; 36 cases where drivers passed right ahead under gates which were in process of being or lowered; seyen cases of driving on to crossings opposite gate which had béen lowered; five cases where drivers under the influence of _liquor crashed into gates; while three accidents were due to pedestrians | \climbing over or under gates. | rais than might have been naively sup- | Census Of Canadian posed, he stated. Trees Is Suggested direction,” Professor Pear explained.| now leading that branch of Canadian “An expert skater would find this! industry, pulp and paper and lumber, very difficult to unlearn, while @ NOV-) qepend for their future existence and ice at both sports would find less} continued prosperity on the timber difficulty. reserves of the Dominion, an estimate o ‘ of what these reserves total is na- NERVE TORTURES turally.a matter of first rank im- | portance to those concerned with the A Condition From Which Both Men and Women Suffer national interest. Proposals have recently been under consideration at Ottawa for the un- Hardly any condition of ill health! dertaking of a nation-wide survey, causes more real suffering than a! to be carried on in éach province shattered nervous system. And often,| .oncerned and the results assembled NEWS Tae AF ——— - not be tempted by the price | Skill Hard To Transfer May Be Good Prophet of ch Beroxtas cap teas. Only fine teas | Sctentist. Finds Emotions Govern President Of Tractor Organization will give | Aptitude In Playing Of G Predicts Chain Farms continued enjoyment foodie. n Playing James redicts Chain Farr | if you have played tennis for years Milton W. Anderson, the presi- and set out to learn golf, will your dent of a big tractor organization, ; tennis skill ald or hinder. Popular predicts the coming of chain farms | views on this question of transfer of fas the logical complement of chain a Fi \ | skill are varied and conflicting, but groceries and other stores, Come pr the udgment of ea, You'll | experiments and analyses of bodily to think of It, Mr. Anderson may be CCEI on aa choice of UGam-Dipped | = ntion have produced some facts a good prophet. a tne the winners ride on + to go on, said Professor T. H. Pear, Rightly or wrongly, farmers claim fieatories? deer one ms |of the University of Manchester, in farming does not pay. Some say it on every famous Face track ete “patented |a report tO the British Association does, but more say it doesn't. Per- standing endurance TAM Ted i part for the Advancement of Science. }haps it is a matter of habit with) Gum-Dipring Pe ering ‘saturates ee ry The mental attitude and the emo-| farmers-to run down farming. There} victory. _GUm-TOFE ery cord with er Fresh from the gardens’ j tions of the learner play an import~ y ull fe aways something wrong about lat 8 every, bre of heat and give Most ns — ant role in his ability to make use Math : |erops If it isn't one thing it is an- ae "That's why Freee safety and C 5 z = J of past experience. If he enjoyed the) ——_ PLCTHERCT Do asae ah bik | other. And, of course they never tires hold ail sec ‘eeal Firestone Dealer. ulpable Negligence old skill and felt confidence in his e-ted babies | admit that they get the prices they endurance. fone powers, for example, this mental ought to. MADE IN HAMILTON, PORE oy Fattitude may be transferred to the r They try oo-operative marketing * bber Compa’ of a eh, aa ever increasing extent, one of the responsibilitles | joy task with favorable results. wae Petes uiminel neae and esi u and ath “farming doesn't Firestone, Tire OP imited 2a Sent aie we 1 xa np people against themselves, not only | yoxperiments have indicated that Bao st Pea oe ne" | pay.” The price of implements is too oO! evowier, tie Sie nae = i sake of others whom, in one way OF the transfer of skill from one sport high—and so on, ; ; ed endanger, One of the latest developments in this’ or task to another is very much less After all, farming is a business, just as running a store or a factory is a business. But farmers are no- Returned Traveller Tells Of Condi- tions In Famine Ridden District In African Congo A land of living skeletons where those who did not die of hunger fell victim of disease or were» torn to pieces by wild animals was described by Commander Edward P. Thomp- son, U.S.N., retired, on his arrival in New York, after spending six years In the famine-ridden Ruanda dis- in Africa. trict of the Belgian Congo, he said, the living were too weak to care for anxiety. The time may come soon when farms are linked up as chain stores are linked up. There will be a cen- tral organization, financed by big business men. Individual farmers will give up running their own farms and merely be the branch managers of farms owned by the chain. They will have to run the farm, not as they have been used to run- ning it, according to their own ideas, but to the HI, devised methods of the proprietors. sel Fieestone TERES Convention Of Canadian Chamber Of Commerce ight Hon. L. C. M. S. Amery, ae B. Bennett and B, W. Beatty will be amongst the speakers to ad- dress delegates to the annual conven- tion, Canadian Chamber of Commerce, at Calgary and Edmonton, September 41, 12 and 13 All speakers will con- form to the general theme of Bons Canadian Economic Partnership.’ Mr. Amery will speak on the Bri- tish Empire's share in the partner- Mr. Bennett on confederation In other words, all these accidents were the result of a wilful| Unfortunately, but little sympathy fs Ge The owners will buy machinery,| the dead, and everywhere corpses) ship; ‘ 4 . ‘in a general census. Those most di- #) the” dead, pA A . Beatty on Pisa ccilee nepseaed etmreteeiinnipriatiiey hegraliqayasmittin’ thetn| Own, Sor, tee) eunoren TS ae re eintasted In tne proposal arg|#tock and seed in vast quantities:| wore left lying beside the ronda) if partnersilpy an ae ee ale insane desire for speed motorists were responsible for a large number of | pe controlled. They wifl sell agricultural produce the| ‘Those survivors who had sufficient the role of transpo) accidents which were the outcome of what is classified as “inexplicable negligence.” Some of the almost incredible performances of careless and reckless drivers are listed as follows: | Fourty-four motorists drove into the sides of moving trains. » | Thirty-eight drove into the sides of standing trains. One driver parked on the railway lines while he had a sleep. One tried to drive between two railway cars while switching. He was ill, ‘unsuccessful. ‘Twelve parked on or too near the railway tracks. _Seven went’ for a drive along the railway tracks—they thet express | trains. One driver left his car on the tracks to search for something he had dropped on the road. When he returned there was nothing left of the car. One driver stopped on the railway tracks to adjust his load. Eleven found too late that their brakes needed relining. | This amazing record shows that not only are many accidents at crossings due to sheer negligence and in no way excusable, but they also serve to indicate the nature of the problem of “educating” drivers of motor cars guilty of such insane conduct. Warning signs and even physical barriers such as crossing gates are no sure guarantee against accidents due to such carelessness. : There appears to be but two methods of putting an end to such accidents, One is to do away with level highway-crossings altogther by carrying highways either over or under the railway tracks, This is a highly expensive business, and is not possible in a country of such immense distances as Canada. It can be done at crossings in all urban centres and at points where traffic is exceptionally heavy, and to this task the Federal Government, through the Board of Railway Commissioners, working in co-operation with Provincial Governments and municipal authorities, has Men and women pend British Columbia, Ontario, nerves out of gear often become irrl-| ang w B vick. table and are blamed for ill tempery| gee Sa eatee eigen when it is not their fault: Their) - VAGTY 0! Is suggestion, the fac! poor health is the cause. The tired, that such a survey has already been over-busy wife and mother, whose quietly under way in Ontario for household’ cares have worn her thins] seven years gives an idea of how the breadwinner whose anxieties have worried him until he is really Much effort is involved. The Ontario are among the nerve sufferers census of trees and timbers is still who become run-down. Their nerves, | far from complete and forestry offi- ania all eae yeoreeae eee zens aed cials can not yet say with exactness ke all such cases the + ‘simplest treatment is a course of Dr. what"the forest resources of the Williams’ Pink Pills, which enriches Province are. An interim report cov- the blood and builds up the nervous/ering the areas already done will, Biba ae Beaks good atreal a ey in all likelihood, be presented to the cheerfulness, rs. M. 8S, c 4 mond, Que., tells how this medicine | Provinclal legislature at its next ses- ended her nervous troubles. She / S!on- says:—‘T have suffered from ner-| Eighty million acres have been re- vousness and dizzy spells, ict the) viewed and crews, on air and op hundred and one things whic! in = oF - such a condition male life a misery. Landnate seHyely, Bulent ye) tuisient The first thing I found to help me|™er as they have been for years past. was Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills. Under Approximately 3,000 square miles a the use of this medicine I found my| season are being checked off the list nerves grew Steadier ,the dizzy spells at the present rate of speed grew less frequent, and I became wi Fi . - brighter and more cheerful. I took) hile it does not involve a census the pills*for some time and found| of every tree, the survey is a most that they enrich the blood, build up| exhaustive and expert proceeding. It the nerves and are a fine medicine) reveals the exact type of timber in for both old and young. boaek ; iti ; ‘i You can get these pills through each area, its condition, whether it any medicine dealer or by mail at | is second-growth, muskeg, approxi- Quebec decided to bend its energies, the cost of ing these level being distributed among these several governmental bodies. The second course is to licence all drivers of motor cars and to make it an offence for anyone to drive a car unless he or she has such a licence, | and to immediately cancel the licence of any person found guilty of | 50c. a box from The Dr. Williams’| mately how much, Co. ville, Ont. Vee in the way of information which is required before proceeding with actual exploitation of the resources in any given sector. Receives New Honor King George Confers Barony On Sir same way. The farm manager will draw a straight salary and be re- lieved of his individual worries. Per- haps he will get a bonus from grate- ful directors. It is a striking picture of the fu- ture. And quite a feasible one. — St. ‘Thomas Times-Journal. strength to gather up their belong- ings have fled to adjacent districts. Commonder Thompson blamed continued lack of rain and under cultivation of the small farms by the Bahutu tribe for- the three-year famine. partnership. Other speakers will include Prem- jer J. E. Browplee, of Alberta; Hon. S. F. Tolmie, ‘ premier of British Columbia; Wm. Butterworth, presi- dent of the United States Chamber of Commerce; Sir A. W. Buchanan, owner of the Lethbridge Herald, who will discuss the share which agricul- Former War Lord Indicted For Murder Chinese Judiciary Want Chang Tsung Chang Exfradited Is Report | An exchange telegraph despatch stated that Peking despatches have been received in Tokio reporting the Must Tell the World British Manufacturers) Can Goods Only By Advertising British manufacturers are losing trade in Canada and elsewhere not because their goods are inferior or] because their prices are too high,| but because they hide their light un-| der a bushel . . . . Those manufac- turers—and there are still too many of them in England—who think that when they have made a good article and quoted a fair price for it, they can wait for buyers to come to them are laboring under a fatal delusion. Our potential customers in Can- ada and other Dominions cannot’ be Sell former Chinese war lord, for the killing of Prince Hsien Kai, 21-year- old cousin of China’s former boy oe | peror. The despatch said the Chin- Chang be extradited because of his alleged- implication in several mur- ders before his flight to Japan after his recent defeat by the Nationalists. everything, in| firms that might supply their needs.| ted are i | ki expect to search out the British Sweet and palatable. Mother Graves’ Worm Exterminator is ac- |The mountain will not come to Ma-| ceptable to children, and it does its ‘homet, but Mahomet must go to the| mountain. In other words, our woulda be exporters need to make their goods widely known before they can work surely and promptly. New Industries For Manitoba In Manitoba last year 63 new in- indictment of Chang Tsung Chang,) ture takes; R. J. Hutchings, presi- dent of the Canadian Manufacturers’ Association; H. W. Wood, president of the United Farmers of Alberta; Senator Gideon Robertson; John w. Dafoe, editor of the Manitoba Free | Press. “Tt is sald of the late Andrew Car- negie——” began the efficiency ex- pert impressively. “ { won't have this,” stormed the’ self-made boss. “If he was late dis- ese judiciary were demanding that| charge him at once! There may be other corn removers, j but you will not be completely satis- | fied until you have used Holloway’s Corn Remover. the Poet sir, poets are born, not made. Worrimore the Editor—And that’s © the worst feature of the situation. If | they were manufactured they could | be prohibited by law. \ - { ss and in a car. Such persons Robert Baden-Powell Miller's Worm Powders, being m sell them, and any lingering beliet| dustries were i i Z are a danger not only to themselves, but to the public at large, and in the| King George has conferred @| demand everywhere,- can be got at|that advertisement is a luxury In-| to the re) ti F SS 7 a | & y o the report of the new industries public interest should be denfed the right to drive such a potential engine | harony on Sir Robert Baden-Powell| any chemist's or drug shop, at very | stead of a necessity nfust be eradica-| committee submitted to the annual UNIVERSITY OF MANITOBA _ of destruction on the public highways as the modern powerful motor car. _| entitling him to sit in the House oh Ota ‘ EEey eanrlae: ee ted from the British business mind.| meeting of the Manitoba Industrial INNIP Sa en eee —— | Loris. fe fully relied upon to expel worms|—London Daily Telegraph. Development Board. Production dur-| oes wv “i EG 4 Praises British Empire British Empire Games Lieutenant-General Sir Robert) from the system and abate the suf-| ing the year was estimated at a : a aothere ts following Baden-Powell founded the organiza-|ferings that worms cause. There are a value of $159,000,000 i , | | | New Midget Auto lu ,000, or an increase | Through its FACULTY OF ARTS : YB 1 Guides| Many mothers that rejoice that they 7 ¥ AND SCIENCE Words Of General Smuts Proves Him EW tty, OER. Ereeldent, To) paabee a Pan aeatee Rice found available so effective a remed | of $17,000,000 over 1927. | BA. and M. roe 2. she 7 Real Imperialist Act As Chairman | res ey eat ie the relief of their children. Will Be Sold Through Mail Order SSS J Jancluding (BSc Char) Senda at ee General Smuts speaks of the Bri-|' = W- Beatty, ICC., president ot eee nee Ca aA ae : Houses For $200 “Why do you pay so many visits | BERING “AND ARCHITECTURE Janis! an outh A - B | . . 4 * courses leading to th (aiianpirevas; ‘ies prestenthifores| |e eere en ome s Ballas Mes saived canitaercitatibudtand’ decors People Are Like Coins The New York ‘Times says negoti-| Put never ask anybody to your)| nsc(G.r), BS(BE), Mee and consented to act as chairman of the ——— ations are under way for the large house?” Arch. Through its FACULTY OF - CINE courses tp thedderea of M.D. and for good the world has ever seen, ‘Those | hi ices and man; te Gut probably willl'ever eee.” British Empire Games Conimittee of| Be OO OT ae ete | some Appear Big But Are Sniall| scale production of the new “baby””| “YoU see, when I pay a visit I can others came to him for his work leading: to the degrees GeeNta wortsot msnika qvbo has ty: the Amateur Athletic Union of Can-| ‘wilh teSHey” Sebuts When Examined auto which would be sold through|8° When I like, but when people | Through its ACULTY OF _AGRI- posed that Empire in arms and has ada, it was announced recently ~by| a i According to church ‘officials, the|the mail order houses for $200. sioner ba veg von walt until sthey)) MICS Gaaeee eae ECONO: ? : MICS : 1 Pelutedtuhis “character: upon the| = Toes teak Lowcen, president of | big Canadian nickel has caused | The car is the invention of James) fee) like Boing: of BSA. and Hse G1Be) os viride mind far more widely than| te Union. The meet will be held in Cramps incueaks it] B. Martin, of Garden City, NX, : Through "MANITOBA LAW SCHOOL. ies Pin opiate OrithedDnich ians| om. Ota tn Auust, 1880) 5 apes the fourth of aidollar Jn size| ‘The feature of the car is thatit| In the seventeenth century, specu-| Tending to the degree of LLB. plas Hate eerie juleeome phases “or| (eamone umembace of the games Diarrhoea and looks, ahd when it {s dumped|bas no axles in the usual sense of the) lation in tullp bulbs resulted in prices] courses fan) olen: Infor ee : Suoth African development are dis-| Committee are: Joe Loudon, John} > 0 , into the plate or put in an envelope| Word, each wheel being independent-| of several hundred dollars for ae npPeREy, F 7 ral te Pains in Stomach | | | «uni SPENCE, Reolatrar. couraging, and especially that reluc-| “sll, gener secretary of the i puts up almost as much “front” as| ly mounted in the reinforced body.| single bulb. { \wuniveraity of Manitoba, Winnipeg. tance fi’ ceftain quarters to’ resien| A-\U- Of 0. “and the) following |) Mo Hey ene NG fete the quarter and deceives the neigh-| Rubjer “aviator cord” is used in the) — : chairmen of the various A.A.U. of C.| writes:—‘I became very Ill; lost my)) suspension of each wheel instead of a old enmities which have lost their meaning: But such a faith—virile and generous—as General Smuts nyows can be trusted to outlive and defeat all cults of more animosity] and negation. | appetite, had cramps, diarrhoea, and} | severe pains in my stomach. “J purchased a branches; Alberta branch, C. B. Chessman, Cardston; British Colum-) | bia, H. R. Davison, Vancouver; Sas-| katchewan, J. W. Hamilton, Regina. James A. Richardson, of Winnipeg, and W. J. Blake Wilson, Vancouver, It might be a good thing for the| 4 spring. bottle of church if it were abolished. But| The new car has a wheel base of and before I had! how like some human beings the big| Sixty inches, compared with 10214 taken half of it 1). | : was completely re-| Bickel is. inch wheel base of the smallest car There are people who are physi-|now being produced in the United Meved, and have had no symptoms cally big, or vocally big, or in some| States. Mr. Martin said his invention | Graduated Since Last September | With the announcement the other! 11s, Can Depend On Britain o- day that three more Calgary airmen | never be without a) js, in fact. lease with a hinged door which may} bottle of it in the be used as a garage. -| are members of the general commit- of the trouble other way have an imposing “front.” will do 50 miles on a gallon of gaso-} Calgary Aero Club tee. | since. nnot praise| But when you get closer in touch | line. } = = | "The Perea too| With them you find that they are| He declared he planned to have it More Than Fifty Local Fliers Have) Naval Limitation | highly, and willl nothing much after all — little nick-| shipped in a weather proof packing) | A house. | ies nA | Operating In Every Way “Tt is pleasant to take and acts Life Of Motor Cars had secured pilot's licenses, under|. 4, very quickly. | The average life of an automobile| |- No country has been so e in| Yer} Aieetreeidlan vat sunspector (E. Western Airways, Limited. RDORY ie Seeponsti ey aon ee aaF B *R | cost was little more than the prico| Without this great remedy, ik: aper. Para-Sani vices. Our good faith in the matter, ‘The U.S. Bureau of Standards, has) (+ ..1egrease,—Montreal Gazette, | —- moisture-proof texture will k . ; of naval disarmament is conclusively | developed a mew sound-proof #ero-| isa arti ae | A Good Suggestion t re EXCED At New Westminster, British Col-| gemonstrated by the fact that the Lennie Bale ved mill , = | them fresh until you are read. tmbia, more than 21,000,000 feet of| . 2 Wathetacuarss plane cabin which, it is believed, w “you gay your mistress is out!| A reader of the Toronto Globe in a to use them. y Jumber were loaded in April for for- announcement of America’s swollen) eliminate one of the drawbacks to! 1 y am almost certain I saw her|Jetter to the editor makes the sug- Fou’ f ieee tats : om cruiser programme coincided with a) increased passenger transportation—| +44 at the window.” i | gestion that, since letters mailed in You'll find the Para-Sani sanitary uN sas naval ~ building} the rodriof the igi “Impossible! She took her head| Canada cost only two cents! postage, | knife-edged carton handy, Or pheriewr Hoover ican.rely abeo- . Tae aaa with her.” one cent is sufficient for postcards. use ‘Centre Pull” Packs in: jutely on Britain’s co-operation in| Why is it some people seem to Oe [frisa Rareawedliuise Comtpineiea coat ‘acks in sheet get so much pleasure in trying to keep everybody else from having form for less exacting uses, At any fair plan of naval reduction grocers, druggists, stationers, Stop Pain Minard’s may be used inter- » nally or externally to ease pain in all parts of body. |cards that would result from the \adoption of this reduced postage | would be very effective advertising | for the Dominion he believes. There| is something in this suggestion that the Government might consider. Let us be air-minded but, If possi- ble not lighter than air-minded. Mrs, Justwed—Are you sure that’s) 40y? a young chicken? ee The Poultryman—Ma’am, that pul-| Clerk: I'm taking correspond- let has barély reached her teens, A| ence course to get more money. miss of her age would be a mere| Boss: That's terrible. I’m taking | Aj lone to reduce expenses. | ‘S is : school girl. Lae ee ne 3 te Lift Ry ht Of-NoPain | An adding machine was built tn Cpploford 7) Se peausealwitecoTha war: started}. A Wee: Senne Australia; has 4 ih joey and yexhibited fabgite RAnaDs he "ef ame (mir eg eee | the ‘ist of ‘August, 1914, didn’t it? lleft her entire estate of $10,000 to * | Exposition that had a capacity of 40 PRON . eae * |reduce Great Britain's national debt. PUT NAMS columns or within one unit of. ten ah | Professor (absent-mindedly)—No, | no, my dear, we were really married | in 1912 | | duoderillions. Corn Extractor ff | Minard’s Liniment for Neuralgia. Western Representatiy s BUNTER-MARTIN €:C0,, Rainy aie : ’ Keep Minurd’s Liniment handy. always