Ask for Salada Orange ekoe—it is the finest Aa AL ‘Fresh from the garden: To Return German Property In Canada Gross) Value Of Holdings In Dominion About ‘Thirteen 59 Millions German property in Canada taken over during the Great War will be returned as a result of The Hague | settlement, to which the Dominion is) “TaT’s why modern moth- at & party. ers prefer Vicks—it cannot Thomas Mulvey, I , custodian |of enemy property, will leave short- ly for Berlin to conclude the details jot the transfer. The gross value of }German property in custody in Can- What Is Hdncwvon? Educational policies and educati world-wide investigation, study and English-speaking countries, Perhaps of education received more attention from the masses of the people. To a Greater extent than ever before parents are showing a real interest and «eep concern. They are in a quest know whether accepted policies, best results. It is also true that our schools and higher institutions of learning are esting more, and that the bills which have to be met by thé taxpayers in trder to provide and maintain their year, and already constitute a large percentage of the annual tax levy. The | yast majority of taxpayers do not object to this if,—and this is the vital | matter,—they are obtaining decidedly better results in the education of the younger generation, and all that they have a right to expect from such) increased expenditures. The higher standard of living thirty, forty, fifty years ago, has the }ada is sa‘d to be approximately $13,- 000,000, comprising real estate, bonds and corporate securities. ional methods are today the subject of discussion, and particularly so in all in no previous period has the subject | India Buys Canadian Grain Pirst Shipment To Be Made From Montreal Shortly Thirty-two thousand quarters of grain will be shipped from Montreal | to India in the near future at a car- rying charge of 22s. 6d. per ton, it is | announced by Thomas Harding and | Son, agents of the S. S. Zurichmoor. | It is believed this will be the first consignment of Canadian grain ever) hipped to India, The local agents have not yet been notified of the par- | ticular type of grain required. joning and questing mood, anxious to ems and methods are productive of the school systems are mounting year by now so universal, as contrasted with upset delicate stomachs. Rubbed on throat and chest, it acts two ways at once: (1) Its healing. vapors, released by the body heat, are inhaled direct to the air passages; (2) It “draws out” the ioned poultice. ways oct Ox: nce YICKS aVAPORUB OVER t= MILLION JARS USED YEARLY [May Emb lazon Honors Sanction From King George al colors of Canadian permanent and non-permanent active militia units, the honors won by these regiments during the Great War. At present 68 regiments haye been given defi- nite sanction to embroider these honors on their colors, and in due course the remainder of the militia will receive authority according to the qualifications of the regiments concerned. Thus a question that has con- Sumed several years and that has soreness like an old-fash-@ involved little short of scanning the war records of almost every one of the 600,000 Canadians who served in the Canadian Expeditionary Force, is settled once and for all. Every one of the “fighting” battal- ions of the Canadian Corps —50 in number—is perpetuated in the non- active militia (exclusive of the three Colossal British Production, “Humpty Dumpty,” Coming Soon Old Country folk who have long craved to see a real English panto- effect of enabling parents to give their | WAS ALWAYS AI‘ING children high school and university training to an extent hitherto unknown. Tens of thousands of children now proceed to high school, collegiates, and | colleges who not so Jong ago would have completed their &cademic training | when they finished with public school. And the demand is for still greater | facilities for secondary education, especially for those resident in rural areas and the smaller hamlets and villages scattered all over the land. | The question arises in the minds of many: Are all these young people NEVER FELT WELL Health Restored Through the} Use Of Dr. Williams’ — | Pink Pills | being truly ed ? Are the of young men and women | “I am one of the manywho have) “nnually gathering from our universities with the right to add B.A., MA., | found new health through the use of and other letters after their names acceptation of the word? Or are they merely equipped with certain tools | which many of them do not know how to use for their own advancement “nd the welfare of the human family? Dr. George A. Coe, veteran educationist of Northwestern University, and recently retired from Teachers College, is convinced"that a good education times to do my is education for good living. “What an absurdity it would be to certify as who has never been | cducated, yet negligible as far as social well-being and Social progress are) well-educated a youth Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills,” says Mrs. Everitt Dowe, South Nelson, N.B. “For some years I never felt well, and at times was so weak that I would be confined to bed. At the very best I was in an a'ling condi- tion and found it difficult at all housework. I was subject to headaches, poor appetite, breathless at the least exertion, and very pale. Before Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills were recommended to me educated in the truest and highest socially awakened,—well- conce-ned.” Dr .Coe presents “ten points” by which a truly educated man); had tried several medicines and! an be detected, which are worthy of consideration: felt that I would always be an in-| 1. An educated man is one who is trained to use the tools of human} valid? A friend strongly urged me} intercourse with readiness, precision, and accuracy. We mean, especially, language and the rudiments of numb 2. An-educated man must be guidance from others. He must b mere imitator. 3. An educated man must ‘have sufficient’ knowledge of nature to » derstand the main processes upon which human life and happiness cCopend. 4. An educated man knows enough of history to enable him to under- stand the main achievements of man. 5. An educated man is acquainted with the major resources for intel- Iectual and esthetic enjoyment. He the other arts sufficiently to choose superior to inferior enjoyments. | 6. An educated man is marked by his interests as well as by his, His attention is habitually attracted by signfficanr rather than trivial objects, events, pursuits, and enjoyments. 7. An educated man must have not only this general culture, but also trained abilities. training for a specific occupation. Foc . Some sort of efficiency has to be inclu: 8. An educated man must have attitudes that are commonly called cthical,—such attitudes as honor ana honesty, helpfulness and good-will and co-pperation. 9. An educated man must have portant ofPanizations and institutions country, one’s church. 10. If there is an inclusive meaning in life, the sort of education that | I have been outlining should include some apprehension of, and feeling for, the divine; the ideally educated man worship. Sherwood Eddy, who quotes these “ten points’ by Dr. “Coe, recently published symposium on the methods, purposes, and results or} American colleges and universities suggests, in order to determine whether | 'P. one’s education is still alive and growing,—and it should always be alive; ¢™ment, cach of and growing. not a dead and finished thing, if it is real education— enswering the following questions: 1. Am I learning to study and to think? 2. Am I getting the knowledge enjoy things tilat are most worth while? Am I acquiring esthetic apprecia- tion of the significant values of life? 3. Am I living in the real world to live by living now; by acquiring some vital knowledge of the world ana to take Dr. Williams’ P’nk Pills, and} finally I consented to do so, but with-| rid }out much hope that they would help, able to study and to think without where other medicines had failed. e—to some extent—a thinker, not a/ But in this.to my joy, I was mis- ‘ taken. I had not been taking the pills very long when I knew they were helping me. As I continued their use I found my appetite im-| | proving, I slept better at n‘ght, and my strength was gradually return- ing. I continued taking the pills for several months, when I again found myself a well woman, and I believe knows nature, literature, mysic,* ana, that had it not been for Dr. Wil-| \liams’ Pink Pills. I would today be a helpless invalid, The pills have since been taken by others in our) family, with the same beneficial re- sults. I strongly urge every weak woman to try this grand health-| building medicine.” | If you will send your’ name and address to The Dr, Williams’ Medi- habitual cine Co., Brockville, Ont., a book, “Building Up the Blood,” be mailed you postpaid. | You can get these pills through| loyalties to at least Some of the im-| any medicine dealer or by mail at of society, such as one's family, one’s | 50c. a box from The Dr. Williams’ | Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. Protecting Health Of Children | alized activity that is directed toward | ded. toward his fellows the little will) Sis | | Residents, Of Rural Districts Given) “f ns] Excellent Health Service | Sixteen public health nurses are} by the ih hi Gov-| whom presides) over a rural district..In this way the| residents of the rural districts are} given excellent health services. | will reverence God, and know how to The) report of the Provincial Department | of Health shows that more than 32,~ 000 pupils of schools were examined last year by these nurses, and 1,324| health talks were given. Pre-school that I need most? Am T learning to or in a corner apart? Am I learning - z ‘ | its real problems, by actually facing them and beginning to try to solve | Clinics were held at which 3 546 chil-| them now? Or am I evading or po: trifles in a thoughtless and unreal academic world? 4. Am I progressing, standing still, or going backward? stponing life, playing about with its, dren were examined. In addition, the) nurses visited 9,932 homes in the fol-) low-up work in connection with child) welfare and prenatal care of moth-| aiateuy sepne Up) Ontario Report Shows Greater Contraction Than Other Proyinces There was a slowing up of indus- tral activity throughout the Domin- jon at the beginning of September, | states the employment report for the month just issued by the Dominion Bureau of Statistics. This is often the case, however, and the report says the situation generally contin- ues more favorable than in any month of the years 1920 to 1928 Logging, mining, communications, transportation and trade showed heightened activity, while there were heavy seasonal losses in construction | ae . ers. During winter months home| Prospecting In West nursing classes are held for adult women and girls of high school age.| | Large Amount Being Done In Mani- | toba and Saskatchewan Poor Year For Tree Seed } | Some idea of the amount of pros- jpecting being done in Manitoba and| |morthern Saskatchewan may be oh- tained from the number of claims staked and recorded during the past year. In 1928, there were 7,335 eral claims recorded in the Pas min- ing district, 1,400 in the Cold Lake district, and 2,118 in the Winnipeg district. There are at present, over The season of 1928 was a poor one for the collection of forest tree seed throughout the western provinces,| and orders received by the Forest) Service of the Department of the In-| terior, Ottawa, for seed could be filled only in part. Oil Of Power. ‘Thomas’ The claimed for Dr. Eclectric 20,000 mineral claims recorded in| Oj that it will remedy every ill, but Manitoba and northern askatch-| its uses are 50 various that it may n be looked upon as a general pain killer. If has achieved that greatness for itself and its excellence is known Controlled By Women ; to all who have tested its virtues and manufacturing was also quieter.| yore than 7,000 cases of eggs| and learned by experience: All provinces reported contrat-\)., ve been shipped by the Saskatch- = tions, that in Ontario being most n Egg and Poultry Pool to Lon- Bgg-Marketing Record pronounced. don, Liverpool and Bristol buyers.| 2} records for the co-oper has no England mountains high enough to be perpetually covered with snow, Fall-Colds Beware the cold that starts in the fall and hangs on all win- ter. Us Minard’s internally and 2 nally to drive it MINARD'S| <> | LINIMENT| 1807 y. Ww. N. U. The Saskatch the w wan Egg and Poultry! marketing of eggs in Pool a co-operative marketing or-| provinces haye been establi \ganization controlled by women, the first eight months of To farmers’ wives. Only one man is on| August 31, the Canadian Poultry the board of directors J Pool, Limited,» the central selling : agency for the westerm provinces, Sunspots Vary In Number has handled more than 7,000,000 Sunspots vary m numbers in a|dozen eggs period of average length of- eleven and a half y s. The weather is Giving Away Father found to vary along with these) Johnny," said the minister, “I’m hanges in the sun, in some localities) socked to hear you swearing. It is quite definitely. As a result living) q yery naug habit. Why, every| conditions vary with consequent cf-| time 1 hear a person » a gid fects on birds, animals, trees, grain) ¢yjj) runs down my back." growth, and economic condition “well,” ¢aid Johnny, “if you'd been = : at our house last night when pop Fresh fruits exported from the| jammed his finger in the door, I - United States during the past increase of 53 scal guess you'd have froze to death.” year represents an — ore per cent. in value of the preceding, The walking speed of the average | year. | nan is aboutt three miles an hour. | mine, and Canadians who have heard) so much of these sumptuous musical entertainments from friends will welcome the news that at Iast a ish producer, Mr, Philip Rodway, had the courage to send us one colossal productions in “Humpty Dumpty,” which will be seen at the Grand Theatre, Regina, for three nights and Wednesday matinee, commencing October 21st. When “Humpty Dumpty“ was pre- sented in Toronto, it was an instan- taneous hit which is proven by the following from the Toronto Daily Telegram. “This season's triumphant march of the British theatre into the hearts of Canadians made notable progress last night when a large audience at the Princesse Theatre ‘acclaimed infantry of the permanent 5 ; force.) The perpetuating unit, Real English Pantomine therefore, has been accorded the | right to carry the honors won by its corresponding Canadian Corps bat- talion. | Four militia regiments in Mani- | toba, five in Saskatchewan, and five in Alberta, have been given duthor- |ity to carry the battle honors in | this, the first allottment made. Might Remedy Wheat Blockade | Ss - | Purchases Of Wheat By British Government Would Relieves Situation Purchases of wheat by Great Bri- tain's Government will probably be a topic of the conference of wheat pool representatives in London, Eng- land, with Rt. Hon. J. H. Thomas, Lord Privy Seal and Minister of Un- employment, Although wheat pool heads were silent meeting, it is known that the bulk purchase plan is looked on as a last means of solving troubles arising out of grain congestion at Montreal. Philip Rodway’s pr ion of the Birmingham Pantomine Company in the musical pantomine extravaganza, Humpty Dumpty.” A story drawn from fairyland it is, but one that! elevators. appeais to young and old—a message of good cheer and optimism, with new faces and new songs, diverting, wholesome, fascinating. “Wee Georgie Wood, of course, is the outstanding star. The diminutive player is a gifted actor exuding per- sonal magnetism, with that from merriment to pathos merely by altering the expression of his face or the tone of his voice, He can build up mass interest in some conceit or other till it soars high, an® then crash it down in a heap with a light- ning-like flash of irresistible wit. His smile is impish in its compelling good humor. Then, in an instant, he adopts a mask of sadness, and the composite face of all the little boys heart-strings of the audience. His part is that of “Humpty Dumpty, nondescript lad out of a broken egg. Few who see it will forget his classic imitation of a boy in the process of being washed at bedtime by his mother. Later as a Scotch laddie with a dog, his antics are inimitable | and his Highland accent, by the way, worthy of Lauder himself. Further- more, Al. Johnson never knew as well as “Wee Georgie’ how to talk to an audierice in intimate fashion. It is some feat to get a Toronto theatre singing unaccompanied songs. ‘Wee Georgie” did it last night at the Princess.” If Miller's Worm Powders needed the support of testimonials they could be got from mothers who know the great virtue of this excellent medicine. But the powders will speak for themselyes and in such a way that there can be no question of them. They act speedily and thoroughly, and the child to whom they are administered will show im- provement from the first dose. Still Believe In Witecheraift Ancient belief in witchcraft was demonstrated at Portimao, Portugal, recently when @& poor woman was | executed because it was believed she} was a witch, Neighbors accused her It is not of bringing about illness, bad crops} lack of rain and even poorly baked bread. You Must Rave Sugar Sugar is one of the much needed elements in a balanced diet. WRIGLEY’S supplies sugar in a convenient way. The flavor is an extra delight. Then too—you know you aren’t adding weight. Sugar isa fuel that burns up needless fat. iben sired oF mt ry. Pep you! RIGLEY’S Chie of the bulk purchase conference follows outright declara- tion of Canadian disapproval for a plan for storage of grain in British H “ It was said that Mr. Thomas planned to construct eleva- | tors in Britain as a means of pro- | viding immediate work for unem- | ployed and of bringing about a steady | How of grain from Montreal eleva- | tors to Britain. But western grain men did not hesitate to say that they rare) would not support any such scheme) bout 20 per cent. completed. A ma- ability to change a crowded scene} of transferring their grain to Bri-| terial yard has been constructed at ‘A Severe Attack of _ Dysentery Checked by 4 Doses |. Mr. Burtonwood, 620-22nd St. jever lost in snowstorms tears at the) W.. Saskatoon, Sask., writes:—'My Endiang subdivision at Scapa. Graa- ‘| child, when only seven months old, |had o very severe attack of dysen- tery, and after three days’ treatment,) with other things we decided to use On «this day his bowels had moved twenty-three times | in eleven hours, but four doses checked it. | “A short time we offered it a neighbor whose baby was troubled, and it too was relieved with- in thirty hours. “We both always keep a bottle of | Dre Fowler's’ handy at all times, This medicine has been on the market for over 80 years; put up only by The T. Milburn Co,, Ltd. ‘Yoronto, Ont | Tell Time By Water Primitive, Method Is Still Used By Cantonese Natives of Canton still use the primitive method of recording time by water. Although one of their clocks is 600 years old, it still con- tinues to measure the minutes, The clock consists of four large copper jars standing on steps one |above the other. They are placed in such a position that when the top is filled, the water gradually trickles ees by drop into the next jar, and $0 on down to the fourth, In this ja }a float is attached to a measure, and jit takes exactly twelve hours for the water in the top jar to be emptied into the lowest. As the water rises in the last jar the float indicates the hour. | At certain intervals during the day the time is written on a board | outside the building. ago 0 His Mistake Millionaire Stevens (to young | Skinner, who has asked for his ‘daughter's hand in marriage) — Would you love her just as much if she received no dowry? Young Skinner—Why, of course! | Millionaire Stevens—Then you'll |e no son-in-law of mine. I don't | want an idiot in the family. | ‘Two pieces of broken Indian pot- the first reported found in, the region, were recently discovered in | Rocky Mountain National Paark. j ter _ United States imported $7,000,000 worth of black pepper last year. For Sprains — Use Minard’s Lint- ment, On Regimental Colors) Canadian Regiments Have Recelyed | wy ork | regarding the | Splendid Progress Made Prairie Branch Li —_— Being Rushe 568 Miles Authorized jin Final approval has now been 8@-) (. struction on the branch 1 Canadian Nation- prairies has Pro- atisfactory accord- jouncemen! ion, ehtef engineer, west lines of the company. Work to a Laaif gress in practically every oak ah the programme authorized ee liament at its last session, stated *F Dixon. | g a Saskatchewan and Alberta @ eit | y line was tal of 568 miles of new ‘: | authorized and of this mileage Work | is progressing on 418 miles. oe On the ‘Aberdeen-Melfort line, if miles of steel already have been lal in an easterly direction from oe junction with the Cudworth su A | division at Wakaw. In 4 number 0! |cases grading is as much as 70 use cent. completed. Mr. Dixon says thal there will be a continuance of this work on all branch lines as long. 48 weather conditions permit. Although the programme was one of the heaviest ever undertaken by the company, only 150 miles have had no work done on them. However, plans are prepared to begin work on this mileage next year, and the as- surance is given by Mr. Dixon, that the programme will be fully complet- ed within the three year period de- fined by parliament. In addition to this programme the company has also succeeded in put- ting steel into the Sheritt-Gordon Mine over the branch line authorized last fall, and is practically complet- ing the first lift of ballast to Fort Churohill over the 90 miles of grade upon which a skeleton track was laid last winter. The engineers in charge expect to have this plece of ‘track in such shape early next sum- mer, that through freight and pas- senger trains Will be able to operate between The Pas and Churchill by the end of July at the latest. Work done on the prairie branch lines during the summer, this work including only the three year pro- gramme, 1929-32, may be summar- ized as follows: Melfort-Aberdeen branch, 88 miles. Grading 70 per cent. completed, and 25 miles of steel have been laid east erly from the junction with the Cud- worth subdivision at Wakaw. Bal- lasting operations are now proceed- ing on this portion of the track. Mawer south westerly branch, 50 miles. Grading on this branch is ing to H. A. Dixon, |Mawer for the purpose of assem- | bling material for track laying. | Neidpath-Swift Current branch, 30 |miles. Grading on this branch is about 60 per cent. completed and a material yard has been constructed at Neidpath for the assembling of track laying material. 3 Hamaruka—Scapa | miles, westerly from | Alberta, to a junction branch, Al Hamaruka, with the | ing | on the branch is about 65 per cent. completed and a material yard has been laid out at Scapa where track laying material is now being | assembled. | Uniity south-westerly branch, 50 miles. Grading on this branch is {about 45 per cent. completed and a material yard has been Iaid out at | Unity where track laying material is now being assembled. | Hamilin-Glenbush branch, 33 miles. porading) on this branch is about 15 per cent completed and a material | yard is being built at Hamlin. St. Walburg-Bonnycille branch, 126 miles. Grading on this branch is jabout 10 per cent. completed and a | material yard has been constructed jat Bonnyville for the assembling of | track laying material. | Ridgedale easterly branch, 30 miles. Tenders for clearing, grading and installation of culverts on this pbranch are now being asked and a start wil be made this fall if weather conditions permit. | Bulwark easterly branch, 25 miles. hat f 8 I Pho. delicate ed a" stomach, M otan nd fx teritated, GUting the dieanr ero 008 toms which overy stomac! needed In ta aro not © atan eal harm. yator tne tha {a no RON A Magners r ae there pl purpoxes . ‘i who. et poopleonr of ind 1G-ZAG Cigarette Papers Large Double Book P) 120 Leaves. Krsib arravions trying To Aid the Blind Manufacturer In Cape Town Finds Work For Them In Factory ‘There is a manufacturer in Cape Town, South Africa, who is doing more for the welfare of the blind than many a philantropist. He is try- ing to find processes in his factory which blind girls are capable of do- ing. As an experiment, he has em- ployed a blind girl to button up the shirts after the buttons have been sewn on, and to leave them ready for the next process. Another blind girl is finding out whether it will be pos- sible for her to lay out the shirts for pressing. In modern factories, where each process is separate, it is possible to ind many of the simpler processes | which, with a little practice, come well within the power of the blind Made a Good Deal Englishman Received Latest Rolls- Royce In Exchange For Veteran Care” An Englishman, a year or two ago, bought an extremely ancient Rolls- Royce for a song—something like $50. Its number he noticed one day was 2. So he wrote to the Rolls- Royce people and told them, for their information, that he possessed the second Rolls ever made. They re- plied saying they had never been able to trace the first Rolls, and, as a matter of fact, had been trying for many years to find number two. If he would consider handing over the veteran to them they would compen- sate him to his advantage. He did so; and shortly there arrived, in re- turn, the latest Rolls saloon model, To Exchange Ambassadors Britain Has Entered Into Agreement With Russia Great Britain and Russia have agreed to an exchange of ambassa- dors, thus paving the way for full re- sumption of trade and commercial relations between the two countries. The agreement, which is subject to parliamentary approval in England, was reached in a secret meeting at Lewes, England, between Right Hon. Arthur Henderson, foreign secretary of Great Britain, and Russian am- bassador, Valerian Dovalesky, who came from his Paris post. Great Sheep From Montana During the month of August the Manitoba Livestock Credit Co. brought in 3,087 sheep from Mon- tana and haye distributed them in small lots to farmers throughout the province. These sheep are all year- ling ewes, and it is expected to make the raising of sheep general through- out the province in the interests of diversified farming. An Oil Without Alcohol._Some oils and many medicines have alcohol Qs a prominent ingredient. A judici- ous mingling of six essential oils compose Dr. Thomas’ Eclectric Oil, | No work will be done on this branch before next year. Alliance south easterly branch, 95 miles. No work will be done on this | branch before next year, | Warden (to prisoner) —“You say you want a key. What In thunder are you going to use it for?" Inmate nights days “I want to sleep home at in jail.” | | For Troubles | due to Acid | | Sick stomachs, sour stomachs 1 Indigestion usually mean excess uecw The stomach nerves aro Groene lated. Too much acid makes @ch and intestines sour. | Alkali kills acid instantly | form is Phillips’ Mill of Ma: cause one harmless | neutralizes many time, | acid. Since its invention jit has remained the ¢ | physicians everywhere, The best Tagnesia, be- teless dose 50 years ago, I was only sentenced to 30 Over-stimu- 5 the stom~ {ts volume in standard with and there is no alcohol in it that its effects are lasting. i The tulip tree of the Great Smoky Mountains has no relative in Amer- ica, and only one elsewhere in tho world—in far. Way western Chinn | Minard’s Lintment for Warts. —~— __ Surplus oil, for which there is in- sufficient Storage, can be back into the earth to rem: | for future use, pumped ain there Reduce the Acid Take a 5 Ke & spoonful im wate t Hnbappy condition wilt wren Your D five minutes, 7 RHE So Then you Know what to do, Crude methods will ney v € Prove this for you Save a great mia Be sure of Magni wil always and harmful T appeal to you. Go r own sake,” i Milk clans Slo 3.