steps * ¢ M 4 Spri y _ Use Cuticura Soap, Ointment and (- [Palen for daily toilet purposes. ABBOTSFORD, SUMAS AND MATSQUI NEWS | Business Men Meet Farmers Plan In Munitoba To Establish Close: ? | Relationships * | Representatives of the United | Farmers of Manitoba and members of j the Greater Winnipeg Board of Trade TEA’: good tee ) tablish closer relations between busi- jhess men and farmers of Manitoba in Red Rose Orange Pekoe —Top Quality | solving special problems of agricul- | ture. | Under a plan discussed, representa- jase of business and of agriculture jmight get together as occasion might jrequuire to deal with specific problems affecting the farming districts. The conference followed the sug- gestion of Premier John Bracken, of Manitoba, made at the 1927 annual | meeting of the Canadian Chambers of |Commerce, that a closer relationship Hvery country in the world is still staggering under the enormous bur- | pe established between- commercial den of the war” debts which each and everyone is carrying. Even countries | ang agricultural interests of the Do- that were not actually engaged in the Great War were none the less put to ahaa he&vy 2xperse anc sustained huge losses as a result of that titanic struggle. | I aN an The people of Canada know what it is costing them. They have been called | 7 upon to pay income taxs, excess profits and business eee taxes, sale tax, | A REMEDY THAT Stainp taxes on cheques, receipts, matches, increased postage rates, etc., ete. | Aside altogetaer from loss of life, and in maimed and suffering humanity, the | INSPIRES FAITH huge monetary loss of war is every day being brought home to the peoples | of the world. People Who Have Used Dr. Wil- Only recently announcement was made that fourteen shillings of every | liams’ Pink Pills Speak Of twenty paid to the British income tax collector goes to pay for past wars and | Them With Praise preparations for future wars. And now the Secretary of the United States | “Going into a decline” is an expres- Treasury explains in his annual report how approximately eighty-two cents sion tlfat has come to be known as ef every dollar pa‘d into the Treasury is expended for past, present, or future| One of the most difficult conditions military purposes, Jeaving slightly less than eighteen cents for financing the | a ne physicians have to, deal. ordinary civil functions of government. | ton Dataunerte. Gen hearer] Hae In other words, as one paper puts it, while eighty-two cents of every | dinary treatment and the debility dollar collected {rom the tax payer is devoted 10 war Purposes, only eighteen continues with loss of flesh and cclits is spent by the Government for the purposes of peace, agricultural Ieeaal ioe uve the patient feels hopes research, erection of public buildings, scientific investigation, the maintens} pic Sintiancdnereems eae a ance of diplomats abroad, the making and enforcing of laws, and all the|red blood, and if the blood can be re- multitidinous forms of ordinary civil functions added together.” jStored to normal no other medical These figures would seem almost incredible even for a country in war- | treatment is ISCEASany Proper food rayaged Europe, but stated Officially by a member of the United States Goy- BU aa won aa ila who ernment as applying to that country enjoying such a large measure of isola- | lacks health ‘and strength should at aon from the entanglements forced on many European nations, and itself once take Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills to practically immune from attack, the facts and the thoughts to which they peube un cheb: Ae a ee ive rise are appalling. lrich red blood, which speedily re- Faced with such a situation it is small wonder that the masses of the| stores health and strength. “T am people of the world are crying desperately for international agreements and | Writing to tell you what Dr. Williams’ tribunals outlawing all war, and that the more far-seeing statesmen in ea ep pare fone. age Utley Sith countries are anxiously striving to find some formula, some basis, of com- feu eae ae es arias run- mion agreement, |down condition, so much so that I was But human nature continues to be very much what it always has been, |subject to fainting spells which would | jleave me in such a condition that 1 and so, while the world is crying for peace, and the United States loudly | could hardly go about. Then I was | s advertises itself as the great apostle of peace, its people are nevertheless! stricken with influenza and this fur-| being incited through a flag-waving campaign, and in the name of one hun-|ther weakened me, and throughout dred per cent. Americanism, to sanction the inauguration of a ‘avorld’s | He weptee Tremaine in this penal: eatest navy” policy and the expenditure of billions of d attic. | Uo. «1 was taking: doctor's medicine, Shes and ere math Brine SARE “ ich : ates thou the, but as it did not seem to help me, my Ps, eships, which will be obsolete and placed upon the mother advised me to try Dr. Wil- scrap heap before the babies of today reach middle age, uniess. indeed. the liams’ Pink Pills, and I got a couple very existence of such a navy does not invite a struggle in which some otf boxes to start on. When these the ships will be destroyed in battle amid the flare and roar of their own | Were done “Ty scemed ito/ceel attain. ee provement and I got a further sup- S, ’ . |ply to continue the treatment. I took And while this madness continues, and debt is piled upon debt for the/in all about a dozen boxes, and by people to bear, civilizatidn is demanding better schools, better roads, better | that time I was in the best of health nousin. 01 ; eli 5 _ {and had gained in weieht. My faith a Ve Be sas the doy ba sar eee The cont Be one modern bat in Dr. Williams’ Pink Pillais now uf- leship gexo ed to agricultural research would work a reformation in food | pounded, and 1 keep a supply on hand production, and every dollar so expended would add hundreds to the wealth and take them occasionally if I am of the world, aS contrasted with every dollar expended in war preparations being for the avowed purpose of destroying both life and wealth. < =| commend! them tojothers, and cannot = = __| praise them enough for restoring my Among all classes of people, agriculturisis should be the foremost in | health.” their insistence upon peace and in setting their faces with determination| You can get these p‘lls from any) against war and preparations for war. jmedicine dealer or by mail at 50c a} box from The Dr. Williams’ Medicine | Co., Brockville, Ont. Revising Trade Agreement Commercial Aviation | Brees British At Heart * | Speaking before the Canadian club Greek Government May Ask For) Attracts Very Little Attention But Is Treaty With Canada Steadily Increasing D. Caclamanos, the Greek minister| While our attention has been cen-| Bridle, author, critic and at Londen, called on Hon. P. C. Lar-|tred on the more spectacular events| writer of the Toronto Star, said that| kin, Canadian high commissioner in| of aviation, with its thrilling hazards, London, recently and conferred with! casualties and triumphs, we have Mr. Larkin nearly an hour with re- | overlooked the less eventful but more gard to a trade treaty between Greece | important aspect of commercial ayia- and Canada. tion. This phase of air travel has been The Greek Government has recently | steadily progressing. The year has | coon songs, slang, comic strips, ser-/1 been revising its trade agreements,| given us day and night transconti-|vice clubs, American novels iscussion|nental mail service and the air ex-| magazines and clothes—and | and there has been some dis of a possible trade re-arrangement as|press. The regularity, smoothness | cocktails. | } tion by American idioms, skyscrapers, and popular songs, not feeling quite well. I often re-| | Britain movies, plays, orchestras, sentimental | Commissioner, asked cake wallts and|what the prospects were of a let-up | | Externally Tuat’s why modern mothers prefer Vicks—it cannot upset delicate stomachs. Rubbed on throat and chest, it acts two ways at once: (1) Its healing vapors, re- leased by the: body heat, are in- haled direct to the air passages; (2) It“drawsout’ the soreness like an old-fashioned poultice. YICKS 27VAPOR uB OVER 1# MILLION JARS USED YEARLY LINKED BY TELEPHONE Extensions Recently Made Con- nect Western Europe With America The most far reaching developments in the history of wireless telephony Were put into operation when the service to England from Canada and the United States was extended to Brussels and Antwerp as a pre- liminary to further extensions linking the whole of western Hurope with the whole of North America, Simultaneously it was a chine out of the snow and took off, tor’s Adventure In North | A Squadron Leader T. A. Lawrence Makes Report 'To Ottawa Forced down by darkness at a lonely trading post, with the tempera- ture hovering around 30 degrees he- low zero, isolated by snow storms and powerless to take wing again for more than a week, Squadron-Leader 'T. A. Lawrence, Ottawa, in charge of the R.C.A.F. detachment assigned to survey the Hudson Straits, was the principal in a thrilling adventure in the frozen North. Rumors reached the capital that the leader of the Government's survey and patrol fliers had been lost. Later offl- cials of the Department of Marine and Fisheries, who are in touch with the Hudson Straits posts by radio, report- ed Major Lawrence safe. The squadron-leader’s report reach- ed headquarters by radio from his winter headquarters at Wakeham Bay, Ungava. After being forced down January 10, the aviator reported, he was weatherbound until January 16, when a companion flier, Carr Harris, sent to search for him, arrived. High winds which accompanied the extreme cold made heating of the ‘plane’s motor impossible, and subsequently Squad- ron-Leader Lawrence was stranded back of the Hudson Bay sub-post at Little Sugluk. With the coming of milder weather January 17, the airmen dug their ma- that successful tests in television be- tween London and New York haye brought this latest scientific marvel appreciably nearer the stage where it can be operated commercially making it possible for London to see events happening in New York or vice versa. The expansion in trans-Atlantic) telephoning, however, is rnore impor-}| fant at the present time because of the trade possibilities it fosters. In this connection it is pointed out that it is now possible to conclude deals verbally between merchants, say, in Dantzig, Vienna or Budapest on one side, and merchants in Vancouver, | San Francisco, or Havana on the other, This remarkable “achievement has led to the appointment of an interna- tional advisory board to standardize | equipment, co-ordinate development j and overcome the difficulties in inter- |national wireless telephony communi- | cation. | It is predicted that in future this | form of intercourse between countries | will supplant the present telegraphic }methods now in use throughout Bu- |rope. London will thus become the |#uropean centre of telephony—a sort jof clearing house for communication | with North America. Market Coming Back Will Again Buy Canadian Bacon. Is Report finally reaching W: poor visibility. Bay despite Tn all infantile complaints that are the result of the depredations of worms in the stomach and intestines, Miller's Worm Powders will be founa an effective remedy. They attack the cause of these troubles, and by expel- ling the worms from the organs insure an orderly working of the system, without which the child cannot main- tain its strength or thrive. These pow- ders mean health and Improvement. Has New Method Different System Of Rejuvenation Evolved By Austrian Surgeon Dr. Karl Doppler, of Vienna, as- sistant to Dr. Hans Lorenz, Jr., bloodless surgeon, has announced a new method of rejuvenating the hu- man species which he has been invited to demonstrate before the American Medical Association. Dr. Doppler says he had evolved a different system from that of Voro- noff. It has to do with supplying more blood to the gland cells, thus bringing | new life and rejuvenating the entire. constitution. He adds that his method | is applicable equally to both sexes and declares that in 200 cases he had not had a single failure. Valuable Clay Property A group of clay experts have ac- quired a valuable clay property three and a half miles from Readlyn, Sask., station and have had a spur track } The market in Britain for Canadian H. S. Arkell, Dominion Livestocl the importers n the bacon supply from the Baltic and|and whether Britain would pay higher | even|for Canadian bacon than for the Bal- tic product. by| Liverpool produce importers to the} Canada's “great heart is absolutely|party of Canadian farmers visiting |41¢ world is in Wieliczka, Poland. | British,” notwithstanding the penetra- bee at a conference here. between Great Eritain and Greece.|and freedom from accident attending |- From these discussions it is possible | these services constitute a record in that a convention between Canada|many respects more remarkable than and Greece will arise. At the present time Canada has no trade treaty with Greece. The history of the banjo shows that the first specimens had but one string. Whet is needed is a saxophone with only one hole. COD AT. STO SLEEP Rash on Anns, Neck and Face. Cuticura Heals. “I was troubled with an itching rash which broke out in blotches on my arms, neck and face, It itched and burned causing me to scratch, and gctatchine caused eruptions. My face was disfigured and I had to bandage my atms. Icould notrest or sicep on account of the irritation. “A friend advised Cuticura Soap and Ointment so I vent for a free sample. I got relief at once so pur- chased more, and after using one fect | cake of Soap and part of a box of = LOisement I was healed.’ (Signed) 5 Wava C. Carter, Junction Rd., chill, N. S., Aug. 30, 1926, 2” | ascple Each Free by Mall Address Canadian “|Depet: “Bienboass, Lid, Montreal” Price, Soap Ye. Vintment 1 and We. Taleum 2c. (BSS~ Coticura Sharing Stick 25c. | everything ‘son “Daily News’ Ww. N. U. 1718 the most.sensational transcontinental | and transoceanic flights. But they | are taken, largely, for granted, be- cause they lack the dramatic appeal of stunt flying. Statistics now avail- able show that 400,000 passengers were carried between January i an July 1, 1927, at an average rate of 1. | cents per mile. In about five years, it| is estimated, this rate will be reduced} 50 per cent. Air mail contractors, dur- | ing the same period, carried 320,212 pounds of mail over a distance of 1,399,720 miles with a ratio of mis- haps so small as to be negligible. Dry figures, perhaps. All figures are dry. But they indicate that the time is near at hand when air travel will be the safest-form of transportation, and, considered, one of the most economical. Wealth Of Kootenay District Kootenay’s production of wealth during 1927 is imated by the Nel- at $56,898,962. In| this tofal, metal produced by the Con- | solidated Mining and Smelting Co. of | Canada were valued at $3',047,302; | and its products are placed at 705; forest products at $5,713,- id agricultural products at $1,- pays to be upr |S” means little, but the t. The crooked | ddition ot | | makes it |two upright lines thus | very eloquent. | Se ere are ee | Minard’s Liniment for sick animals. | Complete in itself, Mother Graves’ Worm Exterminator does not require the assistance of any other medicine to make it effective. It does not fail to do its work. Nights are likely to be cold in a desert because the dry air of the des- ert lets ground heat escape much fast- er than does moist air, according to ‘Liberty. The first Dame Rumor. broadcasting station of | them all was ODR, standing for Old} The answer was that next: March | the Baltic imports would decrease and |Germany would be the big purchaser of pork from the Baltic. Britain, it was asserted, could easily afford a better price for bacon. Canadian pack- ers, the importers conceded, did a bet- ter job than any others. Canadians | were advised to remain in the bacon) miarket until the British market came | back, which would be very shortly. | The importers also said that Canadian cheese was superior to New Zealand’s product and that Canadian butter and eggs were popular with the British} ‘The Least Excitement Made Her Heart Palpitate and Flutter Mrs. Ambroso Orser, Elginburg, Ont, writes: —‘‘I suffered for some time with a bad heart which seemed to bo controlled by my nerves. ‘The least little excitement would cause it to flut- ter and palpitate, and at times I would have real bad spells. I suffered in this way for some timo when, one day, IT saw advertised, so de- cided to try them. I had only taken a few boxes when I noticed that I felt better, tinued taking them and in a short time my heart felt entirely different.” Price 50c, a box at all druggists and dealers, or mailed direct on receipt of prica by The T. Milburn Co., Limited, Tcronto, Ont. so I con- | buyer, but the lack of a continual sup- ply of a high quality was a hindrance to the trade. Raising Polo Ponies The raising of polo ponies is being taken up as a sideline on the Hidorado ranch in the Okanagan Valley. Satis- fied that the climate and range condi- itons of the area are suited to eS) breeding and raising of the type of horses required, stallions have been }imported from the Old Country. The |increasing market in the United States is the one in view. The United States produces about | one-half of the entire world supply | jot iron and stecl, | ating a corn is both risky and in- effective. It is much better to use Hol-| s Corn Remover and eradicate | them entirely. | Courtesy is a personal investment thet pays big dividends, Minard’s Liniment for asthma. | built out to the property from the| bacon is coming back and should be| main line of the Canadian Pacific! dominant quality of laughter should of New York at a luncheon, Augnistus| fairly well established by next March. } Railway. editorial| This was the information given The biggest bed of salt rock in Zam-Buk provides an ever- ready and reliable first-aid for injuries. It is also unequalled as a soothing, speedy remedy for obstinate and deep-seated skin disease, poisoned wounds, ulcers, piles, etc. Within every box of Zam-Buk are stored the most valuable healing, soothing and antiseptic properties own to Science. Its unique herbal composition and its absolute freedom from animal fats and mineral drugs make Zam-Buk the safest and best dressing for skin troubles of all kinds. Get a 50c box of this great herbal healer from your druggist or dea er to-day, or ask Zam-Buk Co, Toronto, to mail FREE TRIAL SAMPLE Nothing like amy A Wealthy District Wealth Produced In the Lethbridge Division Of the C.P.R. Estimated Over Eighty Million in 1927 The Lethbridge division of the Canadian Pacific Railway made @ notable record in 1927, wealth pro- duced aggregating $80,600,000, ac- cording to estimate. Agricultural pro- duction was worth $67,100,000; made up of: wheat, $44,000,000; other grains, $6,000,000; sheep and wool, $1,800,000; cattle and hogs, $5,750,- — 000; poultry and products, $2,250,000; dairy products, $4,000,000; potatoes and vegetables, $1,250,000, hay and feed, $2,000,000; and honey, $50,000. In addition, the production of coal-oil and gas was worth $11,500,000) sugar $500,000 and other manufactures $1,- 500,000. Mothers Value This Oil. — Mothers who know how suddenly croup may seize their children and how necessary prompt action is in applying relief, al- ways keep at hand a supply of Dr Thomas’ Eclectric Oil, because exper- jence hus taught them that this is an excellent preparation for the treat- ment of this ailment. And they are wise, for its various uses render it @ valuable medicine. 5 The less a man knows about poli- tics the more angry he gets in a poli- tical argument. think the Some people seem to be noise. There are 16 square feet of skin cn the average man. \ ‘ You doubtless depend on Aspirin to make short work of head- aches, but remember that it’s just as dependable an antidote for many other pains! Neuralgia? Many have found real relief in an Aspirin tablet. Or for toothache; an effective way to relieve it, and the one thing doctors are willing you should give a child— of any age. Whether to break up a cold, or relieve the serious pain from neuritis or deep-seated rheumatism, there’s nothing quite like Aspirin. Just make certain it’s the box and on every tablet. All Physicians prescribe Aspirin; it does NOT affect the heart genuine; it must have Bayer on druggists, with proven directions. | {Aspirin ta the trade mark | well known that Aspirin the Tablets will be ¢ fu Canada) Bayer While ts = meats Bayer manufacture, to assure the public stamped with thelr "Bayer Cross’ tradeinark,