WORLD HAPPENINGS BRIEFLY TOLD rapes eae adhe pee nae ae ae wadlo broad) nud= parades, fires, bombing, ete, Man., has been granted James Rich-|¢om internal controversy in. th Brdson & Sons, Ltd., Winnipeg. Christian Commuity of © Universal} First doctor in Canada to secure’ Brotherhood, is made in a reference membership in. the British College of) to the suBject in the annual report of Obstetricians and Gynacologists, Dr. | Co}, J, H. McMullin, commissioner of | J. Ross Vant of Edmonton has been) B.C. provincial ‘police. awarded the degree of M.C.0.G. “Since Peter Veregin left the prov-| The steady movement of settlers] ince,” the report states, "we have into northern Saskatcehwan has ab-| had no trouble of any kind with tae sorbed all the available soldier settle- | Doukhobors. It is not suggested the ment board farms in the sub-district |Doukhobor leader was in any way | north of Prince Albert. | directing the perpetration of those Sir Hubert Wilkins, Lincoln Eils-|Utrages. On the contrary, our intel worth and Bernt Balchen, United | mation indicates it is highly improba-| States flyers, left New Zealand |bel he had anything to do with thera - . Doukhobor Troubles Believes Unrest In B.C. Resulted From Internal Controversy centred around leadership and arose aboard the supply ship “Wyatt Earp” jat all; but the sudden cessation on the first stage of a new Polar creates a suspicion all Doukhobor | troubles, including nude parades, adventure in the Antarctic. d A 160-year-old string bass viol, centred around the leadership and y 5 *\arose from an internal controversy man i ice in 1773, is| lufactured in Erance. | among the directorate of the Chris- being heard in Flin Flon, Manitoba.) |) pees Tt 1s owned by John Varadi, T2-year-| Ham Community of Universal Broth- old Jugoslavian, who came to Canada extiood. three years ago. 5 . . Frank Keyser, 54, for 15 years on An Amusing Incident vA it ” list of the the “dead and missing” list o Tay Road Hlctea Pinta Setpeultalgere Great War, died of a heart attack which came after he decided to iden- tify himself to government authorit- | . fes. | during the Duke of Gloucester’s tour Meet Royal Visitor There was an amusing incident .Cigaret ‘FINE CUT , Make no mistake—“roll-your-owners”” who know a thing or two, are smoking Turret Fine Cut these days. First of all, they want the best cigarettes they can roll. Next, they want to get “more tobacco for their money'’. And lastly, they want Poker Hands to exchange for valuable free Gifts— so they smoke Turret Fine Cut because it’s the one cigarette tobacco that gives them all three advantages. Try a package of Turret Fine Cat today—you'll like its mild, cool fragrance. It pays to “Roll Your Own” with TURRET CIGARETTE TOBACCO S AW EoilisHE® PrOIK:E Ro H'AGN DSS: Imperial Tobacco Company of Canada, Limited FINE CUT pemertee at our Poker Hand Premium Stores, or by mail, 5 large booklets of “Vogue” or More °" tes for the same Money, “Chantecler” cigarette papers free in exchange for one complete set of Poker Hands. ., of the Pontypridd and Rhonda areas The assertion that Germany will ¢ tne South Wales coal-field. When | “strain all her resources to meet her ‘ag z he visited the Pontypridd Hospital ot Dr.| ia Da Hs ane Di.| the Duke chatted with all the 30 pa- Hjal eae aaa corn a American | tents. including a nine-year-old boy mejchabank, in| the/Germ® jnamed Teddy Seward. It appears economic bulletin. i with |! | Educationalists Convene | Recipes For This Week Prominent Pedagogues Of Canada (By Betty Barclay) And U.S. Meet At Detrolt | that Teddy's birthday Canadian ‘onts possessed special | that of the Prince of Wales and that keeping qualities and were therefore! jt had been the ambition of his young reserve supply depots, Captain A-|member of the Royal family. How- Duff-Cooper, financial secretary 0) ever, he was discharged cured before the war office, explained in the Bri-|the Duke's visit, but the nurses re- tish House of Commons. |admitted him, and tucked him into ‘The famous “Royal Scot,” crack) bed in order that he might see the train of Britain's London, Midlard) Duke. and Scottish Railway, came home} aboard the Canadian freighter “Bea-| yerdale.”” Behind her were about 6,- 000 miles of ocean voyaging and 14,- Winnipeg Newspaper Union purchased by the war office for the | jife to meet the Prince or some other| 91 LACE COOKIES | Some of the most promiinent’educa- y tionalists of Canada and United a cup sifted cake rash | States, in deep conference at-Detroit. teaspoons combination baking took time enouga to watch-a pair of| powosrs | their leaders toss harpoons into their CUP eRe F fone methods. u 2 egg yolks, well_ beaten. | The harpooning began with an ad- | 4 can shredded cocoanut, moist.| gress by Dr. Burgess Johnson, of 3 cups Post Toasties. | syracuse University, who told the 2 egg whites, stiffly beaten. | National Counc‘l of Teachers of Eng- 5; tablespoons: Butter: |lish he believed “figures almost in- 1 teaspoon vanilla. variably lie, and that mathematics is Sift flour once, measure, add tak | a form of sin.” 000 miles of Canadian and United) States rails. Ailments Of O'd Sol Astronomer Calls New Cycle Of Spots Solar Boils Although Old Sol is a heavenly body, nonetheless it too has its ail- ments. Solar boils. ‘That was the description given at Santa Clara, California, by Dr. Al- bert J. Newlin, director of the Ricard Memorial Observatory, Santa Clare University, in commenting on the| new cycle of spots on the sun. | Among the disturbances which will be noted by these spots, according to Dr. Newlin, are distorted radio re-) ception, possible disruption of the telephone and telegraph service, and | a general lowering of temperatures _ the world over. “oose spots have the appearance of huge volcanic cones, or boils, which belch forth gaseous currents | of tremendous heat, producing an ets fect on earth which manifests itse’t | in disrupting or disturbing magnetic | terrestrial conditions,” Dr. Newlin said. “The result is a distertion of radio waves and interruption of tele- phone and telegraph communication. “The cycle usually runs for a psr- fod of about ten or eleven years, reaching its maximum at tae fourth or fifth years, and,” Dr. Newlin add- ed, “at the cycle’s maximum, weath- | who spend their money here, MILTON NELLES, Owner. Phones: Abbotsford 598, 23¥ imcouver: Trin. 4062; Sey. 1737 ing powder, and sift again. Cream Then came Dr. Stephen Leacock, , butter thoroughly, add ~ugar grad-| famous humorist and economist of ‘ually, and cream together unt'] light | McGill University, Montreal, who as- \and fluffy. Add egg yolks and teat serted today’s college graduate has hed Add flour gradually, beating af-| been “badly damaged” by his edu- j ter each addition until smooth. Add cation. He sa‘d the trouble lies in the | vanilla, cocoanut, and Toasties. Fold) fact that “education, in nine cases |in egg whites. Drop from teaspoon out of 10, is not pursued for its own | on greased baking shect, spread thin, sake.” ;and bake in hot oven (425 degrees | Fahrenheit) 5 to 7 minutes. Makes 314 dozen cookies. Bil Instead Of Fortuns | Man Wrote About Legacy And Got BROWN BETTY | Tax Notice 3 large apples, pared and thinly; England's most d‘sappo:nted anu sliced. ‘disillusioned man is J. Moore, of 1 teaspoon cinnamon. Wandsworth. 14 cup brown sugar, firmly packed. | ide \ ur Staff is Three Local Men got about it. ed had turned a man who owned land oh PRACTICAL, NOT-TOO-EXPEN | IVE BLOUSE THAT YOU CAN | MAKE IN AN HOUR OR TWO | in its simplicity, sophisticated in ni details. It has the important high neckI}SS indies TEP 47g ool Requirements KELLY’S Up-to-the-minute blouse — mod¢ BULLDING = ix-_ there into a_millionaire. - dot} It was a pleasant thought. Novelties ||} . ! Mr. | Recently Mr. Moore read that al | building scheme in the same district’ 990 to put it back in shape. Makes Rural Survey Would Require Huge Sum To Restore London Doctor Experimenting Farm Equipment In Saskatch- ewan Extent to which the return of in- | diseases of modern times may dustrial prosperity awaits tae RSCOYANIE ' Seeks Influenza Cure . eae _ Chinese Needle Therapy Influenza, one of the most b e conquered forever it, al ery of agriculture is d from 5 sea 8 some figures given by Prof. E. ae feees by a Harley Street | 5 | Hope of the Department of Farm ‘ P Management of the Un:versity of Sas- 3 katchewan, after a study of rural e: surveys made by that department. To! wife's needle. restore to the cond‘tion of 1929 the buildings, farm machinery, hous2-' t hold equipment and clothing of the) that ‘flu can be cured within dwellers on the 136,000 farms in Sas-| minutes. F Baad - “There is really nothing in During the past four years, build-) cept as applied to "flu. katcaewan, would take a sum of at least $140,000,000, his figures show. ings have gone unpainted and un- repaired, machinery has been used shall be sui that was ready for the scrap heap, tae a normal expenditure on household fur- which I have based my exp: nishings has been cut to a fraction’ is actually of Chinese origin and the stock of clothing has been nearly five thousand years old. a greatly reduced. t now being ee roves successful. F n The only thing he is using in the! xperiments is an ordinary ho e* eee a With this nedle the doctor hop o prove to the rest of the wor! tae idea,” he told a reporter, “But in this direction I 1. ros a -“The theory of needle ; Peng “The system was recently re The farm in fessor Hope puts the wear and tear| not replaced at $50,000,000. the same state as in 1929. Before the depression the districts | | surveyed had an equipment of farm from pain Fifty-five years ago his wife's) macainery running from $2,000 to| application g her bought land just outside! §3,000 pes farm. This machinery is Melbourne, Australia, and then for-|four years older. Little has b2en replaced and repairs have been cut} to a minimum. It would cost $40,000,-| is to insert needles, pref | The internal fittings of the homes have also depreciated. At Kindersley the farmers used to spend $60 a 4 Moore posted the original sar of possession to the town clerk at Hot Drinks ur, | Melbourne and asked for an estimate ‘mts, of the value of the property. p-| Back came a letter stating that | emant that its value was still £30. Enclosed was a bill for £13 15s. The bill was land tax for 55 years at the rate of five shillings a year! nm Ss; ABBOTSFORD & | 1g; A survey made in Edinburgh, the land had not been built on, and| year inr ts and in the Tur- tleford district $48. It would need some $20,000,000 to bring the home \ furn‘shings back to par. | Carried Out Sailor’s Wish | ' Destroyer Left Halifax To Bury Man | At Sea | “H, M. C. Saguenay” stood out of Halifax Harbor reeently and headed jby Dr. P. Fer ewan were worth $236,000,000. Pro-| French paysician. It would ed successfully thousands of hitl cost that sum to put the buildings in’ to incurable cases of mi | nervous afflictions. =: a further ea have been permanently cured. of gold or s‘lver, into the that certain nerves or combinatio lengths of time. e he said, “that flu is primarily of nervous disorder. the “Already needle therapy has re “The patients have been within a few seconds aft of the needles, and a! short period of treatm all that has to be & “Briefly, ae ral eens a). “[ am working on th2 assump? on. a “If I can prove this to be so. it will not be long before nee therapy will be accepted - the world as the only effective for it. ate “All I have been able to do the present is to remove the toms of ‘flu, such as headaches, ness, neuralgia and coughs. tT “Having got so far, I don’ will be long before this myster: disease is completely conquered.” rj 3 Sa Se er conditions are generally cooler,| and higa shoulders. It is fit warming up again as the cycle runs through the waist and hipline. Yor a toward its minimum.” like the decorative button trim tl pieting crime and high living. | Im responding to the seaman's dy- ling request, the destroyer's officers it Scotland, revealed that children were for the open sea to give John Pul- b- not interested in motion pictures de- ley a sailor's burial. \ FA not always Ly | kado—represents what claims tto be 7 i | ‘i i | i the oldest of reigning dynasties, Jap-| ae Shearer Haar aaRe eye tional harmony is a little more prac- ids were exhibited at the Chicago been residing in Ottawa. Death had| One of the most interesting erpl : anese historians declare that after| inches bust. Sen | tice in playing second fiddle. World's Fair. | been induced by the shock of seeing ations of the new recognition of t ——— jac jon killed last March, The| Soviet by President Roosevelt n = gives emphasis to its perfect shed, ‘A bird sanctuary for flamingces in| broke a tradition of long stand ng, es od Japs Venerate Emperor pe attained nor is it always worth the| northern Cuba has been established It was the first time in Canada’s Bis: Some Soviet Debts The Emperor of Japan—his own | people never refer to him as the Mi-) endless ages in higher spheres their| Royal family began its earthly his-| tory in 660 B.C. Certainly it has held supreme power in Japan since the dawn of history there, It is no wonder that the Emperors have long been—and still are—regarded with religious veneration by their sub- Price of pattern 20 cents in stamps 2 " jects. or coin (coin is preferred). Wrap coin there are 40 camps laid out for the Britain. Of course, there - CAreCUN ik Nhe see te unemployed single men in Ontario, Ferenk debts con ae Insulin Is A Chemical afd by mid-winter these . willl belts comments J iaaaae Insulin {s a definite chemical entity Coral-pink crepe satin made the original model so alluringly lovely. Make it for a nominal cost. It’s simplicity itself to put it together, Size 36 requires 2 yards of 39-inch material, ‘Toe small views show the corded tied neckline, which is self-fabric, made with soft padding. It is a new craft touch so entirely irresistible that Paris is using on the smartest blouses. The pattern envelope ¢x- plains how easy it is to do it. How To Orcer Paltzrns attainment. | scientists of the Connaught laborator- | , aaress: Winnipeg Newspaper Union, | jes stated in connection with the ap-) 175 McDermot Ave, Winnipeg | peal being made in Britain for an} increase in traiff protection. Toronto| pattern NO....+++++++ SUB. -+--+e sme | scientists supported the view of Prof. Robert Robinson. If the Brit’sh Board of Trade finds that insulin is a chemica) substance the tariff will be jumped from 10 to 23% per cent. Timid Wife (to husband who has fallen asicep at the wheel)—"l don't mean to dictate to you, George, but fan't that billboard coming at us awfully fast?” w. wn Name ---eeceee eee reeeee TOWD cecccnencerecrseeesesoee meee — “Do you think it would be rigat to say that the Venus de Milo was a girl who got the breaks?” “Why not, old fellow? It's an arm- | (lesa ioke, | by presidential decree. The only thing needed for interna-} Twenty commercial species of orch- | tory a naval craft left port to bury |@ man at sea. _ Pulley, a native of Russia Has Repudiated “More Tha: if Montreal had Any Other Nation — pe | be on the debt problem. These det The ‘‘Dream Car”’ of the Future The i!fustration above portrays the Aero-Dynamic Research Institute's Idea af what our automobile will eventually look like, It does not represent = model for production by any ufacturer, but created unusual comment at the Detroit Exposition of Prow this week. a Royal Canadian Mount- {ed Police officer, was struck down | by an automobile as he and Pulley were crossing a street. are not so often mentioned in 1 U.S. press as those owed by Fre or Britain. Meantime Russia hes pudiated more debts than any t | nation. They owed $18,750,000,00( France, and $3,013,732,020 to G Camps For Unemployed Eust and west of the lakehead z ; Z Goering said that “more Gerr taffed by 4,000 me Each 4 re paca a men. Each rece.ves| erg could live if Russia pal in cash $10 a month, bes fe 5 in cash $10 a month, besides bunk ia That the soviet governm room, board and some clothing, al- ‘ : s. { iy though the greater number will pur- oes fee pars ae a oe annie . ee ere,too, i chase clothes from the government United States to the amount of stores in the camp. Illiterates In U.S, | Col. L. MeH. Howe, secretary to President Roosevelt, says there are 4,000,000 adults in United States who can neitaer read nor write, and §- 000,000 more whose knowledge is so limited that they can be classed as illiterates. That makes 12,000,000 in that class, which {is more than the ‘Secretary for Air, to speed u 000,000. Is Washington recognition of this trifle at & Brandon Sun. at | ‘The London Chamber of Comm has asked Lord Londonderry, bs Imperial Air Mail Service, ig An American firm wil construst entire population of Canada. bridge, 1,800 feet long, over om River in China. ba