Aluminum possesses quali- ties of lightness, cleanliness and protection against rust and dust which make it in- comparable as a container for fine tea, You will never find that flat, stale taste in Red Rose Tea, because it is put up exclusively in damp- proof aluminum packages. | ay WORLD HAPPENINGS BRIEFLY TOLD Marshal Emile Favolle, Marshal of France, and one of the great French soldiers that the war produced, died in Paris recently. According to members of the Cana-) dian Olympic team, much content was evidenced over the treatment ac- corded Canadians at Amsterdam, What is believed to constitute a record for light aeroplane clubs has been established by the Winnipeg Fly- ing Club, whose members have made| more than 4,000 flights since the club opened on May 28 of this year. | Rear-Admiral Alfred Meyer-Wal-| deck, who defended Kiao-Chaw during | the World War, is dead at the age of | 64. He was appointed governor of| Germany’s colony on the Shantung peninsula of China in 1911. | Hon. C. A. Dunning, Minister of Railways, sailed from Quebec for Geneva to attend the League of Na- tions’ Assembly. Mr. Dunning is ac-/ companied by Mrs, Dunning and his secretary, Miss Craig. | A $25,000 prize for the “best and most practicable” plan to make the! United States bone dry was offered by W. C. Durant, millionaire auto-| mobile manufacturer and stock man-) ipulator, in a cabled statement, from) Europe. Plans are being made for the erec- tion of a million dollar paper plant in Winnipeg, according to advices re- ceived by the Manitoba Industrial Development Board. The Hinde and Dauch Paper Company are said to be considering a Suitable site for the| factory. Through the signing at Paris of a multilateral treaty renouncing mili- tary force as an instrument of na- tional policy, 15 nations, representing two-thirds of the world’s fighting power, haye agreed never again to go to war. The rest of the world was invited to take the same pledge. John Nolan and Robert Copeman, in their canoe “Canadian Iriend- ship,” have left Winnipeg via the Red! River to continue their journey from Edmonton to the Rio Grande. The) canoe trip is 6,000 miles long and the youths expect to complete their trip in time to return to Canada and} spend Christmas in Edmonton. | Shaving Does Not Hurry Growth Dr. Mildred Trotter has proved to her entire satisfaction that shaving] does not intrease the rate of growth! of the beard. Precise measurements] the co-operative idea carried into the, known as the brank, was a sugar | believed to have been used b Canadian National Rathyays’ Tour To Great Britain and Denmark, 1928 | (Continued.) | Time still permitted a visit to Holy- rood prior to a reception by the Lord Provost, Sir Alesander Stevenson, at| the City Chambers. Holyrood, built} in the French style, is@stiil used by} the Royal Family, It has been tho} scene of many stirring events. Crom-| Well stationed some of his troops! there before the Battle of Dunbar, in! 1650, but its chief interest to us, as to most people, was its association ry Queen of Scots, In Mary's Audience Chamber we saw the little oratory where she used to pray. The} bed, chairs and furniture are those| Charles} I. The walls of Queen Mar: room are hung with tapestry hangings of the bed are of crimson damask with green silk fringes and| tassels, but that this was the bed) used by Mary is doubted. The most} interesting of Queen Mary's apart- ments is, of course, the little Supper Room, where Rizzio, her private Set upon by conspira- ed him through the Audienc> Chamber to the head of the principal staircase, There they left his body bearing fifty- ix wounds, The Picture Gallery in the Palace of Holyrood contains the portraits of kings “who,” says Scott, “if they ever flourished at all, lived before the invention of painting in oil colours. During a visit to the Quadrangle our patty-was*photographed as a whole, the first and only time that this had proved possible, The reception at the City Cham- bers was necessarily short for we were due to reach Glasguw by six War, some 11000 British ex-service men paid their tribute to their fallen clock the same evening, but wejcomrades in a great memorial pilgrimage to the battlefields of France and | shall never forget the cordiality of} the we'come we received, or the hap- yy fashion in which the dignity of | the Prince of Wales. Above, his royal highness is seen at Bethune, walking with with the mayor. a cultured city was blended warmhearted _brotheriiness. The} Lord Provost and the City Council- lors in their red robes of office, the lofty rooms and the wonderful pic- | tures dep‘cting the history of the City added to the impressiveness of a hap- py occasion. Owing to the absence of the Lord Provost in London where he was receiving his knighthood on the following morning we were received by Bailie and Mrs. Hay. Our earliest scheduled appointment was kept on our first morning in Glasgow when we brenkfasted with the officers of the United Co-Opera- tive Baking Society at their plant, where the President, Mr. Alexander uichanan welcomed us, Our trip through the bakeries was full of in- Farmers’ Marketing Tour Exe | PAYS TRIBUTE TO FALLEN COMRADES As Britain observed the 14th anniversary of her entry into the great Flanders. Among the pilgrims as a soldier rejoining his old comrades was cellence,” Cawdor Cup, and Brydon| shield winner, and six times first at/ the Scottisn Stallion Show; “Craigie 4 A ‘Ambition,” first. and reserve at the, Mcoming Britishers Should Be Given Royal, High’and, and Scottish Stal-) 9 Welcome By Their Own People lion Sshow; “Craigie Exquisite.” first) yt is a i and Cawdor Cup, Scottish Stallion} tet me ee pbc Cos at hed Show; “Craigie Winalot,”” probably xecbenized ‘act, that the non-British the best colt'in the stud, and many|tesidents in Canaila are much more others were seen, including several! prone to assist their fellow-nationals from Mr. Kilpatrick’s great breeding | from Europe than the British peopl sire, “Craigie McQuaid,” whose pro-| ... ¢ on Supe inane aie Mieke geny stands so high in Scottish show | © gore ea ASS tings today. | brothers from the British Isles: When But a few hundred yards from the| complaints are made that mid-Euro- Ki!patrick home, where we were most! peans seem to find a heartier welcome "Show a Welcome oer re eae Crop ZIG-ZAG ie Cigarette Papers Large Double Book “5 120 Leaves Fifty Million Dollars More Required, This Year 8, H. Logan, general manager of! the Canadian Bank of Commerce, | stated at Toronto, that the prépara-| tions of the banks for financing the! western crop this year have been on a| $1.15 per pound — up, larger scale than ever before, in or- Mulls pape TGOuilia: wat. 2 der to provide for bringing the crop to market at the proper time and to! ensure that the farmers are paid promptly, “Tf the presnt promise of 500,000,-| Sugsest 000 bushels of wheat is fulfilled, the banks will be called upon to finance} After wrestling for a generation to an extent of between forty and| with American boys to whom the fifty million dollars more than last| french language was about as vital season,”” Mr. Logan said. as Sanskrit, Mr, Horace D, Taft, prin- Mr. Logan said several hundred| cipal of the famous private school at million of dollars are required to| Watertown, N.Y., has put into effect finance Canada’s enormous wheat|@ new {dea that promises to change crop. The banks in Canada finance| the whole situation. in one form or another a season's, ® sudden realization of the fact that crop in the aggregate, including the) just north of him is a French-spealk- turnover of all such loans, to an ex-| ing and French-living Canadian pro- ten of several hundred million; of| Vince. Mr. Taft thereupon wrote to dollars, of which probably. a hun-|the superintendent of public instruc- dred million is loaned in the first in-| lon in Quebec and asked if come of stance direct to the western farmer| his boys could be placed for the sum- for the payment of hired help labor | mer in all French familles. And now throughout the season, hail insurance | the boys are in Quebec Jearning premiums, the purchase of seed, agri-| French. cultural implements and binder twine,| Of course, the parents of these and for genéral harvest and thresh-| boys had the money to pay for the ing expenses. _ experiment, and finding the money 1s The movement of the wheat crop,| ®:ways the rub. But would it be estimated this year at about half a|out of the question for the provin- billion bushels, invoives one of the) cial government to offer a half-doz- world’s greatest and most important|en Quebec scholafships each summer marketing systems. Between’ aow/|to Alberta high school boys and girls and the end of the year, sixty to sev-| who had demonstrated their worth in. enty-five per cent. of the total erop| class? French is an important curri- will be delivered by the farmers to] culum subject, a great living lan- more than 4,000 country elevators,| suage, and by law on a parity with and at 2,000 loading platforms, and] English in federal matters. What is will moye to the head of the lakes,| the department of education doing to theré to be sold immediately for ex-| make it vital to English-speaking port or to be placed in terminal ele-| Scholars in Alberta? — Edmonton vators that -comprise the largest) Journal. storage capacity at any one point on the globe. As many as 3,000 cars,per day will be inspected by government officials at Winnipeg. | Finest You Can AVOID IMITA’ Buy! TONS RUG YARN Twenty-one. Yarn Making Frenth Real Quebec Scholarships High School Boys For Winnipeg Newspaper Union Scientific Stations In Arctic Wonld Make Exploration Practically Safe Say Soviet Scientists hospitably entertained, are the ruins (tenes hice of an anvient castle, the stronghold Ucte than Britishers, the fact is over- terest. In one department we saw the! ¢ an uncle of the great William Wal-| !0oked that the welcome extended to baking of one day’s supp'y of the 400,- 000 loaves that are baked weekly. In another, wonderful machines, tended by neatly uniformed! . obyiously happy in work, were turning out biscuits at an extraordinary rate. Over 40,000 tins of biscuits are baked tn one week, 32000 packets of oatcales, and 6.500 trays and boards of pastries anil shortbreads. Over 100 vans are in daily use. The Society is truly co-| operative, the very bakeries having | been built by the Soctety’s own main- tenance staff. The United Co-oper- ative Baking Society serves 228 co-) operative societies and its annual out-| practic put js worth over $6090,000. The baking plant is the largest in Europe! if not in the world. We next visited the Sbieldhall| works of the Scottish Co-operative Wholesale Society, which represents Jace. Close by a monument marks | Europeans is generally looked after i ape calted Burnes) ee which by their cwn people already resident radition says Wallace looke Ac] : f + to watch the burning or theybarns in “cre: ‘The realdent’ Britishers, on thefr| nich he had barred English soldiers the othr hand, pay no attention to the after a number of his followers had incoming Britishers. A real effort to been treacherocusly slaughterea.| overcome this defect, if {t is a defect, Standing at this spot Wallace said “The barns of Ayr burn weel.”{"— ; Hence the persistence of tne name,| ¥0rld to the immigration problem. Burnweel. Western Produce. (To Be Continued.) eect In the Interests Of Peace In the interests of world peace, Minister of War Painleve, of France, TET MEAD 18 Our! announced that he would ask. the Ancestors For Bad Cases | cabinet to change the title of his de- Our ancestors were severe on the] partment to the woman scold, and the penalties! Army.” Painleve's original plan was meted out to her were drastic, One| to propose the establishment of a | “Minister of National Defence," but might make all the difference in the Curing a Scold of beard shavings supplied by four| realm of industry and its application loaf shaped fixture for the head! this could not haye been accomplish- students oyer a period of nine months| to the purchase. distribution and even) constructed of iron hooping, with a/ed without the amalgamation of the were used in the test. She also found) that hair does not grow continuously, | but in short spurts, each of which is) Scottish Co-operative Wholesale So- placed on the woman's tongue. jclety came into existence in 1868) was then led about the street wear-|half hour for that steak. followed by a short rest. Rural Mail Service manufacture of goods for the benefit of a number of individuis working’ together in their mutual interest. The through the federation of retail co-| operative societies. Its initial capital) was $5,000. Its capital today is $45,- cross at the top. A fiat piece of} present war and navy departments. iron projected inwards, which was eee She Diner—Waiter, I've been waiting a ing this unique headdress. If this| Waiter—Yes, sir; I know you have. did not cure her, there was the|If everyone were as patient as you Rural mail services in Canada are| 00,000, and {ts annual sales totat| ducking stool. Fastened in this she| life would be worth living. A maximum of now been steadily increasing. 3,800 rural routes has reached, this representing an increase| furniture, boots and shoes. of about 400 compared with a year ago. The most notable development is in the Western Provinces, more demands coming from there than from other sections of the country. He took the bend like one possess- His brakes refused a sudden test— N.B.—No flowers by request | through which we passed were deyot- | $80,000.000. The Shieldhall Works ed to the manufacture of clotning, We also} being repeated “as often as the virul-| our right when you are dealing with | visited the printing establishment,| ence of the distemper required.” a man who is a hard lot. | where we saw the latest type of two-| = = | colour printing machine which prints) “7 eas TOS eases, in two colours in one operation. z Forty-eight factories are operated BRITISH VISITORS TO CANADA | | by this great Society, and it was es- — | pecially interesting to us to learn) | that it possesses 2,140 acres of farm| }lands. As is wetl known the Society} | maintains an office in Winnipeg and | elevators in Western Canada and it | was our pleasure to meet the Cana- dian Manager of the Company, Mr. John Fisher, in the Shieldhall Dining was swung over a pond and im- mersed in the water, the operation A soft answer doesn't always turn “Ministry of the, Perhaps every man has his price,| Room, where we were entertained to but in most cases it is very elastic. |a delightful luncheon under the cor- — dial presidency of Mr. R, Stewart, Tue Borpen Co. Lmarren, MontReALg | chairman of the Society. | A full day was completed by @ meeting with the representatives of the wholesale fruit, provision, grain| and flour trades in Glasgow. Once) more we were treated to the outspok-| ‘en, business-like talk which we hag} come to expect when dealing witn| leading business figures during our} tour. This particular session was) perhaps the most productive of any| that we had attended. | Our next day's programme had] been anticipated with more than or- dinary interest, for we were to visit the world’s leading Clydesdale stud,| probably the two most famous Ayr-| shire herds in existence and the} wonderful Doonholm herd of Aber-| deen-Angus catttle; and in addition, | Burns’ cottage and the Brig 0’ Doon. | First we went to Craigie Mains, Kilmarnock, where Mr. James Kil-| patrick, famed r only as great} lales but as host,| ed us the finest horses in his| stud. surely never were nobler speci-| mens of the Clydesdale breed ever} brought together. As one beautiful aniinal was succeeded-by another, we became lost in admiration for the truly aristocratic breeding and the high individual merit shown by the| |stud, Such horses ag "Craigie Ex-| Lord Lovat, under-secretary of state for the Dominions, photographed on board the “ ipress of Scotland” en route to Canada with Sir Howard D'Egville, honorary secretary of the Empire Parliamentary Association, and Col. H, W. Cole, principal of the Empire-Marketing Board. From left to right: Sir Howard D’Egville, Lord Lovat, and Col. Cole. Soviet scientists are pushing the| 2 B £ project of establishing a series of permanent scientific stations in the Arctic regions. | The scheme, as outlined in Moscow, contemplates the formation of an in- | ternational Aero-Arctic Society, fin- anced by all the nations bordering on the Arctic, to carry on this work. In a signed article published in a lo- | cal newspaper, the prominent aca- | demician, Prof. A. N. Fersman, said | that until permanent stations are es- tablished at Spitzbergen, Noya Zem- bla, Franz Josef Land and other points, Arctic exploration will in- volve tragedies such as followed Gen Umberto Nobile's efforts. Will Sim Treaty Twice | Ireland Mas Two Signatures On War | Renunciation Document | Ireland, smallest of the nations originally adhering to the war re- nunciation treaty, will have two sig-) natures on that document. President Cosgrave will sign for the Irish Free State, and Lord Cush- endun, acting head of the British Foreign Office, for Great Britain and A Smartly Simple Frock This chic little frock is suitable for play or school-time and will be found : “quite simple for the home modiste to Worthernerreland, fashion. Contrasting material may be Cushendun's signature will stand) used for the wide facing on the skirt, for all divisions of the Empire not ne srone Bie aee and Bande on. i is indivi 33 the long or short raglan sleeves. len! EMSs viene wales TS No. 1630 is in sizes 8, 10, 12 signature for Northern Ireland will be! gnq 14 years. Size 10 requires 2% in behalf of a population of one and yards 39-inch plain material, and % @ quarter million and his separate’ yard contrasting; 4 yard less for signature for the King as Emperor ebOrE sleeves. Price 25 cents the pat- of India, will be in representation of | “7 three hundred millions. | The designs illustrated in our new Fashion Book are advance styles for ~ the home dressmaker, and the wo- A Bid For Advertising man or girl who desires to wear gar- = ments dependable for taste, simplicity ‘Ten cents straight will be charg- and economy will find her desires ful- ed for all obituary notices to all busti-' filled in our patterns. Price of the ness men who do not advertise while book 10 cents the copy. living. Delinquent subscribers will be| charged fifteen cents a line for an obituary notice, Advertisers and cash subscribers will receive as good a! Address: Winnipeg Newspaper Union, 175 McDermot Ave., Winnipeg How To Order Patterns send-off as we are capable of writing, | without any charge whatsoever. Bet-| Battera Now en ter send in your advertisements and) pay up your subscriptions, as hog} cholera is aboard in the land. toona (Kan). Tribune. | seeeee - Size’......5 For Radio Proficiency ~ Certificates of proficiency in radio! Town telegraphy have been awarded by the| = department of marine and fisheries to} Not Measured By Density the following: First class—H. Dunn,| From Ottawa comes the estimate Powell River, B.C.; W. J. Cavanagh, | that the population of Canada is now Vancouver, B.C.; R. G. Doherty, Yan-) 9,658,000, or an Increase of 139,000 couver,, B.C. Amateur—D.- L.| over last year. The total Is not large Que, Alliance, Alta.; W. P. Roberts,| put then prosperity cannot be meas- Hanna, Alta.; F. J. Shaw, Vancouver; | ured by density of people. If it could, D. W. Houston, Tyvan, Sask.; J. S.|tdia and China would be the most Houston, Tyvan, Sask. | Prosperous lands of the world. Things are seldom what they seem| Our cynic says: All that stands be- when it scems as if they couldn't) tween most men and the top of the be worse. }ladder is the ladder, It began with .