a WORLD-FAMOUS FO Sold everywhere. Sample each free, Address Canadian Depot. #. T, Watt Company, Lta., Montre: your bestinsurance against skin troubles. Soap23e. Ointment 25, and Soc, Talcum 23¢, R DAILY TOILET USE WORLD HAPPENINGS BRIEFLY TOLD meeting of the reparations confer | : The “Land Of Millionaires” P More In Great Britain Than In United States accoming to the report of commis: sioners of inland revenues. ASTHMA ASTHMA. 0! bronchia nAges, reatoren Pasi gland activity to normal, qui lah- that ‘a Rey acerec nnd pa ls0 en anthmia, liny fever and bronens | | Smash, and gathers in the bunch ‘nbanceand preserve Int troubles FO) ‘oar out 1 the two colliding of the skin and hair. this advertisement, send for ¥ree | | Collects around Information, enclose name and address to RMB. LABORATORIE: CANADA, LTD. aor 635 Vancouver Block, , Vancouver, B. C. Canadian Legion Dominion Convention To Be Held In Regina In November Of This Year Great Britain, rather than the way. United States, may best qualify for The Dominion Convention of the| "M4 not to blame In aie spate . S, may ig that bo! ; Se ge emo Pucmued recently noseinevah “Gand, of Aillionaires, Canadian: Legion BIS8.1., will be] The truth usually bjame _ ih Paris, where he was attending the z held in Regina on November 25th] Patties were somewhat to bjame, 1929, — Most Drivers Usually Maintain They Were In the Right Human nature at {ts most a aah one happens to witness such & cars, he will probably hear some loud and frrational arguing. ‘The two drivers, if the collision was serlous, are suffering from nervous shock, and will say things they would not say under ordinary conditions. Some people have the manliness to admit they were wrong, but the or- dinary thing is for each driver to maintain that he was wholly right though one of them may have been —— — 4 PO BE PRESENTED AT COURT ~ Soa | cartak 3 Blame For Accidents | a Sn host th Relieved, wi Cuticura Soap fos {ens ig USED YEARLY. a ah THE everyeday use of Cuticura Soa) manifes JAR: n HAY FEVER. BR THs s TLUON assisted ‘Occasional applications \ fe eR lil bs sonable point, is apt to sit ion, 1f| Bs 21M —— Cuticura Ointment, when required, is medicine, softens and moothes the | {ed after an automobile collision. a “ illi {pally at fault. These things ence, aoe halt a million dollars tol” qhere are, the report itvealed: be- To those ex-service men who are Bene pally ST TeRIGTLAEd(b ia galnicet ‘ pene Seyatda Hospital fund sto) | ree 500 and 600 “milllonatres | in Pa een e tee Cea ep oe Ra pCO ee et naeean the. responsl- London. G B iS present is an opportune time to be- impossible to assess a Sreat Britain. These men are mt! bility with strict accuracy. But it The estimates tabled In the New-|jonaires in the terms of pounds come identified with the organiza-| "1 Y : yo drivers had _ foundland legislature provide for 4 either one of the two - near a convent at Sault au Recollet. total expenditure for 1929-30 of $10,- 547,706 as against $10,438,139 for Sterling which means they are worth five times as much as the millionaire tion that has done much to promote the welfare of returned men, thelr been following a policy of special caution, nothing would probably have . is widows and dependents. who reckons his wealth in dollars, ‘pendents. den Co., Limited, Dept. L rite The Bor 1928-29. The total funded debt of] xrntionalres, from British tax ofl The work of the Legion is not|»appened Bao, 140 St. Paul Se Met ee eres oe a Ue > cials’ point of view, are persons whd@! anata ole sa go by, a Newsilvern Process = = = e British sloop “Cyclamen” has/ nave an income of more than 50,000 is growing. ¢ membership | Ne’ SLs s left Irak to protect British subjects] pounds ($250,000) a year, Assuming likewise is increasing and particular- For Purifying Water Assisting the Indians in Abadau, Persia, where mobs had' that the average yield of capital is ly so in Saskatchewan since the Pro- SRE got beyond control of police. Persian troops have been called to restore order. Profound secrecy surrounds the building programme of the French Air Ministry. Everything around the Ministry building is in a turmofl and Aviation factories are working day and night to carry out the pro- gramme. A country-wide search for Miss Barbara Pitcher, missing McGill to an end with the finding of the five per cent., each of these would be worth at least $5,000,000, The report showed that there were 299 persons with incomes between $250,000 and $375,000. There also were 97 persons with incomes be- tween $375,000 and $500,000, and 147 with incomes exceeding $500,000 a year. There were only 19 millionaires in Great Britain in 1906. The number increased steadily after that year Canadian ladies to be presented at his majesty’s court at Buckingham Palace, London, England, include: (1) Mile. Simone David, Quebec; (2) Miss Elizabeth Baird, Winnipeg; (3) Miss Elizabeth Campbell, Winnipeg; (4) Mrs. Robert Dennistoun, Winnipeg. The report showed a reduction in vincial Convention, but in the prov- ince there are still a number of men who are eligible to join, and who have not as yet identified themselves with the organization, possibly due to lack of opportunity to do so. With the increase of branches throughout the province, there is now local representation in practic- ally every district, and the provin- cial secretary, Canadian Legion, Re- gina, will be pleased to ddvise any- German Scientist Discovers Cheap Method Of Killing Germs Sterilizing water for drinking pur- poses will be an easy matter if the method discovered by a Munich en- gineer, Dr. George Krause, proves feasible. All that is needed to destroy the myriads of germs contained in 10,- 000,000 quarts of water is one and a half grains of silver prepared by the Krause method. witz, who has made a thorough test Canada Has Made Them Self-Sup- porting and Independent For those who may be unaware of the success which is attending the efforts of the Federal Government, through its Department of Indian Affairs, to carry the Indians of the western provinces to 4 position of self-support and independence, it is of interest to learn, from a recently presented report, that the Indians In Manitoba, Saskatchewan and Al- University student who disappearea| until there were 562 in 1927, after So ee i one, on request, of the nearest local} 4 professor of hygiene at Greifs-|) 4. now have under cultivation in Montreal, March 21, was brought) the post-war trade boom. 5 P Search For the Brightest Boy | branch. wald University, Dr. Rudolf Degk-| 0° 099 acres of land, having in- Winnipeg Newspaper Union a Unity among returned men was young woman's body in Back River, To provide an outlet for surplus Stocks of potatoes, the New Bruns- wick Department of Agriculture Is national income, which was esti- mated (gross) at $14,520,000 — the lowest since 1921. The net produce Was $1,140,000,000, an average ot 28.58d. on each pound of actual in- Thos. Edison To Grant S i When the C; Le- To Candidate Passing Test Thomas A. Edison, grown grey in achievement and fame, has started }out to find a boy to whom he may gion came into being some years ago. All that remains is to complete the of the process, confirms the efficiency of the invention. Within less than an hour he suc- membership and make the | tion even more representative than ceeded in sterilizing a cubic centimeter of water which con- creased their total during the past summer by breaking 6,000 acres or new land and summer-fallowing 33,- 000 acres. The major part of this large acreage is sown to grain. Gar- dening is being more generally prac- — : 3 ass on some day the torch of his| it is today. ini : pe encouraging the erection and opera-| Come, the lowest for the last ten Pi y tained a million germs. ny of the reserves boast tion as ae plants in the Rotits years. genius. He started a search for the} On its record of achievement] ye new method is said to have ee aie of vegetables. ___ raising sections as a means of tak- ——_— brightest boy in the United States. ee Ben Legion deserves ue {uibs| several improvements. It works inde-|"“o cattie herds of the prairie ing care of the small and otherwise| Australia Is Severe When he finds (him, Re) 13 ong ta ee ee ieee den rca oa) pendently of temperature, it can bel a1.n5 are among the best im West- unmarketable potatoes from the crop of succeeding years. The Nationalist government state council announced that henceforth decapitation as a method of execu- tion in China would be prohibited. D had been by previous regimes but it was still used by the police and military authorities for executing bandits and robbers. Its complete abolition has now been ordered. A Universal Clock German Inyention Would Have One Time Piece For World A German inventor has proposed that one special clock be prepared and erected to keep time for the world. From some central observa- tory its ticks would be broadcast by wireless to the whole civilized world, giving a single actual time. Clocks throughout the world would be brought to agreement as close as one-hundred-thousandth of a second, and the inventor's plans include the use of television devices to syn- On Drunken Drivers Makes Penalties So Strict Motorist Fears To Incur Them How drunken drivers are handled in a country where liquor may be ob- tained by any one at any time is told by Charles W. Lloyd, of Ade-. laide, Australia, who is in North America studying highway and traf- fic conditions. He stated that al- though Australia has no prohibition statute, it has avoided the drunken driver problem by making penalties so strict that motorists fear to incur them. A motorist is liable to be hanged if he kills a person while under the influence of liquor, Lloyd said. Or if the driver is convicted only ot manslaughter, in such cases he Is subject to 8 to 10 years’ imprison- ment. Knocking another person uncon- scious in traffic accidents is punish- able by two to four years’ imprison- ment if the driver is intoxicatea, while the lowest penalty for drun’--~ driving is a fine of $125, six mon— —> RASS pect eies cata send him to college first of all. A scholarship, taking care of all tuition fees for four years at what- ever technical school the winner wishes to enter, will be awarded the high school or preparatory school boy who most intelligently answers @ questionnaire to be made up by Mr. Edison. The winner will be one of 49 to be picked, one from each state and one from the District of Columbia. Mr. Edison will pay the expenses of all 49 boys from their homes to his laboratory at Orange, N.J., about August 1. There he will put to them his questionnaire. Plans Trip To Peace River Premier Brownlee Will Inyestiqute General Conditions In North "Country {Premier Brownlee, of Alberta, is planning a visit to the Peace River country during the coming summer. He expects to make the trip toward last of August and hopes to be -ompanied by President Wallace, | hoped that the next few months will See every eligible man in Saskatch- ‘ewan enrolled. The dues are nominal, but the presence of every returned man in the ranks of the Legion will be of the utmost value in*furthering the aims and objects of the organiza- applied to any quantity of water and needs so supervising. Recipes For This Week (By Betty Barclay) tion, and in promoting that | ship which is one of its biggest as- sets. Bay Route Cannot Operate This Year Impossible To Have Things In Readi- ness Early Enough While the Hudson Bay Railway may be ready for traffic early thi autumn, it is altogether unlikely that e~cur developments at Churchill or the aids of navigation which must be installed in Hudson Straits will be sufficiently advanced to permit of commercial navigation of the new northern route. C In order to open the route this year it would be necessary to have everything in readiness by October, as the season of navigation cannot FRUIT OMELET egg. Few gratings orange rind. teaspoon orange juice, Few grains salt. orange. teaspoons butter. teaspoons powdered sugar. Beat the egg slightiy-adding the lorange-Tind and julce and salt. Peel the orange, removing all white mem- brane, and cut into yery thin slices. Sprinkle with one teaspoon of the powdered sugar. Melt the butter in hot individual omelet pan or frying pan. Pour in the egg mixture and cook over a low heat, shaking the pan and pricking the mixture with a fork until all the mixture {s cook- ed. Roll or fold and turn out on to serving dish. Sprinkle with remain- mee ern Canada, due to the fact that un- usual care has been taken by offi- | cers of the department in the selec- |tion of the sires, which in most cases are paid for from the Indians’ own money. The herds now num- ber 22,500 head, which includes an increase this year of approximately 5,000 calves. During 1928 the In- dians sold beef cattle to the value of approximately $184,000, and in ad- dition they provided beef for their own requirements valued at $40,000. It has only been in recent years that the Indians haye shown a live- ly interest in their cattle, but suc- cesses in open competitions and the good returns from their herds have resulted in increasing the attention given to this phase of agriculture. In Northern Alberta and in Saskatch- ewan and Manitoba the cattle are stabled or put in shed shelters and fed hay during the winter months, which means that a large quantity of hay and green feed must be cut each summer. During the past year 70,000 tons of feed were cut and stacked for use during the winter i meathe University. If the Premier's , ‘! it Decem-| ing sugar and surround with slice: chronized the eafth’s clocks with the imprisonment, and loss of license; “=sent plans work out ,the route for a Test eee possible, roe. 1 season. SERS See So A trip will be down Peace River to| put tho route probably will be in full — Good, heavy horses are rapidly eee clocka from Its own Ar TELS eT @milion, and then to Fitzgerald,! operation in the summer of 1930. A BALANCED MEAT pisn__ | TePlacing the pony type among the at astronomical observatory by wire-!| Nearly every magazine arti t Smith, Chippewyan and Me- i Shrettcneipounavorlamh tection Indians of the West. Nearly all of less and telegraph, and it is pointed| nearly every sermon, nearly e rray. The purpose will be to look] An English physician claims that| por and brown in its own fat in a| 2° f@rming Indians own fine work out that between clocks of foreign) tecture, nearly every speech, is the conditions and possibilities] crying is good for one's complexion] frying pan. Add one cup of chopped| 208° Of- Which there are about countries there is often a discrepancy| jong. The ordinary listener if ja colonization way in the Peace| provided, of course that one's com-| celery and celery tops, one tente.| $000 on the different prairie re- a of a \fith of a second. church, or lecture hall, or at a puj er district in particular, and into| plexion is one's complexion. ~ spoon minced onion and one table-| eS" There are about 15,000 of Z = dinner cannot escape. But the rq general conditions and problems ae icon) ealé