i eS ay = ' ase ABBOTSFOR AND Arameatiencs ABBOTSPORD, SUMAS AND. MATSQCI_NEWS meager if Reon { 4 People who prize the hner things of-life usually ‘Gemiand Red Rose Orange Pekoe Tea. A money-back _ Sutarantee with every package. 76 -REDROSE : = ‘ 660 9 TEA ,000 1d _ RED ROSE ORANGE PEKOE isextra good In the best package—Clean, bright aluminum WORLD HAPPENINGS Tribunal Should Be Valuable 1 BRIEFLY TOLD Canada pe Lord any . The Privy Council as a tribunal ‘The National Research Council has! Of the best legal talents in the Em- been asked to appoint an associate pire, with its members drawn from committee on weed control research.| different parts of the Empire, re- The Earl of Harewood, father-in-| Mote from local influence, was pic- law of Princess Mary, dled at his an-| ured to the Canadian Club at Van- Defends Privy ancl . — E ——— aa ‘Canada H | Draws Smallest Pension S CANADA Preparing For Next Census Trade With Japan | Dominion plrade | ere: Over Four and! Exports Incre ased | Million For e TRAVELLING ACROS Native Of Onslow, England, Receives Six Cents a Week 6 ii Hall Questions Being Considered First 5 x » Inder Way Year | A native of Surrey claims the dis- | Plans Are U vat bo asked , ts to Japan in tho| tinction of drawing the emallest pen- The questions which W xt}, Canada's, exports tO Dg edd lene people of Canada at the NeX')- irae of the year 10!) 2 sion in the world—G cents a week, "porte cord increase, ACcore He is Charles Pearce, of the village | now under con- | t of the Depart-| aneral census are L Sethe Bureau $4,300,000, a re | sideration by the Dominion to a trade repor of Onslow, England, a white-haired, is to| ing : is 7 . is te 1 ceived at white-moustached old figure, and of Statistics, The present ie ne 1,;ment of Finance, Tokio, recelved Ht) every Saturday he may be seen wait- take the census beginning on a to| the Japanese Consulate ee “4 mal ing in the queue at the Southern 1931, and all the questionnaires ase was from $18,00( at ov- | cre’ - the g! first six a ae ernor-in- counc frat 00 in the corres! mense amount of printing and or- br ates ganization required, the initial plans) Japan's exportéto lare well under way. | sae mgt The question of whether should be classed Canadians | according to. the nations from which si a al their ancestors came, will not | pes tase later, I qualified for the old-age pen- pigve'ad feuBlasinel in. thi ol jee Leet ae coe teats Fenian MeEeeRURERE the census as it frequently has wi alae rapid development of the silk automatically reduced by $2.50, but) Malcolm MacDonald, son of Bri-| other Dominion and provincial aaa Ri (ernie country/t (Ue Was I continue to draw my 6 cents 4/tain's prime minister, Who Is travel-| ernment surveys. The name of every Re eon | wweek, though it costs me 4 cents to) jing across Canada en route to at-)man, woman, boy and girl in Can-) Sed ceiver vatus ot $19 250,000| 5 of Jast year to $22, » used must be adopted by err ine nding period | Railway pay 5 Suildford, to allway pay office, in Guildford fe viewice the ime | receive his weekly six cents. “It is true,” explains the old man “that I draw a pension of 6 cents a week, but it is not really as funny as it sounds, I worked for 40 years on the South-Western Railway, ang when I retired, I became entitled t a pension of $2.56 a week. Two years TTT SEER Canada in the} $548,000 to people | same $5 6,720,000. ole ‘phe decrease in the amount a fabrics, and the in- silk imported by Can- | and reflects) e case 0! go and collect It.” |tend the conference on Pacific rela-|ada will. be taken down. They will) nemerted to Japan against $9, He explained why he took the/tions at Kyoto, Japan, in Octobe. | likely be listed as Canadians, British | was Ca corresponding, period trouble to do so. SSE Rae oe El eifecta) those who, itej nok CAs 120,0 a rae 7 yill| last year. I remain on the books of the Canada’s Road Mileage |dians, and allies. Canadians wl |sut umber fell off 2 little. Pulp for| ida, railway company only so long as Tj 2 include all those born in Cana: Papermate showed a’ slight de- cestral estate, October 6. He was 83 COUver, in an address by Lord eure cra, : British Lord Chancellor in Admiral Sir Richard Phillimore, the late Baldwin government, and head of the British Government to first and principal naval aide de camp the Institute of Pacific Relati forte Gjesty, has been placed on e Institute o} acific Relations : " Conference, at Kyoto, Japan. the retired list. Vice-Admiral Sir H.| . W. Ri Suites ted ‘The right of appeal to the Privy jue Promoted admiral. | Council,” Lord _ Hailsham said, _ Lady Schultz, wife of the late Sir| “arises historically by virtue of tho ao Christian Schultz, former Lieu-| fact that any subject may petition b of and His Majesty when -he believes a Senator, died October 7, at Winni-/ wrong has been done. When an ap- peg. peal comes from any Dominion R. B. Morley, general manager of! overseas, it is referred to a commit- the Industrial Accident Prevention; tee of the Privy Council, in order Association, Toronto, was elected that it may advise His Majesty Canadian representative on the ex-| whether a grievance exists. ecutive committee of the National] ‘That tribunal,” the speaker said, Safety Council at Chicago. - “ds not merely one of English judges. ‘Canada and the other British;I have run into cases before the Dominions will be represented at the| council where there was not an five-p naval di: English judge sitting. Commonly ment conference in London, England,|jJudges from England, Scotland, next January, according to present|South Africa and Australia sit on plans. - the tribunal and every summer 4 ‘A crowd of several thousand per-}™ember of your own Canadian sons, at Ottawa, saw Baker Diehl, Supreme Court, Mr. Justice Duff, or 22-year-old parachute jumper, plunge sometimes the Chief Justice, sits on 2,800 feet and fall within 100 feet| ‘he council. of them when his parachute failed to “The Privy Council is ‘a tribunal open. a ne beat legal talent in the Em- e pire to sit on exceptional cases to = faker arate ea advise His Majesty if a mistake has covered -a drug extracted. froma been made, and from the very fact plant found in the Himalaya Moun- that members are drawn from dif- | which would revive perma- ferent parts of the Empire, remote from local influence, they are able ost agate ch UP eS to take a more detached view than Stepping out of a plane after Althose on the spot. In Canada I short flight at Red Wing, Minn., Mrs.| should have thought it was valuable Ray Ahrens, 80, of St. Paul, walked) to have such a tribunal to which into the whirring propellor of 80-) the people- can appeal with con-| other ship and was killed. The pilot) fdence, knowing that only impar- of the plane, Max Conrad, 27, was) tial wWews will be obtained. riously injured trying to save Mrs. aes X-Ray In New Role Beacon For Night Flying Is Tested), aia ro Manufacturing and 6 Notably In Aviation Will Flash Automatically For Six! The X-ray, an inst) t = Months Without Attention Is é Sits oe Claim siclans and surgeons, has become a tool of the foundry room, and its A wind-driven air mail beacon, de-) benefits to the metal industry have signed to flash, automatically every) been of considerable aid to manufac- night for six months without atten-| turing, notably in aviation, accord- tion, has received its first test at) {ng to the statements of W. L. Fink, Washington. od metallurgist, before the National The beacon has been packed on an} Metals Congress at Cleveland. 80-foot tower a few miles below|- The shadowgraphs of the X-ray Washington, on the New York-At-| show shrinkage, blow holes, pin hole Tantia air mail line, The beacon con-} porosity and other imperfections in sists of three lenses and three! castings which never would be dis« lamps, a flashing mechanism, a stor-| covered by other means of examina- age battery, a generator and a wind-/ tion, he asserted. As ,a consequence, mill, the metal frames of airplanes can When charged the battery will run| he thoroughly tested before con- the beacon for two-weeks without 4) struction of the plane is completed, breath of air blowing to turn the) a safety device that would be avail- windmill and run the generator. The/ able in no other way. experimental beacon was set up| By the same means castings gen- there because it is a light-wind re-| erally have been improved, Fink de- gion. If it operates successfully for) clared. several months, it will operate any- to draw my pension, and) yyignyway Construction and Good] all other British subjects who have) PUMTN' | Ying canada in the) consequently, I can claim one free Roads Program Receiving lived in Canada long enough sas as ei “ed by the United States | pass & year on the Southern Rail- Much Attention acquire a domicile here, all persons lead, follow ry way, and privilege tickets—that is, naturalized and their children. tickets at a quarter fare for myself In addition to the census of the and ‘my family, when we wish to humans, the census of the horses end Sweden. Partly to accommodate the rapid- ly increasing tide of tourist traffic, much of which travels by automo- While this was a de-| cre wile the conétruction of highways|and the cows ondithe sheep and the Australia, | A aT d t Canada| hen will be taken in an agricul-| crease a al 5 3 and good roads throughou! ‘anada | 1928, it compared favorably with the Wheat Grading High continues to advance. In the past tural questionnaire. sed: Aguren of $433,000. | aF three years the mileage of surfaced 2 Biles anid parts) a ew" in- Greater Number Of Cars Checked yoads in the Dominion has been in- New Cure For Paralysis Automobiles Pp Grade One and Two Northern | creased from 47,411 miles to 64,121 In a summary of the 1928 situa-| miles. Including improved and unim-| English Doctor Says Induced Malaria tion, the Manitoba Free Press points) proved earth roads, the total mileage| Has Been Tried Out Successfully out that wheat is grading so high|of highways open for traffic in all} tmduced malaria as a successful | this year as to offset, to a consider-| parts of Canada, was at the end of| treatment of paralysis, is revealed we ablé degree, the shortage in the size|last year, 381,977, or a mileage that|/in a recent report of Surgeon Rear} of the crop. It says, “Western Cana-| would girdle the earth over 15 times. | Admiral B. T. Meagher, covering ex-} dian wheat has never graded so high| ‘Last year 8,610 miles of highways} periments on a number of cases in}. in many years. The protein content} were constructed of which 2,454) Fnelish and Welsh hospitals. | Railway Not Open of samples so far checked grade the! miles were earth, and 6,156 surfaced. | “The treatment of general para-| To Regular Traffic highest that the West has known) The total expenditure on construc-| ysis,” his report states, “by induced| steady increase, from $192,000 =| 1927, to $336,000 in 1928. tein was inaugurated.” This author-|sum of $18,963,381 was spent ony cess than any other form of treat-| Bay Roat | ity goes on to show that up to Sep-| maintenance. The year's work iN-) ment that has been given extended Making the tm from Churchill to tember 5th, this year, there were re-| cluded 541 miles of permanent sur-| tyja}.” lec Pan inmeeiionres tha special] ceived 101 cars of No. 1 hard wheat fared highways in bituminous ma- The treatment, which include3|train bearing the Hon. Chas. A.| as compared with none at all at the) cadam, bituminous concrete and ce-| either artificial malaria inoculation) punning, minister of railways, and] | “There were 1,076,819 motor’ tite, to render existence more natur- vehicles registered in Canada in) qj, and to produce improvement in discuss. | jover the previous year. Passenger) tq) state. | registered to | 921,395, an increase of 100,028 over) ne states, “varies from a negative | 1927. On a per capita basis, there was one passenger automobile per ery.” 10.5 persons in Canada, and one ad tor vehicle including trucks, motor - . cycles, buses, etc., per 9.0 persons.| Cuts Running Time jis not ready for passenger traffic. | omy three countfies had greater) | “My speech in parliament regard- per motor vehicle, ; |ning time of the “Continental Limit-| any one who wanted to go in should} ed” all steel train of the Canadian! be permitted, but the first thought National Railways, between Mon-| With the H.B.R. is to make it safe| treal and Winnipeg, became effective | and efficient. Any one who has been| New Professor Appointed Dr. H. R. Thornton Heads Dairy | °° September 29th. Under the new|in the north will realize that i Department At University Of ~|schedule “The Continental Limited’) would not do to start a passenger) ‘Alberta * leaves Montreal at 11.15 p.m. daily| traffic as yef. I would say it will be| esearch | arrives in Winnipeg at 7.15 on the starts. Thornton as head of the Dairy peat partment of the University of Al- berta. Harold Ray Thornton was born in Red Deer, got his first agri- cultural education in the Olds School, took his Bachelor of Science degree from the University of Wis- consin. Last year he was professor th University of er of dairying in the University 0f/+o Edmonton, and also to the cities|ing in the places that others wanted North Dakota. Dr. Thornton was} : | A i, of Regina and Saskatoon and inter-|to visit at the worst time of the president of the Students Union at) ediate palates beats c the University of Alberta in his sen-| jor year. | “The Confederation” the all steel) government policy with regard to in service until mid-November, after) receive an influx of people, they) Toronto and Edmonton, thus giving| pointed out that experienced men in An Unusual Experiment a Test Was Successful Recipes For This Week Value Of Instruments To Overcome} (By Betty Barclay) | duce Race Of Super-Sheep Dr. it erge Voronoff, th where. ‘ Perils Of Flying Through Fog 103 ‘ » the famous re- = May Enter Speed Contest Is Proved | ORANGE SWEET PICKLE | J¥venation expert, is to perform on Men Can Be Placed Pacific Liners Likely To Engage In Completion of the first airplane) 4 oranges. ltions with a view to New Rivalry | fight with a cockpit entirely shut! 2 cups sugar. |race of super-sheep t Producing | : 8 > increa | off from light was announced by) 145 cups vinegar. ase pro- Demand For English Youths Trained) The international rivalry for the DARLING COAT DRESS |duction of wool and meat. After = y. 2 y ae a 3 eel . | * . After the For Canadian Farm Work blue pennant of speed supremacy on} «4 jaunty little model for girls se ee Se etme ssa of teaspoon uel cloves. operation sheep will be handea at Immigration officials, at Otfawa,|the North Atlantic is likely soon to), 10, 12 and 14 years Is illustrated | aera | E ahs to the French Goy fi cee | : on egu gamit MGs gor Acrrsigl Oven Urrgages, comoving ol wuttdldete ee oe ete an Pe , 2 ey will be are confident places will be found for spread to the Pacific, according eos feather-weight tweed in beige and} all the 3,000 young men to be train-| marine authorities at Washington, ed in England this winter for work| who haye received reports from | on Canadian farms. Placements will) many quarters concerning new traf-){s repeater in turnback cuffs. Ae be made next spring by the Domin-| fic developments on the western It is double breaster, trimmed) 5. fon and provincial authorities in ac-| ocean. cordance with demand in various) American, Japanese, and British- The entire effect is smartest ever.| from Mitchell Field, and flew along | exam- n experts, who will compare their §rowth and de- min-| velopment with an equ; a al n be J : utes. Add fruit and simmer slowly! sheep which have a DREN te eee with huge beige ond brown bone| Lieut. James H. Doolittle, seated! for one hour. Place in sterilized jars! ated. In 1932 ena 1 32 France's Centra > ittons, in the darkened cockpit, took off! sen | 3 Central Wool pation Y RY jand seal. Committee will summon brown. A brown suede belt denotes|tics, as the final successful test ©) membrane; cut into thick slices; fashionable raised waistline. The|a group of instruments designed 0) steam until clear and tender, Boil jcollar is of plain beige woollen which jovercome the perils of flying through) sugar, vinegar and spices for 25 ined by a committee c an Interna- parts of the country. Already this|Canadian lines are to participate in| yt is made at a small outlay, and ‘ rect hea oe ae a oS {tional Sheep Conference in Paris year, it was explained, 3,500 trained| a new period of trans-Pacific ship-| practically only side and shoulder mapa cree ing radio beacon | QUINCE AND APPLE |when the world's experts wilt t ve men from overseas haye taken up) ping rivalry, in which speed for pas- reeere olen Une ron tagerer Was is MARMALADzE | vitea to compare the two flock 7 jor} ced a ¢ yers Wi ers wa work on farms here. Last year the) sengers and freight will be @ major the attached straight. collar. | Influence Of Sunspots Wash quinces and remove blossom| Raters as number was about 1,400. | consideration; and the eyes of} §gtyle No. 713 will instantly ap- Sunspots vary in numbers in ajend, Cut fruit in small pieces, add Tomato Isa Fruit Bremen and its mighty rivals. | Works In Reverse } | nurse yout fo: | | | in the opposite direction. mother's care?” ma’am.” FREE BABY Books Write The Borden Co., Limit |, Dept. Bi, 40 St Path Sp amg Rei the United States is sent to the Bu for two Baby The butterfly is an insect whose heart beats backwards as well as| very smart ? when marmalade is cold he says th rds, according to Prof. John H. Bab -use | Gerould The beat starts at the) yelyet, cotton pique, linen and print-| ‘The dome of St, Paul's Cathedral, Unique Clock Is Success the tomato plant: ive flowen of back and frayels forward, squeezing | ed cotton broadcloth ideal selections.|~ondon, England, welghs 64,000) « Having run without being “verything which | called who has never known a} Address: Winnipeg Newspaper Union, | I 3 Teacher: “What 1s the little boy!” 375 McDermot Ave, Winnipeg ChildrenCry for. Small Boy: “An incubator kid, reau of Standards, at Washingion, ee ies ph ea to the girl with sophisticated period of average length of eleven | Sufficient water to cover, and cook ers a ‘s, hav rarils {turned to the north Atlantic to profit| by the transport lessons of the! pelt and matching bone buttons,| aneos in the sun, in some localities, amount of tart apple pulp. Use two| A fellow of the Ri It is most attractive too in navy/and a half years. The weather is until soft. Rub through sieve ana| Because It Comes From Flower or | blue wool crepe with vivid red suede | found to vary along with these|combine the pulp with an equal the Plant ova 0; d ., quite definitely. As a result living) Parts sugar to three parts pulp,| al Society has “ena nie In conditions vary, with consequent ef-| Cook almost half an hour, until it is| doubts as to whether a tomat, je | sn the bicds, animals, trees,|thick and clear, thon turn into clean,| Vegetable or a fruit pea h, and economic condi-| hot glasses. Cover with hot paraffin! considered | with collar and cuffs of white crepe }de chine or of white pique. |" Kashmir printed wool . j¢ en blue colouring trimmed fects armoniing plain blue jersey is ; . Tt is generally a matter of Opinion, but At it is definitely grain g tions. Plain wool — je homespun, y 7 Ys af tweed printed silk, crepe de chine, because it comes from Ur ruit fertilizes from the flowe, the blood on ahead of it, After re- Be ae ise peter ae ovine tons. for a year, the weather ck is classified as fruit 7 see peating this several times the heart) °' 1 carefully. Haiee Zurich, Switzerland, has been deciar-| Pets and marrows are } te cucum.- will pause and then a beat will start eee oie ase There are now about 7 ed a suc Th the 12 m al ally, © both, botanic. 5 | : jed as 2 months it| @Y, fruits. Despite CONDENSED MILK at the forward end, forcing the blood women civil servants in England. | has kept perfect time, It has no ap-| Horticultural pite this the Royal | parent source of power, but is run that a tomato ee : | by the variation of temperature, a| ble, and it shows tomut two-degree change setting the ther-| WAYS exhibited amon ent mometer-like mechanism in motion ponent vegeta | How To Order Patterns | book says} t and vege. | OCS are al- bles, | Pattern NO....-002+++- SIZ€ ....-. | to wind it without human attention Woman Saty } 4 “ges Ships gists , Mrs, Cox, of Gly r wenrrcesgucccsecesconconsenes | The moon completes its circuit] believed to tye Glasgow, Scotland, js ae ae | Paleo Sky CASTORIA around the earth in a little moro’ vager in the « fue only woman sal. Practically all the radium sold in sins than 27 days, the. German alee She helped raise T oe —e et s e NAME cece er cer eneeeeres ser ereeme ABABY REMEDY | Flow, tn: 1¢ unk ee ver judge a man by his act 919° the io APPROVED BY DOCTORS | is : y actions has aided in ive "Years she | emcee | FOR COUC.CONSTIPATION.DIARRNCA ja 9 whien le is away from home. aarceey Yaising 26 de Mee Lead showed an increase) Pleased With Canadi British Delegation To In a telegram from Victo Canada, with her zinc export of where they took the boat for Ja $815,000, was closely followed by the British delegation to the: of Pacific Relations, wit from the first six months 01) yrackenzie King an appt Canadian hospitality. The crossed Canada en route t& The message, signed by } dustry entering the field, showed ia sham, Lord Chancellor of E and head of the delegation to Institute of Pacific Relations) Among the most important Comi=| uy desire to express to dities exported from Japan to} through you to the people of Canada were silk fabrics, raw Silk,) oy; most cordial thanks for chinaware, peas and beans, and toys-| nigcent hospitality extended ae our journey across the Domin you warmly for your kind me |T extend best of wishes to since the practice of testing for pro-| tion was $38,912,029, while a further | malaria, offers more promise of suc-) Much Work To Be Done On Hudson! member of the British and € Caramel Pudding, one of the me date last year, while Nos, 1|ment concrete construction. Water-| 9; 5 / i : < 3 Fe bd = madla Nertier mca ‘up 87 per cent.| bound macadam totalled 417 Sree ee oar ecunae ces party” made” Ukely (the fastest Lup | delicion ies ae etinadistaliceee necked: | ena gravelled highways 6/198 miles. Lareapived aS aoe in eagth a yet made over the new road, but Mr. | one especially Toved by ehild en, | | i , Dunning said that the running time be said practically to make i ee eae was one thing he did not wish to} Here it is: ak Gj : > | . z | Place an uno) ened can of Bor Winnipeg Newspaper Union| | 122" so! 2a increase of 251147 ne pnysical condition and the men-\" “te he public is given the im-\ able Eran Condensed MK It ere. = .,|pression that’ fast time can be nfide| kettle of boiling water and ‘The response in individual cases,”| 54 the Hudson Bay Railway at pres-| for two and a half hours, pane “\ent, people will wonder why it is) ful not to let the Icettle boil dry. result to apparent complete recov-) not open to regular traffic,” said he. |move can, cool and chill. Re “There are still some places where| top of can, cutting along the side, the road is not smooth and where it} can—not the top—so that the con tents may be removed whole; on a serving dish and garnish densities than Cafiada, the United|Cmadian National Cuts Two Hours)ing the opening of the road has) broken States, with 5.1, Hawaiian Islands, Off Montreal To Winnipeg Trip | been criticized. It has been sald) cream 7.9, and New Zealand, 8.0 persons} Reduction of two hours in the run- ‘that this is a free country and that) cream, with or without garnish. Praise For British Diplomacy < | Proposals To Egypt Marvel Of The Chicago Tribune says: instead of 10.15 p.m. as formerly and next summer before regular service| British proposals to | second evening instead of 8A5 p.m.,| One point Mr. Dunning did stress|Statesmanship at their best, and that” as formerly. was his opinion that if critics of the|!% the best in the world. Americans train operating between Toronto and) Churchill could visit the place and|™ingled with envy, for when will the Vancouver, B.C., is being continued| see how ill suited it is at present to| United States in its important and that date it will operate between] would not want to go there. He| benefit of so much tact, skill, and judgment as Mr. Henderson's” faster winter service from Toronto| the north were lost and often suffer-| PToPOSals display 2” Doctor (to patient’s landlady): “Just keep him in bed, and aboye all see that he does not eat too much.” | Seaside Landlady (grimly): “Cer- less = tainly I will; I have two or three | Rejuvenation Expert Plans To Pro-| ter boarders who really ought to |& large scale gland grafting opera-| ‘°TY Daushty girl and I'm going to “From*Mother ¥ now eight months old Lydia E Pinktiam's Vegetable Comna