yee can: . hibition = ———————— Outitanding Value—Always SALADA a fa “Fresh from the Gardens” Are We Over-Goverred? ‘The current economic depression, and the resultant financial stringency, to 32 pounds of fish per annum, —poss bly the order of these two conditions should be reversed,—have led “The fishermen are our best buyers to'the advancement of many suggestions anc ideas having as their object of mnde-In-Canada Foods," raid Mr. The effecting GPleconumnies in nitional, provincial and municipal spheres of | Brittaln. “They do not buy Imported fovernment And administration. Unquestionably people generally are in Paris perfumes. They buy heavy a frame Ofimindbigive that serious consideration to these matters which |Canadian woollens, Canadian grocer- they GEMMEREGHGy Grolld Fave been denied'to them a few years ago... |!es, Canadian, manufactured articles. Mounting national, provincial and mun’cjpal debts, resulting in the We catt help no) better class of peo- twin evils of curtatled public services and higher taxation, reacting adversely | Ple than the fisher folk, upon all individual and community business, is leading serlous-minded men ST ee! ahd women to realize that their must be a reduction in the costs of our gov-| Not Enough For One emmental business, and that such, reduction must be on a fairly large scale; that the mere lopping off of a few minor services, a percentage Smallest Christmas reduction in salaries, will not suffice; that, on the contrary, savings aggre- gating many millions of dollars annually must be effected. The smallest Christmas pudd'ng in | The issue is one extending far beyond the bounds of partizan politics; |tho world, made entirely of Empire | tather it rests within the domain of higher politics, that is, it Is a vital, produce and weighing less than % | integral part of the true science of government. As such it can and must | ounce, was exhibited side by side with | Planning “Eat Fish” Campa | Maritimes Have Scheme Which Will | Bo Ald To Fishermen - | A. HL. Brittain, president of the Canadian Fisheries Associated, with Captain Frederick William Wallace and the two heads of the Fishermen's Federation of the Maritimes, Presi- dent Alf, Hanlan, and Vice-President | Burke, went to Ottawa recently for an interview with Hon, B. N. Rhodes, | Fisheries Minister, to discuss a na- tion-wide “eat fish” campaign. “If we could consume 10 more pounds per capita a year,” Mr. Brittain said, “we should then consume 100,000,000 pounds more fish a year, and raise our per capita consumption from 22 Only Inch In Diameter be discussed openly, boldly, fearlessly, and to that discussion, and ultimate | mammoth 16-ton plum pudding at | do so, says Mr, Henry, who affirms consideration of facts and proposals, every thinking man and woman should |the Royal Albert Hall, Kensington, } his strong belief in the doctrine ot | be patriotically inspired to make their contribution. It is their own busi- |S.W., London, England. ness, their own future, as well as the business and future of their Dominion | It was one inch in diameter and} which is at stake. | Weighed 196 grains, and was specially Herbert Spencer Brice wrote: “The man who, expending his energies made for the Christmas market in| wholly on private matters refuses to take part in public affairs, pluming | ald of the People’s Dispensary for the | himself on his vision in minding his own business, is blind to the fact that |Sick Animals of the Poor, by Miss his own business is made possible only by the prosperity of all.” Lily Dalton, who required the assist- There are some people who still pride themselves on remaining aloof | ance of a mathematician and a chem- from all participation in public affairs. They even assume a superior atti- ist to work out and weigh the vari- tude and treat with condescension those who take an active interest in| ous ingredients. ‘It was made,” she | community affairs, politics, and international relationships. But the trend | said, “from a recipe handed on to) of events in recent years has shattered the self-complacency of many of | me by my grandmother. The 13 any these and thom to the truth of Herbert |Stedients had to be chopped many Spencer's dictum that the business, the success, the happiness, of the in-|times before they were sufficiently dividual is made possible only to the extent that these things are enjoyed fine.” by all. Even powerful nations which gloried in and boasted of their “splendid | A id I 5 ch isolation,” their indifference to the fate of other nations and peoples, and! Cl Ss n toma who lf. unto themselves, are being forced . . Cause Indigestion to alter their views and change their attitude. Geographically and in a) physical sense the world may be just as big as it ever was, it may even be | bigger in other respects, but it is very much smaller in so far as the rela-| crane cHeware 790 le rum tion of one nation to another is concerned. The factor of time in inter- | Rreaicatanctmen lea: communication has been almost annihilated by wireless, radio, the telephone, | nine-tent of tho airships, fast steamships, steam and electric railways, and automobiles. AL paw toa tee raters man living 100 miles away is nearer to us than one only 10 miles away half 97, SxS°s* of hydrochloric acid stomach. The delicate stomach lining a century ago. jis Irritated, digestion {s delayed and alate ca sourncss, that nearly of stomach burning. [+ » Lose Fat —and Feel Better for it! How would you like to lose 15 pounds of fat in a month and at the same time increase your energy and ee your health ? set on the scales to-day and see how much you weigh—then get a bottle of Kruschen Salts (lasts 4 weeks), Take one half teaspoonful every morning in a glass of hot water—reduce the food supply—inerease daily activities and when you have finished the first bottle weigh’ yourself again, Now you can laugh at the people who spend money galore to lose a few pounds of fat—now you will know the pleasant way to lose unsightly fat, and you'll also know that the 6 vitalizi 3 Salts of Krusehen (salts that your blood, have to presented nerves and glands must function properly)—have you with glorious health. ‘After that yowll want around and say to your f 750. bottle of Kruschen Salts is worth ten dollars of any fat person’s moncy.”" Would Settle Coal Freight Rate In This Connection Assistance will be given Alberta by Pudding Was) ontario in its effort to secure’a settle- | |ment of the coal freight rate ques-| tion, according to advices received by Premier J. E, Brownlee from Premier George S. Henry. The eastern prov- ince will co-operate and be glad to Canadian coal for Canadian markets. | A. L. Smith, K.C., of Calgary, was) appointed some time ago to act with the domestic coal operators in bring- ing about a final settlement of the rate issue before the Board of Rail- way Commissioners, and it was to this end that Ontario might take sim- ilar action that its co-operation was sought. The point at issue is the fixing ert a permanent rate, which the railway commission should consider to be a fair one and which should take the by which, for three years, the Do- minion Government absorbed 75 cents |a ton on a $6.75 rate. Depression In Retreat Roger Babson Says Trade Trend Is Now Turning Upward . Roger W. Babson, economist and) due i°| statistician, who predicted the stock | market break of 1929, now says in i fe I r We are conforming to these radical changes in many of our Pero ee ee eee ne piomiach, wuiterer el seen , but in many respects we have | Kiowt et ligontants are not _ needed ignored them in the development of our governmental functions, adhering jn such cases and may do real harm. rather to systems and policies laid down in by-gone years and in an ale) iter wie ttn any drugs Blane together differently constituted world. Only in recent years have people Bisurated Magnesia been awakening to this fact, and the difficulties with which all peoples and | Water vient mttot « 5 have been d within the last two or three years are | °S forcing upon them the conclusion that it is high time that something was rugelst take a tea- or four tablets In ch, ee pare diving: Siclent farm, of magnesia. sorsatéaneh Without assuming to say what ought to be done, and without attempt-| purposes. Tt is used by thousands of | ing even the task of offering the writer proposes in fag eee a ane ee ee articles to discuss some of the suggestions that have been advanced in cer-| —— | tain quarters. He proposes to do so with only one object in view, and that | Most Objectionable is to encourage readers of this column to give consideration to these mat- -— ters, to think them over, to study them, to discuss them with friends and|/ McGill University Professor Gives neighbors; in a word, to assist in creating and developing a live public) Reyised List Of Seven Cardinal opinion in relation to the whole subject of our legislative and administrative | Sins machinery, that is, our entire governmental structure and the effect of it, | “Stupidity, ugliness, moral turpi- as it exists, upon what are at present regarded as essential revenues and | tude, cowardice, meanness, hypocrisy, expenditures, involving not only present but the ever steadily increasing | pessimism,” are the “revised” list of taxation of the individual. | seven cardinal sins given by Profes- | = | sor Rene Du Roure of the Department | | Nevfom dland : Has A Chinese Artist jof Lanzudess, MeGill University, to a} | nisiness men ipo. sarsitay! Tesmed, Neyo, Stemrare STOUP of business menig-a serie Has Picture Accepted For Exhi ~Hesued Nar: = Seip jelub address at Montreal. Claiming At Ottawa Art Show \to speak with authority, ‘from o) Six Cent ee eee Of) joint of view of an old sinner,” Prof. Du Roure stated that the clergyman’s | les aes has ah issued a jist of cardinal sins “may be all right, | new series of stamps, which carries | =I at the National gallery art pictures of members of the royal ee eat iid oe show in Ottawa. He is the first) family and natural products of the| ‘The speaker described his list as Chinese to have a picture accepted. country. The King and Queen are| “the seven most objectionable sins | He was born in Canton and came to| 4, tne two and three-cent stamps, |in creation,” and named pessimism as | Canada in 1919. Five years ago he ,ecpectively; Prince of Wales on the | the worst. “Men should be hanged entered the Winnipeg Art School and, | r4ycent and Princess Elizabeth on | ¢or helping the current defeatist atti- | Jater moving to Toronto, studied at/ in. cix-cent stamp. On the otie= | gaae* he said. the Ontario College of Art. cent a catch of cod. A caribou on} ‘ : \the five-cent. A seal on the 15. A Northern Rhodesia hs aad to| view of Cape Race on the 20-cent. Close London Office move its capital from Livingstone to| q fect of sealing vessels on the 25, | eaicaka” jana plitiect. of Matinel Gosta ion the| ue Of Alberta Agent-General Yee Bon, Ue €ar-old Chinese of Toronto, Aery glad.” One of his jas been accepted for ex- May. Be Closed As Economy Measure Office of the Alberta Agent-Gener- | al in London, England, will be closed | as an economy measure, it is under- 30-cent stamp. Princess Elizabeth, | of the Duke of York and granddaughter of the King, makes her bow to stamp collectors in this new set. The office was opened in 1913 and ‘won. Herbert Greenfield, former Al- berta Premier, was in charge for four years, retiring in March, 1931. Hugh | annual Meeting Will Be Held At|M. Baker, Mf Greenfield's secretary, Regina In August has been in charge of the office since | ie anual convention of (he~As-| “Ltuiasestimated heresthal eligi: sociation of Canadian Clubs will be tion of the office will save the Alberta héld at Regina, Saskatchewan, this $20,000 year, August 29, 30 and 31, it was decided at a meeting of the central executive held at Ottawa. The resignation of Graham Spry, national secretary, was accepted, and Mrs. P. A. Wheeler, Association Of Canadian Clubs Government annually. CHILD need REGULATING? approximately Miller's Worm Powders will eradi- cate the worm evil that bears so heavily on children and is believed to ‘ause many fatalities. They are an istant secre- acceptable medicine to children and tary, will be in charge of the head- | can be fully relied upon to clear the quarters at Ottawa until a successor | food channels shore uay oft these and children are delicate Little is appointed at the Regina convention. CS ae ee caie Aes De bowels must be gently urged—never Tyibute to Mr. Spry's work as secre- | healthfulness forced. That's why cero bt tary s paid by Prof. R. C, Wallace, ' remedy for the ante cially coehe for ebildren s ail. of Edmonton, president of the asso- CASTORIA WILL DO IT! When your child needs regulating, remember this: the organs of babies They are an excellent evils, ars F ation, and other members of the “What is ap optimist?” alae oe Sem cnn | SXpan ens oem ai via give it to young pasate far Souls happens so long as it doesn’t happen Beet ser children, The next, A writer prophesies that under- | to him.” regulatnr ebiid has @ little cold or ground houses will come soon. Then fever, or a digestive upset, give bim \. shall probably see New York go- help of Castorla, the children’s a remedy. Genuine Castoria always has the name: Gaither EGASTORIA DREN FOR IT ing in for hell-scrapers. Switzerland, und Italy is vith them. A pelt taken in December is worth ing three taken in pre-season. A remarkably durable floor cover- now made of leather, cut into and laid like tile Athletic sports are becoming popu- ing lar in practically every city of China a If you trust to luck for anything you will be lucky if you get it. — jere- = squar CRY ——— The sodium-vapo lamp is the most | eficient artificial light source. & prepared “The depression is in retreat. The Babson chart, which was the basis for my forecast of the market brealc in 1929, is now with equal positive- ness indicating that we have seen the trough of the depression of 1930-32, er levels. “The chart is now turning upwards for the first time in more than two | years, except for the temporary rally | of last spring. For some years to come I do not expect to see the Bab- son chart below the depth reached last November. Of course, this does not mean any sharp rise back to nor- mal conditions, but it does indicate the depression is in retreat. The long range outlook is that funda- mentally better times are now defin- itely assured. sien Had Record Teinato Crop Copenhagen Market Gardener Shipped Million Pounds Last Season One of the market gardeners from the island of Amager, which is known as the “kitchen garden of Copen- hagen,” hada record year in the growing of tomatoes. He sent 1,000,- 000 pounds to the market last season. In twenty years, Denmark's tomato production has increased from 44,000 pounds a year to 70,000 pounds a day, and this does not include those ex- ported from Fyen to England. The growth has been so abundant that they have been sold at 35 ord—10 cents—a pound, One of the largest market gardeners has more than five acres of glass houses. For Sprains and Bruises —There is nothing better for sprains and con- tusions than Dr. Thomas’ Eclectric Oil. It will reduce the swelling that follows a sprain, will cool the in- flamed flesh and draw the pain. It | will take the ache out of a bruise by counteracting the inflammation. A trial will convince any who doubt its | power BC. Reacting to business conditions the world over during the past year, British Columbia canned salmon in- dustry shows the lowest pack in ten years, according to figures compiled by the canned salmon section of the Canadian Manufacturers’ Association and released recently. Salmon Pack Among the birds that have longer lifetime than man's three score years, and ten are the parrot, the raven, the goose, the swan, and the falcon, Loan Was Oversubscribed Great Success Attends Ontario's Offering Of Long Term Bonds The Province of Ontario's offering of short and long term bonds to the value of $25,000,000 was largely over- subscribed. Within a few hours of the time it was offered to the public, eager inyestors had taken the entire amount and sought a considerable ad- ditional sum. The loan was of the internal var- fety with interest payments in Cann- dian funds, and its outstanding suc- cess duplicates that accorded other such flotations in recent weeks, The Dominion’s $150,000,000 National Service Loan, Province of New Bruns- | wick, $5,062,000, and Montreal Muni- cipal $15,000,000 loans are other in- ternal flotations which recently have been accorded wide acceptance. The loan was offered in the form }of $5,000,000 worth of six per cent. three-year bonds, yielding six per !cent., and $20,000,000 worth of five land a half per cent. 15-year bonds | Ontario Is Willing To Assist Alberta | ylelding 5.90 per cent. | In a statement accompanying an- |nouncement of the success of the }loan, Mr. Dunlop sa‘d taking up of | the loan would be reflected in a re- Gandhi Lost Great Chance | Art Of Compromising Would. Have | Made Him Leader Of All India Mahatma Gandhi might have been the leader of a powerful United Indian Nationalist Party if he bad lused different tact'cs at the Round Table Conference, declared Rt. Hon Srinavasa Sastri, one of India’s | great:st statesmen in the Indian Re- view. Mr. Sastri, who is a ber of the Viceroy's Legislative Coun- cil, and hai represented India at many Imperial and international gatherings, declared; “If ever the art of compromise was needed in human affairs it was when British, Hindu, | Moslem, Sikh, Christian and Untouch- able met one another at St. James's Palace, but Gandhi remained unbend- |ing to the end. | “pnis Is why, from his standpoint, the conference failed. This is why the communal problem went unsolved. |o enunciate principles, to fight for ideals, to make propaganda—these Jare high duties requiring rare ability —but when agitation has come toa /head it is no ignoble part to make the most of the occasion and get the |people some return for their suffer- mer mem- ..» Here's comforting relief without “dosing. Just rub on Vicks Stand Attractions 5 os i gcnibltions Well Up To Standard J. E. Rettie, s€c- the Brandon Pro- the grandstand at- ‘or Class In the opinion of retary-manager of vincial Exhibition, tions this year, standard of other quality programmes duction of the temporary borrowing | 1088." \eccured in other years. ‘The pageant of the province for hydro-electric | re lected for evening performances is iat 1 q . sel Fi | Power and tr | Invented Differential Gear | oojeq canada Marching On. and assistance to rural hydro nes, high- | ere is an entire pallet, vocal and way construction and other purposes. | According to the Toronto Mail and | Empire, the loan was over-subscribed two and one-half times. | ‘The paper says the $5,000,000 six \per cent. three-year bonds brought |subseriptions amounting to $18,750,- 000, while the $20,000,000, five and one-half per cent. bonds resulted in | applications totalling $45,000,000. earainees deat] Soap Suds |Soap and Washing Compound Indus- | try In Canada Is Well Established industry is a fairly substantial one in | Canada. There are 68 establishments | engaged in it with a capital invest- | ment of $18,340,715, employing 1,648 | Persons. In 1930 the total output of |the various products was valued at | $18,167,838. ° For" the industry as a whole, the production in 1930 included 66.7 mil- | lion pounds of laundry soaps and soap chips valued at $4,583,243; 48.3 mil lion pounds of household soaps at $3, | 636,961; 23.5 million pounds of toilet |soaps at $4,426,452; 13.8 million pounds of soap powder at $1,056,288; four million pounds of other soaps at $336,165; javelle water at $370,518; lammonia powder at $161,733; other | Washing compounds at $249,554; and | other cleaning preparations at $982,- | 745. e | Imports of soap into Canada dur- | ing the calendar year 1930 were val- | ued at $1,216,842. | ed 10,187,490 pounds of common laun- |dry soap, mostly from the United | States; 1,264,509 pounds of castile soap, mostly from France; 340,599 pounds of Soap powders, $223,446 of other toilet soaps; 213,004 pounds of liquid soap, and smaller quantities. of | harness, whale oil, pumice and miner- | al soaps. = everywhere. ° | Exports obsoaps in che-year undery = ~~ == |Tovlew were valued at $653,556 and jsoap worth $623,886 and 895,959 pee of other soap yalued at S$! 670. | Radios In Canada Now 548,342 Licensed Receiving Sets In Operation In Dominion At the end of December, 1931, there were 548,342 licensed radio re- ceiving sets in Canada, according to a | statement just issued by the Radio | Branch of the Canadian Government | Department of Marine. Of the total, | 261,638 are in the Province of On- \tarlo; 114,877 in Quebec; 52,920 in British Columbia; 31,836 in Manitoba; | 28,185 in Saskatchewan; 25,284 in Al- berta; 19,961 in Nova Scotia; 12,465 in New Brunswick; 1,087 in Prince Edward Island and 139 in the North- west Territorics. There are, it is esti- mated, several additional thousand radio receiving sets in the Dominion, for which the owners have, as yet, no\ taken out a license. The license fee charged by the Canadian Govern- ment fs $1 per year. Among the cities in Canada most radios are in Toronto, which is credited with 75,240 licensed sets; Montreal is second with 68,150 sets and Vancouver third with 27,574 Teach By Re skatchewan The § Government Correspondence Schools are using ra- dio for teaching English, History, Sci- ence, Latin, French and German to The students in Grades IX. and X. broadcast is from 6 to 6:30 p.m. dally except Saturdays and Sunda the program will continue until April 29th next. leading specific for of worms, Mother Graves’ proved a beon to suffering children Exterminator everywhere. It seldom fails | Try Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound are. Had bad dizzy spells Afraid to leave house « . . feared aw- 1 ful dizziness would make her keel over. She needs Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound in tablet form. ‘ Safeguarding the Deaf he first home for deaf persons ir Ge an automatic device whereby in case of fire or other danger the watchmar can set the mattresses on all the beds to shaking, so that the sleeper must awake of bells Uneasy lies the head that wears a rPdirbl This total includ- f and has any, recently opened for use, has Light signals take the place Patent For Idea | Alexander Gallinger, 87, inventor of a differential gear, is dead at his farm home Oshkosh, Wisconsin. In 1877, | |Gallinger and John Morse, owner of !a foundry there, built a tractor which employed the differential principle. They drove it from Green Bay to Madison to claim a $5,000 award of- fered by the legislature for demon- | strating the invention’s practicability. Gallinger failed to patent his in-| | vention and consequently never earn- fed anything from it, outside the legis- | The soap and washing compounds | jature’s award. The differential later harness events. place of the temporary arrangement | came to be an important part of the automobile. | Gallinger was born in Gallings-| town, Ontario, in 1844, and went to Oshkosh at the age of 18. Expedition To Antarctic ‘H. G. Watkins, Youthfal Leader Plans Venture Next Fall It was announced in London, Eng- land, recently, that H. G. Watkins, youthful leader of last year’s Green- land exploration party, would head an expedition into the Antarctic next fall. The expedition, which will sail in the early autumn, will attempt to cross the Antarctic from Weddell Sea to Ross Sea and map the southwest coast of Weddell Sea. Attacked By Asthma. The first! earful sensation is of suffocation, which hour by hour becomes more desperate and hopeless. To such a case the relief afforded by Dr. J. D. Kellogg's Asthma Remedy seems nothing less than miraculous. Its help is quickly apparent and soon the dreadful attack is mastered. The asthmatic who has found out the de- pendability of this sterling remedy will never be without it. It is sold es Wife (arriving at husband's office unexpectedly): “Rupert, I could | swear I heard Miss Smith shout out, ‘Let me go!’ as I came up the stairs.”” Husband (hurriedly): “Yes, dear, I was—er—just saying that someone would haye to go to the bank.” | Scientists have found what they | believe to be the tomb of the famous | poet Ovid on the site of the old Gre- | clan city of Tomis. “All-copper” houses are an inno- vation in the construction industry in th Alexander Gallinger Fallcd To Get! gancing units connected with this prov Jauction, It carries 64 people, but this will include 20 girls engaged lo- cally. The include Duncan's other acts on the programmeé collies, the Five Los Ovidus, Juggling Jewels, the three people in syncopated acrobatics, Ellen Dea on the slack wire. Happy and Go Lucky, comic acrobatics, and May, Teddy and Eddy in dancing numbers. ; While every class “A” exhibition in ‘western Canada is putting on run- ning races, Brandon will feature only Regina and Bran- don -taged the harness horses in 1931, but this year Regina plans op a return to the gallopers. Giant Flying Boat May Build Airship To Furnish Three and a Half Day Service Between Britain and Canada The London Sunday Express said drawings were under preparation for a giant flying boat to be used on a three and one-half day service be- tween Great Britain and Canada via the Azores, Bermuda and the United States. An official of the Imperial Airways, interviewed by the Express, said ne- gotiations were being carried on be- tween Imperial Airways and Pan- American Airways in connection with the proposed service. He said also that the flying boat would be the big- gest ever known. An Original Idea 3 In the course of a speech to an ! education authority a lecturer stated that the best story of an examination he had heard was the following. At the enc. of an examination the master gathered up all the papers, among which he discovered one sheet which, \iestead-of being covered with histori- eal natnes and dates, bore merely a crude drawing of a tomb-stone on which was written, “Sacred to the memory which always deserts me on occasions like this.” Cigarettes that extinguish them- selves soon after they are thrown away are a new product, which may aid in fire prevention, Daughter, singing to her own ac- companiments: I'm afloat, I'm afloat! You'll jolly soor be cap- Germany. ch a squall as that! “EATIGU | just “No, Ldon't ha hold’ this sort arounc were worse tha’ “Then T le: The sure cur times we mus Saves the day, gone untilyoua the pain seldom three o'clock postpone if!” ave “nerves.” You can’ : an of position. My he » and cert n others, ned to rely on Aspirin,” e for any i L posta headache is rest, But some: 5 aUs when Aspirin : Aspirin ind the nagging ian is {have them, and head used to throb ain days, of course, Two tablets, re home. And once 1 Ie r n returns! you are comfortable Keep. As taking ie eat andy. Don't pat it away 5 be heroier but it eat headlache to finish Wrecg Dut off A night's sleen Jodo # little foolish, So jee oy me 1 | b. So is s3 irritated 1e°2, Because you've an mass Sci Neuritis, These Lakioretevling tooth ing cold, or depress the heart ot Always relieve, peeetgia, medical opinteart git May be taken freee don't twenty years of made yt tact established 1s; That is Thetanighee dlical practise, by the last buying Aspiris a Not act the sa, h. Don't tah Ke | me. Aspirin is m tion t c © be observed js when y, & substitu: testa ecause it will 4. RE te itn