a Sage a » : s q . ” 4 4 7 4 eo ¢ 4 : ‘- _ the Canadian Army Dental ; 3 sf ‘Take fie Wake Fat Men are Told How can you walk off your fat if you haven't any energy to do it? You can take off fat with Kruschen Salts if you will take one-half teaspoon in hot water every morning before breakfast, modify your diet and exercise regularly, There are six different salts in Kruschen that your body organs must “have if you are to enjoy good health, While you are losing fat you will be gaining in vigor, energy, vitality and power of endurance. : That means that soon you will be ‘able to walk many miles without fatigue and enjoy every step you walk. Drug Stores all over Canada sell Kruschen Salts, and a jar costs but 75 cents—it’s a real blessing to fat people, WORLD HAPPENINGS BRIEFLY TOLD Francis Watts, the authority on tropical agriculture, died recently at Port of Spain, Trinidad, aged 71. The port of Vancouver, I believe, is destined to become the greatest in -the world,” said the Minister of Ma- rine, Hon. Alfred Duranleau, in an address at Vancouver. c Dr. Charles F. Colter, D.D.S., who was largely instrumental in forming Corps early in the war, died in Toronto, in his 64th year. When the Prince of Wales visits South America next year to open the British Trade Exhibition at Buenos Aires, he plans some extensive sight- seeing. _ There were no legal barriers to the building in London, England, of a hotel by the C.P.R., despite a rumor from London to the contrary, com- pany officials stated. Another great Buropean war in 1932, resulting in the annihilation of Germany, is predicted by General Ludendorff in a pamphlet just pub- lished. The trade delegation of the Cana- dian Chambers of Commerce was en- te in at by the Pan-Pacific Association before sailing for Hong Kong: The preparatory disarmament com- ‘mission adopted the first article of the naval armament section of the ‘draft convention providing for total i and of ti The British dirigible R-34, which crossed from Scotland to Mineola, N.Y., in 1919, required 108 hours for the journey, 60 hours longer than the land-to-land crossing of the this year. Premier MacDonald's official resi- dence, No. 10 Downing Street, had a window smashed with a brick. A man E whose name was given as Louis Col- il He Miller, 60, was arrested and charged with causing wilful damage. * Encourage Seed Cleaning P Saskatchewan Municipalities Take Advantage Of Government Assistance rural ities were provided with combination seed cleaning outfits, under arrange- ment with the Provincial and Federal Governments during this, the first year of operation of the scheme, ac- cording to Hon. W. C. Buckle, Minis- _ter of Agriculture for Saskatchewan. Under the plan the cost of the ma- chines is shared by the two govern- ments; the municipalities supplying the engine, the housing and transpor- tation equipment. Milk Pool To Expand The Saskatoon Milk Pool, whose corporate name is “The Saskatoon Dairy Co-Operative Marketing Asso- elation Limited,” has decided to ex- pand and go into the dairy business. It is now prdceeding to get into touch with those eligible for membership. a Picture of Health Now “In May and June I was badly rundown and had faint spells until it was a drag to do my work, In July and August I didn’t seem to pick up so I de- cided to try Lydia E. Pink- ham’s Vegetable Compound because I saw it advertised. I took two bottles and now lam R-100 Reporter Plans Yukon Trip Newspaper Man From Paris Will Write About Frontier Life In Canada | Sent by his newspaper, “Petit Par- isien,’ to gather data on the north- | western parts of Canada, a young Parisian reporter, Alloucherie, passed through Montreal recently on his way to Yukon and Alaska where he in- tends studying the romantic and im-} | pressive surroundings that inspired Jack London's celebrated novels. A year ago Mr. Alloucherie made a | trip out west to investigate immigra- tion problems, but, this time, his |inquiry will cover the life of the mounted police, the prospector, the | Eskimo and the missionary. His trip, which has Vancouver as a starting point will extend as far as Ketchigan, | | Dawson and possibly Nome. Mr. Al- }loucherie intends retracing the path of the ’98 gold rush. / Yor Instant Ease From /1/ COUGHING fake | BUSKLEY’S MIXTURE A Sincte Sip Proves i. | | Personality Suffers In Mechanical Age | Toronto Minister Says Victorian Era Not Altogether To Be Pitied The rise in general intellectual de- | velopment in the modern age did not | entirely compensate for the loss of Similar work, on previous occasion: has taken the young French reporter to Morocco and Syria, where he fur- nished the “Petit Parisien” with magazine material necessitated by | tense competition now existing be- tween the feature sections of Paris- ian newspapers. C.P.R. Hotel For London Arrangements Have Been Made For Securing Sultable Site Annonucement was made by EB. W. Beatty, chairman and president of the Canadian Pacific Railway Company, of the acquisition of a site for the hotel proposed to be erected by the company in London, England. Mr. Beatty's statement follows: “After protracted negotiations, the r has in a hotel site in London, facing Berkeley Square and Bruton Street. The block is a substantial one, containing ap- proximately 77,000 square feet in area. Negotiations for its acquisition are just about completed, and when possession is secured, which will not, however, be for some months yet, the jthe d P | Victorian era, Rey. G. Stanley Rus- | sell, pastor of Deer Park United Church, Toronto, told members of the } Toronto Public School Teachers’ As- j sociation at its annual meeting. The | loss of individuality and personality, jhe said, was one of the by-products |of the enormous increase in mechan- ical inventions. The art of hand-writing, he said, |was passing because of the preva- lence of the typewriter. People “banged” letters to one another on the typewriter, but the day of long hand-written personal epistles had passed its zenith. Because of the in- | vention of the typewriter, people were |laying by the use of their hands in | writing and because of the advent of | the motor car, they were losing their legs. The chance for close observa- | tion of nature, and one benefit to |health as well, were being sacrificed when people gave up walking. The glory and personality had like- |wise gone out of war. Military |training, he stated, had no real re- lationship to warfare today because MES had become merely a thing of j ies of the work of construction will In the interim, the company’s engin- eers and architects will proceed with the preparation of preliminary plans. The hotel, when completed, will con- tain a minimum of six to seven hun- dred rooms.” Winnipeg Newspaper Union FRONT OF APRON AND RUFFLE CUT IN ONE It’s simple as A, B, C, to make! You'll like this dainty apron im- mensely. It's so attractive to slip on over one’s best frock. It is gay chintz that is useful as well. It offers lovely protection to the front of the frock. Aren't you surprised to learn that the front of the apron and ruffle cut in one piece? The belt is in two sections and is attached at sides and fastens at the back with button. The top of the &pron is joined to a yoke with U-shaped neck. Made in a jiffy! !You bet! For the medium size, 1% yards of 40-inch material is sufficient. Style No. C-892 is designed in sizes small, medium and large. ted swiss in pastel shade and blocked tissue gingham in yellow and white are dainty suggestions. Send 25 cents (in stamps or coin) to Fashion Bureau. Write carefully the picture of health: I feel fine, do all my work and milk two cows. If any woman writes, I will certainly answer her letter.”—Mrs, George R. Gillespie, Punnichy, Saskatche- wan. Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound E. Pirkham M. Mase jand the and plainly your name and full address, the number of the pattern you want. How To Order Patterns Adcress: Winnipeg Newspaper Union, 175 McDermot Ave., Winnipeg | | Pattern NO... sss. Size ., | meen mee tee messes eee ees NBMO seresnesreseremereessesenees TOWD pt actow stim mes mrsssrmmrmmses Red and white dimity*prints, dot-| | 1 and devices. Much sympathy, he felt, was now | being wasted on people who lived |in the reign of Victoria. It was a | very happy period, he said, despite the jeers which a certain faction of the “moderns” hurled at it. ~ New Job For Prince Sir Phillip Giggs Thinks He Could Lead Emigrant Army Sir Phillip Gibbs, famous war cor- respondent and author, has submit- ted to the responsible authorities pro- posals for a novel oversea settlement crusade led by the Prince of Wales. The first contingent would be of one hundred thousand of the younger men with their womenfolk, who would form new colonies and organ- ized on the same lines as the ex- peditionary force to France with general headquarters staffed by ad- ministrators and experts including engineers, agriculturists and social organizers. “If the Prince went into the dis- tressed areas saying ‘follow me,’ the young manhood would follow him in the great adventure if he promised to be their leader to go out “with them and visit them from time to time. The Prince alone could break down the political opposition of the Dominions and rally them to a new idea of service on behalf of the motherland,” says Sir Phillip. Long Cruise In Fishing Boat Adventurers Reach Pacific Coast After Crossing Atlantic and Sailing Through Panama E. W. Wilson, with a crew of three, has arrived in Nanaimo on the Brix- ton, “Lady Royal,” a 25-ton fishing boat, after crossing the Atlantic, sailing through the Panama Canal and up the Pacific Coast. The adventurous trip was at times full of hardships and danger. Once when more than 900 miles from land, provisions and water ran low. For two weeks the crew were reduced to one cupful of water a day. By steer- ing into the passenger lanes, the lit- tle sloop was eventually sighted by the Matson liner, “Wilhemina,” which supplied food and other necessities. Australian Wheat Crop Australia's wheat crop for 1930-31 is estimated at 200,000,000 bushels |from 18,160,000 acres as compared | with 112,000,000 bushels from 14,500,> | 000 acres in 1929-30, and 131,172,000 | bushels from 12,576,000 acres, the average for five years, 1925-26 to 1929. | Will Build Produce Market Twenty market gardeners in | Winnipeg region are planning the jconstruction of an all-year produce |market in Winnipeg, to be conducted |by the growers, each of whom will occupy a stall. The cost of the build- ing will run to about $35,000, | Automobiles E | In 1919 the number of touring auto- | mobiles entering Canada was 238,000, |In ten years (1919) this number grew | to 4,509,000. | ring Canada Lift Right Off NoPain ® PUTNAMS Corn Extractor the | Invisble R ay Stalls Cars , Drivers Complain and German Goy- | Started | What it may be that has ykters| |fously been stalling cars on the Saxon |highroad has not deyeloped, but the | German government denies it is a se- eret ray cast across the countryside in its experiments. | The War Ministry took official cog- jnizance of reports filtering in from Czecho-Slovakia, concerning the re- puted invisible ray, It was flatly denied that any such experiments were being carried on at the time anywhere in Germany, and even if | they were, it was added, they would | be conducted in some isolated region. | One of the reports quoted a chauf- |feur as saying that he and about |forty other drivers on the road be- |tween Risa and Wurzen suddenly | found their magnetos out of action. | He said an official of the Saxon Gov- ernment told them experiments were being carried on from a station four kilometres away with a ray capable of stopping automobile or airplane en- gines at long range, After about an hour, the chauffeur said, the magnetos suddenly began working again. Canada Ranks Second In Fatal Accidents Records Show Percentage Not Much | Lower Hhan States It will not make pleasant reading for Canadians to be told that Can- ada ranks second in the records of fatal accidents. The United States heads the list of all civilized coun- tries in the world for its death rate in accidents, which is 79.2 per 100,- 000. Canada comes second with 62.5 deaths per 100,000 of the popula- tion, while England and Wales have only 41. These are the figures just published by Dr. Louis I. Dub- lin, statistician of the Metropolitan Life. In the course of a recent ad- dress he pointed out that motor vehicles were responsible for 31,- 000 of the 97,000 persons accidentally killed in the United States last year. There were 31,000 deaths and also no fewer than 1,000,000 injuries. These figures are a gruesome re- minder that every precaution must Wee ‘DO YoU HEADACHE? So easy to get quick relief and pre- vent an attack in the future, Avoid bromides and dope. They relieve quick- ly but affect the heart and are very dangerous, They are depressing and only give temporary relief, the cause of the headache still remains within. | The sane and harmless way. First correct the cause, sweeten the sour and acid stomach, relieve the intes- tines of the decayed and poisonous food matter, gently stimulate the liver, start the bile flowing and the bowels pass off the waste matter which causes your headache. Try Carter’s Little iver Pills. Druggists 25c red pkgs. Recipes For This Week (By Betty Barclay) CHERRY ROLLS a & cups special cake flour, sifted. 3 teaspoons baking powder. 4% teaspoon salt. 2 tablespoons butter or other shotening. 1% cup milk (about). 1 can (two cups) red cherries, seeded and drained. Sift flour once, measure, add bak- ing powder and salt, and sift again. Cut in shortening. Add milk grad- ually until soft dough is formed. Roll %4 inch thick. Cover with cherries. Roll in long roll, pressing edges to- gether. Cut into 114-inch slices. Place in greased pan and pour cherry sauce over them. Bake in hot oven (425 degrees Fahrenheit) 30 minutes, bast- ing often. Serve hot, with sauce pour- ed around them and a tablespoon of whipped cream placed on each slice. Serves six. Cherry sauce calls for 1 cup sugar, 1 tablespoon flour, 1 cup cherry juice, 1 cup water and 1 tablespoon butter. Combine sugar and flour, add fruit juice and water, and cook 1 minute. Then add butter. APPLE SAUCE PUDDING ; 1-junket tablet. 1 tablespoon cold water. 1 cup thick apple sauce. be taken to on the highways. d ti Britain’s Unemployment Problem Premier Ramsay MacDonald Sponsors | | Back To the Farm Movement | | The British Labor Government is/ | considering a “back to the farm” so- \Tution for the nation’s unemployment | problem. | Premier Ramsay MacDonald- con- |ferred with the Minister of Agricul- | ture on a bill which would provide garden plots and small farms as a aeeee of sustenance to jobless men who know how to till the soil. Mr. MacDonald said he believed the cities’ unemployment burdens were increased by the presence of many farmers who have fled from poverty to the centres of popula- tion. Because the funds available are restricted, he explained, the new bill would put the farms at the dis- posal of trained men’ only, since it would take too long to make farm- ers out of city dwellers. Would Be Safe Rudiments Of Flying Taught In Lon- don, England, From Table-Top A table-top teacher for the rudi- ments of flying is being used in Lon- don, England, to teach student fliers, don, England, to teach student fliers. The “pilot” is provided with a reat joy-stick, a rudder bar and throttle, | | fitted under the table at which he sits. On the table at his eye level \is a large model airplane and the rear end of the case is open so that the | pilot will feel a wind up to 70 miles | jan hour. All movements of the con- | trols at the desk are recorded by the | enclosed "plane. MMe iT Manitoba Honey Crop Manitoba has this year harvested the largest honey crop in her history, | states L. T. Floyd, provincial apiarist. |The reports completed Friday, Nov. 14, on which the total crop estimate |is based, places the figure at 10,110,- 1123 pounds of which only one half is reported sold. The average per |colony reported was 163 pounds. The |season this year was ideal as every | ‘one with a hive of bees reports a |crop, some excellent reports coming |from the far north in the inter-lake | | country. Wanted It To Use Plain Lady at Counter—I want a cake of soap. Fancy Young Clerk—Yes, madam. Here is Prince Domitroeo’s Boudoir soap, highly milled and finely scent- ed. This here is Madame Nix’s vel- vet cuticle soap, while this here named after the Prince of Which one would you pre- madam ? | L 28, fer, Plain that will ta Haye you any soap the dirt off? | | It was once supposed that the | northern lights of Arctic regions} could be smelled as well as seen. —{ A new form of cold in London is| believed to be caused by an ingect sting | ——— te | England's national expenditure to- | day is $4,300,000,000, an increase of | $3,875,000,000 over the 1913-14 figure: | | There has been no execution for) murder in Denmark since 1892. 1 pint milk. - 3 sugar. %% teaspoon vanilla (or other flav- ~ oring). Season the apple sauce to taste with cinnamon or nutmeg, and divide it among 6 dessert glasses. Prepare the junket according to directions on the package. Pour carefully at once over the apple sauce. Let Stand un- disturbed in a warm room until set— about 10 minutes. Then chill. Butter In Cold Rare Forty-Five Per Cent. Increase Is Noted In Report Made Public Increases of practically 45 per cent. in the amounts of butter in cold stor- age on Noy. 1, compared with the totals for the same date in 1929, were noted in a report issued by the Do- minion Bureau of Statistics. The amount of cfeamery butter in storage this year was 33,844,099 pounds and of dairy butter, 527,299 pounds. Eggs in cold storage amounted to 12,285,275 dozen, an increase of 36.3 per cent. over last year. Cheese stocks totalled 24,800,773 pounds, an increase of 1.65 per cent. over 1929 figures. Safety First The Sabetha Herald editor is now spending a brief period out of town. Last week the make-up man accident- ally added a boxing bout paragraph to the story of the most prominent wedding of the season. It said: “The assembled crowd greatly enjoyed the fight, which was a slugging match from start to finish.” - : - , 7. al Trying Hypnotism As a Cure For Amnesia Being Young Man’s Memory Is Gradually Restored Through the strange powers of hyp- | notism, memory may be restored to the healthy young man who awoke }last year in a small New Orleans ' hotel with his past a complete blank. ‘All other treatments having failed to penetrate the fog of his memory, the patient agreed to permit Dr. zeal comfort and long-lasting enjo Nothing else gives so much bene: fit at so small a cost. e C. Young, Professor of Ph y at Louisiana State University, to try hypnotism. Dr. Young reported that these ex- periments conducted over a period of months at the East Louisiana Hos- pital had brought some results, and may prove as fruitful as those con- ducted by Dr. William Brown, British hypnotist, with shell-shocked veter- ans, Bit by bit his past has been recon- structed, Dr. Young explained, by putting the patient under delusion that he was again a child. In the trances, Dr. Young said, the man had mentioned an orphans’ home called “Sacred Heart,” a Sister Mary, of be- ing a newsboy in San Francisco and of being called “Chuck” by play- mates. He also mentioned having in- fantile paralysis, which was proved by a physical “examination. Encouraged by the results, Dr. Young hopes to bring him through the stages of his life until he can pick up the threads lost when he awoke in New Orleans. Outside of his loss of memory phy- sicians said the man appeared to be healthy and normal. He has adopted the name of “Mason.” Dairy Production Higher Latest Statistics Show Appreciable Increase For All Canada “Statistics of dairy production at the present time indicate that there is an appreciable increase in milk and cream production all over Can- ada at the present time,” observes Dr. J. A. Ruddick, dairy commission- er of the Dominion Department of Agriculture. With respect to butter production Ontario and Alberta show a 15 per cent. increase for the first six months of the production year. Cheese production, of which 97 per cent. is centered in Ontario and Que- bec, was 30,000 boxes behind last year at at October 11. One of the interesting features in the dairy in- dustry at the present time is the in- creasing demand for dairy stock in the prairie provinces. . May Not Be Practical Value Of Reading Machine Yet To Be Proved A new invention from Berlin is a “reading machine’ which will pro- ject printed pages upon a screen, en- abling either a family or an entire It isa derful help in and play —keeps you cool, calm and contented, Quick, Sure Relie for BILIOUSNESS SLUGGISHNESS CONSTIPATION BS Take one tonight — Make tomorrow er q “THEY WORK WHILE YOU SLEE Mail Will Be Carried Into North Air More Frequently Arrangements for an air mail se vice into the Mackenzie River trict through the winter of 1930: have been made by the Post Off Department, according to an nouncement in the November supp) ment to the Canada Official Postal Guide. The air mail service will superced ‘all previous mail services to this are | and will effect more frequent and speedy communication than has be: possible in the past. The frequency | of delivery will be increased to more {than double, and the time will be re- ‘duced to less than half. : The mail service between Herschel — Island, ¥.T., and Aklavik, N.W.T., will be performed by police patrol. Rae will be served. irregularly by | police patrol from Fort Resolution. | n | | WN-ng : > 4 Popular stories to the contra ee {there is no such thing as a hoop- — | snake which can put its tail in its to read The pro- jector greatly enlarges the picture, permitting several pages of normal size reading to be reproduced from a film the size of a postal card. Whether this invention will be of any practical value remains to be demon- strated. The inventor declares it will revolutionize the publishing of books, since one of these small films can take the place of several books. Silver Fox Breeding Canada was the first to develop the breeding of silver foxes in captivity and she has so maintained her posi- tion in this respect that she is re- garded as a world-leader by all other countries whose representatives per- iodically visit the Dominion to secure breeding stock and in search of knowledge and advice in the conduct of similar undertakings. thet tear the Chest #4 Mathien 7 Pp MATHIEU'S COUGH DROPS A List Of “Wanted Inventions'* Full Information Sent Free On “Request. The RAMSAY Co. Ser 273, 5aNK st “¢ 17 OTTAWA, Ont This unbreakable glass light and flexible, easy will withstand extreme CUT DOWN YOUR LOSSES BY INSTALLING perature, keeps out cold and wet, but Invest in WINDOLITE Windows and you will be repaid a hundredfold in the health of your Poultry and Live Stock THE ORIGINAL GLASS SUBSTITUTE MADE IN ENGLAND SINCE 1917 ON ORIGINAL PATENTS substitute is to cut and fit, changes in tem- the the allows cluding glass. full health-giving Ultra-Violet Rays, which do not penetrate ordinary sunlight to enter, In- a a ame HeALAEATUEAL WINDOLITE Canadian breeders of poultry and livest ock are finding Windoli and profitable inv Young chick and turkey: ness and disease and will thrive in confi under Wi 8 are a free from leg weak. os uuennugay nit tanga ut I a most B ff comes in rolls any length, but 36 inches wide only. Distributors: JOHN A. 51 Wellington St. W. : | Smunnon onan eeen ene TT it CH ANTLER & CO., LTD TORONTO, ONT.