‘and passed, that an appropriation of

_ lowed to blow back to town with the

The poitey ot in dumping the Bo river wag 8tron nounced at meeting of the > Board . Trade held in <r ; dining room Wednesday at 1:00 p.m. The question is one which been taken up a number of times in previous years by the town council and by citizens, but the City of Cal-

gary te still permitted to dump raw.

sewage into the river from ‘which the Town of Baspano gete its water supply... Fe

The question was brought up at the Wednesday meeting by Robt. McLean when he made a motion, seconded by A. McKee, that ‘the sec- retary be instructed % write to the City of Calgary protesting against their sewage dumping policy. A. T. Connolly, R. A, Travis, H. O. Bredin, H. G. Angell, Wm. McLaws, and othera spoke on the subject. Bredin said that at previous times the town council had endeavored to have thig trouble remedied. They had taken tip the matter with “the provincial health department. with the object of compelling Calgary _ to build a sewage disposal plant, but nothing had come of it.. Samples of water were taken at various times and sent to Edmonton for analysis, Testa showed the water to be free from disease germs,

Mr. McLaws said i was not a question of whether the testa showed disease germs to be present or not. It was a question of Calgary dump- ing raw sewage into the river when they had no right to do so, according to the provincial health Jaws,

Mr. Bredin said the council was now making further efforts in this matier with the health department at Edmonton. The motion passed.

A motion was put by Geo. Travis

$25 be made for the payment of Perry Johnston as life guard at the

ground west of town, saying t rubbish\was dumped there and al-

first strong west wind. The secretary was instructed to write the town overseer requesting that he devise wayg and means to prevent this nuisance,

The question of holding a school fair in Bassano wag brought up for discussion. It was decided to appoint a committee to look into this matter.

Twenty memberg attended the meeting, and they enjoyed the ex- cellent meal provided by the new management of the hotel dining room.

a WEED INSPECTOR ISSUES |. WARNING rs bd

8. J. Ewing, field supervisor, pase- ed through town Wednesday. He wishes to w arn all farmers and those operating threshing machines to be careful to obey the terms of the nox- jous weed act to see that their machines and wagon racks are well cleaned off before moving to other farms or onto road allowances,

Friday & Saturday

Weeks.

Sept. 28th and 29th

{of this vicinity have realized their} they |

dream of a church, and have a building of which they can, be justly proud. When entirely com-

It fs beautifully finished within as well as without the building. In spite of the very busy season building was practically filled to ca- pacity for the dedicatory ceremony.

The members of the W. I. had a very successful demonstration in basketry on Thursday, Friday, and Saturday of last week. Miss Knox Was the demonstrator. This was ithe second year work, and larger articles were completed, ag ferneries,

Mr, | Jardinieres, sewing stands, ete. There

were six members of the Girls’ Club who also took advantage of the op- portunity, and who learned the prin- ciples of basketry as shown jn a was.é paper basket. Frank Wolfe, while riding around his ranch Saturday, was “bucked off and fell between two rocks, landing almost fully upon one in such a. Way as to severely injure his hip. Dr. Scott was called, but the patient was in such agony that he could not be moved to the hospital, Sunday his ondition was about the same, | his uffering being very intense. Farmers here are in the midst of ihreshing operations. 126,000 bushels vere in the elevators Monday and 115,000 bushels had already been shipped out. It-is expected that chis point will ship a million bushels of wheat this season. The arrival of twelve cars last night prevented the threatened “plugging up” of the elevators, and hauling is at full

The. about o erect their how: elevator one hundred feet west of the loading platform. This will be ‘the _ sixth elevator in the row. It means also the building of a house, and the bringing in of another family. Hus sar keeps growing. Two new houses are in the process of erection.

Eddie Wall is on tthe sick lst. Mr. McKinney took him to Basgano Tues- day to see a doctor,

Mr, and Mrs. Hoiland left on an auto trip to Red Deer on Monday ev- ening.

Miss Evelyn Clitgard left Saturday to enter the junior class at the Uni- versity of Alberta. i ,

Bruce Bell left Friday to take up

‘}his work in the sophomore class at

the University of Alberta.

A very pieasant meeting of the W. TP wag held at the home of Mrs, Clif- gard on Tuesday afternoon. | Clitgard gave a very interesting ‘yaper on how to decorate a lawn. Mrs. W. C. Reesor played a beautiful piano solo and encore. Reports of the several committees were accepted.

' GEM THEA TRE

Monday & Tuesday ~October Ist & 2nd

A sinking ship, a romance adrift and the Kid

the You'll You'll

rescue!

pleted it will have cost about $5,000. |

Hight,

2 “Picture nfounted, ivade 2, ist Ta | Clifgatd, 2 Una Hoiland,

Mrs,

Himself to| “Captain January”

thrill rene Rich -

i

Moffat. Re 60 yd. dash, wirls pu un Ruth Brown, 2 Maxime Merrims Mary Kelly, pe pikes 100 yd. aad ROA Stati

Moffat and Pee saderiens’ Roland]

Brassard and Francts Holland.

Three legged race, girls open} -

class, 1 Queenie Sams and Lois Kelly | 2 Lucille Demers and Nettie Le]

Grandeur, 3 Margaret Bell = Elsie Keddy, .

Three legged race, boys open class} 1 Lorne Moffat and Ernest Hurtu-}.

buice, 2. Ivan Anderson and John Moffat, 3 Roland Brassard and H. Holten. :

100 yd. dash, boys 12 and under, 1 Lorne Moffat, 2 Emerson Brown, % Robert Kaughman.

100 yd. dash, girle 12 and under, 2 Annie Will} 2 Ruth Brown, 3 Bisie Kelly.

Relay race, 4 pupils from s*hoo' making team, 1 Hussar school, 2 Lawson school, 3 Atlas school. -

Penmanship

Grade 1, ist Alma Will, 2 Albert Will, 3 Katie Kaiser.

Grades 2 and 3, 1st June Clifgard, 2 Lois Hoagland, 3 Margaret Same, { James Lawson.

‘Grades 4 and 5, 1st Queenie Sams, 2 Dorothy Nelson, 3 Evelyn Forpe mi 4 Mey E. Kelly.

' 3 Lois Hoagland, 4 Harry Gustavsen.

Composition note book, grades 3 and 4, ist Margaret Sams, 2 James Lawson. x

Note book, gradeg 6 and 6, Ist Queenie Sams, 2 Emerson Brown, 3 Mary Kelly.

Note book, grades 7 and 8, ist Lois ‘| Kelly.

Note book, grades 9 and 10, 1

Lulu English.

Music

Solo, grades t and 2, Ist June Clifgard, 2 Verdella Stepan, 3 Albert Will, 4 Mary Hansen.

Solo, grades 3 and 4, Long.

Action song, lst, Hussar Primary room.

Ist Maleste

Public Speaking Grades 1 and 2, lst Pansy Merri- man, 2 June Clifgard, 3 Lois Hoag land, 4 Verdella Stepan.

(continued on back page)

The next meeting” will be held at>the home of Mrs, W. C, Reesor on Tues- day, October 23rd. Please note the date, October 23rd:.

BABY PEGGY

a mn

With ‘Hobart Bosworth

by taking in

ae towns of Standard, Rockyford,}: ad Arrow wood. I iore, Cluny ad Gleichen are alfo in the system.

vith thig expansion and the greater onsumpiion of curfént the company vind it possible to make a reduction a the rates. f a

The system will stil he operated inder the name of the United Blec- vic & Engineerin 'Co.

Thiee officials af the company, G. . Gaherty ‘managing director, F. J. .vobertson, general superintendent, and W. Anderson, commercial super- .ntendent, were in Bassano last Monday and interviewed Mayor H. 0..Bredin in the matter of the new

pamphlet. containing © es . scale and information for consumers. Each consumer will ‘be furnished with one of these pamphlets. It reads in part, ag follows:

Domestic ' Service—Is° available only for lighting, heating, cooking, lomestic power, and the ordinary uses in houses end apartments used exclusively for residential purposes. Service charge (fixed) 80c per month. First 30 kilowatt hourg per month,

10c per k.w.h. x Next 20 kilowatt hours per month,

10c for 2 k.w.h. f All over 60 kilowatt hours per month

10c for 3 k.w.h.

All over 200 kilowatt. bours

month, 10c for 6 k.w.h, Minimum charge, including service

charge, $1.80 gross per month; $1.60 net per month. . BOR.

Commercial Service—is available where other rates listed do not ap- ply. Service charge (fixed) 80c per

month for the first 500 watts of in- ‘taHed capacity, and 20c per month for each additional 250 watts of in

per

stalled capacity. . First 100 hours of installed capacity, 10c per k.w.h.

All over 100 hours; 10¢ for 2 k.w-h.

Minimum charge, including ser- vice charge, $1.80 per month gross; $1.60 net.

‘A discount of 10 per cent of the even dollars in the amount of the account, le, all accounts ‘to $3.90, discount is 30c; $4.00 to $4.90, dis- count is 40c, etc, ete,

Pay Up and Save Money

Jack Allan, local superintendent of the company, gave out the informa- ‘tion that all those whose accounts are now in arrears must pay up be- fore the new rates come into effect, Oct. Ist. If not bald before tnen the service will be disconnected, It will then cost the consumer $5.00 to be re-connected, and another $5.00 item called the consumer’s charge, making in all $10.00. Those in ar- rears will thus save $10.00 by paying hing at once.

Present consumers. in good stand- ing will not be required to pay either

bat Ppa 6

ald were welcome rasta the Sluss

home on Monday.

Mrs. Jas, Newman Was a caller at the home of Mrs. Gamble on Wed- nesday.

Mrs. Ohman arrived on ¢he Wed- 4. nesday evening train for a short vis- it with Mrs. F. T, Smith.

. Mrs. 0. Holm and Mrs. Snaith, of Lathom, were guests of Mrs, }man for dinner one day last week.

J. New

Mr. Alloway was in the district last week in connection with the bull ‘oaning policy, A. Matlick bought the pure bred Holstein bull formerly owned by the government.

Mr. and Mrs. Angell and the boys were dinner guests of Mr..and Mrs. Newman on Sunday last.

Miss L, Bingham, who taught Countess school last year, is in Mont- veal attending an art school for’ the winter, - ;

A, M. Anderson and Mrs. McDonald and son Donald motored to the dam on Sunday,

Mr. and Mrs. John Swanson, of Rosemary were visiting at the home ‘f Mr. and Mrs. A. Swanson the first of the week.

for two weeks longer all the grain

‘will be threshed in this district, The show in Bassano Saturday

night was wéll. attended by’ the

Rosemary people.

' Mrs. Pete Rosetta and her sister

Verna Thacker, left Tuesday to visit

their mother in Raymond, i ee

HERYFORD - BROS, HANDLE BIG OROP EXPEDITIOUSLY

eee, .

The two Heryford Bros. who farm about thirteen miles north-west of Bassano, in the Makepeace district, have almost finished threshing their wheat. Using a combine, they had cut and threshed 550 acres by Tues- day of this week, and were then working on their remaining 250 acres which they were handling by the straight combine method. About 240 acres of their crop was cut with a swather. q

A large acreage of the Heryford Bros. crop was sown on ground that Was not summer fallowed, and the stand of grain was not extra heavy, but even at that it averaged 35 bush- els to the acre. Their wheat graded No. 8.

will read an account of the home- coming of Satan. Semeone asked His Satapic Majesty where he had been that day and the reply was: ‘Walking up and down upon the earth, aud going to and fro upon it.” If one takes an auto trip these days ‘hat’s what he'll find most people doing—except that nobody walks. They all travel on wheels. . s s a

During the past summer I motored through Idaho, Oregon, and Wasb- ington. In the entire trip covering some.2800 miles I met about half a dozen horse drawn vehicles and thousands upon thousands of cars. Were the Devil to patrol the earth nowadays in the same manner he did of old the chances are he would be perambulating along in a product of General Motors or the Ford factory.

ses?

What impressed me most on my auto tour wag the wonderful roads on the route. Yes, and the kindly hospitality of the people. Those states are really foreign country to ‘Canadians, but the folks living there look upon Canucks as “kin,” They have a genuine admiration for the Dominion which does not tend to reduce the size of the visitors’ brims!

*?. *

I travelled along historic highways —the old Oregon trail and the route ét Lewis and Clark in the first trip white men had ever taken across the American Rockies. From Lewiston and Clarkston I followed the path along the Snake river taken by those intrepid explorers and frontiersmen over one hundred years ago. The route is marked by appropriate sign boards. Here Lewis and Olark par- leyed with Indians; a little farther

on they spent the winter, and‘so on. ese 8

About one year previous I had gone over the trail of another man—a king

Kenzie-——whose name is borne by

that mighty river that drains our

north country to the Arctic ocean.

hat

‘amongst explorers—Alexander Mac-

This courageous Gcot was the first white man to cross the Rocky Moun- He performed the hazardous a third of a century be-

tit son, usleussourr tacoma he and his first and last pages of Holy Writ you

LITTLE JOURNEYS

reas

«es 86 ity you go-to Peace River tewn you

137 years ago. The spot was located by Judge Howay, of New Westmin- ster, and I understand a memorial cairn will be erected three. I took a stone from the ruing of the fire place which possibly Mackenzie's hands had helped to build. s es e@

I was quite interested in the bank- ing syetem of the United States. We Canadians know our banking system pretty well. We have the “chain bank” system with the “seats of the mighty” in the money centres, of Montreal or Toronto. The local banking system is the style in the States, augmented by the Federal Reserve banks.

. . s

Their banking ‘system has the weakness that the prosperity of the bank depends entirely upon the pros- perity of the immediate district, while in Canada calamitous con- ditions in one district hardly affects a bank, because the strength of more prosperous portions of the country bears it up. (For instance, several poor crop years in the Bassano dist- rict would probably result in the banks closing if the ‘local system Was in operation.

*. * *&

On the other hand when a local bank fails in the United States its loans are usually in the immediate district and the money has not been drained to far away points. When the home Bank failed in Canada at «he branch in Fernie there was over $500,000 on deposit and loans totalled about $60,000. The balance was in- vested in wild-cat enterprises in Memphis, Tennessess, in timber lim- its in British Columbia, and possibly in musk melon hemos’ in Tanganytke,

-~_*

Local banks take a greater in- terest and ‘give stronger assistance in local enterprise. Our system of banke fail in heaps Feopeot,

My own ‘iedussdacey as to the com- parative systems are rather vague. While I like the solidarity of the Canadian banking system, still the United States has been built up on

nt « winter near the bs banking system until it is the

‘Threshing is progressing raplaly, and if this nice weather continues |

The use of trucks for hauling wheat to. the elevators has greatly speeded up delivery, and contributed tothe filling up of the country grain houses so rapidly. The same story of plugged elevators comes from ‘all points in the neighborhood of Bas- sano. Some farmers from distant points have intimated their tntention of building granaries in town to store theif wheat until they can get cars to ship it out.

‘Crops at Bassano are yielding heavily. Many fields are threshing 40 and 45 bushels to the acre, and some will run over 60 bushels. It ig estimated that for the district the tverage will be more than 40 bushels but this figure is declared by some to be too high.

Frost caused some damage to the wheat, and the grade has been low- ired on this account. Most of the grain so far delivered has graded No. 2 and 3, with some 4, and a little No. 1,

‘Harvest hands are scarce even at he high wages which are being paid,

It is difficult to estimate the am- yunt of threshing already completed, out probably more than 50 per cent of the wheat is now threshed. ~ Old timers say the weather this fall ig the finest for threshing op- erations they ever experienced here. SPECIAL ANGIAOAN SBERVICK

baer oper 2. cua

In preparation tor the 40th quar

iroughout th. ; donee at Calgary, October 7th to 16th, special arrange- ments have been made for the morn- {ng service at 11 o'clock at the Church of the Blessed Virgin on Sun- tay next, Sept. 30th. In .lace of -he sermon an address on the subject of the appeal will be given by one

%f the prominent leymen of the city.

of Calgary, Mr. Allan (C. Fraser, well

known in business and community |

affairs. Mr. Fraser is also a relative of the primate, the Archbishop © of Rupertslend. :

Jackie Coogan Stars In “Buttons”

Latest M-G-M Film Shows Him as a Bollboy on a Luxurious Ocean Liner

“Buttons,” a story of the sea, com ing to the Gem Theatre on Friday and Saturday, September 28th and 20th., is Jackie Coogan’s first vehicle under his new Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer con- tract, by which he becomes a full- fledged gtar in the M-G-M constella- tion.

This is the announcement from the offices of Irving G. Thalberg, and contains’ the news that Jackie’s new- est role, and the ‘‘oldest” role he hag ever played, will be as a cabin boy in a vivid tale of the ocean.

The story is an original by George Hill, noted director, who recently directed Lon Chaney and William Haines in ‘Tell It tov the Marines.”

Jackie with his hair cut short plays a youngster joined with the crew of a ship in a series of thrilling ad- ventures on ithe deep, Elaborate preparations were made for the pic- ture, which wag filmed as one of the biggest offerings on the studio’s new schedules An _ elaborate rounds the youthful star.

A great ocean liner was chartered for. the sea scenes in thie play. It is a vivid modern story of the ocean, with Jackie in the role of a page or bellboy on a passenger ship, George Hill directed the play from his own story. Lars Hanson, Gertrude Olm stead, Roy D'Arcy, Polly Moran and ot: are included in the notable

"It was staged on an elaborate te ove

The picture next Monday and Tues- day, October: 1 ana 2,

cast sure’

| Sounds, ‘so faint that h i ear can detect them, but wha into the waters of an aquari 7

stun and kill. sniall fish, An éarth=| Worm can hear well below the soil! the tread, of a thrush above, and so keep out of harm's way, One may) *| see a slug in a pansy bed but-can you. hear it munching away as it makes a meal ? : There is many a quiver in the air that means nothing to human beings but hag @& message for the ifsect or the bird. Since the beginning of time, electrons have rushed through the ether at the speed of 186,000 miles per second, but we never knew of their

| BlueRibbonTea

i plage ta

-pouring in upon him.,..At-the-same time is heard the “hiss” of the grain | after Mil

250 Cups to the Pound

An Inspiring Sight

mains in a world unknown to human senses ? | HAD NO APPETITE The prairies of Western Canada during this year of grace, 1928, have | ‘WEAK AND

been a joy to behold, In the early summer following the June rains the} DIZZY tender verdant green of the recently sown grain crops presented a restful | picture full of promise for the future. As week followed week of almost/This New Brunswick Woman ideal growing weather, with only an occasional storm affecting restricted | Restored By Dr. Williams’ areas, and an absence of rust and insect pests, the early promise of a bounti- | Pink Pills ful crop grew steadily into a certainty. : Mrs. James Belyea, Brown's Flat, Inspiring as the ptairies'were in early spring and the first days of sum-/ NB, .says:—“I am writing to tell

existence until ten years ago, when ‘wireless’ revealed it. What more re-

agent of Lord Stirling’s sold the whole of Nantucket Island to Thom- as Mayhew for £40; eighteen years _| later Mayhew sold a joint interest to nine partners for £30, and two beaver hats! The island is now a separate county of Massachusetts.

A worth-whilé sale was effected by Roger Ludlow, a year before May- hew bought Nantucket. Ludlow gave the Indians six fathoms of wampum, 6 coats, 10 hatchets, 10 hoes, 10

DELIOIOUS vaAy knives, 10 pairs of scissors, 10 jew's

Use veal steak one-half inch thick.| harps, 10 fathoms of tobacco, 3 ket-

Cut into pieces large enough for a/| tiles, and about 10 looking glasses for

Recipes For This Week By Betty Barclay)

neutralizes

acids, and at once. The sym- | acids,

toms disappear in five minutes. ‘Milk May Be Sold In Sheets.

ties of prepared powder, but shortly it will be made, and sold, in sheets.

A landed proprieitor at Copenha- gen has invented a device which ex- tracts the water from fresh milk and

mer, and full of promise as they were, as the crops became taller and the | you the great good I had through the! serving. Beat the yolk of one egg and| all the land bettween the Norwalk and| leaves dry milk which comes from heads began to develop and fill out as they swayed to the passing breeze, it | timely use of Dr. William’s Pink Pills.| add a teaspoon or more of water,| the Saugatuck rivers in Connecticut,| the machine in a form resembling

is in the late summer and early fall months that the West really comes into re i traal wedknomt be grt hip its own and presents a picture whieh few places in the world can rival and | appetite and frequently had dizzy

none surpass. spells, The least exertion would

! i This article is written in mid-September when days of unsurpassed sun- core tet sep palettes era

shine prevail, each day closing with a glorious sunset, the promise of still goctored a great deal without get- another day of perfect harvest weather to follow.. The writer has just com-!ting much relief, and was feeling pleted a motor trip through hundreds of miles of grain fields. And what a | 8reatly discouraged when i finally de- sight! If the pessimists of our Dominion could make such a trip surely their cided to try Dr. Williams’. Pink Pills, croaking voices would be silenced. { | of this medicine can best be summed)

Speeding along almost perfect roads, albeit only well graded dirt roads,/ UP by saying that I am again per- whether over prairie as level as a billiard table, or with the feeling of a bird fectly well, able to do my housework

rising and dipping as the car speeds over more rolling country, dropping in-

duty to recommend Dr. Williams’ |

The happy results following the use} j,i,

and enjoy life once more. I feel it a| removin,

| into this dip the veal; then roll in| extending one day’s walk from the | bread crumbs which have been toast-| Sound.

ed and well seasoned with salt and —_——

| Pepper. Have an iron spider piping Insects Take Toll Of Grain

| ot with about one-fourth inch hot

{fat in the bottom. Pan-fry the veal Spoil About Five Per Cent. Which ; quickly on both sides until a nice would Otherwise Become Food

| brown, then cover the veal with hot! One small section of the insect foes (a pint or more of sour cream! of man is estimated to spoil nearly | may also be used). Cover tightly and| five per cent. of the grain and milled | set in a slow oven for about one hour, products of this country alone which

g& the lid for the last fifteen! otherwise would become food for the

to a valley here and winding up through the hills, only one sight reaches the | Pink Pills to all weak people.” ee a table.

eye,.and that panorama extends unchanged as far as the eye can reach—a| If you have any, or all, of the | ae The atory of how science and the

seemingly limitless expanse of yellow golden grain. The whole country is | retin agricole pope rs Ma ee LUFF milling industry and farmers are

golden’ yellow. | Williams’ Pink Pills You will be| 4 °S& yolks. combatting. this: taroad, with snotehe f

And no great industrial city in the world can show a scene of greater | surprised to note the improvement in activity. On all sides can be heard the click and clatter of the binders as they | your condition after a few weeks. You | cut down the ripened grain and with automatic carelessness toss the bound °®” Set these pills through any deal-|

er in medicine or by mail 0 cents sheaves to one side, ready for the stookers. With amazing frequency the|, box from the De cae Medi. sight is witnessed of the newer combines—reaper and thresher—some using | cine Co., Brockville, Ont. If you will |

the swather attachment, others threshing the grain as the big machines Send your name and address a little)

move onward with the irresistibility of a tank in modern warfare. In some aati Ronin, Up the Blood,

fields the harvest hands are busy in groups gathering the sheaves anito |” sts nat BB Be

stooks; across the road a’ threshing gang is at work, horses hauling great |

racks or stook-loading machines, pitchers, engineers, firemen, drivers, all} Shi aeeayet ere

covered with dust and working at Iigh pressure to accomplish a maximum | . lore we eee ee erry

ora tore daylight fails. | ment aid!. Congress does not realize And .as one speeds along the road it becomes a necessity to slow down ea expaneive:ttda S90 opiate &. mip

and turn out every few minutes as we pass, or allow to pass, a box wagon or os hy, bo DATERRIRR: Alou squat; Americas

motor truck loaded to capacity with the wheat being hurried to the eleva- | ep 4 BAO0.000.000 whadass

tors, those far from artistic but essentially modern and practical adjuncts to DORETRORRIAD SS OEUE SOB: Ga

twentieth century grain raising and marketing. Every road is alive with! Bret. am oven, eee chanpet arene

them, great wagons drawn by teams, double teams, ‘horses three abreast paemeenecie, or get slong. with fews

countless new motor trucks, strings of wagons hauled by a tractor, driven pen Of) Shem, i

by old men and. young, boys hardly in their. teens, women and girls, all +B 2 9

headed to the nearest railway station. r | Painless and perfect-in their action,

; . * | Milier’s Worm Powd al 3 And these small prairie towns and villages tnrough which we pass every | a ped ina petabhe’ Yapay tor yes hd

eight or ten miles all present the same scene of tireless activity. The loade¢ | dren who show symptoms of worms. grain wagons and trucks are lined up awaiting their turn to reach the | These symptoms are easily recogniz- elevators, while the ‘putt, putt” of the engines testify to the energy with | #Ple in a feverish restlessness, fre-

| quently ending in convulsions. A which tne elevator operator is striving to keep up with the golden stream | Solat 7. notable importance is that

er’s Worm Powders have as it is emptied through. the eleyator chutes into the waiting freight cars | expelled the worms, the stomach and

All night long therelevators’ struggle with the gigantic task before them.| bowels are toned up into a very and through the night the long trains plunge through the darkness hurrying | arr tand aa Ae the proceeds of thé farmers’:toil to the hungry markets of the world.

And where are those tens of thousands of harvesters from Eastern Can- ada, British, Columbia, and the miner-haryesters from over thé sea, whick only afew days ago thronged our cities and larger town distributing cen- tres? Scattered singly or in groups they have been swallowed up in the grain fields of Canada’s prairie provinces. They have been merged into and be- fome a part of the Hpic of the West. They are working hard, but they are, too, catching a glimpse of a new life and it is inconceivable that they will fail to become imbued with some of the courage, the optimism, the vision of this great new land.

September days in Western Canada! Glorious days, health-giving, wealth- giving.

New Use For Radio Waves Manufacture Asphaltic Oil Will Kill Germs Found In Milk, Says | Imperial Oil Co Austrian Professor

Radio waves will kill germs found in milk, according to a report re- ceived by the medical college of the, University of California from Dr. Karl Seidel of the. University of Vienna. .

Research done by the Austrian pro- fessor indicated that intense radio beams of very short wave length will kill germs without altering the milk molecules. nor-changing the natural flavor, the report says,

Turks Are Progressing Dictator Kemal Pasha is compel- |ling the Turks to abandon the Arabic alphabet and to learn the Latin alphabet. Turkey is more progres- sive than the Irish Free State with its compulsory Gaelic. While the |Turk goes forward the Celt goes back.

Minard’s Liniment cleanses cuts, ete.

“Not by appointment do we meet delight and joy; they heed not our expectancy: But round some corner mpany Erect Plant In| in the streets of life they on a sudden

Regina For Production Of Oil clasp us with a smile.”

For Road Making aca enesnmerciaieamnens

A new industry got under way in| Joseph Conrad, the novelist, could Regina a few days ago when there| not speak English until he was 19,

was erected a $25,000 plaht by the ~—— ees Imperial Oil Company. It is for the = Pimples Itched And Burned Badly

manufacture of asphaltic oil, being -Cuticura Healed »

used for waterproofing gumbo roads| in Saskatchewan and also of asphalt for paving and other purposes, The new plant has a capacity of between 300 and 400 barrels of asphaltic oil per day.

A graceful compliment comes fro: Paris. A very pretty girl was stand- ing in front of a French wit at the races. “I trust I am not obscuring your view,” she said. “Madame” he replied, “I prefer the obstruction to the view.”

The. hardest part about knowing some people is to. conceal your opin- ion of them,

ing caused many eruptions. They were 80 ful that I could not sleep, and used to cry from the pain. The trouble lasted two years.

‘| Johnny: “Well, he lives in a street | where all the other boys are bigger

ing success was told in a paper by George A. Dean and Gilbert Shenk before the Fourth International Con- gress of Entomology, which conven at Cornell University, Ithaca, N. The entomologists gathered to relate their almost endless skirmishes with insect enemies, Mr. Dean is entomo- logist of the Kansas State Agricul- tural College, and Mr. Shenk is assis- tant entomologist, bureau of entomo- |rind, and hot water)! and cook in| !08y, U.S. Department of Agricul- double boiler until mixture thickens, | ‘¥T¢-

stirring constantly. Beat egg whites| GS and heat are the two agencies until stiff, add two tablespoons sugar, | Checking the insect raids on grain and fold info first mixture. Chill; line| Products. Mr, Dean named gases sherbert, glasses’ with lady-fingers; which are under test, but said that fill with orange mixture and serve. pe raga acid gas had been found

aI effective. ,

. 4 Maintaining a temperature of 120. Belgians: Are Catering to 125 degrees Fahrenheit in mills for To Tourist Trade

10 to 12 hours effectively destroys all the .insect life sought, provided the American Featutres Being Installed In Every Coast Resort

heated air is fanned or otherwise completely distributed. This degree of Belgium is going to great lengths| heat, Mr. Dean says,.does no injury to attract American visitors. to flour. In every coast resort dotted along the sands stretching from the French to the Dutch border the installation of American features is strikingly noticeable.

4 tablespoons sugar. cup orange juice. Grated rind 1 orange. Grated rind 1 lemon. 2 tablespoons hot water. 4 egg whites. 2 tablespoons sugar. . Lady-fingers. Beat egg yolk with four table- spoons sugar; add orange juice and

A Corrector Of Putmonary Trou- bles.—Many testimonials could be presented showing the great efficacy of Dr. Thomas’ Eclectric Oil in cor- recting disorders of the respiratory processes, but the best testimonial is

Soda fountains with a menu that ; aid tié. O1L te eaeiiend # experience - would disgrace the most select haunts | ed to all who suffer from these dis-

of Palm Beach, are to be met every-| orders with the certainty that they where. The prices are ridiculously | will find relief. It will allay inflamma- cheap. A banana-split costs only 12| tion in the bronchial tubes. cents, while the most expensive com- potaar bination can be had for 25 cents, Locating ‘Rome

Grape fruit is as plentiful ag in| An American mother and daughter any American town, No longer dc had made an exhaustfve tour of the the restaurants make a feature of| Continent. When they returned . to the Continental breakfast. Dejeuner| their “home town” somebody asked a la Americaine is prominently dis-|the mother if they had been to Rome, played on the menu. * “Say, Sadie,” said the mother to

“A stack of pancakes” and similar| the daughter, “did we go to Rome?” phrases are now part of the educa-| “Why, mother,” replied the daugh- tion of the waiters in Belgian ‘hotels| ter, “of course we did, Don’t you afid restaurants. One restaurant in| remember that’s where you bought Knocke-sur-Mer even featured ‘corn-|the black silk stockings with the on-the-cob ag part of its fare, a dish | White clocks?” extremely difficult to find even in ' London. Explanation Is Simple

No hotel worthy of the name ex- Exceedingly strange are the whys ists without its American bar. Every | and wherefores of names, Take, for known from of cocktail can be pro-| instance, the letter ‘Q”—how many cured, shaken in the best style of the| of us have ever stopped to think or American bartender, Salted peanuts| to ask ourselves why we call it “Q’- and olives adorn the counter. Stools| And the answer is just as strangely and a foot-rail complete the atmos-| curious as the question, The name phere of a saloon in the United States | of the letter “‘Q” is from the French before prohibition days. Central heat-| word “queue” meaning “tail.” “Q” is ing is another feature ofthe hotels. | simply an “O” with a tail!

There are 42,992’ women employed Eix-Kaiser Recovers Farms underground in the mines of Japan| Former Kaiser Wilhelm of Ger- at present, and new regulations pro-| many, has won a suit for the recoy- vide that no more shall be so em-|ery of two confiscated farms. The

Teacher: “Johnny, why is it that ployed. : farms weré Belzed by the Govern- ‘you are not as polite and well be- + ‘ment of the Union of South Africa, ‘| haved as Jimmy?” Life insurance 7 The case is considered im-

he has saved, but to save.

sheets of rather heavy tissue paper. In this form the milk, it is stated,

can be kept for years, and becomes | /ensth. ik “fresh milk” again by mixing it with| Foodstuffs

lukewarm water. It is intended to build a factory to

tween the heater and the heated body, and lighting lamps without any ap- These are done by power obtained from a new short-wave vacuum tube. High frequencies are produced at high power, using a short-wave have been enclosed in a glass tube and hung from the end of

a metallic “aerial” that receives the

make this “sheet milk,” which should transmitted power and conveys it to

be important to agriculture.

Worms in children, if they be. not attended to, cause convulsions, and

the food in the form of heat and cooks ee - New methods in electrical treat-

| ment are always being looked for by

often death. Mother Graves’ Worm! doctors. Perhaps, in the future, this

Exterminator will protect the | chil- dren from these distressing afflic- tions.

Millions Still In Slavery

new apparatus will be used for im- parting heat to the body to’ produce artificial “fever,” one of Nature's most prevalent factors ih recovery

Slavery is still practised in nine-| from many diseases. :

teen countries of the world. The num- ber of slaves is estimated at at least 4,000,000. These men, women and children can be taken and sold for

"| profit like any article of commerce.

There are still nearly 2,000,000 slaves

in Abyssinia out of a population of} growth of children takes place

10,000,000.

—— --—-—— --

Many have been relieved of corns

Remowpy's Core Satnnaee, It has. ¢ r of its own that will be found

ective.

One medical authority says that the entire-

tected from wet or damp. Eveready

s cases,

Before you buy a battery for ignition exposed places, make sure it.bears the

The Ev

under cover,

name “Eveready Hot-f Other bat- , teries may resemble these famous power . _ plants in appearance, but only Ev y can make the genuine Hot-Shot.

left is the longest lived single dry money can buy. It is for use

fa Nig , a : toplonts 4 On rbon . ca as Vaacoqver places, tht

y

Hot-Shots give you full value for your money, because they are housed in metal

oe a

Other bat-

Ignitor shown on,

ae

in

the Le cell. Sor

ert PRP eT:

A OME TS

_ British Columbia Railway to the ex-

‘tent of $9,420,000.

(b) Payment of the sum . of $15,-| 580,000 as follows: $5,000,000.on the} erly first of June, 1929; $5,000,000 in four) servi

years thereafter. he

Balance, $5,580,000 in ten years| Possibly. the m< thereafter with interest at 4 per cent, ie

from the date of sale.

tensions will proba’

$1,000,000 or m sale is that the total the neighborhood of $26,000,000.

hy

ston District. and Pennant, ‘The Hatton north“éasterly of about e' teen miles “iil I tap . the Fox Valley country at , and the line from Pen- 8 | th-westerly, will tap

it s- ret be sent. north- ward. This line will everitually con- neet, Swift Current “direct with Sas- katoon.

) poses Porson Wit Be Fed Through

The company further agrees to complete sixty miles of additional extensions in the next five years. It was not possible to get any commit- ment with respect to the coast out- let, but it will be remembered that in the jeint offer submitted at the last session the presidents of the two rail-

In Central Saskatchewan the fol- lowing lines are being” projected:

From Foam Lake, reourmwventerly 27 miles.

From Rosetown to” Perdue, miles.

From Unwin, westerly” 20 a)

45

ins thig or a ay

a ulg_masepo ci mitment whate'

“Makes “Seutpey Over OPR.

=|: Northerm) Saskatchewan will be’

fit by the 10 miles northeasterly from

- Regoeigen | f bas ag the y, Se

-| Youth Wanted On On Murder ard Is

_ eggnog nylon Ae entire

Canadian West-has-been searched for

Melfort, Sask.—'The opening of the four days, was arrested at Okanagan

new branch from Melfort north én the C.P.R. created considerable ex- n the

citément’ and loud chee , ‘sepeeuiee-te aay

ney to the end of the stéel at Eden-

“bridge. Crowds of people greeted the | Distri “iron *horse” which was quite remin-

iscent of the days gone by when *y © first trains “the western

_prairies.

i Every i along the Sway was jammed. with. people who were present to greet the first ‘train

>to traverse the distance betwe: fort and

year to $2,100, a seven-hour day and a five-day week comprise the main demands to be _made by the Canadian le carriers

of the government as’ formulated by

im delegates to the biennial conven- n of the Federated Association’ of setter Carriers of Canada,

ia eT j Warns U.S, Gangsters +) Toronto. —The Ontario Govern- ment, acting through the department of ‘the otormetmert will take im- |. ‘media ate ‘steps in. to see that ted States gangeters do not com- it acts of violence upon Canadian . Attorney: ‘Price has is- a this warning to United States gunmen,

olen Paes Pane Thales Hit. auto- i EE Yinainttt® in which ‘the

ish inventor, Juan de la Cierva, made a successful flight across the glish Channel, crashed in the éourse of @ trial flight, here and was y damaged. Senor de la Cierva pi c were bruised but sitll

ance,—~

a bee rte gictslacnen 1} High Deniniaslonae = To Dublin

bite, RE Fe: wars. It is stat-

madetitsiianrney 95100

) new

, five miles south of Vernon, by provincial police Constable Morley ‘Green, according to information tele-

graphed to Inspector Forbes Cruick- shank, in charge of the Vancouver (a ¥ 2 “The arrested youth, according to the police, did not deny his identity nor did he actually admit it. The police are certain, however, that he is the much-sought man for whom a country-wide search has been in pro- gress for several days.

Sues Government For Pay

‘B.C. Man Listed As Deserter Says He Was Prisoner

Vancouver, B.C:\—Whether a sol-

dier has the right of action against

‘the department of militia and defence

‘for his pay is the point at issue in a case heard here. John William Cooke, who was formerly with the 67th Bat- talion, C.E.F., is claiming from the government $3,225, pay due him for the time he was listed as a deserter, Cooke claims that during this period mentioned he was a prisoner in.a German camp. Mr, Justice Audette,

in exchequer court here, reserved)

judgment. %

Serving, On Health Clinic ‘Three Western Doctors Appointed To Connaught Laboratories Fellow-

Pre | ships Toronto.—Four promifient Cana- dian health officials have been ap- pointed to the Connaught Laborator- ‘ies Fellowships in. the school of by-

giene® of the University of Toronto. They are Dr. R. B. Jenkins, Edmony ton; Dr. F. W, Jackson, Winnipeg; Dr. F. 8. Leeder, Battleford, Sask, and Dr. Eva Mader, Kentville, N.S.

The fellowships wefe ~ established last year for the purpose df increas-

ing the number of public health work- |"

‘ers in Canada.

Reject Marketing Board Plan "Sydney,” Australia.—Wheat “gorw-

erg have tae & scheme,to form

yo ag

yy a A

» course should

oo ofl matter resulted, in

rs opposing the | scheme, | while 6,020 aera it.

d the other cause of loss. The American Railway Association em- ‘| ploys ‘three full-time special repre- sentatives to gather data on the sub-

“4 ject and present it to the parties con-

cerned.

> Pale In Russia

Kharkoy, <= a Soviet Russia.— Hight hundred and fifty thousand per- sons: will” d through public funds during the | winter in the Uk- Hg the grain. crop having fallen

r the oS on of the population.

eaudeey us Ukraine is one of Rus-

sia’s best granaries and in good years has wheat both to eat and to export.

The Moscow government has ap- propriated 31,000,000 rubles, the Uk- rainian government 10,000,000 rubles and social service organizations have begun a campaign to raise an addi- tional 6,000,000 rubles. to provide

aldane, Viscount of ish statesman, who e age of 72.

New Northern Route Is Complete Success

Was Opened By Blasting Of Montreal River Channel

The Pas, Man.—Saskatchewan’s new route into the mineralized coun- try of the far forth, made available by the federal government blasting rocks out of the Montreal River in North Central Saskatchewan, is a complete success.

Hon. Thomas C. Davis, attorney- general of Saskatchewan, and Fred- erick MacDermid, K.C., of Saskatoon, accompanied by their wives, left Prince Albert on September 5, to make the swing around the great water half cirgle in the northern part gf the province.

The voyage ended Tuesday after-

ra"

q

died recently |

nourishment this winter for the! noon, Sptember 18, at The Pas, and

best way to meet this condition would be through a private confer- ence at Paris of representatives of the United States, Great Britain, France, Italy and Japan. He said such @ . Gonferenée might readily reach an agreethent on the points respecting naval»matters which now divide them, i

, He said that unless a working bas- is could be found among these pow- ers he would not take the responsi- bility of re-convoking the preparatory commission except upon a direct mandate from the full’ assembly of the League.

Hard On Herbert ‘Hoover

All His Interests Wer Were British, ls the Accusation

Kansas City, Mo.—Denouncing Herbert Hoover, even to the point of challenging his sincerity in returning to the United States affér living abroad twenty-two years, Senator James A. Reed, of Missouri, opened the Democratic national campaign in Kansas.

Referring to the Republican nom- inee, Senator Reed said:

“If we had not entered the war, 1 firmly believe that Herbert Hoover never would have returned to the United States to live. His house, his

stricken population. One-third of the} was a complete success in every way, | interests, his fortune, all were Bri-

Moscow advance is a gift and the| ony 14 days being required for the

balance is a loan. S

SAYS CANADA

-Northeott Is Apprehended | PROVED TO BE

A REVELATION

oe al is the

House of Commons, here after a Visit to the Dominion.

Im an interview he said he did not |

think immigration to Canada would

y, | Winnipeg, rules for International oratorical con- tests, designed to reduce to the mini-

mn his arrival , Pe | mum interference with school studies,

leader of the Labor Party in the'

entire trip.

That the distinguished travellers were accompanied by their wives proves conclusively the which the new passage can be made.

Rules fe Uiatorical

tish.

“He never cast a vote in the United States until after he was 46 years of age. He was old enough to vote in

éase with| 1896, but did not vote until 1921.”

DEATH TOLL IN

Contests Altered STORM AREA

Manitoba Trying To Reduce Inter- ference With School Stadies

tas been decided upon by the provin- cial central committee. Under the

“cure or even substantially alleviate the 1929 contest. The revised condi-

our unemployment problem.”

Discussing the British miner-har- vester migration, Mr, MacDonald said:

“There is no doubt a very deter-} mined attempt is being’ made by' ce 4 tain people. to spread discontent} among the harvesters. It is my impression that a considerable num- ber of the men will remain and get employment in Canada.

“From east to west in Canada the British worker is preferred to any- body else, providing he is prepared to do the work Canada requires him to do.”

He expressed the opinion that the problem of winter: work could easily be solved if some simple system of organization were brought into exist- ence. Statements that Canada does not welcome British workers, were untrue, he said.

“After more than’twenty years ab-

sence from Canada,’ Mr. MaeDonald remarked, “I hardly recognized plac- es I had visited visited before. It was an absoliite revelation and a good revelation to me. “There is a vitality of expansion, a youthfulness and a hopefulness. in Canada,” said the former British premier, “Her weakness is that she has not got sufficient magnetic pow- er to keep her people both Carfadian born and British immigrants within her own borders.

“The great magnet that is always pulling them.is the U\S,, and it is of the most vital interest to Canada to devise some means whereby she can accumulate sufficient magnetic power to hold her preation within her domains.”

ican Et nl A lth not lia Ecce a

‘district elimination’ contests are to

en

tions are:

That the contest be open to stu- dents of grades 10, 11 afd 12 only.; Last year students of grade 9 were eligible.

Schools teaching any of the grades from 10 to 12 are tc be asked to dé- cide their respective champions by Christmas, by any method they de- termine, provided: public speaking by a considerable number of the pupils is involved.

The preliminaries to the champion- ship contest in Easter week are to be complete by the end of March. The

be held before Christmas.

Eligible For League Posts

Geneva.--Women’s rights have won till another victory, Henceforth ap- pointments on the government boards of all international institutions which are linked with the League of Nations will be made without distinction of sex and women are now assured representation. A resolution to this effect was given unanimous approval by delegates at the league assembly. It was introduced \by Dame Edith Lyttleton, of Great Britain,

Will Enter Oratorical Contest

Winnipeg. Manitoba will enter the international oratorical contest next year it is announced, A number of teachers had objected to the contest, and for a time it was thought that Manitoba would drop out; but it has been decided to enter again and con- tinuance for another year will depend

et”

| Florida—reaching 1,199,

|

‘new rules, Manitoba will take part in,

upon the measure of success of the contest now being inh ar, Hi

tropical hurricane area—Guadeloupe, Porto Rico, the Virgin Island and the _ relief plans were rushed to combat the possibility of disease and pestilence following.in the wake of the storm.

Hundreds of injured are to be treat- ed, thousands thousands given shelter elements. To this end the Red Cross is directing its gigantic relief ma- chine,

Figures reaching the Red Cross place the dead as follows: Guade- loupe, 660; Porto Rico, 106; Florida, | 427; Virgin Islands, 6.

istimaths of injured run into the thousands. Property damage is esti-

mated at exceeding $150,000,000. Tens |

of thousands are without homes.

The chief concern of the Red Cross | and local relief agencies is now cen-|

tered in maintaining .sanitary condi- tions in the area ravaged by the hurricane,

Plans were rushed to establish two camps in Palm Beach to care for

refugees where they can obtain treat- |

ment for disease. Sanitary conditions in the interior of Palm Beach county | were reported bad.

Governor-General Waldo Evans of| the Virgin Islands, notified Red Cross} headquarters that health conditions| were bad but there was not immedi-| ate danger of an epidemic, States Consul William H, Hunt, re- ported from Guadeloupe in the| French West Indies that disease in epidemic form is feared.

Evans and Hunt both appealed for Red Cross aid in the emergency.

Henry M. Baker, National relief di-|

rector for the Red Cross, arrived in Porto Rico and radioed to headquar-

ters here that while there was no)

immediate danger of epidemic there,

| he said conditions were bad and food | logs clothing needed.

Peace River.—The steamer 0D. °A,|¢

Thomas, according to reports reach-

ing here, is sunk 60 miles below here,

broken in the midddle by a huge ler.

Since the palatial steamer left here September -10, loaded with freight for Vermilion Chutes and oth- er way points, navigation has been carried on under the most trying cir- cumstances, due to the extremely low stage of water. She was on her way upstream loaded with 60 head of cat- tle and several passengers when dis- aster overtook her. The cattle swam ashore and all aboard were rescued.

The steamer Thomas was built by the late Baron Rhondda in the sum- mer of 1915, and was one of the fin-

est on the island waters. The ma- terial for her construction was freighted in over the old Grouard trail by teams when the end of the

upwards of $100,000.

Mail Pension Cheques

Manitoba Old Age Pension Scheme Now In Operation Winnipeg.—Hon, W. J. Major, K.

steel was at Reno, and her cost was |

Edmonton and Saskatoon for delivery

in this city, C e

Between Calgary and Edmonton the ‘plane experienced rough weather and was forced to return to the form- er citysto await more favorable con- ditions. This in itself made the time of the journey later than expected but from Edmonton to Saskatoon the 500 miles was covered in three hours and forty-five minutes, which igs a saving of several hours,

This trial trip has proved to be quite satisfactory and the officials of the Canadian Pacific Express

| will inaugurate early next month a | regular bi-weekly service, connecting

with arrivals and departures of trains at cities between here and

| Calgary.

The method of procedure for this service ts that the express agent will gather all parcels marked with the air express stamp and convey them by truck to the airfield where, after careful checkings, they are turned over to the pilot, who after signing receipt deposits them in a specially designed cubicle in the lower front part of the ‘plane. Upon arrival in

nae ose Soa DL PIERS DORAL ROS LI IEGG fi

C., attorney-general of Manitoba,:an-| each city, the parcels destined for nounced that approximately 1,700 old| that point are turned over to the age pension cheques will be mailed| express agent for delivery.

to aged persons in the province of| - Looks For Better Prices

Manitoba at the end of this month

by the old age pensions branch of the Workmen's Compensation Board,

MOUNTS HIGH:

Washington.—With death reports to the American Red Cross from the

fed and. additional)

$20 a month. Legislation passed at the last ses-

scheme.

vincial government. nearly 2,000 claims for old age pen- sions to be investigated oba.

oc

SUNDAY SCHOOL LESSON

SEPTEMBER 80

PAUL Tae MISSIONARY

Golden Text: “Christ liveth in me.” | | Galatians 2.20. | Devotional Reading: Philippians 44-8, 19, 20.

A Review By Means Of Allusions There have been men like those

who have delighted in others. There is no community free from them.

“Nurse Cavell in Belgium was hem med in by.a brutal soldiery who gnashed on her with their teeth, and | |she was at once heroic and tender) | and forgiving.”

When men refuse to retain God in their knowledge, they can hardly ex- | pect to be secure from the tempta- tion to bow before creatures of like passions with themselves, whether they be. cunning adventurers or heartless tyrants.—-The Christian.

“The supernatural is the native air of Christianity, its cradle-song is that of angels, its death-chant the trium- phant exclamation, ‘Behold, I see the heavens opened.’

We are daily judging ourselves un- worthy of divine grace in every act of refusal to accept and rely on it.— Lyman Abbott.

“There stood a man of Belgium

| | immediately men of Britain arose to answer the call.”

the universe without feeling that we

haps we should be more impressed by

United} the order and the uniformity of the

heavens.—-J. Arthur Thomson.

“When came the Sabbath of worship and rest, Out of the city, in reverent quest, Down by the riverside faithful ones came, Where prayer was wont to be made in His name.”

likeness of men, and even of a divine influence pervading all things; but no ethnic religion has told how men may come to God.—H, EB, Fox.

| ing and belligerent as he breathed out |'threatenings and slaughter on the road to Genoa.”

| “What is all this solar energy com- | pared to that boundless supply of ai | vine grace—always available to the believing heart! Therein lies power to} turn the world upside. down, if only the people of God would receive and transmit what he is so willing to be- stow!—The Christian.

Death Of Mrs, Hayter Reea Montreal.--Cable advices received |

here announced the death in London, | British High Commniasioner

Eng., of Mrs, Hayter Reed, eldest daughter of the late Chief Justice

| Armour, of Toronto, The late Mrs. Reed was teadodat socially in Mon-

treal and throughout Canada.

The pensions are at the rate of}

in Mani-

from the! Jews in every age and every land| stirring up)

|

United States Farmers Are Urged To Hang On To Their Crops

Washington, D.C.—Secretary Jar-

sion of the provincial government) dine asserted in a statement released | provided for the old age pensions, | through the Republican national com-

The scheme was approved’ mittee that “if Governor in an agreement between the pro-| elected and tariff rates are reduced to There are still| the schedules of the Underwood Act,

Smith is

as Governor Smith forecast in his acceptance speech, the entire farm in- dustry will be thrown into a state of utter demoralization.”

He reiterated his views that wheat farmers’~’should™ hang” crops. He said that the present price level is lower than justified, and that everything pointed to an increase,

Noting prospects of increases in

| this country's wheat crop, and the | forecast for the | crop in history, he said, however, that

biggest Canadian

from a world point of view the situa- tion is about the same as last year. Shortage of rye abroad and growth of world -population, he asserted,. would increase foreign demand.

Plot To Kill Trotzky

SV" * | Several Attempts Are Made To Assassinate Exile In Siberia

London, Eng.—The London Daily Mail says that despatches received in London revealed several attempts to assassinate Leon Trotzky, since his exile to Siberia by the Soviet govern- ment.,

According to the reports, Trotzky had written letters to Christian Rak- ovsky, former Soviet envoy to Great Britain, describing how his cottage

\

was besieged and how sharpshooters attacked him from trees. * Trotzky said he and his son de-

saying, ‘Come over and help ns,’ and fended their house with two sporting

guns and told how the attack was

We cannot think of the vastness of| repeated three successive nights.

After the failure of. the sharp-

are citizens of no mean city, but per-| shooters, local authorities denied food

to the Trotzky family, the latter were purported to have said. Only the kindness of friends saved them from starving.

Legacy For Lady Byng London, Eng.—Lady Byng, wife of the hero of Vimy Ridge, is left £750)-

The world has often had-its dreams| 000 in the will of Pandell Rall, a |of gods who had come down in the wealthy Greek merchant, who was a

relative of hers, says the . Byening Standard, Ralli was a romantic fig- ure in English society. He. was 4

“The talk of Lenine was overbear- | friend of King Edward VII. dnd of -

Lord Kitchener. He died at Brighton ‘last August at the age of 83. Form New Association Ottawa.—A new organization of | postal employees, to be known as the “United Postal Employees of Can-

ada” was launched here by the fif-

teenth annual convention of the me minion Postal Clerks’ AARON

Ottawa.—Sir William Clark, |

ST

vayverte

7 7 3 : > j i 4 2 3 » ray > 4 > 4 Ps

o> a 4 G3 4 s

i

éer*

Worshipful Master MACDONALD

_B. E. BARLOW

VETERINARY SURGEON M. S. A., Toronto M. V. A., Alberta Govt. Official Veterinary Phone 20

DR. W. F. KEITH» Dentist

JOHNSTON BLOCK

Alberte

WILLIAM McLAWS Barrister, Solicitor, BASSANO ALBERTA

Office 6, Residence 1°38

Phones:

DR. A. G. SCOTT imc s suRGEON

Phones— Office 37

W. S. PLAYFAIR

FEED iSVERY DRAYING Agency For

Residence 131

oF

Sstimates Given on Ali Worb If you want work done PHONE 16

A. R. Maurer

GENERAL BLACKSMITH Aute and Truck springs made to order

House Phone 14 - Shop Phone 4 BASSANO - ALBERTA

A. T. Connolly Registered Peers

Broken lenses replaced from pers-

| BASSANO CREAMERY

Bassano.

Notary |

Keeping dairy cows is a profitable business, as many farmers have found

And for a square deal, ship your

cream to The

mmun'cion tor ths

—- & ©

Fean‘t kick om the deal

the weather man ‘s elviag ws this Conditions

all

fall, nave been almost perfect for handling the crop, and

we Want now is a little ore of the same kind of weather.

At last Bassano is going to gett al | reduction in the rates for electric} current. We tender the company! our thanks, but remind them the re-| duction is Somewhat belated. :

Phone 33 =

Jack ANan has done a lot of ex-) plaining during he past few years | about the electric current rates, but he seems to have the right dope this! time.

.

Bassano, Alberta

Meat For Harvest

.

| W. A. Brodie, Manager

——— a LOWER RATES ON ELECTRIC CURRENT -

People of Bassano will welcome the | reduction in the rates on electric cur-| tent. Commencing October Ist, con- yumers will be charged on the new ‘ate basis, and the reduction will de ~onsiderable for those who have been paying more than the minimum wmount each month.

The Calgary Power took over the ocal light system <ome time ago, and the new owners have expanded the system until it now includes Standard Rockyford, Strathmore, Gleichen, and Arrowwood.

The company has thus greatly in- creased the consumption of current in their system, ani with greater! consumption the cos: per kilowat of production is lessened. thus enabling the company to reduce the rate charged.

Bassano has for years been paying a high rate for electric current. In the old days of the local steam plant the high rate Was necessary because of the heavy operating cost, but since the installation of the hydro the pro-| duction cost hag been greatly lessen-

Eequire our prices on all kinds of SMOKED MEATS - HAMS ~-SIDE OR PRA MEALED BACON For your harvest needs.

FRESH KILLED BEEF, PORK, VEAL, and MUTTON

BOLOGNA, WERINERS, and a large assortment of COOKED MEATS

City Meat Market Bassano, Alberta H. F. McDonald, Proprietor TELEPHONE 140

2 LS SP | ee: ey ce Ay

W. E. SAMBOOKE

BASSANO, ALBERTA

&RAAAM-PAIGE

—~) a -

Look for this label

Gin, see that

|

When you are buyi

2

' ed, and che old fate was excessively Private Remember your fricnds they will, : high. " a. ~: rR . a = ~ ees . oe ies “Tig new rate is down to a more Christmas RAISES: ess Seer SEH nal on £ rie wood f as Grins

reasonable figure, afid the heavy con- sumer will find a substantial reduc- tion in his monthly electric light account, but the small consumer wil receive little banefit.

Prices $2.00 per dozen and up.

The Bassano Mail

room, small spare room, and batb- room; garage. Very convenient to school.

Cards

Distilled, bottled and f guaranteed by W. & A. GILBEY

LONDON, EDINBURGH, BUBLIN | REDOC, COSEAC, OPORTO, Erc.

“The Gin with a world-wide reputation for absolate purity.”

i MARKETING A | BIG CROP ?

As threShing of Aiberta’s bumper) 1928 crop continues, farmers in all) $ parts of southern Alberta are faced with a new difficulty—that of shipp-| ing their grain. i

Elevators at many points are now filled up, and cannot take any more wheat until they get the cars to ship it out to the termimal elevciors at Vancouver and the head of the Great Lakes. i

Ideal threshing weather has pre- vailed since the beginning of the harvest season, and there has been practically no interuption from the work of threshing the wheat. Faiw-; ers everywhere have been pushirg the work at top speed, and a steady stream of golden grain has been flow- ing from the wheat fields to the country elevators. *

The wheat bas been Coming in fas- ter than the elevators can procure cars to ship it out, amd the result is full grain houses and dissacisiied farmers who are anxious to ship their grain but cannot do so.

Many farmers have motorized their grain hauling equipment, and now the wheat moves from the grain field to the elevator at five or six imes the speed of former years.

Railway men claim they are delir- ering the grain to the terminals as fast as the terminals cam handle it. They say the troubl, is lack of capac- ity in the handling equipment at the terminals. The terminals can only take care of a certain mumber of cars of grain each day, and the railways claim they are delivering a capacity number of cars to thé terminals. This “auses a blockade back along the line co the country elevators.

At any rate, the trouble is becom- ing acute, and relief of some sort would be hailed with joy by the

Rite

This Advertisement is published displayed the Liquer Contrel ny ey BA

Worth Coming Miles To See!

Gigantic Auction Sale

of Fine Used Cars At Your Own Price

- Starts SATURDAY

SEPTEMBER 29th - - - 3 p. m,

continuing until all cars sold A large variety of makes and models with explicit instructions to sell regardless. JIM DAVIDSON’S Used Car Mart Ninth Avenue West

Just West of new Albertan Building

New ColemanLamps The new lamp besides being more attractive in appearance has many advantages over the old style. New style burner lights with a match no pre-heatimg. Lamps & Lanterns in stock HEATERS Findlays & Dominon circulators, most attractive in appearance finished

in Black, Blue and Walnut. Prices from $25. to $80.

Gyrator Washing Machine

Copper tub nickel plated clean. Electric $140. & $165, Gas Power |

Battery & battery! DeF

ttery tteryless sets t

and Crosley have pons ads | bie

improvements in tone, hear the new

six tube set. yin

E Fer

: v2ceady Layerbuilt By Batteri

iam Radio Tubes

+ water, the irri-| ea | One aut of an ie] ‘First Merchant: “I have a book- Ask the ; : keeper in my office who has gone s

e livery and dray|&tey in my service.” P. l El A %,

a , at Brooks, iast| Second Merchant: “That's noth- oo evator gent 4

Friday night.. head of horses| ing, old man, Miss Smith there has be ‘4

: Magistrate Ge ‘ona was in Jen and @ team ° were “burned,|8ne brown, blonde, and Titian red M

be aaeday eon a igins along with all the harness, trucks,!! my service.”” 4

in police comrt, wagons, and drays, ; For ¥ :

, Beating Euclid or tour g

will amaze H.W. Ford pala a a vat to Regina a formerly of Hus-/ According” to some automobile ee : an} last week. He owns s ‘& farm near ty, wheat pool}, anufacturers, the shortest distance Dividend Cheq ae 4 you with P PRR in Bassano on Rsinee tant ces ee ee ee > $ Bruee Bell, whe. drove Currie’ & duis ues eight. AE ma z the urity Miltoy’s olf truck this summer, has 2 4 Me barat Pp eee gone back to Edmonton to continue; G. A. Gaherty, managing director Sheep’and the Goats $

his studies at the university. of the Calgary Power Co., F. J, Rob | Every seat was occupied—eighty

and richness of its tone production.

A fair size crowd of young people} W. Anderson, commercial superin- correspondents. —New York Herald P ] T ] h ] attended ihe dance in the Community| ‘endent, were in_ Bassano last Mon-| Tribune. oo ermina over the Pp atform. Hall last Friday evening. They] tay interviewing Mayor H. O. Bredin

enjoyed a real good time, egarding the mater of the new el- STRAYED—One black team, from actric rates,

Dr. W. @; Anderson, of the Steve” ; Makepeace; ‘branded EX 3! per bushel on Special Binned e wit 2c

ville district was in Bassano last Sun-} J. T. Todd, of Toronto, is in Bas-| 0D right thigh. He had just returned from attending | ‘ano this week Jooking after his One with white face, and on Wheat through Pool Elevators.

the medical conference in Edmonton | ‘arming interests in the Crowfoot] star. Reward. J. BE. Martin, ; fs district. , Makepeace, Phone R306. 12tfc é

b r, of Des Moines, Iowa, 1 Abe Weaver, 0 nes Se : 4 c per bushel on wheat delivered on :

was in Bassano last Friday. He went out to his farm east of Hussar to look Wagon lot basis through Pool Elevators.

ertson, genéral superintendent, and| worshipers and twenty newspaper 2c per bushel on wheat shipped to

after his crop there.

( J. Sleight, lawyer, of Brooks, and The Best In Bisanns! !

Mr. Fitzsimmons, of the Triangle | |

Up-to-date Victor —_- Records...dance, instrumental, and vocal numbers.

J. H. STILES. “The Druggist”

gee Bassano and Hussar

Motors at Brooks, were in Bassano TRY THE last Sunday.

Hunter Hotel Dining Room -

Miss Helen‘Johnston left on Wed- nesday for Calgary, where she will

starting training at the General Hos- Clean, MM olesonia Food ae ging

pital.

0. H. O'Tott, of Majorville, has . as . _ All White Help |

sold his farm to L. Long. Mr. and ene Sai Mrs, O'Tott are going to the States, diel haaih ina e a Fe armers ane 4 Cominarcial Men

Give us @ trial and be convinced. Everybody welcome.

School Of Agriculture Olds, Alberta

FREE COURSES IN PRACTICAL AGRICULTURE AND DOMESTIC SCIENCE

OPEN OCTOBER 30th, 1928 CLOSE MARCH 28th, 1929 Minimum Age 16. No Other Requirements. Board and Room for Men and Women $1.00 per day in Dormitories on O. 8. A. Campus, Free Matriculation.course - open Oct. .28th,,1928,.and.close. May..A6ty: 1929, for graduates of the Agricultural schools, Provides an ¢s- pecially valuable training as a foundation for a life’s work on the farm or for university entrance. For further particulars apply: Supt. H. A. CRAIG, Prin. F. 8. GRISDALE,

Dept. of Agriculture, Edmonton O. 8. A., Olds, Alberta

Mr. and Mrs, Ray ‘Phillips and fam- ily are spending two weeks vacation _jat the home of Mrs. Phillip’s mother PRE

Noxious Weeds Notice

Noxious weeds from mature plants are spread by the wind. Hand pull and burn all such plants. Burn any ripe blossoms of Sow Thistle and Canada Thistle that you may find.

is our watchword. We serve the motoring public

Require all threshing machines, combines, wagons, and racks used at the time of threshing, to be thoroughly cleaned before moving on to your farm or leaving it.

\ Gather and burn all weed seeds left on the ground after thresh-

ing. See that your summerfallow goes into, the winter ‘black.’

4

Whether it is gasoline, oil, tires, motor accessories, we are always onthe job to supply your wants. Call on “Jimmie” for prompt and courteous attention.

_ A. P. PIERSON’S. Service Station Bassano, Alberta

}

Attend to this or much of the good work that bas been done in weed control and eradication will be undone,

Your co-operation in the campaign for a ‘weed free province” | is solicited. | |

Register all threshing machines and combines with the Depart ment of Agriculture, W. J. STEPHEN, Field Crops Commissioner,

YOULL LIKE IT aT ONCE

ce } —a \ | Behind the Man! , \ personal experience will prove LSS Bp apentfhin CALGARY to you its peforming leadership Een dl ened of tices oto.

personal demon- In Buying a Hudson realizing the Mneeetaiasy vd petyontiaht Yt ng er Al 2

ou You Save up to provide for its emergencies out of today's Several Hundred : resources. ;

sol ma th on yc $1600 - ‘TheRoyalBank sie IC TE om ie 3 a to. Sere Confectioneries and other retailers.

Al prices fi. bs Windsor sanepextra Bassano Branch -. PMA J. Meniatain, Manager WwW. Bmasnno, Alberta: (te

‘of the Dominion |’ “Agriculture it is learn-| , one and a suarter | Ounces of butter, a seventh of ouinde of cheese, three ounces of beef, three and a half ounces of pork, one- tenth ©f an ounce of mutton and lamb, and one-sixth of an ounce of poultry comprises the daily ration of these products for every man, wo- man and child in the Dominion. In

a3

¢ Thomas Loudon, one-time Canadian sculling champion, died recently -in} (ior ‘words, Canadiaha cOnitine ina Toronto, at the age of 87. year 3,338,868,204 eggs, 274,890,196 " The first windmill ‘plane has cross-| ponds of butter, 32,172,125 pounds ed the English Channel, piloted by its! of cheese, 654,543,632 pounds of beef, inventor, Jv De La Gleva, 775,150,818 pounds of pork, 58,191,- A Chinese laundry “man and the 717 pounds of mutton and lamb, and employees of a millinery shop at} 92,225,019 pounds of poultry. On a Mexico City, divided the first prize of/ per capita basis this amounts to: $400,000, in the September 14th lot-) eggs, 29.67 dozens; butter, 28.88 tery. They held number 1246 which! pounds; cheese, 3.88 pounds; beef, was winner. | 68.76 pounds; pork, 81.43 pounds, * Permanent government flying posts| mutton and lamb, 6.11 pounds; and in Hudson Strait are a strong possi- | poultry, 9.69 pounds. bility it was stated by Squadron Some idea of the responsibilities Leader T. A. Lawrence, who with resting upon the officials of the De eight others, has returned from 16/ partment of Agriculture who super- months’ service in the North. vise the production of foodstuffs and Members ofthe provincial govern- | their sale in accordance with stipulat- : x“ ment and Lord Lovat, under secretary | ¢@ standards may be gained when/ ABOVE—The “C. O. Stillman” world’s largest Tanker. BELOW—The “Calgariolite” most modern of Tank ships. ;

bf state for the Dominions in the, these figures of consumption are pre-) with the launching in England on). Stillman.” he three sea-going) of 12,000 tons, and the ‘“Trontolite,” British Government, discussed the sented. Well over a million tons of September 14th of the motor tank] ships just built in the British ‘yards formerly a steam turbine vessel, placing of British settlers on the land | food are consumed in Canada every! shin “caigarolite” Canadian interests| replace three Imperial vessels which| which was converted into a motor in British Columbia. The government year, and the department must keep! Wnicn already own and operate the} went to the bottim at the hands of| ship, with a tonnage of 9,150. The offered the fhilest co-operation. @ watchful eye upon every pound. | world’s largest tank ship, claim also| the enemy while transporting petro-| combined motor tank ships carry 1,-

5

if

FE i a i

absolutely clean and free from weeds. : : v%

Better Pay For Postal Workers

French Canadians, resident of New| a. ee | the most modern and efficient of) leum for the allied cause. They were | 016,000 barrels of oil which they load Consider Salary Increases At England, may decide the presidential “te 7 tankers, and a Canadian tanker fiéet| the “Luz Blanca,” the “Retlaw” and/| and discharge at an average port time Any Time z ; election. Ordinarily these states are Winnipeg Newspaper Union wins further eminence as one of the| the “Palacine.” of twenty-four hours, It is. estimat- Willingness to consider salary in-| Republican but it is thought Demo- major oil fleets of the world. The motor driven tanker of today ed that these ships carry for about/ creases at amy time was expressed

crats. will get the majority of the French-Canadian vote which is con-

siderable. Fire losses in Canada during the Week ended September 12, 1928, are 4 estimated by The Montreal Times at $729,200, as compared with $239,000 for the previous week, and with! $292,650 for the corresponding week | of last year. Establishment of the largest paper | mill in British Columbia is virtually | assured, according to a recent report | in the Vancouver Star. The lands de- partment, in an interview stated that e Fraser Pulp and Paper Company preparing to go ahead with the tion of a plant in Prince George. * The committee appoMted by the vernment of Persia to examine the ellogg pact for the renunciation of has recommended that Persia re to the pact, but should not re to the conditions and reserva-

The “Calgarolite” slipped. from the/is a highly specialized vessel which | 25 per cent. cheaper than steamships; by Hon. P. J. | Ways at Haverton Hill-on-Tees with is designed to move a great volume|of corresponding size, general, at the convention of the Do- Miss Eleanor Ross, daughter of ,Vic-| of petroleum at maximum speed and| In addition to the ocean tankers,| minion Postal Clerks’ Association at tor Ross, Vice-President of Imperial; with minimum delay at loading and| Imperial Oil is operating six canal| Ottawa. Oil Limited, acting as sponsor. The| unloading ports. A few years ago|size steam driven ships on the Great} Mr. Veniot pointed out that the “Calgarolite” is a 15,600 ton vessel/three days was ‘considered a quick; Lakes. These move refined products| most satisfactry channeol “through with an indicated horsepawer of 6,-| “turnaround” for a tanker. Today,| from Halifax to various ports in the} which to make applications for sal- 500, which makes her one of the most. with modern pumping equipment, a} Great Lakes and to Fort William, | ary increases was the association it- powerful and fastest tankers of her tank ship turns around in twenty-| serving the Halifax, Montreal and| self. : ¥e 5% % size. She is guaranteed a service four hours. That is to say, twenty-| Sarnia refineries. Most of these ves- Disbanding of the Dominion Post- speed of. 12 knots. She is 540 feet | four hours after she arrives in port) sels tie up during the winter but in} al Clerks’ Association and the or- | long with a 70-foot beam and mould-|she has taken on or discharged her/ the summer it is ‘a rare thing for) ganization of the United Postal Em- be depth of 37 feet 9 innhes, Her | cargo and is again at sea. Conse-! one of them to have more than eight ployees of Canada as a_ substitute | modern equipment will permit load-; quently the modern tanker is moving | or ten hours in port. On the Pacific) body with a membership comprising | ing and unloading of 120000 barrels | practically all the time and, -more| Coast the SS “Imperial” and two! post office workers from other de- | of oil in twenty-four hours, and so she; than any other type ship, is the | other steam vessels transport pet-| partments throughout’ the Dominion will be almost continuously in tran-| actual home of her crew. To com-;roleum products for the company,/ was sanctioned at the Convention. | sit, serving much as an “oil ferry” | pensate for the more continuous ser-| and there is also the small motor W. N. Duncan, ‘of ‘Toronto, Domin- between Talara in Peru, Cartagena} vice, the crew is accommodated in a/ ship, the “Marvolite,” with a capa-|ion secretary of the ; association; in Colombia, and Montreal and Hali- | style that would turn the average tar) city of about 1,000 barrels. The | declared the scope of new body fax. She will establish mew figures; green with envy. Nothing is over-| combined capacity of the entire Im-/ was so wide that within the next five for economical transport of petrol-} looked to provide complete comfort! perial fleet is approximately 1,100,- years it should have a mem eum, por the sailors enjoy quarters and! 000 barrels; sufficient to fully load} of 12,000. : The “algarolite” .is the last of cuisine that compare favorably with! more than 5300 tank cars, making) .

not come within fifteen or twenty mil- lion pounds of our own need,” says J. A Caulder, president ; of the National-Dairy Council of Can. ~ ada. “It is perhaps more nearly cor- rect, however, to say the devel- opment has not: kept pace with the increased population and increased purchasing power of the country, so that whefeas, in 1924, we had an ex- portable surplus of approximately twenty-five million | ds, we will undoubtedly import nor twenty - millions of pounds, ls, in the fiscal year , “ending March | 81, 1929,” he continued. ee consumes ximatel: Ibs. 0} “per- ‘per A a undoubtedly the highest per capita ~ : consumption in the world, Mr. Caul- * der explained. “In Eastern Canada’

; weet * fons” of “cera” Hurdpés s - iles long. =’ Motoring Simplified Rea mers be © hs ue " of” ain Ru mnt three large modern sea-going. tank-| passenger accommodation on many )a train 36 m 1 si ( ' ments ee ers and one lake tanker which were liners. | The modern ocean-going tank ship} PP Aes DRT: POTS Srey, * : 2 F ah laid down some time ago in British The Imperial Oil feet now com- contrasts interestingly with the shal- Invention Ri Pe oapeaibaia , mA File On H pe a : shipyards for Imperial Oil. Preced-! prises nine large ocean-going motor: | low draft river boats Which are used Operated From Instrument shipping their product all * Many e omesteads ing her in launching were the Patent | tank ships: the “C. O. Sttillman” of) by the Imperial interests on the Mag- : Board x - | worlds Cathada’s clieéue is'nt = Sm soem solite” for lake service and the ‘Vic-| 22,175 tons, the “Victolite,” ‘“Vanco-! dalena River, in Colombia, and which . . y Ry SF gc 3 j Rush Is Seen At Dominion Land An automatic jack operated from| cheese in the

tolite” and “Vancolite.” "The flagship’ lite,” “Calgarolite”” ‘Montrolite” | resemble in appearance the old stern

of the fleet in which she will serve | and “Canadalite” of 15,600 tons; the’ wheelers Mark Twain once piloted on

“: 2 the instrument board of an automo-

bile has been invented in Frante, says

a report to the department of com- "I ' merce. When a tire goes flat, one

Livestock Industry Prosperous Huge Merry-Go-Round A Growing Industry merely presses a button to raise the} Australia. However, the fact ;

} ae wheel. To each ‘wheel is adapted a} we do’ make good creamety butter,

| Good Prices Now Being Obtained In| Gulf Stream Is As Old As Atlantic) Fish Reduction Plants In B.C. Doing | short cylinder jack on the axle that| is clearly proven by the fact that in

j Western Canada Ocean Big Business : does not decrease road clearance.| 1925, two katchewan buttermak-

3 Office At Edmonton

“All previous records since pre-war days were exceeded during the week of August 9th to 15th, in the number of homesteads filed on at the Edmon- ton Dominion Land Office. The total for the above pé¥led this year was 114, while for the same period of last year only 35 such, entriégwwere taken up. Local officialsattributé the sin-| ©. crease to several causes; the general ‘improvement in conditions, the new regulations which permit a party who has previously proved up a lome- stead to refile on Crown land, and to the large number of settlers now real- izing the opportunity to obtain land

the highest pri average possibly not up to the aver- age of Denmark, New Zealand and

lis the world’s largest tanker, the “C.| “Ontariolite”’ and the ‘Reginolite’ the Mississippi.

| |

% % 5

A cycle of prosperous years faces; The huge Gulf Stream, which moves! . The growth of fish reduction plants | A’ relatively long-stroke double tele-| ers, both still making butter in\this

| the livestock industry of Western! more water than all the rivers of the! on the west coast of Vancouver Is- scopic piston operates the lifting province, won the first and second |

; :

| Canada, in the opinion of ranchers. earth combined, is not changing its' land is shown in a report of the Do-| plate. The lifting has two pSases;| prizes, consisting of the gold and sil-

|Cattle are fetching almost double| course, the National Geographic So-|minion Inspector of Fisheries. With’ first the jack block is brought down|ver medals, at the London Dairy _

what they were turned off for three | ciety reports, commenting on state-!| the lifting of the ban in 1926 fifteen|to the ground, and then the wheel) Show, under the auspices of the Bri-

years ago and hogs are going higher.' ments of ship-captains indicating a/ plants began operations, and a pro-| is lifted. Auto driving is growing too) tish Dairy Farmers’ Association, and

Lambs and mutton are also selling at) possible reversal of current. duction of 8,481 tons of pilchard meal/ soft. Next there will be invented a again: 1 1927, the same buttermak-

| &@ worth-while piice and good, beavy,| There has been a gulf stream! and 1,898,721 gallons of pilchard oil. | block and tackle for lifting lazy driv-| ers won honorable mention, but were

| well-broken horses are in active de-| since there was an Atlantic Ocean | were realized. Latst season 19 plants|ers out of their seats aod obviating| not fortunate enough to secure the

closer to transportation. and J It’s ‘Smart jmand. A survey of the a Caan ang and trade-winds to blow on it, the| were in operation producing 12,115 gold and silver medals.”

activities than formerly. E, © A dew and*flatte ring’dupss of sill! situation in the United States indi-/ society reports, describing how the| tons of meal and an oil production of + ba Pe a Ry Bae aHA

‘4 crepe printed in tweed pattern, that! cates a marked shortage of beef cat-| winds cause the huge current as an! 2,603/190° gallons. The movement in| |

Shorter Names Suggested uses plain silk crepe in harmonizing | tle making for strength in the Chi-| electric fan direc at the surface| the first year was-chiefly to Japan, : of tone for front of double-breasted | cago market, so mucn so that Cana-|of a tub of water will cause all the} but in 1927 more than 9,400 tons were

The Society for the bodice, and for novel plaited trea’ -| able ambur ? , t fitab) to , dto H bu: The entire : o1 | f t f sl : 1 | dian producers find it pro: st water to swirl about. ehippe s-

ganization in France, has decided in | £0T Immediate wear for sports or ship there despite the duty of two’ The warm waters of the Caribbean} production of pilchard oil last year

‘4 travel, and can be worn all through | cents petpound tmposed-on fat cattle.| Sea, blown westward ‘by the trade|was shipped to the United States, favor of the shorteni sof names. It! Fal) season, It is very chic in sheer| Stocker and feeder cattle from the| winds into the Gulf of Mexico swirl :

any movement by them at all.

iat Hu-| remuneration for his labor rope has ever known is threa’ ed in| be sneezed at. And the highhat who Switzerland, where ten villages and| Considers farm work beneath\his dig-

ers an ter Rel ey alle ic te Cuminn ran oes wid ach an sc sate | Noy Baan Car» |i ie det eae semi ina Sevan wl eee this way, it is pp AN RS vet, Style No. 274.18 designed in sizes the middle west. ida Straits, whence the stream, 40 og inthe counttry dre! imperilled: by . lar Adeas of what he wants to do, de- world would saye ons of :pounds 16, 18, 20 years, 36, 38, 40, 42 and 44 miles wide and nearly 3,000 feet deep| yie with Head To North British movin, of millions of tons of | Serves to be left in the lurch

i z inches bust. Pattern price 25 cents The Follow Up Method moves with such mometitum. north- pak eccgeel | aed babe in correspondence yearly. in stamps or coin (coin is preferred), Doctor Advises = rock from Monte Arbine. Villages|

A new sign for motorists has ap-| eastward that it preserves its identity “a peared on an English road. It is, until it reaches Europe. Y Prinaghowns -~ a ee ee ny How To Order Patterns hoped that it ‘will be particularly} ‘The Gulf Stream is a merry-go-| vole“. Your i ah ae f > ii. aad effective in checking those motoriaty spend of the Atlantic. After it hits | a of, counting

; ; i sheep, the London Evening Standard | the Address: Winnipeg Newspaper Union, who are not too careful when on! the British Isles, helping to provide’ 2g hat pine

Wrap coin carefully, there now lie abandoned, and the face Pretty Safe Offer

175 MéDermot, Winni stretches of road under repair. Aja mild but foggy climate in that re- 77 aid gh i: é “i, cag tied first notice gives the warning, the) latively far northern latitude, it di- th gor with the Poissy perth and Pek Pattern No,........4.. Size,....... | conventional “Slow Down, Road Un-| vides, and one branch turns south to PD: Seer en article "

< der Repair.” About 50 yards farther | Portugal, where it strikes the wester- through | wr tterettootneess#ieetesecewe | along ig @ large white signboard) ly trade winds and feturns to the i ype adie Bee “A : - rs i with the admonition: “You Haye! Caribbean Sea. Another branch goes) i plained that , Fe edad an inetinas # ener tecngessercsesespeseeeee | Been Warned,” painted on it in large' north of the British Isles and pro- heady ea Fe al0c% ; bia

Nand) ccs essels. sly... 0 | 0d letters ceeds, considerably chilled, into the! sianas of the neck, whem We eleeper} ae are? Aretic Ocean. : ae ees, " P50 lies toward the north the’ electrons Town Wis fess. 5 < Mees cman Dedicate Canadian Airport But for the stream, Eng- y M4 ye pA, Wi am Conagine Cateren: airpert at |iand right bart ini Ma t pt travel south away from,the brain, . : vu rby Line, Vermont, was dedicated] rador, and N ' akness of|: v3 44 ; oat a pir Ie be prant.| recently with Vermont and Canadian aie baie . 5 °F! Announcer—“I simply cannot work hs van OED Heer na, | officials in attendance. The dedication sie this evening, 3.5 #. . tee pms Wade Boon biae| Adress was delivered by Congress-| About two-thirds ofall the em- a Canadigh pilot's 1i ie, u.s.| man Ernest W, Gibson, Fifteen air-|ployees in the business in

saat F planes from various Canadian and Seperiasent. of oof S APTODAU"| | nerican citien took part in’ the

the United States Canada are women and girls, (972

268 omy ky exercises, Candidate—Let her rip! We're or the Se Le we diy oalee Sagat Cs ' TT PIG TEE Lee pag! Ager er ecoeh The happiest people are those ¢ : ' pat ¢ Pre hoar Sao 4 cl

eae;

- "+ * A” , : 4 tarisnoitosino) aa 4 ee 5 %, , Be As on § fede te Byte, ea Sale ack A Ch Le Hie eta, Rk eae aes lete plllt so! ee : AC Pa : are : Biase se n ee Sar bohtirpieete) onan atk cheb a he's eephes Re nh, : hiv al .e 4 tt shvs j Pod Z ts 1 ¥ 5 alene a A Ae t cnet coisa apt Me, legs ie Sag Ahet jt ; 2 i ' n~ sy - i by 5 ay a f

iujei() - prodlA oaseest:

- ‘i

:

yeages,

or

ane

1a ,

BR I.—Continud

rose with an embarrassed air, | ®°":

am talkin’ "bout you and I * together. I guess you're one of them tourist fellers, and I don’t

suppose you want tojxo long with ;

rough-neck like me.”

Donald liked this big, bluff West- erner, | srllirsgptcteondl sages . He reached in his pock- out the money the sher-

2 rift ioe giten him.

“You see that? Well, before this money is gone T’ll have to find a job. And it’s borrowed money; too.”

Gillis studied him carefully, ‘Well, you got my goat in a way, but there is one thing I do know, and that is that you ain’t no slicker. I'm "bout twice your age, and I knows a good ‘face when I sees it. I'll meet you to- morrow mornin’ at the station. I'm

goin’ to start callin’ you Donald right |

now. And what’s more, Jack Gillis is your friend from now intil hell tréezes over. Good-night, Donald.”

CHAPTER II.

Two days later Donald and the Westerner boarded a C.P.R. train in Montreal for Mie West. They were no

West, running Gn time ike a clock. They tore through towns and farm- hg settlements and plunged into fors ests and hills in the northern part of Ontario. The hills dwindled when they reached Manitoba, and in Al- berta Donald felt as if he were sail- ing over a vast sea of land.

“We'll see them old Rocky Mount’ns pretty soon,” said Gillis happily. “You'll like B.C. Donald. And after you bin there awhile all hell. won't pry you. loose. I_ know, £ "cause I broke away from her twice, * but” I always drift. back, I ain’t got the eddication to tell yeu-the funny

i salen Sand wk oe ee

yn warn you ae I'm hungry," cautioned “Op to it, my lad? about all we

‘Donald’ hed | developed! sincere ft tah ml wpe is what we

friendship for the man. There was a “Donald McLean.” -; sréat deal of tenderness beneath the} «yfine’s Andy Pettray.” rough exterior of this Western log-| hen Andy delivered himself of the ws following information: ‘I’m the man- I'm pretty lucky in fifiding 4] per of Bill Hagin, the Austrylian friend like you,” Donald said feeling- ‘eavyweight. We are to fight Slugger ly as Taay shook hands, : Garrieau, The Canadian champion, in “That's all right, my boy,” Gillis about two weeks. The Slugger is well replied awwardly. ‘I like you, and) jamed, as ’e is an ‘eavy ‘itter and it | M sure. look you up when I hit the tykes a good boxer to beat ’im. I Coast. So-long.” want an ’eavy man that can speed The sun was shining brightly as) pin up a bit, and I've ‘unted this the train rushed along the edge of town over, but I can’t find one. Now, Burrard Inlet toward Vancouver, The | you can deliver the goods, you will

lawns were a bright green, and the) pe worth three dollars a day and your

breeze blowing in the car-window} eats. What do you sy?”

was soft and balmy. At¢ross the In-

let, that sparkled in the sunlight, wer.

were huge, mountain-peaks, their tops Anay dus into Jils pocket. "Bre’s

covered with snow. The homecoming (hres nahh to bind the bargain.”

passengers were smiling). happily, -“Better wait until I earn it,” sug-

while.a look of eager interest shone gested Donald.

on the faces of those who were “phat’s all right, me lad; you'll be

Srengern to the Goast. needin’ if to ‘eat on. I ain't worryin’. Donald paused for a moment'on the} “Come to the gymnasium. at the

corner of Granville. Street while the| corner of Robson and Granville at cosmopolitan crowd flowed past him.| two o'clock tomorrow,” advised Andy Stolid-faced klootchmen, dressed in| ag they stepped outside.

flamboyant colours, with baskets of| y1) be there, and I want to thank clams on their hattes; rubbed shoul- you for your kindness.”

ders with the haughty, turbanned “Forget it,” smiled Andy. Hindu. The little brown-faced Jap| peen flat many a time myself.” darted here and there amongst the “Half an hour ago I was broke and crowd. A Chinaman came swiftly) hungry,” mused Donald, “and now I und the ‘corner of an alley, mov-| am well fed and have three dollars in my pocket. Great old world this.” He chuckled happily as he swung down

* Gillis arose with ble» reluctance aaron wi a ‘Revelstoke.

“T say ‘yes,’" was the decided ans-

“Tye

nother ee buoyant stride.

ce of true Ori To Be Continued.) passiveness, 1 fk a bicycle | = pre OA SAG aie, Hae COATS the street, a clay pipe jutting from his mouth, was extremely incongru- ous. The wide, well-paved streets and the city’s general air of modernity were impressive. In common with many other Easterners, Donald had pictured Vancouver as a rough West- ern town.

Donald engaged an inexpensive) room and at once began a search for employment, Many...of .the - mining} and logging camps were closed for the winter, and work was scarce, He applied to all the engineering firms

Ilustrating His Text - *

The minister was putting on a new collar, and was having the usual | trouble with it.

“Bless the collar!’’ he said, impa- tiently, as he tugged and “Bless the blessed collar!” 4

“My dear,” said his wife, ‘what is your text for this morning’s ser- mon?”

“F-f-fourteenth verse of f-f-fifty- fifth Psalm,” he replied in short gasps. “The words of his mouth were s-smoother (tug) than butter,

-mobiles

et filled with | sun-splashed Cordova Street with a

tugged.

I fell over a steel fen: knee badly, Zam- hoary. rte ,anurse, only an the mass of iam , But I again uk, and it Ff venae ound.” All druggists n-Buk at fifty cents ble for eczema,

fns, etc,

Many Trikes

What Happete"ro Car and Passen- gers Not Hard To Guess

~ An automobilé weighs a ton or two, while a railroad train may weigh a thousand tons, yet in one year auto- t twenty-seven. derail- ments. the whole train was never derailed, but it is surprising that even part of it was forced from the tracks. What happened to the passengers of the charging autom6- biles is easy to reason out.

In the same period over ten thou- sand railway crossing gates were smashed, while many automobiles were stalled on the tracks, and others were demolished by flying trains which were not derailed.

Each year thousands of persons are killed and injured at railroad cross- ings—and practically every death could well be labeled “suicide,” for we recklessly persist in taking the American’s gambling chance.

The only ways in which one may commit suicide at a crossing are by trying to beat the train, or paying no attention to what is coming along the track. The driver who obeys bells, warning lights and whistles, and ap- proaches a crossing with both eyes and ears at attention, is the driver who always has to notify the hospital of what happened to the other fel- low... Even..this.ia.a.mean job, but not half so tantalizing as_ being bumped by a one-thousand-ton mov- ing train on its own tracks.

Teeth and Health}

Issued By The Canadian Dental Hygiene Council and Published y The Baskatpnewan Dental

ey

\TOOTH STRUCTURE

You examine the highly polished)

clean tooth surface and you conclude, and rightly so, that the enamel does not persist all the way through. As

Eckhart guaranteed that the signa- ture of Mr, Stark as it came over the wire was genuine, and Vice-Prest- dent John Washburn, of the Con- tinental National Bank, approved the “photogram” of the original cheque so that it could be cashed.

Although Mr, Eckhart believes that changes will have to be made in the laws regarding negotiable instru- ments fore such transmission of cheques will come into common use, he sees a great future for the sending of documents and autographs by the tele-phonegraphic process.

“Of course, the signature is not the original one,” Mr. Washburn said, “but I believe a system will be work- ed out to make this method practica- ble, and when whoever receivés ne- gotiable paper guarantees the signa- ture as genuine there should be no trouble.”

Mr. Eckhart received the cheque eleven minutes after a telegram from Mr. Stark was delivered to him tell- ing him that the cheque was on the way.

British Columbia Fir

Possibilities Of Use Of This Timber In Britain Is Considered

In a survey of Empire-grown tim- bers published by the Imperial Econo- mic Committee in London, England, attention is drawn to the possibilities of extending the use in Britain of Douglas firfrom British Columbia. The Southern Railway, it appears, has arranged to test Douglas fir sleep- ers (that is, railway ties), creosoted in Canada with a view to determining whether the objection to their use arises from unsuitable

Douglas fir for carpentry.

When Asthma Comes do not de- |spair. Turn at once to the help effec- | tive—Dr. J. D. Kellogg’s Asthma

|Remedy. This wonderful remedy wiu | give you the aid you need so sorely.) 'Choking ceases, breathing becomes {natural and without effort. Others, | thousands of them, have suffered as

you suffer .but have wisely turned to}

this famous remedy and ceased to ‘suffer. Get a package this very day.

| alle Acreage Of Prairie Farms

The total surveyed area of the

| Prairie Provinces is 203,599,827

creosoting treatment. The Research Committee Laboratory is also investigating the means of obtaining a better finish on

Toad Takes Up Battle At Night When Birds Sleep

Scientists at the’ Department of Agriculture, W: , report that the common “hop” toad, familiar to all country children, takes the night shift with birds in their constant war on insects. When the birds cease their daylight activtities the battle is tak- en up by their important ally.

Urging farmers and others to pro- tect the toad and save him for the good he can and will do, the Biolo- gical Survey says:

“An active interest in the conser- vation of toads must be taken if these useful animals are to escape extermination by the draining of their breeding places, by the burning

of fields and wobds, and by other per- |.

ils of their present-day environment.”

The automobile and the city sys- tem take large tolls of toads, the de- partment points out.

NO MEDICINE LIKE BABY’S OWN TABLETS

For Either the Newborn Babe Or the Growing Child

There is no other medicine to equal |

Baby’s Own Tablets for little ones— whether it be for the newborn babe or the growing child the Tablets always do good. They are absolutely free from opiates or other harmful drugs and the mother can always feel safe in using them.

Concerning the Tablets, Mrs. John Armour, R.R. 1, South Monaghan, Ont., says:—‘‘We have three fine, healthy children, to whom, when a medicine is needed, we have given only Baby's Own Tablets. The Tab- lets are the best medicine you can keep in any home where there are young children.”

Baby's Own Tablets are a mild but thorough laxative which regulate the stomach and bowels; banish constipa- tion and indigestion; break up colds and simple fever and make teething easy. They are sold by medicine dealers or direct by mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr. Williams’ Medi- cine Co,, Brockville, Ont.

What Happens In Half Second

Speeding Car Travels Ten Feet In That Time

The fastest thing that any man can do is to wink his eye. The in- stinctive reaction of winking when a cinder blows into the eye is about one-tenth of a second for most peo- ple. In that flash of time, an auto-

|

will move nearly ten feet. A fast air- plane will move more than twenty-!

mobile speeding sixty miles an hour |

If any little word of mine May make a life Ag io If any little won dood May make eart oy lighter, eked take iy tat of @hatigr e my bit o And drop it in some lonely vale To set the echoes ringing. If any little love of mine May make a life the sweeter, If any little care of mine May make a friend's the flecter, If any lift of mine may ease The burden of another, God give me love and care and stre!

ngth To help my toiling brother. God divided man into men that they might help each other.—Seneca. Bears Well Behaved Have Better Manners Than . Any Other Wild Animal

The epicurean bears have the best table manners of any wild animal, in the opinion of Scorehum Alarid, who presides at the nightly feasts served to bruins in the park at Yosemite, Cal.

Scraps of food gathered from e@at- ing houses of the region are brought to a regular place, where bears Bre always waiting to be fed.

“Each evening the hungry brine patiently wait until I have backed my truck containing - their food ‘to the platform and have set their ta- ble,” Alarid said.

“When I émpty the scraps on the platform they take their places, They do not guzzle their food and are not in the least disturbed by the thou- Sands of tourists who watch them,” he added.

Athletes Keep | Minard’s “hanay.”

Liniment

Airplane Saved Men

A score of men without food and very little clothing, in a wild part of the Red Lake District, Manitoba, have been saved by airplane, which took emergency rations from Hud- son. The plight of the men was caus- ed by a forest fire which destroyed their cabins and supplies.

Higgins (rancher)—‘Pete, “when you married your third wife did you take a bridal tour?”

Plainsman Pete—‘Nope! Just tops

IETS

~Sow wee

Jew we vee

beRe er iieee

POSS Ces ew ewe

in. the city, but their answers were

feelin’ I have when I’m comin’ back invariably the e: “Nothing doing

but there was (tug) w-war in his “to her. When f see them big mount’ns

heart.”

the bark is to the tree, so the enamel, acres, of which 87,115,866 acres are is to-the tooth, its protective cover-|in Manitoba, and 87,601,056 acres in ing, but serving as well, the purpose) saskatchewan, and 87,882,905 acres

Rea a ae ameerne

SARs

Ale

SENS OSS

ce OF SEVEN

“loomin’ up I feel sort of scrumptious inside, like I wanted to smile at everybody, and I have a hard time to keep from lettin’ out a yell.”

“Your power of expression needs ‘no apology,” laughed Donald.

“Forgot to tell you that I ain't goin’ right through to the Coast. The Com- pany I work for has a mill at. Revel- stoke that needs fixin’'up, The job’ll probably last till spring. You better stay off with ‘me, ‘cause you'll find > things on the Coast pretty quiet this winter,”

Gillis» had played the part of host

from the start, arid’ Donald knew that |

if he accepted the inyitation to stop off at the interior town, Gillis would insist on | ng him as a guest. He

6 a: OR mends Lydia E. we ’s Vegetable

ii Compound |

HL must say I idifferent we the

dose, I have een told this last months that I

until spring.” ~ ;

Days passed, and as late winter merged into spring there was a stir throughout the city. Men who had spent the winter in idleness were “going out” again. Loggers in their characteristic blanket shirts hanging loose outside their trousers, could be seen on all sides saying gnod- bye to their friends.

One morning Donald counted. his rapidly dwindling cash and found

that he would have barely enough to|_

tide him over the -week-end.

With all his assets in the way of clothes and jewelry in a pawnshop, he could not stave off the inevitable, and there came a day when he had not even the price of a meal. Too proud to ask for a loan, he went without

~| breakfast and lunch,

At the logger’s employment agency he was told the same old story: “Only men of experience wanted. But,” the agent added hopefully, “men are go- ing to be scarce this summer, and they will be taking on everything be- fore long.”’ Donald made the rounds of the engineering firms where he had applied for a position, but without success. Force of habit led him back to “the employment agency, where he sank disconsolately to a bench,

A diminutive man with blond hair, bright blue eyes under shaggy brows, and his head set at a cocky angle. entered briskly and approached the wicket, ‘“S'y, do you know where I can find an ’eavy-weight that can box a bit?” he said to the agent.

“How about those two I sent you yesterday, Andy?”

‘The one addressed as Andy made a gesture of disgust. “Those two blighters were as ’eavy as cows. They didn’t know their. right ‘and from their left, I don’t want any ‘uman

| punchin’ bags, I want aman that ‘as

| a little speed, Blime me, if I was in

ESR Diner: “What is the beef like to- day. George Waiter: “Dunno, sir, except the | customers who've had it say it ain't like beef!”

German youths are not so tall now as in the pre-war days. The genera) decrease is about 144 inches,

a ee ns

MOST people know this absolute antidote for pain, but are you careful ya wy Ba ‘alvays when you buy it? And

if a glance to see Pave the word gen Orinted in red? It isn’t the wine 3 pirin without it! A vain men oar has Ba proven directions in every box:

“=| Austrylia I could get a ’arf a dozen jn ‘arf a minute.” ; % ROR Ng ERE ROP M ERE RANI SOU REEL I NR MII: 8S wesiatreaihitied

of ornamentation of the tooth body.

In the tooth, this body which con- stitutes the main bulk of the tooth, is known as the dentine,

Then is this all? No, for as in the! tree we have a pith or core, so in the) tooth we find a central chamber) known in the crown of the tooth, as the pulp chamber, and in the root, an}

the root canal.

~ But you have observed, too, hat | the enamel coverg only the exposeu portion of the tooth, or crown,

root, then, is protected by a covering known as cementum, which attached | the myriads of fibre or ‘threads,’ that hold the tooth firmly in place in its socket.

Nature, ever wise, has constituted the enamel the hardest substance in the human body, to better withstand the stress to which it is subjected. Also, enamel does not undergo the physiologic changes of dissolution | ond repair to the extent of any oth- er body tissues, hence the need of hardness as an effective barrier to injury and disease.

In the dentine are minute tubules, or canals, containing soft tissue fila- ments through which communication is established from the outside of the

tooth to the nerve tissue of the pulp; |

and because of this honeycombed structure and, too, owing to dentine }being softer than enamel, it is less resistant to disease than is the lat- ter.

So you can see hew important it is to keep intact the enamel which con- stitutes the outer defences of the tooth since disease processes, once penetrating the enamel barrier, can

lin Alberta. Land in the three pro-

| vinces available for agricultural pur-

poses is estimated at 137,022,447 acres, of which at the time of the | 1926 census, 88,929,994 acres was oc- cupied by farms, or less than 65 per cent.

It Has Many Qualities..-The man who possesses & bottle of Dr. Thomas’ Eclectric Oil is armed against many ills. It will relieve a cough, break }a cold, prevent sore throat; it will re- duce the swelling from a sprain, re- lieve the most persistent sores and will speedily heal cuts and contusions. It is a medicine chest in’ itself.

Too Alot Already

It is reported that there is a new |plane which wil land without any effort on the part of the pilot. The trouble |are too many ‘of that kind pen

‘BABY alRL HAD DIARRHEA WHEN CUTTING TEETH

Mrs, A. J. Murray, Gull Lake, Sask. writes:—‘‘Last summer, my bab, y girl | was cutting teeth and became vy weak with the effects of diarrhea. didn’t know just what to do for her as she couldn’t retain anything. At

last one of my neighbors said to me, | ‘Haven't you any

quickly gain access to the more vital tissues within and there proceed | apace to ‘work disaster,

Strong For Trade Mark

According to Premier Ferguson of Ontario, Canadian fruit is losing its chance on the British market, be- cause it is not specially stamped. British buyers are “strong’’ for trade- marks, and they go where trade- marks Jead them.

When, in 1918,' the Jewess Rosa Kaplan attempted Lenin’s life, 800 young Russian officers were execut- ed in Moscow.

with aviation is that there)

five feet. Thus, the pilot can run into! ® fancy to her.” a small bird after he has first seen it| before he can wink his eye against | the expected shock, writes E. E. Free in Popular Science Monthly.

Some nionths ago, a workman fell out of the fifteenth floor of a build- ing in course of construction in New York City. On the thirteenth floor he grabbed a rope hanging from a scaffold and swung himself in on the twelfth floor, saving his life. He afterwards confessed that he was as much astonished by his act as anyone who saw him.

The explanation is that the fall of twenty or twenty-five feet before he grabbel the rope occupied about one second and a quarter, which was time enough for his thinking machin- ery to issue the orders which made | his muscles take hold of the rope be- low at the proper instant, Had he been placed in equal danger while | driving an automobile at sixty miles | an hour he would have been killed. | Tests with a group of typical au-

tomobile drivers have shown that the average time needed to see a danger | | Signal, realize its meaning and begin | to press the brake lever is a little | | more than half a second. In that time, |

a car travelling forty snilea an hour) very thankful there’s a bottle in

would move thirty feet. That dis-! poise. Just a few drops, and

| terion represents the minimum mar- | colle or constipation is relieved;

gin of safety the driver must main- | [Seren Re opanere A veusteula

7 uct; a baby remedy meant for

| tate tp: awogd ‘eeidens, folks, Castoria is about the only As speeds increase, no remedy for

you have ever heard doctors the advancing number of accidents; giving to ‘infants. Stronger will be found in stricter driving tests|cines are dangerous to a tiny b of improved warning signals. Devices

however harmless _ may be -will have to be found speedier than betaling +n ae higooy the human nervous system.

|member the name, and | buy it. It may spare you a anxious night, It is always always .safe to use; in eme or for everyday re ego aa of the day or night that comes fretful, or

[oe GPR RP S4 ‘ag never Don't forget it, that self-pity is the bs ge it

most despicable of all vices. } has it.

What Will

et all

When your |

Children Cty © forlt

There is hardly a household that hasn't heard of Castoria! At least five million homes are never without ft, If there are children in your family, there’s almost daily need of its com- fort, And any night may find

The principal diffe,ence between a “shoppe” and a “shop” is about ten bucks per garment.

A car travelling 30 miles an goes 44 feet in one second.

Veterinaries use Minard’s

eee ee

Nes Z: Grain Enamel tinbic Br ~ lined; 23 inches square; price § $

No. 3. Plain tinish; 20 inches square a

The purpose ofthe Dita Nlenbel of Agricuture, which opens ite doors to classes for the fifteenth time on ONetober 30th of this year, is to give to farmers and their sons. that special || instruction which will fit them to oope successfully with the difficulties Hf bis pene farming, and to give farm gir

Currie & Miro L Ltd., fence serenade

} efficient ho As well as Rigen and Hussar : Fyn were petit SS

life, the course also . serves as pre- paration for further study. leading to degreés in agriculture and domes- tic science in the provincial univer-

JOHNSTON’S STORE NEWS Begs sae ee

provincial government, and there are no tuition fees. The only cost is for board and text books. There is still accommodation available, and ap-| plications will be accepted as long as. jit lasts. ,

Overcoats For Men

Fine tailored, Navy Blue Chinchilla Cloth and Fawn Tweeds; a very warm, dressy coat; interlined with chamois ‘to the waist; deep notched collar; price ........ -..-..2. cu--Lesnene

Children’s Coats Youth’s Quercoats Hussar Shes Winners

With fur collars; lined and interlined: grey t in sizés 34 and 25; halg belt, checked back; a

and fawn Astrakan, and heavy Navy Blue Chin- ents seers ; Seren a er ; (continued from front page) : , : » 4 or nden chilla Cloth; sizes 8 to 14; priced from F pbeatitats Ata Gradeg 3 and 4, 1st Marion Sa . oat bia ae MEN S64. BOYS, 2 Helen Janz, 3 Nettie LeGrandeur. Grades 5 and 6, ist Raymond Kelly Men’ ? : 2 Mary B, Kelly, 3 Eunice Connley, on: & and Boy $ Suits i 4 Queenie Sams. ;

In Blues and neat Tweed Patterns, for Men, Youths, and Boys. Our values are unsurpassed.’ Grades 7 and 8, 1st Lois Nelson, 3 Men’s made-‘o-measure suits—famous Hobberlin Clothiers—They give satisfaction—Ask the man who- Lois Kelly, oy. wears one. Vegetables

; ' Carrots;/1 Rene Raugeau, 2 Mar-

MEL VAN COATS ie : jorie Kelly, 3 Jimmie Treacy, 4

Fashion showing of the season's newest models. This label on your coat is your guarantee of at Sybil Sheppard.

2 Edith Quality, Stylish Garment. Our prices are moderate. Be here— Beets: 1 Lois. Hoagland, - Burdett, 3 Glen Treacy, 4 ba basa

SA TURDA Y, SEPT, 29th 1928 ; | oe Potatoes: 1 Glen Treacy; 2

JAMES JOHNSTON, “The Quality Store? pf ttise:..ne row

Gordon LeGrandeur, 3 Alfred Law. son, 4 Bertha Will. Cabbages: 1 Glen Treacy, 2 Robert ; Kelly, 3 Lois Hoagland, 4 Alfred KNOX PRESBYTERIAN Lawson. CHUROR Mangels: 1 Lois Hoagland, 2 Robt.

BULMER’S STORE and See.) Ween an Miniator-eBev,, A. 0) Smomaon Vegetable marrow: 1 Lois Kelly. Pumpkins: 1 Lois Kelly, 2 Robert

Organist—Mrs. A. A. MacGre ICE CREAM P ARLOR eak ce Sept, Sa oh ova i ‘1 Robert Kelly, 2 Lois

Hoagland, 3 Margaret Bell. Parsuips: no firsts, 4 Margaret Bell,

11 ‘a.m,—Sunday School Rally Day Service. Parents and friends

ICE CREAM in bulk —Vanilla, Orange, Strawberry, Chocolate, cordially invited. Elementary Science Maple Walnut. 7:30 p.m.—Divine Service. Subject]. Collection of leaves: 1 Alma tah : oon * lyn Gustavsen, ICE CREAM IN . BRICKS Neapolitan, Orange, aud Pine- Hh cian guik Deda es nal i a alan e. eh apple Sherbit on hand at all times. ‘| wednesday, at 8 p.m—Meeting of| Weather calendar: 1 June Clifgard, PEACHES, PRUNES, PEARS, CRAB APPLES for canning Board of Management’ in Dr.|2 Lois Hoagland, 3 Mary Hansen, 4 ‘\ A 4 GRAPES, Tokays and Concords; RIPE aid GREEN TOMATOES, Scott's office. yppen Pee | doccuts Son 2 -eTUCR. CE AY, PR ee pea ror pete ay pred eture et; ueenie . APPLES for eating and cooking; HEAD LETTUCE, ¢ ELERY, ote, eauty Doctor: “Of course, madam, Collection of 30 weeds: 1 Robert HEAVY WHITE CUP and SAUCER-—10¢c for the two pieces sera d pe your tees. And! Kelly, 2 Lois Kelly. : : a 0 for you pow?” Wild Flowers, 1 Lois Kelly. FANCY CHINA CUPS and SAUCERS—in three-patterns— Ke aia ae 2 the two pieces for Madam; (4 wondered if yon coals Collection of noxious weeds: 1 Ray P : do something to lift my husband’s.| Kelly, 2 Mary Kelly, 3 Lois Kelly, : It fell terribly when he fegpived Vase of asters:) Emerson Brown,

Asad . Agricutural booklet: 1 Lois Kelly. - ~~ . Basket: 1 Margaret Bell. Woodwork: 1 Jimmie Treacy, 2

Billy Treacy. 7 |

Torgans Going Out of Business ff.wzcv"F Susu. :

Lola McKinney. ° Map of Canada: 1 Mona ‘Bettley, 2

Watch this space next week for a Margaset ee : i . ° : s Map of Europe: 1 elly, Gigantic Sale announcement hap ot rita Ile: 1 Madetns

(continued next week)

Prices Cut, Slashed or and Slaughtered!

Bassano, Alberta

SPP Holy Communionat 8 o’clock a.m., on ist, 8rd, and Sth Sundays of the ~ month, |] Matins or Holy ‘Céeamusio’ - (a8

1st and 8rd Sundays of the month, Byensong at 7:80 o'clock p.m. on ie and 4th i of dhe month. Canon B. D, | Rector - HO. Bredin, ‘s warden

A R. Donaldson, people's warden

Lentils, per |b. poe ws. Ge

and crot trimmed styles. Value unsurpassed.

announced) at 11 o'clock a.m. on

> per | ess | aisins, 15-02. in 15c nily Sodas, per pkt. . . . 21c x, For Fine errs: 2 pkts. ©. . 23c

DRY GOODS & LADIES’ WEAR The Frgietiis Bitord Shoe || Woods Lavender Line

Woods’ Lavender Line Silk Underwear for For Ladies j ladies. New delivery of the loveliest silk lingerie We have just received our fall delivery of ever displayed. Beautiful garments, comprising these most excellent shoes—-in a word—'‘The Best | vests, bloomers, cami-knickers, slips, pyjamas, Good Shoe.” in all she very newest designs; night gowns, etc. Beleed Re cesta vals gure eel tec $5-95 and $6-95 » ests $2.00; Bloomers $2.95; Siips $3.25 In black patent, black kid, brown calf; in plain _ | Camt-Knickers $3.95; Pyjamas $5.95

Night Gowns $4.50

Have you seen the new Lavender Line Silk Stockings? A beautiful sheer silk, full fashioned, of heavy weight, in all the newest colors; Braped BE ne nnn ne name ee Aen wee $1.95 a pair

Holeproof Hosiery

Choose them here in stockings known the world over for their exquisite sheer ness and chic. In all the newest fall colorings,

Silk from top to toe—

Price $1.00

Silk with lisle top—

Price $1.50 ~

Sheer silk, full fashioned—

Price $1.95

The Hose Supreme

ee SPECIAL. Ladies’ Dresses in Heavy Silk Crepe, Newest Styles and Colors, priced at $11.50. Wonderful Value

Bassano’s Exclusive Men’s Wear Store

Winter Overcoats

Men's and Young Men's winter weight coats, in single and double breasted models; full lined and quarter lined. ‘The season’s newest styles and colors, Blues, Tweeds, and Heather mixtures. Made by the oldest and most reliable house in Canada. The style and cut is different from most ready-made coats. Come in and judge the values yourself,

Prices $19.50 $25.00 $35.00

Bios Dandy Clothes

Made to your individual measure. We are showing the largest and most complete set of suitings and overcoatings Semi - + Ready ever put out— New Tweeds, Serges and Worsteds; all new weaves, new patterns, and new color combinations, and moderately priced.

We invite you to compare Semi’ Ready values with any others. We guarantee every garment a perfect fit, and the very best in tailoring.

Semi-Ready Special

44 bargains in winter pvercoate--T'weeds, Meltons, a Chinchilla or «4 Beaver Cloth, from the beat English and Scoteh imills, Tailored to your

- $20.50 $24.50 ‘eh $31.50 $34.50