YBBOTSFORD, SUMAS AND MATSOUI NEWS McBEAN BROS. 45314 Grain Exchange Bldg., Winnipeg Ship your grain to the old reliable firm and be assured of satisfactory returns. Evéry car given in- dividual attention. Liberal advances. Prompt returns. All premiums given to shippers. REFERENCE: BANK OF NOVA SCOTIA Established 1882 August, 1926. | Ambitious Plan For Empire Broadcasting If Adopted, Audience of Half-Million | Would Benefit | OMfictal statistics show that 3,274| ‘2 audience of five hundred million persons have already been killed this|People!. Half w _ billion!) Within} year in 66 United States citles as the | {¥° Or three years this may bea very | result of motor accidents jreal fact if the plans of the British oe in/ Brazil for pda doashing Company and the British several weeks giving lectures and in Government aré approved by the ¥ other cities, Mme. Cu er of radium, sailed for her home, in Europe. What was apparently a meteor star tled the north midland counties Nay ay Oe ek }lect an annual fee from all owners of | ied followed by a sudden t 'lreceiving sets. In return listeners-in| ight. : {are provided with ustonishingly good | Professor Wilk, a Polish astron0-|¢o-ordinated programmes from a great mer, reports that he has discovered | piany stations, and most of the Im-| ew. ¢ t A si lass. Prof, | 2 new-comet of the sixth class. Prof |portant national events are broadcast: WORLD HAPPENINGS BRIEFLY TOLD having been and their new cultural infinence is jous parts of the emp , eo-discover scheme of into being. { Broadcasting in the British Isles is! jcontrolled by the British Broadeca ing | of} «, , Company, which has the right to col- plosion } put 7 1a a » Vil Pel- 3 ; “ i last year discovered the Vil'Pel-| cq. Next year this company is. be - | letier comet. jing taken over By the British Govern | At their home in Ottawa, Right Hon.’ ment Broailcasting Commission and| W. 8. Fielding and Mrs. Fielding re-|its proposal to the other parts*of the cently celebrated their golden Wed-|British League of Nations ding anniversary. A large number}the building of eight high-powered of congratulatory messages were re-| stations, eight special receiving sta ceived tions and six repeating stations. By Mrs. Annie Clarke, aged 90, is re-) means of these-it will be possible to} ceiving the plaudits of all Dareant | Groaleant froni any part of the empire She completed ithe mowing, tying and | to all other parts of the empire and stacking of an acre of oats, the bulk}to reach not only four hundred mil of it six feet the | lon people Within the British empire, task in a week. will be tor high, completing 'but also a hundred million outside ot To-{it, who may benefit by the bro: Preparations are being made al kio’s great cat and dog cemetery, ing along the route of transmission. wherein repose the bodies of more} With Dayentry, England, as a start than 20,000 pets, for the,annual ani-|ing point, Moncton, New Brunswick, mal ceremony at which Buddhist] Would be the first relay stalion—u prayers are sald for their spirits. {distance of 2,440 milésy Moncton United States’ citizens settling in would radiate its programmes for Can Canada in the last 12 years brougnt jada, with intermediate stations in yar with them cash effects to the value of $163,4 , according to the department of immigration and col-| onization. % ious parts of the Dominion participar- | jing in the lines would be employed to carry the the| and local distribution. Lane programmes to Vancouver, on Pacific co , a distance of 2,300 miles. The government is now investigat-| = ene 300) mafle ing the reindeer industry bir Alaska, | with the object of introducing ats | Inyents Instrument To. Analyze Brain Power animal into the northern part of the) Mackenzie district, which is the home| of a considerable portion of Canadian Eskimo population. Four hundred Mennonites pected to reach the west before the snow files, according to Bishop David} |German Sclentlsts New Ap-| 1 paratus a “Diagnascope” | Dr. Zaccharais Bissky, a | scientist Calls Ukrainian | living in Berlin, has invent apparatus known as the “Diagnascope.” are ex- ed a new psycho-electric Toews, chairman of the Mennonite : colonization board and land settie- Extraordinary claims are made for ment board. © Most of the mowcom-| ‘his instrument.’ It Js'suid to beable to register mental capacity and aptr-| tude so accurately that parents need no *_|longer be in doubt with regard to the Drivers of busses and cars FI , SR ara ALO May career for which their children are in Paris recently had grievances 10) NeBE fitted Forbidden by their leaders to\ 4 strike they showed their feeling by driving their vebicles at a snail’s pac Whenever a pedestrian desired to cross the street the driver would stop, remove his cap and bow. ers will be placed on the land imme- diately on arrival. street air. q ” The “patient” sits before an appara jtus resembling a medium-sized wire- ss set from which issue a number | ot wires. To the end of one of these jis attached a metal rod which 1s! | grasped firmly by both hands. | thing resembling a pair of head phones lis then fitted over his head. F rent is London Street Cars Are To Be Like) proceeds to pass an electrode over his Limousines |head and face, Their utility having been brought into doubt, London’s street cars may | down figures read off the instrument | by the doctor, the entire procedure Some- A De Luxe | Street Car -—+- switched on, and the doctor A secretary from time to time takes still be saved by luxury. By way of experiment the London! lasting about half an hour. council recently put a de luxe street] The apparatus, by establishing car in operation along the Thames] ele tric with the centres of the brain, the intensity. contact yarious contained seats said to as those of a limousine. pald to embankment. It as | nerve register the mental passengc rs| without delicate shades of Dr. report comfortable most Special attention was Bissky subse- lighting so to read thei straining their eyes So popular has the t from the o enable quently draws up. a resultant graphs, and gives his diag newspapers nosis of the se, car proved with} - — Growth of Wheat Pool passengers thai the council has de- cided {to order 100 more of the The capacity of pool terminals In same kind. }1924 was 870,000 bushels; in 1 i 2,370,000 bushels; and today 17,450,- ‘Try, [RIN } 000 bushels—not including leased ter lminal space on the Pacific coast. For For Your the week ending August 81st, 500 farmers in Saskatchewan decided to EYES pool their wheat and signed up 76,187 acres In addition, 135 new Wholesome cleansing RefrOShiNG orci contracts were rvcesved, cover ing 9,642 acres | — = telephone lint be euererear tween the engines and cabog, s of long freight trains have proved effec Good Digestion, Active Liver | tive the Easy, Regular Bowels, no| | trins, griping, no nausea, only 25c} | eastern railway. Experimental time-savers In Operation of according to officials of 4 Invite Somebody In Mistre See here now, Fanny, this chair is covered with dust! Mald: Well, madam, what can you expect Nobody has sat in it for aoe | Poverty is one of the crimes for ;which a man fs sentenced to hard Ww. U. 1646 ‘labor for au indefinite term of years sh - ViDIEAAE ICPSR fashiens-? Di € & on Y of Mt i pled, Ye Hamillor. A Smart Ali-Day Frock The combination of materials otters byercome the “dead point” in the revo- sem!- alluring possibilities for the tailored) mode] pictured her m0 99>! THAT SPEAK COUNTER CHEQK BOOK ELEY: ps, bright and cheery, tell We will make a distinc- Ip also to sell your other CANADA estern Waxed Paper Co. 290 McDermott Ave. Winnipeg bbbeebebabanrereeeena ria yyy: The “Dead Point” In Canadian PaaS S5555 Od eae edna sane sea mannas & Progress 2 vation | A MILK BOTTLES “ s - ‘The Great War and its aftermath of ™ | economic nmiisery in Burope demon | e strated the dire social effect-of over 4 | . “ ewe) population in highly developed coun-| y Let your ae ee say “Good morning” to your | tries Nature, however, has a way | 3 eb ise he sos ee A Fes | of ‘effectively compensating fo such | | 4 cach customer of the purity and quality sealed within. conditions, and we are now withes | e As ay papa medium, Oe Ui = | = ing the operation of this correctlye| 4 unexcelled, : ae cut printing reflects the process in tho rapfdly falling birth| | Yq Cleanliness o hae ate rate of the more adyanced countries | 4 tive design whic i aelp | of the world. It is, however, an open 4 \ products—such as butter or ice cream. !question whether such oyer-population | 4 i }brings ih Its train greater economie| A 4Y | Bisa eyils than under-population in an un- | ee Hao | developed ry of gs | ™ capt oped country of sueh enormous >A extent as Canada | 4 WESTERN AGENCIES ae | YA Pacitic Waxed Paper Co. Ww. A young country of’vast natural re- | bo4 320 Davic St. Vancouver 2 pA Hunter Martin & Co. Regina sources obviously faces difficult prob: | >A lems of administration. Such re CLKEKEKKE LLL E KEL ODDIE sources Me darmant until the magic} £££6409;€646466999 9999) 9 | touch of man and capital render them available. And until they are made javailable and contribute to the A Valuable Invention | na-} } | tional wealth they cannot be taken | New Camera Film May Be Used Clg Goes Forth seriously as an asset. All this in-| | Yolves the opening up of the cdthaw'| A. new camera film developed for} | with the concomitant in terms of great | use by the air service, having the} expenditure on transportation factli- | nower to penetrate the land haze | ties of various kinds and for providing | which has curtailed the possibility of| such amenities as will attract the obtaining detail in aerial photographs, | homebuilder and capital, Governments niay be used also in a newly-developed | and municipalities are consequently | camera designed to photograph burg-j faced with perpetual demands on their) jar. and holdup men. ‘ jcredit and resourcés, all of which add to the burden of taxation. Photograph Robbers at Work The eamera, which fs the invention | : If this, in| or John E. Seebold, of La Salle, Ms.,/ turn, becomes too high, it acts as *) may be concealed anywhere in a bank, | serious deterrent te capital and im-| house or office building, fer the pur-} jmugration. pose-of photographing holdup men by | New countries, therefore, normally gay or during the burglar's operations gravfate “between the devil and the! .: night. Im daytime) | deep, blue'sea,” until they successfully may be avorked by the pressure of one or more buttons conveniently located. | lution of progress through reaching a} At it operates automatically the camera night MAT Ai Au Tas , population and geners ave! ant | ; blouse, which has. both sides of the |PoPUlation and‘ general development \.4.4n iniuders come in contact with front buttolied onto a narrow vestee, ends in points , approximately sufficient to absorb the |; 4 cers attache rae id has a simple con- triggers attached to door knobs, .c abnormal overhead inseparable from yertible colla and kimono-sleeve | ;), ii / et ‘ dials,. drawers or other-means of : » earlier stages peering co i shoulders. The skirt fs plain at the a ; g 4 sides ones con’ | eaching stored property or money back and gathered in front between | @/U0Ds. Canada just now is drift-| pye-camera built into & steel case the points of the bodice full sleeves are gather and small women, and is in sizes 16, 18 and 20 yea Size bust) require ed material, 3 iy and yard plain con 20 cents Fall Fashion one material Our new Book illus: trating styles, will be of interest to|' SUMMER HEAT HARD ON BAB No season of the 3 summer. the little stomach out of order quickly that unless prompt aid is at|p) Dorado. y be beyond all he mother realizes Summer is the season when The cur-/ diarrhoea, cholera infantum, dysentry attain the s hand, the baby m: human help before he fs ill. and colic are most preyalent? Any/ success within a similar period, we is considered a work of art worthy to of these troubles may prove dee ly it) would apparently have reason to be rank with any in the nation’s pot erney ae UN ne aay satisfied with ourselves. That | churches. G, Baby's Own Ta They regulate | we can accomplish this through immi- The church faces the little house} the bowels, sw » stomach and | gration policies proceeding in the op-, 0D the hill where Joan was born and keep baby health Tablets are | Hoste direction to those that made| overlooks the Valley of the Meuse, | sold by medicine dealers or by mail 4 5 cents a box from The Dr. Williams Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. The long | ing about in the doldrums of tlifs dit- into narrow ficult period, laborious ei anata 9 isses wrist bands. No. 1409 is for misses ‘pyrden, public, private and corporate, | 18 years (36 | ards 394nch figur- commodate 2 population at least four « -\or five millions greater-than what it ts trasting; or 334 yards if made all of today. ear is so danger- n 5 ¢ er, except perhaps Canada. ous to the life of little ones as is the joey Lege Ses Mel tea eo The excessive heat throws | so|country easily represents the modern} and hidden away in the wall, desk, fil- y carrying the ed, Amploys a flashlight for night work Once the intruders toueh the of every sort of modern facility, to ac- | concealed trigger the steel case opens to permit functioning of the lens, the flashlight is fired and” the pfeture oz the intruders is rded on a film. The camera withdraws int6 its steel So the outstanding problem mm {Canadian public policy just now is how augment rapidly our insufficient \tation of foodstuffs. We cannot pos- | sibly escape the conclusion that the | United States is a great, prosperous | \nation, whose citizens enjoy a stand- his promise, but it was not forgotten, ard of living far above that. of any and the little Lorraine village was gay In tm | With flugs for the ceremony which be- | tional heroine. King Charles VII. failed to fulfill gan with ecclesiastical pomp. The church was thirty-three years It 1g ornamented with eyes of almost the entire world that ‘All this has been accOm-|in building. largely through the If we in Canada coutd| of the peasant girl who has become a Saint of the Church. | plished door” policy. ne degree of material is, however, open to | where in the Great War the contend- Jers of Joan's day also fought for the of France from foreign ot: + the U. S- great serious doubt. - Wi | delivery | ; in’ children work layoc. | cupation ack the tender lining | wie ~ =e ada at the end of 1925 we ] = 942,000, fi vase of $324,685,000 of the intestin and, if left to pursue Tick I 1 d I 942,000, an increase of $324,680,000) thajy ravages undisturbed, will ulti icket Includes Insurance over that of 1924, according toa bulle-| mately perforate the wall, because _— tin of the Canadian Goyernment) these worms are of the hook variety|Passengers on German Aeroplanes bureau of siatistics that cling to and feed upon the inter- Are Well Protected Against Bachelors are womerms right anc widowers are women’s lefts. jor surfaces. Miller's Worm Powders will not only extermjnate these worms, | 1) of whatever variety, but will Serve to re done. Accident Eyery time a air ow one of Germany's seventy-five FOR “Cholera infantum” MOTHERS SHOULD USE This valuable preparation has been on the market for over 80 years, sud has no equal for offsetting the vomit- ing, purging and diarrhaa of cholera infantom. Put up only by ‘The T. MiJburn Co, Limited, Toronto, Gat, aeroplane routes he is insured for $6,- the 2se reutes. 600 at the expense of Lufthansa, } concern which operates th Canadian’ Bar Association Favors Restoration of Custom For Canadians Flying in Germany is regarded quite as safe as travelling by train or mo- tor car. The insuranee companies A resolution regretUing the actlon| with which Lufthansa has contracted of the Canadian Parliament in pass-| for the insurance of passengers charge ing a resolution requesting His Ma-|merely the usual accident rate, with- jesty the King to confer no more} out the super-charge customary In the} | {idles or like honors on subjects of) case of “extra-hazardous occupations.” His Majesty. residing. dn.Canada According to officidl statistics the ther Cc which was presented by FB. stonhaugh, K.C., of ‘Toronto, and onded by R. G. K.C., of! Phus tar during Montreal, and referred*to the resolu- | jas peen Injured tion committee, one of the tures of the opening session of the thirteenth annual meeting of the Can percentage of safety in aeroplane flights during 1 was 99.997 per cent, Delormier, 1925 not a passencer was fea As A Speclal Favor Grimshaw— “What's that. musical adian Bar Association, held at St./instrument you play every night) John, N.B. from 10 until 2?” | iTS ET aad Neighbor.—‘A sliding trombone.” | Non-Stop Elevators | Grimshaw.—‘Would you mind slid | Some of the taller buildings at |ing it in the ash can?” Stockholm are being eauipped . with} Ree non-stop elevators. They moye slow- After winning a woman's hand a ly and continuously from floor to floor. | Man sometimes finds himself under |The passengers must leap ip and our. her thumb | - All ing cabinet or any other place destr- | “open| {rescoes of the chief events in the life | The main altar | traveller goes up in} Curfew Law In Chicago That Gives Mtch Trouble to Policemen |, Time turned back a generation or two as Chicago, a sophisticated city or 3,000,000 revived the curfew law of its innocent ‘village days, but policemen, owing to the styles of the reigning generation, found enforcement-a tiat- ter of considerable difficulty. unescorted boys and girls 16 years old or under must be off the streets at 10 o'clock, the city fathers have ruled, in an effort to end a long record of atiacks and kidnappings, and 3,000 cops were sent forth to enforee the edict Then their troubles began for they claimed tha; with the prevailing mode of short skirts, rolled hose and bobbed hair they were unable to distinguish |children frpm grown-ups. Severai married women, well over twenty, were taken into custody as “children,” while bewildered policemen who stop ped “kids” were indignantly informed that their ages were above the curfew mit. E Parks orde p.m, and county highway officers pat- rolled country roads and lovers’ lane. | “Youngsters must do thelr conpt- jing hereafter in the parlor at hone,” |said Chief-of Police Collins. “Not ‘that we want to De old-fashioned, DUt were red closed at 10 every home dressmaker. Price of agricultural population Compared | 4 simply as a common sense Measure to€ the book 10 cents the cop¥, | with this, all other Jssties are insig case and consealitent eons a slight tS oi Aira ceratvotinemteet yale {nificant and out of the way of d bre Saat sip | = : — A ther Ey aaah Peay 4 L The deyice is manufacturec ye eres | slice Ty, Outer Pattern ear ttacitte ees a oe cable Rochester firm and experiments are | Answer to Last Week’s Puzzle | Address— Winnipeg Newspaper Union, to follow blindly in the adminfstrative being made to adapt it to motion CIA jis S TAIG IE] : 115 MeDermot Ave, Winnipex fodtsteps of the United States. This WAC HY TAPIAIN| \ ul) Pattern NO.-....-:..:. Size. ci.cecraps| Y 98 never more apparent than when, | ae ae ea AIR! LID) ~ laboring under wartime emotionalism, | After Four Hundred Years 1S lly ils Tec 8) he sinul es aleminycged eee adopted drastic exclusion regula- a ak MT ; ltions following the imposition of the | Basilica In France Dedicated-To Joan L EIR Qa e Ov ws 0 osc meen man sce teccccedihsoe | quota law south of the line. We nev- |e Of Arc 2 RIVE | | ar’/stopped)to/consider that the-Unitea,| «The; Basilica which King Gharles} E fap) [Name — 1s. ee asee esos eee eeeseemme |States carefully refrained from any VII. vowed he would build if Joan of} al \ | such measures until her population ex- |ATe succeeded in driving the English N [O|L TOWD w.. ss cceccewecssnevceeeeeees® ceeded’ a round hundred millions and|oUt of France as she promised more IN VIE 5 ——>——-——- |she was on the yerge of heavy impor- | than 400 years ago, was consecrated nae E|N ‘at Domremy, tha birthplace of the na~ SI RIT Swindled | Farmer Cornleigh.—‘Was: that new "fangled incubator you bought much of ja success?” | Farmer Newfodder.—“Success? lve ;had the dang thing sittin’ in the hen- house for three weeks and there aln’t a sign of an eggs in it—let alone @ | chicken! | 1 1 Hy | } | A Famous Man The originator of Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery forthe blood, as well as the “Favorite Prescription” for women, was Dr. Ray_Y. Pierce, 9 practising pave in Western Penn- sylvania. He early moved to Buffalo, N. Y., and established The Invalida’ | Hotel, then he put up his home tem edies in the World’s Dispensary, where they were carefully prepared from | roots, barks and herbs, and placed them with druggists all over the U.S. and Canada, ee For over half century, Dr. Pierco’s | Discovery, for the blood, has been sold in IntRoe quantities by druggists than any other medicine. Itis a tonic in its effect on the stomach and digestive &p= paratus; an alterative in its action on the blood, liver and skin. If inereasesy_ | the appetite, stimulates the digestion, ~ enriches the blood, clears the skin of eornuong and blemishes, and makes both men and women feel as they when they were young and care free. Ask your nearest druggist for Doctor Pierce's family medicines, in tablet of | liquid form, or send 10 cents for a | Dackan of tablets to Doctor Pierce’s | Laboratory in Bridgeburg, Ont. re { —an,