ABBOTSFORD. SUAS AND MATSQUI NEWS 3ordens ST. CHARLES for every milk prerbones ibe ye penis re '° pe and rich=- wherever the recipe calls for milk. WORLD HAPPENINGS BRIEFLY TOLD King George has become a patron of the rebuilding fund for the peare Memorial Theatre at Stratford- on-Ayon, recently destroyed by fire. Emile H. Sharten!, Egyptian engin- is in Canada-from Cairo to help establish direct trade link between-the Dominion and the near east. The agreement effected in 1922 with Canada, coyering flights of aircraft between that country and the United States has beén extended until April 30, 1927. Speaker Lemieux in the House of Commons announced that a bust of Lord Durham had been received by the government as a gift from Mr, St. Loe Strachey, of London, England. The total catch of sea fish on both coasts of the Dominion during the eer, months of March was 18,274,700 pounds yalued at $999,781. It has en- hanced yalue of $57,323 over ihe month | of March, 1925. For the first-time in several years the number of unemployed in Great Britain has dropped down below the million mark. The total number of unemployed is now 997,000, which rep- resents a drop of 200,000 during the past year. The German-Russian treaty violates neither the covenant of the League of; Nations nor the Locarno pact, in the view of the League of Nations circle It is contended that the treaty com- mits the Soviet Government for the first time to @ policy of arbitration with capitalistic governments. The ceremony of the signing of the first contract of the Saskatchewan proyincial dairy pool was conducted fn-a ploughed field on Herman Rich- ardt’s farm, near Saskatoon, recently, when O. W. Andreason, who built and operated the first creamery in the province, C. E, Thomas, provincial or- ganizer, and others drank a_ solemn toast in a pint of the best milk. Iseif- Poisoning Takes Huge Toll Many Fail in Life Through Sheer Neglect of Funda- mental Rule of Health —— Thousands of men and women are to-day victims of their own neglect. Grouchy, listless, quickly tiring, suffer- ing from headaches and biliousness, they spend enormous sums in medi cines without avail. They would give much to regain’their old vitality. Can it be done? Yes! How? Simply by recognizing the importance of one fundamental rule of health—the proper elimination of the bowel con- tents. Poisons that are allowed to remain in the system quickly lower the stamina, weaken the nerves and thus pave the way to ill-health. Stop this self-poisoning by taking Nsjol—the scientific lubricant that pamle the work of Nature’s lubricant when, through modern living conditions, the natural supply fails. Nujol-can be taken inde! finitely with- out injury tothe system. Try Nujol to-day. Ask for it at your nearest drug store, but remember there is only one Nujol. Watch for the name ‘‘Nujol” in red on the label and package. WwW Shakes- | * lkeep: Red Clover, Alfalfa! And Sweet Clover} Correct Method of TL meaanihe a System of Permanent Agricultute (By D, Jas McGregor, Glencarnock | Stock Farms, Brandon, Manitoba) | Red clover is perhaps the oldest | and best known of all the legumes jused in crop rotation, for livestock yield of g grown succes used intelli- gently, it will accomplish all that should be expected of any crop, It usually seeded with small grain, a hay, and seed crop the fol- and is plowed under for and Where and is clover is | | produce lowing year, eeding erop, or if timothy eeded with it, it will make eoed pasture for another yea |A rotation of corn, wheat and clover, |} with stock to eat the corn and clover, | ‘allowing the manure to be returned to the Jand, approaches a system of per- /manent agriculture, A small amount of phosphorus in addition to the man ure would make this system almost ideal. However, there are féw farms s0 situated as to approach this system. Red clover does not grow satisfactor- ily in all localities; neither does corn, and there is not enough livestock to consume the corn and clover if it were grown. Alfalfa has proven to be adapted to many sections; its production is ex? tending very rapidly, and those who are able to grow it successfully ean wish for nothing better, either as a feed for livestock, or as a soil restor- er, All good farmers are agreed that a combination of corn, clover or al- falfa, and liyestock, will enable them to produce more grain—wheat, oats, ete.—than cdn be produced by the or dinary system of strictly grain farm- ing. If you have noticed a decrease in profits, due to lower yields, or an in- jcrease In weeds and plant diseases, and need a crop to help keep up the fertility, furnish good pasture and hay; la crop that will grow where and when ‘nothing else does, early in the spring, jlate in the fall, on the alkali, wet; dry, fees or gumbo spots, try sweet cloy- er. t Sweet clover has long been known las an outcast among plants—growing | by the roadside and in wasfe places, often being cursed, except by the bee- . I€ seems now that, like many ae things we at first rejected, it 1s finding its place among the yaluable crops on all farms, Sweet clover is {no longer an experimental crop. An (increasing acreage is being grown on thousands of farms, in every state and province on the continent, and fs fill- ing a need that no other crop ever has filled. There are several species of sweet clover, but for our purpose we wilt divide them into two classes, White Blossom apd Yellow Blossom, as these are the two which are mostly grown. White Blossom is the variety produc- ed on the nyejority of farms, but great many people are beginning to favon the Yellow Blossom on account of its early maturity and possibly a little finer stem, thus making better hay than the White Blossom. Ther are selections being made from these two yarieties and claims made that they are superior in various ways, such as being earller, cold resistant, less bitter, more leafy, etc. There undoubtedly is merit in all these \claims and great improvement may be a while the alfalfa is almost or by saw teeth, smooth; lof the sweet clover as compared to the Jalfalfa. When older the sweeticlover develops a main stem with many | bre anches, while alfalfa produces many stems from the crowns, with but few) “| branches. to furnish feed | to maintain the | or the rather bitter taste ON THE AIR |} What Is Doing In the World of | | Radio | | Some folks are just bugs about the jtadio. Or, as you tmight-say, they i}! are microphone microbes. | While listening in at Battle Greek, Mich., Paul Stevens, 20, heard over the radio that his uncle had left him a fortune. | ., | | Since the radio broadeasune sta-1 | |Uions quit announcing the names of} | persons who wrote or telegraphed to | comniinte Sirteanie ae} “ oe ider ue eee one to three/them, the “fan mail’ 'to broadcasters ‘ee and may be cut for hay, Un-| has dropped off heavily at Chicago. der favorable conditions, two crops of| mpy, Yand } B dseape-loving pis hay may be cut -the first year, tis! wy, ean ae PUR Bee 5 HOLopIst se view of wi 4 4 sbb= the nature of this plant to store up scured by billb eee aalle ig in large fleshy roots food which 4s] cunerer in theradio tar oncrty won te*ra ae a Neos ths: seco eur Amiga modes re © radio fan beset by radio advertising, -whenever le turns the tion of seed. Hence, pasturing heay- | ) | dials of his recef rs \ily or cutting close before ib has made} ving Kets its maximum’ growth may limit the} growth and seed production the s Commons debates have heen likened ond year t6 some extenf. In fayor- | Soap-box oratory by many Conser- able seasons, sweet clover makes ex- j¥ative members of the British Par- cellent fall after the Hament who have put themselyes on grain is cut. record as being against the introduc- tion of the microphone. Proposals to broadcast the House of pasture, small An interesting record in long dls- tance radio reception on a moying train has been established by the Con- ftinental Limited, the transcontinental express of the Canadian National Railways, If picking up and holding for 30 minutes a broadcast from Vera Cruz, Mexico. Zoendon ,will soon have a theatre where. plays will be staged for broadcasting and not for the benefit of audiences. An attempt was made recently at Covent “Garden Opera House, ‘where an _opexya was per- formed ‘and broadcast, there being no stage setting or costumes used. Radio signals are better 600 miles from a broadcast transmitter than they are 800 miles, according to en- gineers of the fadio department _of the General Electric Company, under whose supervision an exhaustive in- vestigation of radio wave propaga- lion is now being made. Twelve radio “mikes” haye been in- stalled in the frefght yards of the Iinois Central Railroad, Chicago, and the system, with other improvements, has reduced the switching force from 288 men to 27 men. The “mikes” are connected to a universal loud speaker circuit, so that orders and responses of each of the ten switch-towermen, the train dispatcher, and the master are audible to all twelve. scale- Stomach Cramps : Yield to “Nerviline” When doubled up at midnight with cramps you don’t feel like experiment- ing; what you want fs something to {remove the cramp. Nothing acts so effectively as Nerviline. Take twenty drops in a little sweetened water, and quick as wink the cramp is gone. Ner- viline is about five times as strong as most medicines, and because so strong, only a small dose is required to give instant effect. For stomach, gas,.fer- mentation, cramps, ete, Nerviline should be ket in every home . For sure protection, get “Nerviline” to- day, 385c at dealers. The New Costume Blouse Fashioned of a lovely printed and, bordered material fs this oyer-blouse of Russian influence that is almost a dress, so Jong in length is it. Fine | tucks define the hips, and create just} enough fullness to giye the new) bloused effect at the sides. Note the smart arrangement of the tie co) at neck, and front opening back to forma V. A sleeve extension {s join- ed to the kimono shoulders and gath- ered into bands at the wrists. No. J246 is in sizes 34, 36, 38, 40 and 42 inches bust. so 36 bust requires ae yards 40-inch all plain mate , Or yards 64-inch bordered material as “tilustrated. Price 20 cents The secret of distinctive dre in good taste rather than a la penditure of money. Every woman should want to muke her own clothes, and the home dressmaker will~find the designs illustrated in our new Fashion Book to be practical and sim- ple, yet maintaining the spirit of the | Huge Tower For Leipzig One Being Erected Twice as High as Eiffel Tower The city of Leipzig, Germany, {s erecting a steel tower, 1,950 feet high, about twice as high as the Fiffel Tower in Paris, which is to serve as a generator of electric power and as a expected from careful selection and aces of the moment. Price of the] wirel station. The cost of the breeding. book 19 cents the copy. tower will be about one million dollars. When just beginning to grow, sweet It is said that Berlin is considering clover so closely resembles alfalfa How To Order Patterns the question of building a similar that many will mistake one for the tower. Address—Winnipeg Newspaper Union, | other. They may be distinguished by > 3 2 ye., Winnipe . bette the edge of the leaves; the, 175 McDermot Ave. Winnipeg Japan Surprises Naval World sweet clover leaves are much like|pattern No...¢.---++-. Size adeeewum Japan has sprung a surprise on the nayal world. She is building four cruisers, which, although smaller and cheaper than the 10,000-ton W ing- ton treaty ships, are formidable fight- |Name ig units, according to Hector By-| | water, a leading naval critic. | Town ‘The true test of good manners is to OUR CROSSWORD PUZZLE Extra duties sald to have imposed on merchandise from this country by Canada and Argentine are said to} have been responsible for the placing of the new measure. Will Not Participate %4 In World Conference \U. S. Has Forwarded Decision To Its | Legation At Berne | Formal notification the States will not-participate in the world court conference in Geneva, Septem- ber I, has been sent the United States | legation at Berne for delivery to the jLeague of Nations, The conference was called to consider the reservation United } attached by the United States senate to adherence to; the but | world court, | Secretary Kellogg and Coolidge decided adherence could be made effective only through corres: |pondence between the state depare- [ment and the 48 signatories to the court protocol. | ——— } Note that “poor, old, decrepit’ | Britain is paying another $160,000, - Candle clocks, haying rings painted jon the candles at regular intervals, are | still being manufactured in England. She Could Hardly Do Her Housework Nerves Were So Bad Mrs. I. M. Parks, Consecon, Ont., writes:—‘‘I had heart and nerve trouble, and became s0 breath I could hardly do housework, and was s0 could not ‘think of stayin, every little sound I hear g shock to me, 1 Saw tried a after second now fee! different marke ast 32 ycars and has achieved ® wonderful reputation for of all hoart and nerve troubles. X() The biennial sweet clover, wit The wise man is atways known by|be decent to the fellow who isn’t as} 000 on her war debt to Uncle Sam this Put up only by The T. Milbura N. U. 1627 sown alone in the spring will make|the company he keeps out of. operat as you are. | year. Co., Limited, Toronto, Ont “TIPPITY-WITCH IRENE "HE LOVES HER ~ By COLLEEN MOORE \'M YM ONWORTH — [ I+1-1-I-1RENE | | Kv! Tuat | AM 2 : |-l-I- L-LOVe HAVE You TALRERE > Sone eon ttte ‘ou IRENE ! SEEN MOTHER BUT | VE BEEN WANTING To SAY 0 , WILL You MARRY e Love ‘You TIME | i You pole A LONG ZY CONTAIN MYSELF NO LONGER ? AnyHow ? recommended, 80 I taking This preparation has -been on short of my daily nervous L alone, a3 felt like and the one I am ling like & woman.’? box, the t for the the relief 3 ; z 3 72) Fee (Cae 6 7 3 7 wo yl We a z bs 29 4 Ty 38 * is 47 \ a yy f 6 W : i Horizontal 49—Into. 1S—At this place. | i dance. 19--Pen. 1—To make ready. uter pronoun, —|22—Violent anger, | 7—To assert earnestly. seasoning. A heroic poem, 13—To send in return. bundle, 26—Furniture rollers. 14—A constellation, ;6—Pather, 28—To give @ title to. 16—Scarcer. 57—Vim -(colloq). 30—A relish. 17—To Dublish. /\59—A discourse. 81—Personal pronoun. ie ERE 61—A mean fellow. —New. ; alle SHOE pela 62—A bucket. —A period of time. j wie ee Ae 64{—At that place. —Near at hand. 22—To crate again, 65—-To be listless. r24—A non-circular rotary | -. < splece of machinery. 25—Article. P6—A vehicle. | ars. 43—Tourist (cotoq.). 27—To typewrite)7 Insect-like ereatures|44—A repast. (colloq.). I 45—Over. 29—A negative, F 46—Act of selling. 30—A wise man Vertical 47—Primers, 31—Missouri (abbr.). 1—To Induce. 49—Irritates. 32—A small hotel, 2—A work with two/50—Uncoyered. 34—To let parapets meeting at|52—To torment. 36—To exist. a salient angle, —To allow. —Play performers. 8—To thrust out. {55 —Consumes by fire. 89—A deep wheel track. vation, 56—A printed journal. 40—Pronoun (poss.). “| ar-by 58—An Italian city. 41—Part of the yerb (tO) 6—To choc Golf term. F v 7—A vegetable, To contend with. Conjunction. 63—To lay over. s State of 65—Angry, furious. Washington. i 67—Plural form of “you” 45—Preposition. 11—Portable chair. (poet.). 46—A young ox. 7 Shiverings. 69—Seventh note cof scale 48—Soon than. —Organ of hearing. (mus.), ——$s—— — = ; Measure Directed. “Answer to Last Week's Puzzle Puzzle Against D JIOJU/RINAILESPILIAINIS r : : IALIRIEN IN| ILIAIUIRIEL| & Czecho-Slovakia Will Refuse Ship. (a HIAINIT) iclAlRIRIOTIE ments Unless Endorsed By ran NIDEATIRI RAK LT A Consulate Sik|) PASIUIEIDIERIDIE Declared to be directed especially] [7% tule HI D ae against Canada and the Argentine, or- im lal) | A Ss ders have been issued by the Czecho- fo) NIT Slovakian customs authorities stipu- R AIR’ lating that entry of cereals, flour, A U tables and malt be refused unles L E shipment is accompanied by certifi- Ee cates issued by the Chamber of Com- iS] merce of the exporting country en- —_— dorsed by the Ozecho-Slovakian con- re thes making of tae, clay and yt sulate. The new order went into ef] other mixtures are handled 78 times — fect on April 21. before the product is complete. -