SUALAS ALBOTSE( ANT MATSQUI NEWS RED ROSE TE Ai is good tea’ Red Rose Orange Pekoe —Top Quality In clean, bright Aluminum Wilcke Co-operation ip Necded The movement of ten thousand unemployed British miners to Canada to work as harvest hands in the grain fields of the West is so significant, and may have such fqr-reaching results, that it warrants additional con- ration to that already given in a previous article in this column. Suppose the situation was reversed and there was a surplus of tens of | thousands of farmers’ sons and farm hands in Western Canada who could lRetudeer For Hudson’s Bay Area | British Immigration | Conference Between Lord Lovat and! 12,000 Reindeer From Alaska To Be} Ottawa Authorities Brings Sent Overland Shortly after the fawning season 12,000 reindeer will, be herd- When the immigration conference] is over, between Lord Loyat, head of the Em-| ed from Als pire Settlement Board, Bay, ac ka to the shores of Hud- rding to N. A. Bran- : Results and federal son's immigration leaders concluded at Ot-| son, of the Dominion Reindeer Com- tawa, an official statement was {s-| pany. This is due to the rapid in- sued, saying “it is confidently expect-| crease of the herd of 1,249 animals ed that the result of these negotia-| tions will be a steady increase in the flow of suitable British migrants to Sanada,” The conference discussed yarious matters arising out of British emigration to and settlement in the Dominion, with particular reference to the measures to be adopted both started in Alaska thirty years ago. Progress will be slow, the herd trav: elling*about ten miles per day. But first, the shortest route must be found and charted WAS VERY DELICATE in Canada and in Great Britain to| New Health Came Through} give effect to the recommendations of Using Dr, Williams’ | the select standing committee of the Pink Pills House of Commons on agriculture and} yy,. Caspar Miller, Lourdes, N.S., colonization, All these recommenda- tions and other proposals made by lifetime she what that twice in her bas reason to be thankful for Lord Lovat have been fully and|Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills did for her. |She says:—‘I was a very delicate frankly discussed, with a thorough) 2:1) going into womanhood, when not find employment, while, on the other hand, there was a shortage of | appreciation of the difficulties on both | miners in the coal-mining districts of the British Isles, and the experiment} sides and in every case a satisfactory was tried of transporting an army of men from the grain fields of the West| understanding had been arrived at, to the mines of Britain. Under such circumstances the sympathy of the people of Canada would go out to their sons as they journeyed to an unfamiliar country to engage in work of which they had no knowledge or training, and to live under con- ditions entirely new to them. There would be hope in the hearts of the| relatives and friends of those men that the British people and the mine b would be considerate in their treatment, lenient in thelr judgments, | mpathetic and patient in assisting the strangers to adjust themselves to) their own environment and make good. Fortunately for Canada its sons do not haye to go abroad in order to} find work and opportunity, because nowhere in the world today is work} more plentiful, nowhere do greater opportunities present themselves than in Canada. This very fact should, howeyer, but provide a greater incentive to our people to extend a heartening welcome and a helping hand to these | British miners. Judging by numerous statements made by these men, the vast majority | of them have come to Canada with the right spirit,—a real determination to ‘make good” and achieve not merely a temporary but a permanent sucéess in this country. They come wholly inexperienced in the work they are to undertake. Instead of working eight hours a day, they will be required to work from early dawn till dark, but the spirit of the men was expressed by one of them on the eve of sailing when he said _that eighteen hours at work in the open fields and fresh air of the prairies would not be any worse than | eight hours under ground in a coal mine Enroute over the ocean, the first group of miners wirelessed back to the British Government that they were determined to succeed, and at the port of landing in Canada, and again at Winnipeg, Regina, Moose Jaw, and other points of distribution, man after man expressed the same view, namely, that they were anxious to make a success in Canada and were hopeful of secur- ing work after the harvest and becoming permanent citizens of the| Dominion. | These men by the act of their coming to Canada as harvest hands have | shown that they prefer work, even bard wnaccustomed toil, to living in idle- | ness on the “dole” in Britain. Each and every one of them had to pass a | rigorous physical examination before being allowed to sail. They are, there- | the statement said Heavy Apple Crop | Increase Of Almost 900,000 Boxes Of Apples From Okanagan District Is Indicated An increase of 900,000 I pexeeern ithe shipment of apples from the Okanagan fruit district is indi- cated in a report issued todayeby T. P. White, superintendent of car ser? vice, Canadian National Railways, Winnipeg. The latest estimates in- | dicate that the “McIntosh” crop will amount to 1,252,460 boxes as com- pared with 738,493 boxes last year, or an increase of 513,867 boxes or 69 per cent. ‘The total ‘aynle crop, which comprises largely the “McIn- tosh” and the “Wealthy” brands, is expected to amount to 3,928,355 box- es this season, which {is an increase of almost | $90,845 boxes over last year BABY GIRL HAD WHEN CUTTING TEETH Mrs. A. J. Murray, Gull Lake, Sask., writes:—‘Last summer, my baby girl was cutting teeth and became ve week with tho effects of diarrhoa. didn’t know just what to do for her as she couldn’t retain anything. At last one of my neighbors said to me, TARRHEA | “Hayen’t you an fore, the pick of the unemployed miners, and, animated by a desire to “make y good’! they should succeed if given a fair chance, and a helping hand and en-| couragement That chance, assistance and encouragement should be rortheamite in} Jatge measure from the Canadian people as a whole and, in particular, from the individual farmers who employ them. It will be necessary to show these men hew their work should be done and how to do it. This will require t and patience. Too much must not be expected of them. And the man who makes an honest effort to learn, who shows a real determination | to work and render service to his employer, is deserving of every encourage- ment. | Such encouragement cannot be better shown than by a kindly, sym-| pathetic attitude a personal interest in the man’s welfare, and, ineall cases} — ‘(My husband went to town and got wwhere it is possible to do so, by the offer of a job for the winter, The know-| @ hottle, and the very first dose helped ledge that, if he shows a disposition to make good, he will be provided-with | her wonderfully, and in three days she or the winter, and thus given his opportunity to become a permanent! Was well over the diarrhea and was ecitler in Canada, will provide the greatest possible incentive to a man who ronnie Sreruc Ken neues ever.”? is desirous of achieving that result. And it is settlers of this British type ot | rimited Tormnte, Ont Oe” which Canada stands in need. —_—_——-~ If both parties to this unique experiment strive to make It a success Buffalo At Elk Island it should not succeed, and if it does prove successful,! fk Island National Park is a being judged by the results of the movement as a whole rather) reservation for the preservation and ndividual cases,—then it will, in all probability, prove the beginning | propagation of the buffalo, Seven of a new and worthwhile immigraton from the congested groups of the| hundred and twenty-six buffalo dte unemployed in the British Isles to the open spaces of Canada, where,| now in this park, together with a through their labor, such people will be an important factor in bringing | number of mule deer, elk, and moose.| large tracts of vacant Jands under cultiyation, and in providing the neces- sary man-power to develop many of the as yet untouched natural resources A Prime Dressing For Wounds. — cf the Dominion, thus making comfortable homes for themselves and adding | In some factories and workshops car- aaieatteite -oductive capacity, wealth and prosperity of Canada, | bolic acid is kept for use in cauteriz- immeasurably to the productive capacity, we prosperity Pall te ab ulida ake GuLARURGI Ne by the why, I wouldn't be without it where there are children.’ work f and incidentally of the Empire as a whole. lonenenee Mawiacttersn tamer. ton = ~ ——— | hand a bottle of Dr. Thomas’ Eclec-| No Menace To Consumer [and improvement in selection of seed,| tric Oll, It is just as quick in action and does not scar the skin or burn made it possilile for wheat pool mem- flesh. | bers to reap larger profits from their crops and at the same time to give values to the consumers, the British Delegate Returns Home Fa ably Impressed With Wheat Pool Widows and widowers in all con-| ditions of life want re-pairing. “We do not agree with those who} If one be troubled with corns, he Don't fail to study yourself, if you sce in the pools the menace of a mo-|wijji find in Holloway's Corn Remov-| would know others. ropoly to the disadvantage of the/er an application that will entirely consumer,” Henry J. May,) relieve suffering. eneral secretary of the Internation: Co-operative Alliance, who was one| _ Huskies For Byrd Expedition AF. Ge fie’ cinco steanata ae aie re) A Friend to Women Will Collect 100 Dogs In Quebec To Be Used In Polar Venture | better to ites cent international wheat pool confer- ence. Mr. May expresaés his view ; To procure 100 huskies for Com- Co-operati published in} mander Richard E, Byrd's forthcom- Manch Jing Antarctic Polar venture, is the He states that the economy of pro-| task that has been entrusted to a par- methods, the} ty that has left Quebec on board the North Shore, in quest of. the duction on large scale ation of the middlemen’s profits SS. climin right type of canine for the hazard- | undertaking. The party is to A Rubdown comb the north shore of- the St. Lawrence. When secured, the hundred reise will not cause stiff- TET you'll, massage your || dogs will be loaded on the steamer carne on nassage yo body with Minard’s. and brought to Quebec to be shipped to the Pacific where they will be picked up by ‘Commander Byrd. coast, Social Worker: Do you bellevs in 1 1 J ing Nannie abomee alt ydia EB. Pinkham’s Fisherman: Well, no sir. I likes ‘em fried in i” ordinary way Vegetable Compound LYDIA E. PINKHAM MEDICINE Co. Mass., U. and aoboure, ‘Ont Hosein Only his employer ever appreciates! the the successful bill-| collector, 1 vorth of first found benefit from Dr. Williams’ | Pink Pills. I was a sufferer with cramps and pains every month and! was hardly able to move around at} all. One day when I was very sick} a friend came in to see me, and she said to my mother, ‘Why not try Dr.| Williams’ Pink Pills, I know they} will do her a world of good.” ‘The result was my mother got six boxes and I began their use, and I soon found benefit from them. By the time I had taken them all I felt an altogether different girl and no long-| jer suffered from cramps and pains. | | Then a few years ago I was at: p,| tacked with influenza, and was sick for six weeks. Again I started tak- Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, and} Moai they brought me good health. Iam the mother ofa family and do) all my own work, so you see I have to keep in good health, and depend| upon these pills to keep me so. Now | |I always recommend ‘Dr. Williams’ | | Pink Pills to any of my friends who | [pay be sickly.’ f you are suffering from any con- Vala due to poor, watery blood, om | weak nerves, begin taking Dr. Wil-| liams' Pink Pills now, and note how your strength and health will im- | prove You can get these pills} | through any dealer in medicine, or {at 50 cents a box from The Dr. Wil-| |Nams’ Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. Reforms In C Women Must Bob Hair and Remove Bindings From Feet a | The municipal bureau of publi |safety has decreed that Poking wo men under $0 years of age must at their hair or pay a “degeneracy tas The order became effective Sept. 1. It is meant to discourage the old| Manchu style of hair dressing and} contradicts the ruling of General Chu Yu-Pu, military governor of Chihli| under the former regime, who repu-| diated hair bobbing, threatening to punish even his own consorts for dis- obeying this order. The mayor, Ho Chi-Kung, is deter- | mined to eliminate feudalistic habits | still adherred to by some of the Pek-| ing people, He has ordered that men} who insist upon wearing queues must} pay a heavy monthly tax and women must remove the bindings from their | feet within the next few days or pay | periodical fine | | Choked For Air. Some little irri- tant becomes lodged in the bronchial} tubes, othe ather, and the awful} choking of asthma results. Nothing offers quite such quick and positive relief as Dr, J. D. Kellogg's Asthma | | Remedy. The healing, soothing smoke | of vapor penetrates, clears the pas- Sages and gives untold relief. It has behind it years of success. It is the sure remedy for every sufferer. |. Supplies For 3r Northern Posts | Mission For R.C.M.LP, | @he new auxiliary schooner Roch, of the R.C.M-P., has set |from Vancouver to carry fresh pro-| visions and supplies to the posts in} |the R.C.M-P. It is manned by a crew| Jof 13 officers and men headed by | Captain W. H. Gillen, Vancouver, and Kelly, chief engineer. ‘The course St. |set for | ring Straits and around the north- |ern coast of Alaska to Herschel, Yu- | kon territory, By radio the floating | detac hment will keep in touch with | headquarters at all times. Members of the R.C.M.P, comprising the ¢rew in- elude Constables T. G. P; M. | J. Olsen, Larsen, Tudor, Foster, Sea- ley, Parry and Lamothe loe, | Many infants are infested by worms |which cause great suffering, and it not promptly dealt with may cause constitutional weaknesses difficult to | remedy. Miller's Powders will |clear the stomach bowels of worms and’ will so act upon the sys- tem that there will be no recu nce | of the trouble. And not only this, but they will repair the injuries to the organs that worms: cause and restore them to soundn: For the first time a film has been nies. in an aeroplane. It took place to London. : CUT: PLUG ‘ie “SMOKING TOBACCO. { =< IN PACKAGES AND: ?/2 LB. TINS Z WUELUP. of very fragrant and mild. tobuccos Planting Trees On Highway One Of the Most Beautiful Drivew In Western Canada Planned By Mr. Pat Burns The main south highway from the Calgary city limits south to Midna- pore, some ten miles, will be trans- formed into one of the most bemuti-| ful drives in Western Canada with-| in the next two years as a result of | the decision made by Patrick Burns, | well known pioneer ¢attleman rancher, to plant trees on his land,| which skirts both sides of the high- | 4Y°| Can Be Raised In Widely Separated | the Interlor, through its Natural Re- ana] a Sugar Beet Culture Parts Of the Dominion In an analysis of sugar beet cule ture in Canada, the Department of sources Intelligence Service, points { out that beets of excellent quality for | Sugar can be grown in many widely | | separated parts of the Dominion = ; food seed being produced as well, ‘ormerly good seed had to be im | ported from France, Germany, Russia and Denmark, Outstanding localities way clear through to Midnaporé. | ¢oy. sugar beet growing are the Warme Work of preparing the land for the| .+ parts of Ontario, | opportunities; if we | haste, we tree planting is already under way, | and the first trees will be planted next spring. The section between} Calgary and Midnapore will be cont) pleted next summer, and it is possi-| ple that Mr. Burns will extend his| activities further south the following | considerable | | year, as he owns a amount of land south of Midnapore. Russian poplars will be used with | maples scattered here and there Protect the child from the ravages | of worms by using Mother Graves’ Worm Exterminator, It is a standard} remedy, hanced its reputation. Year's Shipment Of Wheat In the 1927-28 crop year ended July 31, last, a total of 261,000,000 bushels of wheat was handled through the elevators at the head of the Great Lakes, situated at Port Arthur and Fort William, Ontario, on Lake Su- perior. Athletes—Keep Minard’s handy. If we do not watch, we lose our do not make are left behind; our best Liniment | and years of use have en-| | | | the Okanagan Valley of British Columbia, South AF berta and the Maritime Provinces. Had Dandruff And Pimples 2 Years ” Cuticura Healed “ Lwas troubled for two years with dandruff and pimples. The pimples were scattered over my, face, neck and head. They were hard, large and red, and festered and scaled over. They itched and burned bad- ly, and when I scratched, it caused them to spread, The dandruff af- fected the growth of my hair, and it fell out badly. I lost a lot of sleep ‘on account of the trouble. _- “I sent for a free sample of Cuti- cura Soap and Ointment and after using it I got relief. 1 purchased more, and after using three cakes of Soap and two boxes of Ointment I was healed.” (Signed) J. W. Polen- chuk, Donwell, Sask. Use Cuticura Soap, Ointment and Talcum to promote and maintain skin purity, skin comfort and skin health; the Soap to cleanse and purify, Ointment to soothe and heal, and Talcum to powder and refresh. Free by Mall Addrons Canadian y e Soap Sample Each Depot: atennonns Ltd. Montreal” Ph q %e. Ointment 35 and fe. Taleam | Bab Coticura Shaving Stick 25 Schooner Sails: From Vancouver On} sail) the northern trip is through} in a machine travelling from Paris} | 90,000 Horsepower is the amazing total amount of current produced by Eveready batteries in a single year! The strong current and uniform long life of these Dry Cells and Hot-Shots have made them the first choice for all - types of farm ignition e Always buy Eveready Hot-Shot for work in ? exposed places. The metal cases protect your power supply against exhaustion during damp nights or in wet weather. Look for the name Eveready before purchasing. If it’s not an Eveready it’s not a Hot-Shot. Canadian National Carbon Co., Limited i TORONTO ee Eveready Ignitors Calgary Vancouver ‘ Dry Batteries