JABBOTSFORD, SUMAS 4 AND MATSQUI_ - MS NEWS Lindbergh Gives Radio Address | Storms At Sea Interfere With Trans | Atlantic Talk Storms at sea, which could not 4 keep Col. Chas. A. Lindbergh from ‘ accomplishing his famous flight across the ocean, recently, prevented x his voice from making a trans-Atlan- | tie journey through the air. | A terrific electrical storm over the T I 11 | Atlantic ruined most ambitious ar- | rangements ever made for a world ‘Fresh from the gardens’ | broadcast. It was Lindy's first Salada Orange Pekoe Biend gives greatest satisfaction formal radio address. In his address, which took just eight minutes to deliver, Col. Lind- bergh spoke of the close alliance between developments of transporta- ,; tion and the general improvement of civilization. “If we accept the principle,” he | said, “that life today is preferable to | that of ancient times, then it is logi- cal to assume that any future im- provement in transportation will re- The. Russian Menace Soviet Russia presents a menace to Great Britain, Canada, the United States, in fact, to all countries which depend for their prosperity upon a world export trade. The Russian menace of today is not one of impending war fought by armies and navies, rifles, cannon, tanks, bombs and aircraft, but of a great economic struggle for world trade, and of the countries most likely to be seriously affected by such a struggle the British Commonwealth sult in a RUERBSLOnCIOE, advance in of Nations, and the United States come first. me ag Us Prior fo the Great War it was frequently contended that wars between _He spoke of the great continental nations were brought about by art facturers and BS eels of today and predicted industry seeking territory within which they might enjoy more or less | that within a few years trans-oceanic exclusive rights of trading. The Great War itself, was, in the final analysis, | ines would link these into a world- caused by Germany’s ambition to secure larger world markets and a greater | wide network. And in closing he colonial empire. The German navy was created for the express purpose of | urged the necessity of international ) challenging the British navy with this very object in view. Germany failed, |!y Uniform alr regulations so that but in the Great War the old Russia of the Czars disappeared, and in its the inter-continental flyers of the fu- place there has arisen the Soviet by the c | ture should: not be impeded by na- , Workers. | tional restrictions. The Soviet leaders are absolutely ruthless in their methods, inspired by | SL Se aoe _ the ideals of fanatics, and spurred on by a belief that their ideas of govern- | W Run D wi _ ment are the only right ones leading to freedom of the masses as opposed | as 0 ~ to all other forms of govermment which they hold are under the control of =f ‘the hated capitalist classes. To the Soviet leaders all methods are right and Now Well Again fair if they will serve to accomplish their purpose. Hence the nature of the economic struggle now confronting the world. ‘ Having seized the property of all the landed and capitalist classes of | _ Russia, having declared it a crime for any person in Russia to hold views Takes Pleasure In Recommend- contrary to those of the Soviet authorities, and having imposed ultra- | ing Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills communistic ideas upon the whole of Russia, the Soviet leaders are now) ‘7, the woman in the home illness _ » utilizing and working these seized, or stolen, properties with what is to all |is almost a calamity. Many a woman intents and purposes convict labor. And if there is any shortage of such | keeps on with her household duties labor, thousands more are made readily available by trumped-up charges of | When she is feeling ready to drop. Ay fy = | Her head aches, she is easily, tired, treason or disobedience to the Soviet, and without trial are thrown into |is depressed and nervous and has no forced labor camps. appetite. In a word she is anaemic Coal, pulp" , agri by) notably wheat, produced under|and badly needs help—the health- such conditions at a cost against which the producers of no other country | help ee eee eecthe aie can are now to be thrown into the markets | rich red blood which Riven mae of the world. Some tens of thousands of tons of Russian coal have been/strength and energy to weak, shipped into Canada; scores of shiploads of Russian pulpwood are being sent | despondent sufferers. Concerning to the United States to enter into competition with Canadian pulpwood, pulp | them, Mrs. Paul Rail, Coin du Banc, 4 a 7 Que., says: “I was badly run-down, _ and paper; Russian wheat is going to England where it displaces hard |slept poorly, and. awoke as tired as _ Canadian wheat as it is largely of the same hard variety. |when I went to bed. My appetite rt And this is only the beginning. The Russian Soviet Government has | was poor and I felt miserable. I mded hundreds of millions of dollars within the last few years in the | took six boxes of Dr. Williams’ Pink - thase of the most up-to-date agricultural machinery. It has granted my health.’ concessions to Henry Ford to establish a great plant for the manufacture of | ‘pr, Williams’ Pink Pills are sold tractors in that country; it has engaged the services of the most noted | by all medicine dealers or by mail at "railway and agricultural experts to direct operat’ons in Russia; it has sent 50 cents a box from The Dr. Wil- + commissions of its own experts to foreign lands, and more particularly ay) ME Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. _ Canada and the United States, to study methods of transportation and:) * _ marketing,—all with a view to making an aggressive bid for the trade of | Agricultural Wealth Of Canada __ the world, and based on methods and costs of production with which other | eae countries with their greater liberty of the individual and higher standards | Gross Agricultural Wealth Of Domin- of living cannot begin to compete. ion Nearly Eight Billion Dollars Such, in brief outline, is the serious nature of the menace to Canadian| The gross agricultural wealth of and Unitef States business in the Russian situation. United States labor | Canada for 1929 is estimated at ap- and United States industrial'sts are strongly battling the unfdir Russian | proximately $7,978,633,000 in a sum- _ competition. Canada must do likewise, for while a country may be willing | mary published recently by the Na- ____ to face the competition of other countries, both at home and abroad, upon | tional Revenue Department. 1) equal terms, no country can compete with conditions such as those now | Last year the total revenue from prevailing in Russia and survive. It is apparent that Russia, having failed agriculture was $1,667,213,000, of a in its political attempts to sovietize the world, has now embarked upon an| which Ontario accounted for $509,. economic conquest. 434,000; Quebec, $320,422,000; Sas- ; Under these the app ig Imperial Confer- |katchewan, $309,308,000; Alberta, _ ence, in London, England, is fraught with greater importance than any | $228,589,000; Manitoba, 3134,095,000; previous Empire Conference. Hon. C. A. Dunning announced that his | British Columbia, $55,235,000; Nova budget was an indication of the spirit in which the King Government | Scotia, $43,558,000; New Brunswick, 3 to th that C but the King Government has been | $39,854,000, and Prince Edward Is- defeated, the responsibility now rests with Premier Bennett, in colloboration | land, $26,723,000. with Premier Ramsay MacDonald, and the other Dominion Premiers, to| The two principal items which go work out an economic policy for the Empire which will enable all its| to make up the total of agricultural parts to ly resist the Russian menace, and at the same | revenue are field crops, valued at _ time develop intra-Empire trade to its fullest possible extent. Every | $979,750,000, and dairy products with ee wish Mr. Bennett well in his important task. an estimated value of $290,000,000. Farm animals are third with a value of $210,437,000, and poultry and eggs fourth with a value of $109,346,000. Crosses Canada On Bicycle Prefer Imported Fruit Young French-Canadian Wins Wager Of $1,000 On Reaching Vancouver ‘Noel Marcil, young French-Cana-' _ dian from Halifax, wheeled his bat- tered bicycle into Vancouver, on August 8th,and won a wager of $1,000, \ Marcil left the Atlantic coast April with $15 in his pocket and a Sup- ®f food on the crossbars of his bicycle. He was to reach the Pacific before midnight, August 15. _ Notwithstanding the fact that he - wheeled his machine into a ditch 5 near Lytton and spent two weeks in a deserted shack With an injured = back and leg, the wiry little Canuck reached his goal one week ahead of time. Apple Consumption In Canada Is On the Decrease While the consumption of fruit per capita, in Canada, today, is as great | as it ever was, there has been a definite shift of popular favour from Seon Canadian fruits, particularly apples, An immediate start will be made to imported citrous fruits and ban-| 0M the construction of the Manitoba anas. National Highway Work On Manitoba Section Of Trans- Canada Highway To Be Started partment of Agriculture, show that|™member-elect for Winnipeg South the larger urban centers in Canada,| Center, who arrived home from during the year 1929, handled 75 per | Ottawa, recently. cent. more citrous fruits and banan-| Mr. Kennedy stated that he had as than they did of apples, 8,619 car- | been assured by Hon. R. B, Bennett, loads of the former being used, as | Premier, in a recent interview, that against 2,371 car loads of the latter, | the work would be under way as soon With 431 carloads of imported apples | 4S possible, in order to relieve the deducted, the preference for import-| unemployment situation. ed fruits would appear to be 10 to 1.| Apple consumption in Canada, in| Miller's Worm Powders were 1910, was 64 pounds per capita; it is | devised to promptly relieve children who suffer from the ravages of now less than half that amount, be-| worms, It js a simple preparation to ing 31.6 pounds per capita. With as| destroy stomachic and intestinal much fruit being used today, as éver worms ithout shock or injury to Rubber Industry Threatened Government Legislation For Regula- tion Of Production Is Suggested Government legislation for the | before, the present situation is really we Bont Agora peaeuu SY, Boe i : ss : ' thoroughly and painlessly, an regulation of production or éxporta-| the challenge of a new opportunity though’ in some cases. they may tion of rubber in all producing coun- tries was suggested in a communique issued by the British Rubber Grow- a ers’ PRPS in co-operation with Develop Own Gas Fields Dutch rubber growers, Saskatchewan To Endeavor To Find | The communique says that only by Supply Of Natural Gas } A government intervention can . wide- bs ic | chemis spread distr in the industry ze Saskatchewan will endeavor to averted, and without a general plan | °P&D up a local field for the supply | examination to regulate production the accumula- | °f natural gas to the urban centres | sos, manures and fertilizers, for- tion of stock will threaten “the whole | 294, to this end, efforts to obtain the| ,¢— plants, fodders and feeding foundation of the industry.” services of Professor G, 8. Hume, | tufts, waters, samples of meat and | Dominion geologist and expert of gas | cause vomiting, that is an indication of their powerful action and not of | any nauseating poperty, to the Canadian fruit grower. A Year's Work year's work in the division cf y of the Department of of 4,263 samples canned foods, and mis Pills and they completely renewed | Statistics compiled by the | section of the Trans-Canada High- | Fruit Branch of the Dominion De-| Way, according to W. W. Kennedy, | Agriculture, at Ottawa, included the | of | CIATICA? Here is a never-failing form of relief from Sciatic pain: <> Take Aspirin tablets and you'll avoid needless suffering from sciatica—lum- bago—and similar excruciating pains. They do relieve; they don’t do any harm. Just make sure it is genuine. * ASPIRIN TRADE MARK REQ, Refers ne Kellogg Pact i Sir Thomas Lipton’s yacht “Sham- Lord Eustace Percy says Wording Of) Pact Misses the Point | Lord Bustace Percy, addressing | the Institute of Politics, at Williams- | town, Mass., on freedom of the seas, | | said that the wording of the Kellogg pact had “missed the point.” . | | “It is difficult to judge whether | | any one really holds the view that | the pact has rendered war impossi- | ble,” he said. | “It may seem captious to complain that the pact, while pledging its sig- natories to respect the sixth com- mandment, omitted to call their at- tention to the tenth, but it is never- theless true that the wording of the pact dbdes really miss the point. “We have not made war impossible because we have issued a solemn declaration against it. We have not abolished the problem of neutrality because we have erected a rule of | Taw which ignores it. We have to} endeavor to adjust the claims of belligerents and neutrals in the light of history and present world condi- tions, instead of trying to squeeze them prematurely into artificial rules of law.” Remarkable Invention Teletypesetter Designed To Speed Up Newspaper Production Successful use of the teletypeset- ter, one of the newest inventions de- | signed to facilitate newspaper mak- | ing, was announced by West Chester County Publishers, Inc., White Plains, N.Y., headed by J. Noel Macy. Seven newspapers in the country are using the instrument, by which | news stories are sent out on telegra- | phic impulses and almost simultan- | publication. Mount Vernon Daily Argus, New Rochelle Standard-Star, Port Chester Daily Item, Tarrytown Daily News, Ossissing Citizen-Sentinel and White | Plains Daily Press thus are enabled to peruse more late news’ “breaks” than heretofore has been possible. Speed, ever an essential in journal- | ism, is vastly increased. \* The instrument was invented by | Walter W. Morey and developed by jthe Collaboration of Edward 3B. Kleinschmidt, Frank BE. Gannett and others. Says Theatres Are Doomed George Bernard Shaw Sees Talking Pictures Usurping Legitimate Stage The doom of the theatre has been sealed, George Bernard Shaw said recently, upon signing his first talk- ing picture film contract calling for the filming of his play, “How He Lied To Her Husband.” “T am afraid the poor old theatre is done for,” Shaw said. ‘The thea- tre may survive as a place where people are taught to act; but, apart from that, there will be nothing but | the talkies. | “All my plays will be made into \talkies before long. I signed the contract today because I wanted | some money.” | “Shaw said “Arms and the Man” probably would be filmed next. It is | one of his more famous comedies, } Keep Douglas’ Hgyptian Liniment | markable in its attackf- o-vETSH always in the stable, ready for im- mediate use. Removes proud flesh and inflammation, Thrush or Hoof Rot, and infection of cow's teat. Production Of Cordage | According to a report by the Do- | minion Bureau of Statistics, the to- tal value of production in the cord- age, rope and twine industry in 1929 was $11,798,165. This compares with $10,839,961 in 1928, the increases in value being $958,204, or 8.84 per | cent. He—“About a half mile from the crossing he put on a terrible burst lof speed to beat the train to it.” She—"And did he get across?” one on his He—“Yes, they put | tombstone.” \or all Skin Abrasions—Minards | Liniment, | ae are belt made by the| subjects, including dairy products rovincial government. wea | and insecticides. The Handy Bottle | This action emanated from a con-| Minard’s is the sure relief in |) ference between representatives of | ; ; the Handy Bottle. For strains, || the inter-city gas conference and the | #4v¢,,Minard's TAniment on your burns, bruises, boils and blis- ters, provincial cabinet. The urban repre- sentatives requested the government | An honest man is one who says, | to obtain further expert advice as to! don’t know,” instead of saying: the progress and probabilities of de-} “Look it up yourself, son, and you'll gloring. 2. Sasks cieyan fcld remember it better.” Seedy (reading) — Say, It is said that a day's fog costs what's er haberdasher? London nearly a million pounds. It’s Hank—What, don't yer know wot | not worth it. er haberdasher is? Didn't yer ever| © haye no learnin’™? A haberdasher is Hank, France exported nearl 25,000,000 | Air Pilot:—“By Jove, I forgot to | give you a parachute.” | Ginsberg:—“S all right. | goin’ to rain.” a | A good home is worth all you put into it in time, money and effort. ZAM'BUK Clears The Skin Of ECZEMA & RASH It ain't Readers of the Yonkers Statesman, receipt of a salary of $10,000 per an- | rock V.” reported from Horta, Azores Islands, missing five days by steam yacht “Brin,” which was escorting it to Newport, U.S.A., for ~ America's Cup race, and lost sight of in rain squall, but now safe. Abolish Tariff Advisory Board New Body To Be Constituted Under Authority Of Act Of Parliament The Tariff Advisory Board has been abolished and will be replaced by a new body to be constituted under authority of an-act of parlia- ment. Announcement to this effect) was made by Premier R. B, Bennett. The board now existent was con- stituted by an order-in-council, and not through statutory legislation, in April, 1926. This order-in-council has been cancelled by the new gov- ernment, and the body to be created will function under authority granted to it.by both the House of Commons and the Senate. Legislation for the establishment of the new board will be drafted shortly; and will likely be introduced at the next session of par- liament. The abolished board began its work early in May, of 1926, with Senator Geo. P. Graham as chair- man, and Alfred Lambert, Montreal, with D. G. McKenzie, now a member of the Manitoba government, as) f F ig the | resignation of Senator Graham, W. | H. Moore became chairman of the| board; and Mr. Lambert and Mr. | McKenzie who resigned, were | re- | placed by Hector Raoine, Montreal, | and Frank Jacobs, De Winton, Al- berta. Mr. Moore resigned on the eve of the general election to contest the | constiuency of Ontario, in which he eously translated into type, ready for was elected as Liberal Candidate. The chairman of the board was in num, and his colleagues $4,000 year- | ly. Relief From Asthma. Who can > describe the complete relief. from suffering which follows the use of Dr. J. D. Kellogg’s Asthma Remedy? | Who can express the feeling of joy | | that comes when its soft and gentle | pineapples, dried apricots, costing 78 cents. | afford a more adequate indication US. Ford Prices Estimated Family Of Four Can Eat On $18.72 a Week A family of four may eat well this summer for $13.72 a week, according to a summer food budget based on current prices, made public by the American Research Foundation. The budget provides: Vv spinach, lima beans, peas, celery, asparagus and onions, to cost $1.32. Fruits, including peaches, apples, bananas, rhubarb and Meats, including pork, bacon, lamb chops, ham and beef, costing $2.77. Margarine, two pounds, 50 cents. Canned goods, including soups, tuna fish, figs, salmon, and grape- fruit, $1.36. Dairy items, including cream, milk hnd eggs, $3.50. Staples, including bread, tea, coffee, cocoa, GLEBRANp co! Le The Borden Co, Lip Please send free booklet to flour, sugar, rice, cereal, and cheese, $3.28, Live Stock Sales New System Of Reporting Sales and Prices Has Been Applied A new system of reporting live stock sales and prices has been put into effect in the Stock Yard and Market Reporting Services of the Dominion Live Stock Branch. The purpose of the new system is to of sales and prices in relation to beef cattle coming on the market. The principal change brings to the top of the list the section of beef cattle in greatest demand, providing a clear indication of the volume and price range of the popular light cattle, and providing the producer with a more adequate indication of grade and price than was possible under the old system. Earthquake Area Extended ~ Heavy Loss Of Life Reported On Shores Of Caspian Sea A terrific earthquake killed 500 persons and injuréd 4,000 others on the northeast shores of the Caspian Sea, a Riga dispatch to the London Morning Post states. The towns of Tchapaevo and Vritzky were reported destroyed. * The bodies of 30 children were re- covered from the ruins. A children’s home at Tchapaevo was destroyed by the shocks, the Morning Post report said. The dispatch said 200 houses at Tchapaevo were razed, and the church destroyed by the quake. The Ural River was reported to have flooded the town. Deceiving the Customer These Berry Boxes Were Worse Than the Standard False Bottoms ~ In the “museum” of the Dominion Fruit Branch, at Ottawa, is a curio of unusual interest. It is a full tray | influence relieves the ti | choking air tubes! It has made asth- | matic affliction a thing of the past! | for thousands. It never fails: Good | druggists everywhere have sold it for years. | | Empire Preference London County Council Gives Prefer- ence To Empire Products _ | There is special interest for Cana- | dian farmers in a communication re- | ceived by the Dominion Department | of Agriculture from a London, Eng- land, buyer of foodstuffs. “The Lon- don County Council has laid down for some time past now that prefer- ence shall be given to Empire foods. In furtherance of this policy it has given permission to those responsible for buying foods to pay up to 10 per | cent more for an Empire article than |for a similar quality foreign pro- | duct,” he states. The London County | Council provides food supplies to | over 80 large hospitals and 70 insti- | tutions of various kinds . British General Election Mrs. David Lloyd George, speak- ing at a garden party in Wales, pro- phesied that there would be a general | election in the coming autumn. Her hearers were much intrigued by the statement, in view of the key posi- tion occupied by the speaker's hus- | band, Liberal opponent in Parliament | of the Labor Government. Persian Balm—the peerless aid to | loveliness. Delightfully fragrant. | Dainty to tise. Leaves no stickiness. A litle gentle rubbing and it is swiftly absorbed by the tissues. Tonic in effect. Soothes and dispels rough- ness and chafing. Keeps skins soft and velvet-textured. Unrivalled for |charm, distinction and refinement. | Used by lovely women everywhere to preserve and enhance their natural | beauty. B.C. Industrial Conditions | The industrial payroll of British Columbia, for 1929, is estimated at | $192,092,249, a new high record, in | the annual report of the provincial department of labor, the most aceur- ate thermometer of industrial con- ditions in the province, as issued re- cently. The total is an increase of $8,994,462 over the 1928 figure. | A thousand American chefs have |chosen petit marmite, poitrine de volaille, pommes-de-terre olivette, en and hashed potatoes, icecream | and coffee! | “a A great percentage of people are length born with arms of unequal 0 per cent. hi | | bombe surprise, and Mocha filtre for | their annual banquet. i In other words, soup, fried chick- Zé and abo ye Oc of twelve ‘y boxes, each box of which is nearly half-filled with blocks of board, bits of field trash and old wood. It was picked up by the inspection service through the complaint of a purchaser on a large Eastern market. To the customer to whom these boxes were sold it was a case of “cayeat emptor’ with a vengeance. Dairy Trade With Orient Following recent experimental shipments of certified milk from Van- couver to Shanghai and other Orien- tal points, a regular service has been established, shipments being carried in refrigerator space and being eagerly sought by European citizens across the Pacific. A letter carrier invented the first ser ler for an Consul Starts Trouble State Of Ferment In Mandated Terri- tory, Formerly German Bast Africa Despatches to the London Daily Mail said the British mandated terri- tory of Tanganyika, formerly Ger- man East Africa, was in a state of ferment over a recent parade of Ger- man marines from the cruiser “Karls- ruhe,” and a speech by the Ger- man consul at Tanga. British author- ities may demand the withdrawal of the consul. The German cruiser recently made the first call of a German cruiser to these East African waters since the war, At Tanga, a party of marines marched past consul Speiser, who took their salute. At a banquet later, © the consul referred to the severe re- pulse of a British invading force at Tanga in 1914. ‘The British commissioner rebuked the consul, who apologized, It is said that an apology from the capt- tain of the “Karlsruhe” will also pe demanded. : Halibut Beg Depleted Warning Is Issued Regarding Situa- tion In the North Pacific Warning that the great halibut re- sources in the north Pacific were rap- idly being depleted, was conveyed to Canada and the United States in a special bulletin issued by the interna~ tional halibut commission and re- P. Babcock. The report states that immediate cessation does not seem imminent but that it is no longer possible to believe that the yield is permanent because it has been maintaiffed until the present time. The French Government is being urged to rivet to the top of the Eiffel Tower a 22-foot flag tower, making it. again the world’s loftiest struc- ture, a position now occupied by the Chrysler Building in New York. ‘HOWONE WOMAN LOST 47 POUNDS OF FAT. “T have been taking Kruschen Salts for nearly 3 months. I have continued taking one teaspoonful in warm water every morning. I then weighed 217 pounds, was always bothered wi pains in my back and lower part of abdomen and sides. “Now I am glad to say I am a well “ woman, feel much stronger, years ) younkey and my weight is 170 pounds. do not only feel better but I look better, so all my friends say. “T shall never be without Kruschen Salts, will never cease taking my daily dose and more than glad to highly recommend it for the great good that is in it.”’—Mrs, S. A. Solomon. “PS.—You may think I am undertaker invented the slot-machine telephone; and a barber first thought of fire-escape. by writing such a long letter but truly I feel so indebted to you for putting out such wonderful its that I cannot say enough.” aper, Your sheet form ask “Centre Pull’ Packs. Don’t Let Foods Stal Foods that ordinarily stale quickly 7 will stay fresh and tempting a sur- prisingly long time if you cover them with Para-Sani Heavy Waxed ‘grocer, druggist or stationer has Para-Sani in the handy, sanitary pelt carton, For We wh lighter paper put up in Feet form ask for Appleford's 4 GU Se x ci leased at Victoria by Chairman John — ay a " i.