ba 5 of the-United States. Canada during 7) States goods compared with $59,621,- ; 4 ports from that country during June) were $1,402,560. In May they were home! Get 2 oz. ‘$8,805,642 in June, 1930, f» ZIG-ZAG ee + oorserys = nota eae ee Le ORaE agi 2 Ne ar a —— Teas are not alike try Salada flavour — “SALAD A" TEA ‘Fresh from the gardens? ind | Awards For the Bli | teen 1 Gold, Bronze and Silver Medals and Cash Awards For Sightless | Achievements of the blind in Can-| |ada and the United States were recognizetd by the Harmon Founda- tion in the granting of 109 awards to sightless men, women and children. Gold, bronze and silver medals, and cash awards of $2,500, were given to individuals who had disregarded the handicaps of blindness in their efforts toward accomplishment. | Canadian recipients are: Dr. A. T. Barnard, Edmonton, $50 and bronze medal for achievement of ~ UNIVERSITY OF MANITOBA | economic value; Joseph Clunk, Tor- jonto, $50 and gold medal for accom-| plishment or progress in first two} | years in blindness. | Edgar J. Miller, Swift Current,| Sask., $20 and bronze medal for par- ticipation in home activities; Adolphe Renault, Montmagny, P.Q., $10 for achievement of economic value; M. C. Robinson, Victoria, B.C., $10 for Cures For Depression Among the thousand and one articles, speeches and interviews to which! the people have been treated on the all-pervading subject of the existing onomic and financial depression, there has at last appeared one courageous individual who preaches the rather unpopular doctrine that continued depres-| _ sion might be a good thing for the country, | ___ The man advancing this opinion is George Richardson, newly-elected| achievement of economic value, $20 ident of the National (United States) Association of Purchasing Agents, | ang bronze medal for Wz J. Si \ University WINNIPEG \ the following 5 Through tts FACULTY OF ARTS AND SCIENCE courses leading tb demrees of B.A nd B Including B.S Be ARCHITECTURE courses leading to the dogress of B.Sc. (CE), BS. (EB), and || LArch, Through It FACULTY ED- IcINB s FACULTY OF MED of M.D. and C. | a course 8 details of } | and other Information, apply to PENCE, Reglstrar. of Manitoba, Winnipeg. courses Does Away With Gave Built By Detroit Man Can Attain Amazing Speed A car so small it can be driven in- to an elevator and almost parked under an office desk has been built by K. L. Moorhouse of Detroit. This miniature car Weighs only 625 52 inches, It is powered with a four-| than 27 horsepower. | Not long ago Mr. Moorhouse put his} tests and established a new world's) record for cars of this type and size. The little machine rolled around the) [track at a speed of more than 92 addition to selecting 15 Indians who miles an hour. | It is unlikely that automobiles of ae o See Indiat Parisian Artist Will Select Group From Canadian Tribe For the purpose of collecting a group of Canadian Indians to take to France, Paul Coze, Parisian artist and Boy Scout Commissioner, who last year headed an expedition into the |pounds and has a wheelbase of only| "rth to study the Redskins in their native haunts, has arrived once more | cylinder motor which develops more | in Canada. Accompanied by Madame Coze and by Pierre H. Godard, a Canadian now living in France, he left | infant automobile through a series of Montreal for Debden, Sask. From there the trio travelled by airplane to the Mission of Ile a la Crosse in Northern In 4ER HU ANI TEASED HER But not for long! ° “T started taking Kruselien Salta for biliousness, and for the last two years I have been perfectly free from an attack, jow I continue to . them, as I find Ut keep me in perfec! health. My husband used to joke about me taking Kruschen Salts ; now he takes them himself, so do my children, My sincere thanks.” —Mm. G. P. When your gastric or digestive juices refuse to flow, your food, instead of becoming absorbed into your system, simply collects and ferments ‘inside will demonstrate their nomad life for the Parisians next winter under the | this type ever will become generally | 4uspices of the Trocadero Museum | popular, even in this day when space|°f Enthnography, Mr, Coze has an- Meter The “X-Ray Yardstick,” a device to | ‘i which organization, it is stated, represents the material buying power of the of progress in first two years of blind- which igress on ‘y at Paris. portant in congested areas and when | baby motor cars and flivver ‘planes) | be, by a slight stretch of the imagin-) New Device Is X-Ray and Radium) saying is becoming increasingly im-| ther object in coming to Canada this summer. As a mark of thanks to the Ob- make use of X-rays and radium safer,| are enjoying a spreading vogue. The !@tes of Ie a la Crosse for their kind- Was adopted by the Third Internation-| chief value of the motor car that can al Ce ness to the French travellers last year, he will present a portable altar The device is a porthole machine | ation, driven right into the office or} © the Mission. big republic to the south. Mr. Richardson takes a sharp rap at the profes- ness, and $20 for part in onal optimist and the nostrum specialist in a special message to the mem- home activities. of his organization in the course of which he says: For improvement of children f 1929, the measure of retribution which is meted out to us is in proportion’ point Grey, B.C. the extent of their breach.” Then follows his declaration that “it might) very A sound for p recovery to have this period of fast and abstinence continue for awhile. There is no) substitute for intelligence, hard work and close application to business.” Mr. , who thinks ly in terms of buying rather than ing, finds that “business mén need to have it borne in on them that they| eel RY NST jot get and hold something for nothing,” and that “a return to hard. Home from the top of the world Cruise Was Successful \Dr. work and a less extravagant living” are the only possible antidotes to “ex- after a week's cruise, the Graf Zep-| guesswork, and also sometimes con- tit pela landed at Friedrichshafen, Ger-) fusion among radiologists in one na- _ Contrasted with this statement of hard work’ and less extravagant liy-| Many, amid lusty cheers of thousands | tion about applying the progress of ng unsound tendencies which are manifest on every hand.” x ing, which latter means less spending, is the view expressed by a writer in| Who flocked to the airdrome instead) a well known Canadian financial paper. He says: “It has been stated that|f goiag to work. | the solution of the present depression is hard work, economy and thrift.| “It was a splendid and highly suc- is has a nice sound but, unfortunately, the people who advance it do not| cessful cruise,” Dr. Eckener said. ly appreciate what the true effect of their recommendation would be.| “Some people may have thought we work means producing and putting on sale a large quantity of com-| Were out in a dreadful region of ice) ties as we did in 1928. Economy and thrift mean spending as little as we, and extreme cold, but from the very} of our annual income and saving the rest. Doubtless by strict economy beginning we never doubted for a mo- could live on three billion dollars and save one billion of the four billion| ment that this would be a relatively, ction in 1928. But if a four billion dollar production is put on sale| easy trip. Often we enjoyed skies of, d we offer only three billions for it, prices must be lowered and the pro-| {talian blue and we never were both-| ered by the discomforts of the Arctic.| “Many people thought we did not) accomplish all we set out to do, but | perhaps we did not mean to do all that some papers said we intended. 1| can = duc rs accept a loss of one billion dollars. Then as only three billions were) eceived, the producers will ye forced to reduce wages and the opportunities | employment it can offer in the future by one billion dollars. Thus nD omy and thrift create the conditions that precipitate a depression.” ‘Now, in our humble opinion, there is something to be said for both these points of view. Hard work we consider essential-in this world. Extravagance| hope this cruise will have a two-fold uld be curbed, and by extr we mean exp on | result, namely, that we may soon or even on essentials beyond the ability of the buyet to pay for, and) Make another journey to the Arctic) juent running into debt. Thrift, not miserly hoarding, is wise and, when we can get the necessary funds/ y, but it should not be carried to the extreme of denying one-self, together, and that the Graf Zeppelin ities, reasonable pleasures, and on what may be termed luxuries. Pro-| Will become a favourite with ourists | tion against old age, possible sickness, and an ultimate loss of earning | Who feel the call of the north.” | ity; in a word, of a future is all that is required. | _ The trouble is, and prior to the close of 1929 it became widespread, that thousands of people do aim to get and hold something for nothing. It sim-| | y cannot be done. We must pay for what we get. Speculation ran riot; Major Scott Crossed 500 Miles Of indreds of thousands of people bought on the instalment plan beyond their) Arctic Ice i to pay. The inevitable crash followed, and the depression was upon | | Long Journey On Skiis ‘us the British Aero-Arctic expedition to! ‘There is a happy medium between the extremes of spending one hundred | Greenland, arrived at Ivigut July 20) ts of every dollar earned, even going into debt beyond one's ability to| after having crossed the inland ice on! , and miserly living in fear of the future and hoarding every possible skiis from Lemon Rose camp, Ang-| . That happy medium is to be found in (1) living within one’s in-| magssalik Fjord. | je; (2) small but regular savings, and these not merely hoarded but wise- The British Expedition to Gyeen-| ‘ly invested in order that they may be available to expand industry, create land, which has been there a year, is) loyment, in a word, perform their proper function in the world; (3) ex-| obtaining data for use in mapping an| ' one’s expenditures in keeping with increase of income. In other words, air route from England to Canada.. | one's dollars should be kept busy. | Major Scott left Lemon Rose camp _ To illustrate: Indystry (and we include agriculture) produces. It Pays) July 1 on the journey across the ice raw materials, wages, transportation, distribution, etc. The wage-earn-|to Ivigut, a distance of almost 500 rs, in turn, buy the goods and foodstuffs thus produced. Thus the money! miles. ‘paid out in wages returns to industry, to again be paid out in wages, to again| ee ee eturn to industry. The more frequently a dollar is thus turned over, the; persian Balm the creator and pre- greater the production, the larger the total of wages paid, the greater the! server of beautiful complexions. Tonic | ‘business turnover of the nation; hence the greater the prosperity, and the) in effect and wonderfully stimulating. | Ea Safeguards and beautifies the most beetice.of a depression, i | delicately-textured skins. Cools and} @ __This, we believe, is sound economics and good finance. It is, however, | relieves all skins flushed or irritated | necessary to add that while the above observations apply to industry gener-| by weather conditions. Magical in re-| “ally, including agriculture, there are seasonal conditions, such ds the present Sults. A little gentle rubbing and a wid lespread crop failure, which cannot be overcome even by the hardest of | Youthful ance nae Pre ard work, the stfictest economy and thrift. These exceptional conditions enin; the hands and making them lust be met by r They are, , exceptions which| flawlessly white. Truly the perfect} not nullify the truth and strength of the general policy to which expres-| toilet requisite for the woman who} sion has been given. cares. be ; aus, “Traile With Roma. “Exports To Russia Show a Heavy An Automobile Chapel The motorized church made its ap- pearance in New York when a small) white chapel, built over the chassis of an automobile, eased into Wall Street,| and a clergyman preached from the rear platform on the theme of “De- pression.” The automobile chapel be- longs to the Evangelistic Committee Where Heat Is Heat Temperatures Soar To Great Height Increase In Death Valley, California While United States trade with vir-| Curiosity being a strong American ‘tually all other regions of the world trait, summer tourists, may tend to fanideclining during June, exports to congregate in Death Valley when they sia doubled those of the preceding} 'earn that they can Bet a. very good month. idea of what hell is like by visiting|j¢ New York, which during the last a ‘The commerce department's analy- that famous Southern California loca~) eight years has used automobiles in ‘sis of foreign trade for June showed | 102- |its campaign. that Russia bought $12,618,056 us| Before the meeting of the Ameri- ———— | compared to $5,361,879 in May and ©®0 Meteorological Society in-Pasa-| «hen 1 preaches a sermon, breth- dena a weather bureau man told of| ern sistern,” carefully explained the nice days he has experienced in| ola darky preacher as he faced his Death Valley. The hottest was July| congregation, “I does three things, 10, 1913, when the old thermometer! First, I takes my text. Second, I de- hit 134 Fahrenheit. The observer) parts from it. And third, I never didn't explain whether he needed al gits back to it.” | match to light his pipe, but we should | judge not. In 1917, it was 120 in} One-piece bathing suits are prac- the shade in Death Valley for 43 con-| tically taboo in Argentina. secutive days. In 1928, 1929 and 1930) = | there were 401 consecutive days on| which no rain fell. But then, as they frequently tell| you in Southern California and other} places where folks are proud of the| climate, that may have been an un- ‘ - _ There was little-change in United "States purchases from Russia. Im-| $1,403,897 and in June, 1930, $2,778,- 238, Canada continued the best customer of United HEADACHE? Why suffer when relief is prompt and harmless; June bought $35,029,796 795 in June, 1930, and the United States bought from Canada $22,853,- 654 compared with $36,522,094 Happiness often depends upon what} |ray and radium, an overdose being as/ |bad as too }even fatal. | rays has been worse than with radium pte because the intensity of radiation vars] Eckener Satisfied With Zeppelin ;,, greatly with differences in the nu- | merous varieties of X-ray tubes. the “dosage” of X- rays accurately. It is an X-ray and | anical efficiency. in| radium meter. “We are now in the second year of a corrective period, which in the sechools for the blind, the following| that for the first time there is ent of many of us is a wholesome and much needed reminder that schools were represented, each pupil) standard unit for use in all countri: there are basic economic, as well as moral, laws which do not change with’ receiving $5 and a bronze medal:|in measuring short-wave radiation. Seasons, and are not affected by mob psychology; and, when flagrant) Ontario School for the Blind, Brant-| The importance of this agreement regard for these laws attains the proportions witnessed prior to the close! ford, Ontario; School for the Blind,/lies in the destructive powers of X- Its adoption means! little, and occasionally The difficulty with X- There has been necessarily mach parked in a dog-house, is its mech-) During a recent visit to New York, | To the diminutive motor car he drove 00 | of Sim. to the freight elevator of one of} | the city’s highest buildings, taken to one of the upper floors and out on to the narrow terrace 18 storeys above the busy street below. year contract. He drove about the terrace, backed) up, manoeuvred the car in circles and! was | | figure eights and returned to earth in| jiyin | the elevator. | - —SS——~ Alberta Aviator Chosen 4) Moorhouse drove his little machine/‘To Operate Air Mall Service For eS through the busiest streets and slip-| | ped in and out of the steady stream of traffic with surprising ease. | give a demonstration of the utility of} » Government Of Siam Reginald B. Jackson, 31-year-old Edmonton airman, is to operate the air-mail services of the you, ig harmful aci and which give rise to biliousness, heartburn ant flatulence. hen is a combination of six mineral salts, which goes right to the root of the trouble. ft first stimulates the flow of gastric and other juices to aid digestion, and then ensures complete, regular and unfailing elimina- tion of waste matter every day. And that means a blessed end to biliousness, and a renewed and whole-hearted enjoyment of your food without the slightest fear of having to pay the old penalty, Why Heliunr Is Safe Valuable Because It Will Not Burn Or Explode The tremendous value of helium gas for dirigibles is emphasized anew by the accident which destroy- cs Well known among north- ern fliers, Mr. R. Jackson is enroute to Bankok, where he will make his ters as of the Siamese service, under a three- From the Old Country, Mr. Jack- son came to Alberta as a child. After ig for some time in Calgary he obtained his license as a commercial ed the Goody \ airship “Mayflower” at Kansas City the other day. . Driven by a high wind, the ‘““May- flower” ran into high tension wires, took fire and burned. The four men aboard were injured, but escaped alive. The “Mayflower” was filled with helium—and the four undoubtedly owe their lives to that fact. For if | Automobiles as small as this can be operated on a small amount of gaso- of the world. |line—hardly more than is required to| Sea Seite Say The meter was developed by Dr.|run a motorcycle—and can travel) Lauriston H. Taylor, of the United thousands of miles on one set of tires. States Bureau of Standards. They are, however, made for one per- son and the single seat is not partic- ularly comfortable on long drives. Be- | sides such a car, one of the standard . : . arcs of “baby’’ motor cars seems Delivered Christmas Gifts | peeigue. Coast Guard Cutter Makes Annual’ | Trip To Alaska | Fruit At Morden, Manitoba Vegetables and Meat Loaded with Christmas gifts for de-| The farmer doesn't very often get livery in August, the coast guard cut- a chance to fool Jack Frost, espe- x ter “Northland” steamed toward the cially on a soft crop like tomatoes, %% cup preserved ginger ‘cut in Made 7 tip of Alaska, arriving, but experimental work at Morden, small pieces. | Vegetarians and carnivorous men) at Point Barrow, August 4, to unload Man., by the Dominion Department 3 lemons, juice and grated rind. | May find food for argument in a re- the cargo of mail and -Christmas of Agriculture shows conclusively 3 cups water. |port of the British Medjcal Research packages, and return immediately be- that this can be done. With the Remove the skin and cores from the! Council. In the British Colony off fore the long winter sets in. Only , advance of the season tomatoes rip- pears and cut the fruit in slices, Kenya, East Africa, there are two) one trip a year is made by boat to, en more slowly and the use of ethy- lengthwise. Add the water and cook. native tribes the Masai and the sine eee isolated settlement. Letters are lene gas speeds up the process from the pears until they are tender. Add, KUYU, who live side by side but feed| delivered three or four times a year late August on. Fruit in danger of the sugar and the other ingredients V¢TY differently. The Masai live corey dog team, but food, newspapers,|frost damage can be picked and ‘and simmer the mixture until it jg| meat and milk and also on blood) magazines and (perhaps most ‘im-|quickly ripened by the use of this thick. Pour it into clean, hot jars| ‘wn from living animals, The Ki-| portant of all) Christmas presents, | £2S- and seal. Hard varietiés of apples KUy" live on vegetables, cereals\and must be included in’the annual cargo | pilot, and later aided in forming|a ship filled with explosive hydrogen had run into high tension wires and i caught fire, every man aboard gary Aero Club and was secretary! would have been burned to a crisp. of Commercial Airways, Limited, | Helium, which neither burns nor ex- from last fall until suspension of ser- plodes, kept a bad accident from be- vices this spring. ; coming a terrible tragedy. their fellow workers in another part Recipes For This Week Fooling Jack Frost (By Betty Barclay) of Gas GINGER PEARS 5 pounds hard pears. 5 pounds sugar. British Medical Research Council nor Major James M. Scott, member of’ ner. es | eal and original vegetarians, for their| |customs date back to times out of « | HUCKLEBERRY SURPRISE 1 junket tablet. 1 tablespoon cold water. 1 pint milk. 3 tablespoons sugar. teaspoon vanilla. } | | | 1 |having made a careful investigation | have found that the advantage in |stature and strength lies with the | memory, while the Vegetarian Society ° t f London, England, is not yet a cen- Restarch ‘ury old. The Medical Council’ |may be preserved in the same man-| Breen leaves. They claim to be the of the coast guard cutter. rr Air parcel post service has been es- d between London, England, How To Read a Book Lord Macaulay said: “When a boy, I began to read very earnestly, but at the foot of every page I read I stop- ped and obliged myself to givé an ac- count of what I had read on that page. At first I had to read it three or four times before I got my mind | and Karachi, India. Vd “tom of five dessert glasses. Fresh, huckleberries! | flesh-eating Masai, and that the veg-| firmly fixed. Sort and wash fresh huckleberries.' etarian Kikuyu are more liable to to comply wii Put a heaping tablespoon in the bot- But I compelled myself | ith the plan, until now,’ bone diseases, tropical ulcers, anae-| after I have read a book through Prepare mia, and pulmonary troubles. The! once, I can almost recite it from the. junket according to directions on the evidence is quite clear that the Ki- beginning to the end.” | package. Pour at once over the/kuyu capacity for work and their! : | huckleberries. The berries will come) powers of endtirance are very low. It at once to the top and make a very has been said that, breeding will tell, tempting dish. Let stand undisturb- and so, also, apparently, will blood. ed in a warm room until firm—about SS ee 10 minutes. Then chill. War Veterans Passing Wealth In Alkali Lakes ~ | The alkali lakes in. the Prairie | Provinces are an important source of! new mineral wealth. Production in| | these lakes last year was 87,571 tons, | an increase of 500 per cent. over the! | output in 1929. HOUSANDS ot mothers have found that Eagle Brand Is ideal for Infantfeed- Ing, where they are unable to. nurse their own childe: Eagle Brand ilk British Columbia Plans Big Business Drive : Tenet se CONDENSED wie 4 7 | Three-Year Campaign To End Depres- Are ej epee Of One} sion Is Proposed | Playing with Braile cards against | Wa VeléFans in/Gadada acerdyine} Driciabs Golumblasieitstollows) te) Pisvers sy agrae eal Sabie Aten) ‘ar veteri a ying proposals now being prepared by Hon. ley, of London, who was blinded in} NIETO Ge GUI) ENN, 12: H./ Ww. A. McKenzie, chairman of the un-| the Great War, won first prize at a Seammel, seretary of the Fedral Wt Merete tc te cain, Wot di at 8, Par, Landon |may shortly an pica Eat ae Ocea sano annual)