__ See ‘ ‘ABBOTSFORD, SUMAS AND MATSQUI NEWH When TEETHING makes HIM FUSSY * One of the most important things) you can do to make a teething baby) comfortable is to see that tle bowels do their work of carrying off| waste matter promptly and regularly.) For this nothing is better than Cas-| toria, a pure vegetable preparation] specially made for bables and chil-| dren. Castoria acts so gently you can) give it to young infants to rellevs| colic, Yet it is always effective, for | older children, too. Remember, Cas- toria contains no ih drugs, no narcotics—is absolutely ‘When yur baby ts fretful with teething or a food upset, give a cleans- ing dose of Castoria. Be sure you get genuine Casto ie ria with the name: Caikldn Pa AGS ROE LA CHILDREN CRY FOR IT - WORLD HAPPENINGS BRIEFLY TOLD The Royal Canadian Mounted Police took over the policing of Prince Edward Island on May 1. The highway programme of the government on relief road work cost approximately $9,996,972. E. C. Cox, of Limerick, Sask., is the winner of the Alexander Laird schol- arship in English at Queen's Univer- sity, it was announced. More than 4,000 miles of roads in the national highway system of Italy were surfaced with bituminous dress- ing in the last 12 months. ‘The Duke of Connaught, Uncle of the King and former Governor-Gen- eral of Canada, celebrated his 82nd birthday May 1, in his villa on the Riviera. There is a possibility that Rt. Hon. Stanley Baldwin may not attend the ~ Empire Economic Conference, be- cause of the ill health of Premier Ramsay McDonald. 4 The new trade treaty between Can- ada and New Zealand was given ap- proval by the New Zealand Parlia- ment when the bill ratifying the agreement was given third reading. A bill to protect the northern Paci- fic halibut fishery industry, through carrying out a halibut convention be- tween Canada and the United States, has been signed by President Hoover. As part of its drive against Com- munism, the Australian Government recently took a number of children home. from the homes of their Communist parents and placed them ina state An impressive military funeral was held at Ottawa when Inspector Alfred H. Joy, of the Royal Canadian Mount- ed Police, was buried, He was to have | Bacon and Ham Exports Canada Is Now Recapturing Large Share Of British Market That Canada is rapidly moving for- ward toward the recapturing of her share in the British market for bacon and ham is indicated by the statistics | of export of these commodities to} Great Britain for the first quarter of the present calendar year in the opin- fon of Hon. H. H. Stevens, During the three months the total exportation | to Great Britain amounted to 56,480,- | 000 Ibs, as compared with 15,821,000 | Tbs. for the corresponding period last year or an increase of 40,659,000 Ibs. | The percentage of increase is thete-) fore approximately 257 per cent. “In addition, it is interesting to) note,” a statement issued by the| Minister of Trade and Commerce, | says, ‘that during the months} of February and March, Canada ex: | | er Tree Planting Car Canadian Forestry Association Carry- ing On od Work In the West The Tree Planting Car of the Cana- dian Forestry Association which will | c commence its fourteenth year oF spreading the gospel of tree planting on the prairies left Montreal after | e a thorough overhauling in the Cae | dian Pacific Railway shops at that point, on April 28 for Ottawa, Ottawa it will be equipped, and then sent on to Regina, where Alan B. Beaven will take charge. The se: jot lectures on tree planting will open | this month. | Mr, Beaven, who has been seven | years with the forestry car, has pre- pared a real entertaining programme for the farmers, their wives, and chil- Send for this FREEBOOKI One hundred and eighty-six ways of aley your cooking better with St. Charles are yours simply for the asking. Send for our new cook book "The Good Provider.” Just fill in the attached coupon, Borden's ST. CHARLES MILK UNSWEETENED EVAPORATED The Borden Co. Limited _ sr. c. 18 115 George St., Toronto, Ont. Please_tend me free copy of “The Good Provider.” t | a new record in the number v! the car will be established. With drought conditions in the | ported direct for the first time to the | — southern prairies during the past | Trish Free State 13,342,000 Ibs of ba- con and ham. And tho Irish Free) State has in the past, been regarded | (with Denmark), as 8 serious com- | petitor with Canada in the British | market for these particular products.” Total exports of bacon and ham to all countries, for the first quarter year amounted to 77,526,000 Ibs. as compared with only 20,052,000 Ibs. in the first three months of 1931, an in- crease of nearly 400 per cent. To Great Britain alone during the first three months of 1932, Canada exported more bacon and ham than were exported during the entire 12 months of 1928, During the latter year less than nine per cent. of | Britain's imports of bacon were sup-) plicd from within the Empire and} only 14 per cent. of the ham. Efforts on the part of the depart-} ment of trade and commerce, through | exhibitions and publicity in Great Britain designed to popularize Cana- dian products, including bacon and} ham, coupled with educational efforts | om the part of the department of/ agriculture to show to the farmer | that standard of quality and contin- | uity of supply are prime requisites in securing and retaining the British | market, are regarded by the minister | as being largely responsible for the increase in the British demand for Canadian hog products. “The meas-} ure of success that has been achieved | through advertised quality, says the) minister, is apparently now being) achieved in the production field.” | | | | Low Ocean Fares Britain Preparing For Greater Invasion Of Tourists From Canada Than Ever Before Britain is preparing for a greater invasion of tourists from Canada and the United States than ever before, this season. This is due to more de- termined efforts on the part of the) Travel Association of Great Britain} and Ireland, who have highly organ-| ized their r for i |IN THIS PRETTY DRESS, DIFFER- three years, the publicity that has} been given the necessity of planting } shelter belts and windbreaks, and the | | belief expressed that trees can and | | will play an important part, farmers have come to look on the problem of |a treeless plain as one needing im- |mediate action. They have learned pera the experience of neighbors that mixed farming and tree planting on | the prairies go hand in hand, and so | efforts have been successful this year in bringing the gospel of tree planting | to the people of the province. The first two months of the tour will be spent in Saskatchewan, and later in the summer the car will trav- | el through Alberta. Winnipeg Newspaper Union ® Recipes For This Week (By Betty Barclay) COFFEE GINGER COOKIES cup strong, hot coffee. cup molasses. cup brown sugar. cup shortening. tablespoon boiling water. tablespoon ginger. tablespoon cinnamon. Flour for mixing. 1 teaspoon soda. Dissolve soda in boiling water and stir into molasses. Pour over the shortening. Add boiling coffee and su- | gar, and then add seasonings. Add flour until dough is stiff enough to roll, Roll and cut into desired shapes. ed ENCE IS ARRIVED BY USING A PLAIN AND PRINTED FABRIC Tiny girls love to have free and easy to wear clothes with skirts to swish about. ORANGE CANDIED SWEET POTATOES (Serves 6) For those who look best with the 1 cup orange juice. fulness falling from the yoke, the 14 teaspoon grated orange rind. narrow tie sceh may be omitted. 1 cup water. It's a darling dress. The yoke and 4 applied band at the hem are nautical gancup SUBar. blue plain batiste. The dress itself| 3 tablespoons light corn syrup. is white batiste al] covered in blue 14 teaspoon salt. 14 cup butter. spots. It’s such a cunning scheme, and 6-8 sweet potatoes or yams. yisitors to the Old Land. Recent ocean rate reductions to the extent of 20 per cent. have now made it possible to spend a summer holi- day by going to Europe, doing what- ever sight-seeing one’s time permits, and returning to this country for an all-inclusive charge of less than sev- en dollars a day, according to the Cunard and Anchor-Donaldson lines. These tours in Europe include the best sight-seeing in the time avail- able, chiefly by motor coach, as well as by rail and steamer. These tours death. Proves London Doctor Wrong Body's been married the day following his y love it. Dimity prints, voile prints, gingham checks, candy striped cotton broad- cloths and pique are also suitable. Style No. 430 is designed for sizes 2, 4 and 6 years. Size 4 requires 11% yards of 35-inch figured with 4% yard of 35-inch plain material and 1% yards of binding. Price of pattern 25 cents in stamps r coin (coin is preferred). Wrap coin carefully. Combine first seven ingredients and pour oter peeled uncooked sweet po- tatoes arranged in casserole or bak- ing dish. Bake covered in a moderate oven (375 to 400 degrees Fahrenheit) until tender, 30 or 40 minutes. Baste occasionally. Remove lid last 10 min- utes to brown or put under blazer. VARIATION: Just before removing from oven, add a layer of marshmal- lows and brown. How To Order Patterns Address: Winnipeg Newspaper Union, Scientist Honored 175 McDermot Ave., Winnipeg Will Also Shoot Or Gas Intruder Says help catch burglars. which has been created by Dr. Phil- lips Thomas, research engineer of At | Westinghouse Electric and Manufac- a network of infra-red or ultra-violet ason | rays thrown over a room | property. that causes the cells to turn on lights in | the room and to soun dren who attend, and is hoping that | alarm at t jsiting | to the intruder. lights, photographs may be taken by a camera hidden in the wall. The burglar need not know of this, as the for the purpose and the intruder re- main in apparent darkness. trapped himself several times success- fully with the instrument and that the device had proved workable under various conditions. were ready for distribution within twenty minutes. i) Photo-Electric Burglar Catcher Inventor Grid glow tubes and photo-electric ells are being brought into play to “Dick Dead-Eye” is the name giv- n an instrument of tubes and cells uring Company. The apparatus is to protect The invisible rays are 50 arranged interruption by an intruder d a loud alarm. They can also be made to give an he police station, unknown Simultaneously with the alarm and infra-red rays may also be utilized Dr. Thomas explained that he had The photographs Possibilities of “Dick Dead-Eye,”” Dr. Thomas says, are limitless, as a burglar may be tear-ganed, imade senseless by an odorless gas or even shot down by an automaticly oper- ated pistol. Trying New Experiment Scientists Will Endeavor To Test Atmosphere During Sun’s Eclipse Science will take advantage of a 99-second total eclipse of the sun on| August 31, to check up on Professor | Albert Einstein's light deflection. Elaborate plans for| the test, which will utilize all modern equipment possible, with adropianes | and balloons taking a major part, were announced by Northwestern University, Chicago. When the moon's shadow wipes out the sun’s light for the few brief mo~ ments, balloons carrying aerological instruments, and aeroplanes bearing additional delicate recording equip- ment, will be ready to meet the occa- sion over Freyburg, Me. Freyburg, said Dr. Oliver Justin Lee, Associate Professor of Astron- omy, was chosen because forecasts in- dicate that the most favorable weath- er conditions will prevail there. This will be the first time, Dr. Lee said, that science has ever under- taken to determine what happens to atmospheric pressure and tempera- ture during the eclipse. If plans ma- terialize, one of the astral expeditions ‘planes will climb 30,000 feet where clouds or haze won't interfere. The full eclipse will sweep down from the Arctic region, across the Province of Quebec and the North- eastern corner of the United States. It will then pass out over the Atlan- tic at Cape Cod. Britain Will Lead the Way land On March Back To Economic Recovery also include visits to the Continent, in France and Belgium especially. “Modern Third Class” is used for the ocean crossing and to many peo- | ple whose memories of Third Class| date back to many years ago when | they first came to Canada this class Worth More Than Dollar , , a 10-gallon tank with the water in f our bodies, make seven bars of soap " the sulphur, make a medium-sized 4 nail with the iron, make 2,300 match heads with the phosphorus, mak provided we could extract it. Wi could produce a dose of salts with th magnesium we contain, and coul whitewash a chicken-coop with ou own lime—again provided we coul extract it. ‘A London doctor says our bodies|adays, in fact, are worth less than $1 each for the materials they contain. We could fill 9,000 lead pencils with the carbon, | offers surprising comfort. Now- third class is more |comfortable than first class was | thirty or forty years ago. Ontario and Quebec provinces ex- pect to reap some benefit from the with the fat, rid one dog of fleas with|™ass of tourists who pass through | Montreal on their way to Europe, as many western Canada and United States visitors spend some time see- ing Ottawa, Toronto and Montreal, en route. e e | ie id) r| ; id| Royal Canadian Mounted Police Wil Aeroplane Patrol Use ‘Planes On Both East and West Coasts Aeroplanes are to be used by the Royal Canadian Mounted Police for preventive work on both Atlantic and Pacific coasts. Major-General J. H MacPrien, commissioner of R.C.M-P, announced that arrange considerable number of ‘planes of th | Royal Canadian Air Force. The aircraft will operate in con | junction with vessels of the preven tive service, and will be stationed a’ | strategic points on both coasts. | cording to recent estimates. ,| ada must face competition from tour- the ments had been made to employ a | The forests of Quebec cover an area} them stopped, pointed his cane at the lof more than 155,000,000 acres ac- Director Of Geological Survey Elect- ed As Member Of American Philosophical Society Election of Dr. W. Collins, director | Pattern No.. Size.. Natio society in the western hemisphere, was announced at Ottawa. As mem- bership is restricted to outstanding scholars and statesmen who have dis- Bidding For Tourist Trade tributions to the Canada Has Competition From | Other Countries and Should knowledge, thd honor conferred on Advertise | The French, Germans, Cubans, larly enviable one. Dr. Collins has had a Italians, Swiss and a dozen other peo- tinguished themselves by their con- realm of useful | friends, some admire Moses, who in- | stituted the Old Law; some Paul, who Dr. Collins is regarded as a particu- | Spread the New, But, after all, which character in the Bible has had the brilliant | largest following?” famous London merchant, course of an interview at Toronto. “England will be at the head of the It is of the geological survey, Department character that does it. We are carry- of Mines, Ottawa, to the American| ing tremendous burdens. We haven't Philosophical Society, oldest scientific | 2 bit more money than we had a igS were at their parade just asin the past. | while back when thin; worst, but we are on our feet.’ Probably Correct Theological Lecturer: ‘Yes, ple. are actively: engagediin\compet eo ee ee ee RAIL EY EBS ENTS {age fortis’ iniariedn “tauriat, fates peomeeene ny eae a ‘ ; |'This year steamship fares have been ment at the International Geological Willing To Make Deal reduced to so low a leyel that Can- | Congress held in South Africa. | She (concluding the quarre | jhaughtily): I suppose you would lik | ist resorts across the Atlantic. Then} | why not make a virtue of the Atlan- | tle shipping fares, and attract more} tourists to Canada from Europe this) milk. A Missouri editor prefers a cow to| Your ring back? a saxophone, because in addition to| | making the same noise the cow gives | He (politely): unless you can find somebody quickl: t ments, summer? Canada needs the tourists, | ~ our shipping companies need passengers. : . PURELY ~ VEGETABLE For 60 years the world's best corrective What Is Fame What is fame? Upon the walls of the corridor leading to the Parlia- _| mentary restaurant at Ottawa, there -\are etchings of all the Prime Minis- t| ters of Great Britain. The other day, |when two American visitors were walking down this corridor,:one of e for CONSTIPATION and INDIGESTION Sold everywhere i 25c and 75c red pkgs 'S TEEEPILLS | etching of Disraeli, and knowingly re- marked: “Ab, George Arliss.” \ Certain Is Right ple outside waiting to be presented t you. Among them jis a bishop wh Film Actress: Gee! I’m practicall certain I never married a bishop. —— ee So large is the collection of and trophies owned by the late . cu vingrove, Scotland. Famous London Merchant Says Eng- “Of course England will lead the} world in the march back to economic | recovery,” declared Gordon Selfridge, in the my I would rather — 0 take over the remaining instal- Friend: Say, there's a bunch of peo- says he married you some time ago. Thomas Lipton that it pe Reap ure) two months to prepare oe bibition at the Art Galleries at Kel- fs, BE ROBBED 0 na RALPH GRAVES Scenario Writer year after year. their complexion se- cretl” Hee “Above all, guard — complexion beau- nee 7 the ly as we do. exquisite. Hollywood, | of the 694 important AVIES © ? re [ON Di ~ MARION PAMIES Soe toc Matter Brought Before Nations Manchurian Commis: News of how 6,000,000 Chinese 1 |sufferers in the Hwel River ‘north of Anhwei are existing Jon grass and bark, whilt |being sold in a human r | brought to the attenti | League of Nations’ Manchuri |mission at Peiping, | The affected area twice the size of New Yor) The chief supply | of relief wheat from the But owing to the trouble al Vbetween the Chinese and | and inconvenient transportal | ditions only 4,000 tons of area. It will be late in June thing possible to improve t tion. Meanwhile, the g been eating grass, weeds, sprou the bark of trees. eS Relief workers reported t that the market price fo humans is $1 in Chinese about twenty cents in each year of the person's a year-old child sells ‘for $10 $2 in gold, the rate rising until the age of 25, whe begins to recede. Soap Used Without Wa! ‘A waterless soap has be oped by a chemist atta joint concern in Kansa soap, in the form of to be harmless to the possesses healing and | ities. It lathers freely and absorbs all dirt. ——S How Earth Is Di fe: Scientists estimate that 40/p of the land area of the earth: ert, 80 per cent. is productive per cent. is poor grazing li high mountains and waste. TI no agreement as to the exact po) that is inhabitable. 1, e Argentina has only” abou plants using steam for powe! Porto Rico imported ~ $1 worth of jute bags in 1931, ly ) ) peHAMILTONs PILLS FOR : ADACHE, BILIOUSNESS CONSTIPATION, INDIGESTION «KIDNEYS, LIVER, WELS ly