Church At Jasper Is WORLD HAPPENINGS Soldier's Mi t BRIEFLY TOLD Canada was the principal country Her Son Unique among the churches Gift Of English Lady In Memory Of of tries in both exports and imports with which the United States traded| Canada is the little church of St. tn Jume, leading all the other coun-| Mary and St. } George, of Jasper, | which~was consecrated recently by a Fascinating Subject y York Paper uture For ‘Aviation Editor, Of New Predicts Wonderful F Air Travel al Among the aviation By ae who set no bounds to their con Could Keep sen People yor Every Soys it The claim bi possible Jopments is a eventually the New) make as forever If he wishes W' Erich Remarque, author of “Anl| the Bishop of Edmonton. The buil Quiet on the Western Front,” may | Ing, te the recipient of tho next Nobel/ and stucco, with a tiled roof, w: "Prize for literature, it was reported] built at a cost of $17,000 from a de- from Stockholm. jsign by A. H. Calderon, of Edmo The British Columbia Government |, and is a gift to the parish fro recently announced the distribution! ® 1@dy in England, who wishes h Of liquor profits amounting to $682,-|2Ame to remain anonymous. 819.48 covering the six-mionths’ per-| It was presented in memory of h fod ended March 31. The first repercussion of the small{ crop in western Canada was felt at Sarnia, when the John Gooding) Thresher Company reduced its oper- ating staff by one-third. Hon. Auley Morrison, Chief Jus- tice of British Columbia, was among those who received the degree of doc- tor of laws at the convocation exer- | body when he was carried out of “! ° lingdon. cises, at Dalhousie University, on —EEE August 26. Closer co-operation in air trans- May Kill His Art port matters throughout the world began between Great Britain and France, was disctissed at @ imecting| ‘Ht™7a Halr Deplores Bobbed ® beautiful structure of stone son who was killed in war, and be- neath the corner stone, which was laid last year by His Excellency The Governor-General, lies the testament which was foundyon the young man’s Man’s Land.” The furnishings and fittings of the church were also the | gift of the unknownonor, while the | bell was ptesented by Viscount Wil- Russian Who Makes Pictures In of Lord Thomson woman in the state of Victoria, Aus- with fying colors. Friedrichshafen brought forth and Laurent Eynac, respective Ministers for Air. Miss K. Bloomfield, 24, is the first tralia, to gain an air pilot's license. She has passed her final tests—they Were pretty severe ones at that — The Graf Zeppelin's flight from a Fashion G. Boruchoff, the Russian artist who has received a certain distinc- tion for his pictures in human hair, fears that the bobbed hair fashion may kill his art. He needs long strands for his work, and the sup- ply of them is becoming shorter. and shorter. At first glance Boruchoff's pictures are said to be indistinguish- able from oil paintings. He blends d- ‘as n- m er er Club, during the Calgary Exhibition and stampede, Hon. J, D, McGregor, Lieutenant-Goyernor of Manitoba, for many years Canada’s most out- standing live-stock man, referred es- pecially to the demonstration put on by the C.P.R. Supply Farm, of C) ductive possibilities of good dairy cows. Mr. MeGregor sald that he considered an educational point of view, he had ever seen at any live-stock show. As shown in the accompanying photograph, five cows of various ages were used to emphasize that high production increases profits. Two one two-year-old heifer were includ- ed in the group. Each of these had finished an official record within five months, and their total production for 365 days was 127,583 lbs. of milk. The first cow to the left, “Strath- In his address before the Rotary ) 27,802 lbs. of milk, and immediately revenue returned more than $475.00 | was shipped to Hrandon, where she won second prize in very strong com-| petition, Her yearling first at Brandon, Calgary, Edmonton, | Saskatoon and Regina ger fast that the 1 “only by the aware of their speed pas \hat life can an Gould, aviation professor KF "York Evening Post, who has it ut forw Singh university, at published a book with the title ee lerow, of © Fane, gohool at Cam- Larking.” Before the end of the nel te goclal Hys % H ie he wot! ceo” half-century, he believes, t 1d | ridge most importance, will have entered the alr 889 | ot 18 ot Tr atiahould free our $ ing to their wer lhe sald, “tha notion ea fates ; Gigantic ying Oe iy once and for all of ee yeapute Torts cacrying 0 thousand passen: that death is a necesSBTy MY yi Sige te the Auantle 5| Trevitable consequence OF ° gers will then cross the Pill or an in! pit demonstrated It has been abun ith- d does continue W' one fact that he can go to sleep | out ceasing: ceasary E wie in te and ne 2 per cow aboye feed costs. night in New York, and wake UP ID) given appropri Seren: eternal The milk cans in the picture were London or Paris the next cauhiet, | conditions of env matty for a num- heifer was’ used to illustrate the amount of milk| It his destination should be rane youth is in fact av veiple to take 2 | produced in one year by Strathmore] smaller aircraft, or tes on the| Der of forms. It mh processes of exhibitions,| Sylvia. About one-sixth of the cans| girs capable of landing ih! ©) worm and by ie ‘ive 20 times and was Junior Champion at SSSA SAI ; and Regina. | Strathmore, which emphasized pro-| The next is “Valley Farm Francy 4 production of 2,937 gallons of milk. | Segis-154139." She produced 22,922] | Ibs. of milk, and 930 lbs. of butter, it to be the best, from| which is 2,357 Ibs, of milk and 22.5 deal of time studying the material \lbs. of butter more than the best two-year-old record reported in Can- ada in 1928. roof of his apartment or fi his door, will be used to com) his journey. ars rifles of aviation is, indeed, a fascinating subject that few are qualified to forecast with any real knowledge as a basis for their pro- phecies. That matters little, how- ever, for Edison was an authority on are visible in this picture, Altogeth- plete er there were 479 cans—representing ~ This exhibit attracted a constant stream of visitors who spent a good attractively-displayed on show cards. There are approximately 600 pure- bred Holsteins in the famous herd at starvation kee longer than it wo the ordinary Way. uld have lived in Gimilar treatment in the case of a man, males tee enation, about similar rejuv' parent effect upon human apt to throw it out of gear. ate “There are nO mysteries © mature cows and one four-year-old) heifer, one three-year-old heifer, and/the right “Strathmore Lassie Sylvia- 180501," as a three-year-old produced Canada, there are 40 Gold Meda} and else cou! 23,568 lbs. of milk and 958 Ibs. butter. The four-year-old Strathmore Texaline’ Sylvia-111946,” According to the Dairy sioner of the Province of Alberta, next in Commis- lino Strathmore, Alberta. The show herd of 15 head won 100 first prizes at of 73 Excellent cows in this herd. This development of his inventions. is the largest number of Gold Medals | it is with what the future ie any herd in the world. the airplane. i Some very distinguished visitors electricity when experimenting with incandescent lamps, moving pictures, other of Id have foreseen the modern So holds for ; Far be it from us to suggest that _for their homes in nearly fify differ- $20,000,000 project for regular Ger- man-Russian-Japanese air service with terminals in each of the three countries. It was announced that plans for the scheme are completed. Sir Frederick Williams-Taylor, of Montreal, general manager of the Bank of Montreal, has resigned to assume the position of vice-president of the bank. H. B. MacKenzie, form- erly assistant general manager, suc- ceeds Sir Frederick as general man- ager. . the various shades of hair on hi palette as an oil painter mixes his colors. His canvas is a piece of silk or linen cloth, and his brush a fine knitting needle. His method of weay- ing the hair into the cloths, he says, is similar to that used in making the famous Gobbelin tapestries. Boru- choff started producing his pictures at 10 years of age when apprenticed to a hairdresser, and while a war prisoner in Germany he spent his leisure in practice. Big Jamboree Over Many Friendships Made At Gather- ing Of Boy Scouts Tens of thousands of boys trekked out of Arrowe Park, England, when camp was broken and the great world jamboree of Boy Scouts came to an end. Fifty thousand boys left Test For Your Eyes. Normal Vision Sees Objects Clearly Fifty Yards Away Are you good at judging. dis- tances? It is said if you have normal eyesight you should be able to sce a man’s eyes at fifty yards; at one hundred yards you may see the but- tons on his coat; and at three hun- dred yards you may just see his face; while the color of his clothes can be distinguished at four hundred . Of course, on a clear day, things look nearer than when the day is cloudy. ent countries. The previous night was passed largely in leave-taking as big contin- gents of boys toured the camp and bade their comrades farewell. At dawn they began passing through the park on their homeward journey is) more Sylvia-89340" by producing 29,871 Ibs. of milk was recognized to be the highest milk producer in Can- ada to finish an official yearly record during the past year and a half. The second cow, “Belvedere de Kol Ruby- 82,632," finished on June 14th, with ince produces 3,950 Ibs. of 4 per cent. photograph was about td be taken. terlalize. Faith and not skepticism and death,” he said, “only ignorance. As knowledge ingreases, as increase ledg' produced 23,830 lbs. of milk and 1,-, eight major exhibitions in 1928. Un- talking machines and a few o it must, so also will ss 052 Ibs. of butter® while the one on der the adyanced registry system of | the commonplaces of today. Yet fifty) * | sical environment an’ | ‘ ear | onej over his phy! ; elf. {the Holstein-Freisian Association of| years ago neither he nor any haver the mechanism that is himself. Science as well as religion oe? that in the future mankind may, } it be so desired, not only remain Lees ive manently youthful, put also may forever.” milk. Tiese five cows produced ay much as 32 average Alberta dairy cows. Their_milk, sold to the Union Milk Co,, Calgary, at regular-Dairy- men’s prices, brought $3,214.10, or an average of $642.82 per cow. This ‘The two ladies are Dowager Pentland and her Lady daughter, Hon.| present epoch shows clearly enough the average dairy cow in that proy-| happened to come along just as this [tena Utopian dreams-may not ma- rules the scientific world, and the Miss Sinclair. The gentlemen are) the futility of holding that there is Lord Pentland and, on the George H. Jones, manager of Strathmore Farm, Recipes For This Week (By Betty Barclay) CHIFFON PIB { cups sugar. cup flour. teaspoon salt. cups boiling water. Juice of 1 lemon. Juice and grated orange. 3 eggs. Mix sugar, flour and salt; add boil- ing water, stirring constantly. Cook 15 minutes. Add well-beaten egg- yolks, rind and juice of fruit and cook until thick. Cool, Make meringue of the whites of the eggs, %4 cup powdered sugar and 1 teaspoon lemon juice. Whip one-fourth of meringue into custard mixture and turn into baked pie shell. Cover rind of 1 to far countries of the earth. They took with them the farewell message from the chief scout issued before he left the camp, the keynote of which was “From now on the scout symbol of peace is a golden arrow.” ‘The total number of visitors was 214,422, The next jamboree will be held in 1933. The place will be deter- |} Winnipeg Newspaper Thin with remaining meringue and brown in moderate oven. 7 GREEN TOMATO PRESERVE 3 pounds sugar, 4 pounds green tomatoes. *3 lemons» 1 preserved ginger. mined at a conference to be held at Salsburg, Austria. Development Of Peace River Country Has Gone Ahead Rapidly In Last Few Years ‘The first shipment of grain out of the Peace River District, was made up of three cars of wheat hauled by team 85 miles from Vanrena to Reno. There were no highways or telephones, and only two small rural schools then. Today, there are 1,650,- 000 acres under cultivation, with a prospective crop of 15,000,000 bush- els. Population has increased from 8,000 to 50,000; there are schools, churches, flourishing stores, eleva- tors, electric light plants, highways and telephones. Victim Of June Blizzard Lost in a blizzard that howled down out of the Arctic on June 21 Jast, Ivan, McKay Christie, Bathurst Inlet trapper, was frozen to death. His faithful husky dog was discover- ed alive by the search party that VOGUE OF PLAITS set Out on the trapper’s trail after the blizzard had spent its force and is now at the Royal Canadian Mount- ed Police northern headquarters at Herschel Island. Christie's body was buried at Bathurst Inlet. Fluttering plaited skirt is such an attractive fashion for growing .girls of 6, 8, 10, 12 and 14 years, as seen in Style No. 605 with flat hipline, and simple “bodice with neckline The above table merely gives the correct proportions. Most women will desire to prepare several times this amount at a time. Wash the tomatoes, remoye any dark spots about the stems, and weigh. Cover with boiling water, Iet stand five minutes, drain and slice into a pre- serving-kettle, placing a layer of tomatoes, one of sliced lemon, then the sugar With the ginger sprinkled over it. Let the mixture stand over- night. Drain and boil the syrup for ten minutes. Skim, add the tomatoes and cook rapidly until they are clear. Pour into clean, hot jars and seal. A Long ’Phone Call Woman In London Speaks To Hospital In Sydney, Australia A conversation between a Hamp- shire widow and the matron of. a Sydney, Australia, hospital, marked the first time that a private tele- phone has bridged the 13,000 miles between London and Sydney. Jack Sigrist, 18-year-old cadet on the “Valencia” now in Australian waters, was calling for his mother trimmed with plaited collar. Long sleeves also haye turn-back plaited | “Gin Chieftain Dead yet Yankee Whitecap Was Last Survivor Of Originol Band The last of the original band of 300 Sioux Indians who came to Can- ada from Minnesota, 67 years ago, Moose in his 79th year. with the Sioux, he was buried the same afternoon with his crown of| eagle feathers, his pipe in its beaded case and many other personal be- longings. ‘The band that came north in 1862 ° was led by Chief Whitecap, Yankee’s father. Young Indians on the reserve, par- ticularly, will miss this last link with the old days of Indian freedom on the untrammelled plains, for Chief Yankee was a great buffalo hunter in his day, and many were the stor- ies he told of hunts and’ battles be- fore the advance of the plow. There is no one left now to tell the young braves first hand of the heroic deeds of their forefathers. Chief Yankee Whitecap will also Presentation Was Delayed Sailor Receives Medal Awarded By King After Five Years The bulletin board at the Seamen's Church Institute, New York, is sort of international newspaper for Chief Yankee Whitecap, died on the) the men who follow the sea. So when Woods Indian Reserve, Sask.,| John Maxin, able seaman, arrived } As is the custom}from foreign parts he headed there as a matter of course. Running his eye over the hundreds of items which in brief told tragic | stories of missing men and missing | ships, Maxim suddenly was halted by an item of more personal interest. “There is a gold medal read. ) left, the in the chaplain’s office awarded to Seaman|- John Maxim if he will call for it,” it any limit to man’s ingenuity in con- quering air and space. But we must admit that we are not yet entirely convinced that the next fifty years will find airplanes quite as safe and so general or of such size and speed as Mr. Gould would have us believe. It may be that his enthusiasms are a little too strong for those of us who perforce still have our feet on the ground. For insance, in his pane- gyric on the joy of skylarking, when “the clean wind plucks at the heart- strings and gets them throbbing to some strangely satisfying celestial music of the spheres,” he forgets one thing. Some people get air sick.—St. Thomas Times-Journal. a Sounds a Bit Complicated Season Known As Dog Days Hard 0 To Explain tremendous | Mentally sketching his past Max- im went to the chaplain’s office where he“learned he had been sought as a hero for almost five years. The medal awarded by King George of England, through the British Board of Trade, was in recognition of his part in rescue of the crew of the The “Dog Days'’’ which begin roughly, about July 3, are scheduled by the almanacks to end, just as roughly, about August 11. It is the period about the heliacal rising of Sirius, the Dog Star, and falls later in the year than it used to do be- cause of the procession of the equi- be missed at the tion where every year he was a col- orful figure with his followers, the Whitecap Band, who rendered ser- vice in the entertainment in front of the grand stand. The old chief was noted as an energetic worker. Many are the substantial buildings on the reserve built under his direction. He was also an apostle of thrift, putting up his own hay and encouraging the others to do this every year. He was at this task this year when he was overcome by his illness two weeks ago. Chief Yankee Whitecap will long be remembered by his band and all who knew him as a wise and good leader. Snow Houses a Myth Few Eskimos Have Ever Seen Or Heard Of Ono ss Eskimos are frequently seeu sweating under a powerful sin. The general idea of Eskimos and all in- habitants of the Arctic Circle is that they live in conditions of eternal | winter, Quite wrong Mr. Stefansson, | the Arctic explorer, has been telling British brigantine ‘Thames,’ 00|poxes, Whatever that means. Since December 23, 1924, when he was|these are the Dog Days, it does not exhibi- of ‘the ip “Spring-| really matter. Leave it to the scien- field.” The board had despaired of| tists. finding him and had forwarded the medal to the institute. Hundreds of years ago this season of the year was r as a sea- | | Making Subs Safer Recent Tests Haye Proved Peril - Being Lessened Marking another step toward Ies- sening the perils of submarine ser- vice, tests in which the V-4 was “rescued” with her complement of 87 officers and men have been carried out at San Diego, California. With tlie precision of a carefully regulated machine, fresh air was supplied to the submarine's compart- ments, the old air exhausted, and finally, the submarine prought to the surface by compressed air lines from, the rescue vessel “Ortolanm” whicli “blew” the ballast tanks of the V-* lying on the bottom of the Pac 86 feet below the surface. While the experiment of “blowing” a submarine to the surface has been tried before, this was the first time {that it had been done in the open sea, and the first time that it had been tried with a vessel the size of the V-4. It demonstrated beyond any doubt, navy officers said, that reser and.salvage work in this manner car be carried on successfully. A Real Scotch Story Match Discarded By Prince I Object Of Trade The world's suppiy of Scotch anec dotes has been augmented with revelation of an incident concern’»~ the visit of the Prince of Wales t» the Boy Scouts world jamboree Impressed by the unusual circum- stances, the Rev. Douglas Matthews, chaplain, assembled the hundred or more marines present and made formal presentation to Maxim of his delayed honors. son during which anything might happen. As a matter of fact, noth- ing ever does, but that does not mat- ter either. But notice is hereby given that mankind must begin again to be serious on or about August 11, when the “Dog Days” end. Whatever that means. The high premium on honesty may be due to the fact that it is the best policy. / Wheat bread has decreased in im- portance in the American diet since the World War. Light and airy—the flighty blonde. Bir , England. While yisit'~ the Scotch camp the Prince lighte! his pipe and tossed away the matr? auctioned shillings (about $1). The pre= proud owner of the burnt match also a Scot—ts offering to exchr it now for a pair of kilts or a by pipe. The woman who has tact iny>~ ably knows what not to do. UUUITNUATTHATT AQUETOTOCUACVOURUNANNUEVOSESOUEQOUOEEUCOUGEOOOUOEUOUOOOOTOEOEDEEOEO EE MADE IN ENGLAND important ally. Medical research that from the point of HUTTITTTTITTTTITTTUEAAN HNTTANTTANTTTTTAAETTANNATEND The Improved Glass Substitute COMES WITH A MESSAGE OF HEALTH RE sun ts the all-powerful lif, Nature's universal disinfectant’ ard and stroyer, as well as stim t WINDOLITE is the sun's iat has definitely proved in delirium and, although radio tele-| phone connections between London flowers of the Arctic are exquisite, and Australia are still in the experi-| he says, and very few Eskimos have mental stage, the post office depart-| ever seen a snow house—or heard ment made arrangements so that| of one except at school! a Cambridge audience. The a wild- Hygiene, the most effect Tays are the Ultra-Violet the greatest power for the’ 7 cure of disease and debility, view of Health ani tive among the sun's Which possess the prevention an’ ' Tamer: “Do you think anyboay) DRE J Lapiteco cee ee will stéal your lion?” — Prager) Presse, Prague. | NQMC cance ees megesecsressnrere - | S W. N. U. 1800 | Towa Pe ee / |cuffs. Neckline and hipline show feminine influence. The museum of the American In- rae dian, in New York, grew out of the purchase by George G- Heye of a4 Nayajo Indian shirt. matching sheer velvet is exclusivi and so inexpensive. Gingham chec! lin printed voile in brown and whit | with brown velvet bows, maize shad in shantung with bows omitted, ani with white organdie pleated anistan. h — and cuffs are dainty blue fully How To Order Patterns — ta | 176 McDermot Ave. Winn!peg + Circus Manager: “The height negligence “to leave the door of the lion cage open.” of) Patter NO. «vs mess en re S1Z6 ewe | dimity in red and white with bows of sports weight linen in orchid shade collar and practical yool crepe with vivid red crepe | Address: Winnipeg Newspaper Union, bows| Mrs. C, G. Sigrist was able to speak d/o the hospital matron for 10 min- e | utes and learn that her son was im- | proving a . . ¥ Larger Production Necded “Larger production of high qualit agricultural goods is what is neces- sary to Canada if the country is to sUgE It can also be made) continue as an exporter of agricul- with short slecves as shown in small) fo" fT tong Te ee Alaa Hack views. For early Fall, it will be| ‘ural products,” declared Hon. delightfully smart, made’ of navy|erwell, Federal Minister of Agricu ture, informally opening Vancouye de chine pleated collar and cuffs.| oth annual exhibition Pattern price 25 cents in stamps or tes coin (coin 15 preferred). Wrap coin een z . y Inside Information Science has perfected a tiny camera that can be lowered into the }human stomach to take sixteen plc- ures of the interior department from jall angles. This is getting an inside | view of the situation. Afterward the | pictures may be enlarged, Barns are popularly painted red cause oxide of iron paint, which 1s |cheap and’ durable, can be obtained ‘in red color only. | Too uppish--the highbrow. Music and Health Physicians at the Middlesex Hos- | pital, London, England, are experi- menting on the value of music to human health. Eighty people, in good health, are being experimented | with, and phonograph records of all descriptions have been tried, favor- {able reactions resulting from all of |them, With yocal and light orches- ‘tral selections, extremely favorable ts on blood pressure were | tained. ob- The farmer may hatch his chick- Jens by electricity, raise them using electric ight instead of sunlight, and finally fry them for the table by the use of an electric range. A new Japanese ruling abolishes night work for women and young persons in cotton factories and other industries, Of the German war vessels sunk in Scapa Flow during the World War, 25 destroyers and 3 battleships have been raised. PTITUIUULL IUVOEOULENEDTRATOOECHUTUNTTD UUUCATOAANEGEOEAEAOOOOMADUONASOUED eSTHTOELETENED Price $1.50 Per Square Yard, f.0.b., Toronto, Use WINDOLITE and let YOUR PLANTS YOUR CHICKENS ° . YOUR CATTLE 5 ar Bask in 100 % Sunlight Send for booklet “WINDOLITE” Distributors: JOHN 51 Wellington St. W. t want. ; have conclusivel 3 ctfective substitute toes A. CHANTLER & (9, ust that ute for glass, - admits thi “Vi WINDOLITE stands for 100 per cent. sunlight. It lias a Tiedt Trays, makes light Lut strong windows for cattle sheds, dairy and development SE xy effect stables, poultry houses, brooders and all out buildings. It on the well-bein, 2 fants and chickens {s economical, unbreakable, flexible and is easy tocut and first time to Hay of cattle, enabled for th + ft. It is now being successfully used for sunrooms, darkness in thee ee ay Be verandahs, schools, a ) Bospitalg, pentariuma: hot Tnded tha sie eds, beds, plant coverings and greenhouses. eeps out cold 3 scovery of WW, will not crack or chip,—cuts with an ordinary pair of Ronee ‘ast, six years AE has scissors and is easy to fit. Ue Ee is supplied tn poultry Drea uh given a nae, mgagrel in one w of 36 inches only. A copacity and fertiity of ae, the eel: mproved the healt ckens, hag pre, fog used { h of cattle an, Breatly foe ae ad eB re- TORONTO, 9