ks s and [ender- to ene the of hy Wi )shawa va rink as the ctween rg ene on af. short lumber g club be de- of the he To- sheets g and some ay af- urg rme eas leton rd 18 cess 6 . 11 ttom norld 'S on wee 6 The ned pion- atur- nes- ley, ski, Ban, ING Al, in- test th a = aaa Ulla Ld A WAILT LIMES, MONDAY, MARCH 11; 1929 PAGE NINE g F cg it of Gerr-an Emperor in 1807 Guests to Court of King Edward Was Colorful Event of Season London, March 11--Lord Haldane, in his newly-published biography, "tells an amusing story of the visit of the German emperor and his minis- ters to Windsor, as guests of King * Edward in 1907, ~~ "It had been arranged," says Lord Haldane, "that the costume should be - English informal Court costume-- - "white waistcoat, black knee-breeches "and Seay, Diack silk stockings with < pumps. e Berlin tailors had made =sthe other things excellently for the + guests, but the German pumps were not such a 'success. After dinner on 'the first might I was there we sat in: the smoking-room, a large salon in which the ministers were ncar the * voyalties on a raised dias. I was next to General von Einem and I 'noticgd he was in pain. By careful = observation I tracked the source of his expressions of discomfort to his fost and I saw his pumps had been made too tight across the instep. At last the two Sovercigns quitted us for the night, but we were to sit on. 1 turned to the Prussian war minister and said it was the custom in Wind- sor Castle when our royal masters left us to kick off éur shoes, and I set the example. He looked grate- fully at mq A ectly understanding, and jo of pumps with an air of relief. He must have told the em- peror for next morning King Edward said' to me, 'A nice character you are, giving Windsor Castle a repu- tation for having strange customs.' I told the King about Von Einem and that out of mercy I had said it was the custom here when the King left the smoking-room to kick off one's pumps. The King laughed." The foregoing incident closely re- sembles one told of King Edward himself, connection with the visit to England in 1892 of the Shah of Persia. The Shah was wholly unused to European ways, and there was more than one embarrassing moment during his visit in consequence. At a dinner given in his: honor, over which the Prince of Wales presided, finger bowls were placed before the guests. To everybody's amazement the Shah promptly seized his and drank off the contents. The Prince as prompt- ly signalled to the remainder of the guests and with His Royal Highness they gravely drank off the contents of their own finger bowls. SAYS IMAGINATION BRINGS OUT FINER QUALITIES OF LIFE Charles W, Bell, M.P., Well known Playwright De- clares It Adds Color Montreal, Que, March 11.=<The value of imagination in adding color to life and bringing into play the finer qualities of men and women was emphasized by Charles W. Bell, M.P,, for West Hamilton, and author * of several plays, in a speech at the charter day luncheon of the Mon- treal West Women's Club. Mr. Bell, the title of whose address was an- nounced to be "Our Lost Imagina- tions," maintained that in the matter of-fact, money getting age, people have lost the imaginative attitude of mind that was once a component part of life, As an indication of this materialistic tend, the lecturer point- cd to the modern newspaper, rve- marking that musical, literary or dra- matic events were not accorded place on the first page, as they were in Horace Greeley's time, Mr. Bell glanced at different per- iods in the world's history in their relation to the imaginative aspects of life. The parables found in the four Gospels were an appeal to the im- | agination, and the early Christians sought to continue the same method of teaching by presenting their les- sons in dramatic and pictorial form, In the "spacious days of Eliza- beth," when English ships brought back tangible evidence of countries beyond the seas, and thrilling stories were tokl of adventure under Drake and Hawkins and Frobisher, men re- sponded with their imagination, and the times were ripe for the gen- iuses that were to appear. In the Victorian era, imagination began to give place to regard for eS erence Counts/ WHEN most of the farmers of today were learning to plough, sow and reap, The Canadian Bank of Commerce had already established a reputation for giving farmers' business special attention. The farmer who becomes a customer of this Bank will find himself dealing with men who understand his work and who regard it as of sufficient importance to support him wholeheartedly. THE CANADIAN BANK OF COMMERCE = «= A RESORT HOTEL witha COUNTRY CLUB ATMOSPHERE NAUTILUS MIAMI! REACH." FLORIDA One of America's finest and most modern fireproof resort hotels, An Unegqualled Winter Playground 20 Acres of gr ds in the ter of all sport activities, "Every known out-of-door sport and health-giving res creation under ideal climatic comditions, . & Polo Fields Superd Tennis Courts 8 Ezcellent Golf Courses Bathing--Yachting--Motor Boating Fishing i snnected with the Nautilus are ing villas, then Prince of Wales, in, FELT MISERABLE E ELE ki gd : wil Ei: Percept HE H "good form," and color was propor- tionately going out of life. . Mr, Béll regretted that, however imagination. might be touched in school life and college, there was little opportunity for this faculty to have place in business or professional life today, Out of the atmosphere in which a people lived, things came naturally and irresistibly, A dearth of novelists, or artists, or play- wrights could not be charged to the absence of talent so much as to the want of an atmosphere in which talent emerges and develops. The lecturer held that one of the biggest legacies this generation can leave be- hind is to have awakened in the children an imaginative interest in higher things "and maybe they will not then have to worry so much about things that are not so good." "It lies with ourselves and more especially with women, what is to be the future of young people. We can- not leave everything to the teacher or to the journalist; we cannot un- load our responsibilities on the preacher, We can still cultivate in the young who are coming up an in- terest that has been all too much neglected in recent years" the speak- er said, BITTER DEBATE ON RAILWAY LEASE INNEW HAMPSHIRE Bill To Allow . Canadian Roads to Run Over Bos- ton Tracks Passed Concord, N.H,, March 11.--A bitter , sign it, wrangling debate marked the passing in the New Hampshire Legislature 'of the bill that will give the Canadian railways. the right to nse the Boston & "Main trackage in this state; ; Emphatic declaration that denials Mer in Montreal and other places mean absolutely nothing when it comes to Canadian railroads being eager to secure a right of way through the state to the port of Portsmouth and positive assertions that these two great systems were waiting to cross this commonwealth and develop a huge terminal at the Granite States only seaport featured the discussion. So bitter was the debate at times that the utmost confusion reigned. The Boston & Maine Railroad was scathingly scored, charged with "stealing," and of taking money from the people of New Hampshire to help Boston, Only the Canadian railroads can save New Hampshire, it was de- clared. The final vote revealed the House almost unanimously in favor of the passage of the bill and upon motion of Representative Callahan it was passed under the suspension of the rules, There is little question but what the Scnate will pass the bill and the Governor is known to be eager to It was the first time in the session that the House has refused to accept the recommendations of the important judiciary committee, The bill and a divided report, the major- ity declaring the proposed law "in- expedient to legislate." REVOLUTION IN SOVIET RUSSIA LATEST RUMOR Recent Resignation of News. paper Editor From Com- munist Society Cause of Unrest Berlin, March 11.--Adyices received by the Socialist newspaper "Vor- weart" from Moscow Socialists state that there are increasing rumors of a pending revolution in Soviet Rus- sia. / These advices stated that the re- cent resignation of M, Bucharin from his editorship of the Communist newspaper Pravda and from the presidency of the Communist Inter- national was because he had been caught in the act of preparing a coup d'etat against the Staling group. He was stated to have written a letter to Leo Kamaneff in which he tried to draw the latter into the anti- Stalin camp. Vorwearts says that when Buch- arin 'was si ed before the Com- munist cefitral confrol commission he broke down and wept hysterically, TRADE IN CANADA "IS SWEDEN'S Af Commercial Attache To Do- | : minion Sees Great Possi. bilities for Negotiations Stockholm, Sweden, March 11.-- Sweden's interest in Canada is stead- ily on the increase and has recently been manifested in scveral ways. "Sweden's business with Canada ought to be intensified," B. A. Ren- borg, the Swedish Commercial At- tache to Canada, told a press repre= sentative of the Gothenburg paper Ny Tid, "because that country is swiftly developing all her natural re- sources as well as her industry. Agri= culture out there is steadily improv ing and yields annually crops worth several hundreds of millions of dollars. Then come the vast forests and. the immense supply of minerals, of which it is difficult to form an adequate opinion, as most of them are only white spots on the map." "When big enterprises start, money is needed," Mr, Renborg continued, "and capital is also forthcoming, mostly from the U.S.A, and Great Britain, which shows the firm confi- dence in the future of Canada. The import of Canadian goods to Sweden is very important, but suffers from old habits, inasmuch as the Canadian firms have maintained the traditional intermediaries in Great Britain and Denmark when dealing with Sweden; | only the wheat pool, which has ren- dered such great service to the Can- adian farmers, has its own agent in Sweden." \ When asked about the Swedish ex- port to Canada Mr. Renborg added that Swedish products, such as ball- bearings, clectrical implements, pulp- making machinery, Diesel motors, tools and agricultural implements, and such like, have their sure market | in Canada, which appreciates the high quality of Swedish' manufacture, but he thought that this export might be increased, especially with regard to mining, where the Swedes have ex- perience for centuries -- Sweden's ancient copper mine of Falun, for in- stance, is run by the same company since 1288, "But if Swedish export industries want to compete with others in the Canadian market, they must be prenared to support our' Swedish representation over there," Mr. Renborg concluded, after having emphasized tlie kinship between the . Canadian and Swedish nations, both used to a hard climate, | : Many Swedes returning from long- |= er or shorter trips to Canada are full of praise for the industrious work | and spirit of enterprise which char- acterize Canada of today. Senator Ivar Wennerstrom, who recently toured the Dominion, has published an interesting book on his experi- ences among the Canadians and has successfully defeated an opponent in a Stockholm daily who accused him of having painted Canada in too IF rosy colours. Mrs, Ruth Gustafsson, a denuty of the Stockholm City Cor- poration, has given a series of lec- | tures in Stockholm as well as in the provinces about the wonderful land north of the American frontier and certainly stimulated the desire in the Swedes to visit Canada, where so many of them have already gone, in- spired by the Viking snirit which is the heritage of the Swedish race and without which Sweden of to-day, with only 6 millions of inhabitants, would not have reached its promin- ent international position of the present day. An interesting conference has now been called together by Mr. Lubeck, the Swedish minister of social affairs, where the important question of find- ing an outlet abroad for Swedish emigrants will be discussed. Mr, Ren- borg will act as expert on Canadian conditions, . And now for the eternal argu- ment over the national debt.--Ot- tawa Journal. Freak hen in Pennsylvania which is said to be laying round eggs, is apparently out of her sphere.--Border Cities Star. The Food-tonic That | Imparts a Feeling of Fitness and Strength-- SCOTT'S EMULSION - Rich in the Health- building Vitamins of Cod-liver Oil Scott & Bowne, Toronto, Ont. 28-28 Machinery Repairing NOTHING T00 LARGE NOTHING TOO SMALL Adanac Mahin: Shop 161 King St, W. Phone 1214 QUALITY COAL W. A. HAR , OPTOuKETRIST 23%, Simcoe St. North Hundreds of people wear TE ere's A New Love Story You'll Thoroughly Enjoy! Che-- 'Make-Believe Wite By KATHLEEN NORRIS About A Young Girl Who Married Her Employer J "4 Here is a story considered by many to be the best that Kathleen Norris ever wrote. It's a love story with an entirely new plot and will hold your interest to the very last sentence. DON'T MISS IT! First Chapter Will Appear Next Thursday Her Problem-- Lovely Beatrice St. John, girl-bride of the middle- aged Houston Challoner, faced the danger of having her happiness destroyed by his suspicion and jealousy. He could not believe that this child, young and eager for life, could love a mature-business man such as him- self. But love him she did, and at last & ey won faith and happiness again, and a second honeymoon that was sweeter than the first, This is the story so simply and beautifully told in "The Make-Believe Wife," Kathleen Norris' latest and best serial, .. ia puNpuesmme EEEoon-ome BEATRICE ST. JOHN Watch For The Opening Chapter on Thursday in the Daily Times Mrs. Kathleen Norris, author of many novels filled with the knowledge of every. day life, likes The Make Believe Wife bet- ter than anything she has done. And well she might. It is filled with all the the emotions and situations that make a splen- did story, and created and woven together by Mrs. Norris they make a story that will live for years. It reveals the profound sympathy and human ynderstanding of America's most beloved novelist, bev 8ef -- ESFc Bopnclal 23F po ow® fe a Watch For the Story In Thursday's Times THE AUTHOR--KATHLEEN NORRIS 0 IUCN