a AG Tt ne "ENTER - CANADA Ca as a vacation land facili- tates the entry of tourists by all nor- mal ns, here are no irritating formalities or cumbersome routine as following resume of regulations "shows: : Tourists entering : require passports. Automobiles may 'be brought into for pur- _poses of health or pleasure for a per- "lod "up to 90 days without duty or 'bond, and for a period of six months 'bythe deposit of a bond for the amount of the duty and taxes ordin- payable on the car, e 'tourist may drive his car un- der' his state license for a generous sriod in every province in Canada. e period varies in the different provinces. Ademissi Canada do not of A biles for Touring General directions--Cars brought into Canada under the regulations herein may be used for touring pur- poses only and not for business. No difficulty. or needless delay need be experienced by the tourist at the bor- der if he observes the following: 1."Entering Canada --, a) Report to~the Canadian Customs at port of 'entry into Canada and obtain a per- mit" for 'admission of automobile, Fidilure to report may result in seiz- tire of the car. State license cards should be presented. Do not fail to declare any articles or goods that may be subject to duty. (b) Report to the Canadian Immi- gration officer at point of entry into Canada. Foreign-born citizens and alien residents of the United States should be prepared to present creden- tials establishing their legal residence in the United States. 2, Leaving Canada--(a) Report to the Canadian Customs at a boundary port of exit and present your auto- mobile entry permit for cancellation. (b) Report to the United States Customs at port of entry into United States and present state li- cense cards. (c) Reports to the United States immigration officer at the point of entry into the United States. To pre- vent possible difficulty in re-entering the United States, native-born citi- zens of the United States should be prepared to present birth certificate, or credentials from responsible per- sons proving United States citizen- ship ;-naturalized citizens of the Unit- ed 'States should be prepared to pre- sent their certificate of naturaliza- tion; and alien residents of the Unit- ed States should be prepared to pre- sent proofs of legal entry into the United States. Alien residents may remain out of the United States not longer than six months without los- ing their status as residents. Entry for Twenty-four Hours Automobiles may be entered at a 'Canadian boundary port of Customs for touring purposes for a period not exceeding 24 hours by the owner sur- rendéring his state-license card, which will-he handed to him on his return. Should he desire to leave at a port other than that at which he entered he 'must obtain a permit at the port of entry as described in the follow- ing section--"Rotary for sixty days." Automobiles may be entered for touring purposes for a period of 60 days by obtaining a permit from the the' a MISS BETTY ELLSWORTH Daughter of A. L. Ellsworth, one of the leading oil magnates of Canada, walking down one of the fairways of Lake Placid Club golf course, to the charm of which she is no slight addi- tion, andl collector df the Canadian Customs port of entry. The motorist fills in a form in triplicate with certain par- ticulars regarding his car," such as make, style, value, serial ..aumber, motor number, 'body number, extra equipment and license number. He is given two copies of this form which constitute his permit and which he presents to the collector of customs at the port of exist when leaving Canada. Should a tourist who has been granted a 60-day permit desire an extension not exceeding 30 days, he may apply therefor to any collector of customs, who, upon being satisfied as to the bona fides of the applicant as a tourist and that the car will be used by him only for purposes of health or pleasure, may cxtend the permit for a further period of 30 days. If the tourist intends to keep his car in Canada for a longer period than 90 days he must deposit, cither in the form of cash or bond, an amount equivalent to the duty and taxes ordinarily payable on the car. He may then keep his car in Can- ada, and use it for touring purposes only, for a period of six months in any one year. The bond may .be in the. form of: (a) The personal bond of two sure- ties acceptable to the collector of customs in a sum cquivalent to the duty and sales tax on the car as an- praised by the collector. With this form of bond a cash deposit of $25 is required, or (b) A bond of an incorporated guarantee company authorized to do business in Canada, and whose bonds are acceptable to the Dominion gov- ernment, in a sum equivalent to the duty and sales tax on the car as ap- praised by the collector of customs. (Note--Customs brokers at various ports of entry will be able to arrange for such bonds, charging therefor a fee of about $10. A higher fee is sometimes charged and the balance returned on caricelldtiofi "6f the hond.) On the réport outwards of the car GINGERALE Unegualledifor flavour-and zest Made by O'Keefe's Beverages, Limited, Toronto JAGE SEVEN: a. the bond, either (a) or (b), is can- celled and the cash deposit, if any, is refunded. : At the expiration of six months, no extension or renewal is permitted. Should an unforeseen delay occur, prolonging the time of stay in Can- ada beyond that mentioned in the permit, the department of National Revenue, Ottawa, should be com- municated with at once. The regulations regarding: the en- try of automobiles also apply to mo- torcycles and bigycles, ] Motor busses may be entered for the purpose of conveying tourist par- ties on the owner or operator of the bus furnishing a bond for a sum equivalent to the duty ordinarily pay- able on the bus. § Admission of T its Persons visiting Canada for a limit- ed period of time, for health or plea- sure, may bring with them free of duty or deposit, guns, rifles (except revolvers and pistols), fishing tackle, golf clubs, tennis racquets and cam- eras previously used by them and re- quired for their own use, upon report- ing same to the customs officer at the port of entry. . . Canoes, outboard motors, tents, camp equipment, phonographs, ra- dios, musical instruments, etc, for personal- use and not for gain or hire may be. entered upon reporting same to the custom officer at the port of entry and depositing with him a sum of money equivalent to the duty and taxes payable thereon. The mo- ney thus deposited will be refunded if the articles are identified and ex- ported outwards, either at the 'port of entry or another port, within six months from the time of entry. Iden- tification for refund may also be at- tested to before a customs officer, jus- tice of the peace or notary public at a place outside of Canada. he tourist is required to fill in a form 'in triplicate giving description and value of the articles in his out- fit. Two copies of this form are given to the tourist, and must be pre- sented 'to the customs officer at the port-of exit. When articles on which a deposit is not required are brought in by a motorist their description and value are noted on his automo- bile entry form and a separate form is not required. SCOTTISH HOME RULERS ACTIVE Hint Given By MacDonald Is Stimulating to "Movement Glasgow, August 1.--Scottish Home Rulers are not exactly sure what to think about the Labour Prime Minister's hint about self- government for Scotland. Mr. Ram- say MacDonald mentioned some- thing about appointing a commit- tee for the purpose of considering the Act passed by the Baldwin Gov- ernment for the amalgamation of Scottish local authorities; und said the new Labour Government proposed to take Education Au- thorities out of the scope of this Act and allow them to remain on thejr own. This committee, he ad- ded, would also think . over the question of Scottish self-govern- ment as a whole; and as fit is known that practically all the Scot- tish Labour members of Parlia- ment are in favour of Home Rule, this looked hopeful as a beginning of an official movement, The National Party of Scotland, which exists for the purpose of pushing the Home Rule movement, but did not get one of its candi- dates into Parliament at the Gen- eral Election, states that Mr. Ram- say 'MacDonald puts the questwn much farther ahead than it is in the official programme of the La- bour Party, which only favours 'a measure of devolution in maiters of local concern for Scotland, lre- land and Wales." But the execu- tive are afraid that he is merely "campaigning ahead," and anwuci- pating a demand that may be made upon him in the future. So they are not being misled by such hints as he has given. It is not an inquiry by a committee they 'want. "This might only be a meth- od of putting the whole matter on a shelf. What they want is an Act of Parliament setting up a govern- ment for Scotland, and they wm be pleased with nothing less. In Big Hurry They won't get that tomorrow or A new idea for a national flag for Canada, reproduced here, has been advanced by A. Spencer, Tor- onto. Mr. Spencer suggests a white OSHAWA, ONTARIO, THURSDAY, AUCUST'Y, 1929 field, on which nine maple leaves, one for each province, are joined together. In the right-hand cor- ner is a Union Jack. Mr. Spencer believes this flag has a dignified appearance, in keeping with Can- ada's pride of country. next week, and they can't expect any. government in London to rusn a most important constitutional change like that through the Impe- rial Parliament without a very thorough preliminary inqury. How- ever, it is just like the young-men- in-a-hurry of Scottish Nationalism to imagine that they should get what they want right off, for the asking. They will have rather, as Mr. Cunninghame Graham ad- vised them at the recent Bannock- burn celebrations, to remember Bruce and the spider, and try, 1r¥y, try again. At that gathering one of the principal = enthusiasts said it was time the vampire of London was taken away from the jugular vein of Scotland. The Prime Minister had told them that Scotland would soon re- ceive back its soul, but when they examined the proposals and pro- gram of the government,™ they found that even if everything sug- gested were done, Scotland wwould be left fettered hand and foot. It wold have no seat in the Imperi- al Conference. it would have no powdr to send a delegate to 'he League of Nations, it would have no place at the world's peace con- ferences, and so it would not have that national freedom which was enjoyed by the other units of jthe Empire. The new under-secretary for Scotland (a leading man in the La- bor Government) had told him that far more would be done for Vhe country by the government's schemes for decreasing unemploy- ment than by holding a pistol at the Prime Minister's head, and de- manding Home Rule, but they sof the National Party did not agree with this. So Mr. Ramsay Mac- Donald, if he is long in. office, won't find it an easy matter to keep the peace with the modern disciples of Wallace and Bruce. Bruce Collection Being men with their eyes on the future, the Home Rule enthusiasts cannot he expected to concern themselves much about relics of the past, even when these are rei- ics of Robert the Bruce; but they might interest themselves a little in the "valuable collection' which is to find a permanent habitation in Dumfermline Abbey. A certain Edinburgh professor who died last year had a lot of Bruce relics, which were described by the au-- thorities on the subject as the most interesting and most valuable of the kind, unequalled by any in the hands of a private collector in Scot- land. : They include a great toe of the skeleton of the Bruce, obtained when the bones were re-interred at Dunfermline in 1818 and now. pre- served carefully in" a glass bottle; a small bit of the original leaden shroud; a small portion of the lin- en cloth in which the body was wrapped, and which was called "cloth of gold," the remains of one of the iron nails used in the mak- ing of the original coffin, a frag- ment of one of the six iron rings or handles for lifting the stones protecting the first tomb of tne Bruce and also twelve bits of the monument erected long, long ago at Dumfermline and destroyed af- terwards (one bit showing part of the head and crown of the king.) It is now proposed that, as the trustees of the late profesosr, are willing to hand over the lot to the Kirk session of Dumfermline Ab- bey, they (the relics) should be en- closed in a special glass-fronted cabinet. immediately above the vault where the bones of the Bruce lie. So far, there is no opposition to this proposal. Evidently there is to be no keen competition for the not very cheerful relics, and Dum- fermline Abbey will be made wel- come to them all. Who Owns The Spey The question away up in Baden- sch. and Morayshire is--who owns the River Spey? The County Coun- cil of Moray have a scheme for pre- venting the flooding of the river at Garmouth, where serious dam- age is frequently done by the ris- ing of the waters; and they were promised £4,000 - by the Ministry of Transport as a contribution to the cost of the work. The London and North Eastern Railway Com- pany, whose main coast line cross- es the Spey near Garmouth, have approved the plans and promised £1,650 ds their share of the cost: but the Duke of Richmond and Gordon thinks otherwise. He is willing to agree to a large part of the scheme if the county Council will guarantee to pay compensa- tion for any damage that may be done to his salmon fishings on the river; he absolutely objects to a roposal for deflecting the current rom one bank to the other, and he decilnes to pay anything at all towards the cost. | His attitude simply means that the County Council and the railway company are helpless. - They can do nothing. The Duke is the land- lord of all the banks of the Spey in that countryside, and evidently thinks he owns also the waters-of the river. One member of the County Council said the Spey was not private property. It belonged to the people of Scotland and no in- dividual man had any right to make claims for water he did not put there and could not control, The thing was nothing short of a fthat, in law, he actually does wwu | 1 Kilda Duke, almost certainly, has law on | his side, and ft will likely be found | the Spey. : St. Kilda's Fate Another question is:--Should St. be abandoned? For years: back the number of. people on.the most lonely of British inhabited islands has been becoming fewer and fewer, and now there are only 88. One hundred and thirty years ago there were 77, and'in 1851 there were 110. . "There does not seem to be any hope of such improved conditions as will bring about an "increase over the present number. Rather, the prospects . are that they will continue to dwindle away, until ultimately there is not one left. That will be a tragic business, but it is inevitable unless something is done before the process takes ef- fect, So there are poposals that all the 38 should leave the island, with their few hundreds of sheep (all they have in the world) and settle down as a township by themselves somewhere on the mainland. They won't be able to live there by climbing the walls for seabirds' eggs, but they can grow better po- tatoes, and more of them, than they can in St. Kilda, and their numbers should increase: rather than decrease. But there is one very serious difficulty, The 38 like their own native island just as much as 'other people like the 'places where they were horn and brought up, and it won't be easy to persuade them to leave it. Even if they do, they will probably spend most of their time on the mainland trying to see it over the horizon edge of the western ocean, and wearying their hearts out in re- membrance of it.--Wattie. ~4ucandal.- So /it -may.. bey but. the F Permaiient | Waves + Latest American Waves, Do. not harm. the hair Jn aby. M respect. Leaves nice, soff, [i natural glossy waves, and |i do not need finger waving, Experienced operators. 18 Ontario Street Two doors off King St. Phone 2418W. too light. miracles A scientist discovers that men's clothing is too heavy and women's Is there no end to the of science?--Kitchener Record. price. Over 100,000 Canadian housewives shop daily at Dominion Stores and we feel there is no more careful group of buyers than these same housewives. Constantly watching for lowest prices, the housewife of today demands more than mere price--the quality of the product must not be sacrificed to We are proud of the patronage of this great group of buyers, placing the stamp of approval on the efforts of this Company to show the way to True Economy. AYLMER BRAESIDE BRAND CREAMERY The Finest Obtainable * Regular 2 tins 25¢ Pork «Beans = 10- TOY PAIL I -- Regular 21c Peanut Butter 1°7- A NOURISHING BREAKFAST FOOD Grapenuts Reg. 14-0z. Mason Jar Regular 25¢ EE -- FOR FRYING OR SHORTENING CRISCO GOOD QUALITY PARLOR McLAREN'S INVINCIBLE QUEEN OLIVES 19- 1-LB. TIN 2 20- CHRISTIE'S ASSORTED BISCUITS SEA KING HAND PEELED GRAPEFRUIT Tins 7p. | TOMATOES DOMINO FANCY QUALITY RELISH VICTORY SWEET LIFEBUOY 3-LB., TIN SCREEN-( RADIO 24 72 KRAFT VELVEETA CHEESE 4b. Pkt. 19¢ QUAKER PUFFED WHEAT Pkt. 14e DOMINO GOLDEN CORN No.2Tin 18e¢ P&G WHITE NAPTHA SOAP 10 Bats 39¢ CHRISTIE'S BISCUITS § tor 25¢ HEINZ PURE VINEGAR 16-ox. Bottle 1Qe¢ 23 Oe 3 Pkts. 23¢ : DOMINION STORES LIMITED "Canada's Largest Retail Grocers" ECZEMA CAUSED | MUCH PAIN H---------------- On Fingers. Lasted Ten . ; Years. Cuticura Healed. "When I. was two years old ecse- - ma broke out in a rash between my fingers and caused much pain. My fingers were swollen and inflamed. The itching and to scratch, which lost sleep on account of it. "Thetrouble lasted about ten years before we began using Cuticura Soap and Ointment. After one week's use * it looked better, and after using three cakes of Cuticura Soap and two boxes 'of Cuticura Ointment I was com. pletely healed." (Signed) Miss Eileen Cavanaugh, Enterprise, Ont., June 8, 1928. Rely on Cuticura Soap and Ointe ment to keep your skin clear. Soap Fe. Ointment 25 and Se. Be. Bold WFR N 0 wonder, everybody is saying: "The new Atwater Kent Screen-Grid Set is miles ahead!" Prove it in your own home today! The radio dealer around the corner has it. PIENIC caused me PACKAGES it worse. 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