PAGE NINE Dire werd present phon sh. hor: of Wa 'the 13th congress 5 den og in the 's address tin] address of the need for de pire trade was is buik up and onc) m look fof its continued Aide His hness spoke of the ad- vantage of congresses, such as the present, in permitting exchanges of viewpoints, Everybody he rema: knew how 'the written word kill oth," how, in correspon the warmth of human } lacking, relations might easily be- come strained, Over a round-table views could be exchanged much better and an agreement reached, The Prince' emphasised the im- portance of communications in shortening the distances within the Pmpire, He himself had experienc- od the manner in which flying shor- tened distance and he ho todon great deal more flying. He warmly congratulated Amy Johnson on her 'plucky single-handed" attempt to shorten the time between E nd and Australie and her remarkable achieyement, WORRIED WIVES ARE GIVEN ADVICE London Woman Solves Pro- blems for Poor Folk of Metropolis London. ~Problems that might have made Solomon 'think twice are brought every week to & young, woman with shingled auburn hair, who sits in a room in & London suburb dispensing comfort to wor ried men and women, She 1s a woman barrister, who is known as "the poor man's lawyer" and her work is done under the auspices of a local women's asso- ciation, roms Banished More than 300 people have al ready brought their troubles to this shingled Solomon---and most of them have had their worries bane ished, "It is Intemsely interesting work," said this young lawyer, "and I.belleve that we have hélped many people out of difficulties. There are three main types of tases---rent, matrimonial and ac- sidents, "The matrimonial cases are the mddest, Time and again I have had worried wives and worried hus. bands coming to me to see If I sould help them to bring happiness to their homes once more, I try, it possible, to preveut the cases §o- 'into 'court, in and women who have at last about it, '1 have known men who have worried about it as long as 12 Iasi Selote t! have at last Stu od to break thelr 'marries e, "1:48 the children that keep them back, and slways they want to know what will happen to them, Then husbands who are going te be divorced will ask me if arrange ments gould be them to seo thelr ¢ ily. "Sometimes, alas, we cannot help, and we have to turn our clients away disappointed. It is often 80 in the case of people who bave signed documents without bothering to read them. An old woman told me she was in danger of Soeing bor lite's savings of about 4 "She had been paying the money in order to become possessor of her house, but she had fallen on bad days snd could not continue. the payment. 1 Times "Now she was told that she could not recover amy of her money. When I saw the agreement that she had signed, I realized that her case was hopeless, "These are, 1 suppose, problems that do not matter in the outside world, but to these pecple they moan the difference between happle ness and tragedy, We do not charge anything for the work we are do- ing is In a way, like thet of the hospitals, They heal broken bod- fes--we try to remove worries and anxieties." SWINDLING WAITER POSED AS COUNT Amazing Frauds on Women Bring Jail Sentence to Man London, ~The remarkable career of a good-looking young man with a rich bass voice who has swindled middle-aged women of thousands of pounds was told to Mr, Bingley, the: Marylebone Magistrate, on Sat- urday, Henry Irving Bustis, otherwise Henry Anderson Conroy Irving ustace, aged 23, of Staffordshire House, alton-on-Thames, was charged with ® is Simon Sherriff, aged 45, a housekeeper, of Bridge Bungalow, Shepperton, Mid. dlesex, with obtaining £47 by fraud. It was stated that Hustis went to an hotel in Cleveland-Gardens, Bayswater W, with Miss Sherriff, whom he presented as his aunt, They stayed for three weeks, and Hustis talked of a wealthy great Uncle at Staines. His cheque for £30 was dishonored and he was ar- rested. The second charge related to the hiring of a motor car and for which he paid with a bogus cheque. i Bank Book Detective Bergeant Duncan said that Eustis had a cleverly faked pass-book showing that he had a oredit balance of £06,442, Mr. Lawrence Vine, defendin the woman sald that, experienc though she was, she was comple hy ne racing into ¢ game way. Tho water was rough, but the boys rll stayed who could charm cherry. tree,' Miss Sherriff, giving evidence, shid she met Hustiy when she was the manageress of an hotel, Ho told her stories of an 'enormous amount of money coming to him from Ireland and sald he wanted her as his housekeeper, Hho wens with him to Bournemouth and paid all the expenses, She regarded him as a man of little Immediate means but great expectatious, Mr, Bingley said Ther position was an amazing one, He would give 'her the benefit of the doubt and discharge her, Detective-Sergeant Tuncan wuld Bustis was born in a fishing villa in Cornwall, After being employed as A gardener's hoy he left home and went Into lodgings with a we- man from whom he stole Jewelry valued at £326, Ho was bound over for this of fenco and became. un walter at sen side resorts in Devonshire, In 1045 he had & serious motor accident and was treated at the Sidmouth Hospital, whese he met three ben evolent elderly women well known in Devonshire for thelr charitable work, His amazing plausibility od thelr sympathy and ono of them took him to her house and treated him as one of the family, In 12 months he had obtained £10,000, At Teignmouth he met another wo man and got £1,600 from her. Cornish Castle Then he bought a motor business at Walton-on-Thames and ran a luxury ear with a chauffeur and n valet, In November, 1027, stayed at a Kensington Hotel, whats fn pear off a reprefdnted himself as "'Rustace Count of Boulogne" with an an clent castle in Cornwall, He mgde such an impression on her that with three weeks she had parted with £19,500, Sergeant sald that ly 'deceived by "this young ra Duncan Outstanding in Style Quality | Preferred in Canadian a and Newcomers to the local outboard stepped pleturo at the first races | light seas, No, 1, Is Rgh Cartér of over the Sunnyside marino speed. elleits | he | he met another woman to whom he | WINNING DRIVERS AT THE though the boats did a lot of fancy leaping and pironetting over, the Owsliuwa, & now driver locally who won a first in class YB" with right side up | "Oshawan Blue Streak," and a sec tn lca ss ie dl add " - sa a ------------ FIRST BEA FLEA RACES ond and third in class "D" and the froe-for-pll with "Canada Flyer." No. 2 is John R, Arvdiel, the U.C.0, student who came down in front | in the free-for-all and class "D" with "Miss Windsor 111," while No [Judgmont, was glven against Eustis [tor £8,000 in the High Court, snd [ in hig dilemma he turned to a Don | caster woman living In London, loading her to belleve that he was in man of high birth, Pretending that he had £8,000 in the bank, but only one cheque, he induced her to | oxchange four signed cheques for {his, One ho filled in for £6,000 [ and gave to a firm of solicitors to | natisly the High Court judgment {and to save his Imprisonment and [it another for £844 he bought a motor oar, | For this fraud he was sentenced {nt the Old Bailey in July 1928 to | 22 months in the second division. | Ho wan released from prison eavly ih Jahuary, and then met Miss | Sherriff, | Mr, Bingley sald that Kustis | had swindled these wretched wo- [mon wight and left and ought to be sont to penal servitude for he was 'nn danger to the community, Another court had tried the effect of a Jong term in the second divi plon, and he would try a sentence of nine months' hard labor to see if it would bring Eustis to his sonses CANADIAN PRISONS HOLD 2,769 PEOPLE Ottawa, May 27=-Thore wore 2,700 persons incarcerated in Can- ndlan penitentiaries during the your 1929, according to an answer to. question given in the House of Commons, Of that number 2,680 wore white, 60 colored, 42 Indian, 7 halfbreed and 71 mongolian, | Two farmers from Alberta were the first to make outry in the com. petitive. classes of the world's grain show being hold at Regina in {2832 The farmers were Wm, | Hudson, of Kathryn, and Andrew | Anderson, of Alsask, | Hgatlon of the project "The Family First, Outsiders Next," is His Slogan Goorge Hambleton, Canadian | Pross Stall Correspondent) London, May '27..-'"Tho family first, outsiders next," With these words as nu slogan Lord Melchett, In addressing the delegates to the congress of the Empire Chambers of Commerce at a Mansion House lunch, made an earnest plea for the economic unity of the Empire He was not concerned, Lord Mel. chett sald, so much with methods of tariffs, as with principles, The first thing necessary was the wholes hearted acceptance of the principle of economic unit Methods could come next, "Britain," urged the great in dustrialist, "In not a European na- tion, but 1s an Empire power. We have now learned that oceans do not divide In many they united." Lord Melchett did not belleve the several parts of the Empire were co-operating to the best advantage, The Dominions were faced by the grave problem of surplus agricul tural products yet Great Britain was to be found buying her food- stuffs from countries. outside the Empire. The criterion of cheap ness should not be tho final test | and also, what wag cheap for the moment was often tho most ex- ponsive 'afticle in the long run, "The principle of Empire econos mic unity," continued Lord Melch- ott, "has had a grout stimulus in the great Canadian budget We | in the Old Country appreciate that budget and appreciate it In a way which 1 hope they understand in the Dominion!" SOCKEYE SALMON TREATY TABLED Provides for Regulation of | Fisheries in British Columbia Ottawa, May 27.-Providing for Joint control and oporation of the Sockeye salmon fisheries along the coast of British Columbia, the state of Washington and in the Fraser river and Its tributaries by Canada and the United States, the new Sockeye Salmon Treaty was tabled in the House of Commons by Pre. mier W, L. Mackonzio King, In order to promote the object of the treaty, the commission is given authority to make regulations Ume iting the taking of Sockeye salmon in any of the walters covered by the treaty. It will also have the power to prescirbe the size of the moshes in all fishing gear operated in these waters, In 50 far as the troaty res lates to the high seas, tho regula. tions will only be binding on the nations of Canada and the United States and will not apply to fish. ermen from other countries, BRITISH AIR SQUAD FASTEST IN WORLD London, ~- British authorities olaimed recently that ro-equipmont of squadron 338 of the Royal Alr Force had made the Eastehurch detachment of fighting planes the fastest hombing squadron in the world. Tho new planes are twos seaters, driven by 650 horse-power engines. and scheduled to fly 190 miles an hour with full armament of machine guns and bombs at 10, 000 feet altitude. NEW: RAILWAY LINE COMING IN RUSSIA Moscow.~-Tho council of Lalor and Detenco has leted planus for a new railwa; but and now lines costing $,000,000,000 rubles, The new lines will be 26,000 kilo meters long. Lee The. fixat line will be a: second track from Omek on the Irtish rive or, hi» Cheliabinsk, Samara, Perm rdinetaoinhrdluhrdand-yt8oG Technion fnvess (By ways and other cities: 8 Is Charley Griffiths, another now driver in N.X.0. events who was second in the free-foreall and thivd in class "DD, Ho drove Gor don Houding's "Miss Cadillac.' Embezzlement Only Discov- ered After. Thief Had MELCHETT PLEADS [GLASGOW TELLER FOR EMPIRE UNITY GETS FOUR YEARS Secured Promotion ---- BR -- Edinburgh ® igwindling anon large scale is deplorably common today and .tends to updermine the stability of the nation," sald Lord |! Alness. at Edinburgh In passing sentence of four yoars' penal ser- vitude on James Ritchle, aged 2 a bank clerk, It was stated that while a clerk In an Glasgow branch of the North of Scotland Bank he embezzled $215,000 between December 40, 1028 and last November, He forg- ed cheques and presented them to! the bank officials to cover the|! 2 3 shortage wheat trade, and appears to have Mr, Burnett, defending, sald that | every penny Ritchie had embezzled |! had gone into the pockets of the bookmakers, The fraud was not |! discovered until he had been pro-|! moted to further responsibility in |r another bank and had left to take || up his appointment. Lord Alness sald he was satisfieqa | 1 that there was a laxity of super vision in the bank, t | & GLASGOW "DRUNK" |i CARRIED FORTUNE |) Glasgow A man who was tak-|! en into custody by the marine po- lee In Glasgow for being drunk failed to appear in court when his caso wad called and ball, which had been fixed at $6, was forfeited surprising discovery which was all the more astonishing from the fact that the man was rather "poorly |e dressed, was made by the police |} shortly after they arrested him, In his possession he had $136 In cash and documents and bonds to the villue of approximately $15,000, most omic life," states 8. H, Logan, gen- eral leased yesterday, war was so rapid us to place hor which enjoys a highly diversified economic broad field of opportumity for the application of agrieyitural and in- dustrial science, which wore laid for tho extension of her worth of business will be done this yoar by the Prince Edward Island A | potato growers' association, been estimated, Is the co-operative marketing cons CANADA IS BEST PLACE T0 RESIDE Lord Willingdon Sees Bright Future Ahead for Dominion | Ottawa, May 20-0f all countries in the world, Canada is the best place to Mve in at the present time, nor-General, speaking at the lun- cheon of the Ottawa Horse Parade and Show Association, is Ex cellency used the occasion to refer to the approaching end of hls ten- ure as Governor-General and paid a tribute to the people of Canada for the great kindness and spirit of generous friendship in which he and Lady Willingdon had been al- ways received, Lord Willingdon said he "had been an agriculturist in the old days, "On occasions like this I sometimes think to myself: "You would haye been a much happier man if you had not undertaken all the other jobs you have had in the past 256 years'." No country had a brighter future than Canads, His Excellency said, and in a very few years the Dominion would go for- ward to Increased prosperity, In his recent visits he had been struck by the evidences of more satisfac- tory farming conditions than he had witnessed since coming to Can. adn, declared Lord Willingdon, Gover |: CANADA IS LEADER IN RATE OF GROWTH | SAYS BANK MANAGER "In a period of Intense econom- le netivity in whieh the world pro- duction reached a record level, the rate cf increase in Canadian pro- Auction exceeded that of the world by a wide margin 1m many of the important branches of econ: manager of the Canadian Jank of Commerce, in a review re. since the "Canada's advances mong that small group of nations lite, and which has Thus Canada os- firmly as the international ablished cading herself factor In made the greatest rolative advance n mechnical farming, "Hor deposits of asbestos and ilckel continued to be the world's argeet sources of supply of these are minerals and, in regard to the atter, new uses weve developed made it fucreasingly im yortant, She mined new ore bod- os which placed hor In third pbsi- fon in world production of gold nd rllver, fourth in copper and oad, and sixth In 'sine, and plans notallurigeal industry whieh would 'place it among the leaders | n its class." Two and one-half million dollars it has This organization ern for the growers of the famous LEI. seed potatoes, .known In many parts of the American conti- nent, organization ness handled totalled $14,000. During the first year of the the amount of busi- | YOUNG WIFE After Taking Lydia E Pinkham's Vegetable Compound ---- so rl 5 Paks V 1 i } Q e s a g i LE it 3 § i ~ il it 3 i It whol feztly wel Ee a sweet, little baby boy." =~Ma=s, J. B, Srarxan, Bancroft, _ ADVISES SPINACH FOR YOUNG PIGS Ottawa, May 27.--Young pigs need their iron and should be fed spinach, Anemia in suckling pigs has become a serious menace where winter litters are being ralged, Dr. I. W. SchofieJd, of the Ontario Vet orinary College, Toronto, told the | delegates to the Thirteenth Annual | Canadian Chemical Convention in | session here, In the summer months, he said, young pigs do not develop the acute form of anemia because they have accoss to green food, but in the winter the mortality rate is high, He recommended the administra- tion of organic iron in the form of forric sulphate on ferrie chlovide, to be supplemented by spinach. COKE IS IMPORTANT COAL SUBSTITUTE Ottawa, May 21)- Coke iy rap- idly assuming the 'uiost important position of all alternatives to cont for domestic heating, Donald G. Munroe, of Montreal, declared be- fore the Thirteenth Annual Can~ adian Chemical Convention meeting here, The Irregular quality and quans tity of anthracite coal available In Eastern Canada had made it nedes- sary, Mr, Munroe said, to turn fo substitutes. Besides being ome bf the most consistent sources of fuel supply, the by-product coking-oven, industry produced gas tar ammonia and light olls as raw materials for other enterprises. Recent develop- ments in the scientific utilization of coal, by turning it into coke, had pointed to a possblity of a unified industry which would benefit both the manufacturing and domestic consumer and materially improve conditions in the eastern fuel area. "IOOSE TAKE STROLL IN OPEN IN QUEBEC Quebec, A pair of moose strol- lod out of the forest near Lorette, nine miles from here and caused considerable excitement among nutoists and residents of the dis- trict, The moose remained in plain view for some time, and then re- {raced their steps into the fofest, without anyone taking a shot at them, EE AIL -- EB a a To make it more digestible os this delicious food is Shot from Guns How 125 million explosions in every grain makes Puffed Wheat and Puffed Rice as nourishing as hot cooked ASTE these deliciou cereals sly flavory Puffed Grains! .. . They are the invention of Pro- fessor Anderson. He seals grains of wheat and rice in huge bronze guns, Revolves the guns in a fiery furnace, When the guns are fired, 125 million explosions occur in each grain, . This opens. every tiny food cell. It makes Puffed Grains as completely digestible as though they had been cooked for hours, Hence they become virtually as. nourishing as hot cooked cereals. And how crisp . . . crunchy . . . delectably " good to eat Puffed Whedt and Puffed Rice are. They melt in your mouth. They give just the splendid grain nourishment everyone needs, Serve them for breakfast, luncheon and supper. Toast them with butter to cious kind of po; Wheat and Company. Rice. will = be started at once. QUAKER PUFFED WHEAT AND PUFFED \ make 8 new deli + Your grocer has Puffed The Quaker Oats RICE "ate 2 ANN: RQ Ea 2