Canada, The Empite and The World at Large 5 CANADA THE EMPIRE x Moral For Motorists A Fair Deal for the Farmer . "There is a bit of a moral for all| With the proper organization of and ls "motorists in the story of the Texan |security for the agricultural producers "who wanted to inspect the scene of a | there is room for a million or more of Pal in | trafic accident the other day. |the urban unemployed in the fields Acar had gone off the road on a which they or their near felatives but * mountain highway, killing its driver, | recently quitted. But proper orgami- #0, this Texan drove out to see, and | zation and effective security are vital, got so interested looking at things |and both these will be fruitless unless #Ahat he lost control of his own ma- | the producer is assured of a fair deal chine--and it, too, went off the road | --London Daily Telegraph. and down into a ravine, killing the driver. The moral, of course, is self- Retrenchment in the Colonies evident; never get so interested in the| Whatever hardships the future holds sights around you that you forget to| in store for officers in Malaya they will watch where you are driving. But] follow on the heels of similar sacrifices that is a fault fatally easy for a motor-| which have been borne by officers fn Sool ! eid pose authorities here nave: ev! let to lapse into. All of us have been | other administrations of the Colonial 5 ; ' expectation that the volume of an guilty of it at one time or another. | service for some time past. Moreover, ; A ian sales to Great Usually we come through it all right. | this Colony is one of those where sn ¥ Rs present high level antl But we might as well remember that | income tax does not operate and, so It can be a horribly costly little error. | far as we are permitted to know offi-| ---- cial intentions, is not contemplated. Other People's Opinions The fact may help Government offi- It is not always easy to decide how | cials here to face future £ ancial sac- ¢ 3 ] much attention we should pay to|rifices with rather greater equanimity . Russia, of Sours, is sellin ils or other peoples opinions. It is a diffi-| than might otherwise be tho case. It's The mew air giant Macon is beginning to take shape and in the viele will be ready to accom no wheat to Britain cf any other coun. cult course to steer, sometimes, be-|a hard life, but it might so easily be pany her sister ship the Akron. Fins are being put in place now. try this Fall. i mars, tween a slavish bowing to the opinions | harder.--Singapore Free Press. but most auth es are of opinion | Jess arias th ve val the end of the year. After that they fear that the currency situation, the disparity between the pound and the dollar, may work to Canada's disad- vantage. ' Meihs! wangt are practically out of the export mar- - hit des, nx 1 io Pegvince, Grith Fyrd Camps has come into ex-| yo PE pov having greatly re- ination of rightful indifference on the | sane international agreements to re the Canadian Life Insurance Officers' upon © ingenious plan ol istence in response to the pop de- dod Choir prelates now ye hand and sane sensitiveness on the | lieve the burden and the increase of Association woted to expend $75,000 in selling the city wall in tenfoot ular { : = . - that the granaries of the Soviet step-| ART FOR SHOP WINDOWS. Ee lai us aud u os ud a. World Problems Insurance Officers to Ancient Chinese Wall Young Men of Britain pes hold scarcely enough grain to sup-| Window dressing has become an aii os follow; $75,000 in i Offered for Sale Have All-Year Camps {ply the food-rationed Russians them-| especially live issue with many shops Ro 1h wholesome middle course to ;| The return of prosperity to Britain, selves. The Danubian countries, 00, |in following the opening @ not a mid@le-of-the-road policy which|and all other countries, depends first| Toromto--For the third comsceutive Shanghai. --The Mayor of the City London.--An organization known as . lin Copenhagen LB Error ro @ ; as no convictions, but a fearless com: | and foremost on the achievement of d. A chain of permanent camp rs / . a 40 4 lengths and using the proceeds to|™2™ Canada Unchallenged : TT 0oMe Sloe Ng 1m the Hu fortheon : i his oe Ene erect modern fortifications to pro- Somnuiles > being Smead in hich Thus Canada at the moment stands | the practical and artistic side of the - - : A Matter of Opinion have thrown the currencies of half the tisements, expounding the principles]. ibe city from the attacks of] Lo C4 Loo life, even if precluded |Pnchallenged in the British matket, be- | work. i is felt hat Danish sions 3 If you see a woman wearing some-| world into the melting pot, and to cut! of fife imgmrames as protection for de-| Cl bubists or bandits. from earning a living. The project| cause tiie United States, the only other | owners have mu earn - from thing nowadays, and the last thing on | the bonds which strangle international | pendenis and for old age income, will Several years ago the city walls pos angle was initiated by the Order of Wood-| Competitor of size at this season, has| America in the art'of displaying their earth. it 'looks like is a woman's hat, | trade.--~Economist (London). 73 Eneli and F , | began to disintegrate when bricks ' . tage. has appear im were removed to prcvide culverts for craft Chivalry, a social and education- | Dot yet got itsprices down to an ex Sods 1 Jost ain the an) at you cam bet your life it is a womans : : newspapers ard 18 Englisch amd oo 000 1oads Then, in 1929 came | 8] Organization, which has had sixteen port basis. As British stocks, accord- vos Toghpigeron Bal Lich Psion hat. --Ottawa Journal. : Quality and Quanity French farm publications from ooast| wo attacks by Communists and the| Years' experience of year-round camp- Ee date 5 ebb, 1t 15 ¢ ton pho in the indow at once, instead of --a The Americanization of industry in to comst im Canada. battleme of ing. * i Newspaper in Every Home Europe has clearly not been a sweeess.| In 1921, im the face of the financial barfliuesty pe Satly Sopalres. It is more than an unemployment here that Britain will be buying at the | arranging a more" artistic and less vi Ht 1 noite: ig i te of 20 million bushels a month dur-| crowded display. Attention is alsa The extent to which newspapers are | High tariff protection, rati:nalization, | situation, the association's members scheme, for it aims at filling needs | : y : read In. Canada Las been illustrated | old-established 'societies of highly | voted fo more tham double its adves.| > 187or of tearing down the walll'" would be urgent if there were |108 November and December. Canada |being paid to the construction of at« f: hops. T : afresh in figures announced at the|and mass-production are of no use to, tising outlay feeling thet the meces- bo Take yoots = hoya. lo Mayor r.o unemployment--(1) for the regain- Should si} the bulk of this wheat, it ixavtive Paes te place Jorignabie ; nineteenth annual meeting of the As-| skilled people. They bore remarkable sity of acquiring life imsurazce and to tenfoot length, each selling for|iF€ by young men of that personal j= ar J \ Bo thar oS ol or oie nd of ; sociation of Canadian Advertisers, It|results in the United States because o. | retaining existing policies should be a little more than $100. Each buyer | €Xberience of primitive adventure| .~a0UATY, however, 1s normally the : i # : 3 3 § hi i was aunouriced that two and a quarter | its vast internal market, its undevelop-| stressed during periods of reduced in-| responsible for tearing down his| Which was lost in the migration from Bogth a which he Agente kd BE i th the million copies of newspapers are sold | ed resources, its continuous supply of | come. The following year it repeated portion of the wall and he may re.| country to town; (2) for the con-|Australia beg Pping oui the! ' : every day in Canada. "This means," | cheap immigrant labour, its self-suf-| its decision, voting $75,000 again. This| sain the bricks as building materia: ] structive use of readiness to face dan-| TOPS: In these countries, harvesting | pupils attend ten-week ao. Les : It was explained, "that every access-| ficiency in raw materials. Even in the year it voted to maintain the-standard . & ger and difficulty in serving their is just starting now. It is when these| sons in the arrangemen q! : ible family in (he Dominion is receiy-| United States the limit of the benefits| set two years agn for he construction of his shop. | BU BN and (8) for education in the | tWO Ereat producers, both of which for various purposes, table decors § i ily oh to be obtai ote Half of the wall has been thus dis- : : 1 | have currencies depreciated as low or| tions, and exhibition arrangements Ing its daily paper. 0 be obtained from rationalization and| For 12 years the association has posed of at a total return of about |Purposful use of the leisuré which : This is an impressive 3 mass-productio to have been idening i i ura of oy i b lower than the pound sterling, that|are included in the course. ills is an imbressive showing, and pro SSeS a i been widening its active sphere until] 259000 This money is being expend. | humanity has secured by the elabora- Canadian wheat exporters may feel|.. ART YIELDS TO UTILITY. : Indicates that even in these present |reached, and indeed overpassed. There in the past two years it has attained of the build: of fift two- | tion of machines. = very triing vedrs people are loath to | Never were any benefits for Europe in| a record,. it is stated, unequalled on on Hae ng sto 0: Members of Grith Fyrd Camps set | the pinch of their relatively high-| Having two strings to its bow, thi ; wh up thelr dalle pe yi) On this con- | turning from craftsmanship to mass-| the North American continent in storey towers commanding all of the about. the task 'of oy b pg So priced dollar, grain men say. Royal Porcelain Factory of Copen : Br a at taper: per 1s ducti ive imstituis tiny [roads entering Melhsien. Ten of i ng: by. As expressed in terms of dollars,|hagen has kept its tall chimneys 3 tindnt at least the daily newspaper is | production; and to craftsmanship Eur-| operative institutional advertising. these forts already - b .| kand experience how to control them- ] p the most widely read of all publica-| ope should return--Prof, R. B. Mowat. a os ave -- ¥y re selves and each other, or, in other|!D® Price of Canadian heat would|smoking through: the economic So 3 oh Lil a inte ; ar Lon-| . pleted, lowers being of rejntore- ee cael have to come down in order to meet| pression. The factcry found itse ; : : Br am Ingishensivie yar of ja he Contemporary Review { Finds Monoxide Gas : ed comerete. yooyds, how 10 live Ju eoumpiities and this Australian-Argentine competition.| with a large stock of its beautifu' 3 I hia Leader-Post." Ne ey Can Act in a Minute] Meibsien is an important center for X= n on ¥° | Ths wheat preference accor e® by the | porcelain on hand, but it was not toe Er TE ib AMERICAN Albany --Numerous deaths vecemt jibe distribution of goods to the in- ae frst camp has been constructed | Cnada-United Kingdom trade agree: | proud to take a temporary step dows : Come Again! Ve Loaduc amdlda | Jy from carbon momexide gas poison- terior of Kwangtung Province. Geo te Samp of the Avon at Gods-| ment applies equally to Australia, 80 |and start manufacturing sanitary fit : Betis SL his pan | ing, have Jed B. BR. Richands, direc- hill near Fordingbridge, on the north. | iat Canada would find no protection | tings- and a popular line in inexpen- : A palifornia newspaper says: "Cana-| The League of Nations is in a rather| tor of State Public Health Education, | New State Pictured 3 itn Sips oF Re ont, there. Moreover it is probable that, | sive crockery. Some 500 employees 3 dian ports. are frozen fora good por-| tight place. It can by no means afford to isswe a warming to the public. of Canada's Future Josten or th in "| currency values notwithstanding, the | are sow busy producing "iro1" pom : 3 4 lithe winter and wheat cannot) to order the Japanese to withdraw| Tne State Labor Department fis dis- A bright piet £- Cat. em ped ini Argentine wheat would be regarded in | celain articles, which are remarkably 5 ive. these ports," The more we see | their control from Manchuria, for the tributing & pamphlet in Tororto.--. picture of : A England as setting a world price low-| strong and in consequence are popula: b of a lack of general world information | J 1d I ada in the future was painted by Reg- S 's N Shrinks ne {a lack of general w juformation | Japanese would simply refuse and the| structions for aveiding the gas that Pi y pain s Navy : . er than Canada's price and conse-| with ocean liners and canteens. There on the part of the United States people | League would have no means of et comes mot enly from automobiles but | ivald H. Dean for the St. Lambert Madrid--Spain, although a Med! a : uently under the terms of the trade j brisk demand for unbreak: the more respect we have fcr our own | forcing its order. No nation or group from indoor gas heaters and similar | Women's Club at its recent meeting quent y is also a cemand eu : 2 . terranean and Atlantic power whose |agreement Canada would not qualify | able stone for decorative building. ational system. --Halifax Herald: |of nations is ready to go t» war with | prmers. bere. Mr. Dean visualize & DEW | strategic position is well known, Is| for the preference. The factory has no intention of ceas- { Lk ze Japan over Manchuria at this time:| «Just to ses how it works, 1 tried | World where the "God standard" not| gemongtrating its desire for peace 0 ing to' manufacture its famous Copen- Twice-Written Works No nation is willing to break off diplo-| un experiment," he said. Leaving) the gold standard would prevail, and | yo in theory and in fact by allow- Lage . porcelain, but is waiting for 'he death of the Detroit author, | matic relations with Japan, Even the| my. som to watel cuiside our gar] the teachings of the Great Master of ing her navy to dwindle in import- Libraries for the Congo better times. W iti Leviuzton Comfort, recalls thefact | aggrieved Chinese have not done 50.--| yee, waiting for a signal from me, 1| nineteen hundred years ago would find | tance until it already is inferior to FRUIT SALES BY AUCTION. tat hie had to write his most success. | Philadelphia Ledger. closed the garage doors and started | definite place, Poblems would bey Argentine fleet, Brussels. There {3 3. movement.onl pL) following Holland's ex- ful book, "Routledge Rides Alone," -- pe the motor of my car. This, mind | faced from a different angle than that| mye navy, as things now stand, is | [00 10 Provide the larger citiesiin the| "HVS selling fruit and vegetables twice." He labored at it ior months | French Plow Horse Leads you, garage. of ten years ago; a greater individual | sageq by only two dreadnoughts of | CONEC With libraries. The project was walle his family almost starved, and was h 3 s ; . . "In just a minute I felt a sort of | responsibility would be apparent. wien on the way to the publisLers, he To Interesting Discovery metallic taste in my mouth. Them| The speaker pointed to the great st the manuscripts and it was never | Chalons-Sur-Marne, France.--A neo- 1 le had no duplicate copy, and { lithic tribal tomb has just been dis-| he door just as my som, realizing stitutions. He noted that banking in- have. a Fruit Hall near the railwa i physically exhansted, he set | covered at Villeneuve Saint-Vistres,| what had happened, threw it open" | stitutions had stood the test of the population with books. of reference of station fitted with cold and -- th and wrote the hook over| where the soil caved in under the ren. critical times. Poles Not Artisti Sirsumecssity iu 8 volony ati] With. re. storage rooms, and packing machines, Other 'authors have performed | hoofs of a plow horse, leaving a hole 's Psy 3 em pe oles INO! rhistic cent works on Central African coloni- AL. motion ck will be. instal greater feats." Tiomas Carlyle,|about a foot wide, The farmer went B.S iri deor's Alle the France Builds Big Locomotive Paris.--The French do not consider | zation and research work. Lied, : which will enable buyers tv record whose "french Revolution" is one of | on unheeding, but some passing hunt- i 1h 2 Rouen. Frans telephone poles things of beauty.| The colonial reference library. and the moet stupendous velumes ever | ers looked in the hole and saw human of children are psychic The state railroad 2 Within ast month, because of a| museum in Brussels will probably their bids by pressing electric buttons, penned, Involving the assembling of an. skeletons. | physical," states a promiment chil-|shops here are putting the finishing dectee He » by the Pe er serve as a model for thesc Congo the figures appearing onthe clock, : , ng the ! g tons od Yat | dren's specialist. touches on a locomotive represant- ment, 249 telephone poles have been | libraries. As always in Belgium, pic-|All fruit will be standsrdized, se mmense amount of kistorical data, al- . Roland, a eneuve archaeolo- He adds that be can determine whe-|ed to be the most powerful in the removed $i the vicinity 'of n tures and diagrams serve better than | that, as in the case of graded milk and 30 wrote it twice. Ile lodned the first | gist, . informed of the discovery, ther he ean be of assistance to the | world. it develops 2800 horse bik rom 2 icinity SF Xivious books. More value is attached, for in.| 688S, even the cottaze grower will ; €Opy 10 a frie fy avd it transpired brougilt to Het a burial Jans sloping | +14 by the behavior of the mother power, makes seventy-five miles an histor} en ruins #nd pictur- stance, to specimens. of cotton or cop-|h8ve an opportunity of" competing wpa later shat Tala Yad seer Jifted diy Fors nl Cc = oa a when he into the sick room. hour and has an automatic stoker. pe. per from the Congo, than to works on with the market gardener, 3 ¢ 8 > ; " hamber [ es een : iY realizing what il was, had used the|found in which were several skeletons | = = | minerals in general, paces every morning to light the fives | on the ground resting against the sides | Santa Claus Down South Eminently practical, the Belgian is| Notable Large Monoplane of the house. Carlyle wrote it all over | heads of men, women or children. Six To Dot a reader of newspapers or books. Ordered bythe Prince again. "Lawrence of Arabia" is an-|of the room. There were twenty-eight He prefers practical to theoretical in| myo prince of Wales has been well other wha had the same experience. | flint-headed arrows, three flint knives, | struction, but the Colonial Govern-|y wo, io on anthustastic private air He wrote his famous book on the Arab | three sandstont kuives and an axe} ment is preparing 3 supply the need, plane owner for the past four years. campaign, numbering 200,000 words, | holder were also found. where practical facilities do not exist, by auction. At Ddense, Aarhus and lanned long ago, but in many cases > x : or not hon put into eit Bad Esburg, auction halls are already times are reminding those in authority | Peing used 2p the Salo of Rome of the necessity of providing the white | TOW products. peniagen. 13 15,700 tons, and three cruisers, two of them of 7,975 tons and one of 4, 725, The other craft are small de- stroyers, submarines, and gunboats. ep en Hitherto he has flown light machines. and one diy a thief stole the bag con- * -------- and where they already exist, wants | yg nas row ordered for his own use a ; taining the complete manuscript at #| Mexican Gold Supply logy plement them by Book kNow- |g win engined monoplane which wil * railway station. So Lawrence re-wrote C 1 Chiefly iin cee. 2 be one of the lastest air line craft / the whole opus. --St, Thomas Times- ad ----e s of comparable size yet built any Journal. U. S. and Britain) 1,630,890 Peiping Population | where in the world. It is notable ---- Mexico City.--Gold production fn "7 la Largest In History of Gity | Among British' aircraft because it in Carbon Monoxide Dangers 1932 totaled 7,530 kilograms, of which A season of danger to motor car | Mexico during the first five months of owners is en, that wherein garage|only ninety-six kilograms were com- doors and windows are closed against | sumed in this country, the rest being the cold afid there is temptation to|exported. During the same period, start the motor under such restricted | Mexico produced 910,899 kilograms of ventilation. Peculiarly there are many | silver, of which only 199,079 kilograms "motorists wlio know nothing of car |Were consumed in Mexico, the rest be- bor-monoxide gas, and would be as-|ing exported. Jounded 40 Journ that the - exhaust( The SEures also reveal that United 'machine, from the motor may contain one of|States and Great Britain are the prin- churla 200. stall; in the . same he most deadly and quickacting gases | cipal consamers of gold. Silver went 5 ta : nl. ow ow at. | Similar planes operate the wn, -- Welland: Port Colborne Tri | In largest quantities to thess two coun- : i tained largest size In ® pet. une. tries and to India, China, France and 5 y Germany. ; i Australia Making Headway AS peg RJ is epring time in Austaralia now, d the winter has been a sharp one. the crops. promise to be bountiful, 1t 1s anticipated that the wool clip| , Los I be larger than for gome | ha¥ Peiping, China.--Peiping, the anc. | CORStructed entirely of metal even L » i»; ' may ent capital of China, has a popula- te i rt Bs ug ss tion of 1,530,890, according to. the o. + AIF SEMft has meant 'tial latest figures. ~ Of this number, 62% 8 Ja 5 the co's attendants have had ta » ae arelguars, Shisfly' Japanese travel in escort machines. The new Pelping now is more populous by | Viastra crall, urnisned shestally Sb x 70,000 persons than it was even dur- 'meet the Prince's wishes, § ing the first year of the republic, ble him to fly from place to place This 18 accounted for by the large when he wishes with his luggage