: Planes Make Amazing Flights )p HV U P kely be im VI C bm Last ed im w hriles WMs M Edmonton.â€"For what is practically the first time in the history of Canada, the law of Britain is to be carried almost into the Arctic Circle, A juâ€" dicial party, consisting of judge, proseâ€" euting attorney and counsel for the defence will leave Edmonton to travel for a month into Northern wilds with Aklavik as their final destination. There they will try two Eskimos for the most sertous of all erimes, There they will try two Eskimos for the most sertous of all crimes, murder, The trip will be made by rail, steamâ€" er and automobile and the court room will be the strangest Canadian justice has ever known, for, lacking proper buildings at distant Aklavik, court will be held in the cabin of the steamâ€" !r "Northern m.mh&‘-?’ ’.&?.3 s s ult . se Sm se er . "Northern Distributor," â€" where wildâ€"eyed natives, almost aboriginal, will sit as a jury in the case of two of their own race. CGowned lawyers will argue before a similarlyâ€"garbed dispenser of justice and all the formal dignity of Canaâ€" dian jurisprudencte wil Ibe rigorously observed. Judge Luelgn Dubuc, stipendiary magistrate of the Northâ€"West Terriâ€" tories whose post gives him the powâ€" ers of a judge of the Supreme Court wHll preside at the hearing. # The counsel for the prosecution will be Clare Darling, while the interests of the defendants will be looked after by Joe Clarke. . It the two accused are found guilty and sentence of death is passed, the date of execution will.be set suffici ently far ahead to permit of communiâ€" eation with Ottawa if any ground should be found for a petition of senâ€" tence or an appeal from the verdict for the Eskimos will have the same epportunity accorded to any in Canâ€" ada of an absolutely fair trial. Full One of the prisoners to face the bar of justice is one, Okchina, who, in the lcy fastnesses of Bathurst «Inlet in 1928 is alleged to have killed Oksusk, ¬her native, by shooting him through the head as he entered his Igl0o. The killing is alleged to have folâ€" lowed on the heels of continued illâ€" treatment by Oksusk of his wife, Avâ€" mcona, who, after enduring many blows and much â€"illâ€"temper at the hands of her husband, told her lroubles to one, Nellikok, a friend. Neliikok, it is alleged; held a grudge against the husband, tried to kill him and who made himselft unpopular in the tribe by his bullying and cruel disposition. Okchina was sought out and the story told to him. Nellikok and Avaconna sought counâ€" sel of one Ehakilak, a man of much Influence in the tribe and the three decided that Oksusk must die. He, too, decided that Oksusk must be got rid of and agreed to do the job. He went to Oksusk‘s igloo to await his homeâ€"coming. In the early autumn twilight, prelâ€" ude to the long Arctic night, Oksusk was heard approacthing, crawling on his hands and knees through the tunâ€" nelâ€"like entrance to the igloo. As he emerged and started to rise to his feet a rifle spoke and a heavy bullet enâ€" tered his skull above the left eye, tore through his vitals and emerged at the lower part of the trunk. He fell dead and the body was concealed under heavy stomes. Avaconna wag a widow and the killing was not spoken of in the councils of the tribe. Months later, a mounted police ofâ€" ficer, making his customary visit to the tribe, heard of the tragedy. The body was recovered and Okchina placed under arrest. The other prisoner is a young girl, Lily Sarnyak, aged fifteen, who, in her home of Clarence Lagoon, demarcaâ€" lion point, Yukon Territory, learned that she was to become a mother. To her untutored mind the obvious thing to do was to dispose of her baby which it is alleged whe did by strang Ing soon after its birth, A few hours after the tragedy a search party orâ€" ranized by the men of her : village iound the body of the infant and buried it. This crime, too, was eventâ€" ually reported to the Mounted Police and the girl‘s arrest followed. The circumstances of the case were reported to Mounted Police Headâ€" quarters and the alleged slayer was taken to Herschel Island under guard and there imprisoned to await his irial. â€"In order to meet the court at Aklavik he is probably even now beâ€" Ing escorted to the delta of the Mcâ€" Konzie River. bave the stock, we have the fodder and we have the men. . All that seenms necessary is to apply more care and thoroughness to the "finishing" Of the cattie for the table. If we do not, it is hopcless to expect Britishers to buy Canadian beef in the quantities which our cattlemen would like to supply. For there is nothing that the Britisher Insists upon more emphatically than a tasty Sunday "joint of beet." Calgary Albertan (Ind.) ;'érnm is no reason why Canadian t should not be as choice as British beef _Yle MURDER AVENGED The Sunday Joint Travels Into North Rivetless Steel Building Finished Said to Be First lgsc of Gas Welding on Structure of Large Size Niagara Falls.â€"Erection of a large steel building put together. without a gingle rivet, has just been completed here. The structure, in which gas weldâ€" ing entirely replaced riveting, was said by building experts to foreâ€" shadow the time when large cities will be free from the riveter‘s racket and modern skyscraper construction The building is said to be the first large‘structure in which gas welding has been used entirely. It is 75 feet wide, 260 feet long and 423 feet, 5 inches high and required 297 tons of structural . steel. . Welders without previous experience in â€" structural welding were employed and qualified for work in accordance with tests recommendéd _ by ‘the _ American Welding Society. will go noise. A senior at the University of Chicago has discovered that 1,015 meâ€" tions are required to wash dishes. Those last fifteen motions, of course, are used for picking up the pleces.â€" Judge. 1s your APPETITE POOR? Dr.Williams‘ PINK PILLS your appetite. Buy Dr. Wil liams‘ Pink Pills from your Co.," Brockville, Ontarto. Send for free bookâ€""What to Bat and How to Eat". When you need any Circular SWw â€" paid, at 50 conts a box from The Dr. Williams Medicine been treating the symptoms, rather than the cause. Loss of appetite, heartburn, sour stomach, are symptome that the blood is ftoipure. This explaing the successful use of I{r. Williams‘ Pick Pill in "I began to feel easily tired," writes Miss Margaret White, of Parry Sound, "and when I sat down to a meal I felt 1 did not want to eat. A doctor told me I was anaemic but 1 made little progres with his medicine. When I started taking Dr, Williemes‘ Pink Pills I soon noticed that my appetite was improving, that the headaches came less frequently and that I was not "A HOUSENOLD NAME IN 54 COUNTRIES" ERHAPS by disting or on _ comparatively without FERTILIZERS FOR FALL WH EAT 3â€"14 It was a perfectly clear day, the sun shining brightly in the sky, and naught bounded our view save the natural limitations of vision. Immeâ€" diately before us, in the direction in which we had climbed, layâ€"nothing: a void, a sheer gulf many thousands of feet deep, and one shrank back inâ€" stinctively from the little parapet of the snow basin when one had glanced . at the awful profundity. Across the gulf, about three thousand feet beneath us, and fifteen or twenty miles away, sprang most splendidly into view the great mass of Denali‘s Wife, or Meunt Foraker,. as some white men misname her, filling majesâ€" tically all the middle distance. â€" It was our first glimpse of her during the whole ascent. Denali‘s Wife does not appear at all save from the actual summit of Denali, for she is completew‘ hidden by his South Peak until the moment when his South Peak is surâ€" wounted. It was, however, to the south and the east that the most marvellous prospect opened before us. What tanâ€" gle of mountain ranges filled the whole scene, until gray sky, gray mountain and gray sea merged in the ultimate distance! ‘The neaâ€"by peaks{ and ridges stood out with dazzling disâ€". tinction, the glaciatior,, the drainage,‘ the relation of each part to the others, all revealed. The snowâ€"covered tops of the remoter peaks, dwindling and fading, rose to our view as though floating in thin air when their bases were hidden by the haze, and the beauâ€" tiful . crescent eurve of the whole }Alaskan range exhibited itself from Denali to the sea. To the right hand the glittering, tiny threads of streams draining the mountain range into the Chulitna and Sushitna Rivers, and so to Cook‘s Inlet and the Pacific Ocean, spread themselve#out; to the left the afflucnis of the Kantishna and the Nenana drained the range into the Yukon and Bering Sea. . ... * Above us the sky took a blue so deep that none of us kad ever gazed upon a midday sky like it before.. It was a deep, rich, lustrous, transparent blue, as dark as a Prussian blue, but inâ€" tensely blue; a hue so strange, so inâ€" creasingly impressive, that to one at least it "seemed like special news of God," as a new poet sings. We first noticed the darkening tint of the upper sky in the Grand Basin, and it deepenâ€" ed as we rose. Tyndall observed and discussed this phenomenon in the Alps, but it seems scarcely to have been mentioned since. It is difficult to describe at all the scene which the top of the mountain presentef, and impossible to describe it adequately. One was not octupied with the thought of description, but wholly possessed with the breadth and glory of it, with its sheer, amazing immensity and scope. Only once, perâ€" haps, in any lifetime is such vision granted, certainly never before had been vouchsafed to any of us.â€"From "The Ascent of Denali" (Mount Mcâ€" Kinley), by Hudson Stuck, D.D. Brandon Sun (Ind.): One phase of Hooverism that will not be copied by Premier Mackenzie King is a precedâ€" ent that would strike awe across Canâ€" adaâ€"the United_ States President‘s decision to make public the names eï¬f those who endorse applicants for fedâ€" eral jobs. The first trial of the new order came when the President gave out the endorsements going with a recent appointment of several federal judges. The President generally is compelled to present these plums without personal knowledge of the ability or fitness of the men he is honouring. While the executive finâ€" ishes the job, actual responsibility for gelection often rests more upon his advisers or upon Senators and Conâ€" gressmen. _ Apparently Mr. Hoover would shift at least a part of the blame for mistakes by this process of proclaiming the endorsers. After all, the more the public knows about inâ€" gide politics, the better it will feel. It has a right to know all about these things, but in the past this right bas not been respected very often,. Vancouver Sun (LMb.): â€" Premier Ramsay MacDonald has decided to confer personally with President Herbâ€" ert Hoover of the United States, .Jt is reported that Premier Mackenzie King of Canada is also to be invited. Naval disarmament is obtensibly the main question to be discussed...... Canada‘s injerest is vital in such a conference. The Washington meetâ€" ings would probably be preliminary to formal session to be held later, perâ€" haps next year. Ottawa would be the logical place for that conference. Canada‘s interests are twoâ€"sided; she has been called the interpreter in Anâ€" gloâ€"United States relations. Even as a gesture, Premier King‘s invitation tendered to the chief executives of the two nations would be a valuable guide as to the Dominion‘s policy, Politics makes strange cell mates Kay Features. Invite Them to Ottawa Startling Precedent th, Fall and Spring. Every rices. Write Now, Agents complain of high prices if West, Toronto 9, Can. ECONOMIC EXPERT Charles H, Luke, of the executive staff of the Trade and Engineering Supplement of the London Times, is spending threeâ€" months in Canada studying the power situation and question of undeveloped and new areas in this country. . Photograph was taken at the Banff Springs Hotel recently where Mr. Luke has been staying prior to interviewing premâ€" iers of the provinces and federal and provincial government officials He will also address Boards of Trade in many Canadian cittes. * MADE HER BABY PLUMP AND WELL Nothing makes a mother more: grateful than a benefit conferred np-‘ on her child. Mothers everywhere who have used. Baby‘s Own Tablets | for their children speak in enthusiasâ€"| tic terms of them. For instance, Mrs.| Zepherin Lavoie, Three Rivers, Que..‘ writes:â€""Baby‘s Own Tablets are a wonderful medicir for little ones.‘ They never fail to regulate the baby‘s stomach and bowels and make him plump and well. I always keep a box of the Tablets in the house and‘ would advise all mothers to do likeâ€" wise." â€" Most of the ordinary ailments: of childhood arise in the stomach} and bowels, and can be quickly banishâ€" ed by Baby‘s Own Tablets. These Tablets relieve constipation and inâ€" dégestion, break up colds and simple fevers, expel worms, allay tecthing pains and promote healthful sleep. They are guaranteel to be free from Injurious drugs and are safe even for the youngest and most delicate child. The ‘Tablets are sold by medicine dealers or by mail at 25¢ a box from The Dr. William‘s Medicine Co., \Brockville, Ont. s ! A body fitly framed, in every part, ‘_ Effectually working, mind and heart. ‘Writo we their names in fire on hisâ€" 1 tory‘s page. Confederation Love was the motive foreeâ€"love of the soil, Love of the ensign, love of humanâ€" kind, Urged on by faith and hope, with endâ€" *_ less toil, Our fathcrs, yielding to an instinct blind They could not analyzenor could withâ€" stand, Weak, weary, oftimes fainting, never faited â€" Till they the spirit‘s Peak of Pisgah scaled And viewed exultantly their promised land. A million lakes they visioned as their dower, £ Mountains upthrusting to the heavenly host; Long â€"rampert .rivers, . limitless in <â€" power, Forests that march abreast fram coast to coast. They saw great plains with fruits of earth in store. They sensed the diggying hints of ~_fabled mines, * Of wealth in fisheries and furs, the signs. [ They heard the cities‘ manufacturing 109 CRD 3 They brought their offering to the| Lord to bless. | Who may that great achievement truly , Stirred by the utter prodigality Of God‘s free gift, by its sheer loveâ€" lieness Constrained to serve and worship He: You say you‘re happy because you are engaged to the man you wanted ? ‘ k ed Minard‘s Liniment for Earache. She: No. To the man my rival want 10}' &A By Mildred Low. The weed menace in Ontario has markedly increased during the past few years. It is not an exaggeration to say that in certain parts of the proâ€" vince certain weeks like the Perennial Sow Thistle are driving men off their farms. ©‘The tax levied by â€"weeds on the agriculture of the province has been mounting yearly. One of the chief reasons why the weed menace has increased with each succeeding years is the undenfable fact that in the past vast quantities of weeds have been allowed to ripen seeds on roadsides ,in schoolâ€"yards, on waste and vacant lands, along our lanes and headlands and in our fence corners and odd spots bere and there on the farm. a The ‘following ars the number of seeds produced by single plants of average size in onre season: Canada Thistle, 3,500; Curled or Yellow Dock, 17,000; Common Ragweed, 5,000; Chicory, 3,000; Perennial Sow Thistle, 2,000; Wild Lettuce, 8,000; Stinkweed, 20,000. Every weed that is allowed to mature produces at least 1,000 seeds and most of them ripen several thousand seeds. In the past weeds by the millioas have been allowed to mature in this province and scatter their WBillions of seeds far and wide, Is it any wonder that the weed menace hbas increased in Ontario? Are we going to tolerate this state‘ of affairs any longer i. Ontario?â€" No. The farmers of the province have raised their voicek in protest. _ An Act has been passed by the Legislaâ€" ture to enable them to meet the situaâ€" tion. _ United action is what is re~‘ quired now. Every municipality, every farmer, every land owner ln% town or country must unite in the ; war against weeds and see that theyf are cut early and often enough tol prevent them from seeding. When the weed inspectors send out nodce! that it is time to cut weeds let no one lag behind or neglect his duty.‘| § Pron;ptness is necessary to prevent all weeds from seeding. Many we'e(q. it cut after they have~ passed full bloom, will mature their seeds. . In order, therefore, to secure the greatest results from the time and labor exâ€" pended, everyone concerned should see that weeds are cut just as soon as possible after the inspector gives notice. United action is required so that no weeds be left uncut on roadsides, vacant lands, railway tracks, schoolâ€" yards or waste places. . Every patch of weeds that is left uncut is a menace to the farms and gardens in the neighâ€" borhood, an eyesore and a costly monument of neglect, signifying that some one has failed to do his duty to his municipality and to bis neighbors. Community pride and regard . for the rights of others should serve as incentives to prompt and united acâ€" tion on the part of all concerned. When such is secured the weed menâ€" ace will be much decreased, our farms will be cleaner and more profitable and our highways and byways will beâ€" come attractive beauty spots, indicatâ€" ing individual and municipal pride and prosperity. â€" We dance with proud and smiling lips, With frank, appealing eyes, with shy hands clinging, We sing, and few will question if there slips, A sob into our singing. * Fach bas a certain step to learn; Our prisoned feet move staidly in set places, And to and fro we pass, since life is . stern, Patiently with masked faces. Mayâ€""I‘m so glad you like it. Mothâ€" er.says chicken salad and strawberry tarts are the only things I make corâ€" rectly." Dollyâ€"*"Which is this, darl ing "How is your son this morning, Mrs. Bland?" asked a neighbor. "Oh," reâ€" plied Mrs. Bland, "he‘s jusi about as usual; there ain‘t no improvement one way or the other." Just a tasteless dose of Phillips‘ Milk of Magnesia in water. That is an alkali, effective, yet harmlese. It bas been the standard antacid for 50 years among physiclans everywhere. One spoonful will neutralize at once many Umes its volume in acid. . Jt is the right way, the quick, pleasant and efficient way to kill the excess acid. The stomach becomes sweet, the pain Mirard‘s Liniment for aching joints. qoÂ¥ Masquerade ' ‘Sow' Stomach makes its appearance. ’.Solthr do Canada‘s producers ob to fair] competition. But it is held to be am; injustice to permit American fruits and vegetables, harvested by cheap: Mexican and negro labour in Califorâ€" nia and the Southern States, to be dumped into the Dominion when the ; fAirst Canadian crops are ready for the ; market,. The Canadian growers are not unreasonable in their demand that they be protected form this kind of competition. } Castoria is a comfort when Baby is fretful. No sooner taken than the ‘lmle one is at ease. If restless, a few drops soon bring contentment No harm done, for Castoria is a baby remedy, meant for babies. _ Per/ectâ€" ‘ly safe to give the youngest infant; you have the doctors‘ word for that! ‘It is a vegetable product and you \ could use it every day. But it‘s in an ! emergency that Castoria means most. \Bome night when constipation must (bo. relievedâ€"or colic painsâ€"or other suffering. Never be without it; some | mothers keep an extra bottle, unâ€" ‘opened, to make sure there will alâ€" ‘ways be Castoria in the house. . It is \effective for older children, too; read the book that comes with it. An election campaign is a combinaâ€" tion of handâ€"shaking and legâ€"pulling! So "Skinny" Couldn‘t Work. Gains 21 Ibs. I could not do my day‘s work. But now I can work hard all day and rest good all night,. _ * "About 3 months ago my weight was 126 pounds. Ironized Yeast gave me 147 pounds of good flesh. You would think I was another woman, I feel and look so much better." . Only when Yeast is Ironized is it | so wonderfully effectiveâ€"for Iron is! needed to bring out the weightâ€"buildâ€"] ing and strengthening values of Yeant‘l Pleasant tablets in a bandy bottle, safe for everybody. Never cause gas or bloating. Miss Donie Brison writes, "Before I took lronized Â¥east I was so ‘skinny‘ Stop being "skinny" and always tired. _ Thousands have gained 5 to 15 pounds in 3 weeks with Ironized Yeast. â€" Scrawny bones change to graceful curves. _ Blotched skin beâ€" comes clear and fresh. _ "Lazy" feelâ€" ingvanishes. Go to any druggist toâ€"day and get a | full size treatment of Ironized Yeast.! If after this generous trial you are| not delighted, get your money back | from druggist or manufacturer, lq inconvenient to buy from druggist,| send $1.25 to Canadian Jronized Yeaat' Co.. Ltd., Fort Rrie, Ont. Desk 425â€"B8 ; Be sure to get the genuine Phillips‘ Milk of Magnesia prescribed by physiâ€" clans for 50 years in correcting excess acids. Each bottle contains full direcâ€" departs. You are happy minutes. Don‘t depend on crude methods. Employ the best wiy yet evolved in all the years of searching. . That is Phillips® Milk of Magnesia. tionsâ€"any drugstore. When your" > for It It May Be and New Strensth ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO again in five Anconas lie, White Leghoreas 10¢, asâ€" ® rted chicks $¢, Express pard on 200 or «over; â€" free catalogue, .A. H .. Switzer, Granton Ontario. +4 M ENX WAXNTEC TO SELL WATKIN8 159 Quality Products in rural seo» tions of Untarto. World‘s largest factory to consumer organization Ailâ€"year.round proposition. Chance to build up lasting permanent business. Credit arranged ? parties. Write stating age to J. R. ns Company, Desk 5, lHMamilton Mistress (tesiily)â€"*"Dear me, 1 told ydou to All that pepperâ€"pot quite an hour ago. <Haven‘t you done it yet?" Maidâ€""Not yet, ma‘am. It is such a job getting it through the little holes." Cuts and Burns ABY CHICKS: JULY AND avcU removes quickly. Minard‘s soothes inflammation removes all poison and heals Sales Agents: Harold F. R ___ WVigour, Vim, Vitality with M‘n': Pdl-wâ€".â€"dm sure way to constant, joyous, bounding # » They quickly reflect your healch and I;:Cll conditionâ€"restless zn indicate the temperament of stomach. Watch the eyes , . . see that the whites ave clear with a healthy bluish tinge. The minute a yelâ€" Jlow tinge appears it betrays conâ€" stipation, sluggish liver or bilâ€" iousness, you need a laxative. Bring back your _ course for a short " Vepctable period will Cpold rell the ::7.."- Product Read about Chudlvjmq the Eyes in Jubure Beccham Advertisemcnts. B it Those Languid Eyes ISSUE No. 28â€"*‘29 ; â€" WEN WANTED. LCKS: JULY 12¢, ‘ron ° AWhike TA Limited, ‘Toronto W OINTMENT Atried and trusty friend for 50 years. uticura