Beaverbrook | Empire Plan | Is Rejected Leaders of Three Parties in Upper House Oppose Protective Tariff London.â€"Lord Beaverbrook‘s farâ€" reaching scheme for free trade within the British Commonwealith of Nations with a protective tari#@ against the rest of the world received its temporâ€" ary political quietus in the House of Lords debate. The discussion brought out the fact that none of the great political parties were prepared to supâ€" port the scheme. 7 Lord RBeaverbrook pointed to the predominance the United States had achieved in the world markets as an evidence of what might be effected by the British Commonwealth of Nations under similar tariff conditions. "In 191% the year before the war," hoi said, "American exports of manufacâ€" | tured goods were only half of those of Great Britain. Now in the year 1929, American exports of manutacâ€" tured goods are actually more thanl the exports of Great Britain." I |ccd t 2s hedc t c He argued it was no more difficult . for the British Empire to adopt tariff unification now than it had been In' the past, for Canada and Anstrallat had introduced a similar arrangement thoughout their territories. He was answered by Lord Ornold for the Government, Lord Cushenden for the Conservatives and Lord Beauâ€" | champ for the Liberals, The firstâ€"| named described Lord Benverbrook’s‘ proposals as "a scheme for the reâ€"| versal of the fiscal policy of the mothâ€" er couptry." He went on: "You couldl not have what he called free trade‘ within the empire unless you first made Great Britain a protectionist ° eountry. 1 need scarcely say His Ma: jesty‘s Government is strongly op-l posed to any such policy. This is &1 tree trade country. Time after time attempts have been made to lndncel people to desert their allegiance to' free trade. I say that the mandato of| His Majesty‘s present Government is to mall do it." Lord Cushenden also ruled out Lord Reaverbrook‘s proposals as 2 practiâ€" cal policy though personally he symâ€" pathized with them. He said that he was not convinced they appealed to the Dominions. He also recalled his ewn unsuccessful endeavor 20 years ago in fighting four elections in Great Britain on somewhat similar proâ€" posals put forward by Joseph Chamâ€" berlain as evidence of the British electorate being quiteo unlikely â€"to agree. Lord Beauchamp said that Lord Beaverbrook‘s proposals should be eddresse@ BHot so much to Great Briâ€" tain asâ€"(o the selfâ€"governing Doâ€" minions, where the tendency was to ticrease, not to diminish, protective éutios. Recordâ€"Breaking Flight is Success Paris.â€"Die ice Bellonte their recordâ€" churia landi a@fter a morn Hundreds La Bourget brought thei Minister 0 Paris.â€"Dieudomne Coste and Maur-i tee Bellonte returned to France form . their recordâ€"breaking flight to Manâ€" churia landing at La Bourget Field a‘or a morning flight from Rome. Hundreds of admirers swarmed over La Bourzet Field as the airmen brought their ‘plane to & landing. Minister of Air Laurent Â¥ynac was on hand to greet the fliers in the name ot the Government and to praise them for their record flight of more than 6400 miles from La Bourget to the d@esolate desert near Tsitsihar, Manâ€" brought t Ministe on hand t ot the Go New World‘s Record 1/ Although the instruments recording the flight to Manchuria have not yeti beon checked, Coste and Bellonte have been accredited unofficially with es | tablishing a new world‘s record for | ronâ€"stop long distance flight. t Their return trip was made by way ot Hano!, French Indoâ€"China, Caleutâ€"| ta, Garacht, and Athens. There was an impressive moment in the coremony when Minister Eynac stenped up to the youthful Bollonte and pinned the Cross of the Legion of | Honor on his breast. | The crowd cheored enthusiastically | as Evaac culogized the aviator vho! has been Coste‘s companion on two @angerous ventures. _ Bellonts won distinction ® few weeks before the Manchurian flight when he accomâ€" panied Coste on a projected fiight to New York. "The aviators turned back â€"mear the Azores Islands because of storms and gasoline shortage and landed safely near Paris. oste and Bellonte Reach Paris After Trip to Manchuria "When starting in to paint old furnt« ture, got an extra can of paint to finâ€" 4sh of the few spots on the floor you miss.â€"Life. -“X!:;;rrzh'a' first greeting the fllors wers honorsd at a reception in the hangar, where the usual toasts wore :x;d washed, and polished, and if yer dike, I‘ll ‘ave it left outside yoer bedâ€" baby car owner who has been giving him very minvrte instructions); "Awl gicht, "awltightâ€"I‘ll see It‘s ronllod.' rogim . . door < with! yer boots " inâ€" the mornia‘." fra ks f Hotel.Carage Man (to fussy _m_u. ;re'e- v{fide and they will oste and Maur should be Great Briâ€" 3.1.A2 JA1IQT9e 2IHY" O a331N9 â€" TV3 933G 320M AO3 i{eâ€"s;ctionsi For |Machines Open Settlers Detailed New Farm Era, * * M 1. . Engineers Told Department _ Says People of Only One Country Barred Ottawa. â€" Any restrictive regulaâ€" tions regarding immigrants to Canâ€" ada as affecting peoples of Southeastâ€" ern Europe, do not apply to Polish farmers or those of any other nationâ€" ality so long as they have the capital to set themselves up on the land, it was stated at the Immigration Deâ€". partment recently in regard to some questions which have been raised. I _ As a matter of fact, Canada bars the people of only one countryâ€"China â€"and even from its population cerâ€" tain can be admitted. All other naâ€" tions who want to come in as farmers and have the money to establish themâ€" selves, are admitted providing they measure up to the physical standards. \| Where & restriction is applied is to | single men from those Eastern counâ€" tries coming in as farm laborers. As [a rule they have no capital. They | are not excluded but the number who ! may be brought in is a quota of the previous year. It was much less this year than lastâ€"about a third of the | former totalâ€"and the same rule will be applied next year. The experience, it is claimed, was that many, so admitted, either failed to go to the land or else drifted back to the cities after a sojourn in rural parts. Families, materially equipped,‘ ; may, as stated, come in unhindered if physically sound. ’ The number of Mennonites seeking admission to Canada was first placed at a thousand families but it is now \ thought to be double that number. A | new development in the situation is ‘the interevntion of Dr. Nansen, who is in charge of refugee work for the Leagus of Nations. He has interested | himselt on behalf of the distressed | people as the German Government did | previously. ' P P yi W on we ces 1224 8 5i2 Ti 124A oi cocntmaamditts IrlalV iÂ¥ in PVINP VE wai e Aemin LA rr neasure up to the physical standards.| "Engineering in agriculture relates Where & restriction is applied is to to the enginsering problems of an inâ€" ingle men from those Eastern coun-! dustry," said Professor Walker, "In ries coming in as farm laborers. As this respect it is similar to mining enâ€" . rule they have no capital. They | gineering, but in practice it must ditâ€" re not excluded but the number who fer, since the basic sciences in agrâ€" nay be brought in is a quota of the culture are largely biological. . For revious year. It was much less this this reason an appreciation by the enâ€" rear than lastâ€"about a third of thel gineer of the importance of the bioâ€" ormer totalâ€"and the same rule will logical sciences is essential. )e applied next year. [ Move Gains Impetus. The experience, it is claimed, was "F@ngineering in agricuiture has atâ€" hat many, so admitted, either failed | tained great impetus through the exâ€" o go to the land or else drifted back | tensive use of mechanical power. This o the cities after a sojourn in rural| has influenced the urban and rural parts, Families, materially equipped.l population ratios,. In colonial days may, as stated, come in unhindered if| more than 90 per cent. of the people physically sound. | were directly dependent upon agriculâ€" The number of Mennonites seeking | ture in contrast to 24 per cent. toâ€"day. admission to Canada was first placed "There have been three distinct at a thousand families but it is now | power epochs in the agriculture of this thought to be double that number. A| nation, viz: human, animal and meâ€" new development in the situation is| chanical The first was characterized the intcrevnution of Dr. Nansen, who | by hard work and little social progress is in charge of refugee work for the| for the worker. The second marked Leagus of Nations. He has interested | the beginning of the machinery age himself on behalf of the distressed | in agriculture, resulting in the breakâ€"| people as the German Government did | ing down of traditions and the beginâ€" previously, ‘ning of scientific agriculture. _ The The inclination here is to go slowly.| third period, just beginning, is exertâ€" The situation might be different had| ing a great influence on production there been a bigger crop in the “'GSt". metbods, as well as on the social enâ€" but though grading high, it is lacking | vironments of the worker, It is dis in volume and conditions are not ta-' tinctly an engineering epoch. vorable to an influx of people at a| Animal Power Wanes season when their relations have no! "Animal power reached its peak of work to put them at. No decision has| application in the United States about been reached pending negotiations{ 1918. The rate of decrease in such with the Prairie Governments but tlle‘ power is rapid, amounting to practiâ€" outlook for a Mennonite movement | cally 500,000 animais a year. before spring, if there is any moÂ¥@â€"| â€" "Agriculture is becoming mechanâ€" ment at all, is not now very promising.| ized rapidly. Statistics in the United 1 . . Cse Laas Jmank NNA : Relief Extract Found in Seed Of Watermelon High Blood Pressure Lessenâ€" ed by Cucurbocitrin, ‘Recent Test Indicate San Francisco.â€"The lowly waterâ€" melon seed has come into its own. Recont experiments tend to show that an extract from these annoying appenâ€" dages of an otherwise delightful desâ€" sort offera dependable relief for many cases of hypertension or high blood pressure. Drug Called Cucurbocttrin. The technical name of the waterâ€" melon used is Curcurbita citrullus. The extract found by Dr. Barksdale has been named cucurbocitrin. . In medical terms this extract is characâ€" terized as a phystologically active gluâ€" cosideâ€"saponin. In plain English it is a drug which when given to patients suffering from high blood pressure, & frequent trouble of people approachâ€" ing old age reduces the pressure of blood coming from the heart by more than ten millimeters in 73 per cent. of the cases. In thirtyâ€"nine patients showing symptoms definitely trace« | able to high blood pressure relief by use of curcurbocitrin was obtained by $2 per cent, of the cases. Drs. Althausen and Kerr carried out their tests chiefly in the clinic of the untversity treating a group of forty patients ranging from twentyâ€"sight to seventyâ€"seven year old of whom thirty seven were more thanforty years old. 1 Takes Effect Immediatly ! They found that curcurbocitrin has | an immediate lowering effect on the \ pressure of the blood proportional to ; the size of the dose taken. . They found that continued _ treatment | brought continued relief but that betâ€" | ter results were obtained, on an averâ€" : age, with younger patients, and with thoso who hal. / been suffering the shortest length of time. Vote "Wet" to Secure Trade Greenwood, B.C.â€"Within a few months it is probable that British Columbia will all be wet following the plebiscite here that decided by more than four to one in favor of beer parâ€" lors. Greenwood voted dry during the plebiscite which placed this province in the wet column, but residents aftor seoing how trade and tourist traffie favored towns that voted wet decided to try to share in the increasing pro# pority of wet centres. 4 We read in a big dally that the Japanese want the submarine retainâ€" ed "as an instrument of navel war fare." We wonder why, when they can still commit harl karl. _ _ _ Labor Reduced, Production is Increased, Social Changes .Brought by Science in Agriculture Toklo. â€" Agriculture is becoming mechanized rapidly and the use of mechanical power on the farm marks distinctly the beginning of an enginâ€" eering epoch, said Professor H. B. Walker, of Davis, Calit., addressing the first world‘s engineering congress here on the subject of "Engineering as Applied to Agriculture:" Professor Walker, head of the agricultural enâ€" gineering division of the University of California, is representing the univerâ€" sity an dthe American Society of Agâ€" ricultaural Engineers at the congress. voa 380T2 AuOC 332 "Agriculture is becoming mechanâ€" ized rapidly. Statistics in the United States show that in 1924 16,000,000,â€" 000 horseâ€"power hours were used by farmers, 16 per cent. of which was supplied by steam and gas tractors. In 1923 18,000,000,000 horsepower hours were utilized, 28 per cent. of which was supplied by steam and gas tractors. The total number of farm tractors in 1924 was 450,000, increasâ€" ing to 768,825 in 1928. Similar trends in agricultural power are taking place in Canada, Argentina, Australia and British South Africa, M;s.' Jt;nes' evening gown?" _ Wifle: "Very little besides style, my dear." In the course of a debate held by the Nationalist party at Pretoria, on women‘s franchine, a delegate said that woman‘s place was among the pots and pans. A most sculleryâ€"ous statement. Hubby: "Well, what was there ' “_gslMSBV APPLE CANNERY CRACKS TWENTYâ€"YEAR RECORD IN. INDUSTRY Twenty thowsand bushels of apples in yards of Grimsby canning plant. This season this firm will can over million and a quarter pounds of apples, record for over 20 years in Grimsby and apples 5¢ eack at Toronto, If Boxed and Sent to England or Toronto. to Topâ€"Fo.. Mississa local historical society inside old fort. Australian Budget Springs Surprise Graded Superâ€"tax on Incomes| to Make Up Big Deficit Will Make Living High Canberra, Australia, â€" A domes{ic" bombshell was exploded when Hon. E. G. Theodore, commonwealth treasurer presented the new Labor governâ€" ment‘s budget. Henceforth the goyâ€" ernment will levy a supertax on inâ€"| comes, varying from 10 per cent,. on incomes above $1,000 to 20 per cent.| on incomes over $15,000. \| Increased duties are imposed on cigars, textiles, metal manufactures, motorcar bodies, motorcar gears and motor chassis. There was no time to prepare an entirely new budget statement and therefore he had to accept some of the proposals laid down by his predeâ€" cessor in the Bruce government, Mr. Theodore stated. As the former government left a. deficit of $10,000,000 he would have to get $6,000,000 more from customs and excise, and the remainder from the supertax, Mr. Theodore explained. The new government, he continued in makâ€" ing the statement to the house of reâ€" presentatives, was convinced there were defects in the present system of credit control,. These militated against the best use being made of credit reâ€" sources. ‘The organization of credit, which was one of the nation‘s great services, would therefore be controlâ€" led by national institutions. The government would also conâ€" sider shortly remodelling the commonâ€" wealth bank to increase its scope, the treasurer said. He was unable to make any provision or liquidation of the accumulated deficits of former Qvemments. "Wae inherited an empty treasury but we do not view the future pessimistically," he said. The report that Mrs. Hoover and Miss Ishbel MacDonald have been out riding at Rapidan on horses from the neighboring marine camp is regarded as justifying confidence that the disâ€" cussions on naval reduction do not inâ€" clude the question of disbanding the horse marines. 4 WOULD PRESERVE ANCIENT NIAGARA LANDMARK â€R:njinider of Days "Gone Fprever†474( 4B aii is cac4. 40 4 & Th 4 148. d t sond h MA dï¬ ac itc Mississauga, Niagaraonâ€"theâ€"Lake, for the preserving of which society will petition government, Bottomâ€"Massive tunnél | _ After being towed from Trave muende to Groetmitz, the machine‘s | propellers were set in motion by 6.30 | a.m.. Everything went smoothly unâ€" til half an hour later, when the hydroâ€" | plane â€" started ploughing its way | through the rather choppy waters of | Luebeck Bay. After travelling a few ‘yards, it turned turtle before it gathâ€" | ered sufficient momentum to rise into thevair, The crew were able to save | themselves only with th greatest difâ€" lï¬cu!ty. The plane was later towed i back, kee! uppermost, to Travemuende ~ by tugboats. Big German Plane Overturns in Sea Rohrbachâ€"Romar Scaplancl Turns Turtle When _ Starting Flight Berlin. â€" One of the three great Rohrbachâ€"Romar type seaplanes, exâ€" cecded in size only by the Dornier DOX, came to grief near Trave muende on the Baitic recently, in its first attempt to fiy to Spain. The accident occurred at approxiâ€" mately the same spot where another Rohrbachâ€"Romar fiying boat sank on Sept. 11 in 60 feet of water after crashing from a height of 100 feet. The 13 passengers and crew in that accident also escaped. The machine which met with this last disaster passed its trial flights a year ago last August. Seventyâ€"two feet long, it was designed to accomâ€" modate 12 passengers and a crew of five. On July 2, with its two sister ships, it was taken over by the Lutâ€" thansa Company for a projected transâ€" Atlantic service by stages between Europe and South America. > There is no greater mistake than that made by the man who is selfishly seeking any kind of happiness at the expense of others,. If he search for it through his whole life he will never find it To diminish the welfare of his neighbors will add no mite to his own store. â€" On the contrary, happlâ€" ness increases as it is shared, and diminishes as it is selfishly grasped. Girls should remember that a love knot is best tied with a single beau. What? SHARING HAPPINESS Canada to Show Goods to World Will Exhibit at British Fair and at Buenos Ayres Ottwa â€"A moeting of representaâ€" tives of Canadian Pacific Railway, Canadian National Railway, Canadian National Steamships, Canadian Manuâ€" facturers Association and other bodies has been called by F. O. T. O‘Hara, deputy minister of Trade and Comâ€" merce, to confer with J. 0. Turcotte, exhibition commissioner at Buenos Ayres, with a view to furthering plans for the participation of the Dominion in the Buenos Ayres trade fair to be held early in 1931. Questions regarding freight rates and the assembling and shipment of exhibits will be dealt with, and Mr. O‘Hara states that already the Deâ€" partment has received assurances of hearty coâ€"operation from manufacâ€" turers and exporters throughout the country to make Canada‘s part in the exhibition productive. most Plans are now being prepared by Mr. Turcotte for a Canadian buudins‘ at the Buenos Ayres exhibition, and a considerable sum will be provided by the Dominion Government for this pirpose. Following the meeting to be held here, a circular will be sent to Canadian manufacturers and exportâ€" ers informing them of the shipping facilities to be available, aslo the exâ€" hibit space to be placed at their disâ€" posal The Stock Market and the â€" Tariff | Springfield Republican: One vital fact is that, whatever may have been the cause of the stock market colâ€" lapse, the business and financial situaâ€" tion has been so far changed that tariff revision should begin from a point of view considerably modified from the earlier point of view which determined just how the pending legâ€" islation should be initiated and maâ€" tured. â€" The situation has radically changed, even since the coalition overâ€" threw the Republican regulars in September. _ To go ahead with this tariff bill would be a leap in the dark, Time is now needed for the stabilizaâ€" tion of the securities market and for a careful and dependable assessment of the new economic factors that have shaped conditions not yet fully disâ€" cerned before any new fiscal legislaâ€" tion affecting seriously the trade and the finance of the country can be judiciously »ndertaken. In conformity with this judgment the President may be expected to ignore the tariff in his coming annual message, or so to treat it that legislation on the lines recomâ€" mended by him six months ago will not seem urgent. "They #ay Auction Bridge is reâ€" sponsible for a lot of nervous breakâ€" downs." "I know it. It won‘t be long before we‘ll have to go to an asylum for a really good game." Responsibilities | Loulsville Courlerâ€"Journal: Let the| law impute to a candidate re-pnusl-} bility for what his representatives at| an election do in his behalf and punish | any who presume to act for him with-‘ out his consent. The candidate is enâ€"| titled to protection against the conâ€" | duct of volunteers; but he stands in‘ the relation of principal to agent with | reéference to his own chosen repreâ€"| sentatives. _ A man in business is bound by the actions of those he em-: powers to represent him in a transac« | tion, though they may be unhlux!ul| to him and disobey instructions. Their : actions are his actions. The law wouldn‘t permit a business man to reâ€" ceive the benefit of their misconduct and disclaim the obligations and reâ€", sponsibilities attached to their methâ€" ods. There is no justice in applying a more liberal rule to politicians than to business men. Election laws should be revised to conform to the theory that it is not a private competition beâ€" tween individuals for the power and emoluments of office, but a public atâ€" fair in which the interests of the peoâ€" ple are superior to those of the inâ€" dividuals concerned. a Politicians and Their . s c s U h Fair Doubleday, rates By Kenneth Stevenson Red Silence, by Kathleen Norris, Doubleday, Doran & Co., Ltd., Toron« to, $2.00. In this book Kathleen Norâ€" ris bhas written another of her very human and moving romances, as the subtitle implies. . *"The story of a girl who kept her secret" is the theme lc i ce dnscsins ty of the story,. Young Dorey Penfield, lovely, talented and supremely happy in her marriage is confronted with am episode from a merry heedless youth, Emm c Ses .4 Should she risk all that her happy marriage has given her and face open» ly the spectre of her early mistake, or should she keep her secret, trustâ€" ing that her husband may never know, The author has written one of her very finest novel in the story of Dory‘s struggle to avert disaster, n 1000 The Young May Morn by Martha Osterso, Dodd Mead & Co., 301 pages, $2.00. The Young May Morn is a story of village life, very grim and like most of the author‘s books «uite purposeless, but the very stex tragâ€" edy of the setting and details is soul gripping from page to page. Marcia Gunther, after her husband‘s sulcide for years Andifferently suffered the hatred and builying of her motherâ€"in« law and the gossiping and sly insinuaâ€" tions of the village folk, and devoted her life to her baby and remorse for the past. Then one day a longing for her girlhood came back. She quar rels with her motherindaw and after a fierce altercation welcomes her dis« missal from the house. How she made a home for her son, defied the advances o the village bully and became eager to have a part and place in the growth of the life about her, all makes in« l tensely good and impressionable readâ€" ing. ‘There are few more w orthy and \ valuable contributions to Canadian ‘ï¬ctlon published this year than (hi# book. l Whiteoaks of Sailna, by Mazo de la Roche, MacMillan, Toronto, 384 pages, $2.00, Again the family of Salna, with its tribal consciousness and its ruth> less vitality. This time the book beâ€" longs to Finch, the gensitive, misunâ€" derstood musical one. Twice he tries to escape, but each time Salna drags him back. There is no evading the spell of the old red brick house. It holds them all, and even Alayne, the outsider, is drawn back in the eircle. The continuation of Saina is undoubt> | edly a best selier on its own merits and not on the success of its forerunâ€" \ ner, The author has written, as in | Salna, with her perfect sense of the .| significance of little things, the same y arresting force and humor and the | same vivid power of characterization. y Death of a Hero, by Richard Aldâ€" . | ington, Gordon & Gotch, Ltd., Toronto, y 888 pages, $2.50, A few days befere t Armistice in the Great War, Captain _| George Winterbourne, of the British i Army, stands up suddenly and unâ€" l necessarily to a hail of machine gun bullets and is ijustartly killed. Did : Book Review he or did he not commit suicide" It it was suicide, what was the reason* Mr. Aldington has written a nove! om the problem of this officer‘s death, H# divides the book into three parts, and also a prologue, which latter describes the indifference the news of the warâ€" rior‘s death was received at home. Part one deals with Winterbourne‘s parents and grandparents, old English families of the Victorian nineties Part two, Winterbourne struggling as an artist amongst the affectations t the Intelligensia and against Britsh apathy, also two women who play ® major part in his life, Part 8, a picâ€" ture of the warâ€"gruesome and real istic as ever a war book was, perhaps a little too frank, but a story that ons will remember. ‘The book is the first noel by this young Englishman, Rich ard Aldington, who is a poet, scholar ly translator, critic and biograph er He writes with a musical sweep and ‘fluoncy that carries you through (24 book entranced. ‘ W. H. Stayton the autiâ€"prohibitio® | leader was criticizing in Boston (»® l methods of certain prohibition oflicers. *"Theu methods are suspect," sald ’Mr. Stayton. "They make me m# trustful, They remind me of the cf, ‘ missionary. â€" This . missionary, Y0% know, made, one day, a tour of inspect tion in a model box factory. ‘Whal‘s the big idea, anyhow? one faclorf, hand said to Whother when the mis sionary started on his rounds, "The second gave a cynical laugh and ansâ€" ‘ wered: " ‘It seems somebody told him | the sivis work in abifts. " . WISHES Happy the man who learns ! wide chasm that les betw« wishes and his powers.â€"Goet Little Algernon, known to ha: etic tendencies, was asked by t« to deliver something along the | nature study, which he did: "The man who made that w hen * Must be a real fine wizard. ‘The matter don‘t concern me ! I always get the gizzard." Martha Osterso 10 p® the #tan tion worl year exie of | men both €iff« thin th wb fin tu: by ww\ va. ot) en ad to 11 n #1 © tal L to al fo be th OV« OÂ¥ &1 AT t t tr y« y« d be the