i ‘is keeP .1 ' prevent scars, too. ' Keep your medicine chest well flocked with “Vaseline" _Petro- W; Jelly. You can buy it any- wherein jars and tubes. Don't writ for trouble. Be prepared. That's what first aid means. And remember, when you buy, mat the trade-mark Vaseline on " the label is your assurance that you are getting the genuine prod- Mi of tin Chesebrough Manu- mturing C0,, Cons’d, 5520 0habotAve.,Montreal,Canada. "What lr. {lic- mntter with that fel- Ig\\' orrr lllrrv?" "Stilifliin" _iu:i mlslbok .'I‘."' " null V~ 1 i .51., m wrnhwg lo the one who's ff" qq-ihpirr. ' -' “That's m: mic I mean."—-Life. ‘a DLOOK Our New urll-iarxusaa For PQBLIGITY PAGE , l‘ 0 Appear asaa UICK treatment for minor ' cuts and burns and bumps 1s r me secret of avoiding dangerous wnsequences.Thaflswhyrtpays “Vaseline" P81701801“ 1e11,. handy all the time. Its . ‘pplication keeps the sore spot " aw, promotes the growth 0f hwyhy new tissues. Tends to s. him for An Examination olfcur Eyes will safeguard llur Vision and Comfort Agiual l§w. ionusron "' Olllonaatrllt llglieni Street Phono m.‘ lolieiown . 1i.’ a F‘ '2 intrinsic: "SALEpof ;us:n anmornouss This Pllfvhuse a really lino Gramo- llhbne at g _ - u a“ count, use lmtnlmcnla some in sale werc exchanged for a‘? :3; can oiferod now at a Q1113! sale} on u‘ "'1 sample satisfaction. We instruments are mags llcsptional val . coma m Ind’ see ihena nix. g lijillabfs makes. n £1 VICTOR grnouoLo yMlzLAGAN fCOLUMBlA 0 above instrumenta- fllaled by making a :3 uheni and weekly or in“. Ynllatallmgnlg, *1 "if gun/urn!) __ ls your opposing“, go lien sacs. ‘l mono]: nouun TABLE IEPIIRT IS .ATTi§KED Winston Churchill De. clares t h e Indian Conference W a s NOlZhIIIE B u t an Hysterical Landslide of Opinion. LONDON. Jan. flt-Keon shafts of argument flew thick and fast when m. Hon. Winston Churchill arose in the l-louss of Commons to attack the report ol’ the mcian round tabla con- ference submitted by the government. The House had already spsnt sev- eral hours in earnest dscusslon of India's problems and svcry bench was paokod. Th, public gallsriss were crowded and in the Peers gallery sat Lord wiulnsdon. who om to take 5W4 174841118. the immediate prede- cessor of Lord Irwin at tho helm of Indian affairs. First in the debate came Prime Minister liamsay MacDonald who urged that the work of the confer. once towards responsible government for India should ba car-lag Iagwfld, "I believe most sincerely that the structure can b, built,” Mr. Macho“. ald exclaimed, and he sketched for the House two pictures, ono of an India of marching soldiers and sfarn and merciless repression; the other, of an mdls. bound m Britain in the bonds of mutual confidance. Sir sensual l-loaro. former Air Min- ister, urged, for the Conservatives, the importance of safeguards and the necessity of a strong central govem- ment in the Indian scheme. 'l‘he mcut serious attacks on the conferenas came from Si: John Sim-l on, ‘the Liberal lawyer-statesman: who headed the so-caliecl Indian Re- forms Commission. and from Mr. Churchill. "Why." lVlr. Churchill a-skad. "had thq government shelved tho Simon report and invldiously excluded Blr John Simon and his colleagues from the whole proceedings of the confor- encs. This cour-sa had boon followed in an endeavor to got thq fndlan Na- tional Congress axacuiivcs to parti- cipate but the Congress members had refused and thou who had stranded from India came with no authority and no power to conclude an agrou- mcnt. "Tho conference. in my opinion, was nothing but an hyawrical Vind- slide of opinion in which tho Con- servatives wore tho only dolegatq to keep their heads," said Mr. Churchill. who accused Prime Minister Mao- Donald himself of having shown asap forebodina in some oi his um!- anooa desplig his flowery language. Mr. Churchill did not think the problem coilld have been handled in aworso way than it had boon at the conference and ho regarded the massing as a prelude to the worst troubles in Dalila. ----___-_.. OTTAWA, Jan. 28.41110 national rsvorsua aitlsatlon is more serious than waaundorswod. Premier Ben- newsctlmah c! a shrinkage of $100,000,000 in rvvenuos for the pres- ent fiscal year is aso,oao,oco more than bad been prwviously catlrnatad by Government officials. The reduc- tion has been becoming groawr in recent months. Ibo tho first nine msnthsodthafiscal yqarit waabe- iwaan sixty and manly million- Tha falling off is in diatoms and excise revenue. and it is due largely to the ahrinkall in trade. both external and internal. with consumption much lower than durinl lholasifiscalyear. ths matomsand amiss taxes an Producing loas mon- ey for the national treasury- -__a--—— Stubborn Coughs Ended by Recipe, Mixed at Home hi h ui‘.”..'r'l§".....° "i'.‘.’l".i'$'.'i§§.‘l.'.i'.. aogthdapofidablsnmaéols o! grabbing ‘ID I u satanic I all?“ llctl: but ll a’: rat] relief avan for than saadad losugbs t t follow savers coldapidsaala I ka I any a ill/s was‘: would. pi:i1}(:"R'$l's'l'nm c" ~= -":'.~~:...;:*;.-...,.:' r... -".'Z":°?'.r.'.."::..: arc“... mu , avsu children ilk it. - - ~ '-r.:~":i".i':.:'".."s..'r" "Z. rials. ... hial mus. gun aidlfll "is y?“ ' W’ iii-Jill. ulna m §§d§l.iiii€="~.~.h.ss iroub ca. Do t ac t a substitute for P! OI- li is mil-mom t0 glvd NOD99 "u; sfundlia lull- aha over tho Vice-Royalty of India, and’ lllfip “VF GOO OQ ’ Health Services oi Oanadian Medical Association z irrnrcirsnox Indigosl-lnn is a word which has no particular ‘meaning beyond conveying the information that there is an un- ccnafortable fooling in the abdomen, which the sudforcr attribuica to the stomachogtoscmsotherpartodthe dllestivo system. Discomfort in the region of the ab- domen may be due to one of» many conditions. it may be used by an ulcer of the aiomach, infl-annnation o! the gall-bladder, W dicitls, constipation. or in some one or other of the many conditions, sometimes trivial, sometimes serious, whim are responsible for what is ‘popularly known as indigestion’. . There is only one way to treat in- digestion properly and effectively, and that is to find out the cause and then remove it. ‘The general ten- dency is for the sufferer to dose him- self with medicines, o; to try some kind of dict which his well-mooning, but medically ignorant friends will suggest as a cure. Soda is often taken in large sm- ounts. regularly or frequently, by tboso who think that their trouble is an "acid with the idea. o! neutralising the acid in their stomachs. They ignore the fact. that if digestion is to take place in the iomada, acid must be present, and, therefore, large doses of soda. merely interfere with normal digestion. A certain amount of roughage in the diet is genorally desirable, but, if the intestines are irritable and are causing discomfort. the addition of roughage so often taken by the sui- ferer to overcome the constipation vlmlch accompanies the condition is likely in increase the irritation is u smooth. soft diet which is indicated in such cases. These points are sufficient to make clear that the proper treatment of indigestion depends, first of all, upon finding the cause. Careless or im~ proper trcotmen may rcsult in act- ual harm, the condition tending to hsoclne ‘ and increasingly difficult to treat successfully. Indigestion which occurs repeatedly after the ado o! forty should never be neglected. The cause should al- ways ba found. This dact is emphas- ized because attacks of indigestion at that period of life may be the first sympion of cancer, and. if at- tended to without daisy, there i5 avsrychance of cure. The mu truible may be due to Jud-habits ofoatirlg-rathcr than in any isliornal condition. dilating too , quickly. washing down food with fuid. inshad of showing it properly, fnlklfig meal-time f-ha occasion for unpleasant discussions these bad habits cause trouble. ‘more are some conditions which require medical or surgical care, and whan such treatment is advised, it mint be undertaken without delay. Soli-rncdication is a mistake; drugs should only be prescribed by a phy- aician. Much can be done, however, in pmsnt digestive troubles if the individual will cultivate proper eat- ing habits and exercise care in the aalaction nf foods. Quaationa concerning Health ad- drasaad lo tbs Canadian Malical as- sociation, 1M Collage street. Toronto, will be answered ' personally by lather. GAGPIIIAUX WOMEN'S 1N5’!!- TUT! The regular monthly meeting of tho Gasperesun Woman's Institute ‘was hold on January 19th, at the hmna of Mrs. Harry Graham. The meeting opened by ‘ “ g "Carry Ms Back to Old Virginny." Roll was csilad and answered by twenty-one numbers. Nina visitors were also prssant. The sninutss of previous mailing wars road and approved or. The sick ccnunittaa reported that four visits had been made to the aiok the DNVlMll month, and a new committee was appointed 0c servo for tho following month. ‘lhraa mom- bars volunteered to scrub the school tho following week. It was decided to hava a Valentino program for the next msstlng. a lama- from Miss Julia Steals, thanking the institute for tha Brthday Party and gifts giv- fll M9. Ila road b! Q10 51mm‘?- alao a latter from Mrs. Ellie Llew- ellyn thanking the mainoan of the “Instituta for their asaisiance to her in bar raosnt illness. n. was decided oo-havo nazt roll call answered by riddles Ind Jokes. ma. George A. moan kindly invited the Institute ' nuns frills next moatifll. lIi-Tlidffiliildlt E 1§.-.. i strains of “Good Night Ladies." The Institute thanks the hostesses of the evening for the very pleasant hours spent at their home. ' CONDITIONS 1N PERU The financial depression in Peru is extremely serious, writes Harris W. Brighton, Acting Canadian Trade Commissioner at Lima, in the forth- coming issue of the Commercial In- telllganoe Journal. Sugar and cotton are the country's main products, and from Hausa the depression has chief- ly resulted: fifty per cent of tho ar- able land under cultivation ls ac- counted for by these two conunodlt- les. The bart- prloss ducted for sugar on the world's market account for acarooly half the cost of ,. ‘ “ , while the prioas obtaining for cotton are but little batter, even with a good crop. As the producers cannot continua 0c carry‘ on at a loss much longer. a grav. crisis ls threatened and othsr commodities. which can- not nearly replace them, will have to be substituted for sugar and cot- ton by the growers. Should this plaassnfl) chasm-u. tho export. trade wmild no many anormously reduced and likewise (ac- Peru's purchasing power. Added to Shredded Wheat is made of Whole Wheat -—nothing added, nothing taken away. It is a nourishing, body-building food. Ounce for ounce it is the most economical food you can buy-delicious and wholesome for anybody, any time. The Canadian Shredded Wheat Company, Ltd. Niagara Falls, Canada " The largest user of exclusively Canadian Wheat among Cereal Manufacturers of the world YOU can he " THE CANADIAN WHEAT GROWER and lay a firm foundation for your own prosperity The Wheat Crop is the greatest factor in Canada’s wealth; The present depression affecting our Canadian Wheat Growers is of national importance to every one of us. ' All good" Canadians want to see the return of prosperity and each one 0f us can do his part in bringing it back by helping to reduce ‘ the surplus WhCatCFOp. EAT TWO SHREDDED WHEAT BISCUITS EACH DAY . ‘9,000,000 Canadians can help ‘materially to dispose I of the surplus wheat gcrop this easy, healthful way ,|\,‘ll ‘(Uurll-u Q5‘): 3 Qé/ ) W bf’ l MADE IN CANADA BY CANADIANS OF CANADIAN WHEAT ONLY . It'd-l’ so‘ _ iiiii/yiiii/ //// m“... -. ernment to guarsnteq; savings counts. Loans to the extent o: 6.- ___ “l.-. .<.-_..7.-_ -~ --—----~-—---—--@-————-— ...._...__.-_....._ -_.~--.--~~ - -—-—-~- 4- i iw- f0!‘ Eff-King filillcl,‘ than to use it i0P|Sovizt ilshcrmcn, who are unrlnrscl-i "Mary, remember that you are nrnblc 11nd. Thus in England uncliung m; p-urlvm; L.’ .7;--_..i1 in 1" |\"'i i-nlg a wrxnni; 1 don't want you to Wales tin; area for clover, snlnfomimarkeis“ have so much company. Why, you 000,000 sols have had to be obtained from foreign banks operating in Lima, and are repayablo in June, 193i. 'I‘he closing of the Bank has had s. very adverse effect on econ- omic conditions generally, many firms having considerable sums in current accounts on deposit; further- more, the Bank was the principal loaning agency for farmers. The Paruvian Government, alarmed at ihq situation, have, through the in- stlgatio no! the Bank, invited Dr. E. A. Kcmmerel, American Economist, to invaatigata and report on flnnn- cial condltlons in the country, as well as on possible remedies for the situ- aticn. NORTH 0F ENGLAND ' SEED MARKET About twenty-five large houses in u. that country-the main ones bc- lng in London, Liverpool and Man- chester, wrli/es Gerald A- Newman. Aulstant f‘ '“ Trade Commis- sioner at Liverpool, in the lOflllCOlll- tho United Kingdom import seed in-' clover this year has been practically vnnccd owing to carry-overs 1928 and 1929. Continental red clover’ imported in fair quantities an analysis basis, a merlium-qualitg‘, and price nlslkc will be most favour- nhly rccmvrrl. Tho murizcl for Grimm alfalfa. is slill in ti": cwrincntil stage. V l i SOVIET l"l.~'|"ll7.'lll.\" l'Nl\liR.\'lllil.l lng issue of she Commercial Intelli- aompanisd by tho music of ahscr- than dlffioultiss than has boon aha can) which was inunonsaly anicyod failure of tbs, Bank of Pam and "o-ccal deplcssl.ir\ lhe vnaeucy Ui; .~ by all. ‘lbs massing blots up to the ioudon which his forced tbs gov- lasrnars has been to sow their unaja grievance loo, and n l5 against inc [qonco Journal. Owing mainly to the , z. 11.1110, iii, 1U" iv" vani- d-an l’|"r.».~.| .’\l .i g1: Unncrllun :|:‘.1l United Stone .'-l~ii"l'.i_. inifi‘ sw- m: ,:":ln’1*_; r’ ilic ornpziifcii from ' , £111 r ~_~;-| It“: i, Jzmpm in: and other grasses decreased from 1.- _ 567,943 acres in 1928 to 1,523,753 acres chiefly over the shipment of crahsf have 1n a wvggk," in 1929. ’I‘hcre is a marked dlsparltyiThc United States is the chief nlnrk-l f0!‘ nlfnlfn which is confined LO lhclgf, for Jg._r;ane5c and Rugglan crab to he a “mic more agfgegblr} you'd EJSV-‘m Cfilmiifii- T110 "OD 0f fed and has been so for many yours.’ have as many frlcnds as l have.“ ‘Soviet exporters are silling crab in a. failure due to excessive rlvlllflll-lfhe United States at prices WllfClIi but Dfif-‘Bfi hallo “Qt Illfllefiillll’ fld-,Japancse cannot, hope to mcet on n iromjproiitablo basis. The controversy is being ranged‘ An idea 0f lhc lT-QQIHLUID ol tlx imnlnly, French and Polish) has becnvmparics: canncd crab buc-lnrss may flllfPbe had from the inrt that the Vfllllk prices nre shouring a. firmer tendency. i0; me puck in one district alone was The general impression is that Can-iggoggpoo “m, yum but, ma: indl. ‘ adlan alslao will have only a fair de- 3, sulxtantial (Tcllnc mand owing to ihc prices quoted fore-m, mm,- rgnritt, _\"a:~.\| Polish alslke. but, as there is a iend-‘iargsiy due i0 m: oncy to purchase this commodity 0053155, , ccnlrn 1 "ii :m:l ll l . \ as. m ‘reusing “Jill. Lin r ialrhcii Suiot crab, Wh-zil '.ll'.\l lhc Unlicd Sinnv m inrtv uninv- iazl mmmci: M1,. irrn mufrlcri undvr launrl ‘i l i: hid; ‘o iv mn- Iizul uuili {now ri 1hr Jnrln" " awarding to ihc crniplllllllll’ Willi" r-ra licrc. Swirl. llu>n uliiflr o» :"\‘"<l - ‘pun l'_}l\li'l'|i‘ zllvlv; i1 ll l|:\:|l\.l"..'l i. i,; ,.- ilwlinu inlmcri Ulilll s 1112s ycrix Til T. lcis i-irxor: :" ‘n. (ll 1h‘ ii i1- ivg demo n or in" Norm lax-hi: hi. caused considerable alarm in Japan. l ‘T? have more callers in n day than l "well, manm. perhaps if you'd "y W For two gen- erations GPOVCW quinlna for Lnxalivc ,. unomo ““""‘.‘;"" QUININE ""° has been tho i cpendable remedy for colds. Ali-Jay's demand Q-iwivdfi Laxative it l hi4. .., l l i