_ lgglgstsgtgjlgr. V F n _ . a - Exploiged For Centuries e . g _ a A . imE-i qlaxgrfi (Tod ishery Still Yields r , I as i r » l r l ’Huge Annual Landings CHARLOTTE-row" i THE Q'_HMA__RLUI'I'E'I'UWN GUARDMN | 1 which trough‘; hLn of! the main- land of th". conti ont in 1497. It has been explotsd ever since John Cabot's time. And it ail‘ yields a billion pounds or more of codish every year. When Cabot mad: his voyage he but Nova Beetle. and Quebec or. much bigger producer: than New Brunswick. and the Prince Ildwuc Island catch is relatively small (Cod. by the way, are a.» tahen in the Domi.:i:n's Pacific water. but not in any such quantities as ‘on tho Atlantic coast.) Inst year "one of the world's great fishing the fresh form. s me reported that h! found the .ea so thick with fish that they e uld Nova Bcotiafs catch wa 100,067,000 be caught "w1;h baskets, a cone pounds, iniraund figures. and the being attzched to make ihe lnsket Quebec fishermen landed nearly sink in the water." Perhaps there{51_884,000 pounds. In the case of were “ lsh stories" in those. bygone New Brunswick and Prince Edward days. as in more recent times. Or Hand the yea ‘s fandirgs were 12,- p:r..aps Cabot was speaking by the 951,000 pound and 4.042.000 pound book, respectively. However that may be after gen- erations of fishing, the cod grounds Marketing the Catch off the continent's Atlantic coast A good deal of .he Canadian have continued to this day to be catch, or course, is m rkcted in is smoked. areas and in the 30-, ear pe iod. and small quaniiits are canzed, 1890-1025, the average total rn- ’but the larger part of the landings nual catch of cod taken in North is dried. Canadian dried cod has American waters by Canadian, New- |enjoyed high reputation in such ex- foundland, Uniiecl states and Per-port markets a" Italy, the Weit In- tuguese fl henncn was 1,103,000,000 dies and Brazil, as will as at home, pounds, with a. peak catch oi1295.- and to these and olher forzign 000,000 pounds in i825. occssiorrahcountries big shipments are made Spanish and British vessels, by the in normal times. Out of the Dom- way, also make catches from these inlon's total Atlantic catch oi 170,- 18000 pounds in '84 more than waters. 98,000,000 pounds were uzed in Canada's Share manufacturing dried and tonelesr ood. Most of the dried fish is sold Canada's average production abroad and the export trad; also fron-rthis fishery in the '06-'25 per- ‘ includes largo sales of gie n-mlted iod was 225,000,000 pounds, with the cod, or partially pro:es.ed fish, to largest catch in any one year 313,- the United Slates. 000,000 pounds. Between 1955 and} Health-building cod live": oil, of 1934 the Canadian landings were‘ courre, is a by-product of the cod Hundreds of Millions of Pounds Taken Yearly by ‘ Canadians and Fishermen of Other Countries in i Atlantic Waters Fished Since Before i Cuboffs Time. ‘ . - Cod ranks third among Camden when Canada's catch was less than flshe in pJlIlt of marketed value 142,020,000 pounds but the fast two " ' of the annual catch, thanks to the years have reen a renewed upward cod resmroes of the Atlsnio coast.‘ movement. In 1004 the landings It's a wondzrful fishery, the ood ‘were about 170,125,200 pounds» fimesy. of the Atllntic waters ‘on All four of tin Atlantic province . North America. The is some evi- hare in this rich fishery, wlrici denca that it we; exploied by is exoeedad only by the Dominion’ European flshemn befo s Jcfm salmur and lcbater fisheries in an Cabot made the hi iorlc voyage nual marheted vaius of prcduotior EN T E R P RIS E RANGE SALE FOR ro-“narrs omr YOUR BIG OPPORTUNITY TO GET A NEW RANGE FREE! You may be the Lucky One. Here's what you do: Estimate the Total Number of Enterprise Ranges, Stoves, and Fur- naces sold by the Enterprise Foundry Co. Ltd, during 1934. If yours is the NEAREST CORRECT FIGURE, the Range not up to the earlier average but that state of affairs has been due to the unsatisfactory market con-, ditions brought about by the world- wide economio chaos of the past few years, not to scarcity of fish. The production "low" was in 1932 Ethiopian Raiding mParties Enter“ Italian SomalilanJ (A. P. By Guardian's Special Wire) DJIBOUTI, French Somalilsrld, 5:30 Tuesday, Oct. 15. (Delayedb- Two strong Ethiopian raiding par- ties swept into Italian Somaliland today and claimed marked success- es, while an African army of 100.- 000 warriors advanced toward the left flank of Italy's southern army. One of the raiding bands, made up of 4,000 trlbesmen under the leadership of Colonel Siwiank, Dutchman who participated in the Boer war. reported a penetration of 45 miles into Italy's colony. ' Col. Biwiank claimed his force captured the town of Lugh, after going over the frontier at the town of Dolo. r “ claimed to have taken Dolo 10 days ago. Lugn is strategically situated on an impor- tant main road from the coast. Ethiopia No I Pushover Says Corre s p ondent (C. P. By Guardian's Special Wire) NEW YORK, Oct. io-Jrhe spirit of hundreds "of thousands of brown skinned troops massed in Ethiopia —“a iittlc tin-pot kingdom lost in the African mountalnW-has caus- ed Robinson Machean, Canadian correspondent at Addie Ababa. to "think that perhaps the Italians aren't going to have the pushover they expected." MacLean gave first-hand im- ‘ mercial purposes. fishery. Last year there was a pro- duction of nearly’ 53 0J0 golons of medicinal cod liver oil and in ad- diticn there was an cutput of more than 113,000 gallons of ccmmon or crude oil for use for oerla.n oom- An even larger band of Ethiop so don't delay another ians were making their way over the frontier between Teolo and thc Webbe Bhibeli River. They were said to have occupied Odour, sornr 65 miles in the interior of Itsiiar Bomaliland. (Oddur is roughly 200 statut miles east of Dolo and about i4 miles northeast of Lugh). Reports received here indicate that Somali tribes, who hold griev ances against the Italians, we: flocking to the banners of the rr: vaders. Observers said oven . greater menace to the Italian coi ony was the advance of 100,000 Etr. iopians under Res fleets against th- left flank of Italy's Bomaiilan army, now advancing into llthiopi and commanded by General R0 conclusive Proof of- Greater dorm Graziam, SOREOTICREOH down by Italian machineguns-is that they passed near a telephon station and reported . . . "On the plains outside Add‘ Ababs hundreds of tents are pitch ed. Right now . . . there are 80.0’ men there and most of thorn hm rifles. . . . Tomorrow 00.000 mo: brown wanton will pace throng‘ the streets. They are the men o Kambata Province. ‘."I'his aftamoon the Minister r War o1 Ethiopia put on his fr European uniform. Boon he will l headed for the front with 50,0! men. There are hundreds of thous ands more just like them ready a the front and hundreds of thous- ands more coming along the trails . . . "The warriors yell their hate a‘ m whenever they pass us in th streets. Personally I don't blam pressions 0g the situation to North America tonight in a broadcast from the Ethiopian capital where! "the streets are filled with soldiers "Who 8111s songs of hate against the white faces." A tranrcript of the address, released here, in part follows: "The record of the Italian bourb- ing hasn't been particularly bril. liant up to the present. Take Gorahai for instance—a little stone fort down in the sweltering desert- 50 men and a colonel. Bo far it has been bombed three times, ac- cording to the latest census, and five men have been killed and lo wounded. “To kill those five men the Ital- ian aviators dropped 300 odd M1056; 100 of the bombs didn't ex- plode . . . "But in the north it was a dif- ferent story. Dozens of women and children died in the bombing of Aduwa and Adigrat. The Italians hold Aduwa now . . . the Ethiop- ians didn't make much of a fight 1°? u" ciiy- They were wise enough to realize that if they have any hopes o: winning this war, thou hopes lie in guerrilla warfare . . . ‘The Italians claimed they did kill about s00 soldiers in m, 1mm, but they killed them with machine Icampered over to the 9° fllht for Hallo lelallio. "How many have deserted fin them . . . The war song of Ethi opia, tnnslafed means ‘break it u; and feed it to the birds.‘ That's th closest I can come to the words. "It doesn't sound like much whe I sing it, but when you hear 35.00 men pouring out their voices i- that. howl of hale, it makes Y0‘- think that perhaps the Italian‘ aren't going to have the pushover they expected." Lord Woolavington’: .Millions . LONDON, Oct l8.- The sine o‘ the fortune left by Lord Woolav inrton. the distiller and racehors owner, who died on August 9, i still unknown. The value o! his propetry ha. been estimated at £0,000,000. but When 5 times more Island Homes prefer Enterprise to ordinary stoves, that’! day. Re- gardless what Enterprise you select you will get positively the Best Range Value in Canada. " $IO For Your Stove This amount will be s1. lowed you on your Stove if it in good condition. you B0 UGHT will be given you ABSOLUTELY FREE, Ofier Applies ONLY s. i0 Purchasers ’ During Sale l As little aa- And the Range of your Choice goes Tome- B a. l a n c e conveniently stretched over 10 Months. N0 INTEREST. fl OME PLAN "In ALWAYS True ECONOMY i0 Bray 355T QUALITY” LOWEST PRICES; norrnnmusu MON 4 RCH 99.50 ..ii‘.i'i.E ca» ..ue.§-§STI¢ 1e» 77.00 VICTORY 66.00 SIM PLFX 54.00 5'00 $ IHIWN toYour ro-narr a FCGNOMY ‘Dahlia m Small Homes» gsvov lada’; Lowest Priced Bails" HOLMAN CAPITAL“ g 39.05 "F" 550V} l_i_a__Pricc Class‘- probate has not yet been fl for in connection with the will. The terms of the will are mean- time being kept secret. GRAND-MIDI! Mrs. Catherine llscdouaid Bil- clransn, Lord Wooiavingtunh dlulhtor. is be oved us have in- herited about .M.M. ans m- rnuu Catharina Collins and Cross, solicitors, when the estate was provisionally valued at 31.000000. ~ TB]; WORLD’! M081.‘ Fssonrsnrro WOMEN .._.._.. I PARIS, Oct. l6—"l‘he worii’! fen most fascinating women w"; named for the Unikd Press tidly two grand-niece, and Jean uchsaaa, for wium a by Elm Maxwell. Now York and trust fund was es , m Paris social leader. she picked them understood to "have benefited from royal wsru. society. Ho‘!!- further. wood, mm wriers and cne even The trust fund serious do» the air. h! Sh! I'll» in itsd o United Btlhs contributed a lion's share. They are: Marlins Dietnh nrllywerd oc- Italian fifth IO don't mow. oom- u . r i . ruminations are bad in the north. m’ Fine‘ 8"“ ' “m” ‘rheroasonweknow about the mT-h“ “:'u"°ili7fi? ylelwplrrthigrlll-ftarrlregnaglzl: '5' of rum Barrymore; Baenq l Q lotbsoniid. CU 13S] Kitty Brotliswood, of Philadelphia; Daisy Reginald F iloues, "W r.‘d's best dressed woman"; Lldy m“; Wolf Mendel, who has rtainq-i her 851180 of humor by standing on her head each morning: Gertrude Stein, American, who lives in France and WW8 WW: Margot Aaqu t». wid- ow of the former p emier of Great 311mm Mr‘. Robert I-l- McAdoc, of New York City; Collette-Madame Maurice GoudekeLt-Preuch author. I: and Amdis Earhart, American aviatrix. who "has eve yth n; that fascinates" - Fascination is an elusive qu lity that is fut Happening, Mrs: Mur- VQ" ll“. IM is liar-i to find to- cause t: rm nothing to do with beauty. charm. blueblood-ouly mo Igmg m g thousand has fasdoatiou. lllmf. reins or m. Gum From Oranges JERUSALBI, Oct. 18.—-A soi- e- ‘life discoverey of greet com- mercial importance has been made at the Daniel Bieff Institute in luhobath, near Jaffa. A German-Jewish professor, Dr. Borgmann, has found a way of ex- tracting pectin. a gelatine used for gum, from the white inner skin of oranges. Potatoes have until now been used to produce pectin, of which large quantities have’ been im- pot-tad into Palestine for various uses. The discovery is expected to cause a revolution in the orange lay-products mar-hot, and to solve Problem of the disposal of d '“Z(i¥‘n'TYT"1 T“ ¥_ T » ‘“_T” " "‘ '»—* ..Y....:.. " n: .... rises": *1." worm» memo o, m, e “ h on uoburn suns: '3’ "ll- carcass" then continent to Darwin m] °" ' °°"'“ M u“ m9" POIBBAM N v Oct re-sno names roruasn m "Ynsdfd ‘ l2“ “m” °‘ "m" nine 0n milki- “it... .' the 11ml; rsumn commem- "m. "'4 mm‘ m“ "m" fad among gm students at the Amtmm‘ 5mm‘ u" Thw‘ “s” State Normal School here The ADELAIDE. o“ u __ mp1“, on this service rvfl be the late Bu.“ h", b put m two huh" o! services are gradually flfldlrfljlngiggmwshimk%lg maifiugyg", physical exercise weckfy and skel- the Austra ian continent and ahw- 4am “We”; 8m Hindi) Ind to be a frame way oi ing the to t t . sources ‘lvritlirertogfigauér-iwaesid 21m‘ “'5' “m7 “mam” far from the coastal markets to be l‘ k‘ owl-gm; ‘A9105 ruuuo Nmsancr developed. m‘ “""“""‘”""""‘ “'1 ‘°"' mm Adelaide to a ok n Bil‘ Eyre Penin ulc Yorke‘; ‘Peninsula, and "m"?! N. a. m, got‘. rs-uu- “Qn ha“ lIItfI-ulfl ‘is. garb has girth runnirlrgerezu- l’ "or ‘ ac: nt or Kangaroo Island-A tai‘ r ‘ 5",,“ “" '“ °" taxi-cabs by the oomminions of serious interruption of any kind. Another new company. Adelaide Airways, Ltd. will orerwe ser ices "us; i ,=;,-'_==--=~,,M,,~ =--,=,,-- - “4 "l"? "WYMW “Immi- Whoa u» bdroom floor u to be ' nu moms a MFA...’ “if: lythen m; been considerablhwsshodloethatitis mommbhmhwnhnhm.“