-_-...._..... _...k.. h,“ . _.._._-....... are‘ ,- 442?" T» - T - . ‘ifib ‘f-F? ‘ ii- 3&1 In ' ¢"?".‘.T,E_i~§*;tt“""".' ‘_ .,.__..‘.'_'.\ .53 ‘ flr&cisv.urm.<:_fa.wx.sar.er~ liiiililiiliiiiiiifii-‘rti? . PAGE FOUR m: GIIAIILUTTETUWII uunnumn Isl. L-Ool. D- L. like: an laugh: Director-J Associate lemon-hub Waller all B. l. Curb Iorlllg Dally (funded llfl) lo-oe corner (ll adv-ac) delivered- Ireallene-I. Chelsea l. Illfllla Jewelery-Lieu le-Nperyelriln iee-rnelaez-o-mluaetl -I\Ilrle¢0. advance) mailed In Canada and Usihl ltatea. ‘IIUESDAY, AUGUST l, 10H ' THE FIRM HAND mflpective of their political sf,- llliatkm. all Canadians worthy of the namewlll commendthefirma- fltuds taken by Premier Bennett to- ward the demands of Communist agitators ls presented t0 him. at Ottawa this week. The Prime Min- Esr heated courteously the dele- gation of so-called "workers" who appeared before him, but emphat- ically turned down their demand for a. change of policy on Canada's part towards soviet Russia, or towards Communist activities in this country_ He made it plain that the contin- ued dumping of wheat, asbestos and lumber info world markets by Rus- sia under Soviet labor would be disastrous to the workmen and farmers of Canada. He also emphat- ically assured the delegation that if they or their followers violated Sec- tion 98 0f the Criminal Code deal- ing with sedition and unlawful as- sembly in Canada, they would be punished “as sure as the sun rises." 'I'hat the Prime Minister was fully justified 1n his attitude is evident from the feet that the Communist leaders recently ence and why. The Doctor points outfhlnloperoentofthedmefl- can exports find markets in British Iimpire and 33 per cent of the import traffic is likewise from the Empire. American investments under the British flag total 05.000,- 000,000. about four fifths 0f which total is in this Dominion. DI’. Klein goes on to say: "The significance of our rapidly , dependence. upon the Eimplre as a source oi essential raw materials has too often escaped at- tmtion. If some unimaginable cat- astrophe were to obliterate or ser- iously impair commercial contact between the Empire and the United States it would mean among other things, that many newspapers would cease publication for lack of Can- adian newsprint paper. The wheels oi most of our automobiles would man be running on their rims for lack oi Malayan and Ceylon rubber. Our farmers would be wondering what to do for sacks in the absence oi Indian jute. The disappearance oi Canadian nickel from our factory raw material stocks would soon par- alyze several of our metal indust- would become to con- ries. victed for attempting to incite in- but Iusrection in this pmven, by their own statements in court, to have been paid Soviet agents. Unquestionabiy, since that time, gggnt; financed from the some source have been secretly operating in Canada, and ‘Tuesday’! mob demonstration at Ottawa had been planned weeks in advance for the sole purpose of interfering with the nnperial Economic Conference. Doubtless amon the misguided people who participated in the demonstration on Tuesday there were some "who sincerely believed Communism to be the panacea ior all our social ills, and that if Capitalism were abolished in Can- ada, and the Red flag waved over Parliament Hill, unemployment would cease and an economic mil- lennium would be attained. Few oi them, however, had any concePVOH oi what such a. revolution would entail. The argument that unem- ployment does not exist under So- viet administration m Russia,-an argument repeatedly urged by Communist agitators in Canada and elsewhere throughout the Empire- was disposed oi once and for all by Viscount Snowden in a. recent speech in the House of Lords. Re- plying t0 Lord Marley’ who 039d Russia as an example of economic lfflciency. the grim mar-Chancellor luring the British Labor regime vetorted: "1 certainly cannot follow the noble Ilord in going to Russia for an example. , . . He say! W" there are no unemployed in 1111s- sia. I do not think he would find many unemployed in Dartmoor goal. "Russia is under a system o! industrial conscription. Russia has confiscated all the caPlill- repudiated all public debts. and yet, starting without any capital liability at all, Russia has ever since been coming to the capitalist countries oi the world. "l? l" hand, begging them for expul- tzrade and loans-and this from a country which has repudiated its liabilities! mo, no. Russia does not attract me. I shall never I've to see the establishment oi a socialist State. but I believe that economic evol- ution is working in that direction. Bu; may God save England from such a Socialism as they have in _ ....R\issia_.todly:.". - . ~- .- w» Canada needed a strong hand at he helm on Tuesday to deal with Communist agents and agitators in their bresen dlllllfly 0f 1m"- Britiah sentiment. The Prime Min- jsm- was exactly the man for the lob. Bis firm handling oi the sit- nation has placed him higher than ever in the estimation of all right- Ilinkifll classes of our 900F16- a, . 2i ‘i . ) ‘ j moss ssu warcnss Dr. Julius xlein, assistant sec- Iellry of commerce oi the United XQI, Writing in the New York Ihrald ‘Iribune. after duly explain- lng that the Imperial Conf Qfi to show first how interested (1 country were countless thousands. It 21 raw materials to make a tele- phone; among these all, except silk. predominantly drawn from American or British Empire sources. There can be no question about the sharp falling off in our imports from the Empire. But there is no indication that this trade has suf- fered more seriously than our pur- chases from other parts of the world. m fact the srinkage in the volume of imports as a whole has been only half as great as that in domestic distribution." Dr. VKIein quotes figures to show that u... year ea poi-l. cent oi this Dominica's imports were from the Republic. and since 1913 the United States’ share in the import trade of India, Ceylon and Malays has risen from 8 per cent to 6 Der cent. In Austrafa and New Zealand in the same time it has risen from 10 per cent to l5 per cent and in South Africa from 9 per cent to 14 per cent. In view of these facts, it is not derstand why Uncle Sam is so keenly interested in the outcome of the Imperial conference which if successful, may mean a substantial alteration in his trade with many parts oi the Empire. BYG Iced tea difficult to ence b ‘ pleasant memo y GERMAN ELECTIONS The result of the elections in Germany is bewildering to Canad- ian readers by reason of the hum. ei-ous parties which have attained mushroom growth in that country in recent months. and whose pol- icies. if they have any, it is prac- tically impcssible to distinguish. What. for example, is the differ- .. the National Social- ists, the German Nationalisis, the Christian Socialists, the Pqiullsfs, the Centrisis. and the Ewnomjo hefty? Then there are the Com- munists, the Bevan-ions, the Ger. man National People; Party, m; Agricultural party, the wddle Class Party. and several "minor" parties, It 1e “weir mnrisinr. amid so much class Doliticl. that no party wes-ableto win a’ majority in Sun- day's election contest, It f; ovidme that the National-Socialists led by Hitler are in the lead, with 229 seats of 569 in the new Reichstag; but as Hitler's strength represents 0111i’ 77 Per cent of thelentlr; m; it must also be apparent that with. out the formation of a coalition government another election will have to be held in the near future to decide whether the Hitlerites or the "neutral cabinet" of Von Plben shall rule. Von Papm 41;. ‘Willi-shed himself as a. statesman at the Leussnne conference. fiitler has yet to prove himself anything the takes nun... Bi Tilt‘ WAY ‘Ihisisagreatageiiorlheliltle critics. There is much that is yrrong throughout the world: in fact the world seems to be out of joint. Bow easy it is then to blame somebody for the mess. And who in Canada is more naturally to be blamed than the Prime Minister and his government? Industrial and financial conditions throughout the world have never been as bad ls they are today. Mr. Bennett has been at the head of Canadian af- fairs practically since the slump began—then why not blame him? 0f course he has nothing to do with the outside world or its man- agement, but that does not matter to the little critiw. By a stretch of imagination it may be assumed, if there is sufficient ignorance to back it up, that it is all his doing. There's a great deal of ignorance in the world Canada doubtless, has its share of it. The appeal to these will strike home somewhere and the appeal is being kept up. It is conceded in Great Britain and elsewhere throughout the Empire that Canadahas negotiated the period of depression more success- fully than any other part of the wide flung Iknpire, but it would not d0 for the little critics to ad- mit this. Blame the Bennett policy, blame the Conservativegovern. ment and like persistent throwing of mud, some of it will stick. That portion of the Liberal press which has, adopted this species oi politi- cal warfare is not helping their party. A trusted employee of Bache and Co., the well known New York bro- kers, is revealed as a deiaulter to the amount of more than half I million. The deialcations extended over fourteen years but were not discovered until the‘ depremion caused a searching investigation. The defauiter had spent much of the money on wine and women. the balance going in stock specula- tion. If, as reported, British and Ca- nadian woolien and cotton textile interests have reached an agree- ment, then a greet help will be given to the work of the Imperial Economic Conference. Because it is in respect of textiles and steel that agreement is most necessary be- fore some real preferential plan can be worked out. a Q; Inna W. Bulen. MD TESTS 0N T!!! LIVER When you think oi the various or- gans in the body. you may think of the heart and oi how it pumps the life-giving blood to all parts of the body: of the lungs and how they purify this blood; of the stom- achasit actsasasortoffueltank to hold a supply of food for the time being end partly dilute some of the food; of the small intestine where the food gets mixed properly with digestive juices so that it can be absorbed into the blood. You'll notice that I haven't men- tioned the liver, and the reason is that the liver enters into so many different kinds of work in the body, that it practcially enters in some way into every body process. Naturally a healthy liver is worth much to every cell in the body. Notwithstanding its importance, or rather because its work is so im- portant, it is actually possible for more than half of the liver to be damaged and yet it is able to do its work fairly well in the body. Thus research ph, icians endeav- to learn just how well the liver and gall bladder are doing their work, so that early treatment can be given or operation performed before it is tests as to the ability of the liver to do each of its several jobs. wastes from intestine to see if some is not being lost by the liver. (b) seeing if the liver is destroy. ing or removing poisons from the blood as it should. (c) Seeing if the liver is storing sugar properly. to and taking from the blood cer- tain substances. the gall bladder after administering a dye of some kind. gall bladder. No one, says the New York Times, with a. spark of historical imagination can fail to be impres- sed by certain aspects of the Im- perial Conference at Ottawa-it is s living demonstration of the W" culiar and continuing power of the British Empire. Under the new title of the British Commonwealth of Nations, it preserves much of its old prestige ‘and gtamor in holding together peoples and governments representing so vast a portion of the earth's surface. something of the old pomp and glitter in which Queen Victoria delighted may have departed from such Imperial 85' therings, but their true significance remains as a standing tribute to the political genius of the British race. It knows how to yield and compromise and adjust itself to the changing demands of demvm cy, but still manages to hold its scattered colonies and Dominions in an unforced loyalty to the mother of Parliaments and of free institu- tions. In its amazing vitality it may be said of the British Empire that the more it changes, the more it remains the same thing. Hon. Henry T. Bainey, Demoorl tic leader in the House of Repre- sentatives in Congress, is advising the United States to be more friendly with Russia, as the only probable ally in a time when ep- psrently world diplomacy is com- bining against the Washington G0- vernment. Mr. Rainey should re. fleet that for this the United states has itself to blame. The Rawley-Smoot tariff has been the last sire/w m the diplomatic ioid that the United States has laid up- on the back of the over-laden world. Commenting upon Mr. Raineyh iemarks an exchange says: As long as Uncle Sam refuses payment in kind and insists upon gold, he may just as well make friends with Russia, and find out how much available gold there is in that revolutionary country. six months ago comparative charts prepared for the financial Post by Babeonh Statistical Orga- nization showed that the relatively faster pace set by Canadian busi- ness since 19M had been slowed down and that for the first time -__ Political groups, public feefng is m" "Ml dew-com. mmwiflsumiy likely to be dictated by which accompanied m; gjsqtfm showed an aroused public but when g peoplg i; w“. "Oflkd Ill" 0'03 IV‘: fiI-Illfifllhn is in the 00bit“ in] betwcengwx is conkst none of Uncle Sam's business pro- fooling, common sense. We do things better in Canada, where political issues ,1" ilrseiy in the keeping of. the 1m of decid- two great traditonsi parties, Lib-l Ieftwenty-cne oral and Conservative. ing__ these conditions. es most of the trouble. overeating and underexercising. U. B. was about on g cent. below the States has slipped till it now hovers at while Canadian business h“ first time since 1027 and the strong independent u" general course of the United States. RICOMPINS! ‘Tia sweet to hear At midnight on the blue and moon- lit deep The song and oar of Adriah gondo- lier, ' By distance mellow'd, o'er the wat- ers sweep; "ris sweet to see the evening star 8PM“; ‘Tis sweet to listen as the night- winds creep From leaf to leaf: 'tis sweet to view on high The rainbow, based on ocean, span the sky. "ris sweet to hear the watch-dog's honest bark ' Bay deep-mouthd welcome as we draw near home; ‘Tis sweet w know there is an eye will mark 0"!‘ 0010113. and look brighter when we come; ’Tis sweet to be awaken! by the lark, 0r lull'd by falling waters; "see the hum Of bees, the voice of girls, tho gong of birds, The lisp of children, and their m. liest words. ’ —-lor\i Byron. or in various ways by various tests too late. There are a number of (a) testing the blood, urine, and of the coloring matter of the blood (d) Finding if the liver is giving e) Taking an X-ray picture of (i) Removing bile from the first part of the small intestine atm- li has lust come from the liver and T559 8T6 lust some of» the tests m" "e made "Don the liver. When certain. faulty conditions are found bY these. tests, medical treatment, the use ofdiets and at times oper- ation, can all be of help in comet- However‘ an active liver is usually a healthy liver. It is sluggishnegg 0i liver and gall bladder that caus- Blusgishness u due usually, w --__. 1" f1" years the relative physical volume of business in Canada and Plr at 15 per average ior the years 1922 to 1925 inclusive. since then ‘the picture has changed ma. terlelly and volume u. tho ohms Itwiily back 192i levels, ac- Wllly gained something over eight 1M‘ cent. and is currently 25 pej- cent. above i921 figures. This is the se- cond time in the past i5 years that Canadian bugjugg; h" shown a trend against business in _ Bennett & the Conference ‘ (Toronto Saturday Night) One of the best auguries for a successful issue oi the Ottawa Con- ference is the happy atmospherei created at the very outset. As most. readers are aware them were in I‘ ’ preliminary attempts, some of them verging/on the ridiculous to make the great event a political; football, and personally score oi! Mr. Bennett and his colleagues in the Government of Canada. Bome- thing of the same sort happened in Great Britain, and it is very prob- able that the other Dominlons have witnessed similar attempts. Those who were anxious to throw a mon- key wrench into the work before the machinery of the Conference could get well under way, would have been extremely disappointed had they been in Ottawa on the after- noon of July 21st, after the impres- sive initial proceedlngs were over. They would have heard universal expressions of approval for the key note address oi Mr. Bennett, and the responses it evoked from official spokesmen of the other sections of the far flung Commonwealth oi na- tions. It was plain that all the particl- pants in a gathering of immense historical as well as economic 1m- portanee are met, not to wrangle and urge impossible proposals, but to reach solutions that will stunn- late trade not only within the Em- pire but in the world at large. Bo far as Canada was concerned par- tisan considerations were set aside and eminent Liberals were found praising the utterances of Mr. Ben- nett as highly as his party friends. Nearly every delegation presented in terms that were guarded yet un- mistakeable in meaning concrete proposals which will receive the most careful discussion. But the speech of the Canadian Prime Min- ister had the further merit that it dissipated widespread and concerted eflorts to create an amosphere hos- tile to the Conference. One of the most popular slanders which had for weeks been circulated in Great Britain, and accepted by some pub- lications of high standing, was that Mr. Bennett was the tool of private Canada give nothing in return for any favors which lhe in common with the other Dominion: and Col- onies, might obtain in the British market. Mr. Bennett's proposals, the clear- est and most direct heard at the opening session were a complete refutation oi that slander and that was why his . ‘ appealed to fair-minded Liberals quite as deep- iy as, to fair-minded Conservatives. In fact everyone realised that Can ada had a leader and the Confer- ence a head who spoke for the whole people and not for my favor- ed or privileged interest. A good many prophets of evil on both sides‘ of the Atlantic must have been chagrined by a conviction of error when they read the Canadian pro- posals, which, in a nutshell were ss follows : (1) The retention cf existing pre- ferences, and (3) their effective ek- tension to those other natural and , ocessed products of whlch' the this is what P" ‘ asked for Canada. And in return he offered the Wngdom: . (l) Extension of our free list; (2) Retention of our existing pre- felgnces in favor oi Great Britain, an Bennett today (3) Increased preferences in re- spect -oi a selected list oi articles in which Great Britain is especially equipped to supply the Canadian market "without injuring efficient Canadian enterprise." Well may it be asked, what could be fairer than that? In these pro- Dosals there is not an ambiguous or equivocal phrase. Canada through her Prime Minister nailed her col- ors to the mast as a fair-trader. All who know the Canadian political situation must have been impressed by the enthusiasm and goodwill ex. Pressed by leading Liberal news- papers. They have been quick to commend the all-round axogugngg of the Canadian Govemmenth pro- meals and have been inspired by Mr. Bennett's terse proclamation interests which would insist that "Which way Point ma. and hope? That way we follow" " Samuel Pepys, Esq. (Montreal Gazette) SamueLPepys ended his career 229 years ago. More than two and a half centuries have elapsed since he finished h’s famous diary, and it is still read with keen relish, though the document was never in- feasts, the arts, sermons, plays, you. days men-y making. and all sorts oi miscellaneous information, duly act down inthe diarist memoir and giving us the most vivid portraysf of the stirring days of the Merry Monarch ever set down on paper. What did Pedys ever miss? Ha semes to have had time to go to tended for the public eye, was pen- ned in cipher, was locked up in a private drawer, and its materials jotted down merely for the relief of utterance. The major port of this manuscript was composed during the ten years 1659-1669, and for a whole century and a half it lay un- deciphered until somebody discov- ered the crypwgrammic key and so let loose this amazing flood of naive and enteraining gossip upon the world. Whether it is to be consider- ed as a contribution to the history of a most eventful period in British annals, or as a picture of the social manners of the times of wh‘ch it treats. or again as a sagacious diag- nosis of the secret motives at work in the human heart, this much can be said for the diary, that it differs from-the average style of historic chron7cles as much as a rambler rose bush differs from the lattice to which it may be ‘tacked; and, though politics and propaganda are entirely absent from these pages, the astoifshing candor with which Samuel Pepys, Esquire, depicts scen- es and characters, including his own, renders it highly probable that the notabilltics of that day and the customs so graphically described. are the harvest, the "omnium gather- um" of a quiet and observant eye. Oi the Pepys diary it has justly been said that it differs from all historiesoi. lmsiand and. indeed. from the literary resume of all other histories whatsoeve . This mem‘ oi the F. R. S. and Secretary of the Admiralty, was of impressionable imagination all compact. He began life as the son oi a. London tailor and worked his way up to a high position m the state. We are told' that he was a first rate accozmtant. showed an extraordinary diligence’ in fulfilling the details of the daily round, worked harder than any of his associates or dependents, attended the Court. the Admiralty Office, the theatre, and the church with unfailing regularity, and knew‘ the budsot of his own Plrtlcular sphere of state activity as nicely as he knew themattors going for- ward under his own roof and the elect contents of the family ex- ohoquer. And along with all this executive diligence. and domestic so enemy, somehow harGworksd sun‘ uei would combine a singular love of gossip, amusement, lively com- psinted in their true colors and are - never hem-cud his official duties. ‘ Ellery Play. Parade, fire, banquet, goncert, riot, trial, execution, pic- ture gallery. wedding, charity ser- mon, festive juuketing and fashion ,revue, he could get wind of; and ‘it is saying a great deal to state that his criticisms and memoran- ’dums are as reiishfui to the reader as must have been his clever knack of playing the flageoiet to himself or the company foregathered under the ‘omestic roof. "Mightily divert. lng" is this Pepsyian record of do- fngs about town in which the author does not spare himself even if he is very plainspoken and candid a- bout some other notablllties of the Period. Samuel does not mind tell- ing us how he became flcup-shotte" none to his advantage the day after: how he bought a copy of 'Hudibras, which he could not bring himself to think witty and sold it for efghteenpence, borrowing the second part instead of buying it: how his flirtatious with "Mercer" aroused the jealousy and protest of Mrs. Pepys, and “so Mercer went away, which did much trouble me." "will tells me that he had present- United Kingdom is an importer- - Aucusr 4. 153, No day will be too long or its problems too burdensome if you have the zest and ener which come from inner health. Start each day with a sparkling glass of BNO’S “Fruit Salm ENO rouses the morning appetite, sweetens the stomach; relieves acidity. ride the inner system of poisonous waste; prevents constipation. It pays tyrou to insist on BNO because it is the most re eshing, pleasant-tasting corrective, contains no purgativc mineral salts; and forms no undesirable/habit. Buy a bottle to-day. mwavrnwssatmaslvommissuedstwu BaleeRepeueomdvaeloINarflaAmnIn naeuiuvaaehuacaunzo-rauectaisefrassa om ENO'S ‘FRUIT SALT’ u. Brahmin Orange Pekoe Tea Retail price 50c per lb. Sold Only In Bed Alrlllht Packages. smds me a kind letter. and the plate back again, of which my heart is very glad," Pepys goes to Tyburn to see several victims hanged and quartered. "ihéy all looked cheerful is his comment. He tells us how the King and Duke of York look "very plain men‘ in their ordinary morn- ”? Se?’ bu” when in m” ‘wuufloi the diary who has voted this ex " oo most noble." There are, hundreds of references in the diary “d” a bormme task‘ to the effect of fine clothes, and Samuel himself knew the value of buttons and gold braid. “The truth is, I do indulge myself e. little more in Pleasure. knowing th‘s is the chasm. “And new," proper age of my life to do it, and Ralph. “H, knuws the rem out of my observation that mosfiwhyg- -.._._.__-_- PENCIL Withliox to carry stamp-these are no larger than the regular, and something you will like— let us show you this newest item. G. H. Taylor J ewler and Engraver men that do thrive in the world i get to take pleasure during - time ‘they are Betting their estp -- but reserve that till they have -| one. then it is too late for the to enjoy it." Samuel Pepys, n quire, was very human indeed. Y we have still to hear of any rea i Ralph: "Before Amos was mar- ried he said he would bethe boa or know the reason why.’ ed my piece of plate to Mr. Cov- entry. who takes it very kindly, and m a discourse $1.00 Enos Fruit Salts ... 10o $1.00 NIIJQI "nu-u...- lie 15o Nuiol sac 01.00 Bottle Beef, and Wine m 01.00 Bottle B’ Hyph n» ‘L00 Bottle I Ilok $1.00 Dextri Maltese .. lie, loclobinsens Ilarley ..,. 41o ‘Ihermoe Bottles assesses Ila a Cakes Weodlnry leap Us Ln... on: In- ‘talcum in it Cakes William leap an] 1 Tube William she emu-m m a2 mics m Great 4mm emu DID]. While NMHOHO. WOCSOBI, ‘i... A this ally- temporal the isire. o! ' goodi twietliyou the. . _ swepsievslffconts ‘for whom you; ask: for: —