[ lIHiHLllTTEI '1 wIi suinm Ill.‘ a. us advance! IIIIII (handed III!) flfillCb-I- ODS“! I. Islam "wills-st. llal. D. A liar-Blanca. mailed ll ll-lb Ihtaa delivered- I\IIII IIIIIII par» year til advance) sflllllll Ill-O. Vie!- learns Idler and lasagna-J u. Burnett. Aoeeelate suitor-qr n. pun; moron-ole sous Nswsrl. 1 _ III IOIIIAGUI-W. A, lllllllllfl- ooannus nan be obtained from s» lullowllll Isa-st- ia Florian-towa- l: awn, Feat Oflee. awn-i- orsm- some. (made... ur-ut ueargo fittest. as-ltinso Stationers. Th0 an Willie, ill Ella Ave. “or Q 0a.. Queen Strut. - Wlltleab. Great Georll Street- Iranl N. lays. ll Audlerwsan. sec ‘irritant It, IOItK-slotallag-s NlIl runes. It West 60th]; HIW GLASGOW. N. S.-I. l. Faulkner. IUIIEBBIDI-llullbs Beck Ills-PO. lOUllb-I. I. Acorn, Duly. Blsnlnnllfl libert- Aiox. Mel's-arson. Queen Street. n. Tweet, ma: Ave. Tomlin! armory. Cor. Kent I Eeahfer’ J. Canada News Colihepot, , Mrs. Jlfltlmlil, bore-heater fittest- . Duffy use-u Street. llllisbora Street. THURSDAY, JANUARY V31, I929 ran urn non. "1. n. aau. The tragic death of Hon. J. H. Bell, at one time Premier of this Province. has struck a sympathetic chordinthsheartsoftiremanywhv know him. No doubt had Mr.» Bell been allowed a choice as to his man- ner of going. he would have prefer- red to meet the arch enemy, as he did. in the great out-of-doors which he loved and in which he delighted ‘moo/spend his leisure hours. Death came to him suddenly, for he did not regain consciousness after his acui- dent on Saturday, although‘ the strong constitution and vigorous frame clung to the spirit until Tues- day niobi- The iate Mr. Bell was not a great man, but he was human and pos- sessed the kindly heart and the friendly disposition which endear man to man. He never permitted political differences to obtrude upon personal relationships. To political friends and opponents alike he was kind, congenial and companionable, and those who knew him best loved him most. As a politician he will be remembered as a successful leader within the limitations of his party. As a man his memory will be fondly cherished He lived to s. ripe old age, blessed with sound health of body and mind, enjoying day by day the passing show of life, and deriv- ing therefrom all the satisfaction that comes to a keen observer. The knowledge that life is but a fltful ' dream and that in passing out of it one does not slip out of the order of nature but finds a surer resting place and a peace which the world can neither give nor take away, must often have come to him in his latter years. “Men must endure their going hence, Even as their coming hither; Ripeness is all." run nssm: roman. Another voice has been added to the many that have declared against the importation of Australian and u... Zealand butter. As stated in our despatches yesterday, the presi- dent of the Saskatchewan (Jo-opera- tive Creameries, speaking at a din- ner tendered him by the Toronto Board of Trade club, declared that Canada had dropped from the posi- tion of an exporter of 25,000,007 pounds of butter annually to that o.’ ‘an importer of an almost equal amount. This he attributed, among other causes, to the trade treaty with Australia and New Zealcnd negotiat- ' ed for the purpose’ of helping the pulp mid paper industry. While Canada has progressed greatly in aisny other industries since the trea- t1 was negotiated, the dairying indus- tryand its subsidiary bodies had suf- fered. That he was speaking to a sympathetic audience goes without . flying. Be expressed the general opinion that Canada's greatest in- dusky, agriculture, is being serious- ‘ 1y msnaced by the unfair competition forced upon her by this same treaty. , _'l‘bo United Farmers of Alberta also A t is raising thsirvoiccs against the s of new Zealand butter. comm into direct competition _ ‘Oitbtheproductofthtirowncresm- Although their policy is low ‘ 5p and on firm imple- unanimous, and one on which ti!!! will expect their press and rep"- sentatives to take a definite stand. If the demand of our farmers for fair treatment in their home ml!‘- ket is inconsistent with the D0110! of the Mackenzie K1118 501731111195‘- as has been argued, then so much the worse for the policy: and so much more the ecessity for having the question threshed out in the open. It will not satisfy our people to dismiss it with elm-ring refer- ences w “buttery propaganda.” or to oppose the movement through anony- mous correspondents. The people now have the facts before them So, also have the press and the politic- ians. Nothing can be gained by any belated effort to camouflage the issue for political purposes. If the policy of the King Government in this instance a the beet for this country. then let the defenders of that policy stand by it openly, as those who oppose it are doing. The issue is now Joined. THE ENEMY WRITES A BOOK. The ear-Kaiser of Germany is pub- lishing a book written to commem- orate the author's personslhaccom- piishment of what the Bible consid- ers lifc‘s. normal span—- three score years and ten—which was rounded out last Sunday. The work shows conclusively that _while the exiled emperor may now have abandoned the role of "All Highest," yet the old motto “Mienself and Gott," still hangs on the wall. Wilhehn describes the Hohenml- lerns who preceded him and admits that some of them were of doubtful quality. Yet it is apparent that he still regards them, one and all, as "bailiffs of the Almighty on this earth." And herein lies the in- terest of the book. The history of Prussia and of its military autocrats has frequently been written. None have dcne the task better than ‘our own Carlyle. whose monumental His- tory of Frederick the Greet remains a classic even in Germany. But no one has yet depicted the viewpoint ofthe man who loomed so large in the public eye during the Great War; who. as the direct descendant of a long line of Hohenwiiem war lords, believed himself to he the chosen instrument of Providence for the expansion and propagation of Prussian ideals throughout the earth, and who, from the summit of power. fell into an eclipse which was com- plete and final. How such a man views history, how he will misread the lessons of history and see ev- erything distorted and discoloredae though, to quote a phrase of Car- lyle's, he were looking "through the horngate of dreams," is surely a matter of profound psychological and philosophical interest. There will probably be a big demand for the book, the motif of which is found in the concluding paregrap , in which the former ruler, who wa's first to flee when the death knell of empire sounded, now presents to his former subjects a new creed for the future: "Fearless and loyall May this slogan always be before the eyes of our house end our people. it be engraved upon their hearts. hr without those two qualifications the German people will succumb." Had Wilhelm but been content to philosophies. what a greet man be might have been! snrronm. worse. _Maybe,sugg'estsanexcbange,tbsy irejusttrying-tomcvelalvstiim Ararybesdquartarstoibslmdtbat nssfitilmcstsslvatlm, .l.» p _ oftheevilsinAmericaneiviliaatloll. wiiinbhefludstorelulhlnlarge an fromtbeunwisldiness of tbsgovernmentalmachinery. The metesssnuuoiemflyivrruwi-Iflva governmentimbe insistatbat it shallbelimpieandintelllgent. He afilrmstbatintheartsofgovern- meat and enforcement of la-Il. B118- land,tbe mother of parliamantl. standsaboveallotbcrsonthoface oftbsssrtmandtbaltthslhigiisb tradition, which is Canada's herit- age, should not lightly be castaside. There were many things which Can- ada could learn from the United .Btates,buthefearedtbelrtofGov- ernmentwasnotoneofthem. Europeans have often asked why communities so competent, in their business affairs. should tolerate in- efficiency, waste, lawlessness, on so pronounced a scale as were tolerated intbecitiesofthsUhitedStatcs. Our Harvard authority does not tell us, though he instances various rea- sons that bave been suggested; among them. and chiefly. the presence of great alien elements. That, unfor- tunately, was an explanation which did not satisfactorily explain, as was shown by the fact that the most thoroughly American of the great cities in the United Stains, namely, Philadeipbliuhad been consistently the worst-governed. Some large Ameri cities had spasms of re- form. ,, remarked. InBoston there was perhaps one year's good govern- ment out of ten: in New York per- haps one out of 20. Most American cities bad their lucid intorvsls of decent government: but Philadelphia, for two generations, had not even had a lucid interval. President-elect Hoover announces that he will as soon as inaugurated appoint a sort of “royal commission" to examine and report upon the Vol- stead Act and its administration, and to ascertain if the present unsatis- factory conditions he due in part to the law itself. The commission is to be impartial to the extent of reflect- ing ever! shade of public opinion. It is estimated that the investigation W111 cost a quarter of a million dol- lars. A voluminous report with many volumes of printed testimony will sooner or later be available to the public. This may shelve the question forthetimebeing, but mean. while the prohibition enforcement bureau must go on functioning. And the immediate problem would seem tobetoflnda waytomaksits functioning more eilicient. UP to a few weeks ago, gayg 9-11 91111181189. it‘ was genes-ally believed that the prohibition en. forcement bureau in the United Bil-ice had been unable to enforce u" l" "M1189 °°B8ress persistently mused to lPPWDriato more than one-tenth of tho money requjy-eq by the bureau for its work. Why mp. tress had done this when the drys had an enormous majority in both houses no one ventured to ask and no one undertook to explain. They Blmllly‘ knew that‘ the head of the bureau stated that he should have 300 million dollars a year, and that °°118rcse was giving him consider. ably less than l0 per cent of that amount. Hence, at this session, mo senate first Pissed en amendment to the appropriation, increasing the up. propriation for prohibition enforce- mmt b! 250 million dollars, and then receded from its amendment when the house refused to 001mm, Subsequently the senate committee 011 Bppfohriaticns reported favorably another amendment increasing the appropriation by 350 million dollars, Then came a surprise. The dirco. tor of the prohibiiton bureau, in- stead of turning handsprinu in all directions to show his delight, re- portcdto the secretary of the treas- ury, and the secretary of the treas- ury reported to the senate, that this additional appropriation was not needed. and that the director had not the slightest ides what he could do with it were the money to be voted. When last heard from. the senate was insisting that the direc- tor must accept at least one mil- lion dollars for general purposes, and an additional 250 thousand dol- lars to be expended on radio talks, newspaper articlel. bill-board ad- vertisements and other bfllilllnda in favor of law observance. Inflltleatotbadireeforofthe prohibition enforcementbureau, it Notes BLTTIe -Way Mist , Toby i- of pours, BgIusuWJiarIOmM-D. ‘ .One of the embarrassing things that come to the physician is where s patient is suffering with rheuma- tism or arthritis. and after having the infeotod teeth removed, continues w‘ suffer with the rheumatism just as severely as ever. Perhap- i-he Phflicisn. with the enthusiasm that na comes from curing twenty or thirty similar cases, has promised the patient that ughopss the teeth extracted be will have him free of the trouble almost at once. As a matter of fact, when tooth are infected. although the poison is b01118 drained into the system by the circulation. nevertheless ‘ Nature "walls off" some of the poison so that it is not all going into the systgm. However when the teeth are re- moved the sockets and gums are dig- turbed and this poison that was be- int drained into the system in small amounts is all released into system it 0110B. and naturally there is an in- crease in the severity of the rheuma- tism or arthritis. Now ft has been shown that the little bumw or glands in the iym. phatlc system of the neck, which are enlarged because of the poison be- 1118 drained into them from the ion- sils, do not get rid of their poison sometimes for two or three years af- ter tonsils are removed. Also the teeth may only be part o: the trouble; although they are the cause in the majority of cases. Infected teeth should be extracted before tonsils are removed, because the tonsils may be able to do their filtering and work of destroying or- ganisms if they haven't got to take care of some of the poisons from in- fected teeth also. So remember that even if teeth and tonsils have been removed, there may be infections in other places which will take some time to get out of the system. However the comforting thought is $111117 as the infected teeth have been removed, the poison factory has been closed down, and all that remains is to get the manufactured goods (the poisons) off the shelves (joints, in- tafine and so forth) and out of the system. While certain drugs help, exercise and heat, by stimulating circulation are really your best treatment. fOQ-OO-O-O The Land We Love ' nv Imam: nroa THE DOMINION CABINET Q~ What is the Dominion Cab- inet and who comprises it? "A. The Dominion Cabinet forms the ministry of the osnauiaifloov- eminent. which comprises eighteen members, who are aisofas a matter of course. members of Parliament. The Right Hon. Mackenzie King, is Prime Minister, President of the Privy Council and Secretary or State fm- External Affairs. Hon. R. Dan- durand is a minister without port- folio. .The Prime lidinistcr receives a salary of $15,000 and the others $10,000 each in addition to the sea- sional allowance. The. same salary is given to the Leader of the Oppo- sition, at present Hon. R. B. Bennett. Household ‘ Scrapbook By ROBERTA LEE To lie-Sire Bugs Dissolve one pound of granulsiod glue in one gallon of boiling water. Tack the rug on the floor, face down, and apply the hot glue to the back with s whitewash brush. Egglstained Dishes Rinse egg-stained dishes in cold water before putting them in the dishpan and they can be cleaned much more easily. Soda rims: soda sac-at» u» water forboiiingvsgetables tbatsrsalifils oldwillmakothemmontendsr. Lessons I in English Dy w. r. ooaoox i Daily 1 I 4 ‘therewiilbsapproximatoiylimmllaxt ‘ ment inspected, whether the instruct- lilflmtceaprsseindirectlyrinain- ‘his. "Your canal I“ gummy U How“ to Become a ' Flyer ‘ Condensed llollline Robert couches ' Iastyearoehriymliiiairpianeswcre built lathe United BtstnThis War year this number will double. at least wd who“! treble- Ibr each aviator piloting a plane in the air, experts have estimated that there are approximately i0 jobs on the ground. Eowshouidayoungmangoabout getting into this new and rablflb’ growing business‘! Can he start out tomorrow andget QM" - Perhapstbebestwaytoanlwersuch questions’ is to listen to whet 00101101 Paul Henderson, "father of ail mail" and former assistant postmast- er-general, bu to say. He is general manager of the National Air Trans- port. Planes operated by this oomDI-B! fly at least 6000 miles every day in the year. Inst year more than 11,000.- 000 lettcrs-without loss or damlle to a single letter-were carried by his planes. Total casualties in more than two years flying-day and 1118113. 51m" shine and storm—were the death of two pilots and serious 1111111‘! i0 B11- otber, who recovered. [Both casual- ties occurred in severe electrical storms when raging elements ecessi- tated forced landings. One man was struck by lightning. "It stands to reason that we can't have inexperienced pilots or helpers," he says. "Handling mail end 1111111811 lives, we can't‘ afford to take chances. Right now we have t’! pilots who leave the ‘flying line’ several times a week The average age of these ‘mail birds‘ is 25. The youngest, in experience. 11118 1275 hours alone in the air. Some have more than 0000 hours. “The majority of our flyers receiv- ed their training in the army. the navy, or the marine corps. ‘Phat is the best place for any one to learn 110W to fly. If a man can come thrOUSh the Flying Cadet school, you know he KIIOWS his business. "But it isn't always possible to set into those schools. Therefore it be- hooves the fledgling flyer to look else- where. He can try the private flying schools. And here lies his danger. Commercial aviation has, in some, re- spects, grown up over-night. As in every other industry. the ‘get-rich- quick‘ boys have gone to work. Th8! have founded ‘schools’ that Bilarantec to teach you to fly by practicing in the parlor. They should be labeled, for such they are, ‘suicide schools.‘ "On the other hand there are leii" timate schools that are performing a real service. The interested youth should flnd out whether the equip- ment of a school is modern, whether the planes are licensed and govern- ors and operators have government pilot license, whether many have been killed and injured during training. how regular pilots’ ‘rate’ the outfit, the kind of jobs graduates are now hold- ing, and so on. “If he does all these things and the school stands up, he can feel reason- ably safe in casting his lot with such an organization. , "He must bear in mind that no school or no man on earth is 80in! to make a flyer out of him in a week. or a month, or for $100. "You can pick HP newillflllers ever! day and read where. ‘Air Student Crashes to Deiith: This year we are going to read more and more of these stories. ‘Suicide schools’ are turbine out ‘flyers’ at an enormous rate, men who have no more right to be at the stick of a plane than a baby has at the throttle of the s ntieth Cen- tury. "In the first place, every good pilot must know the mechanical workings of aviation motors. He would do well to fortify himself with motor train- ing. If he can get a 10b 1n I111 "h" tion factory where motors and planes are being built, he has started on the best route to a commercial pilot's seat. It is also the shortest, although it will undoubtedly seem mighty 1011B- In this way he can 54101111’! I ""3" ing knowledge while he acquires I bank account. This will let him go to schoolonafulltinlebesisforhiflflll- a1 training. “Armed with his dilllwia and lic- enhsmanotsoinztocesbietowslk into our oilice, hang up his coat, put on hig- goggles and go out and take on. as has ‘got to set a reputation- m out goth job as relief pilot with a small company. work for I wlvlie -—'-'—-7——"' ry" expresses motion awe! 1111111- OITIN IDBPRONOUNCIIIJ dis- oern. Pronounce firsteyilabis dis. not dis. CITIN MISSFIILID: evenness; note the two 11's. srupnnrs: moi-sat. inmate. unsducatod. unsnllghtenefi. unicorn- sdiunlettefliblintuhned. . WOfDIPUlJYHUseawmdtlnee times an u a mo" In us in- IIIII oar V0000!!!” It) mlltlflhl \. The Public Forum _4 i? i. Sin-The oonditionofthis 91100 |l beyond excuse. The Grand Jill’! N- ported the jail overcrowded There are no more prisoners in i811 110W than there were this last Yell‘- But now the prisoners have to sleep around the concrete corridors. One aged man, who-bad-the doctor to see him yesterday, also his clergyman. who, I behave. prepared him for deathfwas put m u» recent-Ion room. and today being visiting Ill-y. about ten or twelve prisoners well crowded into this room to meet vis- iting friendswhoarehere. Anlce place for a sick menl Now. Sir. I wiliexpisinwhytbisplaoeissoover crowded and we prisoners have to be put in such places. 'Ono lady bootlegger, doing six months. occu- pies a room alone that accommodat- ed six prisoners this time last year. This lady refused to go to the quarters that are for women prison- ers, and apparently tbb jail keeper did not have the power _to put her there. So this large room was fitted up for her accommodation, leaving otherprisonerstobeput in places such as they are. Thanking you, Sir, for your space. I am. Sir, etc. Queens County Jail. . PRISONER It is, indeed, a hardship that the “lady" bootiegger should overcrowd the profession in their winter quart- era. Ed. G. individual, gobarn-storming’ with an a): circus. In some way be must spend time intheairinasmanypianesas possible. _ "Commercial concerns pay good mlmey and want only good men. Our men average at least $100 a week. Few of them are in the air more than flvs hours-a day, four days a week." So much for Colonel Henderson's sound advice. Now let us look at gov- ernment requirements. Ten hours ‘solo’ flying 1s necessary for a private lic- ense-a license to fly by yourself without a passenger. Fifty hours are required for a limited commercial pil- ot's license. For a transport pilot's lic- ense—the sort y for big mon- ey—2oc hours alone are necessary.- The Flying Cadets school, ambition of all army student flyers, 1g diflicult to enter. The first eight months of the heavier-than-air training is given at a primary flying school, of which there are two-one at Brooks Field, San Antonio, Texas, and one at Riv- erside, California, On completion of Primary ‘ ‘ ‘ , students are trans- ferred to the Advanced Flying school at Kelly Field, San Antonio, for the remaining four months of the course. Col. Lindbergh won his spurs as a flying cadet-the test is so severe that 50 per cent of the cadets “flunk out." Cadets are extended‘ the social and military privileges of a potential of- ficer. They must have completed at least two years of college work or must be able to pass an examination which is the equivalent thereof, Ex- cellent character, physique, and health are vital. Successful completion of the entire course includes approximately 250 hours in the air. Graduates are rated "airplane pilot," and commissioned without further examination as sce- ond lieutenants in the air corps re- serve. They ars free to unease in com- ercial flying then and ere much sought after by transport companies. A graduated cadet has no trouble get- ting the kind of job he wants. Finally, I want to mention the il- legitimate flying schools. The sales talk these "gyp artists" hand out would do credit to P. T. Barnum. one florid-faced. back-slapping "king of the air," promised me, when I told him I was intcrested, that I'd husky- writing “mash notes’! to the “girl friend" within a month, and I could keep right on doing my regular job. That way the course wouldn't costme "scarcely nothinh" The only ground work wss to come from studying a tsxtsoornrnsaymnosuwuttosa hour. ' Tbeacartistsneverthinkofsub- jsctingspplwants tosven tbemost rudimentary physical tests. "You lock OJLto M. 1W7." the! willie! wordsinipiytbatfsm 9 . i “@1111?! 70.1‘ ' Mortgaggfl- rr ' ; I an Royal Securities ' Limited Riley Building, Cbarl 9mm; - Telephone an. health and strength agein- and promote strength. first bottle. It's a swfl "M- E. A.‘ FOSTER PRICE $l.00-3 BOTTLES $2.50. LET VINOL BUILD YOUUP AND MAKE YOU srnonc ANt wan.‘ . \ While you are convalesclng from an attack“ u", '11,,» triers is nothing to equal vmor. n. brlnslns back to t Will 11111110" appetite, give tone to that stomachmuiid up‘run-'down¢°n¢|¢|°m It is especially recommended for all bervousnnumgc, overworked men and women and feeble old Mills. stand behind Vlnol and have done so ever since We W9 old the Sunryside CENTRAL DRUG STORE rpoxtatiom l ii ‘C. M. Lampson fr? Co., ammo. , s u’ Queen Street fnndou, E. C. 4, England Public Augltion Sales Raw Furs Shipping bags will be furnish- ed without charge by applying to It. '1‘. Holman, Ltd. Sum- manide, P. E. L Represented by Alfred Fraser, Inc. ti: Fifth Avenue New York, N. Y. iuu-u-io-u The Poet's Corner CRIMES Brief, on a flying night. From the shaken tower, A flock of bells take flight, And go with the hour. Like birds from the cote to the gales, Abrupt-O hark! ' A fleet of bells set sails, And go to the dark. s i Sudden the cold airs swing. Alone, aloud. A verse of hells takes wing And flies with the cloud. --Alice Megflell O-§OOO-O-O-O-OQ+O-O-Q-Q-O-OQQO ‘QO-OI Modern Etiquette IY ROBERTA LEE Q. If a man happens to get on a bus or street oar with a woman ac- quaintance whom he is not escort- ing, should he offer to pay her fare? A. It is entirely optional, butnot in the least obligatory, nor expected. Q. Is a signature necessary when one sends flowers to a friend who is ilhandwritesafewlinesonhisvis- itingcard? ‘ "!>1>i>|1»‘$'” WLLS mouevf To get the real refreshing flavor flea TRY BRAHMIN Sold only in Red, Hygienic, Airtight -you don't havi a ‘ But when -tho ‘oss does come then you wantbe best. That's the onlyklnd we handle. ‘ Not everybody» races his . insurance with us-bui no one who has do sdias ever regretted It. We will be pl - ito fake care of your ~~ oe re- quircments. Hyndman ' a C‘ Linlit =1 The Oldest-Ins lance Agency ir, P. .l. Charlotisto r A. No; the nme -- he- takes the place of asign are? Q.‘ What can onedo -- '- afternoon, when enterpin s " - end party? _ ;- 1 A. Ask the guests i singu- This often brings unepectcd merit. 4 Jst‘ Arrive AIISTRAIJA eurrrnzro Only a of NORWEGIAI Packages.‘ I l.