,G » ' 1 1 r 1 i UGUST 11? 1°” __ ac oils o@_m ~ ,__,, _,___ ,___,________,,_,__”__ 1-Ace -L 1 L..clon't trifle with 'COLD$l I Break them up over- night - 'with A S C O Wohdlfflll for IVHWABI Hlllllchl opa or down-but soollus =~i:°°.m.'."'€‘. .v _ ,\ A . ,-`~*,' l Leg; \ _ "f ‘ ii grgiiiiiasis s= i gveierl ii‘i-tiiiigr it run a no stlvs tion. ai- lot ll on ASCO Program on dslly'l.15|o'i-30P.M. Potato Thief Covers Evidence pg. . W0ODS'I0CK» AUS. 10.-A thief i i James Wilson, Yeo street, dug up 'i1 -_ hills of potatoes, and than went to g. work and reiplaoed the stalks in the , pound, and hilled up the earth a- f- aulmd them to make it wpear the ' potatoes had not been disturbed. 1- The owner, however, happened to go to the patch early this morning and discovered the theft from the newly disturbed earth. Needless to say, ' the thief carried away the potatoes. _ 'Air Travel Grows - Companies Report A IJONDON, Aug. 10-(C.P.-Large Increases in the number .of passen- gers 'carried by British commercial aviation concerns are recorded in the Report of the Progress of Civil Aviation in 1932, just issued by the Air Ministry. Increase in the num- ber of passengers carried by the air transport companies is no less than 125 per cent over the figure reached in 1931; the increase in the number nirbome in other flying for hire smoiuits to 183 per cent. In August, 1032, the best month of the year, 10,- 403 passengers were carried in air transport vehicles. and no fewer than l0l,'l40,in machines engaged in _ other forms of commercial flying. . In number the flights by British aeroplanes between this country and the continent of Europe were slight- ly less than in 1931, but, thanks to ihe intensive operation of the cross- Uhannel services by the new fleet of Handley Page Type 42 biplanes- largest passenger-carrying land- planes in the world-the passengers \ transported went up from 21,925 in *H031 to 41,609. This increase' was mfuch greater than that achieved by cross-Channel services operated by , any other country, with the result that of the total number of air trav- eliers on the routes 59 percent were carried by British wings. Altogether British air transport planes carried 56,603 passengers over _ a mileage of 2,090,000 on regular routes and in air taxi flight; 389,- . 280 passengers were carried on short pleasure and business flights over a _ iota! mileage of 1,020,000. MANY HOLD THE SYSTEM IS MUCII T00 RIGID -7 IJONDON, Aug. l0-(C.P.)-»Ap- T pointment by the Air Minister of an f~ independent committee to consider ,' the present system of control of '. private flying is in line with the growing opinion _that changes are " desirable. Many hold the system is . much too rigid. Four months ago, ` for example, a new Air Ministry reg- ulation prohibited in effect the fly- `- ing of any aeroplane which did not I possess the formal certificate of air- ' worthiness, unless special Pemli-551°" were obtained. Many people at once declared that such a F681-\1BU°l1 might hamper experiments. The Committee will be asked to examine the requirements of the present Air Navigation Resulations. referring especially to those dealinS with private flying. in such matters as certificates of airworthiness. and to consider whether, and how, the present system of control by the Air Ministry should be modified. IXCEEDED PREVIOUS RECORDS LONDON. Aug. 10-C.P.-Letters lent by air from Great Britain dur- ing 1932 exceeded all Previous re- cords, weighing altogether 64 tons. ll against 52% in 1031. The Christ- mas air mail despatched to India amounted to approximately three ions: the mail of one day alone- Qxhrcember 10-weighed more than a ton. Though parcel air mail fell from mi tons in real to sl tons in 1932 -a result of the world financial de- ilfcolion - the total air mall dis- P0-iched from the country rose. therefore, from 115 tons to 121 tons. evidently the safety and msollriiv of modern sir transport is makins many converts among the businiroi tommunlty. "Wo are at one of those dramat- \° turning points in history when me Path of progress lies clearly bo- lure us if only we have faith and confidence io take ii."-Raymond 5- Fosdiolt. entered the potato patch of Mrs. I ‘MISCUSSES iSli(I|Al|SM AND f.iIiiMM|lN|SM l -~ i Professor H. L Stew- art, of Halifax, Ad- dresses Canadian Political Club. LAH , Ont., Aug 10-C.P.)-"Socialism is the oppo- site of Commlulisrm," declared Pro- fessor H. L. Stewart, Dalhousie University. Halifax. addressing the Canadian Institute of Politics and Economics hero today. "socialism as a trend cf political thought." he said, ‘Jseeks the exten- sion of social control over private property and enterprise and this must certainly be carried much further than it has been. Commun- ism, however, is a. philosophy and a social system based on three dog- mas, the materlalist interpretation of history, the persistent reality of the class struggle and the necessity of a dictatorship of the proletariat. Thefirst two of these proclaims historical facts but the third is a faith about the future. “The classleas world is considered of such supreme value that one may welcome the dictatorship of one class for the extermination of all otherk Againstihis view 'Pro- fessor Stewart' pointed to other alms which move men that do not arise from. the desire for personal or group profits. "The essential good in Commun- ism is its repudiatlon of the policy of interminable delays in ending sc- cial wronss. the demand that every citizen be engaged in actual work of social value, thus abolishing privileged exemption from work and the repudiatlon of that doctrine which asserts the sacredness of private property no matter to what end it is used. Socialism and dras- tic reform provide the strongest opposition to Communism." IMPORTED PEDIGREE LIVE STOCK An important development in the past year in the cattle trade between Canada and the United Kingdom is that the Canadian Government has recognized the London (England) Quarantine Station, under the pro- visions of the trade agreement con- cluded at the Ottawa. Conference. The Canadian Government has of- ficially notified its willingness to al- low the import into Canada of pedi- gree oattle, sheep, goats, other rum- inants and swine from Great Bri- tain provided that the animals have been quarantined at the London Station for fourteen days imlnedl~ ately preceding embarlration for Canada. The eiiect of this, the Em- pire Marketing Board points out, is that the import of pedigree stock in- to Canada is now permitted during periods when the United Kingdom is not entirely free from foot-and- mouth disease. MONTREAL HAS PERFECT BABY MONTREAL. Aug. 9. -- (C.P.) -- Montreal has a 100 percent perfect baby in the person of Valeria An- toinette, aged two years, 10 months, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. M. Sims. She was one of 1,000c children en- rolled in the Perfect Baby Contest sponsored by the local Lions Club in an effort to _drive home the out- standing importance of regular med- ical inspection of children however healthy they may seem." Her’ crowning as Baby Health Queen of Montreal Island was held before a crowd of 14.000 persons gathered at the Lion'a Club Com- munity Party in the Forum to hear the results of the contest and en- joy a programme of entertainment. Six others, one boy and five girls, won prizes with percentages ranging from 99% to 99%- CHANCELLOR OF YORK ` MINSTER YORK, England, Aug. 0.-ollee| , Department unless they are swom‘ 1 ‘ :Bl Charles B. Edwards) , 1 (Canadian Press Staff Writer) VANCOUVER., Aug. 8--Canada will have a two-fold interest in‘ the United States amateur golf! tournament ai. Cincinnati Sept. iii to 16. Defendng his crown will be Ross "Sandy" Summerville, silent Ontario shotmsster; and, challeng- ing, will be the 19 year old Can- adian amateur champion; Albert "Scotty" Campbell of Seattle. - Somerville, as champion, will not be called on to qualify; but Camp- bell m_ust survive the Pacific North- west sectional trials at Tacona ithis month. Because of his consist- 'ent play in winning the Pacific Northwest title at Victoria and the 'Canadian crown here, all in the space of three weeks, Campbell is confidently expected to qualify. The American holder af the Dc- minion‘s premier gold honors lacks nothing a champion should have. Stylish shots, steel nerves, a keen eye and the will to win-all are in- cludied in his make-up. Never once during the six gruelllng days of the Canadian tournament did the Se- attle public links player betray a hint of the strain under which he was undoubtedly laboring. Yet he lost 14 pounds during his final match with Ken Black of Vancou- ver and almost collapsed in the locker room after the match was won. Until this year, Campbell was an unknown, .a caddy at the Jefferson Park public course in Seattle. He borrowed enough clubs to complete his set and entered the Pacific Northwest tourney at Victoria to defeat s fine field. I-Ie was not seriously regarded for the Canadi- an tournament, however, in the iface of the most select entry ever ito compete for the Earl Grey cup. 1 "Scotty" barely survived the qual- ifying round with a shaky 157. Bn the first round. he dcfeatod Stan Leonard of ` Vancouver, young quarter-finalist in 1932, but the ei- iimination of the erratic Leonard ifailed to attract attention. Next, he fbcat a pre-tournament favorite Jack 'Finger of San Francisco, but, again, the experts passed him up for it cracked and he missed .1 two-foot 1'. Ceo o e, led to draw recognition. The spot- i118ht was suddenly tllmed his way, ihowover, when he out-classed the lfavorcd Frank Dolp of Portland in 'the semi-finals. All square at the end of the mcming round, "Scotty" ,clipped five strokes from par in ing second round and ended the lmatch on the 33rd green. | campbell coerced io ihe iinnl round without a complete sci. of ‘clubs but. for the title match, he 'borrowed a couple of irons from 'Davie Black, profess-‘onal at the ishaughnessy Heights club and father of the other finalist. To win. ICING SUGAR 1 lb. pkg. 2 f0l' 230 |5° f°m'“°“Y by 5 r°5°1““°“ adwwd during the past few days oi? 2 in 1 B_IaCk 9C | . needs PEACHES IAYAEITEY, No. 2 Sq. Per 'H111 Special! Hellmufs 8% ca. jar . Mayonnaise or . . » Sandwich Spread c SURPRISE SOAP spec. 10 bars 37c Quaker Corn Flakes, 3 pkgs. 25c EATON‘S Bulk Tea,lb. 29c Empire Brand Coffee, lb. 38c SILVER STAR Motor Oil Zgallon $1.39 4gallon $2.89 lsnowflake Baking ;Powder 1 lb. tin 16c l iL u x Flakes 23c Small size loc. EATON’S Olive OIL, 4 oz. 23c. 8 oz. 35c. FRUIT SYRUP, Bottle .. 35c LIBIE JUICE, Bottle .... 37c on your , CHOICE SLICED BACON, lb. . COOKED HAM, lb. MEATS 39c Ga.u'r:s,l.b. 356 . l l i COTTAGE ROLLS, lb. 19c SLICED CORNED BEEF, lb. 19c FRANKFURTS, lb. . . . . . Zlc CANADIAN CHEESE, lb. 17c NEW VEGETABLES 155135 C€l¢l`1`» held - . » ~ - - 150 I Cauliflower, head . . . . . . . . 100 New Carrots. bunch 10c New Cabbage, head Ge New Beets, bunch ....... 5c String Beans, 4 lbs. 25:: shopping here. lb. box PARUWAX , 2 bojs_250 Rubber Jar RINGS 4 pkgs. 23c 9 _ Dozen in Carton '- ?f5'1"<‘sL'i"lG'Z~""'° spice 'lb 25|: $4 lb- 130 4( lb. ‘lc. GERTU 8-02- 32|: FRUITS PLUM5. Dozen Pa/ms, nonen 4qc ` ., BANANAB 1 70 = 2 Lbs. . . . . il G-R.AP'EI"RUlT . ... .. ~,-.‘ 8 for . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 21C "‘ ORANGES, dozen . . . . . 39C ~ _'Z "-,fn . |- rhe CANADIAN. 'gif » fTVhe1*e If Pays io Shop ~ ___,_. _ "-7 Dress Reform ` stricken While f Among Bishops , Motoring Is Threatenedi ____ (Canadian Press) L0ND°N~ Aug- 1°-C-9”* °“‘“' orrasrnn, N. s. Ang. 10-shicln P818” f°f Dress “Mlm “"‘°“" B15' en with a heart attack, nr. c. s. Dr' 5’mps°“' Bismp M Kenslnswn pool, NB., for the past 20 years, d'ed grlggcan ;31;h‘1’§s 1;‘5:n31afnd’n:g§:g) Frank Hebb, also of Liverpool. e scar e a or o _ dress, according to Dr. Slmpson.` ) Speaking in the presence of Lord galied upon his Lordship to move in Better Habltment of Bishops. Sorlotly sneaking the b1Sh°l1'=d-"SS srocxnonlvr, sweden, Aug. io- so-oallod is ‘Weil B °“1'“"“1 lop.)-A tragedy in ihe northern of ordinary 18th century riding cos- WMS of sweden when the "sk, tume. The bishops were the last King", Anders Mmm’ ,ost his class in this country to maintain me was recently reported in me 0111? Pe1'5°“ “’h° W0" °“e' English bear hunters and ski-runners. H river near the little Lapland settle County Court Judge, declared in on bythe exertion. consmuencix the run he danced all night. With- out any rest, he again strapped on ._-----~ ~--r*--*W 1 h no gavo a stubborn, par-cqlialllng dis- his skiis and went anoi er who is studyillg law at the Uni- -*H1 ill the ll9i§hb0l'i'100d- versity of Washington. His finan- cial status is "low" and he has LESSON5 TN ROPE SPINNING worked hard for the money to buy i- g Campbell knocked three strokes from par in the first round and ust 8. and holiday beach. hops is threatened by the Rt. Rev. Henmgar’ 49) n physman at uve” The gamers and apmn' and wat with while motoring towards Halifax this I flowing skirts, which are wom by aftemoon in company with DL ~ Sankey, Lord Chancellor, the Bishop A the House or Lords a Bill for the Dl6S II] SWE‘,(l6I1' tht WEBTAUE °f 3' Wl5» and at the Stockholm press. He was B0 years Coronation of Queen Victoria the om Mmm in his younger days, Af°hbi5h°P °f Camerbury was the was one of Swedcn‘s most famous judgcssand barristers, of course, still In spite of 8 heavy thunderstorm We" me “'15 1” °°“"° he went out in his boat to draw his long-line in the mouth of the Pearl O _ Stubbs Rephes To ment of Peuraure. A sudden squall 1 li t the boat and Ahrman was Llberal Leader til:-sgwn overboard. His aged wife, QUILL LAKE. Soak. Aus- 10-Rt who saw the desperate plight or Hon. W. L. Mackenzie Kink. Lib- her husband. went to his rescue ini eral leader, has failed to awaken to another boat and managed io throw the urgent demands of humanity him. a line and pull him ashore. as exfpronsfd by the coliditlons pre- Ahnman spoke a. few words to her vaiiing in thc 20th century, L. Bt. and then collapsed and died, due George Stubbs, former Manitoba ‘probably from heart failure ba'°ulht a. campaign address here. Mr. In the cottages and Lapp tents Stubbs is a Co-operative Common- of the northland old people are, wealth Fcdvratlon candidate in now telling their children about the Ma¢kenz'e riding, where a bye- almost lengendary strength and election will be held shortly. adventures of the "Ski King". They Mr. King is living in the mists of toll how 50 yours aso he look part the policies of the Victorian age ill B Ski run. one Oi’ i-he Olliltand-[ in me 19,1, cmiux-y, me roymer ling achievements of Sweden’s skli .lodge wid his audience, in refer- ,hlstorv. covering a stretch of 210' ,mg to ,, ,Quint add,-egg mm, by ikilometres through the wildest re- the Liberal leader in Mackenzie sions of Lapland. After fini-Shins may in me gftemoori to repel the kilometres to Peuraure. After a cmuenge of me youghfui Canadian, couple of houns of sleep he went G01, is 2, _qdeline io gampbeli out and single-handed killed s bear what clubs he owns. Through the LONDON. A112. 10-(C.P->-Free ` varied sun and ,Hin of me Canadi. lessons in the new rope spinning. ian ama,_c,,,., hc pmyed in me same sport of Looporoo are now being salt and pepper weed trousers and given daily in ihe sports depart- faded yellow pulloverl ments of more than a dozen big campbeu WM made eugyblg to london stores. In each of these compete in ihe United States am-,5i»0l`¢-S there 1-S B 5D€C\B»`iil' ifaimd aieur tournament following his d9ll\°¥\5ifi`Bi0\' 90 Si'\°W UW Pmiiic victory in me Canad|,m even; how simple and fascinating rope when the united sims accepted aplnnlns is. Already thousands of into "_, rank, me Jefferson pg,-ig people have mastered the white golf club or which cnmnbeu is a rolvo with the little swivel and member. "Scotty" will compete in hundreds more are buying them the sectional trials at Tacona Aug- ‘daily as the ideal game for garden, Protect Families By Early Relief 1 MONTREAL, Aug. 10-CP.-The policy of giving unemployment re- lied’ to families early in the dvpres- sion as it was carried out by Fed- eral, Provincial and municipal au- thorities has kept Canadian families together, inthe opinion of Miss Mil- dred Kensit, executive director oi the Montreal Childrcn’s Bureau, and has prevented in Canada a problem which has now reached alarming , proportions in the United States, that ls, a rising tide of homeless, neglected children increasing from 284,000 in 1930 to 400,000 in 1932 These children turned adrift by par- enm who were in the last stages o: i despair and destitution as a resul' I of unemployment, must bf- cared ici in some way by the State or by priv- ` ate philanthropy and many will l grow to manhood and wcmauhood knowing nothing of their own par- ents, brothers or sisters. In Canada the number of children living apart from their families un- der the care of a child protecting agency has not shown any abnormal increase due to unemployment. "ln Montreal tlicre has, in fact, been ll decrease," reports Miss Kelisit. Shu attributes this to the fact cllilclren are not taken from their homes on account of poverty, which the direct. relief system has alleviated, but only because of the death or separation of their parents or other disturbing influences. Reveals War-time Scientific Gain EDINBURGH, Scotland Aug. 10- (C.P.l - When Sir James Irvine, principal of St. Andrews University, received the honorary degree ci Fellow of the Edlicatioiml Instituto of Scotland in Edinburgh he disclos- ed ths part hc took in the lvar-tum inoculation of men on service. The supplybf certain sugar fol vaccine had been 1n~i'\'i0»'.is`iy obtalll~ , ed from Germany. When the stock .was exhausted in the United Klng~ dom Sir James was asked to prepare iihe material synthetically. Ho lui- derstood a German chemist limi pru- pared the material synthvtlcally, hui iit had taken him a your io produr: 1 as much as would lie on .1 three- penny piece at a cost of $500. Sir James, assisted by five llrfidl-l* gigs, sucgecded ill priulllclilg ills material, and soon ilu-_\' \\'cl'u nl-uk- ing it at the rate of half a l'>0\lHd H week. By that time France, Russia. and Italy were clamoring for lt, and material for all Allied nl-mics was prepared in sheds built on ihe lawns nt St. Andrews University. They made it cheaper than they used tc buy it from Germany. "Rugged individualism is not so bad, however much wc jccr tllc phrase today."-Owen D. Young. »- - . ..._.- , - - ..... na ,___..__i.__-._._..___.-_.,...._._- ..- \ \ ` . - ` ~ ‘ - _ \' - ,. -, ` "~\ _ \-, J 1