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The Goderich Star, 1926-09-09, Page 2It Nap TWO Milli r J10.011.6•1110111111011•14111111,11 The Aroma Captivates GREEN TEA Vre Pure, , uncolorl ed, delicious. Asti for it. ••"� won itis title far the final eriisode WORLD EVENTS of (hast picturesque campaign in which "elephants were used as biog. 0000,«.._,* gat''e conveyors for thet B ttish A Mearraate From Judie troops. Magda)* was the bill -top The am*a.ng Popularity of thw fortress in which .the Ring. of Abysr Canadian* Nation! E xhibitian it sfnia shut himiietf up after all the forcibly demonstrated by the fact rest ,ei the country lied submitted OW its opening day this year was and in ;which he was found, stoic the greatest in its !history with: 161,• by his own hand, when it was 'lineally 000 persons in attendance. It was overcome. Ile had brought on the Warriors' Day and the return of the war by imprisoning all The British khaki and the sprinkling of the subjects in Abyssinia in an efaor gayer uniforms from the regular to force Britain 'to help him in o regiments brought back proud neem• campaign arsinst Egypt. cries front the sadder past. But the TEM A.11100.010 AN — „wit 1 Irelasnd. is order to wake mese ices• peaied to prevetaateats, promoted a till beton terve stien, • CanWet W ii.Ui the Parliament st Dahlias. It took - to scc.pt t *Wieser suet is M• two years to get the bill threaarb dined to let the owners and *there and then he hoard received a bill continue the debt to the end by for 313,000. Later rause anothee themselves. it is significant that ;till for 3366, the tort of trans- bankers are declining to mks any lacing the Act into Irish. "lee chair- - mere advances to the owners. The - man of the Board declared that the 'miners while still refusing So work i bill should have been 'passed in not any longer hours have admitted a more than seven weeks, And that willingness to ronsider the Vr.dase- f they did not ask far the Act in Irish tion in wages. In the meentiaae, became* they could not read it. - Sir Alfred Mond, is visitor to Can- - eds. just now, declare, his belief Sulks Will 'lea Soca'. that the strike will end in three Although so many men have beer weeks. What the final adjustment involved fcr four rams** in the will he no one yet can guess, but British coal strike, not one Psacsor .the ;sifters have, certainly reaped has so far been seriously injured a big bravest of unhappiness and and not one . been : killed. However privation* in the four fruitier* the miners ere in an ugly mood months during which the struj etc, just now, since "Emperor" Cook in a has one on. whirlwind canmpeign, has put a tent• - Porary stop to the return of Hier Strike Nearing End to work. The miners are them The mttlement of the British coal selves breaking into . rival camps t strike is in sight, since Ramsay Mao - some who would return to work l Donald has tntin*ted that the strik- and others who are for sticking out ere are willing to negotiate without There are those who are advocating reservations of any kind, to discuss the withdrawal of the stsfety nten not only lower wages but longer from the mines and two pits are it hours and eibetrie+t *crewing ik, the grave danger of Are as a range= three things which they have stub- queneb of the inadequate protection bornly declined to discuss hereto. Winston Churchill is - now in con- fore. Following this Intimation, t trot of government negatietions Winston Churchill indicated that and a verba( duel ia going on be. the government would be willing to tween him and Lloyd George, whe support the miners in a national has far out -distanced Rxnisas Mc. agreement, in opposition to the Donald as a champion of Labor. owners, so long ea wagea and hours Although Labor has definitely an- can be negotiated. most picturesque figure at the Fait; An Expensive Tongue wase the Diwan Bahsdur, a famoi k The Harbor . Board of. Dundalk triter from India who opened the Exhibition,. This representative ot 0000..----- a . ,a great and ancient race, who heel travelled 10,000 miles to perform r, ceremony which emphasized the unity of interest in the British Cem- ' monwealth of Notions, delivered the most stirringspeech' Connde has hcard in n long time. There wa a nc - hedging or apotogiea for the loyal - niessage - he brought from India which, - ho declared, was "proud of the 'Empire and does not want tc leave it." •- *"Xhe heart of India is sound,," he said. The iridian licoplo . ate - toc ehretvd.and wise to believe that theta - destinies are better outside than in• .side the British Empire. The British Empire is, the first -which hat ot set up an • averioidshlp over its. Dominipns.. It is made. up . of a fen and voluntary leagues of equal no.' • ""' tions, and that is the geniuts of Brit. isle rule. It leave, each nation to de- velop ori lines of ' its own nation*: glory attd sentiment with the pres- tige of Fanlike . old days it womb not have lost et their backs. . . . We . in India are . united, in the come mon band of • allegiance to King George, and I tell ,you that .one ran• not have a prouder ellegiande tc boast of..than that of Britain." • ' The .Aswan was India's represen• tative in , Wembley affairs, and le .en. _ trenching himself firmly •in the eta• teem of Canadians - with -whom WI, coming in cont'eet, .another Channel Swim The - second woman to cross° the English channel did so within the inenth, after the ` first•suss ssfu'" Woman competitor` for channel`" bon. ors.. She itt-Mrs. Clemington Corson ' also from New York. the mother o. two - children end still under-thirt; gears of age. She took about al - hour longer than Gertrude Ederle For the feat. 'leaving the, Sere eritane In the .exercise of the mandate aver Palestine, Britain has under . her • protection ai curious remnant of tt famous . people, the Samaritans' who -ttoty number leas than a bund red and fifty, living' together int - little village near Jerusaleiu. The _ 'iasis of their • quotret'with the Jews in remote history` is atilt vital to them today. They claim that Mount _ C.nisian, not Jerusalem, is the site of the Holy Cityand stili maks their annutti pilgrimage there tc make a (sacrifice of lambs on the Feast of the 'Passover in April, ton. atituting the oldest blood sacrifice now ceiebrtted in the world,' Neville; goner on since the 'antaritanr settled` le than tend of Canaan. This strange little grout) of people whe still firmly refuse to add to their numbers by marriage outside el their tribe, are being nroto.ted troth pareeecution • bar. Iltitait+. 'Abymbeias Aimee)* to the Leagee Strange it is hpw many of the .f ancient retea *re Winning phsees'in the hatdlinet of the daily papers re. eently. Abyssinia haus been •brought to the* - fore by the averment be- tween Italy and Great Britain to divide the country into spheres of - infleences,- so that 'their eumnierciai developments will not innflict. Abs saints* is indignant et this ' treaty - and being at member of the Itiagtit of Nations, is carrying a protect is 1 that body, demanding. that. tabs- - e j ---- - regarded on en equality with Brit• airs' and Italy and asking that the treaty be made null. Nearly slaty years ago Abyssinia swiss completely **abetted by * British expedition{ ander Lord Napier of Magdala, wheVON i "I Inforitumn, ' 'lr;t+lints SWUM UN .0-......._.a ..04000tuarro....,... 0000...__.-...� .._,._._x Fr•00630., �0*0 _ J. A. JEAUDIIY Tit Men real palati,aber we.t we: found wintered is his dies =dm at v s t anyeterkosa circumstances One theory was that he was killed in reverse for out vnfevorabie report made *port eou3itione in Ruaasia which he investigated fur t big in• doetrial concern. • Ilu.1•10adu 111100114•0•10111 r01.10••• _ _ _. 1.w"r..+ro•••..•••••0l r in i 11 . 11 i t ill. a 11 01140•1011.r-mbn i `0' TIltJl * .IIMPTSIIIISS 4 IRIS i Early Showing of FALL GOODS Plot tsar Owater ""-A Irma of honor et one of the daily luncheons of the C. N. E., was John Moodie et Port Nelson, who it proved to Ir: the first Canadian tc - own a motor car.- ile else brought the first turbine engineq to Canada A Wool Record A unique feat was3 a tcoomialisfhed' by Canadian wool manulhetur ere, t who succeeded in transferring wool front the back of a sheep one morn- ing to the back of the Lieutenant - Governor -of Quebee, Hon. Narcisse Perodeau, in the form of en over- coat, on the evening of the sone day. The Sheep, taken from a farm near Brantford, et four o'clock in the morning, won* sheared, the wool washed, dyed, carded, spun and woven, the cloth made t:p into ar overcoat and transfered by airplane to Toronto before saeven o'clock of the same day. .A. IJ. S. Cancellation View Newton Bakar. former. United (Continued on page 3) FALL HATS FALL SHIRTS GOLF HOSE FALL CAPS SUCKERS GOLF KNICKERS WINDBREAKS , PALL SATINS ARE IN! Come and See TIhern CHAS. BLACK ., The ,leading Tailoring and Men's Smart Wear .Store Phone 219 North Side Square • Vf. Two Sure Roads to u Farming Prosperi 0000..... • Pr�tect the Home Market For Canada, more especially for Ontario and 'Quebec 5 the stage is set for - a tremendous development. The fabulous wealth. of our North Country—now established beyond question,•reeds only the assurance of honest and . stable government to • attract capital and immigration on a scale thatwill inaugurate a. period. of unprecedented prosperity. A few years 'hence in .Cintatio there max easily be a population of 1,000,000 north; of the. .Great Lakes and the Ottawa River, ..,All of which means a big and profitable Market- for farm products. • That market should' be reserved exclusively for Canadian farmers. Elect a conservative Government, and it war be so reserved. For the Conservattve•k'arty stands -pledged to see thatthe Canadian farmer is as adequately protected in this market as the'UnE d States farmer is in his. As Mr. 1'VfeighGin stated at Midland on August 3rd,- 4'We' will make it as hard for the American farmers to get their surplus shipments into Canada, as they are' now making it difficult', for the Canadian farmer to get his surplus into the United States." • What Others Jiave Dane; You Too Can Da! , The farmers of Canada ht ve"abown that they Cwt march abreast of the whole world in quality l duction. Also they have made giant *rid" ikw. increasing the quantity of their production. 0000 'o lost in the - business -like, efficient marketing of their products they have failed to keep palace. , Little Denmark has developed a system of co. operative marketing that h*s•madc her one of the most efficient and prospemus agricultural countries i the girt. Australia and New Zealand have both nude the orderly tnatiteting..of their pfoducts a nutter o& national policy. Don't let Canada lag behind any .tor r,. . . • Promises are Good wairbut Actions e a_Better . 0000 i •. � 0000 For the United States farmer, the season. for "seasonable" . prodlsce -- all' kinds of fruits and vegetables -- opens much: earlier than it does for • you. When youetherries, oryour toznat e . are first. ready to pick. his production of clierz ies t z• tomatoes is at its peak. Heretofore, its order to avoid breaking prices in ..: his own market, he has been acCusstomed to dump his surplus production ort yours: In less than three weeks from the; time it took office, the Conservative administration effectually • stopped this practice by rigid enforcement of the dumping regulations! • Co -Operative ..Marketing. . Every farmer who knows his business hopes to -"»produce in larger quantity, and still be able to sell the ince without breaking the market •produce in a better quality, and obtain the premium to which he should thereby be entitled. Both hopes can be realized- quickly and in full rneasuse- "through co-operative marketing 1 The proper iirocedure as regards organization, the proper technique as regards standard& grading, etc., and: the proper methods of financing, are now an open book that all who will may read and profit by. In the five years he was in office, Mr. King did absolutely nothing to bring the blessings of co-operative marketing within reach ofCanaan farmers. But --r Mr. Meighen stands pledged, if returned to power—to quote his own words from an addreSs delivered in Ottawa: on July 20th—"to put into force such a policy as uwill ..enable the farmers of Canada_to build up a marketing system which will compare in efficiency with that of any agricultural country in the world. ' And this pledge will., be carried out, even as Mr. M en's pledge to stop the dumping on the Canadian -market of United tides .fruits and vegetable* has already been carried Mitt - - Yam is the choice—yours the responsibility—on Septe14th If you would unlock the dile door to prosperity, the key tOt which Ur. Meighen o eraryou VOTE • OP'4' Aft.'ftisalissi.! , 0000 a err, .+t for H J. A. MacEWAN, in N. Huron For ftigg.r and Better Markets! • ,, a alemer trseaesialts rt, > ilie eat Pe* Sissinit