E? ter. TM. in oasattmd by he! very My. tho mum, of In: soil, nad the bounty of than. which do- - the vnrfrttfons of frost and Tho greoduetton of foodstuth must puny: main Cindi. hula indul- Belgium's King and Queen Greet Aviator While Burgo- master Max Presents Medal. Thu ns I tank of the utmost dtt. !ellty Ne I Mme, nrd the utmost cou- mm mvuilod. But t1ntrilr 011th - was cleared, and the Spirit ot m. Loub out-led to the ground. Tho mount the machine came to a that} um It In surrounded " quick I. a but “wally excited crowds that ran â€Moll over the ttttld and stampoded the quarter. roped " tor tho olllchl â€caption commute. thereby summing all the carotully arranged plane tor in: he! a†in Europe (Sundeyrwel to him one ot the moat interesting. lie eterted it try keeping . went en- casement with King Albert and Queen Bum et the Evere- Aerodrome, to Ihow the. his plane. Lindbergh left the United States meaesy early with. out revealing his destination. He met the Royal couple It the aerodrolne and took them to the shed when the Spirit of St. Louis was bowed. He hnd the machine brought out into the open. and explained every dean of it to his MM. eety. who showed the livelieet interest, not only in the machine. but in the do. an M v. a ttitttt, which were told mimzl '.- Th !', ...-.." frown Prince, who boo m. modesty and courts" are earn- M Lindbergh not!" lanol- day by day. He reached Brussels sum-1 and received a wonderful reception. Clrclod Academe Lindbergh reached there at ' o'clock in evening. Ho circled the aerodromo Ind volplanod down. but, owing to the an". of people lnndlng the “old. me min and made another circle, W10 the police endeavored to press OI. mentor. ' Th !', "v'--n from Prhteo, who tte. cam " _ w of chum ot Captain Lind. Mrgl.'< ' tbe Amorloan Club dlnnor last evenikg, received I Viol! from tho aviator l on tttterw.rd. Both Prince Donald and Ms wife, Aotrid, expressed their huh regard. and earnestly hy vltcd the ttler to come an": to Bot. glum when he could any longer. lurgommor of ON“... Tho herrile Bur-gonna!" of Brunch. Adclphe Max, who†nune malted world {nun durlnx the In. greeted (twain Llndbergh In the hm City "All. while 12.000 people mood In from of the bulldlng acclaimed him. Fr.therinttt' of men. women. boys and (Ms, and "on infants. aver assembled in um: country In welcome a private citizen of any nation. A crowd estimated by tho police It more than 100,000. breaking down tho barriers. "armed over the tUM Jul! "tore the "Knot came to earth. 1nd dam robbed him of . India place. T Then with his arm linked tn that ot the nttrttomaster, he went to the bul- eony. where all tho leather-longed brtrtthers tet him know just what they thought of him. Shortly after he took of! fur Croydon- London air port. Wild Enthuolaom Tho t‘ruwd which greater the nlrman It thv ('rnydon Aerodomo was one of "an largest, with“. most enthuohotlc Undlu-rgh Thu song ended. he shook hand. warmly. and asked the winger Who would oblige with "La Bmttaneotttte." M. Noumea "Mixed. surpassing him. n-ll. and the hwvy on: rattan of the old hull fairly rung with the stirring retrain: "The King. the Luv. cud Liberty." MOBBED AT CROYDON. I,llilBlilla's TRIU MPHANT PASSAGE Graceful Ever wk up. ttttd out. ot the tho baritone Bonnie: of munch Opera Troupe of ' 1:1 Montana. Ho “It; anxlod Banner." and 11 at attention. l u he looked into the has of the s. »-.hing mun. Lindbergh called out'. l‘1400K out tor my machine!†, Cook. to Crowd I After meeting the reception com- mittee and climbing a ladder to a bal- cuny on the adtninc,tration bulldlng of the aerodome Lindbergh tspot'" to tho great throng through a m. we in a hUrh-pitehod voice, saiu '1 Just want to tell you people here this after- noon that this is worse than Le Bour. gw- or should I say better?" And snow, Innihino and rain necessaryltory now known as the [Mnliniuh of for the with of fruit, grain attd1c.c1adai', hlas: yew“ :le3 (If?) trg.ttti,-. . Iono w ea was "6,260,09i usheis. WI†unrivalled the world over., In the last 60 We†the develop- In the item of wheat alone the year '; ment of machinery has made farm of thmfed.ration saw I crop of 10, Work much less laborious. In 18u'T. 823,873 but“! for the entire terri- the cutting of grain by machinery greeting the Mn in a dtqasttiod man- HOT. then the airman smiled and chuckled and tried to look around and see where he might “reaps. A miserable showing it one considers the fUuretr in Australia, when " per cent. of tho electors voted in the last election. It Is true that Autumn has the compulsory vote. . Does it mean that we too shall have to compel our electors to do their duty by threats of punishment? Shortly he made an attempt to deg. cend trom the tower, but the crowd surged around the foot ot the ladder to such an extent. that he was forced to remulu on the balcony. Meanwhile the police desperately endeavored to 391 Ambassador Houghton's car to the buildings. but. it was slow work. ro. qulrlng nearly half an hour, and in tho "mule one of the windows ot the car was broken. This mutant was followed by an- other compelling smile. and the crowd slowly divided no the car could get through. The League of Nations has conduct- ed a entem-atic campaign against the evil. Progress has not been as great as American toes ot the nanotic trade believe it could be, but the endeavor has not been abandoned and advances have been made-auch as the limitar tion of exports ot opium from india. Now the Lettguo has published a re- port of seizures of illicit shipments of drugs during the first seven months of 1926, which gives some measure ot the threat. Summarised, it runs: Raw opium. tr.', tone; heroin, 3,520 ounces: marphlno. 10,195 ounces; cocaine. 625 ounces. Since drugs are sold and used in very small doses, these amounts, it is necessary to understand, are enough for in immense illegal Witness. The German police are reported to have dis- covered the existence ot a band of ity ternationnl smugglers, eprrylng on trat. tie in many countries and "to an almost unbelievable exteat."-alditorial from The Outlook.) Three Rivers Noavelliste (Cons.): (Rather less than one-half ot the regis- tered voters In Montreal went to the polla In the last elections.) A miser- able showing when compared with the tUurms in England, where 80 per cent. of the electors vote on every occasion. Sborbrooko Tribune (Lib.): The two greatest menace: to the safety ot motorists are the speed mania and the tovel crossing. When it La properly upproclnted that roads are not race tracks and that level crossings are a species ot death trap, the number of fatal accklents caused by the automo- bile will become practically negligible, at least in comparison with what has been the case tho last few years. Eventually Lindbergh through the megaphone said he had a request from Ambassador Houghton to mike and the crowd Hatched. He said: "Tho Ambassador wants me to ask you to please clear a way tor his car-he ask- ed me, and 2 cu not. out." The Menace of Drugs. One ot the greatest dangers that Wouowrn civilization taeee because so Insidious and silent~ls the trattle in narcotic drugs. It is a peril of partie cular con-corn to the United States, since tho use of drugs in this country is known to be on tho Increase and to have a direct relation to crimes of Noumea Shirking a Duty. Safety First. way for hi: car am telling yon SECOND OF NINE HISTORICAL SKETCHES BY JEFFERYS Reference Made to Part Played by U.S. in Developing Country. The Herald-Tribune has devoted a recent leading editorial to a tribute to Canada on the approaching 60th anni. vers‘ary ot Confederation. “Citizens ot the United States will be glad to be remind-ml that tho month of July contains another important na- tional birthday besides our own. Al. though British Canada dates from the eoaslott of the territory in 1763 and representative government trom one Constitution Act ot 1791, it was not un- til July 1, 1867, that the Dominion ot Canada came into formal existence under, that title and with a federal form of government resembling, but not copying. our own. It originally contained only four provinces: British Columbia and the West we") not brought in until much later and New- foundland still maintains its atom and unshakeable independence. In the meantime, however, the Dominion has solved many 1itBeultie. ot national ex- istence. accomplished the enormous task of opening up its omnty western reaches, achieved a racial harmony "To tho awe-inspiring accompani- ment of 10.000 beacon tires, stretching in an unbroken'iine From (tape Breton to the island of Vancouver, the Do. minion of Canada will on July 1 cele- brate the son: anniversary of Its birth. Those tires will illuminate 60 years ot a unique history. In January, Presi dent Coolidge received in tho able and admirable tigure of Mr, Vincent Mas, sey. Canada's first minister to the Urti, ted States. It was the confirmation of the 'Dominion tstattttr'--attt innovation in world politics for which the British Empire and the world at large are In- debted to the success of the Mimi-i- ment initiated by the British North America Act ot 1867. JUBILEE TRIBUTE FROM NEW YORK B ILL PUT HIM up FOR THE WEEK! ( WHERE IS HE, DOWN SYAIRS? . I J, LN . ' 'it3 cr-r ILL PUT HIM UP FOR THE WEEK! WHERE IS HE, DOWN SYAIR‘S? (CUT OUT AND SAVE) ADAMSON'S, ADVENTURES-BY O. Jacobsson. was comparatively new, and the ma- chines then in use were crude and unwieldy. In that year a Canadian company produced the hand-rake reaper, which'was far superior to any manufactured before. On many a farm of that t' . the entire grain "The disagreements wow frequently sharp and the feelings strong. But without a neighbor at once strong en mum to call forth Canadian exertions and reasonable enough to avoid war, the Dominion status in its present form might not have been attained. By this time the issues have all faded and the goodwill is broken by nothing more than the minor vemtlons of Ameriodn 'culture' or the negligible diMtttlties ot Canadian rum-running. Citizens of the United State's will re, joins in the success of the Dominion of Canada. or all the experiments in statehood on this aide of both the north and south Atlantic, it is one ot the firtetrt, and Americans will look for. ward to extending on July 1 their wishes for many more prosperous birthdays." Whatever our faults, there are thousand» of people In all ranks ot society who are honestly trying to give pt theiy heat for the good of those around them. Bishop ot Lichfield. _ "In the famous series of arbitrutloug; _ with International commissions and ir- ', For 0X10 W hour ot trweet 7990â€. mated communication which have pas-l He pauses at his hithestvcrm: sad between the two communities. the'The ploughmaa quite; even nature United States experienced important,' know: lessons In the arbitral method. while Tho wiselecs would. hour of not. we provided Canada with the record upon which her claim to her present Then once again' tho ridge. rise, autonomy is largely (waded. Mr. Mas. Until the shades ot dusk are spun. soy can find predecessors 1n the Can.- And t111 the fund)". and the skie- dlan members of the various tribunals Bring down the WM when toil ll which acted under the British Foreign done. Oftieo or precedents in the work of -J. C. M. Dunonn. such bodies as the Ciihadiaa member- -----F---- brated issue which so enHveno Amer:- and even dealt with the same 00.0- can politics in a fashion for which many Americans entertain an aaton. lshed admiration. sh lp ot mission the luteruatior Lengthy Louie. IN TOWN W'T‘H THE C‘RCUS AND HE CANT FIND A ROOM IN ANY OF THE titrrecSt . _ . LS l C? - Bibgl , ' " Md z tliiili g 915, LC' :41? It Blll i'iUih 'lilla Il N T ~I _ -__e_e !erflllllF' ITD g) I Joint Com. TORONTO AND F crop was cut by the old-fashioned reaper-threaher ivhich cuts u tF-tco: cradle. An expert cradler, followed', “nth and curios a crew of two met. by a man with I wooden rake, who,oan cut and threeh forty acres in I raked the windrows into “leaves and day! The artist shown the old and bound them with a wisp of tstraw,) new methods, together with another could harvest from three to four levelI labor-saving tusrie.--a modern true- a day. Nowadays a power-driven tor. Then once again tho ridgea rhre, Both ct Viscount Wirlinttdon's curl Until the shades ot dusk are spun. I." landauletteo. and both Ibrtt on " And till the furrow, and the skies ( ho. sixcvliuder chuck. Some of Bring down the night when toil is I their special features an interacting. done. No number plates are provided. but --J. C. M. Duncan. both at the front and rear of etch car --- -.._ P small plate is titted carrying in gilt . I . greliet the coronet ot a Viscount. On National Jeaiousies. jihe rear doors of each car is Viscount Quebec Action Catholique (lnd.i: lWlllingdon's treat. On each lids ot They are trying at present at Genevsl‘the front pillars is fitted n special to assure "economic peace and thejnickel-plnted holder and rod 'to which security of pennies." There is onlyman ho hunched n "and tin; when his one way ot making sure ot both, and it 5 Excellency is in the cu. Theaa Bags is not a new way, although they hardly are not used otherwico. There is Ilsa appear to concern themselves with i'tlL smnll red light mounted at tho top at Geneva, and this is to work. JiliiG on either side of the windshield. Christianity did in its Bower, to den-illness lights, are installed lo that " troy the egolsm of nations at the sauna: 5 EXCOHOBCY'I Mr my be eully distin- time as that ot individuals. Are there (wished at n slit. not many who are generous enough . when it is a question ot individuals. -----_--- but who develop a ferocious em - . when it is a question of mrtiomutieat The Defence of Sm And do there not exist in our any: thkwood'o Magazine: At this mo. pazple who up“ not only individuals meat, “hell we no doing our hot to but also nations? Idetend the Amadeus tend can") It mm the morning after the night before, and a young dork. having met too many friends, rang up his chief at home about eight. o'clock. explained everything, and apologized for his in- uM-lny to get to the ofttee that dar. "I approcato your frankness." said the ettiot,-"but don't you know you're oft today. This is Sunday!" Then once again tho ridges rise, Until the shades ot dusk are spun. And an the furrow, and the skies Bring down the night when toil it done. The Ploughman’s Day. The last thin shadow of the night We before the rising sun, Nod Marta the plougtrman with the light. Tho dar ot labor bu begun. With mum mm the meadows ring. In bush and bower the an.“ throng, Lighthearted u the birds that slug, The trlougt1tttau's day begins with The furrows turn in faullleu linets, Before the brawny-uteadied plough; The sun climbs up the sky and shines With warmth increasing. until now, Blackwood'. Magazine: At thig mo- ment, when we are doing our best to defend the American- (Ind' omen) who are In anger qt Shanghai. we are told that the Ame-Icon. decline to pull the chestnuts out of the M for 0mm Britain. A. though we had Inked them! We know wold that tt b not their pncuce to pull (mutants out ot the firm for anybody, and our expert- once ot the Great War has convinced us that only the wealthiest country can afford to have the Americans tor " Hes. The old coaching lane of England suffered a greet decline with the com- ing ot the rnilwnyl, and were forced to subsist on a much reduced local custom. The popularity ot the bicycle saved many of them, and the motor on seemed well calculated to "More than to their one-time pmpotity, but the motoring clue demand: noilltiel whlch are said by observer. to nuke the old-style innkeepor reouve. A writer in the Manchester Guardian re- cently commented inwmtinxly on tvo phase. ot cheated country condition, mainly due to the increuod use of can. in the following words: “Thor. In" pmbnbly been nor. picnicl thin Enter mun in any Enter tor nanny yours. Tho continued .trts.k of line weather (no CotttidetttMr, tend the big increase in the pow-lotion with motor can mount new opportunities. Along the south country roads " Butt. nble pleasant places won count]... small parties picnicking. It tr nottet able that people are becoming much more considerate than they used to be, both in the clearing awny ot the debris ot their tea-ts and in the parking of their cars out of the roadway. "The new Mdhmlnl that hue sprung up to cater toe the new motor on: public no increasing quickly, nnd tho hotels and inn. on the but rand. that used to have n monopoly in vii- hm and small towns are now finding that they have to make oit‘orta to hold their business. A great mnny motor- ists who are not teetotalem now never touch alcohol until they hnve tinitshed their driving, and the licensed house has to appeal to this elm entirely by food and comfort. This is not relished by the old type of innkeepor." Whenever the can of G'omrntrr.41en. oral Viscount Willinsdon stop . crowd gather and look them our. British Automobile Trade " Now Making Remarkable Progress. London-The loch! 'siguiieanoe of the motor cnr he been tho with“ of countless editoriattr, but sometimes the new; columns the even more intd’ent- in; “delights on this interesting prob- lem. In England, where the motor our is now making swift prone“ after long lagging behind, the growth ot motor tramc is n dillcuit matter for the authorities to cope with, bee-use ot the narrow, twisting roads, Ind the great dimcultr in providing adequate parking and turning spaces In old sot- tied communities. MOTOR TRAFFIC Governor-General', Car. .. --v ......, ""' u. ilrr'., and, "Mn d ' far. he um: “m at I Mt." "And who _ iilGia. "Dad “a!" l""". L'2t impel-moo at in. North At. hntio new “on in the bet that it in It» "tttwar over which shins trom 'hoth America. lulled with the mu that“. m of raw milerlals. lunch as â€in. lumber. cotton, and linden. met true! in outer to mm the dotted, populated cities of the glut-open: Continent and England. (than cities. in their turn. are rui- i table hive. at industry, turning out an landles- nmount ot muteaured arti. lei“. may of which they sell m {Amen-ice and send heck by the ships "rhtets brought their raw materials in I them. Thar - Industrialized a coun ftry becomes. and the mor'e that hrr gel-time earn their living by Working ‘in sham and fluorite. the less foul ,etuih and raw mites-lain that count" 3 will pmdtue. and in coma.» at with. i: :will be neceeeery tor her to buy hm ‘wheet tor bread-making, her ht M and imuttnn tor Sunday dinner, and mum iother commodities whith hhi’ th" 3 1m produce herself from less intiubmw ind tot-elm: countries. The can-stun! interchange of raw materials ant mtutuNctttred nucle- bet Wtell tttrt such countries or continents call, m- n ttatet ot shim to ply new“ the init, venlnx waters, and it is this (nillllllm, tszcfauoe " goods ot every dessript 14'†that lots on between America tIntl Ilium. s mat keeps the Atluntic Ch u 3 dotted vritlt hundred! ot ships. “ _ Though we speak of the Nani: AC ntle an only a tingle rt'lllt'. n I'- a “ample! group of runways. on» st' ", and parallelinz writ l ‘l ‘r rut! t'tilt l “gin; It t'urinw points n tr tho trt,, (ml- ot the routes. Tho most â€(maul iwciteir in the whole Wt Nd is tin- Mrcteh ot water between the south l l lvelnnd and the inland. ot thum. t I: the cunt of Brittany. tor here C,ce greater put of the export and import trade of western Europe ct'nvt"tT3m. Ships that have come from the t ttds ot the world meet each other It this great emu-mac, no they buck into the gm}- uveeu lean that come min; down the English Channel. - to “in the (tendon ot the ocean Just beyond. ml In! Quebec. atttt the counting: it): um enter and have New York, Dom. Philadelphia. and the Win-r out coat not“ of the United Sums, but my when from the Caribbean W “I! and. All these ehuw travel the In). route. to and (run. 5111096. " tho Great Circle CCursv, which I. the chm distance in» tween two point- on the ocean. pins†rUht by New Cork; and I vessel bound from Liverpool to Central America " .11 only Inn to so about three hundred mu†Ott' ot her dimet course to enter John D. Rockefeller. Jr., tt.1st:tV, 'ri' tive in giving. an monstmtod :-u M in his contribution to swell tit" new! for the vlcttma ot the Mssissippi thr:ut has long been interested in Tub-Rum Institute. On a vtsit lo that sum n" educutcn for colored i" opie, tho rl 2- , in business methcds was reciting an 1 “VIII: demonstrations on the hint-L board for Jer. Rocketoyter's bettsulit, One of 1N brUhtedt students was ask ed to who I correct promtulury nuts. The colored boy complied, it: a tine muted-n hand. as tone“: " pm nine to my Tuskegee Ittstitute the mm of 810,000 (Signed) John ll locketdhr. Ir." The ttAlliottaire was '0 “and. It I- reported. that b, it!“ out 3 check for the Immmt. (In. Me- lmstne.) New York Harbor. A Great Circle Gonna II simply a course which " awed dong an arc of any circle on I'm trtttth'g “the. which has the ('(‘llll'l of the earth in (a centers Jumm Let-alums. In “Ships and Caryn-n __ Two children. a brother and tisitar, but a 615m. which ended in a tight Thus “we boy van on a viu to h s on“. and. “In!" to rdate the at ht. In mid.. “lo and Hum had I Mt." "And who “pond?" the will At the â€stern and of the North AC Matte route. there 1: another gum (contain. point of Mtippitrg, which m- cludu not only the vessels that trans Into tho St. [Juneau River to Mn.- It In numbed that tho child had boon dead two or three days. Thu mound not: when the body "a found wu we" “unwed down showing that the unfortunate youngster had tought lard tor " life. Tot in Montreal Dies from Exposure and Starvation. Montrml---qhe search for I-yeamld Emile Erna“. who bu been missing from " home Mr four days, ended Sunday with tho discovery or the â€any“: qtareqd to death In c tieitt In the north end of the city. For four dare pollco. (lumen cud citizens had conducted . qegtrUt for the troy, and two Ptgnt Deputmeut pumps had been called into "tthon to empty a pool of - In which the seal-chm bellmm the bor had “Hell. The body was dip covered by " young girl pinyin; in the add. [today cream. when he, " Sour- old brother â€meal- and theh aunt Luciano Muck. beam lost during a min-tom. Thor party wen on the“ way to "In . relative when the storm broke. Tho following any the cum and 1h. oldest boy were cit-covered wandomug about tho - In the out end. STARVFS IO DEATH WHILE LOST Ill CITY TIn bay disappear“ me on Wed- The North Atlantic Route. Wit Brings Racer: Prim. tutored the mu. JAPAN l Demand From Oriel bum to Successful Seldom h tmdo expert Con. with tl no small. , held alum Geelonm th of a lame labour“. V; â€lung season l Mute-Man can not and until g, OFF MRM' BRID PROBLEM M an W would mean no v a a. N! and tho a. and the return sf Wm nu mxoitt. um M tha elk held " Control of Liquo If ont The " " tely h lull or