HOW TO MAKE ICED. TEA Infui* lix kcapinj Uttpeona of StUdt Black T<« in • pint of frtsh boilin* w«l»r. Afttr tix minutct tlrtin liquid into two-qu«ct container. While hot, add 1V4 cup* "I sraiuilatcd lujar and Iha juice of 8 itmoni. Stir well uittil susar b diuolvcd; RH container with cold water. Do not allow tea to cool before addini tht cold watc// otherwise liquid will become cloudy. Serve with chipped ice i<^^TmM. Heads Can't Quite Keep Up With Truth as It's Revealed Bruce Hutchison in the Victoria Timea observes : Dr. R. H. Coats, Do- mimigti statistician, who gets out all those thrilling figures about our trade per S4(oere mile in Bruce County, On- tario, and how many bananas Canada buys from Brazil, has been talking to the Canadian Political Science Assoc- iation. You would have thousbt the wjrld ha4 enough statistics. But no. Dr. (^ats says every schoolboy in the fu- ture ifi going to know about statistics in a bier way. "I do not think," he says, "anyone will pass as aducated in the world of tomorrow who has not .1 rudimnetary knowledge of the laws of mass phenomena." What a jolly world it is going to be for young people tomorow! Whai I can never understand is how they cram all this new knowledge into the heads of the young on top of all the things we used to learn at scl:Ool. It geemcd to me that our crania were strctche<l to capacity by the existing knowledge of the pre-war world. Since then an equal amount of know- ledge has been added to the human store and has to be rammed into the . lieads of the schoolboy Perhaps the heads and brains of this generation are twice as large as ours were. In the world of tomorrow, which Dr. Coats foresees, they \ni11 have to be twice as large again. It we could only stop making new his- tory and finding out new things for a while, there might be a chance for the youns crania to catch up. There might even be a chance for us grown- ups to become half-educated again; where now, of course, we are all more ignorant than any child in en- tranoo clas.^. Meanwhile, men like Dr. Coat,^ keep filling the world with facts, with statistics, with the laws of mass phen- omena. There are more facts and there is more knowledge, in the world than ever and probably there is less understanding and less truth. The trouble is that the truth becomes more complicated at a rate much faster than our capacity to under- stand it. We never quite catch up. And even when men like Dr. Coats give us a simple truth like the plain facts of our economic situation, no- body ever thinks of acting in accord- ance with it We may not know mu; h about the laws of mass phenomena, but we do know how to keep unpleasant facts in the background. Dr. Coats must credit us with that. For every statis- |He he can get out to show us what IshouUl be done, we can think up a 'hundred reasons why ve shouldn't do it. This must be discouraging for J.nien like Dr. C>>tits. Income T<tx Return In U.S. Increased I (WASHINGTON. â€" Secretary Mor- tentfaau ot the Treasury said recently that United States Income tax collec- tions during the first 15 days ot the uontii of Juno showL'd an Increase of slightly over IS per cent over the com" parabli'' period l:ist year. Fast Selling Profitable Lines Houschvlil Insert .^pray or I'owdef l>ei»vlor .•<|iiay, l.,i.|uiil liuense, Orlt- leHB ll.iiul Soap. I*n.sie or Powjer, and »>;i!jy (Hhor.«. Iitl>er»l trial order nud portlcnlara, $1.00 prepaid BOBBOCKS COMPANY Windeor, Ont. Keep Slim with Ton-To« Prescription Tablets An alJ tu body chomlcal balance. A helpful prepar- ation til pUiulnate wasiu m.itir- ial. Tricf 11.00 and »a.00 per- boX;^ Out c>'' town ciistimiiTs siuU motty N\iHi order. TON-TOM VmODVCTS Xeff'd. smIo dls- tributorx 'â- '":â- tho PoMiinl"!' of ' Cunndit. Box 133, Station H. 143^ Oatberlu* St. Waat, Xoatreal. -r The Graphochart Shows how lo react chfi.acter from iKinJwiifm.?, at a glance. lOc PREPAID Graphologist Room 421 73 Adelaide St.. W. Toronto New York*s Beggars Writes the N'ew York Sun â€" Have warm days thawed the beggars out and brought them to the streets, or have the police driven them from the subway stations to the sidewalks? Some powerful influence has increas- ed their numbers in the open. They accost the citizen on his way t;o work; they descend upon him in his nooning if he chooses to saunter instead of rush; they assail him as he takes his way homeward. As for the window-shopper, the comfort has been extracted from his study of styles, radio parts, hard- ware, travel displays, haberdashery, savings bank announcements, fire- works and firewater and all other In- teresting things the shops offer to beguile and allure. The beggars are a tribe unmistak- able. They are not honest men out of v,'ork, the victims vtf hard times or hard luck. They practice their call- ing with professional facility and persistence in a manner that stamps them at once. Their approach Is not without a trace of threat. They will bully if they dare; their whine is their concession to caution. Ontario to Build Roads Into Camps Ottawa Will Supply Two- Thirds of S562,Oo6 Re- quired for Program TORONTO. â€" With co-operation of the Dominion, the Ontario Gov- ernment will build $562,000 worth of roads into Northern Ontario mining camps. Hon. Paul I.educ, Minister of Mines, announced re- cently. The Dominion will contribute two-thirtls, or $375,000, Mr. Leduc said. Work will be started this summer, though all roads planned may not be completed this year, as thv.- money may not hold out. Work schedule includes a road from Dog Hole Bay to the Picklo Crow-Central Patricia area; a road from Beardmore into the Sand River area; i-epair and improvement on the road from New Liskeard into Elk Lake and Matachewan ; a one-mile road connecting Red Lake gold mine with water transportation of the road into Delnite mines; repairing roads serving Park Hill, Minto, Dar- win and other mines in the Michi- pifoten area. Communications with the Stanley nine will be improved and a road will be built into Fish Siding on the Canadian National Railways to Stur- geon Lake. Parts of the road be- tween Courdreau and Lochalsli are to be improved and a road built into the Woman lake district. Improve- n.eiit of the road from Co'lins Bay to the chrominuni mine at Ononga I.rke is also on the program. The road from Elk LaK? to Gow- gat.da and Tyrel! Township will be in. proved. The Wendigo mine w-!l I>e opened up by a road from the Lerora-Fort Fraiicc^ highway. A rtud will be built fioni Jack Pine lo Sturgeon Rive'. London Newspaper Slates Red Cross Under "A Ghastly Confession" the London News-Chronicle says edi- torially. "In March last Abyssinia made an appeal to the International Red Cross Committee for gas masks. The Committee, astonishingly, re- fused. "The reason is now disclosed. "To supply gas masks." says the Com- mittee, 'would have caused the Inter- i\ational Red Cross Committee to go outside its proper role.' "The refusal to supply them has caused thousands of men, women and children to die in excruciating tor- tures. To prevent that, one would have thought, was well v.ithin the power role of a profes.'^edly humani- tarian committee. Some people would call a humanitarianism so limited by another name." Better Housing Aids Industry Mayor of Liverpool Tells of Double Advantage in Slum Clearance TORONTO. â€" Although unem- ployed resident.! of the Liverpool slums began keeping fi.sh in the bath- cubs of the sparkling new hiaies provided for them in the city's re- cent housing scheme, the surround- inga soon raised the general stand- ard of living and reduced unemploy- ment, R. J. Hall, lord mayor at Liverpool, Eng., said here recently. "You'll have trouble finding a bricklayer or a joiner in Liverpool today, who is looking for a job," he continued. The 1-30,000 men, women and children who were placed in the municipally-built homes soon felt a need for furniture. Men began to look more closely for work. Those who found it bought furniture, and the industry was aided. lappmg leased Writes the Woodstock Seutinel-Re- v:ew: "Remarking upon the factor ot publicity In relation to the wide- spread interest and sympathy arous- ed by thft plight of the men entomb- ed la the Moose River mine some weeks ago, the Sentinel-Review re- called that In France, daring the war, trench cave-ins or shellflre bur'.ed men every day for years. Some were res- cued, many not, but the Incidents were not, ot course, broadcast. Dr. Robertson, ot the Moose River parly, had been witk the 1st Canadian Bat- talion in the war, and doubtless in Jeopardy tor much longer periods than he spent in the mine, but in tliose days the holocaust was upon so gi- gantic a scale as to baffle the imagina- tion. On this point, one finds in the May number of the L-egionary an article by Will R. Bird, in which the blow- ing of Montreal Crater Is described. He writes: "The blowing of this crat- er entombed many of the enemy who had taken refuge In the bombardment dugouts, and for hours the next day workers from the spot. The tapping noises coming from under the tons of mud and debris that the explosion had hurled over the entrances. The Canadians traced the sounds to a small area and started to dig. But the rescue could not be effected, as the enemy shelled and boml)ed the workers from th spot. The tapping grew fainter and finally ceased as the entombed men perished for lack or air." From the same issue of the Legion- ary we quote a related but more cheerful paragraph, appearing upon the editorial page: "The courage, devotion and enerRV ot the brave men who rescued Dr. Robertson and Mr. Scaddlng were be- yond all praise. It Is with pleasure, therefore, that we recall to members of the Canadian Legion that three of those heroes. George Morrell. now a national figure. George Fraser and Joseph Dakens â€" draegermen who broke through the debris to reach the entombed men-are members of the Stellarlon branch of the Legion. Ex- soldlers who served their country well 20 years ago, they demonstrated that the bravery which characterized them in France continues with them. The Canadian Legion Is proud to have such men within Its ranks."' Face Crop Failure For Third Year BISMARCK, N.D., â€" Drought sear- ed Spring wheat fields In portions of North and South Dakota last week, threatening crop failures for the third successive jear. in North Dakota, leading Spring wheat producing state, observers saw in prevailing conditions a repetition of the 1934 drought. Last year the rust ruined many acres of wheat. Three other states In the Spring wheat belt were optimistic. Nebraska termed its crop In "(Ine shape."' Min- nesota and Iowa prospects were list- ed ns fair to good-. "National prestige is a reputation for tht will to war."â€" A. A. Milne. Increased Mental Elfficiency Means Increased Earning Capacity Vou can learn to think posuively and constructively. You can loarii to con- centrata and cultivate a powerful memory. You can overcome Inferl- >'rlty Complex iiiiJ learn to I've suc- cessfully. Let u.s show you tiow. The Institute of Practical and Applied Psychology 910 COMrESERATIOK BV:i.I>IMa Koatieal â€" Qnaiac Special meJal.s commemorating the maiden voyage of Britain's greatest marine masterpiece, tha R.M.S. "Queen Mary," and 96 years of progress in ocean travel, were recently presented to two age4 Nova Scotian women. The pre.sentation was made in. the Council Chamber, Government House, Halifax, by the Hon. A. Si. MacMiUan, Minister of Highways, and this photograph shows Premier Angus MacDonald of Nova i>cotia congratulating Mrs. Fanny Lenoir, 103, the only living person to have set foot on the first Cunarder, "Britannia" on her maiden arrival at Halifax in 1840. Beside Mrs. Lenoir sits Mrs. Loring W. Bailey, 94. the oldest living client of tiie Cunard Line, whe was a passenger in the "Cambria" in 1849. Both these charming old ladies have long been residents ot Halifax, birthplace of Sir Samuel Cunard, founder of the Cunard Steamship Company. (Cunard White Star Photo) Issue No. 26 â€" '36 Will Test Planes For Ocean Trials Name '"Albatross" Selected For 4-Engine Type of Monoplanes LONDON â€" The Albatross Is the name selected for the new four-en- gined monoplane, two of which have been ordered by the air ministry for experimenral tlights across the At- lantic ocean. From the operational point of view these flights will be among the most important that have ever been made for they will enable information to be collected upon the relative valufs of tlying boat and fast land-plane lor long diatance. oversea uommercial services. The first test flishis are expected lo be made towards the end ot tne year and when the airplanes have completed thei.- performance trials they will be tried e.xperlmentally over the Atlantic. The airplanes will have a maximum speed ot nearly 250 miles per hour, and will be able to cruise at more than 20o m p.h. Yet they are large machines with a gross weight of 25,- 000 pounds each and each powered with four Gipsy 12 cylinder engines. They are monoplanes of exceptional- ly clean lines and embody the latest devices tor reducing drag and obtain- ing the highest possible efflclenc.\ from the power available. Careful comparisons will be made between the results achieved by thsse fast landplanes and the new flying boats. At the present moment opinion is almost equally divided as to which type is the better for long distance ocean journey; but there is also a body of opinion which holds that there is room fbr both types. The original argument that the flying boat was a necessity in order to eliminate the risk of accidents If the machine is forced to alight on the water, has lost its force because modern multi- engined airplanes are able to fly with any engine stopped and to maintain height without very marked loss of speed. Children under 12 years of age are forbidden by law to act in British film studios. France has nearly 9,000,000 wo- men earninij^heir own living: about 2,000,000 run their own farms. You'll See Colorful Crochet on Every Hand, Says Laura Wheeler CROCHETED GLOVES PATTERN 778 There's colorful crochet lor every hand this season, says Laura Wheeler, who's designed these gloves for quick crochet. Crochet cottoa makes the hands of simple mesh. cuflTs in lacy stitch, while dainty roses are sewn on for extra chic. Pattern 778 contains directions fot making the gloves in a small, medium and large size (all gives in one pattern); illustrations of the gloves and of stitches used; material requirements. Send 20 cents in stamps or coin (.coin preferred) for this pattern to Wilson Publishing Co., 73 W. Adelaide, Toronto. Write plainly, PATTERN NUMBER, your NAME and ADDRESS. Canal Traffic Shows Big Increaise for May SAUl.T STE. MARIE Ont. â€" Traf- fic through Canadian and .\niorican canals here in May was 2,725,281 tons greater than in May 1935, and was the largest for May since 1930. The total traffic for the season up to end of May was 8,746,578 tons, or 1,87S,- •529 gi-eater than for same period laat year. This increase developed in spita of late start of season and in spite of fact only one vessel passed throu(ll canals up to end of April in contra* to 20 in April 1936. The best buy in cigarette i tobaccos Buckinqham FINE C'U T Designed Sales Books for Cash and Charge Sales .The New "Burt'' Sales Book • improved Non-smiidge Carbon. • Improved Paper. • Improved Quality Thrcmghout. .V\.iiiuiactiired by the OriginafPrs of Sales Books For Price* and Complete Particulars Phone the Office of Thii Newspaper or Write The Wilson Publishing Co., Limited 73 Adelaide St. W.. Toronto