M3 XX tee XOXO HAIR ey : : OWN YN HAIR does E cutter gis hed Fh ' lars ron : Conn alt J 0. " [3 ! '® { f } i a at gl Yang" » ht AEN SE LO % LP Ee ' a PRINT $39.00 F. extension table and 6 '4 leather seat Chairs. So KLIN WEIGHS a5 Kerne Broad best, Used Klines TOUPES, ANSE ORMATIONS wie, ds, a. pnd all types of uality Hols 1 00d rite e for Thea: 0 Lod Co, 628 Bathurst, Toren: --_---- HAIRDRESSING SOHOOLS MADAME 1U {UDSON SCHOOL, Beauty ilre, HAR or Buh 707 Yonge St, Toronto, CUT TRIAL OFFER NOW ON GET YOURS NOW D LADI LEARN BARBER- ng All Hairdresoin under New Mo- hy B stem. Free Intormation. "Write ange Street, Toronto, Lig? MEDICAL 5000 EDMONTON CI ZENS TESTIFY for (R. and 8.) Powder, herbal reme- , --rheumatism, arthritis, stomach troubles, "ete. neuritis, Two weeks, .60; one month, $3; two months, $5. in rice n Farm Sales). Kline r LC. . Ee tusing o Co., Islington, Sntante Drug Jjte, or 4, C McIntyre, Edmen AUTO KNITTERS, YARN, NEEDLES; = REE - also machines for extra coarse socks. i Bellhouse, 1446 W, 8th, Vancouver. AVIATION COURSES IN FLIGHT INSTRUGTION, A plan y Shi Sug Feavona fhen i AE Servi foes, Limited, Barker rport, Toronto. ' FEATHERS WANTED BOUGHT, AND \ heat prices alia The Cana- eather and Mattress Cg. Ltd, 41 Spruce 8t., Toronto. FILMS AND PRINTS RLOPED: PRINTED, = eh ZBRO PRICES, EXPERT W! WORK. ROLL ith free gulargement 25c, Trevanna Studios, 3 8 Niagara 8 reet, St. Cath- FRELTWO BEAUTIFUL ENLARGE- (one colore a) with roll de- : 5 io felt of Salley. *Mathray 2 QUR OWN NEGATIVES AT home on any surface, cloth or paper, without pill or ¢ or darkroom. Less than * gent eac. Foto Kit complete Jit l rH iy for 150. prints, $1. Se Williams, b _Richmo nd Hast, To- ENLARGEMENT WITH EVERY fi Roll film Qeveloped 'and Rd ¢ Htadio 30 Richmond St, 2 fing 3 , 0 , B., h a FURS. WERE TH LEARN SHOH THAND, ACCOUNTANCY, pewriting by mall. Satisfied stu- shite throughout Canada, | Write for prospectus. Dept. C., Business Canada ollege, Hamilton, Ont. MISCHLLANEOUS Nahing your coat tortured in traps or do you bu Intormation, rotection of Fur-Bearers, 73 .nard Avenue, Toronto. ANIMALS FUR- steel humane furs? Canadian Association Ber- NOVELTIES PORTRAIT JN FOLDER -- FREE "WITH EVER LL PERFECTLY Lr Weat, Bonpen YX. Toronto to. 8 PATENT ATTORNEY ROY L. KNOX, REGIST ney. hlormation Te $jon Patents; Drawings tions; Sales. ED ATTOR- ardin Jyens eg stra- 14 Mites te, Ottawa. pA ENTS OFFER TO EVERY INVENTOR. an? of inventions and full informa- tion sent free. The Ramsay company Registered A Attorneys, 278 Bank 8t., Ottaw. PERSONAL ARH YOU RUPTURED? RELIEF, COM- fort, Sve support with our ad- vanced method straps or steel, No elastic or under- Write, Smith Manu- facturing Co., Dept. 219, Preston, Ont, - Sah pre LYONS' TRADE-IN Ye FURNITURE BARGAINS "Listed below "dre "Just a few of the gutatinding valuea Picked at random from the hundreds of wonderful bar- ains you will find in our Trade-in ept. If you cannot pay us a visit be sure to write for our new 1938 fllus- trated cata kus to give you an idea of Lyons' remarkable yvalués in both new and used furniture. 4-Pleéce, walnut-finish--Bed- room Suite: large dresser, chlifonier, full size bed and sagless . $21.00 isco I re-finished, 1.00 8-Piece Dining-room Suite in French walnut finish: buffet, leather seat: $27. in good condition 7.50 Beautiful 3- BL HE) Chesterfield Suite, upholstered in figured French Jacquard with réversible Mar- shall = spring cushions. Thoroughly cleaned and re-conditioned. . $12. 50 Beautiful Brass Bed, full size with sagless spring and brand new -all-felt mattress. Six-plece Breakfast Suite -- large buffet with glass top, dropleat table and 4 Windsor be chairs in ivory enamel -- in splendid condition. $5. 95 Several 3-burner Gas Stoves with oven. Guaranteed. x $45 00 3-Piece Chesterfield Bed L) 'Suite, Kroehler Chesterfield bed with 2 big chairs to match, uphol- stered in a good-mohalr with revers- ible Marshall cushions, in perfect con- dition. Cost new $165.00. $59.00 9-Plece English' Oak Dining- room suite, buffet, china cab- inet leather seat chalrs. $5.95 drawers, $7. 95 'Chiffoniers in oak and walnut $9. finish with five large drawers. Reautiful $65. 00 ¢ Suite in excellent condition. Large dresser, triple mirror vanity, chiffrobe, sagless spring, full-size bed and brand new all-felt mattress. $13 50 Solid walnut Book-case, dou- ble dodr. Completely refin- fehed. .00 Dinette Suite in Flemish oak, buffet, extension table and Completely re- Completely refin- Dressers in assorted finishes with large mirrors and three chines in good condition. finished like ne $19, 50 2- Plece. Chesterfield Suite -- large chesterfield with big chair to match, upholstered in a heavy Tinelieh tanestry. real bargain $14. 95 Walnut Ania Chiffrobe 'with side wardrobe, five drawers Ina swing mirror. Completely refin- i) shed, $8.75 Studio Couch in rust shade ., repp--makes into twin beds "with 8 cushions for back. Before pu urchasing anvthing in Jized "furniture -he. sure to visit our Tradesin Dept., or if unabla to do so write for our new 1938 illustrated free catalogue. All our merchandise fa put in first class' condition and sold under iy monev-back ruarantee it not satiafl Carefully packed for safe shipment on receint nf money-order. LYONS' BEDDING AND UPHOLSTERING CO. = Manufacturers amy YONGE 8T. a === ro TS 3 a i ts TORONTO : 1 aslo 10 ok P18 ee. Fur cataiow r he) 8% how orente, On- ERN SAN TRIO'S, EAST price Na Hartfor . ) Fur Farm, 'Houte Af isgheim, On Singer drop-head Sewing Ma-.. 6-piece Bedroom square extension table and six |- POULTRY AND POULTRY' EQUIPMENT POULTRY EQUIPMENT, HIGH QUAL- ity at low cont.' Qanad dlans. logue. River 'St, Toronto, de in Canada for Write for our new-cata- odel Incubators Ltd. 108 HOLD EVERYTHING. -- UNTIL et. our early 19 32 price list on- Sure Pay'" cHicks. Never YOU Mills before have we offered our Government ap- proved chicks at such low prices for --early delivery. Don't delay, write to- day for- price list. ery, 'Napanee, Ont. The Miils Hatch- WRITE log--Hersom Brothers, Ont. FOR | ILLUSTRATED CATA- Streetsville, Breeders of large type bred to lay. single comb White Leghorns. WOULD YOU LIKE TO WIN 200 Tweddle Special Mating chicks ab- inthe Free. This Ja the first prize the 1938 Tweddle Chick Contest. Major prizes and a worth-while prize to everyond entering the es Tweddle Chick Hatchery Ltd. gus, Ontarlo, Box 10. con- Send for contest form today. Fer- QUILT REMNANTS FIVE POUNDS!--QUILT REMNANTS $1.00, Free!--110 Patterns, Designs, Washfast Cdttons, Prints, cloths, Silks. Broad- Collect 'Samples--26c¢. Refund Guarantee! Maritime Textiles. Department -WILS, Montreal. 8049 Degaspe, SALESMEN WANTED TAILORING SALESMEN MAKE BIG money selling. our Made-To-Measure Clothing. Free sample outfits, ton Clothes, 1108 St. Lawrence Blvd, Montreal. Mor-, STAMPS AND COINS WE BUY AND SELL OLD STAMPS, Toronto Stamp: Company, 66 © Street West, Toronto. A King 50° "DIFFERENT STAMPS INCLUDING Jubilee Airmail, Commemoratives, 10 cents, Murray' Langille, Nova Scotia. Hopewell, Find Runaway Dog . 660 Miles Away G. D. Wills' wandering dog was all ready to come home Friday, to Ty. rone, Pa. after an absence of more than a year in which he travelled : about 860 miles, ki The pedigreed animal disappeared from home, on 'August 8th, 1936, Last week Wills received a letter from Les: ter Halverson, of Leland, IL, advis- ing that Halverson had. found the dog, starving on a roadside near Leland, Wills readily agreed to pay the cost of 'shipping the animal back to TORY, av "Towns all 'over Great Britain have. atic machines which installed autom dispense t{wopenny brickets of cream, Ty. ice A Pills forPILES Medical authorities Suive generally OR PROFRUDING FILES are BLBEDIN caused gree that ING iy 14 inflamed condition of This HE Jower. bowel and congested liver, Le medicine has been made from the ONLY for over 75 years, to of HERBS treat the INTERNAL CAUSE of EX Fi: Sara, AF qa P. x BACK If n ont Con. Bunkers Herbal Medicines, rice 3 or Ont. Issue No, 5--'38 A--C A Reducing Diet Based On Bread Hamilton Women Conduct Suc- cessful Experiment on How to Reduce Without Hunger or Fa- tigue -- Health 'Experts Will Check on Results. How to reduce without hunger or fatigue on a diet that any woman can follow, has been discovered. by a group of Hamilton women, Results of an experiment in reducing' conduct- ed under the supervision of a phy- .siclan by 16 women in Hamilton, just announced, show that the women lost in welght, amounts ranging from nine to thirteen pounds each, Amazing feature of the diet follow- ed by the women in the test was that it was based principally on bread, the one: item usually avoided in the or- "dinary reducing diet. The Hamilton experiment was ¢on- ducted under the direction of Mrs, Thomas Taylor, mother of four ath. letio daughters and energetic expon- ent of personal health, Five Times a Day Organizing the group of women to test thejbread diet which was already popular in Britain, Mrs, Taylor had the assistance of Dr. J. BE. Tilden, Hamilton physician, who supervised the test, examined the women before: and after the diet period and recorded thelr weights before starting and at the end of each week of the diet, Though the British diet popularized by Elizabeth Ann Loring used plain white bread, for the Hamilton experi. ment the : group used a special loat prepared -from 'a recipe made up by Lloyd Jackson, cereal chemist. This bread was slightly higher in protein and mineral salt content than the or- dinary loaf,' The diet consisted of two ordinary slices of bread with butter, five times a day. Twice a day the women drank half a pint of milk with the. bread; They also had tomato juice and were ------ allowed tea or coffee. The meals were spaced out during the day at fairly regular intervals. Loss In Measurements J Most interesting feature of the re- sults was the loss in measurements that accompanied the reduction in welght, . This reduction in waist, hip or bust measurement tended to occur where it was most needed, according to Dr. Tilden. Losing 13 pounds, one woman lost two and a half inches from the' bust, three and a half from the waist and five from the hips. An- other dropped ten pounds to reduce her bust two inches, hips one inch and waist seven inches. In each case, the reduction occurred where it was most needed. Inter- viewed at the end of the test, Mrs, G. Cremer, who lost 10 pounds; was en- thusiastic about the pep she continued to have all through the'diet period, Mrs. R. Richmond had a happy ex- perience because a fur coat which, had become too'small two years be- fore as her welght increased, now fit- ted her beautifully again. Results of the test are being studied by dieticians and health experts and may possibly be made the basis of an education health campaign in dieting, "Roosternapping" Is Latest Crime Beautificus, a pedigreed rooster, was probably the meaty part of a stew in Dallas, Texas, last week, The deadline for his release of $26 ran- som passed and Attorney Maury Tughes, his owner, feared the worst." Hughes had been instructed to place $26 in a tin can at a spot in the resi- dential section, Failure to follow in- structions, the ransom demand said, would place Beautificus in a stew pot. Hughes knew the "roosternappers' were on the level--they enclosed two of Beautificus' tail feathers with their note. The Deepest Dive 820 F eet Down An Italian naval: of officer this week descended 820 feet into the waters of 'the Mediterranean in a newly-in- vented diving suit weighing 900 lbs. at La Spezia, Italy. (Previously the greatest depth a human being had, ever reached was the dive by Max E. Nohl, of Milwau- kee, Wis., who touched the bottom of a valley in Lake Michigan 420 feet below the surface December 1), Lieut. Notari was sealed inside the diving suit which a cranc swung over the side of a barge. Sixty-Ninth Annual Meeting =H Royal Bank of Canada Expansion of Foreign Markets for Canadian Wheat Pressing Na- - tional Problem, Says Morris W. Wilson. -- Urges Reciprocal Trade otght Probl to Secure Outlets for Staple Commodities. 1 --_ Dro ht Problem Reviewed. i Bank's Balance Sheet Reflects Satisfactory Year for Business States " Sydney G. Dobson. -- Looks for Reasonably Good Conditions In 1938. -- Answers Alberta Critics. : The expansion of foreign markets for Canadian wheat by . reciprocal trade agreements and a truly na- tional approach to the drought prob- lem were urged by Morris W. Wil- son, President and Managing Direc- tor, at the Sixty-ninth Annual Meet- ing of The Royal Bank of -Canada. Canada was a fortunate' country stated Mr. Wilson. The high level of national well-being reached by the phenomenal recovery of 1936 was maintained in 1937 and the activity in most lines of business compared not unfavourably with the record year of 1929. A tragic exception to the general improvement was experienced in the A Prairie Provinces, Obviously the need which exists is acute, the situation could not be handled by the Province, and the Federal Government is to be commended for having shouldered the greater part of the burden, The immediate problems creatéd by the drought require emergency meas- ures; but a situation has also 'heen brought to a head which has been un- satisfactory for years and requires treatment on a national basis. Large areas, ordinarily unsuitable for the purpose, have been planted to grain, Under favourable weather con- ditionn the crop from an area equal to "that planted . fn recent years would furnish" serious marketing problems, The 'efforts towards self-sufficiency in food .suppMés on the part: of many countries; and particularly Germany, - France and Italy, have also narrowed the international: market for: wheat and flour to a point where total over- peas sales of the four important non- European exporters have been reduced as follows: Exports of Whe t a 'Wheat Flour (Crop ars 1 to July 31). Mions " Pushel 4 38 Canada Ja¢ 208 You 195 8 LS: aie 154 29, nil , 10% Argentina 1 i 222 147 162 80 Australia 6 . 109 86 102. 104 Total 4 Countries 735 891 456 450 376 * Broomhall's estimate of Decémber 15, 1987. It 1s a sad comméntary that a large érop in Canada, unless accompanied by crop failurés in other countries, would bring little more total remun: eration to our farmers as a whole in exchange for an 4 than they have secured in-'the years of drouglit. There was no single remedy to bring about improvement,' sald Mr. Wilson, Diversified agriculture, with- drawal of sub-marginal land from wheat, and more scientific methods would help. But these should be com- bined with exceptional efforts on the part of the government to open the doors of foreign markets, so that when Canadian farmers again reap a good crop the wheat may be sold to ad- vantage. It is clear that the Prairie Provincds cannot solve this problem alone, This 1s a task which calls for prolonged, consistent and _.whole- hearted co-operation. The best possible hope of securing outlets for our grain and other agricul: tural products is through negotiations with countries which are now grow- ing food crops at an exorbitant cost, I view with satisfaction the present "tendency among democratic countries to break down barriers impeding the natural - flow .of business, With the general statement that Canada should admit freely articles not produced within the country there can be little basis for disagreement. . But 1 would go further and .say that reduced tariffs 'should be applied to articles which are made in Canada only on a restricted and 'uneconomic . scale, The problem is ndt simple, but studies undertaken the Tarif' Board to determine: wh at concessions should be made to: foi ign countries: nt market for our staple commodities,.. should receive the support and. encourage: ment of experts from the industries directly affected. MINING The continued growth of mining had contributed materially to the -general welfare of the country, said Mr. Wil. son. During the past year, he sald, production of gold, copper, nickel and zine, has been between two and two and one-half times the high level of productfon attained in 1929. It is es- timated that in 1937 the expenditures of the mining industry for wages and supplies have been between $225 and $260 million, Of '$300 million paid in dividends: by Canadian companies in 1037, one-third was paid by the mines, "turned full circle and the country is . comparable. One would be tempted to "cession, were it not for the unfortun. tall merchants $21,000,000, to profes- .had loans outstanding to 61,000 bor. a profitable year for business was TTEITST TET NEVER Insipid. Lipton Ltd, For Premium List of Wm.Rogers & Son Silve rite d late write 08, = : FrontE., ronto. FOREIGN AFFAIRS The position abroad is complex and difficult but one gets few hints of the tremendous desire for peace which is latent in all parts of Eurepe. I know of no Ruropean- country .where. the mass of the people .are sympathetic with the aggressive. expressions of some of their leaders. In, many coun- tries, desperate economic ¢onditions have created mass fear, Ruthless, cynical and irresponsible leadership {is gambling to keep itgelf-in power. Just ag there are constructive. psycholog- ical factors beneath the surface, so there are favourable economic forces at work. Those of us who continue to' feel hopeful base our optimism upon the belief that idealism is not dead and that it cannot be long before econ: omie reconstruction gives even those who are most desperate a breathing gpell, UNITED STATES One of the most important. ques. _ tions of the day is whether the Unit. ed States {8 merely experiencing an interruption in the long term trend of recovery, or whether the wheel has again facing a major depression. In my opinion, fundamental conditions now and {in the period immediately preceding the last depressiom are not .-8ay. without hesitation that the pres- ent setback is merely a temporary re- ate lack of co-operation that exists between Government and business. It surely cannot be long before a plan for practical co-operation' be- tween government, industry and lab- our will be adopted. CONCLUSION: Where. the recent prosperity in the United States has been dependent mainly upon large-scale government' deficits, the Canadian recovery took its origin from foreign trade. Without doubt, prosperity based up- on world demand for Canadian pro- ducts is more soundly established than that based upon deficit spending, Six- ty per cent. of our exports go to coun- tries other than the United States, and even with a substantial decline in ex- ports to that country, total Canadian prosperly should be only moderately affected, 2 On the whole, I look forward to 1938 as a year in which--barring some up- set in international affairs not present- ly anticipated---I expect to see an im- provement from present levels in the United States, and a further orderly economic reconstruction in many for- eign countries, If this proves to be an accurate forecast, we can, I believe, look forward to further substantial progress towards full recovery in, Can- ada. GENERAL MANAGER'S ADDRESS - In reviewing, the general Balanje Sheet, Mr. S. G. Dobson, General Man- ager, referred with satisfaction to an increase of $14,000,000 in total assets, a renewal of the upward trend in commercial loans and a growth of 190 million dollars in Royal Dank depos- its in less than five 'years. : Conditions in Canada definitely im- proved during the year, said Mr. Dob- son, the one dark spot being the drought areas in Western Canada, Referring to the unfair criticism in Alberta, Mr. Dobson said in this cam- paign of misrepresentation, efforts have been made to stir up resentment against the banks. And yet, during- the last five years not in one. single fiistance has any farmer or homed own: er in Alberta heen deprived of. his farm or home by this bank through foreclosure. To dempnstrate the wide diversity of services banks provide, Mr. Dobson took occasion to analyze certain of the bank's figures, At the end-of the year; the bank had on its-books loans to farmers totalling $16,000,000, to re- sional men and other private individ- uala $61,000,000, As a further example 'of the extent to which we facilitate the affairs of- what might bo termed the" "smaller: cHent",. '1 may' 'any we rowers whose liability to the Vank did not. exceed $600 each. ] In conclusion, Mr, Dobson sald that clearly reflected in the Bank's own balance sheet for 1937. y @altching | ons JT Zomis ef coe Sh Bom GLE La re ARR Elephant Tusks Sold For $4,000 MOMBASA, Kenya Conoly, Afri- ca.--A pair of elephant tusks, claim- ed to be the heaviest in the Kenya Colony, has been sold to American "interests for between $3,000 and $4,- 000. The tusks, weighing 178 and 187 pounds respectively, were believ- ed destined for a New York museum; 'possibly the ~ Anierican - Museum of Natural History, They were seized from two meh who were fined for il legal possion" because the colony's game laws forbid the ,retaining of ivory from the interior. New U.S. Ambassador WASHINGTON. -- The Senate has confirmed President Roosevelt's nom- ination of Joseph P. Kennedy to. be United States Ambassador. to Great Britain, Kennedy, long one of the Adminis- tration's principal business advisers, will- succeed the late Robert Worth Bingham, CARRY YOUR ALKALIZER WITH YOU 44 IF Ss | CAUSES ACID (NDiGESTION= --HERE'S THE SENSIBLE THING TO DO The fastest way to. "alkalize" +s to carry your alkalizer with you. That's . what thousands do now that gen- » uine Phillips' comes in tiny, pepper- mint flavored tablets--in a flat tin for pocket or purse. Then you are alwnys ready. f Use it this way. Take 2 Phillips' - tahlets--equal in "alkalizing" effect to? teaspoonfuls of liquid Phillips' i from, the bottle. At once you feel 7" *gas," nausea, "'over-crow ding"' «from. hyper-acidity | begin - to ease. "Acid. headaches," "acid breath," over-acid stomach are corrected at the source. This is the quick way to ease your own distress--avoid offense to others. MADE IN {Ra CANADA DIU RETIC stimulant such as Dr, Pierce's A-nuric is often in-' dicated and usually it:is sufficient to re- lieve minor Jiduey irreg. Fables pt re. Dy ablets r. _ Pierce and t py by, Dr. ! sty Are of value in re- ng the bur h and , A esire Jor irene urination wit acid, fod the flow al Jivipe, ner, 132 Brock St. - the morning 1 tI uid had fave me a the cteiralons % Ee ned | 3 . fon br ' Ey Tablefs ane oo r of my Price, 65 cents, DO YOU FEEL SLUGGISH? Maybe 'you nsed more bile When you feel you haven't a friend "in the world and liféds not worth a rod oent---that' 6 ihe dime your liyer Is ets ting you ont fall or it. 'Make your, liver bela Tdnol Table ots "wii do the Job. They act diréctly on the liver, stimulating the liver's production of bile. Compris- ing a apeeial blend of certain laxatives, Tanol Tablets include & small propor= tion of calomel, probably the most ef- fective liver stimulant known, In a Say or two your )iver Is at work again ell as ever and you feel ab Flsnds wit the wide, wide World. A ans Rists have Tanol Tablets, 'Sto (| In case you have forgot, name of this month, February, is tak- en from a Latin word Meaning to purify , .'. Was originally the month of purification « . .» And there 'is as much need for that now as there ever was. Mrs. Blue--How do you control your husband while you are away? Mrs. Black--1 leave the baby with "him, Optimists are, even now, dreaming about the fine vegetables to be grown in' their garden this spring. Boy--=Say, Dad, how toon"will I be old enough to do just as I please? Dad--I don't 'know, Son; nobody -has ever lived that long yet. Thoughts--The things that come to the man who waits are usually not worth waiting for ... The less a man knows 'the more he wants to tell it « + « Some people pray for more things than they work for ... There is one good way to forget the faults of others--remember your own . . . Some: people who think themselves a wit are only half right, Wife--I wish I had talent; I'm just itching to write. Husband--Well, 'why don't you sit down and try scratching a little? It's a smart suitor, in February, who recognizes, in his fair companion, a June bride. Policeman--Excuse me, sir, but- if you're the "pale faced gentleman who looks like a lop-eared rabbit," I was to tell you that your wife has gone home on the 5.80 bus. There, is an off season for nearly all flowers except blooming idiots. Young wife (affectionately) -- I shall miss you while you are on your hunting trip, dear, and 1 shall pray that the hunters you are going with will do the same. Many successes have been won by the marrow margin of a friendly con- tact: Professor--What do you- know of the Latin syntax? . Freshman--Did. vey have to pay 'for their fun, too?. Read it or not--The Vaticin in Rome, Italy, is the largest résidence in the world, s Teacher (after erasing the decimal -- from a number)--Now, where is the decimal point? Pupl=-0n the G eraser) 1 Ticket Agent--This train, madam, |goes to Atlanta and points South. Madam--Young man, . I want a train to Richmond, and I don't care which 'way it points. - -Doctor--Well, my little man, you are duite well again, 1 was quite sure that the pills-I left would cure you. Did you take them in water or sugar? Boy--0Ch, I used them in my pea- shooter, Debtor So long as my spirit still is glad of breath : And lifts its plumes of pride in the dark face of death; While I am curious still of love and ! fame, ; Keeping my head too high for the years to tame, } How can I quarrel with fate, since I can see I am a debtor to life, not life to me? 'Church Tries j Talking Films | Whole Service Is Handled From Screen In Old English Cathedral Talking pictures substituted for the regular evening service last' week in Chichester's twelfth century cathedral. The first 'moving picture service to be presented-fn an English cathedral, the service was handled entirely from .the screen after a brief opening vera- mony by Very Rev. A. 8. Duncane Jones; dean of the cathedral. In place of the:sermon, the main film was based on Tolstoy's work, "Where Love Ig;God Is." Other short. er films showed' BibMcal scenes and adaptations of parable, The screen was hung in the nave, Acoustics of the anclent building -- a mixture of Gothic, perpendicular and other mediaeval architectural stylag-- were good, experts who installed the apparatua' declared. One of our youngest stars--Betels gouse--has a volume more a million times greater than that of the sun, Lod