ArC e is indicated by the Big Ben, London‘s he Houses of Parliaâ€" _ striking either midâ€" lonal child, ®r d and not seem*" sdick. M red in New h Frocks J «)WarGs. orâ€"Dbuses in Brief more Judging DJ avs bad, ou+ Most of them : closeâ€"fitting wcentrated at 20 and â€" fabrics ng trims art ‘he House o rocks designâ€" and hinting and beige w the advance ut on a slenâ€" nished with ornamented ceessories t« ravest Sift a “l'.d\niâ€â€ cakes, pasâ€" ad, potatoes, ruces, . while vegetables, its, Wlth th sband. on . dealng in â€" British is of games "As Tall as 1 Mouse, at Your Part ogs and a home teleâ€" gâ€"coils, comâ€" scale model omplete eleeâ€" «‘ houses are on sale this bes ront. frock de e, slendet ves. It is d buttons istrakhan. ther frock the fabri¢ h 1 n car i the world ds. In the year â€" she are yards 6,000,000 the total assistants ain trades= forged, acâ€" use of the occeur beâ€" are due to i fifty per tain than it _ ecod which Engiaind have ban £690,000 hk t\ ~I€ is ose methâ€" e smaller rches which Moscow. only More than each week, + fu‘l deâ€" ng rrowers aré b r motre a fatal Eng. 1 was MniC some x AWWY, | Woman‘s £ lf]]: l,.i World «s cup sweetened condensed milk, 1 cup flour, 4 teaspoon baking powâ€" der, 1â€"3 cup pitted dates, 14 cup chopâ€" ped nut meats, 14 teaspoon vanilla. Bift flour and baking powder. Add chopped dates, chopped nut meats, sweetened condensed milk and vanilia, Line a shallow pan (8 inches square) with wax paper and spread mixture eventy about 1 inch deep. Bake 30 minutes in slow oven (300 deg. F.) Remove from oven, turn from pan and remove paper at once. Cut into bars on by four inches with a sharp knife, while warm. Makes 16. If you‘re tired of having your kitâ€" chen painted white, gray or tan, try redecorating it in one of the very vivid colors which are so smart this fall. You might paint the upper halt of the walls a bright red and the lower haif and ceiling silver. Red and white or red and pale silver floor covering would carry out your color schema ‘ Fried Apples.â€"Prepare the apples as or apple fritters. Dip them in flour and fry them in butter until they are brown on both sides. Serve the sausâ€" age cakes on top, 23 wh veW=@er, & cups flour, 1 teaspoon lemon extract. For filling, pit prunes and cut into small pieces. Add banana, powâ€" dered sugar, and mix thoroughly. To make cake, add salt to eggs and beat untll very light. Mix in the sugar, add water, flour sifted with baking powâ€" der, extract, and mix thoroughly. Pour into greased shallow pan and bake 15 to 20 minutes in a hot oven (450 deg. ).) : Turn ont on damp cloth and roll up, then unroll and spread with filling. Roll again and .remove from damp cloth. _ Spread top with powdered sugar and cream icing. Devonshire Sausage Cakes This makes a change from the orâ€" dinary breakfast sausage. Take 44 Ib. lean pork, 14 Ib. fat pork and 44 cup of breadcrumbs soaked in & little water. Pass these through the fine meatâ€"mincer twice, season with pepper and sait and a teasnonm af fina Filling: 1 cup sliced b dered sugar sugar, 5 ta teaspoon | sa powder, 2 eu Prune Stuffed Baked Apples 6 cooking â€" apples, 1 cup cooked brunes, 3 tablespoons peanut butter, l4 cup â€"brown sugar, 3 tablespoons butter, cloves, water. Pit prunes and cut into small pleces, combins with peanut butter, mixing thoroughly. Remove cores from apâ€" ples, removing enough of apple to al-‘ low for stuffing. Fill cavities with prune and peanut butter mixture.‘ Place apples in a baking ‘pan and stick 3 or 4 whole cloves into each. Sprinkle with sugar, dot with butter, add about 1 eup of water and bake in a hot oven (425 deg. to 450 deg.) for about 55 minutes or until apples are tender. Serve while hot, plain or with cream. __ * 7 _ _"% Of the prune as a comâ€" mon food? If you do, try these recipes and you will change your mind immediâ€" atel. Baked apples and banana rolls become aristocrats when prepared like this : Colorful Kitchen you‘re tired of having your kit Four over pie degrees F.) 1( ate oven (350 er. or until ap 1 pie. One quart sliced apj cup evaporated milk, 1 Turn apples into pie plain pastry. Sprinkle Place strips of pastry form cross bars; Boil : to a thick syrup â€" abo After Christmas there is always an abundance of appleos in every houseâ€" hold and apple pies are in order. Here is a favorite Dutch recipe: Dutch Apple Pie Try These Do you think of the y C~moving enough of apple to alâ€" t stuffing. _ Fill cavities with and peanut butter mixture, apples in a baking ‘pan and nIck syrup about 10 minutes. ver pie. Bake in hot oven (425 8 F.) 10 minutes, then a moderâ€" *n (350 deg. F.) 50 minutes longâ€" until apples are tender. Yield: Prune Banana Roli 1‘%4 cups cooked prunes, 1 banana, 3 tablespoons powâ€" ar. Cake: 3 eggs, 4 cup tablespoons cold water, 14 salt, 1 teaspoons baking cups flour, 1 teasnoon leman it your color scheme Date Bars I‘ve oned condensed milk, teaspoon baking powâ€" ed dates, 4; cup chopâ€" 14 teaspoon vanilla. baking powder. Add ies info pie tin lined with Â¥. Sprinkle with nutmeg. s of pastry across pie to bars. Boil milk and sugar ind cut into small pleces, i peanut butter, mixing Remove cores from apâ€" MUTT AND uerr apples, nutmeg, 1 h* C omm aiet onl » 1% cups sugar, betlei t % o o o During a gale a girl was blown off her feet into the arms of a man. Now we know why some girls are so eager to get their weight down. Education commences at the mothâ€" er‘s knee, and every word spoken within the hearing of little children tends toward the formation of charâ€" acter. Let parents bear this even in mind.â€"Hosea Ballou. f M 3 squares unsweetened chocolate, 3 °) cups milk, % cup sugar, 6 tablespoons \ | flour, 14 teaspoon salt, 1 teaspoon * | vanilia. Add chocolate to milk and ‘heat in double boiler. When chocoâ€" / late is melted, beat with rotary egg ‘| beater until blended. Combine sugar, \| flour, and sait, add gradually to chocoâ€" ‘|late mixture and cook until thickened, stirring constantly; then continue | cooking 10 minutes, stirring occasionalâ€" ly. Add vanilla. Chill and serve withâ€" cream. Serves 6. Chocolate Bread Pudding 1‘4 squares unsweetened chocolate, 3 cups molk, 2 eggs, slightly beaten, & cup sugar, 44 teaspoon salt, 1 teaâ€" spoon vanilla, 2 cups stale bread, cut in 4%â€"inch cubes. Add chocolate to milk and heat in double boiler. When chocolate is melted, stir until blended. Combine eggs, sugar, and salt; add chocolate mixture gradually, stirring vigorously. Add vanilla. Place bread in greased baking dish, pour mixture over it and let stand 10 minutes; then mix well before baking. Place dish| in pan of hot water and bake in modâ€"| erate oven (350 deg. F.) 60 minutes,| f or until pudding is firm. Serve hot | $ with hard sauce or cold with cream, | f Serves 6. 4 f Woman’s | { _ World T By Mair M. Morgan 1 Chocolate waves its magic over your most economical de and gives them a touch of luxur these and se how the family w prove them. in C9% mconomy is effectively disguised by a touch ofâ€"luxury when the flavor is chocolate. Old French Recipe Chine about 4 Ib. of pork and rub it well with a mixture of the followâ€" ing ingredients: 1 quarter cup salad oil, dessertspoon salit, 4& teaspoon white pepper, 1 crushed garlic clove, 1 tablespoon brown sugar, 1 teaspoon each of minced parsley and sweet herbs. Leave the pork in this mixture for thre days in a cold place. Rub it and turn it once a day. Then wipe and score it. Brush well with salad oil. _ Roast about two hours in a modératel hot oven. Serve with unâ€" sweetened apple fritters and a gravy made â€"as follows: 1 pork kidney minced, pint of stock, 1 chopped onion, 1 tablespoon lemon juice, a litâ€" tle salt, cayenne and nutmeg, Velveteen is being favored for every hour of the day, and is ideal for sports costumes in the lovely new shades. Scears, vests and blouses to wear with tailored suits and dashing berets are shown in gay colors. \ New Afternoon Gowns __New afternoon gowns from Paris are toeâ€"length and have low flares and setâ€"in sleeves; feathered hats are seen with such gowns and capes trimmed with fur. The latest in eveningenâ€" sembles notes are in one fabric and one color. A pretty and inexpensive cot cover may easily be made at home. Cut two lengths of lightâ€"colored silky material, such as crepe or artificial gilk, to meaâ€" sure a yard long and 24 inches wide, Make these into a bag by stitching up three sides and turn right side out. Fill this with a length of wadding of the same size and sew up on the fourth side. To keep the wadding in place, and at the same time to add a profesâ€" sional and decorative touch, stitch out with large running stitches of emâ€" broidery sitk and fancy design to give the appearance of an eiderdown, makâ€" ing sure that the stitches go right through the bag. Motifs of animal and bird designs may be bought in various colors and stitched on, or aniâ€" mal shapes may be cut out of any odd pieces of material of contrasting colâ€" ors to be found in the remnant drawer and appliqued on the silk before makâ€" ing up the bag. Berkshire Pudding Velveteen Favored n a touch of luxury. Try how the family will apâ€" By BUD FISHER A Cot Cover its magic wand sserts and the headmen in villages are thinking of travelers. As the snow falls and lakes and rivers freeze, they take measures. Young spruce trees are firmly planted in the ice at conâ€" venient distances in two parallel rows marking the road. This is a vital precaution in view of the terrible dark blizzards that are to be expected â€"blizzards so dense that once they caused my husband and the coachnian, noticeable in Russia than in â€" most countries where the winters "are milder. Double windows are brought down from the attic, put in and careâ€" fully calked with a kind of putty, The space between the two windowâ€"sashes at the bottom has several inches of sand laid to keep out all the drafts possible, and it is covered with difâ€" ferent colored moss, We had in our _woods the loveliest mossâ€"pale silver, russet browns and many . shades of green that kept their colors all winâ€" ter and were a link between us and the snowâ€"bound world. In cities where moss is not at hand, thick layâ€" ers of cotton batting are placed, someâ€" times brightened by clippings of tinâ€" sel or colored paper or everlasting | flowers strewed over the cotton. While | . the housewives are thus getting the| rppdinnntencormudres /m ". Dke uin aP o us Atostiin t lt in cce 2 baad [ ~~Utics, .. N.Y, ‘=s Marriage, bankâ€" ruptcy and death came to George A. Cassidy, 63, of Schenectady, within five days, it was revealed here. He was married to his bookkeeper on a Saturday. The following Wedâ€" nesday he filed a petition in bankâ€" ruptcy in federal court here. He died the same night. Wedding, Bankruptcy, s \,Deï¬thiin Five Days _ The championship â€" for soy beans went to G. Gordon Finlay, of Northâ€" wood, Ontario, while a Manitoba farmer, P. J. Bose, of Notre Dame de Lourdes, was placed first in the early oats class for Region One. Six Ontario farmers, three from Saskatchewan, and one each from Alberta and British Columbia, â€"folâ€" lowed Bose in the placing of early oats for Region One. was also awarded ihie- Shorthorn bull. ; _ _ "nC Wuebec, scored notably in , the prize for sheepe They won a grand championship, two championâ€" ships, nine firsts and several lesser prizes. The grand championship in the class for carloads of sheep went to Robert McEwen and Son, of Lonâ€" don, Ontatio, which made the ninth time he has won this honor in the past 11 years, Alexander _ McLaren of Buckingâ€" ham, Quebec, captured trne two first prizes in the Shorthorn cattle class for bulls calved after July 1, 1930, and before June 30, 1931. His entry was also awarded the first prize for mrcisr . . W 1 "" "C° «nd to Ith, In addition to winning the world‘s wheat championâ€" ship, which went to Frank Isaakson, of Elfros, Saskatchewan, breeders, principally from the Provinces of Onâ€" tario and Quebec, scored notably in the prize for sheepe They won a grand championship, â€" two championâ€" ships, nine firsts and several lesser‘ prizes. The #rand chamninnehin i. reparation for winter Won High Honours farmers were hon« who increased their Russia Prepares for Winter â€" Marriage, bankâ€" police in towns in villages are _ As the snow At International for soy beans nlay, of Northâ€" t a â€" Manitoba Notre Dame de 1§ acreages siaâ€"My Ho Bobbsâ€"Merrill.) corneBin t t allint A in in es iredin M ies sa with sheepskin coats, quilts, pillows, etc., is sleepingâ€"place, warmingâ€"place and comfort for the whole family.â€" Emma Cochran Ponafidine, in "Rusâ€" . 00 COCO8, CPnpr Om .Awnct ando we have a huge Lrick construction before us with a flat "roof" reached by two or three steps built in the side, The stove is warm â€" the "roof" most comfortingly so, and this platforny, some eight feet by six at least, piled L oul ons s I } The severe climate made warmth the chief objective in all building operations. The Russian stove is therefore the center and most conâ€" spicuous feature of the interior of the house. The huge brick oven in which all cooking, as well as baking, is done is so built as to heat the: whole of the large compartment. The many turnsâ€"forty or fifty, I beâ€" lieveâ€"that the flue makes before the smoke reaches the other chimney inâ€" sures every particle of heat being retained. The hotâ€"air chamber is closed as soon as the fire has burned , out the dangerous fumes, and we in the middle of the day, to flounder ! for hours in the drifts on the lake in front of our house, unable to find the turn. On land, long wisps of twisted straw tied to trees and fences, or, in the open country, little trees were again planted. ‘ Love, fire, and a bad cough are three things that it is impossible to hide. The gold mining country was snowâ€" bound after a storm and the woman, Olga Little, volunteered to break the trail. She brought in a load of high grade ore. In other section of La Plata and Montezuma counties roads were openâ€" ed with tractors, teams and pack mules. A gold strike recently occurâ€" red in the area. ‘ rlgs. _ Aliiin ol tcln sainat s AintotWiacad t cace h 4430 4 Th +1 t c Durango, Colo.â€"A woman "mule-]le)'s were alone in skinner‘"â€"so far as is known the onlyl sion of estates gran one in the United Statesâ€"broke trail ! the feudal tenure by with a string of 80 mules recently to,!\'ormand,\'. a gold mine near here. Tha 98 sanaratinn Woman "Breals Trail" ‘"The vocal chords," he said, "are pairs of fibrous bands drawn suffiâ€" ciently together to leave a fine openâ€" ing called the glottis. The length of the glottis in the adult male averâ€" ages about 1.8 centimeters and in the female 1.0 centimeters. The stream of air flowing through the silt, (-rl glottis, sets the vocal chords in vibruâ€"! tion. This in turn gives rise to pe~‘ riodic fluctuations on the flow of aivl through the glottis, and these fluc(u-, ations create the sound waves." f iney are fearful of enlarging their figures, Dr. Feld"mun stated recentâ€" ly. f Many women also refuse to develop the lower register of their vocal chords because this has a tendency to enlarge their girth, Dr. Felderman said. Many women, who might become great singers, sacrifice their voices by refusing to take necessary exercises. They are fearful of enlarging their figures, Dr. Felflc’rmnn stated recentâ€" lyv. * Philadelphia. & T fashion is robbing the c siderable singing talent Dr. Leon Feldergnn, t ist here. Modern Fashi With String of Mules of the interior of huge brick oven in , as well as baking, __xâ€"_ The, slimâ€"figure ‘in*_tl_le country of conâ€" (Indianapolis : mot have At which Music World ent, according to , throat specialâ€" did yeoman servic to import any gra $65,000 in prizes v TORONTO In addition to their value as a source of potash, wood ashes are of value to acid soils through their conâ€" tent of lime which lessens the acidity of soi‘s to which they are applied. The ashes of coal 'axi& o c;;k'e' are practically destitute of fertilizer conâ€" stituents. * Clean â€" unleacheq wood aghes conâ€" tain from 4 to 6 per cent. (or even higher), of potash, with 1 to 2 per cent. of phosphoric acid and 35 to 40 per cent. of lime. Since wood ashes owe a consider» able part of their value to the presâ€" ence of potash, which is soluble in water, it is obvious that the ashes should be kept under cover and not exposed to the weather. The Preservation Manitoba: Hon. Ewen Alexander McPherson, Provincial Treasurer. â€" Border Cities Star. Alberta: Hon. Oran Tea McPherson, Minister of Public Works. Saskatchewan: Hon. Murdock Alexâ€" ander MacPherson, Attorneyâ€"General and Provincial Treasurer. British Columbia: Hon. Frank Mit chell Macpherson, Minister of Public Works. The Macphersons With the appointment of a Macpherâ€" son to the Pattullo Administration in British Columbia, each of the four Western Provinces has a Macpherson in its government. There are various ways of spelling the name, but they are: The 28 generations of Gresleys have seen all the other families except the Shirleys dispossessed for one reason or another, including the illfavor of the Plantagenet, Tudor or Stuart sovereigns, the Wars of the Roses, the Puritan uprising, the industrial reâ€" volution of the last century or the economic crisis of the present times. ‘ l mconomle c Ithreatened er ic)s were alone in retaining possesâ€" sion of estates granted the family in family line, provoked the sale 1 Robert, who married a daugh the 8th Duke of Marlborough, three sons. With the sole exc of the Shirleys of Ettington the London.â€"One of the only two reâ€" maining unbroken links with William the Congueror‘s Doomsday Book was severed recently with the auction sale of Drakelow Hall, standing in a beauâ€" tiful park a mile outside Burtonâ€"onâ€" Trent. THG hall was the seat of the Gresley family for 2$ generations. Preâ€". sent head of the family is Sir Ruborl' ‘Gresley, 11th baronet. | Even the auctioneer was moved to sentiment, describing the sale as the’ climax of a tragedy and warning the town authorities they might hbe held to account by future generations if they allowed & place of such historic Importance to be lost. But the estate was sold in one lot of $82,500 to parties who, it is um!ev'-] stood,, bought it for speculative purâ€" pC Drakelow Hall in Gresley Faâ€" mily for 28 Generations Ancient Hall 1 services in Italy‘s grain war, any grain. Throughout the land prizes were awarded io growers Of Wood This Guy Could Sell the Sahara Desert. conditions, and not the ‘xtinetion of the historic provoked the sale for Sir married a daughter of ke of Marlborough, has With the sole exception Brings $62,500 nditior vith the auction sale standing in a beauâ€" : outside Burtonâ€"onâ€" was the seat of the Duke William of t of the! pleaded ms. Preâ€", schools. t Ruberli that the ‘ of defec oved to| s2e to : aPes Pat got a job to dig a well, When he had got down to about 25 feet he came one morning to find the hole hbad caved in. He hung his coat and . hat on the windlass and crawled into | the bushes to wait, Passersâ€"by, disâ€" covering the well caved in, and seeâ€" | ing the coat, concluded that a man | was at the bottom, Help was got and the well was soon cleared again. I These figures are shown in the yearâ€" end summary of production being preâ€" pared by government departments. The computation is based upon figures for 11 months, January to November, with an estimate added for December. # __| _ Among other sporting paraphernalis B.C. Produchon, w.'“ made in Canada are skiis, bowling * Fll' M of lm.nlley equipment, billiard â€" and pool Victoria. â€"â€" British Columbia whhe-s!mb]eï¬. cues, lacrosse sticks, baseba; itself a Happy New Year with the bats and balls, golf ang tennis balls, knowledge that its industries in 1933 | golf clubs, sleighs, coasters, tobopgans, increased the value of their production | £ymnasium supplies â€" and badmintos over 1932 by $5,250,000 and industrial| bats and shuttlecocks. pay rolls jumped $7,000,000, I ‘There mre 80 wlunits in T‘anukAs When the liner docks at Cherb ourg, agents will meet Paska and transport her to Lady Hatfeld‘s Paris home. 2 _ [Ol°F 5°r Te"U RTOHIL ol the law in / Atatistics on the sporting gouxis in Jamaica. * Lady Hatfield sailed with ; dustry in Canada for 1982 shows that her pet recently from France to Sou'h‘ the total output of hockey sticks durâ€" America. Arriving at Jamaica Paska } ing the year was 561,460, or about was denied entry, because Jamaica 15,000 more than in 1931. Most of has a law which holds that dogs from the big games of ice hockey in Canâ€" soil other than English are undes.lr- ada are now played on artificial ice in able aliens. So Lady Hatfield shipâ€" buildings, which one night may acâ€" :’OdsP':l:‘aA"’ 1‘:9‘" York and went 0N | commodate thousands of hockey fans o sou merica, and the next night ; be ked b Paska is now at home in the cabin | supporters of ‘ï¬ohxi:‘;) lnut’:w or : » | 1 of a second officer who .wm see that symphony orchestra, The the cleâ€" du;lng the trip :’he xeud. t % ) mentary course for hockey players is .mo‘"l; og;onslen‘m“ .: d I::torâ€"e- ;Om‘; usually token on the outdoor or inâ€" t(; b;d > * ».m., 4 door rinks of natural ice, A considerâ€" * o able percentage of the players on all Three meals a day, consisting of the big 1 hockey teams in the two tablespoons of chicken meat, United Sta“tem" Cansdl C some carrots, turnips or spinachâ€"ail| 7 T l ie LRNRiens, . Canes without seasoning. !dllns_ have demonstrated ?holr at» In her vanity case is a comb, some| t‘activeness of the game in several flea powder, a brush, antiâ€"colic powâ€" other countries. Just now the ~\amâ€" der and a bottle of Epsom salts. rocks, an amateur hockzy team from When the liner docks at Cherbâ€"] Ottawa, are touring the British Isles ourg, agents will meet Paska and ; &nd Europe and ‘have so far beaten transport her to Lady Hatfield‘s Paris ' all opponents. Their appearance in Paska is now at home in the cabin of a second officer who will see that during the trip she gets: Four promenades a day â€" at % am., noon, 6 p.m., and before going was denied entry, because Jamaica has a law which holds that dogs from soil other than English are undesirâ€" able aliens. So Lady Hatfhield shipâ€" ped Paska to New York and went on to South America. Paska is making the voyage alone because she ran afoul of the law in Jamaica." Lady Hatfield sailed with her pet recently from France to South America. Arriving at Jamaica Paska tors dating back long dynasty. ~Paska is : Her owner, Lady F: of London and Paris $4,000, beige marl Aristocratic Poke Croszes Ocearn Alone pa on 1 sUn tals. n She had been proud also to be the first woman M.P. in England, she deâ€" dare&nd said she had stood for the women‘s point of view. Dealing with the question of women in industry, Lady Astor pointed out that in 12 years the number of women in industry in England had increased from 5,000,000 to €.0908,000 and the | number of married women from (;9:5.-; 000 to nearly 1,000,000, ,' Another cause which Ladyv Astor} "These three women did their work more or less simuiltaneously in about | the ‘60‘s, and we today are the better | for their having lived and having ; striven in that very difficult time.| Then came Mrs. Fawcett and Hra.‘ Pankhurst," Lady Astor said, "and alt those who fought for women‘s sutâ€"‘ frage. I the Di tian Se the id askA 18 NAs n Lady Astor Hails Birmi®s} t 1 n ephine Butler, who laid dow of the eqeal moral standard third was Mary Baker Edd; overer and Founder of Chris ngs and bashedâ€"m an aristocrat, her mack long before t} D U ghem, Fus, â€" falso thinking €# W ning . on tite Paska e«m®m, Fos.â€"â€" Persons who lso thinking‘ are potential bo world, Lady Astor pointâ€" recont widross to the Birâ€" Poderation . of University ‘vr subject was the evoluâ€" tovress of women in the Atu t hoso, Lod Nightingale t values her h century kir %c women who ol the world." mdy Astor Said, ile; the second who laid down r ancese the Ming ese dog. Hadfield, The limit of nerwe is to wake you doctor and spoil his rest because y can‘t get to sleep, Constant vigilance is necessary # prevent the spread of contagious dif ease in the flock. Disease, partciularly when of 4 communicable nature, is preunu:! Medical treatment of a sick f costs money with little assurane 4 profitable results, Normal health is essential in 1 poultry flock because illness lowen @ggx production and reduces weigh gains. th Maintain the â€"Health Of the Poultry Plod The owner, Majo® Evelyn Charles Shirley, descendant of the Shirley whe held the land at «the time King Can ute‘s flatterers persuaded him to bit the waves recede, lives mainly on hi Irish state, and Ettington is at pre sent unoccupied. London, Eng. A few days ago ons of the only two landed estates which have remained in possession of the same family since the Norman Con quest was sold at auction. ‘Toâ€"day the other appeared on the market, but not for sale, lease of Ettington Park is Warwickshire being offered for $5,000 yearly. There are 30 plants in Canade which specialize in the manufacture of sporting goods. The total value of the products made in the year under review was $1,272,549, the European centers thousands at each game n she Rent Last Landed Estate Canac Statist pas amoxed anywhere at all, All the proâ€" gress of the new freedom may be indiâ€" eated for the social philosophr in the extension of times and places in which it is permissible for the good h voman to smoke« ubmit to an ex elved etiquette . nough, for the x _ 19000 coaches to be labelles, and they _ have a seating capacity of more than a million passengers, and it will take a year to do the job, from time to { time, as the coaches go to the shopa | for regular overbhaul. |__An official of the L.M.S. has been explaining this business to the London | Times. He says the compeny has had many complaints about people smokâ€" f ing _ in nonâ€"smoking _ compartmnis, | "They take the view that, as smoking is not definitely forbidden they may ’lmokQ if they wish to do so." â€" But when the new labels appear, nobody is to be permitted to smoke unless the labe} is "smoking." And, concludes this official (and this is the informaâ€" tion â€" which is really _ surprising}, "smoking is allowed in 75 per cent, of the coaches, and it is not proposed to alter that proportion. It seems to be generally accepted as meeting public requirements." Ottawa, Canada.â€"That sneedie asing eport Canada‘s Speediest Game "Bo different, my dear," said ont Victorian old lady to another, in the story which iMustrated the changes of the times, "from the bhome life o{ our dear Queen." What, indeed, could rthe Victorian age have made of the latest decision of the London, Midiand and Seottish Railway Company o Great Britain? asks the Vancouver Province. ‘The LM.S. is going to en force the rule against smoking in non smoking carriages on its I‘ne. The company is going to have all its pas senger coaches labelled, either "smok ing" or "nonâ€"smoking." â€" ‘There are 19,000 coaches to be labelle j, and they hare a sealltr Aunablte aÂ¥f Han. Ahuc Ni y Orl to smoke. We should hate to an examination in the r etiquette of that custom. 1t , for the moment, to learna th y do it in threequarters of t er coaches of the L.M.S. e nockey, is evidentl; popularity in Canada just been issued by sovernment _ Bureau women Just now the _ jam» ur hockzy team from ring the British Iskes have so far beaten Their appearance in al 2o years ago or very few. attracting the of 1M m C L 18