e 42 ‘m 1 1 thaw TC ~ A #3 eAÂ¥ *4 i A KÂ¥C Â¥T Learning to Fly. â€"After only three bours instruction an English youth gave such evidence of mastery of an airplane that he was permitted to make his first â€" solo Aight. At another fling school a girl OR 15 is leisurely taking lessons be eause she is tm voung to be granted Good for the Apples. â€"â€"The unusually severe winter weaâ€" ther that is just passing and that will long be remembered as one of the outstanding features of 1934, has been of singular benefit to Canada in â€" at least one respect. It has wiped out the threat of a moth plague in the apple orchards of Ontario. This piaâ€" gne it was feared would ruin the crop this year. In 1932 some of the more dangerous moths that infest applle orchards hbad developed to menacing proportions. The coddling moth aâ€" lone took about half the normal yield. ‘The intense cold of the past winter is said to have killed this pest and thus relieved the orchards of a menâ€" ace for a period of years, perhaps four or fAve.â€"Toronty Mail and Empire. Men are not foreed to crime for a livelihood under present conditions in Ontario. Many do take to crime beâ€" canse they consider it an easy way to a soft existence But the way is not easy, and the wages are hard.â€"Toâ€" ronto Teegram * Wages of Crime, It was an unbappy phrase which described a couple of gunâ€"men as hayâ€" ing "ten suceessful gasâ€"station hold. ups «o â€" their credit." Still less deâ€" fensible was the statement of the counsel for one of them that "with the exhaustion of his savings he was forced to erime for a livelihood," should snâ€"ech Declise in Manners. â€"â€"The decline of manners has beâ€" come clearly marked during the past few yenars and i by no means confined to the one sex. Ordinary politeness and civility have departed from the musses and thei excorcise is, appar ently. . something to be forgotten rather than promoted. It is now reâ€" gavded in many quarters as the smart thing to be impolite and rude, and the inInence of the t me and the school, which has fallen down in so many other things, is equally negligible in this regard Rrockville Recorder. O: a Kind Providence. â€"An actuary finds that singers as a whole do not live as long as other persons. We can only attribute it to the generally keer sense of justiceâ€"â€" Kingsion Whis Standard Lo â€" Chance. â€"Card players who are continually b . ncir illâ€"uck of always reâ€" ceiviag the same poor cards, . will, porhaps, be reassured by knowing that the fiftyâ€"two cards, with thirteen to each of the four players, can be distriâ€" buted _ in _ 53,644,737,756,488,792,839,â€" 237,140,000 différent ways, so that thore would still be a good stock of combination, to draw from, even if a man from Adam‘s time had devoted himself to no oiher oceupation than that of playing at â€" eards.â€" Prairie Murmm. â€"Murder is safer in the United Statee than in any other country on the globe which makes any pretense of civilizgation. The murder rate of 1932 in England and Wales was 0.5 per 100,000 of population! â€" But in 108 representative American cities the murder rate last year was 10.5 per 100,000 persons. Chicago bumped off her citizens at the rate> of 128 per 100,000. Detroit did almost as well, or badly, with 9.6 per 100,000. _ New York furnished the morgue 8.0 in every 100,000.â€"Brandon Sun. The clasp of the handbag of "Hey, lady" had come unfastened, it seems, and an observant boy with a pair of widelyâ€"spaced eyes had noticed the occurrence _ and â€" appointed _ himself guardian, pro tem., and chief pick un after. â€" HMamilton Spectator. Sidewalk Episode. â€"It happened on King street east at the noon hour. A lanky boy of about 13 years, trundling a bicycle through the maze of sidewalk traffic and very red in the face shouted: "Hey, lady; hey, there" to a woman a few paces abead and with whom he apparently had been for some time intent on catching up. In that wondrous, weighty work by Emily Post, the chapter, Sidewalk Salutations, makes no mention of "Hey lady; hey, there," as an apâ€" proved form of greeting, when a young gentleman has occasion to address a strange woman, but even that stickler for niceties would put the seal of apâ€" proval, we think, on the subsequent conversation. "Gee whiz, lady," said the boy, "you should be more careful" about your dough. You‘re dropping money all over the place. You dropped a haltâ€" ahuck back there about a block away. And here‘s some more 1| picked up, too LV@ n A write riter _ submits that people t app aud in the middle of a Certainly _ not; _ it just en the speaker to continueâ€" eaderâ€"Post. TCanada, The Empire and The World at Large CANADA V oite otf the Press â€"Under the treaty the New Zealâ€" and dairy trade has no promise. It is fairly definite that New Zealand bas no prospect of securing a butter mar. ket of any consequence in Canada for some considerable time. The treaty, however, has been of great aid to the wool industry. Formerly free all round, wool entering Canada is now free only to Empire countries. As a result there has been a great imâ€" provement in the direct trade from New Zealand, and without such a benâ€" efit, skins and hides have also gained a better market. . In the cireumstapces: New Zealind may congratulate itself. â€"Auckland Weekly News. e New Zealand Trade with Canada. Farming In Britain. â€"â€"Now is the time to make the effort to improve the quality of our producâ€" tion, for farmers are in a progressive mood, and the agricultural planning already achieved.......has caught the imagination of the public. We are reâ€" building agriculture on the threefold base of better production, better proâ€" cessing and better marketing, and while the new structure rises we are sheltering it from the blasts of inâ€" seniate dumping with the shield of tariffs and quotas. But it is upon better production that the safety of the whole structure ultimately deâ€" pends. Unless we can give the conâ€" sumer the service of quality. and cheapness that is due to him, all our marketing â€" schemes will come to naught, the best intentions of the processers will be frustrated, and neither tariff nor quota will give the home producer the benefits he has not earned.â€"L. F. Easterbrook in The Nineteenth Century (London). * Oil in Britain. â€"Recent borings have apparently raised hope of ultimately profitable workings in British oil fields, and the Government has quite properly de cided to take control of the whole busiâ€" ness if and when serious discoveries are made. This is a wise move. The history of the American oil fields is a sufficient warning to protect such an importaut source of national wealth from the tender meries of private enâ€" terprise, and the Government is to be congratulated in this matter on its vision and cocrage.â€"London Referee, â€"The police of Prussia have had their powers enlarged. They have now the right to fine traffic offenders on the spot. The pedestrian who crosses a traffic thoroughfare diagonâ€" ally will receive from the police offiâ€" cer who detects him brief instruction, and will have to pay a fine of 50 pfeanigs. The cyclist who infringes the regulations will have to part with a mark. The motor car driver who makes excesiive use of hbis horn, who parks his car where he should not, whose numberâ€"plate is illegible, whose lamps are not lit, or whose exâ€" haust emits too much smoke, will be similarly instructed in traffic law and must pay for the information. Habitâ€" ual offenders will have their vehicles taken from them and will have to make their further way afoot, their vehicles being reclaimable after a lapse of time and again‘it payment of a large fine.â€"Glasgow Herald. Needed by a Parson. â€"On a card in a church in the City of London is to be found the followâ€" ing list of qualifications said to be needed by a parson:â€"â€" The strength of an ox. The tenacity of a bulldog. t The daring of a lion, The patience of a donkey. The industry of a beaver. The versatility of a chameleon. The vision of an eagle. T‘he meekness of a lamb. The hide of a rhinoceros. ‘The disposition of an angel. ‘ The resignation of an incurable. ‘The loyalty of an apostle. ‘ ‘The heroism of a martyr. } ‘The faithfulness of a prophet. ‘The tenderness of a shepherd. ‘The fervency of an evangelist. The devotion of a mother. On the Spot â€"The winter soon to be buried with flowers and sunshine has the name of being the longest, the bardest, the steadiest, the coldest, the meanest winter in the history of the North. There are actually people in this country who began to despair of it ever passing away. Yet it is now on its way. "The sur will soon be shinâ€" ing:; the fish (in the waters) will soon be biting; the birds will be singing; the flowers will be blooming; and life will be felt to be worth living even for the downcast.â€"Timmins Advance. Flying a ‘plane after three hours instruction! _ How many motorists ventured out in a car alone after only three lessons of one hour each? Some people take weeks to learn and some renounce the attempt altogether, And during the first altempst there are bent fenders and damaged garages, We speak from experience! â€"St. Thomas Timesâ€"Journal, The Sun Will Shine Again a certificate as a pilot, but when she qualifies she means to run her own ‘plane as a sort of taxi service. THE EMPIRE â€"Belfast Weeklyâ€"Telegraph Comment by farmers stressed reâ€" employment in urban industries and temporary employment in workâ€"relief projects as major rearons for the inâ€" creased movement from farms> .0 cities. is C The number of persons who moved to farms last year who 951,000, while 1,178,000 moved away. The farmâ€" bound movement involved 1,544,000 persons in 1982 while those moving away numbered 1,011,000. The Bureau of Agriculture Ecoâ€" nomics, in a new study of farm popuâ€" lation, attributes the increase prinâ€" cipally to an excess of births over deaths, since more people left farms for cities, in 1983 in a continuation of the farm exodus of the past deâ€" cade than went from cities to farms. Washingtonâ€"The number of indiâ€" viduals living on farms reached a reâ€" cord peak of 32,509,000 on Jan. 1, 1933. The children were tested mentally before the tablets were administered. and then every thirty days. All showâ€" ed a marked improvement in intelligâ€" ence after the treatment. Vitamin Bâ€"complex is protection against pellagra and beriberi, diseas es affecting the nervous sstem. The vitamin is contained in milk, lean meat, east, eggs, green leafy vegeâ€" tables and who‘e wheat. Farm Population Reaches New Peak But Exodus Grows The statemeni is based on the reâ€" sults of tests made by the experiâ€" menters with 46 pupils of primary grades. The children tested were unâ€" derâ€"nourished and selected from poor komes where the parents were unâ€" able to supply proper food. The doeâ€" tors gave the children vitamin Bâ€"comâ€" p.ex tablets with their lunch, the chief meal. Chicagoâ€"A child‘s diet may explain the reason for the high or low marks he receives in school, according to the deductions of Drs. Seigfred Maurer, nutritionist, and Eva Ruth Balkan, psychologist, both of the University of Chicago. Low grades may result from a deâ€" ficiency in the diet and if given foods rich in Vitamin Bâ€"Complex the child will learn more quickly, â€"The University of Capetown has done the right thing in removing its ban on women who want to lecture though married. There is noâ€"reason why a woman who has been appointed to a particular university post because of her eminent suitability for it should be dismissed merely because she has taken a husband unto herseltâ€"or viceâ€" versa,. It may happen in special cases that she gradually becomes less eminently fiited." University teaching is. a 24â€"hotraâ€"day job. The mere lecâ€" turing is nothing compared with the perpetual reading and research which is necessary for a giver of education to keep abreast with everâ€"widening knowledge. if a woman on marriage neglects" her university _ work â€" then she must expect to be superseded on the ground of inefficiency. But that is not likely to happen with the vast maâ€" jority of women who wish to pursue an, academic career and who work more tor love of their subject than for the gain.â€"The Cape Argus (Capetown). May Explain High or Low Standing of Pupil Diet Affects Women Teachers and Marriage. This amazing photograph, taken in secret, shows Koloman Wallisch, Styrian defence leader, executed for his activities during the Austrian civil war. With his will in his hand he is seen in the jail courtyard at Locben, Austria. School Marks Executed With Will In Hand The courage with which Miss Kenâ€" nedy carried on in her dificult posiâ€" tion with the mother‘s allowance board for the Sudbury, Thunder Bay and Sturgeon Falls district, and the hardships which she encountered, were perhaps less wellâ€"known since the nurse was prone to minimize the arduous features of her work. Her friends related how, all alone, she would drive a dog team through the lonely bush to visit an isolated family or walk ; long unfrequented paths to make possible speed‘er relieft for a family in need. Miss Kennedy glanced through a window and hope replaced the despair in her heart, for the fAames of a burning telegraph pole just outside were blowing away from the house. The wind had changed and the new born baby, its mother and the heroic nurse were safe. So grateful was the mother that she called her baby boy Kennedy Edwardson. ; She had spent a whole night in Lake Temiskaming when through the smoke she heard a voice crying from the shore, "My God, will no one do something for my wife?" Miss Kenâ€" nedy, a nurse with a war record, went to the woman‘s side. As the flames crackled fiercely, she gave all the asâ€" sistance possible. Amid the terror and confusion that prevailed during the holocaust, Miss Kennedy delivered a baby in an empâ€" ty house which the flames threatened to devour. Sudbury.â€"In the sudden death at Thessalon of Miss© Josephine Kenâ€" nedy, inspector of mothers‘ allowances Northern Ontario has lost a heroine of the Haileybury fire of October, 1922, Josephine Kennedy, Inspector Of Mother‘s Allowances Performed Many Deeds If the bill does not succeed in 1eâ€" ducing the toll of accidents, then more stringent measures will be used, it is intimated. Haileybury Heroine One feature of the new bill is the reâ€"introduction of a fixed speed limit of 30 miles an hour in urban areas, these being designated as areas where a system of street lighting is mainâ€" tained, Lower limits apply to motor trucks and they are required to carry a special colored disk for identificaâ€" tion. New applicants for driving licenses must pass a stiff test of competence but on the other hand .pedestrians failing to comply with regulations are liable to a fine.â€" Authority is given to prescribe street cros:ing places for them. in 1932 while the number of injured rose from 206,450 to 216,328 and acâ€" cidents from 184,006 to 191,782. The increases were all in England and Wales, Scotland‘s figures remaining stationery. London, Eng.â€"Along with figures showing that 7,000 persons were killâ€" ed in highway accidents in Britain last. year the government published its new road traffic bill, designed to meet the increasing problem of road safety. The fatalities increased from 6,667 Britain Seeks to Reduce Highâ€" way Fatalities New Traffic Laws + In Old Country Of Courage TORONTO C LN For the coed, it will be to sport_!or her college pennant on her thumbs at | ca the more important athletic events, | and in the evening she will match her on gold or silver eyeshadow with nail qu polish of the same color. th There are hair tints to match every of gown, from Chinese rust to starlight Tj blue and the coloring, according to m the beauticians, will wash out with a« the morning tub. > as io Phs ant ihatatafin dudh sc cici dhii d d 91 Revealing beauty secrets, the visitâ€" ing beauticians announced that the supreme sensation among the year‘s innovations is the new jewelled maniâ€" sure with precious stones, Harmonâ€" izing with the gown, in the centre of sach fingernail. Once, he said, he was rewarded with a forced hug around the neck and a dainty kiss from a former New Orleans girl whose homely countenâ€" ance he had (ransformed into beauty in a public demonstration of his art. Then a similar facial operation made a Tampa, Fla., woman more beautiful than the blonde woman she told the surgeon had "vamped her husband" and his affections v ere wou back. So say the members of the Amerâ€" ican Cosmeticians Association attendâ€" ing their annual convention here. New Orleans.â€"Miss 1934 will wear jewels on her fingernails, multiple curls in her windswept coiffure and at the same time using harmless tints to change from blonde to brunette, or vice versa, according to her mood. Jewelled Manicure Of Precious Stones To Match the Gown But this surgeon said he now conâ€" fines his practice to women. Once he changed the face of a man after he had been assured that the police had nothing against the patient, but the man within three months was picked up with a set of burglar tools. Again a woman who had been a penâ€" itentiary inmate for 20 years sought his aid to remove her "hardened face" that she might not be recognmized in the operation of a beauty parlor. It worked _ and _ his _ patient "went straight." The process bears its reward, Dr. C‘lém told the annual convention of the American Cometicians Associa. tion here. T â€"Ailiti t it ol css 4 if you aren‘t and want to be? If you don‘t like the face you have today you can get a new one through plastic surâ€" gery, says Dr. J. Howard Crum, a New York surgeon. Lord Aberdeen was buried in the family interment ground at Haido House "among his ain folkâ€"he _ alâ€" ways wanted it that way." The cofâ€" fin was made at Haddo House from the beech trees on the estate and it was lined with the Gordon tartan. Declaring she would carry on her public work as before the death of her husband, the Marquess of Aberdeen, one time Governorâ€"General of Canada, Lady Aberdcen revealed in her berâ€" eavement the affection and loyaliy which was the foundation of the life partnership of "We Twa," ‘ *T won‘t be long after him," said Lady Aberdeen to a representative of The London News Chronicle. Her husband dies as he wished to d‘eâ€"â€" working to the last, she said. Lady Aberdeen Will Carry on Pub‘c Work Throughout the northern parts of tl_!e province snow continued to cover Former Governor General of Canada Remained a Libâ€" eral to the End Change Your Face if You Don‘t Like It The report said 25 per cent. of cattle herds in Frontenac County were in poor condition and that some losses were expected, It mentioned heavy losses among pigs. Feed supâ€" plies for cattle were reported low in Carleton County. the ground, affording good br-(;te-cttion for grain in most instances, In Lambton County, it said, there has been good demand for horses and Michigan â€" institutions have taken numerous twoâ€"yearâ€"old fillies and breeding mares at good prices, In Lincoln, it reported, slight bud growth made it difficult to obtain an estimate of winter damage to orâ€" chards. In the central part of the province Hastings County reported prices for horses at $125 to $150 a head with good demand. The department reported in southâ€" ern Ontario Essex County has 100,â€" 000 acres of fall wheat, almost twice as much as usual and that it appears all will survive the winter. In Brant, it said, many farmers reported damâ€" age to last year‘s seeding and that some damage had been done to orâ€" chards and raspberries, Torontoâ€"The Ontario~department of agriculture in its weekly crop reâ€" portâ€" indicated mixed prospects for wheat in the‘province but reported good sales of horses in some quarters. Damage to orchards was reported from some districts, â€" Essex Wheat Acreage Through Plastic Surgery â€"If You‘re a Woman New Orleans.â€"Why not be pretty +6 Get a New One Set at loo,m Fevit The baby‘s body is a mass of nerve ends, and patting or stroking wonseâ€" quently clicits a coo or laugh from the infant. _ This is the material out of which all love is made, she said. The child cuddled and petted too much may have difficulty in later life as he may not receive the same sort Describing the way in which atâ€" tractions begin, she said, a baby has not an innate love for his own moâ€" ther, and would learn to love a nurse or an aunt jest«as much if in her Uncomfortable reactions such as these might be resolved if one could discover the connection between the emotion and the experience that gave rise to it. _ For example, Miss Sanâ€" dall explained, a woman who disliked bananas, and continually refused to taste them, was probably influenced by what is known as a "conditioned reflex" built up through having been made ill by eating an unripe banana whenâ€"she was a child. 1f she could recognize the reason for her reaction and eat a good banana she would break her dislike to that fruit, the speaker said. Montreal. â€" If you diglike certain foods, recoil from the feeling bf the fur of a kitten, shudder at the sight of blood, or have other reactions not based on the intrihsic merits of the thing reacted to, the reason can genâ€" erally be traced to some previous exâ€" perience connected with the situation of the moment, according to Miss Mary Sandall, psychologist of New York, who addressed. the Montreal Women‘s Club. Horror of Blood, Revulsion 7 From Cat‘s Fur, Dislike Of Some Foods Phobias Due To The proposed course is for two years, but third and fourth year trainâ€" ing for pupils able and willing to go on is provided. One forward4ooking suggestion arisâ€" ing from the provincial council of the Ontario Second School Teachers‘ Fedâ€" eration is that for modification of the high school curriculum to enable the giving of greater attention to the needs of pupils who do not intend to enter university and who will probably leave school at the end of two years. The matriculation is regarded as the stanâ€" dard for obtaining a position in busiâ€" ness and industry, but the suggestion is that a campaign of propaganda be undertaken to induce parents to permit children to enter the proposed course, If the department of education of the province is willing to establish this course, it is proposed that it apâ€" point one person for a year previously to popularize the course. He would do this by means of inspiring articles and by addres:sing various interested public bodies, to the end that the emâ€" ployer will not expect an applicant for a position to have matriculation standing. * Toronto. â€" Teachers of primary, secondary and specicl schools and of colleges, with trustees and ratepayers to the number of nearly 3,000, gathered here recently to secure assistance in their work, and tc try to further the task of resolving the educational sy8â€" tem of Ontario into a process of pracâ€" tical value to the youth of the country. Ontario Teachers Seek Broadâ€" ening of Course For Older Pupils Higher Education For Nonâ€"College Youths Planned They could study and Organize for peace. They could make it a living cause, for which to work unceasingly. They could join hands with the womâ€" en of the United States to make the women of North America a vital force for peace in the world. Folowing the bishop‘s challenge, Mrs, E. J. Thorlakson said women throughout the ages had achieved great reforms. In the difficult times of 1984 Canadian women could learn to think for themselves and not merely accept a traditional attitude on such questions as world peace. Women Throughout College Girls f l H Ages Have Achieved | . Visit Slums }| ~ y Important Reforms‘, . . â€"â€" . . _ | y o If arother war came would you be brave enough to withstand its hysterâ€" ia, its soâ€"called ‘romance‘ and stand firmly against the tide of feeling if it were arsinst you*? His lordship asked his audience. ~ ‘There is no v&ue in study of peace without conviction that peace is the one goal to be desired in the opinion of Bishop L. Raiph Sherman, of Calâ€" gary. The question cannot be settled in study groups alone, he told the Woâ€" men‘s Canadian Club at a meeting called for organization of groups for a program as outlined by th» League of Nations Society in Canada. Former Experience Calgary Women‘s Club Told to Study and Organize for Peace yla Word recevenm here is to the 1 t that only a ten foot path will be <urâ€" faced this year, This is to exioon J (vom Morpeth to m distance of sis oc# which would take the paving to L# Michigar Centrai crossing on No @1 highway north of Ridgetown. _ Tn® pavement is to be put down one 4@ of the road and the other side s i * built to the same devel with gravel. This will be the first highsay "sidewalk to be constructed in this is trict, although many other roads n=w been paved n the same manner in 0h er parts of the province. It is under stood that the pavement when com pleted later, wili be 20 feet wide During the past five years the d¢ partment of highways has intima® several times that the stretch wou be paved. It was held up, â€" howeve! owing to the "mno paving" _ mot> passed by the Kent County _ Co@ several years in succession A sit lar motion is on the county c04 books this year, iwit apparent s @ exception is being made in the case 0 highway No. 21. Ridgetownâ€"Efforts to secure @ surface for that portion «f the hing Highway No. 21 «xtending frony #: getown to Morpetbh â€" ainck is i« town‘s main outlet to the southe= highway> No 4 â€"have veen pasctia s suceessful, according to an announ~ ment from Toromnte that »nders a~e now iGine weseived for the pasi.s ~ this span. It requires something more tha! general economic recovery to eap the bhesvy increase in port t through Halifax; and one ol the n important factors in the situailo the operation of the new im trade pacts negotiated at Ottawa August, 1932.â€"Halifas Herald In addition to this, it is show returns just published that the toms and Excise revenue at this for the fiscal year ended Mar was $3.912.083.30, comparec with 404,444.52 in the previous fiscal 1 10â€"foot Wide Strip Between Ridgetown and Mor peth MOSL anor smy grmmes asscersss LGS NOE ommummsin â€"nmmmmnmmntwearneres B7 MMSE ssucariemaecraryrismmats & us 164 NOE : 5+. vtepe0O ENN Ets visr mss PBD And for the first quarter of years indicated the figures ar follows: 1931 nogrnmmng grmmees sares o. 446. MREE smm axismcisnmmircems 441L MHIE sccuna strancy yotums sn 420. The figures for the first months of the present year are a new allâ€"time record. Preliminary estimates tor month of March just closed set « tonnage for the month at 28 tons, compared with 144618 1to» the same month of 1933. The following are the March fizures for the years indicated: Says Another allâ€"time traffic reco been set by the Port of Hali(ax At the conclusion of the threeâ€" study there were conferences to : view the ground eovered and to a alyze the significance of whar h had seen. Members of the associa of volunteers ied informal discuss and many of the group prepared ports to carry back to their coll classes and organizations, New York. â€"A group of some 3; college girls carried their classroo;, theories on sociology into thp N~w York slums recently and came to grip with some of the grim problems of depression welfare work, Sponsore; ’by an association of volunteers of ||., New York Welfare Council, this fir=:. lmd insight into practical sociolop; is designed to give girls from mo~ | than a dozen eastern girls‘ colloges ; | working knowledge of the variou; so. cial movements which they wil) ho 'ellled upon to support in later lif From there the field seminar p~ ceeded to their casesystem study « the methods and constructive activi ies of several organizations,. Th Welfare Council will look to the: girls and their classmates who w soon be decided on their use of |ci ure time after college, for both (i; ancial support and volunteer work , Inspection of New York , tivities Give Detailed Knowledge Preceding the first visits in the mor ning, the group met at the Russe; Bage Foundation for a prelimina~ birds‘eye view of the entire fiel; o welfare work in this city, Miss Jan: Hoey, acting director of the Wellan Council, used charts and description: to show how the work of the ®o different . sociological organization: here are coâ€"ordinated through the We) fare Council to avoid duplication c effort and money, They passed three days here yiâ€" ing girls‘ and boys‘ clubhouses, day nursery, a lodge for homeless m, m health centre, a city hospital, seamen‘s institute and other repre tative welfare organizations. At c a member of the staffl explained various activities and answered q tions. Highway "Path" Port Records 137,84° 144618 285,432 Tons 156,50 0 th 14 h The 1¢ U That the t« Cornell as t mctress is on achievement. is that she ha a â€" decentrali; trama.â€"New ly successful and _ down q Btuate.. she t thousand . es national _ int neither dead i1 ©1 n An t} Corn M than « mouth ferent. W pres ious in or pne‘s CiAY DJ M atior J un Dad Up 11. Upp! The Swe The of W t}