|| }% ba ta The preseut generation has experiâ€" enced more thrills than anry before, probably. Movies and talkies, the telephone, electric lights and electriâ€" cal equipment of all sorts, airplanes and the radio, all have come in our lifetime. The children of today acâ€" A very good friend of ours who recently had occasion to treak{ast on a railway train found that the one dollar breakfast consisted of fruit or cereal, ham and two eggs, toast and coffee. Being, like ourselves, a man of most abstemious habits in the earâ€" ly morning, he ordered this break{fast, but with the qualification that the main dish should contain only one egg. He obtained his desire, but the bill was one dollar and twentyâ€"five cents, Upon requesting an explanaâ€" tion he was informed that while ham and two eggs was part of the dollar breakfast, ham and one egg could only bo served a la carte, and his attenâ€" tiou was drawn to the rule on the items named in the table C‘hoto the menu card: "No variation from menus is permitted." â€" Toronto Saturday Night. Only 24 years ago the Halifax mu nicipal council made it lega‘! for auto mobiles to run two days a week on the county roads; contra:t this with the sitwation today where the motor car goes on its way sumimer and win. ter. What has happened in this field be expected in television within even a shorter period.â€"Halifa« Chronicle. A TIME OF SUSPENSE Harvest is three and a a‘t months away, hut what a lot of drama and tragedy those one bundred and five days may include! This is the most importaat time of the year for the prairie provinces. Upon what is proâ€" duced from the soil between now and the first week in August depends to a g eat extent what the welfare of the people will be for th« anecceeding year. Alter harvest, of ~urse, comes the worry of prices and markets, but the main thing now is the oroduction, â€"Calzary Herald. Two yvears ago everybody was dis enssing wageâ€"cuts. Now n»arly every. body seems to be discuesing wave increases. That, in itselt, is a pretty good sign.â€"Ottawa Jourra‘ GOOD TURNS DONE DAILY A lawdable move has been inaugurâ€" ated in Perth within the past few day. whereby several local Roy Scouts under the kindly direction a* Chief Constable Chas. Donovan dai‘y staâ€" tion themselves at the corner of Gore and Foster Streets and Herriot and Drummond Stree‘s to grotect school children from the danyer ot busy street traffic at the noon hour The Scouts are thus »dding to their good turns done daily.â€"â€"Perth Courer. If clergymen only knew what some ol their parishioners think and say of them when they give voice to long sermons, long prayers and long fun. eral panegyrics they might forego the tempiation to indulge in themâ€"Brockâ€" ville Reecrder Orillia is the latest municipality to jJoin the ranks of towns and cities having compulsory pasteurization of milk. Orillia deserves commendation for its decision and we hope that in the near future Simeoe wi‘l ~follow its example. Evidence shews that from 15 to 2% per cent. of tuberculâ€" asis in children is of bovire origin, and that scientific pastearization abâ€" solutely prevent tuberenlosis of thhi nature and in addition prevents all milkâ€"borne epidemics. Contrary to a somewhat popular belief pasteurizaâ€" tion does not alter the nutritional value of milk. Scientific exneriments in many parts of the world have provâ€" ed this fact beyond douabt Even if pasteurization did make a slight difâ€" ference, It is fa; outweigrhed by tbe: protection afforded to the youngetr! generation. It saves many !‘ves nuâ€" merous cripples and muâ€"\ mon«y for the taxpayer each year. It iz only a matter of few years until every urban | municipality will bave 100 per cent. pasteurization, Therefors, why delay, when the health of young boys .nd; girls is at stake? â€"Simcoe Reformer. REPEATING A GOOD THING ’ It has been decided by the Council‘ of Service Clubs for the county that another survey of the whole county will be held again this year to obtain a complete record of att the erippled children in order that anotber clinic ; may be held again this year, tbis time at â€" Almonte. â€"Carleton Place (‘ana‘; dian. H Times are better. There are facts, and facts that must challeng»e busiâ€" ness people to make the most out of present opportunities. Today is a day of opportunity for the go.getters. â€"â€"Victoria Inverness. TIMES ARE GOOD . It is high time for the last of the crepe hangers to quit. Business is good. The depression is a thing of the past. By this we do rot mean that there is any boom. Not by any means. And that in itse‘f is a good thing for a boom is about the worst thing that could confront an incividâ€" wal, community or a nat‘on, WHAT OF THE NEXT 40? WOMEN PREFER MALE TWO CHEAPER THAN ONE MARVELS OF TELEVISION ORILLIA GETS INTO LINE DARK _ THOUGMHTS Canada, The Empire and The World at Large CANADA V oice of the Press S1IGN _ There are still many pecple who, forgetting the history of the past ftew years, pin their hopes to the ability of the companies to carry passengers upon the roads or in the air. Admit. tedly both forms of trangport are of vital interest to the companics as adâ€" juncts to transport by rail,â€"but more than this they cannot be. The capiâ€" tal of the rajilwaysâ€"say £1,500,000,000 â€"consists of permanent way, of staâ€" tions, of signals, of locomntives and trains. It is this investment that must be turned to accourt if the rail. ways are to pay dividends. The probâ€" lem before the compariecs can be Apart altogether from the question of war, which is remote, Britain "uu an Empire to police and obligations greater than those of any other naâ€" tion. By refusing to join in an armaâ€" ments race she has made it plain, by example, what her desires are; it may be necessary now for hor to declare herself more poiatedly. If the Pcwers cannot be argued into agreement, they may be frightened into _ agreement. Britain still has a trum» card conâ€" cealed. ‘There is a possibility that Britain may illustrate the futility and expensiveness of an armiments race by threatening to participate to the limit of her resources. That would be a dangerous expedient, but it might be a sound corrective, Britain does not willingly seek this last course; but it may be forced upon her. If it is, the other powers must accept tha responâ€" sibility.â€"The Australasiav. THE BRITISH RAILWAYS . __ CHANCES IN REAL ESTATE So with real estate. Wo have a won. derful buyers‘ market today. Prices are still very low, low out of all proâ€" portion to real values, just as some of the preâ€"depression figures were out of all proportion, in the opposite di. rection, to real values. People who have money to investâ€"and there are still pleuty of them in Carada â€"â€" are picking up pieces of real estate here and there, They know from past exâ€" perience that the prosperity period following every depression a‘ways brings in its train, a worthâ€"while and perfectly reasonable recovery of real estate values, too. â€"â€" Bovler Cities Star. ‘ ' POLICE PRAISED The Timesâ€"Journal has ro hesitaâ€" | tion whatever in congratulating the _ policeâ€"local, county and provincial, | mounted police and railway policeâ€" l on the very efficient way in which they handled the search instituted to capture the man who is alleged to have clain Police Constable Colin Mc. Gregor _ here last week The case was very promptly taken up by Police Chiel Ketchabaw, enoperating with Crown and civic authorities, nnd‘ assistance from the provincial oflcers and other officers locate? in or l’o-} siding in the county came just as promptly and as readily.â€"St. Thomas | Timesâ€"Journal., CONTRAST Discu:sing crime and !aw enforce. ment, a United States editor makes this _ observation: "Scotland Yard would function no better than the Chiâ€" cago police if Scotland Yard were sub. jected to the same kind of political pulling and hauling that confronts the Chicago force." And that is just about the best tribute that con‘d be paid to law enforcement in the _ United Kingdom.â€"Halifax Herald ' "It will be remembered," writes Mr. A. G. Gardiner in the London Star, '“that not long ago the RB.C. made t the experiment of employing a woman ! announcer, this appointment being given to Mrs. Giles Borrett. The experiment had a very brief run. Afâ€" ter a few weeks Mrs. Borrett vanish. ‘ed from the microphon«, for what reason was not explained. but cerâ€" tainly not because she was inefflicient. "Now Miss Sprott lets the cat out of the bag. The only persons who were to blame for the termination of Mrs. Borrett‘s engagement, she says, were the women of this country. ‘They wrote to us in such large numbers saying that they did ncot want a woman announcer till at last we had to remove her.‘ It was nct a personal objection founded on the tone of Mrs. Borrett‘s voice, or her accent, or her competence. It was a sex objection. They did not want a woman announâ€" cer at all, They preferred men.‘"â€" Toronto Mail and Empire BEAUTIFY THE ROADSIDE _ In Maine a roadside hcautification program is in progress. }ts purpose is to clean up the approcches to towns and cities, plant fowers aad shrubs and make the who‘le scene more _ attractive. _ On#e iraportant effect will be a greater love of the beautiful for its own sake. Garden clubs will be formed, service clubs will aid, and boy and girl Scouts will assist. ‘The movement is one that deâ€" serves universal support. It is not expensive, and will make the road-l sides of the state a joy to the visitor, The result will be more impressive! because this is an organized effort.â€"| Saint John Telegraphâ€"Journa‘ | cept all these things as a common. place, They simply are an ordinary part of their world. Will they, in turn, be able to exclaim over as many marvels and miracles in the next 40 or 50 years?â€"Edmonton Journal. A POSSIBLE ALTERNATIVE THE EMPIRE ANNOUNCERS "What we want this year is a yield of good tobacco somewhere near the size of last year‘s crop. We would not have had difficulty in disposing of last year‘s tobacco if it had been of good quality." He added that the 1933 yield was of about 23 millions pounds, of which approximately eight millions is still being held for sale pending the outcome of the Ottawa conference. Prof. A. A. Leitch, outstanding toâ€" bacco authority, before leaving for Ottawa, declared that the campaign had been an unqualified success and said that close to 90 per cent. of the 1933 acreage had been represented in the agreements. 90 Per Cent. Sign in Norfolk District, Says Prof. Leitch Sicoeâ€"A "deadline" will be set by members of the tobacco reduction committee, after which growers will be unable to sign agreements restrictâ€" ing their crops by 25 per cent., it was announced recently. The comâ€" mittee plans an all day meeting to hear special sases to be affected by the reduction and to prepare a list of those growers who refused to coâ€" operate in the matter of reducing their acreage. Tobacco Growers _____ Cut Acreage LONDONâ€"Surgeons _ of _ Cardiff Royal Infirmary, Wales, announce that they have cured a 13â€"yearâ€"old girl of cancer in the eye by the application of radium. The life and the sight of the girl, both of which were endangâ€" ered by the disease, were saved after 17 days of treatment, in which raâ€" dium needles were used, combined with a rubberâ€"backed application to the eyeâ€"ball. Eye Cancer Growth Cured with Radium LONDONâ€"The Lord_ Mayor _ of Sheffield declared in a speech delivâ€" ered last week that if the present rate of production of steel is mainâ€" tained the year 1934 will be a record one for the city. Monthly returns so far have shown that if the rate is maintained 1,000,000 more tons will be produced this year than have been in any previous year of the city‘s history. Sheffield . Steel Production High stated in simple language; bow can they adapt what they have to the changing demands of our time? That the companies will find the answer to this question I have no coubt what. ever.â€"Ashley Brown in The Nine teenth Century (London}. INDIAN ARMY COSTS We are faced with the fact that the strength of the army in India is great. er than is necessary for defence purâ€" poses because the army is required for the maintenance of internal neace. It is not an army‘s proper function to do police work; its task is the defence of frontiers against foreien aggres. sion. But whether the army is kept above purely defence strength for poâ€" lice purposes or whether the extra money which it costs is spent on adâ€" ditional armed police to be placed unâ€" der the civil authority, the net result to the (axpayer is the same. The mor. al is, therefore, that one of the most important ways of saving money on the armyâ€"and not pretend‘ng to save it by spending more on the policeâ€" is to get rid of all those incitements to disorder which lead Provincial Govâ€" ernments to protest against the re. moval of troops. The idea! before the people is to concentrate upon making India a united nation, free from the virus of extreme communalism, â€" Times of India. | Loretta Young started her screen career because of her resemblance to her older sister, Polly Ann Young, and now little Georgiane Young makes her debut alongside Loretta. Goodlooking Young Clan does the rest, and does it astonishâ€" ingly well. Hs drove a ball recéntly to within three yards of the hole in one shot. To learn how to teach a blind man to play, Mr. Kelly blindfolded himâ€" self. He found just how each club needed to be placed. Blind Golfer Plays Better Now That He Cannot See the Bunkers Estate of Gaiety Brghton, Eng.â€"Connie Ediss, forâ€" mer Gaiety idol, known in the theaâ€" trical profession as "the woman with a heart of gold,‘ because of her genâ€" erosity, died leaving only $1,500, alâ€" though at the height of her fame she had received $1,700 a week. Then run it high on the standard, Let no foeman bring it down, For the sons of famed Toronto, Are loyal to the British crown. Then men of Toronto shield it, No foeman shall trample it down. Symbol of British freedom, It stands for the British crown. It stands for our sons and daughters, And their children yet to come. It guards our rights on every land, That may lie beneath yon sun. It stands for our King and country It stands for our home fireside; It stands to fight against evil. It stands that the right may abide. Men, let‘s nail it to the masthead, That flag of a thousand years: The flag that stands for freedom, And never a foeman fears. Its three crosses stand for anion: The red for pure British blood. The blue stands out for all that‘s true, While the white foam rides the Our great Empire‘s flag has flown. That stately flag The Union Jack. Is the flag she is proud to own. Sauer said, "We were just devising some new equipment which would have wiped all trace of them from the earth, but we‘ll be ready if they come downtown again in the fall." Anthony Sauer, Workhouse superâ€" ntendent, who headed the attack, adâ€" mitted the birds retreated merely beâ€" cause the weather had become mild enough for them to "move out" to the parks and suburban homes. 66 T' By R. H. Judd (All rights reserved.) For one hundred years Toronto, Cincinnatti, O.â€"After six months of "war" by the city, Cincinnatti‘s downtown area is practically . sparâ€" rowless, but leaders of the ouster movement cannot boast of victory. Sparrows Chased Off Busy Streets h oronto and Idol Is $1,500 TORONTO The Flag" "In some ways I have the advantâ€" age of the seeing golfer: I am not frightened by bunkers and obstacles because I don‘t know they‘re there. "It takes me no longer to go round a course than it does any one else. "I enjoy myself tremendously, In fact, golf has opened up a new life for me. "I box, and run and swim, but you get too old for those things. ‘"Golf is a social game. It brings a man into touch with lots of freinds C e q k0 ‘‘~*Z in the right position and tells him the distance from the hole. "I‘m playing better golf now than I playe. before I was blind," â€" said Captain Lowry. The driver, for instance, is placed about three inches inside the ball. For a tee shot he puts Captain Lowry in the right position and tells him the distance from the hole. for each member is being limited to two, according to Claire Geddis, secâ€" retary and treasurer. Premiums may also be made up of shrubs, peonies and annual plants from the Ridgeâ€" $nnarse Smsce t P P town greenho'use.rile' said Magetown. â€" Roses, shrubs and peonies are being distributed to memâ€" bers of the Ridgetown Horticultural Society,. Owing to the shortage of rose bushes this spring, the number for each memiber is hainm» Miniks® . 4. Belleville.â€"Mrs. Melvin Mountney, of Trenton, died here recently in hoyâ€" pital from a rare discase that attack: the throat, Dr. G. S. Stobie said the malady, Ludwig Angina, was not conâ€" tagious. The woman was in an adâ€" vanced gangrenous condition caused D# strangulation from the strange disease. First appearance of the malady, which is caused by a georm is in the glands of the throat, said Dr. Stobie. This is followed by coloring of the tongue. The patient suffers horribly until death. Mrs. Mountneys tongue was a dark purple, and swollen so big she could not swallow or speak. Rare Malady Claims Life in Trenton The calves‘ roles were simply decoâ€" rative. While their mothers were milked in the latest approved scienâ€" tific manners, they lolled contentedly by. Trips from school to school were by truck. Real Cow Shown To City Children a _ "personal â€" appearance" before school children here. A preliminary survey by the Cleveâ€" land _ District Dairy council had shown that seven out of ten pupils in Cev.land.â€"May of the cit; child‘s myths and illusions concernâ€" ing the origin of milk and what a cow look like, were dispelled here when a real "bossy, with a calf, made one school never had seen a cow at close range. Their descriptions of one had left the dairymen still more horrified,. _ Mence the exhibition. Four "bovines" were on display, while the children acted as hosts. Statistics compiled by committee of Florida publishers who sponsored the statewide celebration honoring Col. Henry L. Doherty for his work in bringing prosperity to Florida via the tourist route, show that altogethâ€" er 21,360 tons of refuse went up in smoke during January, February and March, 1984â€"38,566 tons more than for the same period last year, and more than in any other season since the incinerators were installed. Tourist Number . Shown by Garbage Miami, Fla â€"If you want to check up on Florida‘s tourist season, ask the head man out at the city incinerators. He has the figures to prove that this year Miami had 20 per cent. more cleaning up to do than ever before. Serious lack of funds and of books had handicapped the work lately, and closing down was hinted at. This news caused much consternation aâ€" mong the boys and girls, many of whom came with their gifts of books and money saved the day, she said. Montreal.â€"There are better days ahead for the Montreal Children‘s Liâ€" brary, Miss Violet M. MacEwan, libâ€" rarian, believes. She has been at its head for four years. Better Days Ahead For Children‘s Library Ridgetown. â€" Roses Stratford. â€" Approximately fifty per cent. of the bees in Stratford and district have been lost due to the severity of the winter, according to local apairists. Some of the keepers suffered even greater losses, one deâ€" claring that of his six hives only one contains bees which survived the winâ€" ter. It was the apairist who had made preparations for a severe winter by properly packing his bees who is able to start the season successfully., Cold Killed Half of Bees at Stratford Roses Few necessary for a blind New Yorkâ€"If you want to keep cut flowers for a long time, try keepâ€" ing them in copper containers. John Ratsek, floriculturist, on the staff of the New York State College of Ag. riculture, placed snapdragons, Stocks, roses, primroses and other flowers in such containers and by so doing he found that their life span was increaâ€" sed by one to three days. He explainâ€" ed that the copper kills bacteria that would decay the flowers. Flowers Fresh Longer .. In Copper Containers Ring Lardner Estate Valued at $192,927 ner, who also received insurance aâ€" mounting to $169,159. East Hampton, N.Y.â€"Ring Lardâ€" ner, ‘author and humorist, who died September 25th last, left a net esâ€" tate of $192,927 a transfer tax apâ€" praisal filed recently showed. The gross estate was appraised at $247,083. The bulk of the estate was left to the widow, Mrs. Ellis A. Lardâ€" All the meat produced in Great Britain and Ireland and available for Lordon is only sufficient to supply the metropolis‘ 8,000,000 people with 3.2 ozs. of beef, 2.9 ozs. of mutton and lamb, and 2.6 ozs. of pork a week. The Port of London Authority conâ€" trols a special police force 800 strong, whose work lies entirely ashore. The river itself is policed by a division of the Metropolitan Police. Only two districts in London, Srep.l ney and Bethnal Green, show a drop| in rateable value, in every other case the value shows an increase. A Among the items in the annual food bill for the London Zoo are six and a half tons of monkeyâ€"nuts, 184,000 banâ€" anas, and 19,800 eggs. Mud that Costs Millions In a quarter of a century more than 12,000,000 lbs. sterling has been spent in dredging the navigable reaches of the River Thames, National Savings Certificates to the total value of £480,000,000( or over £10 per head of the population, have been issued. There are now 30,200 more persons employed in the making of men‘s clothing than there were ten years ago. Every person sentenced to a term of imprisonment in the United Kingâ€" dom costs more than $%50 a year to maintain. British insurance companies have, at present, no fewer than $5,000,000 industrial assurance policies in force. After the heart of a 65â€"yearâ€"oldâ€"man bad stopped for five minutes, it was set going again by massage and he lived for 2% hours. Every night in the rhubarb season a train bearing sixty tons travels from Yorkshire to London. Fourteen _ pedigree cows, worth £450, were electrocuted in a Durâ€" ham byre. Five others were unharmâ€" ed. London‘s rateable value increased by over £500,000 last year, and now totals well above £600,000. From a livestock emporium â€" in Manchester, thieves stole 150 goldâ€" fAish, five rabbits, five doves, and the watchâ€"dog guarding the premises. A Mansfield J.P., Maltby, a lay preacher, claims to have delivered 4,000 sermons in 60 vyears. Mrs. Urania Boswell, of Farborâ€" ough, the gypsy "queen." who as "Gypsy Lee‘ has told thousands of people‘s fortunes, left over £5,000. Air post stamps fast grow in value. A Sâ€"cent brown Newfoundland stamp of the first transâ€"Atlantic post by Hawker in 1919 fetched £210. Brantford requested such a step be taken some time ago, and recently Hon. W. G. Martin, member in the Legislature for Brantford and minisâ€" ter of public weifare, announced the purchase of the right of way, He stated the government wou!ld handle the building of its section of the high way. One of three hens produce as exâ€" bibits in a court case at Leicester laid an egg while the magistrates were considering their verdict. BRANTFORDâ€"The Brantford Hamâ€" ilton Radial Railway right of way beâ€" tween the city limits and where the railway reaches Highway No. 2 will be purchased by the Ontario Departâ€" ment of Highways. It will be made into a highway to join Brantford with Highway No. 2. Brantford â€" Hamilton â€" Radial Right of Way Will Be Bought Will Build a New Highway British Shorts | _ This makes it all the more imâ€" portant that a complete survey of the | economic, social and political relatâ€" Iions of Canada and the United i States, such as is proposed by the \ Carnegie Endowment for Internaâ€" .n'ond Peace, be carried out. The project calls for extensive investiâ€" !gation on both sides of the line conâ€" cerning such intricate subjects as tariff _ policies the movenent of | vapital, the effect of "Americanizaâ€" tion" through the press and radio the problems of transportation and tions from one country to another, and many other kindred subjects, which, for the mosi part, till now ‘hlve been dealt with piecemeal or . inadequateiy. views. America and Canada both proâ€" spered more in the days when trade was easy and unobstructed than in recent years when ostensibly for seiâ€" fish reasons, tariffs have been raised and taxes made prohibitive. The earlâ€" fer unselfishness was in reality more profitable. responsible for this. Also the s:l-ï¬s'hi :ou and stupidity of narrow political portance. So long as Americans fail to be sensitive to the Canadians‘ keen pride in their own nationalism there can be no fundamentally better reâ€" lations between our two countries. If Canadians and Americans canâ€" not live in close friendship â€" there would seem litte hope for the cause of world peace. And yet in recent years the two peoples have been driftâ€" ing slowly; it imperceotibly _ spart. Misunderstandings have been partly Herein, it would seem to the casâ€" ual observer lies the key t~ the ultimate effectiveness of the maâ€" terial which is to be gathered. In Canadianâ€"American relations prejuâ€" dice and tradition are of vital imâ€" This is unquestionably true and makes the gathering of factual maâ€" terial particularly desirable. But, as Prof. Shotwell points out, it is not enough to amass this factual maâ€" terial. It must be weighed in the light of practical political possibiliâ€" In the foreward to the project, Prof. James T. Shotwell stresses the fuct that sentimentalism has too ofâ€" ten prevented clear and objective analysis, and that people have genâ€" eralized from the century of comâ€" mon endeavor, moving toward like goals on the same continent We know dimly that the Canaâ€" dians were resentful of our tariff law of 1930. We have heard that they disliks American newspapers and magazines. But it is hard for us to understand this, as we cannot look upon them as people different from ourselves, with different loyalties and traditions. (New York Herald Tribune.) To the average American accus tomed to look on Canadians not as foreigners, and Canada not as a foreign country, it comes as a surâ€" prise to learn that little attention has been paid in the past to a thorough study of Canadianâ€"American â€"relatâ€" Canada and the U.S. Motor buses in Venezuela are a dorned with scenes from the Bible be cause the natives believe these wil‘ help to ward off accidents. Almost 2,000 Berliners celebrated Easr at Templehof airdrome as guests of the Lufthansa, which had donated free trips in a fleet of its transport planes stationed at the field. They included only ten minâ€" utes or so over Rerlin, but they were a great thrill. Stunt flying by the famous Ernst Udet and others was thrown into the bargain. The high point to date was desâ€" cent of 6,000 workers frow all parts of Germany on Garmisch, the Bavarâ€" ian winter sport headquarters, where they were equipped with the proper paraphernalia and spent the rest of the week sliding, or tumbling, down the surrounding slopes, according to respective good fortune. The next chance is often long in coming, _ for there are 18,000,000 members of the Labor Front to be taken care of. But in between there are cutâ€"price productions of notable plays, lectures of all kinds, and home vocational courses with increasing enâ€" rolments. Excursions in small groups and in thousands have been arranged. The participants lug their suitcase through the city streets in formation, climb aboard special trains, and chug off for a week or ten days of new exâ€" periences, after which they wait hopeâ€" fully for the next chance. It is part of the program of "Powâ€" er Through Joy," the Germany equivalent of Italy‘s Doppolavoro, to show the working millions how to have a good time, and to bring it within their means to do so. They are touring far and wide to points of scenic or historic interest, They are riding in airplanes, They are aquaplaning and beach loungirg. Berlin.â€"German workers are getâ€" ting a tasteâ€"of things they once thought were reserved only for the wealthy, and are having a wonderful time at it. Germany Sends Tours By Special Train and Plane to Resorts of Wealthy. Gives Workers m to the casâ€" key to the of the maâ€" gathered. In itions â€" prejuâ€" of wital imâ€" Zact in view nul given for ice crea ter and milk she sauces, together of procedure. Fx which is twentyâ€" more satisfactory ing than fresh cre ever be perfectly : essary therefore, kept cool before f »f the ice cream â€" free from ice cry dbjrctionuble | A widespre1 dian homes pa farm homes, w homeâ€"made frozer wible for a reprin subject issued b} partment of gible to mnkeAq the ordinary ute any Canadian kit Frozen I a man think him, he will sooi so they will be one js his friend ly treat them as soon be his frie *"Not at all," 1 replied as he : hand, "I merely what I liar 1 am truth," "You‘ve heard ness sald," persi your evidence is I to infer that acity ?" An enthusiast his quarters fo down to the tab "Junior tells m« all afternoon." "Well, well," *"I thought Td . where before." "I know it," mate. "He ba “l‘." "My daddy‘s Bertie proudly. Coeds at Ind been ordered t reach the tops That, however, Observant « hasn‘t Daddy a Mother â€"â€" ® much, darling, Childâ€"Why mother, dear? Motherâ€"Bec THIS INSTAN my compex Ronald â€" costumes a they? "What was about Walters Dentistâ€"I‘m this tooth is t Man (moant Then, plegse, little more res Friendâ€"Th around telling Manâ€"I don‘ begins to tell neck. Experience i you have to b you let ber te Juniorâ€"Ther wings and get Motherâ€"Oh be unkind to whe may put to heaven. 21 didt willing Seeker Dorot avout the ho odd jobs ab tack in s able That was N Motherâ€"Noi d get baby Bo Mot) maAl ®*Why wal Why W Abr P Hear 0€ET m 6# n Ha â€"] do D