:3] In the suns column ot The Jour- at it is rusted that there was rebel, ll ta Spain and King Allonso was looted In the streets. Thus the weeding sates and the if“ of Suit: were matters ot con. H: s quarter or s century Mo. The laws seen to hsn been possessed I greater powers ot resistance. They Thot In making the civic by. bars In any III" pieces because the speed than than nu ten miles per hour Ind on the Ottawa Improve. new Coalition'- driveway. ot whirl: some sections were In use. new. In mile. the utmost weed allowed. CONNESV A PLEASANT TREAT MIL-mg reference to the death of I Mable puht'v man it was said of him 'ttat he will be remembered tor hi. â€Nailing courtesy, That ieature 'ram "iresseti an) that is u it should be there is running as tine an unfail. his mamas, uht‘lher it be in man or woman It smooths the Pathway of life and makes contacts with our fei- |ows tructt mun pleasant. It is a plea- MM in do Names: with a truly cour- teou. man Ol woman. No matter whnt the hnsines. may ho eourtesy in I Ire. tactor m bringing it to success. But courtesy mull be something in- Bats. not toned. The outward ex- )ression of an inward state of mind. h-Niinra Foil:- Review. THE TRIUMPH OF THE AUTO Dealing with not automobile driv- m u not A new thing. In the Ottawa Journal it is recalled that " year: no thou were complaint: that our: lero mulling â€on Wellington Ind Itha.‘ "no“ u (at " thirty miles " hour." . """"rre"IH't'notottter at Tir. Her jaunt?" in a grandmother I! 33. and ur- why":- chi .t is a mother at 16. A†of which roam the ancient command: "Arm, daughter. and so to Mr daughter. (or your daughter's laugh-er 133 had a tuttoter.--Katn. 1mm.- Sentinel. Y .. who Imma- (he orgy-allow n “can“! that We man. a hub" and munnvntinn m I lonkw like um" t As t rm weather that the idea ol amassing trlbute by I»; .' :2 the hirsute decoration! of a Pts' period may not become Infec- "Hm Our own sturdy lorhears, who Bro m-o wnrthy of an honor, leaned ram": “rough to whiskers at I time chap vaznrn W‘V'p scarce and barber: Illa t 'wn. cu Cr'lower 'f' 'tte is loci o unqu- 39inch bu been making an at. tempt to our the tomuto in bowler than. Some per-on started the re- port that winch had vitamins, There In†none doctor: who tell tor it. When a pull-ht came in looking I little white “an! the sills and not Quite hitting on all cylinders. the ad. vice we: that vitamin were needed Ind spinach could supp?! these strange things. People who write thin-in for th" papers have been tale, In: win-ch. and the folks at home matte people Mr it under the guise that it's good tor them. We were harm: that they would be starting to feet' thaw Dionne sisters, tire of thmn on spinurh and then the thing I-tl." get into the papers, and there I mid he a new spinach campaign un- d-r vrtv_3tratrrwd Reaeon-Heraid. " WORKS BOTH WAYS “an girth " bathing suits took mm. mar» a'i'urtive in their ntreet clam-.4 liar mam look more attract- Ive m tho-ir sum-I vlothes than they do -n bathiuu units, --tir. Thomas Tum- Journal The reason for mlld so! to that the bmato Juice should have received preference over spinach. The tomato a a regular old standby. It [on into Bump. chow-chow, pickles, atewed omatoee. tomato amp, raw tomatoes Ind all manner ot thlnga. and the tomato la luck a handy thing to “lug thou! when a little trouble all" in .110 community. It produces no injury tut I. etqable of the maximum am- )unt of d%toetttort. It is such an all- round non ot thlng. need but to use the phrase a i The in: repcn "I good. In ladl- uon " the human milk which II ted to the [In girls net: on “calves M traps ot tomnto juice per day. That. " eortsider n being uplandâ€. lt in lune-Ha; tyrant! of01bo [on which two being made In Ila. SPINACH. AND THE DIONNB Some folks my new a bit - u retain: About the Dionne gummy. Iota, We don't. We get sort ot tickled over) time there II a report which an that the little Indies have Iddod mom" ounce or halt ounce, Likewise .uggvslit-l‘ might be made and Md that We should abandon the In habit and give a befitting de. Until)" m what our ancestors -v mm wltt- their tlowlng beards. rot weather thought the thing I: rsrtst.--Nrartttord Extsositor. THE WHISKERS PERIOD h One or than: days chan- their _ Guests who Included Prince Arthur in! Ccnnnugm, the King ot Greece, iPrineess Katharine ot Greece and the Prince and Princess Christian ot Ben. 58. had the first pine tree: to be plant- ed in England tloodlit tor their beau. tit. Other sights were noodm tor the‘ first. tim', and included the sale that has not been opened Iince Stu-lli liar-u and the lie: trrove.-Londtm Daily Telegraph the mes of the US. Department ot Justice contain more than 4,400,000 tingmprints. But any home with a baby can show that number on its walls --Woodstock tletttittel-Review. SMOKING FORBIDDEN 'No smoking' was the notice that greeted the hundreds ot guests who danced at Ham House, Lord Dysart'a historic mansion at Richmond. it was only on condition that this noting was hung in various parts ot the house and that strict obserVanco ot the rule was enforced that it wan possible to hold the debutante! haiii there for the mansion is insured mil, six hundred thousand pounds. GueatI‘ who wanted to smoke had to do no outdoors. I tt an explanation of the apparent pretetvnce for pork In Canada In sought it mas perhaps, be found in the power ot advertising. The merits or va'tous brands or hams, bacon, anu- sage and other pork products are set forth consistnntly In the packing hottso advertising. but does any one rot-at: ever having read an advertise: men' concerning a tempting roast oil beet or t tender juicy "te".-Morte-i ton Transcript, l, Vi" quite agree with General Wil- liam< that it is desirable to hare the force known everywhere as a 100 per cent courteous body. A trattic officer can do his duty and Mill be courteous. Orchiouaiiy one finds a constable, who does not appreciate this fact. Sun: a man, or course, is unfilled tor the xork.--Border Cities Star. PUBLICIZING THE PIG i Ou the whole we believe Ontario has a Provincial police system ot which it may well be proud. In all de- partments it seams to be doing good worn. The motorcycle division is par- ticularly sma:t and etticlent and the various officers with whom we have come in contact left nothing to be de- sir:n m the way of courtesy. POLI‘IE POLICE A p'ovincial motorcycle trtticer has been xelieved 0' his duties on the grouml of disccurtesy to motorlsts, "l called tor the constable‘s resig- nac'r." Genela: Williams, chlet or the Provincial Police, announces. "We inteIJ that on: men shall be court- mus, and an) constable that isn't ('OIH‘U‘UIIS can get another job.†i, Midas.†Thr. poem “hit-h first appeared in Blm-kwnorl's Magazine in September 18:yt, has horn attributed to John Gall. John c, Loetthart. the Earl of I-lg'lu:nn and (there. Periodically the ditwas:tc'on of the authorship is reviv- ed. but it has nerer been settled def. initniy and probably never will he.-- Tm-nrvo Mali and Empire. 'cONE SHIELING†RECALLED Tht' late Professor Donald Suther- iani McIntosh of Daihousle University hequmthed to his native province. of Nova Noun, 100 arres of land in Cape Bramu with the request that on it there would be erteted a building sim- ilar in design tn the "lone shiellng" ma'lc famous in Scottish literature. Probably the most quoted stanza in‘ the poem milled "The Canadian Boat' Song." is in lolluwa: "From the lone shieliug on Hand Mouzualns divine us. and tt 593d- But still the mum H strong " High’nmL And It wasn't in describing this abortive attempt " revolution that the sword was tlrgt extensively resorted to in the despatcnes But thy movement that made him Chtttteeilor was cer- taint: not I pulsch in the original sense That launched agninst Dolltttlt Wednesday had the term applied to) it before there was Bttg'ttt'tutrartee ei- (ther ol its sucress or tailure.-Edmmr. ‘ton Journal. THINGS THAT DIDN'T HAPPEN Let’s see. Unless the war debts were cancelled three years Mo the wor'd was to sink in chaos. Unless Britain gave India independence two year-s "o. the white man was to be driven into the sea, And this year it the Government collected a to: on will, mining woula be ruined. What's the nut t'roak?--Sault Ste Marie Star lt m correctly applied only to on at. temptrd revolution whlch end: in a than. That III the outcome of the man- " Hutch In November, 1923, that brought Hitler to the fore and led ttt " meat In t beer hall alter whirb he served a wear in prison. VIM-emu Hepburn, "Alfonso is out." --Btmttord Beaeortareratd. PUTSCH'S EXACT MEANING The word "pttttrNt" its In these days seldom out at the central European news tor long. But, â€cording to I German scholar. it Is being used very wrongly. when, on has come to be I widespread practice, it is made 'T onymoul with revolution. FINGERPRIN1 S in mm n H strong. the heart mm, durum: behold the He. e m. and the waste the misty Ir, " often on he feels it desirable to satisfy himself whether he ls aut. fering from cancer tumor. The blood ot a normally healthy man without cancer should congesl under those condltlons wlth the sddltlon of Ittetie acld In 120 minutes. Blood of persons suffering the worst cancers consuls almost Instantly. "between than two extreme we have chatted an index which allow: positive proof ot whether or not a The teat consist ot congeallng I blood sample by Incorporation ot 10 per cent. ot luctlc acid at I tempers- ture ot one degree centlxnde. Dr. Kopaczewski, in an exclulive ex- planation ot " test to the United Press, said: "It will now be poulble tor any human to undergo tests cheap. Paris.--, simple, inexpensive test which doctors anywhere may perform to determine it a patient has cancer was announced recently " the exclu- sive French Academy ot Science by Prof. Jacqnec Aresene D'Artronvat " the discovery of one ot his pupils, Dr. Ladlslaa Kopaezewski, 3 Pole. i "t am not being boastful." says Mr. ‘Gordon Fellowes in "They Took Me Jim a Ride" (Allen and Unwin, Gs.), H‘when I say that I am one of the few [men who have ever been taken for a ride by gangsters and lived through {the ordeal." It certainly sounds a su- premely uncomfortable experience. He [was acting as _a criminal investigator .ln St. Louis at the time, and could ‘not have been too popular, with the liiiiU,'t'e'rl',. So they arranged an ap- Ipointment with him:-- i I knew it would be useless to argue, and i knew that in all probability I was about to begin my last hour ot life. I had a curious feeling of ex.. hilaration. ........ THIRD DEGREE METHODS. They rushed him across to a car and sat him in the back between them, They drove him out to a detro. late part of the country. and set to no pretence ot concealing the gun in his hand, barred my way. '$ellowea," he said, "we're going to take you for a ride." SIMPLE TEST TO DISCLOSE CANCER PRESENCE FOUND I The War Office is said to have no. det. tonsideration a project for mov. I ing Woolwich Arsenal to South Wales. 'The primary object would he safety (trom air attack. but it would have a ,grea' many other advantages. In the IWar, London proved to be anything but an ideal site tor an ordnance lac- tory. Sooner, or later, and the sooner ! the better, not only the Woolwlch Ar. ‘senal. but all our aircraft factories, iwlll have to be moved to places less 'raecissittle to ex-emy bombers, as a ymamu of common precaution ---Lorw ( don Sunday Dispatch. “As I walked up to the main door of the Pleree Building tour men con. fronted me, and I realized at a glance that I had walked into a trap, One of them. a big. blusterlng man, making Blood Reaction Indication, Says Polish Scientist, Pupil of Prof. J. D. D'Arsonval, Paris-Announced . Academy of Science _ With The Gangsters EASY MONEY DOES IT Why ls business improving In Great Britain? 1. Because foreign countries have crmrldence In our ability to man- utaetute and deliver according to con- tract. 2. Because the banks. by pay- Ing r'.rtuttlls, no interest on deposits. are fu‘clng idle millions into produc- tive channels-London .Sunday Re- teree. VULNERABLE WOOLWICH . ' ' ng them Japanese tank display staged at Tank Corps base In Tokyo byought oyt many women, amo . i. the pupils of the Tokyo Academy of Music. Girls showed lively Interest in every detail :gdtrgoil't‘trl casies of modern death-dealing war machines which were demonstrated and one seen you officers explain operation of turret. Dr. Kowczewaki lectured in New York hospitals .in 1929. Being poor and not practicing. he was enabled to carry his experiments to success through tie assistance ot Proioasor D'Arsonval. taped u the {other of oiectric ihorapeutics. who took him in as I pupil and gave him the use of laboratories We can now prove whether a human has the disease we have made.con. siderable progress." "Testa every " months show the Mart ot cancer; and allow immediate treatment with almost certelnty ot e cure it treated tnttBciently early In development nt the maledy. Tho for we have made no progreu ln lso- lating the cause ot cancer. but when person is euiferlng from cancer and to what extent. Thus far we have been unable to discover a means ot pointing out the exact location ot the cancer, but the new method will enable any doctor anywhere to ex- amine the blood and determine be,. forehand whether surgical interven. tion is necessary. tmapped the other, "You'll keep your mouth shut." Thinking that discretion was the better part of valor, he would not "Well," I retarded, “I should rec. ognlze the man who took a shot at "Say, Fellowes," he muttered, “-you don't know these guys. Get met" An omcer walked up to me with I Btnile--not a very pleasant smile. He went to the Senator and told him that he was going to lie low ror a bit. That evening ttte' Senator was murdered in the theatre! POLICE WARNING. According to Mr, Fellowes, many of the police work hand in hand with the criminals. He was shot at one day, and next morning was summoned to the police station to identity a couple ot possible assailants. In the ante. room, I certainly had got him. I would have been a fool to have Ignored the warning. "I answered the telephone to hear a voice, which I did not recognize, saying in cold, precise tones: "Youve on the spot, Fellowen. and this is the last warning you will ever get. Got me'?" Later he received another warning, He was working with a prominent Senator who was determined to sup- presg the gangsters, and he knew that they both were suspected. One night, he Bays, But. in spite ot everything, he re- fused to give in. He felt that once they knew where the confession was hidden, "the next dawn would have found my body lying In a ditch" - "humped oft." As it was they let him go. Backwards and forwards, backwards and forwards, the car drove along those quiet roads, and In turn each man questioned, threatened. cursed and struck until I was hardly in a state ot consciousness. From seven-thirty till nearly mid- night-almost five ttouris---t was cross. examined, searched. struck with guns and lists, and subjected to every im- aginable form ot mental and physical suffering. “You'll do nothing of the work. What they really wanted was to tind out where he kept his copy of the confession of another gangster who had betrayed his comrades:-. sort! " "He and some friends were um. ing Perle, and one day went out to Versailles. As they were walking along one ot the great ttorid Geller- iets they saw advancing upon them from the tar end a pnrty similar In number, also bent upon tearing the secret trom me sumptuousueu at the Sun-King. _ '"Look," said my friend, 'here come: the British tripper “MAJ vengeance. and his compatriots with him. I ask Now for unit] E. v. Lucu’ Itory about his friend, the "legal lamina. Quoting Andrew Lalng's little. known lines about the two men who thought they were looking Into Intr- rors and were looking " end) other through a pane of glass, E. v. Lucas (in "Poist-Batr Diversion") tells about an nmuslng experience along the some lines that once hoppened to a friend ot " “now n legal lumin- ary." First, let me we the Laing lines: Brown his tie adjusted, Pithy Anecdotes Of the Famous Mr. Fellowes is speaking of condl. Lions some tew years ago. Things may possibly be better now. But Judging from the publicity given to John Dillinger and others, Americu still has I long way to so. Mr. Fel- lowest has certainly written B most exciting account ot his experiences-- many ot which, we imnglne. he would not like to so through lulu. He now finds it safer/to live in England. The weekly lncome ot Chlcugo gangsters and extortioners derived from about 8,000 trpeak-easieis, 2,800 disorderly houses paying protection, 200 ot the larger gambling dens, and 2,000 bookmakers, amounted to About 6,000,000 dollars. - The profits made by the gangs are enormous it we are to believe Mr. Fellowes. In Chicago, he says. Jack Zuta. a prominent gangster before his assassination, told him that 1 The police oMcial was undecided about his charge. He said . . . he would content himself with asking for an advance ot tive hundred dollars on account ot current expenses. This was agreed upon, and the two men proceeded to elaborate the details ot a scheme whereby a high police om. (-ial should charge with murder a man who had no connection with the crime, in order that the real murderer1 should go tree. . . . I And Green arranged " hair. They each exclaimed, disgusted, 'i tttought-t hoped-I trusted My face was tar more Mr!" " Brown hi: tie adjusted, And Green unused " In"! "Fine! I knew you‘d do It for met How much do you want tor the job?" “Guess I've got the guy you want .... His name Is MI----, and he is lo- cated in Detroit waiting tor sentence for another rap, I suggest I get the Judge to mas him to us tor the Phelps murder." Mr, Fellowes tells us that he and the Senator "tapped" the telephone llne ot a high police tytBcial and heard some’ astonishing conversations. One day a gang leader rang up and de- manded that one of his men, In prison for kllllng a bank manager. should he released. This was to be done by llxlng the murder rliarae on some. body else. Next night they heard this:-- identity the 'msn-although he recog- nized one of them perfectly well. And nothing more was heard about the shooting. THE GANGSTERS' INCOME, a“... :_.:m' C ~‘W‘Tr‘. ( "He was sn institutlon In Amherst College," says Professor Burgess, so iold Amherst msn himself; ' q President Moore vs: the tttmt Pro. sident ot Amherst College, sud he vu, threlore. tbs "tst president to the 1rrottuor-Etremser,ti. Snell alu- tstoriln 'to'the ttret ell-s which m- dusted from Amherst College, the clsss ot 1822, sud connected with col. less from the day it opened until " death in 1876. - T The turttlttmtirit In I urn ttt when 'she (lende- to turn blond "Oh," replied the professor, look. ing t little ditteoneerted. "I did not menu Washington. I menu! President Moore." "indeed," and the friend, “myone would value highly in nude once used by Washington." "I value that umbrella more highly than anything I pollen". he told 1 friend one city. "It belonged to the tirttt president." It was this some protessor--"to whom Amherst wu the centre of the world and Amherst College the soul ot Amerlcn and of unlverul culture" -who IIWIyI curled n extraordinary looking umbrella, an old blue cotton concern tled In the middle by n string. Speaking of codllsh reminds me ot a story told by the late Professor John W. Burgess', ot Columbia Uni- versity (in “Reminiscence: of so Am. ericsn Scholar?) Rocslllng the dsys when pedagogues were not psid the princely C.) salaries they now receive. he tells or the exulution of s fun. one old Amherst Professor when " salary was rsised to $800, Rushing home. he burst Into the front door of his cottage sod cried out to his good wife: "Martha, Martha, thank God we can now have trodtiah tor breakfast," "To make the rich milk the moth- ers have to leave their oMspring both in fair weather and foul. lying on the ice which has moved in the mean- while, and return to and their one ptrrparticthr baby unong all the other thousands, Yet no mm could tell two baby seal: upnrt. Moreover, in tnttterttity hospitals, with only I few dozen human babiel at molt. each has to one a little hm. tag chained to his arm, tor fear that their moth. era will not know which in which." Baby Harp seals are practically I." born-on tioating itre--ott the same night, March the MRI. Thousands of them! They are very beautiful In their "white colts." My: Sir Wilfred Grentell. But listen to this: "The Labrador would cod was tot pounds lu weight sad 5 feet ' Inches long," he says. "The English record is A poor second. He was " pounds in weight Ind 6 feet 8 inches long. The largest cod recorded from the Newfoundland Banks um 136 pounds. In the international competition the honors go to Amerlcs with a Bank cod of 160 pounds. An Aberdeen mun hooked a larger one but unfortunate- ly It broke the "he and escaped. When the Englishman suggested to him that it was I whale, he replied that he was uslug a whole tor bait st the time." 1 I or course. yan mustn't expect to find such treasure trove In the inter- "or of a cod lying in the humble cor. 'ner or I. lishmonler‘l an". No, Mr. Sir Wiltred in talking about the big Jellowr. nob of u eodtissh," he goes on. “TWO full-grown ducks, teathe" Ind ali, were found In another. apparently hlvlng been swallowed alive. Candles, guillemou (bean, clown, and III). I whole hare, doMtsh, turttlpc......" But, there. that’s enough! “Scissors, on can; Ind old boot- hnvo been found In them. One skip- per who lost In. keyl overboard In the North Ben got them In the “on. in use you may think it is I mil- print tor "hook," Sir Wilfred oxen acme additional evidence ot the breadth or a cod's appetite "td--du- estion. _ "'I do indeed.' SIM Emerson. "'What do you do with then? " 'Throw them In the wantehuhet.’ "'But they enclooe srtatrttm,' aid Hawthorne. " 'Ot couAe,' an the author of “rho Over-Sour; thnt'a where I get all my postage'." "Presently Hawthorne, wining to be social on . low level it they couldn't mun n high one, uked Enema: 'Do you get 3 lot ot letteu “king tor your autograph? any. the Olymplnnn at Concord decided to have n club," reminisce. Clnrn E. Laughlin ( in “Travelling Through Lite.") "it met on I load†evening in Emerson's study. There were Em- erson Ind Hawthorne, and Alcott and Curtis, and Thoreau. und I can’t re- member what others; und they at about. trtiMy, while conversation languished bee-use no one could think of anything suiilcieutiy Olympinn to; A warning to autograph tieetds.' "Mr favorite Itory of that hone (Ralph Waldo Emenon'l) route. how 'om-aid you ever no net two-I 1tGiireirart'trrrmr-rie' "or saw one.’ . _ (Th!- wu in the dun when m Inc. Huh-n uny- wont to tho Contittett in I up.) "And behold." “d: was, “tho and of an room was all minor, and It wan Mum]! and MI friend. that were relected In it." TORONTO ', nu ' --- ... “g: "IIIIBII "tnrt', et. m. tom In June was 113.900 poundl valued at 822,096 ot “hid {1.1}!!! at 819.1" went to the l'nited Kingdom. A you ago the tum wan 12,754 pounds at 33.099. The "tpor' Pyy1tty the In!!! twetee months my 8.3mm you“. valued ttt mun! .9.“ with 1.376.704 m um.» In the previous {woke tttr min Tho Form In the ed .outtrr ll "mu heavy Purchases In t LONDON - In future harassed Londoners rushing for their 0mm bus will have to be even more alert. for they may tind " dimcult tu ted “tether buaea now being introduce-t are coming or going. They have ataira " both ends and the engine In the middle. Br having the engine in the centre the' apnea beside the driver has be can. available for another ftittht at “in. and instead of increasing [ht 'ttmbee ttf I.“ additions have heen made to the comfort of the passe" ten. he angina in acceuible through I Mel in the side. Distribution of weight in said to be better for Hire?†-- ...n -- - " well u for DoubltEneied oznibus Plum are on foot for the oponmg up of extensive field work during the coming year. It then plan: develop, the executive director, “is: Dorothy A. Heneker. will travel into many new countries. Research has played. and will con- tinue to play, an important part m the work of the federation During the pant year, the Canadian federa- tion has drawn up a comprehensive two-year course in economic study, The Italian federation is organiar ing special couraea in agriculture and applied art designed to open up new opportunities for women. Norway has made a comprehensive study of working conditions among buslnesl ind professional women and has lined the profession] opportunities. In the United States panel diecua aiona on natui... and world problem: have been instituted, with special om- phgia upon economica. JOINS WITH LABOR His explanations led delegates to propose I closer retntiontship between their federation and the Internattott. al Labor Office, which relation. they suggested. might be confirmed by the appointment of Miss Phillips us cor- responding member between the two organizations. Possibly the presence at the con ference of Mr. Tate, an official of the International Lobor Orgnmu- tion, had tsomething to do with the decision of the federation to view economic conditions in their broader upect. Mr. Tate was in a position to explain matters in regard to the 48-hour week, the convention on night work for women, end other In- temationar1 questions denlt with In Geneva. ammo export- OF The conference registered ita agreement in a resolution. The fed cation, however, does not intend to affect women. Women belong to the study of economic conditions as they nffeet women. Women belong to the great man of the world's wage earn- era, one speaker aid. Ind because of this, tho-e who are organiaed will be wise to turn their attention less to the paricuiar point of view of the woman in business than to the point of view of men and women in bud" nest side by side LONDON In a few count-ea no specially drastic steps have no far been taken, but in the majority of eountrie- particnlu'ly in Austria, Belgium, Czechoslovakia, Great Britain, Hun- gary and Germnrtr---women, and es- pecially married women, are senour lr affected and express the opinion that drastic action should be taken in order to stabilize their position, ed diam-ion centered, during the early ulce- of "he conference. Around the question of the diéeritttirtntion, which are being made against women in both were and private employ- ment. Bluincu women from France, Italy, Switzerland. Holland, Great Britain, Hungary, Sweden, Nanny, Pound, Czechoslovak“, Canada and the United States participated. Heat- New! Phillips to the International Federstion of Business and Profes- sional Women when. u president, an addressed the opening bond meeting of tho! ousuisstlon during its con- femee here Way. "We nut so hither.†aid Mm Phillips. “than men good will if we are to mum the - of the world. Real prosperity and international comity." she ssid. “rest upon In eco- nomic, perhaps s political, bum. We must take an active psrt in economic sud political sfhirs if. so women, We no to help bring this chaotic world into order." was 5.314%;va by “in Lena MARRIED WOMEN AFFECTH " Pmh-iemni Group Votes at ' Canal to Safeguard Puzzles Londo~n- Basis of Peace, Women Informed , I " the export of dress- ll l-prooalve. due to In In the British ttttut, I II June was “3.900 I ll 'ttttss ol uhicl' t.Ut went to the l'uitec you no 'he mm no e-"ralk lens and do more" comfort. d tt diitieuit to Led "' being introduced coins They have k .nd the engine no POULTRY urn-(ea 14,450 as um 28,978 deaths 1 l1... during the and In: rear, Tl In. W ot , Dim, coo-hut per 1 nu " We at " M In... of sum mm mustered I Ionic. January - J Births Male-nu " In In. numbered 6.1 and uni-gen 4,051 with M" was, 3/ 1.280 maniacs in 11 050qu In Incroue h um, a loci-use l Beet" and In mom and. In “on. i Inrrlnges rel Canadian cities on cont. more I " In noticeable will ot the conditions In a: (to "tattrer or M. Marriages in Increal 27,“: was at rett rough; on April an round and 8,350 at World mock World noon ot we†unwed at W!“ I decl dttrtttq the nonâ€: accounted tor Mia deem-e. Copper a. “III new Euzhum bone- at the cum Export all: u. not. price liner-tea on varied slight u tow bid of high ot 8.075 menu: of " recorded In eleclmlytlc ' market, In C "we wa Petrmd and J than [Meet Mar was '" AM“, 325281 Coo." Can-dr- com m. to 85.080†paved with Iâ€: recoding mom you“ In Icy 1 month ending I 'tretreat WM 1 " per cent. aim the compounding as per cent. abm In! to In 1932 put was recorded In lay u again In April. was Tm. fl" I“ Canadian and output ot 10.0839 In Mar u on. pounda In the 5,400,“! pounds - of 860.4 shown In Canada" In: the Int "e) when "Mt.08t1 tti " " "unit " the cormpondlnx‘ In the In! " t Item Bulletin m moaned-en! at a I)" mm In the pr! In The . Ill be“, can qqetiest In!“ ar our. [Me-sown ma. tn many abundance at their condition. abort and law carton short-go develop. Gumbel in gran nun-1M In; any great or The northern 1 three provinces lt at wheat, cur-2‘ the recent pend Ian been of no" In Iona mm] from the (mu 4 coming more â€I than it. - humu- We“ the on Album. Th d the out w - in In" “clown, at M any and m (hr ot Alberta. Tim of turther rain! hours. apart lrm .outuern Alberta “MON“ The gmitt h "and In" Med rather dutch are all unman- prion ot moor-(Ion later ret ricr tot " tt, de wt tht