es2eayrc: Antarctic AF from ar BORN VEAL â€"â€" At New London, Oct. 18th, 1935, a daughter to Dr. and Mrs. William Veal of Stonington, at the Lawrence and Memorial~ Associsa. ted hospitals. Transportation, railway construcâ€" tion. communications and services show contractions. The bureau reports improvement in Ontario, Quebec and the prairie provinces. Gain in manufacturing, contrary to seasonal trend, is especially proâ€" nounced in the iron and steel indusâ€" try. Textiles and some other indusâ€" tries are more active, but food and lumber divisions released large numâ€" bers. The bureau reports the employâ€" ment level at Nov. 1 is higher than that of any month since Dec. 1, 1930. It says particularly important improvements occurred in logging, while highway and building conâ€" struction, mining, retail trade and manufacturing _ also contributed gains. ; Ottawa.â€"An employment gain in Canada of 14,803 persons between Oct. 1 and Nov. 1 is reported by the Dominion Bureau of Statistics. The Bureau says Nov. 1 payroll of 9,482 firms making returns stands at 1,â€" 012103 persons compared with 997,â€" 300 on Oct. 1. 4 Employment Gain Reported for October Poverty is not the money we failâ€" ed to get, but the beauty we failed to see. Etenographerâ€"Mr. Pâ€"â€", what is a metaphor? Mr. Pâ€"â€"â€"â€"..A nlace to keen cows in The Penaltyâ€"A careful driver apâ€" proached a railroad; he stopped.! looked and listened. _ All he heard, was the car behind him crashing inâ€" to his gasâ€"tamk.â€"Niagara Falls Reâ€"‘ Â¥iew. Fianceeâ€"What cowards you men are! Father hasn‘t the courage to tell you of his. Fianceâ€"1 haven‘t the courage to tell your father of my debts. Love is the greatest force known in the world. Nothing else can reâ€" eoncile a boy to soap and water. Young Man (equal to the occasâ€" ion)â€"Oh, I didn‘t mean tonight. I meant some wet and miserable night when I have nothing bett«r to do. The Girl (snapping)â€"Cerï¬inly not!‘ I wouldn‘t think of it! Yes, Virginia, there are two Santa Clauses. Young Man (to girl he had met at a dance)â€"May I call and see you? 6 Young Manâ€"What *Biblical gown? Friendâ€"Oh, you k Lo and Behold. Friendâ€"I say, Joe, your girl lookâ€" ed quite temptine in that Biblical gown she was wearing last night. Some wag once said of marriageâ€" The more billings the less cooing. Jockâ€"I dropped a bottle of whiskey on the newly tarred road! Doctor (to Aberdeenian,, whom he had been called urgently to see) â€"What on earth have you been doâ€" ing, Jock? Why, your tongue is abâ€" solutely black, man! ‘ The worst time to get all worked up over an error is after nothing can be done about it. "When its twoâ€"lip time under the stletoe, I‘ll be seeing you." Friendâ€"Tried to climb the ladder of fortune and there were a couple of broken rungs he didn‘t see. Johnâ€"What happened to Frank he‘s all bunged upâ€" Fearful Fatherâ€"My boy, the next time you have an urge to kiss the new maid, I‘d suggest that you use a more secluded spot. Freshman Fredâ€"Ob, the hall was dark enough, Dad. _ Besides, she thought it was you. Some of us save our money in small matters so we can throw it away in bég bunches. Prescription For a Winter Evening In winter, I like to scoot down in bed, Pull all the covers over my head, Make a long tunnel down to my nose, Burrow a pocket for my toes, Wizgle a little for comfort‘s sakeeâ€" And sleep, and sleep, and sleep. {JAV® ueARD A place to keep cows 3 OV you know. Sort of do you mean The Institute of Practical and It is generally recognized that on the majority of farms sufficient proâ€" tein cannot be produced to supply the dairy cows with the necessary _ re. quirements. By producing clover or alfaifa hay, however, along with roots Data secureq@ at the Dominion Ex perimental Farm, Nappan, Nova Scoâ€" tia, show that the cheapest supply of feed is secured from our own farms. In other words, homeâ€"grown feeds are the most economical. Two imporiant factors must be considered in formulating suitable ra. tions for dairy cows: The supply of feed on hand, or available at a cost in keeping with the value of the product to be produced, and the selection of feeds that will supply the necessary food nutriments in a palatable form, plus sufficient variety and bulk. T hose Leisure Hours RATIONS FOR DAIRY Pithy Anecdotes COWS SET BY SUPP[.Yf Of the Famous Chests, of all sizes. Moderate prices and favorable terms. In California, though it‘s differâ€" ent. There, apparently, pigs have learned to distinguish between the command to come and the order to go hence, and hogâ€"calling has become an exact science. It must be the climate, one supposes. or perhaps the Berkeley pigs have imbibed something of learning from a scholâ€" astic environment.â€"Ottawa Journal. a senior from Indiana, whose deâ€" eclamation of "Whoâ€"eâ€"eâ€"e pig, pig, pig." won high praise from the proâ€" fessional judge. Other contestants, it was reported, had good range, adeâ€" quate volume, fine tonal qualities, but they made the grave error of callâ€" ing ‘Sooâ€"eâ€"eâ€"e, pig, pig, pig," which | means "scram" to a pig, it was exâ€" plained carefully, and so presumably |disqualiï¬ed those who said "Sooâ€"câ€"eâ€" e" because after all it was a calling } contest. ‘ What fascinates us in the story | is the degree of culture possessed by Californian pigs that it reveals. We! have serious doubts that Carleton ; county pigs know "Whoâ€"eâ€"eâ€"e means| come to dinner and "Sooâ€"câ€"eâ€"e" means| scram. To tell the truth it is a longl time since we called pigs, but we do | not recall that they showed remarkâ€"| able intelligence or were conspicuous ! for their regard to the niceties of , tone and pronounciation. Volume, | however, was imperative, and if the, call were loud enough it seems to| us the pigs didn‘t care much whether | one said "Whoâ€"eâ€"eâ€"e" or “Soo-e-e-e,"i or sang about the Bicycle Built«for j Two. | One just can‘t pick up a newspaper without learning something. Here is a story about a hogâ€"calling contest sponsored by the University of Caliâ€" fornia at Berkeloy. It was won by commerce in and out of Canadian ports was between 35,000 and 40,â€" 000,000 tons for 1933, made up as follows: Sea going, 17,360.000 tons;| Great Lakes, 15,000,000; _ Pacific! coastal trade (Canada only), 82.500,-| 000; lower St. Lawrence and Atlan-' tic coastal (Canada only), 1,000,000.| 910 Confederation Buillding OoTTAWA .â€" Canada has spent $988.794,100 on the construction and maintenance of Canadian canals since Confederation, a report on the waterâ€" ways of the Dominion issued by the Bureau of Statistics discloses. This total was distributed in round figurâ€" es as follows: Investments, $670,231,â€" 000; maintenance, operation and subâ€" sidies, 3236,389,200; dredging, $82,â€" 173,.800. t Canals Cost Set At $988,794,100 The total investment of the counâ€" try in harbors and rivers, exclusive of dredging, represented $6 per capâ€" t« ita. «J.&J.TAYVLOR unitto Tosontd SAFE works 145 Front St. E.. Toronto Established 18$55 Why Not Employ Them Proâ€" fAtably? Specialised _ training leads to Increased Efficiency. Increased Effictency _ means Increased Elrnlnf Capacity. Overcome Inferiority Complex, develop mental power, and equip yourself for â€" better things. Study leisurely in the ?ulet of your own home. Write or particulars of fascinating correspondence courses â€" ON CALLING A PIG your Cash and Books from SAFES Warden Lewis of Sing Sing Prison tells a story (in "22,000 Years in Sing | "During one of the sittings," says Rothenstein, a solemn stranger, look. ing, I thought, like an old tortoise, sat listening to Rinstein, who, so far as I could understand was putting 'torward tenative theories, his ex. pressive face radiant, as he expound.â€" ed his ideas. " ‘He is my mathematician,‘ said Einstein, ‘who examines problems wehch I put before him, and checks their validity. You see I am not my. self a good mathematician!‘ " "From time to time the stranger shook his heavy head, whereupon Einstein paused, reflected, and then started another train of thought. When I was leaving, the presence of a third party was explained. Among Sir William Rothenstein‘s famous sitters was Professor Ein stein, whose portrait he did in Lonâ€" don. "‘So honeyed his tongue, so polish. ed his manner," adds Sir William, "‘that beside him one feels oneself a clodâ€"hopper." Yet he managed to leave his host.â€" ess with her first impression unspoilt â€"â€"a marvellous thing to have done, says Rothenstein, admiringly ( in ‘"Men and Memories"), for mordant as Max can be with his pencil, he cannot bear to hurt anyone‘s feel. ings. _ _ Max Beerbohm and his friend, Sir William Rothenstein, noted artist, once went to call on the George Calderons, at Hampstead. Now Cal. deron had lately written a novel, "Dwala," and Mrs. Calderon was de.â€" lighted when she found that Max had â€"or rather, said he hadâ€"read it. (How easily it is to say "Yes" under such cireumstances!) She plied him with questions, wishing to know what parts of the book he most ad. mired. But alas, Max had not read "Dwala"! ‘[or ensilage and the common cereal ’crops, it has been demonstrated hore ‘| during t‘re past three years that the ’|on1y feed purchases necessary _ are :‘small amounts of high protein supple. | ments. One supplement that is proâ€" f?duced in Eastern Canada is fish meal | Experiments have been conducted | during the last three winters compar. |ing fish meal with linseed oil meal ‘jwhen used to ba‘ance a homeâ€"grown _ ration. It was found that equally as | good production, at as low a cost, ‘ could be expected from a grain rat. ion made up of 300 pounds of ground |oats and barley, or oats, wheat and ‘barley, plus 50 pounds high grade | fish meal, as when 125 pounds of lin. | seed oil meal was used to replace the : 'fish meal. In either case the ration | contained slightly over 19 per cent | protein. Good quality hay and swedes ; were fed as sources of roughage. With any ration made up of feeds grown in Eastern Canada, a mineral supplement such as ground limestone and bone char is necessary. When the fish meal is fed, this is not so essen. tial, but it is excellent insurance in any case, The Log Cabin at the Tourist Camp at Lansdowne Park, Ottawa, has again been placed at the disposal of several Scout Troops as a winter meeting place by the Capital‘s Tourâ€" ist and Publicity Commission. One of A baby bear has been acqui the Scouts of Wynyard, Sask troop mascot. __For Remembrance Day Sunday at Mount Dennis, Ont., Girl Guides and Brownies and Cubs, Scouts and Rovers _ of the 29th Toronto (Mount Dennis) Group paraded to the Church of the Good Shepherd for a service presided over by the rector, Rev. R. P. Walker. Members of the Group Committee also were present. Following the service the‘ various units formed up in â€" square for an address awmk The nHbCAWkakin. for an address and the presentation of a warrant by Major D. T. McManâ€" us, District Commissioner, to Scoutâ€" master Drane. Banff Scouts made toâ€"door canvas for us footwear for their fri Indians on the rese Alta, [3 3. 3 DCys of the 45th Toronto (Leslie Street School) Scout Troup attended a meeting called for the formation of a Group Committee. The history of the 45th Troop dates back to preâ€"war days, and many of the former Scouts are now occupying Inerennk m wog JPVCOR P L The old saying "Once a Scout Alâ€" ways a Scout," was again borne out when old boys of the 45th Toronto (Leslie Street School) Scout Troup attended a meeting called for the fOrmation of & CEORN C*mmmatin. , iolus oo d sn the reserve at Morley s for used clothing and their friends thei Stony beep acquired by special door. , as a It is a sequel of Dr. Tucker‘s de. velopm®nt a year ago of a method of locating foreign bodies in the stomach by introducing an opaque feeding tube through the esophagus and il. luminating and inflating the stomach. _ The invention, developed â€" by Dr.f Gabriel Tucker, of Philadelphia, is | reported as the newest method of re. moving foreign objects patients have swallowed. In effect, the instrument is a tiny pair of pliers hidden in thel‘ end of a long rubber tube that can | be lowered into the stomach and moved about until the "catch" is "hooked." Chicago. â€" Surgeons can "go fish. ing" in the human stomach with a novel instrument announced recently in the journal of the American Medi. cal Association. the balance at 4% interest. State your requirements and write for details to: COMMISSIONER or _ _ AGBICULTURAL LOAXS "One for Winston," adds Mrs Atherton. " ‘My dear madame,‘ Ae replied suavely, ‘pray do not disturb your. self. _ You are not likely to come in contact with either‘ Invention Allows ‘Stomach Fishing FARMS FOR SALE IN ONTARIOQ Some good properties at fair prices, part cash and extended terms on " ‘There are two things 1 don‘t like about you, Mr. Churchill "* ‘And what are they? asked the budding statesman indifferently. " ‘Your new politics and your new moustache.‘ "Shortly after he left the Conser. vative side of the House {of Comâ€" mons) for the Liberal, he was taking a certain young woman down to dinner, when she looked up at him coquettishly and remarked with the audacity of her kind: A story of Winston 8. Churchillâ€" told by Gertrude Atherton (in "Ad. ventures of a Novelist"). It was a ticklish moment for the judge and perhaps a fortunate one (adds Warden Lawes). When told, later, the identity of his "customer," the prisoner simply shrugged his shoulders and smiled. "Wait a minute, my man," he said quickly, "I forgot to telephone to New York. I‘ll finish the shave later." And he made a rapid exit from the barber‘s shop. The latter mentioned the name, The judge became tense. The razor was grazing his Adam‘s apple. â€" The blood left his face. He held up his hand. Sing") about a certain Judge who, visiting Sing Sing was shaved by a prisoner â€"â€" an Italian â€" he had senâ€" tenced to a long term many years before. The passing years had alter. ed the appearance of the judge, and the prisoner, so that neither recog. nized the other. Jt was only when the barber, in keeping with the tra. ditions of his calling, waxed eloquent about the injustice that the judge be. came interested. "Who was the judge?"" he asked the volub‘le prisoner. 6 PCeae t PR EnV AnEERTVH Two discarded _ cabooses given'“ the motor vehicle into the field of them by the C.N.R. are being turned eml_eavourv so long ruled by the into a novel headquarters by the ©@uines,. Unable to compete with the Scouts of Watrous, Sask. The cars SP¢ed and convenience of automoâ€" were moved to a vacant lot donated Piles 2s a mode of transportation, by the Town Council. The Council th¢ hor.se naturally suf_fered prestige, also supplied workmen to assist in and with the adoption of power fixing them up for the boys. | machinery on farms his spherc of | usefulness became even more limited *â€"â€"“\-!with the result that the number of Sing") about a certain judge who, horses in Canada declina~ from visiting Sing Sing was shaved by a 3,610,494 in 1921 to 2,933,492 in prisoner â€" an Italian â€" he had sen. 1934, notwithstanding the growth of fenced" th n IANa" Aour: ank uwl e ts Y Here : There Everywhere . without regard to race or creed Thirtyâ€"one â€" Scouts and â€" three Scouters of the 26th Toronto Troop made a bus trip to Windsor for a twoâ€"day visit over Remembrance Day to the 10th Border Cities‘ Troop. They joined the Border Cities Scouts for the services at the Cenotaph. Under District Scoutmaster H. W. Taylor, 100 Parry Sound Scouts and Cubs, headed by the Parry Sound Band, paraded to Trinity Anglican Church for a service of dedication of new colors. Rev. S. Turner officiated, and gave an inâ€" interesting address on the "Scout Promise." ‘ Sea Sccouts of Niagaraâ€"onâ€"theâ€" Lake have as their winter quarters a room on the third floor of the county Court House, placed at their disposal by the Town Council. \ The supplying of needed eyeâ€" glasses for children of parents not in a position to purchase them is a new form of good turn discovered by the Boy Scouts of Oriilia, Ont. Funds raised by them in their recent Scout Apple Day will go for this purâ€" pose, the appreciated features of cabin is a large fireplace. ed !" l Shanghai.â€"With the introduction of mass marriages into China, the Chinese Women‘s Temperance Asâ€" es of the sociation has suggested brides and ‘bridegrooms participating should reâ€" veive a course of instruction in the eeded eyeâ€" duties of married life before going parents not to the altar. : them is & In order to improve Chinese famâ€" _ discovered ily conditions the association believes E’:‘f.i"’ O"t: brides should be trained in such matâ€"| l Werner Haag, official representaâ€" tive of the German State Railways, who has recently opened an Informaâ€" tion Bureau for the German State Railways in Canada at Toronto. Mr. Haag comes to Canada after many years‘ association with the German State Railways Offices in Berlin, London and Paris and he is also the official representative of the organâ€" ising committee for the XIth Olympic Games in 1936, in Berlin. ! Despite the continued decline in recent years, indications point to _better days ahead for "Old Dobbin," _ with both horse population an4 deâ€" _ mand on the increase, An estimate of _ the number of horses in Manitoba as at June, 1985, places the horse popâ€" ulation at 297,000, an increase of 1,000 over the preceding year. Anâ€" onther favorable indication is the disâ€" tinct increase in horseâ€"breeding actâ€" ivities. Horse breeders‘ clubs in the , Prairie Provinces numbered 166 inl |1934, an increase of more than 30 per cent over the number in operat-‘ ‘ion in 1933, and a number of distâ€"! ,ricts reported inability to secure satisfactory stallions. Imports of [pure-bred stallions and mares of the |draft breeds numbered 50 in 1933, !and this number was more that doubled in 1934. Height of Crueltyâ€"Disczvering a Christmas _ present â€" purchased by friend wife and letting her know that you have seen what it is. tion, made and guarantced by the makers of Campana‘s Italian Balm. Trial bottle 35¢ at your druggist. 13 Dr. D. D. Den-nis' Liquid MP- Canada‘s horse population has deâ€" clined greatly during the past fifteen years, due principally, to the invasion of the motor vehicle into the field of endeavour so long ruled by the equines, Unable to compete with the speed and convenience of automoâ€" CANADIAN REPRESENTATIVE ters as housekeeping and cooking and should be taught to rear their childâ€" Iren properly. Bridegrooms should be ‘given lessons on how to be good busbands and fathers. rige plan, first started here, has spread to Nanking, Hankow, Pciping and many of China‘s larger cities. The plan was devised t combat the wasteful Chinese babit of spendâ€" ing enormous sums on weddings. For centuriecs the custom has been to go deenly into debt to stave sumnturus‘ wedding celebrations. The maâ€"s marâ€" riage plan place> 4 frucal limit upnn( the cost of wedding celebrations. The fourth mass marr; was performed here early in Octcu«r, the largest ever conducted in China, inâ€" volving 146 couples. The mass marâ€" 2. J ) Issue No. 49 â€" ‘35 Brides and Grooms to Taught Duties of Matrimony Horses Coming Back Clever If any person looks at an official map, he will find a well known comâ€" munity in Wolford township designa ted "Easton" observes the Brockville Recorder. But if a letter be addressâ€" ed to suoh a destination, it will probâ€" ably reach the Dead Letter Office or clse be delivered to a place of thel same name in Nova Scotia. Similarly, Shipping on the coâ€"operative Plan has been productive of splendid results. Selling on the open market means real 2{!. for the owners. Get in touch a village in rear of Leeds and Lans. downe is officially designated by the map.â€"makers as "Sceley Bay." â€" But the post office in the village is ofâ€" fceially styled "Secley‘s Bay" by the Post Office Department. The mapâ€"makers are also respon. sible for such versions as "Row Corners," â€" "Seeley," "Macintosh," "Lake Loyada‘ and Sweet Corners," whereas these places have been known for generations and are still One woman is reported to have recently said: "We women would be just as well satisfied if old Santa Claus would just take the runs out of our stockings." 1 Mrs. Oswalt‘s jdea first came to New York in a letter to the League of Political education at Town Hall after a broadcast in which ecitizens were asked to submit their ideas about possible ways of effecting world peace. Her letter, selected from 8,000 responses, was considered by the league to contain an idea that would be the simplest of atluinment.} _ She proposes to allow other naâ€" tions to pay into the international bank at Basle the war debts owed the United States. This sum would be the nucleus for the democratic support of the League of Nations, the World Court, the international Red Cross and all other peace agencies now in existence, working as part of the machinery of a united states of the world, guaranteeing economic security to all the nations, thereby eliminating the need of armaments. The president of the united states of the world would be elected by popuâ€" lar vote of all peoples on the earth. 1 ET Eue e C Se P eees" " Lve emts, no postage stamps. The first prize will be 25 percent. of the entire contest receipts, second prize 15 percent, third prize 10 percent. A constructive criticism on each story submitted is given, a suggested market for very practical story offered,. Each entrant must send in a signed statement that their story is wither original fiction or a true life story, your name and address, and number of words in the story not over 1,000 words, enclose return BOAIRDE ~ Tamuwalas Ht __ _ m i Vss C L & k __ [z g) 2 00 CCCF agPUC IPUrOF, €BciOe Fetur postage. â€" Typewrite if possible or even legible handwriting acceptec h.'hunoruurunmnco-un were M. Passsmore of Elora, Ont.; Miss A. J. Card of Elora, and Miss E. M. Bchultz of Mulverton, Ont. nuustaia e e t L'No 2‘_-‘ _eon@nt closes on Dec LIVE STOCK MARKETING veres C ais D eE0 P PDDR ELC E, ADAMLLL! IVE 8STOCK COMMIS®ioN® pEPT Union ©tock Yards, West Toronto Amateur Short.â€" A plump, grandmotierly person who manages a woman‘s dormitory at Purdue University, Mrs. Oswalt gave _ newspapermen a preliminary insight into her plan. New York.â€"Bearing a world peace plan so simple she believes "every. body will be for it and no one against it," Mrs. Grace Oswalt is in New York from West LaFayette, Ind. Woman Submits Plan That Sounds Simple Writeâ€"Wireâ€"or Telephone %Â¥nrdburst 1143 Place Names * ns w Pifs" mm .~ BIG size $ " > /A 2 BIG value *" gif t [ BIG satisfaction World Peace , A% BIG BEX THE PERFECT _ Chewing Tobacco 39 LEE AVE., TORONTO + 141.11935. The El.l’_! Fee is Twenty» even legible handwriting accepted. THE DIGESTIBLE COD LIVEr OIL WITH THE PLUS VALUES FOR SALE 8y Your prUsGist SCOTT‘$S EMULSION Story Contest * ° Remover. Expels all Internal Parâ€" asites. Saves feed, costs a trifle. Ask your dealer or write FPairview Chemical Co., 49 Abell St., Toronto. WE BUY, SELL, OR TRaDjJ Store Equipments of all ki .Ferhl Store Fixtures, 43 Â¥Yo oronto. IMPERIAL BONDsS Axny wanted, Oonly of Russi Austrian Governments paid. David Davis, Qued Toronto. 2 CCCCnation sent Company, Worlq 1 Bank Street, Ottaw AN orrER To Evi 4st of wanted inve information sent free. expected people to fo We humbly submit ficialdom tries to old placeâ€"names, it what the residents of ties concerned think certainly the spectacl« possessing one oflicial map and another oï¬ ci post office directory i C!8i01 b Classified Advercs ng CCC HHd eweels Corners." It all started some years aso when some busybody attached to the Cen. graphic Board of Canada set out to rename communities in the countics of Leeds and Grenville, regardi~ss of the wishes or the customs of the in. habitants. There is no evidence that he ‘nr. his tnmantintan . comeanfeel) wl .. known as "Row‘s Corne ly‘s," "Macintesh Mil‘s Eloida" and "Sweet‘s Cor he extrem« building Hypophosphites of Lime and Soda. PLUS VALUES you get only in Tired, jaded appetites need the stimulation of Cod Liver Oil. Scott‘s Emulsion helps give you a healthy, normal appetite PLUS added digesâ€" wbility and vitality because it is an emulsified Cod Liver Oil in a solution of boneâ€" SHOOT YOUR HORSEs 4 io 5 times BURâ€"SHOT BOT Axp More Quickly Digested than Cod Liver Oil STORE EQUIPMENT makir They . INVENTORS® VANTED ents of all kinds. Im in1} itent Att i Canada m Corners reCRRE ow â€"Orners," "Seo. Mil‘s," _ "Lake Higher To | leaile h the countics regardi~ss of ms of the in. evidence that b d LNVi be commt the D# fi WOR M USEID m [Â¥ Bt d of hak ald ay d