P 7R We‘ll be back next week with data on speed records right from the Indianapolis Speedway. So long, gang! Ralph Fountain, 21â€" yearâ€" old youth from Abbotsford, B.C., pedâ€" alled his bicycle 3,400 miles in 83% days. He had three punctures on his journey between British Columbia and Ontario. On this gallant trip the lad averaged 100 miles a day. He said he passed through snow three feet deep. He caught fish nearly every day, and fried them by the roadside. He averaged ten hours a day through out the trip. They say money and fame have not changed that good â€" natured Irishman, James J. Braddock. He lives in the same modest apartâ€" ment and still shakes old friends by the hand with a real, true grip. That big redâ€"head, Torcey Pedâ€" den, will accompany the eycling team to Berlin this year. Incidentally, Torchy‘s brother may be on that team. Hi folks! Just a reminder about Joe Malcewicz â€"we expect the whirlwind elbow smasher back in these parts soon now. * Perhaps the only reliable recipe for long life is a discriminate choice of parentage and ancestry. We once heard Sir Oliver Lodge say that a human being at birth is endowed with a definite amount of vitality, which, barring accidents, will maintain life for a certain neriod of years, and no more. One thing is certain, and that is that human beings are never inâ€" tended to live on indefinitely, otherâ€" wise the planet would become overâ€" crowded and the rising generation would never set a chance. "Here we have no abiding city." â€" Stratford Beaconâ€"Herald. Starlings Saved Crop Every now and again the Star‘s wandering reporter, Dan McDonald, runs across something that appears to upset the usual ornithological data. Now, from Harry Collins, of Echo Bay, he gets a testimony in favor of the starling, bounties for the killing of which are offered in many secâ€" tions. Mr. Collins says the mrlings‘ last year ate the cutworms and saved‘ his crop. Next, please. At the end of May there were 19,â€" 088 individuals on the Ottawa relief rolls, a decrease of a little more than one per cent from 20,218, which was the total on May 31 a year ago. The number of families was actually higher, having risen from 4,580 to 4,504 in that time.â€"Ottawa Journal. to. If a personal reply is desirâ€" ed, enclose a stamped (3¢) selfâ€" addressed envelops. If you have any question reâ€" garding sport personalities or any particular angle to a game, write to Ken Edwards, Room 421, 73 Adsiaide West, Toronâ€" At the end of May there were 80,â€" 016 individuals on the Toronto relief rolls, as compared with 101,643 on the same date last yearâ€"a reduction of twonty per cent. In the first five months of this year, as compared with the first five of 1935, the gross cost of relief in that city dropped by $014,558. AAWALCCNICZ Toronto At the end of VOICE QUESTION BOX Recive For Long Life By THE WORLD AT LARGE From Afar CANADA KEN EDWARDS of the Other features of the Soviet sys-' tem. of course, are less tenable, suchl as, that placing all lawyers in a col-‘ lectivist unit and thus depriving them ! of fees. i But in the main their system does seem to have ackieved one thingâ€"a simplified, direct a nd inescapable court setâ€"up.â€"Kitchener Record. | S me interesting _bservatiocs have been reported by a group of English and American law students now studyinz the Russian court system. The Soviet legal machinery, :t apâ€" peoars. is distinguished for its brevity and dJirectness. Judges, an4 not the lawyers, conduct the trials and preâ€" cedents just don‘t count. Lawyers are not required, and many litigants conduct their own cases even in the higher courts. There are long staâ€" tutes; procedure is decidedly simple, and legal loopholes are practically unknown. | Mussolini is to assume the title of "chancellor." Hitler may take this as a compliment or may resent it as an infringement of copyright.â€"Ed monton Journal. T NP dning Rarflsnntaiciio S uk the year and such checks will include brakes, lights, license plates, and other equipment. Cars which pass ifâ€" spection will display stickers and cars lacking such stickers or with them outâ€"dated, will be halted anJ inspectâ€" ed. Every car must be equipped with devices for dimming lights and drivâ€" ers are required to dim lights at least 300 yards before meeting another or as soon as it is visible.â€"â€"Niagara Falls Review. Tolegraph o oa A horse never looks quite at ease ridng in a truck.â€"Quebec Clivronicleâ€" lsevs C "Three strikes and you‘re out"i will be the effect of a now highway traffic safety program inaugurated : in New Brunswick. In the case of minor offences, a first offender wi]l| have his license endorsed and a reâ€" port sent to the registrant. When an officer makes a third such endorseâ€"‘ ment. the operator will be forced to take his car from the road for atj least a month. Royal Canadian | Mounted Police, who police the proâ€" vince, have been instructed to put ; on a drive for stricter enforeement| of the traffic law. | Cars will be checked throughout WWe s uce s css‘ id 3 a 2 ue‘ 1 Above all, don‘t build a fire on forest mold. This will retain heat for days and sometimes fire breaks out again from it. Never throw away a match without first breaking it. Cigarettes, which do most damage, should be snuffed out between the fingers â€"Sault Ste. Marie Star. Camp Fires When you want to cook a meal in camp don‘t hang the pot. Build a small low fire on clay or gravel beâ€" tween two stones or pieces of wood just far enugh apart to support the pot. In this way very little fire is needed. When cooking is over, douse the embers thoroughly. It wor‘t hurt to use several pails of water. Finally, throw the charred sticks into the lake or river. Moreover, married couples have a solicitous regard for each other‘s health which often insures timely medical attention to condition which, in single individuals, are likely to be ignored until the damage is beyond repair. â€" Brockville Recorder and Times. Most husbands have a strong sense of responsibility to their families which makes them avoid conditions likely to impair their capacity as wageâ€"earners; they, therefore, shun known sources of infection and hazâ€" ardous adventures. Doesn‘t Just Seem Longer All in all, it seemed clear that mariage is distinctly beneficial to the health of the individual. The married person‘s life is better regulated with regard to sleeping hours, meals and recreation. Mrs. Geo. R. Mayo has been apâ€" pointed supervisor for radio receivâ€" ing licenses in Perth County. Should ladies be appointed to all those posiâ€" tions, a householder will soon not know whether a lady visitor is a welâ€" come guest or is just another inspecâ€" tor, to see if you have the proper colâ€" lection of licenses or permits.â€"The Stratford Beaconâ€"Herald. A boy on a bicycle and another playing "tag‘" on the streets were killed in Toronto. We have noticed that some boys on bicycles ride as though they were playing "tag" with the motor traffic. There should be some rule of the road for bicycles. Another Chancellor Three Times â€" PRESS Status Of The Ladies Bicycles In Traffic â€"Stratford Beaconâ€"Herald CANADA THE EMPIRE my son That you‘ll be coming Home one day! So dreaming by the fire this Wintry night In this, our England, sombreâ€"hued and grey, Your Dad salutes you, and he knows This well, bs She claims her sons wherever they away, And all the homely scenes that once you knew, Yes! like us all she‘ll call you home, This island kingdom we all love so ald sea P Dyed by a fiery sunset‘s crimson hue, Yet, long for England, dim and far so £oon, The while you yearn a simple English WwWill you love swimming in an Do you like heat and sweat of scorchâ€" ing noon, The sunâ€"drenched languor of a tropic land, And gaudy scented flowers which die flames e I see you, and I pray that you _ old tonight Asleep beneath the Eastern stars. Now I a‘dreaming by a Winter fire Recall my youth, and in the flickering Will gain your heart‘s desire! ; A Colonization Blunder | Onee more, a chicken hatched from iil considered and inept government ; interference with the natural expanâ€" | sion of primary production has come | home to roost. Despite tne warnings from competent authorities of the atâ€" tendant risks and the dubious prosâ€" pects of success, repatriated soidiers, | many of whom had but slight knowâ€" ledge of farming, were settled in the !Notthern Mallee, Victoria. Even in | richer soils and more favored arcas, _experienced men fnd farming a speâ€" eulative enterprise, owing to the vaâ€" | garies of our climate. In the new | areas these odds against the settler | were far heavier. Given favorable seasons, prospects of success became remote with the slump .in wheat gprices, and remain remote. Hitherto the seasons have been almost conâ€" sistently against the settlers, who ‘have carried on courageousty in the 'face of drought, disappointment and discouragement. Now a crisis has _been reached where it is impossible to carry on the lost fight. â€"The Ausâ€" tralasian. (London). § Thirty years ago; it I remember right I sailed from England, I was just a Vernon Hayne in the Empire Review, boy, Like you, To A Son, Abroad \ _ Irish Independent, Dublinâ€"EFarmâ€" ‘\ ers have been persuaded that they can retrieve their fallen fortunes by cultivating wheat and sobacco. Last _year the area anrder wheat was 163,â€" 000 acres, and we are informed that Dr. Ryan that owing to the wet seaâ€" son there will be no increase in the‘ acreage this year. Wet sowing seaâ€" sons and harvest periods are not of rare occurrence, and in connection with a crop so susâ€"eptible to climatic conditions as wheat those who conâ€" template a production ample to satisâ€" fy home requirements are certain to experience some disappointment. It appears from the minister‘s statement that only pip» tobacco can be grown, and "we grow that cnly indifferentâ€" ly " In any even:, if crough to meet the entire home consumption were produced, only ten thousand acres would have to be put under tobacco. Distributed among half a million lindholders, the revenue to the agriâ€" cultural community would not be sti pendous. When a boy commences to wear a necktie, he is growing up, remarks a contemporary; When he cleans his tceth regularly, parts his hair sceruâ€" pulously, and shines his shoes, it means that he has a girl around the corner somewhere.â€" St. Catharines Standord. ; over a threeâ€"foot wall. Various mechanized ‘;‘:ax;:;z the proving grounds. THE EMPIRE Tobacco In Ireland my son, of whom I think emerâ€" Governor Graham Towers said he believed there were not more than four of the bills in circulation and that they hadâ€"been traced in Ontario and Manitoba. f OTTAWA â€" The Bank of Canada disclosed recently search was being made for a man who had raised three or four of the bank‘s bills by skilful art work, faking a $2 bill into a $20 on one occasion. y "l,é't“"’":â€f:'_“'ff“?e_i_flï¬ tested at the Aberdeen, Md,. proving grounds rumbling Jack Henley of Oshawa and Edna Lorimer of Brockville represented Queen‘s abroad last term. These stuâ€" dents will be replaced next term by Murray Cowie of Peterborough and Bernard O‘Beirn of Toronto. Bank of Canada $2.00 Bills Raised by Counterfeiter Vilgroy is 24 and has studied at Sedan and Paris. Miss Kreuger is also 24 and has studied at Bonn, Berâ€" lin and Kostock. She is the daughter of a German government official. KINGSTON, Ont.â€"A student from France and one from Germany will represent their countries as exchange students at Queen‘s University the coming session. They are Daniel Vilâ€" froy and Carole Kreuger. Both are mature students and both expect to come to Kingston with their doctor‘s degree they are now completing. She has one feature the scereen â€" even in colorâ€"has never brought out. Shy blue eyes, with a fleck of brown in the right one. Foreign Students Chosen for Canada ‘| "My own marriage would have | been just the same if I had been an |unknown stenographer. But at least I wouldn‘t have gone to business each morning among people who were looking for the first sign of a glum face so that they could lick their lips and say, ‘Well, that‘s gone â€" on the rocks.‘ "I don‘t think fame has anyâ€" thing to do with happy marriage, It is the relationship between two human beings by themselves that succeeds or not. "The danger lies in the people themselves. What marriage teaches you is that to make it succeed it re= quires the finest kind of people. It requires more generosity, tolerance, sympathy and patience than it is > possible to imagine before you have | been married. of it. I can‘t even remember the lines I spoke or the names of the characters." "I never talk shop," she says. "When I finish a film that‘s the end Miss Sidney, who earns £600 a week, says she would go crazy withâ€" out work to do. "It doesn‘t take long to find out if you‘ve made a mistake. wWHO KNOWS? "That doesn‘t mean there is anyâ€" thing wrong with marriage. The fault is in the people. They will probably try it all over again later." "Will you?" I asked. The answer was a raised shoulder, a raised eyebrow, a ~ quick "who knows?" and a change of subject. "I deny that marriages â€" among Hollywood people last less long than others," she said. "They seem to â€"but only because every breakâ€"up is so much publicized. Wpae nane n eoiey . t Sn â€"â€" in in the divoree court after months. Tc We o mEmgy? But she did talk about marriage, with a feeling which must have been informed by her own recent â€" and firstâ€"experience of it, which ended LONDON _ Twentyâ€"sixâ€"yearâ€"old Sylvia Sidney fitted a fresh cigarette into her holder and said, "I don‘t want to talk about my marriage." But she did talk about marriage, td 2e can 110 Sylvia Sidney, Actress, She Has Learned a Lot LONDON Broken Marriage FAME NOT THE WRECKER Test Huge Tank and new artillery are undergoing rigorous test at , Says TORONTO seven The first admiral ever appointed | m‘:&:"“ En was William de Leybourne, who was ! wrap . it e-nf‘(““ made Admiral of the English Sess > your order to Barbas by Edward I, in the year 1297. 1 West AdalalA. @a «o The discussion of pension chiselâ€" ling was marked by the declaration of Reeve Robert Atkin, of Malden, that politicians are largely responâ€" sible for pensions being granted to undeserving persons. He claimed that officeâ€"hoiders frequently exert their political influence to have penâ€" glons granted to constituents after the local pensions officials have reâ€" jected the applications. WINDSOR, Ont. â€" In a move to stamp out "chiselling" among recipiâ€" ents of old age pensions Essex County Council decided recently to furnish each municipality in the county with a list of pensioners every three months so a constant check can be made on those being supported in part by the municipalities. Miss Kennedy stated that during the last few years many Toronto girls and women previously in "white colâ€" lar" positions had, on the Employâ€" ment Service‘s advice, turned to doâ€" mestic work. Others had not been urgâ€" ed to do so because they lacked the robust physique or because their temâ€" perament was such as to make it eviâ€" dent the switch would be unsuccessâ€" ful. "At this time of year the scarcity of experienced help is always acute," said Miss Kennedy. "Golf clubs and summer hotels are opening, and many girls and women prefer such work to nositions in private homes." Toronto has 2,550 unmarried women on relief, but Miss Kennedy pointed out it would be incorrect to infer they should be in domestic work. To Check Cheating Among Pensioners TORONTO, â€" There is a distinct shortage of domestic help especially of experienced cookâ€"generals, accordâ€" ing to the information given to the Evening Telegram, both by Miss L. O. R. Kennedy, head of the women‘s diâ€" vision, Employment Service of Canâ€" ada, and by â€"Miss Ada Ross, in charge of the Young Woman‘s Christian Assoâ€" ciation employment buseau. Toronto Employment Agents Say There Is Need for Cooks Beach trousers have replaced paâ€" jamas, with an accompanying tailored and a backless blouse of bright print for beach wear. For cruising, the blouse is replaced with a sleeveless gilk jersey sweater with a turtle neck. Distinct Shortage In Domestic Help But on the beach, a cape, jacket or shirt can be unbuttoned to reveal brief shorts and a brassiere top. The halter necks still are the most popuâ€" lar as the entire back can be left bare and open to the sun. Beach dresses in uncrushable linen look tailored enough to be wirn on the street with a shallowâ€"crowned, largeâ€"brimmed linen hat to match. The color schemes are gayer and brighter than usual, in contrast to the sobriety of spring clothes, which were somewhat affected by the period of mourning in English court circles. A pair of brown linen beach shorts are worn with a bright orange woolen jerâ€" sey and a fullâ€"length coat of brown linen . PARIS, â€" Dress houses here â€" are presenting their first cruise and their beach clothes. The dresses or skirts vary considerably in style, but they invariably are worn with shorts, that are either short and tight or are made to look like kneeâ€"length skirts. The latter are either flared or pleated and are seen most frequently in uncrushâ€" able linen. Color Schemes Brighter; Unâ€" crushable Linen Dresses Beach Skirts A r e Worn Over Shorts ul c es‘ . B CV AASC. Barbara Bell Pattern No. 1874. B is available in sizes 14, 16, 18, 20, 40, 42 and 44. Correspondâ€" ing bust measurements 32, 84, 36, 88, 40, 42 and 44. Size 16 (34) requires 4% yards of 35 inch material. ""My how slim you are!‘ ex. claims your ncighbor who is quick to admire your new slenderizing daytime frock. You‘ll rejoice inâ€" deed over the center seamed skirt simple fitting bodice and the gathâ€" ered yoke. Don‘t leave your dressâ€" making until the days are too hot to bother about it, do it now and be ready with something smart to don. _ Just think how nice and cool the neckl:;:e will feel, when temperatures to rise! 6 Barbar’. Bell g:n‘ttern No. 1874. Swimming baths can now be kept| pure and safe for use by means of ll new Dutch process of filtration, which | calls in the help of a certain microbe to fight any disease bacteria in the: water. | When the women of Quebec do get the vote they wi‘l know a good deal about it, Mrs. Pierre Casgrain said as she ovtlined the efforts that had been made to reach the people throughout the province and interest them in the cause. His diagnosis convinced him that the "Sleeping Beauty" of Oak Park is condemned to live for years, seeing and hearing what is going on about 'her, but unable to move or speak â€" , in other words, living a lifeless life, Mr. Monk said he saw no reason for discouragement. He believed that the next year there would be & changed mentality and that the members would feel "free to vote." MONTREAL â€" The Woman Sptâ€" rage Bill was defeated in the Legislaâ€" tive Assembly at Quebec because the "party whips cracked," F. A. Monk, the sponsor of the bill, declared at the annual meeting of the League for the Women‘s Rights here. The noted specialist looks like the popular conception of a Frenchman. He is slight and wears a generous beard. He left Edmonton headed for Ottawa. Still Hold Hope For Suffrage in Quebec "Tears appeared in ‘her eyes when I spoke of her sickness," said the farâ€" famed medico. , He examined Patricia who has been asleep since Fobruary 15, 1932, and on his Edmonton visit said she had appegred to hear and understand everything he said to her. EDMONTON, â€"â€" Fresh from the bed side diagnosis of Patricia McGuire, Oak Park‘s famous "Sleeping Beauty" Dr. Rene Cruchet, neurologist and peâ€" diatrician of the University of Bordâ€" eaux, France, said here that the girl will probably live to be a ripe old age â€" & living mummy. World famed for his discovery of encephalitis lethargica, dread malady which leaves its victims paralyzed, DPr. Cruchet has been doing research work as guest professor at the univerâ€" sities in New Orleans and Chicago. To Have Long Life She Can See and Hear, But Can‘t Speak Nor Move Stunning and Cool TO <_ _ _ Raauty" Good Posture Must Be ing _ Beauty"| °4 __uored by Effort | __John James Berens, son of Chief William Berens, and president of the branch, explained in a letter the origâ€" in of his branch, and the nature _ of their work,. He enclosed miniature snowshoes, made by himself, beaded ‘moecaslm;. buskins, pictureframes, embroidered in rose, mauve, blue and green. "I don‘t see how they do such fine work on skins, Look at the stitches, they‘re as minute as you ever saw on muslin," said Miss Gladys Pritchard, director of the juniors as she showed the work to teachers in the hotel lounge. Knitted articles were a marvel to behold; a pair of miniature stockâ€" lnuludnllttlomflmdaulmo- tif worked into the maroonâ€"colored legs, and the feet were bright red. Nextlheo.h.onrybltol'ult away and massages the scalp with a z,-d‘nl tonic for greasy hair (most arts ' Prof. Watson world make anthroâ€" |polog,\' one of the major studies _ of ;adolescrnce. He would teach the proâ€" blems of citizenship which could be | found in the pages of the newspaper, |He hoped during his lifetime to see | children apprenticed to educational | vocations in such a way that they will learn to work along with elders enâ€" gaged in these, and ascertain the arâ€" tistic skill, the attitudes, the creative ; value of the job. Junior Red Cross, located at Berens River, Man., sent a display of work to Red Cross headquarters, shown at the recent teachers‘ convention that proved that one section of Maniâ€" toba at least was retaining a knowâ€" ledge of its Indian handicrafts and Excellent Examples In Indian Handicraft | _Personality and personal relationâ€" Ishlpl had been sadly neglected in the | school. "How to control one‘s temper would seem to be much more imporâ€" 'tant than some of the things children now study." Manitoba Branch Junior Red Cross Work Brings Favâ€" orable Comment ‘I would like the children to bring comic strips into the classrooms. I wouldn‘t preach to them, nor would I expect them to stop reading them, but 1 would consider whether they were makeâ€"believe. There is a tremâ€" endous difference between _ being knowingly subjected to propaganda, and accepting it and having it sink in." TORONTO â€" "I would like to see a society formed to teach geography by means of travel by :xldren themâ€" | selves," said Dr. Good Watson, the !Profeuor of Psychology in Columbia | University, in New York, lecturing | here. Commenting on the fact that the life of the camp was better than that of most classrooms, he expressed the hope that the time would come when the camp was not supplementary to the schoolroom, and run by private inâ€" ‘ividvals, but an essential part of the public schoo! system. Settling childâ€" ren down in seats glued to the floor was a fair‘ly recent idea and an unâ€" fortunate one â€" the old desks should be unscrewed and chairs and tables used. k PSX .4 sdnettcâ€"cmsptred vep rons IP _ ture, like many of the best things in lift, has to be acquired by effort, says a writer in New Health Magazine. Very rarely is it & gift of Nature. Bo perhaps, though, that is too sweeping \a statement, Nature does indeed make the gift, but often does not endow it | with sufficient strength to withstand 'the strain tBat civilization puts upon ‘it, and so we may have the sad specâ€" tacle of a child of five years old, beauâ€" | tifully firm and straight, two or three years later showing signs of round | shociders, flat feet, and other irregu? \ larities which schoo!l desks and resâ€" \tricted activity tend to produce. And \ mingled with these physical factors !are the psycbologlcal ones, fear anxâ€" jety, aggressivencss, inferiority, U the different emotions which each 6have their characteristic physical exâ€" pression. So it comes about that the ’child‘s natural stance is altered and |modn'ied by the demands which a ciâ€" vilized environment make on it. WINNIPEG, â€" Urxon Revolutionary Ideas In Modern Teaching + Columbia Professor Says That Personality is Neglected in Schools hi a o lt “ & cmou' t.h!?‘ 9.& .LI-.-â€â€˜-' L eean e mE quite a time after the treat» salt: Jack branch, Increasing 900; hardw to $307,000 : 189,000 to $ $6,724,000 t "The subjert one Aptly qi King Char der?) _E speaker, h an afterâ€"d Turning t« "Give m "Your 1i4 he Unit 1907, his (Does an umorelia shopping lady‘s m lady tur mt.l Lk pardon!‘ she had : she got . sat the | was wat but, geti topped : your afte able after When the Un *"In the Ma Here stories taken Advanc news death house that he her at ti doct« rei They ar would 1i daughte to lie or I think the the dee den almost th the the to orig spea x of t ter The and P thinks. from * har to M ende even puzz.« no su poun« right. the i Amor quesa ing s lished AJ flht bes afte sCor of w tic i Tacin Past« Ame publi ing book bro;z very Ve from D« The M