k.4 Men Ihe cetw minister was calling upon the members of his flock. What a cute little girl he gallantly remarked, upon viewing one of the ¢~‘‘dren. And this sturdy little urchin the bib belongs to the cortrary sex 1 presume?" Do men like brainy women? asks a magazine ad. Well, every man thinks the woman who says "yes" to him has brains, but after she has lived with.him a while the woman is sure she didn‘t have any when she said it. Postman‘s Wife â€" "Why pa, you look all tuckered out." Postman â€" "I sure am. I‘ve been all over town lookin‘ for a guy named "Fragile," t} Life is never free of even the fellow who live: roses has the thorns wi eontend. Mrs. Stillrich â€" you know, but in tion of course the 1. "â€")"6 velivery Man â€" You cerâ€" tainly have some wonderful chickens Mrs. Stillrich. Do they lay well? t fc 22 mt When & bit of sunshine hits you, After passing of d cloud; When a fit of laugher gets you, And your spine is feeling proud; Don‘t forget to up and fling it At a man that‘s feeling blue, For the minute that you fling it, It‘s a boomerang to you. Small our applied for a job business office. % "Do you smoke?" asked the No, sity ‘Dbut I dOWL mink hast Let‘s start the column today with these cheerful lines we found in the Christian Sctence Monitor: RADIOS $10 AND UP Many extravagances begin * guise of efficiency. Oh, yes," M rocer‘ s DiRECT from Ractory Distributor; ve as high as 50¢ off list prices. for particulars and photos. All rd makes. State battery or electric. y radios $12 up â€" Electric radios Caâ€"Plan Radio Corp., 282 College ept. A, Toronto. HJAV: e fisherman saw what loo! likely looking: 3 of and man lounging on the bank sherman â€" "Is it "a crin : fish here ?" in â€" "Crime. If â€"you eate be a miracle." . I‘S ream cone 0 is credited with once having : spent $150,000 on flowers for juet, which is about $150.000 than some men have spent on s for their wives in the past deâ€" er envy anyone. If hing you want, wor! mething like it. otiirich â€" "Oh, they could, ow, but in our financiel posiâ€" course they don‘t have to." neARD e As \\‘ & y O ourn‘. said the mother, "she‘s BOOMERANG livery Man Iree of troubles â€" ‘ who lives on a bed of thorns with which to 1y OV oke:" asked the Loss, I don‘t mina having an M at 2 costâ€" _ ...nca@Eel what looked to . If they have work until you you catch any ol and turn»d a crime c to under "1 MAYC n BU MO“EY 10 gurn~, ,mat’swhyl qRDE® _\ ‘plue cool because & _ pottel heat at a 1 navent $y "Gv TA B“R* Writes the Edmonton Journal â€" The claim that a family gathering in Winnipeg last Sunday was the largâ€" estâ€" ever held in Western Canada is no doubt well founded. There wera present 94 descendants i# Jean Bapâ€" tiste Lagimodiere and his wife who came to Red River at the operins of the 19th century and were the first Canadians to establish a home on this kide of the lakes. At that only a small proportion of thsse wh» have that distinction were able to attend. They are scattered in all parts of the continent. ‘ excent as in a category. When one hears that women have more laid hands on somethinp which was previously men‘s special provâ€" ince, Miss Sayers said, one must ask is it something suitable for them, or are they adopting it merely because every man does it. Concerning the question of women doing men‘s jobs, Miss Sayers said: "‘The only decent reason for tackling a job is that you want to do it and feel you are the person who can do it. In the Middle Ages the whole of the spinning industry, the dyeing inâ€" dustry, the weaving industry, the enâ€" ‘tire catering business, the canning industry, all the bacon curing, were in the home and done by women. "But these and many other womâ€" en‘s activities have been taken into factories under the direction of men. The home to which women are asked to return now contains a great deal of interesting activity. It is thereâ€" fore foolish to take away traditional occupations of the home and comâ€" plain because women look for new ones." Peace of democracy depends on the individual, she said, but classes and categor‘es lead to a totalitarian state where no one is free to think or act excent as in a categorvy Miss Sayers went on to warn her audience against running into the error of having an argressively femâ€" inine point of view about every subâ€" Jeet which crops up. Though she agreed it had been necessary â€" for women to unite for "their rights", she felt to continue to put one class against another, women against men, was to split the foundations of the state. ',v IF": it 1e5® £oSsâ€"* says S mmu H\\C\\,‘m\\\o This was the contention of Miss Dorothy Sayers, novelist when adâ€" dressing the London and _ National Society for Women‘s Service here reâ€" cently. . 4 LONDON, Eng, â€" Won proved that they can unite to gain recognition of their a class, and the time has . to insist on each woman‘s man‘s requirements as an person. Dorothy Savers Emhasizes Attenâ€" tion to Requirements of Men and Women‘as Individuals some guy hadn‘t been ‘wâ€"r;;'i-n scratchy pen." things of the nex: It is the thinkable things of one geâ€" neration that become the workable 7° °C MMe S 9000 ‘ People Should Be Individuals uxn oi 9 C M HT guard. Wot‘s the vica?" l rivate â€" "I overslept ard â€" Sergeant â€" "In all this bombardâ€" ment?" Cowes eR ARITT all one one c}eck please." The only =#ter dinner spee"h that is assured of a big hand is: "put it y 2 2e s e Oe U Sergeant â€" "You‘rs Big Family nition of their rights as the time has noo come each woman‘s and each hi t I‘1 be sleo®crg yet if « â€" Women have unite as a class late to go on an individual .g with a Back in 18993 was called o Lac Ste. Anne, nort f here, to perâ€" form a postâ€"mortem n the body of an Indian brave, vi .im of murder, Son of an Anglican mintster, he was born in Yorkshire and attended United Service Collegs at Westward Ho. Here he once protected a strange lad from punishment at the hands of school bullies. The name of the boy was Rudyard F.. ling. "Doc" Braithwaite was medical attendant on that memorable 375â€" mile march. He enlisted with the Northwest Mounted Police at Regina on his arrival from England in 1884, and remained on the p:yroll of the force 47 years and eight months. He held the position of honorary surgeon until December 31, 1931. DEPT. W.P. Post Office Bot 72, Guelph, _ Celebrating the 40th anniversary of his appointment as Alberta corâ€" oner he recalls the historic trek of Colonel Irvine‘s meunted troops from Regina to Duck Lake for the relief of Fort Carlton in the Northwest reâ€" bellion of 1885, He was an eyeâ€"witâ€" «ess, to the execution of Louis Riel, leader of a Metis uprising for a native northwest. Manufacturer wants to introduce quickly, Singer De Luxe Razor Blades â€" New Process Latest Type Double Edge â€" Finâ€" est, Smoothest Cutting Edgeâ€"None Made Better â€" For All New and Old Double Edge Razors â€"Free Samples will be maiiâ€" ed om request â€" Send 10c to cover cost All Men Use Them and Save Dollars EDMONTONâ€"Clearâ€"eyed and more vigorous as the years roll by, Dr. E. A. Braithwaite can point t» a police record unique in Canadian history. His name appeared on Royal Canaâ€" dian Mounted Police payrolls longer than any other member of the force, living or dead. Dr. Braithwaite Longer on R.C. M.P. Rolls Than Any Other Living Man Original "Mountie" Has Unique Record Seitredidtt & *\ % *__ Wierc s #x . ® The chill of March upon my.henrt, And April tears in the eye, And my wonting steps on the gardon pathâ€" xd Where my friends all sleeping lie. Your forms are hid but I feel you near ; ‘Neath the cozy, wrinkled loam; But other hands will tend you, And greet you when you come, For I may not tarry,. my gardenâ€"â€" The gate from the latch swings free, The road winds out like a ribbon, There‘s a call on the wind for me. Oh! rather the ache of a burden, And the gird of tired feet; The heat and dust of the highâ€"way, Than dreams, and a garden sweet! And it‘s ever the Treasure just over _ the hill! And ever the Soulâ€"Thirst questâ€" And the rise and fall, ‘till we rest no more, And the shadows grow in the west. â€"Annie Bethune McLougald. Streamlining on locomotives, according to engineers, is only the outward symbol of the radical changes which are taking place in railroad wlling stock as modernization programs proceed. With inâ€" dustry advancing into the age of alloys, entirely new â€" materials which give greater strength and ruggedness are being used. In this field, Canadian nickel as an alloying material with steel is being used in new railroad equipment throughout the whole world as well as in Canada. An interesting historical point is the fact that the discovery of Canada‘s nickel resources was originally made when the line of the Canadian Pacific was being pushed through the Sudbury district. Now, years later, the metal discovered then, is a vital factor in the development of better rail services. TOP, a trio of the giant yÂ¥ xt Panaso TVE w P ET . F I I 9 C.N.R. 6400‘s, reported as the woirrldi"swl-arg;s't_ 'stvl"e;r-nvlir‘;;dml;c;mo- tives ,in which Canadian nickel is used extensively; BOTTOM, one of the new Canadian semiâ€"streamined trains in service. Behind the New Streamlines & pectunh > sn lfiheer hn n aer n 0 Of the Dominion‘s Steam Lsines _ CHICO, Calif, â€" Chico State Colâ€" lege has decided to instal a "date" bureau. Files will be kept on the social proclivities of all students, both male and female, and an effort made to develop as meny "peaches of a pair" as modern business methâ€" ods will permit. ‘ IDead lovers come once more, and hearts that leapt __At joyous idings o‘er my threshold brought; 1 knew both birth and deathâ€"men laughed and wept At happenings with which my task was fraught; Trysts with the past here still are sometimes kept By those who long ago my friendshtp sought. Ten thousand times I closed upon the night, And twice ten thousand, opened to the day; Long years the wellâ€"attired found me away, And liveried footmen here used to alight. Now you may see I‘m in a sorry plightâ€" Black rains and cold neglect have left me gray; â€" But, traveller, hear me! For a moment stay, While I*recall again some vanished sight! Once he travelled into the north for 29 days with two other conâ€" stables to bring back two Indian killers over a route negotiated today in 15 hours. As coroner of the provâ€" ince he continues his practice with the energy and interest of a middleâ€" aged practitioner. He started the autopsy and then hurled himself to the ground as a bullet whizzed over his head from the rifle of the Indian‘s sister. He had difficulty explaining he was not molesting the body. Charlottetown _ ....$13.21 Halif@X :14« : se .. «ooo $0â€"00 Saint John ...... .... 87.65 Quebec ...... ... .... 36.63 Montreal .... .... .... 36.77 London ...... .... .... 48.50 OtERWEL _ ..i... ... kes #D0.00 Hamilton ........ .... 85.64 Toronto .,.. .... a.. 45.65 Winnipeg ........ .... 42.08 Saskatoon ........ .... 43.94 Regins .....« «e «««40.00 Calgary ... L. ... 43.62 Ednmonton â€"...... ... 45.86 Vancouver ...... ... 44.69 ian:â€"The City of Charlottetown ‘ehâ€"" joys the reputation ‘ of being the least taxed and the least indebted of 1 any city in Canada as the following| report by the Citizens‘ Research Inâ€" stitute of Canada shows: l College Keeps "Date" File W.ites ‘the Charlcttetown Guardâ€" â€"Alexander Louis Fraser Happy P.EJ. City _ ME "scarces seus I sefecizess 4040 1 kervepen C srse spen â€" srke . Shee & sasseces â€" sese I (sspeccne soee e ie ns ME Susecee . «ree BP. cccese\ "cues A Door Per Capita Per Capita Taxes Net Debt ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO $119.22 182.14 168.23 284.81 809.02 124.55 145.96 185.98 244.09 197.83 251.50 215.29 175.92 806.90 228.50 _ The Sault Ste. Marie Star writes: â€"There has been during the past year a considerable agitation for the establishment of a model farm in this district, to give an opportunity for the farmers of Algoma to obâ€" serve the results of the application of modern methods of farming to the particular conditions of the district. So far nothing has come of the plan,’thoygh it has been endorsed by â€" several municipal â€" and farml _Thus endeth the year when the players pitched so many ringers that a* least 4 peg sockets were smacked off their bases. The boys at Meaford pitch in the church shed all winter and extend an invitation to visitors, So, folks, you see there really is a Santa Claus. After all was over | ally had to have a da surmise that Horsesh not bother with ~irls on hand for 1937. Dean McGlaughlin of Oshawa was the most impressive of the _ new crop of players. One is always inâ€" terested in those from a distance, and Jas. Rose of Saskatoon was closely watched. He lost all his 4 preliminâ€" ary games, by such close scores that you just had to wonder how it was done. of calomel but have no calome! or mercury in them. Ask for Carter‘s Little Liver Pills by name! Stubbornly refuse anything else. Zc. f&ï¬ï¬-‘o{ bile flowing freely and make eel "up and n&"".'lhmluu and snth.l make the bile flow freely. They do the v Morning Rarin‘ to Go The liver should gur out two pounds of liquid bile into your bowels daily. If this bile is not flowing freely, your food doesn‘t digest. It just decays in the bowels. Gas bloats up your stomach. Y&(;:.denmt:'r.wd&rmful poisons into y. and you sour, sunk lngo the world looks punk. A mere bowel movement doesn‘taiways get &t the cause. You need something that works on the liver as well. It takes '.boumud Carter‘s Little Liver Pills to get these two The finals were run in one roundâ€" robin group of six players with all having at least one loss registered against them. Geo. Craggs, defendâ€" ing champion, was eliminated by Ferâ€" ris in Group 5 by only 2 points. John Simons, "Peer of Indian playâ€" ers," from Melbourne, Ont., finished number three, only 4 points below Ferris. John bad won this event twice before as had also George \ai win of Richmond Hill and will have to try again rext year if h> wants to break the allâ€"time players‘ record, Jimmie Daniels of Toronto Beaches was only 3 joints behind Simons on the total, but played a very bad game against him. And You‘ll Jump Out of Bed in the WAKE UP YOUR LIVER BILEâ€" Rola«t "Lefty" Ferris « Riverdale was #~cond, only down. Fred Harburn of Crom. y after trying for seven years the tie to vin the eup for t time. When a shock comes a person suould be prepared, but who was to know that there would be four Horseshoe Pitchers all with over 60 per cent. ringers, who would be pracâ€" tically tied for the Dominion Chamâ€" pionship. Issue No. 50 â€" T he Open Shoe Model Farms was over they just natur have a dance, an<© if you t Horseshoe Pitchers do BIG BEN The PERFECT Chewing Tobacco By A. Ringer Ferris of Toronto you better be points Ont., broke first HAVE JUST RECEIVED ANOTHER large shipment of Canaries from Europe. Write for wholesale prices, Good opportunity to make money. Anv quantity shipped anyâ€" where. CANARY IMPORTINC CO., 1 WELâ€" LINGTON 8T. WEST, TORONT« honestly recommended. Large packet, fifty cents. James Shrimptor, Wadena, Saskatcheâ€" wan. Member Canadian Stamp Societies. SLLVER JUBILEES, COMMEMORATIVES, Pictorials, Colonials, Revenues, Blocks, Airs, Forelq. U.S.A., Precancells, Something STAMUERING CORRECTED. | Write helpful booklet William â€" Denniso Carlton Street, Toronto. AN OFFER TO EVERY INVENTOR List of Wanted inventions and full information sent free THE RAMSAY Company, World moslllC=bt, _ AToM PRRTCNTE A2D Patent Attorneys, 27 Canada. TRAPPERlâ€"Tune up . Fishers Course on Stamp for particulars. A Sask. Shows how to read character from handwriting, at a glance 10c PREPAID ,LLUSTRATED CATALOGUE FREE â€" United States, Canadian, British Coloniais, Jubilees, Edwards, sets. Sent for postage or entirely free. EMPIRE STAMP CO., Dept. PC., Toronto, Canada °7 wll breeds. Write letter with full partiouâ€" lurs, breeds, sex, age, colour. Cash prices. Prompt reply desired, dogs for Christmas deâ€" livery. _ Builmers Kennels, 740 Guy Street, s#sull czcs Montreal Classiï¬ed Advertisiné MONTREAL â€" Poker will long‘ survive bridge as a card game, Prof. Ramsay Traquair, head of the de-l partment of architecture at McGil] University, told members of the Electrical Club of Monireal. Prof. Traquair also said catchbail, oldest | and simplest of all ball games, would be played long after tennis andl rugby, I "In order to make peaceâ€"just as to make loveâ€"it is necessary that there be two." Graphologist Room 421 73 Adelaide St. W. Now a proposal for the estaousnâ€" ment of similar model farms on variâ€" ous sections of Northern Ontario is advanced by Nicholas Ignatieff in an article in Toronto Saturday Night, in which he discusses settiement problems. _ "Central model tarms, which would carry on an exemplary economy suited to the soil and conâ€" ditions of the district are really reeded," he writes, and he adds: "In Canada there is a aafficiency of experimental farms, which are imâ€" portant in their wa» but of very limied value and interest to the average settlerâ€"they are too divoreâ€" ed from practical farming." This is the view also of the 1ocal advocates of a model farm. Poker bodies and has the support of both local members of the legislature. Graphochart Ous WANl‘EQâ€"WlLL BUY PUPPIES TRAPPERS â€" STAMP COLLECTORS STAMP COLLECTING CANARIFS BARGAINS STA MMERING PET STOCK T o Outlest Bridge, He Says DOGS WANTED INVENTORS The 3 Bank Street, Ottawa tECTED. â€" Write â€" free William Dennison, 119 ATTENTION now, be ready with Coyote, Fox, Wolf. . E. Fisher, Holbein, f LONDON, Eng.â€" Nearly 2,500 | pilots who were formerly in civil life and more than 20,000 "other ranks" |have joined the service during the 18 months that have elapsed since ithe first expansion program was anâ€" nounced for the Royal Air Force. I Delivery of aircraft is going ahead Iand formation is announced of two new R.A.F. groups to take over exâ€" iecutive control of 10 service siaâ€" |‘tions. Two more stations are listed ‘t‘or early opening, and "high altiâ€" tude" bombing ranges revealed. The Landguard Fort range may now be brought into general use aurâ€" ing the hours of daylight, it is anâ€" nounced. The range at Dailgety Bay is being converted to provide general facilities for "high altitude" bompâ€" ing during the hours of daylight, by units using practice bombs only. It became available for use December 1. The two new groups Many Pilots Join Royal Air Eeorce Miss Whitton, hose services will be temporary, Mr. Purvis said. will make a special investizgation into the phases of unemployment reliet problem which relates to coâ€"ordinaâ€" tion of Government and voluntary agencies for reliet and social serâ€" vices. OTTAWAâ€"Arthur _ Purvis, chair man of the National Employment Commission, announced vrecently the commission had obtained, through coâ€" operation of the Canadian Welfare Council, the services of Miss Charâ€" lotte Whitton, the council‘s executive director. Relief Problems Of _ T he Unemvloyed To Be Invcstizated good care of them., sent is to raise im to construct a buil centre for women‘s "Archives concerning women scattered ali over theworld," said, "so that no student can go to the trouble of took ing ; up, ~Our job is to brinz as man possible of these gocuments t B« under one roof aund in charze women who will know ho to good care of them. OJu aim at 1 sent is to raise money with w to construct a building as w "One would never know Feard said. "that women ha in science, medicine > sliti philosophy _ throughout â€" the Until the arrival of social men taught history as being . of conflicts of power in which were _ NOnâ€"exi8stent. _ Women, having _ known | themselves, nothing to oppose to this thi NEW YORKâ€" establishing a s which documents tivities of .women would be kept w; by Mrs. Mary R. and historian, St. Paul‘s has a memento of Halifax explosion of 1917. concussion of the blast splinter« window in the church and the 3 that remains in the frame resem (‘lOS(‘l_V the profile of the first »/ On the pages of the visitors‘ book placed in the vestry by the clergy, can be found the names of royalty, statesmen, poets and admirals of the years gone by, _ Among the disâ€" tinguished persons whose names are enscrolled are those of King Edward VII, then a "prince, King Edward VIIlI, as Prince of Wales, Admiral Jellicoe, Commander Allenby, _ Eir Charles Tupper, Lord Willingion, Bliss Carmen,. Sir Sanford Flemming, and many others, _ To scan the pages of the book is to review the history of this garrison city. HALIFAXâ€"Situated in what is now the heart of the business secâ€" tion of Halifax, St. Paul‘s Anglican Church, the oldest Protestant Church in Canada, constructed in 1750, has ben visited by many noted people down through the years. Gas warfare would mean the conâ€" tamination of food, for even the best refrigerator is not airtight.. It may mean survival and salvation to a warâ€"stricken area that can rely on such a source of supply. Most interesting and most successâ€" ful experiments have been made. Toâ€" day they are canning bread ana cheese and beer; not altogether, of course, as a sort of midâ€"day ‘snack‘ but each in its airtight tin as victuals inviolable to decay until the necesâ€" sity of the tinâ€"opener arises. The successful canning of bread is very significant, it is believed. Great Names On Old Church Books LIVERPOOL, Eng. â€" This is the canning age. In 1930 the canned foods consumed in England ran to 50,000,000 tins. Last year they had grown to 672,000,000 tins. Bread and Cheese Now Come in Cans B Of it are styled (} ns awlm at pre with â€" wdide 8 Together charze of h:story series women l1aving cently ut hor she Inrg en ind the The MB m h e .