48 nvnuazrc io 4 Wigee Plowzv;:‘ is one of the most pleasâ€" ant, as well as the most important, parts of farming. . Provided one has STLRY TELLEK EARNS PRIZE Git No ssomer have experis invented a noew and more dead‘y war weapon thaa another set of experts develop a w a_.on to combat it. The tank is no l:ngzer a safctyâ€"first fort on a batâ€" tlclis c. _ Woolwich arsenal gun exâ€" poris have perfected an antiâ€"tank gur. â€" ‘They clam infantry armed with the antiâ€"tank rifle will be able to stand up to tanks azd beat them. A twoâ€"pound sholl, fitted with a svecial armoredâ€"piercing nozzle, is firsd by the antiâ€"tank gun. This shcll can penetrate the armorplates of any tank and explode inside. One dircet hit from an antiâ€"tank gun moars ccath to the whole tank crew and the destruction ef the entire To ti mol tï¬ y» VOICE Aae repuiatca of the Canadian Government in matters of paternalâ€" is . scems to have spread across the l ne. Our Morrisburg, Ont., corresâ€" pondent reports that while strolling down the street he was hailed by a United States tourist who said: "Pardon me. Can you tell me where the Government woollen store is?" The eontributor says he didn‘t want to appear dumb in case the Governmenrt had recently gone into the wool business, so he asked a few eautious questions. It turned out that the tour‘st was looking for Hudâ€" son Bay blankets. â€"MacLean‘s Magâ€" The recent tragedy near Sarnia where a farm woman was attacked and killed by a cow which had run into her yard from the road, causes surprise and apprehension as well as sympathy and sorrow. Is a cow, therefore, unsafe? It is not unusual to hear of people being killed by bulls. Two neighbors of the woman who was killed in Moore Township have met a similar fate in recent years from bulls. But cows are usually regarded, at least by city folks, as placid animals which graze quietly and, in their moments of leisure, chew their cud at peace with the world. Some city girls, out in the country on picnics, are loath to climb over a fence into a field where there are cows. Is their fear Justified or are their companions right in making fun of them ? l‘and the prize to that Algoma Le that first sank its teeth into one 15, dived under the boat, struck the i r oar, and used it as a gangplank )¢ voarding the fishermen‘s craft.â€" c atiord Beaconâ€"Herald. We would hand the prize to the <low who first told the story, â€" hatham News Farmers tell us that, on the whole, cows of course are much quieter than bulls. If cows are together in a group or a herd without bulls, they are almost entirely harmless. If a vhe gun traveis on a small rubber <d trues and :s so light that it can taken up into the front truck, untcd on a tripod, and brought inâ€" act on in less than 30 seconds. It os with torrfic rapidity and can »w up a tank a mile away. The wltank rfle is made for use airst whippet tanks, and fires ccal armorâ€"piercing bullets which a br ng a tank to a standstill at a ags ol 749 vya~ds.â€"Brandon Sun. CAnAuIAN â€" ELANKETS ART OF PLOWING THE WORLD AT LARGE AMTLâ€" CCW RUNS AMOK CANADA m GUNS of the cow is taken away from other cows, however, or if something exceptional occurs to make her nervous, there may be instant danger. A cow that for any reason does run amok is more agile than a bull and, with its added nervousness, is at least as perilous. The moral for city people, because farmers are doubtless aware of the situation themselves, is that while they should not become panicky about cows, they would do well to rememâ€" ber that any animal of that size and strength is a potential menace and that watchfuiness at all times is the part of wisdom.â€"Toronto Star. That is entirely a mistake. A susâ€" pended sentence is just what the name impliesâ€"a sentence that is susâ€" pended, that hangs over the offender. So long as he behaves himself, nothâ€" ing further is done about it; but if he offends again during the term for which sentence has been suspended the first offence can be cited against p him in case of conviction and the penalty be imposed in addition to that for the second offence. Suspended sentence does not mean that the judge or magistrate has placed the offender in the position of one who has not broken the law. If he does not take his lesson to heart and breaks the law a second time the magistrate may remind him that he has broken faith. "Authority," the magistrate may say, "has given you a chance to go straight. Only one thing can be done with a person who wiil not behave; it is high time for you to learn that the way of the transgressor is hard. _ Society will stand for only so much." Suspended sentence, ther, is not a clearance; nor is it a sign of weakâ€" ness on the part of the authorities. It is a manifestation of the desire of the law to give one who has slipped a chance to get back on the straight roadâ€"a favor which too often is not appreciated.â€"Timmins Daily Press. A Goderich man tripped over the lawn hose when he went to turn the water off and fractured his arm in three places. We imagine many married men will make sure their wives read that particvlar item.â€"Petâ€" erborough Examiner. Scientists have put forward a new theory. They say that if the iceâ€" caps which cover each Pole, North and South, could once be removed, they would never reform. Once they went the whole climate of the earth would be altered. The hard climate of Britain would change to the soft warmth of the semiâ€"tropics. Scientists say that with modern explosives the feat is not impossible and‘ certainly it would be better for mankind to use explosives in this way than to blow each other to death with them.â€" Sunday Express. HEALTH AND ENVIRONMENT Good environment is a creator and guardian of health, the indispensable foundation of eager living. _ Those who ruin natural beauty and those who fail to provide satisfactory houses are alike enemies of the peace of mind out of which alone proceed good craftsmanship on the one hand and good housewifery on the other. Health of body and health of mind, nutrition, physical fitness, the hapâ€" piness ef children depend, in the last issue, upon thinking and feeling and therefore upon the influences and suggestions by which men and woâ€" men are surrounded. There should be no clash between the demand for beauty and the demand, made again and «gain in the debate, for »ffective sanitation, for cleanliness, and for preventive medicine. Hygiene is the craftsmanship of beauty and will usually found wanting where beauty does not ex‘st. Mean streets, mean villages, and mean, or blacklisted, schools, the existence of which â€" Mr. Lindsay regretted carlier in the week are as defective in spirit as in equipâ€" ment.â€"London Times. The girder or truss type of bridge pushes down on its foundation piers. TO CHANGE OUR CLIMATE PRESS SENTENCE SUSPENDED AN ITEM FOR WIVES CANADA THE EMPIRE THE EMPIRE T10 ARCHIVES TORoNTO Saskatchewan Reports _ Loss Of 25â€"Mile Lake Dramatic evidence of the transition of a section of Western Canada to an area of severe drought is conga_ined in news despatches that Lake Johnsâ€" ton, famed for years as a nesting place for millions of waterfowl, and the largest body of water south of the main line of the C.P.R. in Saskatcheâ€" wan, is now a mere puddle of water and will probably be entirely dry by the end of July or early in August. Once a lake 25 miles long and 11 miles wide, covering about 275 secâ€" tions in area, Lake Johnston is alâ€" ready so low that cars can be driven right through the lake from north to south. With the disappearance of the big lake and its conversion into an alkali plain, farmers of the area south of Moose Jaw are facing an added handiâ€" cap in the white alkali powder that is now being scattered through the countryside with every windstorm. Every lake in Alberta is shrinking annually, and some in the southern and eastern portions of the province are in danger of disappearing like Lake Johnston, but none have yet shrunk to the same alarming exâ€" tent. The fate of the largest lake in the Southern Saskatchewan area emphaâ€" sizes the need for rehabilitation and conservation of available water supâ€" plies in the drought area. Conservâ€" ation of the annual runoff of water from the Southern Prairies is becomâ€" ing absolutely essential if the district is to preserve ability to support any population, and work of providing dams and reservoirs to hold the natural water should proceed as rapidly as possible. One of our American tourists caught a prize trout up north last week, so this should prove we in Canada have a few big ones left. No one ever talks or hears about the oyster. Well, here is just a fact: hey say that an oyster takes from foww to six years to ripen for the market! "Jimmy Wilson, take the stand:" â€"The New York Giants are willing to pay $50,000 for his services. The Chicago Cubs want him too, whether or not 50 grand is a little high, we are not sure just now. I gut;s;“t-l;e;"-ï¬â€"s{lll have to stretch it a little to come up to Babe Ruth‘s top salary of $80,000 a year. They say last season at Saratoga and Lexington the sales for 800 yearâ€" ling were 31250()_.000.00. Ruefe;-rlfng 'bacli to oysters again, it is said a female oyster spawns 50,000,000 eggs in a year. Guess we better hoof it along, gang. Thanks a lot for your letters. Our column is dedicated this week to Jack Legge, Toronto‘s "statistical whirlwind." Adios. Autos to Incrzase 50 Per Cent. In 23 Years DETROIT, Mich.â€"Charles F. Ketâ€" tering, research engineer told the American Society of Civil Engineers a new highway system must be proâ€" vided in the United States to accomâ€" modate 37,000,00 motor vehicles by The number of automobiles on the highways will increase 50 per cent. within the next 23 years, he said, while "an increase in motor vehicle registration on our present highway system would almost prohibit much of our usual driving. "Such a plan would require a primâ€" ary system of high speed highways crossing the country in all directions. It is estimated that 50,000 to 60,000 miles of such superâ€"highways would be sufficient. Leading from them would be a secondary system of good highways serving small cities and towns. The third system would conâ€" sist of service highways serving the rural areas." Fiery Kiss:â€"When a young Vienâ€" nese kissed a girl she threw him against a fire alarm with such force that the alarm was set off. S‘x fireâ€" engines were on the scene in a few minutes. ' How do you fishermen _ react to this piece of information? â€" In 1936 the State of W.sconsin‘s t w o â€" hatcheries produced 7,000,â€" 000 Muskies for reâ€"stocking purâ€" poses. _ They‘re probably big felâ€" lows by now, waiting for you gents out there! â€"Ken. HAMILTON.â€"Mrs. Jessie Louttit pleaded with Magistrate H. A. Burâ€" bidge to send her 16â€"yearâ€"old son, convicted of 18 burglary charges, to a reformatory. "He‘s done enough damage, let h‘m suffer," the woman asked the Magistrate, â€" who sentenced _ Ross Louttit to Ontario Reformatory for nine to 15 months. Louttit‘s comâ€" panion, Joe Poyton, also 16, receivâ€" ed five months definite and four months indefinite on six charges of burglary. "He‘s been warned a dozen times and suspended sente.me or the strap would do him no good. He would be better of dead than free," said Mrs. Louttit as her son, his eyes to the court room floor, listened. "You are somewhat of a Spartan mother," the Magistrate replied. "Strangely enough our psychiatrists agree with you. They have advised institutionalization _ if _ all â€" other methods fail." Within the ty area, the Lord Mayor of London ranks second only to the King, and takes precedence of other members of the Royal Famâ€" ily. Plants have a nervous system which is affected by strong emotions, just as in the case of the higher aniâ€" mals, according to a famous Indian scientist. Asks Reformatory For Her Son OTTAWAâ€"All eastern Canada and British Columbia continued to show prospects, said a crop report issued this week by the Dominion Bureau of Statistics. The droughtâ€"stricken Prairâ€" ies, however, faced failure over a wide area, with low yields expected from those fields which still promised a crop. In Ontario, the weather has been favorable for the development of all crops. Cutting of fall wheat is nearly finished, and yields should be above average. Some early spring grains have been cut, and in southern disâ€" tricts harvesting will be general this week, with fairly good yields in prosâ€" pect. Fruit and truck crops are promâ€" ising. In northern districts haying is delayed by wet weather, but general prospects are good. WASHINGTON,â€"The United States Senate sent to the White House this week a bill authorizing construction of six naval auxiliary vessels at a maxâ€" imum cost of $50,000,000. The Senate agreed to House amendâ€" ments to the bill, which provides for a new seaplane tender, destroyer tenâ€" der, mine sweeper, submarine tender, fleet tug and oil supply ship. TORONTOâ€"Canada‘s cattle businâ€" ess, domestic and foreign, is ready to boom under the impetus of a Governâ€" mentâ€"assisted plan for shipping thin live stock from the dry prairies to Ontario‘s rich feeding landâ€"then to market. Live stock men said this week the movement of Western cattle to Onâ€" tario has started several weeks earlier than last year, the first in which the Dominion Government paid halfâ€"cost of shipment and halffaré of Eastern buyers who select their own cattle for finishing. Because the market is better, due largely to cattle shortage in the Unâ€" ited States, Eastern cattle men are hurrying to take advantage of the Government scheme. _ Personglly or through agents, they are buying Westâ€" ern cattle in Julyâ€"last year heavies purchases were in Augustâ€"to get an early start. The Dominion live stock branch here reported July shipments "unusuâ€" ally large," and added that the heavâ€" iest movement was expected in the period from August to November, Threeâ€"yearâ€"old steers and heifers, oh younger, and cows and calves qualify under the Government plan. Higher prices and prospects of a ready sale to the United States are incentives to Ontario dealers, who find choice grade steers marked at $9 to $9.25, compared with around $5.75 a year ago. Cattle moving to Ontario will not be marketable until fall, but live stock men are satisfied there will be no slackening in demand. WASHINGTONâ€"The Labor Departâ€" ment estimated this week 4,500,00 manâ€"Gays of work were lost in the Unâ€" ited States last month because of strikes. A preliminary survey showâ€" ed 575 strikes started during June, that 300 were‘n progress June 1 and that 530 ended during the month. CROPS LOOK PROMISING .S. SENATE PASSES NAVY CONSTRUCTION BILL _ CATTLE BOOM NEARS News In Brief 00 MAN.â€"DAY‘S WORK ST IN MONTH‘S STRIKES let Those who wiil be remembered longest are often the least known. Canada‘s history studded with names M o cl"â€" site Cns far better known than TNAL OF ®"| Charles Saunders but it is doubtful if any other man has had a greater inâ€" fluence upon its development. Macâ€" donald created Confederation but it W #! nooctudes PE ERaiHT s Oiomee fluence upon its development. . Macâ€" donald created Confederation but it was Saunders‘ discovery, marquis wheat and its later improvement in garnet wheat that provided the means of existence for a very young nation. Railroads had been built from east 10 west across limitless expanses of alâ€" most laste land. The country Was unâ€" ! 29e ulc anb. a pin tyï¬ 1 d cccifiiet on is aner t der a heavy burden of debt. The Saunders discovery turned" the vast prairie wastes of the west into a treasâ€" ure house which was to lift Canada from the position of a relatively unâ€" important appendage of Great Britain into one of the five great trading naâ€" tions of the world. As wheat poured out, gold pc;ured in and found its way from the farmer‘s pocket into every form of Canadian economic developâ€" ment. As the creator of the treasure house passes beyond, it is interesting to exâ€" amine the future of these same broad lands. The one crop West is passing through a dark period in its history. Thousands of acres are being scoured clean of top soil. Rain has failed and the 1937 wheat crop is a failure in & line of failures. The Western wheat carry over has shrunk from a high of 211 million bushels to under the hunâ€" NEW SALVATION ARMY HEAD OF CANADA ARRIVES picog s M 4 T25 ar ids vi ty QUEBE(‘.â€"Commlsaioner G. L. Carâ€" penter, newly appointed head of the Salvation Army in Canada, . arrived Wednesday on the liner Montcalm to take over his new duties. He succeeds Commissioner MacMillan, who has beâ€" come Chief of Staff at Army Headâ€" quarters in London. Commissioner Carpenter, accompanied by Mrs. Carâ€" penter and their daughter, is making his first visit to Canada. He was born in Australia and has spent several years in the Argentine., ONTARIO DOUBLE GRANIS FOR YOUTH REHABILITATION (th To dA 4A 1043 . ochaoratste \frcnt" TORONTOâ€"Fred Marsh, Ontario Deputy Minister of Labor, Wednesday told Ken Woodsworth, secretary of the Canadian Youth Congress, grants for youth rehabilitation projects would be doubled. At the moment the Govâ€" ernment provided $240,000 as its share of the Federal Government $1,000,000 grant. Projects are being considered for employment of about 3,000 youths, Mr. Marsh said. AMELIA EARHART‘S PRESENT MEDFORD, Miss.â€"Little Amy Morâ€" rissey, niece of Amelia Earhart, lost in the Pacific while flying around the world, received a birthday present which was mailed by Amelia when she was in Bombayâ€"six Oriental bracelets made of gold and spun glass. Amy‘s mother was the former Muriel Earhart, Miss Earhart‘s only sister. Amy will be six on Friday. BRITISH TERRITORIAL _ ARMY STRCONCGEST IN 17 YEARS LONDON.â€"Strength of the Terriâ€" torial Army is now greater than at any period since it was reconstituted seventeen years ago. The War Office announced officer and other ranks on July 1 totalled 155,090, compared with 138,926 on the same date last year. Since the beginning of the year 30,240 have joined the colors. CHINESE TEACHERS ARE TOLD TO KEEP ON SH.AVING CHENGTU, _ Szechuen _ Province, China. â€" Primary school teachers in the Chinese town of Chikiang have been ordered by the government to shave frequently and have been forâ€" bidden to wear long hair. Not only will this improve their appearance, acâ€" cording to the order, but their spirits. GERMANY IS UTILIZING = _ WASTE HUMAN HAIR BERLIN.â€"The use of human hair for the making of carpets, tarpaper covering for roofs, and felt, is Gerâ€" many‘s latest plan for saving raw maâ€" terials. Hairâ€"dressers throughout the country will be asked at the coming Barbers‘ Convention at Breslau to start collecting human hair of every kind ard length. STRATFORD. â€" Practically all Stratford‘s employable men who were on the relief list at the beginning of the year are now at work, and if an urgent order were to come into the Relief Department for five ableâ€"bodied men the order probably could not be filled, Alderman James Stewart, Chairâ€" man of the Relief Committee, stated. The recent order of Premier Hepâ€" burn allowing reliet recipients to go on farm work without deduction from their wages for the maintenance of their families has cleaned up the local situation, he said. ALL EMPLGYABLE MEN IN _STRATFORD HAVE JOBS NEWS PARADE HIGHLIGHTS OF THE WEEKS NEWS â€"â€" By Peter Randal The West of Today en the least known. y studded with names vn than that of Sir rs but it is doubtful if has had a greater inâ€" a Aavelorment. Macâ€" dred million mark. dire want. It Will Come Back In line with the experiences of the dust bow! states to the south, there are many who belive that this great area stretching across southern Albera and Saskatchewan should be abandoned. Aided by the Federal Government, many families have already . been transplanted from the most affected n °~ Wnics a# annving uPanSpPRER UE C000 C areas but the possibilities of moving an entire population are too enormous ‘ L n ogpien t â€"sunoun P woBB PBEOET e PE C to be seriously contemplated even if those involved were agreed that the move was in their own best interests. That is the strange quality of the Western character, In spite of conâ€" tinued crop failures and hard luck, these people still believe that the West will come back. A few years ago, & WUN BMVT" eastern financier and engineer came to their support. According to R. O. Sweezey of Montreal, the West needs irrigation on A huge scale. True, the expense would be enormous but so ’ C[D L000 Reccvediancedts ts en Nee esnt CC CMET TE will be the expense involved in any other solution. ‘The great difference is that irrigation will be an investâ€" ment capable of bringing in a great return, Whether jrrigation is the key to the riddle or some other solution is required does not matted, _ The wealth of Canada, not only for the U e sc MkLe MBaud oo lfiit 4100 C444 it alificctctoliina is wealth of Canada, not only for the West and the farmer but for the East and industry depends on saving the Western wheat field. Warned About Women‘s Club Advised Of Qua!â€" ifications of Leaders ATLANTIC CITY, NJ.â€" Women‘s clubs were warned recont‘y against choos‘ng leaders just because they know how to slap backs, m‘x well, and wear Parisian clothes. "We should select the women who can best advance our interests," Miss Lena M. Phillips, lawyer and associâ€" ate editor of The Pictorial Review, told the convention of the National Federation of Business and Profesâ€" sional Women. -â€"â€";‘Vlfltr is all right to choose a slapper and good mixer if sl other worthwh‘le qualities, _bt ;;â€"c;.sh; wears Parisian models does not necessarily make her a desirable leader. s _"Good will and affability are no substitutes for directness, efficiency, intelligence and viliqn.'_' The speaker advised the women not to gloat over the prospect of repealâ€" ing the federal law prohibiting emâ€" ployment of both husband and wife in the government service. Miss Phillips observed "this disâ€" criminatory legislation" remained on the statute books four years and has "only just now been rescinded by the lower House." "What will happen in the Senate", she added, "is stil problematical, Yet the men in Congress who had the power to rescind that bill were sent there largely by the votes of women, who constitute nearly half the celecâ€" torate. "Women had the power to force change of that law any time they wanted to. They simply didn‘t exerâ€" cise it. . . We cannot stop at talkâ€" ing about coâ€"operation. We must prackce it, not only in the national body but in the various states." Mss Frances Maule of New York, author of books on good business beâ€" havior for women, warned clubwomen against allowing commerc‘al conâ€" cerns to get hold of membership lists. "When we sell our lists," she said, "we are violating a principle of busiâ€" ness cthicsâ€"to say nothing of a defiâ€" nite policy of the federation." $86 INVESTMENT SWELLS ____ TO $8.000 IN 2 YEARS PETERBOROUGH.â€"Two years ago the Peterborough Rotary Club purâ€" chased eightyâ€"six bushels of white winter wheat at $86 and distributed it among fortyâ€"three boys in Peterâ€" borough County who were then memâ€" bers of the Seed Club. This year the club, which has shrunk to thirtyâ€"five members, will harvest 8,000 bushels of high uniform quality white winter wheat, tentatively valued at $8,000. seed, and last fall their planting rangâ€" ed from five to twelve acres apiece. This fall the original $86 investment will have swollen to $8.000 in the short space of two years. ‘The plan was introduced by Arthur Runions, local Department of Agriculture representaâ€" tive, who is now President of the Roâ€" tary Club. He told the club at the regular luncheon this week of the suc cess of the venture. Each of the original fortyâ€"three members received tw bushels of the Several of the boys will display samâ€" ples of their wheat at the Peterbor ough Industrial Exhibition, with a furâ€" ther prospect of obtaining prize monâ€" ey. ‘Thousands are in N.J.â€" Women‘s well â€"known Camera Queen Is No Good With Gun WINNIPEGâ€" Though a hopelosg shot with a gun, and faced with cop. ditions that would daunt the hardiest duck hunter, vivacious Lorene Squire, official photographer for the Amer. can Wild Life Institute, thinks noth. ing of spending three woeks wy 4 soggy marsh waiting for one goog camera "shot" of a wild duck, Tanned to a deep bronze by a month‘s outing near Nowh Batle. ford, Sask., where she ohbtained bird life photos, Miss Squire recontly pass. ed through Winnipeg on her way to northwestern Manitoba marsh araas, "It has always been my ambition to come to Canada to see the ducks @ their nesting grounds. Now I have, and have some good pictures of haby ducks swimming about on the water," Miss Squire said. Her career as a photographer started 10 years ago in Kansas yahon she went duck hunting \\‘it,,“/,-.r father and mother. _ "I was pretty terrible with a gun, so I bogan shootâ€" ing with a camera." The rosult has been a series of outstand ng pictures of wild life on the wing. "It‘s hard work," said the young Kansan. "About only five out of a hundred pictures are successful, 1 spend days in the darkroom getting the effect I want." She usos a two miniature reflex with 15 contimetre telephoto lenses. The young girl, a gradua sas University, came to ( the result of communicat or officers of the Alborta, Sas and Manitoba Game and F. ations. She intends to s; a month in Manitoba b ling westward again t Chipewayan arca. for more humane condt nurs‘ng Profession is sou gates to the Intornatio: of Nurses meeting hore. An eightâ€"hour clay was listed wa the chief obpective of the drive, On the walls of the convention hall grim statistics were disn‘ayed such as: 84 per cent of probationers caich contagious diseases from patients; only 14 per cent of trained nurses enâ€" joying regulated hours catch them; 26 per cent of the probationers affected die. Other charts listod the Mg#ses which particularly assail runâ€"Jown nurses. *Show this to probationers and you would not get one to take the job," one delegate romarked HARDâ€"WORKED STUDENTS Jean I Church, of Ottawa, stres ed the ordeal to which many studen nurses were submitted. "I have seen girls un into the bath or evon : uniforms after a day‘ Canadian delegate said. exhausted and three ho: to be up again for a |« study and straight to d: "After 10 years‘ s: drudgery, a nurse i hausted, ill. The rc she spenis nursing h Miss Church said the obstacles in the x ing the cightâ€"hour c: which was the "almo: of convineing hosp:ts advantages accruing i novation. She added, hows were not sceking t duties and respons. fession imposed. *"No nurse wort s‘on would thin\ of sonal desires while ices", the Ottawa "But under presen time is left for p« recreation." 80 COUNTRIE More than 3,000 different countrios congress. Throe ol Engl ‘sh, French an ing used and inter; symopsis of each . concluded. Canadians | pait Miss Jean 1. Gunn nurses, â€" Toronto Miss Ruby Simpso: ing services, Prov wan; Miss Eliza> intendent, Vistor‘s for Canada; [ss mesistant €lroclos, University of Tor: Mocre chief, pub! vis‘on of matoral Oxrtario Dopartm LONDON, Eng. â€" P eonzress of 1 Mrs. Efiie Ta States was eeci internaticnal cou 1941, wll be h States, the co: here was inforn :« ford Fenwick, wh Gocd Shot Of Wild Duck LONDONXâ€" 1 Eight fourâ€"yca Need â€"Houvr Day )0 For nze by m h Battle rined bird ntly pass» er way to rsh araas, a® h th Cwa ts m Three bandits . _ Three bandits seize a transcor ental bus, and force the drives guide it up a mountainside to a } ‘f" shack. They want a valu secret formula believed to be in m of one of the passen z' Trump. To add to the sini tion, a raging forest hre, c ing up the mountain, traps the gr The first night, one of the bandi mystcriously strangled with his Ee * ‘ bandana, and the next night, a ond one meets the same fate. 1 F&' TN.I. is found strang and it is discovered that Ken Hhi. browbeaten l‘ttle man, alisappeared. Meanwhile, Miss 1 Jones, school teacher, has been some private detective work vounr Dr. Nick Strand and young Ur. Nick Strand Lawrence, pretty nurse, time to become engaged "We gotta rouse Somers told Red D tin‘ so murder don And that‘s bad. W a question about « of usâ€"â€"" *"Well, Jenkins shoulder it," said *"He just beat it," bus driver, "He‘s no sayâ€"did you know the dits took from us is go m@leather case under th Now the case has dis cfl suppose little Jenl fore he beat it"" "And strangled T« way?" said Doyle, s inggf) n t aslee} Breakfast was No one had any â€" But way ,wf" Some: co ‘t strangle took the money Trumpâ€"â€"*" Just the running . it and excite *Me‘s out the: gasped. "I se fead, all black : burnedâ€"gosh, ) Doyle seized t\ *"Who‘s a sight "Mr, Jenkins! the road, and th Doyle and So find Jenkins lyi swhrt distance d« gied him bact on his cot, a "Can‘t talk to foctor‘s order, what he could 1« an‘t say yet w Try Salada Thisâ€"the newest in © or two colors (the leaf | home. â€" Make luncheon of perle cotton or just string. l'o';}flu the design sh« us?0; material requiremer gestions for varied uses. Send 20 cents in stamp to Needlecrlft_ Dept., Wilsc Tmto. Write plainly 1 )at it might be veryone made . ept Mrs. Jenk‘r Done In Four Strand TERROR Trump saw hi JFFY CROCHET CHAPTE! We D it ne n A T have f t