"The will for peace," President Roosevelt declares, "must express itâ€" self to the end that nations attemptâ€" ing to violate agreaments and the rights of others will desist from such a course." In that event "the will tr peace" takes a curious shape, for what is to be done about the naâ€" tions which, in the late President MWilson‘s words, "do not intend peace br justice"? It is easy to say that Since unemployment is a most urâ€" gent social and economic problem, it is extremely necessary that the Doâ€" minion and the provinces should get together on this matter with the least possible delay. There should be a central administration under a highâ€" ly capable executive head, and the diiferent branches throughout the Doâ€" minion should be under able directors. The expenditure on relief continues higher than necessary because of lack of an efficient system for placing the unemployed in jobs. Why should this remain so? The great scarcity of skilled workers in some parts of the country will suggest bringing in imâ€" migrants of this class. Why bring in outsiders if there are Canadians who are qualified for the jobs, or can be fitted for them?* Unemployment inâ€" surance will be adopted in some way before long. Then it will be expediâ€" ent to keep unemployment at a miniâ€" mum, and this will require a fully orâ€" ganized and aggressive employment service. There is every reason for abandoning the present policy of drift. For the sake of the taxpayers and also of the unemployed, the Doâ€" minion and the provinces should lose no time in establishing an efficient, coâ€"ordinated _ employment _ service, which can be modified later if necesâ€" sary.â€"Winnipeg Free Press. THE EMPIRE Who Will Guarantee? Coâ€"ordinat.on Is "What was the attraction?" probâ€" ably the first question many persons asked on reading the news despatch reporting an attendance of 25,000 people om the second day and 45,000 on the third day of the International Plowing Match at Fergus. Fergus being a town with no great population it would be readily asâ€" sumed that a large percentage of the people came from outside points. It would be further assumed that only a small percentage of those 45,000 acâ€" tually took part in the contest. The answer, of course, would be obvious to anybody who knows anyâ€" thing about plowing. There is noâ€" thing like the thrill which accompanâ€" ies plowing a straight furrow, and when you can‘t do the plowing yourâ€" self the best thing is to watch.â€" Windsor Star. The secretary of the Ontario Mediâ€" cal Association is on safe ground in asserting that state health insurance will come in this country. It will arâ€" rive, with or without the assent of the medical profession, because the people at large will demand, as they are already demanding, some relief from the heavy financial burdens acâ€" companying sickness and hosnitalizaâ€" tionâ€"Brockville Recorder and Times. Thrill of Plowing What motive inspired the Bank of Canada to abolish the twentyâ€"fiveâ€" cent note, the shin plaster? Surely no economy was invoived. Did anyâ€" body find it a nuisance" A good many found it a conventence for small remittances when a postal note or money order seemed nardly worth while. Children â€"loved it.â€"Saint John Telegraphâ€"Journal. Pesple Will Demand It Last week a man was convicted of manslaughter before Mr. Justice Denâ€" is of Jolictte, Quebec, in connection with a "hitâ€"andâ€"run" fatality, and Judge Denis sent him to penitentiary for seven years. That, we should say, was an adequate penalty, and more of the kind would have an exâ€" tremely â€" salutary effect.â€" Ottawa Journal. It is a tribute to Canadian nurses that their services constantly are beâ€" ing sought in the United States. In fact, Canadians are numerous and highly placed in all the professions across the border. This can have but one meaning; ability and zeal.â€"Toâ€" ronto Globe and Mail. Tribute to Nurses When it is found necessary to open a special prison camp in British Coâ€" lumbia to house unemployed disturbâ€" ers it is idle to talk about the depresâ€" sion being completely over.â€"Peterâ€" borough Examiner. CANADA Not Over Yet VOICE THE WORLD AT LARGE of the Skylarks sing, on the average, for 2.22 minutes. A return to bows and arrows, he added, would not remove the grievâ€" ances of nations, for which they will fight, or supply the enlightened diploâ€" macy which can keep peace without injury to a nation‘s sense of injustice. Wants Practical Democracy "The plea 1 make is for practical democracy, but if democracy is to triâ€" umph in the attack now being made, it must have method, and I believe the records of the scientific worker and the way he sets about his work will steady and clarity the popular mind not only to complain eloquently, but to conclude wisely," the former Prime Minister declared. The action of the farmer in growing wheat and food for war, he continued, was akin to the engineer turning out improved flying engines. But it was false judgment and cowardly for one to blame them if peace was not secured. He said China and Spain had shown the great advance attributable to science in the destructive forces of soâ€"called civilization. These would be repeated with increased horror wherâ€" ever war broke out. Cannot Avoid Worst "If we cannot avoid war, we cannot avoid the worst that can happen in warfare," he said, in delivering the first Radford Mather lecture to the association. ‘But let us not be misled by thinking scientists as such can stop war." Former Prime Minister Ramsay MacDonald, addressing the British Association for the Advancement of Science, discussed the effects of modâ€" ern science on warfare. Ramsay MacDonald Warns Assoâ€" War‘s What famous bicycle rider allowed his brother to chop off halft of his index finger because of snake bite? Max Schmeling, the German, will fight Harry Thomas, of Chicago, in December, in New York. Last year Harry won 13 fights out of 15, with 8 knockouts. At the time when the %‘g Owlahoma oil wells were discovered on the Inâ€" dian reserves, oil was their gold, hence one old Indian chief approâ€" priately named his race horse "Black Gold." "War Admiral" is following in the footâ€"steps of pappy "Man o‘ War." It seems he had a hoof injury last seaâ€" son but now in his first few races he is walking away well in the lead. \,.uay don‘t you try it sometime? Well, did you get around to anâ€" swering last week‘s question? What wrestler has had his nose broken 23 times? The answer is Little Beaver, the 24â€"yearâ€"old Cherokee Indian iron man. " Sporting Comment i By KEN EDWARDS So longâ€"Ken _ Henry Ford once said: "The yard is always 36 inches, but when is a dollar a dollar?" The man in the street reads of Wall Street slumps in share prices, of the rocketing franc, of the jumpiness of stock exchanges, and the failure of brokers. And the man in the street can be excused for thinking that finance has gone crazy. But the explanation is simple enough â€"â€"a world nervous and ill at ease, the Mediterranean full of warships, solâ€" diers of four or five nations fighting in Spain. And on top of it Japan‘s savage war on China. How can trade flourish or the world get on with its job of sharing the abundance that science has made possible? So long as the world is crazy finance will be cr]ny, too.â€"London Sunday Chronâ€" icle. "injustices and wellâ€"founded grievâ€" ances‘ should be removed; but who is to be the judge of them, and who is to guarantee that the aggrieved will be satisfied with what others decide to be justice?â€"Telegraph and Morning Post (London). Crazy World, Crazy Money ciation For PRESS Will Increase CANADA THE EMPIRE Hello, gang! â€" Back again from the old fishing grounds, and how they take those little minnows. There are plenty of whitefish in Lake Simcoe now. Another estate of note which has come into the market is Broughton Place, near Maidstone, in Kent, where Queen Elizabeth once stayed Many of the timeâ€"worn structures figuring in the realty news there latâ€" ely have in days gone by sheltered members of the royal family or outâ€" standing figures in the literary life of the nation. Their very walls whisper of the colorful past. Known to Dickens and Scott One of these interesting places is the Rokeby Castle in Yorkshire, the home of the Morritt family since the early part of the seventeenth cenâ€" tury. More than 1,100 acres comâ€" prising the eastern portion of this esâ€" tate is to be auctioned. Changing family fortunes, new deâ€" signs for living and death have been some of the factors behind the many offerings at auction and private sales of vast holdings once occupied by English nobility. Historic British estates which date back several centuries, in some cases even to feudal days, have been comâ€" ing into the market in large numbers recently. Many of Them Have Histories Old English Estates Coming On Market Africa Chicf Source Africa is now the chief source of the ivory supply. From East Coast Zanzibar and _ Mombasa, trading centres for British Kenya Colony and Uganda, and Mozambique,. port of Portuguese East Afrca, regular shipments are made. Supplies are also obtained in the Sudan and Cenâ€" tral and Wost Coast regions, chiefly the Congo, Cameroon and Nigeria. Russia ships annually a small quan tity of mammoth tusks uncarthed in Siberia, of an age estimated at 1,000 to 50,000 years. Siam provides a small quota obtained from tame eleâ€" phants who have died of old age. Shoot Their Ivory At one t‘me practically all the ivory brought on to the market was found dead in the jungle MW#@Wcollectâ€" _ed by native expeditions from "cemeâ€" teries" where elephants in that region find their way to die. It is estimated that now about 50 per cent are shot, although slaughtering of the animals is strictly controlled. Hippos Produce It Too Besides the elephant, the ivory produced by some other animals is of commercial value and use. For example, the hippopotamus, or seaâ€" horse, has two immense canine teeth or tusks, six others which are curved â€" in the upper jaw, and six straight in the lower jaw. Various species of wildâ€"boarâ€" notably the warthog of South Africaâ€"produce quantities of ivory. Among marine animals there is the spermâ€"whale, which has imâ€" mense jaws full of unusual looking teeth, and the walrus whose long Commerce in the days when sailâ€" ing barques, laden with "strange carâ€" goes of ivory, apes and peacocks," plied the seven seas was invested with a certain glamor. Even today, in this more prosaic industrial age, a few of the romantic trades of the past still flourish in outâ€"ofâ€"the way spots of the carth. One of these is the ivory trade, writes Frank K. Linge in Barron‘s Financial Weekâ€" ly. Romantic Trade of Past â€" Thrives in Far Corners The Ivory Trade Is Carried On In Africa, Chiefly â€" _ Used For Billiard Balls and Piano Keys Prime Minister Mackenzie Kin after the premiere of her pic ducing director of the film in Linking Back to Early Days of England; Some Sold by Auction As Various Factors Enter Into Transactions ts EuD TORONTO King is shown here cor picture, "Victoria the mlllag, .8 C1CC8 22008 NC _ , i , mictoria the Great," in Ottawa. At which Miss Neagle has the leading role, It is now a traffic bul to stop a person ask for a match. dow. But, nevertheless, the firm, who sell a million oysters a year, cannot reâ€" call anything like it before and Mr. Butler says he has found bigger pearls in the past, but only one at a time. The oyster in question will go down in history and not down someone‘s throat. It is being exhibited in a winâ€" Arws In case you are thinking of going to Whitstable and starting the oyster rush of 1937, it should be stated that the pearls were exceedingly small and not of saleable value. Mr. Butler has been an oysterman for more than twenty years. He opâ€" ens an average of 400 a day, so that oysters have no secrets from Mr. Butâ€" ler. But he has never met such an oyster before. Robort Butler, one of the firm‘s eight oystermen, opened the oyster. Scores of pearls rolled on the floor. A nest of more than 100 pearls was found in a Whitstable native oyster opened at a famous restaurant in Coventry street, London, England, reâ€" cently. But They Were Too Small To Be Put On Sale Oyster Produced Hundred Pearls An example of this is found in the recent sale of Rousdon Mansion in East Devon, known as "one of the beauty spots of England." The buyer paid about $150,000, which was only a fraction of what the late Sir Henry Peek paid to erect it. Just as in Canada and United States the large estates are difficult to sell because of the limited number of persons who can afford them, so in Britain many fine places "go begâ€" ging." Many need modernization, taxes on them are high and upkeep is costly. King Congratulates a "Queen" He is said to have "prayed to be excused" from knighthood and other honors which she offered him. Near the house stands an old yew tree, enâ€" closed by a high ragstone wall. Tradition has it that the Queen planted this tree. Held for 400 Years The Wotton family held this esâ€" tate for more than 400 years, and then it passed by marriage to the "great" Earl of Chesterfield. Later it became a part of the Kent estates of the Cornwallis family. on a visit to that county in the sixâ€" teonth century. The man who ownâ€" ed the place at that time was Thomâ€" as Wotton, Sheriff of Kent, who enâ€" larged and beavtified the house to make it suitable for his distinguished guest. London Central Market London is the central market of the world for ivory, although the growth of the Congo trade has re sulted in moderate quantities being shiped to Antwerp where sales are also held. Buyers from the United States and the continent, as well as purchasers representing the home trade, regularly attend the quarterly sales, which have been held for many years in the commercial sales rooms in Mincing Lane. All the ivory to be offered is stored and exhibited at the ivory warchouses at the London docks where it is inspected by buyâ€" ers and valued according to quality. tusks projecting downwards are in many instances fine quality ivory, and were at one time extensively congratulating Miss 7 We . wb duirns +‘ Th s a traffic menace in Istanâ€" Million a Year in the street a:{& Anna Neagle + Al\; e:‘lz,t: ROME.â€"Premler' Mussom;l. preparâ€" ed this weekâ€"end, on the eve of the fAifteenth anniversary of his "march on Rome, establishing fascicm, to plunge into the Spanish civil war on a grand scale if the London nonâ€"inâ€" P T MEmo 1 CC n n o eetyengeis mail and express traffic between Washington and Buffalo, a route that is expected to link eventually Ottawa and Washington. WASHINGTON. â€" Pennsylvaniaâ€" Central Airlines formally opened a new skyway this week for passenger, Robed in a mantle of red and black, collared with ermine, the King adâ€" dressed members of the Houses of Lords and Commons, the Peers gorgeâ€" ously attired in their robes of *state, from his throne in the Lord‘s Chamâ€" ber. But he pledged the Government also to maintain the racing pace of its reâ€" armament programâ€"with special atâ€" tention to antiâ€"aircraft defence â€" so that if war comes, the country will be ready for it. LONDON.:ng George, addressing his Parliament for the first time in a Speech from the Throne, pledged his Government to work unceasingly for peace in Spain and in the Far East. Prince Michael Honored BUCHAREST.â€"His eyes sparkling with joy and pride, King Carol II this week placed on the shoulders of his son, Crown Prince Michael, who reachâ€" ed his 16th birthday, the stripe of a second lieutenant in the Rumanian army. A salute of 21 guns marked the occasion, considered here the most important event in the Rumanian Royal Family since the enthronement of Carol in 190. Ordered to Stand By LONDON, Eng. â€" All British warâ€" ships within wireless range were asked this weekâ€"end, Lioyd‘s reported, to assist the British steamer Stanray after it was fired on and halted by a Spanish insurgent trawler in the Bay of Biscay,. is the touristâ€"catering profession. Starting later this month or early in December, a course in wayside booth selling, advertising proper cabin acâ€" One of the newer vocations openâ€" ing up for the young people of Onâ€" tario, especially now that the tourist trade is becoming a major industry, any decision regarding Dr. Hjalmar Horace Greeley Schacht, German Minister of Economics, had been reached, Dr. Schacht considers himâ€" self discharged from office. The Minâ€" ister, whose astounding feats of finâ€" ancial juggling the past few years have kept Germany‘s economic affairs on a workable basis, has long been at variance with certain of the Nazi leaders. Trouble first came to a head with the institution of the fourâ€"year plan sponsored by General Goering, the No. 2 Nazi. Asked about the Government‘s denial that he was leaving office, Dr. Schacht said: "The official announcement of my resignaâ€" tion will be made yesterday, today or tomorrow." The Minister desires alâ€" so to withdraw from the presidency of the Reichsbank, the Government agency for the control of German banking. What will Germany do without him? Ontario Trains Tcurist Caterers The Kirg Opens Parliament the Britisn screen star. News In Review Finance Wizard Resigns Although Nazi officials dendied that Duce Ready to Plunge Highlights of the Week‘s News . . . Frows Hakacds New Skyway 1 000 2O CCCCCm S 10008 and the â€"telephone wires cut. Separate bands fired on the Ramieh and Lydda naliaa abasl... An attack was made on the Lydda railway station and a military vehicle en route from Namlus to Tulkarem was fired upon. Twelve telephone wires connecting Palestine with Egypt were cut near Rafa. The Jerusalemâ€"Hebron road was barricaded near Solomon‘s Pools and 2 _ TCO TCO 5 HECpE JERUSALEI.â€"Unreut in was kept smouldering this new sabotage attempts aga munications, railway | stat police posts. BERLIN.â€"Theodor Wolff, former editor of the Berlin Tageblatt, is on a list of sixtyâ€"seven Germans deprived of citizenship, published this week by the official Gazette. Wilhelm Dittâ€" mann, former Socialist in the Reichâ€" stag and one of the leaders of the revolution of 1918 after the armistice, also is named. ouipedbnelfiatsints. bevadictmmmas S 25 1 WASHINGTON.â€"The United States Federal Reserve Board has announced & drastic revision in its stock market margin requirements. ‘The move was expected by many Washington authâ€" orities to boister sagging security prices. tervention negotiations collapse, it was learned on excellent authority, While 100,000 Black Shirts poured into Rome in ninetyâ€"three columns that tramped through the streets throughout the night, I1 Duce conâ€" ferred with his subordinates on stern measures to cope with any situation arising from a decision by Russia and France to resume "liberty of action" in Spain. tervention Hopeless of agreement, nine Euâ€" ropean powers delegates to the Spanâ€" ish _ Nonâ€"Intervention Committee meeting in London which convened over the weekâ€"end, sought only to avoid the definite break in relations that might mean the opening of the French frontier to the passage of men ard arms into Spain. On the one side were Great Britain, France and Russia, demanding the removal of foreigners from the civil war; on the other side, Germany, Italy and Portugal demanding recognition of the Spanish insurgents as belligerâ€" ents. ‘The meeting preferred a deadâ€" lock to a wideâ€"open split. ‘ berta, irrigation district; and in the Cypress Hills area of Southern Sasâ€" katchewan. ‘The Government scheme involves taking over the land at about $10 an acre and reselling it at the same figure. Land will be used for placing farmers from poor lands. New Irrigation Projects At a cost of more than $100,000, two new projects for irrigating areas in the Canadian west have been anâ€" nounced to be carried out under the Prairie Farm Rehabilitation Act. The work will be done in the Brooks, Alâ€" LNE S e e i5 Premier Paul Van Zeeland resigned last week from the leadership of the Belgian Government in order to fight the charges of Rexist (Fascist) oppoâ€" nents that he was mixed up in a "national bank scandal." His cabinet resigned with him as a confidence gesture. The resulting crisis in Belâ€" gium forced the postponement of the nineâ€"power conference which was to have met in Brusse}s Saturday to find an "amicable" solution to the Sinoâ€" Jap embrozlio. Revises Margin Requirements Relief List Reduced Latest figures issued by Ottawa show that unemployment and relief have decreased during the past year in the Dominion of Canada. In Sepâ€" tember, 1937, there were 78,479 fewâ€" er people on relief than in Septemâ€" ber, 1936. Responsible for the drop are better times, provincial and muâ€" nicipal work projects, activities of the National Employment Commission, the land scttlement plan under which unemployed are assisted in becoming established on farms. Again the voice from the south heard above the din of European squabbling and preparing for war: "We, as a nation, are at peace with all the world and for that we are thankful. We have no plans for conquest,. To keep the peace is a fundamental policy of the United States. War will be avoided by all honorable means." Also in his Navy Day Letter, President Roosevelt warned that the United States will maintain a sea strength sufficient to "ensure a righteous peace." commodation and the «a«» «of OVerâ€" night tourists will be made available to all young people interested, by the Women‘s Institutes Department of Ontario in connection with the National Employment Commission. Such a training will be of special use to young people in districts well travâ€" elled by tourists which are yet poor farming country. Depr; sas s Deprived of Citizenship Sabotage In Palestine ;-lnterven_tion Accord Remote "By All Belgian Cabinet Crisis . Peter Randal® stations and week by A German workman, served vic» the wrong type of sausage in a wo \s canteen, threw it out of the wi:ix‘ He claimed that he was entitled to co what he liked with his own savs A dhclplimry court held that le |a i been guilty of unsosial and unrcomâ€" radely conduct, and suspended him «* from membership of the German i W bour front for a year. * Three hundred patrons male a cess of the formal opening o{ nonâ€"alcoholic night club at the « Washington University, Washin: Nothing stronger than ginger was served. The club, planned managed by students, is similn several established recently in Middle West and on the Pacific C: "It is certainly not learning abi that distinguishes man from the called lower animals, Man is closo: the apes in this respect than the a are to the guinea pig." k A ‘"fairly bright" ape could give some humans a halfdength handicap and still beat them to the wire in an intelligence derby, Dr. Philip H. Du bois, of the University of New Mexico psychology department, said at Al} buquerque, N.M., last week. "There are undoubtedly some anes that can learn more than some men." he said in a Phi Beta Kappa addross before a campus cultural group, "In order to find this overâ€"lapping, it & necessary to take for comqi»nn fairly bright apes and very duhl ho mans," the doctor explained. Differences Only of Quantity The differences between man and animals are quantitative rathor than qualitative," he said. "Men learn {~= er than white rats; they learn more complicated things, but the process is apparently much the same. "It 4s CENtRINIY mnot Inornine ahilice Liquorless Night C!> Psychologist Would Compare Two to Find Out How Much Some Apes Smarter * Than Certain Men four. At the end of that time they aiso were shed. Her death occurred in the year 1688 at the ripe age of sevonty In true deer fashion she shed thom at the age of thirtyâ€"three, but the r» markable point about her case is that another pair of horns sprouted, and remained with her for five yvears Two Pairs ~# m'"ï¬sï¬:ï¬'«-** In the British Museum there are Tigo: Targt Pulicl, as:n two horns which sprouted from the chairs upholstered in ge head of a young Lancashire woman _ nietely refinished. _ _ A somewhat similar case occurred in Scotland, where in 1671, there lived a woman fifty years of age whose head grew a crooked horn sevoral inches long. This horn was cut of in the year mentioned, and is presorved in the Edinburgh Library founded by Clement Little. The horned lady died at the age of seventy without having produced another of these curious ornâ€" aments. By the time he was seventoon thig horn was the length of a man‘s finger, at the age of thirtyâ€"five it had taker the shape of a ram‘s horn. In the year 1598 he was exhibited as a froak, first in Paris and then at Orleans, whers his death took place. Franciscus Trovillion spent his boy. hood with French charcoal burners in the woods near his native village, Ne zieres. At the age of seven a swolling appeared on his forehead and grow into a horn, Museums Now Possess Specimen That Grew From Foreheads of M People & A volcano that is geitin» ready |, go into action acts very mueh Tike pimple that is swelling ang N“' m' to burst. This has beey d?m: strated by accurate m ASUPORRep made by two Japanese nriami,bv“; Takahasi and T. Minakam;, who ducted observations on th» H(‘li\‘p'(' cano Asama in Japan and have ""“&t- ly published their findines in the bu tin of the Earthquake Research lns, tute. They used tiltometors 1, detrg the ground movements », Beven points on the flanks of tho volcapy These are instruments sin lar to §6g mographs that record ““"hquam When the ground remains Perfecny still, the seismograph wil record D:@ allel lines uniformly spaced as hok cording paper makes its daily revoly tion under the stylus,. If the #rount is tilted these lines have their npuqn‘ changed. ‘The distance ang directioy by which they are displaced m @ e possible to determine th» dir:l and amount of the ground tilting Such tilts take place normally every day, The Japanese scientists found that tilting five times the norma} amount took place from seven to thirty dayy before the volcano erupted. The Tloor ‘of the crater rose before outbursts, The direction of the tilts indicateg the whole mountain was swel.ing by fore the eruption. Freak Humans D. Sprouted Horns Jap Scientists De It Byflusuremcr:;:.d"‘ Volcanos Act < o_ £YONS va W ECC “m Beautiful Amer room suite la n length triple mirror van 4â€"poster bed with sagless ®} «p refinished. Cost new over $2 f ““m WALNUT finish < gondition, with 1 to match, sagless «pring an Ssn Slors THE TRINDL BLEC" woNDERFUL NEW iN whes trom 6â€"volt batte a _ TRREE :fw na to match, #A felt ronttress $19.50 $49.00 LNXX"VL Suite (uncla has been rebullt and reco tractive brand new brow #hall revereible spring cus bargain at this price. Or. Is exactly like new. #h0m EM Ful lensts @ stered in a novelty re whall cushions and sh «ompletely reâ€"condition $35.00 s chatre, co quard ‘Taupe shade; « thoroughly dry cleaned Large assortment of 1 Eng Machines, Cas S Beds, Spring Mattresses fonters, BStudio Couches 478 YONGE ST BCOTCH, . FNGLISH ages; fallures repla dogs; trained coon, CHRISTMAS CARDS FRO ite negatives, 12 for T5 plete with envelopes. S ling, 29 Richmond St. } ROLM@ DEVELOPED, PI] ©nia Phe Reâ€" M:‘N. 188% King RERO PRICES, EXPERT with free enlargement 25 tos, ©3 Niwara Street. 6 ORIGINALLY CostING wi §800., good makes, hbeau hogany and golden oak good _ condition, . tun«« benches; bargain price ©59.50. Ideal for home: Write for our bargain pr Bales, 2418B Dufferin ® @lanes, pups; buy from kennels in Canada. C Rapidview Kennels, N @»ply, Mermant Buildinc. T WY BUPPRER? OX you that Mazar : rele® from woer old wounds. Mon Mfg., 331 Florn . Medicines, 526 Dov GREAT SALE USED P FEIBT DANCE POLIO c m." *Lovely One DICK POWELL No “.'. "l Kn..\-_ ‘\ DANCE FOLAO contai: savings in our T UMC! _ . _ Our low prices h ent the dargest and Just a few of the h . Mated here. IJf you 40 ° *.yons eenoinc / UPHOLSTERING n @â€"volt batt $3.05 delivere HAIRDRESSING SC ? USED FURNIT\ BARGCAINS FILMS AND PRINT FURNITURE Tradeâ€"In Depnt ACADEMY OÂ¥ elcome. Write #. Doronts. from Heave MUSIC BY ! our Fur the n« cha MED|ICAL Dogs Don