New York City, Oct. 10.â€"~Prghib+ 1 tion o¢ strikes and lockouts by legisâ€" lation is a futile means o fattempting I to avort indistrial disturbances; getâ€" ting both sides in a labor dispute toâ€" . gether for dscussion and conciliation, on the other hand, is shown to have , boen an effective means of governâ€"| mental intervention in serious indus~| trial controversiesâ€"these are somi of the concilusions in a 400â€"page reâ€"| port on "Postponing Strikes" publishâ€" ed here today by the Russell suo‘ Foundation. The report is based on | a study, made by Ben. M. Solekmn.!‘ of the efforts to prevent strikes in Canada durin gthe last 1% years by means of the Industrial Disputes Inâ€". vestigation d wheth purpoi try "The continucus and efficient serâ€" vice of public utility industries, under conditions fair to employees, is essenâ€" tial to the weilare of the general comâ€" munity," Miss van HKleeck said, "but it caunot be secured by the short cut advocated by many infuential citl zens in recent yoarsâ€"legislative u-l-‘ tations on the right to strike.. "The study of Canada‘s experience In postponing ,and so averting strikes was undertaken because in the United States the wageâ€"carner‘s right to utrike in transportation systems, coal mines, qublic utilities or in any Indus-‘ try affecting large communities, is beâ€" Ing challenged by a considerable secâ€" tion of the community and in the efâ€" fort to prevent such strikes legislaâ€" tures are repeatedly proposing and sometimes enacting laws patterned aiter â€" the â€" Canadian Industrial Disâ€" putes Act. These proposals are often basod upon a mistaken idea of the actwal scope and oporation of this Jn Impose board and in the pft the â€" woft strikes, | coal min dition U%. LEARNS FROM CANADA Aet has w where inst larity of ¢ failed. _ A} rise to the purposes | ribmat tios i «brstr el Contrasting the sitaation in the'l United States with that in Canada, the roport says: "Just as the policy' of conciliation pursued by the Canaâ€" diar â€" government has won the coâ€"| eperaiion of labor in the admlnlstra-‘ tion of the Industrial Disputes Act, so the policy of coercion sometimes purâ€" sued by government bodies in the Wanited States has intensified the opâ€" position of labor to similar laws. The Canadian â€" experience indicates that governmental bodies can obtain the best â€" results in industrial disputes, not by threatening arrost, imprisonâ€" ment or fines, but by intervening in a sympathotic and conciliatory sptrit to find those terms upon which agreeâ€" find those terms upo ment may hbe reached On Canadian Mr. Selekman, the Russoll Sage Foundation‘s investigator, points out that while the Canadian Industrial Disputes Act was drafted on the prinâ€" ciple of compulsion, it bas been adâ€"| ministered largely as a measure to secure . yoluntary consultation â€" and agreement. . Thus while 472 punishâ€" abls; violations of the law oceurred in 18 years, . only 16 of these, were brought before the courts and none of ‘these at the instigation of the governâ€" ment. . The government‘s policy has been against resorting to prosecution of violators of the Act, despite the ftact that the Act provides a penalty of fines ranging from $100 to $1000 a day for employers and from $10 to $50 a day for employees declaring a "trike or lockout in violation of the s From Russell Page F oundation Stedy Our trial Dispute Acts to Advantage 4 difl o1 1 dR 0 0 cpedcccdiiechint Auttr c I P tion Act. \ The most important metbod â€" ot toreword to the report, MiS$ rrauqulent stock selling 4s carried on an Kleock, director of the Inâ€" through medium of the mails. The 1 Studies Department of the, zyq chief ways of developing clients Sage Fourdation, $aY8: "We | py mail are the distribution of market ot to bring enlightenment 109| ppr;ersg and market newspapers. In ans, but to look across the bOT*| porn cages the firm from which they »ward our nelghbors‘ MIDC®: | priginate is important, the only deflâ€" ds and fictories, and to ask nite line that can be drawn is that of t the Act has accomplished !t5| morperghip in a reputable st0CK °X~ es satisfactorily and whether it change, preferably the Toronto Stock isely be followed in this counâ€" Exchange or the Standard Stock Exâ€" change. The stock being toisted on s continucus and efficient #°"° | jp, puplishers‘ clients may be detect t public utility industries, under ed almost without fail by two general ions fair to employees, is essenâ€" charactoeristics. ~It is usually a lowâ€" the weilare of the general COMâ€" | py;.eq stock and the successive issles Â¥." :‘“†k IK:W(;‘; sa.‘::;,,t‘ l:,:t of either the market letter or the not be secured by the s1 . on ated by many influential citl :;:;upa:::m::ll"zz:tlnue to hetp } in recent yoarsâ€"â€"legislative llmtâ€"\ 1'_": other bits o" good advice to w om the wight to se | the prospective investor are first: "the e study of Canada‘s experience | qyargy of the stock being sold is very tponing .and so averting StriKO8 | yjyory to vary inversely to the sales imdertaken because in the United press'mre being applied to such sellâ€" s the wageâ€"carner‘s right to ing;" the second, "Never buy a stock : in transportation systems, €0@1|;p ; purchaso is urged by telephone :. qublic utilities or in any ind@$ | |_ ;ojegraph, except where the firm is fecting large communities, is be"repulahle.†Mr. Seioknakik POubWt SIT "Am Td dian boards of conciltation and inâ€" vestigation heard industrial disputes not as judges called on to render deâ€" cisions, nor &s investigators to disâ€" cover the relevant faets for the educaâ€" tion of the community, but as peaceâ€" makers called on to create a friendly and informal atmosphers which would help to bring about amicable settleâ€" mants. Ho defaito code of industrial imadian railroads where conâ€" are fairly well stabilized, the :ays, the Industrial Disputes â€" worked well; in coal mines nstability and chronmic irreguâ€" ( employment prevail, it has Aithough a coal strike gave ho Act, and one of its primary s was to provent the recurâ€" t such strikes, the report atâ€" this failure more to difficul creat in the coal mining inâ€" than to flaws in the Disputes Selekman found that ch the Act was eC . and 40 per cent. lays â€" lost through st through disputes SsYSTEM EFFECTIVE € the Canaâ€" principles has veloped to #0 boards. Commenting on the apparent tenâ€"| dency of the boards of concfllawm1 and investigation, appointed â€" under: the Canadian Act, to ignore the eduâ€" cation of public opinion, the report says: "Canadian officials have frankâ€" ly assumed that the community is not especially interested in knowing the !truth in an industrial dispute but in ‘avoldlnx any interruption of service that will jeopardize its comfort and \ routine." Warning Against Fake Stotk Selling im mm CCERl In the last analysis "BRefore you Invest, investigate." ts \ Sydney, N.S.W.â€"The quantlty °‘$wrltten of the OO EOEUPAAEAE UUR ARTE T 0 0 mW s SA C AOEE: | on Arviit e c L omm se i I";“;’y w":‘;“) rlec‘ntrded;ortthe.hyle;r age'lthese early voyageurs and it is interâ€" anyons is thereby deceived. be “"‘: § ast, ““b t" w tf 7 n"estlng to trace out on these maps | se El | ernment figures are but recently avallâ€" i6 ty + % | tiowent aperer se hn reconhr mnate ons o i i otenrtses io | . webine Siewp io in Bive® of | value in this city of over £35,000,000.!,amely le:vel country _ subject wi Wickham Steed in the Review Ofl: The average price in the grease was| periodic flooding, as may yeadily be | Reviews: â€" There are worse things :‘ | 17%4. per pound. This clip, representâ€" | seen from the map by the labyrinth of t‘ than war. One of them is Moth!ul’ l ing 1,539,700 bales, was the heaviest | watercourses shown. This valle;' is-‘defl‘"‘-‘ffltlon of the moral sense. . A . | known in New South Wales. Therefreally the delta of the Saskatchewan | daykmay gome hn We Sasl have 10 { | are petween 50,000,000 and 60,000,000 | River before it enters Cedar Lake on | MACE onr minds witether we will | | sheep in this State. The exact total| its way to Lake Winnipeg and zhei“‘“ the risks of wsr'for the sake o{: | is not ascertainable just now, but the| area has the characteristic delta tor. | L885 Were that issys. ever PVE | fact that last year the total Was set| mation. _ There are regular "rarer | Sehted. frankly to the people, there‘ | down at 51,880,000 indicaes that th@|routes followed by steamers and'nwould be little doubt of tha answer.! \ igures just given are conservative.| motor boats of shallow draught. m]Thes_', who would not fiight for any The State may be considered as catâ€"| the duck shooting season this detnies | Lorfit {eauas. would still fight for a | &( i 1 d if there is a | sure and known ideal, and their readiâ€" | ‘| rying to capacity, an ere is @|jg visited by numefous hunters as it | i | profonged dry time the strain on the) is a feeding ground for all kinds of | ness to fight would be likely to make o | pastures generally will be savere, wild ducks. _ It is a trapper‘s paradise l fighting â€"superfluous. _ But if any | # nctore s moee ns tifffimemmimensncemint as the swamps and marshes swarm British Government, present or fulure, t‘French Methods for Keeping a with muskrats. Thousands of pelts “':'y“i:i?;‘ tï¬h;:tt::a‘;zopfl:roimcmuzzu?t' j Kitchen Odorless from these little fur bearers are taken o * E C every season, and find their way to does nct understand, @r merely to cut +\ No housewife likes the odor Of ©00Kâ€"| jng. fur auction sales in Montreal or its way out of a muddle in which putâ€" " | ing to go through the house. To P"S | pondon blind Ministers may have involved it, a ; P d cent this happening, the Wrench are From Cedar iake to Lake Winniâ€" that Government will be likely to get > ;_ :2‘:;:5‘0 resort to one of two simple peg the character of the country is 6* rude aw?kenlng. P 1 _ {entirely different ‘nfl.-thi.ï¬gff_t_fl:f; »The politicianshave nothing on the 1 uts se usds uin Himnnne "The synthetic thrill in kissing 13 dangerousâ€"to your bridgeâ€"work, unâ€" tess your car boasts shock Assorbers." anccmacon. im Record Wool No housewife likes the pdor of cookâ€"| ing to go through the house. To preâ€" cent this happening, the Wrench are known to resort to ong of two simple devices. It the odor of the anticipated cookâ€" ing is not exceptionally strong, they take a potato, cut it in two, and lay one half, skiu down, on the stove. It warms there, but without becoming cooked. The potato absorbs the odor of whatever happens to be cooking, provided the odor is not too intense. 1t it should happen to be very strong, the housewife may take an orange peol, put a fow drops of vinegar on it, and lay this peel on the stove in the same way as the potato half. The skin gots a little warm, but does not cook, and the kitchen is without odor. PE S m w 0 «) «ie Cape Townâ€"A motion is being tabâ€" led by members of the Cape Town City Council for the raising of a loan of 2 n Bak s $500,000 toe relleve the overcrowd‘n§ in the slum districts. Dr. Shadick %l_liuys that Cape Town needs 62 ouses immediately, and 2900 more will be required each year to cope with the increase in population. Over 75 per cent. of the nonâ€"European population, he says, live coustantly under overcrowded condiâ€" tions and the position ‘constitutes a menace to the oity generally. as been laid down Or deâ€" govern â€" decisions of the ars‘ clients may be detectâ€" vithout fail by two general tics. It is usually a lowâ€" k and the successive issues the market letter or the will continue to harp On Wool Year in New South Wales : Town to Relieve Overâ€" The quantity . of Inrusâ€" the overcrowding in kissing is ]Nes» Early Days of Fur Trader and Indian Recalled by Maps Recently Issued by Government The early days of the fur traders in Canada are recalled by the publicaâ€". ‘tion of two new map sheets of the Naâ€" tional Topographic series by the iTopographlcal Survey, Department of the Interior, at Ottawa. These are | the provisional editions of the Grand ‘Rï¬)lds and The Pas shoets, adjoining | each other and showing that portion of Manitobas and a small portion of Saskatchewan lying between latitudes |53 degreos and 54 degrees, and beâ€" | tween longitudes 98 degrees and 102 degrees. These maps are published 3 aceâ€"LITUI on the scale of four miles to an inch Dr. Leonard Williams | in five colors and may be obtained | Review: The practice « from the above office. The Depatrt | skin of the face "lifted ment makes a nominal charge of fifty ‘ means, in order to oblite cents each for the maps in folder | is & procedure of which form or if printed on linenâ€"backed | ;ime one hears a good ds paper, and twentyâ€"five cents each it | ing the hair, such attem on ordinary map paper. ‘all and sundry are seldo \ The main topographical features lPerhapa the most ludicr are the Saskatchewan River with its | belonging to the categ0o tributaries, its devious passages andlmke is that of the bal xits lake expansions, and portion of ‘ who tries to cover up h Lake Winnipegosis and Lake Winniâ€" | bringing the hair from peg. The early fur traders and exâ€" iacm“ the dome of th lplorers in canoes or York boats used | his genius for apt gene! the route from Lake Winnipeg Vi<hua that Mr. Punch i Saskatchewan River to points in the | the grocer. _ The mer |far West or North. Much bas been | such a trick is very diff twrmen of the picturesqueness Oof for no one can really Ithese early voyageurs and it is Interâ€" anyona is thereby dec (estlng to trace out on these maps‘! hnd rnecnthccelpreap s \some of their routes of travel. The ) Britain Wor‘ ‘[lower valley of the Saskatchewan i$s| _ wijckham Steed in argely â€" level â€" country ““b“f‘t ‘t‘o | Reviews: â€" There aro EPUWMT ECC CUHE peg the character of the country is entirely different and the Saskatcheâ€" wan River flows swiftly with several rapids culminating in the Grand Rapids, where there is a fall of about 75 feet. In the early days it was necessary to portage around these rapids, but the Hudson‘s Bay Comâ€" o © _ NINE BUNDLES Bloodhound puppies snapped at the Edmund they pause in their play for the photoâ€"grapher to g¢ New Maps The busy HER NATIONAL EMBLEM AT WORK v beaver doing his stuff in Jasper National Park Caneda Busy As a â€" pany now has a tramway from Lake Winnipeg to a point on the river above the Grand Rapids. . There is a very great potential source of power in the rapids at this point and no doubt some day this will be developed and utilized. The information shown on the maps. was largely obtained from photoâ€" graphs taken from aeroplanes under the guidance of Dominion Land Surâ€" veyors of the Topographical Survey staff acting as navigational officers, Not all of The Pas sheet was photoâ€" graphed, hense there are still blank spaces in the southwestern part of ‘ that map. The two map sheots lying directly to the north of these two are also in course of preparation and will be isâ€" sued soon. Dr. Leonard Williams in the Emplre‘; Review: The practice of having the | skin of the face "lifted" by surgical ; means, in order to obliterate wrinkles, 1 is a procedure of which from timo to | time one hears a good deal. Like dye~\ ing the hair, such attempts to deceive | all and sundry are seldom convlnctng.! Perhaps the most ludicrous subterfuge belonging to the category of personal fake is that of the baldheaded man ' who tries to cover up his baldness by bringing the hair from over one car iacross the domb of the head. With his genius for apt generalization, it is ‘thus that Mr. Punch usually depicts ithe grocer. _ The mentality behind such a trick is very difficult to gauge; such & trick is YOrYf annui‘t 27 beCBTr d for no one can really suppose that; anyons is thereby «decelved. se s Aay o. CiLi Britain Wor‘t Shirk Wickham Steed in the Review of Poaviaws ‘There gre WoOrse lhings‘; The politicianshave nothing on the suburbanite when At comes to "run ning for office." The “backward"'South backward than much of â€"Don C. Seitz. NDLES OF SUBpUED MISCHIEF Edmunds‘ Kennels, Leighton Buzzard, Euhng, er to get this picture. o Faceâ€"Lifting outh is no more of New England. slothful | * *\ Ancient Pottery A fascinating recountal of three years of exploration and botanical reâ€" ser)ch in the most extensire an? . loftiest platean region in the world,| the mountain fastness and grass-l;ndl& pof somiâ€"civilized Tibet, is made by pr.‘ Joseph Francis Rock, director of the . Arnold Arboretumâ€"Harvard University | botanical and zoological expedition. ’; Hunting Flora on World‘s Roof Heights and _ It is a thrilling tale of adventure in ) a country of mountain ranges rising || one upon another in a succession of | gray, backed ridgos rgainsta seemingâ€" y endless and insurmountable panoâ€" . ramic background of snow and ice) a land where the lowest valley floors are ; 15,000 to 17,000 feet above sea leve!; | where huge amphitheaters . of bare, | eroc»d limestone are cut into myriad cliffs whose sides drop steeply into | narrow chasms cf rivers whose serpen-': tine courses are hemmed in by precipiâ€" ‘ tous walls of red and brown sandstone. Dr. Rock in an interview tells of the | difficulties he and his escort of faithâ€" \ful natives encountered while pursuâ€" ing a path into the unexplored region, where biting winter blasts of the rareâ€" fied atmosphere of the high mountain contrasted sharply with the terrific heat of arid desorts; where icy torâ€" \rents. interminable mud slipes and sloughs, and broken DTICB@S U"**" | j blocked the trail. 1 Collection New in Boston * Dr. l}ock's collection of botanical | and ornithological specimens from the | regions bheretofore unknown to botanâ€" ists bhas been placed in the Arnold Arboretum and the Harvard Museum | of Comparative Zoology. It consists lot approximately 30,000 sheets ot , plants, several bundred packages of seeds, samples of woods, 1046 birds, 700 photographs and extensive data'i ‘compiled from the explorer‘s note books. % Adventure Follows Sci g Relics Thousands of Years Old Indicates City Was Cite of Prehistoric Settlement ‘built the royali | the foundations and specimens of unadorned pottery. Berlin was originally erected on & swamp and even toâ€"day vast peatâ€"bogs are under some of the city‘s principal streoets. It therefore becama necesâ€" sary, even as late as the eighteonth century, when Frederick the Great built the royal library, to construct Dug Up in Berlin ;;n;vbri-oken bridges often ARIO ARCHIVE TORONTO HICHER THAN EVEREST look rather of larger structures of semtarid grasslands, and is very rich in Ash Large flocks of lhup.‘ goats, yak and borses Eraze in the isurroundin( plains. f | After â€" exploring . the Richthofen \ range which runs paraliel to the north Koâ€"Koâ€"Nor barrier rango, Pr. Rock iC _llsd iha Minshan. southwest of n\id;} trri'p. n.~n____n on pi ‘troe l a_, | they 'lm | water | Tm | subte | Old | last 1 Of | fram« t ‘wnd : Inn. # c_rvca;iéd the Minsban, southwest 7 which lies Tebbu dand where he found some of the most important speciâ€" mens of bis collection, To get into Tebbu land he wA# forced to go through the gtoat Shimen or Rock Gate at an elevation of 11,600 feet. The highest portal of this naâ€" tural gate is 16,000 feet high. Tebbu land is &A country of steop ;; slopes and dense forests ot conlfors| ,, and spruce and fir troos with an uD | (;, dergrowth of scrub rhodedendron | _ varying in colors from rose pink t0| turquoise blue and deep purple shadeos, In Curious walled villages were discorâ€" ered in alpine meadows where grew pI scattered clumps of willows and barâ€"| .. berries or occasional orchards â€" of & pears, cherries and jujubes. t PDr. Rock attempted to explore the ) n country in the direction of the Anne | q Machin, a mountain of extraotdinary | h geographical interest which is said to| t be many thousand feet higher than Mount Everest, hithertp belioved to be the highest mountain in the world. C The explorer learned of this range | through Brig. Gen. George Perelra, ; | who made a special trip from Peking | , :‘ in 1922 to explore the peak, and pASSâ€" | | ed on within 100 miles of his goal. + l! When General Pereira returned to || ; Peking after his first view of the t) Amne Machin, hbe rescribed it a# ' t "towering aboue everything else in| , Its snowâ€"clad grandeur." A\ The Chinese call the mountain °!Ma-chl Hsiehâ€"Shan. The director of | the Arnold Arboretum expedition was ‘°‘thwarted in his attempt to reach the & cAmne Machin by the Goloks, nomads ‘ of Tibetan origin, & warlike people " . who recognize no authority e.xcep‘t! 8:‘ their own chiefs. They are robbers" "â€" . by profession, according to Dr. Rock, Yâ€"‘ having raided and preyed upon other â€" tribesfor many years. For this TeÂ¥ 1s‘ son the country has been loft un Câ€" touched by evploring parties. :‘j| Tribesmen Block the Way | The Goloks gathored their warrilors iand formed an impenetrable chain of 1arnwd and mounted tribesmen across th ‘ the ccuntry Dr. Rock had to cover, and in he was forced to turn back, The exâ€" a8s‘ plorer and his attendants had several sb ! vrllishac with bvirpands and robbers. iarmed and mounted tribesmen &Cros>| _ . the ccuntry Dr. Rock had to cover, and I _ he was forced to turn back, The exâ€"| / . plorer and his attendants had several | skirmistes with brigands and robbeors.| ¢ | _ Most of the inhabitants Of Tib%t f | who number approximately 2,000,000, | 1 .are semiâ€"civilized members of Monâ€"| | golian races somewhat related to the" ;‘Burmele. PDr. Rock said,. In places| \where they can live in houses and | ‘ / cultivate land, the Chinese will come, ‘, but the pestoral work is done by rovâ€" “lng tribes of Mongols and Tibetans, :,Hving intents among their focks. In ; these tent villages of the Tibetans the ilcrudo shelters are constructed of di black yak bair in the form of a recâ€" § | tangle. The tents of the Mongols are \ circular and made of sheeps‘ wool! 3 gfelt. ‘ P 1 esn on pileframes of. GANC ‘tree trunks driven into ‘they were â€" entirely fc i water. . Dr. Rock repcried tion wes successful f1 point. All of the sI in Boston ia perfect C even a letier was 10 trip. age were foundâ€"in~4106 006 °" """7 i Corha COBETC numbers as to give palentologists and‘ The Congress held technical gathor archeologists a new incentive for asâ€"| ings and listened to scientific papers siduous research. / lon many subjects. These meetings It is believed that so many remains | were held in Montreal, Toronto, Winâ€" of animais found in a compantively\nipeg. Vancouver, Jasper, and Queâ€" small grea point to some catastrophe | bec. There were also addgresses heard of nature that killed all these mlmln!'at Banff, Lake Louise, Victoria, Jas about the same time, whereas the| per Park and Saskatoon, with Canaâ€" pottery specimens . are conslderii‘da’s leading politicians and scientists proof of a community of fairly civll-‘sddmslns the visitors at these ‘lzed human beings having existed at | poiuts. f a remote age on the spot where Berâ€"| lin now stands. g ; Memâ€"«â€"««â€"miaenniih we se wor o mw 00 . i ht charet to wish veaple talk be as of hundreds of huge | driven into the bog unttl‘ entirely flooded by the | opcried that the expediâ€" essful from every standâ€" f the specimens arrived erfect condition, and not was lost while on the ritend the movies then ?" koi VW C 0 e Much Impressed‘ Secretary of British Institute ENJOYED TRIP Surprising Yields Expected in 1 ~ld Deposits of North Nearly 30 of the original party of , 450 leading mining and metallurgical| authorities of the British Empire, who have been on a fiveâ€"weeks tour of the | Dominion of Canada, sailed troln! Montreal recently for England. . The: departure was characterized by cheerâ€"| ing and shouts of farewell to Canada. Among the departing group were Slri Albert Kitson, CM.B., director of the Gold Coast (Africa) geological surâ€"‘ vey; Lady Kitson; Charles McDerâ€" mid, secrotaryâ€"general of the British Institute of Mines. doais o c t mdns oo 0( h a d o t fis it ctenatat l Sir Albert in speaking of the comeâ€" pleted inspoction of Canada‘s mineral resources, declared that there was & greater future in the gold deposit than was generally known, and that he expected surprising yilelds from the more modern minerals which haey not as yet been applied to indusâ€" tries. w Will Bring Results. Mr. McDermid, in commenting upon Canada as a whole, declared that the result of the visit of the Mining and Metallurgical authorities was "hound to bring results both certain and maâ€" terial to the future of Canada and of the British Empire. . I have found Canada to be a country rich in minerâ€" als and with resources far in exce8s8 of my most optimistic hopesâ€"and I one hears about Canada‘s future. I have always been partial to the stories wish to make it emphatic that the hospitality . we received in Canada was boundless. The trip was a comeâ€" plete success from every point of view, and I can assure you that the impressions we gathered of Canada | are not only extremely encourazing but are truly sincere." This party of returning mining a@ thorities is part of that section of the | Congress which took the route west | ward from Monretal through the Prairie Provinces to the Pacific Coast simvltancously with anoiher group ot , | about 150 members which travelled [l!yj.' speciel accommodation | through , | the Maritime Provinces and through 1 Newfoundland. 21 ® At Nicks! Refineries.. Among the leading points â€" OL in« terest atken in by the tour of this "travelling congress" were the nickel refineries of Port Corborne, Ont., the silver and cobalt areas surrounding Cobalt and Sudbury, Ont., and the Ontario gold districts of Porcupine and Kirkland Lake. In Saskatcheâ€" wan the Congress gathered at Esteâ€" ‘bnn, in the southern part of the proâ€" vince, where interesting gold deposits are found. The Crow‘s Nest coal fields at Fernie, BC., presented material for the investigator, and the Kootenay and Nelson area of British Columbia was the scone of much discussfon. The largest smelter in the world, ‘lltuatad at Trail, BC., was viewed by | the visiiors with ‘admiration. This is |\a sight which was declared to be an ‘invaluable experience for mining Auâ€" ‘ thorities. At Kimberiey, BC a cop ipar-load-zlnc mine was inspected. \Tbls project attracted wide interest on account of the many byâ€"products | which it produces. The coal of northern Alberta, in the district of Cadomin was examined by the party following a visit to the un developed iniuing areas surrounding Port William. \ _ The party concluded its tour with ‘Ivls(t to the new smelter at Noranda, Que,, the gold mines of Rouy and |\the Thetford asbostos mines. Asboes tos will play a prominent part in the future development of Canada, the visitors declared. * Th nia, Péople marry because of a bioiogicat appeal for a certain person. The mind }muy reject the person and a divorce may result. But the emotional apâ€" | peal may be #:ronger than the mental “rejogtion, and brihg about a reâ€"marâ€" | riage. Which probably explain» why \a woman will live with a man when {everybody else wonders "why in the “,!NIQ she doesn‘t leave him"" This | also applies when the prainy mian imarâ€" Why We Marryâ€"and Divorce rleg Yo em:(y}em‘e{ du‘abbell, a everybody wonder % ‘fi§ her?t" The voqler is there should any wonder.â€"Capper‘s Weekly. oo a, e~>* 4 _ +*=® Ww ~oese . % tong ï¬)\f&pied, Female xo l & *_!ld'iu‘ and bag; jeft in my fl e Mrkoi Owner can bave , same by identifying property aud pay» ing for this ad, or if she will make , » vurl't;n; also called at B Future of inâ€" &N in the bt." mow "The Battl Somr l.o g1 #1 t \ Review Fiim Whi CJhx C ing Pris 1 n tunat ¢} tu th fi« rIV rel upt utt 16 ng D th in ueX try woul ed quant: East Indi Ing coun foodstuff: eonfectio fruits wi portant year the onions Canadiar Strolli weaport wooden roond surpect ous dis this bo: bystand j of health Reed OBo "that‘s lWike th uk. * TA n () Canadianâ€"Ja that ctel t