These animals should do just as well in this area as have those which were set out in former years at Petaâ€" wawa and at Burwash and should in time prove a valuable addition to the §game resources of Algoma. serve is one that will be (enâ€"cr:l-ly-l-;)- proved in the district. Elk for Algoma The decision of the Game and Fishâ€" eries Department to liberate 25 head of elk in the Ranger Lake Game Preâ€" The cost of the merchandise is marked upou the blackboard and the purchaser selects the article that he requires, consults the price list and add to it whatever he feels is a fair profit. P Texas is popularly considered to be rather a hardâ€"boiled part of the world, and yet we have Mr. Purvis‘® word that, notwithstanding the way in which he does business, he averages ten per cent. profit during the year.â€" Brockville Recorder. Mr. Purvis‘® establishment, in apâ€" pearance not unlike many others which stand i1 rural communities throughout Ontario, known as "God‘s Mercy Store," and the method underlyin,, the business conducted in it is explained upon a blackboard which reads: "All goods it this store are sold to you at costâ€"nothing has been added as personal gain or profit. The store is kept by f: eâ€"will offer. ing«. Anything you add to your purâ€" chase will be received with thanks." â€" Freeâ€" Will General Store We have just been reading about a un.qte general store which is conductâ€" ed in Waller, Texas, by a certain Alâ€" bort D. Purvisâ€"possibly of Leeds court ancestryâ€"who has carried on & successful business for 19 years in spite of the fact that he is dependent entirely upon the freeâ€"will olerlnn‘ of his customers. "The Woman Pays" Judging by an analysis that has Been made of incomes in the United Btates. she‘s darn well able to pay. The analysis shows that women reâ€" «eived 38 per cent. of the total of $9,â€" $00,000,000 of income reported â€" to Washington in 1983. Seventyâ€"seven thousand women had an annual inâ€" come of more than $5,000, the average being $19,129. Of the 18,000,000 stockâ€" h lders in the country, 7,740,000 were women. And women were beneficiarâ€" ies of 89 per cent. of all the lifte insurâ€" @nceoutstandingâ€"a matter of biltions. Nor is that all. Somebody else has di=covered that women do 80 per cent. oi all the shopping on this continent â€"â€"S" per cent of the spending.â€"Ottaâ€" wa Journal. Superiority Complex It is a very fine thing to have pride in one‘s country and the citizenship of one‘s country, but it is not a fine or dosirable thing to <uppose that people livinx in cne land are superior to peoâ€" p.6 ‘iving in all other lands. _ This "superiority complex" has l13d to a great many disasters in "‘.is world and has brought untold suffering lnd‘ misery.â€"Halifax Herald. There are 73,000,000 more people in the world toâ€"day than there were four years ago, according to Sir Charles Close, president of the International Population â€" Union, who apparently keeps close tab on births and deaths. ~â€"Kingston Whigâ€"Standard.) Point was added to a debate in the House of Commons on Wednesday night on road accidents by figures given at question time apout the casualties on the roads in Great Briâ€" tain in the eight years 1926 to 1933. The figures, which were given by Sir John Gilmour, the Home Secrotary, were received with expressions of inâ€" dignation. A member asked: "What war was that?" and Mr. Kirkwood exâ€" claimed: "A great shame, a scandal." The figures were: Killed, 50,837; inâ€" jured, 1,421,083.â€"London Express, or five marches of the same name which bhe wrote. One section of this march was given words to turr it into a patriotic song, and as such is known throughout the British Empire as "Land of Hope and Glory."â€"St. Thomâ€" as Timesâ€"Journal. With the public at large he will best be remembered for his charming, but now _ overâ€"worked "Salut d‘Amour," and his magnificent "Pomp and Cirâ€" ecumstance" march in D, which he composed for the coronation of King Edward VIL. This is one of the most stirring and majestic classic marches ever written, but it is only one of four CANADA Afterâ€"Dark Accidents Most traffic accidents, outside of the centres of population, occur after dark. There are two reasons why this is so. One is that there is a school of drivers which insists on driving as fast after dark, when visibility is poor, as in the daytime when the highway and the objects upon it ‘are clearly etched. The heads of drivers of this type, when bumped together (and this is a dandy game to play)}, do not ring, but, instead, give forth a flat, cracked note. The other factor contributing to tragedy is glaring, blinding headâ€" lights, the problems of which motor car manufacturers apparently are unâ€" able to solve.â€"Hamilton Spectator. Road Slaughter in Britain mt e o Bemaii. o ce w0 on c t esnt t Elgar‘s Great Music Growing ‘ Playing Fields for Eton M. Andre Siegfried, the celebrated French critic, says that our national fondness for running about, hitting, bowling, and kicking balls, and punchâ€" ing one another‘s ribs, is a dreadful waste of time. He wonders how we get any work done. For answer we can point to the work itsell. â€" The By August of 1934 twenty'years will have elapsed since the outbreak of the World War. A good deal has passed under the bridge since then and many lessons have been taught to those who cared to learn. The supreme lesson which we should have learnt is that war does not pay. The mechanism of the world has grown so delicate and complex that a dislocation in one part seriously affects every section,. Victor is hardly better off than unqnlshed‘ and certainly not as well off as in the preâ€"war period. In spite of this truth, which most of us have realized, it is deplorable that Governments still preâ€" fer to sacrifice sums of money on armaments and general preparations for conflict which are out of all proâ€" portion to the power of the people to defray by taxation. If only a minor part of these wasteful disbursements were diverted into channels of rapâ€" prochement, if only an iota of the energy consumed were spent in the propagation of friendly relationship between nations, a lasting peace might have been secured for mankind.â€" Hong Kong Press. * The Drought in Britain The danger of a shortage of water this summer is now a serious if not yet an acute one. If there is normal rain in March, the danger will disapâ€" pear; if March follows January and February in their unprecedented dryâ€" ness, then the situation will be really bad, and it will be too late to do much to meet it.â€"Manchester Guardian. ( _ The number of cars in use is only slightly higher than it was six years ago. The cars themselves are far safer; they are solider, their brakes are better, they stick to the road betâ€" ter, they are easier to keep under conâ€" trol. It is the human element, and it alone, which has failed, â€" Quebeci Chronicle Telegraph. If it were possible to abolish rush hour periods and avoid the necessity of transporting the population of> a goodâ€"sized city from the cutskirts to the downâ€"town section within an hour and a half in the morring and home again in the same period in the evenâ€" ing, the solution would be easy. It might then be possible to realize the ideal both for the passengers and for 'the T.T.C. of & seat for every passenâ€" ger and every seat comfortably nued.j But as long as the s«yâ€"scrapers, office buildings, factories and great stores pour out their thousands on to the streets, all within little more than an hour and all demanding instant transâ€" portation to their destinations, there is bound to be overcrowding. This is true not only of Torcnto, but of every large c‘ty where there is a similar movement of population. â€" Toronto Telegram. 000 more exports than imports in the elapsed ten months of the fiscal year up to the end of January. This favorâ€" able trade balanceis the greatestsingle factor in stabilizing the Canadian dolâ€" lar and supporting the national credit. â€"Winnipegâ€" Tribune. Canada‘s Recovery Canada has regained its pesition as fifth among the great trading nations of the world. In January our foreign trade ‘cas 40 per cent. greate. than in January, 1933. Furthermore, the balâ€" ance of trade is favourableâ€"$125,924,. Heart Disease With so many prominent men dying of heart disease in recent months, parâ€" ticular interest is being shown in exâ€" periments which bave been conducted in Vienna by Dr. Hammerschlag. â€" By taking a new preparation made from the hormone of the subsidiary thyroid gland, it has been found that good reâ€" sults have been obtained in the treatâ€" ment of those suffering from heart ailâ€" ments. The doctor explains the horâ€" mone relieves the cramped conditions of the blood vessels and allows a free passage of the blood through the orâ€" dinary channels. It is claimed the treatment can do no harm, and as it has been proven to do some good, it has drawn much interest from mediâ€" cal practitioners.â€"Border Cities Star. & net registered tonnage of 5,562,717 tons, compared with 800 vessels in 1932 of 5,193,758 tons, an average in 1933 of 263 vessels and 368,959 tons over the previous year.â€"Canada Week by Week, For over 200 years ships have been entering and leaving the port of Queâ€" bec, on the River St. Lawrence, but 1933 was one of the busiest years in the history of the port. ‘The number of vessels docked totaled 1,064 with "Together with the herd which was recently put out on the Chapleau Preâ€" serve they will make a good start in adding the elk to the game animals of this district.â€"Sault Ste. Marie Star. The Driver is Unsafe It Does Not Pay Activity at Oldest Port Rush Hour Crowds THE EMPIRE lication, says. The newspapers carâ€" ried 120,632,000 lines last month and 110,821,000 in January, 19383. Autoâ€" motive advertising led the list. Chicago.â€"Newspapers in 80 cities of the United States gained approxiâ€" mately 10,000,000 lines of advertising in January over the same month a year ago, Advertising Age, trade pubâ€" V POV C V dimaiiy e Alafie s .5 Newspaper Advertising __ _ Increases in U.S. ers and not let them cover his pc;l;; badge on his breast." Chatham, Ont.â€"In force for several decades, rules of the Chatham police force have been revised and will be brought upâ€"toâ€"date by the Police Comâ€" misgion. "There is one regulation that :xould be considered, and that I don‘t together agree with," remarked Magistrate S. B. Arnold. "I states that a constable must trim his whiskâ€" Is a We uT S oo d ce n B The Scout promise, based on an oldâ€" er order of chivalry, is the only true rule of conduct. The Scout Law inculâ€" cates nobility.â€"London Daily Mail, Cockney Pioneers "The best type of sett‘er in the Doâ€" minions comes from the Old Kent Road." ‘This is not idle praise. Cockâ€" ney quickness, adaptability, and obstiâ€" nate, humorous courage supply the stuff of which the finest ploneers are made, and the Cockney is endowed with a resillience, a superb indifferâ€" ence to misfortune, which makes him able to face difficulties and problems which would utterly defeat the apâ€" parently sturdier rustic. â€" London Evening News, i Needs Greater Air Force So it is everywhere. The world is exchanging feet for wings. Britain alone, like a fat goose, waddles along in the old way.â€"London Daily Mail. of which is usually his (suppositious) lack of humour. And the Scot has a large store of tales about Englishmen, based perhaps on a wilful misunderâ€" standing of their character, but which disprove his lack of humour and are not devoid of a piercing wit. There is now no real reason why Scots and English should not understand and appreciate each other, We Scots have much for the English to admire in us, if only they will admire the right thing! And many, if not most of us, have an ~enormous admiratior for our ‘Southern _ neighbors â€" their great achievements, their bulldog tenacity, their literature. Do we not admire most of all thisâ€"that so many Engâ€" lishmen try to prove that they have some Scottish blood in their veins, or even affect that they are Scots!â€"J. A. MacCulloch, in The Spectator (Lonâ€" don). Scots and English The Englishman loves to tell humorâ€" ous stories about tlge Scot, the point the two centres most representative of the need. The increasing difficulty of providing work for ment capable of light tasks only, especially men in adâ€" vancing years, has necessitated a reâ€" view of the position. Cireumstances arisirg from the widespread economic stress have hampered seriously the efforts of these men to find work for thamselves and have equally hindered the endeavours of the Unemployment Board to find work on their behalf. An inevitable eifect has been the embarâ€" rassment of the general scheme of reâ€" lie?, and ihe position should become appreciably defined by removing thus, as far as possible, a number of appliâ€" cants for relieft work that is difficult to provide.â€"Auckland Weekly News, 62. N6 The Dole in New Zealand The decision of the Unemployment Board to grant sustenance without work to elderly men and men of any ago unable through physical disability to perform the class of work offering is an evidently sincere effort to meet a need. As such it is worth trying, in harder we play, the better we work London Sunday Chrontcle. Boy Scouts and Chivalry Jne Regulation He Would Consider John Dodd, shown at the wheel of the fishing smack February 26, after a twoâ€"weeks trip to the fishing bank relate f Colonel Deacon is head of the firm of F. H. Deacon and Co., investment bankers, of Toronto and is identified in various official capacities with inâ€" dustrial and financial institutons of high repute. The agricultural interâ€" ests of Canada have a warm and acâ€" tive friend in the new president, His pride is Glenburn Farms, his magniâ€" fcent country place near Unionville, Ontario. Colonel Deacon has been chairman of the cattle committee of the Exhibition since 1925 and has es tablished a reputation as one of the leading shorthorn breeders of the United States and Canada, He has won premier honors 2t the Canadian 3 Col, F. H. Deacon The election of Colonel Frederick Herbert Deacon to the presidency of the Canadian National Exhibition brings to the chair a gentleman who has contributed a very great deal to this great instituiion and who is eminently fitted to discharge the duties of the very responsible posiâ€" tion for which he has been chosen. Graphoâ€"Analysis helps you to know yourself, and thus enables you to Life‘s prizes go to those who, knowâ€" ing their potentialities, " capitalize them and strengthen them; who, reaiâ€" izing their faults, strive to overcome them. The answers to all these questions can be summed up in a phraseâ€"Know yourself jand others. Or, one word may suficeâ€"Understanding. If you go through life without knowing and understanding yourselfâ€"your faults and your virtues; your merits and your weaknessesâ€"you will be seriousâ€" ly handicapped. _ Do you make friends, and keep them? â€" Or are you living the life of an involuntary recluse, unable to enâ€" joy the society and companionship of real friends? If you are married, are you contentâ€" ed? â€" Or is disquiet creeping â€"in, with perpetual ©bickering between yourself and your life partner? Are you progressing in your work? â€"Or are you dissatisfied; a square peg in a round hole; unable to make any real progress, yet not knowing what to do to change the possibilities of your future? Are you happy? â€" or are you conâ€" tinually frowning at life, with a conâ€" stant chip on your shoulders? "How â€" can Graphoâ€"Analysis help me?"â€"that is the question that readâ€" ers invariably ask when they read my article on the subject of character analysis from handwriting. And it is a natural question. For in these days, perhaps more than any others, the struggle for existence, tor‘ progress, is individualistic. I will enâ€" deavrour to answer the question by first asking others. All rig! (Editor‘s Note: The response to the author‘s invitation to readers to send in a specimen of their handwriting for a pergonal reading has been enormâ€" ous. Readers are referred to the anâ€" nouncement at the foot of this article). What Does Your Handwriting Show? Some Icy Anecdotes shing smack New Bedford, as it docked in New York harbor, fishing banks for mdckerel, had some vivid experiences to TORONTO By GEOFFREY ST. CLAIR (Graphoâ€"Analyst,) } "You say»to an Australian that it is hot and he replies, ‘a nice dry day.‘ â€"You tell a Canadian it is cold in Canâ€" ada and he answers, ‘not so cold as all that.‘ . You mention eamaqnthl‘ to a New Zealander and he replies, | ‘not at all, no earthquakes‘ But ask an Engiishman what sort of climate he has in England, and be amswers Montreal.â€"The difference between the Australian, New Zealand, Canaâ€" dian and British point of view in reâ€" gard to the weather of the respecâ€" tive countries was summed up in the following way by the Rev, Philip Carrington, dead of Bishop‘s College, Lennoxville, when addressing the{ American Women‘s Club here. London.â€"The great British Indusâ€" tries‘ ,Fair, opensl recently, again beat its own record in the space taken for exhibition. A the Olympia and the White City, London, and in the heavy trades section at Birmingham the total indoor frontage alone amâ€" ounted to %2 miles, with nearly 3,000 exhibitors. Canada has taken a fn'r‘ amount of space, some 40 firms being represented in addition to govorn-l mental and railways exhibits. Considerable Variation ’ President Deacon has been a tireâ€" less worker in behalf of junior farmâ€" er and farmerette movements and in all live stock and agricultural deâ€" partments of the Exhibition, _ This, together with his wide financial and industrial experience make him a most valuable head of the highly diversifie "Show Window of the Nations." c | British Fair Fair, and leading United States shows including the International Live Stock Show at Chicago, Miss M.â€"You have a great pride and personal dignity, a retentive memâ€" ory and are very careful about details. You have a considerable regard for your own impor{ance, and are prone to pride yourself on your originality and individuality. . But 1 am afraid that this is perhaps more pretension than actual, and is not entirely sln-‘ cere. I suggest you try to be more your natural self; your friends will like you all the more. Do you want a personal reading of your own writing? The author of this series of articles, a wellâ€"known Graphoâ€" Analyst,. will.. send. you.. a .personal analysis, if you will send a letter in your normal handwriting, in ink, and enclose 10 cent coin and a stamped ‘(M#) addressed envelope. . You will be surprised at the revelations, and may find the door of opportunity opened for you. Address your letter to: Geofâ€" frey St. Clair, Graphoâ€"Analyst, Room 421, 73 Adelaide St. W., Toronto. R. M.â€"You are likely to be impulâ€" sive. You do not consider very long before moving. ‘There is a slight strain of procrastination shownâ€"do not let it grow, Your writing shows a distinct cultural trait; you have a de sire to know things, and to investigate and find out for yourself. I have space for only a few very brief extracts from character readings made recently. And everything you are an can be is summed up in your handwriting, as diagnosed by aun expert graphoâ€"anaâ€" lyst. Handwriting is not merely a matter of putting pen to paper. You have to use your brain in order to write. And the brain is the captain of your body. Everything you do emanates first of all from your brain. Handwriting is only the physical expression of your brain‘s instructions. | s reserved. make the most of your capabilities, whilst at the same time, by pointing out your weaknesses, gives you an opportunity to eradicate them. Shows Progress Shown on Weather Prize Blackâ€"Eye Story of Them All New York.â€"Jacob Bernsweig, 31, tells the prize blackâ€"eye story of then: all. He was picking up firewood along the beach at Rockaway, he reported The announcement stated that they would attend a Scout jamboree in Australia in December in connection with the commemoration of the 100th anniversary of the founding of Melâ€" bourne, and will come home by way of Vancouver. They will visit various centres throughou. Canada on their way back to England, ‘ Ottawa.â€"The visit of Lord and Lady Badenâ€"Powell to Canada this fall has been postponed till April, 1985, it was announced recently by John A. Stiles, chief executive comâ€" missioner of the Boy Scouts Associaâ€" tion for Canuda. Badenâ€"Powell‘s ___ Visit Postponed Net earn $888,9890 s 23,372 _ Note: (x) Includes $149,548, °_ ~+ CHPmMINgs ior the month toâ€" talled $8,070,335 as compared with $7,675,660 in January of last year, a gain of $1,294,674, Operating exâ€" penses increased $7290,057 to $8,081,â€" 846. Included in January expenses were pensions amounting to $149,548. Figures for Jan «ary, this year, as compated with Janvary, 1933, comâ€" pare as follows: Gross earn,. 1934 â€" â€" 1983 Increase $8,970,8335 $7,675,660 $1,294,074 Oper. exp. | x$8,081,846 _ $7,302,288 $ 729057 Net earnings of the Canadian Paâ€" cific Railway for the month of Januâ€" ary totalled $888,989 as compared with $328,372 in the same month of last year, an increase of $565,616, or 174 per cent. ‘ extremely valuable C.P.R. Jan. Net Gains 174 p.c. School was closed one day so that children could join their parents in combing the beach for the material, Expelled from the stomachs of sick whales, ambergris, when purified, is used in the manufacture of rare perâ€" fumes, and because of its rarity is Residents of the area have gather ed between 200 ang 300 pounds of the substance, worth approximately $27 an ounce at present market prices. San Franciscoâ€"A halfâ€"dozen needy families may divide as much as $100,â€" 000 as a result of an analysis which the Examiner says proves that a subâ€" stance picked up on the beach at Bolinas Bay, north of here, is amberâ€" Needy Families Find Fortune on Beach But it turned out to mean that with the drop in these diseases, it was be coming increasingly difficult for nursesâ€"inâ€"training to obtain adequate experience in communicable diseases‘ care, _ It was Miss Elvira Manning, chairman of the Public Health Secâ€" tion, who pointed this out in her presentation of the findings of her committee from answers to a quet-i tionnaire sent to public health nurses all over the districtâ€"but she did say, ‘"There are not enough of them to go round either in Toronto or Hamilton." She also stated that the answers , to the queries had noted insufficient training in pediatrics for the ntudent! nurse who is to do public health work | after graduation. ‘ A surprising statement made at the annual meeting of the Registered Nurses‘ Association of Ontario, was that there was not enough whooping caugh, measles or diphtheria to go around in Toronto. Contagious Diseases Scarce in Toronto He added the percentage of f@male employes in the Ottawa headquarters staff was 22 per cent in the group of 45 years and over; 38 per cent in the 30â€"45 years of age group, and said he ignored the younger ages because in that period staff turnover is rapid "and nowadays the girls always outâ€" number the boys" ,‘ â€"*""The time is coming," said Watson Sellar, comptroller of the Dominion Treasury in an address to the Board of Trade Club, "when women will hold enough of the key positions on the ladder to the executive positions that either the practice will be adoptâ€" ed of going outside of the civil service to recruit men for the senior adminisâ€" trative posts, or else we sink the prejudice now existing against women being placed in charge of major acâ€" tivities. _ As you pay the bills, I leave the decision to you " | w * ARGICO NGV _For Senior Posts | e EP 'utflo:::' ernment," In'm'. 0‘: Sl}'l P f Wny to ¢ government, * 1 En‘l.nd ftel’ i the authority of one of the most‘ A. % Windsor eminent civil servants, Canada will; Visit soon have to go outside the civil 8°â€"; wringsor,. â€" Automobile sales in vice for men to fill big jobs or else | Great Britain have doubled since the tll: women will take u:’“ Wat depression lifted, Edward Dowling, re ‘The time is coming," said “l ;}o: presentative of Leonard Williams and Sellar, comptroller of the u?o“x';"lod Company, Limited, London agents for Treasury in an address to the Bo T; the Canadian Packard car, said in an 9!_'_l‘rlde (:‘l“b-_ ts when _‘ï¬â€™mefl_“_h l interview at Montreal recently. Civil Service May Have to Recruit Men earnings for the $ 565,616 $ 729,057 »2wWiail was registered here recently when aâ€"total for the winter of 121 inches was calculated. The heaviest previous total fall was 118 inches, three years ago. Records have been k’t here for 85 yvears. when a total for the winte inches was calculated. The previous total fall was 118 three years ago. Records h: kept here for 35 years. Aominicheeis w e i0 t . o 4 " Moneton.â€"An allâ€"ti snowfall was registere General Hood u; (Penturyn whose &7 CCCFIAi HooGd in lreland in the 17th century, whose greatâ€"great niece, Miss Mann is. The 12 beautiful shasis of the Flannigan collection were also exâ€" hibited among the antiques, 121 Inches Snowfall For New Brunswick ronto, e One shawl, more than 200 years old, was loaned by Miss E. T. Manr, It ;l? a h?e"l’luey from the family of romance of centuries ago, so lovely that they hav» been treasured careâ€" fully through generat.ons, appeared in the colorful shawi pageant at Our Lady of Perpetual Help church, Toâ€" 1‘TB‘"@.â€" Druige has supplanted poker in the north, according to D. A. Hall, M.L.A,, representing the most north srly constituency in the Saskatâ€" chewan Legislature. His home is somewhere just ouiside the settlement oflacllhue,zoomflunorthof Prince Albert. "Winter nights are long in the north," he said here, "and trappers, traders and priests play bridge. They have time for a 20â€" rubber tournament in one night and get home bfore daylight." ’ Lord Tennyson, grandson of the poet, succeeded to the title on hte death in 1928 of his father, the seoâ€" ond Baron Tennyson. â€" The present Lord Tennyson was born in Novemâ€" ber, 1889. He married in 1918 the Hon. Clarissa Madeline Georgina Fellâ€" city, only sister of Lord Glenconner and niece of the Countess of Oxford and Asquith, The marriage was terminateg by divorce in 1827 in London. They have two children Quit Playiné Poker; .Succ‘:qmb to Bridge Buffalo, N.Y.â€"Announcement bas been made of the engagement of Mrs Joseph W. Douner, of Buffalo, to Major Lionel Hallam, Lord Tennyson, Mrs. Donner, the former Miss Carâ€" roll Elting, is the widow of Joseph W. Donner, of Buffalo, who died in 1929, "‘The women," he said, "ultimately should have a great deal to do with the prevention of cancer in women, and the establishing of preventive measures from the preâ€"natal stage." Engagement of Lord Tennyson Announced rue Paisley Shawl Exhibited in Pageant !ï¬fwric shawls, fragrant with the Discussing the danger of cancer, Dr. Bloodgoog said only 10 percent of mothers have adequate protection because of lack of examination and general knowledge. _ Baltimore,â€"More women are needed in the practice of medicine, Dr, Joseph Colt Bloodgood, eminent ©ancer specialist, told the student body of Goucher College here, "Woman was once considered an inferior, but now that we‘ve educated her she may prove a superior being," Dr. Bloodgood said. Women, he added, have a maternal jnstinct that paturally makes them better fitted for preventive medicine Women Well Fitted To Work in Field of Preventive Medicine ‘However the depression definitely has left Great Britain and optimism is felt everywhere," he added. ; Pointing out that a car which pays a tax of $5 in Ontario pays a tax of $110 in England, Mr. Dowling said this heavy taxation was the cause of peoâ€" ple being prevented from buying autoâ€" mobiles to the same extent as on this side of the Atlantic. A campaign, however, is being waged for reduced luudon, or rather, for taxation on a more equitable basis, it being felt that the age and value of cars should be taken into consideration in assessing taxation. Gasoline, he pointed out, paid 100 per cent. taration in Great Britainâ€" the companies got 6 peace a gallon, the dealers 2 pence, and the governâ€" ‘ment imposed a tax of 8 pence. , "It is quite possible that we shall |go further than the mere assembling 'ot these cars in Canada," Mr. Dowling | said. "There has been some prejuâ€" ‘dlco against American cars, but Canaâ€" dian automobiles are welcome, and | the cars assembled in Windsor get in i under the British preference. The cars are made exclusively for the Briâ€" | tish and Northern Ireland markets." Mr. Dowling is shortly returning to England following an inspection of the plant for assembling cars hbere in Windsor. Sales Go Up â€" for _ Sunday 8 it bim tss utfl. Mar ts t t to the If you val :; don‘t , cutting Ruler‘?" *Man, do : #@ll your life can go to a An En;lij man who 0 his sleep, b family he 4 awake. Lady Libr in the fiction himself wl wounds is glad to hea serious." time? It is but how yor is the age c day dinners Duties are tions. It is gails that car ter business ter men. A| it establisheq mot swell, | them does. *Should I to me*" No man may bring f ties are oft epnterprises. Janetâ€"*V mow that sh Janitorâ€"* your job*" Oflce Bo grandmoth Many a be dishes at h commendati wastes his ! fed with t Cruggists w of what yo better view dgress, but labor under little coâ€"oper preciated by pecked husbt is in his wif "It is a ; hat to a lad This conve ing your b ful habits. it you w and have a bright eyes your nerve; are apt to s ly than per Brushville Repairma your teleph Bubscribe three times to retain th In the A It‘s very . wilfe is jeal when she is Young Ma book ca Be sure The follo ken from If there rong with esset is tha reaso most