younger generation is clearâ€"eyed perâ€" LEARNING TO LIVE We have to live in order to hknow what living is about. Maybe it really doesn‘t make any difference, but it seems we have put too much emphaâ€" sis on the ability of youth to have fresh answers for present troubles. It makes nice nm’in Sunday supâ€" plements but it isn‘t so. ‘The BETTER THAN DITCHES Welcome announcement is mado by &. M. Smith, Deputy Minister of Highâ€" ways, that tenâ€"foot shoulders will be provided along provincial highways, providing safe space for pedestrians and also a track for sleighs in the winter time. Certainly.the shoulders will. be better than the present danâ€" gerously deep ditches in which so many people have been killed.â€"Niaâ€" gara Falls Review Journal. DEAD AND BURIED Now that we are reading again about records in industry and comâ€" merce, we think of old man Depressâ€" ion as gone, dead and buried. Among others, a new high record for power output was established in February when the previous high, in January, was exceeded by 3.6 per cent. Indusâ€" try in the second month of this year was served by over 1,600 million kiloâ€" watt hours.â€"Canadian Business. pro eros and Ove mor AN Tae trips abroad of our hockey teams are not all unprofitable. Other countties are seeing the sort of skates we use,. _ The archaic and traditional skate« of many European countries are apparently giving way before the Canadian brand, for in the last two years there has been a large increase in the export from Canada,. In 1931 Canada sent only 6,001 pairs of skates to Europe, but in 193% the export was 24,418 pairs. t goat on : F1 litc a sleve, but will they attend to t_o e matters*" _ Not much. Not unâ€" til stern necessity takes them by the neck and forces action, and then they will desive service quick and good. Actually we are a funny lot of peoule. â€"Stratford Reaconâ€"Herald. markers and they all wanted to get attended to at once. . . . We do the same thing in a number ol ways, We find out when we zo to light the furnace in the Fall en _ We knew about it months ago, that the grates are warped and brokâ€" but not until there is need for fire do we attend to it. _ People know Farmers, city people, young people, wll people, busy people and people who have little to do; they all huddled into the ofice where one secures car Travel between the United States and Canada is greater than over any other international boundary in the world, according to a return just isâ€" sued by the Canadian Government dealing with the tourist traffic of Canada, During 1933 the number of automobiles from the _ United States which entered Canada for touring purposes was 3,096,8%87. Of these, 2,233,418 were admitted for a poriod not exceeding 24 hours; 863,â€" 136 for a period not exceeding 60 days; and 333 for a period not exâ€" ceeding six months. _ From ‘nformaâ€" tion received from various sources inâ€" eluding _ coâ€"operation with United States officials it is estimated that the average expenditure per car in the 24â€"hour class was $7.68; in the 60â€" day class, $59.80; in the sixâ€"months class, $234.07. _ Total expenditures by visitors by automobile from the United _ States during the year â€" are placed at $77,250,000 in Canadianl funds,â€"Canada Week by Week. Commercial aviation touches the economic interests of the country: in a vital spot,. _ It enters into Canada‘s conviction that this country has rich resources as yet undeveloped, and that development can be speeded up by organized use of air facilities. It enters into Canada‘s wellâ€"founded beâ€" licf that this country has a position of rare strategic value in the planning of world acrial highways, _ Broadly speaking no country in the world stands to gain more from well organâ€" ized and strongly supported commerâ€" cial aviation than this Dominion of Canada.â€"â€"Winnipeg Tribune, rined â€" some â€" degre enities. for an~ I HOCKEY TEAMS ABROAD nere are two old stories about s. ‘The one where two goats met a narrow bridge, but being just a, refused to give cach other the t of way and there they stuck, till i suceeeded in butting its opponâ€" into the stream below. The other y tells of two zouts which had € A FUNNY LOT, HE SAYS GOATS AND AVIATION IN CANADA TOURIST STATISTICS ut a ruffling of feelings. not something valuable for the old schoolâ€"book story ? Chronicle. CANADA V oice of the Press , The Empire and The World at Large zoats, which had ree of â€" civilized HumaAxX$s marketing is ing done by progress will INDIAN AGRICULTURAL STANDARDS Except for cotton, for which there exist the East Indian Cotton Associaâ€" tion standards and the corresponding Karachi and Liverpool standards, most Indian agricultural produce is sold without any systematic and orâ€" ganised grading. Enlarging the agriâ€" cultural wealth of India depends on a number of factors of which improved ks is io en e no Pm mt limit of thirty miles an hour in builtâ€" up area«s, which are ingeniously definâ€" ed as areas provided with street lighting. This provision has few of the disadvantages of the old general speed limit af twenty miles an hour. The old limit was abolished because it could not be enforced. It gave the motorist too much occasion to think the law was an ass and to act accordâ€" ingly on stretches of open road in the country. The new limit will apâ€" peal to the reasonable motorist as itâ€" self reasonableâ€"London Times. | The amendments to the existing law of the road which are embodied in the new Road Traffic Biil cover most of the needs revealed in the rcâ€" cent official analysis of t:e czuses of road accidents. The Bill rightly reâ€" cognizes that all blame for accidents does not fall upon one class of road users, and it proposes a number of changes calculated to make motoring, cycling, and walking all safer. The first main provision affecting motorâ€" ists is the reimposition of a specd Iuctsk ce ar is . 2s E 1 ceptance by them of ninetecnth cenâ€" tury culture. France, torn between Republicanism and Monarchism, Reâ€" ligion and Irrelision, was toss sure of herself, less culturally gnostic, and so less successful.â€"The Earl of Idâ€" desleigh, in The English Review (Lonâ€" don), The Victorian period was the classic age of British lmperialism. Immense new territories were then acâ€" quired; others were settled. Trade vastly increased; Government became effective, and the Crown sicceeded the chartered companies. The Lritâ€" isl. were in that age incomparably tne most successful In perialists T suggest that this was due to the inâ€" herent qualities of the English and Seots than to the more complete acâ€" a world of peace, progress and prosâ€" perity in full swing. It is the crown of the successful man.â€"Y, Y., in the New Statesman and Nation (Lonâ€" don). HIGH HAT The _ most â€"revolutionary things which have happened to masculine dress in the period have been the disâ€" appearance of the frock coat and the decline in popularity of the top hat. A top hat shining in the Jume sun is a very beautiful spectacle, suggesting In many towns tradespeople are ruined because people, perfectly wellâ€" toâ€"do, do not pay their bills for a year or two. That is only a form of theft. _ The man who can pay and does not is on precisely the same level as a man who puts his hands into a till and takes out what he finds there. Such people are common robbers.â€" Dr. Heywood, Bishop of Hul!, quoted in Public Opinion (London). â€"â€"Consider this as a fine type of British Columbia citizenship. A resiâ€" dent of Burnaby inquired of the reâ€" lief department of that district the amount he and his family had drawn since he had become unemployed. The information was duly given to him and he replied: "Thank you! I wish to refund to the municipality the relief afforded my family, as we have come into a little money and are now in a position to repay." It was a bit of a shock for the relief officer; but we are told that he promptly ralâ€" lied and gave the man a receipt for the full amount which he returned to the public fund,â€"Victoria Times. We can‘t get back to it, and if we could we should probably think twice about it. But at this distance it has a sort of halcyon look, It is misty with enchantment, because it was a time when the problems which beset us now were still below the horizon.â€" Woodstcck Sentinelâ€"Review. Nobody dreamed of talking across the continent by telephone, much less with Europe; aviation was in the visâ€" ionary stage, health regulations were comparatively sketchy and we disposâ€" ed of our own garbage. In short, it was a simpler age, and contained less to worry about. There were few traffic jams, no radio crooners, nobody thought of resetricting production of any sort whatever, and if a dollar a day was a good wage for a workman, at least he was allowed to run his own affairs without so much official interference as governments impose today. laps, but when it gets a few cinders in its opticsâ€"which is experienceâ€" it will learn the wisdom of blinking and when it learns that it will have ceased to be a younger generation.â€" Lindsay Post, VICTORIA‘S GOLDEN AGE NEW TRAFFIC LAws GOOD CITIZENSHIP ON PAYING BILLS FORTY YEARS AGO only one. Much is beâ€" scientific research, but not be achieved solely _A beneve in home rule, but 1 also believe in good governments."â€"Samâ€" uel Seabury. Prof. Sandiford thought the old‘ pioâ€" neers didn‘t have much in the way of entertainmenrt, so they just to!ld fantastic stories. Commenting on the recent Sault Ste. Marie Hackle club‘s Ananias competition, which was won, lying up, by Alex. Dorou, Professor Sanâ€" diford stated such competitions were frequent sources of entertainment among pioneers. "Humorous â€" exaggeratior is typiâ€" cal of this continent," declared the professor, instancing the yarns of the horseâ€"swapper, David Ha‘rum. Frof Sundifawm} Fnanaks 412 cujf "1. beotuioismam s t hedc t : d 11 114 to some of the sturdy pioneers who sat round camp fires and told tales when they weren‘t busy carving out an empire or two. Toronto. â€" Inhabitants of this continent are bigger liars than peoâ€" ple from older countries, in the opâ€" Sutil C# y 0k se _ 120 F mt n neaens 220 > ied inion of Prof. Peter Sandiford, eduâ€" cational psychology expert at the Ontario College of Education, who thinks Ananias, the lying _ Greek must surrender his mendacity title [ _ Cl . "Ves «uce 0S nen an effect similar to thoaflmiii'nvrâ€"â€"}-’;i.e? stinian Dead Sea by bituminous deâ€" posits. a Prof. Gardiner expressed the opinâ€" ion that the lack of life in the depths may be laid to the petroleum which has been seeping into the ocean from the land through the agesâ€"producing It is far down in the ocean between Arabia and India. To depths of from 50 to 100 feet below the surface the waters teem with marine life. Below those levels life does not exist. The discovery is due to the reâ€" search of the expedition financed by m neemiet San s on Sm o the late Sir John Murray. The comâ€" mander sent a fresh report to Profâ€" Stanley â€" Gardiner, expedition â€" seeâ€" retary. Cambridge, Eng.â€"Another "dea‘ sea" has been discoveredâ€"one which, unlike that in Palestine, is not open to the sky and in whose musky â€" and mysterious depths â€" moves no living thing. Is From 50 to 100 Feeet Beâ€" low the Surface Between Arabia and India. "I believe in home rule New Perhaps we should be thankful for what foreigners most criticise in us. The Briton is accused of being too rational, too unimaginative, too unreâ€" sponsive. Foreigners find him rather a dull fellow. But if volatility, temâ€" perament, and imagination find exâ€" pression, in the hour of crisis, in desâ€" truction and disorder, the Briton may thank his stars for his dullness. To put i. differently, he may thank his common sense. Surely the greatest triumph of common sense is to be found in the policy of Great Britain. Here is a country to which other naâ€" tions still look for the preservation of world peace, and to which Britons may still look as a rallying ground of civil liberty. It is not too much to hope that in the continuance of this: policy lies the brightest hope of the: future.â€"The Australasian, ‘ by concentrating upon it, Improveâ€" ments in production and in marketâ€" ing must go hand in hand.â€"Times of India. ioneers Best Liars Declares Professor A]l the way from Vancouver, with their husbands, to jobs in Newark, New Jersey, came these two ladies, Mrs. Frank Connors, left, and Mrs. Alex. Simpson, right. The two couples were arrested recently in Sudbury, -éii;rigve-a \-v.i?j;"ste;l'i.;g';i‘ée;v;;.;;a{;l;.;n;i“gi\'en 10 days, The ladies are seen just after their release from jail. BLESSED COMMON SENSE Has Been Found Down in Ocean Members of the school will be acâ€" commodated in Wadbam and Oriel Colleges and elsewhere. Speakers will include three British cabinet ministersâ€"Sir Philip Cunliffeâ€" Lister, Walter Elliot and Mr. Ormsby. Gore; Malcolm MacDonald, Underâ€" Secretary for Dominion Affairs; Earl Peel, the High Commissioner for Ausâ€" tralia; John Buchan, M, Andre Siegâ€" fried, wellâ€"known French â€" writer â€" on British administration, and Air Comâ€" modore _ Fellowes,. who fiew ~over Mount Everest. I LONDON, Eng.â€" Emp‘re summer schools under the auspices of the Royal Empire Society, which last year attracted many from overseas, will be held at Oxford this year, July 21â€"28. Oxford to House Empire Students July 21â€"28 Earlâ€" Stanhope concluded:; "Ths League of Nations was conceived to prevent war rather thap to make war." Objections were posed on behalf of the government by Earl Stanhope, who pointed out the time was now Underâ€"Secretary of the Foreign Office, opportune for the realization of such a plan, a number of the larger na tions being unrepresented in the League of Nations. He termed the‘ League the only body that could conâ€" trol such a policeâ€"force army. ‘ Proposed by Lord Davies as one way of approaching the disarmament question, the suggestion was taken up by Viscount Cecil of Chelwood, who said the only moral use of, force in international affairs would be through an international police force. f LONDON, Eng.â€"An international police force for the puniszment of any belligerent nation was discussed recently in the House of Commons. The breach between the exhibiâ€" tors and producers widened when speakers said they were "being fed apple sauce in the land of ‘citrus fruit." _ They referred to a defense of the producers, made by Louis B. Mayer, in which the exhibitors‘ charges that â€" presentâ€"day pictures were indecent and immoral were deâ€" nied. Punishment o f _ Warlike Nations Discussed In House of Lords World Police Force Talked The owners took under considâ€" eration a plan to appoint a commitâ€" tee to meet here with the makers of lfims in an effort to eliminate misâ€" understandings. The resolution said "wise cracks and sex angles" were resulting in decreased box office receipts. It will be acted upon soon with another resolution assailing "block booking," the practice by which theatre owners buy sight unseen the studios‘ season supply of feature pictures. motion pictures were condemned in a resolution introduced before the American Theatre Owners‘ Associaâ€" tion. American â€" Theatre Owners Say *"Sex Angles" Cut _â€"__â€" Box Receipts _ _ "Indecencies" Hollywood, ONTARIO ARC TORONTO This Year Condemned School "Indecencies‘ in "Every novel effect has been tried," said Rudy Vallee. Individuality in inâ€" strumentation, in his opinion, will be the keynote of popular dance orchesâ€" tras in the next few years. "Popular music from now on must be played properly," said Phil Harris. "Bands will be composed of qualified musicians, men who could play what we call ‘long haired‘ music if necesâ€" sary." s Explaining he is just a fiddler and not a prophet, Paul Whiteman placed the future of jazz on the doorstep of American composers. ‘"They must write something imâ€" portant," said the genial Whiteman, "before we can play it." ed George Olsen. "People, I think, are returning to waltzes in Viennese temâ€" po. Something like old gypsy songs with light and dark shades. "Repeal is having a wemendous efâ€" fec: on our popular music," commentâ€" New Yornâ€"More like music, less like noiseâ€"that is the future of jazz as envisaged today by four widely known orchestr.. leaders. Vallee, Whiteman, Olsen and Harris See New Trend The cost, stated Dr. Robb, was in the neighborhod of $4,000 per month. "‘That," said he, "is s.ight compared with the amount of work that is beâ€" ing done, and it has been made posâ€" sible by the splendid assistance which the dental profession is extending to the government. in conneclion with this policy." 7 Popular Music Taste Ch: ’ "Originally," stated Dr. Robb," it was felt that the urgent dental reâ€" quirements of the people in the rural and semiâ€"urban sections of the provâ€" ince should be taken care of and that this shotld be done through the practicing dental profession. The dentists in the areas concerned coâ€" operated remarkably well with the department in this effort, and so well was the work handled through the advisory commitee of dentists that we appointed for the purpose, that it ‘was not long before the scheme could be extended to include all the smaller cities of the province. l "The extension we announce makes: i. possible for every person in Ontâ€" ario who it on relief to have dental service for extractions, for the relief o pain, and for repair of dentures." ister of Health and Labor, that the scheme for emergent dental service, by which the citizens of Ontario on relief have their immediate and urgent dental needs attended to, is being extended to include the cities of Toronto, Hamilton, Ottawa and Lonâ€" don. * Torontoâ€"Announcement has been made by Hon. Dr. J. M. Robb, Minâ€" Larger Area Included in Govâ€" ernment Plan, Dr. Robb States. Extend Dental It is a gala day when the master of the house sends out a wedding gift. The recipient must pay the bearer 10 per cent. of the estimated value of what he receives, if the tip is small, the servant reports to his master, and the master will be deeply offended at the implication that he sent a cheap present. | At most Mah Jongh parties a speâ€" cial ash tray is prominently displayed into which the winner of each game is supposed to put 10 per cent. of his winnings. The host or hostess will first take enough money from the ash tray to pay for the cigarettes and sweetâ€"meats consumed, and wil} then hand the rest to the "No. 1 Boy" for distribution _ amongst tbo‘ servants. At lavish feasts the guests are supâ€" posed to tip from $2 to $20, the money being handed either to the master or mistress of the house for distribution amongst the staff of servants. Chinese hosts make a habit of sending their own rickshaws, carriages or automobiles for their guests, and the guests are supposed to hand rather lavish tips to the rickshaw puller, the coachman or the chauffeur, The Chinese habit of tipping lavish. ly accounts for the difference in the wage scale. No guest in a Chinese home ever thinks of leaving without banding out a "cumshaw" or tipâ€" the money usually being wrapped in red paper for good luck. ; SHANGHAI, Chinaâ€"An investiga tion of social usages in Shangbai reâ€" veals the fact that even wealthy Chinese families pay their servants only oneâ€"third or even oneâ€"fourth of the wages paid by the average foreign family. A Chinese family, for inâ€" stance, will pay only $12% a month for a good cook, but a foreign tnmlly} will pay from $30 to $45. Difference in Wages Paid Servants is Made up by Lavish "Cumshaw" System in China Paid to apparently has read about the cat that adopted the rat. ‘The cow at Lefler‘s farm in Waterford had a calf. But bossy wasn‘t satisfied with such a small family, so adopted a twoâ€"weeksâ€"old pig, and is feeding both of them without any fuss, Monkey fur is to be used extensively for tailored and evening ensembles, Lk acals 4‘ B C ol y Mme omeen hat trimmings and accessories The Ottawa agreements generally, as with Canada, are for a period of five years, expiring in 1937, but so far as meat is concerned the agreement with Australia expires at the end of nert June, while the dairy products agreement runs out next year, Stanley Bruce, Australian high comâ€" missioner, it was thought, would likeâ€" ly play an important role in the coming discussions in laying the foundation for the wider negotiations that will be necessary when the main Ottawa pacts run out, LONDON, Eng.â€"Negotiations shortâ€" ly between the British and Auitralian governments regarding expiring porâ€" tions of the trade agreement signed at Ottawa may concelvably have &n important bearing on future discusâ€" sions with other Dominions. Besides her father, husband and daughter Jane, she is survived by one stepâ€"brother, Rev. B. H. Penwarden, Kennetcook, N.S., and three stepâ€"sisâ€" ters: Mrs, George Chase, Saint John; Mrs. C. Hatt, Windsor, N.S.; Mrs. W. Van Blanco, Weehawken, New Jersey. Bmtf_ord_â€"Wilhrd Lefler‘s Thurston spoke with his daughter for a moment and then informed the theatre manager that they would not cancel _ the show. _ They carried through to the finish. In a recent issue of a leading Amâ€" erican magazine, the man of mystery attributed the major share of his sucâ€" cess to his wife. During a visit to her father here last November, her 23rd wedding anniversary was celebrated. Radiantly happy on that day after talkâ€" ing by telephone to husband and daughter then in Toronto, she said that in all their married life they had never exchanged a cross word. ‘ Thurston and company had just beâ€" gun the first of two night shows, when the magician received word that his wife bhad died. Struck by an automobile in New York several years ago, Mrs. Thursâ€" ton never completely recovered, For And yet the road is ours as never theirs; It is one gift on us alone beâ€" The safe, smooth journey and the certain goalâ€" Yea, birthright in the land of covâ€" enant ; For us dayâ€"labour, travail of the soul. For 20 years she was stage direcâ€" tor and handled a large portion of the business affairs of the "great Thurs ton." Accompanying her husband on all his national and international tours, Mrs. Thurston has been three times around the world and has seen him perform before monarchs and chief administrators of several nations, For them the shade of trees that now we plant, A sorrowing father, George Hawes, well known, rotired railway man, mourns her passing here. She attendâ€" ed a finishing school in New England and was a stage director in New York before she married the magiâ€" cian at the age of 23. For us the heat by day, the cold by night, | The inchâ€"slow progress and the heavy load, And death at last so close the long, grim fight With man and beast and stone; for them the road. Upholding one of the finest tradiâ€" tions of the stageâ€""The show must go on"â€"her husband and daughter Jane carried out their performance in a New York theatre although they knew the third member of "Thursâ€" ton and company‘" had left them forâ€" ever. ‘ We shall not travel by the road we make; Ere day by day the sound of many feet Is heard upon the stones that now we break, We shall be come to where the cross roads meet. A native of this town, she was at one time a choir singer in St. James Anglican Church. At the age of 16 she left to begin a stage career ln‘ the United States. ‘ Kentville, N.S.â€"The final curtain has rung down for Nina Hawes Thurâ€" ston, wife of Howard Thurston, inâ€" ternationally famous magician. Late Mrs. Howard Thurston Was a Native of Kentville, Nova Scotia Trade Agreements stowed ! r us the joy of joys, O pionecrs; We shall not travel, but we make the road! â€"â€"V, H. Friedlander Cow Adopts Pig lagician‘s Wife Takes Last Curtain "There is on‘ly one way by whick we can avoid being the s‘ave of events and that is to be their master."â€"Sir Arthur Salter. tors. Mr. Hoover gets nine columns ln.th 19383 Index for two months in the White House. Even the last two months of a defeated President were good for about 120,000 words of news in the Times.â€"New York. Time«. holds. Presidents of the United lumm not overlooked by news ediâ€" It seems altogether probable tha Mr. Roosevelt‘s prominence in the news is chiefly due to the ofice be Last year the New York Times printed 1,000,000 words about Presiâ€" dent Roosevelt, So one gathers from the interesting note about the 1938 Times Index on the last page of toâ€" day‘s Special Features Section. Thore are 6,000 columns in the Index. A quarter of a million references give the gist of 72,000,000 worda in the 365 daily issues of the Times for last year. President Roosevelt gets eightyâ€" one columns of references in tha‘ Index. In that way we arrive a; the Times itself Presidents Are _ Not Overlooked The Russian Government has just launched a fiveyear plan to train a million skilled pilots. Italy is subsidizing her commercial air lines to the extent of more than 1.500,009 lbs. sterling every year. There are already 13,000 qualified glider _ pilots in â€" Germanyâ€"apart from 4,500 civil pilots, In Germany, where military air planes are forbidden, the population is being trained as pilots, She is planning to build 1,00 new aerodromesâ€"400 at home and 600 in her colonies. France has 4,500 civil and military pilots. The gravity of the situation is ac.â€" centuated by the ease with which large commercial aircraft can be conâ€" verted into bombers. The rest are spread over the Em pire. MERIY »ecuusse ahourdk Snirabinntsnnt & snsisess L,/ROD ENE 4. sircromogpmmacisiny grasirmes TBD m SNEMNN . n cesc mennnnnin deaviciry i onnncnes . TB Only 420 of Britain‘s 750 firstdine airplanes, including the Army wing and the fling boats, are available fo: national defence. Today the number of fArstâ€"line air planes in the air forces of the six great world Powers, excluding Gerâ€" many, is as follows: ENNNE ....2. olsn eeccnacs nulsie‘s ol 3 BU0 If the Government is forced to carry out its pledge Britain will be compelled to build another 1500 a&irâ€" planes to reach parity, even if Prance did not add a single machine to hber total. France, our nearest nelghbor, has the strongest air force in the world. She has 3,000 airplanes ready for war. Britain has only 1,500, Soviet Has Tremendous Air Plan â€" Britain is 1,500 ‘*Planes Short LONDONXâ€"What will it mean to Britain if the Government is compeliâ€" ed by a failure of the disarmament talks to carry out its new pledge to build an air force equal to the strongâ€" est air force in Europe* Following them came the German Dutch, the nationalities of the British Isles and then the Germans direct. Russia to Have "In fact," said the speaker, "their influence has almost been too predomâ€" inant in our history." Important is the fact that original settlers of Ontario came from other parts of North America, said Dr. Sage. After the Indians came the Frenchâ€"Canadians, and then the Unitâ€" ed Empire Loyalists, after 1783, whose background "it should not be forgotâ€" ten, is American," and who played a tremendous part in early Canadian events. _ The speaker said early Ontario had its bankers and manufacturers all of whom played a part, Profoundly inâ€" fluencing Ontario history was the un. usual shape of the international bounâ€" dary dividing the province from the United ‘States, its crooked "V" bounâ€" dary line being like a wedge driven Into the heart of the middle states, Climatic conditions, too, have strongâ€" ly influenced the development of the pioneers. "Canadians are, in truth," said Dr. Sage, "a survival of the At. test. The others have died or went south of the line," â€" Old hardwood forts dominate Onâ€" tario history and the real builders of the province were the pioneers who could adapt themselves and actually build, said Prof. Walter N. Sage of the University of British Columbia, addressing the Vancouver Woman‘s Canadian Club on "Builders of Old Ontario." Pioneer Canadians Strong and Sturdy |_ Original Settlers of Possible Bombers 1,000,000 words in the 1,000,000 Pilots 1,100 1,100 150 of N uk 4 * vim idenuhcation. The system is alsc ®ther Canadian h :einting is an ofsho« rtillon methad o In the case of babic ®©btain good fool in ï¬nta of sach ::t hospital rec mother, maskatoon ties are runnin identities of n« qnstitution, _E footâ€"printed mother‘s side, tiv: identificat Babies Foot Bome fellow are worth mu an their hands Doth heartles My wife eyes w Another face Bhe foels the b« __While jealous If people w war and plan makers wou other line o Neighborâ€" Wt your son study t at college? Fatherâ€"I‘m c undertaker out o Just the : & woman‘s woman‘s ha Jun two n can you « Bible to & have two a lif. tha B1CK e thr My r a&nd young fell about a g mbout a c nca ta marmriages Daddv rous began tha hollered it and if I wa be 50 cent His Mo darling? Give a stubb he will credit y lent judgment. Little Junior tist‘s)â€"The d began that if I hollered it wou Bo live that peep out of the collector is at t A philathrop erosity is prais he couldn‘t tak Minister (sy how long ago Elderly dead. He was Elderly Ladj will excuse but when 1 pray last Su me of my brot me, that 1 fel with you. H such a wondor? A minister elderly lady: With the a m mother thin entirely new | () Tomâ€"Do y flirting? A Joeâ€"1 tho J tried my sy Betty eats spinach KFrom a herd browse RBetty is ba with V But there‘s n alphabet her hat. Grandma ar Brush Dir Heard? porch wiTCr Imé nior me IIs at other val is the « ne o ro The Be 1( H ha