‘ca Kn now } L o 4." The coming lightweight chamâ€" pion starts his training early.â€"Van couver Province. The London Times carries an adâ€" vertisement for "strong minded boy of 4 to spend Winter in seaside village with advertiser‘s strong minded boy The fact of the matter is that business men want healthy employâ€" ers. Most colds and practically all attacks of indigestion are due to carelessness. In very few cases is there any excuse for not getting enough sleep. If you want to be a valued worker, focus your attention on keeping fit. You can do it if you wish. Some young people take considerâ€" able credit to themselves for going to work when they are really not fit for it, when they are suffering from bad colds or from indigestion, or lack of sleep. If their employers show no especial gratitude, they are inclined to be resentful. Of course employers are not keen about workâ€" ers who have to have a few days in bed every few weeks, but the workâ€" er who comes to the office half sick every now and then does not stir them to enthusiasm either. y1 "Brother, have you made your peace with God?" Resting on his hoe, the old man drawled : ‘"We ain‘t come to no open break FRIENDLY RELATIONS An old Yankee was in his garden One morning when the town‘s reliâ€" glous zealot, passing by, called: An ounce of keepingâ€"your mouth whut is worth a pound of trying to square yourself. J Girlâ€"You are a fellow who is alâ€" ays equal to any situation, aren‘t Boy Friend â€"Yes, I was born in emergency hospital. Ready for the Bell MacDougalâ€"Well, weel, I thank ye for the advice, and I‘ll no bother ye after all. Good night. He (during argument) â€" For odness ‘sake, let‘s talk sense! She (sweetly) â€" Yes, cents and Infuriated Druggist â€" Five cents worth of bicarbonte of soda for inâ€" digestion at this time of night, when a glass of hot water would have done Just as well! It The three things that make a seedy looking man over are â€"A #whave, A shine; A clean shirt. A TsS Fatherâ€"Well, I guess she is all right for this modern age, but if I‘d brought home a girl like that to my old home and told the folks she was elected to be their daughterâ€"inâ€" law, I am sure they would have run us both out. ¢« a‘r! you Teacherâ€"What was George Washâ€" ington noted for? Pupilâ€"His memory, Teacherâ€"What â€" makes you think bis memory was so great? Pupilâ€"Well, they erected a monuâ€" ment to it, didn‘t they? If you ever took airplane you‘ll adn your life you were and out. ~Â¥V ao we fear the certain tryst ave with death? rhaps ‘twill be more kind and . than aging breath. may be "Better to have loved ost than never to have loved at as the poet says but it is usuâ€" ‘ar more expensive. i‘ an man‘s heart isn‘t related to is stomach why does he drink in a irl‘s beauty, and always act starvâ€" I for love? Santa Claus is who pay~ any at imgs when there Y ou Heard? ealr Keeping Fit Flapper : "Why didn‘t you before 1 undressed? try Constable: "Well, there > law against undressing." entist is puzzled by the scarâ€" gnats and mosquitoes this ar. One theory is that they ¢© cigar containing a pen, a letter opener and nail file. It ved that it is an improveâ€" ver the realistic cigars which osed to contain tobaceo. scason‘s novelties include 1ed the EYE FOR BEAUTY Constable: "Pardon, Miss ng is not allowed in the fear the certain tryst FEAR ius is about the only man ny attention to silk stockâ€" there is nothing in them, nudist colonies. took a ride in a bumpy admit that for once in were glad to be down Nova Scotia Gold Mines Limited have started actual development of their property at Tangier, Nova Scoâ€" tia, In a long distance call, Mr, A, L. Schneider, engineer in charge of opâ€" erations at Tangier, advises that livâ€" Ing quarters for the preliminary staff are completed and that he expects this week to haveg between 40 to 60 men at work constructing the dams for the Hydro Plant He estimated that it will take him 60 to 90 days to do this work and to have the plant in readiness for operations, All generatâ€" ing machinery mill equipment, etc, is already in. In the meanwhile development of the Caribou property of the Company is in the hands of Consolidated Minâ€" ing and Smelting Company of Canâ€" ada, Limited, and is being carried forward under their directions, f THE COD LIVER OIL WiTH thie PLUS vauue For Sale by Your, Druggist Fine soft grey, éu;a-ra;nced all wool blankets, 54"% 72", only $3.15 per pair, C.O.D. pastage exâ€" tra. Extraordinary value. DUKE EQUIPMENT CO. Nova Scotia Gold Start Development Of Tangier Group c 24 ,) j °C fmed everything I knew of to try and get slim, so 1 thought 1 would give Kruschen Salts a trial. 1 started at first +o take half the dose prescribed, in my first cup of tea. Nine months ago, l turned the scale at 196 lbs., and at the time of writing 1 go 178 lbs. 1 feel better than 1 have felt for a long time,"â€" (Mrs.) H. The formula of Kruschen repreâ€" sents the ingre«lient saits of the minâ€" eral waters of those European Spas which have been used by generations of â€" overâ€"stout people to reduce weight. _ Gently, but surely, Krusâ€" chen rids the system of all fatâ€"formâ€" ing food refuse, of all poisons and harmful acids which give rise to rheumatism, headaches, and many other ills. The Bone Building Value of Cod Liver Oil A letter just received from a woâ€" nan states that she is writing â€" in thanks for the benefit she has reâ€" ceived. Hepr letter goes on:â€" "About 12 months ago everybody remarked how fat 1 was getting. 1 turned the scale at 196 lbs. 1 was fed up at getting so fat, and it made me shortâ€"winded. Why they noticed it more was because 1 was getting fat slowly since 1 had an operation for appendix. 1 went back to the hospital, and the doctor said most women get fat alter that operaâ€" tion. 1 had tried everything 1 Iknew of to try and get glim, so 1 thought ! would give Kruschen Salts a t+rial y . _ _ __"O CRCepLIONally active, while there were also gains in mining, shipâ€" ping and trade. On the other hand, manufacturing, steam railway transâ€" portation, building, highway and railâ€" Manufacturer‘s Agents 297 Duke St., Montreal Firms in Quebec showed their enth consecutive monthly | incr This occurred chiefly in log; which was exceptionally active, w there were also gains in mining, : ping and trade. On the other h manufacturing, steam railway t bureau states. For O workers were shown 0 on November 1 by 3,f reporting as compared on October 1. ced recently, in the l Prairie Provinces and tendency was upward. recorded in Ontario an umbia. Ottawa.â€"Emple showed 937,482 ; roll of reporting vember 1, an in« compared with 0 inion Bureau of \ Bureau of Statistics Reports 2,580 More Jobs on November 1 â€" Quebec, Maritimes and Prairie Provinces Record Gains And Became Shortâ€"Winded A total of Strong Bones and Sound Teeth are built of mineral salts in our food. Cod Liver Oil helps our bodies absorb these minerals. Scott‘s Emulsion is doubly effectiveâ€"because it is an Emulsified Cod Liver Oil in a solution of bone building hypophosphites of lime and sodaâ€"PLUS values you receive in Scott‘s Emulsion of Cod Liver Oil. #a After Operation She Grew Fat BLANKETS ! P I- U s ADDITIONAL BONE BUILDING MINERALS reported for Novembe} â€"11 . â€"Employment in â€" Canada 937,482 persons on the pay. reporting employers on Noâ€" 8,978 firms throughout For Ontario, 394,909 shown on the payrolls upward. Losses increase of 2,580 as October 1, the Domâ€" of Statistics an ounâ€" n the Maritime and 3,592 emplbyen ed with 399.166 C. 1088es were and British Colâ€" in _ logging, Quebec â€"the increase °V "SJ0‘ce in the prosperity of anâ€" other is to partake of it."â€"William Austin. There was a further improvement in the situation in the Maritime Provinces on November 1, Most of the gain took place in logging, but manufacturing mainly in vegetable food, iron and steel and electric .curâ€" rent works. _ While mining, railway transportation and building construcâ€" tion were also brisker. On the other] hand, lumber mills, shipping, highâ€" | way and railway construction reâ€" leased employees, the losses on highâ€" way work being most pronounced. Reâ€" turns were received from 629 emâ€" ployers, with 74,415 workers on their| payrolls, or 1,229 more thanat the beginning of October. | , the A further decrease in employment was recorded in British Columbia ; the staffs of the 925 employers furnishing returns aggregated 78,â€" 334, compared with 79,296 in the preâ€" ceding month, The reduction â€" ocâ€" curred almost wholly in manufacturâ€" ing, there being important seasonal losses in food factories, together‘ with a large contraction in iron and steel. Transportation and railway construction also showed a decline. On the other hand, highway construeâ€" tion was decidedly more active. Emâ€" ployment was brisker than on Novemâ€"| ber 1 of last year, when greater | shrinkage had been noted; the 1n-, dex then stood at 84.0, as compared ‘ with 94,1 at the latest date. , FURTHER IMPROVEMENT "To rejoice in the prosperity u. 3. ‘% ET L Coal minirg, logging, manufacturâ€" ing, â€"railway tanrsportation _ and building afforded considerably more employment; on the other hand, comâ€" munications, railway construction, and local transportation and storage showed contractions. The gain in the manufacturing group occurred mainly in animal food and iron and steel plants, The general though moderate expansion in the prairies contrasts favorably with the decline noted on November 1, 1933, when :he’ index was slightly lower, and retail and wholesale tr'ade, but manufacturing as a whole, shipping and railway and highway pulp and baper, textile, chemical and electrlca‘ apparatus divisions were brisker, while vegetabie food, lumber, tobacco and beverage and electric current plants showed losses, ' INTERESTING FIGURES The increase in employment in the Prairie Provinces on November 1 was especially interesting in that it was contrary to the usual seasonal movement indicated in the years since 1920, Return were compfledl‘ from 1,329 firms having 121,460 emâ€"| ployees, as against 120,228 on Oc-l tober 1. There was improvement on Novemâ€" ber 1, 1934, in logging, metallic ore mines, building construction â€" hotels Employment in Ontario showed a seasonal decline, which exceeded the average loss indicated <in the years since 1920. An advance over the preâ€" ceding month had been noted on Noâ€" vember 1 of last year, but the index then was lower by over 12 points than on the date under review, when it was 100.6, ‘ The 2143 coâ€"operating employers enlarged their staffs by 5,338 persons, bringing them to 268,364 on Novemâ€" ber 1. Employment was in greater volume than on the same date in 1933, when general improvement has also been indicated. | ces e c CCC memty . CEEUEE . WWEEHAE steel factories, however, â€"recorded heihtened activity. Within the manufacturing group,. the leather, lumber, vegetable food, puip and paper and textile divisions showed contractions, in some cases of a seasonal character; ijron aand way construction and hotels and resâ€" taurants registered curtailment. SEASONAL ‘DROPS takinga ccount between Smith and Fulton Shaw in the foreclosure action As the hammer went down on -tho last lot, the 50 or so rneighbors turned around in a body and. walked off the One by one they bid in the articles as they wandered about the farm, beâ€" hind Alec Stewart, the bewhiskered bailiff, Horses, farming equipment, pigs, cows and the restâ€"all were knocked down before brisk bidding. â€" Friends Restore Farmer‘s Goods at N.S. Auction Sale A king is the sin of his father; a President isn‘t. A polygon with seven sides is called a hooligan A polygon is a man with more than one wife, but an Englishman is not allowed to be polygon for his wife brings him up for it. A licentiate is an undergraduate who is sent down from his univer. sity for immoral behaviour. Nowadays it is rot so usual for a man to insult a girl‘s mother before he marries her. * Divorce suits are special clothes worn when the wedding is all over. | From a girl‘s essay on the rules | of netball: Girls are divided in two | parts. One lot wear red ribbon and the other nothing at all. There are l two parsons who stand between them. You cannot keep healthy without exercise, but the brain gives the most lasting pleasure and poetry can always be appreciated after the stom ach has ceased to make itself felt. Some people put too much on their bodies until it is too late. Business is a man‘ game and you‘ve got to know that from the start. I intend to be a business magnate. 1 shall probably employ others until I reach the top. After working up you look down. It is quite easy when you know the way. It must have been awful for peoâ€" ple in the time of Pericles to have known nothing about God or Amâ€" erica. An art gallery is a‘place with picâ€" tures, some of them by artists, Infanticide is a powder for killing babies. A manor house is where they teach people manners. They don‘t build them now. influence." "Why has our party ignored this matter?" he asked. "Why has the Young Communist League not carâ€" ried on an active campaign against religion? Why have the trade unions done nothing to combat the growth of religion?" ' If Communist leaders think reliâ€"| gion is a dead issue in the Soviet Union, they are mistaken, said Mr.! Yarovslavsky. "Is religion not a real force when there are 100,000 active churches in Russia, each with an‘ active group of members?" he asks.i "These churches still influence great‘ numbers of our‘ people, and the‘ party mustâ€"endeavor by every pos-l‘ sible means to combat this growing‘ i | CGucal "This is no trifling matter," he ways declared. "Even while on their way are un to the party cleaning, Communist health collective farmers at Grigoripolsk It w have sung ‘God save thy people.‘| rection ‘v Communists and their families have ciated collected money to repair churches. cialize Communists have applied for perâ€"| PRESI mission to join religious organiu-l' "Not tions, and others are openly friendly| made with priests." ‘ ing ins The Moldavian Communist Party, tal â€" m said Mr. Yarovslavsky, has almost' tributic entirely abandoned its antiâ€"religious‘ lems h; campaign. l P , A large number of Communists | were expelled because of active work in religious organizations. In a speech at Tiraspol, Moldavia, Emelyan Yarovslavsky, secretary of , the commission, expressed alarm concerning the religious activities of | Communists. | _ MOSCOW â€" The persistence of religious feeling even among | memâ€" bers of the Russian Communist Party, especially in such remote reâ€" gions as the Moldavian Societ Re-]l public, has been disclosed by the anâ€" nual party "cleaning," in which the: records of all party members are exâ€" amined by the Party Cleaning Com-, mission. Many Religion Grows " Mental Health Among Sovnets' Effects of School Methods on mss 1 _ _Children‘s Personalities To Many Communists Expellcd‘ Be Studied. Ruw Dakl., C« rrâ€"1328° > L .. iny Communists Expelled By Party for Holding to Their Faith ‘ More Howlers ation of the menzalflhe;i-t‘!'l o}v childâ€" ren. C. All exploration to discover practicable methods for the personâ€" ality appraisal of candidates for n‘ APPPAIS W it h ctatnest is L "The program of work will entail such activities as the following: A. A canvass of the experience of educators and rpecialists in child guidunce concerning the types of teachers who have exerted a harmâ€" ful influence upon the mental health 3 "Fortunately, there is a growing ‘| interest on the part of educators in | mental hygiene work and activities. | A number of recognized leaders have recently expressed the opinion that Ieducntion should combine with itl, | cultural aims the objective of con-i | serving mental health. These men are desirous of taking advantage of | psychiatrie knowledge and experiâ€" | ence. l "To facilitate further collaboration | between educators and psychiltrists,’ ’the National Committee for Mental | | Hygiene is embarking upon this project for the integration of mental hygiene with educational activities, TEACHERâ€"TRAINING SURVEY "Initial attention will be devoted | to the basic problem of teacher ]‘ selection and teacher training in} mental hygiene. _ This point of atâ€"| tack is selected because it is at once| urgent from the point of view of education and possible of treatment on the basis of our present knowâ€" ledge of mental hygiene. Concentratâ€"| 1 ion on normal schools and teacherâ€" a training colleges and schools of| i education is indicated because the character, attitudes and equipment of| . the teaching profession are of crucial importance in child training. r sim 02.3 2 8 _ "It can be said that psychiatric studies of maladjustment have reâ€" vealed, in striking fashion, factors in child rearing that have been conâ€" ducive to mental ill health. And from this experience leads are proâ€" vided for the prevention of disabiliâ€" ties by devising ways of avoiding mistakes that have been prevalent in the past. "Unquestionably the time has come when educators and specialists in mental hygiene should collaborate in formulating a program for conseryâ€" ing mental health. | . ‘"We now possess scientific eviâ€" dence to warrant the conclusion , that many mental disabilities have . their origin in childhood and have | been aggravated by conditions and practices in the school and home, |such, for instance, as mishandling of what seemed to be minor behaâ€" vior and. emotional problems; â€" lack of opportunities â€" for â€"the developâ€" ment of avocational interests and skilis; lack of understanding â€" of child nature and the requisites for mental health on the part of guard. ians; _ unwholesome attitudes of teachers and parents, and others. MISTAKES IN REARING C en 30 C n ol e are important in personality develâ€" opment: data that can be used with advantage in formulating prevenâ€" tive programs. 4 " This problem is now to be studied by the committee, especially as it _ applies to the selection and trainâ€" ing of teachers. Funds have been 'supplied for a preliminary year‘s _work ty the Carnegie Corporation. , The investigation has been projected in the belief that coâ€"operation â€" beâ€" tween mental hygiene specialists and ’ educators might bring to light new ways of correcting conditions that are unfavorable to children‘s mental oo e â€"training positif:;xst:x-x:i for t | z_ ,;__ C °‘Q observations by the | National Committee for Mental | Hygiene. As a result, it reports, ’ weaknesses that might be corrected are sometimes aggravated until in , later life they develop into important handicaps or, in extreme cases, into serious ailments. | handled in homes ; according to obs 9 TORONTO personality problems of childâ€" the mental health f 2 f Ideas Unlimited z {______ ; Thirtyâ€"Nine Lee Avenue, Toronto, Ontario Fertilizer Division, Toronto 9 Balt and Alkali Division, ‘Windsor, l. Write For Literature CANADIAN INDUSsTRIES LiMiTED 100% Available and Digestible. Diâ€" calcium phosphate, (bone derived), the wholly digestible, naturally balanced. concentrated calciumâ€"phosphorus salt, combined with other minerals supplyâ€" ing iron, ijodine, sodium and chlorine. The entire mineral portion of bone, specially processed to secure digestiâ€" bility and balanced with other essential minerals. Contains phosphorus, calcium, jodine, sodium, chlorine, jron and sulâ€" phur. ‘Take no risks of mineral deâ€" _ _ Mineral deficiency doesn‘t stick out like & sore thumb to help you recognize ‘lt offhand. Chances are that some aniâ€" mals you own, healthy enough looking but not so good producers, are border line cases. The right minerals are your key to profit right now. Feed one of these C.Iâ€"Lâ€" Mineral Supplements daily to promote thriftiness and productivity. Rich in digestible calcium and _ phosâ€" phorus, and nutritionally balanced, they glve esults with real economy and proâ€" . Câ€"Iâ€"L SOLâ€"MIN 1 STOP LOSSES EDP C EEE hok A _ 4 LE offers exceptional profit possibilities to the wis every indication that next summer will see two mines in the one Company. Without obligatior 'v'f'utï¬ like to give you full information regard rite to: "The national committee is of the belief that a forward step can be made in the improvement of the teaching personnel by devoting first attention to types that are obviously unsuited for the responsibility â€" of F. An attempt to secure the coâ€" operation of several centres in organâ€" izing experimental demonstrations in teacher selection and teacher trainâ€" ing to test the merits of various techniques. ‘ E. A survey of training schools to le; practices in teacher training and to give to the development of programs. pointment and reappointment â€" to teaching positions. J D. An inquiry concerning . the fundamentals in mental hygiene that should be â€"absorbed by teachers in] training. NOVA SCOTIA GOLD MINES LTD Câ€"Iâ€"L NUTRIâ€"MIN (Soluble Minerals ) . LATER STUDIES E. W. Sanderson & Company . PLUG SMOKING ToBaAcco Jb 413 FVey ol representative ols to learn of existing teacher selection and to give encouragement _°~O/° PUSSIDIIMECS 1O the Wise investor, ‘There is t next summer will see two profitable producing ompany. Without obligation on your part, we you full information regarding this Company. Inv“c-o._t_ _ Brokers more effective , Ont. salvage | vesse] Arpione from the sea‘s depths appr: £100,000 worth of copper o Held, in the South of I»»!. rlre You Sluggish ? m m CHFY Hol means of preventing such persons from entering the profession in the future, And it is also our conviction that teachers in training _ would benefit by lectures and demonstrat. ions that would press home princip}â€" es in mental hygiene which should be kept in mind in school work. "Additional activities â€" wou!ld inâ€" clude coâ€"operation with other organ. izations conducting research tha: ;s pertinent to mental hygiene an4 education; the accumulation of data pertaining to the field; and the proâ€" vision of an advisory counseling service concerning . questions â€" of mental *ygiene for educators." Classified AdverTisi teaching and by During the To Throw Of Encr&y-Sleah‘ng Impurities, enjoy a glass or two each week of _ _ Energizing, Effervescent the South of Irc summer, . the Cung research tha; mental hbygiene a» accumulation of da (_levining ways n ing 9 and