For running through stop signs red lights, six motorists were fir one dollar in city police court I called because it rate of about 60 wheels. â€" Queb graph. s Library boards may hesit; elude on their shelves novel. with certain problems of or sex where the individua of wider taste is quite ready such presentation. But su garity is inexcusable in a claiming literary merit. In : run it is doubtful if either or publishers will benefit b filthy words or vulgar exp They certainly add nothing virility of narrative while t decidedly offensive to tens 01 UHAGS > Of C FEROOKS ... t Fmeanmil "zo _ C oCmemg T% ~Anecl â€" D€ admitted it is q profitable trangac tion. An Englishman recently made & nice profit on two pictures, He picked them up for $50 from the estate of two old maids, shortly af. ter their death. Two weeks later he sold them for $50,000. _ of course one doesn‘t find a great master ey. ery day.â€"Le Soleil, Quebec. Three Swiss stamy have just been sold i $7,000 apiece. When : size, the weight, the duction of the.skamn General Johnson says the NRA & as dead as a dodo and while this scems to be a preity strong stateâ€" ment on the part of the former adâ€" ministrator, some convincing figures re‘eased at Washington would indiâ€" cate that it has not done much in the way of wider distribution of tho[ nation‘s weal.h. The figures show that in 1933 the number of persons who received incomes of less than $25,000 dropped below the 1932 level, but the number and totai inâ€" come in the classes from $25,000 upâ€" wards increased. Those receiving inâ€" comes of $1,000,000 or more inâ€" creased from 20 to 46.â€"Border Cities Star. ie within several thousand years. Enâ€" gincers express the opinion, neverâ€" theless, that protectvie work should be undertaken at an early date in order to avoid much heavier expendiâ€" tures later on. The plan that seems to have the most support is one whereby artificial weirs would be cons ructed on the river bed above the falls to divert the flow of water more evenly over the brink.â€"Woodâ€" stock Sentinelâ€" Ravicuw Of course, it is not that complete destruction « Agara Falls could be acc even by a much faster erosion than is now within several thousand y gincers express the opiniot theless, that protectvie wao» Many a man won‘t join a church because there are hypocrites in it, He remains outside where there are more hypocritesâ€"Niagara Falls Reâ€" view. VULGARITY in BOOKS$ that a mosquito extermination proâ€" ject in the Bronx is still in progress and that it has 95 supervisors to 91 laborers. _ At this time of year, we suppose, it would take more men to find the mosquitoes than to exterâ€" minate _ themâ€"Kingston Whig\-l Standard. PRESERVATION or NIAGARA FALLS Now and again adventurous souls have crossed the frontier into Can ada carrying their gangster devices north of the boundary Fortunately they found themselves facing a difâ€" ferent set of conditions and discovâ€" ered that Canadian soil was not an exactly healthy place in which to ‘ ply their trade. Long may it conâ€" tinue so.â€"Halifax Chronicle. | readers.â€"Edmonton Cw OCRECCCTY UP IHe their shelves novels dealing tain problems of morality have aL. ol Â¥. D PERHAPS MORE MILLIONAIRES New York aldermen have learned MOSQUITO EXTERMINATION ntinel Review wiss stamps dated 1843 been sold in England for ce. When you figure the weight, the cost of proâ€" the stamps, it must be is a profitable transacâ€" nglishman recently made fit on two pictures, He n up for $50 from the wo old maids, shortly lf-‘ ath. Two weeks later he FAT PRICES _classes from $25,000 upâ€" ased. Those receiving inâ€" $1,000,000 or more inâ€" om 20 to 46.â€"Border the individual reader is quite ready to read mernt. in the long il if either writers 1 benefit by using vulgar expressions. gencration is 5o is passing at the miles an hour on c Chronicleâ€"Teleâ€" FINES merit. In the may hesitate to in ‘ nothing to the > while they are to tens of thousâ€" HYOCRITES it is not suggested destruction of the Niâ€" But surely vulâ€" any ~book fined For accomplished Jourâ€" or apparent, °> «nnual exodus from the icy nort the sunny southland will find lovely Mrs, Bowles Volhard of Roanoke, Va., on har Beach â€" Sha‘s wifa af hand a# l:zv...‘.._-- of _ The results of periment with a . not particulariy garded as so n while during the Thursday 8.85 », Dr. Dafoe has been recommendâ€" ed for the Nobel Medical Prize in recognition of his care of the Dionne quintuplets. It is also rumored that the Callander doctor is likely to be included in the list of recommenda-‘ tions for the King‘s New Year‘s honâ€" ors. The Order of the Bath, nol doubt.~Chesley Enterprise. Mussolini has declar mosquitoâ€"but this is warfare which arouses al.lâ€"Ottawa Journal. As annual exodus ssm m ede are urged as a way out of the deâ€" pression, but a friend protests: "I get my vegetables at an Italian‘s, my meals at a Greek‘s, my shoes at a Russian‘s, my shoes are repaired by a guy from Czechoslovakia, my laundyman is a Chinese, and I forâ€" get the others, so how in the name of the League of Nations am I to do more business with foreigners?" ' â€"Hamil:on Spectator, FIVE. ing TRADE WITH FOREICGNERS More purchases from Of APPROVED CENT FARE FAILURE BASIC CONSERVvATISM DR. DAFOE of the e week which e per cent. more ° fhe first week‘s ex. _ bâ€"cent car fare are y encouraging, re. much statistics, for s care of the Dionne also rumored that ctor is likely to be ist of recommendaâ€" z‘s New Year‘s honâ€" of the Bath, no Enterprise, declared WARFARE 4 AILURE Yesterday an engine d a lorry at a level crossing st week‘s exâ€" | were killed and many inj car fare are | the level crossing. And d uraging, reâ€" ly. It belongs to a past a tatistics, for cumbersome. It wastes time which ended | out nerves. And it is not . CS anl. CA C it an Italian‘s, ‘s, my shoes at s are repaired hoslovakia, my d war on the one form of only approvâ€" , and 1 forâ€" in the name ns am I to foreigners?" foreigners pas | â€"London Daily north gets under way, visitors to Mrs. John Jay O‘Brien, nee Anita haan 't'o greet arrivals in Miami But there is more in the air race to Australia than just daring. Our Empire our once farâ€"flung Empire, is drawing physically closer toâ€" gether every day. Already the air has made it a far more compact and _ accessible continent _ than America was when the Union was‘ founded.â€"London Sunday Referee, EXâ€"KAISER‘S WEALTH Exiled monarchs have not always fared so badly as the exâ€"King of Spain. The three richest are reputed to be the exâ€"Kaiser, exâ€"King Ferdinâ€" and of Bulgaria and the Duc de Guise, the French pretender. _ The exâ€"Kaiser is still the richest land owner in Gemany. His landed wealth there represents between 20,000,000 lbs. and 25,000,000 1bs.â€"From the London Daily Telegraph. The death is announced of Miss Julia Hansad, aged 96, who was a greatâ€"greatâ€"granddaughter of Luke Hansard (1752â€"1828), printer from 1774 umtil his death on the "Jourâ€" nals of the House of Commons," ILuke Hansard‘s son, Thomas Cur son Hansard (1776â€"1833) started a press of his own in Paternosterâ€" row, and in 1803 began to print the "Parliamentary Debates," which are still known as "Hansard," though that name has not now appeared on the imprint for 43 years.â€"From the London Daily Telegraph.) sengers were carried than in the corâ€" responding week of last year the revenue was 12.81 per cent. less.â€" Calgary Albertan, LEVEL CROSSINGS ORIGIN OF HANSARD THE EMPIRE THE EMPIRE Eoo s uen «4 28 It wastes time, It wears nd it is not even safe. ly Express, The harnessing of the town at the site of the Cr many injured. End . And do it quickâ€" a past age. It is engine dashed i ARIO ARCHIVEsS TORONTO The greatest value increases this year as compared with last year were shown for the grains and fodder, off. set to some extent by a sharp decline in potatoes and a lesser decline in sugar beets, $ The greatest value increases this year as compared with last year were shown for the grains and fodder, offâ€" set to some extent by a sharp decline in potatoes and a lesser decine in suâ€" gar beets, ‘It tae prevailing prices are mainâ€" tained through the balance of the marketing season, the estimated vaâ€" lue of field crops grown in 1934 will be the highest since 1930. This is a men into 440 The estimated value for the four, 2. years previous follow: 1930, $662,040, | imp 900; 1931, $435,966,400; 1932, $452, | eraj 526,900; 1933, $423,597,000. & ng of the Columbia, turbulent river of the Grand Coulee reclamation da ’ Ottawa, â€" The value of Canada‘s field crops for 1934 was estimated by the Dominion Bureau of Statistics in a crop report issued at $536,498,600, This is $112,901,600 aver the 1933 va luations. It is the largest value since 1930. Field Crops Dortumun, Germanyâ€"Eightyâ€"two persons have been sentenced to terms ranging from one years in jail to six years‘ solitary confinement when convicted of plotting against the security of the state. [ Incidentally, every mature woman should see a physician once a year. If you have minor skin eruptions, chronic muddishness, puffs under the eyes or an unusually tired, drawn look, a doctor undoubtedly can do more for you than any amount of. creams and lotions, applied exter-‘ nally, Watch yiur diet. Don‘t become a fanatic on the subject, but do try to curb your craving for sweets and other fattening items. Ask your doctor to give you a list of foods that are necessary to your general health, include them in your daily diet and then eat sparingly â€" of things you like but which aren‘t parâ€" ticularly beneficial or which tend to make you gain. ty mark, she must pay special atâ€" tention‘ to her figure. The old ounce â€" of â€" prevention â€" is â€" worth a â€" pound â€" of â€" cure rule certainly applies where weight is concerned. It is much easier to keep from gainâ€" ing surplus pounds than to lasel‘ them. Health authorities everywhere are convinced that if both the public and the doctors can be educated to recogâ€" nize and deal with the first danger signals of cancer, and if the public can be safeguarded from quack remâ€" edies, the death rate from this parâ€". ticular cause can be appreciably reâ€"| duced.â€"Queber Chronicleâ€"Telegraph. l Six The Director of the. New York City Cancer Institute is quoted as having remarked lately that fully forty percent. of the cases »â€" > beâ€" ing cared for as hopeless, need not have been so if the patients had sought aid from the proper sources ‘ early enough. Once a woman has pased the thir to P Sduphe) d Mss 1 4t 4d them fail to seek medical treatment in timeâ€"and thus their fear as to cancer‘s incuubiliï¬y becomes a fact. cer is that people have been thoroughly persuaded that it is 1 ly incurable. In that belief greatly fearing the malady, mar them fall "Ly sock. L mmaBaninkwont $‘ One of Catch Cancer Early _the chigf dangers of 66 Thirty hi * Newca.sfle.on"!‘yne, Eng. â€" Signs ’of improved trad are evident in Tyneâ€" side, one of Britain‘s derelict areas, f Canada‘s | FMor the first eight months of 1934 timated bYy . there is a 40 per coapt improvement tatistics in ‘ over the corresponding period of 1933 5$36,498,600, ‘ saiq official figures submitted to the e 1933 vaâ€" River Tyne Commission: alue since| 1. ap increase in coal exports of 1,000,000 tons, the four| 2. An increase of 217,000 tons ml , $662,040, | imports of raw materials and genâ€" ’32. 3452.- APBY wesauakac Bs c that belief and 99 er of the nor thwest, gets under way as workmen construct "Mason City" contract» dam and pow er project in Washington. »° eral merchandise, _ 3. A decrease from $ | number of shins Ivin the past four P‘0jment ligures in every quarter since the end of 1932. In marine en. gineering there are more men workâ€" ing on the Tyne that at any time in Wilyis Ceue ds uts * o+ arly I signitic covery rs of canâ€" "The been too $112,91( it is utterâ€" | !8 ";‘;3; elief and ;'503006 , many of and $10 treatment ear as to a;"d "f es a fact. se’;‘tb:‘ ew _ York| ~" quoted as t “9‘ hat fully | turnmips â€" »â€" . pe. | estimate need not Ehdward nts had :r:flu ps cc t sources the ‘redu N here are sht:’; ’: ::hrcec?:-i improven it in 0 l::kpubll:lc an increa his ;:r_' per cent . ably reâ€" In Onta and fodde egraph, slevere dr estimated $17,500,000 is also ah« e thirâ€" | to $28,250, cial at. shows a s ‘he old ,valuations. 1 man | Jacks h year. without ions, | cept fa: ‘ the | speeding awn | army is i do The f; t of | ness to terâ€" | especiall 25 jacks : of | cow. lenâ€" Conser cise | rabbit p» ing | about 10 wnâ€" The ro of | boys of iny | about a : al. | and movi the | square t he | before â€"th closure. Iklll using Anmals to relief a vo The kil to | from seve ril | 5,0000, def nt | roundâ€"up, st Tynes Tynesid.e‘ Recovery polniants Aovitodisens 4 u. to relief agencies, The kill at each roundâ€"up ranges from several hundred to as high as 5,0000, depending on the size of the roundâ€"up, Conservative astimates place the rabbit population in each county at about 100,000, The roundâ€"up starts with men and boys of a community taking places about a square several miles in area and moving toward the centre of thlal square the Aunters drive the jacks before them into a wire mesh enâ€" closure. Then everyone joins in the kill using clubs, i The farmers figure it is good buriâ€" ness to reduce the rabbit population, especially when it is estimated that 25 jacks eat as much pasture as one cow, _ Heretofore the rangy longeared jacks have loped over the prairies without any much to worry about exâ€" cept farm dogs, a few Ahunters and speeding motorists. But now a whole army is after them. Dodge City, Kan. â€" outdoor sport in these winter days is rodeo. Jack Rabbit Kansas Farmers Round Thousands of Them To Save Pastures | "In Quebec, a fairly general betâ€" terment in yields and prices causes an increase of over $30,000,000 or 45 per cent in the value of field crops, In Ontario higher prices for grains and fodder offset the effects of the «levere drought on production and tie estimated value ‘of fie‘d crops is up $17,500,000 cor 14 per cent, _ Alberta is also about 37 P@r cent, and amount to $28,250,000. Britsh Columbia also shows a slight betterment over 1933 valuations. j covery of Canadian agriculture. _ "The total increase of $112,901,600 $112,9100,600 over the 1933 valuation is largely accounted for by increases of $37,000,000 in hay and clover, $36,â€" 500,000 in wheat, $31,000,000 in oats, and $10,500,000 in barley, The estimâ€" ated value of the potato crop is placâ€" ed at $9,000,0000 lower than in 1933, despite the hlghe;dzductlon in 1934 "The low prices of potatoes and turnips result in the lowering of the estimates in the Maritimes, _ Prince Edward Island is the only province showing _ a reduced value of field crops compared with last year and the reduction is very slight. Both Nova Scotia and New Brunswick show increases due mainly to the improvement in hay prices, ‘ significant and hopefu} covery of Canadian a fit for eating are Rodeo Latest 0 higher prices for grains offset the effects of the zht on production and the alue of field crops is up r 14 per cent. â€" Alberta t 37 per cent, and amount | 10. â€" Britsh Columbia also 122 to 83 in the eral miles in area the centre of this s drive the jacks a wire mesh enâ€" â€" The _ greatest Western Kansas s the jack rabbit shipped step in the re ‘Kthe napy,j, """ tor I you but tap _ the nutrition of the nervous system, deep hidden 1 The roe dietetically is a valuable part Which lies in the of the fih and should be eaten when gaw! available, provide n The 41 ., __ 1t ‘of ‘the fatt] fish in the dietaries of children, Fis? roe, which is simply the re productive elemets, jg also rich i vitamin A ang to some extent in @; tamin B,. 1; also containg con@lder. able quantities _ of ts â€". Abrienn t o ng Aiwinbctmc ds ia ‘ ment and pro ’fection.; while for the constr and teeth, its being the imm Clearly, these cluding ample fish in the dia amins, and sec !source of mine whether in the enriched with q A and D, Tiaes mense imnorts onia â€"cc, > PHABnâ€"Â¥alte from the standpoint of human nuitrition First fish are a good source of certain vit. amins, and secondly they are q #ood SOUTCA D# tmaccas. AuT There are two other why fis‘? are of high y standpoint of human n mex _0 Up yclc0 CC murrouced | in the flecth of salmon, herring, eels, mackeral, sardines and halibut, It is lto be noted from the dietetic point of view that the presence of fat between the muse] fibres adds considerably to the caloric value of the flsh. but that it tends to diminish its digectib. ility. Thus while al1 healthy people should be Able to Miwace 2i e PC 1 Importance of this Food in Dietsâ€"Roe Nourishes Systems ‘"Cr in the flesh or the ched with the fatsoluble nd D. These vitaming a se importance during t period of life Vitamin Physical grOWMh anq F esd ncE s Fish Source of ‘f Vitamins And of _ Mineral Salts But the task was u: held up, with the resu rollment of students in reached a total of nea Fish is organized courses in evening instit. ute, in polytechnic, in sett‘ement and in college was no light task, since strenuous opposition was offered in the early days and official opinion was slow to recognize that courses run on uniform lines and compelling those who took them to attend regâ€" ularly were preferable to the old hapâ€" hazard «whooling which was indulged in only now and again "according to inclination." i aAmple supplies of the dietaries of ch T0e, which is uin No one had realized that, since abâ€" ilities are not liberated, in board schools by the lis\: of nature' *"mute inglorious Miltons" are apt to remain mix~e and ins‘oriouns unle & somebody ¢f pionses Iininstinete Alwa Hkaw. L...l construction PpF ul stsitcadivtitrdlith cs 4900 222020010( + i ; rain boots, dressy white galoshes, | Adult _ Education _ Aided; P is for petit point bags and pearls. f During 21 Years of Q is for quilled robes and deb jacâ€" f Oneet] kets, Plonccrmg R is for rhinestones that dominate ndon, Hvening institutes which | the evening jeweliry mode, hatvg .l’)ro::g::‘t afte‘r.srhool education |â€" 8 is for slips of crepe or satin. within the reach of the great major| T is for tunic blouses, ity of Londoners recently celebrated| U is for umbrellas, their "coming of age‘ at a Pageant of | Y is for vanitiesâ€"and the watch Progress in the Roya Albert Hall. | %A%¢ one s clever, ; The London County Concil now|~ W is for ‘woolies"â€"yes, yes, wo. runs 184 institutes scattered over the| M®D @re wearing ‘em again. . city, Only 21 years ago, London knew |_. Xi8 for Xmas gift wrapping â€"and little better in the way of adult eduâ€", PME And silver seem the high vouue. cation than the night schools; and, Y «s for yarnsâ€"everybody‘s knit. the night schools knew little better ; 4PE shan the teaching of reading and| Z2 48 for that zero shopping hourâ€" writing to those artisans and factory | 404 there are clayer §28t tbiermomeâ€" workers who attended them. | ters, The London County Concil now runs 184 institutes scattered over the city, Only 21 years ago, London knew little better in the way of adult eduâ€" cation than the night schools and + _its absence op immediate cause C secondly they mineral falts. ‘p protects Night Institutes ",’ In London Mark ‘,,*.* Growth to 184‘ ..‘\.,# ag c PSE "*~ Cuvnse To ous Miltons" are apt to remain | and ing‘oricus unle & somebody | Knttane noor ininstincts digs them out. There. comes a Paus launch the present system of rush zed courses in evening instit.‘ To the mind that‘ polytechnic, in settl‘ement and When memory sheds ege was no light task, since â€"â€" light DC o atnininuedidzews 5_ _ EU usually classltied for vitamin C CE lndice.tlron; for against K was undertaken and the result that the enâ€" dents in a recent year in D is 'Te;l:lr ed of health; bones contrast, a considâ€" fat is distributed of nearly 250,009 . The issined for diet. ling to whether 1 throughout the the liver of the Arbuthnot Lane h its digectip. ealthy people t all kinds of not advisable e given to in. °. In the flest haddock, whit deficiency of rickets, is very little is being storâ€" ‘ fish fats Hver, Are _vitaming 1e of im. he grow. A stimy}. develop. germ in. required 1 Children‘s Nervous reasons t in. fatty l i j 0 9 CAAB0, n : If you have the courap i There is no 8in Of gy pâ€" past * e . y Can ‘keep you from â€" rc h goal, r If you but tap the 5 k deep Mdden _fome. t\ Whish 1: 2 There is no sea No obstacle ey, Bllt the SQR w. the If you yz ", _ 18 NO task, be it eve No battle, though ever so But the task may be done battle won, If your will to conquer is There is no truth, be it eve; No change, be it ever so ; But the fruth maxy hn 41. * There is By the shado Is l’e}'ond the sc Or science to And is one of n Designed in How lmprossinns left uno» the ; By events that long haye post Can revive the same emotions By the shadows that they ea Is beyong the scope of knowlnd~s Ne cembngis on o . How The fondest memo myths Or Phantoms of the Reflections from those That time has left Like: flirkeringe from that shone In life‘s more happ Preserved within that The seat of mental . l o_ ~ COee CVeFr q obstacle everâ€"so high, _ the sea may be sailed obstacle scaled, ‘ou have the COUrage to re is no sin or mistal keep you from reachi goal, The past That shal] The choicest crown, But gleam Reflectjnk pa Like the m As [."(‘.V 1 halls Made rich We mentally P ETE ©l | Place To more sombre thoughts Where youth and strength the wane Life roses past the bloom Reminded thus how time he The truth comes home at That the mills of life will ; more With The "Water ahos 1c That scenes Of days that long have An impulse seems to swa "_"" e years roll back again. When memory _ thus â€" revives 11 * "o truth, be it ever so d nge, be it ever so groat, truth may be though+ . changes may be broupoht, will to MaASter vour f~+. Like a Reflcciions And lile _ N is for nosegays of flowers, pearing on muffs, O s for overshoesâ€"new Russ rain boots, dressy white galoshes, P is for petit point bags and pea Q is for quilled robes and deb ; kets, e P J is for jacketsâ€"sequins for evenâ€" ing and leather for sport, K is for knots of gold or silver met. al, seed pearls, in breast pins and in clips. L is for lame blouses. M is for mirrorâ€"back vanities and mirrorâ€"case lipsticks new and naval I is for initials that are designed as scarf pins, D is for drams of perfume. E is for eyeglass cases, brocaded and beâ€"jewelled, F is for feather fans and feather hair ornaments, G is for gold costume jewellery, H is for hosieryâ€"and black is new and daring, and hankies. sense C is for clipsâ€"and this season there are big cuff clips and clip neck. laces. B is for belts with mcial mesh, gold or silver metallic cord or }ridskin, velvet with rhinestones, and bags of course, A is for accessories and what would be more acceptable? Chicago, â€" That plaguing last. minuteâ€"Christmasâ€"gift for the ladies â€"well, here‘s the A.BC. of smart idâ€" to long ower Of Wy;) pa. » be it ever 0 explain nature‘s ; ° Ghems to sway the : balmy breeze at down, leads us courage to try, or -ime of the Fashion‘s A. B. C‘s mental povt:él': water that with memory‘s 1o, scan. those dav~s return no gens in of of the mind, l t_hou $°@NC« memories hp_nny bhour left behind ; remain â€"Melntoâ€"s * a pause in lif, source of that pleasure goon ; mirrorâ€"back vanities and upmcks‘ new and novel!, nocegays of flowers, apâ€" your fate, thoughts o strength a Mystorjes so long, one, and +) mystic shr so hard, , and the of those 1‘ s calm an) s s her glers throu str more your your at ]~ me gone Russian u{ «©r." Those listed in the "adult" fication were: "A Wicked W *"Here Is My Heart" "One Late," "Romance in Manhattan *Sweet Adeline." The federation reviews o views new pictures, listing those it endorses. The pic fy" are: the Rang "Grand O Coming," .C“' centuy made pictures to w indorsement. "‘terrific ed in sk sun did : mantic s in intere Fourteen Pictures Cndorsed 1 Fed« ed ; to 1 day this these tribu ing and tell Ma coming Or tha Americ Jous sury tere it r Kkencered in Valhalla conquered land, Fran Spain, frig their glean streets of C «dred coasts deliver v adventure eockle sh distances unknown land auth Stra *"They were boi &n their blood ar the world seen Compass they ha quadrant and . ®c knew, though th« conception of lat the declination c *#ook direction fr« and the stars b; fog or storm cu! guides they fell b fine instinct. On geleased tame rav and arrived off | threw â€" their ho with images of 1 to the sea and : #o shore." is the re the part formatio gathered crudely cient N« ehronicl« C€ompany, | associates, * MHayhurst. timately ass time issued brochure, * which dealt in the full with the st; ateers along down the 8; When the Vi Came to C incourage attended thi issued an a little book « Bagas," whi style with th Marmiand beaches," land abw said that Norway t the Tirst 1 born hun gallant C memorabl Buch were Leif Ericson and his galla years before their open Bcotia and V his brot have al for the legond to the Novea 8 of the M ros "If NC of the P« subi¢ C TA d« an M I] en