4e is yople careless with cigarettes london hotel finds women worse than men in this particular wiwnigtfriss cora hind writ es tsahi free press from london cf jr a conversation vith a housekeeper in a hotel concerning damage done by smokers thousands a year cannot cover the damage done by cigarettes we do try our best to prevent losses and fires but it seems no use light ed cigarette butts are iaid down any where and everywhere but en the ash trays and we do try to have them everywhere lock she said at that window in the bathroom there was the telltale leng brown stain so deep in the good enamel paint it must have been eese to a fire yet even the bath tub was furnished with a cigarette rest and ash receiver and large dress ing glass and high shaving mirror were furnished likewise when the housekeeper paused for breath i asked which do you find the worst men or women women was the quick retort id like to see some cf their homes they seem to have no respect for good furniture and decent hangings and that my cigarettesmoking friends is that canadian radium now being used toronto delivery of three and a half grams of radium produc ed in the great bear lake district has been made to the ontario gov ernment for use in toronto general hospital cancer clinic hon j a faulkner minister of health an nounced recently the radium re places the sjic quantity the gov ernment has been renting from new york the price paid for the cana dian element was 542800 a gram comic stars entry women should get as high pay as men tourist ruling requires change in custom laws ottawa regulations under which canadian tourists to the united states may bring back 100 of goods free of duty must await amendments by parliament this com ing session to customs and excise laws it was learned authoritatively last week this statement sets at rest earlier reports that the new proposal contained in the united states canadian trade agreement might be put into effect by the na tional revenue department around jan 1 next amendments to the excise act will be necessary to permit cigarettes and tobacco to be included in the goods up to 100 that a bonafide tourist may bring back to canada it is understood that owing to the varying liquor laws in the nine can adian provinces liquor is to be ex cluded from the items which can be brought back here free of duty the regulations when drawn will define the term bona fide tourist and how many times a year a cana dian tourist may bring 100 worth of goods free of duty the government may give consid eration also to the suggestion that the proposal bo ven wider applica tion so tlrj canadian tourists to other countries including england and european countries rvrticularly may bring back a similar amount of goods frej of duty from those coun tries toronto there should be no double standards either in business or morals declared rabbi maurice n eisendrath in commenting on the dispute in the board of education us to whether women clerks should be paid the same as men why stick to the ancient and primitive super stitions with regard to the superior ity of man if woman can do tne job as well she should be as well paid if a woman is as capable as a man she should be paid the same salary said onie brown barrister there are many jobs a woman can do as well as a man if a woman can do the same quality of work as a man she should have the same remuneration ob served mrs w b horkins equal qualifications should bring equal pay regardless of sex mrs a m huestis declared of course there is the man with a family to think about but then the girl who is working vepy rarely lives unto herself i have known women to be tied down all their lives through j having to support brothers a great many women have mothers or other dependents to support farewell to arms expert gives rules for road safety washington want to avoid sudden death on the highways an expert says you can providing you dont drive if you have epilepsy or poor vision dont drive without knowing how dont count too much on good luck at the crossroads dont aniline the other fellow will get out cf tc yav the expert br siclne- j williams of the national safely council says 10000 to 15000 lives are sacrificed needlessly each year cambridge mass a campaign to obtain 50000000 signatures in all nations that signed the briand-kel- logg peace pact t a petition advo cating the eventual abandonment of all arms has been started by the womens international league for peace and freedom miss sarah du pent cousin of pierre du pont munitins manufact urer who sold her holdings in the du pont company and became a pea ce advocate was among those pre sent at the first meeting the petition league officials said would be presented to the league of nations at geneva in the spring says criminals begin truants prevention of crime must be done among children urges safety first for mothers campaign toronto charging that 200 000 children now attending school in ottawa safety first for mothers campaign to bring down the high maternal death rate in this country was advocated by dr w w chipman emeritus professor of ob queen mary a ship not floating hotel some time ago a cartoon appear ed in which a bewildered old lady standing with halffrightecd eyes in the magnificent salon of a trans- stetrics and gynecology of mcg j atlantic liner was appealing to a university in an address to the steward with the timid question canadian welfare council in cntawa i could you tell me the way to the in concluding a resume of the situ- j sea the humor was scarcely far- th united states will probably be- aviothespeakersaw in an this fetched more and more the term como criminals john b quinn of stfsetiiin president mlx abtologtcat outlook j plicableto the ocean giantstf re- service we must gradually develop a floating hotel has been really ap league of compulsory education startled his hearers at the twenty- fifth anniversary conference of of ficials mr quinn added that one might well ponder the challenge to society in this trend of children be ing raised for th prisons pupil attendance juvenile wel- fare juvenile delinquency truancy j wih pregnancy but and the problem of unemployed th mother herself in her own in- 1 i lilll 1 upon our national life we aro j cent years the tendency being to not only to save our mothers but make the passenger forget that ho steadily to improve them physically is not among the familiar scenes mentally and morally the need and comforts ashore is not so much for more babies as j t throughout it all however there for better ones ante natal care j must begin he contended not mere- j atber with joe e brown film comedian pictured with his twoyearold thoroughbred barnsley whom he has entered in the race meet ings at santa anita cal joe hopes the horse will have the laugh on the field youth were among the subjects dis cussed by the educationists from all parts of canada and the united states gathered at toronto leave school too early too often children are forced to leave school under the age of 1g years without sufficient prepara tion for the duties of life ho de clared becoming liabilities in the form of idlers wasters or criminals in his opinion the jurisdiction of juvenile courts should be extended to deal with all minors instead of only those under the age of 10 juvenile delinquency is increasing in spite of the efforts of school workers and social agencies declar ed martin m ilihn director of at tendance of baltimore md he maintained that home conditions of delinquent children shovd be sub jected to more careful investiga tion with the health of the parents financial standing and their general outlook on life taken into considera tion begin as truants that the vast majority of habit- has been a section of the travelling public that has been willing to be regarded as oldfashioned and senti mental a clan of shameless roman ticists who have protested their iovo for surroundings that smack of the sea when they indulge in a voyage it is obvious that these revolution aries against revolutionary ship building have been taken into con sideration by the designers of the for the first time in several sea- llu queen mary for despite the sons it is difficult to say what is the lusuriousness of britains wonder color for winter clothes no one tap the decorations of her rooms i will remind passengers constantly special shade stands out because col- unh fw f fancy and childhood brilliant shades shown for winter wear j ors are blended so subtly and shown that they are in the cradle cf the low priced cars popular hollywood leaves wells speechless hollywood calif ii g wells the author was the talk of the town last week three speakcis heaped encomiums on wells last night at a dinner tend ered him by the academy of motion picture arts and sciences j 1- o r ti company discovers demand in england heavy london eng for the first time motor manufacturers in bri- i tain have been able to put on the market a complete sedan motorcar fcr 100 and this car is said to be attracting a new kind of buyer the car was on exhibition for the first time at the albert hall london the ford company states that a great number of inquiries have come regarding the car from persons who admit they have never driven a car before large number are being sold on the hire purchase system at the exhibition cne salesman from a north london firm made all his sales in such great variety deep even if they are not being no- purples recv blues browns and t r greens each being shown in a wide ma dmi roon usually the range of tones vie with parisian fc w the black and white for first choic mzl v liocrately been done in the maritime sports clothes are defmtely gay- tradition extending entirely across cr and brighter with wines and bur- ship u gundies leading greens browns and hoes cn both sije an ts cantra smoky slate blues two tone com- j decorative featurc wii he rn im binations are shown widely for sports mense map 0 wnichj dsy a for example grey blue is frequently miniature queen mary will indi- rclievcd by scariel green compte- ca the boats exact position ments brown and the wine tonea are i certain parts have of course set off by touches of a soft medium been given a grandeur in keeping blue with the vessels size the main black relieved by white and often lounge for instance will be flooded a touch of red green or purple do- with light from 32 windows each 13 ual criminals began as iruants from minates tailored afternoon and town j feet high fifty different kinds cf school is a fact known to every clothes cocktail gowns and dressy wood have been used in the clecorn- cnminologist said judge r s hos- velvet suits embrace the wrole field j tions including such rare woods as king of the toronto juvenile and of winter shades with no one color betual patapsko makore and zebra- iamily court hence to make the pro- 1 outstanding for evening wear i no but primarily it is to be a shin outofthenewshunt on a quietuses fasfc k iiant shades are shown including sundav fternnm i ion- t t to t0 im from school v orange roval blue and purples sunday afternoon 190 for inst- is often to save him from the lis- brirh rapbetv iel kcllv green a mcc he dropped into the office to w of a prison term later in life i ita the deep purplerown and loo how tnigs were going and tear- c m a year to educate the snow shadow blue ned that same correspondence had wlcr t costs s560 1 th ncw of those shades is the oire o light in which e ii harri- tenth v a in the neni- plu piebrown although tentau nnetymne cents per for ovoning is seen in many of the new winter j coats street and cocktail dresses tentiary man assorted that president theo- citizen is spent on public health scr- dore roosevelt had asked him to vic nj 290 each on hosnitaliz- raise money for the 1904 campaign e indigents jhss margaret gould of the toronto child welfare in the trustbusting days that was com h t thesj terrific news especially for a -demo- a plel f01 pi t cratic paper and in an instant mr i curf had taken charge like a tornado and certain and ordered every one on the staff jj out to look for mr harriman and any one elre who could shed light on the matter fought onecent price mr seitz who became busin manager in 1898 was a minority of some on the parents one when the world strategists on the curricula of frank capra present spoke fourji ono da mulcl lhe im purchase minutes- charlie chaplin wells host i arrangements tcok five minutes and c b demille tll car is manufactured at dagen- producer stretched his speech to ilam london it is the same seven minutes type of car previously sold for 115 then wells arose acknowledged i c rsopower automobile clo the introductions and said s aml built britai hollywood leaves me speechless so i have no down he did recourse but to sit i heartily approve of picnics but they must be properly chaperoned lecause of these few couples who insist uoon going off by themsel ves dean susan guild washburn college topeka kan sunrpcts to increase wireless interference chicago old sol is on anoth er spree threatening radio listeners on mother earth with an epidemic of static in the next year or two astronomers warned that increas ing sun spots noted at various ob don c seitz reporter edi tor author passes at sev entythree new york don carlos seitz newspaper man and author intimate ly associated with joseph pulitzer servatories- cantevxpoctedto put i jurine the great clays of the world nasty kinks in he ether waves bntj cadmc ast at l i 5 downing street brooklyn o trees will grow better and have more rings to show for it viceroyally for australia his excellency the governor of new south wales sir alex ander hororuthvon who will take office as governorgeneral of the commonwealth of australia about january 21 seen hero with lady horcruthvcn was seventythree years old throughout his career a prolific writer of books and articles mr seitz combined the qualities of jour nalist and business man a cumbi- 1 nation which became rarer as news- papers more and more became large i impersonal institutions he was business manager of the world dur ing its most prosperous days but among the incidents of which he was proudest was the occasion when undertaking to find some fiction for the sunday world he obtained a stack of rejected manuscripts from a literary agent and went through ihem ignoring the names of the authors but setting aside the stor ies he liked then looking again through the favored manuscripts he discovered that most of them were by a virtually unknown writer nam ed o henry often took chrc of news j don c seitz always contended j that a newspaper was not a business j but rather an institution of public sendee and that a business manag ers job was to keep his hands off the editorial side of the paper as the intmatc adviser of mr pulitzer however he bad a hand in shaping policies ami as rn old reporter him- elf he wa i ui always able to keep imperfections in society as today aro responsible for the fact that many children are being deprived of tie right to an adequate education said dr c c superintendent of schools schools also dlamed some of the blame for problem children must fall on the teacher i but most of all j the schools in decided to meet hearsts conipcti- which academic subjects ore stressed i tion by cutting the price of the at the expense of vocational and i paper to one cent and thereby ran technical training said dr l j into years of financial difficulty it simpson minister of education for was after he had retired as business ontario manager in 1923 that the world oilier addresses were given by dr started on its road to disaster by a o heck ohio slate university raising the price to three ceiils in dr o li mosher of the new york competition with twocent papers state department of education and mr seitz published his first book it e dugdale of toledo in 1903 the last piracy on the j martin m hihnof baltimore sid spanish main and among the thirty was elected president of the organiza- olher hooks he published in the next tion with it e dugdale of toledo thirty years were several others on first vicepresident nellie e con- piracy as well as biography and ilcman niagara kalis ny recre- cther phases of history he died tary and the ims president john p leaving unpublished manuscripts on quinn 0 st louis mo was named captain kid i and alexander hamil- treasurer ton his best known work probably j the 1030 conference will bo bid was his biography of mr pulitzer j springfield mo published in 192i and he later wrote books on horace greeley the james gordon bennetts and abraham lin coln as well as on the dreadful decade the era of railroad wreck- j coeds ing following the civil war most needles i of his work was notable fcr amount of research involved not a waldorfastoria that has brok en away from shore one is inclined to believe that the cunardwhite star authorities have shown genuine strategy in the mat ter apart from those passengers 1vu who have openly retained their love clothes itaisoj the vhiff cf sat t eh with t- an ccenn voyage there have un doubtedly been thousands who have expressed an appreciation of the ho- if the little girl has a cdleetlonof gsv jsk things in her toy room that looks just to do b ready for the trash basket dont m queu m comb throw it out without a consultation tho better points qf both on the subject you never know of au uptotheminute hostelry the strange things n child treasures and the g of an argosy she and probably a carton could house should well fill the place in marine cociring j this collection that is so fascinating and the carton tucked out of sight between playthings clicking needles jcined the churchriai from 1923 to 192g mr seitz was titular manager of the evening j s time in less than a we world and then severed his connec- others have knitted dresses tion with the pulitzer papers to be come associate editor of the oul- irc plying the knitting a revival of the purl and the drop that threatens to revolutionize campus styles many mcmaster hamilton girls make alt their clothes while others content them selves with making wool outfits one girl knitted a skirt for a dress ieek for themselves and are now working on angora wool bedroom slippers look later he was associate editor sonic 6f the coeds have reached the of the churchman in magnbine stage where they arc doing needle- the roped smiaro was cbristejd articles mr seitz set forth vigorous- point work and knitting finger srwgi ly the view that a passion for gloves tie y0un 0 thirteen children ruining news- tho increased popularity of knitjj father was a stuggling laborer history that her makers have vision- ed for her edmonton journal jeem of italy jim londos the golden greek of moneymaking was papers and while on the churchman ting has the blessing of male studj the olive groves he took part in its campaign njyiinst ents many of whom are wearing jeem at 11 years of age left those in control of the motion pic- j sweaters mufflers ties and crests home on a greek ship for the great ttire industry at portage hope chests mr seitz was bo ohio the son of the rev j aj seitz ji universalist clergyman in 1890 mr seitz married miss mild red e blake of east dealing me until her death in 1 921 she was cs- pecially interested in orphan wel- fare she adopted more than sixty sma 0 babes preliminary to finding homes madebycocducatiolarfr y f h rti i iii as cabinboy the first jobs londos other coeds are said to be prepar- i w i fear of the dark secured in america were electrician biz on broadway by the broadway yardstick things are strictly nexttoclosing onco more according to the show sec tors business barometer and this is as good an indication as any of the general national trend things are hearing normalcy and in many re spects within arms reach of tho peak times most significantly the total broad way legit theatre gross last week hit 311500 on 24 shows a figure not far behind the pace of pre-de- pression days and 70000 better than the corresponding week last year when the streets total was 241500 on 22 shows with the legit boxoffice situation further mirroring conditions in gen eral another indication of the biz pickup is the fact that while there have been fewer openings this sea son than last the commensurate number of outright flops has been much lower last year at this time 47 new shows had premiered on broadway since the opening of the season and of that number 25 had already fold ed so far this year there have been 39 openings and only 15 closings still another pertinent fact is tho increased staying power of the non- hit type of show with several pro ductions going along in hopes on grosses that necessitated immediate closing last year that the trend is clearly upward is indicated by all factors that react at the boxoffice and most vital is the interest of playgoers in the new plays they want to see shows more and more inquiries about the shows are being made by people who stayed away from the theatre for two or more years the fear that the legit stage would pas3 out of the scheme of amusements what with the opposed diversions principally films and ra dio has about been dissipated hollywood it is true lias become increasingly important in the sup port of production that is so for two and ironworker londos wrestled for a time under his own name londos used to come iinto the ring in a plasterers clothes md then strip to his tights in his one mother conquered the fear of jorricr thus he was called the three reasonsthe necessity for de the dark in her small daughter by wrestling plasterer in those days velopng talent material and on table by la n portland oregon promoter i mrsieing the value of piays for lit- changed his name to jim londos er screen exhibition the little girl was londos is the best read of all the childs bed mrsi p that a time she felt uneasy wrestlers i lis hobby iscclectine for them among these the children adopted by mr and fineley i shepard thev had two e was 0 each out and light her and reading books in his home in children of their own mrs edward la and see for herself there was st louis he has 1000 choice books m geibel cf shanghai china apd nothing about which to be afraid it j a part of his extensive lib- miss mildred seitz wit whom mr was quite a novelty and by the time a sa for t0 seitz lived burial was at portind the novelty had worn off fear bad become champion he must not worry i me kone with it i mr londos what about danno mr wall street always was a barom eter for broadway formerly when stocks went up the demand for tic kets correspondingly increased for several seasons that didnt count but this fall the market appears to be ascendant and broadway has ar rived its interest