lohgn-lnmhul!o)uh For sanmer spent ond actumn lost, When every tree is powderblack, \A« «*ery meadow stark with frost, *Lhle Javes in Peribner‘s Magezine. Theso for the traveles that makes Winter bis wey, to swecor bim; More in the hand then boneyâ€"cakes Or wine to sta® a tackards brigc. Hoard the blue husks of waxen seed Strung ca a thread, so lato to fall; The hurlequin paint of Jewelâ€"weed That droops a bouble an the wall Thet stares across the dutu>s snows Whe fect that you are a trife diszuty is uo wign that you would be a good air pllot. ° s jwall moon!ig>« to the bark of cherry; liide the gold fan of whnd that blows The banishot lesf; the wild white Strychnive is the bitterest substance In the world except pride, when you try to swalle? It. Correct This Sentence: "The agent‘s .ountain pen wouldn‘t write at first," said the housewife, "bu; he didn‘t squirt isk on my rug." Motherâ€"Who‘s the bright e or o d iee bnakteet bor ds _ Juniorâ€"Lill Smith! HMe preterds to be loony 1o he won‘t have to study. Are your hens good layers? Cook â€"â€" Well, mum, I can cook French beans, Brussels sprouts, Dutch cheese, German sausages, Jerusalem artichokes, and Spanish onlons, Who can remember the good old days when farmers were content to raise corn and wheat? Mable (fresh from the city)â€"They haven‘t laid a bad egg yot. Cookâ€"Ob. yes, mum, 1 understand all these /. «‘zn dishes. Woman ~sndeed! Tell me what you can do? position as cook)â€"And can you cook French dishes? make me fyul Sam*oâ€"No, dey can‘t make yoall #g* . But dey can take an‘ put yo‘ ~aar de Sghtin‘ am, en‘ aftab dat yo‘ kin use yo‘ own judgment. ‘The country editor never puts any» thing in the paper that will offend his friends. The city editor hasn‘t any Rastusâ€"Sambo, dis byah papah ses dat in do nex‘ war dey gwine to make ebry man fight. Well, byeah «m one man dats not gwine to figh*. h doan‘ feel lak doin‘ no *,â€"«in‘ nobow. Dey All of those who want to soak us for too much money will ever explain that they are doing it for a great and worthy cause, Lawyer (to applicant as stenograâ€" pher)â€"Can you use the typewriter? ‘ Pretty Applicantâ€"Yes, sir. I use the Biblical system. ‘ Lawyerâ€"1 never heard of it. _ Pretty Applicantâ€"Seek and ye shail The hardest work we know ot is that done by the little wisp of hair in trying to cover a bald spot. There are two things that a man always puts off till the last minute, proposing and buying ber a gift, and wash dishes for any man, Louiseâ€"She doesn‘t. The Jowelry Clerkâ€"This watch, though tiny, keeps perfect time. Manâ€"That docsn‘t make any differâ€" ence. I‘m buying it for my wife, and correct time means nothing in her life, A wrist watch is just a bracelet to her. Eisieâ€"So Mollie got married? 1 thought she said she wouldn‘t cook Becond Dittoâ€"Ought to beâ€"he‘s wever used it. ‘The oldâ€"{ashioned girl bad a good memory if she could remember her first kiss, but nowâ€"aadays a woman is lucky if she remembers ber first bus There was a young man named Teedie, -“h‘f'n':'.‘..... u.:o Teedie, #a .'lllut being Teedic, D.D." Ministerâ€"So you like country life? Judyâ€"aw, the polis were padded. Jimâ€"Well, sho wasn‘t. Woman (interviewing applicant for Jimâ€"Yes, Susan was yoted the most First Observerâ€"Jasper‘s head is as Locket for the Heart €€ | S MIL E $ Plain Teedie. â€"Dirge, A big program of public wo‘ks is contemplated in the com‘.g year which should go a long wa towards absorbing all branches 0‘ the build« ing crafts, There are indications of Business Improvement in Dominion Solid Basis for While I was telephoning, a large limousine drove to the door and the proprietor, manager and other officials of the hotel went to met it, and with stiff genuflections from the waist they treated the arrival with great cereâ€" mony, I remarked to the porter, "To whom does the car belong?" and he answered, "If you walt a moment, sir, We spent three hours in Gitzbuhel and then proceeded to our destination for the nightâ€"Berchtesgaden. To reach this place, we bad to pass a frontier and here we overtook the car with the luggage, Apparently everyâ€" thing was going right, so we went shead‘* without It, arriving at the Grand Hotel in Berchtesgaden about 5 o‘clock. Everyone was in raptures over the accommodation and the wonâ€" derful panorama spread out before us, but after an hour bad passed and no luggage car, I went to the telephone to see !f it could be located. suttbâ€"n daee every‘ t w m ‘.Qf. 3? E.-a"’ e ied e ie On my first valt to Berchtesgaden, four years ago, we had left Innsbruck, in Austria, and entrained as far as Kitzbubelâ€"another lovely spot. In Europe, as in this country, luggage is bandled on railway station premises by station porters, ‘The train made but a short stop at Kitzbubel and our bage were burrledly placed on the platform. I saw the man I was exâ€" pecting just outside the station gate, nodded to him and attended to the lugâ€" gage, but, on getting it outside, I asked for the cars which were to take us on to Berchtesgaden after lunch. My man pointed to some, stat*ing a short distance away; I said "That is all right, as far as the people are conâ€" cerned, but what about the luggage?" It then transpired that this matter had been overlooked. This meant that I had to hire a large car; not an easy matter, even so shori a time as four years ago, Austria was poor and, in the small places, conveyances were at a premium. However, one was found to answer the purpose and I sent it abead of us. If you have never tried Kruschenâ€"try Il“'-n at our expense, We have ributed a great many "GIANT" packages which -::'1 easy for you to prove our claims for y vrd ons Te wh e rikane FREE TRIAL OFFER KRUSCHEN perpntmaiieeBat tm iiat ceï¬ & i green or brown tunics, _ chamois breechos held up with green cloth or brown leather suspenders, balf socks covering only the calf of the leg and heavy walking shoes. Berchtcsgaden Il.lllul.nl:nlln.ml.dbyl belt of majestic snowâ€"capped peaks and, being altuated on the sunny southern slopes of the Untersberg, it The great German writer, Lodwig Ganghofer, volcing the impression made on him by the sublime beauty of Berchtesgaden, uttered the fervent prayer: "Lord, whomscever ‘Thou lovest, let him come here." is sheltered most effectively against all cold winds, Fourteen kilometersâ€"approximately 8 milesâ€"away from Hallheim, the wcent of last week‘s episode of the adâ€" venture in the sait mines, is the exâ€" quisitely beautiful village of Berchâ€" tesgaden. Bavarian Alpine scenery, lumbring oxen in the twisty, narrow streets; the inhabitants and visitors alike dressed in the picturesgue Tyroâ€" lean costumes, with bottle green hats trimmed with a tail curling feather, Shows Steady Gain TRAL IMPRc3SiONS awakening activity, freer eircu‘ation of funds for business m‘ and trade, \ Fifth Among Nations in Valug of Exports Lookisg at the outlook from an inâ€" ternational viewpoint a great deal has to be done before world trade approaches its former proportions, but notwitastanding trade restrictions, Canada has been able to maintain her proud position of fifth among the nations in value of exports, and Canadians have the prédiction otf Mon. HM. H. Stevers, Minister of Trade and Coâ€" "IL wonld seem that betfer i.2 wro aboad for Can#»42." Emplre ‘Trade Boomed Result ‘ of Conference _ While there may have been some weaknesses in the trade pacts made at the Imperial Economic Conference WAl:.omn.mMn-llulhl / ve . tremendously increased .:l.-'“l'o trade with the United Kingâ€" dom as proven by the fact that in the cight months ended November, 1933, total exports from Canada to Empire countrics increased $29,000,/ 000 to a total trad . of $185,317,000, Imports from the Empire were w‘ panded by $11,000,000. Exports to forelgu countries increased in the same period $20,300,600, while imâ€" ports from foreign countries were reâ€" duced $22,390,000, Comeback in Canada Commenced ‘ in April Canada‘s comeback appeared to comâ€" mence, sccording to observers, fo April last year, continuing to gain momentum despito seasonable inftuâ€" ences that ordinarily result in a lull, and lost quarter reports from business enterprises, commercial us dertakings, departmental stores were the best for the yeer in most cases, the climax occurring in the pheno menal Christmas purchasing. Loo# ening of pocketbooks in December was genoral snd some large storea reported the largest volums of busi ness in their history. The Grand Hotel at Rerchtesgaden was, apparently, a favourite resort for German royalty. In a large diningâ€" room there was a life sized portrait of William II. aud in the ofice there were framed and signed photographs of other members of the family. ‘The town has assumed new importance in the past year, 1t is the favourite sumâ€" mer place of Herr Hitler and many visitors were attracted there in the hope of seeing him. ‘This ilustrates the tremendous change that has come over Germany, a change not noticeâ€" able to the outside observer, exceptâ€" Ing from deductions made through trk vial and seemingly unimportast hapâ€" penings. "Open Air Opera in Rome" is the subject for next weekâ€"a considerable jJump from Germany, but these articles are nothing If they are not informal. 1 would like you to write in and tell me how you enjoy them; it isn‘t always possible to correetly guage the readâ€" er‘s point of view. To come back to ~.ur luggage car, Just as I was beginning to worry about some possible mishap, the driver apologetically pulled up to the hotel and showed me threo fiat tires that had impeded his progress. . So that ended well. you will see the wife of the exâ€"Kaiser." Well, I was curiousâ€"as you would be â€"and I waited. Presently a plain but well dressed woman came down the \oup. was treated with every deferâ€" ence and, after giving some instrucâ€" tions to the management, entered her ‘m and was whisked away. The Princess Hermoine. as she was then called, is a pleasant . tle woman; much nicer than amy ph ‘ures I had seen of her, She was sta_ing at the hotel for three weeks and the ladies of our party had the opportunity .0 study her more closely in tho 4rawingâ€" room that evening. I personally went into the town, heard a zither band in a beer garden end enjoyed myselt u‘ another way. Bask clearings have boen advane Capt, F. H. Reld, the wellâ€"known traveller, who has beew contribut« Ing the series of. articles to this paper, under the heading of "Travel Impressions," bas what is, perbaps, the fnest collection of European views in the country. _ Pictures taken with his own camera, beautl fully coloured, showing some of the outâ€"oftheâ€"way places, as well as the localities about which you bave read and heard. Portugal, Spain, France, Italy, Switzorland, Austria, Jugosiavia, Hungary. Czechosio vakis, Germany, Holland, Belgium, and British Isles are included in this unique collection. _ c For particulars regarding this, communicate with Captain Reld at Room 421, 73 Adcialde Street West, ‘Toronto. Are you looking for something different in the way of entertainâ€" ment for your church, society, club or institute? products also year very vubstantially, yo â€" Hou., Robert Weir, exports to the alone amounting to as com» pared with $129,000,000 for the previâ€" ous year, Een _ Botter prices were being obtained by the farmer for his products, alâ€" though there is room for niuch imâ€" provement before agriculture resumes a normal state. Forestry operations are also on the incréase with larger gangs going into the woods this winâ€" ter to carry on work, Lumber Exprts Gain to United Kingdom Canada‘s lumber ¢XPOrt trade durâ€" Ing 1933 experienced a decidediy subâ€" ‘nuunl gain and statistics to the end of November showed total exports of planks ang board, amounted to 955,â€" 987 million feet, sh increase of about 38 percent. Value Of this export business was $16.365,544, an Increase of $3,300,000 over the preceding period or more than 2 percent, _ There were also sharp zains in the export of Douglas fir, hardx00d, white pine and other squared timbers from Britâ€" Ish Columbla and New Brunswick. Production of newsprint by Cana dian mills during the first eleven months of the year amounted to 1, $31,828 tons as compared with 1,769, 879 tous in the sa=a tem months of 1932, being an iscreaso for last year of 3.5 percent, . Allho#zh the output was much below 1930 and 1931, the Increaso last year ov@r 1982 is reâ€" garded as encoun;s®. Â¥he decisin o >*@ the steriing is a tot ho ‘up In rfl."‘- erament‘s poiley t« diÂ¥wee the poo from ary comsectios with gold stancâ€" ard «nrrencies, wit\ a Ylew to cheap sulng the peso to « xb?Wh dispose more cas!)y **4 proftab primary progncis. trst Tifton, Gaâ€"Rolor skaters here have been given a «ity block for their own exclusive use letween the bours of three and six ».®. hl!:._ Gc wl The block will is roped off during those hours and c}s««rs must not use other streets at any time, The chief of police announ««d the new move to ci j 0 ooo uie Shaiets‘ Use Buenos Aires, A‘ gentine peso Was ; sterling last wesk franes, Pixance M\s edo announced. Any review ddl- past year in Canada® would short if special emphasis was omilted on the manâ€" ner in which Canada‘s w‘ing indusâ€" try held up. Taking in ail minerals, value of production was $198,253,000, an increase of elght percent. over the 1932 total and this do«s not provide for an extra $3,000,000 approximate ly for the higher price ootained by the markeiing of Canadian gold on the London market, . The risg in the price of gold stoog out as the preâ€" aging between $32 and $33 at the end of the year 1933, compared with around $25 the ead of 1932, in Canaâ€" dian funds, While the permanency of the higher figure c»nno, be guarâ€" anteed it is not expecied, according to well informed mising officials, ever toâ€"sell back to its old figure, Was Difficuit Year For Both provgnt accider ing consistently, Whil, bank gebits to individual accoubts at the end of October last year Amounted to §3, $23,000,000, a gain of over 19 percent. compared with October, 1932, Rise in Gold Price is Feautre of Year Argentine to Peg Make 10¢ Go Farther! SAVE POKER HANDS TO GET BETTER CIGARETTE PAPERS FREE Everybody agrees that "Vogue" and "Chantecier" are the best Mess complars tor of Poket Sapin Fom ::-N': eme com your “h-i-h:'uh-ll. Get More Tobacco for Your Money, _â€"_ mMï¬ == aind Poker FHiands, Free! Poso to Sterling atlenâ€"The Arâ€" ed to the pourd instead of the er Federico Pinâ€" Paris. â€"â€" Albert Sarraut, mcl Premier of France and now Minister of the Navy, sugwested in a secret session of the Chamber naval comâ€" mittee that France be"4 foating air craft bases for the protection of her Pacific Ocean possessions. _ e These hases, he proposed, would be built off Madagascar and Prench Indoâ€"China and would cost 250,000,â€" 000 francs (approximately $15,000, 000) over a twoâ€"year period. French AirBases In Pacific Are Urged Womes, he toid a divisiona} meetâ€" tng of the American Cosmeticians Association, will spend about $2,000,â€" 000,000 during 1934 for cosmetics and beauty service. ‘This, sho told the Middle Atlantic Shoe Retailers‘ Association, explains the trend of blunt toes. A. M. Genâ€" ting, of the Retailers‘ Code Authority, added that Americans are the best shod people on earth, Billions of Dollars to Be Spent for Beauty Chicago.â€"Thowas L. Williams, an eye cosmetics manufacturers is an optimist. T on ie «+ _ Philadelphia, â€"â€" Miss Kay Silver, whoo stylist, says the American woman has ditcovered that shoes may be more comfortable and at the same time make the feet look smaller. . . Mo salq his Agure represented $500,000,000 over the 1933 beauty aid expen.imros, . He added that the Inâ€" @ustry as w holo was alreedy «* loying from ‘» to 20 por cent more tasiness than . it war@ > sren 25 this time. Cheuem enremrgmer Evanston, I!1.â€"A new senior "honâ€" erary" society for women has appearâ€" ed at Northwestern University, It‘s to be known as "martyr bored" and takes its name from "mortar board," but instead of elect‘n; to membership outstanding women, it will draw from the ranks of the "do nothings." The cight organizers described themselvas ll“!:ollllhlt fools in the senior Shoes May Be Smart #pots or pimples on «â€"why let them M‘G t ":';-u':":i"'"“,; th:ï¬ of a physicianâ€" #.D'..l').. of a gl 'lrhhn- Th me in meuiniend. iy Criam t ines Pam eruers Iesenah o peoin atd Gusrantted to give hn-\‘:al or monty refunded. % ans Map of ridge River Area oi Rrites Columbia. Grant Mahood & Company 302 Bay Street, Toromio, Ont. _ There are some 300,000 footpaths in the United Kingdom and disputes conâ€" cerning them have averaged someâ€" thing like 2,000 a year, The shire horse the heaviest in the world, is of the same breed as those msed in the Middle Ages by armour clad knights, "Looseness of conduct is vaquestion ably spreading downward to classes lflm it wes almost unknowp."â€"Dean Vinge, Burgundy pitch is nci pitch, and does not come from Burgundy. 1t \s a resinous substance . prepared fror common frankincense and broug‘t from Hamburg. London‘s basement dwellings proâ€" vide homes for no fewer than 30,000 persons. T The potato‘s most dan~erous enemy, the Colorado beetle, is threatened with extinetion by a flowerâ€"the ptunia, whose leaves attract the pest and then polson it. Tobacco smugglers on the Francoâ€" Belgian frontier train dogs to carry thelr ilicit wares. A wellâ€"trained dog will carry 50ib. packets past the fron: tler guards three times a week Alpuonso went down to the ships and the seas; Paulinus stayed home with the gurden and bees. Pisa‘s Leaning Tower formerly had a "leavover" of 16 ft.;a recent meaâ€" surement shows this now to be 14 ft. Where 1,000 workers produced 5,000 pairs of boots in one day five years ago, modern machinery enables nearly as many pairs to be turned out in the same period by a little over half as many hands. The Curse of Kent significs a ‘ainute spider which plagues hop elds, It spins a thread round the ste«= of the young hop, and this acts as a hang» man‘s noose, throttling the plant. Alphonso would dream in bis bamâ€" mock at night s Bweet dreams of the groves and the awallows is fight. Domestic servants in Western Ausâ€" traila must in fulure be known as "Miss Soandâ€"«0," the use of a Chrisâ€" tian name being forbidden unless the servant herself gives her consent to It. Paulinus would sit with the stars and the trees And dream of white sails on soft swailâ€" Ing seas, Parents of ten children != Italy are! z=â€"â€"â€"â€". exempted from payment of taxes, while bachelors between the ages of twentyâ€"fve and sixty are heavily taxed. L.E( is estimated to cost Gt. Britain J .N _ _French Civil Servants recelve inâ€" creases of salary as their familles grow, ranging from $30.00 for the first to$115.00 a year for the fourth and each successive child. ‘ Subd Said he of the hi"‘s to the man of the ©@8. «â€"W, D. Gough in Montréal Star. The year 1933 gave capitalism asd demseraey anothe» chance, The year cmmume on rrmeircith *8o long as work is aot obtainable lelsure is fuposs!ble."â€"Nicho‘rs Mur vay Butior, Every other bome in Great Britain now has a wireless set, according to recent figures. There are toâ€"day apâ€" proximately 6,000,000 wireless lm‘ in force, Fog is estimated to cost Gt. Britain j . J $5.25 per head of the population every year. _ One real "London particular®"l........ will cost the metropolis $5,000,000 a Joy‘s "Vogue" or "Chantecier"â€"the finest quality papers. The Polulhahanhdnfllftnbcama of beautifel and useful gifts, 1f you aren‘t now enjoying Turret Fine Cut quality and economy, start doing so today. Y more tobacco for money wher m&uYumfl{&dmï¬:Tm Fine Cutâ€"and you get Poker Hands, too ! You save more than enough on Turret Fine Cut to buy Make this Saving Yours! It pays to "Roll Your Own" with CIGARETTE TOBACCO SAVE THE POKER HANDS The Hills and the Sea Told in Brief true son of joy is my brother that tills," w of the ships to the man of the hilis. for the rover, but sorrow‘s fus TURRET FINE CUT Imperial Tobscco Company of Canade, Limited Doctors who use motorâ€"cars in Bek grade are now supplied with a special slgn. With this afxed to their cars they are exempt from speed !ipita oneâ€"way trafic, and other trafie reg® lations. N OPPPR To EVERY INYVENTOR, A I.ut“of -n;v‘ invertions and full nformation sent free. The -q Come r. World Patent Attorneys. 273 Hank reet, Ottawa, Canada. The Preeminent HotAd Achievement ADL LEAJN | HAIRDRE®N8HNq, Complete course. $30, Includes rooum ..-L o“\.\‘vllt Jones Heauty Ralon, cause Buckley‘s is so rupremsiy good that only cough or cold. And grhrgc_-l_-n--v-.d.-:E poiie o ie e ids ts few Amack -" o Tt hh HOCELRTS MHIXTORLE e "NOW I FEEL FULL OF PEP Nam‘a Veettaiile Compoun exheyn what bundreds of wouy OFF COLOUR? HOW IS YOUR LIvEer? Wake up your Liver Bile =â€"Without Calomss Cough or Cold Classified Advertising ISSUE No 53â€"‘34 in Liver Pille m€1 soon bring be 4 With Buckley‘s