.9; IF IT ' rs USABLE w: WILL roan rr ovsa ro run runs: msrnnsaav 0a {run soorar. saavron roa ran can or some: raumv n! nnsn or rr. USE rr WILL an nnsraovnn m rm: orrv momma ATOR. l Cioénvention At , Hunter River ._.__.;_. The Annual Teacher's Convent- tion of Northern Queens was-held at Hunter River, August 26. There were twenty-five teachers present, of than thirteen were remaining in the same schools. ten in new schools and two befllfllflrs. _ The president, Mia MacRae pre- sided, and after the reading and adqption of the minutes of last convention the following com- mittees were appointed: Nomina- tion oommlttee— Mrs. Cora Mac- leod, Mr. George Cairns. Resolu- tion commlttoeflillr. Donald Nichol- son, m.“ Margaret Woolner, Miss Alice MacLeilan. Question Box- Miss Catherine MacPherson, Miss Mildred Brown. Press Committee- Miss Beatrice Stevenson, Mr. D1! MacDonald. Miss MacRas welcomed all teachers and in a very interesting sndinstruciive address reviewedthe year's work of the executive meet- ings. She urged all teachers to join the Federationbecause of its help to us in solving our difficulties by means of "Teacher's Aid Service" directed by Mr. C. F. Hines. and then during the winter months educational talks were broadcast by prominent educational persons. A splendid paper on "Seat Work Devices" was read ky Mr. Edison MacDonald. of ice-cream social $18.80, expenses $2.99, Amount donated to School Fall‘ 815-00- A report of the Insti- tute Convention was given by Miss Mary MacGrcgor. Mrs. Bert Mac- Kay entertained the membersand visitors with a contest which was enjoyed by all. Programme Com- mittee appointed for next meeting Mrs. med Campbell and Mrs. Hugh Campbell. Roll call to be answered with “A Current Event". A five cent collection was taken. Mrs. J. A. Campbell invited the members to her home for October meeting. ‘A dainty lunch wal served by the hostess. assisted by. Miss May Mac- Gregor. . Dress Big Item In (lo-ed Costs (By The Canadian Prea) MINNEAPOLIS, Sept. Ill-It's clothes that make college girls’ ex- penses heavier while eats bring up the cost to the men students ac- cording to a recent survey by an insurance company. Apparel costs, a ‘family econom- ics" study among 8B2 University "f Minnesota students dixzlosed, make "co-ed" expenses larger than the male students. The averages are $77.97 a month expense, against $59.75 exclusive of tuition fees. One suspicion about “eo-ed" inclinations suffered a setback, however; she Slliltrl/IBOI Willianis then ad- dressed the convention taking for his topic "Drill." Supervisor Chandler gave a valu- able talk on the librarlu and their irsefulneu. He also distributed lists of books and stressed the reading of some more than others. - Miss Catherine Maclean was Pleased to report that the Junior Red Crom rnem ship had now reached almost 1.000 and that some; five hundred and eighty- thzee bnnchu were in operation. She asked that any crippled child- ren. who had not received treat- ment should be reported by the teachers in whose district they might be. ~ Miss Taylor gave a brief talk concerning the work and benefits deceived frcrn the Federation. Jlrrgnnoor: sassrou _Supervisor Williams presented Junior Red Crms flags to the teachers of Bradaibane and North Rustico schools for efficiency in Red Cross work. Mn MscNutt outlined the teach- ins of “Histcr-y" ‘ using supplementary ing to educate and interest- , 5st Major Irlsm directed the teachers in the teaching of "Drills" and Physical Bducstion- program. Superintendent H. H. Shaw dealt chiefly with the new course o! studies and also conducted the Question Box. after which the re- ports of Committees were celled or. llnllcwing were the Resolutions: lved that tbethsnks cf this conve tion be extended to the trustees and ratepayers of Hunter River district for the use of the school. Resolved that the thanks of this spends only 76 cents a month more in beauty shops than men do in barbel- 3110135, she spends ills?- l fraction of the smounrmcn do o“ tobacco. , , The average fraternity mans ex- penses monthly are $96.90. com- pared with $47.21 for the non- fratemity man. New Samoan Stamps Memories of Robert Louis Stev- enson are conjured up by I new and picturesque series 0f 58ml"! postage stamps bearing for the "irst time official designation of New Zealand mandated P01‘; on of the group "Western Samoa. e stamp vignettes are finely en- ved with local scenes. including l. view of Stevenson's home "Vail- " according to William Gour- l; manager of the American Ex; a Travel Service. "Vailima. new. the official residence c! the Adminlstmm,’ 5nd Stevenson's tomb‘ on the top of Mount Vaea. 0n m. HQmmAtIOIl-s 6d Petunll» "a shown on the stamPS- A 35mm“ gm king Kava is the subject o! the s; stamp in apple 8m", while pgrt of the waterfront at Apia, th capital, is seen in tho 1d design, rint in claret and blue- black. , 4 no arose, nsncmo i, mans on RADIO Thj cansdisn Press) ION-DON, Sept. ia-Dancinl Girls are to vanish, from the British grownups; generation's autumn and winter programs and there is m he less jun hen has been heard for some tin}. accordinB to u" 3.2.0.1 plans m risht wtcfllln" msnt broadcasts in future. The new pllll provide for short- er dance music pmsrlml- "Vim" lion of ten dancers and dancing w“ virtual abolition of studio Qudiencel and increased topicsiity. populgr features or last rm W111 bg continued and», there will b! 1W9?“ A WISSIII of Remembrance KINGSTON. Ont. Sept. 19-(0?) —Railways Minister Dr. R. the 21st Battalion memorial in city Perk. Dr. A. n. Ross and William Nickle. K. 0.. accompanied him. Dr. Manion was formerly medical officer of the 21st Battalion. He was awarded the Military Cross for Gallantr-y at vimy Ridge. PRIMARY ELECTION IIITS NEW DEAL WASHINGTON. Sept. 19—(AP)-—- Tuesday's primary elections hit New Deal constitutional revision hopes in Pennsylvanl. the Sales Tax in New Jersey and abortive revolts in both democratic and Re- publician organizations of New York city. New Mexico, the fourth state holding an off-yearprimary elec- tion. witnessed apparently success- ful opposition to proposed consti- tutional changes there, particularly charter revision extending to all the property tax exemptions now granted to war veterans. With returns in Pennsylvania nearly all in, charter revision trail- ed by more than 101,000 votes. The result was a defeat for the plans of Governor George Earle to provide constitutional foundations for social security measu ca patterned after the Roosevelt New Deal. In New York city all the borough Democratic organizations bearing the approval of Postmaster General James A. Farley swept their tickets to victory. Tammany Hall, faced with internal uprising among fol- lowers of the ousted leader John F. curry. stood off a threat to the leadership of James J. Dooling by winning I3 of I0 district fights. The country Republican organi- zation of Chase Mcllen, young Liberal in Manhattan. similarly fought off an "old guards" move- men with Mellen‘s country chair- manship apparently preserved. Silver Fox Trims New Goats for Fall Fall coats are interesting in their almost unanimous acceptance of the slender wrapped body, some- times wcm without a belt. oc- casionally with the closing accented by fur. but most. instances worn belted. The fabrics lend to empha- size the straight up-and-down line of the slim silhouette in their en- dorsement of the self-striped raised pattern effect. There is a series of coats magni- ficently trimmed with silver fox in every collection. Silver fox is worked into deep tubular cuffs that serve as a muff as well; the fur sleeve reaches its most luxurious expression in this fur. skilfully mounted on the outside ofthe arm. There is a new looking cape idea, which works fur vertically down the back in sailor suggestion, but rwrlaccs the flat line of the heck of ‘p. collar with a built-up collar. A coat that should be regarded as highly important from the style point of view emphasises the side closing with a band of silver fox and introduces l. shined treatment qt the armhole of the wide sleeve. The new flared collars in mink will also add to fall coats, while double bands of fur treated in sofe fichn effect. suggesting o. very fem- inine version of the p1astron.‘will 6W5"!!! PM" Dflhllcr in either misnoknor Per-alien lamb. I h" doll Ifccspreuc coat fabrics. ‘than are about fflfl n. d in hllf all. j u: concerned with mili- iii r V“; kidneys a good Y0“? the Purchase Price cl: a Spring Filled Mattress Choose From Canada's Best The "Sleepwell" Rog Price . . . $l9.95 Allowance . . . . 5.00 Pa’ 0 o o o o $2.50 Now—$2.50 Monthly Mattress I T l1 e ‘Relates!’ Rog. Price . . $25.00 Allowance . . . . 5.00 You Pay . . . . 20.00 82.50 Now-$2.50 Monthly T l1 e “Duchess” Reg. Price . '. $27.50 AIIOWBIICG s e c o You Pay . . . . 22.50 $2.50 Now—$2.50 Monthly Reg. Price . The “True-Rest” Allowance . . . . 5.00 YcuPay . . . . 21.50 $2.50 Now—$2.50 Monthly If . $32.50 laws l Possrarv- - - You no nor REALIZE. We are informed bytholein, touch with these things thal- therc are that are in dire need and , they could use dozens of good old mattresses. ' .|t||.|._rwo slabs a wnjl-l our srouei " Save $5.00 on the purchase = - price of one of these luxuriously comfortable mattresses and at the sometime bring a bit of com- fort to some onénot so fortunate as yourself. and changes in present labor ' I many homes in the ' point to higher prices. SALE POSITIVELY ENDS SEPTEMBER 30th Entomologists Fight Spruce Sawfly -—-- WASHINGTON. Sept. IO-(CP) —The United States Agriculture J. Mango“ today planed a wreath m, Department reported today that the European spruce sawfly now is well established in northern New England, adjacent to infecttd sec- tions of Canada, with the fate of New England spruce resting on the success of ‘ logists to discover a practical method of control. The Department's Bureau of lim- tornology and plant Quarantine said this particularly destructive pest of spruce trces-especiall white spruce-has spread across the Can- adian border and now occurred from the Maine-Quebec line to the Acadian National Park on Mount Desert Island, the Baxter ational Park at Mount Katahdin. the northern part of Aroostook County. Dr. F. C. Craighead of the Bureau of Entomology commented: "If we can draw conclusions from conditions in Canada, it will be a matter of only a year or two before our spruce trees will suffer- the destruction now going on in Southeastern Canada." One Price For . Both Wheat Grops WINNIPEU. Sept. l9—-(CP)-—- Farmers still holding wheat grown in 1934 will receive the same price for lt from the Canadian Wheat Board as for the 1935 crop it was announced here today. This means c. price of a7 1-2 cents a bushel for all No. 1 North- em Wheat, Burt William basis. whether it is in store in elevators or held on farms, as long as it is owned by the producers. The date on whic the Board will start pur- chasing is to be announced shortly. TAKING BACK MEN AFTER. YEARS OP UNEMPLOYMENT SPOKANA. Wash. Sep 1B.- (C. P.)- Railroad men who haven't employed since 1929 are being employed on the three- trans continental lines through Spokane, officials reported today. A rush of grain shipments. with timber products, early fruit and sheep. are taxing rail facili- ties to the limit. Grain move- ment over the Union Pacific here increased 40 percent, in Aug- ust over a year ago. SACRIFICE!) TO CROP GOD NAGPUR. India, Sept. Ill-TWO villagers were sentenced to death and three to life imprisonment for throwing a lu-yesrold man into the sacrificial fire to e996!” 9- gcd, after successive crop failures. The victim escaped the fire and was strangled to death. grayest blue and should be an effective contrast with certain fox fur tones.‘ The military red is lively and not to bold to be wearable. A very mixed olive green and s purplish wine ans new renaissance colors. I-‘igne for Kidney Weakness STOP RESTLESS NIGHTS Keep your kidneys free from waste matter, poisons and acid, and pat healthy activity into kidneys and bladder and ‘you'll lire a healthier, happier and onger life. One moat efficient and harmless way ggt from your box G d and swift 9c . some symp- tome cf lldllc are beek- ar-ho, moist pa c. leg cramps and puffy eyes. If you want real results he sure to t GOLD DAL —tl|e original an my stimulant In from Burma is cleaning once a Couldn't Sleep Cried At Pain lat Budd's Scan lrclgil lcllci "For 22 years I suffered with bsck- . ache, which scarred after child-birth," writes Mrs. Flor- sncs Johnatcne. Impsrcyal, Dart- mouth, N.S. "I tried icu of medicines bu: they did me no good. rec or four years ago my rheumatism was so bad that I could nor lay down at night and I o0 cry with pain. About a ear ago I started taking Dcddh Ki ney Pills, and I felt good after urin the first Z boxes. I heel three troub eo- L ' L , bladder " and rheu- mctiun—bu now have none." D47 Budd's Kidney Pills Children L... Normal Weight (By The Canadian Press) WASHINGTON. Sept. io-Re- cently completed surveys by the public health service of school children in six representative Am- erican cities reveals that young- sters from families whose incomes have shrunk due-to the depression did not maintain the same relative growth as children of the entire group studied. Most significant of the findings was that "the average weight of children from the continuously comfortable families is approxi- mately four per cent greater than the average weight of all children taken together: that the relative weight of children from the poor families is roughly one to two per cent below the weight of all chil- dren and that the relative weight of children from recently poor families takes an intermediate po- sition between the other two eco- nomic groups." the report says. The children from six to nine years o: age failed by slightly more than two per cent to attain the average weight of the entire group. Little relationship was found for children over 10 years of age or in heights of any of the children. By 1933. the report adds, the weight of children from families which ‘pcame poor during the de- pression dropped from the level of the continuously comfortable fam- ilies to about that. of the continu- ously poor families. Bluenose In English Drydock LUNENBURG. N. S. Sept. 19- fCPi-Owners of the international champion racing schooner Blue- nose, learned today the racy banker was in dry-dock at Plymouth, England, after receiving a sever e buffeting in an Atlantic stonn of the British Isles last week. A cable said sails. booms and gcffs would have to be renewed, the mast had been strained; and the hull had become leaky. She had left England a week ago after a baanstonning tour of English ports. American Business Man's Sudden Death CHESTER. N. S.- Sept. lll-(CP) ~Cllbert Browning. 63-year-old Greenwich. Conn.. business man. died suddenly at his summer home yesterday. Planning to take iris family for c drive in the morning, he went out to start his car. Later his wife and two daughters Alice and Jean. found him dead in the front scat. Death was ascribed tc a heart attack. N0 inquest will be hold. For years Mir. Browning had been ts...- £.~...""'“"" "iii? ti . business cos to Iii. Wore Clothes To Wear Long Not For View (By The Canadian Press) LONDON. Sept. ill-What our Victorian grandmothers wore—and didn't wear~is the subject of an raticle in The Manchester Guardi- an, largely on the authority of masculine writers. but interpreted by a woman contributor: Dr. Willett Cunnington, whose collection of feminine 19th century clothes has earned large sums f0! various charities; has recently writ- ten a book on the subject and has called it "Feminine Attitudes in the Nineteenth Century." What he says about women's dress insofar as styles have been evolved and adopted with an eye to husband-catching, has been set down before in slightly different words by D. H. Lawrence in one o1 his essays collected under the title of “Assorted Articles.’ And judging from its reception by some o1 Dr. Cunningtonls women re- viewers, it has given considerable offence. The old question has crop- ped up: Do women dress with the male eye as their chief objective, or is there adornment chiefly adop- ted in self-expression lmd as a re- sult of their strong aesthetic sense? However Ms question may be answered, there can be no doubt that our grandmothers. granted that they were respectable women. seem to have made no 6110M t0 please one eyes in the matter of underclothes. Acoordingl Dr. Cun- nington has found r1 difficult t0 obtain as many specimens as he would have liked of such gunn- ents. Even trousseau nishtsvwns and the rest, have seldom been kept, these having been intended rather for hard wear and wash than for charm. so that scruvlllillls cleanliness alone was the oblwli 01 women in this respect, and when a garment was outworn or out- grown it was out up for the sake of the linen. the embroidery alone being sometimes retained for use with new material. A feminine contributor to The Guardian says: "The other day, reading a cur- ious Victorian book by a male auth- or on the subject 0f WON-HHS 1°!‘ women. I came across. the infor- mation that few little girls in early Victorian times possessed any drawers at all, that in a girls’ school the richer children owned a. few pairs, which they wore on Sundays only, and that the long pantalettes in the pictures of small girls were usually mere leggings drawn on separately over each foot. after the girl was dressed. to be secured roimd the: knees by tape or elastic, with the result that a common disaster during a walk was to discover one frilled legging- growing longer than the other. “That is to say, that the Brontes, George Eliot, and, earlier, Jane Austen wore chemizes but no draw- ers. It was at a. later date that the pantaiettes tool: to themselves an upper part And turned into those open drawers which, when they were first introduced. were considered both daring and indeli- cate. although they cam to serve a wi-s); generation and more of our mothers and aunts. The intro- duction of bloomers or closed pants came later and was a startling in- novation which many condemned on the grounds of excessive mascu- linity. ~ - "'Stout' underelothing, in the sense of substantial, was the word And perhaps nothing could better demonstrate the difference between a. girl of thcse days and one of the present time than a comparison the nightgowns normally worn the two epochs. “Old fashions for dresses and coats may return." the writer pro- phecies. "Evln the crinoilne and the bustle may easily have a modi- fied revival. But I take it that we shall never again ~wl"h to we-rr anything resernbl, ' Victorian un- der cloth s. no matm- how the wheel of fashion may revolve." iii-i- X ii‘! IR It!!! IOIIQI OLM srs L Not One Stricken Of- 7,000 Treated MONTREAL. Sept. 1a-Dr. Mau;ice Brodie, of Ottawa, dis- coverer of a new serum for the prevention of infantile paralysis. who is connectcdwith the public health services in New York city, said here tonight it was too early yet to know whether - the serum was good pr not. In the next breath he revealed that out of 7.- 000 perscns vaccinated with the serum none has yet been stricken with infantile paralysis. “There really isn't any news in this thing," he stated. "We have been trying the serum out for about a. year. Just recently, we used it 0n a. batch of New York children and the papers got hold of it. But there wasn't anything new then, and there isn't anything new now. As far as we're concerned,’ there won't be anything new for a. considerable time until our tests have been in practice long enough to show results." Its discoverer said the serum is cf no value for treatment. It is purely a preventive. It is derived from the spinal cords of monkeys which had the disease. One monkey can supply enough serum to im- munize six persons. Dr- Brodie ls a graduate of McGill University, Montreal. PEEIFS IIEIR: DAUGHTER OF MRS. MEYRICK: ROMANCE IDNDCIN, Sept. Ill-Announce- mcnt is expected shortly cf an eh. Easement between Lord Howard of Effingham. heir to the Earl of Eff- lngham, and Miss Kathleen Mey- rlck, night club hostess and eldest unmarried daughter of the late Mrs. Kate Meyrick, London's "Night Club Queen.“ Lord Howard of Effingham is aged 30. . Kathleen Meyriok. 2B yeflfg o; age. is the third of the former “Night Club Queen's" eight q-mq. ren. May, the eldest daughter, is the Countess of Kinnoull. Dorothy married Lord de Clifford. Nancy married secretly two years ago Lieutenant Edward Fitz- roy St. Aubyn, who belongs to Lord St. Levanis family. CHANGE SEEN IN U.K. IN EMIGRATION TREND LONDON, Sept. 19—'I‘he over- seas Settlement Department of the Government reports a. slight change in the trend of migration. m 1e34, 22,966 resident; cf the United Kingdom left for the Dominions; in 1933. 20,760 18ft. Th9 former year saw 29,230 leave for foreign Movies as compared with aazss in 1933. immigrating into the Unit. ed Kingdom from the Dominions were 38,846 in i034 and 44,642 in i933. and from foreign countries, 48,843 and 59,324 respectively. COW WINS REPRIEVE EFAVETJEY. Derbyshire, Eng, Seht. l9--A cow bolted when on the way to a slaughter house here. held up an express train and won a reprieve for herself, the butcher Fears Manipulation ,. 0f Lithuanian Ballot orcrrarva. Sept. rs-rc. P.>-, _ League-of Nations statesmen still lv had on their doorstep last. night that recurring menace to Europe's peace-the Memel question. Anthony-Eden of Great Britain v found time to scrutinize the sight- " page protest brought to Geneva by Richard Myer. Deputy Speaker of the Memel Parliament. alleging . that Lithunia is determined to pre- vent fair election in the uu0llOmlll Memel Territory Sept. 29. The German's protest says Lithu- anian authorities are packing Memel territory with new pro- Lithuanian voters by "faclliating_ the granting of citizenship contrary to statute." On the other hand, he ,. charges, they are reducing the f number of potential German voters ' by wholesale owenn-anchisement of Gennan residents of Mcmel. His protest also alleges Uthuanian authorities are changing the elec- toral law to faeiliate manipulation a of the balloting. ’ Newfoundland Most , Suitable for Air-port , LONDON. Sept. 19—(C.P. Cable) —Port Botwood, Newfoundland, is _ the most suitable airport for a ,5 British North Atlantic airmail ser- '- vice. Air Ministry officials have decided, the Daily Herald said to- day. The officials have been cooperat- ing with Imperial Airways in work- ing out details for a projected ser- , vice linking Great Britain and ‘ Canada. The paper said the probable op- erating base on the English side K would be Lough Foyle. mnderry, t Northern Ireland. i . IN MEMORIAM EDWARD B. MACLEOD Edward B. MacLeod, formerly with the Kenney-Kcnnedy Co., Worchcster, Mass, and president of MacIeod. Inc. Boston the last 10 years, died Saturday Sept. 14,111 St. Margaret's Hospital, Dorchester. He was a member of Worchester lodge, 13.? 0.13.. and the Com. mercial Travellers Association. Mr. Macleod was the son of ' Margaret iBarnesi and the late James Macbcod. He is survived by his u'i'c. Alice (l-lcaleyl Macbeod; his mother; three brothers, Ernest MacLcod of Boston, Dr. Harry T. Macleod of Milton and J. Cordon MacLeod of Mattapan, and two sisters, Gertrude. wiio~of--~Ja-rnea Conkely of Medford and Miss Amy MacLeod of Boston. 1, The funeral was at his home, -. i746 Commonwealth avenue. Brigh- ton. ‘Pilesday morning. A high mam of requiem was offered in St. . Gabriel's Monastery. Brighton. . Burial was in St. John's Ceme- l tery. Wcrchcster. ' The late James family left Chariot quarter of a century ago and located in Boston. Mrs. MacLeod acLepd and ~ own over a _. retiring to kill the anlma‘. of in l t NOW IS AN OPPORTUNE TIME T0 INSTALL A Pipeless Furnace ' The Fawcett Line is giving ‘ excellent satisfaction. Oall and see us or write if interested. " Samuel Kennedy- i 9-16-mwf 3i. was formerly MlssAnnic Payne of i ' Charlottetown.