sarrifiis; 1s. 194s. 'Iisw School Trains Jap Girls \ As ‘American-Style’ Jlalils i To mile "V108 smoother for American servicemen and their 1a - lies in Jfldlflll. U. S. authorities, aided by the Japanese Foreign 111:- lIl-W- m" °P°n°d ' “Mm”? l°h°°1 1h ‘WWO “here Ilrls are trained western stfie maid serivce. A11 mm who.“ o, any,“ “mun” & 10o enmms ms English lemons. learning American seeking’ le service and Baneral housekeeping teclmiques. A girl must-me: safully complete the one-month course. before she can work u ‘ ousemaid. Photos below show typical scenes at the school, m mmwbfil m. Howard Anderson who ia v ill. 8:: father Ind 11101-59!‘ an wth his". Mrs. Clmnincham being s. ami- to Mrs. Anderson. ~ Mr. John a has been‘ remov- ed to the ollglotm n tal 21:53” where his oogitlonom is ‘rbeeonditio trktOurr "mains n tbeauue m I'll! CILABLOTTIETQLVNVEEJQQRDIAN N 11$“ in ‘w mo! alcfll thevven-_ We. 1 Mr _ ‘ . L90 Q merchant business 1n the okl 5mm Students learn how to make a bed American style, with carefully Wquared "hospital" liow an American s mm left." says the instructor as abvahflws “Always serve me table is "t md the m“; 5flTQd,, Blx-tyear-old Lois Ann Kraut. oftTowson. Md. has made a meoial M 0t "wllionaire Blackcsm", a $05,000 Aberdeen-Angus bull entered l the Nationgl Angus Stow‘ at Baltimore. Md. “ATHLETES INDOORS AND MITDOORS rrm raanlans a ma“ teams new luau: have l "an med and raoo OLYMPINI - Cana ‘a na- tional antiseptic linlm t. n"! know — from personal "Defiance-chat Oi pens la Quick mm from lltratnl» aomand trains, ngmm- recovery Aimee bottloofO ‘- rm hepa but Jnyour mmqaaadlteusorrew ‘sou-tau - ~ factured. in England, of David I. mach. that has been 1m. Two brothers are still overseas. two discharged and taken up farm- 1118 and sad but true one brother WI! killed in action some years l8 . W. flcx, Morell has sold w?! cto Byronwvllreebste; e . ., moved to the city to xesifie. an Mr. Oaml McAdam has his ymlietllelgv 101M lflhMprell aluttost @114) . new .. will be installed v.11.» ‘deer? m em Several new headstones are in be erected in the Little Flower church Cemetery this fall before the frost comes. Mr. Ted McEwers has received the road masters s. lntmsnt r.- gl: Howard A ereon who has n l for some time. The mad machine and uew are at present in Bristol. It is reportul that Mr. and Mrs. Melvin: Furguson have sotd their property here and plan to remove to another farm west. of the city where they resided before coating to Bristle Mr. Wilfred McDonald. section- man here. has returned to work after s. vacation trip to various parts of New Exigland. It is alleged that a man who claims summer-side as his home has been pestering the worm-n o! this vicinity for some time as o. sewing machine repair man and at some houses ls reported. us in- listing on repairinz machines a alnst the wishes of the woman w are very often alone. Two other men have been pest- ering the houses along this way wulki inandaaklngto.» keot over t. They also claim Sum- mes-Ii the people of Bristol doubt ver; much if those tramps ever came frcnn that. fine western town. —E EDITOR SPEAKS our r61. MEN 0F SCIENCE ~ LONDON, Sept. 15-(0?) -No- body can ccntrol science except men of science, L. J. F. Brimble, - editor of the scientific magazine Nature, said at a conference. "Scientists have been develop-- in: a code of ethics for some time. They are well aware of the way science is leading and they are re- . renting the treatment meted out to them since the development of the atomic bomb." he said. . "They now are beginning to show signs of self-control and they are determined not to be control- led by anybody else. Scientists are willing ‘to co-operate with men of religion and have held their hands out to them on more than one oc- casion." a. mt. a. v. am. Imldon Univer-s slty, said that faiiin the collab- oration of the worl ‘s scientists‘ and maintenance of a common. ethical standard, “one could. fore- ‘aee the time when scientific dls-' covery and invention may provide one o! the chief stumbling blocks to international co-operation and the chief means for mutual de- struction." svnuav BRIDGE rTo-mn LANDMARK (By William Stewart. Canadian Preal Staff Writer) SYDNEY, AuS., Sept. l5—(CP)—- Australia's moat famous landmark is the Sydney harbor bridge which links the city's downtown busi- ness section with northern suburbs and even 14 years after complet- ion remains one of the most oop- ular Sydney sights. _ A toll-bridge, the great structure which took sl-x years to build with 00.000 tons of special steel manu- is slightly more than two miles long. When its approaches, including OUT OUR WAY do as their home port and‘ l lr/hy: Tun FEDERATED MALAY sum produce a. large part of the world's tin. Canada produces about ninety per Only .4 small percentage of Malayan tin is consumed in Malaya. Less than three percent of the Nickel produced in Canada is consumed in Canada-the rest is exported, and the money received helps to pay for tin anckother products we?‘ . "t Ill _ o ‘~3- , ~ l) l ii .\ 7’ I “"e_7 .., “m i I "aaa/Iufia, N cent of the world's Nickel. necessary to good living in Canada. Canada cannot keep on importing from / g _--, 1 it?” fr” s. yo” 7 /'0 pmoé/c/fs‘ other lands unless Canadian goods are exported.‘ “ll/i Q E Each increase in the export of Canadian Nickel means more workers employed in the Nickel mines, smelters and refineries, as well as additional workers employed in the production of the lumber, power, steel, machinery and supplies used by the Canadian Nickel industry. By constantly expanding the use of Nickel at home and abroad, the Canadian Nickel industry brings additional benefits to Canadians. l TIIE INTERNIIIONAL NICKEL COIiPANY 0F CANADA, LIMITED, 2% KING ST. ZBS-foot granite pylons at either end 0i’ lvts arched central span were completed in 1932, the total cost was about $82,000,000. To Sydney residents, "our bridge" is not only an object of pride but an indispensable traffic route to the north snore of the harbor where thousands have homes from which they are able to travel in to city jobs by fast suburban train. The bridge, carries four rallwa! lines in addition to its six-lane automobile roadway and two foot- ways. its capacity 's 138 trams. 6.000 motor vehiclI-s and 40,000 pedestrians an hour. Its lab-foot height from the ‘By J. R. WlLLiAMb YE GODS.’ I TOLD HIM TO $TEP BACK AND JEE IF OUIZHSLIFS WERE. SHOW‘ IMG. AND HE'S MAKlNCe A GEOGRAPHIC SURVEY OF IT.’ water permits the largest ships visiting Sydney to pass under it easily, and from the footways, travellers get a view of the sprawling port exceeded only by the view from an airplane. When it was first projected ear- ly in the century. at a time when harbor travel was largely by ferry. there was also talk oi’ tunnelling a route to the north shore. . Now dominating the waterfront. the bridge lighted at dusk can be seen from downtown areas miles apart. To Australian servicemen returning from the wnrs the bridge has represented the front gate to their homeland. CIVIL SERVANTS RETUBN TO . UNION LONDON. Sept. 15—(CP)- The ban 0n their affiliation lifted by n Labor Bfivernment service unions have been re-ad- mitted to the Trades Union Con- gress. increasing its membership by about 250.000. The T.U.C. general council ac- cepted the re-affiliations of the Civil Service Clerical Association, Inland Revenue Staff Fedcratiozng Union of Post Office Workers and Post Office Engineering Union at a recent meeting, All werwcompelled to withdraw from association with the '1‘.iJ.C. under the 192'! Trade Union and aTrade Disputes Act passed follow I OUR BOARDING HOUSE With Major Hoopl- eeacinnets me straw mar scams ‘ c M us GACKI~ WHEN t co ' ,Z / 1... LOOK FOR A $HlRT O HA8 FiLC % cleans A HAUNTED HOUGE 44mg; cfi :_/—_q¢_- 4 ' iiiiiiii! ‘lb LEARN l-le /// - ro 8AM; sages tug/e TuB'-- 1 ' yea n, mo now Tats! Mv - me HUM ooe A 1H5 PATtetlce OF 50B. BUT ‘l’. can ‘ 6E GOADED outs-so FAR.'*-Tl-lE ecu.‘ p?‘ CLANGS FOR NlTlON- lng the general strike of i926. The act was repealed government now in office. The council will consider estab- shment of a separate group with- °°"°“- °"’“ in the T-U c. m the ci-vil by the Labor service Two men were burned to death and ll other persona injured. '11- Rsmmllr 4 .\‘|r!.~.ol"u 1-01-05- l-nolr fine .11.... lmirfi. nu 1.. wa fnv on n-qunl u my“ WEST, TORONTO unions. An application for affilia- tion was received from the Assoc. lotion of Civi-l Service 8nd Drnughts bl h ' s affiliated whehrletlhdvwcfl ‘dent £2: passed, Design vi". when they attempted to leap ta safety, i»; thls spectacular four-alarm fire in a Philadelphia apatintzrzt, house. Firemen here pour with iniothoblalinginfelminan w.» tobringthellhaaiQ ..-r.~w,. - i