| ff. SATURDAY THE G umuggvr-yn»--»r-~ ARDIAl\ .f-,ip/uf raimfs Women of Europe . Sta tesmen After Conference . 1 * . ..~.....¢°..... ...ms Making Progress 0' ’ A .aiu Q F _._ .~ ‘ - e ha" m t lm to can - » “After a ng women 0 n if rf \ ) ji H* forty nations at the International ` "‘ Suffrage Conference at Istanbul.” //// "'f’il|n..._- i\iii.\i||."i Jig ‘ f 11"! '-ni; _ V . - I /_ I/A . " ‘ ._'». = 'ser-U . 1l`75"C"n. 'f,]`,`_`i I'f,'!,,-"ily '- V i ,I2 Df~\l'5\{ Fibvt cfa ie Sllfoufi’ _, 2_9o 19.511 f.A_§Y "VP/-\Y|'l`l£f\TS Ivory enameled baby or'iba,cen- pleto with ra Hi Y. 1 gi al 'A 7 Comylata ahewing of all naealt etrollera and . carriages in ai.- traetlva, li-rom fibre read. Thick rubber tiral. Aejultaeh. Nota tha lor Price. H 0LMM|’S Ch'town and Summerslde V a on apr nga lturdily built and safely de- nsoad. ri-my ara very spas. lelly priced. Woman Jurist Urges Reform (By The Canadian Prices) EDMONTON, July 26 - Judge Helien Gregory McGill, judge of the Vancouver juvenile court for 15 years, urged the value of train- ing and reform of prisoners while visiting here. "There are more Juvenile cases in Vancouver today than any time in our history but s, large number of these cases are brought to us by parents who find the law the most effective way to deal with undis- eloiined chudien," Judge Mcoiu uid. “Under what we term the cloak Of Charity." we establish facts that prove the children incorrlgible and then ure every effort to correct them before finally resorting to the industrial schools. “It is sociel- ized justice in its highest form," lhe added. _ Mrs. McGill was enthusiastic con- cerning the provincial prison farm Ol' British Columbia, “Oakalla. ' “lt is the only one of its kind in the dominion with the exception of the reformatory at Guelph, _0nt. The prisoners are trained ln every trade and there is a library of 900 books. The prisoners keep their °Wn Gardens and are paid 10 ccnta a day for their work." Promotions For R. G. M. Police fCa.n;|:iian Press) OTTAWA, July 26-Promouons in the Royal Canadian Mounted Police here announced today as follows: Inspector G»F. Fletcher, Inspector A.H.L. Mellor and Inspector A_E. (}.O. Rcamcs are promoted to the rank of Superintendent following the retirement from the service of three senior ofllcers recently. Superintendent Fletcher has serv- ed continuously with the force since November, 1906. He passed through the various gi-alles of mn-commiv efoner rank and served overseas with the R.N.W.M. police squad- ron. He is at present stationed at Halifax, being in command of the Halifax sub-division, and sewnd in command to "H" division. A man without money is like a bow without an arrow. 'Ability To See Comfortably .@.._- _ Theoofseedamoderneti Zaetv|eeil¢o`enlb\e|»¢\llh\a aemfotiably.Tha¢maaea [mmm main on an Andalaolhaavofdaloe malwbollyreaeltdoleri 'ngeelieughtdnoervae eanaillailen ofall who ifeiidtaillelihaeolrll- ‘lyelrqaa _.___- ade in recent years sion. Turkish Women - per classes. Now schools for gi are overcrowded, the students mad up of all classes. In universities and normal schools girls are nd- mitied on equal terms with men. Likewise, the professions are open to women. It is not imcommon to meet women who are doctors, law- yers, judges and teachers. This year seventeen women became members of Parliament. - It would not be‘fair to sum up the position of women in Turkey without mentioning the part of Mustapha Kemal Pasha, president of the 'Iurkish Republic. In no uncertain terms he told the wom- en's parley et Istanbul that he wanted women of his country to have an equal opportunity with men. Russian Scene Traveling from Istanbul across the Black Sea to the la-nd of the Soviet, one ilnds an even more lib- eral attitude toward women, im- pressive fn the speed and complete- ness with which it was put into effect. The importance of the po- sitions attained by women in Tur- key is slgnificant. but the number is small compared with Russia. The entire situation in Russia can be summed up with the simple statement that women have equal opportunity, The opportunities offered women fn Russia already have had a de- cided effect on adjacent countries. and the future influence for wom- en's betterment will be increasingly apparent. German Dec-I" Arriving in Berlin, .Y.".s'phvne Schain went to the headquarters of the Deutsches Frauenwerk, or Fed- eration of Women‘s Organizations. The work of the women in Ger- many is "co-ordlnatcdf' By a cur- ious paradox, she says, here is an elaborate organization staffed by women-working outside the home -whose chief object is to keep women in the home. There are five divisions to wom- en's interests and work under the direction of Frau Scholtz-Klink. The Nationalist Socialist Women‘s Organization takes in all the women who belong to the party. Through this division the women express themselves politically. In the second group one finds the co-ordination of such women's groupe as are left of the former regime, the Association of Univer- sity Women, the Y.W.C.A. and simi- lar groups which have no political slant to their work. Several na- tional won1.en's groups with inter- national connections disbanded under the Hitler regime rather than be "co-ordlnatedl’ The third group is the Women‘s Working Service. This division has under its direction 317 homes or camps where girls from 17 to 25 go for training and service. This ser- vice tries to break down class lines. The organization also sends girls to work for farmers who cannot af- ford hired help and to work for social service institutions. The Labor Front is the fourth di- vision. Here problems relating to women in industry are handled. Every factory has its council rep- resenting employers and employes. The Labor Front endeavors to se- cure the appointment of a. woman on each of these councils so that women will have a voice in deter- mining the conditions under which they work. 'I‘he fifth project is the Red Cross, with the usual activities of that organization. The common belief, outside of Germany, that the women of the country had been relegated to the three K's-Kuche, Kinder and Kirche-was denied emphatically. At headquarters it was said that the yordsticks so often used to measure the Pf0¢'l‘ess of the woman movement was whether women wen allowed a plecedn Parliament. "That has no meaning in Germany today.” one woman said, "because the Reichstag il now more like' a theatre where Hitler makes a lpeech for the benefit of the press or foreign countries. "The new movement is seeking to help the rank and his of women who are housewives. The great ma- jorityofthewomenwhoerein hdiltry ,teach them thinga that they will m.._ is gg r§;-3 ii if? i it is It lil' the National Committee on the YOUCE FFORDAIIIW /CAN" Logj( CRIB AND A1- “|555 _5“\°i-lf* ssnsmonai. FOR BABY- vA|_uss.. .rose-shine scuain, chaimmu of . - Cause .and Cure of War. has Jus (4 $ returned from a visit to Turkey, ‘ Germany. Russia and Italy. Writ - »g& . ing in the New York .Times she gives some interesting views on the strides which women in those lands 5 ` ight u 1 a f, -Q \\ she says, "one m we cone u e that the gains of women in their W’ U fight for equal rishts have been ' :”':"r Bfvater than their losses." P t 'I‘he impetus given by the United l States. England and the U.S.B.R.. f"‘i“~' ' -- to women's struggle for equality with men in lndustry, lawmaking and moral standards has forced Fascist Governments to yield some- what fn their attitude of suppres- The most dramatic change in'the i status of women is in Turkey. 4 where women's veils were long a ` 1 of Sultans and mums' Pierre Laval French premier with Capt. Anthony Eden after a conference of many hours at the Egkggfécdmg? f12efrfe,,_ec;tsmv§‘€";§,‘; foreign office in Paris, at which no lxgreement could be reached in regard tp naval affairs. leading nations of the world were ’ I §.‘§..°’iiZ.I.‘I.$’2§.?.§‘d"1‘l.’Ili.’2,“£.,§2§ Artist Paints iW0111d E110 Bl1I`i&lSi1i Blames Husband I wrf§t¢fst15 ' Prairie. Blooms t “P0f»l`»6l"S Fltlld.” F01' Prison Sgntenge was restricted to women of the ug; ‘ ___._ t (By The Canadian Press) ° nncrus, July as-wirmifred Walker, internationally known painter of wild-flowers, while on a tour through Saskatchewan put on canvas the colorful blooms which grow on the prairie. Later in the year the paintings will be exhibited in England. She has been awarded medals at exhibitions held in London, Paris. Philadelphia and Ghent. and her ipictures have been hung in -Paris `salons and the Royal academy in London. Miss Walker is the offifiai artist for the Royal Horticultural society in London. "I was simply drunk with de- light,” said Miss Walker, “When ‘I went into the Yosemite valley in California before coming here and found so many flowers that have never been painted beiiore." She painted 150 varieties in Califomla since her arrival there in March. She expla‘ned her prize is a pic- ture oi a blood-red snow plant that grows at thc line where the snow melt; in California. "I painted 120 different kinds of Canadian wild flowers from Mon- treal to Vancouver when I was here in 1928. the visiting artist said. “Canadian flowcas have a rc- mnrkable beauty rind grow v-ery well in England. Lady Byng has a Canadian gard"n in which she grows dozens of dlffcrcnt. kinds of Canadian flowers and shrubs. I have been asked to paint it.” A horticultural artist must have a wide knowledge of botany and Miss Walker explained very often she can toll the par(-niago of a flower by merely rubbln; the fol- iage or a petal between her fing- ers. "My pictures mus: bo exact re- iproductions of the flowers. for size color and distinctive markings so they can be recognized by flowers growers for what they arc," she said. Patched pants cover e multitude of shins. Radicallsm docs not thrive in the soll of justice. Jif I. I i i 1 MILVERTON. July 26.-“Pot- ter's field" burials for Ontario citi- zens on relief will be abolished. and funerals for the__unemployed will be paid for by the Provincial and Federal Governments, if ne- gotiations now under way Hi Queen's Park are successful, it was announced by Robert McMa.nc. president of the Ontario Funeral Service Association. Some 350 members of the amoe- intion from every town and city in Ontario will attend the 52 annual convention at the Royal York Hotel in Toronto next week. "We fecl that by this plan the self-respect of those in unfortun- ate circumstances, degraded by having members of their families laid in paupers' graves, will be re-