~ and forth. I ins surprised if hips are the target of PHONE Lawyer Pecifique Plsnte. Mon. treal police attorney who has been in the 111111110 eve in connection with the arrests of alleged keen- en of a houses. and ntio baa clashed with Ram-g“- of the some name in the matte; of granting ball to fihc accused. Snappy Exercises To Reduce llips The "Hindu Roll" is a new hlp- l” whittler worth adding to your re. Dar-tone. i! 10115"! in search of an axsroisa that imfailingly ships aft inches. For this one. vouched for by trained-down Junior hostesses of San Francisco's USO Clith, you wear a. bathing suit and take the exercise crossdeqged on the floor. tailor-fashion , A11 set? Let Eugenia. Oasse, ex. crcise instructor to hostesses-to. be. oall your turns. Stretch arms outward as far as they will go. Then roll from one side of your hip ta the other, back at rockingxhuir pace Do this about I0 or 15 times. Then increase tbs count until you can I0 thrown a 50-1011 wuvne. Hip control isnt all that USO club h-stesses lcnm front charm. school instructors. Take the tech. nique of getting into an autcmo. bile. Girls are taught to move in “sidlwnys and to sit down with one leg 15a one out. Then they drww in the nth-r leg and there they are. sitting pretty , This procedure takes care of the not uncommon fault of climb- ing into s. car with hips beamed across the as. Wnen a girl makes t. kind of an entrance. s say. the shouldn't bc playful slaps or shoves from the passenger who follows her in. How do you nold your hands when they're not in use? Junior boctnaaaa have learned to rest theirs on their la palm! up and one h-a-nd lying serenely over the other. ‘ilhese girls are also briefed in the kind of polao that keeps hands fr‘? haggling with jewelry. pal" 4r bovine rearrangi clothes or the air :0 efrzfcrcc speech. Briefs From Britain TUART UNDEBIIILL Canaan PRII Staff Wrltasr nounorr. Sept. ao -—(CP) -Prc- ‘ fesslonal footballers and cricket umpires have joined the parade of . workers leeking higher wages to meet increased llvl-ng costs. . Before tho war umpires for first ’ class cricket matches got 10 guin- ess (M2) for t. ekend fixtures and .- nine guinea: for midweek games. ~ This has been increased to 13 pounds ($50) and l2 pounds but they complain this still isn't en- ough. he footballers, who also go; in- creases recently, are seeking fur- lhcr boosts, They want a maxi- mum~of l2 pounds a week during winter and lo pounds durin sum- mer. instead er the i0 rmm I Win- ter and 7 pounds 10s. wage 110W in, farce. If; addition, they urged_ a higher minimum . ' Another complaint of the cricket umpiru la accommodation. They think pro or lodgings should be‘ provided or them when they ar- rive in a town where they have ' an engagement. Rooms are a0 dif- ficult to gat that often they've had ‘ to walk thc- streets or sleep in the ' cricket pavilion overnight. Veteran race oars recalled turf exploits of rank Bullock when . the ex-joc and t-rainer- died at t-Branatead, urrsy. aged 6i. An - Auatrallln, he rode in England from 1013' to 10H. dome of the victories Frank ain- Od- won the One Thousand in- en and Oaks on Saucy Bus, the w Ascot d Cup. - Ono sports writer laid Bullock was the had aver. "seldom" being boat- en i at, which l more f- ton Ehamm a teat of braini." o ~ After he gave up u f rill‘ ll riding Bullock l. "and" fill. . p 1 In f ta annual ts 00st and Sada: mulling toil-d for young Thames water-men -wna :0: sawed this year. It was llat a n f it la hoped one h Wu ave returned to o rift vent, which was round- l. the - ac- 'hove been satisfactory the - Cup, Ceaarewitch. and ' groatalt match-rides he ' Franco. . Atla- oldoat‘ aportllsavmta run": INSURANCE B. H. HUGHES 179 QUEEN srnsns 714 i Boy Friend Finds Diamonds Expensive By KAY DEX Canadian Proaa Staff Writer ‘IORONTO. Sept. 23 — (OP) - ‘Hie coat of cnghglmenta has ria- on, the boy friend will agree once he has finished pricing diamonds in the neighborhood Jewellry store; At one time a $50-$75 ring would for the object of his affections, but un- less he also provides his fiancee with a magnifying glass to find the diamond, then he had better count on spending I100 st least, probably double that. And diamond merchants say he had better not put off the happy day, because the longer he hesi- tates the more he'll have to in- vest. Some qualities of diamonds have gone up more than others. The small diamonds have risen as much as five and six hundred per cent. And while production of rough diamonds has fallen far behind schedule. the rush on this precious ' atone continues as heavy as it was during the war, for returning ser- vicemen are still buying engage- ment rings and getting married. In addition, as a protection against ssible currency inflation, many eople are investing their savings n diamonds. The situation probably will grow 0° worac baforo any improvement is noticed, because mi labor shcrt~ ages and lack of m chlnery hirve caused further depletion of the stocks, Officials of the Dominica Dia- mond Cutting Company here, only one of its kind in Canada, claim unpolilhed diamonds have been easier to obtain since February when the Prices Board lifted the ceiling. Before that the world mar- ket was higher than the :ellinil. However, there still i-s not mough rough material on hand. The only reserve of diamonds from South Africa during the war annually on Aug. l by slur young watermen within a year of com- plating their apprenticeship with the Waterman! Company. C. N. Cooper. clerk of the Fish- mongers‘ Company, under whose auspices the event is held, said the competitors end their apprentice- ship at 21 and therefore can take part only once in their lives. "During the war all the young fellows have been away and we are waiting for them to return, he said. ‘v was in... in c._...l...., and this now has been shipped back to England, lays the head of a well-known jewelry firm. There used to be a large reserve from the 124 mines in South Africa, but apparently in}; ‘has all‘ been urd. e ore e war t. ere were 40,00 diamond cutters in Antwer ang 4,000 in Amsterdam, but thl fig- ura has been reduced to 11,000 in Antwerp and 1.000 in Amsterdam. It ,wlll be a long time before the situation becomes normal. SEEK TO ADJUST WOMEN'S WAGES CANBERRA. Australia, Sept, 24 (CPJ-The constitutional referen- dum. which will be held with Federal elections this month may bring tho Federal Government power to legislate for increased women's wages. At present the Federal Govern- ment fixes special wage rates for women emDlt-lyees in some indust- Hss. while state and federal arbi- tration courts lay down bum "w; for women in other industriesand undertakings The Federal Government fixes these wages under wartime nat- ional securitv regulations on the ground that the industries con- cerned are essential. but the reg- ulations will bccome inoperative in December. If the referendum does not grant new powers. the waxes will have to be determined either by an agreement between employers and employees‘ organizations or by reference to the Arbitration urt. More than 100.000 women are concerned. At present they ra- ceive 75 Der cent cf the wages paid to men. Before the govern- ment flxed this standard. they received only 60 to 05 per cent of men's wages. special war loadings which will cease when the National Security Regulations become inoperative. ma" mean 1 reduction of up to $1.89 a week in each woman's wage. A war loading is a bonus paid over and above a basic rate for special skill or lrksome or dangerous work. 'Ilhe Australian Council ofTrad- as Unions savs that if the reduc- ticn occurs. it will be impossible to retain women workers in the dozen essential industries affected en-d this will in tum disrupt PTO- duction plans and accentuate ex- lstinc shortages of floods. The A. C.T. U. points out that women have been leaving industrv by the hundreds since the end of the war with the result that there are vacancies now for 30.000 wo- men in industries in Australia. Commonwealth and private em- ployment scencics say it is im- (By Jack Wlllilml, Canadian PIOII Stiff Wflbl‘) TORONTO. BQM. l’! _ (GP)- cansdira 10-week steel strike ap- peared edging toward a settlement tonight on the basis of negotiations opened yesterday in Montreal. C. H. Millard, national director of the United Steelworkers cf America (CLO) who took part in the Montreal dlacusslms with 1", B. Kllburn, controller of the steel plants reported some improvement. Basis of the new negotiations was understood to be a lO-cent wage increase retroactive to April l and s three-cent increase effec- tive when work wea resumed. This would mean l3 oenta as com- pared with the Government's previous offer of ill 1-2 cents and the union demand of 15 1-2 cents. Negotiations in an effort to and the strike whhsh affects 15, workers in Sydney,~N. 5., Hamil- ton and Sault Ste. Marie, Ont., were resumed in secrecy aftcr a lull since the union rejected a 12 l-a-cent settlement plan, Mr. Millard slipped out of the Canadian Congress of Labor con- vention here yesterday and went to Montreal. Only top officials of the union knew why he was miss- ing from the convention floor. To- day he was back in Torontb and the Montreal meeting had been disclosed through a, telegram read to the C.C-I... convention from Prime Minister MscKenzie King. Earlier in the week the conven- tion had wired Mr, King asking that negotiations be resumed in an effort to end the strike which PARIS. Sept. 29 -(CP)-— The mmpesn peace conference com- pleted all but l0 clauses of the Italian peace treaty today as it drove for adiouriunen-t by the Oct. l5 deadline. The l0 clauses however, includ- ed three of a. political nature on the big problem of ‘Trieste, and there were indications that this issue might have to be shelved in. definitely. The other seven are eco. nomic clauses upon which agree- ment must be reached before the treaty can be sent to the plenary session for final approval. 81111-00111 deadline The mhssionls for finishing its work is Monday. Other commissions accelerated their tempo to meet the timetable approved at Wednesdays plenary session. The military commission artmunced it hoped to and its work by the middle of next week and said it planned to sit twice daily to do it. The Hungarian political commis- sion adopted unanimously the final clauses of the projected treaty with Hungary relative to the mode of ratification, then ap- pointed s. subxommittee to study Yugoslav demands for s clause re- quiring Hurgary to return certain archives. The only two items remaining on this commission's 386ml a" the Yugoslav de rands and a re- quest from Czechoslovakia for frontier changes and authority to mossible to fill them. Lantlgen 'A' For tho common cold and Influenza. Help: la prevent attack of coll gonna, neutralising their toxic diode. [antigen 'a' m» m llotatmonf of cohwllv bronchitis, alnua and nntrum lroubll, 5'9"‘ alvlol caihma and other IOIPINWPY "i" mitih‘ hntlgon ‘C’ lot Ilia treatment of rheumatic and antirltlc palm. neuritis, aclalkq lrnabllo and apondyiltle. six rvors or tanner-m expel some 200,000 Hungarians. luntlgon '0' for use In the spongy gums and other alrln nllavo lhoao suffering from atogoa d Infections. 1o tweak oufseeei Strike Appears Edging Towards Settlement 000 ed the additional income to .vork- Italian Treaty Completed Except For Ten Clauses curbuncloa, pimples, almanac, ulcers. lontlgon ‘I’ for the haotmont of hay favor. Contains extracts of mind gun pellons to llntlgon 'I' for the lnotmant and pvovontlon ol whooping cough. Stops attacks Immedi- ately, or pnvanta than ll used baton or In early Tiurgrinrtcoflsrowu cuannuw s?! tied up the Sydney and Sault e. Marla plants and cut produc- tion at Hamilton. On the heels of the disclosure before the 0.0.1.1. convention came an Ottawa report attributed to a well informed source that, the basis of negotiations was l3 cents and that settlement might be ex- pected within a day or two, Mr. Millard, in a prepared statement. termed the Ottawa report "pre- mature, lll-advlbecl and mislead- n . g. Notlceably missing from the hare l3-cent plan was the question of statutory holidays, union security and the wage differential which places Sydney rates five cents an hour below those paid in the Ori- tarl-o plants. The union has been seeking ny- mccit for statutory holidays w lch are not worked. If this were grant- ers, spread across the year, would bring the increase close to the union's 15 i-fl-cent objective. The Sydney differential issue dates back to the 1943 steel strike and the union has been insistent that it will not settle in any of the three plants unless it is rc-. moved, Union security la an issue at the Steel Company of Canada lnjfarnilton where union member- ship in the lest government-con- ducted vote early this year rep- resented a bare majority. M1‘. Mi-llardfls brief statement was generally taken as an indica- tion that negotiation: have not yet reached the final stage, thou h he gave no hintbf what wr nkles still had to be ironed out. The Italian political commission set for five hours without halt. Three hours vim. devoted to aim. less discussion of an Australian proposal for creation o! a Euro- pean tribunal for human rights. which already had been voted down or withdrawn in all commissions. Ftnall it was disapproved. after Mr. lsh-insky assailed it as "in- fart-tile" ard recommended con. signing it to "the waste-basket." Health Minister Brooke Claxton of Canada asked the Australian delegate to withdraw the proposal. Canada was sympathetic to its spirit. he said. but felt that. this was not the time to adopt. it. men the commission adopted with little discussion tour articles concerning supervision qt’ the way the treaty is to be carried out. That left the delegates witv: only art- icle three. ‘he Italodlugoslav frontier, article four. the bound- aries of the ‘Prioste interr-ational zone, and article e. the statute of the Ione. In the meeting of the Trieste sub-commission ~81“??? ii W!" reached in principle on the estab. lishment of a free port at Tfiesto and on permitting landlocked Aus- tria, Czechoslovakia, Hungary and Switzerland to use the port as a port of registry for their merchan. vessels. , But the eflfectlmness of til-S decision was virtually "unified THE WINNING CIGARETTE There's no_ doubt that, when it comes to blended cigarettes, Winchester: win with smokers everywhere. rette tobaccos, Turkish, Virginia and Hurley, “Blended Right", give that consistently finer flavour and aroma l0 exclusively Winchester. PAGE Winner of the 87th King's Plate n Woodbine ‘- (Jareud Three of the world's choicest cigar; Park! This chestnut teldms wanton successive Ill!!! finishing with rbc Canadian Classic at Toronto this year. His honours include the rich. csgcvents of rhc season for Canadian brad 2-year on Plate, Mrs. Owen's Cup \ and Saucer Handicap and the Coronation Stakes. J Winchester ' cmanarrrs ' acwaoa/ facilities to u. . mumfls‘ o er central European The Balkan economic oommis. sion adopted the principle or 75. pencent compensation for Allied DTOPQYW dllmfiilfl! or destroyed in Rflm-Bnia which had been decided 11W» three, days ago in the Italian economic commission. Elegant Look in Fall's Style World NEA iitTrTWFnsr- NEW YORK tNfiAh-“Letfis dress up” is the vheme of the fall style story which tells a tale in early previews of the triumph o: ladylike elegance over the hoy- dens of fashion and of the feats of sleeves. pepiurns, tunizs bold pockets and drapery in. freeing the silhouette from its sheath-like prison. Longer aklrts- at least an inch longer- help and abet the iadv. like look. They swap, ripple, flare or dip in bsok to free the silhou- ette. The back-dipping lromllne. seen. in almost cvery collection, gives both dresses and costs the when Yugoslav delegate Ales Bob- -ler declined w commit his coon. lnolmonl of bolls, Infections. pollen sensitivity. peculiar to treatment. illusion of much more onlLcover- In Canada more people suffer from Arthritis than from any other single disease; Many factors working to- gether produce the changes which take place in the joints and give .rise to the crippling pains whioh wreck the lives of so many sufferers. Focal infection from infected teeth,- tonsils, sinuses and other organs is considered by many authori- LANTIGEN-A DISSOLVED VACCINE T0 BE TAKEN BY MOUTH To combat this infectious process by building up the natural defenses of the body,‘ a dissolved vaccine which may be taken by mouth has been prepared from the _ organisms which are commonly found in the centres of infection. This i" E \ LANTIGEN -“C”. WHAT IS LANTIGEN? Lanrigen is a dissolved Vaccine containing such dissolved Micro-organisms which are the particular disease requiring It contains no live germs. They are all destroyed by dissolving thus‘ re- leasing the antigens contained therein- the natural antidote. Lantigen works rwo ways; firstly, by absorbing into open tissue such as the tongue, throat, and intestinal tracts; secondly, it is operative by means oi‘ if! distribution through the alimentary- stomach-system. try to give assurances of tranaitml than the rapellno measures is The long jerk-st that has made the Erode as a short-fitted topper this fall owes H! new rule to a. buds dip and .1. fislatall swing. Launched by Piullp Marge-re in Smlwd and plaid tweeds. these coats with full dolman sleeves, de- si8~ned for easy ensembling with £11114. can be worn until firs come home from the storage vaults. _Both the unfurred and the pelt. piled coat show c. swing away from the boxy toward the fitted silhouette. Topping the gllgvpd- thin sparseness of the wool coats midriff is blcusiuess above in ban looning sleeves. iulness below in gathers. pleats or the birlky look 0f fur. That also is the fashion line followed by suits, In suits a. r/srseietted or belted- in waist is usually made to look more wee-sized by wide loo is out in sleeves above or below In tu- ndcs. big pockets or perpiume. If it's a funtrimmed wool suit sup- ple bards of Person lam‘... nuirlo, ‘broadtail. ermine or muskrat bdr- der a. peplum to make it flare out. like a ballerina/a skirt. The dross for fall turns the some profile to the fashion spot. light. But added to the current repertoire of .'ippi-.s is one which the dross claims exclusively-dra- pery, used on bodice or skirt, On the Skirt. it takes on the look of the harem queen's. On one spright. 1y series of dresses. swag dnapery introduced by adding a. vivid satin scarf, integrated into the design of the cocktail gown. Onc- attent- iongetter of Pstrids design ll a blad; crepe dress which yields all interest to .1. bright satin scarf, sequin-embroidered with iiolii vari. colored motiffs and the French motto, "Cherchez la femmc" ieu tered so large that all who run may read its saucy messalze. LIVE AND Lazarus- Our dogs can teach us many things. We should observe them carefully, be it climbing a high wall or finding their way homo from long distances. A dog will keep tryl-ng until ho makes his objective or drc-ps with exhaustion. His patience is almost unbelievable. A dog \viil bear pain with great. fortitude and wail. pat- iently for relief. He will sit quiet- ly for hours awaiting his mastefl retum, never taking his eyes away from the place he last saw the be- loved person. Their gentleness with children, their forgiveness of harsh treat- ment, set examplgs for all of us. They are faithful_i1r¥t_ death, heroic without though -o‘. feward ant! alert to all that ‘goes on around them. The capacity for love that is possessed by dogs 1| almost be- yond understanding. I; is truly said that here ls the only love that money cannot buy. — Los Angelca Times. WHA T. CAUSES ARTHRITIS ?‘ ties as being largely responsible; IIEALTII RULES FOR ARTIIRITICS The treatment of these conditions is assisted by simple rules foods should be avoided; ml I TORIES Z RICHMO or m». 61's. sxrur JOHN. u. Nana...........~................... Addrcasu-t....I.................. GoorTowmu. w... Flfillifliilll flenlmofnyuaoalflrugginla... health. An excess of sugar and starchy in Vitamins is helpful. The affected parts benefit by warmth and gentle massage. Adequate rest is important. —__-——~_____-_____—--b§sm MAIL THIS COUPON TODAY! Ewilgfiffblilfiii-"ilblbigg: ‘£311.’ lg?" 'ili’i‘éi'ii"tili~tl." m" sr. a. TORONTO 1.0m , DEAR Slkk-Plcan land mo. .... bottle: of lantlgeo. . . J-n-uni. . forihematmeatof........................t'orwlr.lchfencla|cl...... Una unionist-Headboard »e~a~.~v_ of diet and A diet rich s »-~w-._-.M. ‘iw ~n..-w .....H.ss...@.~.. -__..x.!,;.’ ' 1’ \ ----...--.-.--¢~.--.--.-.--can-e e---------e--ea-aces u.u“"en-u-Janeen-nan- u II.