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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Seaforth News, 1927-10-20, Page 2U.S. LEARNS FROM T CANADA Erts From Russell Page Foundation Study Oh trial Dispute Acts to Advantage port on "Postponing Strikes" nubile ed hero to -day by the Russell Sa Foundation, The report is based a study, uiado, by Ben. M. Selekm of the efforts to prevent stripes' Canada durin gtho last 18 years means of the Industriae Disputes I vestigation Act, Ina foreword to.the report, Mt Mary van Kleeck, director of the I die trial Studies Department of ti Rusreil Sage Foundation, says: " seek not to bring' enlightenment Canadians, but to look across the bo der toward our neighbors' mine railroads and factories, and to a whether the Act has accomplished i purp,i •es satisfactorily and wltetller can t, ieely be fellawed in this eoun try, "The contumoaa and atileient s vice er public utility industries, and conditions fair to employees, is esse tial to the welfare of the general co tenuity," Mia van ICleeck said, "b it cannot be secure l by the short c advocated by many influential of eons in 00c00t yaars—legislative it tations on the light to strike.. "The study of Canada's experlen n postponing ,and so averting sulk was undertaken because in the Unit States the nage-earher's right triho in transportation systems, co min0d, public utilities or in any into ry affecting large communities, is b ng challenged by a considerable se tten OK the contntunity and in the e fort to prevent such strikes legisl ur? are repeatedly proposing an somatintes enacting laws patterne liter the Canatlit'n Indestrial Di n:_ a :Art. The-.., proposals are ate upetn a mistaken idea of th lot, -11 scope and operation of th i Tee Canadian Act Prohibits deela lett of a strike or lockout in mine raliAportation systems or other pu is t:tflIty industries until a report n ata dispute has been made by a boar f r tncitiation and investigation an mpo,cv tinea for vtol:ttlatt-4. A ne word in appointed for tach 111:pt1 nd in earli board a repree entattt'e ho publi: pr sides, 1110 other the her being representatives . l.S 11' g P e tativt+s of thl mgt yers and employees. Tit' report shows that in 6311 di mos handled ttnder the Canadi t't 1`to :atria a tot p. r cent.) ue 0,1:1 or an it•.'d; (lacing tato seas z 'tic, however, thereIver:, 12 aril in which lTlo Act 11.23, con P,_•h i pore tt and •1:1 per edit. n lt- t ,eking days lo,t through e e.,ere lost through disputes i ,,:11 1121, SYSTEM EFFECTIVE bi- Principles has been laiddown ot do- is- veloped to govern decisions of the ng boards. et- Commenting on the apparent tee- to- deecy o5 `alto boards of conciliation n, and investigation, appointed under ve the Canadian Act, to ignore the edu- 'n- ication of public opinion, the report s. says: "Canadian oMeials stave frank- s ly assumed that the community is not especially interested in knowing the h- truth in an industrial dispute but in ge on an, in by n' The most important method of se Praudtilent ,tock soiling is e riled on Q, through mediumof the mails, The lVe two chief ways of developing clients to by mail' are the distribution of market letters and market newspapers. In s both cases the firm from which they Sit originate is important, the only deft - New York City, Opt. 10.—Prohi tion of: ,strikes and lockouts by leg fades is a futile means a fettentpti to'avort intlistrial clistnrbauces; g ting both sides in a labor dispute gether tor discussion and conciliates on the other hand, rte shown to ha been an effective means of gore/ mental intervention iu serious indu trial controversies -these are som of the conclusions Ina 400 -page r avoiding any interrnp'Eion of service that will: jeopardize its comfort and routine.": - - Warning ?�.gai tat Fake Stock Selling is nits line ,that can be drawn is that oil it tnerbership in a reputable stock ex- it preferably the Toronto Stock Exchange or the Standard Stook Ex- er- change, The stock being foisted on er the publishers' clients may be detect- or almost without fail by two general m- char:te a lestics. It is usually a low - et priced stock and the successive issues et of either the market letter or the ti- newspaper will continue to harp on mi this particular stock. Two other bits of good advice to 10 the prospective investor are first: "the 10' quality of the stock being sold'is very ed likely to vary inversely to the sales to pressure being applied to such sell- as ing;" the second, "Never buy a stock 1 $ t 1 a 1 t t t a t 0 (1 A e 1 s t s 5- 0- 0- f- a - d tl n is va- s, b - u d a to of m - le s. an i'e 5 11 ' "i'he synthetic thrill in kissing is n dangerous-tc, your bridge -work, un- less your ear boasts shock assorbers. Record Wool Year in New South Wales Sydney, N.S.W.—The quantity of greasy wool recorded for the year end- ed June 30 last, and of which Gov- ernment figures are but recently avaiI- able, was 496„520,000 potincls•, oI,a total value in this city of over £35,000,000. The average pi -ice in the grease was ' I71,ed, per pound. This clip, represent- ing 1,539,700 bales, was the heaviest known in New South Wales. There are between 50,000,000 and 60,000,000 sheep in this State. The exact total is not ascertainable just now, but the If its purchase is urged by telephone or telegraph, except where' tee firm is reputabie." In the last analysis "Before you Invest, investigate." tin Ca meiIan reilroa;la water., con - cliti i are fairly well. stabilized, the Amer, :hes, the Industrial Ilisputes Aet has worked well; in coal mines where in:-ttbllity and chronic irregu- larey ezf onipaoynient prevail, it has fill,I. Although a ectal strike gave rice ! t the tet, and one of its primary pre was to prevent the recur - ren: of such strikes, the report at- tribute., this failure more to (Mail - ties inherent in the coal mining in dustry than t.t fla;v4 in the Disputes Act. C'on.tastinn the elate/ion in the Dnittel states with that in ('anada, the velvet says; ',fust as the polio' of rn' aliation pursued by the Cana titan government has won the co opo Fal ion of labor itt the adntinietra tion of the in.l.tatral Disputes Act, r, the policy of •t•ooreion eometimps pm• suet by government bodies int 'United States has intensified the op position of labor to similar laws, The Canaalan experience. indicates tha governmental bodies can obtain th best results itt industrial disputes, not by threatening arrest, imprison- ment or tines, but try intervening in a sympathetic and enncilletcry spirit to , fine those terns upon which agree - stent may be reticaied," \tr. Sclekman, rho Russell Saga ;Foundation's investigator, points out that while the Canadian' Industrial Disputes Act was drafted en the pitn- chits of compulsion, it has been ad- ministered largely as a measure to secure voluntary consultation and agreement. Thus whiio 472 punish- ablo 1 tulations of the law occurred ,in 13 years, only 13 of these were brought before the courts and none of :these at the instigation of the govern- mont. The government's policy has been against resorting to prosecution of violators of the .Act, despite the fact that the Act provides a penalty of fines ranging from $100 to $1000 a day for employers and from $10 to $50 a day for employees declaring a strike or lockout in violation of the law. Mr. Sedekman found that the Cana- dian boards of conciliation and in- vestigation heard industrial disputes not as judges called on to render de- cisions, nor as investigators to dis- covor the relevant facts for the educa- tion: of the community, but as peace - matters called on to create a friendly and Informal atmosphere which would nen) to bring about antiomble settle- ments, Na dentate code of industrial Canada Busy As a --- HER HER NATIONAL EMBLEM AT The busy beaver doing his stuff in Jasper NewMaps pany now has a tramway from Lake i1Y% s Winnipeg to a point on the river above the Grand Rapids.. There is a Early Days of Fur Trader and very great potential sourceof power In the rapids at this point -and no doubt some day this will be developed and utilized. The information shown on the maps was largely obtained from photo- t,t Tate early days of the fur traders in graphs taken from aeroplanes under Canada are recalled by the publics- the guidance of Dominion Land Sur - Adventure ;Follows Science' in Tibet Hunting Flora on World's Roo f Mid' Strange Peole, Icy Heights and Arid Desert HIGHER THAN EVEREST A fascinating tecoutital of three of semi -arid grasslands; and is very veaxs cf exp!o.atlon ft1t1 botanioal•ro- rich in fish Large flocks of sheep, se^j'eh in the most extensleve am Beate, yak and.' horses graze in tho laftfest Plateau region in the world, '-surrounding plains, the mountain' fastness anti grass -lands After a plorittg tho Richthofen oP ssnti elvillt:ad Tibet, is made by Dr.' range which runs parallel (h the north Saseph I cassis r oclt, director"of the Ko -Ko -Nor barrier range, Dr. Rock Arnold Arboretumllarvard "university crossed ilio Minsh'en, e,outhwest of botanical and zoological expedition- t which Iles Tebbu band where he found It is a thrilling 'tale of adventure in : some ofe the most important olieel- a country of mountain ranges rising' melts of his collection, one upon' aitother in a succession of To get Into Tebbu land he was gray, hacked ridges e:gaineta s.eenling- forced to go through the groat Shitnen' ly endless and ineurmenntabde pano- , or Rock. Gate at an elevation of 11,000' ramie background of snow and ice;' a feat. The hlgheet portal of this ne land where the enema valley floors are turas gate is 16,000 feet Mgt. to 17,000 feet above sea level ;, Tebbe land is a. country of steep where huge amphitheaters of {bare, slopes and dense forests of conifers eroded limestone aro cut into myriad and e twee and fir trees with ae un• cuffs whose sides drag steeply into dergro'wth of scrub rhododendron narrow chasms cf rivers whose serum-, varying in colors from rose pink to tine courses are hemmed in by preelpi- turquoise blue and deep purple shades, tous walls of red and brown sandstone. i Carious welted v11'lages were diseov Dr, Rock in an Interview tells, of the .eyed in alpine meadows where grow scatteredclumps of willows and bar - berries or occasional orchards of pears, cherries and. jujubes., Dr. Rock attempted to explore the country In the direction of; the Anne Machin, a mountain of extraordinary geographical interest Wblch is said to be many thousand' feet higher than Mount . Everest, hitherto beiie'vee to be the highest mountain in the world,. The explorer learned of this range Dr, Rock's collection of botanical throught Brig, Chen. George Pereira, and ornithological specimens from the who Heade a special trip from Poking regions heretofore unknown to betas= in 1922 to explore the peak,; and pass - WORK late has been ,placed' in ,the Arnold ed on within 100 shies. of his goal. National Park Arboretum and the >:Iarvard Museum ` When General Pereira returned to of Comparative Zoology. It. consists Peking after Ills first vlow of the of approximately 30,000 sheets of Anise Machin, he :rescribed Lt as plants, several hundred packages of "towering aboue ,everything else in seeds, samples° of woods, 1046 birds, its snow -clad grandeur," 700 photographs and extensive data The Chinese call the mountain compiled from the explorer's note Ma -chi Hsieh -Shan, The direntor(tof books. the Arnold Arboretum expedition *00Among the collection of birds are thwarted in his attempt to reach the speelmens of bearded eagles with a Amne Machin by the Goloks, nomads wing spread of 10 feet, Kolonor cranes,weople acltele° cranes, several unknown, 'whoopTibetan recognizeorigin, no, a authorityarlike epxcept species of pheasants, eared pheasants, their own chiefs. They are robbers bar nock geese, white ibis, heron0, 00n- by profession, according to Dr. hock, movants, bine-tall bush robins, snow= having raided and preyed upon other cocks, ravens and snips. Approxi- tribestor many year's. For ('bus rea-. mately 300 various species of birds son the country has been 'left un ar•erepresented in th.e collection, se- touched by evploring parties. cording to 50. Outram Bangs, ornitho- Tribesmen Block the Way difficulties ho and hie escort of faith- ful natives encountered while pursu- ing a path into the unexplored region, where biting winter blasts of the rare- fied atmosphere of the high mountain contrasted sharply with the terrific heat' of arid deserts; where ley tor- rents, interminable mud slipes and sloughs, and broken bridges often blocked the trail. Collection New In Boston Indian Recalled by Maps Recently Issued by Governn-tent tion of two new map sheets of the Na- tional Topographic series by the Topograpbical Survey, Department of the Interior, at Ottawa, These :are the -provisional editions of the Grand Rapids and Tho Pas sheets, adjoining each other and showing that portion The two map sheets lying directly veyors of the Topographical Survey staff acting as navigational officers. Not all of The Pas sheet was pboto- graphed, Venae there are still blank spaces in the southwesternpart of that map. of Manitoba and a small portion of to the north of these two are also in Saskatchewan lying between latitudes course of preparation and will be is - 53 degrees and 54 degrees, and be- sued soon. tweee longitudes 93 degrees and 102 degrees. These maps are published Face-lifting Oil the scale of four miles to an inch Do Leonard Williams in the Empire in five colors and may be obtained Review: Thepractice ofhavinge from the above office, The Depart- � shin of rho face "lifted” ment makes a nominal charge of fifty t toe" by surgical cents each for the Snaps in fouler means, in order 1 obliterate wrinkles,mto form or if is a Ono hears a' whl d from time dye. on Linen -backed time one hearses good,deal. Lilco dye• paper, and twenty-five cents each if ing the hair, such attempts to deceive on ordinary map paper. all and sundry aro seldom convincing. , The main topographical features Perhaps the most ludicrous subterfuge aro the Saskatchewan River with its belonging to the category of personal tributaries, its devious passages and fake is that of the baldheaded man its lak" and portion of who tries to cover up his baldness by Lake Winnipegosis and Lake Winne bringing the hair from over one ear peg. The early fur traders and ex- across the dome of the head. With piorers in canoes or York boats used his genius for apt generalization, It is the route from Lake Winnipeg via thus .that Mr, Pttnch usually depicts Saskatchewan River to points in the the grocer, The mentality behind far West or North. Much has been such a trick is very difficult to gauge; I written of the picturesqueness of for no one can ready suppose 11 these early voyageurs and it Is inter- anyone is thereby 'deceived. eating to trace out on lheee maps W some of their routes of travel, 'Pita Britain 'won't lower valley of the Saskatchewan is Shirk level country eubject to 'Wickham Steed in .rho ReviewoP Periodic flooding, as may readily be than war. One of them is slothful o degeneration of th t! ASL on pilri-frames of hundreds of huge A� nen a of the Saskatchewan shall have to Reviews: There are worse things seen from the map by the labyrinth of watercourses shown. This valley is realty the delta make up our minds w;tether we will River before it enters Cedar Lake on face the risks of war for the sake of its way to Lake Winnipeg and the peace, Were that issue ever re - area has the characteristic delta f 1 logist at the museum, who is prepar- ing the specimens for elasslfeation. Expedition Started In 1924 - The Gololts gathered their warriors and formed an impenetrable chain of armed and 'mounted tribesmen across The expedition started In 1924 with tato country Dr. Rock had to cover, and the object of exploring the regions in, he was forced to turn back, The ox- Cm/tree Asia of which little was plover and his atteudan s had several known from it botanical and zoological akirmis'hes with brigands and robbers; stars toint. Prof. Charles Sprague' 1 Most F the iul abitaitts of Tibet o t e Sargent was partlyresponsible g n for the l who number approximately 2,000,000, promotion of the expedition and it was are serol -civilized members of Mon - entirely financed by o,ficials of the Arnold Arboretum. Dr, Rock was also genas races somewhat related to the director of the National Ggographical!Burmeest, Dr. Rock said, Ill' places Society's 'Yunnan -Tibet expedition in where they can live ihouses and 1928-24. Traveling overland from cultivate land, the Chinese will come, Indo-China Dr, Rock operated slang! ;but thibnastor work is done by rola g tribes of mongols end. Tibetans, the vast, sand -swept areas of the Gobi Desert, and entered Tibet. In 1926 a war between the 'Tibetans and the Muhammadaus prevented Dr. Rock black from followhtg the oou,rse he had yak haute f thePerm of a roe - mapped out, and he traveled north to {tangle. The rostra of tato mongols, are Lake I{o•Ito-Nor, the Blue Lake, 1u ` circular aa•.l made of weeps' wool Tibet, not far from the Chinese Pro-1Tett. vines et Ilan-su, Dr. Reek reported that rite a podl- living intents among their focus. Ill these tent villages of the Tibetans tihe crude shelters are constructed of Lake High in Clouds tion was sueeessful from awry stand- point, .-'All of tate specimens arrived . Lake Ieo-Ko-Nor covers an area 06 in Boston in perfect condition, and not miles Mug mid 40 miles wide, 9975 feet even a letter was lost while on the above Melton] of the sea in the midst trip, day may come when we e mom sense, A i o�aery y 03 act [hat laat year the total was Set nation. There are regular water $ented frankly to the people, there down at 51,8&),0011 indlcaes that the routes followed by steamers and would be little doubt of the answer. figures just given are conservative. motor boats of shallow draught. In They, who would not flat for any The State may be considered as car' the duck shooting season this district sordid cause, would still fight for a 3 he prolonged dry time the strain on the pastures generally- will be severe, r French Meth odsfor Keeping a e Kitchen Odorless ryiug to rapacity, and. if there is a No housewife like's the odor of cook- ing to go through the house. To pre - rent this happening, the French are known to resort to one of two simple devices, If the odor of the anticipated cook- ing is not exceptionally strong, they take a potato, cut it in two, and .lay one half, slain down, on the stove. It warms there, but without becoming cooked. The potato absorbs the odor of whatever happens to be cooking, provided the odor is not too intense. If it should happen to be very strong, the housewife may take an orange peel, put a few drops of vinegar on it, and Iay this peel on the stove in the same way as the potato half, The shin gets a little warm, but does not cook, and the kitchen is without odor. Cape Town to Relieve Over - Crowded Slums o Cape Towne-A.motionis being tab- led by monikers of the Cape Town City Council for the raising of a loan of $500,000 to relieve the overcrowding in the shim districts. Dr, Redick Higgins says that Capa Town needs 6250 houses immediately, and 000 more will be required earn Year to cope with the increase in poisulation.Over 75 per •cent. of the ttou-European population, he says, live omestantly under overcrowded condi- tions and the pasttioSt constitutes a menace to the city geueaally, Is visited by numerous hunters as it sure and known ideal, and their readi- is a feeding ground for all hinds of wild. clucks, It Is a trapper's paradise as the swamps and marshes swarm with muskrats. Thousands of pelts from these little fur bearers are taken nese to sight would be likely- to make fighting superfluous. I3nt if any British Government, present or future, imagines that the people of this coun- try will light again for a cause it every season, and final their way to does net 'understand, 00 merely to ctrl its the fur auction sales in Montreal or ' way out of a muddle in which pine London. From Cedar Lake to Lake Winni- peg the character of the country is entirely different and the Sasltatcho blind i0littisters may have involved it, test Governtnent will be likely to gat a rude awakening, The politicianshave nothing on the 'Ivan River flows swiftly with several suburbanite when it comes to "run - rapids culminating in the Grand ing for office." Rapids, where there 9s a fall of about s 76 feet, In the early days it was The ebackward'r.South to no morn necessary to portage around these backward than much of New England, rapids, hut the Hudson's Btty Com- 1 .:.:.pen C, Seitz, Dug Up in Berlin Relics Thousands of Years. Old Indicates City Was Cite of Prehistoric Settlement Berlin, — Numerous prehistoric re- lics found under the former royal library by workmen restoring the pile -frame on which the building's foundation was built point to tee existence of some earlier settlement on the silo of tate present city of Ber- lin. Those relies, believed to be thousands of years old, comprise the bones of unknown species of animals and specimens of unaeornod pottery. Berlin was originally erected on a. swamp and even to -day vast 'peat -bogs are under• Some of the city's principal streets. It therefore became metes - sane even as late as the eighteenth century, when Frederick the Cireat built the royal library, to construct the foundations of larger structures Who Wouldn't Like to S crutch Their silky Ears? NINE BUNDLES OF SUBDUED MISCHIEF lioodhound puppies snapped at the Edmunds' Kennels, Leighton Buzzard En laud, look rather bored as they pause in their play for the photo-rapher to get this picture.. .. tree trunks driven into the bog until they were entirely flooded by the water. Through the rapid sinking of the eubterranean water level within the last few centuries, however, the pile - frame under the library was exposed and started to rot, thereby causing the foundation to give way and threat- ening to cause the collapse of the massive building. In the course of restoring the library's pile -frame, reties of a bygone age wore found to the hog in such. numbers as to give palentologlsts and archeologists a new incentive for as- sidtiotts reset -tech. It is believed that so many o.•etnains of animals found in a comparatively small area point to some catastrophe of nature that Milted all these animals about the same time, whereas the pottery specimens„ are considered proof of a community of fairly civil- ized human beings having existed at a remote age on the spot whets Ber- th.' now stands, Mining Experts Leave Canada. Much Impressed( Secretary of British Institute Foresees Glorious Future ENJOYED TRIP ' Surprising Yields Expected ed ia Gold Deposits of North Nearly, 30 of :the original party `of 450 leading mining and metallurgical authorities of the British Empire, who have boom on a flue -weeks tour of the DominioYl of Oanada, sailed front Montreal recently for England, The departure was characterized by cheer, ing and shouts of farewell to Cabs' Among the departing group were^ Albert Kitson; C,M113., director"of Gold Coast' (Africa) geological 'sur- vey; Lady Kitson! Charles McDer.I rnid; secretary-general of the British Institute of Mines. Sir Albert in'apeaking of the com- pleted inspection of Canada's mineral' resources, declared that there was a' greater future' In the gold deposit' than was generally known, and that he expected surprising , yields from the more modern minerals which` haev not as yet been applied to indust tries. Will Bring Results. e Mr. McDermld, In commenting upon Canada as a whble, deelarod that the result of the visit of the Mining and Metalld'rgicai authorities was "bound to bring results both certain end ma- terial to the future of Canada and of the British Empire.. I have found Canada to bo a country rich in miner- als and with resources far in excess of my most optimistic hopes—and T one hears about Canada's future.` I have always been partial to the stories wish to make it emphatic that the hospitality . we received in Canada was boundless. The trip was a com- plete success from every point of view, and I can assure you that the impressions we gathered of Canada are not only extremely encoaraling but are truly sincere." This party of returning mining au- thorities is part of that section of the Congress which took tits -,route west• ward from Mouretal through the Prairie Provinces to the Pacific Coast simultaneously with another group 01. about' 150 members' which travelled A by special eceotuntedatlon through the Maritime Provinces and through Newfoundland, At Nickel Refineries.. Amoug the leading paints bf in- terest atkee in by the tofu` of f" "travelling congress" were the nick raAneries of Port a Corborne,Ont.' th3 t silver asci cobalt areas sirounding Cobalt and Sudbiu'y, Ont„ andthe Ontario gold districts of Porcupine a' and Kirkland Lake. In Sasltatcho- wan the Congress gathered at Este- ban," in the southern part of the pro- vince, where interesting gold deposits are found, The Crow's Nest coal fields at route, D.C.; presented material for tho investigator, and the Kootonay and Nelson area of DritIsit Columbia was the neene of much clieettesion. The largest smelter in the world, • situated at Trail, B.C., was viewed by tite visitors with admiration. 'Fitts 1:t a sight which was declared to he an invaluable experience for twining au- thorities. At Kimberley, E.C. a eop- pet-tom d-zInc mine was iusp s t'totl. This project attracted evict+ interest on account of tho many by-products which it produces. 'rho visitors also called at Britan- nia, B.C. The coal of northern .Alberta, in the"" district 01 Caclomin was examined by the party following a visit to the un- developed mining areas surrounding Port William.' The party concluded its lour with e visit to the new smelter at Noranda, Qtue„ the gold mines of Rouyn and the Thetford asbestos mines. Ashes - Los will play a prominent pert in the future development of Canada, ilia Visitors declared. The Congress held tenhnirnl gather - tugs and listened to scientific papers on many subjects. These meetings were hold in Montreal, Toronto, Win- nipeg, Vancouver, Jasper, and Que. bee. Thera were also addresses esses beard at Banff, Lake Louise, Victoria, Jas- per Park and Saskatoon, with Cana - (la's loading politicians and :sc'.:.:tttsts addressing tato visitors at those points, Why We Marry--anaDivotca people marry bemuse of a bininglcal. * ;, . appeal Tor a certain person. "rho,, mind may reject the, permit and it divorce may resglt. But the emotional ap-. pea may bo stronger than the mental rejection, and bring about a remar- riage, 'Match. probably explains 'why , a woman will live with a man whenc everybody else wonders "why In the I world oho doesn't leave hint? This also applies when the brainy man mar-. lies the om,rv1101rlcd ti am hhnii. n,i� �t ti.:.., ovoly Cody Woneee nwh tt 110yv ;n hany woer7't ''ndeltewor - denaa1p2eirrri ti thWeclity,ere settonld be t pit Have Cut ,04 the ,,Mtalk ves, ne-trei gpttWho$e pedile al 'lie• oit do alte>7 (le movies then?" One tllinr fe e0itial the airplane fg eight .woi ( jiave 0 bull over o ldiug to lei t$e n a Iiaaseuger pinnae go b f, , el Wanted, Female keound Gtdtos' hatid bagj left itt my a cat✓ while parked, .Owner can 'have iraae yifdeutifytng property and pay- ,b ng for tilts ad, or it she will mato stttisfeetory explanatidnp to my' wife will for ad'; Ad In a 't'leittle (Texas,