Be Sure of Yowr RUGS Have them cleaned noiv and returned for, Christmas For gifts, beautiful Throw.Rugs -AIrarnJC MESTJIAN 51.1 GREEN BAY ROAD WILME1TE 5051 Patronize Outr Advertisers The two are -Miss Adah Fleming- ton. of the commerce, department, who taught fast year at the Hitchin girls' grammar school, near Lon- don. and R. S. Peterson, of the English department, who was .at the Ayr academy," Ayr, Scotland. "To go for a year to a girls' grammar school -'-m Southern Eng- land from a Mid-Western high school is a change as well as an exchànge. "Miss Flemington coni- mented,. "Besides being an oppor- tunity to. travel, it has been a valu- able.,experience In teach'ing, in an entirely. different educational scheme, .,an-z it gives better under- standing of international relations. Christmas in Florence, iMiss Flemington. spent a mnonth in attending lectures at Cambridge, spent Christrnas in Florence, visit- ed the bulb fields- inw the Nether- lands, saw the beautifully cultivated Rhineland and attended Easter SundIay services at L~ucerne. Shç. went to England shortly after the close of school in June 1937, and returned to the United States last August. The Hitchin school. MNiss Flern- ington explained. is one for girls. from the ages of 5 to 18-corre- sponding roughly to both elemnen-. tary and secondary institutions. in the United States. It's what in this country would be called. a "privàte- sehool, That is. it*s not tax-suppori- off icers during * .S. Peter'son de nt that wehave here,"- was ber comment. Mr. Peterson found Scotland as different froni England as England is fromn the United States. Educa- tiom in Scotland, 15 free. public., and! eoedctinak. Secondary education. however, in Scotland differs from that of the United States in several respects.' he added. "Most important, it seem-s to me," he said, "is the fact that in Scot- land, all secondary schools are pret- ty much on the same leveI. Thel per capita cost of education is. low.1 compared with som-e schools ini 2. Stationing of officers at night clubs and othér public places to dis- suade drinking drivers froni taking the wheel. 3. Instruction of ail policemen not to translate the spirit of Yuletide gMaly into leniency towar er ing drivers or pedestrians. 'iin the final, analysis," said the: council, "hope of, reducing the usual heavy* year-.end1 traffic. toil rests largely onrigid enforcemnent of the traffic laws. National -experience has .beien thàt the, stricter the en- forcemient, the fewer the accidents. "The . United States is pi'ng into this final hectic traffic period of the year with. an excellent. chance 'of materially reducing its annuai traf- fie toli. The 1938 reo. depe-nds largely on, frow .we meet the usual bugaboo of the Christmnas rush, when sleet, snow, ice and darkness combine with the shopping and holi- day Ihazards:to pile Ùp deaths on-i the streets and highways. and are asking the police chiefs adtraffic officers' to step .up their enforcement. But even the .best po- lice efforts. must fail if rnotorists ani d pedestrià'ns do flot do their part. 1 '.No Christmnas can be happy when death ýor injury strikes."' ýe From Fast for 1<r; t)the theVi ares nts.sh aded, makd eryPays Owui Way I ber -parents-in-iaw, Mr. and Mrs. sacifcesinorer o en thf -T'he unfairness of our own sys- Frank P. Whitmore, 644 Abbotsford thien edctonthe tem on suporate m, where each community .pays road, Kenilworth. Saturday, Mar,, Isohel by tioaxess tended for to its Ow11 way, is obvious.". Elizabeth will celelrate her fir-st wo l abaedos n thne fostudie f All pupils are subj'ected to the birthday with her grandparet whork at abaou ter14. ie fori sanie standard of accomplishmnents. Philip Whitmore is in Cubaonbi the object being the attainnient of ness for three mnonths. Becauseof his "The children were délightful," :1 a "lecturing certificate." an exani- seven years of experience in Bar- Miss Flemington declared. "The ination not, unlike our own college celona,, Spain. , which he left becaust- eniphasis of the whole éducational boards. of the civil ,var, he is nom. represent- systeni, however, is on facts and "The resffits of tbe n1ai are not iflg the Electrie Bond and Sharý,- [n examin ations. Education over wholly good scholasticaly» he add- j.company in other Spanish sekn --------------------------- -- - -- - - tt -'l k non-schoastic. problem. No Close Contact "One of, the things I notkced over there was that there isn't the close contact between tea cher and stu- e pupils, too, we polite, andl pleas- iWe regret, every many gçod friends