HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1927-08-04, Page 5,monoesseleseweesoke-71-,‘APkt----,-.
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mutnitEn.--mecuiali's ni;nE:RIIINION'P. COOKERY.
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.'...,T1OKES., AN ACCEPTABLE Golr, FoR/HousEw!FIE
, .
006E, FLOUR DREDGE . .
•WITII EACH PURCI1ASE OF ABOVE..
.CLL IN ANI) SEE . THE 17..pitY • LATEST !'NEW
- TION" OIL'cooK-FrOirgS:'.--7.
.Tomm.A,Nki.."&kkoLINEliAriGgs ,AIMAYS. ON HAND.
• .611.FRESCO FOR. 'DECORATING.: WALL S •ANilvveiCE11.01,9/3".;
MARTEN .SEi41)011," :PAINTS ANDA VARNISHES, k
"ROGER'S" A
"
CQILSITING WIRE.HARj WIREAisTa WOVEN FENCING
AllyA*s orr.nAN'Er 41‘,10 oukcium.irrY AND fin[cE
ISItIGHT. •
TORONTO ' ASPHALT ROOFING. ,
„PERFEC..
Just Untioaded-a'Freskqtr.litt*elif:'-
Phone .66.
Hardware' co,9:1
..T.oRTgovi
'
01.
Luck now.'
Pluinbing
Tinsinithin
'ere Lid There
L,iving births in Caned*, , during..
for the nine province's' being '.2.18.
per thousandof eopulation. • Deaths
• at all ages. numbered 107,318' in 'the •
., Dominion, , a rep nf , 11:4 per thou-
by:attending iii•large-numbeve':-
Sand; Excess of birth over :deaths' • litnni:
In the year was124.887. A total There were 'big crowds. On Sunday'af.
of 60,570 Marriages were rendrted ternopn and. on Monday'. •
' during" the- year: ' •
.• , . ..On Sunday • there 'was •a parade .of
•War Veterans; the 'Town:: Council;
•Tht general' Cool weather for :this
• Season of the year in British Colurn-. Black. knights, Orangemen;
bia and the, amount of inobiture Lodges. . The :parade end -
about has saved a "great' ..dear of ' ed ,at.the soldiers' ,ineinerial in . tb(.
•titaber froni. destruction 'by, fire. So
Park, where • an *appropriate Sunday
far this year. there 'have been -6111Y
.210 .forest fires in the province; at service Was conducted. The principle
'compered. with 570 for the • similar . address was -given by the. -Rt. Rev
period of Mat. year. The. . ,present, Charles A. Seeger, Bishop of Ontarfe.
condition of . the, Woods' .are; excel-
The' ReV:' R. C. MeDiarinid • of knox
lent.
Church," presided, And ether riergy--
c .
• As, a 'sign of ;Agricultural progreas • mentook part,
In the west and Industrie' :pres...••Monday being givieholiday in
verity' here,. the International' ,
• vester Company, Limited, have just many• surrounding tnwun; illnunandl!
s
. sent two of. :the largest trainloads • eanie• to Goderich to Pend the day
. or threshers ever ihipped to tho and evening.
. ,weit,Over C.P.R. lines from the east,•-,
• the first train •consisting of 43 Cars
with. 111 threshers and the other Of t, Th. Hebridean 'emigrants', who •
40 Can containing 103 threshers.:,• • are laming their lone 'shoilinga and
misty islands for noir life In
' The ratepayers of Victoria . have
endorsed a 'by-law 'providing for • Canada have, curiously enough,
civic supportof a .proposal .for the hitherto been ignored hi tho
establishiment • by British interests 1st. altlicitigh the:romance of this'.
,
of a . ¬ion picture producing in-
' dilistry hors, 'by a rite of 2487 to • migration, extending over a hundred
060; The 'city was thereby author- years provides a:wonderful:field for
izet to guarantee bonds of the/ con- " fiction. , The extent of this . field
oern to the extent of $200,000, after • has now been realized,hoWerer„ in
•
motion:11500,picture distributors and ex -
090 'had been raised by Britieh
.'the new navel f'Eyes 'of Gypsy,",
• .
hibitere. • •
.GODERiCH-
The , Centennial Celebratiini, for
which active Preparations have been
under way for months is in full
town; , especially about the •Centrill
square, is beautifully decorated, and
the public are showing their ,appreci-
lf•
A thriving new industry in South-
ern Alberts, which is making :pro..
grass and is fall Of promts', is that
of theraising of polo ponies. .Three
ranches 'are' engaged exclusively in.
'this industry and ranchers and
, farmers are coming increasingly to
engage in it alio& side line. ut
five carload, or one hundred ' pole
ponies IsSie Southern Alberta an-
- inhally, for the United States.
The Development Branch of the
•Canadiain. Pacific Railway in • co-
operation with. Macdonald „Agrimil-
turf] College, is conducting exPeri-
Ments on the fares of Donald •Fraser
at Plaster Rock, N.B., to ascertain
, whether gypsum, of, which there are
larro depoidts; has special value-in-
---conneCtiop—with -potato , culture;
M rebers of the staff Of the college
a4 sUpeivieing field tests on the
The itinerary of the 'party' of ,one
• hundred „Britishnewspaper men
vvho will' arrive: at Quebec August
• 12, provides that during the month
they are in Canada the Britiishere
viII visitpractibally every corner
• of the -Dominion and, beilidee
every *city of importance, have.
an,opportunity of studying at first
hand Canada's' natural resources and
Anvestinent possibilities, They will .
travel across Canada and- 'hack on
Canadian' Pacific lines.
•-01t4a, Ont. - Canada'i total
Wheat4 yield' for the season 1927- is
. forecast at \ 825,075000 bueheis by
• the Dominion Bureau of,Statistics...
The estiona0 few, the' three "Prairie `
*Provinces is 805,052;000 bushels and
• for the Wirtf'ritz"Clinittla T.20;023;000.- .The total yield. of onta is .,,
-
389,758,000 :bushels,., of whiCh,
.,228,297,000" bushels is assigned to
the ;Prairie Frovhice. , 'Barley.
-estiniated" at 83,839,000- bushels, of-
'Which:the ;Prairie ProVitioes,sre
ex-
p(-ctcd to furnish 71,724,000,bnehels..
Rye is given at 12,169;000 bushels,
of Which 10,664,000 is alloWed for
the. Prairie Provinces. For flat;
seed," 5,819;300 ;bir•Stiel, ietourriatod;›
of which all but 167,000 bushel, 10,,
Lo; th.,rokit ktoviwise
by:. the 'Canadian • writer John .
. Murray Gibbon, who it the well-
known author of 4Drums Afar", ••
itee, aria Dean .of Pnblicity of tile
. Canadian Pacific Railway;
Action shMild be 'taken' •. by. lint'
. • • .
• authoritiesin the Province! 'ef
Que-
bec to sherit,en- the 'Oen, season for
• , hunting..deer and. niaiie, .iiCcOrding• ,
•
to Ozark Ripley, Well known' writer
on animal and wlld life And Orem-
• inent hunter -and Angler.' -Mr. Ripley
!alio believes that the .deer. Seaton:1i
too .early as in September the deer'
are atill in their .red coati, and their
, ,ntimberie are 4011y. coniarred 'through .
---!their ability to hide 'ankrftet,'„LtliA.-
•'' leaves. ot-thicatdirtirUsh: which have
not yet fallen., He believesthiit• a
. scartiti' of Able, game Wil.1 • *nit
from the lengthy 110.418011.
„The Earl .of , Clarendon; Under
` Secretary of . State for Doaninion
Affairs •.in the 'British Government;
who hal been touring Dondrilen
investigating the Condition*, under .
Which. the 8000 -family *cheese from
.Great • Britain ie working out, de -
tilted; in an intorvieir at the Cana-
dian
Station
at Montreal **Centel'', that, One of
' vthe greatest thlnga apcii• which the•
-...stleCeia: Of the •scherne, depended Wait
- the loyalty .And ,.CheerfnInsisof. the .
.nitithirs ,Ot•-fitrilliiiir-brinight"'ent to ,
Canada to be Iodated on farina: • His
Lordahip 'paid a epiciatc. tribute ;•to. :
;tinder 'this -scheme whom he limt
.4tirilig lili personal iiut4,.,411104.%
• .irninigrAnt jmf11e.•
:It isn't 'reifily slimmer' until you
find out that you wife has given your
,old diothes to the r* mane • •
When..-togirta$T2 snme'cillicr.01k;11-4
sport 'isn't really' Old" she, meatie
bee., lot of inerielf and ish,0 Walltz it
..spent On her.
4
4
•
THE J,
,
ESTSTOCK FEED. OF ALL
AL,FALFA • Ell-lOPLO ',13E MORN
,!1X.TENfilIVE14 onowpr•
•
Only Blardx,Setid ShohldiBersed and
Plenty le ;!1TOVf AV41404.4.11f1P01,47.
Aeln Points to COniddoi. .
ontrib4ut$74buritOtimilie,,r11.0orPoneirtirttni5en.oS
Ohs • of the valnable_features •g&f
.0414 OAR rich:nips :in the expiniive
•0rOtoine. livhen''cnt at filx or 13.412t!
inches in-lielkht, we have found it 'Pit':
.contain 26 per centor misgonnus
s;matter, that la.. one-quarter ,;nt'ine
„dry Matter, of the Crop wati. 'crittlit Pre,
• tein.., The aineunt naturally '44,ereas,;..
00:as the -planta inature(i. (410 *4;;:,, the,
development or tlie..fibre, but in the..
early Idosseraing stage We .found al-
talfa
inintained, on ` the Average:, -16:6
per Cent, of crude 'protein, in, .4 1,3 per
:Ont.:.of digeatible ,crtitie'Protein,;;cai±.]
entered to Water,tree.,basis: • ',la the f
hay Condition.,•of 'drYriefis-, Henry and
'Morrison • in.. "Feed si and .Feeding".
give the Per cant.of digestiblo. pro-
tein, in 291110of thecol:ninon folder*.
ils• „follows: Alfalfa,: 40.0; red, clover
hay, 7.6; timothy •hay, 3,0; eorn
age, 1.1;- and aniciegthe grains,. oats,.
9.7; •cern, 7,-.54...-barley,'9.0;• and 1004:
itran,42,5, it will thee be'seen why
.it iii,...noLnecessary-to-,-feed-eo-ranclt,..!
grain er'coaceatilitee When alfalfa is
ned as• ,
, • 0 er. •
Furthermore, _ the alfalfa -- is --vain-
able for ite..A and ,Bt'viternines- and
its ash conteiii. • It may not he better
these respects , than "the • elovere.,
.
but it has a' recognized)value when•
:fed with .'concentrate. • .
1. The Ontario farmer's. feed problemt
is beet solved 'through. the production
And use of the greatest possible.euaa-
Mies: high-class lieine:growe•
rOugliage, Which.' obviates the neces-
sity of using- large:troportiOn of
expensive. concentrates In his rations.
Most honie,greivn :concentrates; 7 and :
,roank•of the • roughagel,! ere -cartiona-
eeous feede.Which,la then:mei:veil; even
--in, mixtu'resc:Ao-net- Make -for p rop erly-
balanced . r6tithis and, .'cOneequentli•
• there' is aliraye big.dentand for
tein-rich feeds. with as 'bran; .shorts,
niiddtingc,••oilcake meal, ..cottonseed .
:Meal; gluten- meal and Other,. ,
,'•feetls. -These feeds are. always • inor .e •
-nr-letis-eilienitiVer--aneVitrillretitd- far*"
••economicato•attempt: to produce 'sob- .
Stitutee.for them-in.ito 'far ae•possIble.•
,The!farnier ,understands- the iiitusition,
.and naturallytornato., leguininous
701k,rpila.7aTificularly •the clovers; le' cut
down'his feed billet and; at the Stine
time, enrich. his soil„, .1fe realizes that
..his:boine4rown. grains and ,hiii Corn
and irOots,, are ow in :Protein.' He
knows ' protein:410h Concentrate*.
:are high .in - Therefore, he ',le
interested .more. and ,niOre In. in • in-..
7Creased:''Supply of hom,e-proditeed
feed high in protein. ' Mona. fact .
that ttletle: legulninotUrfeede, are high
In . mineral • Matter BO 'neets.sary, •to
prOduetion...reprodectiOn end general
.health in herd e and 'flecks; and the
best •of them alfalfa, -the
-moat palatable of all. . •''' ''• • •
Aifiafa Hay; •
. . .
• Alfalfa lia,y•.stande'•at. the head -Of
the hay list In -rdlUe ter dairy cows,.
sheep and lambs, beef. cows, • grOwing
young Cattle, breeding bulls,,and'InXy
6q„stised 'with .care for horiies„
eupo-
c(a4ly whorl they are .idle Or compara-
tively
•.
.so: Of Course, the bay: should
be Well aimed,: preferably ' by the , coil
method, and generally. Speaking the,
•
second cutting is Of finer -quality than
the Arit:,-GOod 'alfalfa hay. is lust •un-
• d,er. Wheat' bran in digestible crude
,protein;.but'sherat *.about three- times
• as much Ilhre. • Itil,s; roughage, but
Mine feeders& forget that it 1. A. rich
• roughage and throw ..too muehof it
to their itooke • A small. forkful .of •
0dod 'alfalfa hay. Contains more'.real.:
feed value than a big bundle at th,
average timothYor mixed hay ;and
soit should .be. fed with Mere „cal.° •
to 'prevent waste or danger of' over-
feeding. Alfaltahay„-corn•silage and..
. a few ,roots 'make an idealrOughage
ration tor alt claws of• Cattle and
elieep..". and oitiny 'feeders have cut
, down, • or out out, their, cern acreage.
Where • altalft,:dees well. ,Por dairy
and beef cattle, from one -halt to one
• pound .0er • day per hundred :pounds.
•
of Weight,: acoordiat. to .other
feede fed; proves :very; valuable; in.
Mixed retinue.... For sheep, either fat-
tening lanthe or breeding ewes, , from,:
two: to fOur pounds perday will be:
relished. For hormie not over one,.
half 'Podrid per hundred ,pounde '
'Weight, preferably Mixed with Miter
hay'or straw, la:Rarer than too Much
And for the old sows, it May also •he
„used as part of the winter ration. •
..tuidt, **age. .
! As a soilage Crop nOthing,Leickle
-altalfa. It grown-fipidlY--lind' pro-
duces severai Crepe in atleasort. Green,
alfalfa cot' and,..earted to all. stock
kept' stabled: during the Suittiner pro;
videe .pretein-rich Succulence in The
'Mesa palatable form. • The crop will
produce mote feed out and fedas a
soilage crop than in any other form:
IlhtuPe cattle May be fed up 'to fifty
'Or :slaty pounds per day of' this green
feedalong with Other Ueda:: 'Calves
-and youngor.stock do exceedingly
well On alfalfa. As. green . feed. Show
Or fattening sheep can get no better:.
•feed, and it is attiong 'the veil, 'best
green .feede- for all ,cleeeee of hogs,'
front the _yentgaiit Pige to older,
'breeding Steck. Green alfalfa is eot
al very satisfactory feed for the iverk.,
ing„horeebectiese it has 4 tendency.
to cause WashineM:
fAlfaIfa, In such retie, PrOVides in
!Melt a narrow ration,' being :very high
In :pretein,dnd should be .fed, along
!With Iiiinie-grOWn..graitis„ a little hay'
or &it'll allege to eattiti. Sheep .will
handle It Without raireh didieulty And;
0fcpurso, it naturally. is only a sijp-
,plenient. to thograln-.rntlon for hbg,
dOWil the
.•thst of ;pork4prOdtiation VerY Mater-,
:Jelly, .1f fed vireen to :lioreeii„ It leho old
only oomprise. a ;part of the
litimg: With: seine dry hey And, Wein..
'When feeding to tattle:. itnd.,slieep, it-
is Vvell to start With a smell Amount
and that trYi-Ork-thine-10-sonttr'dati,..--
,ger of bloatlf-Airrte•-4nirlritits • We,.
fed • wet In the beginning; • •
Ask for Ciroular.48,' on 'tardy .4.1,•••
and jet the reit-0t the story Alt
N. *NW Or+•
•
I
O:f.v '8ENZINE:4 TilibtSDAY, .471017b1 4th„, 1927:
ere and Mei.
Is now the large*t producer
7of oil and gas in Canada In 1926
,
the production. of gas amounted to
,:."..spproxisnately. • 9,000,000 thousand
Cubic. feet, the production of oil
• 18a,000'hirrelz.' '
trade : delegitte' 040
'Union:. of. Soviet • SoCiiilists. Repub. '
; licit. confirms the 'repOrt,. that an.
Order. for *1,0110,000 •worth of bin.
der t'whia • has been with
Brantford' firm:: Other large 'or-
ders: for Canada are pending. ' •
‘' During the season of 1926 dyer
0(4000 square miles • of 'mineralized'
areas in the Donlinion - were map-
ped out by means' of aerial I.Jhoto- •
. `.
photo-
graphy ha* heen adapted.
u*laasca0asit:4rt:'0,9sai nin we!. ol etResourcest hatllereird..elat Depart. -.t°4 oti ttma;:
portant
• A bill to establish Bah, .8arisZ
.anci., wild life sanctuary in the in-
terior of Nova Scotia has been pass- •
ed in the .1.segislitture. The sanctu-
• "--a-Vy-irto'be-located at the intersec-
tion of the counties of Annapolis;
Digby, , Yarmouth and Shelburne -
Queens. Others may ,follow in other
parts of the province in the 'near s
future.
• A large single shipment of motor :
oil, A :solidtrainload' of 26 Care.. of
11.arveltilie, left Sarnia for various.
points in the west, but ,mostly ' • for.
• Vaneouv.er. The Oil is a :Canadian- .
,
neantifeetured product . whieh. has
! delieMed •within the Past year
, ,
the special train
was handed :wirer, to,. the :;'Cariadian-
Pacific'Railway for exhibition lilting
its lines'
• . .
• Announcement of the offer' of two.
, •
scholarships annually --by EL
Beatty, chairman, and president of
the Canadian Pacific Railway,' and '
Chancellor of McGill University,- to
the first mals candidate in Greek
and Latin, and. to ,the 'highest male
candtdate, in mathematics . enter-
ing the 'University; was plade re-
cently by Sir. Arthur Currie, prin-
cipal of 'McGill. ' A prize. of 500 is
attached . to each scholirsdlia.
According to thedepirtment of
, .
Colonizatien. and Development of.
Pacific 'Railway,there
1. every. indication thatl there will
be a greet increase' in the, number
of intmigranta coming to Caligda
this ' year .,coinnered with the .num-
her locating during 1928. ',. it has
been - estimated that immigration
figures, for this year will .he .almost
•double those. of, the Past year: Since
the first of the Present year Cana',
•dian, pacific liners have • brought.
to Canada approximately 15,000 new.
Settlers..
• -
E.1kr. Beatty, chairman and pre-
sident of the Canadian Pacific Rail- •
way, announced .from headquarters
recently that the name of the new
hotel now being erected at Regina,
'Would be "Hotel Saskateheivan."
The new C.P:R. hotel at 'this place'
will, he an eleven story structure
Containing 284 bedrooms •with bath'.
' and will mist in, the neighborhood
Of • $1,500,000, the opening •,being
scheduled for" May 24:. The hotel is
being. built or one of the finest sites
In -:the- city on Victor iii Avenue, fee-
' ing the park ,It will be only Within
a few ,minutes' , Walk ,from the
C.P.R.: Station. "
• The 'Canadian Patific Railway
made an excellent ishong. in 1926,
groat revenue for the 'twelve months
being the beat, :shoWn sine 1920,
While net :.. reVenue was the: best
_ehownsincj, heirig nearly
.'zifillion ahead of •the fine. record of
1926,'Th groie earnings:from rail-
way And hike steamers the year re-
sulted In a Very notable: increase,
, over the .preceding fiscal Year,the
showing being one of the best On
' record, 'while inciime Pion* special
sources, including ocean' steamers,
held up well, beingMily slightly bet,
low. that Of 1928, and also being one
•of the heat 'exhibit," ever •:nutde
cempanyt •
• Y el IAL i•
•
Pre.sident Coelidge's natal State, •
•
Vermont, has been brought 'vividly to '
the attention of the iliddie
West, On-
tftrie 411ellec by a Special
as the..Nerniont Matile Sugar
.Special;Which hits been touring the
Western ' stapes, ,and ' which visited.:
‘Oritario and' Quehee an the latterjrtrrt
.•
hibit.ef Vrniont products and :Attie'
Cear. of,'::Canitdian .Pacifie exhibits::
GoVerner John E. Wreeke, I/ern-tones:
:011ier;.exeentiiTe, and "Mrs. Weeks;
together With „hie „Staff, .tho Unit6d
States ,6'enator tor Vertnonti And:
tepreeentatives of leading: .baSiness
interests, Were ,.aboard the train
"durilig,tta,eittended
•
•
•
'Hold Vo.40
L 14 GE I 1 WI El 1 1
ME7
•
1. p41„g thketig,t., the water.. it 'The *edge "oe a. lake 1 A cool relief for tie ItorieL 2. Mount AisiE*1". the "'"!
objective of the Trail Ride. 3. ,Seerir of a Trail Ride •Poir- 'Wow lir Yoho Valley. ' . •
4TRAIL•amt-R:"7 The vezi. sound Of ',the. Words climber, ark Tom.' •NO'ition; , of nft, made ,thett, *ay
brings the tang of Woodland 'fire smOke,:the crackling to its foot by way Of Simpson Pass, the :ionte which.
Of burning twigs, the Musical 'running and 'tumbling the Trail Alders will take on their return. trip :thi,
. to Streams slipping' hurriedly down the mountain smisnier. ' • : •
• to offer:'an early , Morning drink to thirsty campers. . The fourth •annual trail 'ride will leave Banff on,
•
13 there anyone inthe world sufficiently ...prosaic not Monday, August 4. • The Cdpintissioner of Parks has
•
to .be. attracted • by . the fascination of that., word had Cleared an old; trail which leads through the wild
"trail ?” It mysteries, an eluelve.iontething canyon of Brewster : creek.. The first night' eanip
lying: always round, the nextbend of the road,' he:. Will be by the head of this creek; andin the Morning
yerel the :next Mountain peak, •.• . •' • • • . • . ' the: riders' Will :trese Aesinibeine .Pass to the Camp
One part -pf Canada. in particular is threaded with by • the 'shore Of Lake "Magog,. Which- holds in its,
the world's most* fascinating trails, to be followed turquoise- depths the reflection of thisgreat, stOny;
through -the world's most lovely scenerY.,• day after snow-CrOwned giant. The third day will be "gent
day, eachto. its , ultimate termination: That is the with the camp a- base, allowing' the: Trail 'Riders. to
arena indigenoos toBanffand Lake ...Louise,: in the explore the surrounding lakes .and foothills, or to do
heart of the Canadian Rockies a veritable land° of some climbing. The fourth .day they will .ride by way
newt% Desire for the man Or woman with thelove of • the .Valley Of the Rocks, Golden Valley, .Citadel
. of Nature and the explorer's hot blood in their' Veins, Pa.ss, Alpine Lakes and Meadows on the Great Divide ;
where every trail leads to beauty, ,Peaceand radiant to Sunshine camp. The Grand PowArow'will be.held
health.• . ' • • ••: on Simpson Pass on the 'fifth day and the party Will
; Off the beaten track of the luxury loving -rocking :ride home the folloWink, day by way of Healy Creek. •
Chair tourist, directly smith -of Banff is Mount Assinia ' This year's ride is the most ambitions Of any ••
. beine, the objective Of this year's trail ride. This undertaken by the Trail Riders since, the inception '
majestic -Mountain .towers' Many thousands'. Of, feet of :the organization and, :from all indications it will.
Above the .snow -fields, and is. clearly reflected in the be 'One of -the, chest successful:. And no 'matter !what .
,jirfaces of the lakes that lie at its base, '--No-Twhito wonderfal-picturesAheLiingginatiOn• of the rider's 'may
an reached the . base, of this, noble pyramid .;' until conjure up, the ' heant1es of the trip' are , aura 10 b'
593; when E. L. Barrett, in American mountain lovelier., ' • • .. di •.:: , •
A,
GREAT BATTLE IN MOTOR, •
•, 1NDUSTity
„ •,-
.•conditiona might .he given. in the:
autoniotive industry as spotty'," but
produetion .holds "Well. Some ; emu-
panies.,have rePorted a reeord,break-.:
ing 'gay 'output ; .while Others‘haVer0.,
ported eabstantialand seasonal cuts.
It is noW a genie of the survival Of
the:,;'.fitkest., Possible and. .linpossible.
combinations are -talkedabout; but
'are not ; inaterialikieg.„ Rioters'. • Or
cerebinations •of 'weak sister's .lire not
materializing fer the reaeOli • that a
hunch of the weak 'onee car not :get.
together, and. make one strong . -one,
torebinatione• to 'apprOa;h • Or rival
• General rotors: •Corperationniust be
of ' a:lot oPsucceSsful,, aggreesiva.con.
cerns' vt Ith. ,dietidbutien welt established. 'Stich concerns belieVe theinselveS,
able to stand bn. their own feet. ,
Those' Wile alwayS:„..:adVeltiee.L...
gressiVely are going ahead; while
•those who 'hold baCk and ,find reasons
for' net- advertising „. are diupping
back. ,SoMe Wiii hythe wayside
that i sere- Tbet:e.. have been many.
runithe ';;.nd Oen' the, real 'seasonal
decline j. ts under 'ally 1 6ny things
May dtop,
The ,stweest'ul ones, When business
checks tit 'all,, add to. the 'advertisig
at; oncc Tho 000 who falls bY the
waysid6 .put.‘fil.:111s, horns; becdtisc::
business-, is slaek lied; then. when he
blie Intsiness :sees no reason to adver..
Use 1:1.4aese he i,,i-n3aking more saty,
thlfin '1,1thiate•(1.? • 'bare: :I...al:b.:I,
may' II a UI.L at: •6"•eivitit
reeentlr i b 1 iz.11..,q1 .0f the limiters • VII e'
• hnee7f ' by . the: WaYs e.: --M ty,.
have 111:ide eioner,,'1,11t, .it ,prhisahle
Moro luta 'been,..loSt than hae'• • eVin
rnrerb
'Maty hAttlee Cow' Inefit, . 'but tile,
greatest Will, be; that. between Pori
end Geller I MotOre,! OorPOratro-U
Cbqyt-Oet er: 3'ae:•11-„M...a.: group
r'silid:" • gain !. (Yds .."Niotol'
'.s% ‘-,1 •on- r,,,t
ndh•T.:,:..;*•Ts, bat4
doing ;.;., Ti.r
not tit 12 011,)rn;)s•
May delivered approximately 36,000
!Alto, ,wbieb. is • 'equal tte .May, '192'61.
but Buick :Made Only 20,000: care .in
May as against ;27,099 in April.. Oak-,
land Pontiac sixes in May. numbered
24;006, which ,is 20 per cent. above
April, the Previous high ,thonth , for
,these allied comtaniee..'
land fetal Shipments 'in. May. were'
23;293 up to: May.. 25th;,. when .1,701
cars were turned out Chandler Ship-
ments in May were 68 per cent above
'a, Year *age in. May, and• -the :month
proved the best month of the ' year
for this 'company.:
• ' Paige Dettoit . operations vary,, ac7
cording to reports for thi'.'cOmpany
recently'taken °Ver. by :Graham ,13ro-
thers by purchase of ' the .majority
stock Num the jeWett Brothers, made
in May, I-401 cars agairisi,..2,819 in
April, and: schedules 3;000, units foi;
,l,tniee., In Mak last year the company
turned mit 3,201 Paige and .1,708 Jew-
etj ears.
Wht ectL the price :Tcdu 'ction . all
:along the hirle of.•Colds will have ic.
unkracwri, Mit it may prove An open-
ing: gun 'in,' A' price war; so.'Detrolters-
Say. It May ',bring allOut evert keener-
oPmPetition ,and rather disastrous re
;,tilts, to some of the smaller inde-
'pendent, coMpanies before the end .of
- the year, according: to well-inforined'
.huthorities.
• Taken, all i»i. all; the pr,eserit sitila-
, Lion is most interesting:and the fact
that 'some are and :same -are not (ping
;so well •is significant; Whilethe' re..ry,.
fact the. production flg '1'•"11010. is tip
at,0•Ver'ekl'igetett10n15
-1S71'LWgdlc.-eet:;o-:lihtpen; is the quee
and ;those who would like' to
-make -their ..ptedietione•; are not r eady:
to 'do So for: o1e h1y say w1)4t.
the future holds; ' •
There ,te• tnitlahr peSsithisticith
agihosihero:':: ":1EverYtele ".;ix-optimitt.k
uf;c1,,Oth a reason. But eanditiens. aie.
teoli cglie .erdini tete otle
orn
,,
simieone .is mity bo annot be OW
now, at h.Aet publici•print, tve,/74
of,...!*<11 t by inilide has' hi', thought•e
7,1\i•L!-.:(701TTesitiril'It:711:11:7"e t 1Ot f1"1:::(17;:v
who' know, but who are looping their
'0Wil cotinsc1 iti4 a wise inan nowa.
days -who know 's enough -;'-to keep
:quiet, for citing rumors is .about , as
. ,
bad as causingit run on the:bank. '
reporting a line op at all windows...
our mrvcs2
asszt-
• 4The Young .r.copfe,.
havn--,the'
• , about'ile itilport-dif(6 '
of keeping up l on e"s friends.
Their ' mOderii jioint :Of
ft' i endA
are Your .bigge'gtassa. '
Keeping up be-.
.c6ines.a very simple.„
,Matter When you can ,
.easily call them .,-1.5y
Long. Distance. Tf;9 sir -
vice Was 'never 86 quick,
and ,tb Interurban towns .'
, (Within a radius of "siy.254
the rateis pArtion-
larly
..„
141e finest kind of a,
habit is to taveon
..dat-, each week for.,
calling up 'a friend or
friends by ..ong Distance„,
•
The,benegtS are often cl,;dite
-startling. ,,
•