HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1941-12-25, Page 5:ea.. .."'
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Trenching Plow, •�
Huge Implement•
A giant trenching plow weigh-
ing four tons is now at work in
England 'turning acres of water-
logged ground into land which •
_. will yield erops next
It is an ingenious trenching ini-
plement designed in the north of
England chiefly for, use in land
drainage. The new machine .outs.
channels to a depth of two feet ,
nitre inches at a rate of a hundred
yards.in 'four •minutes.
The base of the trench is cut by
a .share, while cul"tern carve the
aides, • the earth passing up in-
Wined bciurds to ,ground .Level '
tvhere' it . is formed into equal
' Ksdgesi tun. each side: The imple--.
went is 'hauled by a 'pair ;of.•wih'dr
']Lasses; driven by two ,diesel . en-.
nines placed at each end of the
One windlass polis the
;dement along when cutting, the
ether returns it into 'position F for
• putting the next trench.
• • The .standard 'windlass .employ- "I
�d for this work' by the designers.
s a range of .gears with differ-
nt speeds for different soils, and
e winding: drum carries 450
ards of steel .prow. rope:'
The implement can be.. hauled.
by the steam cable engines used
for plowing and cultivating, or ,by
the, large types of direct tractors.
In the Zuider. Zee reclamation,
la machine from the same
design -
leas
cut two million yards of
•
'treiiches in 20 minutes.
S. Bomber
Oil ,Rec *rd" -H -op
A record time .for the eastward
°rose%ng of the - Atlantic of 8
hours 23 'minutes was made by a
ioUr-motored Liberator bomber
that arrived in Britain recently,
the• Air Ministry reported, '.Cap=
tarn 0. T. Jones piloted, the plane'
throughout the:'trip.,
The previous fastest west -east
time of i3. hours ,45 minutes was,
made by a i iberato —the .timer-
Ican-built Consolidated B-2.4
:and- -Boeing--Plying Fortress.-,.
Captain'Jones is a former Im-
perial. Airways and British Osvr-
seas Airways pilot and has flown
about 2,000,000 miles. Last June
he piloted the Britibli plane that
inaugurated•the ‘London -Lisbon
nail service: • `'
A LIFE OF 'SERVICE
"Dave" Williams, editor of the
Callingweed`; Enterprise -Bulletin,
is this month to receive the 'hon-
orary degree of Doctor of, Civil
.',Laws from the University of -To=
ronto. He ' is an outstanding ex-
ample' of what Can- be accom-
plished, by a lifelong.resident of a
'comparatively ,small community;
of'what can be accomplished in.
service not only to that conmun-
ity, but to his fellow men
Much wider field. Although he
Was born in Perth county, he has
lived in Collingwood since he was
four—and he . is • now 72. 'He has
been 55' years in ,newspaper work
there; editor of the town's weekly
pepei; fors 45 Vara.
In addition to his ioCal,.journa-
hstie activities, Mr. Williamshas
'bWilliasd himself with an astonishing
number of outside interests. He
has been associated ,for many
years with various press organiza
'tions,, Iced C'ros's societies, library
boards, 'Historical societies, hospi-
tal boards, Canadian Club, "Board
of Education, Hortif;ultural Soci-
ety, Board of Trade and the Great
Northern= Exhibition. Hehas
been mayor of Collingwood. In
Trinity' United Church he has
been a member of the financial
stewards, and ' seven years chair-
man of. finance.
HELP FOR RUSSIA.
'Vralentine-tanks built at the Canadian PacificAngus Shops en
route, to the Russian battlefield.
HOW CAN I?.
BY ANNE • ASHLEY
•
What is a good. fertilizer for' a
fern?
A. Try 'using; .a solution of eight
parts. of. sodium chloride, four
parts potassium nitrate, and two
parts magnesium. 'Mix thoroughly
and put -into bottle. Dissolve' one
teaspoonful of this solution in a
quart ata water, and:' Water ,the Oro., ,.
about once a week.
Q. How can 1 prevent squeaking
casters in my furniture?
' A,; lister.e.-iabsorting,the_:.casters,
dip the 'shanks 'into vaseline and
then slip them into place. This
not• -:only: prevents squeaks;' but also
greatly,. facilitates the rolling of
the•furniture. --, •
Q: How carpi preyent'syrup,from
turning .back into . sugar?
A. The turning, back to sugar can
be avoided when making syrup, if,
'when it is' coming to a' boil, one-
third teaspoon •cream• Of tartar.is
ry
added to evetwo tops of sugar
used.
• Q. How can I clean corduroy?'
t4se-pure—w-Bite aoap•••• •ao
warm soapy water . when • wash•ing
corduroy. Plunge tie goods up. and
Own', rinse several tithes in clear
water. Do not wring; . h'ang' up
inside out, (kipping wet; to dry,
Do not iron, but use a brush when
•' dry (only one way of, the cloth)
to
to '•smooth the nap.
' Q. What is a good 'home remedy
t.- faaiaaebie ei+agaaa eeuad tom ..
A niiixttirev of hameS-an lend.
• juice' wtTl, Often;.: prove' effective.
Butter in hot milk, taken before re-
tiring, will'eaao the throat and in-
duce a pleasantly drowsy feeling.
What a full life, that has been;
" and what a refutation of •the idea '
that opportunities for. real service
are not plentiful in the smaller
'population.honor-
'
•4!entres. of In to
ing David William§, the univer-
sity pays • tribute to the type of
roan as well as to the reran him-
fielf;' to the, stnall town editors•
and non -editors, for that matter---
who have done, so much outside
the sphere of their iinmediate
business activities to build,. up
• • their own cornn1unities and to
'promote good causes of more '
than community interest.
MODERN
". ETIQUETTE
BY' . ROBERTA LEE
1. What is . the• proper way to
(,speak into a telephone? •
2. Should salads always be cut
andeaten with the 'fork?
3. What. kind of ' place -cards
should be tised at the bridal table
•to indicate where. the guests are
to sit?
4. What are some of the expres-
alone salespeople in stores should
avoid 'tieing?
.5..Is it ever' permissible for the
hostess to sit at the side of the
dinner table?
6. \i let le the correct pronun-
elation of "decollete" ' and , what
does it mean? • .
ANSWERS
1. Talk directly into the mouth-.
piece with , your • lips not more than
half an inch away. Each inch that,
,you add , between your lips and
the mouthpiece is' equal to adding•
120, -wire miles to the distance your
voice must travel.' .Use a full,',
'natural tone, end take' care . to
pronounce each word clearly and
distinctly. Don't talk too loudly,'
Las this may cause the words to
blur in transmission. 2'. All salads
are 'eater with the fork. :11 hard
hearts of lettuce are served and•
they cannot be managed with • a
fork, it is permissible to cut them
. with the knife. 3. (fain white circa,
einbossed with the bride's initials;
4. Such phrases as "Look here,'
Oa "Say now!" to attract cne's at
tention. And slang .phrases such 'as
'}O. K., "Sate," and "All righty."
5. No; she should attvays sit at
the' foot: of the 'table. 6. Pronounce
da-kol•ta, both a's as in day, o as
.in of, accent last syllable, it is
a French .word. that means "leav-
ing the neck and 'shoulders uncov
ered."
Clean Sweep
Revenue :was mounting nicely
at the benefit turkey shoot when
a°uniformed man strolled up and
wanted to, know what went on.
Sponsors explained that three
turke s and a goose; were , being
given away.
All you had to- do
was hit the birds' heads bobbing
in a 'box 90 yards away—at a
dime a shat.
The uniformed, man . said+ *he'
wouldtry' fifty cents, worth, lie
fired four times,,, picked up three
turkeys and the goose and went
home without asking for his dime
change. 'The sponsors'also went
home.
Have You Heard ?
Having extended her visit long-
er than she meant to, the old. lady
was going home after dark -Li -and
it was dark.
Presently in spite of all her care,
she bumped into a dimly -seen man
and.they•both crashed on the pave-
inent_ At once the .than was-''ali-
apologies.
"So sorry," he murmured. ,"Care
leis of me.; 'Let met help you up.
So sorry." •
"Never mind all 'that," returned.
:they old lady,.. -curtly, "Will. • ou
please tell me• which way I was
facing • before 1 was knocked
•
=v— .
Some, gulls were following a
ferry boat... '
(An' Irishman ' said,. "Nice
flock of'pigeons,"`
A tourist insisted: "Those
are gulls.
"Well,". said the Irishman,
"gulls' or boys, they're a fine
flock of pigeons.",
• —v—
evar,systeut a inemn____ry__v'train-
1ng was being taught"in a villager
school and the teacher was be-
coming enthusiastic.
"For Instance," he said; "suppos-
ing you want to remember the
`name of a poet. Bobby Burns.' Fix
in ' your mind's eye a, picture of
a policeman in ;flames. See Bobby
Burns?"
"Yes,.. I .sees," said- a, br-igb -_..
ka papal aaa ids`1teavealea inv ttaadin! wag"
it does• not represent Robert
Browning?"
What Science la
Doing.
WHAT SCIENCE,, IS DOING?
• • SNEEZES
Professor M. W. Jennison of the
Massachusetts' institute • ofTech-
nology has been i'n'vestigating the
"velocitp of 'sneezes," reports, The
Halifax `Herald. The professor used
a :camera in his research work, and
his findings, ;just published, 'are
•worthy of • note.
in a "good, full-bodied sneeze"
thousands of particles, he, •assures
us, leave the mouth. in much the
same manner as pellets leave the •.
muzzle of a shotgun, with a.•vel-
,'.ocity' of 150 •feet •a second The
moisture of them quickly evapor-
ales, and the ngerm-laden, ,particles '
are left 'wandering. about • in the
.a4r looking for aplleiiody, •to' infect.•:
SOY -BEAN HELMETS
The Soybean' Pro -Mitts 'Labor-
atory ' "of ,the .Depar-tment of Agri-
culture and the Cotton specialists '
of the Southern Regional 1 .esea;rdh
Laboratory have jointly developed
a plastic, helmet out of heavy
cotton cloth and soybeans. Object:
To protect the heads of miners
and workers' on construction jobs '.
from falling material. The new
helmets` are lighter than the old
metal kind hitherto used.. -•In .fact,
they are strong enough to deflect
blow's u'p to "ferty pounds,. whieh
is about all that the human neck
can stand.
An optimist and a pessimist
were defined by a speaker at
e' Meeting in Falkirk the 'other-
-day as follows:
"An optimist is 'a man. who
sees a light 'that isn't there,
and a•pessimistis the fool who.
trres to' blow it. out." •
Hitler was interviewinghis
troops and stopped to talk to one
private.
"How ail things with you? he .
asked. I
"01, 'I can't complain, sir," an-
swered the soldier.
"ill say; you can't," agreed the
Fuehrer. •
--v—
•
Wife: "• You kissed the maid,
you kissed the maid, you kiss-
ed the maid. "• ' •
Hubby: "You don't have to
repeat it so many, times."'
Wife:, "You didn't have to
repeat it so many times eith-. •
,er.
—v --
The man, hearing of, a position,
open in another 'City,. wired the
following measeee, direct and col-
• lett:
"Am on way to accept the posi•
-
tion stop deduct cost of this tele-
, grain from my first week's salar'y." ,
, He got the job.
—v= .
Teacher: "Name the five "
zones." '
Pupil: "Temperate, intemp-
erate, war, postal" and o."
Submarine Officers
Under Great Strain
Submarine officers often have
ridges across their finger nailsi
each ridge being caused: by a sep-
arate period of mental strain, ac=
cordiflg to, Charles Graves, in a
book entitled "Life Line," just
published in 'London.
White hair and, baldness -are also
found among captains of subma-
' rines. Baldness cannot be caused
by nervousness but white' hair
can, be Says. It is not. unubual
for a submariner's hair to go from
jet black ' to• :.;gray in twelve
months.
These and other 'strange facts
tin his account of, the navy's de-
fense of Britain ' were obtained
hrow ts ecial fatil,ities accor-de.
d
by the Admiralty.
Menthes/haute..
quiekly 'soothes,
iiasai irritation,
-relievessniff-
wing and •sneez-
ing. Clears' the
nose. Jars and
tubes,30e, via •
itto Zl�iit'ORr D.il,1' a
—v
A.. NG ..
.3ELF-HE TI
Popular :Science tells of ,cans
that' heat themselves. The cans
are -double,. with a chemical be-
twoen••-t&1•ewalls-tha t heats -on-eon,-
tact' with air. Ttirn, a can• ,over,
punch' four holes, and, •let. • stand
about' fifteen '2minutes e' r Thesuit-
,w.il~1 be piping hot, ready -to serve
spaghetti;' beans, orcoffee.
•
•
Nearly 2,500:O1i0 tons' of rice Was
shipped from Burma in eight •
months.
Speaks For British
• • Artilier 'shells enemy posi-
tions as ritish forces fight on
in new„ Ibyan offensive.
Christmas Boxes .. ,
For War Prisoners
As early as August, 72,000
Christmas boxes• began their trek
irony the- Red Crossae°ki•ng sen-,
tre in London to Britain's 70,000
men in the prison camps.. of Ger-
Many, . British Industries Bulletin
relates. The extra 2,000 parcels
are an. insurance that everybody
gets one. The first lap was 'to
•Lisbon; the next to Marseilles;
then on to Geneva, and so to •
Germany. •
In each box was a Christmas
pudding, a double ration of choco-,
late, chocolate biscuits,. rye bis-
cuits, jam, margarine, roast pork
and' stuffing, a tin of steak and
tomato, condensed milk,:: four
buneee of sugar, .two ounces 8f
tea and a Christmas cake. • Also,
7;200,0'00 cigarets went off at the
same time to separate packages
of 100—a double ration for each
min. The value of this Christ;
mas gift' is £36,000.
Nor has the Red Cross' forgot-
ten the little band of eleven Brit-
ish children . in German intern-
ment camps. Each, of them' has
been sent a special -,parcel of. bar-
ley sugar,. boiled stiveetsand 'so
on. , And to one hospital' in Bel-
.gium'where there are soldiers who
habe , been lying on theirbatiks
since Dunkirk; has gone ii con- •
signment-of jig -saw puzzles. •
Relieves MONTHLY
PAIN
FEMALE
Women who suffer pafsa of irregular
periods With cranky nervousness—
one to monthly functional disturb-
ances—should . ftnd Lydia E. Pink -
ham's Vegetable CAmpo4lnd Tablets
(with added iron) eery epectivc to
relieve sUchdistre 5.Pinkham'eTab-
betc made especially for /Contest help,
tnild up resistance against such
annoying symptoms. Follow label
directions. Made in Canada.
Dinna Ye Hear
The Highlanders?.
. Scottlsh Battalions, Bagpipes
and All, Take Part In Libya
Fight,. ,,• t•s. -
While regimental . anonym'ity is
still observed with regard to the,
Battle of Libya, it is learned in-
directly that there are Higbiand-
ers in the fray Aar a matter of fact •
there have been Scottish battal.}
Imo ioin all the North Africa cam-,
paigns down es far a8 Ethiopia. It
, is in this great struggle in, Libya,,
however, that the presence of the,'
Scots has 'beeormeakaewn 4,41.6 ig1k
• incidental 'reference to the bag-'
pipes, • •
A despatch for ..Cairo bathe mid!
die Af. last week -atatdi ''that.. be -a;
tween • lulls in. the' `..gunfire, the
'sound 'of °=the bagpipes could be
heard putting fresh heart ihte their
comrades. A latero despatch told of,.
the joy with; which a Highland
regiment heard . the skirl of the
pipes coming from up in front.
That : was a• pre -arranged signal
that a certain point had been cap-
tured. '
• Colors In 'Action'
In olden daysbands used to play
'the regiments into action. The
colors of the reglldent were carried
into the fight 'too, and the music
and• the colors were great sources
of. inspiration. When thesecustoms--
w•ere, aboliiihed, the bandsmen eith-
er went into action, too, or acted
as strcteheM'beare^s:`"7-
It seems,: however; that the
'Scots' pipers go into actionstill, to
inspire and encourage their ,com
rades. Scoffs are sttPrcd b r tre
story of the captive -of the heights
o� Dargai .•during the Chitra: cam
--pai•gn. in north-west=India. in 189.7, -
the hero of which . Piper James
Findlater of the Gordon Highland-
ess, is still living, and visited: rele-
tives.in (*nada a few years ago.
Twice, English regiments had 'at-
tempted --to- storm the, heights, but •
were driven back by a withering
fire. Then, Colonel. Mathias rode
up: to his then and said:. "The gen-
eral says thathill must be taken:' ,
'The' Gordons will take it." Twice
•
Piper Findlater was shot going up
the hill, . but propping himself
agairt'st a boulder he played "The . -i
Cock o' the North," and thus inspir-
-ed,'the Gordons took the. hill. Find -
later •, was awarded' the Victoria
Cross.:. •
Pipes Give Warning '
�'cvnProbably Scottish men and wo•
-
nat is •1..'ate• i•.e :.aysmatt Yl w•.a
sound of the pipes: 'VF err -the -Brit= "
t is7ngarrison of. 30,:. 'together with
a few civilian's,' were' besieged. in
Lucknow for fear months, they had
\almost, given up hope and were re-
signed . to massacre when ,the wife
of one of the Scottish 'soldiers'':
Suddenly leaped to 4er feet and '
'cried: "Dinna yehearthem,dinna
ye• hear• them? The ighlands are
corrin'."
Nobody else 'did but in a few
minutes the pipes were plainly
heard • and a column- of'' Highland-,
ers soon arrived causing the Sepoys
..to flee.
Perhaps there is no 'sound. the
. Italians and Germans more dread
to hear on the field than the bag-
pipes. It warns„ them that not
only the Campbells are c$min' but -
all the rest of the Scotties.
One -wheelers
The C: 0. of a regiment in the
Middle East, was puzzled when he
received notification to make a7;-
rangenrents far the 'arrival of : •
"'Carriers, general utility, one-
• wheeled, sixty." -
lie thought it must be a eiew
type. of - small whippet, tank and
made the' •necessary parking • ar-
rangements.
Eventuallr he received sixty
wheelbarrows.
GERIM;IAN HOWITZERS ,IN ' RUSSIAN I-IANDS,
Soviet 'artilleryrnenn examining "German- Howitzers captured.•.•in
recent fighting. 'Except for missing parts of 'the breech block,. the '
nearer gun ,appears, to:be, in good-' condition. •
-Hitler Treats Friend
,And Enemy. Alike
It is not .only in the • invaded ,
and occupied (countries that the
Nazis are hated. For 'sante •time •
now the Italians have 'been• be-
coming- increasingly restive; since
they axe. finding by bitter-,experi- .:
ince that as Hitler's jackal ,they'
m bl it -
get; , remarkably y few t bets. -'A
••-•most--interesting' artiele- recently --,
• appeared in • an English newspaper : f
by 'an Englishman who• has lived
• in, nitaly for (;many years and `,who
-was-rery -recenti-r--a--prrsorrei.--nr
• Tuscany. , The writer says that
".Italy is subjected by..the.. Nazis
to.-ahuost_a9.-muehaindignity
conquered country. i There i's'Ger
• 'man, control 'Ori all railway sta-
• tions, German supervision in sev`-
eral centres,. arid the Italian sec-.
ret' police takes .second -place °'to
the Gestapo. Food is. exceedingly
scarce the Italians have ,had no.
butter 'since they entered *the war,
and -.they.'have meat only.. once a:
-week. The main reason for this is
that the Gerinlans have __annexed
most of their products •'such as
oil,• fat, oranges. and. lemons.. Hit- -
• ler. 'adopts hie- `:bleeding .white"
policy towards :his friends as well
as towards his enemies.'
•
1941,: Farm Incoine
di An•
Fnerease o_f.. 46/2• Million and
Trend is Greater to Mixed
Production
: The prairie •trend to mixed. farm-
ing "was exemplified• in 'figures of
the Dominion Bureau of Statistics
"showing that `.'farmiijcoii:fe`4flr"the
first: nine months of 1941 was sub-
stantially higher than for the same
period in 1990.
Live. Stock Increases
T1ie increase in 'value of live-
stock and livestock _products sur-
passed that ,of ' field crops, . al-
though increased • returns from
• both categories were reported.
Cash income from prairie farm.
products sales was placed at '$255,-
359,000 for the . nine months this
year • compared With *2031533,0OG.
iii •the same period: in 1940
The value of field crops advanc-
ed to r141,056,000 frons' $122,942,-
000 in 1940,• while 'the value in
livestock and livestock products
rose, to $119,303,00, from '• $85,646,-
000: -
Wheat production in. 19,41 was
reduced sharply compared. with
1990, but during the present year
large quantities of the 1940 crop
were marketed. . -
The bureau. saIii that higher re-
ceipts in. 1941' were recorded. •for all
individual items ' contributing to
the. total of •farni Inca -nue.
•
Saga of the Sea
'The perils of the sea are; not. '
reserved to the menaces of tor- '
pedoes and mines says the Kitch;.
ener Record. The old sea with.
its hurricanes, its•pounding waves .
'and its typhoons is still the same
elemental ••terror that challenged.
mariners spice Viking days;`
Of recent .date is the story,_`og
a -•Canadian'. threereaster•::.-schoo..ner,._'.a. �:>.,,.`
from Lunenberg ', caught in two hurricanes and breached. Her men
were reduced.to starvation.. when
--a-e--surall-•--freighter•-•have -in-,-sig-ht-----4,_
•
and took on (the. despairing crew.' -
,5'a1t, water permeated the vee- -
--fel-and--spoiled-the-fend.- The 13 .•-_-
caught ' water in 'reservoirs der
signed to-1Told• the rain. This was'•
all they had to, drink. The slop-•
perTad• a•' pew dress "shirt and be'
• converted the pins. in it to fish
"hooks and the men caught small---
fish over the ,rail of the stagger
isle. ship.
This' 'i Just
another 'saga of
the sea that has 'no. U-boat or
,_lurking_ nine in the_ backgr:.aun.d:_
It is the peril mariners have braves
' ed through the ages, and it is the
sort ; of 'thing that has •made men
of mariners who now keep open
,.•the life lanes of. the Empire, op
erating the Merchant. marine' in
spite of the hazard of atorni or
war. - -
British Ships Carry
New 'S.O.S. Signals'
A' column of reddish -orange
smoke rose over the ocean, nearly
30 -miles-away. --A--British pilot,
on ' petrel hover the Atlantic spot ;
ted it, and realized immediately ; •
what it was- an S 0 S.
The smoke came from a bolt •
about two feet square -and every
new ocean-going. British ship will
'carry' several of 'them.
This is the life-saving .apparatus)
secretly tested by the Ministry of
Shipping,. and when the:: British
pilot sighted, the ,coluni'n of smoke
from the air the experiments were
ended. •
Shipwrecked filen carrying one•
of these .boxes Beed only to pull
a trigger to release .a cloud of
smoke which will rise for an hour,
becoming thicker, • every minute.
The Pox floats, anti'if water gets ,
into the chemical inside the smoke
becomes still thicker:
Raw, . fur production in `Canada •
inthe twelve months ended June
30, 1940, amounted to 16,668,348;
an increase of 177 per cent over
the preceding season.
•
...CLASSIFIED ADVE RaTISEMENTS...
Rana coiciaS
'MAKE 'FULL USE U1' YOUR FOUL-
try equipment, LW your .110us.es.
with . birds bred for steady. and
full production. 1 du Cont'afford
to do anything else it you want
to' meet egg demands at home
and abroad. Wait for the Bray
price list, out shortly. We can
fill .orders now. for pullets. Gray
Hatchery, 110 John N., Hamilton.
Out:
• IIAlltoniessINht 'SCLIUUL, •
L 1; A It N .LiALEL)Jt1i1Sti1NU ' THE
Robertson Method. information
0tt request, regarding fall cliwsses,
liow beginning. itobertson's Hair-
dressing Academy, 117 Avenue
Ituad, Toronto.
LARK — USED yy1) 'NI V• •
MOUNT. PLEASANT. t(U'rotts Ltd:,
'Toronto's oldest Chrysler, .I'lym-
• Guth dealers; three locations, 038
Mt. Pleasant' Road 2040 Yongo
St. and 1650 Danforth Avenue.
" Otte Used Cars Make us many
• ,friends,.Write for our Free Book-
let on pedigreed renewed and an-
•,alyzed _used cars.
•
FIRST MORTGAGE 'MONEY
WANTk.
D
EXCEPTIONAL OPPORTUNITY AT
this time, investigate now. liox
40, 73 Adelaide W.,'Toronto,
Flllt A TRAPPING
SNA male`, P3tAPPlan AND 1+112
Marketing tips, particulars on
' Indian. Secret,..trapping methods,
tunes, snared • Tile. Fur catches
assured. 1iil'l'�'Hoffmun, .'Russell,
Man•
Lri.A'It
•
J N. LINDSAY, LA orovi('E, C,A'ts,
Itol, Theatre l3'uilding, St. Thomas,
Ontario. Special . Department for
fermerh collecttonil. •
°PEER TO INV aa'I'OItS
AN UFFER TU EVERY INV1!:NTUR°,
..List -of ttiventwaa, and •full rotor
.'matlun sent tree.•The Ramsay Co.;
Regisfefed, . Patent Attorneys, 2$3
Bank Street, UttaWa, Canada.
•
1:'E't'llk:RST'UNIAAt.la1 A i:U111'ANY
1'ittent Solon tors ' ,Latabli:+ned
i30U;, 14 Ring, Abest, 'raiontu.
Booklet 0f 1 ii to i'm,ltit,tf on re-
quest.
MEDICAL.
. IT'S PROVEN — E ,'EttY SUP -
fever pt Rheumatic • 1 airs or
Neuritis should, try Dixon's frets-,
edy. Soft only lvlin)ro's Drug .
, store, 385 Ethan. uftit\va. Post-
paid UAW. •
•
PERSONAL
ELIJAH C 1) N1 I N (r BEFORE
Christ. Wonderful book sent free.
Megiddo Mission, Rochester, New
York.
TtinsE
GOV1'3JtNM11NT iNst L:C'rkur AND
Banded Broad, Breasted prolste
Tutkc)s Healthy range stools.
.11.1ton ,13ttg .,,. M cherry OntrtrlO,
2. Quilting Outfit — $2.
MARC BEA ti'r.iFlit, .t''.Y'Tt'i-t-WUitlt
gittlt. Get one quilt batt, 'l?{
cotton print quilting patches,
- douibl'ei bedlisiei.o quilt, Ando
1 bpair,
8 inch ,.seiasors .(ralire' b9r1 all
'fol' only $'I.00 postpnld. Dept.
Textile Jobbers, 516 Queen•. St.
W., Toronto.
'YOUR FUTURI FOR 1942.
Ll'F 0 IUSADLNG AND PREDICTION -
month b'y month for 'one year:
COVeting•• fully business aftairs,
entpIdytnL'4t'r; love,- marriage,- tray
el, speculation, health, lucky days,
etc. Complete, $1.00. Short outline,
.10e. Send birthdate. M. Klenran,
Louise Bridge, J3ox 174, Winni-
.,peg, Man.
RIILhMATIII PAINS
•
SATiSFY YUL'RSI;LF'• EVERY
auffeser 0f Rheumatic Pains or '
Neuritis to -try Dixon's Remedy.
Munro's 1)rtig Store. 335: Elgin,
Uttattu, Posl•pa'id $Lull, , . '
ItAiniIZTS
1VANTED — LARGE LIVE '1)0-
mostly. rabbit's: Any'. quantity,
price SUc pdr pound you pay .ex-
p�iresii 'Lightfoot, St. Lawrence
Market,' Toronto., •
•
t,VO'HI:;\T WANTED
WANTED: WOMEN TO DO HOME]
sewing, Best pay. Postage paid
ot1all work, Sent anywhere,
Bontex Specialty Co.,, BOx 27,
• Chase, 13.C.
FOR tiALITY
O
SERVICE -
ANn SATIS.FACTI4 N
Tits, iMfl'l [tial.
6 or 8 exp'osutbe films,: • developed
and printed, or 8 reprints, :5c.
Both 'with tree enlargement..
illi l'i:itl t11 PHOTO SERVICC
•Station 'J, Toronto.,,;
ISSUE 52-'41