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The Lucknow Sentinel, 1935-06-06, Page 7F -------■ & 5 : SMOKING TOBACCO .9 f, ).7 every Classified Advertising OLD COINS SALESMAN WANTED Refuge From Lightning surroundings. tra-hd, Russell,' * $ A brother to every other Scout, without regard to race or creed ' “When I come to -die' I 'hope 1 Miall be propped up jn bed with a ’newspaper in my hand.” — Bruce Barton. ■ . !'■ cf aL -similar crowd, a towering bea ’a "SHEET" ' "*-i V ■afternoons, and ‘there will be evening, entertainments of music -and drama-'' tics' w ? j5q 35c (tube), 50 c, 01 ’35 “E'Ven wheri the c’l'ieTts they' may \vell betonistakbu.": ^NO SMOKE LARGE PLUG • r ■' •£ x- .'■ Tear Off and Mail Today/y CANADIAN INDUSTRIES LIMITED SALT DIVISION | " WINDSOR, ONT. • , ’ Without obligntjon■plt'A.o’j? Ffnd special ClTld •ren'a Booklet. "SALT allov.er tire World." Natnc.__ Addre.^.v FROM "SHOWER" Dixie Plug is mellow, . D'fee Plug is ripe, - -------- ------- ..-----!-------- . ' ' Dixie Plug is the world's —------—ibest-be-t— Chinch Bugs - Menace U.S. Wheat Lands (New York-Times) jR'rom man’s first appearance on this earth there ljas been war be­ tween .him and the insects, t " By Bruce Hutchison in the Vancouver Province ■ If the. depression and the gerie.ral which madness of these times have got you. were here before him. Milton must, d.o.wri, what you need is a tri|p to have had them in mind as well as the Cariboo.- There isn’t any de- the wild behsts when he,-in “Para- pre$sion up there, nOr any madness. dise'Lost,” cried “shajne to meir” for As this late Spring-opens, with soa?- ' ’ ’’was,ting the (ing; beef pxices arid more gold mifies A ’ .at work, the ICariboo is looking«4or- ward to one’ of the biggest years ‘since the old placer days. / -But having, said that,, the Cari­ boo "will never . forgive r you if you. "don’t add a warriifig. to city green­ horns who thipk that there is g^ld -atothe.-jgrassr. oots’?and -4 o.bs-f or_e-yery,rj: body. As- usual' this year,1 hundreds of ’men will, go to the Qariboo look­ ing for gold and. will come, back broke in the Autumn,, and there will be f^r more job seekers than jobs. , ■ . • , '• ' / .. The Cariboo’s, advice. i^ to. stay aw<iy 'unless .you ■ have a certain job or .a grubstake, but that “doesn’t _alter the fact that- it will be a great year up there. . .. -jfnq- (jq^v n fl}§ -'CarTliob'''"“Road?"" 'ffdm "bTcTA'slTEf:dTr“fb'''’‘Qufes’fi' el^from”" YoU'inQv^^ ) ■ SCOUTING j -s ...The coast-ta-coast chain of beacons. ^y1 which Scouts celebrated the King’s Silver. Jubilee on the evening of May 6th, was a huge success. Fires-stretched from Sydney on-Xhc ; Atlantic, to Prince Rupert on tlfe Pacific. Thb great Micf-Canada bon- ----Jr.e:.a.t-W-innipeg.,_.vva.s Jjg.hto(lJAy_L<)rdr ftaden^-Powell himself, in the presence rf a crowd of many thousand spec- 'tators. At Edmonton in thejpre'sence con was lighted “by Lieut.-GovernOr Walsh. In the’ Old Land some 2,000 Scout. beacons burned from ” .Land’s Ehd' to John o’ Groats. , , A 'demo'nstratipn. of first aid by "Sc'buts" of" the”1"st;"_2ml'"a7T(r_3rd , Bar­ rie Troops, was' a'feature of a recent- iun.ch'e.on nice ting of’ tlie“Barrie Lions' 'Club,; '..'■■ I IP TO $50,00 EACIIoPA I L) FOR U.S. . Indian head cents.' *\Ve "buy -all dates regardless of condition. Up- to 11.00 each paid" for U.S. Lincoln cents. Up to $150.00 each, for Canadian coins We-, buy..-s.ta.i.n.p,-.c.pll<toUohs.... JU eda Is, 'Li 1 j V iStM ' SUTniTL,'" CHICKS FOit SALE ,, , ........................' A. CIX BREEDS- CHICKS, fT CENTS; -pullets 25c. Complete cata\ogue mail­ ed. St. 'Agatha- Hatchery, St. Agatha. Ontario.. . . ' O werr • -S-mriTd, - h e 1 d S c o u t- A-pp 1 e -Days ■.; on an- April Saturday, selling apples purchased' and stqned'away last “fall.' Toronto Scouts were callect upon .to.supply ushers for the T°^°nt0 ■Garrison church parade held in Maple Leaf‘Stadium, Sunday, .May dise'Lost,” j •levying cruel. wars a _ earth each other to destroy?’ . ( As if (which, mightjnduce .us to . ” ’ . accord) ■ . z to .■ ." • - ■ Man had not ...hellish foes enough , beside i ' . . - That day arid riight’fbf'his de- J. 1 structipn, wait* ~ "-Wdr.d“-comes'^f-rom-;sc-ience.’.s-r-^head7“: quarters; that an attack by these an-, cient enemies on a wide' front is imminent, out in the great bread­ producing area of this country. This time it is the army of :the malodor­ ous chinch-bugs that i .s menacing ?wha£ it. Left, by- drojught and, ,:du^" sweeping . winds. In fact, t the drought has "been its ally. Hereto­ fore Chinch-bugs have , npt _ been “troublesome” outside of the Kansas-. ~Okia'homa -M i ss p u ri- r eg-ipm-—But—by-: ■ TavoT;~of the-' hot, -dry Summers-f-or- two or three years the map of their rriestation • shows deep black or lighter shadows .well toward the Creat Lakes and- eastward to ;-the7 -------—• T.he Urfi-ted States. .Department of . ^or "foe..-,cariir_. .paign, "but . it has, for the .“season s- fight”’only .the price., of. .. a \.‘‘few •hours’ barrage "hy . modern artillery.” ' . If the defence is to- be decisive '.this year, it is ■ stated . by the agri- -"cultural———stmt e-gistSy.™”—a—»—«*«fa,vorj.hg^ break” from - the weather will ,‘be needed. The bugs have Winter-quar­ tered, concealed in the wild grasses,, but they' .. are . • now '.' showing their ^toengTh^as-JRey-Ja^-n-^o-moxe-initL the fields of young wheat, oats ‘-and other grains... ' ' ' , ; “-■-But-the'-most .omin —-phase---is- that of the advance of the “young of the ngw generation.” They will feed in swarms and severely daimage the. crops. Later on, when the har­ vesting of the small grains begins, or if a new drought makes their food scarce, they wilH“era.wl”'(being pot .yet. fully 'equipped with'wings)' toward adjacent ^-fields of Corn and other forage -. cropLif.. .they are. not' headed off by wet weather- or „by the ““trench” warfare~'—ptanned. by t4in^ science' strategists, the', devastation that? may‘be expected is described as -to-l-l-ews^- —x.__Like. a - 1-i-vi ngL. car-pet,—i Stitch of it a. ravenbus Tittle ap- ' petite, .they cover the ground. The,.- very soil seems to be mov­ ing. ... A wave of chinch-bugs will ruin a -cornfield like fire, while you wat’ch.' " ' The analogies in human warfare are too patent to contemplate with­ out. painful reflection upon “crea- . tilths..rational”—leading? as it does alesman 'Wanted, to canvass 1 house to house to sell , Tlchty'S amous .'Cleaner. Free • samples' for' iemonstratirjg. Good margin ,.of profit. Must have $15 to start. Number of ter­ ritories open for salesman. B. w. JLlchty. 157 King. St. East, Kitchener, Ontario. * . ,- , '• KINARDS LinimeNT lArtisfs’ and Authors9 Service •Send a three ceiit stamped en- ' velope^R? information .on jour Monthly bulletin ser» VICE to Artists arid Authors,*4 listing ' up-to-date information "WHERg AND WHAt I TO SELL Canadian and International Art and. Literary Contests Yearly subscription, One Dollar Sample Sheet, Ten Cents GIFF BAKER 3» LEE AVENUE TORONTO, ONT —-ln~-a4- basement being ■ epristtucted .beneath : the Hollinger Recreation Hall.' 4 .■ ' I. The experiment' of'having P. L.’sj and Seconds take all . 'instructional | classes of the 3rd , Guelph Troop, proved such a success that it was , repeated.' Instruction included ScotTt's ( pace<Kim's game, compass, Second Class, .first,"aid arid signalling.. The 74th 'Toronto Rover Crew (Ghalmer’s Presbyterian), : _,,w er e ■ guests of the 3rd Haniiiton Cicyv, an.d atten<ted_ Sunday morning serviee with other" Hamilton Rovers at Trinity Baptist- Church. Latgr, nearby historical points, were visited. '. * * >!< Mayor J. W. Hahira' presented test • and" proficiency badggs at a largely attended and wellj-plannfed Qri£P Night of the 1st Wingham Troop, Ont The programme ■ included a lecture, on “Emergencies,” by Patrol Trader Rgss Howson. * " A ‘‘street accident” in front of Montreal Scout Headquarters, pfovid- cd the. practical test for the. Hugh Paton Provincial Ambulance Trophy competition. The problems included severed arteries, : fractures of the skull, collarbone and limbs, and burns of varying seriousness.’' The ambulance *team of Rosemount,-First United Church <- won ..the cup. - The -3rd Lethbridge, Alta., . TroOri . operated a'very successful refresh- ment-booth At-the Lethbridge Ex^ hibition -grounds, during-the Annual Spring Horse Sale, - The. ,ScQut troops of Johns. Que., vVere invited to provide, an exhibit at the Annual Scouteraft and Hobby Exhibition of Region 1, Boy Scouts of America, held in Boston. A SAFE ointment Soothinq / Pam'Relievmq Green Lake over to. (he Gang and- U,p on the Chilcotin plateau, the good, .news Jias gone forth — beef prices ~are ‘.“ciimljirig. ( . . ■waTtedT'foT^'that”"news' a good many .years . now, ■ 'the big cattle companies, and. the settlers with half a: .dozen, white-faced steers. ‘They have .slaughtered their beef far below the cost of producing it. They have driven it all the way. in fix>m' Alexis Creek and Tatl.a Lake, from 'down'tohe road arid .up to the road to ■ Williams Lake and seen- it sold under the hammer at -two cents for top steers. .- to , , Jiip- debt; hoping for the price to swing' upward.- The small settlers ■ have. ^de-nned-7up-4n--them--c^bins~and--iived- dn spuds and moose meat,. .soriie- t.imes with a few days’ work- on .the roads. ' ” , . . Now the-- tide has turned. Seven- cent beef _ is, arriving. The cattle man is getting five cents ’for top steers, at the /ailwiyC now and sliduld be getting six ana 'a half ce'-nts. by June, -ThQ housewife, may grujtrible. You may see more pot roasts on your table and. less prime ribs,, but Tt wilT be sorii'e satisfaction to know that’ the cattle—men'-a^e. only. begin- ’ ning. to get baj/k what they put into -the—lrerfT~rhfl—ittov-rll—ta‘ke~bh-eiii—sev-- eral ::t.-asons "Lo;"caL^h. up with • losses incurred in the lean years. ' Back of the new/^eof• 1 of course, -is the riioat .“sKprtag'e in the' .United'' States. In the "worst years of. American agi ic.ul.tnre. millions of head of beef cattle w-ere slaughtered because their o.wners“"”couldn’t af­ ford to keep' them. On top of that, millions more wore ' killed because •-t'hgg~c°'rildiT,t..be..-tod..inr’tl-nf-drp-.rrght- . INFORMATION, INSPIRATION and RECREATION pwlfl feature the Farm and .Horiie Wee-k programm.e. at the O.A-C; June' :17th to 21s,t, and the.-many- thousands of farm folks who visit ..the- College at that time will be sure to find the usual hearty welcome. While probably most eftorie visitors' will .be able to spend only' a day, those who can should reinain for two1 "or more days.so as to absorb as. much as possible , .of th.^ three ‘atlons”. mentioned aboye, and to .do.. It without hurry or fatigu'e; The rooms "aa'eU'eqjm^orta-b-letotoe -fireais' good' "an.d’'; the cost; 'very low. ' ? In-the'daily parade -of fine, live' stock, .the famous Clydesdale stal­ lion, “Craigie, Realisation’’ (recently, arrived from Scotland)« will be an outstanding, attraction' since "he is eaid to b.e the .'best" Clydesdale ever* brought' to Canada.j, .' There will be much of interest in the' field 'crop, experiment grounds' and in the vegetable "arid (lower gar- “cle'nsl".'" 7.'"' ......""" ‘ pu s, ‘witS.i"fs'‘“'~bToad“ stretches of'smooth shaven lawn,-its; .beautiful trees and -.many kinds, of. flowering-shrubs and "its. many huh-' •.drMs of varieriesA_of' M-.otoming.^rosesr^ -yvi-H—be-a-n— to lovers and sweethearts, .but to ■tominan-wplorVeir ... ~ An, excellent,.programme..of demon­ strations'' iS : being arranged for the ladies,, and there will ibe interesting exhibits, in other departments of the' College, .relating to plant- diseases, -■ins’ect^"gn'd~w.wmfto)to"s^ farm machinery, honey- dnd ' dairy products',, etc., . Provision will be made "for playing soft ball and horseshoes late in the-. Ten Years With Rheumatism To this woman it must have been like commencing to live, a new life, When she began to -use her arms and legs ” again, afte they had beeA ^el'pless for'ten years. “I suffered ..With rheumatism,” she writes, “and had. been bedrid- , * den singe 1920? I ; could not move arms, or legs,'.and , had to be fed like a child. Everybody thought I should be an invalid <all ^my life. I forced- myself to fight against it, and tried a. number of’different things, Tt was .Kruschen that eventually sav­ ed me ..and to-day.-1 consider., it is saying my, life. My condition' has .'greatly- improved, arid my limbs are gradually^becoming- ■ -more -^supple-. -.. Already' I can pat without1’, assistance ' and dressl myself—which I. had" not done for ten years-’’ -4- M.H. Two Of the ingredients of Krus- ■ochen "salts are the most effectual solvents of uric acid known to medi­ cal science... They swiftly dull, the sharp edges of the painiu-l crystals, then convert ■ them into. a harmless' ■" solution. Other ingredients of these' ' ■Salts have a .simulating- effect upon ’• the kidneys, and assist them to expel -the-dissolved .uratic needl.es. ithrough . ._±.e.i_toitural-..chimmj;L..;_; ■' Fabric- 'For ' Spring The ihreeTittle 'pigsi have bedft wo. :ven into I!)i35 fabrics’arid printed on ^novelty sfl&b—and not., only for .'the ■tihy., tot's wardrobe, either!' ■ " '; ■. Marcel has made “Les Trois Petits' ' -‘&peh(rhsJ’L'“fn--^n-en—-w“O'ol';rsfl-ir~atTd,','-taT!f",'';“ feta iaricT Paris* dressmaking houses have found -ways of wafting it into.’ ' the cleverest little beacli. ensembles, .cpcktail frocks, and—-hold everything , April Income -Tax . Collections Lower OTTAWA;—Income tax collections in April, Started the 1935-36 . .fiscal year „ with 'a drbp; the " decline, from the corresponding month of last year being $439,101. . Figures issued, by, Hon. JFl. C. Mathew’s, minister of national revenue, showed. 1 a,s,t’ - -mo-ntfi’-s-^con-e-ctfcnis* to’ ’tea ve^een ^K,- ■-788,027, compared with $6,277,128 fo,r, April, d year ago. .*r v.,. .Th c-HJCAv-ry—t h e ci t r e - ari±u"iiij.i’ce - de - mands of a dramatist .thht ' he, 9no longer^ condescends to it in .the slightest degree, but meet, it on its. .own intelligent and ' experienced' em-o-tional level.” 1— George 'Jean ——IL-.. - ' ’ ' . —even evening gowns for summer evenings! > _.„tojio.thfir....fabri.c--fromiliis---lmri.se-?is-"__ called “Crepe Peanut”' probably, be­ cause it looks like a .splotch of sand, . W..o.ul.d...if....you .scattered a bag of pea­ nuts, over it, pushed them gently, in- ’ to the sand -and'then removed them. Triis mjakes .a’ "particularly .novel .^,- ■ crepe that washes admirably and re--, quires, no ironing. : to • Amodg the -new—-mixtures in mod- , eTn? fabrics are, „)v.ool ...arid' mohair; ■rayon and wool crebeto ■ velvet and' metal, and cotton and ‘.'taffeta;"' '" ?--• .We learn soriiething new about',, r-laees-wa-ito-r-tutte-s—fre-m—Dejgn-i-n—-w-h-o—— ■-•makes- ihcin of wvovfui li!;en"-t-hi'ead's ' with ail elastic quality so-that if you happen to' snag your . frock, it‘pulls out as if to tear and then snaps back - .ihtq place without even so much as •a- bulgy place where, it ca'ught, ... ’ ■ .......... ........,---------' - . GIGANTIC FUNNEL 2,000 FEET HIGH _____LS LATESfr.SCHEME TO. BRING RAIN •ti •8 --are™- -end.' . ' • “Like the rest %f "the-nation. Main Street has become sophisticate’d?’— Sinclair. Lewis'. ' . People who stand • in an open field, ar golf course or on 'a flat beach during a thunder-storm, are much more l ikely to be ^struck by lightning than people who ke'ep close to certain .bushes or clumps of small trees- - - -The preference ■ of lightning for persons standing. in the. open is not that which is often suggested be­ cause persons are taller than fetheir The prefernce arises because their bodies are warmer, especially if they have been, ruri- •ning'to escape the1 storm, “swim­ riling rapidly back to a beach or have been exorcising violently- in any Others way. Warm air rising from heated .bodies attracts the lightning, just as , warm air rising frprii. a. barn filled with fermenting hay is known tb fdrm ,ijn easier path for lightning. This explains why'the -exceptional, numbei-s of bay are struejk. /.The institute's- .Census 'o-f struck shows- that’ oaks -are likely to be. lightning Xricfims. “low , in the "order given. barns can rebuild its herds', j Gold mining, though it depends on the curious system of taking a metal out of the ground in British Colum­ bia and 'pujcingT it hack into the ground1 iri Ottawa, ‘suffers no set­ backs from climate or prices, will take more gold out of Cariboo .this. year than, in any season since !'.o Hint it would be-tapered with-the the .days of the ' Argonaifls-and the Cariboo Trail. . Bridge River has settled -down­ now, after- its first wild excitement,' to a the steady businesslike I camp which mining men had expected-- ,Jt will not thank you-for sending you)-, friends there to' look for work............. They haye already fed thousands i"be and start-'a of poor devils' who. thought . there 1 i.he'to.poist to create a vadium. .’was a job fol- everyone bn the far would ’ give a -------- side of the . Mission Mountain. ' BiT-t' now that most of the original Wild1- the Meteorological Society of France, is the latest .io. have a scheme. He wpuld buildpa steel and concrete fun­ nel 2,000 feet high. .Through, this he j would force water vaprii? into the up- I per air with the thought that it would ! supported hy^st-ruts- and pillars." It They'area ' . j . The .funnel would .be constructed broad end at the tori 4-nd the whole suppored- by. struts^ and ^illarg. It wo,u)d be about 450 Teet in .diameter at' the top and. resemble a large tel­ escope standing on the smaller end. The' underlying idea is to have a series of wind vanes at the top which will catch whatever breeze there may whirl .of air inside . This a ..vacuum core on the; There is one. detail. curbing Dubbs from building his core.at once. He'.require? $10,OOO,000. .to-go ahead*' with construction. Itf, will take that much to -buy materials and build the spout. Apd he is .finding it hard to '.get anyone to gamble the $10,000,- .000 on the chance t>hat the tiling might work a-nd, produce rain. It would tak,e a- lot. of bushels of wheat, ■for Instance; to pa"y the interest and, ■ principal on That much money. > Perhaps ".Mr. Dubos will .anyone' to tufe. But not get take him pp on his ven­ that will not curb other * scientists and ijnventors ’trying, to - find-snipe way to get rain from the clouds, And, some day,'one of'them is quite l-ike$ . to., solve. the secret, even though people may laugh at his efforts while he i.s'experibient-ing. cats have disappeared, Bridge'-River' is concentrating on the development of properties that have a real chance to become mines. □This season' the Cariboo is rather more excited about the Barkerville region; Last year, after an earlier boom,, this area seemed to lose favor with, mining men. You heard pess­ imistic talk of it everywhere. The people up there began to be wor­ ried. -trees-! most ___u wr _ Elms, pines^poplars^^illows and ashs .fol­ low , in the' order given. Tn the three years of the record not even ohe beech, birch, horse­ chestnut or holly tree has suffered. My-advjce to-people, in these is­ lands caught in thunder storms fa. r of a holly bush' GARBAGE TO CREATE lands caught in thunder storms .to get .in the.'shelter of. a holly bush' if one-is available, or otherwise ti> i get near ■anj’" small beeches or other', smooth-barked trebs so long - as _ there is a clump o£ these, and not ' merely tone tree standing alone. 1 • ‘ , ' i ■ -J I ’ ' i all agree,, GARBAGE TO CREATE N E W G E R M A N C11'1 ES ■ . . • --------- , ■ B.brliij—Phoenix-like, German cities Of 'the? future will rise out of ashes -^-or rather, ashcans --scientific cir­ cles assert. Garbage front ashcans is to be processed . to produce • a building material having, the elasticity of felt, the solidity ,df wood, the ductility of cork, and the non flamhia'bility of .asbestos',' it'xvas .as- ?ssors charig non-cdn- flamma'bility of •asbestos',' it Was ^as­ serted by German professors chang­ ed with research ip “Ersafz.” Dr. Lippert, Nazi. Commissioimr of Ber­ lin,' announced the process. ■ ' . , , ,U|| „ j, • ' .... .A.......................... DEAD 1 ? A tjKaf. <’a xai fi a x itk \ i.’qi• #\ i r;rt:ns,, famous l,yitish ija-vck" Hearing Aids. Also, rnokf varietl ;<st.wli ■ i’n t’ati- jrla N4n..Eler"trii' AMs. Tell, us I'lol.leni. IPpaii's’ and ■biittities - 11 ii iih’h I s. Semi for illusliat ■a t(ire .1". < 1. . W'allaee, l' . Va lb' Throat Tickle: A pinch of Windsor Salt stops throat tickle. REG AL Table Sallt is Cree’running. Painty,-fine salt for your table, for all cooking, /and for oral health. .- A Windsor Salt product. " •In certain parts or France the bride’s wed­ ding costume has salt seWn into the seams'1 to ...! Read all altqpt ' this and other customs . of gripping interest, in wonderful NEW , PICTURE BOOK FOR CHILDREN. .' Free .. Write now!