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!