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The Lucknow Sentinel, 1936-03-12, Page 3
«■■"“’s'?’',’:. b 4 w <a ■ .ft TT >?’ D Classified Advertising j i J X 13'IX X I v:tl‘ OreLl'e, ■ *rr r-^r. l'tl- l-XJtJ". i-j-x-XA-Iq lb— .................— .————— -———;---------- -—■—..........—'>—- ' Empire an increase. of 337013 Scouts “errtHa.st~wttek.of-a -gold’-medal-from for i ? ftI li I I A for 1 month ( is the of in i I Feel That They’re Slipping Ix>singTheir“Grip”onThing9 in of at of 14 new nn- Free Nor- other. the ab- In are lie- lit-" h ii- in of of “If the Japanese navy' is called .updn to fight the combined power of America arid Great Britain I am con fident will win,/even if the ratio is 10 to 1.’’—Admiral Takahashi. disease, was a' new form heals wounds ■y feel tired a Jot headaches, dizzi- “What is the matter, with. Europe that every nation should hate and fear~an^7^IUsJet^’^6v?l’'y other ,?'”=■ •Beni.td Mussolini. . „ ■ ■ ’ for some tinTe comparatively latest equipment 'and manufacture are' in use, high quality products. ’. <r~ j “Cheapness Of behavior has noth ing whatever to do with lack of money’.”—Emily Post'. . the—nruTrcrfirc^-. • domestic As the : new in day, Lord Tweedsmuir; who., told, the 1-. branches of Association ....... .... .___ ,r , was stjl full .of wonders that .Jia’d” not found, Tull /■ ' ' * ftThe Contester" A WEEKLY BULLETIN SERVICE FOR CONTESTANTS, ARTISTS AND AUTHORS rvii-.e Ilhlktr; During last., summei’ 231 Boy Scout camps were held, and attended. by a total of 6,316, boys. Not one serious accident or case of. serious illness was reported. ' , park, with a brief rall-j E. p. Bai-ry, R. J. C. Stead. Mrs. i.otrse Murray Bownian.,, Leslie Gor- MONTREAL Canada’s writers. k ~ returned to their decks ’- ^timulat- 1 ed by . penetrating . advice from har\est.ed duripg the j pqg of - the foremost writers of the The total Tiumber of Bijy' Scoiits-iii,'°? Fielding.. -------- ---------:......................... * ....paj.l.rv/T: . 4-riin YYinr ' ■ “1 thp beauty vyinnewvii or the Milk of Canada. Many people ’round 40 think they’re, “growing old.” They fn"’ ° ,n,‘ “wwi'k.” Have ncss, stomach upsets. Well, scientists say the cause of all this, in a great many cases, is simply an acid .'condition of the stomach. :FHiaK5-—i • And PhiLlips 4/ilk /llaaite^UL. - BAN SH WAKE UP YOUR LWER BILE- And You’ll Jump Out of Bed in the Morning Rarin’ to Go / . The liver should’ pour out two pounde, of Bquid bile into your bowels daily. If this bile ia not flowing-freely, your food doesn't digest. It just decays in the bowels. Gas bloats up your stomach. Youget constipated. Harmful poisons go into the body, and you feel sour. Bunk and the world looks punk. ". . A mere bowel movement doesn’talways get ' at the'eause. You need something that worke on the liver as well. It takes those good,- old • Carter's Little Liver Kills to get these two pounds of bile flowing freely and make.you feel “up and up’L Harmless arid gentle, they make the bile flow freely. They do the work of calomel but have no calomel or mercury in thjam. Ask for Carter’s Little Liver Pills by (uune I Stubbornly refuse anything ©Ise. 25c. -'.f"1 ■J; —"— ------——• Honey Crop Hit By Poisqri Plant EDMONTON,—Vetch, ja poisonous^ plant that thrives in Southeastern Alberta, was responsible for a 400,- 000 pound slump in the province’s honey production last year.' Annual report of .the Department of Agri culture said' field bee losses from pollen obtained from vetch ranged from 50 to 90 per cent. The honey yield was placed at. 1,100,000 pounds. Valut of Field Crops In United- States 1 > • The- aggregate value- .of the Held crops from farms in the United. States in 1935 was $5,118,444,000 exceeding by $339,00.0,000 or seven per cent, the value of the crops 1934. The harvested ares of 44 the principal crops is estimated 327,60.1,000 acresr an increase 41,000,000 acres or more;, than per cent: over the* greatly. reduced acreage in 1934, btjt a decrease of- 28,0000,00 or eight per cent.' .from the acreage I 1928-1932 period. Due in part to! control- prograins the total area of | ^nd .Montreal- corn, "wheat and cotton harvested tlle Canadian ■Authors’ was about - 30,000,000 acres below j recently the country the 1928 to 1932 average. r'” acreage of oats and barley, the im< portant feed, grains other than corn,- was just about, average in 1935. The • low yield of spring wheat/was due to rust and the slightly below aver age yields of corn, sorghum: and potatoes were more than offset by the ‘ iteavy .yields of hay,? and the slightly above, average yields of cot ton,.annual legumes, rice and tobac co.. The total production of corn for 1935 has been placed at 2,202,8521,- 000 bushels; wheat 603,199,000 bushels; barley 292,249,000 bushels. , Prices received for the 1935 crops- are about 13 per, cent, below those received fox’ the 1934 crops. . Twelve Toronto Rover Scouts, On smart Rover uniform, acted as ushers at the opening of the Ontario Legisla-.. ttire. King’s Scouts or Rovers have; performed this function at" PrdyinciaK Parliament openings for a number of years. - ’ Reports presented at the 25th An nual Meeting of the Provincial Boy Scouts Association at London, Febru ary I5th, showed a total membership at th tot end of 1935 (of 30,045. This was an Oj"-lfse of 4,070.- The total com prises 11,977 Wolf Cubs, 14,836 Scouts .1,046 Rover (Senior) Scouts,'183 Sea Scouts, 214 Lone Scouts a,nd 2,293 lea ders. Reveals His Likes and Dislikes in Literature. — Believes Samuel Butler and George Bernard Shaw Much Over-Praised: expression i’rwart and .’-still' iiwaited further .interpretation; On ' the program it was Lord Tw.eeds’mu’r who spoke. But to the large audience that hung on the words of the quiet-spoken Governor General of Canada it was John <iu- chan they heard.. The creator of “Richard Hannay” and “that' general’s war adventures, .the author of “Cas tle Gay” and othdr interpretations of Scottish life, and of History" a‘pd--bip- graphy that have made his name world famous’.deprecated writing^ on ■the “cesspools”, of life, urged a com promise between the eternal struggle between romanticism, and classism, between • youth and• age, arid advocat ed selection and interpretation' rath er than bare information.. John‘Buchan^ admitted dislikes and “blind spots” predation of literature. -MORE:WHOLESOME PERIOD = A piore wholesome period hs cpme. (The,., Governor Genera! inter jected a criticism of much modern poetry 4xs “nonsense, as meaningless as a crossword puzzle.”) Every gen eration had to decide its owh forms of art.. It could not mechanically ac cept the 'traditions of past - genera tions without . degenerating into,'-a mere grahiophone, “dearily grinding out old records’.”-; j Life,. said' Lord Tweed?muir, coui-d never be the same . thing'as art Ijc-' cause, art was life, interpreted -end made significant; art was and the .meaning-of life •bv selection. “dtherwise, you sirnply • sert of .ugly trivialities, -less trivial because they The result is. ghastly unreal'ty, pho tograph.but nbt art; informfikion, byt ■ not truth.” I' Modern Arms Seen As Need the world ~at "VlrU end of/IV35r-a'^“f6~ -.ported by the International Scout Bu reau atLondon-, was..2,505,963. This was an increase over 1534 |of 206,874. England has 366,763 Scouts, Scotland 56,674, Wales' 1-5.668^ Ulster 7,194, and -Irish -Free Stater -S-,4-24.—In- the J likes and jn h’s ap- The late Samuel . Butler and the living Ber;n- ard 'Shaw were ' very nxtich oyer .praised. “A little of'D. % Lawron.ee goes a very long w„ay,” with him. He read most Russian literature with respect “and ennui.” The 18th century British-novelists did not .naise much .enthusiasm with I the. Governor • General “with the ex- .......... IIe....was rather 74)-l-i-nd--4o----4-hc--,--.me-i-Xs---^of -,-Cha*.lo tt-e. Bronte. “I cannot read the Restora tion .dramatists at all;” ; A distinguished audience gathered ' Dr. Pelham Edgar, 'of’ University of Toronto, honorary, president of the ' Canadian -Authors' Association, recip-. Defence Association Say's. . Ca n a d a ’ $ Army. I I’as OM ' •. Equipment ’ . DIXIE'4s- the thrifty man’s smoke. You cut it as you use it and the plug remains fresh ,f to the last cut. PLUG SMOKING TOBACCO At Bov Scout Japiboro.e similar' to’ those .held in various parts of Canada , last summer, brought 3,000 ' Scouts | from ail parts of South Africa • to; greet Lord. Baden-Powell at" East Lon-i dori, Cape Colony. Boys were present.; from the Capo., Natal, Orange State, .Transvaal, Southern and tliern Rhodesia. Nyasaland. and sections of southern' Africa. the Royal Society of Canada, .intro duced the speaker and recalled ^hat Arnold Bennett had a “very young, fair. m'an, charmingly shy. A most modest, retiring, man. yet obviously sane and shrewd; w611 disposed ‘ a-nd anxious to be jtlst; a man who holds the respect of those he meets. Ono who counts.” Buchan was then' a reader at the ■ English- publishing house,. “The Bodley Head.” Ralph Connor, creator of the in? lerpretations of Western Canada that have made the Winnipeg clergyriian- known throughout the world* of let ters, was ■•t-here. * F.rak-k Packard, whose, “Jnmny, Dale” series- have’ .been .among'the century’s best known ..thriliorAwwaLteuwled. Sjr' Andrew Mac-, A new form of’’public service Rover Scouts was found by-'the Rover Crews of Malden and Coombe Uibah England,, when ' an epidemic 'of the .measles threatened. Rove-rstwho 'haft had th«—malady ,._xLin.tjaJ)Jdfid__-thdr.__ ____ -hJ-ood._fm*~7tLLAw4.K-.ula-lipii oamoa ian. —pi>hail<..author - - ' <*.-------- • , . : ada's medical services, in ’the.'G.rea:f •A- -.cross-country ski hike during War, Mr. Justice E. , Fabre Surveyor. Many people ’round 40 think they’re, “growing old.” They feel tired a lot . . . “weak.” Have headaches, dizzi ness, stomach upsets. Well, scientists say the cause of all this, in a great many cases, is simply an acid .'condition of the stomach. Nothing more. All you have to do is to neutralize . the excess stomach acidity. When you have owe of these acicll •stomach upsets, take Phillips’ Milk of Magnesia after ..meals and before going to bed. That’s all! Try this. Soon you’ll feel like another person! Take either the familiar liquid “PHILLIPS’” or the convenient new Phillips’. Milk tof Magnesia Tablets. Made in Canada. AI.SO tN TABLET FORM: Phillips' Milk of Mncncsia Tab lets are now oh sale .-it all. rlrug. stores everywhere. Each tiny tab* -J |et is Khe equivalent of , a teaspnoriful of Gen- . . ui.rie Phillips’ Milk of Q - Magnesia. N PhiLlips’ /l/il/z /Itaaiieria- Nothing more. All you have to do is to neutralize . the excess stomach acidity. When you have owe of these ackll •stomach upsets, take Phillips’ Milk ~ of Magnesia after ..meals and before going to bed. That’s all! Try this. Soon you’ll feel like another. person! Take either the familiar liquid .“PIIILIdPS- ” lbrt convenient new Phillips; Magnesia Tablets. Made in AfSO tV TABLET FORM: Phillips' Milk of Mncncsia Tab lets are now oh sab* .-it all. drug, stores everywhere. Each tiny tab* ----- -- let is Uic equivalent of , a teaspnoriftil of Gcn- . ui.rie Phillips’ Milk of - Magnesia. February’s sub-zero blizzard weather . Prof. Jenp -Bruchesi. 'of'Univ'ersite'do from Parry Sound to Ottawa, through J Montreal; Mrs. E. P. Benoit, Mrs. L. Xlgonqtiin ’ ................... break.Madawaska to Renfrew, was au 1 achievement of Assistant Scoutmaster J don Bernard. Miss Spencer-Smith and Tom Marwood of the 1st .Parry Sound : Scout. Troop. "Notwithstanding heavy, powdery snow, and unbroken trails, a dally average of 30 miles was main- . tained. with -a high figure’of 36 for one day. OLD PEOPLE FEEL YOUNG Just bees use more years than you ( care to count have fled by on your1, life’s calendar is no reason for feeling old. Age, after all, isn’t a matter of Bears. It is. ,a maltcr of health, tay vigorous and you stay young. But how,, you ask. Do -it the way thousands of people of advancing years do. Take •Wincarnis regularly.' ' Wincarnis' is a delicious wine, free from drugs, that brings you all the valuable elements of grapes combined with the highest grade beef and guaranteed malt extract. Its invigor ating effect is almost magical—yet Krfectly natural. -' ’ <>- lose valuable elements in Wincarnis give your ageing system exactly the stimulating nourishment, it requires. They soothd your nerves, enrich your blood, and flood your whole body with almost ’youthful buoyancy arid vigour. More than 20,000 medical men have heartily endorsed Wincarnis. It- is , a great tonic.' It will make you feel young again by creating for you new stores of strength, and energy, ‘ Get Wincarnis from your druggist—Sales Agents: Harold F. Ritchie &Co. Ltd., ' Toronto. . 30 TWis Scrcic.e Is of. 1 n li rim I mniil I'rizc . Conn sts, Mnrlwts tbfniq.' IlhiVtnUibris. Borders, Designs for .MagaxhK* s, Greeting Hards and Verses ,\rtlcles». Einwrii l<s, I’oeiiys: ’ Stories. $2.50 for 1 yean $1.50 for 6 months, $1.00 for 3 months, .50 anti a sample sheet .10- ‘ Send ft 3c. stamped, addressed envelope for other money making Ideas GOT■ BAKERy 39^ LEE AVENUE, TORONTO, CAN. OTTAW’A --The Defense Associa tion, in conference here, . disclosed; recently that its’iriembefs had em-1 phasized need for. immolate re-. organization and modernization of Canada's ■ defense -forces-.—7 . A • spokesman, for the assoc’at on I said the body, a clearing house for pi’Ob'lem '-ga ffecting- 'Canada-hs —militrar ■ and other branches of the service, had decided immediate renrganizat on was imperative and that modernized equipment was needed for traiping.> Such a .reorganization, the spokes- _m.an.....said, would entail a great: in- crease. in technical arms- and' it wr.as understood from his words-that his colleagues believed cavalry and in fantry .would he reduced ■ drastically if. the plan was carried out, bec.-^se they arc considered top-heavy. ■ ~ • “ ■■■ Make High Quality Fertilizers in Canada COD LIVER OIL USED IN SALVE Successful Tests Reported by Russian Doctors iCHICAGO.—Cod Liver Qil^lbrig a? potent defence against offered to medicine in recently. A pasie.whic|n on' the body’s surface.' The revolutionary’ £_ _ X___’............................j contribution ■~Tame~f rom-l wo~Smu?t~phy s i ciam?—Dr. V. I. Lost and Dr. I. G. Kochergin, ■ of Gorkin, Russia. .. . . Vitamins A and D, the source of the oil’s power in building resistance when , liquid | when I form. te.qN 263 CAsEg _■ Successful use of the salve, in cases of the' following types' ‘. claimed in a report received by J, American • Medical • Association from the Journal Novyy Khirurgicheskiy ‘ Arkhiv: Fresh supirfi'eial wounds.- Older wounds which b.a\o started ■ • fester. '.'-t' ■ " ' Chronic ulcers, , Jd-uririCT___’................. ■.....7’”" administered internally as a tonic, are equally effective* applied externally in1 paste the Russians announced. . Eer.tilizers . are manufactured In Canada on a mtic'h larger scale than' is. generally known. Sulphate 'of ammonia, ammonium phosphate, su perphosphate, .cyanamhl, organics and mixed fertilizers are' all made in different parts of the Dominion in large (Quantities. -. The capacity of xhrnadnrn pfrrnrsr^Trr—thW greater than prospective ^requirements industry Canada ’processes resulting As. Canadian crop production be comes more intensified and- diversi- ’fiod more fertilizers will likely be •/used, but the extent, to; which these products are used in the Dominion is rather small, in comparison with other -countries. For example: annual requirements in Canada sorb only about 200,000 tons, the United States' 3,750,000 tons used; 1,500,000 in Great Britain; 3,500,000 in France, and 6,000,000 tons in Germany'/. . many - others attended. . . FOI.LOWS SOUND MODELS Lord Tyeedsmuir said he found ' Canadian literature, and ho had read a great amount both in French and English, neither . anarchic nor ^ovbi- lutionnry It followed old. but sound models and ^attempted to apply the old- inv-if labl'e rule's^oT art to .terial. ' At tho back of ..Cnnad an were two* great .assets, ,twp wonder ful langiTageS', he said.’ There was a great tradition. Canada was heir to the literature of England and France, and behind . both were the glories of ’Rome and Greece. After the war, “we struck a very bad patch in art and literature..Th^rc was .a tendency to be contemptuous about everything that ha<L gone .fore and for youth, to regard its tie novelties; as the, la-t wdid in .man perfect:onl • - • “Wc had shapeless and meaning less'Hovels and' philosophies \vheric the shallowness was concealed. Sy. the confusion,’Our noble-English tongue, ■was grossly abused; and since there was also considerable confusion in manners,..and morals, there is. justice in the phrase-1 have Heard applied to certain typical .novels ef the period. ’ that they were like a series ..(if ex ph i- •>|1O -I.'”' . ""Frost "Bite? : Severe injuries to the extremities. Healing,of open stumps of arms and Jogs after ampu'tations. The salvo was • made, with 100 cubic centimeters of cod liver, oil. 100 ■' c;,af-s of petroleum, 1.5 cubic centi meters of a preparation' con’aining , vitamins, and 10 cubic centii.r7i?'tf"’< ' of Japanese wax; The Russians said vitamin- D the oil stimulated the growth ■ granulations—part of.the process he-aling' wounds- -- and-repaired the' epithelium, the outermost layer- of the' mucous membrane. ..The paste- a'sa. slowed down the activity ■ in pus producing h the Soviet e.xperip.^’nters •They ebnsidc-red it ■ probable i .iured ,hody tissues suffered lack of supply Or ,-:n inqr/u mand. Take PHOSFERINE. Thou sands endorse- this great Eritish tonic for the quick, sure way ■ it ends' rheumatic aches and stilY- ness. —and soothes' -the nerves. PHOSFER n^rei'dodu._.unrz to sleep like a log. Start with PHOSFERINE now-just a fevv , tiriy> economical dr-ops each d FOR . -. ■ FaV/p'if —Sl-c; i'es^ne*-. - Crerieral Det — Ri-rnrded Cr nv*r.b. er., c. • N’eiveb Ana»:rr..CcmV.t ;<>:i • yr,d:gest:>:>n - Rlif-ii- tnatisni —-G-.j'pe '•—.NtmraiciU — Ne-jrV •» Less of A TAKE ,- “.THE GREAT B.RITTSH GONIC At Your Drug Store—In Liquid or Tablet • Form at the Following reduced price? 3 Sixes- 50c - $1.00 - $1.50 The $1.00 lite li nearly Four times the.50c ti»4 and the $1;S0 site Is.twlce the $1.00 sire. STOPS ITCHING Bn One Minute LIVE STOCK MARKETING SI .jipinp Iwrn'’ | St illnp v jtb-ie u::t: POULTRY RAISERS Check ROUP • (Bronchial Fju) .■ With a Few Ih-ops of i- .' For quick relief from the itching of pimp les, blotches, eczema, rashes and other skin erupt ions, apply Dr. Dennis' pure, moling, liquid, anti.*epii<?I). D.,J>. Prescription. Thirty-yea r.s' world-wide succes* Its gent Id oils soothe t he irritated nnd’inft,ame<l skin. . thus aiding nature itself to heal (he disor-* ° dor.- No fuss—ho mj/ss. Clear, greiiseless and stainless—dries Up almost immediate ly. St ops the moAt intenseit< hi.tiginstantly. Try I). D. Dr.now.' A 35c trial bottle, at drugstores, will prove'h—or m/mry back. •|). D. I). Prescription is made by fajeowij-, < ■ It M.l W B M.M. ' tn th- l>r<-rfni'(1c of .-•I’l"’ n r on < ri-'n- ’-'■ •’ t’-.t for tho <Wii.-:-s. (5 Write—Wire—or Telephone • I«lr nd hurst 1143 THE UNITED FARMERS co-o-PEiiATiVE compAnv1. Ell Livi'l STOf'lv <•' i.ss I'-X’. I'I ■ Union Stock Yards. West Toi-onto Catarrhal Deafness The Health Restoring Valine of COD UVER OIL _ PLUS Easy Digestibility "fniAlids sirujigliag back heahh need strength and vitality giving foods. SCOTT'S EMI VI SION is an emulsion of pure , energ.)-packed ■ Cod Liver Oil l’l.USi bone-building Hypophos> phitfs of Lime arid Soda.. It r? four .to five times 'more e.i<i?y *<)ige<tc-d than the highest grade Cod I i-ier Oil. / These arc PLUS \ AF ITS-4au get st OTT’S FMULSION THE DIGESTIBLE C.OD OIL WITH THE PLUS VALLES . Tor'saLe BY YO.UR DRUGG:?- 60 CYCLE i\ F\(T’ i ! \ r i <> : . Wilson Publishing Co 110 VOLT—C. G. E. MOTOR . ' '. . < I'M- i: Vi ION A. , 73 Adelaide St. W., Toronto