HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1938-07-15, Page 54
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MIDNIGHT SHOW.t
-Beginning at 1209 Sunday, Jul17 a
"-"U"-Fdday, Tues ay, es y r
' planer Durbip rho a ge 'Ehe aonge the
whole world loves, in a
"MAD ABOUT MUSIC" i
Herbert parshalTreach aril, Patrick I
`Next Thursday." Friday, Saturday
Gene Autry Smiley Burnette
- "SPRING TIME in the ROCKIES"
Polio Rose •
4 Western, combiningymusic, action and
Coming -- "You're a Sweetheart"
A
m
i
.IIOWICK • ' t
Farmer Killed
A fatal accident occurred in How- c
ick Township on Saturday—afternoon; 1
when Charles Muir, aged 68 years, 1
lost 'his balance when bis. team bolt- i
ed. He was attempting to climb up '
at the front of a load of hay when 1
the team' started to run he was `•
fhnown to the ground and .crushed be- 1
neaps the wheels of. the loaded wag-
on. :Mdrley. Bell, who was also in the
field, ran to his •assistance, but he 1
was dead by the time he reached him.
`The authorities decided an inquest '
was «unnecessary. The funeral was '
Held from; -the home of his •niece, Mm's, '
Chad. Henning, lot 20, on. C., Turn -
berry, at- 'three o'clock on Tuesday '
:aftegrnoon, Interment•••• -was made in
VVtoxeter cemetery.
BLYTH ,
Council Meets
The regular monthly meeting of
Blyth municipal council was held on
Monday, July 4th, with Reeve McNall n
and Councillors Taman, Coq and n
Potts present. Minutes of previous
meeting were confirmed on motion of
Councillors Taman and Petta. Messrs.
RusselShaw and V. M. Bray were
present in respect to a grant from
the council to assist the band in se- ,
scuring ,new uniforms. The matter
was left over for further considers-
xiols. Bills and accoun4s: C. E. Mor-
rison, 310 gallons gas, $27.50; Isaac
Snell, work on streets, 87c; James
Dcugherty, work on streets, $9.87; .T.
A. `Cowan, salary, June, $50; William
Thlell, salary, June, $40; Hydro Com-
mission, street light, $395.00; Hydro
"Conllnission, pump house, $3.75;, Hy-
riro Commission, church shed, $3.75;
Hydro Commission, jail, $3.75; A.
Barr, work on street, •$27.00; • C. Bur-
ling, work on streets, $L25; Lloyd
Wettlaufer, suit for constable, $45.25;
Blyth Standard, adv., 12; John Bail-
ey, work on street, 75c. On motion
-of Councillors Cook and Petts, the
foregoing accounts were ordered: paid.
Moved by Councillors Taman and
Potts: That we pay baseball club ac-
eount, covering the following items
for material and trucking with the un-
Ylerstanding that no further bill will
'be paid without' the work first being
,authorized by council. Carried. On
:-notion of Councillors Taman and
Petts, Engineer 'llhuell was instruct-
--red to canvass users of the water ser-
e -ice and find omyt who was prepared
'to accept the service. The service is
to be one-half hour three times each '
week. Carried. Moved by Councillors
Petts and Cook: That we accept
1VIontgomery and Jackson's, tender of
a0 cents per cubic yard for gravel
'placed on the• streets. Carried. Mov-
ed by Councillors Petts and Cook :
-That Bylaw No. 5, 1938, as now read
three titnes he finally Tressed. Car-
' -Tied. On m'ption of Councillors Tam-
an and Cook, the council adjourned.
—J. H. R. Elliott, Clerk. ,
LO.NDESBORO
Mr. and Mrs. Cowan and family,
Brandon, Man., are visiting their
in, Mrs. Townsend and Mts.
Little.
Mr. W. C. Thompson and Mrs.
Ball are at present ill in Goderichand
Clinton hospital. We wish them
' a speedy recovery.
Mrs. E. Wilsdn, of Orlando,
da, Mr. S. Brechin, Mr. J. Brechin
Miss Norma Rogers, all of Toronto,
visited with Mr. and Mrs. J.
ming this week.
of
cous-
Frank
W.
both
Flori-
and,
P. 111an-,
boy,
B,C.,
with
sail for
Royal
years
Mr. and
to
•
On His Way To England
Last week a former Goderich
.chose home is now at Victoria,
-rived' in Goderioh for a visit
relatives on his way east to
England, where he will join the
,Air Force. The lad, only sixteen
of,age, is Bob Carey, son of
Mrs. Robert Carey, who moved
r T hs Leg
- Sait0r, 'Toxttaidtot ,eith4 Is
trending the llolldayu Wi'tlk 'lata aunt
lid uncle, Mr. and litre; tie ttell `
s in Clinten bospital spilus ? olfen
eg, Just Blow' the •aCChla$ ocdurred
s not definitely knetterYbge, the
oung lad was' playing at she tea' of
he !Dugan Factory ou • S4inday flight
ad in some manner fell, with the
esult that he ',received R bad ;break
hove the knee which w l keep hdin
n bed for some time, --CI nton News-
tecord.
'The Doctor's Lament
An eye-catching and thoug'ht-pro-
roking poster is being displayed this
'eek in thousands' of factories and
vorkthops• which are members of the
ndustrial Accielent Prevention Asso-
aations.
It is headed "The Doctor's Lament"
tnd appeared recently in the Journal
mfthe American Medical Association.
t has just as much application . to
bus•eholders as it has; to industrial
orkers,
Last night when others were at rest
rode about and did my best
Co save some patients, called by Fate,
rom Tnav'iing through the Golden
Gate.
ilhi:s morning, when the news I spied.,
thought they might as well have
died:
'Two Hundred., Injured in a Wrack,"
'Man Falls, Sustains Broken Neck";
'Two Drown While Rocking a Can-
oe";
'Grade Crossing Murders Twenty -
two";
'Gas Blast Takes Lives of Twenty-
three";
'Two Die 'Neath Falling Apple Tree.'
11 night I toiled to save one life,
n•d- millions die in useless strife.;
6Vhat is the use to make one well
Whiie thousands harken to death's
knell? •
Where is my labor's recompense?
Why can't the world have common
sense?"
Smile
Or Two
"Oh, John! I forgot to turn off the
as in the kitchen when we left." -
"Don't worry. Nothing'11 burn. I
oi-got-- to turn off the' water in the
rats room."
•
When they drag in ' odd, misshapen
things,
Don't blame the family cats—
They may be trying to suggest
New styles for mother's hats.
•
• "You certainly must know what a
rivulet is. Look, what comes down
out of the mountains and goes on
forever?"
"Hill -billies."
`'�+
1gw,V, 4 .ih) e l �l e$f b$ a it'ny�tQl
tXlEh 3a,c o4i k In sll41Cri fob"
iia>x►ek fl,11p, til, thatle ew bia4• fix.
stockings " 3.4at'•cleseetiitting' 'littlo
hate yeti flaw Oie wear 61,144117."
Samhe "'porn! ypu at&rk no fight
w't' me, nigger, ,Ah'was deeorated hi
the' Spantslr war:" ' '
Restusr' "Maybe you' was, but ala
man 'pinion • fit's' given ee'? such a
swell head yo' is 'boht ripe to be re-
Customer: "Is there much give to
this cloth?"
Dry Goods Clerk::: "No, Ma'am,
That's Scoitcdl, Tweed."'
•
Jeannie:—'"Why don't you eat your
apple, Sandy?" '
Sandy: "I'm waiting for Jock
Smith to come along: Apples taste
meek better if there's another bey
looking on!" -
•
"My fiance is a young man in a
million," declared a girl in a local
train the "other evening.
' "I'd rather have a young man with
a million," replied her companion
quickly.
•
The proprietor of a big store notic-
ed an assistant dozing up against the
wall of one of the departments. He
consulted the manager about the mat-
ter.
"I can't do a thing with him," said
the manager. "I've had him in three
different departments, and he dozes
all day long."
"Put him at the pyjama counter,"
suggested the .proprietor, "and fasten
a card on him with the wards:- 'Our
pyjamas ane of such superior quality
that even the man who sells them
cannot keep awake.'"
•
Teacher: "If you were' to have an-
other eye, where would you like it to
be?"
"On my finger end," replied one of
the boys.
"Why?" asked the teacher.
"So that I . could stick it through
the fence and see the football game."
•
Teacher: "Tommy, where was the
American Declaration of Independence
signed?"
Tommy: "At the bottom, I guess."
•
Wife (paying unexpected call at the
office) : "You told me, John Henry,
that your new stenographer was an
old maid."
Husband (flustered) : "That's right,
my dear, but she's away ill today and
sent her granddaughter instead."
•
Etiquette Expert: "It is wrong for
a man to walk between the woman
she is escorting and shop windows."
Practical Husband: "It may be
wrong. But, oh boy, it's smart!"
•
"Have you any brothers or sisters?"
asked Jean.
"Oh, yes," replied Mary. "I have
three half brothers and a half sis-
ter."
"Gracious!" she exclaimed- "Are
you the only, whole one in your fam-
ily?"
•
Always do more than you promise
—rather than promise more than you
do.
t:be West from Goderne a cpuple of
years ago. - W'nle in Goderich Bob is
staying with his uncle and 'aunt, Mr.
and Mrs. P. F. Carey. The boy's
young friends bene, •recall that Bob
aiways was enthusiastic about flying,
and when be flew for the first time
.three years ago he definitely was de-
cided on 1'is career. He now has
i'meen accepted as a student pilot in
the R.A.F. and will sail foe London
this month to realize his, ambition.—
Goderich Signal -Star.
"Serveen crlaft lettere'. and flartif3V,
with pat'sleyPiro•*etercreas" 'Jllia 1s
usually the thigh, ,sentence to direr-•.
clone for ma1r ig • salads, whieb, ap-y
plies to the servkb g of the following,
summer cheese . salads as well as to
all others. Salads must have an air'
of crispness,.., which is easily attalti
e,f if freshly made and arranged ,pr
cold, crisp 'lettuce leaves- They test,
also have eye appeal, hence a. garnish
of parsley, watercress, or peppergrass
to add the need ell touch of attr'aotive-
ness.
Summer 18 the, true salad season,
and 'although thediet should not bce
made up entirely of cold foods even
i.n sotteet weather,. the salad has a
very definite place in the summer
menu. Any of the following salads
may be served as the main,course for
lunch or supper, and with an appetiz-
er and light dessert, will make a sat-
isfying, enjoyable meaL
Jellied Tomato Cheese Salad
2 tablespoons granulated gelatine
1/2 cup cold water
1 cup tomato juice
1% cups cream -of cottage cheese
1 cup salad dressing
1 cup chopped celery
•7/4 cup 'chopped green pepper
1 tablespoon minced onion
Salt and pepper to season.
Soak gelatine in cold water. Heat
tomato juice to boiling point. Dis-
solve gelatine in hot juice. Add cheese
• and heat until thoroughly blended.
"Have women more Cool- When mixture is partially
men?" thickened, add salad dressing, celery,
"Certainly? Have you ever seen a .green -.pepper, onion' and seasonings.
man try on three or four suits with Pou•
r' into a mould. Chill until. firm.
only 30 cents in his pocket?" •
e •
The chief salesman of a certain
New York firm had a very loud voice.
One morning the manager heard a
terrible noise coming from the sales-
man's office.
"Who is that
manager.
"That's Mr. Hill talking to
go," replied his secretary.
"Well, tell him to use
'phone!"
courage than
shouting?" asked the
•
A personal eon•sdderation dwarfs
our soul.
Kindness is worth much, yet costs
little.
the
Chica-
tele-
•
It was an Irish clergyman who,
while expounding on the transitori-
ness of earthly things, exclaimed:
"Look .-at the great cities of an-
tiquity. Where are they now? Why,
some of them have perished so ut-
terly that it is doubtful if they ever
existed!!"
•
Two small boys were discussing the
capabilities of their mothers, who
were active club members.
"My mother can talk on just about
any subject," one lad declared proud-
ly.
"Ave shucks," retorted the other,
"my mother can talk without any sup-
ject at all."
•
Mrs. Hibbertson: "What I
just said is a great secret. It was
told to me in the strictest confidence.
I must caution you against repeating
it-"
Mrs. Mowlby:. "I shall endeavor to
be just as cautious as. you are!"
•
"The difference betweeu
and the milkman," sneered
gruntled customer, "is that
gives the milk."
"Aye, so," said the milkman, "an
another difference is
doesn't give credit!!"
•
"Can you imagine! MacTavish
takes his girl Friend to the theater
every evening."
"Is that so?" What show is. she
playing in?"
have
the cow
the dis-
the cow
d
that the cow
•
"What are you doing here?" said
`the haughty chairman at the Disarm-
ament. Conference in Geneva.
"Excuse me," replied the soldier in
a frayed uniform. "I thought - I
might be useful — I went through
the whole war in the front line,"
"Get out. This is a meeting of ex-
perts: An unheard-of intrusion!"
. •
A young woman who came to Co-
lumbia to take her degree of doctor
of philosophy' married her professor
in the middle of the second year.
•
' Sign in Chicago news stand, turn-
ed in by otie of Arch Ward's scouts:
This is No Library
Either Buy or Good, -bye.
•
"Esmeralda, you really ought to
wear a hatwhen you are going out
at night."
"But, Mamma, I am wearing a
hat! It is at the other side."
•
Mrs. Wigglesworth: "Have you de-
cided how you are going to vote?"
Mrs. Guppy: "I think 1,11 wear my
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)
THE WORLD'S GOOD. NEWS
Will come to yotir home every day through
THE CHRISTIAN SCIENCE MONITOR
An International Daily Newspaper
It records for you the world's clean, constructive doings. The Monitor
does not exploit crime or. sensation; neither does it ignore them.
hat deals correctively with them. eatures for busy men and all the
family, including the Weekly Magazine Rection.
Tho Christian Science Publishing Sbeteta
One, Norway Street, Boston, Massachusetts
eleese•renter les, subscription to Tho Christian Science Monitor for
g Pari
1 year
$12.00 8 months $0.00,3 Months $3.00 1 month 81.00
Wednesday isaae, including Mflgaztne Section: 1 year 82.60. 6 issues 25o
Name. __ •_� __w_____ V___ _ _
ildaresa n.
Sample�Oy ea l e'gaese
Cheese -Vegetable Salad
1 tablespoon gelatine
3 tablespoons cold water
11/2 cups cream or cottage cheese
1/ cup mayonnaise
Juice of % lemon
2 tablespoons sugar
1 cup grated carrot
1 green pepper, chopped
1 small onion, minced
1 medium cucumber, seeded and
diced
Salt to taste.
Soak gelatine in cold water. Dis-
solve over hot water. Mix all ingredi-
ents. Stir in dissolved gelatine. Mould
and chill.
Lettuce Rolls
1 beads lettuce
11/2 cups Cottage cheese
ee cup seedless raisins
ee cup chapped nuts
% cup mayonnaise
Salt, pepper and paprika. •
Wast( and dry lettuce leaves well'
Combine other Ingredients. Spread
mixture on leaves. Roll up like jelly
rolls. Tie with pimento strips. Serve
two or three rolls on each salad plate.
Cheese -Pineapple Salad
1% cups cottage or cream cheese
in cup mayonnaise or cooked salad
dressing
% cup drained, ~rushed pineapple
1/3 cup finer c ppped pimento
1/3 cup finely chopped celery
1/$ cup chopped, browned almonds
Salt, ,••
Mayonnaise or cooked salad dress-
ing.
Toss ingredients together lightly,
using two forks. •Add salt to taste.
Serve with additional mayonnaise or
salad dressing.
When she announced her engage-
ment, one of her friends said: "But,
Margaret, I thought you came uphere
to,get your Ph.D."
"So I did." agreed Margaret, "but
2 had no idea I would get him so
soon-"
•
The wife came home breathlessly
after a day of shopping.
"Look, darling," she told her -hus-
band 'happily, "I've got one of those
new hats without a crown, and a
dress without a back, and shoes with-
out tees."
"You think that's something!"
grunted her 'husband. "Look at this
suit of mine: it has pockets without
money!"
When we Give,ItHurts
Give,ItHurts
(Condensed from The Forma in Reader's Digest)
One recent afternoon in Union
Square, New York, a stump -legged
beggar snared in his tin cup exactly
38 coins in 1e, minutes. Better than
$5 an hour! And the streets of mid-
town Manhattan or the Chicago Loop
district are glutted after nightfall
with "touoh-artists" all whining,
"Buddy, can you spare a dime for a
cuppa coffee?" Panhandling has be-
come a minor Social menace and a
source of increasing concern to the
police and public of most large Am-
erican cities.
No sympathetic human being wants
to let an unfortunate fellowman go
hungry. But the charitable impulse
that leads us to drop a dime into the
beggar's hand merely serves to in-
crease the number of forlorn dere-
licts, 'without really answering their
-mumbled plea for help.
For when you give, it hurts --hurts
the reeipient, society, organized char-
ity and, in a subtle manner, yourself.
This is the -opinion of social workers
and police 'officials in New York, St.
Louis and Boston whose investigations
total 30,000 cases.
In every American community as
established organization stands ready
to feed, clothe and house all who ap-
ply, whether sick or ablebodied, with-
out any red tape. When you are ap-
proacbed by a panhandler you ,may
know that the man has. ignored these
means of relief and' that you are be-
ing asked to support a chronic para-
site,
Experts . divide these parasites into
two classes: panhandler and profes-
sional beggar. The panhandle' sig ' a
res.
Terry
Facecloths
Good weight; good size.
5c
Men's
Work Sox.
Penman's Merino; loop-
ed cuffs.
25c -
•
gibbed
• Dishcloths
Tubular woven, cotton
knit.
10c
Men's
Bath ingTrunks:”
Pure wool; all colors.
$1.95
u
White or fang'
caps.
2I
iee
Women
Py�anla
Good quali'iri,ati, ..._.
V-neck, fancy, 2-pieee ,
59c
k':
Women's
Summer Purses ..
White or fancy; fully
equipped.
$1.010
sv
Linen
Table Napkins
Real - Damask Linen,
hemmed; good size.
19c
Men's
Shirts & Briefs
Fine cotton knit; cool
summer underwear.
Suit, $1,00
Men's
Work Shirts
New patterns; good
material; full size.
$1.0'0
Snagproof°
Overalls -
Blue or Black; full
size; good wear.
51.50
Boys' Wool -
Bath Suits
Speed Back Bathing
Suits; pure wool.
79c•
Women's Silk
Rayon Hose
Look and wear like high
grade silk hose, rein-
forced:' -
29c
Bright
New Chintz
25 Dark and Light pat-
terns, 36 inches wide ;
excellent quality.
Yard 2:5c
Women's
Summer. Dresses
a
All new styles, . colors
and patterns. Big
range.
$1,98
tewart Bros:, Seaton
Fifty thousand dollars a day is the
estimated, haul by beggars in New
York City alone. Most of this is pick-
ed up by individuals operating on
their own. But there are signs of
syndicated management. A man in
the Bronx, arrested recently, turned
out to b e a panhandling overlord.
Each morning he delivered bis beg-
gars to "work" in les car. He called
for them at night and collected 'their
money: then he lodged and fed them
and plied them with cheap liquor to
keep up their morale. Under this
treatment they slept contentedly un-
til it was time to be deposited on
the streets next day.
homeless vagrant; his stock -in -trade
is his hard luck story. He needs only
enough for "flop, horsemeat and jer-
rocky" (the latter a cruelly denatured
alcohol). You can identify him by
watohing him work for 10 minutes- As
he repeatedly approaches his victims
his manner and story are always the
same. After a dollar is garnered he
knocks off for the day and retreats
to bis miserable "scratch house"
where it costs him a quarter to sleep,
10 cents for breakfast, 20 for dinner
and, 45 for a pint of jerrocky.
The professional beggar, on the
other hand, often makes a comfort-
able living. Whether he fakes or ex-
aggerates some physical impairment,
or goes' through the pretense of offer-
ing wares, he is essentially a busi-
ness man on the streets for profit.
He maintains a residence in the city
a.nd generally supports a wife and.
family in middle-class comfort. The
professional beggar's "take," in auth-
enticated cases, reaches $50 a day A
22 -Mr -0111 beggar was found to own
a home in Riverside, Rhode Island,
and a $6,800 bank .balance. He claim-
ed that the income from begging in
the Eastern seaboard cities had drop-
ped during the recession, from $65
to $12 or even $10 per day. A street
beggar in a New Jersey resort town
had $5,250 sewn in his unkempt
clothes. A man arrested in New York
,had bank books recording deposits of
$6,179. Another made $66 in a day;
apiother collected $745 in a week. One
legless man admitted that he support-
ed himself, three other persons "and
three ,pollee dogs" -averaging $25 to
$30 every day he . Worked.
Ij
per day to keep a vagrant in jail, and
50 per cent.' of all the time spent in
county jails is chargeable to the pan-
handler. To this must be added the
costs of arrest, transportation, hos-
pitalization and cdurt- Each derelict
spends an average of six years in
prison, and costs the community some
53,000 before he arrives at the pot-
ter's field.
What is the answer to this annoy-
ing, costly and as yet unsolved prob-
lem? T'iie unanimous opinion of those
qualified to know is camps! In 1931
farsighted welfare experts, with a
small grant of federal money, settled
200 volunteers from the Municipal
Lodging House on a forest preserve
near Blauvelt, New York. These dere-
licts were given $6 per week for clear-
ing timber—out of which they were
assessed for their food, shelter and
clothing. At the .official rate of 50
cents an hour their six-day week re-
quired only two hours' work a day
and. nobody was urged to work more.
But curiously, instead of loafing as
Lhey did at the municipal shelters,
everybody worked all day. Many
found homes again. ; Drunkenness
was taken in hand by the men them-
selves. Hardened alcoholics gradual-
ly fought their way back to health.
They polished their boots and wash -
fid their shirts.
When Blauvelt failed through lack
of funds, Camp LaGuardia, at Grey -
court, was set up. It flourishes still,
but unfortunately it accommodates
only a few- At the moment, however,
a bill is pending in the New York
State Legislature to establish the first
permanent rehabilitation camp of
this kind in the United States—at a
cost par derelict of less than 50 cents
a day!
It has been demonstrated that many
panhandlers and professional beggars
are willing to take the bard road back
to respectability, if given the chance.
You can give them the chance and et
the seine time discharge your obliga-
tion to society if you direct your
coins to organized charity rather than
"charitably" give to beggars on the
street. P
The beggar's wretched plea to the
passer-by is not, as it affects to be,
the desperate cry of an' worthy fellow
in the depths of a temporary crisis.
He knows that organized oharity
stands ready to help, but as one of
the whiners explained to me, "It's
easier to beg a dollar, and besides
there ain't no strings attached to it."
Essentially the begigar is a person-
ality problem, calling for curative ra-
ther than repressive measures. He
tries to escape the economic struggle
by surrendering every responsibility
to which the normal man clings. Mag-
istrates find it hopeless to send these
men to jail for short terms, only 'o
have them haled into court a few
weeks later on the same charge.
Many policemen will not arrest mendi-
cants who are turned out of court as
fast as they are rounded up.
New York and St. Louis have at-
tempted to deal more intelligently
with the problem, While funds for
the project lasted, a. bureau of train-
ed social workers was set up in each
court to oheck the fingerprints of
each arrested beggar for previous con-
victions; to examine his case history,
and to encourage him to explain his
plight and what he thought was his
way out of it. • In three months in
1935, 1.663 beggars in New York were
so treated. Tie sick, insance, drug -
addicted and alcoholic were hospitaliz-
ed. Each case was routed through
its appropriate Channel to relief, work
project or private job. With a Com-
plete summary of the case before him
the magistrate was better able to deal
with the individual offense.
In other countries, when the va-
grant is arrested he is sent to a farm
colony, where he works for pay at
farming or a trade until he develops
the work habit,' a health habit and
self-respect. He is then returned to
the community, a useful citizen. The
430 inmates of the celebrated Swiss
colony at Witzwil, in the Canton
Berne, 'pay $40,000 annually into the
Canton Treasury by raising farm and
dairy produce and manufacturing non-
competitive produet8 which they fur-
nish
urnish to state institutions.
in New York State it costs $1.08
f) U•
r,l �rry. r h1
5
GARDEN SLUG CONTROL /f
Garden slugs are frequently rimer-
our on heavy land where they do con, 1.44
siderable damage to beans, lettuce, V'
a 1, t.
cabbage, cauliflower and similar
Like other pests, slugs can be more
easily controlled if remedial measures
are applied when the animals are
small and few in number. To control'
them, the infested planter (and the
slugs) should be dusted with hydrat-
ed
ydrarat
ed lime in the even, ' when the sunt
has gone downz'and' f"eediing has com-
menced.
o o,menced. Care should be taken to
cover the upper and lower surfacea
of the leaves and the soil immediate-
ly surrounding the plants. Hydrated
lime is effeotive only when in the
form of a light, dry powder.
Lime becomes hard when subjected'
to moisture and in that condition 1ti
hen -injurious to the slugs. For this
reason, a few light applications of
lime at intervals of three or four day'et
are much more effective than one
heavy dose. Another method: of con-
trol frequently recommended is to
spray tihe •infested• plants thoroughly'
with Bordeau mixture. This materia/
is repellent to slugs, and if the foliage
of the plants is completely 'coveretr
by the mixture, the slugs will confine
their attention to weeds growing is
the field.
The innovation of Froleeland, the
new aneusement area last year at the
Canadian National Exhibition, was so
sudeessful that it fs now a perman-
ent part of that great institution's
life. Frolexland is indeed all that the
name implies', comprising numbers of
interesting, thrilling and hilarious at-
tractions. Kiddies' Piaylandt, wlifeh.
was .inaugurated fast year, and is an
amusement park in Miniature opened
expresslty for children will again be
featured. . Frolexlantl• ivill,.one more
be under the dissection of, ' that ,out-
standing Canadian aho'wmala, "Pattie"
Conklin.
(
J
dor
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