HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1938-07-22, Page 3ri
r 4.1T 22
• 7%
Seen in, tile
CountyPapers
(dOntilOnedefrOUI Page4 2)
-amounting to some ;10,000. P has -
eel by Wililam Cudmare, Seelierth, and
consigned by Williamson -Bros., of To-
ronto, they will go to Perth, Scotland,
where there Is a shortage of .1sorses,
many animals having died from; grass
fever. It is said to be one of the'tbe
est"'shipments toe leave this country
for some time. OTwo hundred and
fifty-five .dollars was the highest price
paid for Qne 'horse, William Leirier, of
Seaforth, being,the seller. The heav-
iest horse was procured- from J. Bal-
lantyne, M.L.A. , It weighed 2,050
pounds and was a Belgian.—Mitehell
Advocate,
Injuries Da Not Halt Activities
Inquiring as to the progress being
made by William Tuer, who a few
weeks ago was injured when. struck
by aepassing motorist near his home,
it was. surprising to learn that despite
She fact that the sustained two baok-
,en 'toes and another fracture above
the ankle, he had been getting about
since a few days after the accident,
his leg in a plaster cast with the toes
-protruding, Mr.' Tuer is 'a very busy
mean with a large farm requiring much
supervision but we doubt if there
would be many men who would go
about as he is 'doing, to carry on. We
understand, too, that he visits the
soene of the building activities of
Gould's School, in which he is great-
ly interested as a member of the,
-school .board.—Mitchell Advocate.
•
Drowning Victim
On Monday evening at about seven.
o'clock, Billy Blair, five-ye(ar-old son
• of Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Blair, conces-
sion 6, East Wawanosh, met his death
by drowning. The drowning toolplace
ini a creek near the sixth line school
and not far'from the Blair home. Bil-
ly. whons; an only son, was swimming
with a companion, Billy Nethery,
aged 11, son of Mr. add Mrs. Albert
:leathery, of East Wawanosh, and the
boys were ready to leave the water
-whenBilly disappeared below the
surface. The other lad, not seeming
to realize what had happened until
his churn disappeared from sight, ran
homeward to bring help. He was met
I by Harry Black, who 'went to the
bridge on the 6th concession road be-
neathhich the boys were swimming.
'The boys were able to bring the body
up from the hole into which the child
lad fallen. Neither lad, however,
anew anything of artificial respiration
methods.—Blyth Standard,
Fire Destroys Chopping Milt
A. disastrous- fire visitedthe village
Mildmay early Sunday rdarning. A
t hopping mill operated by Henry
Beetling was completely destroyed,
while the home of Mr. Hoefling, ad-
jacent, was also extensively gutted.
The bakery store and residence of
Arthur Keelan on the other side of
the mill is also almost totally in
ruins. The fire, s'tartin'g from an un-
anown cause in the mill, about one
o'clock in the morning, gaineerapid
headway and the brick mill building
was doomed before the Mildmay fire
brigade had much chance to work on
it. Attention was set to the two dwel-
lings on either side and a call was
sent into Walkerton for help, the
brigade responding promptly. When
rthe Mildmay pumping engine ceased
after an hour and a half of continu-
ous operation and water pressure was,
cut down, calls for help were sent to
Teeswater and Hanover by Mildmay
authorities. — Wingham Advance -
Times.
Brothers Meet After 42 Years
Forty-two years of separation be-
tween two brothers was ended at
Welland last week when Andy Glean,
Crowland, and John Glenn, of Detroit,
met each other. Neither brother knew
of the other's whereabouts' duringthe
long period, and Andy thought his
brother had been killed in the Great
War. The reunion came as the re-
sult of John Glenn endeavoring to
and members of the family. After
se,arching through. Walkerton, the
birthplace of the family, he located
Mrs. •Robert Burgess, a sister, at
Wingham, Ont. Through the.sister
the two brothers communicated with
each other. The two separated in
1896 when Andy, a youth of sixteen,
sought adventure and fortune in min -
leg. Ho Worked in copper and lead
pines in Montana, gold mines in the
Yukon and British Columbia, and lat-
er in the Northern Ontario gold mines.
John, too, has led a life of hardy ad
-
vultures in many parts of the con-
t i r, ent.—Wi nerham Advance -Times.
Do you know a freckled faced kid?
If so, suggest to him that he enter
the Canadian National Exhibition
"Freckled( Kids" 'competition, to be
held on Children's Day, Monday, Aug.
29th. Of the tens of th,ousanre of
young Canadians that attend the be-
loved "Ex" on "Kids, Day" there are
bound to be a large .percentage who
are freckled and this. innovation prom,
is,es to be of keen interest.
11.1E -ALLY ICILL
,One pad kills dies all day and every
day for 2or .3 weeks, 3 pada in esiett
packet, No spraying% he eitieltilitailia
no bad odor. Ask. your • Draggillk,
Grocery or General .Store •
19 'CENTS t18111 PACittr
•
pitt*itgto,torletkotitonia,ii,*.thit.,
•
.. • •
4 'r
4^
•;:i.S. • i•O• ale ,
estria-ns
To e
UC
Highway Minister A sk §
For Co-operative
Spirit.
FAULTS ARE CITED
"Highwy acc1dextt tolls W111 be
sharply reduced when pe eletriana
learn to think of themselve eas a dis-
tinct group in the highway traffic
stream," Hon. T. Be afeQuesten, On-
tario Minister of Highways, stated in
an appeal issued recently asking fot
co-operation fram all Users of the
streets and, highways in; the ,press
'campaign of advertising now 'being
carriedon throughout the province,
aimed at cutting down the toll of
fataJities and injuries.
"Pedestrians have remained strong-
ly indiaidualistic through all the
years of rapid growth in vehicular
trffic," he explined, "while motor-
reit,s ore increasingly conscious of
themselves as a -clu. Motorists hae'
trained themselves, and are being
trained, to keep their minds on the
job of driving,while, they have ' a
wheel in their ;hands. Too many
pedestatiats have- .their minds any-
where except on the job of walking
en the streets and highways in a
manner that will prevent an accident
involving themselves and posstibly
other travellers on the highway.
"The best pedestrians," he saida
"are the postmen. They use the
streets more than wiyone else, but
very rarely are they involved in an
accident, and you don't seea post-
man's name in the casualty lists. The
postman uses the cross walks, is care-
ful and accurate in his judgment of
traffic naovements 'and speeds, .anil
Melody Th a t Fits The Voice
Set Above Fife and Drum Swing
(By Guy Lombardo)
We like sweet music. We've been
playing sweet Music ever since we
left London, Ontario, with a band of
eine mien—and we're going to stay
just as sweet as we are.
Swing, to my mind, is test a tad.
E opular music •always travels in cy-
cles—we're always having a run of
Southern "Mammy" songs, or He.wai-
den songs. Right now, there's a fad
tor the Johnny Mercer kited of song,
with gay, informal, kidding lyrics.
The jazz craze of 20 years ago was
th,e same kind of thing. And so is
the swing- craze of today. I think
the whole thin -g will die when some-
thing new comes along to take the
public fancy.
But no matter how many fads or
crazes we ;have, there will always be
the same desire for sweet music.
Why? Because sweet music appeals
to all the fine things about-life—hap-
piness, harmony, romance.
You all remember Howard Dietz'
some, "Dancing in the Dark," „ from
"The Bandwagon." I mention it be-
cause it illustrates what 1 mean-,
Mr. Dietz was visiting raeone night
at the Roosevelt Hotel wnere my
band was playing. We were sitting
together at a side table while the
boys played one of the dance sets.
It was a mellow Melody, done in the
quiet Lombardo style, and the lights
were turned low to set the mood of
the music.
Mr. Dietz and I watched' the danc-
ers, and he remarked how quietly hap-
py and, relaxed they looked.
"Yes," I remarked, "that's what
they 1k -e ---dancing in the dark."
"S,aa!" he replied, "Id like to write
a song about it—using that for the
title."
And he did. It's a song that Seems
to me to express that peaceful hap-
piness we noticed in the dancers at
the Roosevelt that night.
.The, Lombardo band used to play
an occasional "hot" number, but when
the swing craze came in, we stopped
even that. We don't like to imitate
cr follow. We prefer to play the kind
of music that has lasting appeal.
When we started oat, you know, it
was just tat the enellbt the jazz craze.
I remember we played a job in a
dance ,hall in Akron Ohio. We were
playing' along, the way we've always
played, for' nearly an hour, when a
big boun-cer came up and said, "Say,
when do youse guys start playing?"
We told him we were playing right
hen—and we kept right on. Before
the evening was' over, that bouncer
came up and congratulated us. Even
the people wale think they like • jazz
best, often find out that, in the long
run, sweet music is the kind that
really gets under the skin.
-When; you get right down to it, the
melody is the thing that makes music
what it is. People want music they
can sing—and the thing they sing is
the melody. You -can't sing a drum
so, no matter hew wonderful it is.
And you can't sing all the fancy stiff
the "ht" men play when they forget
all about the melody and! start "rid-
ing out," as they say, with improvisa-
tions of their own.
Instead or obliterating the melody
with superfluous; sounds and rhythan,
we try, through actual simplification,
to accentuate the melody so that it
stays in the listener's ear long after
he bas- heatel us pla.
That seems to. me the best thing
about music, and it goes right back to
all the fine old American tunes people
still like to sing—back to the lovely
Stephen Foster sonigs like "Old Folks
At Home," "Old Black Joe' and "I
Dream of Jeannie With, the Light
Brown Hair." Stephen Foster . stil
remains th,e Franz Schubert.of Amer-
icareenusic becauee of his great gift
of melody.
The Loixtbardo band will never go
llor the trick or novelty aapects of
male, We have no interest in Music
fads. . WItS, W111 netrer ;play seeing. To
Us, made is Melody aftd melody 15
criveet. tbolnk the greatest advance
American tangle can Make Is to for -
Olt about the "hot" staff and eonawa
trate on the Pure Strand bf needle
that Soothes the +heart wad that nu-
ttires &Male.
', • .
•
he never Wee to compete with' lease-
ing traffic." ee:::
•
Peciesttlats, as a glotap, figure
tamely in the iota latintber of encl.
(beats, afialysis of the Departretent of
aecleleat 'cantata& reveals.
The second moult frequent type of ac-
cident involves pedestrians and re-
sulted in Injuries to 3,617 pedestrians
last year.
' "Not all the blame for these'aeoi-
dents can be placed on the motorists'
,siaouldere," Mr. McQuestea said, "be-
cause glare than 70 per cent. iof
pdd-
estitan aoeidents occurred under nor-
mal conditions—the view was not ob-
structed—there was no confusion of
traffic."
The causes of these Opedestrian's
accidents point their own lesson and
cure, the minister concluded.- In the
order of their frequency these major,
accident causes immediately suggest
the care:
1, Crossing between Intersections
—cross only at crossings.
2. Children playing ieethe streets
—parks, playgrounds and yards are
abviously much safer plats to play.
3. Crossing the street against traf-
fic and signals—don't walk into the
path of trouble.
4. Stepping from behind parked
vehicles or objectsi—don't play hide-
and-seek on the highway, but give
e ourself and the motorists a chance
to see and be seen.
5. Walking ern ;or crossing higle
way—be fair and be safe; cross quick-
ie- and safely and always walk at the
side of the road, facing the traffic
strewn, 1,..h.en using the highway.
CKNX, WINGHAM
1200 Kcs. 249.9 Metres
WEEKLY PROGRAM HIGHLIGHTS
Friday, July 22-10.30 am., Salvia
Hen Army Hour; 11.30, "House of
Peter MacGregeri 7 p.m., "Light Up
& Listen Club"; 7.30, "Honourable
Archie"; 7.45, "Do You Know?"
Saturday, July 23-10.30 a.m., Shut -
Ins; 12 noon, Canadian Farm & Home
Hour; 12.45 p.m., CKNX Hill -Billies;
6.1, Sport Reporter; 7.30, Barn Dance.
Sunday, July 24-11 a.m., Wingham
United Church; 7 p.m.; St. Andrew's
Church.
Monday, July 25-11 a.m., "Clip-
pings"; 11.30, "House of Peter Mac-
Gregor"; 12.45 p.m-., Leckie Wakeford
songs; 7; "Light Up & Listen Club';
8, Kenn,eth Reatoul, songs.
Tuesday, July 26-11.45 a.m., True
Tale Drama; 12.45 p.m., Wayne King
Orchestra; 7, "Light Up & Listen
Club"; 745, "Do You Knew?"
Wednesday, July 27-11 am., "Clip-
pings"; 11.30, "House of Peter Mac-
Gregor"; 7 p.m., "Light Up & Listen
Club"; 7.45, Happy Jack Hall.
Thursday, July 28 — 10.30 a.m.,
Church of the Air; 7 p.m., "Light UP
& Listen Club"; 8, Gladys Picket',
piano.
Hulless Oats for
Wean ling Pigs
Young pigs have high efficiency for
the conversion of nourishing food; ire
tn weight increase but low efficiency
for the utilization of fibre. Except
for this latter fact, ordinary oats,
would be a suitable gain, but the hulls
dilute the food too much, and, uniese
very finely ground or else coarse en-
ough to be rejecte,d during mastica-
tion, they irritate and clog the diges-
tive traot. It is often advised to
screen oat cheap for weal:tiling pigs
but this is a laborious task frequently
r °elected.
Unless mechanical means can be
found to dethull ordinary oats, the
simpler way is to grow a variety that
threshes" tree of the hull. Years ago
the late Sir (then* Dr.) Charles E.
Saunders bred -two such varieties, Lib-
erty and Laurl, for the express pur-
pose of feeding young pigs and chick-
ens and for makling oatmeal porridge,.
Laurel proved slightly the heavier
yielder but is rather shorastrawed
for droughty seasons. In 19 yeare'
tests at Bes,verlodge Liberty proved
about three and a half days earlier
than Banner and yielded nearly 85
per oent as much meat. In a briefe
comparison Laurel matured practical-
ly with Banner, yielding 53 bushels
pea acre as against et for Liberty.
Both varieties of hulless are prone
to smut infestatiom and are easily in-
jured by formaldehyde, but careful
treatment with copper carbonate or
erercuric dusts ensures el clean crop.
lialless oats cross, readily with ord-
irery eats. It is important to take
pains to ensure purity and then ,it
may be necessary to -go back frotn
tene to time for re -selected founda-
tion stock.
Hulless' oats are rather tough to
thres(hi and suminer storage in bulk is
sometimes a problerh.
Feeding trials at Deaverlodge years
ego indicated that wben hullese oats
constituted a large percentage• of the
grain ration for pigs and poultry
there was a pronounced tendency .te
overfataess, but this does not apply
to a few weeks use for the weanlings.
The hulless oats may be creep -fed
whole on a clean board floor or in a
flat trough_
-Patron: "Look here, waiter, I or-
dered chicken pie arid Were isn't a
eingle. piece of chicken; le. it."
Waiter: "That's being consistent,
sir. We also have cottage cheese, but
so far as I know there isn't a cottage
In
•
A easterner once called the photo
graphic departmeat..store in New
York City, to ask if it would enlarge
a snapshot of her von:. Of course it
would. Then ;She wanted to know if
they could remove his hat — she
would nether have thie enlargement
withleta it. That, tots could be dome;
but on which did he part his hair,
and Was -it straight or curly?
"DWI 'be KIM" snapped the wo-
man. "Yull see that When you
take Ma bat •
(Lras MA14.1.3tolt, *Mee list-
, • -Readea'a, pigest)
wilimonemeeriationsimasonimpo;
efemericans muet be 'finding it in
crawlingly bard bo -get to sleep. Pays-
leialla report aesteedy inerease in the
number of auaomnia cases that ,Pass,
threttgll their offices, 'Mat isn't se
disturbing as the fact ;that the over-
whelealug majority of insomniacs
aren't seeking medfcal help, but are
doping themsehiefip •wath stteeping pills.
• eSalesof sleeping pills are Senor -
mous,"; in the words of Dr. Mary M.
Rising of the University of Chicago,
scientist who helped develop some of
these drugse "Millions are 'spent for
the purchase of these &rugs," says
Dr. Some, Weis, Associate Professor
of Medicine, Harvard Medical School.
• Druggists ,in 'large, citiee say that
sleeping pills now sell as fast as as-
pirin and laxatives., The problem is
discussed with cement at Meetings
of medical societies.
The sleeping -pill habit (has spread
until debuntantes, business men, sten-
ographers andi housewives- are steady
pierthasers .of the "sedatives" sold un-
der a score of trade names—allonal,
alurate, amytal, dial, luminal, nembu-
tail, neonat and eo on.
Writes Dr. R. L. Blunter of Wesil
Virginia: "I could report at least 20
cases here 1 Beene County. Some
are now in the asylum, some in jail.
some 'in hospitals, eight or ten are
home, well—and some are dead.
Others will die -or be committed to
an asylum ,befeale the lawmakink bod-
ies wake up." - -
Dr. G. Wilee Robinson, Jr., of the
Neurol'agical Hospital, Kansas City,
Mo., told' the Missouri State Medical
Assaciatien, "More than 75 per cent.
of patients in -our hospital had been
taking large doses of barbiturates, for
more or less extended periods of time
before admission."
Because he doesn't sleep well; the
victim turns to a harmless pill re-
commended by a friend. He uses
larger and larger doses, until some
day be is rushed off to the emerg-
ency hospital suffering perhaps from
acute poisoning, or a kidney ailment.
There is no such thing as a "harm-
less" sleeping pill. There are a num-
ber which are blessings when given
to just the right person in the right
dosage under theobservation of a
physician. But there is none which
is safe for the layman to use at his
own whim.
This is recognized in Europe, where
most of these drugs no longer can be
purchased without 'prescreaion. Some
States and cities in this country have
put up bars—but as in New York
City, where the Sanitary Cede for-
bids their sale, they nevertheless can
be purchased alomts everywhere.
Now, here are the facts' about the
popular sleeping pills:
Strictly speaking, in the dosages
used, they are not sedatives but hyp-
notics. Sedatives soothe the nerses
but do not necessarily induce sleep.
The sole purpose of hypnotics is to
induce sleep.
For years the medical profession
had waited for ohemists to produce a
substitute for the opiates, morphine
and Codeine, which are strongly hab-
it -to rs*ng. In, 190.3 Emil Fiecher,
German chemist, produced the first of
t'he barbjearic acid derivatives. ver-
onal or barbital, from which has stem-
med a long line of synthetic drugs.
Some, like phenobarbital or luminal,
are essentially thypnotics. Sotnetimes
these are combined with analgesics
like pyramidon, which relieve pain.
Each, of the barbituric acid eom-
pounds (and there are Many of them
with new preparations being placed
en tbe market almost every month by
pbarmaceutical manufacturers) has
its peculiarities, good and bad. The
physician has to follow a voluminous
lieerature in order to keep ,abreast of
ell the known effects of each type.
Non -e is without its accompanying
dangers. Some of them, if misap-
plied, will have a harmful effect on
the heart or the nervous system.
Others do net decompose easily so
that they can be eliminated normal-
ly, but tend to accumulate 1/1' the sys-
tem until the organism becomes
acutely poisoned..
Instead of insomnia, the doctors
may now .have to deal with barbitu'ric
acid. poisoning. The prolonged use of
barbiturates often produces in sensi-
tive people a painful akin rash. Miler
confirmed users suffer hallucinations,
temporara mental distu.rtra.ncee, sex-
ual disorders, or even death. Suicide
by "an overdose of sleeping tablets"
is a routine news item.
Must be T.B.Tested
, The Stedgmient of the majority of
county councils in Ontario in sup-
porting the Live Steck Branch of the
Ontario Department of Agriculture in
its efforts to have every county in On-
tario made a TB. restricted area for
cattlehas proven sound in view of
the recent action, taken by the United
States Department of Agriculture gov-
erning cattle being shipped to that
country.
These regulations in •subetance
state all Canadian cattle toeing export-
ed to the U.S.A. other than those for
immediate .slaughter, must have a
qualified veterinarian's certificate
showing they (have been tested with-
in 30 days of date �f shipment and
found free of bovine tuberculosis.
This, however, does not apply to cat-
tle exported directly from an accred-
itd. area. 'It means that a veterinar-
arCe eertificate is not required for
cattle in the Detente counties already
tested and' theowners will be able to
export freely..
The reason given by Anderkoan of-
ficials for their new law is that Mee
tit:My all United States •eattle are
teited -and they wiSh to maintain this
status and- keep T.B. oat of their
herds.
Tma new ruling Will probably re-
430Ire the teeing of eit• 1084 100000
u.s. to feeding pailitOe14
Canadian cattle art17115.ie:t:::':hf
!1i1
• . „._
ate 6 deStage per
tiala4 aliteeOler 11 'TOW' 'eS41-4*Ord'.4
tlfa-tiatieStery•of that' Oatatinillarit
noatotta. teade -WhaCh, be rattle:, Mark.;
. the: atvent. of Spring' iBut, to tAfj
ahem:Mal 'engineer, etelplatir eepreeelete
one Of • the most Stiliefsit- andipterborf-
ing the Materials Offered to man bY)
Mother Nature. Irt feet,. It ora
Mileoealble to jaak-ab011it ett
titian Or village • without seeing -smile
useful tealneadity l th,e manufacture,
of which sulphur has played an., im-
• portant part. •
When you sit down to work at ''a
desk that is painted or stained, in all
probability you are, so to speak, work-
ing on sulphur. In the United States,
during '1937; paints and pigments, re-
presented the seventh largest user of
sulphur. There were 105,000 tons of
"Oh, en overdose of anything will
kill you!" is the pat rejoinder of
users who are warned. They are stip
unaware of the insidiousways of
these "handless" drugs. A.11 hypnot-
ics deerease the intileitions. He who
takes a tablet and then lies back and
waits for sleep t� come (when even
15 minutes can seem an eternity!)
will find a lot more difficulty in re-
sisting the urge to take a secoitd tab-
let. It is p -art of the vicious cirCle
that hypnotic users soon find .th.em-
selves travelling.
The doctors issue -a 'special warn-
ing that the person who drinks would
do well to avoid sleeping pills. Alco -
(hot increases and hastens the I:mist:M-
ous effects of the barbiturates.
Many patients, it is true, need hyp-
otice. But they must bays the drug
suited to th-eir particular physical
condition and n-ervous temperament.
It must be taken in just the right
doses.
It is a ;safe rule that any person
who needs a drug to put him ta sleep
needs to see a doctor first.
• During tilie war. wheri our supply
of barbiturates .from Germany was
cut oft, Dr: Rising_ developed a meth-
oci of producing luminal; sadly need-
ed for treatm,ent of epileptics. Listen,.
to what abe says:
"Such drugs poison the body and
should only be used in real need, un -
dr obs•ervatian of a physician. Hyp-
notics are habit -terming. And the
nerve trestles may be irreparably in-
jured by their prolonged use. Vec-
tors ansi druggists deplore the fact
that allonal, veroaal and the other
ureddes may he bought without pre-
scription. The present sales indicate
that persons wholly unaware of the
harmful effects of th-ese drugs are do-
ing themselves serious injury."
Until legislation to protect the
public is enacted and enforced, the
wise person will leak upon all forms
of "store-bought" slumber as harmful
and habit-forming.
JI
kit
f4r0W010':_ufoOk.,40g
about 4:p4:4404, 4P'SitfS.
,If „tise 4eio we.metat ,
a -fiat as top,
tOPO:0#!...
salphut beeeditse-"041t:",
gamy to theeptgellitotisagae.
eleolit 22 penaltela'.01, fallahlfais....
-form of stalk cake 1,000 (SteltarC
et flat,
Ente,ee Into Mannfaette e of .tiOthiligi
The textile prooeasdflg 1114UStrlya'4
• lealetithoritatively estimated, lis: 22ta
400 tans' of sultelliir daring. 1937. '404.
if you're wearing rayope you're wears
ing eometting that sulphur helped ta
make. Last year, the rayon..industry
used 76,000 tone of sulphur 'in addi-
tion to many thousand tons of carbon
bisulphide and sulphur chloride,
It is quite a jump in thought Pram
rayon to candy, but don't overlook
ate fact that sulphur insthe form oa
Culphur diotide, s used"in the. clan.'
fieation of raw juices.and in the pre -
ste
cipitation of sugar.
Sulphur also contributes, to ' your
tering comfort and, safety. About
35 poUrads of slphur, in one form or
another, are required in the manu-
facture of a car. The rabber in the
tires usually is compounded "with 2
per, cent. by weight of elilphur. Hiard
rubber moulded product'ddatain a-
bout 40 per cent. by weight of. sul-
Any.
.A.gdeuiture owes much to sutph.ur,
f.r immense amounts of ealphtiric
acid are teed in the manufacture ,of
chemical fertilizers.
Vital To Pulp and Paper Induetry
Last year, over 457,000,000 pounds
of sulphur were imported from Tex-
as, a very large percentage of whioh
went to our own.. pulp and paper
plants, because, next to pulp wood it -
elf, sulphur is probably the most es-
sential raw material used by this;
great industry. Those 457,000,000
pounOs represent milhons of dollars!
What a market to have for our-
selves! And we are going to have it
in the near future. Nature hasnt
given us sulphur to be dug or forced
out by super ;heated water, as in Tex-
as; but the ingenuity of our chemists;
has produtced a new process for break-
ing pyrite into its two main constitu-
ents, sulphur and iron, guickly, easily
and cheaply.
This process is considered by ex-
perts to be th.e greatest metallurgical
achievement for Canada since- Con-
solidated Smelters invented their new
procers for separating zinc -silver -lead
ores.
What about the source of pyrite,
you ask? During the twa. years that
chemical engineers Were testing the
new process, before they finally pro-
nounced it perfect, mining, engineers
iu Quebec Province had aecertained
that sufficient ore vvaas -available for
,_' tilVaiapieBD,g:i44:1:0,S14414:,!4v43%14:::;
whiapa
yourre 51:::;:sat'476:ne.
spring 114!ter•'• %Ur A
.104 is Pelitra*d Clui
Your•bloodis maotlic -
wrthat st4Elas$13124hof vt11:47,'-„PO:'
matter -lying la VoUr.
osomaufttre.veneiedll9Ytios7r4thtblYinty7is 721:"„v4.4,
good! St's marvellusl-'3SE:j,'
,.._ ,r•
are only 60 cents a tin I At yain't-
gist now—but if you're 'Wse; on
bathroom shelf tonight!
at least five years, production.
thie is only the beginning. '
So, on the face of things,
seems certain ;ot her own' sulp
dustry in thie near future, an:
try singularly favared in. that
assured of a 24-4iour-wday demand-A:WV,
its product, before the first sokihur,11,4'
eiard has even been built
Reservations ten meths In, advance
That's the story at the Canadian Nur
tional^ Exhibition. Last Pall the me& -;),•21
agement received orders for reserve
seats for 1938. Of course this la not
the general rule but it is indicative
of the great popularity of the page-
ant, for it is generally acknowledged
that in the Canadian National Ebilba-
nee's grandstand displays the at of
pageantry reaches the ultimate. The
musical ride and the smashing, scin-
tillating pyrotechnic display are ex-
trentely popular feature i of the per-
formanee.
PIPE
TOBACCO
FORA MILD,COOL SMOKE
TELErlioNE TALKS IN THE WATSON FAMILY
MURIEL Watson used to
worry about Bob's fre-
•quent trips to the "raw edges
of civilization" — to mining
towns and construction camps
wiiere life was rough and
comforts few. Now he tele-
plfees her—and the children
—from each new location
cheering them, -and himself,
in the process. After .all, he
muses, you're never out of
civilization as long as you
have the telephone.
Reductions in telephone rates—local and long
distance --in 1935, '36 and '37 have effected
savings to telephone users in Ontario and
Quebec of nearly one million dollars yecrrly.
14,
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