HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Goderich Star, 1930-05-22, Page 7I.Y.I 1t�lr.'i M'ts' aaia-a le'.
210.
Your Breakfast
Shot from Guns
.4111111
so you don't have to cook it
Read how this amazing in-
vention gives Puffed Grains
the virtual nourishment of
hot cooked cereals.
N""Frofessoi Andetanri°'foured the may to
shoot wheat and rice grains from guns he solved
an important problem, He gave these crisp, delicious,
ready -to -eat cereals the virtual nourishment of hot
cooked cereals.
e Every grain of wheat and rice contains 125 million
food cells. Every food cell must be broken before the
grain can be completely digestible. It takes long hours
of cooking to do this. But Professor Anderson found
a better way, He• seals grains of wheat and rice in
bronze guns. Revolves them in fiery ovens. Then fires
the guns. This causes 125 million explosions in every
grain. It` blasts open every tiny food cell. Puffed
Wheat and Puffed Rice are thus, made completely
digestible. Hence practically as nourishing as data
cooked cereals.
The grains become 8 times normal size, They have
all the buttery crunchiness of fresh toast. They ate
made to taste like sweet new nut -meats. Never before
was rich grain nourishment made so delectably
good to eat.
You owe k to your family to give them this extra
delicious grain food that tastes like nut goodies. Order
Puffed Wheat and Puffed Rice from your grocer today.
The Quaker Oats Company.
• 5764
QUAKER PUFFED WHEAT AND PUFFED RICE
/1
f
COMMENTS ON' THE BUDGET
No Concession to Western Ontario
Farmers
(Farmers' Sun)
In view of a pending election, we
looked for a farmers' tariff more ob-
vious and more striking than that an-
nounced in his budget speech last
week. —Excepting the matter
of New Zealand 'butter, there is ap-
parently no concession to the United
1`'armer Counties of the. Niagara es-
carpment, as the geologists call it,.
that is, Oxford, Middlesex, Welling-
ton, Perth, Dufferin and the counties
on Lake Huron and Georgian Bay.
Printing Industry Ignored
(Financial Post)
peen . disappointment ' .peevails
throughout the printing and allied in-
dustries as n result of the budget.
the
LILce,
Hens bothered with
lice stop laying. To
kill the lice, take the affected chicken
liy'the legs and sprinkle thepowder
in the open feathers. PRATT'SiLICE
„KILLER ie harmlese,non-irdtalinr and non-
poleonotre, but tills the lite. Asci' your dealer.
xµrIte fur WORRY
IsRA Yi OOD Co. of mato �M
3 wrlaw CO..7br.wt.
Expected tariff revisions on' 'printed
matter failed to materialize and the
printers feel that the interests of one
.of the leading industries in ,Canada
res been ignored to the disadvant-
age of the printing and allied inter-
ests, the government and the consum-
er. The tariff interests of the;rprint-
ing industries have been passed up,
while the tariff interests"of the indus-
tries al. -much less importance have
been favored, leaders in the printing
trades state.
Competition Under Increased British
Preference
(Montreal Gazette)
Competition,whether. from neigh-
bors or kinsmen is still competition
and so far as Canadian industry and
Canadian labor are concerned, com-
petition is as difficult to meet from
one source as from the other, or will
be as difficult if the Baeitish manufac-
turer and exporter makes full use of
'the opportunity which is being ex-
tended to him.
Where Countervailing Duties Fail
(Toronto Saturday Night)
"Provision for countervailirse duty
is now made effective in the case of :
Potatoes, soups and soup prepara-
tions, live stock, fresh mea'ts, cured
and pickled meats, butter, eggs in
the shell, frozen eggs, frozen egg al-
bumen, wheat, wheat flour, oats; "oat-
meal, rye, cut flowers, cast iron pipe."
This, apparently, ,can only mean that
if the United States or any other
country increases its duties on its im-
ports of these commodities from.Can-
ada, the Dominion will increase its
duties to the same height on imports
of these same commodities front the
country concerned. But what does
this undertaking amount to in the.
in the case of a commodity that Can-
, ada only exports and does not im-
port? The United States imparts
each year a considerable amount cf
�westftr/ce
ever placed on, a
ST..J-i;E B
it 5 5 to
at the$1460 factory
Gov't tura, Safra
114•INCH WHEELBASE -70 HORSEPOWER
Hydraulic shock gbcorberr ... Lanchester Vibration
Damper ... Double -drop frame ... Gasoline filter
• . Fuel pump ... Time tapered roller hearing
• . New Pull•Power Muffler . . Cant -and -lever-
steering ... Adjustable steering wheel and seat ...
Drain engine oil only every 25N miles ... 40 miles
an hour even when NEW.
STUDEBAKER SIX MODELS AND PRICES
Coupe, 2 -pass. . . . $1155 Coupe, 4 -pass. . $1274
Club Sedan . . . . 1,195 Regal 'Tourer . ... 137$
Tourer 1245 Regal Sedan . .. , 1355
sedan . . 1270 Landau Sedan . . 1454
Priceo At 4111) factory. Oov't texe testra.
The greatest value in Studebaker's
78 years of honest merchandising
F. H..WOOD & SON
GODERICH
4
Canadian wheat for the purpose of
improving the quality of her flour,'
but we have no occasion to' import
United States wheat. • Surely this
gesture 'would be more effective if it
were made to apply to commodities
which Canada actually imports from
the United States. Similarly the in-
clusion in the British preference of
commodities with which Britain does
not and cannot supply us, such as
washing machines, furnishes ground
for • wonder if political as . well as
economic considerations have not
played their part in the framing of
Mr. Dunning's masterpiece.
Analysing the Budget
(Ottawa Journal)
The; more Mr. Dunning's budget is
examined, the more it becomes ap-
parent that it is largely a fake, a
cunning but discreditable attempt to
fool the public for purposes of elec
tioneering. Dozens of items declared
free under the preferential rate mean
nothing at all; were clearly put in for
no other purpose thanto give Mr.
Dunning a chance to go. out Westland
say: "See what I've done for Free
Trade!" These items, in fact, are
nothing more than a mask for the
Government's humiliating surrender
in the matter 'of action against the
United States. (They are simply; and
solely a part of : the old game of
throwing dust into the eyes of the
electors, a part of the policy of hold-
ing on to office regardless of consis-
tency or prindiples. Trickery of this
kind must be exposed. So far as Mr.
Dunning's budget is a step toward
meeting United States 'tariff aggres-
sion and dealing creditably with the
British Preference, it is to be com-
mended. But . Mr. Dunning must be
taught that he is not now in the Leg-
islature of Saskatchewan, and that all
this mosaic of nonsense and crazy -
quit patchwork that he has tacked on
to a few substantial tariff changes,
are a long way from fooling the Can
adian public. This Government, even
with a wholly sensible tariff budget,
would still be subject to censure. It
would be subject to the censure of a
deathbed, electioneering recantation
of folly with which it has injured
Canada for nearly ten . years. But
when M. Dunning comes to Parlia-
ment with a long list of .alleged tar-
iff changes that are nothing but a
fraud, seeking with these fraudulent
changes to trick himself back into
office, then the censure must be dou-
bly severe. There has been too much
of this sort of political dishonesty
during the past ten years.
Dr -ESS
.,4// Your
('urs& SORES
W/TH ANT/SEPT/C
lamBuk
NEW HEADQUARTERS
At
COCICSIRJJTT PLOW CO.
And general line of Vann Ian-
plcments and Repair, including
the United and Allis Chalmer
Tractors, et
GODERICH
note 598. Kingston Bt.
Goniatteil STAR
NEVER SAID EQUAL.
OF SARGON, HE SAYS
"'In spite of tonics anut s,a: cal
treatenera.s 1, toeie, 1 S?eailils Ipat
Area -lath and energy find 1 itta l ging
clown Lill. -
JOHN HARRISON
I suffered with indigestion and bilious
spells and hardly passed a day with-.
out a headache. 1 couldn't half sleep
and would get up mornings complete-
ly fagged out, Four bottles of Sar -3
gon restored niy appetite, my weight
has increased 10 pounds, I sleep fine
and have more strength and energy
than I've had in years. In my opine ,
ion there's nothing to compare with
Sargon i
•
"Sargon Pills •put my liver in line
working order and rid me of consti-
pgtion."—John Harrison, well known
farher, Woodbridge, Ontario,
,hist 'gawk" t:.1 $i c I`r;1 rft'.
* loee.eteo eove L at , c to'a
Ur ti, 4474 ',1r1
Weklt f lee Yl a.a-seelivel, the 'leig-'
* e-yee oei E',1,1 a 1 nC o and fetal
Ceae .Attlitse et e C t tr cel* Lai An came.
etory e gee nt laic i, a
slue entre', t and ➢end Seat 1Ca.ned''
thy= z li.i t 0`.: flee aeetiuual AA in td b
wiicn luC` _ tl NIS rinetee tient lips want.
CCI to as' "ecu noble fence."
Oleo day alien tea 1a➢i ; Vi i•
titan, in tic" ;eraseratle 4t 1,aeniie IsmtC
tin` lank S -f t L'tati,tti it. 1.1)1.1
linty vete Wel be hie tame. " Lieut
there is the Kiia;, recur getenilinti:es
"Oh, iia," Bald a'.saa e Lord Nee,
duff, "that I,1 no. the icing. 'fleet lr
my 'Uncle a 'eerete."
tv Slee ego liraal;ay.
the larevet Melte In the world. an
cording tea tltueaiie'ru at a t`.ttinrena of
Natural ; Iona`, recently ir° id isl
Euelcantd. lit poese :sed by the ta'tiitlt`.
Pref. \4. WryGatad. lrnetd agalunt
a prevalent beiict that the largest
brain elate la shared by whales, tie.
I
entente. and man. Tie ntatrtt that tho
whale Coate Juatfped tae elaine the
largeae whale ever cautett having a
brain welihlies ,000 grains.
The human brain, he added net.'
dem e.:mtdn an average weight' of
1,2e0 to 1,460 1:raiirs in thea acute anti
1,140 to 1,340 dft the female.
WHERE SNAKES AIIE FAI4MItD.
Crib Reptiles and Their Poisons for
• Scientific Purposes.
At Sao Paulo, Southern Brazil, le
to be found the famous garden of
sinakes, owned by the Instl,ute at So-
ruurtherapy, who use the reptiles and
Met; poisons for scientttie purpoeen.
"Here the laboratories and mu-
seum, with stables for the cntenemd
s
horses, mules and oxen which yield
the precious anti-.oxlu of their omit
Wood, look down upoh the sliest.•I.
park of Serpents, with its symineti•t-
epl array of cemented dens and a
wide moat in wlifcli toads scud ea 11
reptiles glide throughthe a.agna'it
rt atere.
"Tho institute,' directed by 1 rro
,famous ophidnlogist, Dr. Vital Brazil,
is the continent •ua;ton's clearing
'Meuse for poisonous snakes. The
'taaendelros,' or growers of coffee,
sugar, cocoa, and other produce, rhp-
tareand cenutgn snakes in the tete-
00.1;0016d
etesial labelled caseswhich the inst.ute
ptovides and which ail Brazil's rait-
iv{tys and ricer companies carry free
of charge.•
e'Iia their thousands these reptiles
come. and aro luoscd in lie garden,
tlpttl the scientific slate are ready to
4*tract their venom, And in dune time
the agriculturitl senders retells vfats
f f the precious serum together wi h
syringe -needles for instant iajcctluit
tni any victim of snake -bit, in their
ebrvice. . .
"The director tells me of flys
thoilsand deaths and ,went; tlteuaand
Darier cases every year,"
1iI:RCLLASE Cil.
Beauties of Ancient t'ity Are Tieing
Iteconstrucfed.
' Excavators are rapldly uncovering
the wonders and beauties of laneient
Herculaneum:
Thus • the ntiesine portions of a
frescoed• wall are no langur consider-
ed as irrevocably lost. Ne trace of
desa'uction or ruin is lett after the
siseovery of a building, and, as far as
possible, no blank hpaces are to be.
found in any mosale or fresco un-
covered. Wooden doors, windows.
Stairs and furniture. are rec6nstrucled
or reproduced from the origlnrlesur-
viving fragments, generally contesting
of ,charred or carbonized piecce ut
wood.
Tretes, 'plants and flowering; shrubs
originally adorning gar•denr are Iden-
tified trent their surviving roots and
replaced by new ones.
Several houses have been unearth -1
ed'.within tho Last six months, and
most of theta have been practieally
rebuilt. The carbonized iemttins of
wooden beds and chests found In
three cubicles rendered poaalble the
reconstruction of the origin'ul
furniture.
A swimming pool faced with mar-
ble, a watea'',anlc covered by an irwr
grating, a ladder li+ading to a slave's
bedroom In an attie, shutters mount
to keep the glare of the sun frot.r coo/
marble halls, have all been rt we.
structed,
T}lbl 'i'oWER OF I'ISA.
An I-:fuet Is Being Made to Salve t1 -e,
. Old htructure:
The famous l..tuirig tower of Pisa
ltas• ,been tipping fur, her over and
fear has been lett fur its safety, lr.
n effort to vase the old utructure
concrete lei being YorerA under iha
foundation. Whim mear,urtd a hun-
dred years ago, the tower wan fifteen i
and one-half feet out of the perpaneil- I
cular. In 1910, it was elxtevir and i n -
half feet. The foundation defends
only tett feet into the,graund.
A recent survey cva:r matte of thCi
subsoil underne,,th to nee what
strengthening nreasuren could be fur- 1
dertaken. it was decidr'u to force eon.
crate, under the walls, which are ihlr• r
teen feet thkk at the base. They tows
er, with lin eight atoriea, Hues 11,
feet, and le eorratructed,tliroughout of
marble. Expetes who have etudled qq
it believe that the tower aaeumed its
leaning position while ander eat- 1,
structlon, early in the twelfth curt-
fury, and that Ito dealg,nera did not
intend it to lean.
SASTORIA1
For Infants and Children.
In Use ForOver 3OYesr
Atr>Apo team , rft' i -
tie
3 naturo ni e
ioct
PACK hCil"*B
tan
conal
EVtiitYWI MMR)
FN t'ANAi)A
A fuse. fast, throuh trash to
Rick West, Invent Toronto
daily a't9a30pa i tideltt+inal i,
1, Yinnipeg,llcandon,Rogina,
Saskatoon, Edmonton, Jas.
per and Vancouver,
LCtiilMENT
Radioneqqulpped Comport.
menta UFwery ationalabrary
-Buffet Car with Valrt Ser.
vice;StandsrdSlee ingCar,,
Tourl,t Sleeping airs, Din,
ing Can and Coacbat.
Face 1Ria
OeVibleineYONik Wasle,w nie,
S1r'u re,.rtvaioas dlrasah ear.
CoaaatanNasia Ml Amyl, Fat
_ Then them was the Seutelaniau isles
bought the ear became the dutch
Was th tun is',
ADVERTISE IN 'l'III STAR
Chilarei, TOry
FOR FLETCHER'S.
n•A,STO R I A
French, River, Home of Wiley " uskie," Will Soon Echo
• Cries of Elated Anglers as They Battle Fresh Water Tiger
524
..<�n a °,,:, .
04•'Muc`KrC; F'vcNc4
ids ✓ere,
A• 8$1.8. Ms)Sloe AMU
file CA Prole.
i 41\Tow is the time for all good
." fishermen to prepare for
that summer trip''" is an appro-
priate
pro-priate slogan for disciples of Isaac
Waltonthese balmy spring days.
A successful fishing trip depends
• largely upon the careful selection
of location, tackle and evert asso-
, ciates, for many a party has b
ruined by the last-minute intro-
duction of a "wet blanket" to an
otherwise congenial collection of
sportsmen,
One of the most intcrekting fish-
ing streams in North America is
French River, Ontario, 215 miles
north of Toronto on the Canadian
Pacific Railway. This lordly river
is celebrated as the habitat of the
fighting muscalunges one of the
gamest fish known; huge Great
Northern pike, pickerel, an abund-
ItoeweaCiWS
er F,QENcld Tljdl�,
ance of small -mouth and large-
mouth black bass and other finny
prizes. To accommodate sportsmen
and their families, a fine bungalow
camp --a" collection of individual
cabins centering around a main
clubhouse—has been erected on a
cliff overlooking the river. Here
the fisherman and his family can
"rough it in comfort," far from
the "cares and annoyances of a
work -a -day world.
That big "muskies" . are plen-
tiful at French River is proven by
the fact that one recent summer
a monster muskie weighing 115
pounds was taken in the North
Channel at the mouth of the
Wolseley River. !Also; not long
ago a party of Ohio sportsmen
caught, besides their daily limit of
bass, pike and pickerel, no less
than seventeen "'muskies" ranging
from 10 to`3814 lbs. In 1926 a "mus-
kie" of 96 pounds weight, 50
inches long and 21 inches in girth
was taken in the main channel of..
the Freneh, one mile from the
bungalow camp.
The French River Bungalow
Camp will open June 15 and re- . .
main open Until Sept. 16. Jack
Strathdee, its. genial manager, .is
an experienced outdeorsman whose
chief delight is coaching the un-
initiated in the art of luring Abe
fish..French River also has a fine
9 -hole golf course so that devotees
of the royal and: ancient game who
are also fond of fishing need not
entirely forego the former sport
itt favor of the latter.
IT PAYS TO USE MARTIN-SENOUR PRODUCTS
away r w `
,su
¢ry
ParPose—
-wand it pays
particularly on Barns
and Outbuildings
Rw.—.7t-Ang01144,
Barns, silos, fences—surfaces subjected to
attack of sun, rain, snow, frost. Valuable
property that will age prematurely with-
out the protective covering of a durable,
wear and weather resisting paint.
It costs so very little to give your buildings
this protection with Martin'Senonr• heti
School house Paint. .
Here is u Martin-Senour product specially
made for this purpose.. Made of the finest
English Red Oxide, mixed in scientific
proportion and finely ground by the moat
modern machinery.. A red paint that
will stay red, standing off the effects of
the weather for many years. A paint that
twill keep your outbuildings always
new, free from expensive repair
cost. 4:
Where protection and fine
appearance are concerned it
certainly pays to use Martin•
Senour Red School House
Paint.
Mart n=Senour Products for every par.
/sae. for every eadsce, are NM by
t
Fred Hunt
GODERICH
V
PA i MT
63
RED SCHOO.L-HOUSE
PA1OT
trirtk
r ,dl�:sn!}� tr •
el!FerZAIMI01""-e"?.--
..