The Lucknow Sentinel, 1938-10-13, Page 7•
1711.411. :TOOPS:
'"•ru
"d• elArer
f4..in.191.01
reach GelleTat EStiMates _that
Germany Lacks tremendna*
'-'1'.ininher Of. Trained OffieerS
• and Racemes
Gen. Rend 'Albert 'NeiSsek One
of France's outstanding military
:autlierities, paid last :week, thAt.
Germany could put fewer divisiox*
, into the field now •than in 1914
-
' because of a deficiency, in trained
, reserves and. officers.
He said that because Of • the
difficult, situation 'Of her finances
"Geirtiany must have a short war.
-.arid her success. it not at all as-
'
Ile . estimated' that Germany.'
lacks -150,000 trained. offiieri and
hundreds. of thousands- of trained
non-eoinmissioned .0ificer,S.•lat'gz;V•
as a result ,of restrictiont Of the.
;Versailles Treaty which ended the,.
World War. -
"Must Have Short War&.
"Germany can put less trained.
.troops into the field today than'in
1914 despite the anschluss with
Austria," he said. "In 1914 it the
start Of the war.:Germany
mobil-
ized 50 active divisions.
"It , would take several years
for Germany to form 50 reserve
divisions now and Gern-any Would
•!,., not be able to put that many re -
terve. divisions into the field be- '
fore April, 19,40."
Bruce Wild Life
Is Growing Wilder
KINCARDINE, Ont—TwO
sections of •Bruee County are
vieing far the ;title of; wild,
animal •centre,', While Kinioss
Township has its wolves, the
, Linke' Peninsula' has tome to
.the 'fore, with stories of black
bears sighted hi the 'vicinity
'of Stokes Bay •Moie than
one resident has seen them on
the outskirts of the village
Then, to add- to the animal
annals, : Tom Belrose,. who
diliVes the Mail fi:oin Warton ••
to Tobermory, savi a silver
•fezt on the roadway nPar
Eagle Harbor, • '
•
anada Seen As..
• amci pronlis
Canadian • Newspapenvonian
Travelling Through Czecha-,
slovaliia :Is Asked All Sorts
•Questions 'AbOnt the ajo,-minlon;
'
• :•
cOmnientiog on her experiences
'In . Cefitrai Europe, • a Canadian
aeWsPaperwoman Writes: "In '.trav-
elling n Czechoilorakia eertain
qiiestions and exelarnatiens greetect
me eter and over agaiit When I was
identified as a Canadian.
'The'. most frequent was, 'what
.arekthe reguiations for getting ;hi-.
.
to Canada?. Is it 'easy? R 'must be
wonderful to live, in a country like
Canada Where :Jou are •never in
danger Of war'!'"."' ' '"
Tradition Not•Fir Wrong
•:-,Their--there-was• the young nTan
In 'the, trala in northern
When, he heard • us 'speaking •Eag-
lith it soon became•evident that he
Was: dring with 'a desire tO:' t'pealc.
He Consulted with. two friends who
:.quite obviously egged:•hinz'en. Fin-,
allyhe took courage and said,
"Please, ho nr are •You=plea se ?"'and
he was Overjoyed when he realiied •
hehad been Underttbed.
The 'tradition that Canada- is the :
Premised Land Stilt eiittt—and if
we compare•it With the Unenviable
Situation Of .Many a. European` ha -
tion -,-it is 'evident Ale traditicin
net far wrong.'
Some 1)iabetics.,
Just Gluttons
Manitoba Medical Association
Hears That 50 , Percent .'• of.
'Sufferers Just Eat Too
, •
Professor L. '11: ',NeWburglr of the
.Ilnivertity • of .Mielhigaa talk 'the.
•
Manitob- Medteal Attociaticintt an- , •
inial.cOnvIentiontliat 50, Per,t eatet
the Pertoilt diagnosed as.•suffering
••• train diabelet at 'jut .gluttonso
' only they WOn't adatit it ACcorcl.
• lag to lite nsarallee statitties,.
1111040sed, there 'are 2,900.„0q6 .o4d-
•-• dlelged, Ohete• linlividualt in the
United States With diabetie
torna.
°They're, net diabetict, at all
they're ,jitst fattiesr he added. .
• .
He re&Miniended a milk. ,vegeA
table, and' frUlti,. diet and. declared
' the "!tticat dating. 'fallaer" started'
'Germany ;Years. ago a'
'deriaan cOneltided tile way 't•Ci be
'great. and healthy Wayo .eat -
• rhe. restjt (he • Gerhuth
olit
thgtit litek t.ould. lick the 7ittitlit
• If' .they hidit diet. a•rMilact -
;.,.tnelit, and that idea *at Obterbed.
by other‘counitlee:' . ."
AG,PSTS•WANTED
ATIT.INTR)Nl: AGENTS ALL OVER
Canada Are...Making 'spare: time
, money • shoUring Yuletide' Chriat,.
Mas Card. A Ilfgrillied
able,ocenpation whieh meons dol.
• lars, .for you, •Withaut
we Setid:PI(ER''',POrlfuliO. sa#9.!•
row panipnlet • On selling..
Priced f.rsom, 81 to 6140. dozen-,-
•leveriliody, .bnsra- 'flighest
commIsS:ion bonus. '
§tticlitm, TeroutO.' • ' •
,
I.,ADV IN EVEItY• LoCALITV TO
represent' complete line of ladies'
' .men'o, shirts, ,socks: ties, '
l'Oonlar price, h
s, 'ighest gommis- •
Slone. Reliable nem, 15. years In
business...Will stand tow. ItiVestiga-
tion. I'M dour Lingerie. 1849 Am, ;
herst. Montreal. • • '
,
, .
WORLD'S 41,AIIQZST PURLI$KiNq,
coinpany can use full or part -011e
agents 'to,solicit,,,orders for. pietor-,:
ial Review, Good, Housekeeping.,'
and",CosmOrtolitalv'Which are jiwt,
a few. HigheSt eettllniSsicum Paid! "
,Por.,ctUriPlete list ancl' information '
' Wrltei D. E.: VI1son. , 331,, Bay '
' Street. Toronto, • '
, .
A/RATEUR AitT1ST'
TO PAINT AND SELL TCS THEIR '
, friends Christina.s Cards of :Cana=
dian seeaes. 12 sample Cards worth
11.00 when painted sent on 'receipt
or Ise. Money cheerfUlly refund- •
ed It not satisfied. This is pleas-
ant. -profitable• work at home.
Hollywood Studio. .Room 3.0.` 319 •
Spadina Ave.. Toronto.
. AlITONTolaILE REPAIRS
• Shirsek...Absorbers
SALES AND SERVICE. ALL MAKES.
• We specialize. Fred Stratford,
Limited. 35 Gerrard' West. Tor-
onto,
BIG SIPAItE TIME MOEy
AN YONE--Al'IY,WHERE—,C.AN SELL
Canada's be'st yalne 'Personal
Christmas Cards. ExPeilence, un-!.
neeetiary. , samples Free. Exten-
sive •selection of forty printed -to.
order card$ priced one dollar :per ,
• dozen, none higher:. Free cards
With early „Orders. 40 emits high-
est caslyecimmission paid on every
tingle order. Mao 50:Z, commis-
sion possible on complete' line" box- •
ed , assortments...seals. calendars...,
em. ,Economy. Printers. 332' King-
ston' Ito'ad. Toronto. . •
ERCCATIONAL
QUALIFY FOR OFFICE POSITION
. by home study. Courses Inexpen-
sive. Easy payments. • Write for,.
• booklet. Canada. )3usiness
Chatham. Ont.
FARM MACHINERY
GENUINE PARTS AND SUPPLIES
for Magnet Cream Separator.'lin-
mediae delivery. Two 'rubber
rings and complete set or brushes:
•Postage paid. MOO. T. S. Petrie, .
13 Rambert Ave.; Swansea. Tor-
FLfl itlit,EiglistNo STOCK
FOR MINK', SILVER FOXE,$ AND
Elise Foxes of high grade breeding
stook reasonably priced; , write L.
A. "Jones. 58 Arthur Avenue, St.
Thomas, Ontario. I '
.1.7tritNifurtl'Ith:
sT9ck REDUCTION SALE
• Reconditioned' Furniture
• LYONS.' TRADE-IN. DEPT.
' 478 Yoioge St., Toronto
4s, DM:1Na ROOM SUITES,' •OAK
Walnut and -birch in Walnut
finish. Thoroughly' cleaned and re-
conditioned.. 8. and 9 'piece ,suites. •
Priced froth 114.14 UP, '
Ay BED ROOM ,SOITES REAL
3.7 high ciasg stittet•in Solid Wel-
nut. or walnut and enamel finishes.
Guaranteed; eleari,and Completely re-.
conditioned. • priced from -024:504,...'
C.1-1RSTERPIELD SUITES IN. A
. wide ' variety of ::covers and
styles. 5Mhairs, repps, tapestries
and Velours. .2 and 3 .piece suites. ,
Guaranteed clean 'and completely re, -
conditioned.. Priced from $14.95. .
LARGE STOCK OF ODD DRESSERS,.
chiffonier::: beds, springs , -Wardrobes.
kitehen cabinets and stoves at rock
bottom prices. • . .
Buy With, Confidence
. EVERY ARTICLE IS THOROUGH- '
ly cleaned. reconditioned and sold
with a poSitivc money back guaran-,
• tee of Satisfaction. [1 , • , '
LYONS TRADE -JN
478 Yonge St.,Toronto
TRACTOR MAGNETO AND
GENERATOR REPAIRS
:SEND U'S YbUR TRACTOR MAGNE-
to and tlenerator Repairs. We save
you money. Allanson Armature
Ilanfr.. 855 Ray St.. Toronto.
NEWSPAPER PROPERTY
ADVERTISER. CS INTERESTED IN ,
purchasink,* Ontario NVeekly Neirs• - ,
paper. Cantrnake reasormble .down.
, Payment in cash and monthi,Y pay-,
silents Mr balance. Must" inelude
good Job,business and well.estith-
lisbedneirspaper in growing dis-
trict. a Esuersen. 9 Delaware
Ave.. Toronto, •
• GAuoEs STOCK.
DARWIN Tura PS; CHOICE VARIE-
ties. ' Top Size, lc each, 1125 per
100„ Mixed 63.00. CrOcus 21Ie doz.
• William Hart, Ithporter. Seaforth,
•
Ontario. ,
itipinic
NO MORE,SCRE 'FEET IF YOU
. will uSe BuSsOn's ,F'Sx.;Foritzl"Soft.
ens callouses. •,Relieves ell cases
of Trench Peet, Atbiete'S .Peot..
; Send 40c. .487 LuMbermaris Bldg..
Vitheouver. B.C. '
DICSICAL laitrItti-aigNTS
. .
WE' TEACH MCSIC EY MAIL
Piano. Violin:. Guitar, voice tut.,
tureSimples abe. Partieu/ars
free. Paramount Conservatory of
Music. 246 E 18th. Vaticociver.
ounritt,Ess 'Alit f.W.rs•
1-00 CAN HAVE; CITY CCNVENI-
enceS in your tillage Or f artn home
•
Without water ,supply or sewers
Write for tree informatioa on out
nioderte .seir-einotying, odourlesa
Toilets front 540.00 .up and leave
behind' tor • ever the' dread out-
house with- itt flies, eold and en,
2. lallaltly rftscornfortsi KaUstine En,
.0 -
' Sneering oniPanY. 164 Portland
al
' treet. Toronto. ' Ont. VtrAverlek
AN OPPER TO tretteir INVENT011.,,
'List "of invetitionaand fall biter.,
„nnition Solt ftw, • The Rainitay
CottiPanY.,•litegittereil: Patent At,
turneYS, 213 tank St:, OttaWa, Cint
issue No. 42—'38
'PROTGGRAPRIr
FREE ENLARGEMENT R 0 L L
Rini- developed -8 prints or re-
prints 25e. 8 enlarged P-Ints 30c.•
EotablIshed over 25, 'year. Bright -
ling Stadle, 29 Ilielimond 'Street
East. Toronto,
, PHOTOGItAP111'
Dvpi,oiliNGAND' PRINTING
. .
PEAUTIPULENDARGEmENT FREE
--Roll Developed and eper
-
.feet pe -
.feet prints 25e. Satisfactioi•guav-
'anCeed, mail. 'order •Photo Ser-
ee, Box 869: Peternorougli. Gat .
ING PATtlIIES IFOR SALE
,
QUILT4NG PAT(11tES, LAIt(IE BUN-
, .dle, enough for ,,fiv'e *quilts, 61,
postage prepaid. .1liegler'S. 282
Armed:Ale, Toronto.
'SCRAP IS. GOLD
k
:RRING YoUit SC4,41'• IRON. BAGS.
' papef, mattresses;and• all old met-
' :
Ma to us and.get higher prices. No'
aniount tie. small. C'onsolislated •
Iron and••Sletal Co 5.8 Niagara St.,
Toronto., -
STANIRF.:RING
STAMMERING CORRECTED, HELP-
ful '
bOoklet giving. full informa-
tion. Write today. W. Dennison,
. 150 Carlton Street. Toronto.
FALL- •
A fall can Mean a lot of things,
.
One 'starts in lite September,
But there are falls of other kinds.
Oh, mydon't you remember?
The one a baby always gett, when
, untrained feet first tread. ,
Yolz pick it up,. Surprised, to find
itsbrains still in its head, ,
Then older groWn42-Some eyes and:
smiles, Welted up, by , Cupid's .
Produce a fall that's sure to leave'
big cracks in •sOttleone's .heart.
yes•We,- live through many
kinds; but I have found the fall
That wears gay leaves --and gems
of frost, least painful of them
all —Li la ,
Myers.'
Sue --"A friend' of mine named °-
his child • Carol becaute. ,she was
.born , on 'Christmas.", '
John—She?1 thoughta carol
•••was a hymn:" - • •
READ'IT ,I,OR 'NOT :—There ate.
from .16 to 21 hopes in •the full.
•
length tail of a deg. • '
An• d we are all'm the same boat;
Quiggle —, "Don't you find it
• hard to meet expenses these
days?", • ., • •
Peewitt—"Hard.! I should say
net •:Why, man alive, I meet ex-
penses at every tarn.",.
Some young women `appear' to
sMoke cigarettes for the purpose
of 'showing off their colored nails
and finger ;jewelry by extending
the hand conspicuously to flick off
the 'ashes.
Mrs. Jones had 'just been pre- ,
, tented with. a •beautifuly ziew fur
coat by her husband: • ,
--1111anes (as 1-h-eti-iod adnair-I •
ing herself iwthe leng mirror)-_
"You know, Oswald, .one really
• can't help feelingsorry for the
poor' thing that was skinned for
this."
Omit -aid" (who was going. throne'
his 'handbook to tee if he had any
Money lett; .nodded,
appreciate your sYTtlint.thY, my
dear."
. Baseball Fan (boa.sting)--"I've
teen these teams play so often I,.
bet / can tell the score of this old
hall 'game before it starts."
biovie—"All right then, whit' is
,
Baseball Fan • 11Notiung ZO
nOtkiing--‘13fOre t starts."
• Two girls, were reading a news- .
paper;rn a .street car. -
First --"I see .that • So -arid -So,
the octogenarian, is dead. Now
•what on earthis aft Ogtogen-'
• Secpiul—"Search me; ,but they-
're a sicklY lot. You never heard
• Of One but, what he is dying."
.•
There, is one good reaton Why
'the. old -saying of—give until ilk
hUrts neVer •very, ,popular.
Most; of us hruise easii'
...Filetid-7-"Did the doctor take
your, temperitnre ?"
„• Patient --• "I duhn�. All e
.taissed to far is my, watch."
INVENTIONS
WANTED
. ' , .. .
We have been
. . Sticeeasfulty Sella
Ing - I oveativap, Patented, andlunpat-
ented . 'Slime 1924.. It you • have n
*Mild, Practical 'invention Or ;641,1e,
write tiff. itnthedititely, , , '
• Cliiteteied lentiOnte at Anterietin .
.
".,PItaVentiata. t. 5,:-11, •Writiliiitatta ID: Co
, 14
Dept. - .
cvenues
hOw.hicase, .
For the of August, But
Figurrgs For 4 -Month PeriodWere Not 'So Cheerful:
MONTREAL.—After payment af
operating expenses the Canadian
Ngio/l41 li.ailwa$S.bad'Oet Teri/gine
of $060',248 for the .`mouth • of Au-
gust. 1938, an increase of 0,04714
as compared with the correspond -
Ing period of last year, according
. to the Monthly statement of operat
ing revenues, operating expenses
oad net revenue ter the all-inclusive' •
systent., Operating, revenues were
;15,551,529,. a ,decrease of 4934,032.4,
Thi r decline in geese rescciiiptt•. was
Mores' than •o,ifset,' hOwever„..by,
• redualtin in operating egDenseS.'of 1,
;.1,03.5,750, operatieg exnentet in •
August, 4938, being. i$14;091.?.$1. As
,compared 'With.,11.5,927,031 in the •••
Inanth 0! 197. •
For the eight-mOnths period end,
ing August : 31; 1933, operating re:r-
elines 'Were, $112,437,805. against
$128,144,860, in the eight -months pe-
riOd' of last,year: Operating expen-
ses ' 'werd-$111,60,4,498, a.' reduction
of $2,354,985 eomPared With $119,-
959,48: for. the silnilar period 'or
1917.. •. . •
'The summaries follow:.
Motttly,of August, 1938, Operating
. Revenues $15,551,i29t1---1937,.
435,561:: Decrease, $934,032,, '
. Month of August, 1938, Operating
Expenses, ,$14,891,281; 19370• $15,
937,031; Decrease. $1;036750. ;
Month ...of August, 1938;' Net Re-, '
venue,. $660,248; 1937,1558,530; .111 -
crease $101,718. ., •
.Aggreg.a. to August„ 31st: Op-
.' elating Revenues, 1938, $112;487,-
805; 1937, • $128;144,850; Decrease,
$15,657,055. Operating Dxpenses,
1933, .$117;804-,4931 1937, $119,959,- •
433; Decrease, $4354,985-`: .Net Re -
'
venue Deficit., 198; §61.16,623; 1937,
.$8,185,377; Decrease, $13,302;070.
T he.
BOOK SHELF
, .
By ELIZABETH 'EEDV
,!'APPOINTIVI.ENT %/VITA.
." ' •
By Agatha Christie
When in , doubt, read Agatha
. Christie.' ,Youll',finct ‘-!Appointment
, With Death" one of this' anther's
slickest. with Hercule Poirot,• the
'Iittle Belgian snoop,. in • top form:.
nattiralik. he's J•uri .adross a miird'er
. while doing .1ei•asalem, F.:etr,a;,. An.
nam 'and part's. adjacent 44.ntrthere's
• • no use concealing'the at that the
carpte is old Mrs:Boynton, a fright..
• fur, Atnerican woman, touring:, the '
,
world • with .five members of her
bullied and frightened family; :she's
described“by one of the pharaeters
•"a dittorted •old 'Buddhaa gross
spideti'qnithe *Oter 'of a Web" and
,that"t top good for her., Suspects in-.
elude Raymond' BoYnten, a .stepson
eveiteard, saiing '"-You .see, don't
you, that.. she got. to be killed?"
(Hercule heard him say it one night
:at the Solomon, liotei.)•' Also Miss
.
Sarah Ring a -,z.4e4,ical young. Wo
-
Man witli hem- Raymond is „in
love; and half:a dozen -other rela,
.‘ three. and. bystanders-.
. • ,
. This seems to be the sea,'
.ion for Whopping till Solutions; ‘•at
and: rate. Mrs. Christie' ,springsv. a,-
. fiend 'yen_aren't
Which is ail right with us. We like'
to he stirPrised. • •
•‘`Appointment With Death", By
Agatha, Christie •.• .• •; 301 *PP.
. . Toronto: Dodd, Mead and.
Company,. • . $2.
Lived 115 Years
In Native Town
Still alert; Sari Fatma,
• to woman; has „just .celebrated her
Il5th' birthday in her naVte toWn,
.of .Kozane, Asia 'Minor.;
Her two sons' and two (laugh:.
ters, aged Tes.PectiVely 17, 95, 92 ,
and 90, accompanied by their chil-
Aren,grandchildren and great .
• grandchildren; •,totalling 117; ar-
Zived from all parts of the coun-
try to Join in the festivities which '
had bee,n organized by local peoT
born in 1823; Sari was married
at 17 to a corporal of the Otto-, •
nnati army, five years her Senior.
He died in 1928, hen 110, after •
,terving more than 80 years in the
army,: He took part in the Orim-",
ean war, 1858, and; in several oth-
er campaigns. ' • •
•-•,' The open seaaround tiorthernf
.Norti,ny'is never, froZen. '
'
COLDS
, Head Cultist' Flea utard's
'and inhale it Ch t Colds
'I. .1.ntta.°Ieftfm1
Sore ":(84 then
• tIfir61-
Real relief. . . quickly
. .
o
Prepare, Select
Winter Layers -
House No Poor Hens Pre -Win-
ter Advice
• . Pellets for the. laying flock
must have full opportunity right
from hatching tittle 1.111 to, matur-
ity, to Make normal, healthy
growth. This requires first; an
•
adequate supply soliPlY of AP. Prove;
feeds; and, second, good environ-
mental conditions. Overcrowding
should be avoided and precau-
tions taken to mord the health•
the birds! Any bi-ds showing Signa
cdisease or ,weakness..shouId be..
disposed of immediately. '
tbhe:c6MnalliatnetnlYanbC9;11-:in mind thati
a healthy,"
•Pi4Ofistabulled f151O;calc continuous process
the year' round, • • ' '
•• • ' • PrOpeie,Pieding
•:dornmen`eing .when.the: firit, few
pullets start to lay, it is a recom-
"Mended practice to go • over the
pellet, fleck 'every,. week or two
.• moving to 'their permanent
ter quarters all •those', that seem,
almost ready to. lay or have al-
ready started, states L. A. Grlae.. ,
dinger, Head Poultryman Domin:
ion Experimental . Station, Len-
noxville, P.Q. Feeding should
have been such that at this tithe,
the birds should be heavily flesh- ,
0 and fairly fat. the subsequent
feeding ;program should he design-
ed to prevent any marked decrease
in body' Weight. Each bird should
be carefullY examined at this time
and •any that are poorly fleshed,
very, small; or deformed should be
culled out. Heavy, sustained'
egg
preduction demands healthY,
developedbodies and ritgged con-
stitutions' .
to,olrn might say:
"Grew goad. birds and house no
Canada's Honey
Worth_ $2,198,400
• Ontario'. Is nbilnally- the' ,ehief,
source of honeY ProdtiCtion in, .Can.:-
. ada. Last year, howe'Ver.owing to
. an unusually low •yield •in that pro- ,
. vince, Manitoba •came :first: ,Totel •
honey Production for the fibminion
' Waslow, but (lie' ,?. •were 'Ilial:Oa416:
over. the previons ye5tr in four p•,•0•J
vinees... •,Canada., is3n 'o•an export
basit on the h.onjy, .ra•lo. but lin-
pertt 'lla.Ve been , rising •Iately, • An
increasiing, tra.di has aiso lii‘en.,de •
..l'eloped in Paeag,e bees.„
The total.',pir,odu 'ti,?n Of ho,neF in:
Canada last .Vear • was ' 21,733,200
Peninds, ,vained ,at $2,198300: The
• , . .
; oatnut was armsuallY large' in, 1936' ,
at 28,333;806 pounds : having a' value '
of $2,85L706; .In 1935, ,produetion
., 'amounted to ..24,29.1:000 pound,' and .
. fix 1933 to 22,913,800 pounds .' .The
number of'hives latt yeailwas 391,- '
300;• compared with 3.70,000 in 1936; ,•
. 358,700 in 1935 and.335,70C in 193,:..
Cockroach Smuggler
County, jailer at Amarillo (Tec-
asi was puzzled.. Solitary confine-
mentman...Was getting. his &gar;
. ettes daily. . He found that a
, large and well-trained cockroach
—a cigar,ette 'tied , to its 'back—
Was making regular deliveries 'un-
'• der the doers of the, ceIl
at Science
Doing *
• .'• SLEEPING slacivEs,.cuRE.
Edwin ...Moore, of • Drummer •
townshiP; near Peterborough, Ont.,
left hospital last *eek apparently
cured of an attack of sleeping
•
sickness .' Credit for his recovery
Wag givenvitamin treatthents ddr •
ministered hy Dr. I. C. "Smith, Of
Likefield: •• , • • •
Moore,, who c'ontracted the dis-
ease Augus.t ;t5..9, was removed to
hospital and Th.. Sinai began
ad-
mlnisteiing injections of synthetic
Vitamiii B!1 ,in a short time, he
said, the patient who had stink
into a come. •began .to. rally.-.
yorcE FOR THE DUMB
A ,new talking' ••••deViee which
takes the place of the human 1,-,eiCe
when. the :•:voc al, cords .; refuse • to
function, was deseribed before the:
:Toronto Iiiwanis ChMlastweek:
by Dean:T. Smith, of Les Angeles,
.Supervisor of Public Activities for
the .sputhe.n'.Califorr.ia' Telephone
• 'A tube -the throat Pll-
.r
abies a husky or voicelets man to
. speak bY OW movement ofThit,lips
...Ind Mr.. Se:1:th- instanced: this, as '
one of -the ,rnany alvancements
• now- being made by telephony.
•
THYROID AND "SIXTH SENSE"
New etidence , of the exittance
of a sixth sense as in e".airvovance
7 and mind reiding, is being exaM-
hied by sayrint-5 at McGill Liniver-
°•sity who have been interested in
experin•ients carried out at ,Duke
University in the',United States;
. The 'latest .sensational 'evidence .
indicates that*there is a ',tie UP
between ,the thyroid' gland' and
the existence of the sixth sense, .
7 When this . gland .does not
duce sufiltiierit secretion, ordinalT-
iIy indicated lQ.7 dullness and Tack
of •activi.ty on the part of the
diVic:ail, it has been 'found in two
notah10 casei at least that there
is an extra aotilvity' of the snb-
conseions mind:
ll.A
.Xf!pp &lmnjer at Home!
This ivintep. erijey the stendi, eutritheiry wartrith Of flarrica.
' dititada'a 'finest bok'e,, Delivers ozi'abitriClant fltrtv .of
, claim.. easily; cOrdrolleq.,.heat.--th Plenty of ipserve fy‘;
'colciesi• Snarl. •thistless.''Striok'elna.s; wasleleSs: • Easy .
JO , Priced, tridciy af tho
• loWeet in3ieccla. Wit your' greatest fuel. bargain: • O'rcler
from you,- frical 1-L/11NRCOciecller_hodeserVes yrtilrftieY
A7'En
k itr.,0)"0 14, :ad 11 0.14:
02; AMC°
bRiv,7; Lliotnaiie
lErAmaci' A .
• CoArmix,
, 4nci:
con"„ien:::
less I
COKE
Adii.uttok iy.paoouct ccuct ovEnt 1.0.41186
I4Alalt.tON CANADA ' ' •
OUR LOCAL brALEIV8 NAME APEtA.11.5
ELSEWHERg THIS' ISSUE
HAMCO — NOW THE LOWEST PRICE. IN" YEARS
474
n
13.1.IHBER .BAND "SNAPS"
fromfrhufbbsetrretbcahnd edSVatael5Paitntagiebtaat .
• extremely high velocity; Its speed
has 'been clocked by, ultra high-
speed Photography 'and has been ,
'. found .to • be 204 miles an hour,.
states Dr. Gustavus J' Estelen;
cheinital'cora:ultant, in 'w.hate'Bos-
ton laboratories the measurements
were made. •
COME' FROM MILKY WAY •
Dr. Arthur H. Compton, '
.:SitY of Chicago phisicjit; believes
,that lie: has found the answer'.to
one Of the major mysteries of the
, scientificworld--;•the point of ori7
; gin of cotenic. rays:. .
• "The question was Whether cos-
rnie rays come, from the milky' A -ay
" in •our galaxy or fidrir some •point.
;
beyond the i•,alaxy," he said. at
Vancouver last , week., •'The Mtn-
catio.ns .are 1,that they come from „,
. the 'Milky way.",.
London had a traffiejaria When
n duck decided to cross the street
with f her family to the .,pond in St:
%James :,..Park, .just in front ef• •
Buckingham Palace. •
of Rheumatism Neuritis
Neuralgia Quickly
_slimy arum RI 0"—. FOLLOW
;EASY DIRECTIONS BELOW
"Aspirin".
Tablets ,Wlth a lull
glaes.of Water the:.
• rtiovitent :To d feel
ealtera rheumatic or
neuritic petit ciaming
2. You slamicl feel
relief very quickly. If
pain in natienatly
severe., topeat
cording to directiens.
To relieve pain .of rheumatism or •
•quickly; try the Aspirin 1
avay--thown above.
• People everywhere say results are
• remarkable. "Aspirin", Tablets,' are'
.economical, which mak et the usdof exr,
pensivepaiti reineciies" unnecessary.
• IlthiS way, fails, tee your doctor.,
. He will find the cause and,correct it: ••
While there, ask ,hirn about taking
• "Aspirin" to relieve these pains: We
belieN,e ,he Fill tell you there Is no
more effective, more depthciable way
normal persons•rnay use,
limaid-ad,Gei
.7
tarlat.maiix ass.,
R • .4•.•
• ..AHC.E.
•• AT'
PAR
••8:atiSrday, October. 1,15th'to,'
the 22rx.1, 13
Metiopolitan Raci'og
Association of Cada
'Limited
Direetort: • •
P. E Fred'Oren.
- G. AV7I-laY