" points to "areal danger of initiating + pirange, that an ex SE abot B00. ~ i dag In Science World BL a VR * piple. They have prescribed alcoholic J. whatsoever." Dr. MeiseI"things that _ sause dermatitis. is -- 'per cent. solution of alcohol. 3 1 . Stiensist Srudics Origin W&g mgy be t dispersion, he has brought order where +" pitherto there has mmunizipg Skin = Against Poison Ivy -- Russian a of Grain : ~ It is of little use to tell city pic: © tickers how they may identify poison "ivy. They simply sit down in a growth eir ignorance of elementary botany r, So the doctors bend their effort Rliscover how they can suage the in Land burnings: called by them Y. gon the: ancient, homely principle | that a little of the froth of the mad| "fog that bit you will eure you of| * hydrophobia, country people have for "penturies advocated the chewing of} json ivy leaves to alleviate dermati- Stomach aches, Ja Yet the principle of like curing like| "*Is 50 well established in medicine that | physicians toy with the old folk prin, extracts of the leaves and injected di- futed poison-ivy juice into the: veins, wil' results that are at best contra- dictory. It occurred to-Dr. Fred Mei- sel of Mount Sinai Hospitil, New York, that it might be possible to-im- pr 1nize the skin directly. He describes his Fesults in the Journal of Allergy. Bince "allergy" is not to be found in most dictionaries, it is as well to ex- "plain here that the word means the "reaction of an immunized organism to a specific disease, The allergic con- dition often precedes immunity. Hay _.lever and bronchial asthma are now. . regarded as allergic diseases, - IVY EXTRACT IN BATHS One of Dr, Meisel's cases was that of & Boy Scout leader who had tof: spend his Week-ends in the country 'and - invariably broke out cteristic atitig of poison ivy. age ui SHE Tontamed By, ally increasing amounts of poison ivy sxposed himself. on' four different oc- jasions in four different localities where poison ivy existed in abundance |" without develoying any" symptoms the simplicity of the treatment may load other physicians to €xperiment with it and thus build up a more sub- ptantial case record, - although he an attack of poison. jvy." unless very weak doses are cautiously used in the beginning and a vigilant eyes is kept vpen for the first symptoms of skin lesions...) RE Let - The actual poison of poison ivy is a complex 'orgrnic compound some-| what like Tesin and related to 'carbolic eid. It is so'active that a garden tool which has come in contact with it'may The usual remedy ls to wesh the skin: first with alcohol or gasoline (but not ethyl gasoline, . which contains lead) and then with { soap and water. Dr. James B. Mec- " Nair of the Field Museum of Natural History of Chicago recommends a so- Jution of 5 per cent ferric chloride in a "TRACING EARLY MAN. - Civilization begins_with farming. A tribe must settle down for at least a _ peason if it grows what it eats instead ~ of seeking it in forest or stream. Hence, if we can discover whence came "the first grains and what they were, ..we should go far in tracing civilized ~.man back to his cradle. . : "The -leader in studies of 'this kind Jo-the Russian geneticist Vavilov. In ypite of the internationalization of " jultivated plants, the wanderings 'of peoples, colonization and the antiquity' agriculture, he finds it possible to, pace a species of wheat and barley * Sack to its original geographical birth- Mace. Applying the methods of the Jant breeder he sifts out original rarieties of grains. He has about 30,- )00 varieties under cultivation. According to Vavilov the centre sof "Mversity of a species is the place where it originated. He finds the « greatest number of varieties of bread wheat (botanists call it Triticum . vulgare) in Afghanistan and fewer 'and fewer as he 'proceeds outwardly from this centre. The most important ppecies of durum wheat comes from Abyssinia, where it is very diverse. Two modern varieties of wheat, there- fore, originated in mountainous areas. "Vavilov find¢ that there were five world 2entres from which our prinei- pal agricultural plants came. Afghan- n gave us bread wheat, beans, , lentils, carrots and Yomegran- Y From Southeast Asia Came ked oats, naked barley, millet, soy |™= beans, fruit trees and probably rice. Mediterranean and Abyssinian Tone aa the Hier our oats, peas, large seeded flax, many vegetables, durum wheat and hulled barley. The fifth centre is the new world, with Mexico, Peru, Chile as the original homes of potatoes, Jerusalem artichokes, maize (what we call corn), tobacco the occidental cottons. to J probably a coincidence, yet raminatio b, Dr. Bernstein, should k : fusions that harmesize ilines #3 rh F sit. oak spot In Vavilov's reason" his predise that the eon- Are of greitest' diversity defines the "place of a plants origin. Even if it proves that the wanderings of peopies may have helped fo shift the centre of : of it, munch their sandwiches and rue|' with. the| sxtriict brought about so high a de-|. gree of immunization that "the patient). -- YL, fF : sas at 2.4 : 2 S$ i B 1 Ss m0 x J - ya Ba biiit pEely ering Cy \ [ 3. - 35 76 : BT rr 2 7 ' ar) i pi : TT i I 52 } -\1 Cay 55 BE EC Horizontal 40--To tall in drops 9--Detests 1--Steam 42--QGirl's name 10--To become a\/are 6--Part of flower 45--Bel 11--Part of menu glan 13--River of Europe (abbr.) 19--Mythical moncter 14 -Avenus (abbr) 47--Ecstasy 21--Branch railways Limits 8 , 49--Afterword (abbr) 23--Select group IE clamation - 60--Demands 25--Weary une 52--Hades: _ 27--Metalliferous rock 2h fares b4--Cordage fibres 29--To stem y Di : b5--At that place 31--Declivities 24--Central American Vertical AALS ind rubber tree 26--Sea bird _ iF 26--Fodder bin : * 28--Gentlewoman 30--Russian villages '32--Aromatic unguent 83--To discover. wt" 35--Ylelding + M--ToYeel © 4 88--Craft o (abbr,) pound 6--Feet . 43--Entertainment ' 46--Flickertail" state --QGoddess of fire aplrs Tm, Ufa to arrest §--Capacily measure oe? 0 Th, 4--Basic metallic com- 43--Scottish caps 5--Remainder 7--Type units 8--French for "thou"--53--Pronoun 12--Unbleached 13--To hehave 16--Mound resort 36--To smoke-dry 41--Mucllage , wii ; 44--Horse's gait : iad - 48--Book of New Testa- he yit . , ment (abbr) : b1--Part of "to be" Answers to Last, Week Puzzle B[AIn[T[U] [A]P[PIAlL] MAIR] I]o]|N]| [Rlo]alM|E|D]) ANTI LZAE|G|RIE[T# clo ALlx| oA sil ulalT As |A|T I S|ojv|L AlNITIE c|H|L|o|R|A|LVZ clL]|U]lE]S AlBIRILWRio|olr : UIRIGIE|SPZQIVUIA|F|F|E|D PI=| EIRP 6lul1 ly Ir A]. PIAIRVZM[A|T{N]S oir] Blue alr [iVAR|1|P(E [RIE|PIUIT|R| [N|o|o|S|E|S p[alw[z[s] [o[RlE[E[Dh HER 45 Fine Spirit Marks : 0 Canadian Fishermen Canadian fishermen have been hay- ing their share. of trials during the past year or two but 'they have shown a fine spirit, and an extract from a re- cent 'report to the Dominion Depart- 'ment of Fisheries by one of jts British Columbia supervisors' is' pertinént comment in this connection. ""Forti- tude and consideration of the difficulty of others engaged in the industry, by practically all 'concerned, were never apparent .ag during: the past year," runs the officer's report jn referring to the attitude of the fishing people of hig district. "Determination to carry on in spite of obstacles, low prices, and difficult market conditions was.a very noticeable feature throughout the year." Va And the same courageous spirit that was showh by these Pacific coast peo- ple during 1932 has been characteristic of Canadian fishermen generally. To rejoice in anothei's prosperity is to give content to your own lot; to mitigate another's grief is to alleviate or dispel your own,--T. Edwards. xmm---- -- | Temperate Climate Must Be Neither Too Hot Nor 'Best For Humans Too Cold--Otherwise' Too Stimulating Says an editorial writer in The Journal of the American Medical As- sociation (Chicago): ! ? : "Man's adaptation to climate plays an important part'in the progress of civilization, For example, climate seems rather naturally to make its own adaptation of the individual in the matter of exercise. Persons who live for any length of time in the South gradually develop a distate for exertion of a physical kind. In the North there is quite naturally an in clination even in winter for vigorous outdoor lite. Nature should be fol- lowed. The winter-time 18 the most} important time to carry on outdoor activities, Vigorous' walking, outdoor games, skating and coasting are healthful im- posed by the weather cause. people to live unhygiénic . lives. during the winter. For many persons it is a period of semihibernation. . "There is a wide-spread belief, pro- moted, it may be, by Huntington's essays, that the miost stimulating}: quality of man's environment is & mean temperature between' 38 and} 64 Fahrenheit, with frequent fluctua- tions of moderate extent across this means range, We are told that varl ous phases of human social and econ- omic development have proceeded with greatest rapidity and been most extensive in regions where the clim- ate 1s characterized by such tempera- ture conditions, Where it remains above 64 all, or nearly all, the time, If You Are... ANAEMIC ALWAYS TIRED WEAK NERVOUS RUN DOWN LOSING WEIGHT _RUEUMATIC ent) r ' ! -o pefore and after taking this and red uSclen. 4 4 4 0 4 Williams' Pink Pills improved was, to quote the physician, Increases Oxygen. © Dr. Willams' Pink Pills recon- and reyjtalize the Blood . LASER A , Whic s your Life ote Api, wip nit Stream, They create new red. blood cells. They stimulate the Blood Stream to carry more Oxygon--life's great vitalizer-- _ to all parts of the body. This Oxygen rebuilds tissue and clears away system poisons. been only chaos. +. t ~ Better Look to Your i Blood Stream! EAT a ria R Dlactising physician, who knew the formula of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, tested the blood of eleven people remedy, , . . At the start, these pallents wero all easily ire "Jacked energy and were underweight, . ... Their Bison reams were found to be "nothing short of remarkable," Don't walt too long get -a supply of Dr. Wiliams' © Pink Pills from your Druggist, 50 cents a a CTI TY widely.known , blood:building RT TR deficient in haemoglobin , short time, however, Dr, eir condition in a manner that 'Gives New Strength ; and Vitality With the reconditioning of your: blogd stream, new vitality, new power, new energy Course through your arteries to every organ of the body. Your appe: - tite picks up, Your digestion ' ymproyes. Day by day 'you feel yourself becoming stronger and better able to resist dangerous diseases. Ss package. humanity takes place unless the cli- Unfortunately, the large is shown to overcome the depressing that these differences under the vari. that have heretofore been extolled as of man 7" '34--Allowance for waste|. or below 38, little development of mate is possessed of great varlabil. fty or storminess. Suficiently wide and frequent changes In tempera ture, however, seem able to neutralize the depressive effects of Leat on man, land and population masses in the tropics and subtropics are handicapped by both heat and lack of variability." _"A few hours of cooling each day influence of a hot envirgnment, = Ani- mal spending two-thirds ot the time in the hot room, but cooled a while each day, are found to-have more ac- room ones, Ogle and Mills believe ous conditions; are maiply dependent on changes in the operation of the guprarenal glands. / Definite and certain proof for this, however, Is not" yet at hand, "Ogle and Mills remark that in cer- tain of the most stimulating areas of the earth it seems evident that thej climatic 'drive is exceeding man's bodily. capacity. to respond, with the result that in- these regions break: down is manifesting {tself with in- creasing severity and frequency. The death-rate from diabetes, for in stance, -is steadily rising in spite of the frea use of insulin, while the in? cree in diseases of the heart and blood-vessels gives real cause for alarm, Are we to believe that we may become victims of the climates the most invirorating environments - SHE WAS GETTING FATTER ARE bok - Now Down to Normal ol was putting on flesh very rapld- ly," writes a married woman, "and also suffering from constipation, and was very liverish, Three months ago a friend advised me to take a tea spoonful of Kruschen Salts in hot water every morning, I have kept this up regularly ever since, although I have been down to my normal weight (126 1bs.). for several weeks, I never felt better in my life, and I intend to carry on with Kruschen always. Sev- eral of my friends have remarked how slim I was getting and how 'well I was looking. After my. having told them how 1: was done they are dolng the same."'--(Mrs.) D. H. Overweight -- arises frequently be- cause the system ir loaded with unex- pelled waste, like a furnace choked with ashes and soot, Allowed to accu- mulate, this waste matter is turned into layer after layer of fat. The six salts in Kruschen assist the internal organs to throw oft each day the wast. age and poisons that encumber the system, Then, little by little, that ugly fat goes--slowly, yes--but surely. You feel wonderfully healthy, youth- ful and energetic--more so than ever before in your life! : ------ : "The Cart-Horse One white foot--buy him, so I did, Cheap at the price. No fault about him--nothing to be hid, No tricks--na vice With, Charley--that's his name. A good horse through and through. He's. like a Christian, just as if he - knew, - And my! he'd spirit in him when he came. : ' . Just youth it was, yoi'll find a child's . the same, Handle them wrongly, it's yourself.to blame. Soon like a child he'd follow me. Once, when the boy here was a little © lad, We missed -him from the house, and felt right bad - As we espied him down in Charley's --- stall, Playing about between - beast's feet. "Don't call," I said, "for mercy's sake, . don't call!" But there--to seo that the great horse, 'twas a great hoof, s -- fair treat, while he , Moved it as gently as a cat its paw: He's strong, yet gentle as canbe; Many's the mile he's ploughed with Many's the load he's fetched, turnips or hay, : So you might say. - Ay, and he's won a pine two in his LLL ABR EE A dpi SOE § ok at the muscies i i, ghosts See how he holds his head! | the best, None can do better'n that, when all So, Charley, thou and I'll not part, Not even when thou can's na pull --May I. E. Dolphin, fn "Stars and Chimneys." - (London: Fowler Flying Warship Added London. --A 31-ton, famotored flying boat, described as a "flying warship," force, ft is revealed, It has under gone durability tests. The ship ig one 1f is of all-metal ®nstraction and car- ries a cfew of 10. tive combustion than even. the cold |* - | And that with POKER Razor Blades FREE HANDS I You can get these five keen, well-honed safety razor blades (fit any Gillette-type razor). Given free for just oné complete set of Turret Poker Hands . « ¢ any man would appreciate such a gift. é . 1 [S . Mild, yet sweet and full of flavour--Turret Fine Cut is a particular favourite with men wy own." A 20 cent package of this mell "told their ow Virginia Tobacco will make at least 50 cigarettes... in it are combined satisfaction and genuine | IP} pays to "Roll Your QOwn" with FINE CU CIGARETTE TOBACCO SAVE THE POKER HANDS economy. T T 0-0 ..SMILES.... 4 It Is our modest guess that nobody, young or old, ever, had lips ot the cherry color the préseht-day lipsticks paint them. . . Edithe=--"Do you love me, Richard dear?" Richard---"Huh! Do you supose I'd be laughing my head oft every night at your father's stale jokes if I didn't love you?" . -- tang Blzabeth?? Ellzabeth--"1'd have fo refer to my card index, but I think you are pretty near the top." He was wakened in the middle of. the night by his nervous wife, who said: "I hear sounds as though some-. one Is coming up the stairs." «What's the time?" hé~asked, sleep: ily. "Two o'clock," replied the wife. «g'all right," be said, turning over; "It'll be me \ : The colonel's wife sent the follow- ing note to Captain Green: 'Colonel and Mrs. Brown request the pleasure of Captain Green's company to dinner on the 20th." ' _Captain Green's reply gave her a shock, It read: "With the exception of four men on leave and two men iu the guard-room, Captain 'Green's company have great pleasure in accepting your invitation." The two young married women were talking seriously over 'the affairs--of married life. First Newlywed--"I'm very much concerned lately about the way my husband is treating me. Gradually he has been getting lax in his attentionsy stays down town for dinner quite fre- quently, leaving me home alone, and gometimes comes home late at night with very slim excuses. I don't like it at all." | Second Newlywed--*1 went through that same experience, but I soon broke it up." First Newlywed--"How?" Second Newlywed--"*Well, I waited until he came in very late one night, and as he camo quietly up the stairs I called out: 'Is that you, Charlie? broke him of staying out nights." Sh First Newlywed -- "My goodness! How did that break it up?" Second Newlywed="My husband's name is John." - ' "This is a wonderful suit I'm weare Inga a ALT laa . "It looks very ordinary." . "But the wool came from Australia, English merchants said it to a Scotch factory, it was woven in Saxony; made into a suit in Berlin--" ' "Nothing wonderful about that." "No, the wonder Is that so many people can get a living out of some- thing I've never paid for!" a --- .8he--"The man I marry must be as brave as a lion, but not forward; hand- some #s Apollo, but not conceited; wise ag Solomon, but meek as a lamb; a man who is kind to every woman, but only loves me." % He (enthusiastically) -- "By Jove! Early Summer Shorts ' Kisser are the dessert of avant ing, and, just like a man, he. ays wants to eat his dessert nd The ys The baby stroking his The strangest sight it was ever I saw, me behind, ° Toiling right heartily, as he'd a mind, day, ~~ Fo | "No-shirking there, my lad, thou dost fg-said , the cart." Wright, Ltd.) to Britain's Air Force has been added to Great Britain's air of the largest flying boats in the world. ISSUE No. 25-33 4 bride's mother may ery at the wed- ding, but if you see p man wearing a vn hr | Jack--*"How do I stand in your affec- | look of supreme content, that's the broken-hearted father. Now that jig- saw puzzles are all the rage, girls may try putting the pictures of A boy's heart together after he's all broken up over her. : Helen--"What™ do you do 'when a man tries to kiss you?" Clarlce--"0h, that's something you will have to find out for yourself." Man--*"Congratulate us! 1 have be- come a grandfather and my wife a grandmother!" Neighbor--* Really! Twins?" Celored Parson (glancing at' the di- minutive, watery-eyed, bow-legged bridegroom, who stood beside two two hundred and ten pounds of feminine assurance)--""Does yo' take this wo- man for your lawfully wedded wife?" Bridegroom (gloomily)--"Ah takes 'nothin'. Al's beein' tooked." ; =a . "Have you brought a reference?" asked the manager, yes," said the applicant. "You see what it says: J. Hope'--that's me-- | 'worked for us one week, and we're satisfied"."" 4 a. | Smiles of 1932 He talked as it his thoughts had been wirgd for sound.--Anthony Ab- bott. ; F Tasteless as a kiss over the phone.-- Rose Adams. ' 3 : Useless as a relative.--George Ade. Floating around like flotsam in "a terry slip.--Ibid. Ruthless as the dial on a radio.-- David O. Alber. ee : Busier than Gandhi slapping at flies. | --1bid, . : My salary looked as if it had been made up in the miniature department. --Fred Allen. . Lots of people are like fish: They open their mouths but they never say anything.--New York American, No more chance than a blonde at a motion picture exhibitof's plenic.-- Jack Alcoate, . " Drifts off gently, like a goap-bubble detached cautiously from a clay pipe. --John Anderson. ' Reluctant as a newspaper retraction, --Carlton Andrews, . ; t The tired moon, like a big red sag- ging lantern feeding on its last drop of oil, was languishing into the warm lagoon.--Loring Andrews, The, elephant went plunging along the river bank like, a runaway war tank.--Paul Anixter. ' George Moore . . with a long colorless face that locked like a cod- fish that had been crossed by a salyr. --@ertrude Atherton. B . Uneémotional as a dentist pulling a tooth.--Anon. : Brief as kisses at a golden wedding, | --Anon. Common as a curbstone (ouch.-- Anon. Fallg like a balloon ball in a grass bunker.--Anon. Busy as a nepotism beneficiary sign- ing his government pay voucher.-- . RA Ae Lil, chs Ledionay o 2 uae le 3, Gorm First of all things for friendship there must be that delightful, indefin- able state called feeling at ease with your companion,--the one man, the one woman out of a multitude who in- terests you, meets your thoughts and tastes.--Dubring. ---- ISSUE No. 24--'33 GOVERNMENT APPROVED CHICKS. ) P SIRED GOVERNMENT TY od ¢ Approved Chicks from blood tested breeders. Leghorns, .063c; Barred Rocks, White Roclts, Wyandottes, .063c, Started chicks ten days old, .020 more. Baden Electric-Chtck Hatchery, Post Office Box-24, Baden Ontarlo. ---- | British Firm Salvages Germany's Scuttled Fleel With the.towing of the Prinz Regenl Luitpold,. from Scapa Flow to the Ro syth Dockyard, for the purpese ol breaking lier up, the salvaging of the German fleet of thirty-two warships delilierately sunk by its officers after surrender, on June 12, 1919, bas been abandoned by Cox & Danks, the firm which in Aprl, 1924, started the work of raising them: . The Prinz Regent Luitpold, a 23.000 wards to the Firth of Forth. She had been lying in that position on the shore since she was raised from the bed of Scapa Flow in the Summer ol 1931--after sinking back to the hot tom shortly after the initial attempt had sueceeded. ' : With the 'removal of the Prinz Re gent Luitpold and the battle-cruises Von der Tan, the operations of the al vage company will come to an end. E. F. Cox said recently that he had decided to give up the task of raising he, ten German warships which still remain at the bottom, and that he had" logt £20,000 on his £50,000 transac: tion, ** Last year's run of herring to the Barclay Sound area of British Colom: bia was the:heaviest in years. 'I'he runs. in several previous years bad been light but the 1932 experience dis. counts the idea that the stocks hid fallen off. } --_-- "YOUNG MEN! Uso Cunticunnes! TO SAVE YOUR HAIR Soap 25¢c. Ointment 25c.and60c, THAT DEPRESSED FEELING 1S LARGELY LIVER Wake up your Liver Bile : --Without Calomel You are "legling punk' simply because yout Hver ian't pouring ite daily two pounds of liquid bile into your bowels. Digestion and elimination re both hampered, and your entire svetein ie ing poieoned. - What you need fs a liver stimulant. Eome- thing that goes farther than salts, mineral water, oll, laxative candy or chewing gum or roughage 2 which only move the bowela--ignoring the real enuse of trouble, ya liver. Take Carter's Little Liver Pills, Purely vege- table. No hareh calomel (mercury). Safe. Sura. Atk for them by name Refuse substitutes, 950. at all druggists. - 83 ey NERVOUS WOMEN | Take Lydia E, Pinkham's Vegetable Compound "J am 60 nervous it seems as though K ehould fly .« aro all on he straln, can no longer stand the hersell to ante into this condition if she can help. herself, ham's Vegetable Compound a trial. For neatly sixty yeara women have taken this wonderful tonic to give them genewed ' strength sid vigor. out of ever Wy say that they are benefited by thie medicine. Buy a bottle from your drugs glst today « « « watch the results. i -- ---- } a' | i Ny LIES S-- We are in a position to Pay you the Highest Possible Price for Your ¥ NOOL l The Canadian Wool Company Limited 2 CHURCH ST, TC : "THE LARGEST HANDLERS OF WOOL IN CANADA" TORONTO ' rid cp spray Sl ton battleship, was towed bottom upg .